explicit specialization of a function template, mark the instantiation as
constexpr if the specialization is, rather than requiring them to match.
llvm-svn: 151001
and introducing the lambda closure type and its function call
operator. Previously, we assumed that the lambda closure type would
land directly in the current context, and not some parent context (as
occurs with linkage specifications). Thanks to Richard for the test case.
llvm-svn: 150987
name mangling in the Itanium C++ ABI for lambda expressions is so
dependent on context, we encode the number used to encode each lambda
as part of the lambda closure type, and maintain this value within
Sema.
Note that there are a several pieces still missing:
- We still get the linkage of lambda expressions wrong
- We aren't properly numbering or mangling lambda expressions that
occur in default function arguments or in data member initializers.
- We aren't (de-)serializing the lambda numbering tables
llvm-svn: 150982
handled by the caching and rauw. Also fix one cache that wasn't
being added to highlighted by this patch. Update all testcases
accordingly.
This should fix the deall failure.
llvm-svn: 150977
match the behavior of GCC. Also add a test for these intrinsics, which
apparently have *zero* tests. =[ Not surprisingly, Clang crashed when
compiling these.
Fix the bug in CodeGen where we failed to bitcast the argument type to
x86mmx prior to calling the LLVM intrinsic. This fixes an assert on the
new 3dnow-builtins.c test.
This is one issue impacting the efforts to get Clang to emulate the
Microsoft intrinsics headers -- 3dnow intrinsics are implictitly made
available there.
llvm-svn: 150948
complex numbers. Treat complex numbers as arrays of the corresponding component
type, in order to make std::complex behave properly if implemented in terms of
_Complex T.
Apparently libstdc++'s std::complex is implemented this way, and we were
rejecting a member like this:
constexpr double real() { return __real__ val; }
because it was marked constexpr but unable to produce a constant expression.
llvm-svn: 150895
eliminating a bunch of redundant code and properly modeling how the
captures of outside blocks/lambdas affect the types seen by inner
captures.
This new scheme makes two passes over the capturing scope stack. The
first pass goes up the stack (from innermost to outermost), assessing
whether the capture looks feasible and stopping when it either hits
the scope where the variable is declared or when it finds an existing
capture. The second pass then walks down the stack (from outermost to
innermost), capturing the variable at each step and updating the
captured type and the type that an expression referring to that
captured variable would see. It also checks type-specific
restrictions, such as the inability to capture an array within a
block. Note that only the first odr-use of each
variable needs to do the full walk; subsequent uses will find the
capture immediately, so multiple walks need not occur.
The same routine that builds the captures can also compute the type of
the captures without signaling errors and without actually performing
the capture. This functionality is used to determine the type of
declaration references as well as implementing the weird decltype((x))
rule within lambda expressions.
The capture code now explicitly takes sides in the debate over C++
core issue 1249, which concerns the type of captures within nested
lambdas. We opt to use the more permissive, more useful definition
implemented by GCC rather than the one implemented by EDG.
llvm-svn: 150875
We had two separate issues here: firstly, varions functions were assuming that
they did not need to perform semantic checks on trivial destructors (this is
not true in C++11, where a trivial destructor can nonetheless be private or
deleted), and a bunch of DiagnoseUseOfDecl calls were missing for uses of
destructors.
llvm-svn: 150866
decent diagnostics. Finish the work of combining all the 'ShouldDelete'
functions into one. In unifying the code, fix a minor bug where an anonymous
union with a deleted default constructor as a member of a union wasn't being
considered as making the outer union's default constructor deleted.
llvm-svn: 150862
it aware of CString APIs that return the input parameter.
Malloc Checker needs to know how the 'strcpy' function is
evaluated. Introduce the dependency on CStringChecker for that.
CStringChecker knows all about these APIs.
Addresses radar://10864450
llvm-svn: 150846
We now generate temporary arrays to back std::initializer_list objects
initialized with braces. The initializer_list is then made to point at
the array. We support both ptr+size and start+end forms, although
the latter is untested.
Array lifetime is correct for temporary std::initializer_lists (e.g.
call arguments) and local variables. It is untested for new expressions
and member initializers.
