Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Blaikie 05785d1622 Include llvm::Optional in clang/Basic/LLVM.h
Post-commit CR feedback from Jordan Rose regarding r175594.

llvm-svn: 175679
2013-02-20 22:23:23 +00:00
John McCall 5fb5df9c83 Restructure how the driver communicates information about the
target Objective-C runtime down to the frontend:  break this
down into a single target runtime kind and version, and compute
all the relevant information from that.  This makes it
relatively painless to add support for new runtimes to the
compiler.  Make the new -cc1 flag, -fobjc-runtime=blah-x.y.z,
available at the driver level as a better and more general
alternative to -fgnu-runtime and -fnext-runtime.  This new
concept of an Objective-C runtime also encompasses what we
were previously separating out as the "Objective-C ABI", so
fragile vs. non-fragile runtimes are now really modelled as
different kinds of runtime, paving the way for better overall
differentiation.

As a sort of special case, continue to accept the -cc1 flag
-fobjc-runtime-has-weak, as a sop to PLCompatibilityWeak.

I won't go so far as to say "no functionality change", even
ignoring the new driver flag, but subtle changes in driver
semantics are almost certainly not intended.

llvm-svn: 158793
2012-06-20 06:18:46 +00:00
Chris Lattner 0e62c1cc0b remove unneeded llvm:: namespace qualifiers on some core types now that LLVM.h imports
them into the clang namespace.

llvm-svn: 135852
2011-07-23 10:55:15 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 20b2ebd785 Implement a new 'availability' attribute, that allows one to specify
which versions of an OS provide a certain facility. For example,

  void foo()
  __attribute__((availability(macosx,introduced=10.2,deprecated=10.4,obsoleted=10.6)));

says that the function "foo" was introduced in 10.2, deprecated in
10.4, and completely obsoleted in 10.6. This attribute ties in with
the deployment targets (e.g., -mmacosx-version-min=10.1 specifies that
we want to deploy back to Mac OS X 10.1). There are several concrete
behaviors that this attribute enables, as illustrated with the
function foo() above:

  - If we choose a deployment target >= Mac OS X 10.4, uses of "foo"
    will result in a deprecation warning, as if we had placed
    attribute((deprecated)) on it (but with a better diagnostic)
  - If we choose a deployment target >= Mac OS X 10.6, uses of "foo"
    will result in an "unavailable" warning (in C)/error (in C++), as
    if we had placed attribute((unavailable)) on it
  - If we choose a deployment target prior to 10.2, foo() is
    weak-imported (if it is a kind of entity that can be weak
    imported), as if we had placed the weak_import attribute on it.

Naturally, there can be multiple availability attributes on a
declaration, for different platforms; only the current platform
matters when checking availability attributes.

The only platforms this attribute currently works for are "ios" and
"macosx", since we already have -mxxxx-version-min flags for them and we
have experience there with macro tricks translating down to the
deprecated/unavailable/weak_import attributes. The end goal is to open
this up to other platforms, and even extension to other "platforms"
that are really libraries (say, through a #pragma clang
define_system), but that hasn't yet been designed and we may want to
shake out more issues with this narrower problem first.

Addresses <rdar://problem/6690412>.

As a drive-by bug-fix, if an entity is both deprecated and
unavailable, we only emit the "unavailable" diagnostic.

llvm-svn: 128127
2011-03-23 00:50:03 +00:00