Objective-C type arguments can be provided in angle brackets following
an Objective-C interface type. Syntactically, this is the same
position as one would provide protocol qualifiers (e.g.,
id<NSCopying>), so parse both together and let Sema sort out the
ambiguous cases. This applies both when parsing types and when parsing
the superclass of an Objective-C class, which can now be a specialized
type (e.g., NSMutableArray<T> inherits from NSArray<T>).
Check Objective-C type arguments against the type parameters of the
corresponding class. Verify the length of the type argument list and
that each type argument satisfies the corresponding bound.
Specializations of parameterized Objective-C classes are represented
in the type system as distinct types. Both specialized types (e.g.,
NSArray<NSString *> *) and unspecialized types (NSArray *) are
represented, separately.
llvm-svn: 241542
Produce type parameter declarations for Objective-C type parameters,
and attach lists of type parameters to Objective-C classes,
categories, forward declarations, and extensions as
appropriate. Perform semantic analysis of type bounds for type
parameters, both in isolation and across classes/categories/extensions
to ensure consistency.
Also handle (de-)serialization of Objective-C type parameter lists,
along with sundry other things one must do to add a new declaration to
Clang.
Note that Objective-C type parameters are typedef name declarations,
like typedefs and C++11 type aliases, in support of type erasure.
Part of rdar://problem/6294649.
llvm-svn: 241541
Objective-C format strings now support modifier flags
that can be attached to a '@' conversion. Currently
the only one supported, as of iOS 9 and OS X 10.11,
is the new "technical term", denoted by the flag "tt",
for example:
%[tt]@
instead of just:
%@
The 'tt' stands for "technical term", which is used
by the string-localization facilities on Darwin to
add the appropriate spacing or quotation depending
the language locale.
Implements <rdar://problem/20374720>.
llvm-svn: 241243
Addresses a conflict with glibc's __nonnull macro by renaming the type
nullability qualifiers as follows:
__nonnull -> _Nonnull
__nullable -> _Nullable
__null_unspecified -> _Null_unspecified
This is the major part of rdar://problem/21530726, but does not yet
provide the Darwin-specific behavior for the old names.
llvm-svn: 240596
These usually apply to the return type. At one point this was necessary to
get some of them to apply to the entire block, but it appears that's working
anyway (see block-return.c).
rdar://problem/20468034
llvm-svn: 240189
...instead of as a special case in ParseObjCTypeName with lots of
duplicated logic. Besides being a nice refactoring, this also allows
"- (instancetype __nonnull)self" in addition to "- (nonnull instancetype)self".
rdar://problem/19924646
llvm-svn: 240188
Includes a simple static analyzer check and not much else, but we'll also
be able to take advantage of this in Swift.
This feature can be tested for using __has_feature(cf_returns_on_parameters).
This commit also contains two fixes:
- Look through non-typedef sugar when deciding whether something is a CF type.
- When (cf|ns)_returns(_not)?_retained is applied to invalid properties,
refer to "property" instead of "method" in the error message.
rdar://problem/18742441
llvm-svn: 240185
Introduce the clang pragmas "assume_nonnull begin" and "assume_nonnull
end" in which we make default assumptions about the nullability of many
unannotated pointers:
- Single-level pointers are inferred to __nonnull
- NSError** in a (function or method) parameter list is inferred to
NSError * __nullable * __nullable.
- CFErrorRef * in a (function or method) parameter list is inferred
to CFErrorRef __nullable * __nullable.
- Other multi-level pointers are never inferred to anything.
Implements rdar://problem/19191042.
llvm-svn: 240156
'null_resettable' properties are those whose getters return nonnull
but whose setters take nil, to "reset" the property to some
default. Implements rdar://problem/19051334.
llvm-svn: 240155
Introduce context-sensitive, non-underscored nullability specifiers
(nonnull, nullable, null_unspecified) for Objective-C method return
types, method parameter types, and properties.
