(while computing user conversion sequences), make sure that a result
of class type is a complete class type. Had we gone through
ActOnCallExpr, this would have happened when we built the CallExpr.
Fixes PR8425.
llvm-svn: 119005
parameters to the Transform*Type functions and instead call out
the specific cases where an object type and the unqualified lookup
results are important. Fixes an assert and failed compile on
a testcase from PR7248.
llvm-svn: 118887
in the order they occur within the class template, delaying
out-of-line member template partial specializations until after the
class has been fully instantiated. This fixes a regression introduced
by r118454 (itself a fix for PR8001).
llvm-svn: 118704
constructor template will not be used to copy a class object to a
value of its own type. We were eliminating all constructor templates
whose specializations look like a copy constructor, which eliminated
important candidates. Fixes PR8182.
llvm-svn: 118418
abstractions (e.g., TemplateArgumentListBuilder) that were designed to
support variadic templates. Only a few remnants of variadic templates
remain, in the parser (parsing template type parameter packs), AST
(template type parameter pack bits and TemplateArgument::Pack), and
Sema; these are expected to be used in a future implementation of
variadic templates.
But don't get too excited about that happening now.
llvm-svn: 118385
of its parent context, be sure to update the parent-context pointer
after instantiation. Fixes two anonymous-union instantiation issues in
<rdar://problem/8635664>.
llvm-svn: 118313
or dependent specializations, rip apart the dependent name/dependent
specialization to recanonicalize its pieces, because
nested-name-specifiers store "dependent-type::identifier" differently
than types do. Fixes PR7419.
llvm-svn: 118211
ambiguous name where none of the declarations found are actually
templates. In this case, make sure we clear out the ambiguous-path
data when recomputing the lookup result kind. Fixes PR8439.
llvm-svn: 117112
within a default argument), recurse into default arguments. Fixes
PR8401, a regression I introduced in r113700 while refactoring our
handling of "used" declarations in default arguments.
llvm-svn: 116817
that the class type into which the pointer points be complete, even
though the standard requires it. GCC/EDG do not require a complete
type here, so we're calling this a problem with the standard. Fixes
PR8328.
llvm-svn: 116429
of a binary expression, continue on and parse the right-hand side of
the binary expression anyway, but don't call the semantic actions to
type-check. Previously, we would see the error and then, effectively,
skip tokens until the end of the statement.
The result should be more useful recovery, both in the normal case
(we'll actually see errors beyond the first one in a statement), but
it also helps code completion do a much better job, because we do
"real" code completion on the right-hand side of an invalid binary
expression rather than completing with the recovery completion. For
example, given
x = p->y
if there is no variable named "x", we can still complete after the p->
as a member expression. Along the recovery path, we would have
completed after the "->" as if we were in an expression context, which
is mostly useless.
llvm-svn: 114225
"used", at the time that the default argument itself is used, also
mark destructors that will be called by this expression. This fixes a
regression that I introduced in r113700, which broke WebKit, and fixes
<rdar://problem/8427926>.
llvm-svn: 113883
error to a warning if we're in a case that would be allowed in
C++0x. This "fixes" PR8084 by making Clang accept more code than GCC
and (non-strict) EDG do.
Also, add the missing test case for the C++0x semantics, which should
have been in r113717.
llvm-svn: 113718
declarations in potentially-evaluated subexpressions, about
recursion. Fixes the release-mode self-host failure I introduced in
r113700.
llvm-svn: 113708
used in the default function argument as "used". Instead, when we
actually use the default argument, make another pass over the
expression to mark any used declarations as "used" at that point. This
addresses two kinds of related problems:
1) We were marking some declarations "used" that shouldn't be,
because we were marking them too eagerly.
2) We were failing to mark some declarations as "used" when we
should, if the first time it was instantiated happened to be an
unevaluated context, we wouldn't mark them again at a later point.
I've also added a potentially-handy visitor class template
EvaluatedExprVisitor, which only visits the potentially-evaluated
subexpressions of an expression. I bet this would have been useful for
noexcept...
Fixes PR5810 and PR8127.
llvm-svn: 113700
Windows GetTempPath() function, and be sure to create the directory in
which the precompiled preamble will reside before creating the
temporary file itself.
llvm-svn: 113695
of that parameter, reduce the level by the number of active template
argument lists rather than by 1. The number of active template
argument lists is only > 1 when we have a class template partial
specialization of a member template of a class template that itself is
a member template of another class template.
