TSK_ExplicitInstantiationDeclaration make sure we call
MaybeMarkVirtualMembersReferenced with a method attached to the definition.
Remove the hack that forced vtable emition with declarations.
llvm-svn: 99174
entity (if applicable) which was actually looked up. If a candidate was found
via a using declaration, this is the UsingShadowDecl; otherwise, if
the candidate is template specialization, this is the template; otherwise,
this is the function.
The point of this exercise is that "found declarations" are the entities
we do access control for, not their underlying declarations. Broadly speaking,
this patch fixes access control for using declarations.
There is a *lot* of redundant code calling into the overload-resolution APIs;
we really ought to clean that up.
llvm-svn: 98945
instantiation. Based on a patch by Enea Zaffanella! I found a way to
reduce some of the redundancy between TreeTransform's "standard"
FunctionProtoType transformation and TemplateInstantiator's override,
and I killed off the old SubstFunctionType by adding type source info
for the last cases where we were creating FunctionDecls without TSI
(at least that get passed through template instantiation).
llvm-svn: 98252
injected class name of a class template or class template partial specialization.
This is a non-canonical type; the canonical type is still a template
specialization type. This becomes the TypeForDecl of the pattern declaration,
which cleans up some amount of code (and complicates some other parts, but
whatever).
Fixes PR6326 and probably a few others, primarily by re-establishing a few
invariants about TypeLoc sizes.
llvm-svn: 98134
fixing up a few callers that thought they were propagating NoReturn
information but were in fact saying something about exception
specifications.
llvm-svn: 96766
headers, where malloc (and many other libc functions) are declared
with empty throw specifications, e.g.,
extern void *malloc (__SIZE_TYPE__ __size) throw () __attribute__
((__malloc__)) ;
The C++ standard doesn't seem to allow this, and redeclaring malloc as
the standard permits (as follows) resulted in Clang (rightfully!)
complaining about mis-matched exception specifications.
void *malloc(size_t size);
We work around this by silently propagating an empty throw
specification "throw()" from a function with C linkage declared in a
system header to a redeclaration that has no throw specifier.
Ick.
llvm-svn: 95969
variable type, we can (and should) still check for completeness of the
variable's type. Do so, to work around an assertion that shows up in
Boost's shared_ptr.
llvm-svn: 95934
conversions. Fix an access-control bug where privileges were not considered
at intermediate points along the inheritance path. Prepare for friends.
llvm-svn: 95775
of a C++ record. Exposed a lot of problems where various routines were
silently doing The Wrong Thing (or The Acceptable Thing in The Wrong Order)
when presented with a non-definition. Also cuts down on memory usage.
llvm-svn: 95330
(necessarily simultaneous) changes:
- CXXBaseOrMemberInitializer now contains only a single initializer
rather than a set of initialiation arguments + a constructor. The
single initializer covers all aspects of initialization, including
constructor calls as necessary but also cleanup of temporaries
created by the initializer (which we never handled
before!).
- Rework + simplify code generation for CXXBaseOrMemberInitializers,
since we can now just emit the initializer as an initializer.
- Switched base and member initialization over to the new
initialization code (InitializationSequence), so that it
- Improved diagnostics for the new initialization code when
initializing bases and members, to match the diagnostics produced
by the previous (special-purpose) code.
- Simplify the representation of type-checked constructor initializers in
templates; instead of keeping the fully-type-checked AST, which is
rather hard to undo at template instantiation time, throw away the
type-checked AST and store the raw expressions in the AST. This
simplifies instantiation, but loses a little but of information in
the AST.
- When type-checking implicit base or member initializers within a
dependent context, don't add the generated initializers into the
AST, because they'll look like they were explicit.
- Record in CXXConstructExpr when the constructor call is to
initialize a base class, so that CodeGen does not have to infer it
from context. This ensures that we call the right kind of
constructor.
There are also a few "opportunity" fixes here that were needed to not
regress, for example:
- Diagnose default-initialization of a const-qualified class that
does not have a user-declared default constructor. We had this
diagnostic specifically for bases and members, but missed it for
variables. That's fixed now.
- When defining the implicit constructors, destructor, and
copy-assignment operator, set the CurContext to that constructor
when we're defining the body.
llvm-svn: 94952
sequences, where we would occasionally determine (incorrectly) that
one standard conversion sequence was a proper subset of another when,
in fact, they contained completely incomparable conversions.
