support dependent receivers for class and instance messages, along
with dependent message arguments (of course), and check as much as we
can at template definition time.
This commit also deals with a subtle aspect of template instantiation
in Objective-C++, where the type 'T *' can morph from a dependent
PointerType into a non-dependent ObjCObjectPointer type.
llvm-svn: 102071
in a throw expression. Use EmitAnyExprToMem to emit the throw expression,
which magically elides the final copy-constructor call (which raises a new
strict-compliance bug, but baby steps). Give __cxa_throw a destructor pointer
if the exception type has a non-trivial destructor.
llvm-svn: 102039
method parameter, provide a note pointing at the parameter itself so
the user does not have to manually look for the function/method being
called and match up parameters to arguments. For example, we now get:
t.c:4:5: warning: incompatible pointer types passing 'long *' to
parameter of
type 'int *' [-pedantic]
f(long_ptr);
^~~~~~~~
t.c:1:13: note: passing argument to parameter 'x' here
void f(int *x);
^
llvm-svn: 102038
during message sends) over to the new initialization code and away
from the C-only CheckSingleAssignmentConstraints. The enables the use
of C++ types in method parameters and message arguments, as well as
unifying more initialiation code overall.
llvm-svn: 102035
Objective-C class message expression into a type from the parser
(which was doing so in two places) to Action::getObjCMessageKind()
which, in the case of Sema, reduces the number of name lookups we need
to perform.
llvm-svn: 102026
sends. Major changes include:
- Expanded the interface from two actions (ActOnInstanceMessage,
ActOnClassMessage), where ActOnClassMessage also handled sends to
"super" by checking whether the identifier was "super", to three
actions (ActOnInstanceMessage, ActOnClassMessage,
ActOnSuperMessage). Code completion has the same changes.
- The parser now resolves the type to which we are sending a class
message, so ActOnClassMessage now accepts a TypeTy* (rather than
an IdentifierInfo *). This opens the door to more interesting
types (for Objective-C++ support).
- Split ActOnInstanceMessage and ActOnClassMessage into parser
action functions (with their original names) and semantic
functions (BuildInstanceMessage and BuildClassMessage,
respectively). At present, this split is onyl used by
ActOnSuperMessage, which decides which kind of super message it
has and forwards to the appropriate Build*Message. In the future,
Build*Message will be used by template instantiation.
- Use getObjCMessageKind() within the disambiguation of Objective-C
message sends vs. array designators.
Two notes about substandard bits in this patch:
- There is some redundancy in the code in ParseObjCMessageExpr and
ParseInitializerWithPotentialDesignator; this will be addressed
shortly by centralizing the mapping from identifiers to type names
for the message receiver.
- There is some #if 0'd code that won't likely ever be used---it
handles the use of 'super' in methods whose class does not have a
superclass---but could be used to model GCC's behavior more
closely. This code will die in my next check-in, but I want it in
Subversion.
llvm-svn: 102021
expressions, to improve source-location information, clarify the
actual receiver of the message, and pave the way for proper C++
support. The ObjCMessageExpr node represents four different kinds of
message sends in a single AST node:
1) Send to a object instance described by an expression (e.g., [x method:5])
2) Send to a class described by the class name (e.g., [NSString method:5])
3) Send to a superclass class (e.g, [super method:5] in class method)
4) Send to a superclass instance (e.g., [super method:5] in instance method)
Previously these four cases where tangled together. Now, they have
more distinct representations. Specific changes:
1) Unchanged; the object instance is represented by an Expr*.
2) Previously stored the ObjCInterfaceDecl* referring to the class
receiving the message. Now stores a TypeSourceInfo* so that we know
how the class was spelled. This both maintains typedef information
and opens the door for more complicated C++ types (e.g., dependent
types). There was an alternative, unused representation of these
sends by naming the class via an IdentifierInfo *. In practice, we
either had an ObjCInterfaceDecl *, from which we would get the
IdentifierInfo *, or we fell into the case below...
3) Previously represented by a class message whose IdentifierInfo *
referred to "super". Sema and CodeGen would use isStr("super") to
determine if they had a send to super. Now represented as a
"class super" send, where we have both the location of the "super"
keyword and the ObjCInterfaceDecl* of the superclass we're
targetting (statically).