... and Boost.MSM does this. Fixes PR7669.
llvm-svn: 112551
namely when the friend function prototype is already used
at the point of the template definition that is supposed
to inject the friend function. Testcase verifies four
scenarios.
I would like receive some code review for this.
llvm-svn: 112524
a template-argument-list. When template template parameters are
involved, we won't already have checked the template-argument-list (it
may not be known yet!). Fixes PR7807.
llvm-svn: 110444
dependent bases, construct a dependent nested-name-specifier rather
than complaining that the name could not be found within the current
instantiation itself. Fixes PR7725.
llvm-svn: 109582
expression such as the "foo" in "this->blah.foo<1, 2>", and we can't
look into the type of "this->blah" (e.g., because it is dependent),
look into the local scope of a template of the same name. Fixes
<rdar://problem/8198511>.
llvm-svn: 108531
definition, we're likely going to end up breaking the invariants of
the template system, e.g., that the depths of template parameter lists
match up with the nesting template of the template. So, make sure we
mark such ill-formed declarations as invalid or don't even build them
at all.
llvm-svn: 108372
This flag and warning match GCC semantics. Also, move it to -Wextra as this is
a largely cosmetic issue and doesn't seem to mask problems. Subsequent fixes to
the tests which no longer by default emit the warning. Added explicit test
cases for both C and C++ behavior with the warning turned on.
llvm-svn: 108325
strip cv-qualifiers from the expression's type when the language calls
for it: in C, that's all the time, while C++ only does it for
non-class types.
Centralized the computation of the call expression type in
QualType::getCallResultType() and some helper functions in other nodes
(FunctionDecl, ObjCMethodDecl, FunctionType), and updated all relevant
callers of getResultType() to getCallResultType().
Fixes PR7598 and PR7463, along with a bunch of getResultType() call
sites that weren't stripping references off the result type (nothing
stripped cv-qualifiers properly before this change).
llvm-svn: 108234
class templates within class scope (which is ill-formed), and recover
by dropping the explicit specialization entirely. Fixes the infinite
loop in PR7622.
llvm-svn: 108217
default arguments to template parameters don't have a DeclContext when
instantiated, and so we can't detect that we're in an instantiation context as
opposed to the definition context. However, it fixes the more commonly-occuring
cases in TMP code that use devolve to this type of tautology after
substitution.
llvm-svn: 108044
current attribute system, but it is enough to handle class templates which
specify parts of their alignment in terms of their template parameters.
This also replaces the attributes test in SemaTemplate with one that actually
tests working attributes instead of broken ones. I plan to add more tests here
for non-dependent attributes in a subsequent patch.
Thanks to John for walking me through some of this. =D
llvm-svn: 106818
attribute as part of the calculation. Sema::MarkDeclReferenced(), and
a few other places, want only to consider the "used" bit to determine,
e.g, whether to perform template instantiation. Fixes a linkage issue
with Boost.Serialization.
llvm-svn: 106252
(or operator-function-id) as a template, but the context is actually
non-dependent or the current instantiation, allow us to use knowledge
of what kind of template it is, e.g., type template vs. function
template, for further syntactic disambiguation. This allows us to
parse properly in the presence of stray "template" keywords, which is
necessary in C++0x and it's good recovery in C++98/03.
llvm-svn: 106167
disambiguation keywords outside of templates in C++98/03. Previously,
the warning would fire when the associated nested-name-specifier was
not dependent, but that was a misreading of the C++98/03 standard:
now, we complain only when we're outside of any template.
llvm-svn: 106161
virtual base class, but the class still has dependent base classes,
then don't diagnose the failed match as an error: the right base class
might magically appear. Fixes PR7259.
llvm-svn: 106103
any arguments that are default-argument expressions. The can show up
when we have a new expression whose constructor arguments are not
type-dependent and whose allocated type is not dependent and has a
constructor with default arguments. Fixes PR7202.
llvm-svn: 104690
in several important ways:
- VLAs of non-POD types are not permitted.
- VLAs cannot be used in conjunction with C++ templates.