Introduce Objective-C-specific semantics, including computation of the
nullability of the result of a message send, merging of nullability
information from the @interface of a class into its @implementation,
etc .
This is the Objective-C part of rdar://problem/18868820.
llvm-svn: 240154
This generalizes the checking of null arguments to also work with
values of pointer-to-function, reference-to-function, and block
pointer type, using the nullability information within the underling
function prototype to extend non-null checking, and diagnoses returns
of 'nil' within a function with a __nonnull return type.
Note that we don't warn about nil returns from Objective-C methods,
because it's common for Objective-C methods to mimic the nil-swallowing
behavior of the receiver by checking ostensibly non-null parameters
and returning nil from otherwise non-null methods in that
case.
It also diagnoses (via a separate flag) conversions from nullable to
nonnull pointers. It's a separate flag because this warning can be noisy.
llvm-svn: 240153
Introduces the type specifiers __nonnull, __nullable, and
__null_unspecified that describe the nullability of the pointer type
to which the specifier appertains. Nullability type specifiers improve
on the existing nonnull attributes in a few ways:
- They apply to types, so one can represent a pointer to a non-null
pointer, use them in function pointer types, etc.
- As type specifiers, they are syntactically more lightweight than
__attribute__s or [[attribute]]s.
- They can express both the notion of 'should never be null' and
also 'it makes sense for this to be null', and therefore can more
easily catch errors of omission where one forgot to annotate the
nullability of a particular pointer (this will come in a subsequent
patch).
Nullability type specifiers are maintained as type sugar, and
therefore have no effect on mangling, encoding, overloading,
etc. Nonetheless, they will be used for warnings about, e.g., passing
'null' to a method that does not accept it.
This is the C/C++ part of rdar://problem/18868820.
llvm-svn: 240146
in the context of the container itself.
Otherwise we will emit 'unavailable' errors when referencing an unavailable super class
even though the subclass is also marked 'unavailable'.
rdar://20598702
llvm-svn: 235276
attribute to be placed on Objective-C pointer typedef
to make them strong enough so on their "new" method
family no attempt is made to override these
types. rdar://20255473
llvm-svn: 235128
"multiple methods named '<selector>' found" warning by noting
the method that is actualy used. It also cleans up and refactors
code in this area and selects a method that matches actual arguments
in case of receiver being a forward class object.
rdar://19265430
llvm-svn: 235023
Previously, many error messages would simply be "read-only variable is not
assignable" This change provides more information about why the variable is
not assignable, as well as note to where the const is located.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4479
llvm-svn: 234677
This warns when using decls that are not available on all deployment targets.
For example, a call to
- (void)ppartialMethod __attribute__((availability(macosx,introduced=10.8)));
will warn if -mmacosx-version-min is set to less than 10.8.
To silence the warning, one has to explicitly redeclare the method like so:
@interface Whatever(MountainLionAPI)
- (void)ppartialMethod;
@end
This way, one cannot accidentally call a function that isn't available
everywhere. Having to add the redeclaration will hopefully remind the user
to add an explicit respondsToSelector: call as well.
Some projects build against old SDKs to get this effect, but building against
old SDKs suppresses some bug fixes -- see http://crbug.com/463171 for examples.
The hope is that SDK headers are annotated well enough with availability
attributes that new SDK + this warning offers the same amount of protection
as using an old SDK.
llvm-svn: 232750
override where at least a declaration of a designated initializer is in a super
class and not necessarily in the current class. rdar://19653785.
llvm-svn: 231700
This commit adds new warning to prevent user from creating 'circular containers'.
Mutable collections from NSFoundation allows user to add collection to itself, e.g.:
NSMutableArray *a = [NSMutableArray new];
[a addObject:a];
The code above leads to really weird behaviour (crashes, 'endless' recursion) and
retain cycles (collection retains itself) if ARC enabled.
