This change makes it possible to extract iOS-to-another-platform version mappings from `VersionMap` in the `SDKSettings.json` file in Darwin SDKs, for example, `iOS_watchOS` and `iOS_tvOS`.
This code was originally authored by Alex Lorenz.
rdar://81491680
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116615
This change adds an option AfterOverloadedOperator in SpaceBeforeParensOptions to add a space between overloaded operator and opening parentheses in clang-format.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116283
Adds another constant-propagation analysis that covers all variables in
the scope (vs the existing single-variable demo). But, the analysis is still
unsuited to use, in that ignores issues of escaping variables.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116370
This patchs adds a `MapLattice` template for lifting a lattice to a keyed map. A
typical use is for modeling variables in a scope with a partcular lattice.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116369
This is part of the implementation of the dataflow analysis framework.
See "[RFC] A dataflow analysis framework for Clang AST" on cfe-dev.
Reviewed-by: xazax.hun
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116368
This commit resolves GitHub issue #45895 (Bugzilla #46550), to
add or remove empty line between definition blocks including
namespaces, classes, structs, enums and functions.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116314
My team has a vendetta against lines ending with an open parenthesis, thought it might be useful for others too 😊
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116170
There is some similar looking code in `TokenAnnotator.cpp` but given that I've
never worked on clang-format before I don't know what the purpose of that code
is and how it's related to `UnwrappedLineParser.cpp`.
Either way, it fixes clang-format with `BraceWrapping.AfterEnum=true` and
`AllowShortEnumsOnASingleLine=false` to behave like the documentation says.
Before this patch:
```
enum
{
A,
B
} myEnum;
```
After this patch:
```
enum {
A,
B
} myEnum;
```
According to the unittests which I had to modify this would change the LLVM
style. Please evaluate if you want to change the defaults or if you consider
the current style a bug.
Reviewed By: curdeius, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106349
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/52881
It seems that clang-format off/on is not being honoured in regard to adding spaces.
My understanding of clang-format off/on is that it marks the token as finalized based on whether formatting is currently enabled or disabled.
This was causing a space to be added between the `<` and `<<` in the Cuda kernel `foo<<<1, 1>>>();`
This if doesn't solve this actual issue but ensure that clang-format is at least honoured.
Reviewed By: curdeius, owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116494
This diff extends the -style=file option to allow a config file to be specified explicitly. This is useful (for instance) when adding IDE commands to reformat code to a personal style.
Usage: `clang-format -style=file:<path/to/config/file> ...`
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius, MyDeveloperDay, zwliew
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72326
Currently, we are unable to inherit from a chain of parent configs where the outermost parent config has `BasedOnStyle: InheritParentConfig` set. This patch adds a test case for this scenario, and adds support for it.
To illustrate, suppose we have the following directory structure:
```
- e/
|- .clang-format (BasedOnStyle: InheritParentConfig) <-- outermost config
|- sub/
|- .clang-format (BasedOnStyle: InheritParentConfig)
|- sub/
|- .clang-format (BasedOnStyle: InheritParentConfig)
|- code.cpp
```
Now consider what happens when we run `clang-format --style=file /e/sub/sub/code.cpp`.
Without this patch, on a release build, only the innermost config will be applied. On a debug build, clang-format crashes due to an assertion failure.
With this patch, clang-format behaves as we'd expect, applying all 3 configs.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116371
This is part of the implementation of the dataflow analysis framework.
See "[RFC] A dataflow analysis framework for Clang AST" on cfe-dev.
Reviewed By: xazax.hun, gribozavr2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116022
Single-variant enums were still getting placed on a single line
even when AllowShortEnumsOnASingleLine was false. This fixes that
by checking that setting when looking to merge lines.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116188
This reverts commit cc56c66f27.
Fixed a bad assertion, the target of a UsingShadowDecl must not have
*local* qualifiers, but it can be a typedef whose underlying type is qualified.
Currently there's no way to find the UsingDecl that a typeloc found its
underlying type through. Compare to DeclRefExpr::getFoundDecl().
Design decisions:
- a sugar type, as there are many contexts this type of use may appear in
- UsingType is a leaf like TypedefType, the underlying type has no TypeLoc
- not unified with UnresolvedUsingType: a single name is appealing,
but being sometimes-sugar is often fiddly.
- not unified with TypedefType: the UsingShadowDecl is not a TypedefNameDecl or
even a TypeDecl, and users think of these differently.
- does not cover other rarer aliases like objc @compatibility_alias,
in order to be have a concrete API that's easy to understand.
- implicitly desugared by the hasDeclaration ASTMatcher, to avoid
breaking existing patterns and following the precedent of ElaboratedType.
Scope:
- This does not cover types associated with template names introduced by
using declarations. A future patch should introduce a sugar TemplateName
variant for this. (CTAD deduced types fall under this)
- There are enough AST matchers to fix the in-tree clang-tidy tests and
probably any other matchers, though more may be useful later.
Caveats:
- This changes a fairly common pattern in the AST people may depend on matching.
Previously, typeLoc(loc(recordType())) matched whether a struct was
referred to by its original scope or introduced via using-decl.
Now, the using-decl case is not matched, and needs a separate matcher.
This is similar to the case of typedefs but nevertheless both adds
complexity and breaks existing code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114251
It appears that this regressed the formatting of initializer lists in some
cases, see comments on https://reviews.llvm.org/D114583. I'll follow-up
by adding regression tests for these.
This reverts commit c41b3b0fa0.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116000
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/49804
Interaction between IndentExternBlock and AfterExternBlock means you cannot have AfterExternBlock = true and IndentExternBlock = NoIndent/Indent
This patch resolves that
```
BraceWrapping:
AfterExternBlock: true
IndentExternBlock: AfterExternBlock
```
Fixes: #49804
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius, owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115879
The alignment fix introduced by https://reviews.llvm.org/D104388 caused a regression whereby formatting of code that follows the lambda block is incorrect i.e. separate expressions are put on the same line.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115738
This error was found when analyzing MySQL with CTU enabled.
When there are space characters in the lookup name, the current
delimiter searching strategy will make the file path wrongly parsed.
And when two lookup names have the same prefix before their first space
characters, a 'multiple definitions' error will be wrongly reported.
e.g. The lookup names for the two lambda exprs in the test case are
`c:@S@G@F@G#@Sa@F@operator int (*)(char)#1` and
`c:@S@G@F@G#@Sa@F@operator bool (*)(char)#1` respectively. And their
prefixes are both `c:@S@G@F@G#@Sa@F@operator` when using the first space
character as the delimiter.
Solving the problem by adding a length for the lookup name, making the
index items in the format of `USR-Length:USR File-Path`.
Reviewed By: steakhal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102669
The minimizing and caching filesystem used by the dependency scanner keeps minimized and original files in separate caches.
This setup is not well suited for dealing with files that are sometimes minimized and sometimes not. Such files are being stat-ed and read twice, which is wasteful and also means the two versions of the file can get "out of sync".
This patch squashes the two caches together. When a file is stat-ed or read, its original contents are populated. If a file needs to be minimized, we give the minimizer the already loaded contents instead of reading the file again.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115346
Relevant issue: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/52705
When the `DisableFormat` option of `clang-format` is set to `true` and a JSON file is formatted, the ephemeral variable binding that is added to the top-level object is not removed from the formatted file. For example, this JSON:
```
{
"key": "value"
}
```
Is reformatted to:
```
x = {
"key": "value"
}
```
Which is not valid JSON syntax. This fix avoids the addition of this binding when `DisableFormat` is set to `true`, ensuring that it cannot be left behind when formatting is disabled.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115769Fixes#52705
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/52715Fixes#52715
`AllowShortBlocksOnASingleLine` seems to never be checked for "Empty" as such if its used it will be considered "Always" as we only ever check `AllowShortBlocksOnASingleLine != Never`
This impacts C++ as well as C# hence the slightly duplicated test.
Reviewed By: curdeius, jbcoe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115794
The empty VisitDecl() meant all assertions were skipped.
Meanwhile the assertions have rotted as some type printing has changed.
The test is still in the wrong directory, because it requires TestVisitor.h
which uses Tooling APIs.
The matcher crashes when a variadic function pointer is invoked because the
FunctionProtoType has fewer parameters than arguments.
Matching of non-variadic arguments now works.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114559
Reviewed-by: sammccall
Link BasicTests via explicit target_link_libraries() rather than
clang_target_link_libraries() in order to fix linking when building
clang against libclang-cpp. The latter requires all listed libraries
to be part of libclang-cpp and omits them if libclang-cpp is used.
However, LLVMTestingSupport is not part of libclang-cpp, so omitting it
causes undefined symbols. Link to the library explicitly to follow suit
with the 7 other unittest programs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115580
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/48642
clang-format does not respect raw string literals when sorting includes
```
const char *RawStr = R"(
)";
```
Running clang-format over with SortIncludes enabled transforms this code to:
```
const char *RawStr = R"(
)";
```
The following code tries to minimize this impact during IncludeSorting, by treating R"( and )" as equivalent of // clang-format off/on
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115168Fixes#48642
Summary: Handle intersected and adjacent ranges uniting them into a single one.
Example:
intersection [0, 10] U [5, 20] = [0, 20]
adjacency [0, 10] U [11, 20] = [0, 20]
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99797
This is part of the implementation of the dataflow analysis framework.
See "[RFC] A dataflow analysis framework for Clang AST" on cfe-dev.
