mostly in avoiding unnecessary work at compile time but also in producing more
sensible block orderings.
Move the destructor cleanups for local variables over to use lazy cleanups.
Eventually all cleanups will do this; for now we have some awkward code
duplication.
Tell IR generation just to never produce landing pads in -fno-exceptions.
This is a much more comprehensive solution to a problem which previously was
half-solved by checks in most cleanup-generation spots.
llvm-svn: 108270
self-host. Hopefully these results hold up on different platforms.
I tried to keep the GNU ObjC runtime happy, but it's hard for me to test.
Reimplement how clang generates IR for exceptions. Instead of creating new
invoke destinations which sequentially chain to the previous destination,
push a more semantic representation of *why* we need the cleanup/catch/filter
behavior, then collect that information into a single landing pad upon request.
Also reorganizes how normal cleanups (i.e. cleanups triggered by non-exceptional
control flow) are generated, since it's actually fairly closely tied in with
the former. Remove the need to track which cleanup scope a block is associated
with.
Document a lot of previously poorly-understood (by me, at least) behavior.
The new framework implements the Horrible Hack (tm), which requires every
landing pad to have a catch-all so that inlining will work. Clang no longer
requires the Horrible Hack just to make exceptions flow correctly within
a function, however. The HH is an unfortunate requirement of LLVM's EH IR.
llvm-svn: 107631
provides C "integer type" semantics in C and C++ "integral type"
semantics in C++.
Note that I still need to update isIntegerType (and possibly other
predicates) using the same approach I've taken for
isIntegralType(). The two should have the same meaning, but currently
don't (!).
llvm-svn: 106074
objective-c++ class objects which have GC'able objc object
pointers and need to use ObjC's objc_memmove_collectable
API (radar 8070772).
llvm-svn: 106061
ObjCObjectType, which is basically just a pair of
one of {primitive-id, primitive-Class, user-defined @class}
with
a list of protocols.
An ObjCObjectPointerType is therefore just a pointer which always points to
one of these types (possibly sugared). ObjCInterfaceType is now just a kind
of ObjCObjectType which happens to not carry any protocols.
Alter a rather large number of use sites to use ObjCObjectType instead of
ObjCInterfaceType. Store an ObjCInterfaceType as a pointer on the decl rather
than hashing them in a FoldingSet. Remove some number of methods that are no
longer used, at least after this patch.
By simplifying ObjCObjectPointerType, we are now able to easily remove and apply
pointers to Objective-C types, which is crucial for a certain kind of ObjC++
metaprogramming common in WebKit.
llvm-svn: 103870
Emitted some metadata on message sends to allow a later pass to do some speculative inlining of class methods (GNU runtime). Speculative inlining of instance methods requires type feedback to be useful (work in progress), but for class methods it works quite nicely.
llvm-svn: 102514
This works around stack corruption / crashes resulting from PR6944, and also
works around people who expect 'what works on my machine' to work everywhere
(GCC crashes in a number of cases on SPARC that should now work correctly with
clang).
llvm-svn: 102430
statements. Instead of the @try having a single @catch, where all of
the @catch's were chained (using an O(n^2) algorithm nonetheless),
@try just holds an array of its @catch blocks. The resulting AST is
slightly more compact (not important) and better represents the actual
language semantics (good).
llvm-svn: 102221
This introduces FunctionType::ExtInfo to hold the calling convention and the
noreturn attribute. The next patch will extend it to include the regparm
attribute and fix the bug.
llvm-svn: 99920
follows (as conservatively as possible) gcc's current behavior: attributes
written on return types that don't apply there are applied to the function
instead, etc. Only parse CC attributes as type attributes, not as decl attributes;
don't accepet noreturn as a decl attribute on ValueDecls, either (it still
needs to apply to other decls, like blocks). Consistently consume CC/noreturn
information throughout codegen; enforce this by removing their default values
in CodeGenTypes::getFunctionInfo().
llvm-svn: 95436
- Don't use GlobalAliases with non-0 GEPs (GNU runtime) - this was unsupported and LLVM will be generating errors if you do it soon. This also simplifies the code generated by the GNU runtime a bit.
- Make GetSelector() return a constant (GNU runtime), not a load of a store of a constant.
- Recognise @selector() expressions as valid static initialisers (as GCC does).
- Add methods to GCObjCRuntime to emit selectors as constants (needed for using @selector() expressions as constants. These need implementing for the Mac runtimes - I couldn't figure out how to do this, they seem to require a load.
- Store an ObjCMethodDecl in an ObjCSelectorExpr so that we can get at the type information for the selector. This is needed for generating typed selectors from @selector() expressions (as GCC does). Ideally, this information should be stored in the Selector, but that would be an invasive change. We should eventually add checks for common uses of @selector() expressions. Possibly adding an attribute that can be applied to method args providing the types of a selector so, for example, you'd do something like this:
- (id)performSelector: __attribute__((selector_types(id, SEL, id)))(SEL)
withObject: (id)object;
Then, any @selector() expressions passed to the method will be check to ensure that it conforms to this signature. We do this at run time on the GNU runtime already, but it would be nice to do it at compile time on all runtimes.
- Made @selector() expressions emit type info if available and the runtime supports it.
