buffer as an 'unsigned char', so that integer promotion doesn't
sign-extend character values > 127 into oblivion. Fixes
<rdar://problem/10188919>.
llvm-svn: 140608
which will do a binary search and return a pair of iterators
for preprocessed entities in the given source range.
Source ranges of preprocessed entities are stored twice currently in
the PCH/Module file but this will be fixed in a subsequent commit.
llvm-svn: 140058
the AST reader), merge that header file information with whatever
header file information we already have. Otherwise, we might forget
something we already knew (e.g., that the header was #import'd already).
llvm-svn: 139979
-Use an array of offsets for all preprocessed entities
-Get rid of the separate array of offsets for just macro definitions;
for references to macro definitions use an index inside the preprocessed
entities array.
-Deserialize each preprocessed entity lazily, at first request; not in bulk.
Paves the way for binary searching of preprocessed entities that will offer
efficiency and will simplify things on the libclang side a lot.
llvm-svn: 139809
target triple to separate modules built under different
conditions. The hash is used to create a subdirectory in the module
cache path where other invocations of the compiler (with the same
version, language options, etc.) can find the precompiled modules.
llvm-svn: 139662
but there is a corresponding umbrella header in a framework, build the
module on-the-fly so it can be immediately loaded at the import
statement. This is very much proof-of-concept code, with details to be
fleshed out over time.
llvm-svn: 139558
where the compiler will look for module files. Eliminates the
egregious hack where we looked into the header search paths for
modules.
llvm-svn: 139538
'id' that can be used (only!) via a contextual keyword as the result
type of an Objective-C message send. 'instancetype' then gives the
method a related result type, which we have already been inferring for
a variety of methods (new, alloc, init, self, retain). Addresses
<rdar://problem/9267640>.
llvm-svn: 139275
keyword. We now handle this keyword in HandleIdentifier, making a note
for ourselves when we've seen the __import_module__ keyword so that
the next lexed token can trigger a module import (if needed). This
greatly simplifies Preprocessor::Lex(), and completely erases the 5.5%
-Eonly slowdown Argiris noted when I originally implemented
__import_module__. Big thanks to Argiris for noting that horrible
regression!
llvm-svn: 139265
Previously we would cut off the source file buffer at the code-completion
point; this impeded code-completion inside C++ inline methods and,
recently, with buffering ObjC methods.
Have the code-completion inserted into the source buffer so that it can
be buffered along with a method body. When we actually hit the code-completion
point the cut-off lexing or parsing.
Fixes rdar://10056932&8319466
llvm-svn: 139086
The function was only counting lines that included tokens and not empty lines,
but MaxLines (mainly initiated to the line where the code-completion point resides)
is a count of overall lines (even empty ones).
llvm-svn: 139085
and language-specific initialization. Use this to allow ASTUnit to
create a preprocessor object *before* loading the AST file. No actual
functionality change.
llvm-svn: 138983
LangOptions, rather than making distinct copies of
LangOptions. Granted, LangOptions doesn't actually get modified, but
this will eventually make it easier to construct ASTContext and
Preprocessor before we know all of the LangOptions.
llvm-svn: 138959
include guards don't show up as macro definitions in every translation
unit that imports a module. Macro definitions can, however, be
exported with the intentionally-ugly #__export_macro__
directive. Implement this feature by not even bothering to serialize
non-exported macros to a module, because clients of that module need
not (should not) know that these macros even exist.
llvm-svn: 138943
existing practice with Python extension modules. Not that Python
extension modules should be using a double-underscored identifier
anyway, but...
llvm-svn: 138870
collision between C99 hexfloats and C++0x user-defined literals by
giving C99 hexfloats precedence. Also, warning about user-defined
literals that conflict with hexfloats and those that have names that
are reserved by the implementation. Fixes <rdar://problem/9940194>.
llvm-svn: 138839
__import__ within the preprocessor, since the prior one foolishly
assumed that Preprocessor::Lex() was re-entrant. We now handle
__import__ at the top level (only), after macro expansion. This should
fix the buildbot failures.
llvm-svn: 138704
loads the named module. The syntax itself is intentionally hideous and
will be replaced at some later point with something more
palatable. For now, we're focusing on the semantics:
- Module imports are handled first by the preprocessor (to get macro
definitions) and then the same tokens are also handled by the parser
(to get declarations). If both happen (as in normal compilation),
the second one is redundant, because we currently have no way to
hide macros or declarations when loading a module. Chris gets credit
for this mad-but-workable scheme.