These restrictions are intended to keep VLAs out of the parts of the
C++ type system where they cause the most trouble. Fixes PR5678 and
<rdar://problem/8013618>.
llvm-svn: 104443
the required "template" keyword, using the same heuristics we do for
dependent template names in member access expressions, e.g.,
test/SemaTemplate/dependent-template-recover.cpp:11:8: error: use 'template'
keyword to treat 'getAs' as a dependent template name
T::getAs<U>();
^
template
Fixes PR5404.
llvm-svn: 104409
that is missing the 'template' keyword, e.g.,
t->getAs<T>()
where getAs is a member of an unknown specialization. C++ requires
that we treat "getAs" as a value, but that would fail to parse since T
is the name of a type. We would then fail at the '>', since a type
cannot be followed by a '>'.
This is a very common error for C++ programmers to make, especially
since GCC occasionally allows it when it shouldn't (as does Visual
C++). So, when we are in this case, we use tentative parsing to see if
the tokens starting at "<" can only be parsed as a template argument
list. If so, we produce a diagnostic with a fix-it that states that
the 'template' keyword is needed:
test/SemaTemplate/dependent-template-recover.cpp:5:8: error: 'template' keyword
is required to treat 'getAs' as a dependent template name
t->getAs<T>();
^
template
This is just a start of this patch; I'd like to apply the same
approach to everywhere that a template-id with dependent template name
can be parsed.
llvm-svn: 104406
sure that the anonymous struct/union record declaration gets
instantiated before the variable declaration, and that it and its
fields (recursively) get entries in the local instantiation map. Fixes
PR7088.
llvm-svn: 104305
"used" (e.g., we will refer to the vtable in the generated code) and
when they are defined (i.e., because we've seen the key function
definition). Previously, we were effectively tracking "potential
definitions" rather than uses, so we were a bit too eager about emitting
vtables for classes without key functions.
The new scheme:
- For every use of a vtable, Sema calls MarkVTableUsed() to indicate
the use. For example, this occurs when calling a virtual member
function of the class, defining a constructor of that class type,
dynamic_cast'ing from that type to a derived class, casting
to/through a virtual base class, etc.
- For every definition of a vtable, Sema calls MarkVTableUsed() to
indicate the definition. This happens at the end of the translation
unit for classes whose key function has been defined (so we can
delay computation of the key function; see PR6564), and will also
occur with explicit template instantiation definitions.
- For every vtable defined/used, we mark all of the virtual member
functions of that vtable as defined/used, unless we know that the key
function is in another translation unit. This instantiates virtual
member functions when needed.
- At the end of the translation unit, Sema tells CodeGen (via the
ASTConsumer) which vtables must be defined (CodeGen will define
them) and which may be used (for which CodeGen will define the
vtables lazily).
From a language perspective, both the old and the new schemes are
permissible: we're allowed to instantiate virtual member functions
whenever we want per the standard. However, all other C++ compilers
were more lazy than we were, and our eagerness was both a performance
issue (we instantiated too much) and a portability problem (we broke
Boost test cases, which now pass).
Notes:
(1) There's a ton of churn in the tests, because the order in which
vtables get emitted to IR has changed. I've tried to isolate some of
the larger tests from these issues.
(2) Some diagnostics related to
implicitly-instantiated/implicitly-defined virtual member functions
have moved to the point of first use/definition. It's better this
way.
(3) I could use a review of the places where we MarkVTableUsed, to
see if I missed any place where the language effectively requires a
vtable.
Fixes PR7114 and PR6564.
llvm-svn: 103718
referenced unless we see one of them defined (or the key function
defined, if it as one) or if we need the vtable for something. Fixes
PR7114.
llvm-svn: 103497
explicit instantiations of template. C++0x clarifies the intent
(they're ill-formed in some cases; see [temp.explicit] for
details). However, one could squint at the C++98/03 standard and
conclude they are permitted, so reduce the error to a warning
(controlled by -Wc++0x-compat) in C++98/03 mode.
llvm-svn: 103482
value-dependent if their initializers are value-dependent; my recent
tweak to these dependent rules overstepped by taking away this
value-dependents. Fixes a Boost.GIL regression.
llvm-svn: 103476
of the current instantiation is value-dependent. The C++ standard
fails to enumerate this case and, therefore, we missed it. Chandler
did all of the hard work of reducing the last remaining
Boost.PtrContainer failure (which had to do with static initialization
in the Serialization library) down to this simple little test.
