In general, clang-format breaks after an operator if the LHS spans
multiple lines. Otherwise, this can lead to confusing effects and
effectively hide the operator precendence, e.g. in
if (aaaaaaaaaaaaaa ==
bbbbbbbbbbbbbb && c) { ...
This patch removes this rule for comparisons, if the LHS is not a binary
expression itself as many users were wondering why clang-format inserts
an unnecessary linebreak.
Before:
if (aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa(
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa) >
5) { ...
After:
if (aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa(
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa) > 5) { ...
In the long run, we might:
- Want to do this for other binary expressions as well.
- Do this only if the RHS is short or even only if it is a literal.
llvm-svn: 185530
Summary:
The analyzer incorrectly handled noreturn destructors which were hidden inside
function calls. This happened because NoReturnFunctionChecker only listened for
PostStmt events, which are not executed for destructor calls. I've changed it to
listen to PostCall events, which should catch both cases.
Reviewers: jordan_rose
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1056
llvm-svn: 185522
The removal is tried by retrying the failed lookup of a correction
candidate with either the MemberContext or SS (CXXScopeSpecifier) or
both set to NULL if they weren't already. If the candidate identifier
is then looked up successfully, make a note in the candidate that the
SourceRange should include any existing nested name specifier even if
the candidate isn't adding a different one (i.e. the candidate has a
NULL NestedNameSpecifier).
Also tweak the diagnostic messages to differentiate between a suggestion
that just replaces the identifer but leaves the existing nested name
specifier intact and one that replaces the entire qualified identifier,
in cases where the suggested replacement is unqualified.
llvm-svn: 185487
CorrectTypo will now see and consider those corrections that are effectively
shadowed by other declarations in a closer context when resolved via an
unqualified lookup. This involves adding any parent namespaces to the set of
namespaces as fully-qualified name specifiers, and also adding potential
corrections that passed name lookup but were rejected by the given
CorrectionCandidateCallback into the set of failed corrections that should be
tried with the set of namespace specifiers.
llvm-svn: 185486
Darwin systems currently do not support dwarf version 3 or above. When we are
ready, we can bump the default to gdwarf-4 for Darwin.
For other systems, the default is dwarf version 3, if everything goes smoothly,
we can bump the version to 4.
rdar://13591116
llvm-svn: 185483
Unlike Itanium, there is no code to indicate the beginning of a
parameter pack. I tested this with MSVC 2013, which is the only version
that implements variadic templates so far.
This is needed to compile APInt.cpp for the MS C++ ABI.
Reviewers: timurrrr
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1077
llvm-svn: 185454
Make sure we properly treat names defined inside a block as local
names. There are basically three fixes here. One, correctly
treat blocks as a context where we need to use local-name mangling using
the new isLocalContainerContext helper. Two, make
CXXNameMangler::manglePrefix handle local names in a consistent way.
Three, extend CXXNameMangler::mangleLocalName so it can mangle a block
correctly.
llvm-svn: 185450
While we don't model pointers-to-members besides "null" and "non-null",
we were using Loc symbols for valid pointers and NonLoc integers for the
null case. This hit the assert committed in r185401.
Fixed by using a true (Loc) null for null member pointers.
llvm-svn: 185444
Before, the computed byte range would include the trailing newline.
clang-format on the other hand counts whitespace as belonging to the
following token, so that git-clang-format inadvertendly reformats the
first unmodified line as well.
It is not entirely clear whether clang-format's behavior itself should
be modified, but for now this seems to be a safe change.
llvm-svn: 185423
Summary:
Static analyzer used to abort when encountering AttributedStmts, because it
asserted that the statements should not appear in the CFG. This is however not
the case, since at least the clang::fallthrough annotation makes it through.
This commit simply makes the analyzer ignore the statement attributes.
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1030
llvm-svn: 185417
This commit rearranges the logic in CXXNameMangler::mangleLocalName and
GetLocalClassDecl so that it doesn't accidentally skip over lambdas. It
also reduces code duplication a bit.
llvm-svn: 185402
The one bit of code that was using this is gone, and neither C nor C++
actually allows this. Add an assertion and remove dead code.
