diagnostic count.
If a DiagnosticConsumer sub-class overwrites IncludeInDiagnosticCounts,
this should change diagnostic counts. However, it currently also
influences Diag.ErrorOccurred, which in turn influences the behavior of
parsing and semantic analysis (in a way that can make it crash).
llvm-svn: 164824
have PPCallbacks::InclusionDirective pass the character range for the filename quotes or brackets.
rdar://11113134 & http://llvm.org/PR13880
llvm-svn: 164743
Xcode-style clang builds only support Xcode's architectures, so mips
isn't available and the driver tries to use gcc instead. cc1 will go
ahead and do -fsyntax-only for any platform it knows about even if it
can't actually compile.
llvm-svn: 164742
This checker is annotation driven. It checks that the annotated
invalidation method accesses all ivars of the enclosing objects that are
objects of type, which in turn contains an invalidation method.
This is driven by
__attribute((annotation("objc_instance_variable_invalidator")).
llvm-svn: 164716
where an attribute is attached to a forward declaration of a template function,
and refers to parameters of that declaration, but is then inherited by the
definition of that function. When the definition is instantiated, the
parameter references need to be remapped.
llvm-svn: 164710
This also adds a definition for uint64_t, which was causing build failures
on some platforms. (I'm actually surprised this didn't happen on more
builders, but maybe the search paths are different.)
llvm-svn: 164706
typeid (and a couple other non-standard places where we can transform an
unevaluated expression into an evaluated expression) is special
because it introduces an an expression evaluation context,
which conflicts with the mechanism to compute the current
lambda mangling context. PR12123.
I would appreciate if someone would double-check that we get the mangling
correct with this patch.
llvm-svn: 164658
enough information so we can mangle them correctly in cases involving
dependent parameter types. (This specifically impacts cases involving
null pointers and cases involving parameters of reference type.)
Fix the mangler to use this information instead of trying to scavenge
it out of the parameter declaration.
<rdar://problem/12296776>.
llvm-svn: 164656
This makes the behavior clearer concerning literals with the maximum
number of digits. For a 32-bit example, 4,000,000,000 is a valid uint32_t,
but 5,000,000,000 is not, so we'd have to count 10-digit decimal numbers
as "unsafe" (meaning we have to check for overflow when parsing them,
just as we would for numbers with 11 digits or higher). This is the same,
only with 64 bits to play with.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 164639
There are very few tests here because SValBuilder is fairly aggressive
about not building SymExprs that we can't evaluate, which saves memory
and CPU but also makes it very much tied to the current constraint
manager. We should probably scale back here and let things decay to
UnknownVal later on.
bitwise-ops.c tests that for the SymExprs we do create, we persist our
assumptions about them. traversal-path-unification.c tests that we do
clean out constraints on arbitrary SymExprs once they have actually died.
llvm-svn: 164623
Previously, we'd just keep constraints around forever, which means we'd
never be able to merge paths that differed only in constraints on dead
symbols.
Because we now allow constraints on symbolic expressions, not just single
symbols, this requires changing SymExpr::symbol_iterator to include
intermediate symbol nodes in its traversal, not just the SymbolData leaf
nodes.
This depends on the previous commit to be correct. Originally applied in
r163444, reverted in r164275, now being re-applied.
llvm-svn: 164622
No tests, but this allows the optimization of removing dead constraints.
We can then add tests that we don't do this prematurely.
<rdar://problem/12333297>
Note: the added FIXME to investigate SymbolRegionValue liveness is
tracked by <rdar://problem/12368183>. This patch does not change the
existing behavior.
llvm-svn: 164621
top-level frameworks can actually be symlinked over to embedded
frameworks, and accessed via the top-level framework's headers. In
this case, we need to determine that the framework was *actually* an
embedded framework, so we can load the appropriate top-level module.
llvm-svn: 164620
Summary: Passes all tests (+ the new one with code completion), but needs a thorough review in part related to modules.
Reviewers: doug.gregor
Reviewed By: alexfh
CC: cfe-commits, rsmith
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D41
llvm-svn: 164610
If an MS-style inline asm is matched to multiple instructions, e.g., with a
a WAIT-prefix, then we need to examine the operands of the last instruction
instruction, not the prefix instruction.
llvm-svn: 164608
specific module (__building_module(modulename)) and to get the name of
the current module as an identifier (__MODULE__).
Used to help headers behave differently when they're being included as
part of building a module. Oh, the irony.
llvm-svn: 164605
Currently Sema/wchar.c fails because WCHAR_T_TYPE is defined as int,
however on ARM wchar_t is unsigned int.
This patch changes that, so this test passes for ARM.
Patch by Joey Gouly!
llvm-svn: 164598
be sure to delete the complete object pointer, not the original
pointer. This is necessary if the base being deleted is at a
non-zero offset in the complete object. This is only required
for objects with virtual destructors because deleting an object
via a base-class subobject when the base does not have a virtual
destructor is undefined behavior.
Noticed while reviewing the last four years of cxx-abi-dev
activity.
llvm-svn: 164597
into the enclosing scope; this is a more accurate model but is
(I believe) unnecessary in my test case due to other flaws.
