Instead of selectively storing some changes and directly generating
replacements for others, we now notify the WhitespaceManager of the
whitespace before every token (and optionally with more changes inside
tokens).
Then, we run over all whitespace in the very end in original source
order, where we have all information available to correctly align
comments and escaped newlines.
The future direction is to pull more of the comment alignment
implementation that is now in the BreakableToken into the
WhitespaceManager.
This fixes a bug when aligning comments or escaped newlines in unwrapped
lines that are handled out of order:
#define A \
f({ \
g(); \
});
... now gets correctly layouted.
llvm-svn: 182467
clang-format was a bit too aggressive when trying to keep labels and
values on the same line.
Before:
llvm::outs()
<< "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa: " << aaaaaaaaaaaaa(
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa);
After:
llvm::outs() << "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa: "
<< aaaaaaaaaaaaa(aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa);
llvm-svn: 182458
This only affects styles that prevent bin packing. There, a break after
a template declaration also forced a line break after the function name.
Before:
template <class SomeType, class SomeOtherType>
SomeType
SomeFunction(SomeType Type, SomeOtherType OtherType) {}
After:
template <class SomeType, class SomeOtherType>
SomeType SomeFunction(SomeType Type, SomeOtherType OtherType) {}
This fixes llvm.org/PR16072.
llvm-svn: 182457
If clang-format is confronted with long and deeply nested lines (e.g.
complex static initializers or function calls), it can currently try too
hard to find the optimal solution and never finish. The reason is that
the memoization does not work effectively for deeply nested lines.
This patch removes an earlier workaround and instead opts for
accepting a non-optimal solution in rare cases. However, it only does
so only in cases where it would have to analyze an excessive number of
states (currently set to 10000 - the most complex line in Format.cpp
requires ~800 states) so this should not change the behavior in a
relevant way.
llvm-svn: 182449
The crash is triggered by the newly added option (-analyzer-config report-in-main-source-file=true) introduced in r182058.
Note, ideally, we’d like to report the issue within the main source file here as well.
For now, just do not crash.
llvm-svn: 182445
*that* easy...
Try a bit harder to disambiguate. This is mostly straightforward, but for
=-style initializers, we actually need to know where an expression ends:
[foo = bar baz]
is a message send, whereas
[foo = bar + baz]
is a lambda-introducer. Handle this by parsing the expression eagerly, and
replacing it with an annotation token. By chance, we use the *exact same*
parsing rules in both cases (except that we need to assume we're inside a
message send for the parse, to turn off various forms of inapplicable
error recovery).
llvm-svn: 182432
common function. The C++1y contextual implicit conversion rules themselves are
not yet implemented, however.
This also fixes a subtle bug where template instantiation context notes were
dropped for diagnostics coming from conversions for integral constant
expressions -- we were implicitly slicing a SemaDiagnosticBuilder into a
DiagnosticBuilder when producing these diagnostics, and losing their context
notes in the process.
llvm-svn: 182406
With this patch, clang-format will try to keep the cursor at the
original code position in editor integrations (implemented for emacs and
vim). This means, after formatting, clang-format will try to keep the
cursor on the same character of the same token.
llvm-svn: 182373
attach, rather than merging all comments on the declaration chain. This gives a
more faithful dump, and has the side benefit of unbreaking uses of dump() from
within AST deserialization (where the redeclaration chain may not be sane).
llvm-svn: 182350
This resolves the last of the PR14606 failures in the GDB 7.5 test
suite. (but there are still unresolved issues in the imported_decl case
- we need to implement optional/lazy decls for functions & variables
like we already do for types)
llvm-svn: 182329
protocols that declare the same property of incompatible
types, issue a warning when class implementation synthesizes
the property. // rdar://13075400
llvm-svn: 182316
While the C++ standard requires that this lookup take place only at the
definition point of a virtual destructor (C++11 [class.dtor]p12), the
Microsoft ABI may require the compiler to emit a deleting destructor
for any virtual destructor declared in the TU, including ones without
a body, requiring an operator delete() lookup for every virtual
destructor declaration. The result of the lookup should be the same
no matter which declaration is used (except in weird corner cases).
