Previously we were using the static type of the base object to inline
methods, whether virtual or non-virtual. Now, we try to see if the base
object has a known type, and if so ask for its implementation of the method.
llvm-svn: 160094
diagnostics implemented -- see testcases.
I created a new TableGen file for comment diagnostics,
DiagnosticCommentKinds.td, because comment diagnostics don't logically
fit into AST diagnostics file. But I don't feel strongly about it.
This also implements support for self-closing HTML tags in comment
lexer and parser (for example, <br />).
In order to issue precise diagnostics CommentSema needs to know the
declaration the comment is attached to. There is no easy way to find a decl by
comment, so we match comments and decls in lockstep: after parsing one
declgroup we check if we have any new, not yet attached comments. If we do --
then we do the usual comment-finding process.
It is interesting that this automatically handles trailing comments.
We pick up not only comments that precede the declaration, but also
comments that *follow* the declaration -- thanks to the lookahead in
the lexer: after parsing the declgroup we've consumed the semicolon
and looked ahead through comments.
Added -Wdocumentation-html flag for semantic HTML errors to allow the user to
disable only HTML warnings (but not HTML parse errors, which we emit as
warnings in -Wdocumentation).
llvm-svn: 160078
as "volatile", meaning there's a high enough chance that they may
change while we are trying to use them.
This flag is only enabled by libclang.
Currently "volatile" source files will be stat'ed immediately
before opening them, because the file size stat info
may not be accurate since when we got it (e.g. from the PCH).
This avoids crashes when trying to reference mmap'ed memory
from a file whose size is not what we expect.
Note that there's still a window for a racing issue to occur
but the window for it should be way smaller than before.
We can consider later on to avoid mmap completely on such files.
rdar://11612916
llvm-svn: 160074
This is accomplished by making VerifyDiagnosticsConsumer a CommentHandler,
which then only reads the -verify directives that are actually in live
blocks of code. It also makes it simpler to handle -verify directives that
appear in header files, though we still have to manually reparse some files
depending on how they are generated.
This requires some test changes. In particular, all PCH tests now have their
-verify directives outside the "header" portion of the file, using the @line
syntax added in r159978. Other tests have been modified mostly to make it
clear what is being tested, and to prevent polluting the expected output with
the directives themselves.
Patch by Andy Gibbs! (with slight modifications)
The new Frontend/verify-* tests exercise the functionality of this commit,
as well as r159978, r159979, and r160053 (Andy's other -verify enhancements).
llvm-svn: 160068
Previously we'd halt at the fatal error as expected, but not actually emit
any -verify-related diagnostics. This lets us catch cases that emit a
/different/ fatal error from the one we expected.
This is implemented by adding a "force emit" mode to DiagnosticBuilder, which
will cause diagnostics to immediately be emitted regardless of current
suppression. Needless to say this should probably be used /very/ sparingly.
Patch by Andy Gibbs! Tests for all of Andy's -verify patches coming soon.
llvm-svn: 160053
there's something going on there. Remove the unconditional line entry
and only add one if we're emitting cleanups (any other statements
would be handled normally).
Fixes rdar://9199234
llvm-svn: 160033
This is probably not so useful yet because it is not path-sensitive, though
it does try to show inlining with indentation.
This also adds a dump() method to CallEvent, which should be useful for
debugging.
llvm-svn: 160030
C++ method calls and C function calls both appear as CallExprs in the AST.
This was causing crashes for an object that had a 'free' method.
<rdar://problem/11822244>
llvm-svn: 160029
Also contains a number of tweaks to inlining that are necessary
for constructors and destructors. (I have this enabled on a private
branch, but it is very much unstable.)
llvm-svn: 160023
In order to accomplish this, we now build the callee's stack frame
as part of the CallEnter node, rather than the subsequent BlockEdge node.
This should not have any effect on perceived behavior or diagnostics.
This makes it safe to re-enable inlining of member overloaded operators.
llvm-svn: 160022
While this work is still fairly tentative (destructors are still left out of
the CFG by default), we now handle destructors in the same way as any other
calls, instead of just automatically trying to inline them.
llvm-svn: 160020
These are currently unused, but are intended to be used in lieu of PreStmt
and PostStmt when the call is implicit (e.g. an automatic object destructor).
