the output size is greater than the register size. No truncation occurs with
those. Reword warning to make it clearer what's the problem is.
llvm-svn: 169054
module, provide a module import stack similar to what we would get for
an include stack, e.g.,
In module 'DependsOnModule' imported from build-fail-notes.m:4:
In module 'Module' imported from DependsOnModule.framework/Headers/DependsOnModule.h:1:
Inputs/Module.framework/Headers/Module.h:15:12: note: previous definition is here
@interface Module
<rdar://problem/12696425>
llvm-svn: 169042
building module 'Foo' imported from..." notes (the same we we provide
"In file included from..." notes) in the diagnostic, so that we know
how this module got included in the first place. This is part of
<rdar://problem/12696425>.
llvm-svn: 169021
If 'x' is a temporary, x.getAs<Foo>() may not be safe if the result is
supposed to persist (if its address is stored somewhere). Since getAs()
can return a null value, the result is almost always stored into a
variable, which of course is not safe when the original value dies.
This has caused several bugs with GCC's "Temporaries May Vanish Sooner Than
You Expect" optimization; in C++11 builds, at least, we'll be able to catch
these problems now.
I would suggest applying these to other getAs() and get*As() methods
(castAs is "better" because sometimes the result is used directly, which
means the temporary will still be live), but these two have both caused
trouble in the analyzer in the past.
llvm-svn: 168967
import of that module elsewhere, don't try to build the module again:
it won't work, and the experience is quite dreadful. We track this
information somewhat globally, shared among all of the related
CompilerInvocations used to build modules on-the-fly, so that a
particular Clang instance will only try to build a given module once.
Fixes <rdar://problem/12552849>.
llvm-svn: 168961
1) init-order sanitizer: initialization-order checker.
Status: usable, but may produce false positives w/o proper blacklisting.
2) use-after-return sanitizer
Status: implemented, but heavily understed.
Should be optional, as it significanlty slows program down.
3) use-after-scope sanitizer
Status: in progress.
llvm-svn: 168950
Among other differences, GCC accepts
typedef int IA[];
typedef int A10[10];
static A10 *f(void);
static IA *f(void);
void g(void) {
(void)sizeof(*f());
}
but clang used to reject it with:
invalid application of 'sizeof' to an incomplete type 'IA' (aka 'int []')
The intention of c99's 6.2.7 seems to be that we should use the composite type
and accept as gcc does.
Doing the type merging required some extra fixes:
* Use the type from the function type in initializations, even if an parameter
is available.
* Fix the merging of the noreturn attribute in function types.
* Make CodeGen handle the fact that an parameter type can be different from
the corresponding type in the function type.
llvm-svn: 168895
performed, to determine whether that special member is deleted or constexpr.
That overload resolution process can in turn trigger the instantiation of a
template, which can do anything, including triggering the declaration of that
very same special member function. When this happens, do not try to recursively
declare the special member -- that's impossible. Instead, only try to realise
the truth. There is no special member.
llvm-svn: 168847
in deciding a copy/dispose field is needed in a byref structure
and when generating the copy/dispose helpers. In certain
cases, these fields were being added but no copy/dispose was
being generated. This was uncovered in ARC, but not in MRR.
// rdar://12759433
llvm-svn: 168825
constructor/assignment operator with a const-qualified parameter type. The
prior method for determining this incorrectly used overload resolution.
llvm-svn: 168775
allocated using the allocator associated with an ASTContext.
Use this inside CXXRecordDecl::DefinitionData instead of an UnresolvedSet to
avoid a potential memory leak.
rdar://12761275
llvm-svn: 168771
a special member" diagnostic from warning to error, and fix the cases where it
produced diagnostics with incorrect wording.
We don't support this as an extension, and we ban it even in C++98 mode. This
breaks too much (for instance, the ABI-specified calling convention for a type
can change if it acquires a copy constructor through the addition of a default
argument).
llvm-svn: 168769
r128056 moved PrettyStackTraceParserEntry construction from Parser.h
to ParseAST.cpp, so there's no need to keep this class in a header.
llvm-svn: 168731
This change list implemented logic that explicitly detects several combinations of locations where C++11 attribute
specifiers might be incorrectly placed within a class specifier. Previously we emit generic diagnostics like
"expected identifier" for such cases; now we emit specific diagnostic against the misplaced attributes, this also
fixed a bug in old code where attributes appear at legitimate locations were incorrectly rejected.
