Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Richard Smith ce03732ec8 Permit keywords in module names in #pragma clang module *.
This is necessary to be able to build a libc++ module from preprocessed source
(due to the submodule std.new).

llvm-svn: 302312
2017-05-05 22:34:07 +00:00
Richard Smith d13863008b Add #pragma clang module begin/end pragmas and generate them when preprocessing a module.
These pragmas are intended to simulate the effect of entering or leaving a file
with an associated module. This is not completely implemented yet: declarations
between the pragmas will not be attributed to the correct module, but macro
visibility is already functional.

Modules named by #pragma clang module begin must already be known to clang (in
some module map that's either loaded or on the search path).

llvm-svn: 302098
2017-05-04 00:29:54 +00:00
Richard Smith c51c38b4ec Add pragma to perform module import and use it in -E output.
Many of our supported configurations support modules but do not have any
first-class syntax to perform a module import. This leaves us with a problem:
there is no way to represent the expansion of a #include that imports a module
in the -E output for such languages. (We don't want to just leave it as a
#include because that requires the consumer of the preprocessed source to have
the same file system layout and include paths as the creator.)

This patch adds a new pragma:

  #pragma clang module import MODULE.NAME.HERE

that imports a module, and changes -E and -frewrite-includes to use it when
rewriting a #include that maps to a module import. We don't make any attempt
to use a native language syntax import if one exists, to get more consistent
output. (If in the future, @import and #include have different semantics in
some way, the pragma will track the #include semantics.)

llvm-svn: 301725
2017-04-29 00:34:47 +00:00