Exception specs are not part of the canonical type, but we shouldn't
drop them just because we merged a noreturn attribute.
Fixes PR17110.
llvm-svn: 190206
When an AST file is built based on another AST file, it can use a decl from
the fist file, and therefore mark the "isUsed" bit. We need to note this in
the AST file so that the bit is set correctly when the second AST file is
loaded.
This patch introduces the distinction between setIsUsed() and markUsed() so
that we don't call into the ASTMutationListener callback when it wouldn't
be appropriate.
Fixes PR16635.
llvm-svn: 190016
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
- Some documenation were added.
- Usages of OpaquePtr<A>.getAsVal<A>() were replaced by OpaquePtr<A>.get().
- Methods getAs and getAsVal were renamed to getPtrTo and getPtrAs respectively.
llvm-svn: 189346
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
referenced as a member of the current instantiation. In that case, deduce the
type of the function to a dependent type rather than exposing an undeduced auto
type to the rest of the current instantiation.
The standard doesn't really say that the type is dependent in this case; I'll
bring this up with CWG.
llvm-svn: 188410
When a local extern declaration redeclares some other entity, the type of that
entity is merged with the prior type if the prior declaration is visible (in C)
or is declared in the same scope (in C++).
- Make LookupRedeclarationWithLinkage actually work in C++, use it in the right
set of cases, and make it track whether it found a shadowed declaration.
- Track whether we found a declaration in the same scope (for C++) including
across serialization and template instantiation.
llvm-svn: 188307
I'm not really satisfied with the ad-hoc nature of
Sema::diagnoseQualifiedDeclaration, but I'm not sure how to fix it.
Fixes <rdar://problem/14639501>.
llvm-svn: 188208
of local classes. We were previously handling this by performing qualified
lookup within a function declaration(!!); replace it with the proper scope
lookup.
llvm-svn: 188050
bool, half, pointers and structs / unions containing any
of these are not allowed. Does not yet reject size_t and
related integer types that are also disallowed.
llvm-svn: 186908
The functionality is equivalent to the GCC attribute. Variables of tagged
types will be warned about as unused if they are not used in any way
except for possible (even non-trivial) ctors/dtors called. Useful for tagging
classes like std::string (which is not part of this commit).
llvm-svn: 186765
r186331).
Original commit log:
If we friend a declaration twice, that should not make it visible to
name lookup in the surrounding context. Slightly rework how we handle
friend declarations to inherit the visibility of the prior
declaration, rather than setting a friend declaration to be visible
whenever there was a prior declaration.
llvm-svn: 186546
cl.exe treats wide bitfields as an error. This patch causes them to be
an error if IsMsStruct is true, as it is in straight C.
Patch by Warren Hunt!
Reviewers: eli.friedman
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1125
llvm-svn: 186536
Sema needs to be able to accurately determine what will be
emitted as a constant initializer and what will not, so
we get accurate errors in C and accurate -Wglobal-constructors
warnings in C++. This makes Expr::isConstantInitializer match
CGExprConstant as closely as possible.
llvm-svn: 186464
Not completely sure this is right, but it's clearly better than what
we did before this commit (effectively dropping the attribute).
<rdar://problem/14413117>
llvm-svn: 186373
This breaks the build of basic patterns with repeated friend
declarations. See the added test case in SemaCXX/friend.cpp or the test
case reported to the original commit log.
Original commit log:
If we friend a declaration twice, that should not make it visible to
name lookup in the surrounding context. Slightly rework how we handle
friend declarations to inherit the visibility of the prior
declaration, rather than setting a friend declaration to be visible
whenever there was a prior declaration.
llvm-svn: 186331
Original commit log:
If we friend a declaration twice, that should not make it visible to
name lookup in the surrounding context. Slightly rework how we handle
friend declarations to inherit the visibility of the prior
declaration, rather than setting a friend declaration to be visible
whenever there was a prior declaration.
llvm-svn: 186199
fix is.
