delayed diagnostic
This fix avoids an infinite recursion that was uncovered in one of our internal
tests by r301992. The testcase is the most reduced version of that
auto-generated test.
This is an improved version of the reverted commit r302037. The previous fix
actually managed to expose another subtle bug whereby `fatal_too_many_errors`
error was reported twice, with the second report setting the
`FatalErrorOccurred` flag. That prevented the notes that followed the diagnostic
the caused `fatal_too_many_errors` to be emitted. This commit ensures that notes
that follow `fatal_too_many_errors` but that belong to the diagnostic that
caused `fatal_too_many_errors` won't be emitted by setting the
`FatalErrorOccurred` when emitting `fatal_too_many_errors`.
rdar://31962618
llvm-svn: 302151
The intent for an explicit module build is that the diagnostics produced within
the module are those that were configured when the module was built, not those
that are enabled within a user of the module. This includes diagnostics that
don't actually show up until the module is used (for instance, diagnostics
produced during template instantiation and weird cases like -Wpadded).
We serialized and restored the diagnostic state for individual warning groups,
but previously did not track the state for flags like -Werror and -Weverything,
which are implemented as separate bits rather than as part of the diagnostics
mapping information.
llvm-svn: 301992
Rather than storing a single flat list of SourceLocations where the diagnostic
state changes (in source order), we now store a separate list for each FileID
in which there is a diagnostic state transition. (State for other files is
built and cached lazily, on demand.) This has two consequences:
1) We can now sensibly support modules, and properly track the diagnostic state
for modular headers (this matters when, for instance, triggering instantiation
of a template defined within a module triggers diagnostics).
2) It's much faster than the old approach, since we can now just do a binary
search on the offsets within the FileID rather than needing to call
isBeforeInTranslationUnit to determine source order (which is surprisingly
slow). For some pathological (but real world) files, this reduces total
compilation time by more than 10%.
For now, the diagnostic state points for modules are loaded eagerly. It seems
feasible to defer this until diagnostic state information for one of the
module's files is needed, but that's not part of this patch.
llvm-svn: 293123
This behavior is enabled when the new CXTranslationUnit_KeepGoing
option is passed to clang_parseTranslationUnit{,2}. It is geared
towards use by IDEs and similar consumers of the clang-c API where
fatal errors may arise when parsing incomplete code mid-edit, or
when include paths are not properly configured yet. In such situations
one still wants to get as much information as possible about a TU.
Previously, the semantic analysis would not instantiate templates
or report additional fatal errors after the first fatal error was
encountered.
Fixes PR24268.
Patch by Milian Wolff.
llvm-svn: 262318
If you increase the number of diags of a particular type by one more than the
number available you get the nice assert message. If you do it by two more
than available you get the old non-helpful message. Combining the two makes
sense I think.
llvm-svn: 250546
The patch is generated using this command:
$ tools/extra/clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py -fix \
-checks=-*,llvm-namespace-comment -header-filter='llvm/.*|clang/.*' \
work/llvm/tools/clang
To reduce churn, not touching namespaces spanning less than 10 lines.
llvm-svn: 240270
intent when we added remark support, but was never implemented in the general
case, because the first -R flags didn't need it. (-Rpass= had special handling
to accomodate its argument.)
-Rno-foo, -Reverything, and -Rno-everything can be used to turn off a remark,
or to turn on or off all remarks. Per discussion on cfe-commits, -Weverything
does not affect remarks, and -Reverything does not affect warnings or errors.
The only "real" -R flag we have right now is -Rmodule-build; that flag is
effectively renamed from -Wmodule-build to -Rmodule-build by this change.
-Wpass and -Wno-pass (and their friends) are also renamed to -Rpass and
-Rno-pass by this change; it's not completely clear whether we intended to have
a -Rpass (with no =pattern), but that is unchanged by this commit, other than
the flag name. The default pattern is effectively one which matches no passes.
In future, we may want to make the default pattern be .*, so that -Reverything
works for -Rpass properly.
llvm-svn: 215046
this pointer is always non-null. If the this pointer is null, it is undefined
and the compiler may optimize it away by assuming it is non-null. The null
checks are pushed into the callers.
llvm-svn: 214471
Custom diagnostics don't have a builtin class so this wouldn't have worked.
Reduces surface area of remark-related changes.
No test coverage.
llvm-svn: 211462
By describing system header suppressions directly in tablegen we eliminate
special cases in getDiagnosticSeverity().
Dropping the reliance on builtin diagnostic classes when mapping also gets us
closer to the goal of reusing the diagnostic machinery for custom diagnostics.
