std::make_exception_ptr calls std::__GetExceptionInfo in order to figure
out how to properly copy the exception object.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8280
llvm-svn: 232188
This adds support for copy-constructor closures. These are generated
when the C++ runtime has to call a copy-constructor with a particular
calling convention or with default arguments substituted in to the call.
Because the runtime has no mechanism to call the function with a
different calling convention or know-how to evaluate the default
arguments at run-time, we create a thunk which will do all the
appropriate work and package it in a way the runtime can use.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8225
llvm-svn: 231952
of extern "C" declarations. This is simpler and vastly more efficient for
modules builds (we no longer need to load *all* extern "C" declarations to
determine if we have a redeclaration).
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 231538
Find all unambiguous public classes of the exception object's class type
and reference all of their copy constructors. Yes, this is not
conforming but it is necessary in order to implement their ABI. This is
because the copy constructor is actually referenced by the metadata
describing which catch handlers are eligible to handle the exception
object.
N.B. This doesn't yet handle the copy constructor closure case yet,
that work is ongoing.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8101
llvm-svn: 231499
Summary:
Allow user to provide multiple blacklists by passing several
-fsanitize-blacklist= options. These options now don't override
default blacklist from Clang resource directory, which is always
applied (which fixes PR22431).
-fno-sanitize-blacklist option now disables all blacklists that
were specified earlier in the command line (including the default
one).
This change depends on http://reviews.llvm.org/D7367.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: timurrrr
Subscribers: cfe-commits, kcc, pcc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7368
llvm-svn: 228156
We didn't consider any alignment attributes on an EnumDecl when
calculating alignment.
While we are here, ignore alignment specifications on typedef types if
one is used as the underlying type. Otherwise, weird things happen:
enum Y : int;
Y y;
typedef int __attribute__((aligned(64))) u;
enum Y : u {};
What is the alignment of 'Y'? It would be more consistent with the
overall design of enums with fixed underlying types to consider the
underlying type's UnqualifiedDesugaredType.
This fixes PR22279.
llvm-svn: 226653
The test was fixed after a discussion with the revision author: the check
pattern was made more flexible as the "%call" part is not what we actually want
to check strictly there.
The original patch description:
===
Introduce SPIR calling conventions.
This implements Section 3.7 from the SPIR 1.2 spec:
SPIR kernels should use "spir_kernel" calling convention.
Non-kernel functions use "spir_func" calling convention. All
other calling conventions are disallowed.
The patch works only for OpenCL source. Any other uses will need
to ensure that kernels are assigned the spir_kernel calling
convention correctly.
===
llvm-svn: 226561
This implements Section 3.7 from the SPIR 1.2 spec:
SPIR kernels should use "spir_kernel" calling convention.
Non-kernel functions use "spir_func" calling convention. All
other calling conventions are disallowed.
The patch works only for OpenCL source. Any other uses will need
to ensure that kernels are assigned the spir_kernel calling
convention correctly.
llvm-svn: 226548
Types composed with certain implicit record types would have their RTTI
marked as hidden because the implicit record type didn't have any
visibility.
This manifests itself as triggering false positives from tools like
clang's -fsantize=function feature. The RTTI for a function type's
return type wouldn't match if the return type was an implicit record
type.
Patch by Stephan Bergmann!
llvm-svn: 226148
Also add a few asserts for this. The existing code assumes this in a bunch
of places already (see e.g. the assert at the top of ParseTypedefDecl(), and
there are many unchecked calls on the result of GetTypeForDeclarator()), and
from looking through the code this should always be true from what I can tell.
This allows removing ASTContext::getNullTypeSourceInfo() too as that's now
unused.
No behavior change intended.
llvm-svn: 225125
To support it in the frontend, the following has been added:
- generic address space type attribute;
- documentation for the OpenCL address space attributes;
- parsing of __generic(generic) keyword;
- test code for the parser and diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 222831
For all threadprivate variables which have constructor/destructor emit call to void __kmpc_threadprivate_register(ident_t * <Current Location>, void *<Original Global Addr>, kmpc_ctor <Constructor>, kmpc_cctor NULL, kmpc_dtor <Destructor>);
In expressions all references to such variables are replaced by calls to void *__kmpc_threadprivate_cached(ident_t *<Current Location>, kmp_int32 <Current Thread Id>, void *<Original Global Addr>, size_t <Size of Data>, void ***<Pointer to autogenerated cache – array of private copies of threadprivate variable>);
Test test/OpenMP/threadprivate_codegen.cpp checks that codegen is correct. Also it checks that codegen is correct after serialization/deserialization and one of passes verifies debug info.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4002
llvm-svn: 221663
Get rid of ugly SanitizerOptions class thrust into LangOptions:
* Make SanitizeAddressFieldPadding a regular language option,
and rely on default behavior to initialize/reset it.
* Make SanitizerBlacklistFile a regular member LangOptions.
* Introduce the helper class "SanitizerSet" to represent the
set of enabled sanitizers and make it a member of LangOptions.