Found by Matthew Dempsky!
llvm-svn: 185401
The key insight here is that weak linkage for a static local variable
should always mean linkonce_odr, because every file that needs it will
generate a definition. We don't actually care about the precise linkage
of the parent context. I feel a bit silly that I didn't realize this before.
llvm-svn: 185381
Blocks, like lambdas, can be written in contexts which are required to be
treated as the same under ODR. Unlike lambdas, it isn't possible to actually
take the address of a block, so the mangling of the block itself doesn't
matter. However, objects like static variables inside a block do need to
be mangled in a consistent way.
There are basically three components here. One, block literals need a
consistent numbering. Two, objects/types inside a block literal need
to be mangled using it. Three, objects/types inside a block literal need
to have their linkage computed correctly.
llvm-svn: 185372
This lead to weird formatting.
Before:
DoSomethingWithVector({ {} /* No data */ }, {
{ 1, 2 }
});
After:
DoSomethingWithVector({ {} /* No data */ }, { { 1, 2 } });
llvm-svn: 185346
Summary:
Add penalty when an excessively long line in a block comment can not be
broken on a leading whitespace. Lack of this addition can lead to severe column
width violations when they can be easily avoided.
Reviewers: djasper
Reviewed By: djasper
CC: cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1071
llvm-svn: 185337
This is not all bad, but people are often surprised by it.
Before:
namespace {
int SomeVariable = 0; // comment
} // namespace
After:
namespace {
int SomeVariable = 0; // comment
} // namespace
llvm-svn: 185327
Before: void f(int */* unused */) {}
After: void f(int * /* unused */) {}
The previous version seems to be valid C++ code but confuses many syntax
highlighters.
llvm-svn: 185320
The build system is currently miss-identifying GNU/kFreeBSD as FreeBSD.
This kind of simplification is sometimes useful, but in general it's not correct.
As GNU/kFreeBSD is an hybrid system, for kernel-related issues we want to match the
build definitions used for FreeBSD, whereas for userland-related issues we want to
match the definitions used for other systems with Glibc.
The current modification adjusts the build system so that they can be distinguished,
and explicitly adds GNU/kFreeBSD to the build checks in which it belongs.
Fixes bug #16445.
Patch by Robert Millan in the context of Debian.
llvm-svn: 185312
This allows clang to use the backend parameter attribute 'returned' when generating 'this'-returning constructors and destructors in ARM and MSVC C++ ABIs.
llvm-svn: 185291
before the value computation of the result. In C, this is implied by there being
a sequence point after their evaluation, and in C++, it's implied by the
side-effects being sequenced before the expressions and statements in the
function body.
llvm-svn: 185282
standard's rule that an extern "C" declaration conflicts with any entity in the
global scope with the same name. Now we only care if the global scope entity is
a variable declaration (and so might have the same mangled name as the extern
"C" declaration). This has been reported as a standard defect.
Original commit message:
PR7927, PR16247: Reimplement handling of matching extern "C" declarations
across scopes.
When we declare an extern "C" name that is not a redeclaration of an entity in
the same scope, check whether it redeclares some extern "C" entity from another
scope, and if not, check whether it conflicts with a (non-extern-"C") entity in
the translation unit.
When we declare a name in the translation unit that is not a redeclaration,
check whether it conflicts with any extern "C" entities (possibly from other
scopes).
llvm-svn: 185281
explicitly specify use of C++98 or C++11. Lang_CXX is preserved as
an alias for Lang_CXX98.
This does not add Lang_CXX1Y or Lang_C11, on the assumption that it's
better to add them if/when they are needed.
(This is a prerequisite for a test in a later patch for RecursiveASTVisitor.)
Reviewed by Richard Smith.
llvm-svn: 185276
across scopes.
When we declare an extern "C" name that is not a redeclaration of an entity in
the same scope, check whether it redeclares some extern "C" entity from another
scope, and if not, check whether it conflicts with a (non-extern-"C") entity in
the translation unit.