No change in functionality.
llvm-svn: 211023
Thanks to David Blakie and Richard Smith for pointing out that we can retain the
-Wswitch coverage while avoiding the warning from GCC by pushing the unreachable
outside of the switch!
llvm-svn: 210812
tools/clang/lib/Basic/DiagnosticIDs.cpp: In function ‘clang::DiagnosticIDs::Level toLevel(clang::diag::Severity)’:
tools/clang/lib/Basic/DiagnosticIDs.cpp:382:1: warning: control reaches end of non-void function [-Wreturn-type]
tools/clang/lib/Format/Format.cpp: In member function ‘virtual std::string clang::format::ParseErrorCategory::message(int) const’:
tools/clang/lib/Format/Format.cpp:282:1: warning: control reaches end of non-void function [-Wreturn-type]
Add a default cases that asserts that we handle the severity, parse error.
llvm-svn: 210804
This begins to address cognitive dissonance caused by treating the Note
diagnostic level as a severity in the diagnostic engine.
No change in functionality.
llvm-svn: 210758
Diagnostic mappings are used to calculate the final severity of diagnostic
instances.
Detangle the implementation to reflect the terminology used in documentation
and bindings.
No change in functionality.
llvm-svn: 210518
Anyone enabling this warning would expect to hear about all occurrences
including those in system headers that can cause non-reproducible builds.
To achieve this, rework ShowInSystemHeader to remove broken unused mapping code
that didn't make sense with a simpler and correct scheme.
llvm-svn: 210512
Summary:
This patch adds a new flag -Rpass=. The flag indicates the name
of the optimization pass that should emit remarks stating when it
made a transformation to the code.
This implements the design I proposed in:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1FYUatSjZZO-zmFBxjOiuOzAy9mhHA8hqdvklZv68WuQ/edit?usp=sharing
Other changes:
- Add DiagnosticIDs::isRemark(). Use it in printDiagnosticOptions to
print "-R" instead of "-W" in the diagnostic message.
- In BackendConsumer::OptimizationRemarkHandler, get a SourceLocation
object out of the file name, line and column number. Use that location
in the call to Diags.Report().
- When -Rpass is used without debug info a note is emitted alerting
the user that they need to use -gline-tables-only -gcolumn-info to
get this information.
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D3226
llvm-svn: 206401
A 'remark' is information that is not an error or a warning, but rather some
additional information provided to the user. In contrast to a 'note' a 'remark'
is an independent diagnostic, whereas a 'note' always depends on another
diagnostic.
A typical use case for remark nodes is information provided to the user, e.g.
information provided by the vectorizer about loops that have been vectorized.
This patch provides the initial implementation of 'remarks'. It includes the
actual definiton of the remark nodes, their printing as well as basic parameter
handling. We are reusing the existing diagnostic parameters which means a remark
can be enabled with normal '-Wdiagnostic-name' flags and can be upgraded to
an error using '-Werror=diagnostic-name'. '-Werror' alone does not upgrade
remarks.
This patch is by intention minimal in terms of parameter handling. More
experience and more discussions will most likely lead to further enhancements
in the parameter handling.
llvm-svn: 202475
encodes the canonical rules for LLVM's style. I noticed this had drifted
quite a bit when cleaning up LLVM, so wanted to clean up Clang as well.
llvm-svn: 198686
substitution failure, allow a flag to be set on the Diagnostic object,
to mark it as 'causes substitution failure'.
Refactor Diagnostic.td and the tablegen to use an enum for SFINAE behavior
rather than a bunch of flags.
llvm-svn: 194444
The individual group and subgroups tables are now two large tables. The option table stores an index into these two tables instead of pointers. This reduces the size of the options tabe since it doesn't need to store pointers. It also reduces the number of relocations needed.
My build shows this reducing DiagnosticsIDs.o and the clang binary by ~20.5K. It also removes ~400 relocation entries from DiagnosticIDs.o.
llvm-svn: 189438
Diag ID is used throughout clang as a sentinel id meaning "this is an
invalid diagnostic id." Confusingly, Diag ID maps to a valid, usable,
diagnostic id. Instead, start diagnostic ids at ID one.
Incidently, remove an unused element from StaticDiagInfo.
llvm-svn: 186760
Patch by Will Dietz:
Minor touchup so the values of Offset/ID reflect their intention.
Previously, the sum (Offset+ID) was correct, but Offset/ID
individually were wrong.
Caught by investigating unsigned overflow reported by -fsanitize=integer.
llvm-svn: 171421
Instead of doing a binary search over the whole diagnostic table (which weighs
a whopping 48k on x86_64), use the existing enums to compute the index in the
table. This avoids loading any unneeded data from the table and avoids littering
CPU caches with it. This code is in a hot path for code with many diagnostics.
1% speedup on -fsyntax-only gcc.c, which emits a lot of warnings.
llvm-svn: 169890
with -Werror. Previously, compiling with -Werror would emit only the first
warning in a compilation unit, because clang assumes that once an error occurs,
further analysis is unlikely to return valid results. However, warnings that
have been upgraded to errors should not be treated as "errors" in this sense.
llvm-svn: 169649
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