Reviewed By: xazax.hun, gribozavr2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115235
This avoids an unnecessary copy required by 'return OS.str()', allowing
instead for NRVO or implicit move. The .str() call (which flushes the
stream) is no longer required since 65b13610a5,
which made raw_string_ostream unbuffered by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115374
Most of `MemoryBuffer` interfaces expose a `RequiresNullTerminator` parameter that's being used to:
* determine how to open a file (`mmap` vs `open`),
* assert newly initialized buffer indeed has an implicit null terminator.
This patch adds the paramater to the `SmallVectorMemoryBuffer` constructors, meaning:
* null terminator can now be added to `SmallVector`s that didn't have one before,
* `SmallVectors` that had a null terminator before keep it even after the move.
In line with existing code, the new parameter is defaulted to `true`. This patch makes sure all calls to the `SmallVectorMemoryBuffer` constructor set it to `false` to preserve the current semantics.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115331
Declaration context of template parameters of a FunctionTemplateDecl
may be different for each one parameter if the template is a
deduction guide. This case is handled correctly after this change.
Reviewed By: martong
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114418
Clang static analyzer uses bitwidth to infer the integer value type, that is, any 32-bit integer is considered of type `int`, and any 64-bit integer is considered of type `long`. This isn't always true, for instance, in ILP32 (e.g., 32-bit AIX), 32-bit could be `long`, and in LP64 (e.g., 64-bit wasm64), 64-bit could be `long long`.
Reviewed By: steakhal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114454
Responding to a Discord call to help {D113977} and heavily inspired by the unlanded {D34225} add some support to help coroutinues from not being formatted from
```for co_await(auto elt : seq)```
to
```
for
co_await(auto elt : seq)
```
Because of the dominance of clang-format in the C++ community, I don't think we should make it the blocker that prevents users from embracing the newer parts of the standard because we butcher the layout of some of the new constucts.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, Quuxplusone, ChuanqiXu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114859
Make sure we do not try to change line comments that are non-regular, i.e. do
not start with "//" or "#". This can for example happen when "//" is
broken into two lines with an escaped newline.
Previously, clang-format would not correctly identify preprocessor
directives directly following a conflict marker, which would result in
violating the formatter's invariants.
The provided test fails in assert mode before this change.
Test failed on x86 platforms due to a calling convention mismatch
when member function was called like a free function. In this patch,
member function is marked static to address this.
{D110833} regressed behavior of spaces before parentheses for operators, this revision reverts that so that operators are handled as they were before.
I think in hindsight it was a mistake to try and consume operator behaviour in with the function behaviour, I think Operators can be considered a special style. Its seems the code is getting confused as to if this is a function declaration or definition.
I think latterly we can consider adding an operator parentheses specific custom option but this should have been explicitly called out as it can impact projects.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114696
The filesystem used during dependency scanning does two things: it caches file entries and minimizes source file contents. We use the term "ignored file" in a couple of places, but it's not clear what exactly that means. This commit clears up the semantics, explicitly spelling out this relates to minimization.
The AST structural equivalence check did not differentiate between
a struct and a struct with same name in different namespace. When
type of a member is checked it is possible to encounter such a case
and wrongly decide that the types are similar. This problem is fixed
by check for the namespaces of a record declaration.
Reviewed By: martong
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113118
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=52517
clang-format is butchering modules, this could easily become a barrier to entry for modules given clang-formats wide spread use.
Prevent the following from adding spaces around the `:` (cf was considering the ':' as an InheritanceColon)
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, owenpan, ChuanqiXu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114151
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=52595
missing space between `T(&&)` but not between `T (&` due to && being incorrectly thought of as `UnaryOperator` rather than `PointerOrReference`
```
int operator()(T (&)[N]) { return 0; }
int operator()(T(&&)[N]) { return 1; }
```
Existing Unit tests are changed because actually I think they are originally incorrect, and are inconsistent with the (&) cases that are 4 or 5 lines above them.
Reviewed By: curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114519
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47936
Using the MultiLine setting for BraceWrapping.AfterControlStatement appears to disable AllowShortFunctionsOnASingleLine, even in cases without any control statements
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114521
The AST structural equivalence check did not differentiate between
a struct and a struct with same name in different namespace. When
type of a member is checked it is possible to encounter such a case
and wrongly decide that the types are similar. This problem is fixed
by check for the namespaces of a record declaration.
Reviewed By: martong
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113118
This patch replaces each use of the previous API with the new one.
In variadic cases, it will use the ADL `matchesAny(Call, CDs...)`
variadic function.
Also simplifies some code involving such operations.
Reviewed By: martong, xazax.hun
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113591
This contributes follow-up work from https://reviews.llvm.org/D112491, which
allows for increased control over the matching of lambda captures. This also
updates the documentation for the `lambdaCapture` matcher.
Reviewed By: ymandel, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113575
`CallDescriptions` deserve its own translation unit.
This patch simply moves the corresponding parts.
Also includes the `CallDescription.h` where it's necessary.
Reviewed By: martong, xazax.hun, Szelethus
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113587
Looks like the work of {D113393} requires manual clang-formatting intervention.
Removal of the space between `auto` and `{}`
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113826
The following interpreter tests failed on AIX because 64-bit XCOFF object files are currently not supported on AIX. This patch disables the tests on AIX for the time being.
Reviewed By: Jake-Egan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113614
The coding style of some projects requires to have more control on space
before opening parentheses.
The goal is to add the support of clang-format to more projects.
For example adding a space only for function definitions or
declarations.
This revision adds SpaceBeforeParensOptions to configure each option
independently from one another.
Differentiel Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110833
These should be all the commands from [1] except those that are marked
obsolete, and "link" / "endlink", as that conflicts with the existing
HeaderDoc pair "link / "/link". For some commands we don't have the
ideal category, but it should work good enough for most cases.
There seems to be no existing test for most commands (except the ones
interpreted by -Wdocumentation), and to some extent such a test wouldn't
look very interesting. But I added a test for the correct parsing of
formulas, as they're a bit special. And I had to adapt
comment-lots-of-unknown-commands.c because typo correction was kicking
in and recognizing some of the commands.
This should fix a couple of reported bugs: PR17437, PR19581, PR24062
(partially, no diagnostic for matching cond/endcond), PR32909, PR37813,
PR44243 (partially, email@domain.com must be addressed separately).
[1] https://www.doxygen.nl/manual/commands.html
Reviewed By: gribozavr2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111190
This provides better support for `LambdaCapture`s by making them first-
class and allowing them to be bindable. In addition, this implements several
`LambdaCapture`-related matchers. This does not update how lambdas are
traversed. As a result, something like trying to match `lambdaCapture()` by
itself will not work - it must be used as an inner matcher.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112491
Now in libcxx and clang, all the coroutine components are defined in
std::experimental namespace.
And now the coroutine TS is merged into C++20. So in the working draft
like N4892, we could find the coroutine components is defined in std
namespace instead of std::experimental namespace.
And the coroutine support in clang seems to be relatively stable. So I
think it may be suitable to move the coroutine component into the
experiment namespace now.
This patch would make clang lookup coroutine_traits in std namespace
first. For the compatibility consideration, clang would lookup in
std::experimental namespace if it can't find definitions in std
namespace. So the existing codes wouldn't be break after update
compiler.
And in case the compiler found std::coroutine_traits and
std::experimental::coroutine_traits at the same time, it would emit an
error for it.
The support for looking up std::experimental::coroutine_traits would be
removed in Clang16.
Reviewed By: lxfind, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108696
Previously, if accidentally multiple checkers `eval::Call`-ed the same
`CallEvent`, in debug builds the analyzer detected this and crashed
with the message stating this. Unfortunately, the message did not state
the offending checkers violating this invariant.
This revision addresses this by printing a more descriptive message
before aborting.
Reviewed By: martong
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112889
The #pragma directives push_macro/pop_macro and include_alias may influence the #include / import directives encountered by dependency scanning tools like clang-scan-deps.
This patch ensures that those directives are not removed during source code minimization.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112088
1. Moves the check to ASTStructuralEquivalence.cpp like all the other checks.
2. Adds the missing checks for identifier and init expression. Also add the
respective tests for that stuff.
Reviewed By: martong
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112804
Use the new sys::path::is_style_posix() and is_style_windows() in a few
places that need to detect the system's native path style.
In llvm/lib/Support/Path.cpp, this patch removes most uses of the
private `real_style()`, where is_style_posix() and is_style_windows()
are just a little tidier.
Elsewhere, this removes `_WIN32` macro checks. Added a FIXME to a
FileManagerTest that seemed fishy, but maintained the existing
behaviour.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112289
Original commit message: "
Original commit message: "
Original commit message: "
Original commit message:"
The current infrastructure in lib/Interpreter has a tool, clang-repl, very
similar to clang-interpreter which also allows incremental compilation.
This patch moves clang-interpreter as a test case and drops it as conditionally
built example as we already have clang-repl in place.
"
This patch also ignores ppc due to missing weak symbol for __gxx_personality_v0
which may be a feature request for the jit infrastructure. Also, adds a missing
build system dependency to the orc jit.
"
Additionally, this patch defines a custom exception type and thus avoids the
requirement to include header <exception>, making it easier to deploy across
systems without standard location of the c++ headers.
"
This patch also works around PR49692 and finds a way to use llvm::consumeError
in rtti mode.
"
This patch also checks if stl is built with rtti.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
This used to span just the `[[enum foo]] : bar;` in the absence of a
body. This patch expands the range to cover the base specifier, so that the
various consumers can detect the full range of the decl.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111259
Fix for importing functions where the TypeSourceInfo is set and the
exception specification information contains reference to the function
declaration itself.
Reviewed By: martong, steakhal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112013
Based on post-commit review discussion on
2bd8493847 with Richard Smith.