Original commit log:
If we friend a declaration twice, that should not make it visible to
name lookup in the surrounding context. Slightly rework how we handle
friend declarations to inherit the visibility of the prior
declaration, rather than setting a friend declaration to be visible
whenever there was a prior declaration.
llvm-svn: 186185
lookup in the surrounding context. Slightly rework how we handle friend
declarations to inherit the visibility of the prior declaration, rather
than setting a friend declaration to be visible whenever there was a prior
declaration.
llvm-svn: 186040
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
Sema::MergeFunctionDecl attempts merging two decls even if the old decl
is invalid. This can lead to interesting circumstances where we
successfully merge the decls but the result makes no sense.
Take the following for example:
template <typename T>
int main(void);
int main(void);
Sema will not consider these to be overloads of the same name because
main can't be overloaded, which means that this must be a redeclaration.
In this case the templated decl is compatible with the non-templated
decl allowing the Sema::CheckFunctionDeclaration machinery to move on
and do bizarre things like setting the previous decl of a non-templated
decl to a templated decl!
The way I see it, we should just bail from MergeFunctionDecl if the old
decl is invalid.
This fixes PR16531.
llvm-svn: 185779
This boils down to us sending invalid function decls to
CheckFunctionDeclaration becauswe we did not consider that CheckMain
could cause the decl to be invalid. Instead, interogate the new decl's
main-validity and *then* send it over to get CheckFunctionDeclaration'd
if it was still valid after calling CheckMain.
llvm-svn: 185745
The removal is tried by retrying the failed lookup of a correction
candidate with either the MemberContext or SS (CXXScopeSpecifier) or
both set to NULL if they weren't already. If the candidate identifier
is then looked up successfully, make a note in the candidate that the
SourceRange should include any existing nested name specifier even if
the candidate isn't adding a different one (i.e. the candidate has a
NULL NestedNameSpecifier).
Also tweak the diagnostic messages to differentiate between a suggestion
that just replaces the identifer but leaves the existing nested name
specifier intact and one that replaces the entire qualified identifier,
in cases where the suggested replacement is unqualified.
llvm-svn: 185487
standard's rule that an extern "C" declaration conflicts with any entity in the
global scope with the same name. Now we only care if the global scope entity is
a variable declaration (and so might have the same mangled name as the extern
"C" declaration). This has been reported as a standard defect.
Original commit message:
PR7927, PR16247: Reimplement handling of matching extern "C" declarations
across scopes.
When we declare an extern "C" name that is not a redeclaration of an entity in
the same scope, check whether it redeclares some extern "C" entity from another
scope, and if not, check whether it conflicts with a (non-extern-"C") entity in
the translation unit.
When we declare a name in the translation unit that is not a redeclaration,
check whether it conflicts with any extern "C" entities (possibly from other
scopes).
llvm-svn: 185281
across scopes.
When we declare an extern "C" name that is not a redeclaration of an entity in
the same scope, check whether it redeclares some extern "C" entity from another
scope, and if not, check whether it conflicts with a (non-extern-"C") entity in
the translation unit.
When we declare a name in the translation unit that is not a redeclaration,
check whether it conflicts with any extern "C" entities (possibly from other
scopes).
llvm-svn: 185229
r177473 made us correctly consider only those declarations in the
enclosing namespace scope when looking for a friend declaration. Under
ms-extensions mode, where we do some level of friend injection, this
meant that we were introducing a new tag type into a different scope
than what Microsoft actually does. Address this by only doing the
friend injection when we didn't see any tag with that name in any
outer scope. Fixes <rdar://problem/14250378>.
llvm-svn: 185100
Make use of getTypeSizeInChars to detect structs/unions of zero size. It allows
more accurate detection of types of zero size. It however has a side effect -
sequence of used types may change, that is why the test 'override-layout' was
modified.
llvm-svn: 184088
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
references. What's more, they use this language extension in their
ATL header files (which come as part of MFC and the Win32 SDK). This patch implements support for the Microsoft extension, and addresses PR13737.
llvm-svn: 182936
While the C++ standard requires that this lookup take place only at the
definition point of a virtual destructor (C++11 [class.dtor]p12), the
Microsoft ABI may require the compiler to emit a deleting destructor
for any virtual destructor declared in the TU, including ones without
a body, requiring an operator delete() lookup for every virtual
destructor declaration. The result of the lookup should be the same
no matter which declaration is used (except in weird corner cases).