4) Previously represented by an instance message whose receiver is a
an ObjCSuperExpr, which Sema and CodeGen would check for via
isa<ObjCSuperExpr>(). Now represented as an "instance super" send,
where we have both the location of the "super" keyword and the
ObjCInterfaceDecl* of the superclass we're targetting
(statically). Note that ObjCSuperExpr only has one remaining use in
the AST, which is for "super.prop" references.
The new representation of ObjCMessageExpr is 2 pointers smaller than
the old one, since it combines more storage. It also eliminates a leak
when we loaded message-send expressions from a precompiled header. The
representation also feels much cleaner to me; comments welcome!
This patch attempts to maintain the same semantics we previously had
with Objective-C message sends. In several places, there are massive
changes that boil down to simply replacing a nested-if structure such
as:
if (message has a receiver expression) {
// instance message
if (isa<ObjCSuperExpr>(...)) {
// send to super
} else {
// send to an object
}
} else {
// class message
if (name->isStr("super")) {
// class send to super
} else {
// send to class
}
}
with a switch
switch (E->getReceiverKind()) {
case ObjCMessageExpr::SuperInstance: ...
case ObjCMessageExpr::Instance: ...
case ObjCMessageExpr::SuperClass: ...
case ObjCMessageExpr::Class:...
}
There are quite a few places (particularly in the checkers) where
send-to-super is effectively ignored. I've placed FIXMEs in most of
them, and attempted to address send-to-super in a reasonable way. This
could use some review.
llvm-svn: 101972
we will print with each error that occurs during template
instantiation. When the backtrace is longer than that, we will print
N/2 of the innermost backtrace entries and N/2 of the outermost
backtrace entries, then skip the middle entries with a note such as:
note: suppressed 2 template instantiation contexts; use
-ftemplate-backtrace-limit=N to change the number of template
instantiation entries shown
This should eliminate some excessively long backtraces that aren't
providing any value.
llvm-svn: 101882
of buildbots with:
error: 'error' diagnostics expected but not seen:
Line 9: too few elements in vector initialization (expected 8 elements, have 2)
1 warning and 1 error generated.
llvm-svn: 101864
function declaration, since it may end up being changed (e.g.,
"extern" can become "static" if a prior declaration was static). Patch
by Enea Zaffanella and Paolo Bolzoni.
llvm-svn: 101826
look from an Objective-C class or category to its implementation, to
pick up synthesized ivars. Fixes a problem reported by David
Chisnall.
llvm-svn: 101792
a qualified name. We weren't checking for an empty
nested-name-specifier when dealing with friend class templates
(although we were checking in the other places where we deal with this
paragraph). Fixes a Boost.Serialization showstopper.
llvm-svn: 101724
different kinds (aka garbage). This happens if we're comparing a standard
conversion sequence to an ambiguous one which have the same KindRank.
Found by valgrind.
llvm-svn: 101717
resolution ([over.ics.ref]), we take some shortcuts required by the
standard that effectively permit binding of a const volatile reference
to an rvalue. We have to treat lightly here to avoid infinite
recursion.
Fixes PR6177.
llvm-svn: 101712
reference binding to an rvalue of reference-compatible type, check
parameters after the first for complete parameter types and build any
required default function arguments. We're effectively simulating the
type-checking for a call without building the call itself.
llvm-svn: 101705
reference-compatible type, the implementation is permitted to make a
copy of the rvalue (or many such copies, even). However, even though
we don't make that copy, we are required to check for the presence of
a suitable copy constructor. With this change, we do.
Note that in C++0x we are not allowed to make these copies, so we test
both dialects separately.
Also note the FIXME in one of the C++03 tests, where we are not
instantiating default function arguments for the copy constructor we
pick (but do not call). The fix is obvious; eliminating the infinite
recursion it causes is not. Will address that next.
llvm-svn: 101704
temporary object. This is blindingly obvious from reading C++
[over.match.ctor]p1, but somehow I'd missed it and it took DR152 to
educate me. Adjust one test that was relying on this non-standard
behavior.
llvm-svn: 101688
resolution. There are two sources of problems involving user-defined
conversions that this change eliminates, along with providing simpler
interfaces for checking implicit conversions:
- It eliminates a case of infinite recursion found in Boost.