Other uses of forcing HasEmptyPlaceHolder to false seem OK to me -
they're all around pointer/reference types where the pointer/reference
token will appear at the rightmost side of the left side of the type
name, so they make nested types (eg: the "int" in "int *") behave as
though there is a non-empty placeholder (because the "*" is essentially
the placeholder as far as the "int" is concerned).
This was originally committed in 277623f4d5
Reverted in f9ad1d1c77 due to breakages
outside of clang - lldb seems to have some strange/strong dependence on
"char [N]" versus "char[N]" when printing strings (not due to that name
appearing in DWARF, but probably due to using clang to stringify type
names) that'll need to be addressed, plus a few other odds and ends in
other subprojects (clang-tools-extra, compiler-rt, etc).
Fallback to stringification and string comparison if we cannot compare
the `IdentifierInfo`s, which is the case for C++ overloaded operators,
constructors, destructors, etc.
Examples:
{ "std", "basic_string", "basic_string", 2} // match the 2 param std::string constructor
{ "std", "basic_string", "~basic_string" } // match the std::string destructor
{ "aaa", "bbb", "operator int" } // matches the struct bbb conversion operator to int
Reviewed By: martong
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111535
This NFC change accomplishes three things:
1) Splits up the single unittest into reasonable segments.
2) Extends the test infra using a template to select the AST-node
from which it is supposed to construct a `CallEvent`.
3) Adds a *lot* of different tests, documenting the current
capabilities of the `CallDescription`. The corresponding tests are
marked with `FIXME`s, where the current behavior should be different.
Both `CXXMemberCallExpr` and `CXXOperatorCallExpr` are derived from
`CallExpr`, so they are matched by using the default template parameter.
On the other hand, `CXXConstructExpr` is not derived from `CallExpr`.
In case we want to match for them, we need to pass the type explicitly
to the `CallDescriptionAction`.
About destructors:
They have no AST-node, but they are generated in the CFG machinery in
the analyzer. Thus, to be able to match against them, we would need to
construct a CFG and walk on that instead of simply walking the AST.
I'm also relaxing the `EXPECT`ation in the
`CallDescriptionConsumer::performTest()`, to check the `LookupResult`
only if we matched for the `CallDescription`.
This is necessary to allow tests in which we expect *no* matches at all.
Reviewed By: martong
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111794
When building frameworks, headermaps responsible for mapping angle-included headers to their source file location are passed via
`-I` and not `-index-header-map`. Also, `-index-header-map` is only used for indexing purposes and not during most builds.
This patch holds on to the framework's name in HeaderFileInfo as this is retrieveable for cases outside of IndexHeaderMaps and
still represents the framework that is being built.
resolves: rdar://84046893
Reviewed By: jansvoboda11
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111468
Looks like lldb has some issues with this - somehow it causes lldb to
treat a "char[N]" type as an array of chars (prints them out
individually) but a "char [N]" is printed as a string. (even though the
DWARF doesn't have this string in it - it's something to do with the
string lldb generates for itself using clang)
This reverts commit 277623f4d5.
Based on post-commit review discussion on
2bd8493847 with Richard Smith.
Other uses of forcing HasEmptyPlaceHolder to false seem OK to me -
they're all around pointer/reference types where the pointer/reference
token will appear at the rightmost side of the left side of the type
name, so they make nested types (eg: the "int" in "int *") behave as
though there is a non-empty placeholder (because the "*" is essentially
the placeholder as far as the "int" is concerned).
Adds `selectBound`, a `Stencil` combinator that allows the user to supply multiple alternative cases, discriminated by bound node IDs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111708
This moves the registry higher in the LLVM library dependency stack.
Every client of the target registry needs to link against MC anyway to
actually use the target, so we might as well move this out of Support.
This allows us to ensure that Support doesn't have includes from MC/*.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111454
Original commit message: "
Original commit message: "
Original commit message:"
The current infrastructure in lib/Interpreter has a tool, clang-repl, very
similar to clang-interpreter which also allows incremental compilation.
This patch moves clang-interpreter as a test case and drops it as conditionally
built example as we already have clang-repl in place.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
"
This patch also ignores ppc due to missing weak symbol for __gxx_personality_v0
which may be a feature request for the jit infrastructure. Also, adds a missing
build system dependency to the orc jit.
"
Additionally, this patch defines a custom exception type and thus avoids the
requirement to include header <exception>, making it easier to deploy across
systems without standard location of the c++ headers.
"
This patch also works around PR49692 and finds a way to use llvm::consumeError
in rtti mode.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
Attributes of "C/C++ Thread safety attributes" section in Attr.td
are added to ASTImporter. The not added attributes from this section
do not need special import handling.
Reviewed By: martong
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110528
This provides better support for `TypeLoc`s to allow `TypeLoc`-related
matchers to feature stricter typing and to avoid relying on the dynamic
casting of `TypeLoc`s in matchers.
Reviewed By: ymandel, tdl-g, sbenza
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110586
Currently constructor initializer lists sometimes format incorrectly
when there is a preprocessor directive in the middle of the list.
This patch fixes the issue when parsing the initilizer list by
ignoring the preprocessor directive when checking if a block is
part of an initializer list.
rdar://82554274
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109951
Earlier during the development of {D69764} I felt it was no longer necessary to
ensure we were not trying to change code which didn't need to change
and we felt this could be removed, however I'd like to bring this back for now
as I am seeing some false positives in terms of the "replacements"
What I see is the generation of a replacement which is a "No Op" on the original
code, I think this comes about because of the merging of replacements:
```
static const a;
->
const static a;
->
static const a;
```
The replacements don't really merge, in such a way as to identify when we have gone
back to the original
Also remove the Penalty as I'm not using it (and it became marked as set and no used,
I'd rather get rid of it if it means nothing)
I think we need to do this step for now, as many people use the --output-replacements-xml
to identify that the file "needs a clang-format"
The same can be seen with the -n or --dry-run option as this uses the replacements
to drive the error/warning output.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110392
Commit a44ab17025 added a unit test that fails to build with
-Werror which causes build bot breaks on bots that include that
option in their build. This patch just adds the necessary casts to
silence the warnings.
Developers these days seem to argue over east vs west const like they used to argue over tabs vs whitespace or the various bracing style. These previous arguments were mainly eliminated with tools like `clang-format` that allowed those rules to become part of your style guide. Anyone who has been using clang-format in a large team over the last couple of years knows that we don't have those religious arguments any more, and code reviews are more productive.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fv--IKZFVO8https://mariusbancila.ro/blog/2018/11/23/join-the-east-const-revolution/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6s6bacI424
The purpose of this revision is to try to do the same for the East/West const discussion. Move the debate into the style guide and leave it there!
In addition to the new `ConstStyle: Right` or `ConstStyle: Left` there is an additional command-line argument `--const-style=left/right` which would allow an individual developer to switch the source back and forth to their own style for editing, and back to the committed style before commit. (you could imagine an IDE might offer such a switch)
The revision works by implementing a separate pass of the Annotated lines much like the SortIncludes and then create replacements for constant type declarations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69764
This patch uses a different command-line arguments to test `clang::tooling::ToolInvocation` that are not specific to Darwin.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110160
Import of Attr objects was incomplete in ASTImporter.
This change introduces support for a generic way of importing an attribute.
For an usage example import of the attribute AssertCapability is
added to ASTImporter.
Updating the old attribute import code and adding new attributes or extending
the generic functions (if needed) is future work.
Reviewed By: steakhal, martong
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109608
Rename methods to clearly signal when they only deal with ASCII,
simplify the parsing of identifier, and use start/continue instead of
head/body for consistency with Unicode terminology.
Commits 58494c856a, f6bc614546, and 0fc27ef196 added special
handlings for K&R C function definitions and caused some
JavaScript/TypeScript regressions which were addressed in D107267,
D108538, and D108620. This patch would have prevented these known
regressions and will fix any unknown ones.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109582
This was an accidental behaviour change in D106789 and this patch
restores it back to original state.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109361
This reverts commit 2fbd254aa4, which broke the libc++ CI. I'm reverting
to get things stable again until we've figured out a way forward.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108696
Per the comments, `hash_code` values "are not stable to save or
persist", so are unsuitable for the module hash, which must persist
across compilations for the implicit module hashes to match. Note that
in practice, today, `hash_code` are stable. But this is an
implementation detail, with a clear `FIXME` indicating we should switch
to a per-execution seed.
The stability of `MD5` also allows modules cross-compilation use-cases.
The `size_t` underlying storage for `hash_code` varying across platforms
could cause mismatching hashes when cross-compiling from a 64bit
target to a 32bit target.
Note that native endianness is still used for the hash computation. So hashes
will differ between platforms of different endianness.
Reviewed By: jansvoboda11
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102943
Original commit message: "
Original commit message:"
The current infrastructure in lib/Interpreter has a tool, clang-repl, very
similar to clang-interpreter which also allows incremental compilation.
This patch moves clang-interpreter as a test case and drops it as conditionally
built example as we already have clang-repl in place.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
"
This patch also ignores ppc due to missing weak symbol for __gxx_personality_v0
which may be a feature request for the jit infrastructure. Also, adds a missing
build system dependency to the orc jit.
"
Additionally, this patch defines a custom exception type and thus avoids the
requirement to include header <exception>, making it easier to deploy across
systems without standard location of the c++ headers.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
D105553 added NoStateChangeFuncVisitor, an abstract class to aid in creating
notes such as "Returning without writing to 'x'", or "Returning without changing
the ownership status of allocated memory". Its clients need to define, among
other things, what a change of state is.