This change will cause us to reject some valid TUs in Microsoft ABI
mode, e.g.:
struct A {
void operator delete(void *);
};
struct B {
void operator delete(void *);
};
struct C : A, B {
virtual ~C();
};
As Richard points out, every virtual function declared in a TU
(including this virtual destructor) is odr-used, so it must be defined
in any program which declares it, or the program is ill formed, no
diagnostic required. Because we know that any definition of this
destructor will cause the lookup to fail, the compiler can choose to
issue a diagnostic here.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D822
llvm-svn: 182270
selectany only applies to externally visible global variables. It has
the effect of making the data weak_odr.
The MSDN docs suggest that unused definitions can only be dropped at
linktime, so Clang uses weak instead of linkonce. MSVC optimizes away
references to constant selectany data, so it must assume that there is
only one definition, hence weak_odr.
Reviewers: espindola
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D814
llvm-svn: 182266
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
I was not able to find a case (other than the fix in r181163) where this
makes a difference, but it is a more obviously correct API to have.
llvm-svn: 181165
This change partly addresses a heinous problem we have with the
parsing of attribute arguments that are a lone identifier. Previously,
we would end up parsing the 'align' attribute of this as an expression
"(Align)":
template<unsigned Size, unsigned Align>
class my_aligned_storage
{
__attribute__((align((Align)))) char storage[Size];
};
while this would parse as a "parameter name" 'Align':
template<unsigned Size, unsigned Align>
class my_aligned_storage
{
__attribute__((align(Align))) char storage[Size];
};
The code that handles the alignment attribute would completely ignore
the parameter name, so the while the first of these would do what's
expected, the second would silently be equivalent to
template<unsigned Size, unsigned Align>
class my_aligned_storage
{
__attribute__((align)) char storage[Size];
};
i.e., use the maximal alignment rather than the specified alignment.
Address this by sniffing the "Args" provided in the TableGen
description of attributes. If the first argument is "obviously"
something that should be treated as an expression (rather than an
identifier to be matched later), parse it as an expression.
Fixes <rdar://problem/13700933>.
llvm-svn: 180973
This change partly addresses a heinous problem we have with the
parsing of attribute arguments that are a lone identifier. Previously,
we would end up parsing the 'align' attribute of this as an expression
"(Align)":
template<unsigned Size, unsigned Align>
class my_aligned_storage
{
__attribute__((align((Align)))) char storage[Size];
};
while this would parse as a "parameter name" 'Align':
template<unsigned Size, unsigned Align>
class my_aligned_storage
{
__attribute__((align(Align))) char storage[Size];
};
The code that handles the alignment attribute would completely ignore
the parameter name, so the while the first of these would do what's
expected, the second would silently be equivalent to
template<unsigned Size, unsigned Align>
class my_aligned_storage
{
__attribute__((align)) char storage[Size];
};
i.e., use the maximal alignment rather than the specified alignment.
Address this by sniffing the "Args" provided in the TableGen
description of attributes. If the first argument is "obviously"
something that should be treated as an expression (rather than an
identifier to be matched later), parse it as an expression.
Fixes <rdar://problem/13700933>.
llvm-svn: 180970
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
Instead, we check for one line extern "C" context in linkage computation and
when deciding if a variable is a definition.
This hopefully completes the transition to having "as written" semantics for
hasExternalStorage.
llvm-svn: 180258
statement in constexpr functions. Everything which doesn't require variable
mutation is also allowed as an extension in C++11. 'void' becomes a literal
type to support constexpr functions which return 'void'.
llvm-svn: 180022
C++1y, so stop adding the 'const' there. Provide a compatibility warning for
code relying on this in C++11, with a fix-it hint. Update our lazily-written
tests to add the const, except for those ones which were testing our
implementation of this rule.
llvm-svn: 179969
It was being used correctly, but it is a very dangerous API to have around.