- It eliminates the search for the constructor needed to copy a temporary
generated by an implicit conversion from overload
resolution. Overload resolution assumes that, if it gets a value
of the parameter's class type (or a derived class thereof), there
is a way to copy if... even if there isn't. We now model this
properly.
llvm-svn: 101680
checking into a single function and use that throughout. Remove some
now unnecessary diagnostics and update tests with now more accurate
diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 101610
TryStaticImplicitCast (for references, class types, and everything
else, respectively) into a single invocation of
InitializationSequence.
One of the paths (for class types) was the only client of
Sema::TryInitializationByConstructor, which I have eliminated. This
also simplified the interface for much of the cast-checking logic,
eliminating yet more code.
I've kept the representation of C++ functional casts with <> 1
arguments the same, despite the fact that I hate it. That fix will
come soon. To satisfy my paranoia, I've bootstrapped + tested Clang
with these changes.
llvm-svn: 101549
functional casts over to InitializationSequence, eliminating a caller
of Sema::TryImplicitConversion. We also get access and ambiguity
checking "for free".
More cleanups to come in this routine.
llvm-svn: 101526
intended for redeclarations, fixing those that need it. Fixes PR6831.
This uncovered an issue where the C++ type-specifier-seq parsing logic
would try to perform name lookup on an identifier after it already had
a type-specifier, which could also lead to spurious ambiguity errors
(as in PR6831, but with a different test case).
llvm-svn: 101419
in case it ends up doing something that might trigger diagnostics
(template instantiation, ambiguity reporting, access
reporting). Noticed while working on PR6831.
llvm-svn: 101412
ASTContext::getTypeSize() rather than ASTContext::getIntWidth() for
the width of an integral type. The former includes padding for bools
(to the target's size) while the latter does not, so we woud end up
zero-extending bools to the target width when we shouldn't. Fixes a
crash-on-valid in the included test.
llvm-svn: 101372
that have reference or const scalar members, since those members can
never be initializer or modified. Fixes <rdar://problem/7804350>.
llvm-svn: 101316
ResolveAddressOfOverloadedFunction when asked to complain. Previously,
we had some weird handshake where ResolveAddressOfOverloadedFunction
expected its caller to handle some of the diagnostics but not others,
and yet there was no way for the caller to know which case we were
in. Eliminate this madness, fixing <rdar://problem/7765884>.
llvm-svn: 101312
generally recover from typos in keywords (since we would effectively
have to mangle the token stream). However, there are still benefits to
typo-correcting with keywords:
- We don't make stupid suggestions when the user typed something
that is similar to a keyword.
- We can suggest the keyword in a diagnostic (did you mean
"static_cast"?), even if we can't recover and therefore don't have
a fix-it.
llvm-svn: 101274
than just a bool indicating that correction occurred. No actual
functionality change (it's still always used like a bool), but this
refactoring will be used to support typo correction to keywords.
llvm-svn: 101259
that adds parentheses from the main diagnostic down to a new
note. This way, when the fix-it represents a choice between two
options, each of the options is associted with a note. There is no
default option in such cases. For example:
/Users/dgregor/t.c:2:9: warning: & has lower precedence than ==; ==
will be
evaluated first [-Wparentheses]
if (x & y == 0) {
^~~~~~~~
/Users/dgregor/t.c:2:9: note: place parentheses around the &
expression to
evaluate it first
if (x & y == 0) {
^
( )
/Users/dgregor/t.c:2:9: note: place parentheses around the ==
expression to
silence this warning
if (x & y == 0) {
^
( )
llvm-svn: 101249
receiver is a mis-typed class name. Previously, we would give a non-specific
typo-correction diagnostic from the expression-parsing code, but there
was no fix-it because it was too late to recover. Now, we give a nice
diagnostic
honk.m:6:4: error: unknown receiver 'Hnk'; did you mean 'Honk'?
[Hnk method];
^~~
Honk
honk.m:1:1: note: 'Honk' declared here
@interface Honk
^
which includes a fix-it.
We still need to recover better from mis-typing "super".
llvm-svn: 101211
for reference binding. The code attempted to handle both the
computation of the ICS and the actual conversion, but the latter is an
anachronism: we now use InitializationSequence for that.