It is exactly the entity we want to cache and modify in CodeGenFunction,
for instance. We'd also be able to reuse SanitizerSet in
CodeGenOptions for storing the set of recoverable sanitizers,
and in the Driver to represent the set of sanitizers
turned on/off by the commandline flags.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 221653
Plumb through the full QualType of the TemplateArgument::Declaration, as
it's insufficient to only know whether the type is a reference or
pointer (that was necessary for mangling, but insufficient for debug
info). This shouldn't increase the size of TemplateArgument as
TemplateArgument::Integer is still longer by another 32 bits.
Several bits of code were testing that the reference-ness of the
parameters matched, but this seemed to be insufficient (various other
features of the type could've mismatched and wouldn't've been caught)
and unnecessary, at least insofar as removing those tests didn't cause
anything to fail.
(Richard - perchaps you can hypothesize why any of these checks might
need to test reference-ness of the parameters (& explain why
reference-ness is part of the mangling - I would've figured that for the
reference-ness to be different, a prior template argument would have to
be different). I'd be happy to add them in/beef them up and add test
cases if there's a reason for them)
llvm-svn: 219900
Soon we'll need to have access to blacklist before the CodeGen
phase (see http://reviews.llvm.org/D5687), so parse and construct
the blacklist earlier.
llvm-svn: 219857
We build a NestedNameSpecifier that records the CXXRecordDecl in which
__super appeared. Name lookup is performed in all base classes of the
recorded CXXRecordDecl. Use of __super is allowed only inside class and
member function scope.
llvm-svn: 218484
we were failing to find that bit-field when performing integer promotions. This
brings us closer to following the standard, and closer to GCC.
In C, this change is technically a regression: we get bit-field promotions
completely wrong in C, promoting cases that are categorically not bit-field
designators. This change makes us do so slightly more consistently, though.
llvm-svn: 218428
FunctionProtoType::ExtProtoInfo. Most of the users of these fields don't care
about the other ExtProtoInfo bits and just want to talk about the exception
specification.
llvm-svn: 214450
Iterator invalidation issues already force us to do one lookup and one
insert.
Don't use the particular bit-pattern of the 'Align' field to determine
whether or not we have already inserted into the TypeInfo DenseMap;
instead ask for an iterator to the TypeInfo entry.
llvm-svn: 214293
The MS ABI has a notion of 'required alignment' for fields; this
alignment supercedes pragma pack directives.
MSVC takes into account alignment attributes on typedefs when
determining whether or not a field has a certain required alignment.
Do the same in clang by tracking whether or not we saw such an attribute
when calculating the type's bitwidth and alignment.
This fixes PR20418.
Reviewers: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4714
llvm-svn: 214274
This makes us emit dllexported in-class initialized static data members (which
are treated as definitions in MSVC), even when they're not referenced.
It also makes their special linkage reflected in the GVA linkage instead of
getting massaged in CodeGen.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4563
llvm-svn: 213304
Summary:
Do not store duplicate parents when memoization data is available.
This does not solve the duplication problem, but ameliorates it.
Reviewers: klimek
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4124
llvm-svn: 210902
The backing store of thread local variables is internal for OS X and all
accesses must go through the thread wrapper.
However, individual TUs may have inlined through the thread wrapper.
To fix this, give the thread wrapper functions WeakAnyLinkage. This
prevents them from getting inlined into call-sites.
This fixes PR19989.
llvm-svn: 210632
expression of array-of-unknown-bound type, don't try to complete the array
bound, and return the alignment of the element type rather than 1.
llvm-svn: 210608
MSVC delays parsing of default arguments until instantiation. If the
default argument is never used, it is never parsed. We don't model
this.
Instead, if lookup of a type name fails in a template argument context,
we form a DependentNameType, which will be looked up at instantiation
time.
This fixes errors about 'CControlWinTraits' in atlwin.h.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3995
llvm-svn: 210382
On test files I ran this on, memory consumption overall went down from
2.5G to 2G, without performance regressions.
I also investigated making DynTypedNode by itself smaller (by pulling
out pointers for everything that doesn't fit in 8 bytes). This led to
another 200-300MB saved, but also introduced a significant regression in
performance due to the memory management overhead.
llvm-svn: 209297
ensure that querying the first declaration for its most recent declaration
checks for redeclarations from the imported module.
This works as follows:
* The 'most recent' pointer on a canonical declaration grows a pointer to the
external AST source and a generation number (space- and time-optimized for
the case where there is no external source).
* Each time the 'most recent' pointer is queried, if it has an external source,
we check whether it's up to date, and update it if not.
* The ancillary data stored on the canonical declaration is allocated lazily
to avoid filling it in for declarations that end up being non-canonical.
We'll still perform a redundant (ASTContext) allocation if someone asks for
the most recent declaration from a decl before setPreviousDecl is called,
but such cases are probably all bugs, and are now easy to find.