Patch checks the following collections:
- NSMutableArray,
- NSMutableDictionary,
- NSMutableSet,
- NSMutableOrderedSet,
- NSCountedSet.
llvm-svn: 231265
Previously we allowed these casts only for constants declared in system
headers, which we assume are retain/release-neutral. Now also allow them
for constants in user headers, treating them as +0. Practically, this
means that we will now allow:
id x = (id)kMyGlobalConst;
But unlike with system headers we cannot mix them with +1 values:
id y = (id)(b ? kMyGlobalConst : [Obj newValAtPlusOne]); // error
id z = (id)(b ? kSystemGlobalConst: [Obj newValAtPlusOne]); // OK
Thanks to John for suggesting this improvement.
llvm-svn: 230534
Bug report: http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22561
Clang tries to create ObjCBoxedExpression of type 'NSNumber'
when 'NSNumber' has only forward declaration, this cause a crash later,
when 'Sema' refers to a nil QualType of the whole expression.
Please, refer to the bug report for the better explanation.
llvm-svn: 229402
__declspec(restrict) and __attribute(malloc) are both handled
identically by clang: they are allowed to the noalias LLVM attribute.
Seeing as how noalias models the C99 notion of 'restrict', rename the
internal clang attribute to Restrict from Malloc.
llvm-svn: 228120
As mentioned in the previous commit, if a property (declared with @property)
has a name that matches a special Objective-C method family, the getter picks
up that family despite being declared by the property. The most correct way
to solve this problem is to add the 'objc_method_family' attribute to the
getter with an argument of 'none', which unfortunately requires an explicit
declaration of the getter.
This commit adds a note to the existing error (ARC) or warning (MRR) for
such a poorly-named property that suggests the solution; if there's already
a declaration of the getter, it even includes a fix-it.
llvm-svn: 226339
This fixes PR21587, what r221933 fixed for regular programs is now also
fixed for decls coming from PCH files.
Use another bit from the count/bits uint16_t for storing the "more than one
decl" bit. This reduces the number of bits for the count from 14 to 13.
The selector with the most overloads in Cocoa.h has ~55 overloads, so 13 bits
should still be plenty. Since this changes the meaning of a serialized bit
pattern, also increase clang::serialization::VERSION_MAJOR.
Storing the "more than one decl" state of only the first overload isn't quite
correct, but Sema::AreMultipleMethodsInGlobalPool() currently only looks at
the state of the first overload so it's good enough for now.
llvm-svn: 224892
So, place warning about property getter should not be used for side-effect
under its own group so warning can be turned off.
rdar://19137815
llvm-svn: 224479
This means that a pointer to the struct type to which the attribute appertains
is a CF type (and therefore an Objective-C object of some type), but not of any
specific class. rdar://19157264
llvm-svn: 224072
of new warning for deprecated method call for receiver
of type 'id'. This addresses rdar://18960378 where
unintended warnings being issued.
llvm-svn: 221933
This is to accept "NA" in place of vesion number for availability
attribute. Used on introduced=NA to mean unavailable
and deprecated=NA to mean nothing (not deprecated).
rdar://18804883
llvm-svn: 221417
auto synthesized because it is synthesized in its super
class. locate property declaration in super class
which will default synthesize the property. rdar://18488727
llvm-svn: 219535
in availability attribute by preserving this info.
in VersionTuple and using it in pretty printing of attributes
and yet using '.' as separator when diagnosing unavailable
message calls. rdar://18490958
llvm-svn: 219124
off by default, issue a warning if %s directive is used
in formart argument of a function/method declared as
__attribute__((format(CF/NSString, ...)))
To complete rdar://18182443
llvm-svn: 217619
off by default, issue a warning if %s directive is used in
certain CF/NS formatting APIs, to assist user in deprecating
use of such %s in these APIs. rdar://18182443
llvm-svn: 217467
"protected scope" is very unhelpful here and actively confuses users. Instead,
simply state the nature of the problem in the diagnostic: we cannot jump from
here to there. The notes explain nicely why not.
llvm-svn: 217293
in the super class, do not issue the warning about property
in current class's protocol will not be auto synthesized.