For code like this:
f() {
g();
}
foo() {
f();
h();
}
We'd have a path in the ExplodedGraph that looks like this:
-- <g> -->
/ \
--- <f> --------> --- <h> --->
/ \ / \
-------- <foo> ------ <foo> -->
When we're interested in whether f neglected to change some property,
NoStateChangeFuncVisitor asks these questions:
÷×~
-- <g> -->
ß / \$ @&#*
--- <f> --------> --- <h> --->
/ \ / \
-------- <foo> ------ <foo> -->
Has anything changed in between # and *?
Has anything changed in between & and *?
Has anything changed in between @ and *?
...
Has anything changed in between $ and *?
Has anything changed in between × and ~?
Has anything changed in between ÷ and ~?
...
Has anything changed in between ß and *?
...
This is a rather thorough line of questioning, which is why in D105819, I was
only interested in whether state *right before* and *right after* a function
call changed, and early returned to the CallEnter location:
if (!CurrN->getLocationAs<CallEnter>())
return;
Except that I made a typo, and forgot to negate the condition. So, in this
patch, I'm fixing that, and under the same hood allow all clients to decide to
do this whole-function check instead of the thorough one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108695
Summary: Now in libcxx and clang, all the coroutine components are
defined in std::experimental namespace.
And now the coroutine TS is merged into C++20. So in the working draft
like N4892, we could find the coroutine components is defined in std
namespace instead of std::experimental namespace.
And the coroutine support in clang seems to be relatively stable. So I
think it may be suitable to move the coroutine component into the
experiment namespace now.
But move the coroutine component into the std namespace may be an break
change. So I planned to split this change into two patch. One in clang
and other in libcxx.
This patch would make clang lookup coroutine_traits in std namespace
first. For the compatibility consideration, clang would lookup in
std::experimental namespace if it can't find definitions in std
namespace and emit a warning in this case. So the existing codes
wouldn't be break after update compiler.
Test Plan: check-clang, check-libcxx
Reviewed By: lxfind
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108696
D105553 added NoStateChangeFuncVisitor, an abstract class to aid in creating
notes such as "Returning without writing to 'x'", or "Returning without changing
the ownership status of allocated memory". Its clients need to define, among
other things, what a change of state is.
For code like this:
f() {
g();
}
foo() {
f();
h();
}
We'd have a path in the ExplodedGraph that looks like this:
-- <g> -->
/ \
--- <f> --------> --- <h> --->
/ \ / \
-------- <foo> ------ <foo> -->
When we're interested in whether f neglected to change some property,
NoStateChangeFuncVisitor asks these questions:
÷×~
-- <g> -->
ß / \$ @&#*
--- <f> --------> --- <h> --->
/ \ / \
-------- <foo> ------ <foo> -->
Has anything changed in between # and *?
Has anything changed in between & and *?
Has anything changed in between @ and *?
...
Has anything changed in between $ and *?
Has anything changed in between × and ~?
Has anything changed in between ÷ and ~?
...
Has anything changed in between ß and *?
...
This is a rather thorough line of questioning, which is why in D105819, I was
only interested in whether state *right before* and *right after* a function
call changed, and early returned to the CallEnter location:
if (!CurrN->getLocationAs<CallEnter>())
return;
Except that I made a typo, and forgot to negate the condition. So, in this
patch, I'm fixing that, and under the same hood allow all clients to decide to
do this whole-function check instead of the thorough one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108695
Document 'use-external-name' and the various bits of logic that make it
work, to avoid others having to repeat the archival work (given that I
added getFileRefReturnsCorrectNameForDifferentStatPath to
FileManagerTest, seems possible I understood this once before!).
- b59cf679e8 added 'use-external-name' to
RedirectingFileSystem. This causes `stat`s to return the external
name for a redirected file instead of the name it was accessed by,
leaking it through the VFS.
- d066d4c849 propagated the external name
further through clang::FileManager.
- 4dc5573acc, which added
clang::FileEntryRef to clang::FileManager, has complicated concession
to account for this as well (since refactored a bit).
The goal of 'use-external-name' is to enable Clang to report "real" file
paths to users (via diagnostics) and to external tools (such as
debuggers reading debug info and build systems reading `.d` files).
I've added FIXMEs to look at other channels for communicating the
external names, since the current implementation adds complexity to
FileManager and exposes an inconsistent interface to clients.
Besides that, the FileManager logic appears to be kicking in outside of
'use-external-name'. Seems that *some* vfs::FileSystem implementations
canonicalize some paths returned by `stat` in *some* cases (the bug
isn't fully understood yet). Volodymyr Sapsai is investigating, this at
least better documents what *is* understood.
Original commit message:"
The current infrastructure in lib/Interpreter has a tool, clang-repl, very
similar to clang-interpreter which also allows incremental compilation.
This patch moves clang-interpreter as a test case and drops it as conditionally
built example as we already have clang-repl in place.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
"
This patch also ignores ppc due to missing weak symbol for __gxx_personality_v0
which may be a feature request for the jit infrastructure. Also, adds a missing
build system dependency to the orc jit.
The current infrastructure in lib/Interpreter has a tool, clang-repl, very
similar to clang-interpreter which also allows incremental compilation.
This patch moves clang-interpreter as a test case and drops it as conditionally
built example as we already have clang-repl in place.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
Add backward compatibility tests for mapping the deprecated
ConstructorInitializerAllOnOneLineOrOnePerLine and
AllowAllConstructorInitializersOnNextLine to
PackConstructorInitializers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108882
LLVM 13.0.0-rc2 shows change of behaviour in enum and interface BraceWrapping (likely before we simply didn't wrap) but may be related to {D99840}
Logged as https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=51640
This change ensure AfterEnum works for
`internal|public|protected|private enum A {` in the same way as it works for `enum A {` in C++
A similar issue was also observed with `interface` in C#
Reviewed By: krasimir, owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108810
Add a new option PackConstructorInitializers and deprecate the
related options ConstructorInitializerAllOnOneLineOrOnePerLine and
AllowAllConstructorInitializersOnNextLine. Below is the mapping:
PackConstructorInitializers ConstructorInitializer... AllowAll...
Never - -
BinPack false -
CurrentLine true false
NextLine true true
The option value Never fixes PR50549 by always placing each
constructor initializer on its own line.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108752
TypeScript 4.3 added a new "override" keyword for class members. This
lets clang-format know about it, so it can format code using it
properly.
Reviewed By: krasimir
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108692
This fixes up a regression we found from
https://reviews.llvm.org/D107267: in specific contexts, clang-format
stopped breaking after the `)` in TypeScript decorations. There were no test cases covering this, so I added one.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108538
This happens in createInvocationWithCommandLine but only clangd currently passes
ShouldRecoverOnErorrs (sic).
One cause of this (with correct command) is several -arch arguments for mac
multi-arch support.
Fixes https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/827
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107632
After
9da70ab3d4
we saw a few regressions around trailing attribute definitions and in
typedefs (examples in the added test cases). There's some tension
distinguishing K&R definitions from attributes at the parser level,
where we have to decide if we need to put the type of the K&R definition
on a new unwrapped line before we have access to the rest of the line,
so we're scanning backwards and looking for a pattern like f(a, b). But
this type of pattern could also be an attribute macro, or the whole
declaration could be a typedef itself. I updated the code to check for a
typedef at the beginning of the line and to not consider raw identifiers
as possible first K&R declaration (but treated as an attribute macro
instead). This is not 100% correct heuristic, but I think it should be
reasonably good in practice, where we'll:
* likely be in some very C-ish code when using K&R style (e.g., stuff
that uses `struct name a;` instead of `name a;`
* likely be in some very C++-ish code when using attributes
* unlikely mix up the two in the same declaration.
Ideally, we should only decide to add the unwrapped line before the K&R
declaration after we've scanned the rest of the line an noticed the
variable declarations and the semicolon, but the way the parser is
organized I don't see a good way to do this in the current parser, which
only has good context for the previously visited tokens. I also tried
not emitting an unwrapped line there and trying to resolve the situation
later in the token annotator and the continuation indenter, and that
approach seems promising, but I couldn't make it to work without
messing up a bunch of other cases in unit tests.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107950
A follow-up to
f6bc614546
where we handle the case where the semicolon is followed by a trailing
comment.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107907
Some files still contained the old University of Illinois Open Source
Licence header. This patch replaces that with the Apache 2 with LLVM
Exception licence.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107528
https://reviews.llvm.org/D105964 updated the detection of function
definitions. It had the unfortunate effect to start marking object
definitions with attribute-like macros as function definitions.
This addresses this issue.
Reviewed By: owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107269
The patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D105964 (58494c856a)
updated detection of function declaration names. It had the unfortunate
consequence that it started breaking between `function` and the function
name in some cases in JavaScript code.
This patch addresses this.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107267
@kpn pointed out that the global variable initialization functions didn't
have the "strictfp" metadata set correctly, and @rjmccall said that there
was buggy code in SetFPModel and StartFunction, this patch is to solve
those problems. When Sema creates a FunctionDecl, it sets the
FunctionDeclBits.UsesFPIntrin to "true" if the lexical FP settings
(i.e. a combination of command line options and #pragma float_control
settings) correspond to ConstrainedFP mode. That bit is used when CodeGen
starts codegen for a llvm function, and it translates into the
"strictfp" function attribute. See bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44571
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102343
Previously, with AllowShortEnumsOnASingleLine disabled, enums that would have otherwise fit on a single line would always put the opening brace on its own line.
This patch ensures that these enums will only put the brace on its own line if the existing attachment rules indicate that it should.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99840
When `-fno-integrated-as` is passed to the Clang driver (or set by default by a specific toolchain), it will construct an assembler job in addition to the cc1 job. Similarly, the `-fembed-bitcode` driver flag will create additional cc1 job that reads LLVM IR file.