Some finessing is still in order here -- in particular, we use a very general
mechanism for handling the DefinitionData pointer on CXXRecordData, and a more
targeted approach would be more compact.
Also, the MayHaveOutOfDateDef mechanism should now be expunged, since it was
addressing only a corner of the full problem space here. That's not covered
by this patch.
Early performance benchmarks show that this makes no measurable difference to
Clang performance without modules enabled (and fixes a major correctness issue
with modules enabled). I'll revert if a full performance comparison shows any
problems.
llvm-svn: 209046
GetGVALinkageForFunction handles TSK_ExplicitInstantiationDeclaration
twice, remove the redundant code trying to handle it again.
While we are here, update the reference we make to the standard. It
seems like another paragraph was added causing this text to get
renumbered.
llvm-svn: 208850
Having various possible states of initialization following construction doesn't
add value here.
Also remove the unused size_reserve parameter.
llvm-svn: 207897
Summary:
A reference temporary should inherit the linkage of the variable it
initializes. Otherwise, we may hit cases where a reference temporary
wouldn't have the same value in all translation units.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3515
llvm-svn: 207451
When instantiating an array that has an alignment attribute on it, we
were looking through the array type and only considering the element
type for the resulting alignment. We need to make sure we take the
array's requirements into account too.
llvm-svn: 206317
Summary:
MSVC always emits inline functions marked with the extern storage class
specifier. The result is something similar to the opposite of
__attribute__((gnu_inline)).
This extension is also available in C.
This fixes PR19264.
Reviewers: rnk, rsmith
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D3207
llvm-svn: 205485
This adds Clang support for the ARM64 backend. There are definitely
still some rough edges, so please bring up any issues you see with
this patch.
As with the LLVM commit though, we think it'll be more useful for
merging with AArch64 from within the tree.
llvm-svn: 205100
correctly order comments in SourceManager::isBeforeInTranslationUnit() order
Unfortunately, this is not as simple as it was implemented previously, and
actually requires doing a merge sort.
llvm-svn: 204936
Summary:
The MSVC ABI appears to mangle the lexical scope into the names of
statics. Specifically, a counter is incremented whenever a scope is
entered where things can be declared in such a way that an ambiguity can
arise. For example, a class scope inside of a class scope doesn't do
anything interesting because the nested class cannot collide with
another nested class.
There are problems with this scheme:
- It is unreliable. The counter is only incremented when a previously
never encountered scope is entered. There are cases where this will
cause ambiguity amongst declarations that have the same name where one
was introduced in a deep scope while the other was introduced right
after in the previous lexical scope.
- It is wasteful. Statements like: {{{{{{{ static int foo = a; }}}}}}}
will make the mangling of "foo" larger than it need be because the
scope counter has been incremented many times.
Because of these problems, and practical implementation concerns. We
choose not to implement this scheme if the local static or local type
isn't visible. The mangling of these declarations will look very
similar but the numbering will make far more sense, this scheme is
lifted from the Itanium ABI implementation.
Reviewers: rsmith, doug.gregor, rnk, eli.friedman, cdavis5x
Reviewed By: rnk
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2953
llvm-svn: 202951
With r197755 we started reading the contents of buffer file entries, but the
buffers may point to ASTReader blobs that have been disposed.
Fix this by having the CompilerInstance object keep a reference to the ASTReader
as well as having the ASTContext keep reference to the ExternalASTSource.
This was very difficult to construct a test case for.
rdar://16149782
llvm-svn: 202346
When calculating the preferred alignment of a type, consider if a alignment
attribute came from a typedef declaration. If one did, do not naturally align
the type.
Patch by Stephan Tolksdorf, with a little tweaking and an additional testcase by me.
llvm-svn: 202088
Most 64-bit targets define int64_t as long int, and AArch64 should
make same definition to follow LP64 model. In GNU tool chain, int64_t
is defined as long int for 64-bit target. So to get consistent with GNU,
it's better Changing int64_t from 'long long int' to 'long int',
otherwise clang will get different name mangling suffix compared with g++.
llvm-svn: 202004
Member pointers are mangled as they would be represented at runtime.
They can be a single integer literal, single decl, or a tuple with some
more numbers tossed in. With Clang today, most of those numbers will be
zero because we reject pointers to members of virtual bases.
This change required moving VTableContextBase ownership from
CodeGenVTables to ASTContext, because mangling now depends on vtable
layout.
I also hoisted the inheritance model helpers up to be inline static
methods of MSInheritanceAttr. This makes the AST code that deals with
member pointers much more readable.
MSVC doesn't appear to have stable manglings of null member pointers:
- Null data memptrs in function templates have a mangling collision with
the first field of a non-polymorphic single inheritance class.
- The mangling of null data memptrs changes if you add casts.
- Large null function memptrs in class templates crash MSVC.
Clang uses the class template mangling for null data memptrs and the
function template mangling for null function memptrs to deal with this.
Reviewers: majnemer
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2695
llvm-svn: 200857
A return type is the declared or deduced part of the function type specified in
the declaration.