// rdar://18179833
llvm-svn: 216769
Do not warn when property declared in class's protocol will be auto-synthesized
by its uper class implementation because super class has also declared this
property while this class has not. Continue to warn if current class
has declared the property also (because this declaration will not result
in a 2nd synthesis).
rdar://18152478
llvm-svn: 216753
into primary class's named categories before looking
into their protocols. This is because categories are
part of the public interface and , just as primary class,
preference should be given to them before class
(and category) protocols. // rdar://18013929
llvm-svn: 216610
global pool in the course of method selection for
a messaging expression, select one with the most general
return type of 'id'. This is to remove type-mismatch
warning (which is useless) as result of random selection of
method with more restrictive return type. rdar://18095772
llvm-svn: 216560
the no-arguments case. Don't expand this to an __attribute__((nonnull(A, B,
C))) attribute, since that does the wrong thing for function templates and
varargs functions.
In passing, fix a grammar error in the diagnostic, a crash if
__attribute__((nonnull(N))) is applied to a varargs function,
a bug where the same null argument could be diagnosed multiple
times if there were multiple nonnull attributes referring to it,
and a bug where nonnull attributes would not be accumulated correctly
across redeclarations.
llvm-svn: 216520
feature is c11 about nested struct declarations must have
struct-declarator-list. Without this change, code
which was meant for c99 breaks. rdar://18125536
llvm-svn: 216469
We had two bugs:
- We wouldn't properly warn when a struct/union/enum was mentioned
inside of a record definition if no declarator was provided. We
should have mentioned that this declaration declares nothing.
- We didn't properly support Microsoft's extension where certain
declspecs without declarators would act as anonymous structs/unions.
* We completely ignored the case where such a declspec could be a
union.
* We didn't properly handle the case where a record was defined inside
another record:
struct X {
int a;
struct Y {
int b;
};
};
llvm-svn: 215347
These macros are used as markers for Interface Builder and need to be defined
to empty strings since they have no impact on the code.
Patch by Ted Kremenek.
llvm-svn: 215259
is unused (this is match behavior when property-dot syntax is used to
use same getter). rdar://17514245
Patch by Anders Carlsson with minor refactoring by me.
llvm-svn: 213423
We've decided to make the core rewriter class and PP rewriters mandatory.
They're only a few hundred lines of code in total and not worth supporting as a
distinct build configuration, especially since doing so disables key compiler
features.
This reverts commit r213150.
Revert "clang/test: Introduce the feature "rewriter" for --enable-clang-rewriter."
This reverts commit r213148.
Revert "Move clang/test/Frontend/rewrite-*.c to clang/test/Frontend/Rewriter/"
This reverts commit r213146.
llvm-svn: 213159
Otherwise, multiple errors such as having unknown identifiers for two
arguments won't be diagnosed properly (e.g. only the first one would
have a diagnostic message if typo correction fails even though both
would be diagnosed if typo correction suggests a replacement).
llvm-svn: 213003
than one method with mismatched type of same selector name.
clang issues a warning to point this out since it may cause
undefined behavior. There are cases though that some APIs
don't care about user methods and such warnings are perceived as
noise. This patch allows users to add paren delimiters around
selector name to turn off such warnings. So, @selector((save:)) will
turn off the warning. It also provides 'fixit' so user knows
what to do. // rdar://16458579
llvm-svn: 211611
a qualified-id type because pointer is object of a forward
class declaration, include this info in a diagnostic note.
// rdar://10751015
llvm-svn: 211324
retainable ObjC pointers without requiring a bridge-cast
in the context of pointer comparison as this is in effect
a +0 context. // rdar://16627903
llvm-svn: 211243
IBOutlet and weak attributes when accessed being
unpredictably set to nil because usage of such properties
are always single threaded and its ivar cannot be set
to nil asynchronously. // rdar://15885642
llvm-svn: 211132
to call themselves will get the warning:
"Capturing <itself> strongly in this block is likely to
lead to a retain cycle". Cut down on the amount of noise
by noticing that user at some point sets the captured variable
to null in order to release it (and break the cycle).