This change records the types in each step within a standard
conversion sequence, so that we can check the specific comparison
types to determine when one sequence is a proper subset of the
other. Fixes this testcase (thanks, Anders!), which was distilled from
PR6095 (also thanks to Anders).
llvm-svn: 94660
when checking for covariance. Added some fun test cases, fixes PR6110.
This felt obvious enough to just commit. ;] Let me know if anything needs
tweaking.
llvm-svn: 94173
Change LookupResult to use UnresolvedSet. Also extract UnresolvedSet into its
own header and make it templated over an inline capacity.
llvm-svn: 93959
identifier always names a type. In the case of a dependent
nested-name-specifier, build a TypenameType to describe the dependent
base type. I'd like to move more of this behavior up into the parser,
but this fixes PR6062.
llvm-svn: 93871
that name constructors, the endless joys of out-of-line constructor
definitions, and various other corner cases that the previous hack
never imagined. Fixes PR5688 and tightens up semantic analysis for
constructor names.
Additionally, fixed a problem where we wouldn't properly enter the
declarator scope of a parenthesized declarator. We were entering the
scope, then leaving it when we saw the ")"; now, we re-enter the
declarator scope before parsing the parameter list.
Note that we are forced to perform some tentative parsing within a
class (call it C) to tell the difference between
C(int); // constructor
and
C (f)(int); // member function
which is rather unfortunate. And, although it isn't necessary for
correctness, we use the same tentative-parsing mechanism for
out-of-line constructors to improve diagnostics in icky cases like:
C::C C::f(int); // error: C::C refers to the constructor name, but
// we complain nicely and recover by treating it as
// a type.
llvm-svn: 93322
information to feed diagnostics instead of regenerating it. Much room for
improvement here, but fixes some unfortunate problems reporting on method calls.
llvm-svn: 93316
I said to myself, self, why don't you go add a couple of parameters to a method
and then fail to use them, and I thought that sounded like a pretty good idea,
so I did it.
llvm-svn: 93233
sequence. Lots of small relevant changes. Fixes some serious problems with
ambiguous conversions; also possibly improves associated diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 93214
were performing name lookup for template names in C/ObjC and always
finding nothing. Turn off such lookup unless we're in C++ mode, along
with the check that determines whether the given identifier is a
"current class name", and assert that we don't make this mistake
again.
llvm-svn: 93207
templates. Previously, a little thinko in the code that replaced a
conversion function template with its redeclaration was causing some
very weird lookup behavior.
llvm-svn: 93166
(C++ [temp.mem]p5-6), which involves template argument deduction based
on the type named, e.g., given
struct X { template<typename T> operator T*(); } x;
when we call
x.operator int*();
we perform template argument deduction to determine that T=int. This
template argument deduction is needed for template specialization and
explicit instantiation, e.g.,
template<> X::operator float*() { /* ... */ }
and when calling or otherwise naming a conversion function (as in the
first example).
This fixes PR5742 and PR5762, although there's some remaining ugliness
that's causing out-of-line definitions of conversion function
templates to fail. I'll look into that separately.
llvm-svn: 93162
not just the viable ones. This is reasonable because the most common use of
deleted functions is to exclude some implicit conversion during calls; users
therefore will want to figure out why some other options were excluded.
Started sorting overload results. Right now it just sorts by location in the
translation unit (after putting viable functions first), but we can do better than
that.
Changed bool OnlyViable parameter to PrintOverloadCandidates to an enum for better
self-documentation.
llvm-svn: 92990
deterministic and work properly with templates. Once a class that
needs a vtable has been defined, we now do one if two things:
- If the class has no key function, we place the class on a list of
classes whose virtual functions will need to be "marked" at the
end of the translation unit. The delay until the end of the
translation unit is needed because we might see template
specializations of these virtual functions.
- If the class has a key function, we do nothing; when the key
function is defined, the class will be placed on the
aforementioned list.
At the end of the translation unit, we "mark" all of the virtual
functions of the classes on the list as used, possibly causing
template instantiation and other classes to be added to the
list. This gets LLVM's lib/Support/CommandLine.cpp compiling again.
llvm-svn: 92821
- All classes can have a key function; templates don't change that.
non-template classes when computing the key function.