While I'm at it, clean up the dependence rules for template arguments
that are declarations, and implement the dependence rules for template
argument packs.
llvm-svn: 103464
particular, don't complain about unused variables that have dependent
type until instantiation time, so that we can look at the type of the
variable. Moreover, only complain about unused variables that have
neither a user-declared constructor nor a non-trivial destructor.
llvm-svn: 103362
for, and switch), be careful to construct the full expressions as soon
as we perform template instantation, so we don't either forget to call
temporary destructors or destroy temporaries at the wrong time. This
is the template-instantiation analogue to r103187, during which I
hadn't realized that the issue would affect the handling of these
constructs differently inside and outside of templates.
Fixes a regression in Boost.Function.
llvm-svn: 103357
specific message that includes the template arguments, e.g.,
test/SemaTemplate/overload-candidates.cpp:27:20: note: candidate template
ignored: substitution failure [with T = int *]
typename T::type get_type(const T&); // expected-note{{candidate ...
^
llvm-svn: 103348
conflicting deduced template argument values, give a more specific
reason along with those values, e.g.,
test/SemaTemplate/overload-candidates.cpp:4:10: note: candidate template
ignored: deduced conflicting types for parameter 'T' ('int' vs. 'long')
const T& min(const T&, const T&);
^
llvm-svn: 103339
ensure that we complete the type when we need to look at constructors
during reference binding.
When determining whether the two types involved in reference binding
are reference-compatible, reference-related, etc., do not complete the
type of the reference itself because it is not necessary to determine
well-formedness of the program. Complete the type that we are binding
to, since that can affect whether we know about a derived-to-base
conversion.
Re-fixes PR7080.
llvm-svn: 103283
are reference-compatible, reference-related, etc., do not complete the
type of the reference itself because it is not necessary to determine
well-formedness of the program. Complete the type that we are binding
to, since that can affect whether we know about a derived-to-base
conversion.
Fixes PR7080.
llvm-svn: 103220
different tag kind ("struct" vs. "class") than the primary template,
which has an affect on access control.
Should fix the last remaining Boost.Accumulors failure.
llvm-svn: 103144
ParseOptionalCXXScopeSpecifier() only annotates the subset of
template-ids which are not subject to lexical ambiguity. Add support
for the more general case in ParseUnqualifiedId() to handle cases
such as A::template B().
Also improve some diagnostic locations.
Fixes PR7030, from Alp Toker!
llvm-svn: 103081
typedef int functype(int, int);
functype func;
also instantiate the synthesized function parameters for the resulting
function declaration.
With this change, Boost.Wave builds and passes all of its regression
tests.
llvm-svn: 103025
friend function template, be sure to adjust the computed template
argument lists based on the location of the definition of the function
template: it's possible that the definition we're instantiating with
and the template declaration that we found when creating the
specialization are in different contexts, which meant that we would
end up using the wrong template arguments for instantiation.
Fixes PR7013; all Boost.DynamicBitset tests now pass.
llvm-svn: 102974
mapping from the declaration in the template to the instantiated
declaration before transforming the initializer, in case some crazy
lunatic decides to use a variable in its own initializer. Fixes PR7016.
llvm-svn: 102945
assignment operators.
Previously, Sema provided type-checking and template instantiation for
copy assignment operators, then CodeGen would synthesize the actual
body of the copy constructor. Unfortunately, the two were not in sync,
and CodeGen might pick a copy-assignment operator that is different
from what Sema chose, leading to strange failures, e.g., link-time
failures when CodeGen called a copy-assignment operator that was not
instantiation, run-time failures when copy-assignment operators were
overloaded for const/non-const references and the wrong one was
picked, and run-time failures when by-value copy-assignment operators
did not have their arguments properly copy-initialized.
This implementation synthesizes the implicitly-defined copy assignment
operator bodies in Sema, so that the resulting ASTs encode exactly
what CodeGen needs to do; there is no longer any special code in
CodeGen to synthesize copy-assignment operators. The synthesis of the
body is relatively simple, and we generate one of three different
kinds of copy statements for each base or member:
- For a class subobject, call the appropriate copy-assignment
operator, after overload resolution has determined what that is.
- For an array of scalar types or an array of class types that have
trivial copy assignment operators, construct a call to
__builtin_memcpy.
- For an array of class types with non-trivial copy assignment
operators, synthesize a (possibly nested!) for loop whose inner
statement calls the copy constructor.
- For a scalar type, use built-in assignment.
This patch fixes at least a few tests cases in Boost.Spirit that were
failing because CodeGen picked the wrong copy-assignment operator
(leading to link-time failures), and I suspect a number of undiagnosed
problems will also go away with this change.