// rdar://16944538
llvm-svn: 210823
correctly when both NSAttributedString and
NSMutableAttributedString are specified on the same
CFStruct via different typedefs. // rdar://17238954
llvm-svn: 210660
The thread safety analysis isn't very useful in ObjC (you can't annotate
ObjC classes or methods) but we can still analyze the actual code and
show violations in usage of C/C++ functions.
Fixes PR19541, which does not use thread safety attributes but crashes
with -Weverything.
llvm-svn: 208436
This tests for broad compatibility with platform SDK headers using the clang
driver and so belongs alongside the other header ingtegration tests.
llvm-svn: 206687
This adds Clang support for the ARM64 backend. There are definitely
still some rough edges, so please bring up any issues you see with
this patch.
As with the LLVM commit though, we think it'll be more useful for
merging with AArch64 from within the tree.
llvm-svn: 205100
-Wselector-type-mismatch default again. After
internal discussions, we think that in most cases
it has helped our developers find hard to detect
undefined behaviors. We are going to provide a syntax
(and fix-it) to suppress the warning in remaining of
false positive cases.
llvm-svn: 205024
warnings (warning or lack there of) as well since
blocks are another pattern for envoking other
designated initializers. // rdar://16323233
llvm-svn: 204081
Recent work on -Wunreachable-code has focused on suppressing uninteresting
unreachable code that center around "configuration values", but
there are still some set of cases that are sometimes interesting
or uninteresting depending on the codebase. For example, a dead
"break" statement may not be interesting for a particular codebase,
potentially because it is auto-generated or simply because code
is written defensively.
To address these workflow differences, -Wunreachable-code is now
broken into several diagnostic groups:
-Wunreachable-code: intended to be a reasonable "default" for
most users.
and then other groups that turn on more aggressive checking:
-Wunreachable-code-break: warn about dead break statements
-Wunreachable-code-trivial-return: warn about dead return statements
that return "trivial" values (e.g., return 0). Other return
statements that return non-trivial values are still reported
under -Wunreachable-code (this is an area subject to more refinement).
-Wunreachable-code-aggressive: supergroup that enables all these
groups.
The goal is to eventually make -Wunreachable-code good enough to
either be in -Wall or on-by-default, thus finessing these warnings
into different groups helps achieve maximum signal for more users.
TODO: the tests need to be updated to reflect this extra control
via diagnostic flags.
llvm-svn: 203994
'init' methods which are unavailable. Subclasses of NSObject
have to implement such methods as a common pattern to prevent
user's own implementation. // rdar://16305460
llvm-svn: 203966
Per more discussion, 'objc_protocol_requires_explicit_implementation' is
refinement that it mainly adds that requirement that a protocol must be
explicitly satisfied at the moment the first class in the class hierarchy
conforms to it. Any subclasses that also conform to that protocol,
either directly or via conforming to a protocol that inherits that protocol,
do not need to re-implement that protocol.
Doing this requires first doing a pass on the super class hierarchy,
gathering the set of protocols conformed to by the super classes,
and then culling those out when determining conformance. This
two-pass algorithm could be generalized for all protocol checking,
and could possibly be a performance win in some cases. For now
we restrict this change to protocols with this attribute to isolate
the change in logic (especially as the design continues to evolve).
This change needs to be adjusted for properties as well; this
only impacts methods right now.
llvm-svn: 202948
This test also illustrates that checking for properties is not working properly with
this attribute, as we are missing a diagnostic for a property not being implemented.
llvm-svn: 202335
In particular, if we see an @property within the @interface of a class
conforming to a protocol with this attribute, we treat that as
if the implementation were available, per the rules of default
property synthesis.
llvm-svn: 201911
Thanks to r199467, __attribute__((nonnull)) (without arguments) can apply
directly to parameters, instead of being applied to the whole function.
