The rewrite facility's footprint is small so it's not worth going to these
lengths to support disabling at configure time, particularly since key compiler
features now depend on it.
Meanwhile the Objective-C rewriters have been moved under the
ENABLE_CLANG_ARCMT umbrella for now as they're comparatively heavy and still
potentially worth excluding from lightweight builds.
Tests are now passing with any combination of feature flags. The flags
historically haven't been tested by LLVM's build servers so caveat emptor.
llvm-svn: 213171
Thanks for pointing this out, Stephen. I think this is right now -- I
attempted to try all four valid combinations with both the autoconf and
CMake builds.
See also LLVM changes to the configure script.
llvm-svn: 189027
Per feedback from Chandler, it's better to have libraries with more specific functionality.
LibIndex will contain the indexing functionality of libclang, which includes USR generation.
llvm-svn: 188601
Libclang has a lot of functionality that is inaccessible.
The purpose of clangIDE is to move most of the functionality of libclang to it so we
can expose it and have libclang be more of a thin C wrapper over clangIDE.
Start by moving the USR generation functionality into clangIDE.
llvm-svn: 188569
specifies not to. Dont build ASTMatchers with Rewriter disabled and
StaticAnalyzer when it's disabled.
Without all those three, the clang binary shrinks (x86_64) from ~36MB
to ~32MB (unstripped).
llvm-svn: 170135
That commit added a new library just to hold the RawCommentList. I've
started a discussion on the commit thread about whether that is really
meritted -- it certainly doesn't seem necessary at this stage.
However, the immediate problem is that the AST library has a hard
dependency on the Comment library, but the dependencies were set up
completely backward. In addition to the layering violation, this had an
unfortunate effect if scattering the Comments library dependency
throughout the build system, but inconsistently so -- several parts of
the CMake dependencies were missing and only showed up due to transitive
deps or the fact that the target wasn't being built by tho bots.
It turns out that the Comments library can't (currently) be a well
formed layer *below* the AST library either, as it has an API that
accepts an ASTContext. That parameter is currently unused, so maybe that
was a mistake?
Anyways, it really seems like this is logically part of the AST --
that's the whole point of the ASTContext providing access to it as far
as I can tell -- so I've merged it into the AST library to solve the
immediate layering violation problems and remove some of the churn from
our library dependencies.
llvm-svn: 158807
* Retain comments in the AST
* Serialize/deserialize comments
* Find comments attached to a certain Decl
* Expose raw comment text and SourceRange via libclang
llvm-svn: 158771
Provides an API to run clang tools (FrontendActions) as standalone tools,
or repeatedly in-memory in a process. This is useful for unit-testing,
map-reduce style applications, source transformation daemons or command line
tools.
The ability to run over multiple translation units with different command
line arguments enables building up refactoring tools that need to apply
transformations across translation unit boundaries.
See tools/clang-check/ClangCheck.cpp for an example.
llvm-svn: 154008
the new Objective-C NSArray/NSDictionary/NSNumber literal syntax.
This introduces a new library, libEdit, which provides a new way to support
migration of code that improves on the original ARC migrator. We now believe
that most of its functionality can be refactored into the existing libraries,
and thus this new library may shortly disappear.
llvm-svn: 152141
layout. :)
Rename the 'EntoSA' directories to 'StaticAnalyzer'.
Internally we will still use the 'ento' namespace
for the analyzer engine (unless there are further
sabre rattlings...).
llvm-svn: 122514
r110903 introduced a dependency from Frontend to every library that
declared an Action by introducing Action references that previously
resided in the driver in the file ExecuteCompilerInvocation.cpp.
This patch moves ExecuteCompilerInvocation to a new library named
FrontendTool which is intended to bear these dependencies.
llvm-svn: 111873
(1) libAnalysis is a generic analysis library that can be used by
Sema. It defines the CFG, basic dataflow analysis primitives, and
inexpensive flow-sensitive analyses (e.g. LiveVariables).
(2) libChecker contains the guts of the static analyzer, incuding the
path-sensitive analysis engine and domain-specific checks.
Now any clients that want to use the frontend to build their own tools
don't need to link in the entire static analyzer.
This change exposes various obvious cleanups that can be made to the
layout of files and headers in libChecker. More changes pending. :)
This change also exposed a layering violation between AnalysisContext
and MemRegion. BlockInvocationContext shouldn't explicitly know about
BlockDataRegions. For now I've removed the BlockDataRegion* from
BlockInvocationContext (removing context-sensitivity; although this
wasn't used yet). We need to have a better way to extend
BlockInvocationContext (and any LocationContext) to add
context-sensitivty.
llvm-svn: 94406
- compiler-rt should be checked out into $LLVM_SRC_ROOT/projects/compiler-rt.
- On Darwin, this will automatically build the runtime libraries clang needs
into $OBJROOT/lib/clang/<version>/darwin/...
- The mechanism can easily support other platforms, and can eventually support
multiple platforms once clang has some kind of configure process (for
specifying the desired targets).
- Feedback on the approach is welcome.
llvm-svn: 93910
Its purpose is to provide the basic infrastructure for cross-translation-unit analysis like indexing, refactoring, etc.
Currently it is very "primitive" and with no type-names support. It can provide functionality like
"show me all references of this function from these translation units".
llvm-svn: 74802
lib dir and move all the libraries into it. This follows the main
llvm tree, and allows the libraries to be built in parallel. The
top level now enforces that all the libs are built before Driver,
but we don't care what order the libs are built in. This speeds
up parallel builds, particularly incremental ones.
llvm-svn: 48402