Some of the diagnostics we had previously have gotten worse with this
change, since we're going through generic code for our
type-checking. I will improve this in a subsequent patch.
llvm-svn: 102853
parameter with pointer-to-member type, we may have to perform a
qualification conversion, since the pointee type of the parameter
might be more qualified than the pointee type of the argument we form
from the declaration. Fixes PR6986.
llvm-svn: 102777
of the mapping from local declarations to their instantiated
counterparts during template instantiation. Previously, we tried to do
some unholy merging of local instantiation scopes that involved
storing a single hash table along with an "undo" list on the
side... which was ugly, and never handled function parameters
properly.
Now, we just keep separate hash tables for each local instantiation
scope, and "combining" two scopes means that we'll look in each of the
combined hash tables. The combined scope stack is rarely deep, and
this makes it easy to avoid the "undo" issues we were hitting. Also,
I've simplified the logic for function parameters: if we're declaring
a function and we need the function parameters to live longer, we just
push them back into the local instantiation scope where we need them.
Fixes PR6990.
llvm-svn: 102732
InjectedClassNameType's Decl to point at the definition. It's a little
messy, but we do the same thing with classes and their record types,
since much of Clang expects that the TagDecl* one gets out of a type
is the definition. Fixes several Boost.Proto failures.
llvm-svn: 102691
entering the current instantiation. Set up a little to preserve type location
information for typename types while we're in there.
Fixes a Boost failure.
llvm-svn: 102673
bindings when the template argument is still an expression; it happens
while checking the template arguments of a class template partial
specializations. Fixes PR6964.
llvm-svn: 102595
Amadini.
This change introduces a new expression node type, OffsetOfExpr, that
describes __builtin_offsetof. Previously, __builtin_offsetof was
implemented using a unary operator whose subexpression involved
various synthesized array-subscript and member-reference expressions,
which was ugly and made it very hard to instantiate as a
template. OffsetOfExpr represents the AST more faithfully, with proper
type source information and a more compact representation.
OffsetOfExpr also has support for dependent __builtin_offsetof
expressions; it can be value-dependent, but will never be
type-dependent (like sizeof or alignof). This commit introduces
template instantiation for __builtin_offsetof as well.
There are two major caveats to this patch:
1) CodeGen cannot handle the case where __builtin_offsetof is not a
constant expression, so it produces an error. So, to avoid
regressing in C, we retain the old UnaryOperator-based
__builtin_offsetof implementation in C while using the shiny new
OffsetOfExpr implementation in C++. The old implementation can go
away once we have proper CodeGen support for this case, which we
expect won't cause much trouble in C++.
2) __builtin_offsetof doesn't work well with non-POD class types,
particularly when the designated field is found within a base
class. I will address this in a subsequent patch.
Fixes PR5880 and a bunch of assertions when building Boost.Python
tests.
llvm-svn: 102542
complete, return an error rather than falling back to building a
dependent declaration reference, since we might not be in a dependent
context. Fixes a fiendish crash-on-invalid in Boost.FunctionTypes that
I wasn't able to reduce to anything useful.
llvm-svn: 102491
template argument deduction, use the lexical declaration context as
the owner for friend function templates. Fixes 2 failures in
Boost.Graph.
llvm-svn: 102489
of a class template or class template partial specialization. That is to
say, in
template <class T> class A { ... };
or
template <class T> class B<const T*> { ... };
make 'A<T>' and 'B<const T*>' sugar for the corresponding InjectedClassNameType
when written inside the appropriate context. This allows us to track the
current instantiation appropriately even inside AST routines. It also allows
us to compute a DeclContext for a type much more efficiently, at some extra
cost every time we write a template specialization (which can be optimized,
but I've left it simple in this patch).
llvm-svn: 102407
that the type we're copying is complete.
Boost.Regex now builds, although it's failing its regression tests
with our favorite "Sema doesn't consider destructor as used."
assertion.
llvm-svn: 102271
when they are not complete (since we could not match them up to
anything) and ensuring that enum parsing can cope with dependent
elaborated-type-specifiers. Fixes PR6915 and PR6649.
llvm-svn: 102247
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
Remove -faccess-control from -cc1; add -fno-access-control.
Make the driver pass -fno-access-control by default.