The Clang tooling library only cares about the job that reads a source file. Instead of relying on the fact that the client injected `-fsyntax-only` to the driver invocation to get a single `-cc1` invocation that reads the source file, this patch filters out such jobs from `Compilation` automatically and ignores the rest.
This fixes a test failure in `ClangScanDeps/headerwithname.cpp` and `ClangScanDeps/headerwithnamefollowedbyinclude.cpp` on AIX reported here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103461#2841918 and `clang-scan-deps` failures with `-fembed-bitcode`.
Depends on D106788.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105695
This patch exposes `InputInfo` in `Job` instead of plain filenames. This is useful in a follow-up patch that uses this to recognize `-cc1` commands interesting for Clang tooling.
Depends on D106787.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106788
BindingDecl was added recently but the related DecompositionDecl is needed
to make C++17 structured bindings importable.
Import of BindingDecl was changed to avoid infinite import loop.
Reviewed By: martong
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105354
This patch separates the local and global caches of `DependencyScanningFilesystem` into two buckets: minimized files and original files. This is necessary to deal with precompiled modules/headers.
Consider a single worker with its instance of filesystem:
1. Build system uses the worker to scan dependencies of module A => filesystem cache gets populated with minimized input files.
2. Build system uses the results to explicitly build module A => explicitly built module captures the state of the real filesystem (containing non-minimized input files).
3. Build system uses the prebuilt module A as an explicit precompiled dependency for another compile job B.
4. Build system uses the same worker to scan dependencies for job B => worker uses implicit modular build to discover dependencies, which validates the filesystem state embedded in the prebuilt module (non-minimized files) to the current view of the filesystem (minimized files), resulting in validation failures.
This problem can be avoided in step 4 by collecting input files from the precompiled module and marking them as "ignored" in the minimizing filesystem. This way, the validation should succeed, since we should be always dealing with the original (non-minized) input files. However, the filesystem already minimized the input files in step 1 and put it in the cache, which gets used in step 4 as well even though it's marked ignored (do not minimize). This patch essentially fixes this oversight by making the `"file is minimized"` part of the cache key (from high level).
Depends on D106064.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106146
Break an unwrapped line before the first parameter declaration in a
K&R C function definition.
This fixes PR51074.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106112
It was possible to re-add a module to a shared in-memory module cache
when search paths are changed. This can eventually cause a crash if the
original module is referenced after this occurs.
1. Module A depends on B
2. B exists in two paths C and D
3. First run only has C on the search path, finds A and B and loads
them
4. Second run adds D to the front of the search path. A is loaded and
contains a reference to the already compiled module from C. But
searching finds the module from D instead, causing a mismatch
5. B and the modules that depend on it are considered out of date and
thus rebuilt
6. The recompiled module A is added to the in-memory cache, freeing
the previously inserted one
This can never occur from a regular clang process, but is very easy to
do through the API - whether through the use of a shared case or just
running multiple compilations from a single `CompilerInstance`. Update
the compilation to return early if a module is already finalized so that
the pre-condition in the in-memory module cache holds.
Resolves rdar://78180255
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105328
`PathSensitiveBughReport` has a function to mark a symbol as interesting but
it was not possible to clear this flag. This can be useful in some cases,
so the functionality is added.
Reviewed By: NoQ
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105637
When the end loc of the specified range is a split token, `makeFileCharRange`
does not process it correctly. This patch adds proper support for split tokens.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105365
This reverts commit 20176bc7dd as some
versions of GCC do not seem to handle the new code very well. They
complain about:
/tmp/ccqUQZyw.s: Assembler messages:
/tmp/ccqUQZyw.s:1151: Error: symbol `_ZNSt14_Function_base13_Base_managerIN5clangUlPKNS1_4StmtEE2_EE10_M_managerERSt9_Any_dataRKS7_St18_Manager_operation' is already defined
/tmp/ccqUQZyw.s:11963: Error: symbol `_ZNSt17_Function_handlerIFbPKN5clang4StmtEENS0_UlS3_E2_EE9_M_invokeERKSt9_Any_dataOS3_' is already defined
This seems like it is some GCC issue, but multiple buildbots (and my
local machine) are all failing because of it.
Original commit message:
[clang-repl] Implement partial translation units and error recovery.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D96033 contained a discussion regarding efficient
modeling of error recovery. @rjmccall has outlined the key ideas:
Conceptually, we can split the translation unit into a sequence of partial
translation units (PTUs). Every declaration will be associated with a unique PTU
that owns it.
The first key insight here is that the owning PTU isn't always the "active"
(most recent) PTU, and it isn't always the PTU that the declaration
"comes from". A new declaration (that isn't a redeclaration or specialization of
anything) does belong to the active PTU. A template specialization, however,
belongs to the most recent PTU of all the declarations in its signature - mostly
that means that it can be pulled into a more recent PTU by its template
arguments.
The second key insight is that processing a PTU might extend an earlier PTU.
Rolling back the later PTU shouldn't throw that extension away. For example, if
the second PTU defines a template, and the third PTU requires that template to
be instantiated at float, that template specialization is still part of the
second PTU. Similarly, if the fifth PTU uses an inline function belonging to the
fourth, that definition still belongs to the fourth. When we go to emit code in
a new PTU, we map each declaration we have to emit back to its owning PTU and
emit it in a new module for just the extensions to that PTU. We keep track of
all the modules we've emitted for a PTU so that we can unload them all if we
decide to roll it back.
Most declarations/definitions will only refer to entities from the same or
earlier PTUs. However, it is possible (primarily by defining a
previously-declared entity, but also through templates or ADL) for an entity
that belongs to one PTU to refer to something from a later PTU. We will have to
keep track of this and prevent unwinding to later PTU when we recognize it.
Fortunately, this should be very rare; and crucially, we don't have to do the
bookkeeping for this if we've only got one PTU, e.g. in normal compilation.
Otherwise, PTUs after the first just need to record enough metadata to be able
to revert any changes they've made to declarations belonging to earlier PTUs,
e.g. to redeclaration chains or template specialization lists.
It should even eventually be possible for PTUs to provide their own slab
allocators which can be thrown away as part of rolling back the PTU. We can
maintain a notion of the active allocator and allocate things like Stmt/Expr
nodes in it, temporarily changing it to the appropriate PTU whenever we go to do
something like instantiate a function template. More care will be required when
allocating declarations and types, though.
We would want the PTU to be efficiently recoverable from a Decl; I'm not sure
how best to do that. An easy option that would cover most declarations would be
to make multiple TranslationUnitDecls and parent the declarations appropriately,
but I don't think that's good enough for things like member function templates,
since an instantiation of that would still be parented by its original class.
Maybe we can work this into the DC chain somehow, like how lexical DCs are.
We add a different kind of translation unit `TU_Incremental` which is a
complete translation unit that we might nonetheless incrementally extend later.
Because it is complete (and we might want to generate code for it), we do
perform template instantiation, but because it might be extended later, we don't
warn if it declares or uses undefined internal-linkage symbols.
This patch teaches clang-repl how to recover from errors by disconnecting the
most recent PTU and update the primary PTU lookup tables. For instance:
```./clang-repl
clang-repl> int i = 12; error;
In file included from <<< inputs >>>:1:
input_line_0:1:13: error: C++ requires a type specifier for all declarations
int i = 12; error;
^
error: Parsing failed.
clang-repl> int i = 13; extern "C" int printf(const char*,...);
clang-repl> auto r1 = printf("i=%d\n", i);
i=13
clang-repl> quit
```
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104918
This reverts commit 6775fc6ffa.
It also reverts "[lldb] Fix compilation by adjusting to the new ASTContext signature."
This reverts commit 03a3f86071.
We see some failures on the lldb infrastructure, these changes might play a role
in it. Let's revert it now and see if the bots will become green.
Ref: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104918
https://reviews.llvm.org/D96033 contained a discussion regarding efficient
modeling of error recovery. @rjmccall has outlined the key ideas:
Conceptually, we can split the translation unit into a sequence of partial
translation units (PTUs). Every declaration will be associated with a unique PTU
that owns it.
The first key insight here is that the owning PTU isn't always the "active"
(most recent) PTU, and it isn't always the PTU that the declaration
"comes from". A new declaration (that isn't a redeclaration or specialization of
anything) does belong to the active PTU. A template specialization, however,
belongs to the most recent PTU of all the declarations in its signature - mostly
that means that it can be pulled into a more recent PTU by its template
arguments.
The second key insight is that processing a PTU might extend an earlier PTU.
Rolling back the later PTU shouldn't throw that extension away. For example, if
the second PTU defines a template, and the third PTU requires that template to
be instantiated at float, that template specialization is still part of the
second PTU. Similarly, if the fifth PTU uses an inline function belonging to the
fourth, that definition still belongs to the fourth. When we go to emit code in
a new PTU, we map each declaration we have to emit back to its owning PTU and
emit it in a new module for just the extensions to that PTU. We keep track of
all the modules we've emitted for a PTU so that we can unload them all if we
decide to roll it back.
Most declarations/definitions will only refer to entities from the same or
earlier PTUs. However, it is possible (primarily by defining a
previously-declared entity, but also through templates or ADL) for an entity
that belongs to one PTU to refer to something from a later PTU. We will have to
keep track of this and prevent unwinding to later PTU when we recognize it.
Fortunately, this should be very rare; and crucially, we don't have to do the
bookkeeping for this if we've only got one PTU, e.g. in normal compilation.
Otherwise, PTUs after the first just need to record enough metadata to be able
to revert any changes they've made to declarations belonging to earlier PTUs,
e.g. to redeclaration chains or template specialization lists.