However, the old form of nonnull (with an argument index) could also apply
to the arguments of function and block pointers, and both of these can be
passed as parameters.
Now, if 'nonnull' with an argument is found on a parameter, /and/ the
parameter is a function or block pointer, it is handled the old way.
PR18795
llvm-svn: 201162
parimary class and in mrr mode, assume property's default
memory attribute (assign) and to prevent a bogus warning.
// rdar://15859862
llvm-svn: 200238
not using backing ivar warning, ignore when
property is not being synthesized (user declared its
implementation @dynamic). // rdar://1583425
llvm-svn: 199820
This involved making CheckReturnStackAddr into a static function, which
is now called by a top-level return value checking routine called
CheckReturnValExpr.
llvm-svn: 199790
This attribute is supported by GCC. More generally it should
probably be a type attribute, but this behavior matches 'nonnull'.
This patch does not include warning logic for checking if a null
value is returned from a function annotated with this attribute.
That will come in subsequent patches.
llvm-svn: 199626
This allows the following syntax:
void baz(__attribute__((nonnull)) const char *str);
instead of:
void baz(const char *str) __attribute__((nonnull(1)));
This also extends to Objective-C methods.
The checking logic in Sema is not as clean as I would like. Effectively
now we need to check both the FunctionDecl/ObjCMethodDecl and the parameters,
so the point of truth is spread in two places, but the logic isn't that
cumbersome.
Implements <rdar://problem/14691443>.
llvm-svn: 199467
which may belong to unrelated classes. It was
primarily intended for miuse of @selector expression.
But warning is too noisy and will be issued when
an actual @selector is used. // rdar://15740134
llvm-svn: 198952
property has the naming convention that implies 'ownership'.
2) improve on diagnostic and make it property specific.
3) fix the line number in the case of default property
synthesis. // rdar://15757510
llvm-svn: 198905
Fixes <rdar://problem/15596883>
In ARC, __attribute__((objc_precise_lifetime)) guarantees that the
object stored in it will survive to the end of the variable's formal
lifetime. It is therefore useful even if it completely unused.
llvm-svn: 198888
- Remove the additions to ObjCMethodDecl & ObjCIVarDecl that were getting de/serialized and consolidate
all functionality for the checking for this warning in Sema::DiagnoseUnusedBackingIvarInAccessor
- Don't check immediately after the method body is finished, check when the @implementation is finished.
This is so we can see if the ivar was referenced by any other method, even if the method was defined after the accessor.
- Don't silence the warning if any method is called from the accessor silence it if the accessor delegates to another method via self.
rdar://15727325
llvm-svn: 198432
Fixes <rdar://problem/15584219> and <rdar://problem/12241361>.
This change looks large, but all it does is reuse and consolidate
the delayed diagnostic logic for deprecation warnings with unavailability
warnings. By doing so, it showed various inconsistencies between the
diagnostics, which were close, but not consistent. It also revealed
some missing "note:"'s in the deprecated diagnostics that were showing
up in the unavailable diagnostics, etc.
This change also changes the wording of the core deprecation diagnostics.
Instead of saying "function has been explicitly marked deprecated"
we now saw "'X' has been been explicitly marked deprecated". It
turns out providing a bit more context is useful, and often we
got the actual term wrong or it was not very precise
(e.g., "function" instead of "destructor"). By just saying the name
of the thing that is deprecated/deleted/unavailable we define
this issue away. This diagnostic can likely be further wordsmithed
to be shorter.
llvm-svn: 197627
of objc_bridge_related attribute; eliminate
unnecessary diagnostics which is issued elsewhere,
fixit now produces a valid AST tree per convention.