Update a bunch of tests to be correct under access control.
llvm-svn: 100880
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
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
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
involving substitution of deduced template arguments into a class
template partial specialization or function template, or when
substituting explicitly-specific template arguments into a function
template. We now print the actual deduced argument bindings so the
user can see what got deduced.
llvm-svn: 99923
check deduced non-type template arguments and template template
arguments against the template parameters for which they were deduced,
performing conversions as appropriate so that deduced template
arguments get the same treatment as explicitly-specified template
arguments. This is the bulk of PR6723.
Also keep track of whether deduction of a non-type template argument
came from an array bound (vs. anywhere else). With this information,
we enforce C++ [temp.deduct.type]p17, which requires exact type
matches when deduction deduces a non-type template argument from
something that is not an array bound.
Finally, when in a SFINAE context, translate the "zero sized
arrays are an extension" extension diagnostic into a hard error (for
better standard conformance), which was a minor part of PR6723.
llvm-svn: 99734
What happens here is that we actually turn the first declaration into a
definition, regardless of whether it was actually originally a definition,
and furthermore we do this all after we've instantiated all the declarations.
This exposes a bug in my DefinitionData patch where it was only setting the
DefinitionData for previous declarations, not future declarations.
Fortunately, there's an iterator for that.
llvm-svn: 99657
that we extend/truncate then correct the sign to convert the non-type
template argument to the template parameter's type. Previously, we
reported an error when the non-type template argument was out of
range; now we just warn.
llvm-svn: 99600
the type of its corresponding non-type template parameter changes the
value. Previously, we were diagnosing this as an error, which was
wrong. We give reasonably nice warnings like:
test/SemaTemplate/temp_arg_nontype.cpp💯10: warning: non-type template
argument value '256' truncated to '0' for template parameter of type
'unsigned char'
Overflow<256> *overflow3; // expected-warning{{non-type template ...
^~~
test/SemaTemplate/temp_arg_nontype.cpp:96:24: note: template parameter is
declared here
template<unsigned char C> struct Overflow;
^
llvm-svn: 99561
- When substituting template arguments as part of template argument
deduction, introduce a new local instantiation scope.
- When substituting into a function prototype type, introduce a new
"temporary" local instantiation scope that merges with its outer
scope but also keeps track of any additions it makes, removing
them when we exit that scope.
Fixes PR6700, where we were getting too much mixing of local
instantiation scopes due to template argument deduction that
substituted results into function types.
llvm-svn: 99509
the redeclaration chain. Recommitted from r99477 with a fix: we need to
merge in default template arguments from previous declarations.
llvm-svn: 99496
buildbot. The tramp3d test fails.
--- Reverse-merging r99477 into '.':
U test/SemaTemplate/friend-template.cpp
U test/CXX/temp/temp.decls/temp.friend/p1.cpp
U lib/Sema/SemaTemplateInstantiateDecl.cpp
U lib/Sema/SemaAccess.cpp
llvm-svn: 99481
therefore not creating ElaboratedTypes, which are still pretty-printed
with the written tag).
Most of these testcase changes were done by script, so don't feel too
sorry for my fingers.
llvm-svn: 98149
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
used to do this, but it got lost when we switched functional-style
cast syntax over to using the new initialization code. Fixes PR6457.
llvm-svn: 97568
template definition. Do this both by being more tolerant of errors in
our asserts and by not dropping a variable declaration completely when
its initializer is ill-formed. Fixes the crash-on-invalid in PR6375,
but not the original issue.
llvm-svn: 97463
propagating error conditions out of the various annotate-me-a-snowflake
routines. Generally (but not universally) removes redundant diagnostics
as well as, you know, not crashing on bad code. On the other hand,
I have just signed myself up to fix fiddly parser errors for the next
week. Again.
llvm-svn: 97221
used when we instantiate C++ new expressions, delete expressions, and
object-construction expressions. Fixes PR6424, although we can't test
all of it until we finish implementing lookup of "operator delete" for
new expressions (!).
llvm-svn: 97195
to mark the constructor as referenced. Fixes the narrow issue reported
in PR6424, but there are a few other places that I'll fix before
closing out that PR.
llvm-svn: 97185
expressions that look like pseudo-destructors, e.g.,
p->T::~T()
where p has dependent type.
At template instantiate time, we determine whether we actually have a
pseudo-destructor or a member access, and funnel down to the
appropriate routine in Sema.
