Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Akira Hatanaka 7275da0f2e [ObjC] Allow declaring __strong pointer fields in structs in Objective-C
ARC mode.

Declaring __strong pointer fields in structs was not allowed in
Objective-C ARC until now because that would make the struct non-trivial
to default-initialize, copy/move, and destroy, which is not something C
was designed to do. This patch lifts that restriction.

Special functions for non-trivial C structs are synthesized that are
needed to default-initialize, copy/move, and destroy the structs and
manage the ownership of the objects the __strong pointer fields point
to. Non-trivial structs passed to functions are destructed in the callee
function.

rdar://problem/33599681

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41228

llvm-svn: 326307
2018-02-28 07:15:55 +00:00
John McCall 9b0a7cea0f Make -fobjc-nonfragile-abi the -cc1 default, since it's the
increasingly prevailing case to the point that new features
like ARC don't even support the fragile ABI anymore.

This required a little bit of reshuffling with exceptions
because a check was assuming that ObjCNonFragileABI was
only being set in ObjC mode, and that's actually a bit
obnoxious to do.

Most, though, it involved a perl script to translate a ton
of test cases.

Mostly no functionality change for driver users, although
there are corner cases with disabling language-specific
exceptions that we should handle more correctly now.

llvm-svn: 140957
2011-10-02 01:16:38 +00:00
John McCall 24fc0decfe Change the driver's logic about Objective-C runtimes: abstract out a
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
2011-07-06 00:26:06 +00:00
John McCall 31168b077c Automatic Reference Counting.
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
2011-06-15 23:02:42 +00:00