One who seeks the Tao unlearns something new every day.
Less and less remains until you arrive at non-action.
When you arrive at non-action,
nothing will be left undone.
llvm-svn: 112244
- move DeclSpec &c into the Sema library
- move ParseAST into the Parse library
Reflect this change in a thousand different includes.
Reflect this change in the link orders.
llvm-svn: 111667
A ParmVarDecl instantiated from a FunctionProtoType may have Record as DeclContext,
in which case isStaticDataMember() will erroneously return true.
llvm-svn: 108692
allows Sema some limited access to the current scope, which we only
use in one way: when Sema is performing some kind of declaration that
is not directly driven by the parser (e.g., due to template
instantiatio or lazy declaration of a member), we can find the Scope
associated with a DeclContext, if that DeclContext is still in the
process of being parsed.
Use this to make the implicit declaration of special member functions
in a C++ class more "scope-less", rather than using the NULL Scope hack.
llvm-svn: 107491
"used" (e.g., we will refer to the vtable in the generated code) and
when they are defined (i.e., because we've seen the key function
definition). Previously, we were effectively tracking "potential
definitions" rather than uses, so we were a bit too eager about emitting
vtables for classes without key functions.
The new scheme:
- For every use of a vtable, Sema calls MarkVTableUsed() to indicate
the use. For example, this occurs when calling a virtual member
function of the class, defining a constructor of that class type,
dynamic_cast'ing from that type to a derived class, casting
to/through a virtual base class, etc.
- For every definition of a vtable, Sema calls MarkVTableUsed() to
indicate the definition. This happens at the end of the translation
unit for classes whose key function has been defined (so we can
delay computation of the key function; see PR6564), and will also
occur with explicit template instantiation definitions.
- For every vtable defined/used, we mark all of the virtual member
functions of that vtable as defined/used, unless we know that the key
function is in another translation unit. This instantiates virtual
member functions when needed.
- At the end of the translation unit, Sema tells CodeGen (via the
ASTConsumer) which vtables must be defined (CodeGen will define
them) and which may be used (for which CodeGen will define the
vtables lazily).
From a language perspective, both the old and the new schemes are
permissible: we're allowed to instantiate virtual member functions
whenever we want per the standard. However, all other C++ compilers
were more lazy than we were, and our eagerness was both a performance
issue (we instantiated too much) and a portability problem (we broke
Boost test cases, which now pass).
Notes:
(1) There's a ton of churn in the tests, because the order in which
vtables get emitted to IR has changed. I've tried to isolate some of
the larger tests from these issues.
(2) Some diagnostics related to
implicitly-instantiated/implicitly-defined virtual member functions
have moved to the point of first use/definition. It's better this
way.
(3) I could use a review of the places where we MarkVTableUsed, to
see if I missed any place where the language effectively requires a
vtable.
Fixes PR7114 and PR6564.
llvm-svn: 103718
different tag kind ("struct" vs. "class") than the primary template,
which has an affect on access control.
Should fix the last remaining Boost.Accumulors failure.
llvm-svn: 103144
friend function template, be sure to adjust the computed template
argument lists based on the location of the definition of the function
template: it's possible that the definition we're instantiating with
and the template declaration that we found when creating the
specialization are in different contexts, which meant that we would
end up using the wrong template arguments for instantiation.
Fixes PR7013; all Boost.DynamicBitset tests now pass.
llvm-svn: 102974
of the mapping from local declarations to their instantiated
counterparts during template instantiation. Previously, we tried to do
some unholy merging of local instantiation scopes that involved
storing a single hash table along with an "undo" list on the
side... which was ugly, and never handled function parameters
properly.
Now, we just keep separate hash tables for each local instantiation
scope, and "combining" two scopes means that we'll look in each of the
combined hash tables. The combined scope stack is rarely deep, and
this makes it easy to avoid the "undo" issues we were hitting. Also,
I've simplified the logic for function parameters: if we're declaring
a function and we need the function parameters to live longer, we just
push them back into the local instantiation scope where we need them.