Thanks to Richard Smith for reviewing!
llvm-svn: 168626
and defined within the current instantiation, but which are not part of the
current instantiation. Previously, it would look at bases which could be
specialized separately from the current template.
llvm-svn: 168477
Previously, this flag to CC1 was never exposed at the clang driver
layer, and if you happened to enable it (by being on Android or GCC 4.7
platform), you couldn't *disable* it, because there was no 'no' variant.
The whole thing was confusingly implemented.
Now, the target-specific flag processing gets the driver arg list, and
we use standard hasFlag with a default based on the GCC version and/or
Android platform. The user can still pass the 'no-' variant to forcibly
disable the flag, or pass the positive variant to clang itself to enable
the flag.
The test has also been substantially cleaned up and extended to cover
these use cases.
llvm-svn: 168473
There were numerous issues here that were all entangled, and so I've
tried to do a general simplification of the logic.
1) The logic was mimicing actual GCC bugs, rather than "features". These
have been fixed in trunk GCC, and this fixes Clang as well. Notably,
the logic was always intended to be last-match-wins like any other
flag.
2) The logic for handling '-mdynamic-no-pic' was preposterously unclear.
It also allowed the use of this flag on non-Darwin platforms where it
has no actual meaning. Now this option is handled directly based on
tests of how llvm-gcc behaves, and it is only supported on Darwin.
3) The APIs for the Driver's ToolChains had the implementation ugliness
of dynamic-no-pic leaking through them. They also had the
implementation details of the LLVM relocation model flag names
leaking through.
4) The actual results of passing these flags was incorrect on Darwin in
many cases. For example, Darwin *always* uses PIC level 2 if it uses
in PIC level, and Darwin *always* uses PIC on 64-bit regardless of
the flags specified, including -fPIE. Darwin never compiles in PIE
mode, but it can *link* in PIE mode.
5) Also, PIC was not always being enabled even when PIE was. This isn't
a supported mode at all and may have caused some fallout in builds
with complex PIC and PIE interactions.
The result is (I hope) cleaner and clearer for readers. I've also left
comments and tests about some of the truly strage behavior that is
observed on Darwin platforms. We have no real testing of Windows
platforms and PIC, but I don't have the tools handy to figure that out.
Hopefully others can beef up our testing here.
Unfortunately, I can't test this for every platform. =/ If folks have
dependencies on these flags that aren't covered by tests, they may
break. I've audited and ensured that all the changes in behavior of the
existing tests are intentional and good. In particular I've tried to
make sure the Darwin behavior (which is more suprising than the Linux
behavior) also matches that of 'gcc' on my mac.
llvm-svn: 168297
With this, ARCMT tests would not crash on certain hosts with g++ -O2, eg. cygwin g++-4.5.3.
r160404 crashed mingw32-g++-4.4.0. I guess method's pointer in conditional expression could not be handled.
llvm-svn: 168295
common LexStringLiteral function. In doing so, some consistency problems have
been ironed out (e.g. where the first token in the string literal was lexed
with macro expansion, but subsequent ones were not) and also an erroneous
diagnostic has been corrected.
LexStringLiteral is complemented by a FinishLexStringLiteral function which
can be used in the situation where the first token of the string literal has
already been lexed.
llvm-svn: 168266
Separate out the notions of 'has a trivial special member' and 'has a
non-trivial special member', and use them appropriately. These are not
opposites of one another (there might be no special member, or in C++11 there
might be a trivial one and a non-trivial one). The CXXRecordDecl predicates
continue to produce incorrect results, but do so in fewer cases now, and
they document the cases where they might be wrong.
No functionality changes are intended here (they will come when the predicates
start producing the right answers...).
llvm-svn: 168119
This allows us to properly remove dead bindings at the end of the top-level
stack frame, using the ReturnStmt, if there is one, to keep the return value
live. This in turn removes the need for a check::EndPath callback in leak
checkers.
This does cause some changes in the path notes for leak checkers. Previously,
a leak would be reported at the location of the closing brace in a function.