- The Preprocessor now holds on to a reference to a module loader,
which is responsible for loading named modules. CompilerInstance is
the only important module loader: it now knows how to create and
wire up an AST reader on demand to actually perform the module load.
- We search for modules in the include path, using the module name
with the suffix ".pcm" (precompiled module) for the file name. This
is a temporary hack; we hope to improve the situation in the
future.
llvm-svn: 138679
to increased calls to SourceManager::getFileID. (rdar://9992664)
Use a slightly different approach that is more efficient both in terms of speed
(no extra getFileID calls) and in SLocEntries reduction.
Comparing pre-r138129 and this patch we get:
For compiling SemaExpr.cpp reduction of SLocEntries by 26%.
For the boost enum library:
-SLocEntries -34% (note that this was -5% for r138129)
-Memory consumption -50%
-PCH size -31%
Reduced SLocEntries also benefit the hot function SourceManager::getFileID,
evident by the reduced "FileID scans".
llvm-svn: 138380
Currently getMacroArgExpandedLocation is very inefficient and for the case
of a location pointing at the main file it will end up checking almost all of
the SLocEntries. Make it faster:
-Use a map of macro argument chunks to their expanded source location. The map
is for a single source file, it's stored in the file's ContentCache and lazily
computed, like the source lines cache.
-In SLocEntry's FileInfo add an 'unsigned NumCreatedFIDs' field that keeps track
of the number of FileIDs (files and macros) that were created during preprocessing
of that particular file SLocEntry. This is useful when computing the macro argument
map in skipping included files while scanning for macro arg FileIDs that lexed from
a specific source file. Due to padding, the new field does not increase the size
of SLocEntry.
llvm-svn: 138225
for tokens that are lexed consecutively from the same FileID, instead of creating
a SLocEntry for each token. e.g for
assert(foo == bar);
there will be a single SLocEntry for the "foo == bar" chunk and locations
for the 'foo', '==', 'bar' tokens will point inside that chunk.
For parsing SemaExpr.cpp, this reduced the number of SLocEntries by 25%.
llvm-svn: 138129
1. Be more tolerant of comments in -CC (comment-preserving) mode. We were missing a few cases.
2. Make sure to expand the second FOO in "#if defined FOO FOO". (See also
r97253, which addressed the case of "#if defined(FOO FOO".)
Fixes PR10286.
llvm-svn: 136748
etc. With this I think essentially all of the SourceManager APIs are
converted. Comments and random other bits of cleanup should be all thats
left.
llvm-svn: 136057
and various other 'expansion' based terms. I've tried to reformat where
appropriate and catch as many references in comments but I'm going to do
several more passes. Also I've tried to expand parameter names to be
more clear where appropriate.
llvm-svn: 136056
FullSourceLoc::getInstantiationLoc to ...::getExpansionLoc. This is part
of the API and documentation update from 'instantiation' as the term for
macros to 'expansion'.
llvm-svn: 135914
entities generated directly by the preprocessor from those loaded from
the external source (e.g., the ASTReader). By separating these two
sets of entities into different vectors, we allow both to grow
independently, and eliminate the need for preallocating all of the
loaded preprocessing entities. This is similar to the way the recent
SourceManager refactoring treats FileIDs and the source location
address space.
As part of this, switch over to building a continuous range map to
track preprocessing entities.
llvm-svn: 135646
source locations from source locations loaded from an AST/PCH file.