Fixes PR6380.
llvm-svn: 97092
now cope with the destruction of types named as dependent templates,
e.g.,
y->template Y<T>::~Y()
Nominally, we implement C++0x [basic.lookup.qual]p6. However, we don't
follow the letter of the standard here because that would fail to
parse
template<typename T, typename U>
X0<T, U>::~X0() { }
properly. The problem is captured in core issue 339, which gives some
(but not enough!) guidance. I expect to revisit this code when the
resolution of 339 is clear, and/or we start capturing better source
information for DeclarationNames.
Fixes PR6152.
llvm-svn: 96367
rebuilding a typename type terminating in a template-id (with
dependent template name, naturally) as a TypenameType when, because
its context could be fully resolved, we should have been building it
as a QualifiedNameType. Fixes PR6268.
llvm-svn: 96084
Sema::ActOnUninitializedDecl over to InitializationSequence (with
default initialization), eliminating redundancy. More importantly, we
now check that a const definition in C++ has an initilizer, which was
an #if 0'd code for many, many months. A few other tweaks were needed
to get everything working again:
- Fix all of the places in the testsuite where we defined const
objects without initializers (now that we diagnose this issue)
- Teach instantiation of static data members to find the previous
declaration, so that we build proper redeclaration
chains. Previously, we had the redeclaration chain but built it
too late to be useful, because...
- Teach instantiation of static data member definitions not to try
to check an initializer if a previous declaration already had an
initializer. This makes sure that we don't complain about static
const data members with in-class initializers and out-of-line
definitions.
- Move all of the incomplete-type checking logic out of
Sema::FinalizeDeclaratorGroup; it makes more sense in
ActOnUnitializedDecl.
There may still be a few places where we can improve these
diagnostics. I'll address that as a separate commit.
llvm-svn: 95657
deduction. This requires refactoring the deduction to have access to the Sema
object instead of merely the ASTContext. Still leaves something to be desired
due to poor source location.
Fixes PR6257 and half of PR6259.
llvm-svn: 95528
params. Don't insert addrof operations when matching against a pointer;
array/function conversions should take care of this for us, assuming the
argument type-checked in the first place. Add a fixme where we seem to be
using a less-restrictive reference type than we should.
Fixes PR 6249.
llvm-svn: 95495
type-checking within a template definition. In this case, the
"instantiated" declaration is just the declaration itself, found
within the current instantiation. Fixes PR6239.
llvm-svn: 95442
when instantiating the declaration of a member template:
- Only check if the have a template template argument at a specific position
when we already know that we have template arguments at that level;
otherwise, we're substituting for a level-reduced template template
parameter.
- When trying to find an instantiated declaration for a template
template parameter, look into the instantiated scope. This was a
typo, where we had two checks for TemplateTypeParmDecl, one of
which should have been a TemplateTemplateParmDecl.
With these changes, tramp3d-v4 passes -fsyntax-only.
llvm-svn: 95421
declaration, we can end up with template-id annotation tokens for
types that have not been converted into type annotation tokens. When
this is the case, translate the template-id into a type and parse as
an expression.
llvm-svn: 95404
template parameter, perform array/function decay (if needed), take the
address of the argument (if needed), perform qualification conversions
(if needed), and remove any top-level cv-qualifiers from the resulting
expression. Fixes PR6226.
llvm-svn: 95309
that is in an anonymous namespace, give that function or variable
internal linkage.
This change models an oddity of the C++ standard, where names declared
in an anonymous namespace have external linkage but, because anonymous
namespace are really "uniquely-named" namespaces, the names cannot be
referenced from other translation units. That means that they have
external linkage for semantic analysis, but the only sensible
implementation for code generation is to give them internal
linkage. We now model this notion via the UniqueExternalLinkage
linkage type. There are several changes here:
- Extended NamedDecl::getLinkage() to produce UniqueExternalLinkage
when the declaration is in an anonymous namespace.
- Added Type::getLinkage() to determine the linkage of a type, which
is defined as the minimum linkage of the types (when we're dealing
with a compound type that is not a struct/class/union).
- Extended NamedDecl::getLinkage() to consider the linkage of the
template arguments and template parameters of function template
specializations and class template specializations.
- Taught code generation to rely on NamedDecl::getLinkage() when
determining the linkage of variables and functions, also
considering the linkage of the types of those variables and
functions (C++ only). Map UniqueExternalLinkage to internal
linkage, taking out the explicit checks for
isInAnonymousNamespace().