This also modifies the Data1 field of ProgramPoints to allow storing any
pointer-sized value, as opposed to only aligned pointers. This is necessary
to store SourceLocations.
There is currently no BugReporter support for these; they should be skipped
over in any diagnostic output.
This commit also tags checkers that currently rely on function calls only
occurring at StmtPoints.
llvm-svn: 160019
Implement UniqueFileContainer::erase(), camelCase, add comment on future optimizations of the cache versus de-optimizations of invalidations.
llvm-svn: 159997
from a source file and changes clang-check to make use of this.
This makes clang-check just work on in-tree builds, and allows
easy setup via a symlink per source directory to make clang-check
work without any extra configuration.
llvm-svn: 159990
void f(); // expected-note 0+ {{previous declaration is here}}
void g(); // expected-note 0-1 {{previous declaration is here}}
The old "+" syntax is still an alias for "1+", and single numbers still work.
Patch by Andy Gibbs!
llvm-svn: 159979
// expected-warning@10 {{some text}}
The line number may be absolute (as above), or relative to the current
line by prefixing the number with either '+' or '-'.
Patch by Andy Gibbs!
llvm-svn: 159978
Previously it was possible to get an infinite-loop-on-invalid with a namespace
decl within @interface. Since 'namespace' is normally a safe place to retry
top-level parsing, we just didn't consume the token.
This adds a flag that tracks whether we have temporarily left Objective-C
scope to parse a C-like declaration, and uses that to better recover from
parse problems by stopping at possible method declarations and at @end. To
fix the original problem, we do /not/ stop at 'namespace' when in an
Objective-C @interface or @protocol context (but still do in @implementation).
llvm-svn: 159941
This was a regression introduced during the CallEvent changes; a call to
FunctionDecl::hasBody was also being used to replace the decl found by
lookup with the actual definition. To keep from making this mistake again
(particularly if/when we start inlining Objective-C methods), this commit
adds a "getDefinition()" method to CallEvent, which should do the right
thing under any circumstances.
llvm-svn: 159940
Chris pointed out that while the comparison is certainly problematic
and does not have well-defined behavior, it isn't any worse than some
of the other abuses that we merely warn about and doesn't need to make
the compilation fail.
Revert the release notes change (r159766) now that this is just a new warning.
llvm-svn: 159939
* When substituting a reference to a non-type template parameter pack where the
corresponding argument is a pack expansion, transform into an expression
which contains an unexpanded parameter pack rather than into an expression
which contains a pack expansion. This causes the SubstNonTypeTemplateParmExpr
to be inside the PackExpansionExpr, rather than outside, so the expression
still looks like a pack expansion and can be deduced.
* Teach MarkUsedTemplateParameters that we can deduce a reference to a template
parameter if it's wrapped in a SubstNonTypeTemplateParmExpr (such nodes are
added during alias template substitution).
llvm-svn: 159922
expression, skip over any SubstNonTypeTemplateParmExprs which alias templates
may have inserted before checking for a DeclRefExpr referring to a non-type
template parameter declaration.
llvm-svn: 159909
-ftemplate-depth limit. There are various ways to get an infinite (or merely
huge) stack of substitutions with no intervening instantiations. This is also
consistent with gcc's behavior.
llvm-svn: 159907
multidimensional array of class type. Also, preserve zero-initialization when
evaluating an initializer list for an array, in case the initializers refer to
later elements (which have preceding zero-initialization).
llvm-svn: 159904
which will appear in the vtable as used, not just those ones which were
declared within the class itself. Fixes an issue reported as comment#3 in
PR12763 -- we sometimes assert in codegen if we try to emit a reference to a
function declaration which we've not marked as referenced. This also matches
gcc's observed behavior.
llvm-svn: 159895
in the ABI arrangement, and leave a hook behind so that we can easily
tweak CCs on platforms that use different CCs by default for C++
instance methods.
llvm-svn: 159894
- Split pedantic driver flag test into separate test file, and XFAIL on cygwin,mingw32
- Fix bug in tablegen logic where a missing '{' caused errors to be included in -Wpedantic.
llvm-svn: 159892
I suspect FileCheck might match assertion failure, even if clang/test/Misc/warning-flags.c passed the test.
