Sourcery CodeBench and modern FSF Mips toolchains require a bit more
complicated algorithm to calculate headers, libraries and sysroot paths
than implemented by Clang driver now. The main problem is that all these
paths depend on a set of command line arguments additionally to a target
triple value. For example, let $TC is a toolchain installation directory.
If we compile big-endian 32-bit mips code, crtbegin.o is in the
$TC/lib/gcc/mips-linux-gnu/4.7.2 folder and the toolchain's linker requires
--sysroot=$TC/mips-linux-gnu/libc argument. If we compile little-endian
32-bit soft-float mips code, crtbegin.o is in the
$TC/lib/gcc/mips-linux-gnu/4.7.2/soft-float/el folder and the toolchain's
linker requires --sysroot=$TC/mips-linux-gnu/libc/soft-float/el argument.
1. Calculate MultiarchSuffix using all necessary command line options and
use this MultiarchSuffix to detect crtbegin.o location in the
GCCInstallationDetector::ScanLibDirForGCCTriple() routine.
2. If a user does not provide --sysroot argument to the driver explicitly,
calculate new sysroot value based on command line options. Then use this
calculated sysroot path:
a. To populate a file search paths list in the Linux::Linux() constructor.
b. To find Mips toolchain specific include headers directories
in the Linux::AddClangSystemIncludeArgs() routine.
c. To provide -–sysroot argument for a linker.
Note:
- The FSF's tree slightly differs (folder names) and is not supported
yet.
- New addExternCSystemIncludeIfExits() routine is a temporary solution.
I plan to move path existence check to the addExternCSystemInclude()
routine by a separate commit.
The patch reviewed by Rafael Espindola.
http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D644
llvm-svn: 179934
Introduce a new helper function, which computes the first symbolic region in
the base region chain. The corresponding symbol has been used for assuming that
a pointer is null. Now, it will also be used for checking if it is null.
This ensures that we are tracking a null pointer correctly in the BugReporter.
llvm-svn: 179916
not the asm parser. As such, begin moving the parsing logic in that direction.
This patch is just a temporary hack until the real frontend parser can be hooked
up. Part of rdar://13663589
llvm-svn: 179882
Microsoft's Source Annotation Language (SAL) defines a bunch of keywords
for annotating the inputs and outputs of functions. Empty definitions
for the keywords are provided by <stdlib.h> -> <crtdefs.h> -> <sal.h>.
This makes it basically impossible to include MSVC's stdlib.h and
Clang's *mmintrin.h headers at the same time if they have variables
named __in. As a workaround, I've renamed those variables.
This fixes the Modules/compiler_builtins.m test which was XFAILed,
presumably due to this conflict.
llvm-svn: 179860
This was a suggestion by Jordan Rose since the documented format for these pragmas is without the parentheses. At the same time, I've increased test coverage too for the preprocessed output.
llvm-svn: 179771
The analyzer uses LazyCompoundVals to represent rvalues of aggregate types,
most importantly structs and arrays. This allows us to efficiently copy
around an entire struct, rather than doing a memberwise load every time a
struct rvalue is encountered. This can also keep memory usage down by
allowing several structs to "share" the same snapshotted bindings.
However, /lookup/ through LazyCompoundVals can be expensive, especially
since they can end up chaining back to the original value. While we try
to reuse LazyCompoundVals whenever it's safe, and cache information about
this transitivity, the fact is it's sometimes just not a good idea to
perpetuate LazyCompoundVals -- the tradeoffs just aren't worth it.
This commit changes RegionStore so that binding a LazyCompoundVal to struct
will do a memberwise copy if the struct is simple enough. Today's definition
of "simple enough" is "up to N scalar members" (see below), but that could
easily be changed in the future. This is enough to bring the test case in
PR15697 back down to a manageable analysis time (within 20% of its original
time, in an unfair test where the new analyzer is not compiled with LTO).
The actual value of "N" is controlled by a new -analyzer-config option,
'region-store-small-struct-limit'. It defaults to "2", meaning structs with
zero, one, or two scalar members will be considered "simple enough" for
this code path.
It's worth noting that a more straightforward implementation would do this
on load, not on bind, and make use of the structure we already have for this:
CompoundVal. A long time ago, this was actually how RegionStore modeled
aggregate-to-aggregate copies, but today it's only used for compound literals.