It should even eventually be possible for PTUs to provide their own slab
allocators which can be thrown away as part of rolling back the PTU. We can
maintain a notion of the active allocator and allocate things like Stmt/Expr
nodes in it, temporarily changing it to the appropriate PTU whenever we go to do
something like instantiate a function template. More care will be required when
allocating declarations and types, though.
We would want the PTU to be efficiently recoverable from a Decl; I'm not sure
how best to do that. An easy option that would cover most declarations would be
to make multiple TranslationUnitDecls and parent the declarations appropriately,
but I don't think that's good enough for things like member function templates,
since an instantiation of that would still be parented by its original class.
Maybe we can work this into the DC chain somehow, like how lexical DCs are.
We add a different kind of translation unit `TU_Incremental` which is a
complete translation unit that we might nonetheless incrementally extend later.
Because it is complete (and we might want to generate code for it), we do
perform template instantiation, but because it might be extended later, we don't
warn if it declares or uses undefined internal-linkage symbols.
This patch teaches clang-repl how to recover from errors by disconnecting the
most recent PTU and update the primary PTU lookup tables. For instance:
```./clang-repl
clang-repl> int i = 12; error;
In file included from <<< inputs >>>:1:
input_line_0:1:13: error: C++ requires a type specifier for all declarations
int i = 12; error;
^
error: Parsing failed.
clang-repl> int i = 13; extern "C" int printf(const char*,...);
clang-repl> auto r1 = printf("i=%d\n", i);
i=13
clang-repl> quit
```
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104918
C++23 will make these conversions ambiguous - so fix them to make the
codebase forward-compatible with C++23 (& a follow-up change I've made
will make this ambiguous/invalid even in <C++23 so we don't regress
this & it generally improves the code anyway)
Allow a preprocessor observer to be notified of mark pragmas. Although
this does not impact code generation in any way, it is useful for other
clients, such as clangd, to be able to identify any marked regions.
Reviewed By: dgoldman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105368
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50727
When processing C# Lambda expression in the indentation can goes a little wrong,
resulting the the closing } being at the wrong indentation level and meaning the remaining part of the file is
incorrectly indented.
This can be a fairly common pattern for when C# wants to peform a UI action from a thread,
and it wants to invoke that action on the main thread
Reviewed By: exv, jbcoe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104388
Compilation database might have empty string as a command line argument.
But ExpandResponseFilesDatabase::expand doesn't expect this and assumes
that string.front() can be used for any argument. It is undefined behaviour if
string is empty. With debug build mode it causes crash in clangd.
Test Plan: check-clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105120
This commit adds a function to the top-class of SVal hierarchy to
provide type information about the value. That can be extremely
useful when this is the only piece of information that the user is
actually caring about.
Additionally, this commit introduces a testing framework for writing
unit-tests for symbolic values.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104550
I find as I develop I'm moving between many different languages C++,C#,JavaScript all the time. As I move between the file types I like to keep `clang-format` as my formatting tool of choice. (hence why I initially added C# support in {D58404}) I know those other languages have their own tools but I have to learn them all, and I have to work out how to configure them, and they may or may not have integration into my IDE or my source code integration.
I am increasingly finding that I'm editing additional JSON files as part of my daily work and my editor and git commit hooks are just not setup to go and run [[ https://stedolan.github.io/jq/ | jq ]], So I tend to go to [[ https://jsonformatter.curiousconcept.com/ | JSON Formatter ]] and copy and paste back and forth. To get nicely formatted JSON. This is a painful process and I'd like a new one that causes me much less friction.
This has come up from time to time:
{D10543}
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/35856565/clang-format-a-json-filehttps://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=18699
I would like to stop having to do that and have formatting JSON as a first class clang-format support `Language` (even if it has minimal style settings at present).
This revision adds support for formatting JSON using the inbuilt JSON serialization library of LLVM, With limited control at present only over the indentation level
This adds an additional Language into the .clang-format file to separate the settings from your other supported languages.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93528
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50702
I believe {D44609} may be too aggressive with brace wrapping rules which doesn't always apply to Lamdbas
The introduction of BeforeLambdaBody and AllowShortLambdasOnASingleLine has impact on brace handling on other block types, which I suspect we didn't see before as people may not be using the BeforeLambdaBody style
From what I can tell this can be seen by the unit test I change as its not honouring the orginal LLVM brace wrapping style for the `Fct()` function
I added a unit test from PR50702 and have removed some of the code (which has zero impact on the unit test, which kind of suggests its unnecessary), some additional attempt has been made to try and ensure we'll only break on what is actually a LamdbaLBrace
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104222
This is mostly a mechanical change, but a testcase that contains
parts of the StringRef class (clang/test/Analysis/llvm-conventions.cpp)
isn't touched.
This introduces ReferenceAlignment style option modeled around
PointerAlignment.
Style implementors can specify Left, Right, Middle or Pointer to
follow whatever the PointerAlignment option specifies.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104096
Currently the lambda body indents relative to where the lambda signature is located. This instead lets the user
choose to align the lambda body relative to the parent scope that contains the lambda declaration. Thus:
someFunction([] {
lambdaBody();
});
will always have the same indentation of the body even when the lambda signature goes on a new line:
someFunction(
[] {
lambdaBody();
});
whereas before lambdaBody would be indented 6 spaces.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102706
This reverts commit fb32de9e97.
Remove the secondary synchronization point as noted by Adrian. This is
technically only to make the builders happier about tests and should not
be needed. This also pushes the condition variable setting to after the
watch is actually established (which was the source of the original race
condition, but would normally succeed as the thread shouldn't get put to
sleep immediately on the trigger of the condition variable).
This also was pretested on the chromium builders:
https://ci.chromium.org/ui/p/chromium/builders/try/win_upload_clang/1612/overview.
This reverts commit 76f1baa787.
Also reverts 2 follow-ups:
1. Revert "DirectoryWatcher: also wait for the notifier thread"
This reverts commit 527a1821e6.
2. Revert "DirectoryWatcher: close a possible window of race on Windows"
This reverts commit a6948da86a.
Makes tests hang, see comments on https://reviews.llvm.org/D88666
Template parameters are created in ASTImporter with the translation unit as DeclContext.
The DeclContext is later updated (by the create function of template classes).
ASTImporterLookupTable was not updated after these changes of the DC. The patch
adds update of the DeclContext in ASTImporterLookupTable.
Reviewed By: martong
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103792
Currently, `access` doesn't recognize a dereferenced smart pointer. So,
`access(e, "field")` where `e = *x`, yields:
* `x->field`, for normal-pointer x,
* `(*x).field`, for smart-pointer x.
This patch normalizes handling of smart pointer to match normal pointer, when
the smart pointer type supports `->`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104390
Currently, `hasUnaryOperand` fails for the overloaded `operator*`. This patch fixes the bug and
adds tests for this case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104389
21c18d5a04
improved the detection of multiplication in function call argument lists,
but unintentionally regressed the handling of function type casts (there
were no tests covering those).
This patch improves the detection of function type casts and adds a few tests.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104209
This reverts commit 0ec1cf13f2.
Restore the implementation with some minor tweaks:
- Use std::unique_ptr for the path instead of std::vector
* Stylistic improvement as the buffer is already heap allocated, this
just makes it clearer.
- Correct the notification buffer allocation size
* Memory usage fix: we were allocating 4x the computed size
- Correct the passing of the buffer size to RDC
* Memory usage fix: we were reporting 1/4th of the size
- Convert the operation event to auto-reset
* Bug Fix: we never reset the event
- Remove `FILE_NOTIFY_CHANGE_LAST_ACCESS` from RDC events
* Memory usage fix: we never needed this notification
- Fold events for the notification action
* Stylistic improvement to be clear how the events map
- Update comment
* Stylistic improvement to be clear what the RAII controls
- Fix the race condition that was uncovered previously
* We would return from the construction before the watcher thread
began execution. The test would then proceed to begin execution,
and we would miss the initial notifications. We now ensure that the
watcher thread is initialized before we return. This ensures that
we do not miss the initial notifications.
Running the test on a SSD was able to uncover the access pattern. This
now seems to pass reliably where it was previously flaky locally.
Given `int foo, bar;`, TraverseAST reveals this tree:
TranslationUnitDecl
- foo
- bar
Before this patch, with the TraversalScope set to {foo}, TraverseAST yields:
foo
After this patch it yields:
TranslationUnitDecl
- foo
Also, TraverseDecl(TranslationUnitDecl) now respects the traversal scope.
---
The main effect of this today is that clang-tidy checks that match the
translationUnitDecl(), either in order to traverse it or check
parentage, should work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104071
<string> is currently the highest impact header in a clang+llvm build:
https://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/chromium-browser-clang/llvm-include-analysis.html
One of the most common places this is being included is the APInt.h header, which needs it for an old toString() implementation that returns std::string - an inefficient method compared to the SmallString versions that it actually wraps.
This patch replaces these APInt/APSInt methods with a pair of llvm::toString() helpers inside StringExtras.h, adjusts users accordingly and removes the <string> from APInt.h - I was hoping that more of these users could be converted to use the SmallString methods, but it appears that most end up creating a std::string anyhow. I avoided trying to use the raw_ostream << operators as well as I didn't want to lose having the integer radix explicit in the code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103888
The previous implementation would accidentally still sort the individual
named imports, even if the module reference was in a clang-format off
block.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104101
This implements the 'using enum maybe-qualified-enum-tag ;' part of
1099. It introduces a new 'UsingEnumDecl', subclassed from
'BaseUsingDecl'. Much of the diff is the boilerplate needed to get the
new class set up.