Instead, move the logic from the filtering to when we are deciding if we should
link two decls.
llvm-svn: 179523
Invalid redeclarations of valid explicit declarations shouldn't
take the same path as redeclarations of implicit declarations,
and invalid local extern declarations shouldn't foul things up
for everybody else.
llvm-svn: 179482
New rule:
- Method decls in @implementation are considered "redeclarations"
and inherit deprecated/availability from the @interface.
- All other cases are consider overrides, which do not inherit
deprecated/availability. For example:
(a) @interface redeclares a method in an adopted protocol.
(b) A subclass redeclares a method in a superclass.
(c) A protocol redeclares a method from another protocol it adopts.
The idea is that API authors should have the ability to easily
move availability/deprecated up and down a class/protocol hierarchy.
A redeclaration means that the availability/deprecation is a blank
slate.
Fixes <rdar://problem/13574571>
llvm-svn: 178937
This removes a bit of patching that survived r178663. Without it we can produce
better a better error message for
const int a = 5;
static const int a;
llvm-svn: 178795
Having these not be the same makes an easy to misuse API. We should audit the
uses and probably rename to something like
foo->hasExternalLinkage():
The c++ standard one. That is UniqueExternalLinkage or ExternalLinkage.
foo->hasUniqueExternalLinkage():
Is UniqueExternalLinkage.
foo->hasCogeGenExternalLinkage():
Is ExternalLinkage.
llvm-svn: 178768
This mostly reverts 178733, but keeps the tests.
I don't claim to understand how hidden sub modules work or when we need to see
them (is that documented?), but this has the same semantics and avoids adding
hasExternalLinkageUncached which has the same foot gun potential as the old
hasExternalLinkage.
Last but not least, not computing linkage when it is not needed is more
efficient.
llvm-svn: 178739
This test was exactly the opposite of what it should be. We should check if
there old decl has linkage (where it makes sense) and if the new decl has
the extern keyword.
llvm-svn: 178735
caching the linkage for a declaration before we set up its redeclaration chain,
when determining whether a declaration could be a redeclaration of something
from an unimported submodule. We actually want to look at the declaration as if
it were not a redeclaration here, so compute the linkage but don't cache it.
llvm-svn: 178733
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x86_64-darwin10-gdb went back green
before it processed the reverted 178663, so it could not have been the culprit.
Revert "Revert 178663."
This reverts commit 4f8a3eb2ce5d4ba422483439e20c8cbb4d953a41.
llvm-svn: 178682
For variables and functions clang used to store two storage classes. The one
"as written" in the code and a patched one, which, for example, propagates
static to the following decls.
This apparently is from the days clang lacked linkage computation. It is now
redundant and this patch removes it.
llvm-svn: 178663
Doxygen treats "@command" the same as "\command" in a doc comment, so
whenever we talk about Objective-C things like "@interface" we have to
make sure to escape them.
Let's try to keep Clang -Wdocumentation-clean!
llvm-svn: 178603
variable in a C99 inline (but not static-inline or extern-inline)
function definition.
The standard doesn't actually say that this doesn't apply to
"extern inline" definitions, but that seems like a useful extension,
and it at least doesn't have the obvious flaw that a static
mutable variable in an externally-available definition does.
rdar://13535367
llvm-svn: 178520
visible. There's a lot of potential badness in how we're modelling
these things, but getting this much correct is reasonably easy.
rdar://13535367
llvm-svn: 178488
We already avoided warning for
extern "C" const char *Version_string = "2.9";
now we also don't produce any warnings for
extern "C" {
extern const char *Version_string2 = "2.9";
}
llvm-svn: 178333
picking up cleanups from earlier in the statement. Also fix a
crash-on-invalid where a reference to an invalid decl from an
enclosing scope was causing an expression to fail to build, but
only *after* a cleanup was registered from that statement,
causing an assertion downstream.