A result type is the (potentially adjusted) type of the value of an expression
that calls the function.
Rule of thumb:
* Declarations have return types and parameters.
* Expressions have result types and arguments.
llvm-svn: 200082
not using backing ivar warning, ignore when
property is not being synthesized (user declared its
implementation @dynamic). // rdar://1583425
llvm-svn: 199820
Fix a perennial source of confusion in the clang type system: Declarations and
function prototypes have parameters to which arguments are supplied, so calling
these 'arguments' was a stretch even in C mode, let alone C++ where default
arguments, templates and overloading make the distinction important to get
right.
Readability win across the board, especially in the casting, ADL and
overloading implementations which make a lot more sense at a glance now.
Will keep an eye on the builders and update dependent projects shortly.
No functional change.
llvm-svn: 199686
There's been long-standing confusion over the role of these two options. This
commit makes the necessary changes to differentiate them clearly, following up
from r198936.
MicrosoftExt (aka. fms-extensions):
Enable largely unobjectionable Microsoft language extensions to ease
portability. This mode, also supported by gcc, is used for building software
like FreeBSD and Linux kernel extensions that share code with Windows drivers.
MSVCCompat (aka. -fms-compatibility, formerly MicrosoftMode):
Turn on a special mode supporting 'heinous' extensions for drop-in
compatibility with the Microsoft Visual C++ product. Standards-compilant C and
C++ code isn't guaranteed to work in this mode. Implies MicrosoftExt.
Note that full -fms-compatibility mode is currently enabled by default on the
Windows target, which may need tuning to serve as a reasonable default.
See cfe-commits for the full discourse, thread 'r198497 - Move MS predefined
type_info out of InitializePredefinedMacros'
No change in behaviour.
llvm-svn: 199209
__builtin_va_list and friends have been showing up where they shouldn't for way
to long, making unwanted appearences in -ast-print, tooling and source level
visitors and even the hello world tutorial on the clang website.
This commit factors down the implicit typedef and record creation facilities to
ensure they're marked implicit.
Also fixes a unit test that was testing incorrect behaviour, and removes old
hacks in the DeclPrinter that tried to skip implicit declarations manually.
llvm-svn: 197336
Summary:
In general, this type node can be used to represent any type adjustment
that occurs implicitly without losing type sugar. The immediate use of
this is to adjust the calling conventions of member function pointer
types without breaking template instantiation.
Fixes PR17996.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2332
llvm-svn: 196451
The xcore llvm backend does not handle 8 byte alignment viz:
"%BadAlignment = alloca i64, align 8"
So getPreferredTypeAlign() must never overalign.
llvm-svn: 194462
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2090
Clang was "improperly" over-aligning arrays with sizes are not a multiple of
their alignment.
This behavior was removed in microsoft 32 bit mode.
In addition, after examination of ASTContext::getTypeInfoImpl, a redundant code block in
MicrosoftRecordLayoutBuilder::getAdjustedFieldInfo was deleted.
llvm-svn: 193898
address spaces which is both (1) a "semantic" concept and
(2) possibly a hardware level restriction. It is desirable to
be able to discard/merge the LLVM-level address spaces on arguments for which
there is no difference to the current backend while keeping
track of the semantic address spaces in a funciton prototype. To do this
enable addition of the address space into the name-mangling process. Add
some tests to document this behaviour against inadvertent changes.
Patch by Michele Scandale!
llvm-svn: 190684
Static locals requiring initialization are not thread safe on Windows.
Unfortunately, it's possible to create static locals that are actually
externally visible with inline functions and templates. As a result, we
have to implement an initialization guard scheme that is compatible with
TUs built by MSVC, which makes thread safety prohibitively difficult.
MSVC's scheme is that every function that requires a guard gets an i32
bitfield. Each static local is assigned a bit that indicates if it has
been initialized, up to 32 bits, at which point a new bitfield is
created. MSVC rejects inline functions with more than 32 static locals,
and the externally visible mangling (?_B) only allows for one guard
variable per function.
On Eli's recommendation, I used MangleNumberingContext to track which
bit each static corresponds to.
Implements PR16888.
Reviewers: rjmccall, eli.friedman
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1416
llvm-svn: 190427
getRealTypeByWidth and getIntTypeByWidth
for ASTContext names are almost same(invokes new methods from TargetInfo):
getIntTypeForBitwidth and getRealTypeForBitwidth.
As first commit for PR16752 fix: 'mode' attribute for unusual targets doesn't work properly
Description:
Troubles could be happened due to some assumptions in handleModeAttr function (see SemaDeclAttr.cpp).
For example, it assumes that 32 bit integer is 'int', while it could be 16 bit only.
Instead of asking target: 'which type do you want to use for int32_t ?' it just hardcodes general opinion. That doesn't looks pretty correct.
Please consider the next solution:
1. In Basic/TargetInfo add getIntTypeByWidth and getRealTypeByWidth virtual methods. By default current behaviour could be implemented here.