> 0. Program arguments: bin/./clang -### -pedantic -Wpedantic clang/test/Driver/warning-options.cpp
llvm-svn: 159886
This patch introduces some magic in tablegen to create a "Pedantic" diagnostic
group which automagically includes all warnings that are extensions. This
allows a user to suppress specific warnings traditionally under -pedantic used
an ordinary warning flag. This also allows users to use #pragma to silence
specific -pedantic warnings, or promote them to errors, within blocks of text
(just like any other warning).
-Wpedantic is NOT an alias for -pedantic. Instead, it provides another way
to (a) activate -pedantic warnings and (b) disable them. Where they differ
is that -pedantic changes the behavior of the preprocessor slightly, whereas
-Wpedantic does not (it just turns on the warnings).
The magic in the tablegen diagnostic emitter has to do with computing the minimal
set of diagnostic groups and diagnostics that should go into -Wpedantic, as those
diagnostics that already members of groups that themselves are (transitively) members
of -Wpedantic do not need to be included in the Pedantic group directly. I went
back and forth on whether or not to magically generate this group, and the invariant
was that we always wanted extension warnings to be included in -Wpedantic "some how",
but the bookkeeping would be very onerous to manage by hand.
-no-pedantic (and --no-pedantic) is included for completeness, and matches many of the
same kind of flags the compiler already supports. It does what it says: cancels out
-pedantic. One discrepancy is that if one specifies --no-pedantic and -Weverything or
-Wpedantic the pedantic warnings are still enabled (essentially the -W flags win). We
can debate the correct behavior here.
Along the way, this patch nukes some code in TextDiagnosticPrinter.cpp and CXStoredDiagnostic.cpp
that determine whether to include the "-pedantic" flag in the warning output. This is
no longer needed, as all extensions now have a -W flag.
This patch also significantly reduces the number of warnings not under flags from 229
to 158 (all extension warnings). That's a 31% reduction.
llvm-svn: 159875
We use LazyCompoundVals to avoid copying the contents of structs and arrays
around in the store, and when we need to pass a struct around that already
has a LazyCompoundVal we just use the original one. However, it's possible
that the first field of a struct may have a LazyCompoundVal of its own, and
we currently can't distinguish a LazyCompoundVal for the first element of a
struct from a LazyCompoundVal for the entire struct. In this case we should
just drop the optimization and make a new LazyCompoundVal that encompasses
the old one.
PR13264 / <rdar://problem/11802440>
llvm-svn: 159866
currently we take address of std::vector's contents only after we finished
adding all comments (so no reallocation can happen), this will change in
future.
llvm-svn: 159845
This flag sets the 'fp-contract' mode, which controls the formation of fused
floating point operations. Available modes are:
- Fast: Form fused operations anywhere.
- On: Form fused operations where allowed by FP_CONTRACT. This is the default
mode.
- Off: Don't form fused operations (in future this may be relaxed to forming
fused operations where it can be proved that the result won't be
affected).
Currently clang doesn't support the FP_CONTRACT pragma, so the 'On' and 'Off'
modes are equivalent.
llvm-svn: 159794
very simple semantic analysis that just builds the AST; minor changes for lexer
to pick up source locations I didn't think about before.
Comments AST is modelled along the ideas of HTML AST: block and inline content.
* Block content is a paragraph or a command that has a paragraph as an argument
or verbatim command.
* Inline content is placed within some block. Inline content includes plain
text, inline commands and HTML as tag soup.
llvm-svn: 159790
that the migrator handles) but return their instances as 'id', resulting
in the compiler resolving 'objectForKey:' as the method from NSDictionary.
When checking if we can convert to subscripting syntax, check whether
the receiver is a result of a class method from a hardcoded list of
such classes. In such a case return the specific class as the interface
of the receiver.
llvm-svn: 159788
(apart from NSDictionary/NSArray) that implement objectForKey:/objectAtIndex/etc.
and the subscripting methods as well.