Fixes PR6990.
llvm-svn: 102732
specializations, which keeps track of the order in which they were
originally declared. We use this number so that we can always walk the
list of partial specializations in a predictable order during matching
or template instantiation. This also fixes a failure in Boost.Proto,
where SourceManager::isBeforeInTranslationUnit was behaving
poorly in inconsistent ways.
llvm-svn: 102693
template argument deduction or (more importantly) the final substitution
required by such deduction. Makes access control magically work in these
cases.
Fixes PR6967.
llvm-svn: 102572
we will print with each error that occurs during template
instantiation. When the backtrace is longer than that, we will print
N/2 of the innermost backtrace entries and N/2 of the outermost
backtrace entries, then skip the middle entries with a note such as:
note: suppressed 2 template instantiation contexts; use
-ftemplate-backtrace-limit=N to change the number of template
instantiation entries shown
This should eliminate some excessively long backtraces that aren't
providing any value.
llvm-svn: 101882
function declaration, since it may end up being changed (e.g.,
"extern" can become "static" if a prior declaration was static). Patch
by Enea Zaffanella and Paolo Bolzoni.
llvm-svn: 101826
sure to introduce them into the current Scope (when we have one) in
addition to the DeclContext for the class, so that they can be found
by name lookup for inline members of the class. Fixes PR6570.
llvm-svn: 101047
function's type is (strictly speaking) non-dependent. This ensures
that, e.g., default function arguments get instantiated properly.
And, since I couldn't resist, collapse the two implementations of
function-parameter instantiation into calls to a single, new function
(Sema::SubstParmVarDecl), since the two had nearly identical code (and
each had bugs the other didn't!). More importantly, factored out the
semantic analysis of a parameter declaration into
Sema::CheckParameter, which is called both by
Sema::ActOnParamDeclarator (when parameters are parsed) and when a
parameter is instantiated. Previously, we were missing some
Objective-C and address-space checks on instantiated function
parameters.
Fixes PR6733.
llvm-svn: 101029
specializations when the explicit instantiation was... explicitly
written, i.e., not the product of an explicit instantiation of an
enclosing class. Fixes this spurious warning when Clang builds LLVM:
/Volumes/Data/dgregor/Projects/llvm/lib/CodeGen/MachineDominators.cpp:22:1:
warning: explicit instantiation of 'addRoot' that occurs after an
explicit specialization will be ignored (C++0x extension) [-pedantic]
llvm-svn: 100900
involving substitution of deduced template arguments into a class
template partial specialization or function template, or when
substituting explicitly-specific template arguments into a function
template. We now print the actual deduced argument bindings so the
user can see what got deduced.
llvm-svn: 99923
check deduced non-type template arguments and template template
arguments against the template parameters for which they were deduced,
performing conversions as appropriate so that deduced template
arguments get the same treatment as explicitly-specified template
arguments. This is the bulk of PR6723.
Also keep track of whether deduction of a non-type template argument
came from an array bound (vs. anywhere else). With this information,
we enforce C++ [temp.deduct.type]p17, which requires exact type
matches when deduction deduces a non-type template argument from
something that is not an array bound.
Finally, when in a SFINAE context, translate the "zero sized
arrays are an extension" extension diagnostic into a hard error (for
better standard conformance), which was a minor part of PR6723.
llvm-svn: 99734
- When substituting template arguments as part of template argument
deduction, introduce a new local instantiation scope.
- When substituting into a function prototype type, introduce a new
"temporary" local instantiation scope that merges with its outer
scope but also keeps track of any additions it makes, removing
them when we exit that scope.
Fixes PR6700, where we were getting too much mixing of local
instantiation scopes due to template argument deduction that
substituted results into function types.
llvm-svn: 99509
instantiation. Based on a patch by Enea Zaffanella! I found a way to
reduce some of the redundancy between TreeTransform's "standard"
FunctionProtoType transformation and TemplateInstantiator's override,
and I killed off the old SubstFunctionType by adding type source info
for the last cases where we were creating FunctionDecls without TSI
(at least that get passed through template instantiation).
llvm-svn: 98252