Make StmtPrinter use DeclPrinter to print all declarations. Merge
declarations in the limited case of an unnamed TagDecl followed by one
or more declarations using that TagDecl directly. Change
SuppressTypeSpecifiers to the more general SuppressSpecifiers, and
use it to suppress stuff like "typedef" and "extern". Replace
OwnedTag with SuppressTag, since it's more convenient to print
declarations from DeclPrinter at the moment.
improvements to declaration printing. Fix pretty-printing for K&R
function definitions and __builtin_va_arg.
We're now to the point where the pretty-printing output for non-trivial
programs can actually be piped back into clang.
llvm-svn: 72608
walks through DeclContexts properly, and prints more of the
information available in the AST. The functionality is still available
via -ast-print, -ast-dump, etc., and also via the new member functions
Decl::dump() and Decl::print().
llvm-svn: 72597
printing logic to help customize the output. For now, we use this
rather than a special flag to suppress the "struct" when printing
"struct X" and to print the Boolean type as "bool" in C++ but "_Bool"
in C.
llvm-svn: 72590
instantiation of tags local to member functions of class templates
(and, eventually, function templates) works when the tag is defined as
part of the decl-specifier-seq, e.g.,
struct S { T x, y; } s1;
Also, make sure that we don't try to default-initialize a dependent
type.
llvm-svn: 72568
specifier resulted in the creation of a new TagDecl node, which
happens either when the tag specifier was a definition or when the tag
specifier was the first declaration of that tag type. This information
has several uses, the first of which is implemented in this commit:
1) In C++, one is not allowed to define tag types within a type
specifier (e.g., static_cast<struct S { int x; } *>(0) is
ill-formed) or within the result or parameter types of a
function. We now diagnose this.
2) We can extend DeclGroups to contain information about any tags
that are declared/defined within the declaration specifiers of a
variable, e.g.,
struct Point { int x, y, z; } p;
This will help improve AST printing and template instantiation,
among other things.
3) For C99, we can keep track of whether a tag type is defined
within the type of a parameter, to properly cope with cases like,
e.g.,
int bar(struct T2 { int x; } y) {
struct T2 z;
}
We can also do similar things wherever there is a type specifier,
e.g., to keep track of where the definition of S occurs in this
legal C99 code:
(struct S { int x, y; } *)0
llvm-svn: 72555
given DeclContext is dependent on type parameters. Use this to
properly determine whether a TagDecl is dependent; previously, we were
missing the case where the TagDecl is a local class of a member
function of a class template (phew!).
Also, make sure that, when we instantiate declarations within a member
function of a class template (or a function template, eventually),
that we add those declarations to the "instantiated locals" map so
that they can be found when instantiating declaration references.
Unfortunately, I was not able to write a useful test for this change,
although the assert() that fires when uncommenting the FIXME'd line in
test/SemaTemplate/instantiate-declref.cpp tells the "experienced user"
that we're now doing the right thing.
llvm-svn: 72526
diagnostic to include the full instantiation location for the
invalid paste. For:
#define foo(a, b) a ## b
#define bar(x) foo(x, ])
bar(a)
bar(zdy)
Instead of:
t.c:3:22: error: pasting formed 'a]', an invalid preprocessing token
#define foo(a, b) a ## b
^
t.c:3:22: error: pasting formed 'zdy]', an invalid preprocessing token
we now produce:
t.c:7:1: error: pasting formed 'a]', an invalid preprocessing token
bar(a)
^
t.c:4:16: note: instantiated from:
#define bar(x) foo(x, ])
^
t.c:3:22: note: instantiated from:
#define foo(a, b) a ## b
^
t.c:8:1: error: pasting formed 'zdy]', an invalid preprocessing token
bar(zdy)
^
t.c:4:16: note: instantiated from:
#define bar(x) foo(x, ])
^
t.c:3:22: note: instantiated from:
#define foo(a, b) a ## b
^
llvm-svn: 72519
parser. Rather than placing all of the delayed member function
declarations and inline definitions into a single bucket corresponding
to the top-level class, we instead mirror the nesting structure of the
nested classes and place the delayed member functions into their
appropriate place. Then, when we actually parse the delayed member
function declarations, set up the scope stack the same way as it was
when we originally saw the declaration, so that we can find, e.g.,
template parameters that are in scope.
llvm-svn: 72502
declaration references. The key realization is that dependent Decls,
which actually require instantiation, can only refer to the current
instantiation or members thereof. And, since the current context
during instantiation contains all of those members of the current
instantiation, we can simply find the real instantiate that matches up
with the "current instantiation" template.
llvm-svn: 72486
within a template now have a link back to the enumeration from which
they were instantiated. This means that we can now find the
instantiation of an anonymous enumeration.
llvm-svn: 72482
references. There are several smallish fixes here:
- Make sure we look through template parameter scope when
determining whether we're parsing a nested class (or nested class
*template*). This makes sure that we delay parsing the bodies of
inline member functions until after we're out of the outermost
class (template) scope.