Someone more familiar with the Mac runtime needs to implement the GetConstantSelector() function in CGObjCMac. This currently just assert()s.
llvm-svn: 95189
This fixes throwing exceptions inside @catch blocks nested inside outer @try blocks and also fixes jumping from an inner @finally to an outer @finally (via any relevant @catch blocks).
The code exhibiting this bug was based on code from CGObjCMac. I believe that this bug may still be present on the Mac runtimes, although the test case in the bug contains a few GNUisms and won't compile without some minor tweaks with Apple's libobjc.
llvm-svn: 92117
Several of the existing methods were identical to their respective
specializations, and so have been removed entirely. Several more 'leaf'
optimizations were introduced.
The getAsFoo() methods which imposed extra conditions, like
getAsObjCInterfacePointerType(), have been left in place.
llvm-svn: 82501
This fixes some bad -O0 codegen and the unnecessary clearing of al on entry to objc_msgSend for most message sends.
<rdar://problem/7102824> [irgen] unnecessary xorb on calls to objc_msgSend on x86_64
llvm-svn: 82118
This currently breaks test/SemaObjC/id-isa-ref.m and issues some spurious warnings when you attempt to assign a struct objc_class* value to a Class variable. The test case probably should fail as it's written, because without the definition of Class the compiler should not assume struct objc_class* is a valid receiver type, but it's left broken because it would be nice if we could get that passing too for the special case of isa.
Approved by snaroff.
llvm-svn: 79248
The idea is to segregate Objective-C "object" pointers from general C pointers (utilizing the recently added ObjCObjectPointerType). The fun starts in Sema::GetTypeForDeclarator(), where "SomeInterface *" is now represented by a single AST node (rather than a PointerType whose Pointee is an ObjCInterfaceType). Since a significant amount of code assumed ObjC object pointers where based on C pointers/structs, this patch is very tedious. It should also explain why it is hard to accomplish this in smaller, self-contained patches.
This patch does most of the "heavy lifting" related to moving from PointerType->ObjCObjectPointerType. It doesn't include all potential "cleanups". The good news is additional cleanups can be done later (some are noted in the code). This patch is so large that I didn't want to include any changes that are purely aesthetic.
By making the ObjC types truly built-in, they are much easier to work with (and require fewer "hacks"). For example, there is no need for ASTContext::isObjCIdStructType() or ASTContext::isObjCClassStructType()! We believe this change (and the follow-up cleanups) will pay dividends over time.
Given the amount of code change, I do expect some fallout from this change (though it does pass all of the clang tests). If you notice any problems, please let us know asap! Thanks.
llvm-svn: 75314
Remove ASTContext parameter from DeclContext's methods. This change cascaded down to other Decl's methods and changes to call sites started "escalating".
Timings using pre-tokenized "cocoa.h" showed only a ~1% increase in time run between and after this commit.
llvm-svn: 74506
variables in ObjC's Next runtime mode. Next runtime also implicitly applies
'used' attribute on some of its meta-data. This results in two
'llvm.used' arrays to be generated, and one of them is renamed to
'llvm.used1'.
llvm-svn: 74008
compiled with -fobjc-sender-dependent-dispatch. This is used in AOP, COP, implementing object
planes, and a few other things.
Patch by David Chisnall.
llvm-svn: 72275
It currently requires a patches to GNU libobjc (and so is not enabled by default) which are currently
being tested and reviewed by GNUstep before being pushed upstream.
This patch does not allow support for synthesized ivars, but does provide the infrastructure
needed for supporting them.
Patch by David Chisnall
llvm-svn: 72175
"This patch is a first pass at adding support for exceptions for the GNU runtime. There are a few limitations at present:
- @synchronized() is not yet supported at all. gcc currently emits calls to runtime library functions that don't exist for this directive.
- Only id @catch statements are currently working. This is enough for NS_DURING and friends, but I need to spend more time reading the output from gcc -S to work out how it finds the class pointer to make arbitrary class type catch statements work.
- I've tested it with a few common cases[1] and the clang test suite (which doesn't test exceptions for the GNU runtime, but shows I haven't broken anything else), but there are probably a lot of cases I've missed."
Patch by David Chisnall!
llvm-svn: 71198
The attached diff fixes the //FIXME in message send to super. This
should now be faster, and works in the presence of class posing. This
is now the same approach as used in GCC (the earlier code was a quick
hack to get something working).
llvm-svn: 70868
methods, class methods, and property implementations) and instead
place all of these entities into the DeclContext.
This eliminates more linear walks when looking for class or instance
methods and should make PCH (de-)serialization of ObjCDecls trivial
(and lazy).
llvm-svn: 69849
- For now, this means we are always doing the address computations by
hand instead of constructing a proper GEP. Right now, however, this
is less important than having fewer entry points to dealing with
Objective-C interface layout.
llvm-svn: 69787
Changed GenerateConstantString() to take an ObjCStringLiteral (instead of a std::string). While this isn't strictly necessary, it seems cleaner and allows us to cache to "containsNonAscii" if necessary (to avoid checking in both Sema and CodeGen).
llvm-svn: 68114
- Lift CGFunctionInfo creation up to callers of EmitCall.
- Move isVariadic bit out of CGFunctionInfo, take as argument to
GetFunctionType instead.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 63550