Sema::CheckReferenceInit is now a static function TryReferenceInit
that's only use within overload resolution, and has been simplified
slightly. It still needs to be updated per C++ [over.ics.ref], by
eliminating more of the lvalue/rvalue checks.
llvm-svn: 101136
from a conversion function template specialization to one of exact
match rank. We only know how to test this in C++0x with default
function template arguments, but it's also in the C++03 spec. Fixes
PR6285.
llvm-svn: 101089
copying the type location information from the conversion-type-id into
the type location information for the function type. Do something
similar for constructors and destructors, by giving their "void"
return type source-location information.
In all of these cases, we previously left this type-source information
uninitialized, which led to various unfortunate crashes.
We still aren't tracking good source-location information for the
actual names. That's PR6357.
John, please check my sanity on this.
llvm-svn: 101088
name-lookup ambiguities when there are multiple base classes that are
all specializations of the same class template. This is part of a
general cleanup for ambiguities in template-name lookup. Fixes
PR6717.
llvm-svn: 101065
sure to introduce them into the current Scope (when we have one) in
addition to the DeclContext for the class, so that they can be found
by name lookup for inline members of the class. Fixes PR6570.
llvm-svn: 101047
function's type is (strictly speaking) non-dependent. This ensures
that, e.g., default function arguments get instantiated properly.
And, since I couldn't resist, collapse the two implementations of
function-parameter instantiation into calls to a single, new function
(Sema::SubstParmVarDecl), since the two had nearly identical code (and
each had bugs the other didn't!). More importantly, factored out the
semantic analysis of a parameter declaration into
Sema::CheckParameter, which is called both by
Sema::ActOnParamDeclarator (when parameters are parsed) and when a
parameter is instantiated. Previously, we were missing some
Objective-C and address-space checks on instantiated function
parameters.
Fixes PR6733.
llvm-svn: 101029
LookupInObjCMethod. Doing so allows all sorts of invalid code
to slip through to codegen. This patch does not change the
AST representation of super, though that would now be a natural
thing to do since it can only be in the receiver position and
in the base of a ObjCPropertyRefExpr.
There are still several ugly areas handling super in the parser,
but this is definitely a step in the right direction.
llvm-svn: 100959
typo correction. However, now that the code has been factored out
of LookupMemberExpr, it can recurse to itself instead of to
LookupMemberExpr! Remove grossness.
llvm-svn: 100958
pointer to an objc interface out to a method in SemaExprObjC.
This is *much* uglier than it should be due to grossness in
LookupMemberExpr :(
llvm-svn: 100957
member. Use a better diagnostic for this case. Also fix a bug with nested
anonymous structs/unions for -Wreorder; this last was PR6575.
llvm-svn: 100923
when they're instantiated. Merge the note into the -Wreorder warning; it
doesn't really contribute much, and it was splitting a thought across diagnostics
anyway. Don't crash in the parser when a constructor's initializers end in a
comma and there's no body; the recovery here is still terrible, but anything's
better than a crash.
llvm-svn: 100922
specializations when the explicit instantiation was... explicitly
written, i.e., not the product of an explicit instantiation of an
enclosing class. Fixes this spurious warning when Clang builds LLVM:
/Volumes/Data/dgregor/Projects/llvm/lib/CodeGen/MachineDominators.cpp:22:1:
warning: explicit instantiation of 'addRoot' that occurs after an
explicit specialization will be ignored (C++0x extension) [-pedantic]
llvm-svn: 100900
we don't have enough information to tell them how to use 'strncmp'. Instead, change the
diagnostic to indicate they should use 'strncmp'.
llvm-svn: 100890
the implicit template instantiations we need to perform. Otherwise, we
end up erroneously diagnosing static functions as used if they were
only used within an implicit template instantiation. Fixes a bunch of
spurious failures when building Clang with Clang.
llvm-svn: 100872
destination type for initialization, assignment, parameter-passing,
etc. The main issue fixed here is that we used rather confusing
wording for diagnostics such as
t.c:2:9: warning: initializing 'char const [2]' discards qualifiers,
expected 'char *' [-pedantic]
char *name = __func__;
^ ~~~~~~~~
We're not initializing a 'char const [2]', we're initializing a 'char
*' with an expression of type 'char const [2]'. Similar problems
existed for other diagnostics in this area, so I've normalized them all
with more precise descriptive text to say what we're
initializing/converting/assigning/etc. from and to. The warning for
the code above is now:
t.c:2:9: warning: initializing 'char *' from an expression of type
'char const [2]' discards qualifiers [-pedantic]
char *name = __func__;
^ ~~~~~~~~
Fixes <rdar://problem/7447179>.