When we declare a name in the translation unit that is not a redeclaration,
check whether it conflicts with any extern "C" entities (possibly from other
scopes).
llvm-svn: 185229
Previously, for a field with an invalid in-class initializer, we
would create a CXXDefaultInitExpr referring to a null Expr*.
This is not a good idea.
llvm-svn: 185216
This function only makes sense there. Eventually it should no longer
be part of the CGCXXABI interface, as it is an Itanium-specific detail.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D821
llvm-svn: 185213
Summary:
Some valid pre-C++11 constructs change meaning when lexed in C++11
mode, e.g.
#define x(_a) printf("foo"_a);
(example from http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=16342). "foo"_a is treated as
a user-defined string literal when parsed in C++11 mode.
In order to deal with this correctly, we need to set lexing mode according to
which standard the code conforms to. We already have a configuration value for
this (FormatStyle.Standard), which seems to be appropriate to use in this case
as well.
Reviewers: klimek
CC: cfe-commits, gribozavr
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1028
llvm-svn: 185149
This replaces a long list of declarations for visitor functions with
a list generated from DeclNodes.inc. Nothing really interesting came
out of it; we had comprehensive coverage anyway
(excluding FriendTemplateDecls).
llvm-svn: 185118
passing arguments in the fixed style.
We have an abstraction for deciding this, but it's (1) deep in
IR-generation, (2) necessarily tied to exact argument lists, and
(3) triggered by unprototyped function types, which we can't
legitimately make in C++ mode. So this solution, wherein Sema
rewrites the function type to an exact prototype but leaves the
variadic bit enabled so as to request x86-64-like platforms to
pass the extra variadic info, is very much a hack, but it's one
that works in practice on the platforms that LLDB will support
in the medium term --- the only place we know of where it's a
problem is instance methods in Windows, where variadic functions
are implicitly cdecl. We may have a more abstracted base on which
to build a solution by then.
rdar://13731520
llvm-svn: 185112
This reverts commit r184817. The failure Chandler was seeing was most likely the
bug that Bob Wilson fixed in r184870 (which was a bug caught by these tests).
To be safe, I just checked again on x86-64 mac os x/linux that this test passed
(which it did).
llvm-svn: 185110
r177473 made us correctly consider only those declarations in the
enclosing namespace scope when looking for a friend declaration. Under
ms-extensions mode, where we do some level of friend injection, this
meant that we were introducing a new tag type into a different scope
than what Microsoft actually does. Address this by only doing the
friend injection when we didn't see any tag with that name in any
outer scope. Fixes <rdar://problem/14250378>.
llvm-svn: 185100
* Use a single stat to find out if the file exists and if it is a regular file.
* Use early returns when possible.
* Add comments explaining why we have each check.
llvm-svn: 185091
Armed with a much better understanding of what
TemplateSpecializationTypeLoc::initializeArgLocs actually does, I now
understand that it's fine to just use an empty TemplateArgumentLocInfo
for Integral, Declaration, and NullPtr TemplateArguments.
Fixes PR14281. (The testcases are actually derived from libcxx_test in
deduction-crash.cpp because the original testcase was impossible to reduce.)
llvm-svn: 185038
side-effect is not sequenced before its value computation. Also fix a
mishandling of ?: expressions where the condition is constant that was
exposed by the tests for this.
llvm-svn: 185035
They are mostly duplicated and got out of sync during the PathV1 removal. We
should factor the code somewhere, but for now a FIXME will do.
llvm-svn: 185019
The old implementation of ms_struct in RecordLayoutBuilder was a
complete mess: it depended on complicated conditionals which didn't
really reflect the underlying logic, and placed a burden on users of
the resulting RecordLayout. This commit rips out almost all of the
old code, and replaces it with simple checks in
RecordLayoutBuilder::LayoutBitField.