Previously, loading an AST/PCH file involved carefully pre-allocating
space at the beginning of the source manager for the source locations
and FileIDs that correspond to the prefix, and then appending the
source locations/FileIDs used for parsing the remaining translation
unit. This design forced us into loading PCH files early, as a prefix,
whic has become a rather significant limitation.
This patch splits the SourceManager space into two parts: for source
location "addresses", the lower values (growing upward) are used to
describe parsed code, while upper values (growing downward) are used
for source locations loaded from AST/PCH files. Similarly, positive
FileIDs are used to describe parsed code while negative FileIDs are
used to file/macro locations loaded from AST/PCH files. As a result,
we can load PCH/AST files even during parsing, making various
improvemnts in the future possible, e.g., teaching #include <foo.h> to
look for and load <foo.h.gch> if it happens to be already available.
This patch was originally written by Sebastian Redl, then brought
forward to the modern age by Jonathan Turner, and finally
polished/finished by me to be committed.
llvm-svn: 135484
variants to 'expand'. This changed a couple of public APIs, including
one public type "MacroInstantiation" which is now "MacroExpansion". The
rest of the codebase was updated to reflect this, especially the
libclang code. Two of the C++ (and thus easily changed) libclang APIs
were updated as well because they pertained directly to the old
MacroInstantiation class.
No functionality changed.
llvm-svn: 135139
'expand'. Also update the public API it provides to the new term, and
propagate that update to the various clients.
No functionality changed.
llvm-svn: 135138
argument expansion to use the macro argument source locations as well.
Add a few tests to exercise this. There is still a bit more work needed
here though.
llvm-svn: 134674
instantiation and improve diagnostics which are stem from macro
arguments to trace the argument itself back through the layers of macro
expansion.
This requires some tricky handling of the source locations, as the
argument appears to be expanded in the opposite direction from the
surrounding macro. This patch provides helper routines that encapsulate
the logic and explain the reasoning behind how we step through macros
during diagnostic printing.
This fixes the rest of the test cases originially in PR9279, and later
split out into PR10214 and PR10215.
There is still some more work we can do here to improve the macro
backtrace, but those will follow as separate patches.
llvm-svn: 134660
When a macro instantiation occurs, reserve a SLocEntry chunk with length the
full length of the macro definition source. Set the spelling location of this chunk
to point to the start of the macro definition and any tokens that are lexed directly
from the macro definition will get a location from this chunk with the appropriate offset.
For any tokens that come from argument expansion, '##' paste operator, etc. have their
instantiation location point at the appropriate place in the instantiated macro definition
(the argument identifier and the '##' token respectively).
This improves macro instantiation diagnostics:
Before:
t.c:5:9: error: invalid operands to binary expression ('struct S' and 'int')
int y = M(/);
^~~~
t.c:5:11: note: instantiated from:
int y = M(/);
^
After:
t.c:5:9: error: invalid operands to binary expression ('struct S' and 'int')
int y = M(/);
^~~~
t.c:3:20: note: instantiated from:
\#define M(op) (foo op 3);
~~~ ^ ~
t.c:5:11: note: instantiated from:
int y = M(/);
^
The memory savings for a candidate boost library that abuses the preprocessor are:
- 32% less SLocEntries (37M -> 25M)
- 30% reduction in PCH file size (900M -> 635M)
- 50% reduction in memory usage for the SLocEntry table (1.6G -> 800M)
llvm-svn: 134587
structure to hold inferred information, then propagate each invididual
bit down to -cc1. Separate the bits of "supports weak" and "has a native
ARC runtime"; make the latter a CodeGenOption.
The tool chain is still driving this decision, because it's the place that
has the required deployment target information on Darwin, but at least it's
better-factored now.
llvm-svn: 134453
Previously macro expanded tokens were added to Preprocessor's bump allocator and never released,
even after the TokenLexer that were lexing them was finished, thus they were wasting memory.
A very "useful" boost library was causing clang to eat 1 GB just for the expanded macro tokens.
Introduce a special cache that works like a stack; a TokenLexer can add the macro expanded tokens
in the cache, and when it finishes, the tokens are removed from the end of the cache.