2. Fix handleModeAttr according to new methods in TargetInfo.
This approach is implemented in the patch attached to this post.
Fixes:
1st Commit (Current): Add new methods for TargetInfo:
getRealTypeByWidth and getIntTypeByWidth
for ASTContext names are almost same(invokes new methods from TargetInfo):
getIntTypeForBitwidth and getRealTypeForBitwidth
2nd Commit (Next): Fix SemaDeclAttr, handleModeAttr function.
llvm-svn: 190044
Summary:
Makes functions with implicit calling convention compatible with
function types with a matching explicit calling convention. This fixes
things like calls to qsort(), which has an explicit __cdecl attribute on
the comparator in Windows headers.
Clang will now infer the calling convention from the declarator. There
are two cases when the CC must be adjusted during redeclaration:
1. When defining a non-inline static method.
2. When redeclaring a function with an implicit or mismatched
convention.
Fixes PR13457, and allows clang to compile CommandLine.cpp for the
Microsoft C++ ABI.
Excellent test cases provided by Alexander Zinenko!
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1231
llvm-svn: 189412
Specifically, the following features are not included in this commit:
- any sort of capturing within generic lambdas
- nested lambdas
- conversion operator for captureless lambdas
- ensuring all visitors are generic lambda aware
As an example of what compiles:
template <class F1, class F2>
struct overload : F1, F2 {
using F1::operator();
using F2::operator();
overload(F1 f1, F2 f2) : F1(f1), F2(f2) { }
};
auto Recursive = [](auto Self, auto h, auto ... rest) {
return 1 + Self(Self, rest...);
};
auto Base = [](auto Self, auto h) {
return 1;
};
overload<decltype(Base), decltype(Recursive)> O(Base, Recursive);
int num_params = O(O, 5, 3, "abc", 3.14, 'a');
Please see attached tests for more examples.
Some implementation notes:
- Add a new Declarator context => LambdaExprParameterContext to
clang::Declarator to allow the use of 'auto' in declaring generic
lambda parameters
- Augment AutoType's constructor (similar to how variadic
template-type-parameters ala TemplateTypeParmDecl are implemented) to
accept an IsParameterPack to encode a generic lambda parameter pack.
- Add various helpers to CXXRecordDecl to facilitate identifying
and querying a closure class
- LambdaScopeInfo (which maintains the current lambda's Sema state)
was augmented to house the current depth of the template being
parsed (id est the Parser calls Sema::RecordParsingTemplateParameterDepth)
so that Sema::ActOnLambdaAutoParameter may use it to create the
appropriate list of corresponding TemplateTypeParmDecl for each
auto parameter identified within the generic lambda (also stored
within the current LambdaScopeInfo). Additionally,
a TemplateParameterList data-member was added to hold the invented
TemplateParameterList AST node which will be much more useful
once we teach TreeTransform how to transform generic lambdas.
- SemaLambda.h was added to hold some common lambda utility
functions (this file is likely to grow ...)
- Teach Sema::ActOnStartOfFunctionDef to check whether it
is being called to instantiate a generic lambda's call
operator, and if so, push an appropriately prepared
LambdaScopeInfo object on the stack.
- Teach Sema::ActOnStartOfLambdaDefinition to set the
return type of a lambda without a trailing return type
to 'auto' in C++1y mode, and teach the return type
deduction machinery in SemaStmt.cpp to process either
C++11 and C++14 lambda's correctly depending on the flag.
- various tests were added - but much more will be needed.
A greatful thanks to all reviewers including Eli Friedman,
James Dennett and the ever illuminating Richard Smith. And
yet I am certain that I have allowed unidentified bugs to creep in;
bugs, that I will do my best to slay, once identified!
Thanks!
llvm-svn: 188977
Add support for half (a.k.a. __fp16) in builtin descriptions.
The second argument to BUILTIN() now accepts 'h' to represent half.
Patch by Daniel Sanders
llvm-svn: 188464
We were exposing the extra alignment given to large arrays. The new behavior
matches gcc, which is a good thing since this is a gcc extension.
Thanks to Joerg Sonnenberger for noticing it.
While at it, centralize the method description in the .h file.
llvm-svn: 187999
Before this patch we would align
long long int big[1024];
to 4 bytes on 32 bit systems. The problem is that we were only looking
at the element type when getLargeArrayMinWidth returned non zero.
llvm-svn: 187897
via a macro, try using declaration's starting location.
This is improvement over not having a valid location and
dropping comment altogether. // rdar://14348912
llvm-svn: 187085
Compute mangling numbers for externally visible local variables and tags.
Change the mangler to consistently use discriminators where necessary.
Tweak the scheme we use to number decls which are not externally visible
to avoid unnecessary discriminators in common cases now that we request
them more consistently.
Fixes <rdar://problem/14204721>.
llvm-svn: 185986
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
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
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
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
The untemplated implementation of getParents() doesn't need to be in a
header file.