This commit also fixes <rdar://problem/14252115>, a bug where class
inheritance would cause us to lay out bitfields incorrectly.
llvm-svn: 185018
This allows clang to parse the type_traits header in Visual Studio 2012,
which is included widely in practice.
This is a rework of r163022 by João Matos. The original patch broke
preprocessing of gtest headers, which this patch addresses.
Patch by Will Wilson!
llvm-svn: 184968
As noted by Richard in the post:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20130624/082605.html, the following code should not add an entry
into PendingLocalImplicitInstantiations, since local instantiations
should only occur within the context of other instantiations:
int foo(double y) {
struct Lambda {
template<class T> T operator()(T t) const { return t; };
} lambda;
return lambda(y);
}
Hence the attached code does the following:
1) In MarkFunctionReferenced, check if ActiveInstantiations.size()
is non-zero before adding to PendingLocalImplicitInstantiations.
2) In InstantiateFunctionDefinition, we swap out/in
PendingLocalImplicitInstantiations so that only those
pending local instantiations that are added during the instantiation
of the current function are instantiated recursively.
llvm-svn: 184903
When the decl that we're getting alignment for is a FieldDecl, and the field's
parent record is invalid, skip the actual field alignment calculation (and
return 1-byte alignment in the general case).
Also, assert in in getASTRecordLayout that the decl is valid. This was
inspired by PR16292; see also r184581 and r184751.
llvm-svn: 184883
A default template-argument shall not be specified in a friend template
declaration.
Interestingly, we properly handled default template arguments on friend
class members but not on just friend classes.
llvm-svn: 184882
this code. These aren't technically standard predefines for the platform
but apparantly lots of folks use them as they show up within LLVM's own
codebase. ;] This may even fix some self host issues w/ the JIT!!!
llvm-svn: 184830
Re-apply r184511, reverted in r184561, with the trivial default constructor
fast path removed -- it turned out not to be necessary here.
Certain expressions can cause a constructor invocation to zero-initialize
its object even if the constructor itself does no initialization. The
analyzer now handles that before evaluating the call to the constructor,
using the same "default binding" mechanism that calloc() uses, rather
than simply ignoring the zero-initialization flag.
<rdar://problem/14212563>
llvm-svn: 184815
In order to make sure virtual base classes are always initialized once,
the AST contains initializers for the base class in /all/ of its
descendents, not just the immediate descendents. However, at runtime,
the most-derived object is responsible for initializing all the virtual
base classes; all the other initializers will be ignored.
The analyzer now checks to see if it's being called from another base
constructor, and if so does not perform virtual base initialization.
<rdar://problem/14236851>
llvm-svn: 184814
numbers as we deserialize class template partial specializations. We can't
assume that the old sequence numbers will work.
The sequence numbers are still deterministic, but are now a lot less
predictable for class template partial specializations in modules/PCH.
llvm-svn: 184811
Use castAs<> where appropriate. Don't check conditionals which are
always true. Delete a bit of dead code. Reindent a bunch of code which
is no longer guarded by an if statement.
llvm-svn: 184801
-performSelector: and friends return a value that is boxed as an Objective-C
pointer. Sometimes it is an Objective-C pointer, sometimes it isn't.
Some clients may wish to silence this warning based on calling
this method.
Fixes <rdar://problem/14147304>
llvm-svn: 184789
This is a large test and thus it will only run if you pass in --param
run_long_tests=trueto LIT. This is intended so that this test can run on
buildbots and not when one runs make check.
llvm-svn: 184787
This will prevent the tests from running on normal make check. You will need to
actually pass in --param run_long_tests=true to LIT in order to run these.
llvm-svn: 184784
The top-level hash is used to determine if we need to update the global code-completion results.
ImportDecls did not affect the hash so a newly introduced ImportDecl would not trigger an update of the global results.
rdar://14202797
llvm-svn: 184782
This changes the mangling of local static variables/etc. inside blocks
to do something simple and sane. This avoids depending on the way we mangle
blocks, which isn't really appropriate here.
John, please take a look at this to make sure the mangling I chose is sane.