Now, it gets reported at the last statement. This matches the way leaks are
currently reported for inlined functions, but is less than ideal for both.
llvm-svn: 168066
to a cc1 -fencode-extended-block-signature and pass it
to cc1 and recognize this option to produce extended block
type signature. // rdar://12109031
llvm-svn: 168063
more sense anyway - it determines how expressions are codegen'd. It also ensures
that -ffp-contract=fast has the intended effect when compiling LLVM IR.
llvm-svn: 168027
We do this by using the "most recent" good location: if a synthesized
function 'A' calls another function 'B', the path notes for the call to 'B'
will be placed at the same location as the path note for calling 'A'.
Similarly, the call to 'A' will have a note saying "Entered call from...",
and now we just don't emit that (since the user doesn't have a body to look
at anyway).
Previously, we were doing this for the "Calling..." notes, but not for the
"Entered call from..." or "Returning to caller". This caused a crash when
the path entered and then exiting a call within a synthesized body.
<rdar://problem/12657843>
llvm-svn: 168019
working with preprocessed testcases. This causes source locations in
diagnostics to point at the spelling location instead of the presumed location,
while still keeping the semantic effects of the line directives (entering and
leaving system-header mode, primarily).
llvm-svn: 168004
pointer, otherwise we will double free it when ExpressionEvaluationContextRecord
gets copied.
Fixes crash in rdar://12645424 & http://llvm.org/PR14252
llvm-svn: 167946
the related comma pasting extension.
In certain cases, we used to get two diagnostics for what is essentially one
extension. This change suppresses the first diagnostic in certain cases
where we know we're going to print the second diagnostic. The
diagnostic is redundant, and it can't be suppressed in the definition
of the macro because it points at the use of the macro, so we want to
avoid printing it if possible.
The implementation works by detecting constructs which look like comma
pasting at the time of the definition of the macro; this information
is then used when the macro is used. (We can't actually detect
whether we're using the comma pasting extension until the macro is
actually used, but we can detecting constructs which will be comma
pasting if the varargs argument is elided.)
<rdar://problem/12292192>
llvm-svn: 167907
This corrects the mangling and linkage of classes (& their member functions) in
cases like this:
struct foo {
struct {
void func() { ... }
} x;
};
we were accidentally giving this nested unnamed struct 'no' linkage where it
should've had the linkage of the outer class. The mangling was incorrecty too,
mangling as TU-wide unnamed type mangling of $_X rather than class-scoped
mangling of UtX_.
This also fixes -Wunused-member-function which would incorrectly diagnose
'func' as unused due to it having no linkage & thus appearing to be TU-local
when in fact it might be correctly used in another TU.
Similar mangling should be applied to function local classes in similar cases
but I've deferred that for a subsequent patch.
Review/discussion by Richard Smith, John McCall, & especially Eli Friedman.
llvm-svn: 167906
positions of Objective-C methods.
It is possible to recover a lot of type information about
Objective-C methods from the reflective metadata for their
implementations. This information is not rich when it
comes to struct types, however, and it is not possible to
produce a type in the debugger's round-tripped AST which
will really do anything useful during type-checking.
Therefore we allow __unknown_anytype in these positions,
which essentially disables type-checking for that argument.
We infer the parameter type to be the unqualified type of
the argument expression unless that expression is an
explicit cast, in which case it becomes the type-as-written
of that cast.
rdar://problem/12565338
llvm-svn: 167896
applied to CXXRecordDecls, where functions with that return type will
inherit the warn_unused_result attribute.
Also includes a tiny fix (with no discernable behavior change for
existing code) to re-sync AttributeDeclKind enum and
err_attribute_wrong_decl_type with warn_attribute_wrong_decl_type since
the enum is used with both diagnostic messages to chose the correct
description.
llvm-svn: 167783
The 'a', 'c', and 'd' constraints on i386 mean a 32-bit register. We cannot
place a 64-bit value into the 32-bit register. Error out instead of causing the
compiler to spew general badness.
<rdar://problem/12415959>
llvm-svn: 167717
When recursively visiting the generated matches, the aggregated bindings need
to be copied during the recursion. Otherwise, we they might not be properly
overwritten (which is shown by the test), or there might be bound nodes present
that were bound on a different matching branch.
Review: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D112
llvm-svn: 167695
- New options '-mrtm'/'-mno-rtm' are added to enable/disable RTM feature
- Builtin macro '__RTM__' is defined if RTM feature is enabled
- RTM intrinsic header is added and introduces 3 new intrinsics, namely
'_xbegin', '_xend', and '_xabort'.