However, one of those flaws is now intentional: blocks which
appear in return statements can be trivially observed to not
extend in lifetime past the return, and so we can allow a jump
past them. Do the necessary magic in IR-generation to make
this work.
llvm-svn: 164589
function being instantiated. An error recovery codepath was recursively
performing name lookup (and triggering an unbounded stack of template
instantiations which blew out the stack before hitting the depth limit).
Patch by Wei Pan!
llvm-svn: 164586
deprecation attribute ('deprecated', 'availability' or 'unavailable').
This warning is under a separate flag, -Wdocumentation-deprecated-sync, so it
can be turned off easily while leaving other -Wdocumentation warnings on.
llvm-svn: 164467
The issue is that we were calling clang_getCompletionBriefComment
unconditionally. New we check if this function is available before calling it.
llvm-svn: 164464
FunctionDecl that we are importing the FunctionProtoType for, in which case we'll have
infinite recursion when importing.
Initially create a FunctionProtoType with null ExceptionSpecDecl/ExceptionSpecTemplate and
update the type in ASTNodeImporter::VisitFunctionDecl after the FunctionDecl has been created.
llvm-svn: 164450
This is a heuristic intended to greatly reduce the number of false
positives resulting from inlining, particularly inlining of generic,
defensive C++ methods that live in header files. The suppression is
triggered in the cases where we ask to track where a null pointer came
from, and it turns out that the source of the null pointer was an inlined
function call.
This change brings the number of bug reports in LLVM from ~1500 down to
around ~300, a much more manageable number. Yes, some true positives may
be hidden as well, but from what I looked at the vast majority of silenced
reports are false positives, and many of the true issues found by the
analyzer are still reported.
I'm hoping to improve this heuristic further by adding some exceptions
next week (cases in which a bug should still be reported).
llvm-svn: 164449
Before, PathDiagnosticConsumers that did not support actual path output
would (sensibly) cause the generation of the full path to be skipped.
However, BugReporterVisitors may want to see the path in order to mark a
BugReport as invalid.
Now, even for a path generation scheme of 'None' we will still create a
trimmed graph and walk backwards through the bug path, doing no work other
than passing the nodes to the BugReporterVisitors. This isn't cheap, but
it's necessary to properly do suppression when the first path consumer does
not support path notes.
In the future, we should try only generating the path and visitor-provided
path notes once, or at least only creating the trimmed graph once.
llvm-svn: 164447
This is intended to allow visitors to make decisions about whether a
BugReport is likely a false positive. Currently there are no visitors
making use of this feature, so there are no tests.
When a BugReport is marked invalid, the invalidator must provide a key
that identifies the invaliation (intended to be the visitor type and a
context pointer of some kind). This allows us to reverse the decision
later on. Being able to reverse a decision about invalidation gives us more
flexibility, and allows us to formulate conditions like "this report is
invalid UNLESS the original argument is 'foo'". We can use this to
fine-tune our false-positive suppression (coming soon).
llvm-svn: 164446
Rather than saying "Null pointer value stored to 'foo'", we now say
"Passing null pointer value via Nth parameter 'foo'", which is much better.
The note is also now on the argument expression as well, rather than the
entire call.
This paves the way for continuing to track arguments back to their sources.
<rdar://problem/12211490>
llvm-svn: 164444
Like with struct fields, we want to catch cases like this early,
so that we can produce better diagnostics and path notes:
PointObj *p = nil;
int *px = &p->_x; // should warn here
*px = 1;
llvm-svn: 164442
We want to catch cases like this early, so that we can produce better
diagnostics and path notes:
Point *p = 0;
int *px = &p->x; // should warn here
*px = 1;
llvm-svn: 164441
fatal error. Previously, if a fatal error was followed by a diagnostic which
was suppressed due to a SFINAETrap, we'd forget that we'd seen a fatal error.
llvm-svn: 164437
This makes the wording more informative, and consistent with the other
warnings about uninitialized variables.
Also, me and David who reviewed this couldn't figure out why we would
need to do a lookup to get the name of the variable; so just print the
name directly.
llvm-svn: 164366
external visible decls, call DeclContext::setMustBuildLookupTable so that the
"lazy decls" bit of the LookupPtr is set.
Previously, in non-C++, if there were no new declarations causing the "lazy decls" bit
to be set, then DeclContext::lookups_begin() would fail to return the decls from the PCH.
Fixes rdar://12316296.
llvm-svn: 164351
The expression based expansion too often results in IR level optimizations
splitting the intermediate values into separate basic blocks, preventing
the formation of the VBSL instruction as the code author intended. In
particular, LICM would often hoist part of the computation out of a loop.
rdar://11011471
llvm-svn: 164342
their implementations are unavailable. Start by simulating dispatch_sync().
This change is largely a bunch of plumbing around something very simple. We
use AnalysisDeclContext to conjure up a fake function body (using the
current ASTContext) when one does not exist. This is controlled
under the analyzer-config option "faux-bodies", which is off by default.
The plumbing in this patch is largely to pass the necessary machinery
around. CallEvent needs the AnalysisDeclContextManager to get
the function definition, as one may get conjured up lazily.
BugReporter and PathDiagnosticLocation needed to be relaxed to handle
invalid locations, as the conjured body has no real source locations.
We do some primitive recovery in diagnostic generation to generate
some reasonable locations (for arrows and events), but it can be
improved.
llvm-svn: 164339