Fixes <rdar://problem/14074423>.
llvm-svn: 184780
At this point, it's clear that the MSVC mangler uses the type-as-written
instead of the canonical type, so this should bring us closer to MSVC.
The main thrust of this change is to fix the way we mangle decayed array
parameters of function pointer parameters. With a DecayedType sugar
node, this code can now be much simpler.
Fixes PR16096.
This also fixes a separate issue that Richard spotted in review.
Because separate declarations of the same entity can be spelled and
mangled differently, MSVC always mangles the earliest declaration in an
attempt to avoid link errors. Clang now does the same.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D844
llvm-svn: 184777
Add a debug checker that is useful to understand how the ExplodedGraph is
built; it can be triggered using the following command:
clang -cc1 -analyze -analyzer-checker=debug.ViewExplodedGraph my_program.c
A patch by Béatrice Creusillet!
llvm-svn: 184768
The way we decide which file to remove is fairly odd. I took a quick look at
maybe changing that, but it would be a more work than I want to put at this
right now, so I left pair of FIXMEs.
llvm-svn: 184766
The goal of this sugar node is to be able to look at an arbitrary
FunctionType and tell if any of the parameters were decayed from an
array or function type. Ultimately this is necessary to implement
Microsoft's C++ name mangling scheme, which mangles decayed arrays
differently from normal pointers.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1014
llvm-svn: 184763
print-size-type.cpp was checking for specific record layout output for invalid
decls; I've removed the checks but left the records as tests for not crashing.
llvm-svn: 184751
constructing a lookup table.
Previously, buildLookup would add lookup table entries for each item lexically
within the DC, and adding the first entry with a given name would trigger the
external source to add all its entries with that name. Then buildLookup would
carry on and re-add those entries all over again.
Instead, follow a simple rule: a declaration from an external source is only
ever made visible by the external source. One exception to this: since we don't
usually build a lookup table for the TU in C, and we never serialize one, we
don't expect the external source to provide lookups in the TU in C, so we build
those ones ourselves.
llvm-svn: 184696
There's still a problem here - since we're not appropriately using the
signedness/range of the enum to chooset the encoding and emission of
enumerators, but GCC has some bugs around this too so I assume that's
not /such/ a high priority though I may get to it soon out of
completeness.
llvm-svn: 184695
whether they replace any existing lookups in the context, rather than
accumulating a bunch of lookup results referring to the same entity.
llvm-svn: 184679
when specifying --coverage (or related) flags.
The system for doing this was based on the old LLVM-hosted profile_rt
library, and hadn't been updated for Linux to use the new compiler-rt
library. Also, it couldn't possibly work on multiarch or biarch systems
in many cases. The whole thing now works much the same as the sanitizer
libraries that are built and used out of the compiler-rt repo.
Note that other target OSes haven't been updated because I don't know if
they're doing anything special with the installation path of profile_rt.
I suspect however that *all* of these are wrong and would encourage
maintainers of each target to take a hard look at how compiler-rt
runtime libraries are linked on their platforms.
llvm-svn: 184666
to build and one had grown out of sync. Put this list in a variable so
this doesn't happen again.
The whole thing here is somewhat suspicious as we don't support 32-bit
environments with a 64-bit bi-arch capable compiler, but none have
complained yet about this so I'm just leaving it alone.
llvm-svn: 184665
verifies that we run the assembler and linker in the correct mode, and
that we can successfully use a bi-arch variant of a GCC installation in
a generic cross compilation invocation of Clang.
llvm-svn: 184662
Allow the comments in the FriendObjectKind enumerator-list show up in
doxygen. Also, some small readability improvements in related functions.
llvm-svn: 184657
Remove unneeded member in CommentSema, add a test for the XML schema (the
schema already allowed multiple paragraphs in <ResultDiscussion>, but there
were no tests for that), fix HTML generation (it is not allowed to have <p>
inside <dl>).
llvm-svn: 184652
There are fundamentally two different things that were getting conflated
here.
