It turns out that MinGW never dllimports of exports inline functions.
This means that code compiled with Clang would fail to link with
MinGW-compiled libraries since we might try to import functions that
are not imported.
To fix this, make Clang never dllimport inline functions when targeting
MinGW.
llvm-svn: 221154
Because references must be initialized using some evaluated expression, they
must point to something, and a callee can assume the reference parameter is
dereferenceable. Taking advantage of a new attribute just added to LLVM, mark
them as such.
Because dereferenceability in addrspace(0) implies nonnull in the backend, we
don't need both attributes. However, we need to know the size of the object to
use the dereferenceable attribute, so for incomplete types we still emit only
nonnull.
llvm-svn: 213386
This makes us emit dllexported in-class initialized static data members (which
are treated as definitions in MSVC), even when they're not referenced.
It also makes their special linkage reflected in the GVA linkage instead of
getting massaged in CodeGen.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4563
llvm-svn: 213304
MSVC doesn't export these functions, so trying to import them doesnt' work.
Also, don't let any dll attributes on the CXXDestructorDecl influence the
thunk's linkage -- they should always be linkonce_odr.
This takes care of the FIXME's for this in Nico's tests.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3930
llvm-svn: 209706