Now consumed memory by expanded tokens for that library is ~ 1.5 MB.
Part of rdar://9327049.
llvm-svn: 134105
Language-design credit goes to a lot of people, but I particularly want
to single out Blaine Garst and Patrick Beard for their contributions.
Compiler implementation credit goes to Argyrios, Doug, Fariborz, and myself,
in no particular order.
llvm-svn: 133103
Patch by Matthieu Monrocq with tweaks by me to avoid StringRefs in the static
diagnostic data structures, which resulted in a huge global-var-init function.
Depends on llvm commit r132046.
llvm-svn: 132047
header. Getting it in the wrong order generated incorrect line markers in -E
mode. In the testcase from PR9861 we used to generate:
# 1 "test.c" 2
# 1 "./foobar.h" 1
# 0 "./foobar.h"
# 0 "./foobar.h" 3
# 2 "test.c" 2
now we properly produce:
# 1 "test.c" 2
# 1 "./foobar.h" 1
# 1 "./foobar.h" 3
# 2 "test.c" 2
This fixes PR9861.
llvm-svn: 131871
minor issues along the way:
- Non-type template parameters of type 'std::nullptr_t' were not
permitted.
- We didn't properly introduce built-in operators for nullptr ==,
!=, <, <=, >=, or > as candidate functions .
To my knowledge, there's only one (minor but annoying) part of nullptr
that hasn't been implemented: catching a thrown 'nullptr' as a pointer
or pointer-to-member, per C++0x [except.handle]p4.
llvm-svn: 131813
1. We would assume that the length of the string literal token was at least 2
2. We would allocate a buffer with size length-2
And when the stars aligned (one of which would be an invalid source location due to stale PCH)
The length would be 0 and we would try to allocate a 4GB buffer.
Add checks for this corner case and a bunch of asserts.
(We really really should have had an assert for 1.).
Note that there's no test case since I couldn't get one (it was major PITA to reproduce),
maybe later.
llvm-svn: 131492
__has_extension is a function-like macro which takes the same set
of feature identifiers as __has_feature. It evaluates to 1 if the
feature is supported by Clang in the current language (either as a
language extension or a standard language feature) or 0 if not.
At the same time, add support for the C1X feature identifiers
c_generic_selections (renamed from generic_selections) and
c_static_assert, and document them.
Patch by myself and Jean-Daniel Dupas.
llvm-svn: 131308
CXTranslationUnit_NestedMacroInstantiations, which indicates whether
we want to see "nested" macro instantiations (e.g., those that occur
inside other macro instantiations) within the detailed preprocessing
record. Many clients (e.g., those that only care about visible tokens)
don't care about this information, and in code that uses preprocessor
metaprogramming, this information can have a very high cost.
Addresses <rdar://problem/9389320>.
llvm-svn: 130990
which determines whether a particular file is actually a header that
is intended to be guarded from multiple inclusions within the same
translation unit.
llvm-svn: 130808
As far as I know, this implementation is complete but might be missing a
few optimizations. Exceptions and virtual bases are handled correctly.
Because I'm an optimist, the web page has appropriately been updated. If
I'm wrong, feel free to downgrade its support categories.
llvm-svn: 130642
includes get resolved, especially when they are found relatively to
another include file. We also try to get it working for framework
includes, but that part of the code is untested, as I don't have a code
base that uses it.
llvm-svn: 130246
This introduces a few APIs on the AST to bundle up the standard-based
logic so that programmatic clients have access to exactly the same
behavior.
There is only one serious FIXME here: checking for non-trivial move
constructors and move assignment operators. Those bits need to be added
to the declaration and accessors provided.
This implementation should be enough for the uses of __is_trivial in
libstdc++ 4.6's C++98 library implementation.
Ideas for more thorough test cases or any edge cases missing would be
appreciated. =D
llvm-svn: 130057
Add 'openFile' bool to FileManager::getFile to specify whether we want to have the file opened or not, have it
false by default, and enable it only in HeaderSearch.cpp where the open+fstat optimization matters.