There is one case where we accept ill-formed, but I believe this is
merely an extended case of an existing bug, so consider it
orthogonal. AFAICT in class-scope the c++20 rule is that no 2 using
decls can bring in the same target decl ([namespace.udecl]/8). But we
already accept:
struct A { enum { a }; };
struct B : A { using A::a; };
struct C : B { using A::a;
using B::a; }; // same enumerator
this patch permits mixtures of 'using enum Bob;' and 'using Bob::member;' in the same way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102241
This diff adds testcase for the issue fixed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D77468
but regression test was not added in the diff. On Clang 9 it caused
crash in cland during code completion.
Test Plan: check-clang-unit
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103722
ParmVarDecl is created with translation unit as the parent DeclContext
and later moved to the correct DeclContext. ASTImporterLookupTable
should be updated at this move.
Reviewed By: martong
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103231
Template args of outer types were not fully-qualified when calling getFullyQualifiedType() for inner types.
For simplicity the patch is a copy-paste of the same call from getFullyQualifiedType().
Reviewed at: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103039
This allows to set a different indent width for preprocessor statements.
Example:
#ifdef __linux_
# define FOO
#endif
int main(void)
{
return 0;
}
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103286
This re-applies the old patch D27651, which was never landed, into the
latest "main" branch, without understanding the code. I just applied
the changes "mechanically" and made it compiling again.
This makes the right pointer alignment working as expected.
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR27353
For instance
const char* const* v1;
float const* v2;
SomeVeryLongType const& v3;
was formatted as
const char *const * v1;
float const * v2;
SomeVeryLongType const &v3;
This patch keep the *s or &s aligned to the right, next to their variable.
The above example is now formatted as
const char *const *v1;
float const *v2;
SomeVeryLongType const &v3;
It is a pity that this still does not work with clang-format in 2021,
even though there was a fix available in 2016. IMHO right pointer alignment
is the default case in C, because syntactically the pointer belongs to the
variable.
See
int* a, b, c; // wrong, just the 1st variable is a pointer
vs.
int *a, *b, *c; // right
Prominent example is the Linux kernel coding style.
Some styles argue the left pointer alignment is better and declaration
lists as shown above should be avoided. That's ok, as different projects
can use different styles, but this important style should work too.
I hope that somebody that has a better understanding about the code,
can take over this patch and land it into main.
For now I must maintain this fork to make it working for our projects.
Cheers,
Gerhard.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103245
Summary:
suggestPathToFileForDiagnostics is actively used in clangd for converting
an absolute path to a header file to a header name as it should be spelled
in the sources. Current approach converts absolute path to relative path.
This diff implements missing logic that makes a reverse lookup from the
relative path to the key in the header map that should be used in the sources.
Prerequisite diff: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103229
Test Plan: check-clang
Reviewers: dexonsmith, bruno, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tasks:
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103142
This patch adds support for matching gtest's ASSERT_THAT, EXPECT_THAT, ON_CALL and EXPECT_CALL macros.
Reviewed By: ymandel, hokein
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103195
{D74265} reduced the aggressiveness of line breaking following C# attributes, however this change removed any support for attributes on properties, causing significant ugliness to be introduced.
This revision goes some way to addressing that by re-introducing the more aggressive check to `mustBreakBefore()`, but constraining it to the most common cases where we use properties which should not impact the "caller info attributes" or the "[In , Out]" decorations that are normally put on pinvoke
It does not address my additional concerns of the original change regarding multiple C# attributes, as these are somewhat incorrectly handled by virtue of the fact its not recognising the second attribute as an attribute at all. But instead thinking its an array.
The purpose of this revision is to get back to where we were for the most common of cases as a stepping stone to resolving this. However {D74265} has broken a lot of C# code and this revision will go someway alone to addressing the majority.
Reviewed By: jbcoe, HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103307
This inheritance list style has been widely adopted by Symantec,
a division of Broadcom Inc. It breaks after the commas that
separate the base-specifiers:
class Derived : public Base1,
private Base2
{
};
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103204
WG14 adopted N2645 and WG21 EWG has accepted P2334 in principle (still
subject to full EWG vote + CWG review + plenary vote), which add
support for #elifdef as shorthand for #elif defined and #elifndef as
shorthand for #elif !defined. This patch adds support for the new
preprocessor directives.
The diff adds Remark to Diagnostic::Level for clang tooling. That makes
Remark diagnostic level ready to use in clang-tidy checks: the
clang-diagnostic-module-import becomes visible as a part of the change.
Since @bkramer bumped gtest to 1.10.0 I think it's a good time to clean
up some of my hacks.
Reviewed By: Szelethus
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102643
Currently, we have support for SYCL 1.2.1 (also known as SYCL 2017).
This patch introduces the start of support for SYCL 2020 mode, which is
the latest SYCL standard available at (https://www.khronos.org/registry/SYCL/specs/sycl-2020/html/sycl-2020.html).
This sets the default SYCL to be 2020 in the driver, and introduces the
notion of a "default" version (set to 2020) when cc1 is in SYCL mode
but there was no explicit -sycl-std= specified on the command line.
In the case of TypedefDecls we set the DeclContext after we imported it.
It turns out, it could lead to null pointer dereferences during the
cleanup part of a failed import.
This patch demonstrates this issue and fixes it by checking if the
DeclContext is available or not.
Reviewed By: shafik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102640
We've accumulated a scary amount of local patches to this directory. I
tried to merge them all, but if your favorite change is missing please
reapply it manually (and send it upstream).
The new matcher additionally covers blocks and Objective-C methods.
This matcher actually makes sure that the statement truly belongs
to that declaration's body. forFunction() incorrectly reported that
a statement in a nested block belonged to the surrounding function.
forFunction() is now deprecated due to the above footgun, in favor of
forCallable(functionDecl()) when only functions need to be considered.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102213
Original commit message:
In http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-July/143257.html we have
mentioned our plans to make some of the incremental compilation facilities
available in llvm mainline.
This patch proposes a minimal version of a repl, clang-repl, which enables
interpreter-like interaction for C++. For instance:
./bin/clang-repl
clang-repl> int i = 42;
clang-repl> extern "C" int printf(const char*,...);
clang-repl> auto r1 = printf("i=%d\n", i);
i=42
clang-repl> quit
The patch allows very limited functionality, for example, it crashes on invalid
C++. The design of the proposed patch follows closely the design of cling. The
idea is to gather feedback and gradually evolve both clang-repl and cling to
what the community agrees upon.
The IncrementalParser class is responsible for driving the clang parser and
codegen and allows the compiler infrastructure to process more than one input.
Every input adds to the “ever-growing” translation unit. That model is enabled
by an IncrementalAction which prevents teardown when HandleTranslationUnit.
The IncrementalExecutor class hides some of the underlying implementation
details of the concrete JIT infrastructure. It exposes the minimal set of
functionality required by our incremental compiler/interpreter.
The Transaction class keeps track of the AST and the LLVM IR for each
incremental input. That tracking information will be later used to implement
error recovery.
The Interpreter class orchestrates the IncrementalParser and the
IncrementalExecutor to model interpreter-like behavior. It provides the public
API which can be used (in future) when using the interpreter library.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96033
This reverts commit 44a4000181.
We are seeing build failures due to missing dependency to libSupport and
CMake Error at tools/clang/tools/clang-repl/cmake_install.cmake
file INSTALL cannot find
In http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-July/143257.html we have
mentioned our plans to make some of the incremental compilation facilities
available in llvm mainline.
This patch proposes a minimal version of a repl, clang-repl, which enables
interpreter-like interaction for C++. For instance:
./bin/clang-repl
clang-repl> int i = 42;
clang-repl> extern "C" int printf(const char*,...);
clang-repl> auto r1 = printf("i=%d\n", i);
i=42
clang-repl> quit
The patch allows very limited functionality, for example, it crashes on invalid
C++. The design of the proposed patch follows closely the design of cling. The
idea is to gather feedback and gradually evolve both clang-repl and cling to
what the community agrees upon.
The IncrementalParser class is responsible for driving the clang parser and
codegen and allows the compiler infrastructure to process more than one input.
Every input adds to the “ever-growing” translation unit. That model is enabled
by an IncrementalAction which prevents teardown when HandleTranslationUnit.
The IncrementalExecutor class hides some of the underlying implementation
details of the concrete JIT infrastructure. It exposes the minimal set of
functionality required by our incremental compiler/interpreter.
The Transaction class keeps track of the AST and the LLVM IR for each
incremental input. That tracking information will be later used to implement
error recovery.
The Interpreter class orchestrates the IncrementalParser and the
IncrementalExecutor to model interpreter-like behavior. It provides the public
API which can be used (in future) when using the interpreter library.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96033
Non-comprehensive list of cases:
* Dumping template arguments;
* Corresponding parameter contains a deduced type;
* Template arguments are for a DeclRefExpr that hadMultipleCandidates()
Type information is added in the form of prefixes (u8, u, U, L),
suffixes (U, L, UL, LL, ULL) or explicit casts to printed integral template
argument, if MSVC codeview mode is disabled.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77598
This fixes two errors:
Previously, clang-format was splitting up type identifiers from the
nullable ?. This changes this behavior so that the type name sticks with
the operator.
Additionally, nullable operators attached to return types in interface
functions were not parsed correctly. Digging deeper, it looks like
interface bodies were being parsed differently than classes and structs,
causing MustBeDeclaration to be incorrect for interface members. They
now share the same logic.
One other change is reintroducing the CSharpNullable type independent of
JsTypeOptionalQuestion. Despite having a similar semantic purpose, their
actual syntax differs quite a bit.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101860
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR35099.
I'm not sure if this decision was intentional but its definitely confusing for users.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101628
Previously, the JavaScript import sorter would ignore `// clang-format
off` and `on` comments. This change fixes that. It tracks whether
formatting is enabled for a stretch of imports, and then only sorts and
merges the imports where formatting is enabled, in individual chunks.