RecursiveASTVisitor.h is full of repeated macro expansion. Moving this
include to ASTContext.cpp speeds up compilation of
LambdaMangleContext.cpp, a small C++ file with few includes, from 3.7s
to 2.8s for me locally. I haven't measured a full build, but it can't
hurt.
I had to fix a few static analyzer files that were depending on
transitive includes of C++ AST headers.
Reviewers: rsmith, klimek
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D982
llvm-svn: 184075
This helps preserve the type-as-written in the AST, which we need for
MSVC mangling. In particular, we need to preserve the types of array
parameters in function pointer types.
The essence of this change is:
- QualType ArgTy = Param->getType();
+ QualType ArgTy = Param->getTypeSourceInfo()->getType();
... followed by the adjustment in ActOnFunctionDeclarator().
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D883
llvm-svn: 183614
handle temporaries which have been lifetime-extended to static storage duration
within constant expressions. This correctly handles nested lifetime extension
(through reference members of aggregates in aggregate initializers) but
non-constant-expression emission hasn't yet been updated to do the same.
llvm-svn: 183283
This patch ensures that APValues are deallocated with the ASTContext by
registering a deallocation function for APValues to the ASTContext.
Original version of the patch by James Dennett.
llvm-svn: 183101
attach, rather than merging all comments on the declaration chain. This gives a
more faithful dump, and has the side benefit of unbreaking uses of dump() from
within AST deserialization (where the redeclaration chain may not be sane).
llvm-svn: 182350
recovery form duplicate method definition error thus
preventing doc parsing to loop trying to find comment
for the invalid redefinition in a previous declaration.
// rdar://13836387
llvm-svn: 181710
This patch renames getLinkage to getLinkageInternal. Only code that
needs to handle UniqueExternalLinkage specially should call this.
Linkage, as defined in the c++ standard, is provided by
getFormalLinkage. It maps UniqueExternalLinkage to ExternalLinkage.
Most places in the compiler actually want isExternallyVisible, which
handles UniqueExternalLinkage as internal.
llvm-svn: 181677
MSVC provides __wchar_t. This is the same as the built-in wchar_t type
from C++, but it is also available with -fno-wchar and in C.
The commit changes ASTContext to have two different types for this:
- WCharTy is the built-in type used for wchar_t in C++ and __wchar_t.
- WideCharTy is the type of a wide character literal. In C++ this is
the same as WCharTy, and in C it is an integer type compatible with
the type in <stddef.h>.
This fixes PR15815.
llvm-svn: 181587
clang would omit 'C' for 'copy' properties and '&' for 'retain' properties if
the property was also 'readonly'. Fix this, which makes clang match gcc4.2's
behavior.
Fixes PR15928.
llvm-svn: 181491
- References to ObjC bit-field ivars are bit-field lvalues;
fixes rdar://13794269, which got me started down this.
- Introduce Expr::refersToBitField, switch a couple users to
it where semantically important, and comment the difference
between this and the existing API.
- Discourage Expr::getBitField by making it a bit longer and
less general-sounding.
- Lock down on const_casts of bit-field gl-values until we
hear back from the committee as to whether they're allowed.
llvm-svn: 181252
This patch then adds all the usual platform-specific pieces for SystemZ:
driver support, basic target info, register names and constraints,
ABI info and vararg support. It also adds new tests to verify pre-defined
macros and inline asm, and updates a test for the minimum alignment change.
This version of the patch incorporates feedback from reviews by
Eric Christopher and John McCall. Thanks to all reviewers!
Patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 181211
This patch adds a new common code feature that allows platform code to
request minimum alignment of global symbols. The background for this is
that on SystemZ, the most efficient way to load addresses of global symbol
is the LOAD ADDRESS RELATIVE LONG (LARL) instruction. This instruction
provides PC-relative addressing, but only to *even* addresses. For this
reason, existing compilers will guarantee that global symbols are always
aligned to at least 2. [ Since symbols would otherwise already use a
default alignment based on their type, this will usually only affect global
objects of character type or character arrays. ] GCC also allows creating
symbols without that extra alignment by using explicit "aligned" attributes
(which then need to be used on both definition and each use of the symbol).
To enable support for this with Clang, this patch adds a
TargetInfo::MinGlobalAlign variable that provides a global minimum for the
alignment of every global object (unless overridden via explicit alignment
attribute), and adds code to respect this setting. Within this patch, no
platform actually sets the value to anything but the default 1, resulting
in no change in behaviour on any existing target.
This version of the patch incorporates feedback from reviews by
Eric Christopher and John McCall. Thanks to all reviewers!
Patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 181210
MSVC provides __wchar_t, either as an alias for the built-in wchar_t
type, or as a separate type depending on language (C vs C++) and flags
(-fno-wchar).
In -fms-extensions, Clang will simply accept __wchar_t as an alias for
whatever type is used for wide character literals. In -fms-compatibility, we
try to mimic MSVC's behavior by always making __wchar_t a builtin type.