This fixes much of PR5792, which, as discovered by Anders Carlsson, is
actually the reason behind the pass-manager assertion that causes the
majority of clang-on-clang regression test failures. With this fix,
Clang-built-Clang+LLVM passes 88% of its regression tests (up from
67%). The specific numbers are:
LLVM:
Expected Passes : 4006
Expected Failures : 32
Unsupported Tests : 40
Unexpected Failures: 736
Clang:
Expected Passes : 1903
Expected Failures : 14
Unexpected Failures: 75
Overall:
Expected Passes : 5909
Expected Failures : 46
Unsupported Tests : 40
Unexpected Failures: 811
Still to do:
- Improve testing
- Check whether we should allow the presence of types with
InternalLinkage (in addition to UniqueExternalLinkage) given
variables/functions internal linkage in C++, as mentioned in
PR5792.
- Determine how expensive the getLinkage() calls are in practice;
consider caching the result in NamedDecl.
- Assess the feasibility of Chris's idea in comment #1 of PR5792.
llvm-svn: 95216
(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
in a member access expression referring into the current instantiation
need not be resolved at template definition *if* the current
instantiation has any dependent base classes. Fixes PR6081.
llvm-svn: 93877
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
which are instantiations of the member functions of local
classes. These implicit instantiations have to occur at the same time
as---and in the same local instantiation scope as---the enclosing
function, since the member functions of the local class can refer to
locals within the enclosing function. This should really, really fix PR5764.
llvm-svn: 93666
distinguish between nested classes (whose member functions cannot be
parsed until the innermost non-nested class is complete) and local
classes (that are defined within a function but are not necessarily
nested). The upshot of this change, which fixes PR5764, is that the
bodies of member functions of local (non-nested) classes need to be
parsed when the local class is complete (and no later), since they may
refer to function-local static variables, typedefs, enums, etc.
llvm-svn: 93653
to merge the local instantiation scope with the outer local
instantiation scope, so that we can instantiate declarations from the
function owning the local class. Fixes an assert while instantiating
Boost.MPL's BOOST_MPL_ASSERT_MSG.
llvm-svn: 93651
function template declared within a class template did not match a
function in another scope. We really need to rework how
friends-in-templates are semantically checked.
llvm-svn: 93642
references a const variable of integral type, the initializer may be
in a different declaration than the one that name-lookup saw. Find the
initializer anyway. Fixes PR6045.
llvm-svn: 93514
Adjust BuildMemberReferenceExpr to perform the inheritance check on implicit
member accesses, which can arise from unqualified lookups and therefore may
reference decls from enclosing class scopes.
Fixes PR 5838.
llvm-svn: 93510
do not look into base classes if there are any dependent base
classes. Instead, note in the lookup result that we couldn't look into
any dependent bases. Use that new result kind to detect when this case
occurs, so that we can fall back to treating the type/value/etc. as a
member of an unknown specialization.
Fixes an issue where we were resolving lookup at template definition
time and then missing an ambiguity at template instantiation time.
llvm-svn: 93497
finds nothing), and the current instantiation has dependent base
classes, treat the qualified lookup as if it referred to an unknown
specialization. Fixes PR6031.
llvm-svn: 93433
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
why the candidate is non-viable. There's a lot we can do to improve this, but
it's a good start. Further improvements should probably be integrated with the
bad-initialization reporting routines.
llvm-svn: 93277
name a template, when they occur in a base-specifier. This is one of
the (few) places where we know for sure that an identifier followed by
a '<' must be a template name, so we can diagnose and recover well:
test/SemaTemplate/dependent-base-classes.cpp:9:16: error: missing
'template'
keyword prior to dependent template name 'T::apply'
struct X1 : T::apply<U> { }; // expected-error{{missing 'template' ...
^
template
test/SemaTemplate/dependent-base-classes.cpp:12:13: error: unknown
template name
'vector'
struct X2 : vector<T> { }; // expected-error{{unknown template name
'vector'}}
^
2 diagnostics generated.
llvm-svn: 93257
initializers. This isn't actually in the C++ grammar (in any version),
but that's clearly an oversight: both GCC and EDG support this syntax,
and it's used within Boost code. I'll file a core issue proposing
precisely the change made here. Fixes PR6008.
llvm-svn: 93243
context, do not attempt typo correction. This harms performance (as
Abramo noted) and can cause some amusing errors, as in this new
testcase.
llvm-svn: 93240
no viable overloads. Use a different message when the class provides
no operator[] overloads at all; use it for operator(), too.
Partially addresses PR 5900.
llvm-svn: 92894