The crash-on-valid is rdar://13459289.
llvm-svn: 177692
Before this patch we would compute the linkage lazily and cache it. When the
AST was modified in ways that could change the value, we would invalidate the
cache.
That was fairly brittle, since any code could ask for the a linkage before
the correct value was available.
We should change the API to one where the linkage is computed explicitly and
trying to get it when it is not available asserts.
This patch is a first step in that direction. We still compute the linkage
lazily, but instead of invalidating a cache, we assert that the AST
modifications didn't change the result.
llvm-svn: 176999
extern "C" {
void test5_f() {
extern int test5_b;
}
}
static float test5_b;
This patch makes us report one for
extern "C" {
void test6_f() {
extern int test6_b;
}
}
extern "C" {
static float test6_b;
}
Not because we think the declaration would be extern C, but because of the rule:
An entity with C language linkage shall not be declared with the same name as an entity in global scope...
We were just not looking past the extern "C" to see if the decl was in global
scope.
llvm-svn: 176875
Without this patch we produce an error for
extern "C" {
void f() {
extern int b;
}
}
extern "C" {
extern float b;
}
but not for
extern "C" {
void f() {
extern int b;
}
}
extern "C" {
float b;
}
llvm-svn: 176867
the normal attribute-merging path, because we can't merge alignment attributes
without knowing the complete set of alignment attributes which apply to a
particular declaration.
llvm-svn: 175861
control the visibility of a type for the purposes of RTTI
and template argument restrictions independently of how
visibility propagates to its non-type member declarations.
Also fix r175326 to not ignore template argument visibility
on a template explicit instantiation when a member has
an explicit attribute but the instantiation does not.
The type_visibility work is rdar://11880378
llvm-svn: 175587
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
I added hasCLanguageLinkage while fixing some language linkage bugs some
time ago so that I wouldn't have to check all users of isExternC. It turned
out to be a much longer detour than expected, but this patch finally
merges the two again. The isExternC function now implements just the
standard notion of having C language linkage.
llvm-svn: 175119
some cases where functions with no language linkage were being treated as having
C language linkage. In particular, don't warn in
extern "C" {
static NonPod foo();
}
Since getLanguageLinkage checks the language linkage, the linkage computation
cannot use the language linkage. Break the loop by checking just the context
in the linkage computation.
llvm-svn: 175117
If the member has an initializer, assume it was probably intended to be static
and suggest/recover with that.
If the member doesn't have an initializer, assume it was probably intended to
be const instead of constexpr and suggest that.
(if the attempt to apply these changes fails, don't make any suggestion &
produce the same diagnostic experience as before. The only case where this can
come up that I know of is with a mutable constexpr with an initializer, since
mutable is incompatible with static (but it's already incompatible with
const anyway))
llvm-svn: 173873
This required plumbing through a new flag to determine whether a ParmVarDecl is
actually a parameter of a function declaration (as opposed to a function
typedef etc, where the attribute is prohibited). Weirdly, this attribute (just
like [[noreturn]]) cannot be applied to a function type, just to a function
declaration (and its parameters).
llvm-svn: 173726
Title: [PR9027] volatile struct bug: member is not loaded at -O;
This is caused by last flag passed to @llvm.memcpy being false,
not honoring that aggregate has at least one 'volatile' data member
(even though aggregate itself has not been qualified as 'volatile'.
As a result, optimization optimizes away the memcpy altogether.
Patch review by John MaCall (I still need to fix up a test though).
llvm-svn: 173535
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
and split it out of -Wgnu into its own warning flag.
* In C++11, this is now a hard error (GCC has no extension here in C++11 mode).
The error can be disabled with -Wno-static-float-init, and has a fixit to
add 'constexpr'.
* In C++98, this is still an ExtWarn, but is now controlled by
-Wstatic-float-init as well as -Wgnu.
llvm-svn: 173414
Introduce a spelling index to Attr class, which is an index into the attribute spelling list of an attribute defined in Attr.td.
This index will determine the actual spelling used by an attribute, as it incorporates both the syntax and naming of the attribute.