Fixes rdar://9139899.
llvm-svn: 127748
clients to observe the exact path through which an #included file was
located. This is very useful when trying to record and replay inclusion
operations without it beind influenced by the aggressive caching done
inside the FileManager to avoid redundant system calls and filesystem
operations.
The work to compute and return this is only done in the presence of
callbacks, so it should have no effect on normal compilation.
Patch by Manuel Klimek.
llvm-svn: 127742
Find out that our C++0x status has only one field for noexcept expression and specification together, and that it was accidentally already marked as fully implemented.
This completes noexcept specification work.
llvm-svn: 127701
of an Objective-C method to be overridden on a case-by-case basis. This
is a higher-level tool than ns_returns_retained &c.; it lets users specify
that not only does a method have different retain/release semantics, but
that it semantically acts differently than one might assume from its name.
This in turn is quite useful to static analysis.
llvm-svn: 126839
The previous name was inaccurate as this token in fact appears at
the end of every preprocessing directive, not just macro definitions.
No functionality change, except for a diagnostic tweak.
llvm-svn: 126631
AST/PCH files more lazy:
- Don't preload all of the file source-location entries when reading
the AST file. Instead, load them lazily, when needed.
- Only look up header-search information (whether a header was already
#import'd, how many times it's been included, etc.) when it's needed
by the preprocessor, rather than pre-populating it.
Previously, we would pre-load all of the file source-location entries,
which also populated the header-search information structure. This was
a relatively minor performance issue, since we would end up stat()'ing
all of the headers stored within a AST/PCH file when the AST/PCH file
was loaded. In the normal PCH use case, the stat()s were cached, so
the cost--of preloading ~860 source-location entries in the Cocoa.h
case---was relatively low.
However, the recent optimization that replaced stat+open with
open+fstat turned this into a major problem, since the preloading of
source-location entries would now end up opening those files. Worse,
those files wouldn't be closed until the file manager was destroyed,
so just opening a Cocoa.h PCH file would hold on to ~860 file
descriptors, and it was easy to blow through the process's limit on
the number of open file descriptors.
By eliminating the preloading of these files, we neither open nor stat
the headers stored in the PCH/AST file until they're actually needed
for something. Concretely, we went from
*** HeaderSearch Stats:
835 files tracked.
364 #import/#pragma once files.
823 included exactly once.
6 max times a file is included.
3 #include/#include_next/#import.
0 #includes skipped due to the multi-include optimization.
1 framework lookups.
0 subframework lookups.
*** Source Manager Stats:
835 files mapped, 3 mem buffers mapped.
37460 SLocEntry's allocated, 11215575B of Sloc address space used.
62 bytes of files mapped, 0 files with line #'s computed.
with a trivial program that uses a chained PCH including a Cocoa PCH
to
*** HeaderSearch Stats:
4 files tracked.
1 #import/#pragma once files.
3 included exactly once.
2 max times a file is included.
3 #include/#include_next/#import.
0 #includes skipped due to the multi-include optimization.
1 framework lookups.
0 subframework lookups.
*** Source Manager Stats:
3 files mapped, 3 mem buffers mapped.
37460 SLocEntry's allocated, 11215575B of Sloc address space used.
62 bytes of files mapped, 0 files with line #'s computed.
for the same program.
llvm-svn: 125286
- Don't publicize a C++0x feature through __has_feature if we aren't
in C++0x mode (even if the feature is available only with a
warning).
- "auto" is not implemented well enough for its __has_feature to be
turned on.
- Fix the test of C++0x __has_feature to actually test what we're
trying to test. Searching for the substring "foo" when our options
are "foo" and "no_foo" doesn't work :)
llvm-svn: 124291
and turn on __has_feature(cxx_rvalue_references). The core rvalue
references proposal seems to be fully implemented now, pending lots
more testing.
llvm-svn: 124169
Turn on the __has_feature switch for variadic templates, document
their completion, and put the ExtWarn into the c++0x-extensions
warning group.
llvm-svn: 123854
new gcc warning that complains on self-assignments and
self-initializations. Fix one bug found by the warning, in which one
clang::OverloadCandidate constructor failed to initialize its
FunctionTemplate member.
llvm-svn: 122459
Diagnostic pragmas are broken because we don't keep track of the diagnostic state changes and we only check the current/latest state.