1) A bi-arch GCC toolchain install. This is not a full blown cross
compiler, but it supports targetting both 32-bit and 64-bit variants
of the same architecture using multilib OS installs and runtimes.
2) A "multiarch" Debian OS/runtime layout that lays out the libraries,
headers, etc as-if there were going to be a full blown cross compiler
even when in reality it is just a bi-arch GCC targeting two variants.
Also, these tend to use oddly "canonicalized" triples without the
vendor in them unlike the typical cross compiler runtime library
search that vanilla GCC cross compilers perform.
Now, when we mean the bi-arch nature of GCC accomplished with just
a suffix or tweak to the GCC paths, we say 'Biarch' or something
related. When we mean the Debian layout of includes and libraries, we
say multiarch or reference the multiarch triple.
In the process of reading and often renaming stuff in all these places,
also reformat with clang-format. No functionality change should be going
on here, this is just tidying up.
llvm-svn: 184632
The problem with r183462 was that we assumed that a diagnostic id of
zero would be silent.
This small correction to CheckDerivedToBaseConversion changes it's
behavior to omit the diagnostic when given a diagnostic id of zero.
This fix passes the test case added in r184402.
llvm-svn: 184631
This fixes false positives by allowing us to know that a loop is always entered if
the collection count method returns a positive value and vice versa.
Addresses radar://14169391.
llvm-svn: 184618
Add the back edge info by creating a basic block, marked as loop target. This is
consistent with how other loops are processed, but was omitted from
VisitObjCForCollectionStmt.
llvm-svn: 184617
Empty structs are ignored for parameter passing purposes, but va_arg was
incrementing the pointer anyway which could lead to va_list getting out of
sync.
llvm-svn: 184605
According to the Itanium ABI (3.1.1), types with non-trivial copy constructors
passed by value should be passed indirectly, with the caller creating a
temporary.
We got this mostly correct, but forgot that empty structs can have non-trivial
constructors too and passed them incorrectly. This simply reverses the order of
the check.
llvm-svn: 184603
Per review from Anna, this really should have been two commits, and besides
it's causing problems on our internal buildbot. Reverting until these have
been worked out.
This reverts r184511 / 98123284826bb4ce422775563ff1a01580ec5766.
llvm-svn: 184561
Itanium destroys them in the caller at the end of the full expression,
but MSVC destroys them in the callee. This is further complicated by
the need to emit EH-only destructor cleanups in the caller.
This should help clang compile MSVC's debug iterators more correctly.
There is still an outstanding issue in PR5064 of a memcpy emitted by the
LLVM backend, which is not correct for C++ records.
Fixes PR16226.
Reviewers: rjmccall
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D929
llvm-svn: 184543
This is to make test cases looking for definitions more legible by
making the definition explicit rather than just the absence of '[fwd]'.
This allowed the debug-info-record tests to be rephrased - and in the
interests of reducing the number of individual test cases/invocations we
have, I merged them into one file, separated them with namespaces (&
then moved them to C++ because namespaces are great). If they need to
remain 'C' only tests, they can be moved back. (I didn't group them with
'debug-info-class.cpp' because these tests only apply to
-fno-limit-debug-info)
I removed the pieces of code that would cause these tests to pass under
-flimit-debug-info to ensure the tests remain relevant to their fixes
should we ever improve -flimit-debug-info to catch that kind of code.
This commit is version locked with the corresponding change to
DebugInfo.h in LLVM. Except some transient buildbot fallout.
llvm-svn: 184524
Certain expressions can cause a constructor invocation to zero-initialize
its object even if the constructor itself does no initialization. The
analyzer now handles that before evaluating the call to the constructor,
using the same "default binding" mechanism that calloc() uses, rather
than simply ignoring the zero-initialization flag.
As a bonus, trivial default constructors are now no longer inlined; they
are instead processed explicitly by ExprEngine. This has a (positive)
effect on the generated path edges: they no longer stop at a default
constructor call unless there's a user-provided implementation.
<rdar://problem/14212563>
llvm-svn: 184511