This means that there's no meaningful total order when module references are mixed
with blocks that have formatting disabled. The alternative approach
would have been to sort all imports that have formatting enabled in one
group. However that raises the question where to insert the
formatting-off block, which can also impact symbol visibility (in
particular for exports). In practice, sorting in chunks probably isn't a
big problem.
This change also simplifies the general algorithm: instead of tracking
indices separately and sorting them, it just sorts the vector of module
references. And instead of attempting to do fine grained tracking of
whether the code changed order, it just prints out the module references
text, and compares that to the previous text. Given that source files
typically have dozens, but not even hundreds of imports, the performance
impact seems negligible.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101515
A need for such an option came up in a few libc++ reviews. That's because libc++ has both code in C++03 and newer standards.
Currently, it uses `Standard: C++03` setting for clang-format, but this breaks e.g. u8"string" literals.
Also, angle brackets are the only place where C++03-specific formatting needs to be applied.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101344
Reverts parts of https://reviews.llvm.org/D17183, but keeps the
resetDataLayout() API and adds an assert that checks that datalayout string and
user label prefix are in sync.
Approach 1 in https://reviews.llvm.org/D17183#2653279
Reduces number of TUs build for 'clang-format' from 689 to 575.
I also implemented approach 2 in D100764. If someone feels motivated
to make us use DataLayout more, it's easy to revert this change here
and go with D100764 instead. I don't plan on doing more work in this
area though, so I prefer going with the smaller, more self-consistent change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100776
Clang-format was indenting the lines following the `?` in the added test
case by +5 instead of +4. This only happens in a very specific
situation, where the `?` is followed by a multiline block comment, as in
the example. This fix addresses this without regressing any of the
existing tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101033
The if condition was testing the current element, but
forgot to check the previous element (doh), so it
would fail depending on sort order of the imports.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101020
`asserts` is a pseudo keyword in TypeScript used in return types.
Wrapping after it triggers automatic semicolon insertion, which
breaks the code semantics/syntax.
`asserts` is different from other pseudo keywords in that it is
specific to TS and only carries meaning in a very specific location.
Thus introducing a token type is probably overkill.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100953
Previously, clang-format would erroneously merge import and export
statements. These need to be kept separate, as the semantics differ.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100752
This patch implements the copy assignment for `CompilerInvocation`.
Eventually, the deep-copy operation will be moved into a `clone()` method (D100460), but until then, this is necessary for basic ergonomics.
Depends on D100455.
Reviewed By: Bigcheese
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100473
Extend the matchers gathering API for types to record template
parameters. The TypeLoc type hierarchy has some types which are
templates used in CRTP such as PointerLikeTypeLoc. Record the inherited
template and template arguments of types inheriting those CRTP types in
the ClassInheritance map. Because the name inherited from is now
computed, the value type in that map changes from StringRef to
std::string. This also causes the toJSON override signature used to
serialize that map to change.
Remove the logic for skipping over empty ClassData instances. Several
classes such as TypeOfExprTypeLoc inherit a CRTP class which provides
interesting locations though the derived class does not. Record it as a
class to make the locations it inherits available.
Record the typeSourceInfo accessors too as they provide access to
TypeLocs in many classes.
The existing unit tests use UnorderedElementsAre to compare the
introspection result with the expected result. Our current
implementation of google mock (in gmock-generated-matchers.h) is limited
to support for comparing a container of 10 elements. As we are now
returning more than 10 results for one of the introspection tests,
change it to instead compare against an ordered vector of pairs.
Because a macro is used to generate API strings and API calls, disable
clang-format in blocks of expected results. Otherwise clang-format
would insert whitespaces which would then be compared against the
introspected strings and fail the test.
Introduce a recursion guard in the generated code. The TypeLoc class
has IgnoreParens() API which by default returns itself, so it would
otherwise recurse infinitely.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100516
This class initially had args to be generic to future needs. In
particular, I thought that source location introspection should show the
getBeginLoc of CallExpr args and the getArgLoc of
TemplateSpecializationLocInfo etc. However, that is probably best left
out of source location introspection because it involves node traversal.
If something like this is needed in the future, it can be added in the
future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100688
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR41870.
Checks for newlines in option Style.EmptyLineBeforeAccessModifier are now based on the formatted new lines and not on the new lines in the file.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99503
This could probably be made into a compile time constant, but that would involve generating a second inc file.
Reviewed By: steveire
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100530
Add a print method that takes a raw_ostream.
Change LocationCallFormatterCpp::format to call that method.
Reviewed By: steveire
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100423
The current logic for access modifiers in classes ignores the option 'MaxEmptyLinesToKeep=1'. It is therefore impossible to have a coding style that requests one empty line after an access modifier. The patch allows the user to configure how many empty lines clang-format should add after an access modifier. This will remove lines if there are to many and will add them if there are missing.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98237
Fix the logic of detecting pseudo-virtual getBeginLoc etc on Stmt and
Decl subclasses.
Adjust the test infrastructure to filter out invalid source locations.
This makes the tests more clear about which nodes have which locations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99231
Multiple lines importing from the same URL can be merged:
import {X} from 'a';
import {Y} from 'a';
Merge to:
import {X, Y} from 'a';
This change implements this merge operation. It takes care not to merge in
various corner case situations (default imports, star imports).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100466
The `CompilerInvocationBase` class factors out members of `CompilerInvocation` that need special handling (initialization or copy constructor), so that `CompilerInvocation` can be implemented as a simple value object.
Currently, the `AnalyzerOpts` member of `CompilerInvocation` violates that setup. This patch extracts the member to `CompilerInvocationBase` and handles it in the copy constructor the same way other it handles other members.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99568
clang Tooling, and more specifically Refactoring/Rename, have support
code to extract source locations given a Unified Symbol Resolution set.
This support code is used by clang-rename and other tools that might not
be in the tree.
Currently field designated initializer are not supported.
So, renaming S::a to S::b in this code:
S s = { .a = 10 };
will not extract the field designated initializer for a (the 'a' after the
dot).
This patch adds support for field designated initialized to
RecursiveSymbolVisitor and RenameLocFinder that is used in
createRenameAtomicChanges.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100310
The function did not handle every case. In some cases this
caused assertion failure.
After the fix the function returns DependentTy if the exact
return type can not be determined.
It seems that clang itself does not call the function in the
affected cases but some checker or other code may call it.
Reviewed By: hokein
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95244
Fixes bug http://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49000.
This patch allows Clang-Tidy checks to do
diag(X->getLocation(), "text") << Y->getSourceRange();
and get the highlight of `Y` as expected:
warning: text [blah-blah]
xxx(something)
^ ~~~~~~~~~
Reviewed-By: aaron.ballman, njames93
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D98635
Required for capturing base specifier in matchers:
`cxxRecordDecl(hasDirectBase(cxxBaseSpecifier().bind("base")))`
Reviewed By: steveire, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69218
The major change here is to index macro occurrences in more places than
before, specifically
* In non-expansion references such as `#if`, `#ifdef`, etc.
* When the macro is a reference to a builtin macro such as __LINE__.
* When using the preprocessor state instead of callbacks, we now include
all definition locations and undefinitions instead of just the latest
one (which may also have had the wrong location previously).
* When indexing an existing module file (.pcm), we now include module
macros, and we no longer report unrelated preprocessor macros during
indexing the module, which could have caused duplication.
Additionally, we now correctly obey the system symbol filter for macros,
so by default in system headers only definition/undefinition occurrences
are reported, but it can be configured to report references as well if
desired.
Extends FileIndexRecord to support occurrences of macros. Since the
design of this type is to keep a single list of entities organized by
source location, we incorporate macros into the existing DeclOccurrence
struct.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99758
In D84673, we started using `DiagnosticsEngine` during command-line parsing in more contexts.
When using `ToolInvocation`, a custom `DiagnosticsConsumer` can be specified and it might expect `SourceManager` to be present on the emitted diagnostics.
This patch ensures the `SourceManager` is set up in such scenarios.
Test authored by Jordan Rupprecht.
Reviewed By: rupprecht
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99414
The '-plugin-arg' command-line arguments are not being generated in deterministic order.
This patch changes the storage from `std::unordered_map` to `std::map` to enforce ordering.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99879
(PR49478)
As ArrayType::ArrayType mentioned in clang/lib/AST/Type.cpp, a
DependentSizedArrayType might not have size expression because it it
used as the type of a dependent array of unknown bound with a dependent
braced initializer.
Thus, I add a check when mangling array of that type.
This should fix https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49478
Reviewed By: Richard Smith - zygoloid
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99407
All three cases were imported correctly.
For BlockDecls, correctly means that we don't support importing them, thus an
error is the expected behaviour.
- BlockDecls were not yet covered. I know that they are not imported but the
test at least documents it.
- Default values for ParmVarDecls were also uncovered.
- Importing bitfield FieldDecls were imported correctly.
Reviewed By: martong, shafik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99576
This patch fixes left pointer alignment after pointer qualifiers of
operators. Currently "operator void const*()" is formatted with a space between
const and pointer despite setting PointerAlignment to Left.
AFAICS this has been broken since clang-format 10.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99458
In JavaScript, `- -1;` is legal syntax, the language allows unary minus.
However the two tokens must not collapse together: `--1` is prefix
decrement, i.e. different syntax.
Before:
- -1; ==> --1;
After:
- -1; ==> - -1;
This change makes no attempt to format this "nicely", given by all
likelihood this represents a programming mistake by the user, or odd
generated code.
The check is not guarded by language: this appears to be a problem in
Java as well, and will also be beneficial when formatting syntactically
incorrect C++ (e.g. during editing).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99495