Problems manifest if a diagnostic is emitted for a source line that has different diagnostic state than the current state; this can affect
a lot of places, like C++ inline methods, template instantiations, the lexer, etc.
Fix the issue by having the Diagnostic object keep track of the source location of the pragmas so that it is able to know what is the diagnostic state at any given source location.
Fixes rdar://8365684.
llvm-svn: 121873
pointer that is passed down through the APIs, and make
FileSystemStatCache::get be the one that filters out
directory lookups that hit files. This also paves the
way to have stat queries be able to return opened files.
llvm-svn: 120060
FileSystemOpts through a ton of apis, simplifying a lot of code.
This also fixes a latent bug in ASTUnit where it would invoke
methods on FileManager without creating one in some code paths
in cindextext.
llvm-svn: 120010
and use a better and more general approach, where NullStmt has a flag to indicate whether it was preceded by an empty macro.
Thanks to Abramo Bagnara for the hint!
llvm-svn: 119887
than a Token that holds the same information all in one easy-to-use
package. There's no technical reason to prefer the former -- the
information comes from a Token originally -- and it's clumsier to use,
so I've changed the code to use tokens everywhere.
Approved by clattner
llvm-svn: 119845
The callback info for #if/#elif is not great -- ideally it would give
us a list of tokens in the #if, or even better, a little parse tree.
But that's a lot more work. Instead, clients can retokenize using
Lexer::LexFromRawLexer().
Reviewed by nlewycky.
llvm-svn: 118318
When -working-directory is passed in command line, file paths are resolved relative to the specified directory.
This helps both when using libclang (where we can't require the user to actually change the working directory)
and to help reproduce test cases when the reproduction work comes along.
--FileSystemOptions is introduced which controls how file system operations are performed (currently it just contains
the working directory value if set).
--FileSystemOptions are passed around to various interfaces that perform file operations.
--Opening & reading the content of files should be done only through FileManager. This is useful in general since
file operations will be abstracted in the future for the reproduction mechanism.
FileSystemOptions is independent of FileManager so that we can have multiple translation units sharing the same
FileManager but with different FileSystemOptions.
Addresses rdar://8583824.
llvm-svn: 118203
load identifiers without loading their corresponding macro
definitions. This is likely to improve PCH performance slightly, and
reduces deserialization stack depth considerably when using
preprocessor metaprogramming.
llvm-svn: 117750
inclusion directives, keeping track of every #include, #import,
etc. in the translation unit. We keep track of the source location and
kind of the inclusion, how the file name was spelled, and the
underlying file to which the inclusion resolved.
llvm-svn: 116952
Now MICache is a linked list (per the FIXME), where we tradeoff between MacroInfo objects being in MICache
and MIChainHead. MacroInfo objects in the MICache chain are already "Destroy()'ed", so they can be reused. When
inserting into MICache, we need to remove them from the regular linked list so that they aren't destroyed more than
once.
llvm-svn: 116869
The problem was not the management of MacroInfo objects, but that when we recycle them
via the MICache the memory of the underlying SmallVector (within MacroInfo) was not getting
released. This is because objects stashed into MICache simply are reused with a placement
new, and never have their destructor called.
llvm-svn: 116862
list of allocated MacroInfos. This requires only 1 extra pointer per MacroInfo object, and allows us to blow them
away in one place. This fixes an elusive memory leak with MacroInfos (whose exact location I couldn't still figure
out despite substantial digging).
Fixes <rdar://problem/8361834>.
llvm-svn: 116842
spelled (#pragma, _Pragma, __pragma). In -E mode, use that information
to add appropriate newlines when translating _Pragma and __pragma into
#pragma, like GCC does. Fixes <rdar://problem/8412013>.
llvm-svn: 113553