This fixes PR15815.
llvm-svn: 181004
are now two distinct canonical 'AutoType's: one is the undeduced 'auto'
placeholder type, and the other is a deduced-but-dependent type. All
deduced-to-a-non-dependent-type cases are still non-canonical.
llvm-svn: 180789
a comment, grab the first comment found in its class
heirarchy. Also, when a category is mossing a comment,
grab comment of its primary class. // rdar://13647476
llvm-svn: 180629
This reverts commit r179436.
Due to caching, it was possible that we could miss overridden methods that
were introduced by categories later on.
Along with reverting the commit I also included a test case that would have caught this.
llvm-svn: 179547
Use an newly introduce ASTContext::getBaseObjCCategoriesAfterInterface() which caches its
results instead of re-calculating the categories multiple times.
llvm-svn: 179436
Summary:
This also relaxes the requirement on Windows that the member pointer
class type be a complete type (http://llvm.org/PR12070). We still ask
for a complete type to instantiate any templates (MSVC does this), but
if that fails we continue as normal, relying on any inheritance
attributes on the declaration.
Reviewers: rjmccall
CC: triton, timurrrr, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D568
llvm-svn: 178283
This reverts commit r177158.
I'm blindly reverting this because it appears to be breaking numerous
buildbots. I'll reapply if it doesn't turn out to be the culprit.
llvm-svn: 177165
FindNodeOrInsertPos() is called 10 lines earlier already, and the function
early-returns there if the result is != 0. InsertPos isn't recomputed after
that check, so this assert is always trivially true. (And it has nothing to
do with if T is canonical or not.)
llvm-svn: 177158
Add an ability to specify custom documentation block comment commands via a new
class CommentOptions. The intention is that this class will hold future
customizations for comment parsing, including defining documentation comments
with specific numbers of parameters, etc.
CommentOptions instance is a member of LangOptions.
CommentOptions is controlled by a new command-line parameter
-fcomment-block-commands=Foo,Bar,Baz.
llvm-svn: 175892
The TypeLoc hierarchy used the llvm::cast machinery to perform undefined
behavior by casting pointers/references to TypeLoc objects to derived types
and then using the derived copy constructors (or even returning pointers to
derived types that actually point to the original TypeLoc object).
Some context is in this thread:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2012-December/056804.html
Though it's spread over a few months which can be hard to read in the mail
archive.
llvm-svn: 175462
In cooperation with the LLVM patch, this should implement all scalar front-end
parts of the C and C++ ABIs for AArch64.
This patch excludes the NEON support also reviewed due to an outbreak of
batshit insanity in our legal department. That will be committed soon bringing
the changes to precisely what has been approved.
Further reviews would be gratefully received.
llvm-svn: 174055
never key functions. We did not implement that rule for the
iOS ABI, which was driven by what was implemented in gcc-4.2.
However, implement it now for other ARM-based platforms.
llvm-svn: 173515
return type of a function by canonicalizing them away. They are
useless anyway, and conflict with our rules for template argument
deduction and __strong. Fixes <rdar://problem/12367446>.
llvm-svn: 172768
consider (sub)module visibility.
The bulk of this change replaces myriad hand-rolled loops over the
linked list of Objective-C categories/extensions attached to an
interface declaration with loops using one of the four new category
iterator kinds:
visible_categories_iterator: Iterates over all visible categories
and extensions, hiding any that have their "hidden" bit set. This is
by far the most commonly used iterator.
known_categories_iterator: Iterates over all categories and
extensions, ignoring the "hidden" bit. This tends to be used for
redeclaration-like traversals.
visible_extensions_iterator: Iterates over all visible extensions,
hiding any that have their "hidden" bit set.
known_extensions_iterator: Iterates over all extensions, whether
they are visible to normal name lookup or not.
The effect of this change is that any uses of the visible_ iterators
will respect module-import visibility. See the new tests for examples.
Note that the old accessors for categories and extensions are gone;
there are *Raw() forms for some of them, for those (few) areas of the
compiler that have to manipulate the linked list of categories
directly. This is generally discouraged.
Part two of <rdar://problem/10634711>.
llvm-svn: 172665
The testcase in pr14929 shows that this is extremely hard to do. If we choose
to apply the attribute, that causes the visibility of some decls to change and
that can happen really late (during codegen).
Current gcc warns and ignores the attribute in this testcase with a warning.
This suggest that the correct solution is to find a point in the compilation
where we can compute the visibility and
* assert it was never computed before
* reject any attempts to compute it again in the future (with warnings).
llvm-svn: 172305
uncovered.
This required manually correcting all of the incorrect main-module
headers I could find, and running the new llvm/utils/sort_includes.py
script over the files.