When constructing an attribute AST node, the spelling index is computed based on attribute kind, scope (if it's a C++11 attribute), and
name, then passed to Attr that will use the index to print itself.
Thanks to Richard Smith for the idea and review.
llvm-svn: 173358
The warning is still under -Wuninitialized (although technically this
is defined behavior), but under a subgroup -Wstatic-self-init.
This addresses PR 10265.
llvm-svn: 172878
it apart from [[gnu::noreturn]] / __attribute__((noreturn)), since their
semantics are not equivalent (for instance, we treat [[gnu::noreturn]] as
affecting the function type, whereas [[noreturn]] does not).
llvm-svn: 172691
This fixes pr14946. The problem was that the linkage computation was done too
early, so things like "extern int a;" would be given external linkage, even if
a previous declaration was static.
llvm-svn: 172667
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
overriding and overridden method, allow the overridden method to have
a narrower contract (introduced earlier, deprecated/obsoleted later)
than the overriding method. Fixes <rdar://problem/12992023>.
llvm-svn: 172567
ActOnFinishFullExpr that some of its checks only apply to discarded-value
expressions. This adds missing checks for unexpanded variadic template
parameter packs to a handful of constructs.
llvm-svn: 172485
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
which a particular declaration resides. Use this information to
customize the "definition of 'blah' must be imported from another
module" diagnostic with the module the user actually has to
import. Additionally, recover by importing that module, so we don't
complain about other names in that module.
Still TODO: coming up with decent Fix-Its for these cases, and expand
this recovery approach for other name lookup failures.
llvm-svn: 172290
(because they are part of some module) but have not been made visible
(because they are in a submodule that wasn't imported), filter out
those declarations unless both the old declaration and the new
declaration have external linkage. When one or both has internal
linkage, there should be no conflict unless both are imported.
llvm-svn: 171925
To do so we have to wait until we know that the type of a variable has been
deduced. Sema::FinalizeDeclaration is the first callback that is used for
decl with or without initializers.
llvm-svn: 171458
This patch moves hasCLanguageLinkage to be VarDecl and FunctionDecl methods
so that they can be used from SemaOverload.cpp and then fixes the logic
in Sema::IsOverload.
llvm-svn: 171193
the body of a functions. The problem was that hasBody looks at the entire chain
and causes problems to -fvisibility-inlines-hidden if the cache was not
invalidated.
Original message:
Cache visibility of decls.
This unifies the linkage and visibility caching. I first implemented this when
working on pr13844, but the previous fixes removed the performance advantage of
this one.
This is still a step in the right direction for making linkage and visibility
cheap to use.
llvm-svn: 171053
This unifies the linkage and visibility caching. I first implemented this when
working on pr13844, but the previous fixes removed the performance advantage of
this one.
This is still a step in the right direction for making linkage and visibility
cheap to use.
llvm-svn: 171048
This was removed with -Wunique-enum, which is still removed. The
corresponding thread on cfe-comments for that warning is here:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-dev/2012-September/024224.html
If we get specific user feedback for -Wduplicate-enum we can evaluate
whether or not to keep it.
llvm-svn: 170974
When we are visiting the extern declaration of 'i' in
static int i = 99;
int foo() {
extern int i;
return i;
}
We should not try to handle it as if it was an function static. That is, we
must consider the written storage class.
Fixing this then exposes that the assert in EmitGlobalVarDeclLValue and the
if leading to its call are not completely accurate. They were passing before
because the second decl was marked as having external storage. I changed them
to check the linkage, which I find easier to understand.
Last but not least, there is something strange going on with cuda and opencl.
My guess is that the linkage computation for these languages needs to be
audited, but I didn't want to change that in this patch so I just updated
the storage classes to keep the current behavior.
Thanks to Reed Kotler for reporting this.
llvm-svn: 170827
This does limit these typedefs to being sequences, but no current usage
requires them to be contiguous (we could expand this to a more general
iterator pair range concept at some point).