llvm-svn: 100832
unless they are used. I discussed this with Daniel Dunbar, and we agreed that this
provides an inconsistent warnings experience for the user and that there were
genuine cases where we wouldn't want to do this optimization.
llvm-svn: 100800
<tr1/hashtable> header, where a friend class template
std::tr1::__detail::_Map_base is declared with the wrong template
parameters. GCC doesn't catch the problem, so Clang does a little
back-flip to avoid diagnosing just this one instance of the problem.
llvm-svn: 100790
parameter, explicitly ask the user to give it arguments. We used to
complain that it wasn't a type and expect the user to figure it out.
llvm-svn: 100729
isn't any extra work to perform. Also, don't check for unused
parameters when the warnings will be suppressed anyway. Improves
performance of -fsyntax-only on 403.gcc's combine.c by ~2.5%.
<rdar://problem/7836787>
llvm-svn: 100686
- When instantiating a friend type template, perform semantic
analysis on the resulting type.
- Downgrade the errors concerning friend type declarations that do
not refer to classes to ExtWarns in C++98/03. C++0x allows
practically any type to be befriended, and ignores the friend
declaration if the type is not a class.
llvm-svn: 100635
semantic analysis) and Sema::ActOnFriendTypeDecl (the action
callback). This is a prerequisite for improving template instantiation
of friend type declarations.
llvm-svn: 100633
definitions, e.g., after
-
or
- (id)
we'll find all of the "likely" instance methods that one would want to
declare or define at this point. In the latter case, we only produce
results whose return types match "id".
llvm-svn: 100587
that protected members be used on objects of types which derive from the
naming class of the lookup. My first N attempts at this were poorly-founded,
largely because the standard is very badly worded here.
llvm-svn: 100562
while we're completing in the middle of a function call), also produce
"ordinary" name results that show what can be typed at that point.
llvm-svn: 100558
presence of precompiled headers by forcibly loading all of the
methods we know about from the PCH file before constructing our
code-completion list.
llvm-svn: 100535
"id" or an expression of type "id". In these cases, we produce a list
of all of the (class or instance) methods, respectively, that we know about.
Note that this implementation does not yet work well with precompiled
headers; that's coming soon.
llvm-svn: 100528
poor (and wrong) approximation of the actual rules governing when to
build a copy and when it can be elided.
The correct implementation is actually simpler than the
approximation. When we only enumerate constructors as part of
initialization (e.g., for direct initialization or when we're copying
from a class type or one of its derived classes), we don't create a
copy. When we enumerate all conversion functions, we do create a
copy. Before, we created some extra copies and missed some
others. The new test copy-initialization.cpp shows a case where we
missed creating a (required, non-elidable) copy as part of a
user-defined conversion, which resulted in a miscompile. This commit
also fixes PR6757, where the missing copy made us reject well-formed
code in the ternary operator.
This commit also cleans up our handling of copy elision in the case
where we create an extra copy of a temporary object, which became
necessary now that we produce the right copies. The code that seeks to
find the temporary object being copied has moved into
Expr::getTemporaryObject(); it used to have two different
not-quite-the-same implementations, one in Sema and one in CodeGen.
Note that we still do not attempt to perform the named return value
optimization, so we miss copy elisions for return values and throw
expressions.
llvm-svn: 100196
an object or function. Our previous checking was too lax, and ended up
allowing missing or extraneous address-of operators, among other
evils. The new checking provides better diagnostics and adheres more
closely to the standard.
Fixes PR6563 and PR6749.
llvm-svn: 100125
nested-name-specifier (e.g., "class T::foo") fails to find a tag
member in the scope nominated by the
nested-name-specifier. Previously, we gave a bland
error: 'Nested' does not name a tag member in the specified scope
which didn't actually say where we were looking, which was rather
horrible when the nested-name-specifier was instantiated. Now, we give
something a bit better:
error: no class named 'Nested' in 'NoDepBase<T>'
llvm-svn: 100060
(such as "class T::foo") from an ElaboratedType of a TypenameType to a
DependentNameType, which more accurately models the underlying
concept.
Improve template instantiation for DependentNameType nodes that
represent nested-name-specifiers, by performing tag name lookup and
checking the resulting tag appropriately. Fixes PR5681.
There is still much testing and cleanup to do in this area.
llvm-svn: 100054