- We always mark all of the virtual member functions of class
template instantiations.
- The vtable for an instantiation of a class template has weak
linkage.
We could probably use available_externally linkage for vtables of
classes instantiated by explicit instantiation declarations (extern
templates), but GCC doesn't do this and I'm not 100% that the ABI
permits it.
llvm-svn: 92753
test/FixIt/typo.cpp:41:15: error: initializer 'base' does not name a non-static
data member or base class; did you mean the base class 'Base'?
Derived() : base(),
^~~~
Base
test/FixIt/typo.cpp:42:15: error: initializer 'ember' does not name a non-static
data member or base class; did you mean the member 'member'?
ember() { }
^~~~~
member
llvm-svn: 92355
more or less cv-qualified than another during implicit conversion and overload
resolution ([basic.type.qualifier] p5). Factors the logic out of template
deduction and into the ASTContext so it can be shared.
This fixes several aspects of PR5542, but not all of them.
llvm-svn: 92248
keep track of friends within templates, which will provide a real for
PR5866. For now, this makes sure we don't do something entirely stupid
with friends of specializations.
llvm-svn: 92143
size_t. Also, fix an issue with initialization of parameters in calls,
where we weren't removing the cv-qualifiers on the parameter type
itself. Fixes PR5823.
llvm-svn: 91941
this was useful, and on review Doug and I decided it was probably on the level
of a bug in the standard and therefore not worth a warning even in -pedantic.
If someone disagrees and urgently wants clang++ to warn about this in strict
c++98 mode, we can talk about it.
llvm-svn: 91868
the redeclaration problems in the [temp.explicit]p3 testcase worse, but I can
live with that; they'll need to be fixed more holistically anyhow.
llvm-svn: 91771
Magically fixes all the terrible lookup problems associated with not pushing
a new scope. Resolves an ancient xfail and an LLVM misparse.
llvm-svn: 91769
new InitializationSequence. This fixes some bugs (e.g., PR5808),
changed some diagnostics, and caused more churn than expected. What's
new:
- InitializationSequence now has a "C conversion sequence" category
and step kind, which falls back to
- Changed the diagnostics for returns to always have the result type
of the function first and the type of the expression second.
CheckSingleAssignmentConstraints to peform checking in C.
- Improved ASTs for initialization of return values. The ASTs now
capture all of the temporaries we need to create, but
intentionally do not bind the tempoary that is actually returned,
so that it won't get destroyed twice.
- Make sure to perform an (elidable!) copy of the class object that
is returned from a class.
- Fix copy elision in CodeGen to properly see through the
subexpressions that occur with elidable copies.
- Give "new" its own entity kind; as with return values and thrown
objects, we don't bind the expression so we don't call a
destructor for it.
Note that, with this patch, I've broken returning move-only types in
C++0x. We'll fix it later, when we tackle NRVO.
llvm-svn: 91669
than using its own partial implementation of initialization.
Switched CheckInitializerTypes over to
InitializedEntity/InitializationKind, to help move us closer to
InitializationSequence.
Added InitializedEntity::getName() to retrieve the name of the entity,
for diagnostics that care about such things.
Implemented support for default initialization in
InitializationSequence.
Clean up the determination of the "source expressions" for an
initialization sequence in InitializationSequence::Perform.
Taught CXXConstructExpr to store more location information.
llvm-svn: 91492
is difficult because they're so terribly, terribly ambiguous.
We implement access declarations in terms of using declarations, which is
quite reasonable. However, we should really persist the access/using
distinction in the AST and use the appropriate name in diagnostics. This
isn't a priority, so I'll just file a PR and hope someone else does it. :)
llvm-svn: 91095
declaration. Rename note_using_decl to note_using, which is possibly less confusing.
Add a test for non-class-scope using decl collisions and be sure to note the case
we can't diagnose yet.
llvm-svn: 91057
are a couple of O(n^2) operations in this, some analogous to the usual O(n^2)
redeclaration problem and some not. In particular, retroactively removing
shadow declarations when they're hidden by later decls is pretty unfortunate.
I'm not yet convinced it's worse than the alternative, though.
llvm-svn: 91045