Clang currently croaks on the following:
struct X1 {
struct X2 {
int L = ([] (int i) { return i; })(2);
};
};
asserting that the containing lexical context of the lambda is not Sema's cur context, when pushing the lambda's decl context on.
This occurs because (prior to this patch) getContainingDC always returns the non-nested class for functions at class scope (even for inline member functions of nested classes (to account for delayed parsing of their bodies)). The patch addresses this by having getContainingDC always return the lexical DC for a lambda's call operator.
Link to the bug: http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=18052
Link to Richard Smith's feedback on phabricator: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2331
Thanks!
llvm-svn: 196423
which specifies couple of (optional) method selectors
for bridging a CFobject to or from an ObjectiveC
object. This is wip. // rdsr://15499111
llvm-svn: 196408
Summary:
MSVC destroys arguments in the callee from left to right. Because C++
objects have to be destroyed in the reverse order of construction, Clang
has to construct arguments from right to left and destroy arguments from
left to right.
This patch fixes the ordering by reversing the order of evaluation of
all call arguments under the MS C++ ABI.
Fixes PR18035.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2275
llvm-svn: 196402
We would lose track of the mangling number assigned to the original
declaration which would cause us to create manglings that didn't match
the Itanium C++ specification.
e.g. Two static fields with the same name inside of a function template
would receive the same mangling with LLVM fixing up the second field so
they wouldn't collide. This would create an incompatibility with other
compilers following the Itanium ABI.
I've confirmed that the new mangling is identical to the ones generated
by icc and gcc.
N.B. This was uncovered while working on Microsoft mangler.
llvm-svn: 196368
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
designated initializers of an interface.
If the interface declaration does not have methods marked as designated
initializers then the interface inherits the designated initializers of
its super class.
llvm-svn: 196315
We wouldn't properly save and restore the pending local instantiations
we had built up prior to instantiation of a variable definition. This
would lead to us instantiating too much causing crashes and other
general badness.
This fixes PR14374.
llvm-svn: 195887
I have disabled some attribute subject lines on purpose in Attr.td;
this part is a WIP with the goal being to restore those subjects
incrementally. By commenting them out, it leaves the original behavior
the same as before for those attributes and so those are not
functionality changes.
llvm-svn: 195841
We would fail to instantiate them when the surrounding function was
instantiated. Instantiate the class and add it's members to the list of
pending instantiations, they should be resolved when we are finished
with the function's body.
This fixes PR9685.
llvm-svn: 195827
code for handling triviality, deletedness and constexpr. Fix a few bugs in
these, particularly related to mutable members, and remove some dead code.
llvm-svn: 195809
look at the attribute spelling instead. The 'ownership_*' attributes should
probably be split into separate *Attr classes, but that's more than I wanted to
do here.
llvm-svn: 195805
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
This enables a micro-optimization in protocol conformance checking
to not examine the class hierarchy twice per method.
As part of this change, remove the default arguments from lookupInstanceMethod()
and lookupClassMethod(). It was becoming very redundant. For clients
needing the default arguments, have them use the full API instead of
these convenience methods.
llvm-svn: 195532
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
can't accidentally be allocated the wrong way (missing prefix data for decls
from AST files, for instance) and simplifies the CreateDeserialized functions a
little. An extra DeclContext* parameter to the not-from-AST-file operator new
allows us to ensure that we don't accidentally call the wrong one when
deserializing (when we don't have a DeclContext), allows some extra checks, and
prepares for some planned modules-related changes to Decl allocation.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 195426
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
data member definitions when the variable has an initializer
in its declaration.
For the following code:
struct S {
static const int x = 42;
};
const int S::x = 42;
This patch changes the diagnostic from:
a.cc:4:14: error: redefinition of 'x'
const int S::x = 42;
^
a.cc:2:20: note: previous definition is here
static const int x = 42;
^
to:
a.cc:4:18: error: static data member 'x' already has an initializer
const int S::x = 42;
^
a.cc:2:24: note: previous initialization is here
static const int x = 42;
^
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2235
llvm-svn: 195306
- 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
and we see an ill-formed declarator that would probably be well-formed if the
tag definition were just missing a semicolon, use that as the diagnostic
instead of producing some other mysterious error.
llvm-svn: 195163
The previous patches tried to deduce the correct function type. I now realize
this is not possible in general. Consider
class foo {
template <typename T> static void bar(T v);
};
extern template void foo::bar(const void *);
We will only know that bar is static after a lookup, so we have to handle this
in the template instantiation code.