This change will cause us to reject some valid TUs in Microsoft ABI
mode, e.g.:
struct A {
void operator delete(void *);
};
struct B {
void operator delete(void *);
};
struct C : A, B {
virtual ~C();
};
As Richard points out, every virtual function declared in a TU
(including this virtual destructor) is odr-used, so it must be defined
in any program which declares it, or the program is ill formed, no
diagnostic required. Because we know that any definition of this
destructor will cause the lookup to fail, the compiler can choose to
issue a diagnostic here.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D822
llvm-svn: 182270
selectany only applies to externally visible global variables. It has
the effect of making the data weak_odr.
The MSDN docs suggest that unused definitions can only be dropped at
linktime, so Clang uses weak instead of linkonce. MSVC optimizes away
references to constant selectany data, so it must assume that there is
only one definition, hence weak_odr.
Reviewers: espindola
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D814
llvm-svn: 182266
This reverts commit r181947 (git d2990ce56a16050cac0d7937ec9919ff54c6df62 )
This addresses one of the two issues identified in r181947, ensuring
that types imported via using declarations only result in a declaration
being emitted for the type, not a definition. The second issue (emitting
using declarations that are unused) is hopefully an acceptable increase
as the real fix for this would be a bit difficult (probably at best we
could record which using directives were involved in lookups - but may
not have been the result of the lookup).
This also ensures that DW_TAG_imported_declarations (& directives) are
not emitted in line-tables-only mode as well as ensuring that typedefs
only require/emit declarations (rather than definitions) for referenced
types.
llvm-svn: 182231
imply -fno-math-errno if the user passed -fno-fast-math OR -ffast-math,
regardless of in which order and regardless of the tool chain default.
I've fixed this to follow the logic:
1) If the last dominating flag is -fno-math-errno, -ffast-math, or
-Ofast, then do not use math-errno.
2) If the last dominating flag is an explicit -fmath-errno, do use
math-errno.
3) Otherwise, use the toolchain default.
This, for example, allows the flag sequence
'-ffast-math ... -fno-fast-math' with no mention of '-fmath-errno' or
'-fno-math-errno' to preserve the toolchain default. Most notably, this
should prevent users trying to disable fast-math optimizations on Darwin
and BSD platforms from simultaneously enabling (pointless) -fmath-errno.
I've enhanced the tests (after more reorganization) to cover this and
other weird permutations of flags and targets.
llvm-svn: 182203
Constructs like PseudoObjectExpr, where an expression can appear more than
once in the AST, use OpaqueValueExprs to guard against inadvertent
re-processing of the shared expression during AST traversal. The most
common form of this is to share expressions between the syntactic
"as-written" form of, say, an Objective-C property access 'obj.prop', and
the underlying "semantic" form '[obj prop]'.
However, some constructs can produce OpaqueValueExprs that don't appear in
the syntactic form at all; in these cases the ParentMap wasn't ever traversing
the children of these expressions. This patch fixes that by checking to see
if an OpaqueValueExpr's child has ever been traversed before. There's also a
bit of reset logic when visiting a PseudoObjectExpr to handle the case of
updating the ParentMap, which some external clients depend on.
This still isn't exactly the right fix because we probably want the parent
of the OpaqueValueExpr itself to be its location in the syntactic form if
it's syntactic and the PseudoObjectExpr or BinaryConditionalOperator itself
if it's semantic. Whe I originally wrote the code to do this, I didn't realize
that OpaqueValueExprs themselves are shared in the AST, not just their source
expressions. This patch doesn't change the existing behavior so as not to
break anything inadvertently relying on it; we'll come back to this later.
llvm-svn: 182187
Ted and I spent a long time discussing this today and found out that neither
the existing code nor the new code was doing what either of us thought it
was, which is never good. The good news is we found a much simpler way to
fix the motivating test case (an ObjCSubscriptExpr).
This reverts r182083, but pieces of it will come back in subsequent commits.
llvm-svn: 182185
assert_exclusive_lock and assert_shared_lock. These attributes are used to
mark functions that dynamically check (i.e. assert) that a lock is held.
llvm-svn: 182170