Part of rdar://11734969
llvm-svn: 159783
duplicates attributes on the declaration. Also eliminates a false negative in
ReleasableMutexLock. Fixing this bug required some refactoring.
llvm-svn: 159780
of out-of-line c++ method definition which happens
to be inside an objc class implementation
until I can figure out how to do it. This is to fix
a broken project.
llvm-svn: 159772
used with classes that generate ASTConsumers; this allows decoupling
the ASTConsumer generation from the Frontend library (like, for example,
the MatchFinder in the upcoming ASTMatcher patch).
llvm-svn: 159760
actually perform value initialization rather than trying to fake it with a call
to the default constructor. Fixes various bugs related to the previously-missing
zero-initialization in this case.
I've also moved this and the other list initialization 'special case' from
TryConstructorInitialization into TryListInitialization where they belong.
llvm-svn: 159733
This required moving the ctors for IntegerLiteral and FloatingLiteral out of
line which shouldn't change anything as they are usually called through Create
methods that are already out of line.
ASTContext::Deallocate has been a nop for a long time, drop it from ASTVector
and make it independent from ASTContext.h
Pass the StorageAllocator directly to AccessedEntity so it doesn't need to
have a definition of ASTContext around.
llvm-svn: 159718
Our current inlining support (specifically RegionStore::enterStackFrame)
doesn't know that calls to overloaded operators may be calls to non-static
member functions, and that in these cases the first argument should be
treated as 'this'. This caused incorrect results and sometimes crashes.
The long-term fix will be to rewrite RegionStore::enterStackFrame to use
CallEvent and its subclasses, but for now we can just disable these
problematic calls by classifying them under a new CallEvent,
CXXMemberOperatorCall.
llvm-svn: 159692
By default on OS X 10.8, we don't link with a crt1.o file and the linker
knows to use _main as the entry point. But, when compiling with -pg, we
need to link with the gcrt1.o file, and the linker needs to be told to use
the "start" symbol as the entry point. The -no_new_main linker option does
that last part. <rdar://problem/11491405>
llvm-svn: 159683
values:
- Return integer vectors in integer registers.
- Pass vector arguments in integer registers.
- Set an upper bound for argument alignment. The largest alignment is 8-byte
for O32 and 16-byte for N32/64.
llvm-svn: 159676
initializer.
I really feel like Clang should warn about this, but I can't describe
a good reason. GCC will warn on this in some cases under
-Wsequence-point, but it actually seems like a false positive for that
warning....
llvm-svn: 159631
if we want to ignore a result, the Dest will be null. Otherwise,
we must copy into it. This means we need to ensure a slot when
loading from a volatile l-value.
With all that in place, fix a bug with chained assignments into
__block variables of aggregate type where we were losing insight into
the actual source of the value during the second assignment.
llvm-svn: 159630
c-functions declared in implementation should have their
parsing delayed until the end so, they can access forward
declared private methods. // rdar://10387088
llvm-svn: 159626
...and instead add an accessor. We're not using this today, but it's something
that should probably stay in the source for potential clients, and it doesn't
cost a lot. (ObjCPropertyAccess is only created on the stack, and right now
there's only ever one alive at a time.)
This reverts r159581 / commit 8e674e1da34a131faa7d43dc3fcbd6e49120edbe.
llvm-svn: 159595
Now that we're only using -frewrite-includes rather than full preprocessing
when producing repro source files, we should also include command line macro
definitions in the repro script.
I don't have a test case for this because I'm not sure if/how I can open the
crash report file when the name is only known by scraping the crash report
output. Suggestions welcome if anyone thinks it'd be helpful.
llvm-svn: 159592
In C, enum constants have the type of the enum's underlying integer type,
rather than the type of the enum. (This is not true in C++.) Thus, when a
block's return type is inferred from an enum constant, it is incompatible
with expressions that return the enum type.
In r158899, I told block returns to pretend that enum constants have enum
type, like in C++. Doug Gregor pointed out that this can break existing code.
Now, we don't check the types of return statements until the end of the block.
This lets us go back and add implicit casts in blocks with mixed enum
constants and enum-typed expressions.
<rdar://problem/11662489> (again)
llvm-svn: 159591
template instantiation. I wasn't able to reproduce this down to
anything small enough to put in our test suite, but it's "obviously"
okay to set the invalid bit earlier and precludes a
known-broken-but-not-marked-broken class from being used elsewhere.
llvm-svn: 159584