This patch reverts my previous two changes (but not the tests) and instead
handles the issue in DeduceTemplateArguments.
llvm-svn: 195154
logic was not handling typedefs as free functions. This was not
causing problems with the existing tests, but does with the microsoft
abi where they have to get a different calling convention.
I will try to refactor this into a method on Declarator in a second.
llvm-svn: 195050
Before this patch explicit template instatiations of member function templates
were failing with the microsoft abi and 32 bits. This was happening because
the expected and computed function types had different calling conventions.
This patch fixes it by considering the default calling convention in
GetFullTypeForDeclarator.
This fixes pr17973.
llvm-svn: 195032
representing the module import rather than making the module immediately
visible. This serves two goals:
* It avoids making declarations in the module visible prematurely, if we
walk past the #include during a tentative parse, for instance, and
* It gives a diagnostic (although, admittedly, not a very nice one) if
a header with a corresponding module is included anywhere other than
at the top level.
llvm-svn: 194782
Also refine test case to capture the intention of this suppression. Essentially
some developers use __bridge_transfer as if it were a safe CFRelease.
llvm-svn: 194663
bit fields of zero size. Warnings are generated in C++ mode and if
only such type is defined inside extern "C" block.
The patch fixed PR5065.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2151
llvm-svn: 194653
This patch fixes PR8264. Duplicate qualifiers already are diagnozed,
now the same diagnostics is issued for duplicate function specifiers.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2025
llvm-svn: 194559
See http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-dev/2013-November/033369.html for discussion on cfe-dev.
This fix explicitly checks whether we are within the declcontext of a lambda's call operator - which is what I had intended to be true (and assumed would be true if getCurLambda returns a valid pointer) before checking whether a lambda can capture the potential-captures of the innermost lambda.
A deeper fix (that addresses why getCurLambda() returns a valid pointer when perhaps it shouldn't?) - as proposed by Richard Smith in http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=17877 - has been suggested as a FIXME.
Patch was LGTM'd by Richard (just barely :)
http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2144
llvm-svn: 194448
substitution failure, allow a flag to be set on the Diagnostic object,
to mark it as 'causes substitution failure'.
Refactor Diagnostic.td and the tablegen to use an enum for SFINAE behavior
rather than a bunch of flags.
llvm-svn: 194444
Hopefully Richard won't notice this terrible egregiocity - clearly the work of a malevolent poltergeist - fixed now ;)
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 194439
No Functionality change.
This refactoring avoids having to call getCurLambda right after PushLambdaScope, to obtain the LambdaScopeInfo that was created during the call to PushLambdaScope.
llvm-svn: 194438
Under ARC++, a reference to a const Objective-C pointer is implicitly
treated as __unsafe_unretained, and can be initialized with (e.g.) a
__strong lvalue. Make sure this behavior does not break template
argument deduction and (related) that partial ordering still prefers a
'T* const&' template over a 'T const&' template when this case kicks
in. Fixes <rdar://problem/14467941>.
llvm-svn: 194239
When performing an Objective-C message send to a value of class type,
perform a contextual conversion to an Objective-C pointer type. We've
had this for a long time, but it recently regressed. Fixes
<rdar://problem/15234703>.
llvm-svn: 194224
Also - others have complained about some white space issues - sorry about that - continues to be a pain point for me - will try and see what I can do with clang-format this evening after work - as a short term fix, if anyone can email me the files that they have already identified with issues, it would help me speed up a focused fix. sorry.
llvm-svn: 194206
Both Richard and I felt that the current wording in the working paper needed some tweaking - Please see http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2035 for additional context and references to core-reflector messages that discuss wording tweaks.
What is implemented is what we had intended to specify in Bristol; but, recently felt that the specification might benefit from some tweaking and fleshing.