- 3 new builtins are added to keep compatible with gcc, namely
'__builtin_ia32_xbegin', '__builtin_ia32_xend', and '__builtin_ia32_xabort'.
- Test cases for pre-defined macro and new intrinsic codegen are added.
llvm-svn: 167665
would have diagnosed this at instantiation time anyway, if only we
didn't hang on all of these test cases. Fixes <rdar://problem/12629723>
llvm-svn: 167651
C++11 3.3.3/2 "A parameter name shall not be redeclared in the outermost block
of the function definition nor in the outermost block of any handler associated
with a function-try-block."
It's not totally clear to me whether the "FIXME" case is covered by this, but
Richard Smith thinks it probably should be. It's just a bit more involved to
fix that case.
llvm-svn: 167650
Spent longer than reasonable looking for a nice way to test this & decided to
give up for now. Open to suggestions/requests. Richard Smith suggested adding
something to ASTMatchers but it wasn't readily apparent how to test this with
that.
llvm-svn: 167507
allowing a module map to be placed one level above the '.framework'
directories to specify that all .frameworks within that directory can
be inferred as framework modules. One can also specifically exclude
frameworks known not to work.
This makes explicit (and more restricted) behavior modules have had
"forever", where *any* .framework was assumed to be able to be built
as a module. That's not necessarily true, so we white-list directories
(with exclusions) when those directories have been audited.
llvm-svn: 167482
We don't support any C++11 attributes that appertain to declaration specifiers so reject
the attributes in parser until we support them; this also conforms to what g++ 4.8 is doing.
llvm-svn: 167481
-fno-address-sanitizer, -fthread-sanitizer, -fno-thread-sanitizer, and
-fcatch-undefined-behavior as deprecated: produce a warning if they are used
pointing to the corresponding -fsanitize= option. In passing add the missing
'-' to some diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 167429
- The whole {File,Source}Manager is built around wanting to pre-determine the
size of files, so we can't fit this in naturally. Instead, we handle it like
we do STDIN, where we just replace the main file contents upfront.
llvm-svn: 167419
checks to enable. Remove frontend support for -fcatch-undefined-behavior,
-faddress-sanitizer and -fthread-sanitizer now that they don't do anything.
llvm-svn: 167413
-fno-sanitize=<sanitizers> argument to driver. These allow ASan, TSan, and the
various UBSan checks to be enabled and disabled separately. Right now, the
different modes can't be combined, but the intention is that combining UBSan
and the other sanitizers will be permitted in the near future.
Currently, the UBSan checks will all be enabled if any of them is; that will be
fixed by the next patch.
llvm-svn: 167411
As Anna pointed out, ProgramStateTrait.h is a relatively obscure header,
and checker writers may not know to look there to add their own custom
state.
The base macro that specializes the template remains in ProgramStateTrait.h
(REGISTER_TRAIT_WITH_PROGRAMSTATE), which allows the analyzer core to keep
using it.
llvm-svn: 167385
This will simplify checkers that need to register for leaks. Currently,
they have to register for both: check dead and check end of path.
I've modified the SymbolReaper to consider everything on the stack dead
if the input StackLocationContext is 0.
(This is a bit disruptive, so I'd like to flash out all the issues
asap.)
llvm-svn: 167352
These are CallEvent-equivalents of helpers already accessible in
CheckerContext, as part of making it easier for new checkers to be written
using CallEvent rather than raw CallExprs.
llvm-svn: 167338
Add FIXMEs for the traits visible from multiple translation units.
Currently the macros hide their key types in an anonymous namespace.
llvm-svn: 167277
Also, move the REGISTER_*_WITH_PROGRAMSTATE macros to ProgramStateTrait.h.
This doesn't get rid of /all/ explicit uses of ProgramStatePartialTrait,
but it does get a lot of them.
llvm-svn: 167276
Often users of the ASTMatchers want to add tasks that are done once per
translation unit, for example, cleaning up caches. Combined with the
interception point for the end of source file one can add to the factory
creation, this covers the cases we've seen users need.
llvm-svn: 167271
Specifically, if adding a constraint makes the current system infeasible,
assume the constraint is false, instead of attempting to add its negation.
In +Asserts builds we will still assert that at least one state is feasible.
Patch by Ryan Govostes!
llvm-svn: 167195
The stat cache became essentially useless ever since we started
validating all file entries in the PCH.