Unfortunately, it seems that we've special-cased LazyCompoundVal in certain
places (such as liveness checks) but failed to similarly special-case
CompoundVal in all of them. Until we're confident that CompoundVal is
handled properly everywhere, this solution is safer, since the entire
optimization is just an implementation detail of RegionStore.
<rdar://problem/13599304>
llvm-svn: 179767
A C++ overloaded operator may be implemented as an instance method, and
that instance method may be called on an rvalue object, which has no
associated region. The analyzer handles this by creating a temporary region
just for the evaluation of this call; however, it is possible that /by
creating the region/, the analyzer ends up in a previously-explored state.
In this case we don't need to continue along this path.
This doesn't actually show any behavioral change now, but it starts being
used with the next commit and prevents an assertion failure there.
llvm-svn: 179766
In the committed example, we now see a note that tells us when the pointer
was assumed to be null.
This is the only case in which getDerefExpr returned null (failed to get
the dereferenced expr) throughout our regression tests. (There were multiple
occurrences of this one.)
llvm-svn: 179736
We always register the visitor on a node in which the value we are tracking is live and constrained. However,
the visitation can restart at a node, later on the path, in which the value is under constrained because
it is no longer live. Previously, we just silently stopped tracking in that case.
llvm-svn: 179731
Typo correction for an unqualified name needs to walk through all of the identifier tables of all modules.
When we have a global index, just walk its identifier table only.
rdar://13425732
llvm-svn: 179730
The system_header pragma (from GCC) is implemented using line notes in the
source manager. However, a line note's line number specifies the number
not for the current line, but for the next line. This was making all
line numbers appear off by one after the pragma.
Reported by Andy Gibbs, uncovered during r179677.
llvm-svn: 179709
This was slightly tricky because BlockDecls don't currently store an
inferred return type. However, we can rely on the fact that blocks with
inferred return types will have return statements that match the inferred
type.
<rdar://problem/13665798>
llvm-svn: 179699
Summary:
Added BreakableLineComment, moved common code from
BreakableBlockComment to newly added BreakableComment. As a side-effect of the
rewrite, found another problem with escaped newlines and had to change
code which removes trailing whitespace from line comments not to break after
this patch.
Reviewers: klimek, djasper
Reviewed By: klimek
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D682
llvm-svn: 179693
Also,
- abstract out the indirect/in memory/in registers decisions into the CGCXXABI
- fix handling of empty struct arguments for '-cxx-abi microsoft'
- add/fix tests
llvm-svn: 179681
VerifyDiagnosticConsumer previously would not check that the diagnostic and
its matching directive referenced the same source file. Common practice was
to create directives that referenced other files but only by line number,
and this led to problems such as when the file containing the directive
didn't have enough lines to match the location of the diagnostic in the
other file, leading to bizarre file formatting and other oddities.
This patch causes VerifyDiagnosticConsumer to match source files as well as
line numbers. Therefore, a new syntax is made available for directives, for
example:
// expected-error@file:line {{diagnostic message}}
This extends the @line feature where "file" is the file where the diagnostic
is generated. The @line syntax is still available and uses the current file
for the diagnostic. "file" can be specified either as a relative or absolute
path - although the latter has less usefulness, I think! The #include search
paths will be used to locate the file and if it is not found an error will be
generated.
The new check is not optional: if the directive is in a different file to the
diagnostic, the file must be specified. Therefore, a number of test-cases
have been updated with regard to this.
This closes out PR15613.
llvm-svn: 179677
will fire on code such as:
cout << x == 0;
which the compiler will intrepret as
(cout << x) == 0;
This warning comes with two fixits attached to notes, one for parentheses to
silence the warning, and another to evaluate the comparison first.
llvm-svn: 179662
For a parameter in a method like this:
-(int)methodWithFn:(void (*)(int *p))fn;
we would return the source range of the type and not include the parameter name.
Fixes rdar://13668626.
llvm-svn: 179660
When we are in a implementation, we check the global method pool whether there were category
methods with the same selector. If there were none (common case) we don't need to do lookups for
overridden methods again.
Note that for an interface method (if we don't encounter its implementation), it is considered that
it overrides methods that were declared before it, not for category methods introduced after it.
This is tradeoff in favor of performance, since it is expensive to do lookups in case there was a
category, and moving the global method pool to ASTContext (so we can check it) would increase complexity.
rdar://13508196
llvm-svn: 179654