I also manually added quite a few missing headers that were uncovered by
shuffling the order or moving headers up to be main-module-headers.
llvm-svn: 169237
Among other differences, GCC accepts
typedef int IA[];
typedef int A10[10];
static A10 *f(void);
static IA *f(void);
void g(void) {
(void)sizeof(*f());
}
but clang used to reject it with:
invalid application of 'sizeof' to an incomplete type 'IA' (aka 'int []')
The intention of c99's 6.2.7 seems to be that we should use the composite type
and accept as gcc does.
Doing the type merging required some extra fixes:
* Use the type from the function type in initializations, even if an parameter
is available.
* Fix the merging of the noreturn attribute in function types.
* Make CodeGen handle the fact that an parameter type can be different from
the corresponding type in the function type.
llvm-svn: 168895
in deciding a copy/dispose field is needed in a byref structure
and when generating the copy/dispose helpers. In certain
cases, these fields were being added but no copy/dispose was
being generated. This was uncovered in ARC, but not in MRR.
// rdar://12759433
llvm-svn: 168825
to a cc1 -fencode-extended-block-signature and pass it
to cc1 and recognize this option to produce extended block
type signature. // rdar://12109031
llvm-svn: 168063
This corrects the mangling and linkage of classes (& their member functions) in
cases like this:
struct foo {
struct {
void func() { ... }
} x;
};
we were accidentally giving this nested unnamed struct 'no' linkage where it
should've had the linkage of the outer class. The mangling was incorrecty too,
mangling as TU-wide unnamed type mangling of $_X rather than class-scoped
mangling of UtX_.
This also fixes -Wunused-member-function which would incorrectly diagnose
'func' as unused due to it having no linkage & thus appearing to be TU-local
when in fact it might be correctly used in another TU.
Similar mangling should be applied to function local classes in similar cases
but I've deferred that for a subsequent patch.
Review/discussion by Richard Smith, John McCall, & especially Eli Friedman.
llvm-svn: 167906
methods looking for documentation on a particular base
class inherited by any method that overrides the base class.
In case of redeclaration, as when objc method is defined
in the implementation, it also looks up for documentation
in class/class extension being redeclared.
llvm-svn: 165643
AAPCS ABI Section 7.1.4 [1] specifies that va_list
should be defined as struct __va_list { void *__ap;};
And in C++, it is defined in namespace std.
[1] http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic
/com.arm.doc.ihi0042d/IHI0042D_aapcs.pdf
Patch by Weiming Zhao.
llvm-svn: 165609
ASTContext to the ObjCMethodDecl, and have the more generic
ASTContext::getOverriddenMethods() use the ObjCMethodDecl::getOverriddenMethods()
function.
llvm-svn: 165518
enough information so we can mangle them correctly in cases involving
dependent parameter types. (This specifically impacts cases involving
null pointers and cases involving parameters of reference type.)
Fix the mangler to use this information instead of trying to scavenge
it out of the parameter declaration.
<rdar://problem/12296776>.
llvm-svn: 164656
Now we have a list of all commands. This is a good thing in itself, but it
also enables us to easily implement typo correction for command names.
With this change we have objects that contain information about each command,
so it makes sense to resolve command name just once during lexing (currently we
store command names as strings and do a linear search every time some property
value is needed). Thus comment token and AST nodes were changed to contain a
command ID -- index into a tables of builtin and registered commands. Unknown
commands are registered during parsing and thus are also uniformly assigned an
ID. Using an ID instead of a StringRef is also a nice memory optimization
since ID is a small integer that fits into a common bitfield in Comment class.
This change implies that to get any information about a command (even a command
name) we need a CommandTraits object to resolve the command ID to CommandInfo*.
Currently a fresh temporary CommandTraits object is created whenever it is
needed since it does not have any state. But with this change it has state --
new commands can be registered, so a CommandTraits object was added to
ASTContext.
Also, in libclang CXComment has to be expanded to include a CXTranslationUnit
so that all functions working on comment AST nodes can get a CommandTraits
object. This breaks binary compatibility of CXComment APIs.
Now clang_FullComment_getAsXML(CXTranslationUnit TU, CXComment CXC) doesn't
need TU parameter anymore, so it was removed. This is a source-incompatible
change for this C API.
llvm-svn: 163540
(__builtin_* etc.) so that it isn't possible to take their address.
Specifically, introduce a new type to represent a reference to a builtin
function, and a new cast kind to convert it to a function pointer in the
operand of a call. Fixes PR13195.
llvm-svn: 162962
__objc_yes/__objc_no to (BOOL)1/(BOOL)0 when
BOOL is declared; otherwise it resorts to
default of 'signed char'. This is important to
selecting the correct Numeric API numberWithBool:
Can't have a clang test for this. Will checkin and
executable llvm test. // rdar://12156616
llvm-svn: 162922
not be set for implicit instantiations, remove the FIXME. This should be the
last bit for PR13634. The actual fix happened in r162238.
Motivation: it might be misleading to mark implicit instantiations as
Decl::isImplicit = true. Because then, in order to be consistent, we should
mark all instantiated members as implicit. But the user did actually type the
declaration for the member, but the compiler played with it a little bit.
llvm-svn: 162488