- Since the bodies of member functions are always parsed
"out-of-line", even when they were declared in-line, teach
unqualified name lookup to look into the (semantic) parents.
- Use the new InstantiateDeclRef to handle the instantiation of a
reference to a declaration (in DeclRefExpr), which drastically
simplifies template instantiation for DeclRefExprs.
- When we're instantiating a ParmVarDecl, it must be in the current
instantiation scope, so only look there.
Also, remove the #if 0's and FIXME's from the dynarray example, which
now compiles and executes thanks to Anders and Eli.
llvm-svn: 72481
instantiation of a declaration from the template version (or version
that lives in a template) and a given set of template arguments. This
needs much, much more testing, but it suffices for simple examples
like
typedef T* iterator;
iterator begin();
llvm-svn: 72461
an integral constant expression, maintain a cache of the value and the
is-an-ICE flag within the VarDecl itself. This eliminates
exponential-time behavior of the Fibonacci template metaprogram.
llvm-svn: 72428
thing for non-aggregate types.
- Otherwise we unnecessarily pin values to the stack and currently end up
triggering a backend bug in one case.
- This loose cooperation with LLVM to implement the ABI is pretty ugly.
- <rdar://problem/6918722> [irgen] clang miscompile of many pointer varargs on
x86-64
llvm-svn: 72419
argument. This avoids the argument from being silenced when the argument is
the NULL macro, which is defined in a system header. This also makes the output
a bit nicer, e.g.:
t.c:8:3: warning: null passed to a callee which requires a non-null argument
func1(NULL, cp2, i1);
^ ~~~~
vs something like:
t.c:8:10: warning: argument is null where non-null is required
func1(NULL, cp2, i1);
^
llvm-svn: 72393
1. When we accept "#garbage" in asm-with-cpp mode, change the token kind
of the # to unknown so that the preprocessor won't try to process it as
a real #. This fixes a crash on the attached example
2. Fix macro definition extents processing to handle #foo at the end of a
macro to say the definition ends with the foo, not the #.
This is a follow-on fix to r72283, and rdar://6916026
llvm-svn: 72388
expressions. We are now missing template instantiation logic for only
three classes of expressions:
- Blocks-related expressions (BlockExpr, BlockDeclRefExpr)
- C++ default argument expressions
- Objective-C expressions
Additionally, our handling of DeclRefExpr is still quite poor, since
it cannot handle references to many kinds of declarations.
As part of this change, converted the TemplateExprInstantiator to use
iteration through all of the expressions via clang/AST/StmtNodes.def,
ensuring that we don't forget to add template instantiation logic for
any new expression node kinds.
llvm-svn: 72303
expressions. This change introduces another AST node,
CXXUnresolvedMemberExpr, that captures member references (x->m, x.m)
when the base of the expression (the "x") is type-dependent, and we
therefore cannot resolve the member reference yet.
Note that our parsing of member references for C++ is still quite
poor, e.g., we don't handle x->Base::m or x->operator int.
llvm-svn: 72281
(T(*)(int[x+y]));
is an (invalid) paren expression, but "x+y" will be parsed as part of the (rejected) type-id,
so unnecessary Action calls are made for an unused (and possibly leaked) "x+y".
Use a different scheme, similar to parsing inline methods. The parenthesized tokens are cached,
the context that follows is determined (possibly by parsing a cast-expression),
and then we re-introduce the cached tokens into the token stream and parse them appropriately.
llvm-svn: 72279
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
- We could just warn about -fno-unit-at-a-time, but in practice people using it
probably aren't going to get what they want out of clang.
Also, use "clang" specified error for unsupported things instead of driver
unsupported error.
llvm-svn: 72272
and objects of this class are derived from 'NSProxy'.
Under such conditions, which means that every method possible is
implemented in the class, we should not issue "Method definition not found"
warnings.
llvm-svn: 72267
a paren expression without considering the context past the parentheses.
Behold:
(T())x; - type-id
(T())*x; - type-id
(T())/x; - expression
(T()); - expression
llvm-svn: 72260
Embed its functionality into it's only user, ParseCXXCasts.
CXXCasts now get the "actual" expression directly, they no longer always receive a ParenExpr. This is better since the
parentheses are always part of the C++ casts syntax.
llvm-svn: 72257
-Makes typeof consistent with sizeof/alignof
-Fixes a bug when '>' is in a typeof expression, inside a template type param:
A<typeof(x>1)> a;
llvm-svn: 72255