Also, it'd be nice if SmallVector were constructible directly from an ArrayRef
but this is a bit tricky since ArrayRef depends on SmallVectorBaseImpl for the
inverse conversion. (& generalizing over all range-like things, while nice,
would require some nontrivial SFINAE I haven't thought about yet)
llvm-svn: 170482
This fixes the storage class of extern decls that are merged with file level
statics. The patch also fixes the linkage computation so that they are
considered internal.
llvm-svn: 170406
This fixes the missing warning here:
struct S {
template <typename T>
void meth() {
char arr[3];
arr[4] = 0; // warning: array index 4 is past the end of the array
}
};
template <typename T>
void func() {
char arr[3];
arr[4] = 0; // no warning
}
llvm-svn: 170180
is switched of by about 0.8% (tested with int i<N>).
Additionally, this puts computing the diagnostic class into the hot
path more when parsing, in preparation for upcoming optimizations
in this area.
llvm-svn: 169976
Remove pre-standard restriction on explicitly-defaulted copy constructors with
'incorrect' parameter types, and instead just make those special members
non-trivial as the standard requires.
This required making CXXRecordDecl correctly handle classes which have both a
trivial and a non-trivial special member of the same kind.
This also fixes PR13217 by reimplementing DiagnoseNontrivial in terms of the
new triviality computation technology.
llvm-svn: 169667
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
Our error recovery path may have made the class anonymous, and that has a pretty
disastrous impact on any attempt to parse a class body containing constructors.
llvm-svn: 169374
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
It brought bunch of (possibly false) warnings.
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:60:22: warning: variable 'ID' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
char ModuleNDNM::ID=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:86:22: warning: variable 'ID' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
char ModuleNDM2::ID=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:106:21: warning: variable 'ID' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
char ModuleDNM::ID=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:217:16: warning: variable 'initcount' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
int LPass::initcount=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:218:16: warning: variable 'fincount' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
int LPass::fincount=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:259:16: warning: variable 'inited' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
int BPass::inited=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:260:16: warning: variable 'fin' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
int BPass::fin=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:283:24: warning: variable 'ID' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
char OnTheFlyTest::ID=0;
^
8 warnings generated.
llvm-svn: 168549
"clang -cc1 -fsyntax-only" on the preprocessed output of
#define M extern int a;
#define M2 M M
#define M4 M2 M2
#define M8 M4 M4
#define M16 M8 M8
#define M32 M16 M16
#define M64 M32 M32
#define M128 M64 M64
#define M256 M128 M128
#define M512 M256 M256
#define M1024 M512 M512
#define M2048 M1024 M1024
#define M4096 M2048 M2048
#define M8192 M4096 M4096
#define M16384 M8192 M8192
M16384
goes from 2.994s to 1.416s. GCC is at 0.022s, so we still have a long way to go.
llvm-svn: 168519
Separate out the notions of 'has a trivial special member' and 'has a
non-trivial special member', and use them appropriately. These are not
opposites of one another (there might be no special member, or in C++11 there
might be a trivial one and a non-trivial one). The CXXRecordDecl predicates
continue to produce incorrect results, but do so in fewer cases now, and
they document the cases where they might be wrong.
No functionality changes are intended here (they will come when the predicates
start producing the right answers...).
llvm-svn: 168119
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
applied to CXXRecordDecls, where functions with that return type will
inherit the warn_unused_result attribute.
Also includes a tiny fix (with no discernable behavior change for
existing code) to re-sync AttributeDeclKind enum and
err_attribute_wrong_decl_type with warn_attribute_wrong_decl_type since
the enum is used with both diagnostic messages to chose the correct
description.
llvm-svn: 167783
The problem is as follows: C++11 has contexts which are not
potentially-evaluated, and yet in which we are required or encouraged to
perform constant evaluation. In such contexts, we are not permitted to
implicitly define special member functions for literal types, therefore
we cannot evalaute those constant expressions.
Punt on this in one more context for now by skipping checking constexpr
variable initializers if they occur in dependent contexts.
llvm-svn: 166956