But the motivating reason for removing it now is that it also affected
correctness in this situation:
-You have a header without include guards (using "#pragma once" or #import)
-When creating the PCH:
-The same header is referenced in an #include with different filename cases.
-In the PCH, of course, we record only one file entry for the header file
-But we cache in the PCH file the stat info for both filename cases
-Then the source files are updated and the header file is updated in a way that
its size and modification time are the same but its inode changes
-When using the PCH:
-We validate the headers, we check that header file and we create a file entry with its current inode
-There's another #include with a filename with different case than the previously created file entry
-In order to get its stat info we go through the cached stat info of the PCH and we receive the old inode
-because of the different inodes, we think they are different files so we go ahead and include its contents.
Removing the stat cache will potentially break clients that are attempting to use the stat cache
as a way of avoiding having the actual input files available. If that use case is important, patches are welcome
to bring it back in a way that will actually work correctly (i.e., emit a PCH that is self-contained, coping with
literal strings, line/column computations, etc.).
This fixes rdar://5502805
llvm-svn: 167172
diagnostics script.
This addresses the FIXME pertaining to quoted arguments. We also delineate
between those flags that have an argument (e.g., -D macro, -MF file) and
those that do not (e.g., -M, -MM, -MG). Finally, we add the -dwarf-debug-flags
to the list of flags to be removed.
rdar://12329974
llvm-svn: 167152
Previously, every call to a ConstraintManager's isNull would do a full
assumeDual to test feasibility. Now, ConstraintManagers can override
checkNull if they have a cheaper way to do the same thing.
RangeConstraintManager can do this in less than half the work.
<rdar://problem/12608209>
llvm-svn: 167138
This implements has(), hasDescendant(), forEach() and
forEachDescendant() for NestedNameSpecifier and NestedNameSpecifierLoc
matchers.
Review: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D86
llvm-svn: 167017
The ImmutableMap should not be the key into the GDM map as there could
be several entries with the same map type. Thanks, Jordan.
This complicates the usage of the macro a bit. When we want to retrieve
the whole map, we need to use another name. Currently, I set it to be
Name ## Ty as in "type of the map we are storing in the ProgramState".
llvm-svn: 167000
we had the -ccc-clang-cxx and -ccc-no-clang-cxx options to force them
on or off for testing.
Clang c++ support is now production quality and these options are dead.
llvm-svn: 166986
Previously, the warning would erroneously fire on this:
for (Test *a in someArray)
use(a.weakProp);
...because it looks like the same property is being accessed over and over.
However, clearly this is not the case. We now ignore loops like this for
local variables, but continue to warn if the base object is a parameter,
global variable, or instance variable, on the assumption that these are
not repeatedly usually assigned to within loops.
Additionally, do-while loops where the condition is 'false' are not really
loops at all; usually they're just used for semicolon-swallowing macros or
using "break" like "goto".
<rdar://problem/12578785&12578849>
llvm-svn: 166942
Our one basic suppression heuristic is to assume that functions do not
usually return NULL. However, when one of the arguments is NULL it is
suddenly much more likely that NULL is a valid return value. In this case,
we don't suppress the report here, but we do attach /another/ visitor to
go find out if this NULL argument also comes from an inlined function's
error path.
This new behavior, controlled by the 'avoid-suppressing-null-argument-paths'
analyzer-config option, is turned off by default. Turning it on produced
two false positives and no new true positives when running over LLVM/Clang.
This is one of the possible refinements to our suppression heuristics.
<rdar://problem/12350829>
llvm-svn: 166941
Additionally, don't collect PostStore nodes -- they are often used in
path diagnostics.
Previously, we tried to track null arguments in the same way as any other
null values, but in many cases the necessary nodes had already been
collected (a memory optimization in ExplodedGraph). Now, we fall back to
using the value of the argument at the time of the call, which may not
always match the actual contents of the region, but often will.
This is a precursor to improving our suppression heuristic.
<rdar://problem/12350829>
llvm-svn: 166940
This code checks the ASM string to see if the output size is able to fit within
the variable specified as the output. For instance, scalar-to-vector conversions
may not really work. It's on by default, but can be turned off with a flag if
you think you know what you're doing.
This is placed under a flag ('-Wasm-operand-widths') and flag group ('-Wasm').
<rdar://problem/12284092>
llvm-svn: 166737