As a rough attempt to explain the semantics: If a nested lambda with a default-capture names a variable within its body, and if the enclosing full expression that contains the name of that variable is instantiation-dependent - then an enclosing lambda that is capture-ready (i.e. within a non-dependent context) must capture that variable, if all intervening nested lambdas can potentially capture that variable if they need to, and all intervening parent lambdas of the capture-ready lambda can and do capture the variable.
Of note, 'this' capturing is also currently underspecified in the working paper for generic lambdas. What is implemented here is if the set of candidate functions in a nested generic lambda includes both static and non-static member functions (regardless of viability checking - i.e. num and type of parameters/arguments) - and if all intervening nested-inner lambdas between the capture-ready lambda and the function-call containing nested lambda can capture 'this' and if all enclosing lambdas of the capture-ready lambda can capture 'this', then 'this' is speculatively captured by that capture-ready lambda.
Hopefully a paper for the C++ committee (that Richard and I had started some preliminary work on) is forthcoming.
This essentially makes generic lambdas feature complete, except for known bugs. The more prominent ones (and the ones I am currently aware of) being:
- generic lambdas and init-captures are broken - but a patch that fixes this is already in the works ...
- nested variadic expansions such as:
auto K = [](auto ... OuterArgs) {
vp([=](auto ... Is) {
decltype(OuterArgs) OA = OuterArgs;
return 0;
}(5)...);
return 0;
};
auto M = K('a', ' ', 1, " -- ", 3.14);
currently cause crashes. I think I know how to fix this (since I had done so in my initial implementation) - but it will probably take some work and back & forth with Doug and Richard.
A warm thanks to all who provided feedback - and especially to Doug Gregor and Richard Smith for their pivotal guidance: their insight and prestidigitation in such matters is boundless!
Now let's hope this commit doesn't upset the buildbot gods ;)
Thanks!
llvm-svn: 194188
Summary:
Similar to __FUNCTION__, MSVC exposes the name of the enclosing mangled
function name via __FUNCDNAME__. This implementation is very naive and
unoptimized, it is expected that __FUNCDNAME__ would be used rarely in
practice.
Reviewers: rnk, rsmith, thakis
CC: cfe-commits, silvas
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2109
llvm-svn: 194181
the same virtual base class multiple times (and the move assignment is used,
and the move assignment for the virtual base is not trivial).
llvm-svn: 193977
would be deleted are still declared, but are ignored by overload resolution.
Also, don't delete such members if a subobject has no corresponding move
operation and a non-trivial copy. This causes us to implicitly declare move
operations in more cases, but risks move-assigning virtual bases multiple
times in some circumstances (a warning for that is to follow).
llvm-svn: 193969
If the sole distinction between two declarations is that one has a
__restrict qualifier then we should not consider it to be an overload.
Instead, we will consider it as an incompatible redeclaration which is
similar to how MSVC, ICC and GCC would handle it.
This fixes PR17786.
N.B. We must not mangle in __restrict into method qualifiers becase we
don't allow overloading between such declarations anymore. To do
otherwise would be a violation of the Itanium ABI.
llvm-svn: 193964
Flexible array members inherently index off of the end of their parent
type.
We shouldn't allow this type to be used as a base, virtual or otherwise,
because indexing off the end may find us inside of another base or the
derived types members.
llvm-svn: 193923
Flexible array members only work out if they are the last field of a
record, however virtual bases would give us many situations where the
flexible array member would overlap with the virtual base fields.
It is unlikely in the extreme that this behavior was intended by the
user so raise a diagnostic instead of accepting. This is will not
reject conforming code because flexible array members are an extension
in C++ mode.
llvm-svn: 193920
The determination of which diagnostics would be issued for certain
anonymous unions started to get a little ridiculous. Clean this up by
inverting the condition-tree's logic from dialect -> issue to
issue -> diagnostic.
As part of this cleanup, move ext_c99_flexible_array_member from
DiagnosticParseKinds.td to DiagnosticSemaKinds.td because it's driven by
Sema, not Parse.
Also, the liberty was taken to edit ext_c99_flexible_array_member to
match other, similar, diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 193919