This results in some simplification in handling of
this attribute as well. // rdar://15499111
llvm-svn: 197436
property declaration has a memory management
attribute (retain, copy, etc.). Sich properties
are usually overridden to become 'readwrite'
via a class extension (which require the memory
management attribute specified). In the absence of class
extension override, memory management attribute is
needed to produce correct Code Gen. for the
property getter in any case and this warning becomes
confusing to user. // rdar://15641300
llvm-svn: 197251
That's a mouthful, and not necessarily the final name. This also
reflects a semantic change where this attribute is now on the
protocol itself instead of a class. This attribute will require
that a protocol, when adopted by a class, is explicitly implemented
by the class itself (instead of walking the super class chain).
Note that this attribute is not "done". This should be considered
a WIP.
llvm-svn: 196955
Add -verify and update the test directives to match current expectations.
Also add a FIXME to an ObjC test that has expected-* directives but no -verify.
llvm-svn: 196737
attribute in sema and issuing a variety of diagnostics lazily
for misuse of this attribute (and what to do) when converting
from CF types to ObjectiveC types (and vice versa).
// rdar://15499111
llvm-svn: 196629
category is declared in category's primary
class's super class. Because the super class is
expected to implemented the method. // rdar://15580969
llvm-svn: 196531
don't assume that it inherits the designated initializers from the super class.
If the assumption was wrong because a new initializer was a designated one that was not marked as such,
we will emit misleading warnings for subclasses of the interface.
llvm-svn: 196476
super another initializer and when the implementation does not delegate to
another initializer via a call on 'self'.
A secondary initializer is an initializer method not marked as a designated
initializer within a class that has at least one initializer marked as a
designated initializer.
llvm-svn: 196318
This is still an experimental attribute, but I wanted it in tree
for review. It may still get yanked.
This attribute can only be applied to a class @interface, not
a class extension or category. It does not change the type
system rules for Objective-C, but rather the implementation checking
for Objective-C classes that explicitly conform to a protocol.
During protocol conformance checking, clang recursively searches
up the class hierarchy for the set of methods that compose
a protocol. This attribute will cause the compiler to not consider
the methods contributed by a super class, its categories, and those
from its ancestor classes. Thus this attribute is used to force
subclasses to redeclare (and hopefully re-implement) methods if
they decide to explicitly conform to a protocol where some of those
methods may be provided by a super class.
This attribute intentionally leaves out properties, which are associated
with state. This attribute only considers methods (at least right now)
that are non-property accessors. These represent methods that "do something"
as dictated by the protocol. This may be further refined, and this
should be considered a WIP until documentation gets written or this
gets removed.
llvm-svn: 195533
attribute on method declaration and implementation
match. This makes no sense. Most annotations are
meant for declarations only and one is for implementation.
This has been constant source of regresions and hackery to
get around special cases. I am removing this check.
Such checks must be done on a case by case basis and
when it makes sense. For example, it makes sense
for availability/deprecated and I will file a radar
for that. // rdar://15531984
llvm-svn: 195524
whose semantic is currently identical to objc_bridge,
but their differences may manifest down the road with
further enhancements. // rdar://15498044
llvm-svn: 195376
After implementing this patch, a few concerns about the language
feature itself emerged in my head that I had previously not considered.
I want to resolve those design concerns first before having
a half-designed language feature in the tree.
llvm-svn: 195328
The idea is to allow a class to stipulate that its methods (and those
of its parents) cannot be used for protocol conformance in a subclass.
A subclass is then explicitly required to re-implement those methods
of they are present in the class marked with this attribute.
Currently the attribute can only be applied to an @interface, and
not a category or class extension. This is by design. Unlike
protocol conformance, where a category can add explicit conformance
of a protocol to class, this anti-conformance really needs to be
observed uniformly by all clients of the class. That's because
the absence of the attribute implies more permissive checking of
protocol conformance.
This unfortunately required changing method lookup in ObjCInterfaceDecl
to take an optional protocol parameter. This should not slow down
method lookup in most cases, and is just used for protocol conformance.
llvm-svn: 195323
- If a deprecated class refers to another deprecated class, do not warn.
- @implementations of a deprecated class can refer to other deprecated things.
Fixes <rdar://problem/15407366> and <rdar://problem/15466783>.
llvm-svn: 195259