Things left to do:
Massively increase the amount of testing. I need to write tests for
start+end init lists, temporary objects created as a side effect of
initializing init list objects, new expressions, member initialization,
creation of temporary objects (e.g. std::vector) for initializer lists,
and probably more.
Get lifetime "right" for member initializers and new expressions. Not
that either are very useful.
Implement list-initialization of array new expressions.
llvm-svn: 150803
variable ends, if the variable has a trivial destructor and no mutable
subobjects then emit an llvm.invariant.start call for it. globalopt knows to
make the variable const when evaluating this.
llvm-svn: 150798
1) It has a const-qualified type, and
2) It has no mutable members, and
3) It has no dynamic initialization, and
4) It has trivial destruction.
Remove the unnecessary requirement that the type be POD. This allows us to
mark all constexpr objects with no mutable members as 'constant'.
llvm-svn: 150792
designators in the parser. In the worst case, this disambiguation
requires tentative parsing just past the closing ']', but for most
cases we'll be able to tell by looking ahead just one token (without
going into the heavyweight tentative parsing machinery).
llvm-svn: 150790
optional argument passed through the variadic ellipsis)
potentially affects how we need to lower it. Propagate
this information down to the various getFunctionInfo(...)
overloads on CodeGenTypes. Furthermore, rename those
overloads to clarify their distinct purposes, and make
sure we're calling the right one in the right place.
This has a nice side-effect of making it easier to construct
a function type, since the 'variadic' bit is no longer
separable.
This shouldn't really change anything for our existing
platforms, with one minor exception --- we should now call
variadic ObjC methods with the ... in the "right place"
(see the test case), which I guess matters for anyone
running GNUStep on MIPS. Mostly it's just a substantial
clean-up.
llvm-svn: 150788
conversion to function pointer. Rather than having IRgen synthesize
the body of this function, we instead introduce a static member
function "__invoke" with the same signature as the lambda's
operator() in the AST. Sema then generates a body for the conversion
to function pointer which simply returns the address of __invoke. This
approach makes it easier to evaluate a call to the conversion function
as a constant, makes the linkage of the __invoke function follow the
normal rules for member functions, and may make life easier down the
road if we ever want to constexpr'ify some of lambdas.
Note that IR generation is responsible for filling in the body of
__invoke (Sema just adds a dummy body), because the body can't
generally be expressed in C++.
Eli, please review!
llvm-svn: 150783
loop and switch statements, by teaching Scope that a function scope never has
a continue/break parent for the purposes of control flow. Remove the hack in
block and lambda expressions which worked around this by pretending that such
expressions were continue/break scopes.
Remove Scope::ControlParent, since it's unused.
In passing, teach default statements to recover properly from a missing ';', and
add a fixit for same to both default and case labels (the latter already
recovered correctly).
llvm-svn: 150776
"Add a completed/incomplete type difference. This allows us to have
partial types for contexts and forward decls while allowing us to
complete types later on for debug purposes.
This piggy-backs on the metadata replacement and rauw changes
for temporary nodes and takes advantage of the incremental
support I added in earlier. This allows us to, if we decide,
to limit adding methods and variables to structures in order
to limit the amount of debug information output into a .o file.
The caching is a bit complicated though so any thoughts on
untangling that are welcome."
with a fix:
- Remove all RAUW during type construction by adding stub versions
of types that we later complete.
and some TODOs:
- Add an RAUW cache for forward declared types so that we can replace
them at the end of compilation.
- Remove the code that updates on completed types because we no
longer need to have that happen. We emit incomplete types on
purpose and only want to know when we want to complete them.
llvm-svn: 150752
Don't try to typo-correct a method redeclaration to declarations not in
the current record as it could lead to infinite recursion if CorrectTypo
finds more than one correction candidate in a parent record.
llvm-svn: 150735
even if they are not within a function scope. Teach template
instantiation to treat them as such, and make sure that we have a
local instantiation scope when instantiating default arguments and
static data members.
llvm-svn: 150725
name for dot syntax, e.g., NSObject.class or foo.class. For other
C++-keywords-as-method-names, use message send syntax. Fixes
<rdar://problem/10794452>.
llvm-svn: 150710
For compatibility with gcc, clang will now parse gcc attributes on
function definitions, but issue a warning if the attribute is not a
thread safety attribute. Warning controlled by -Wgcc-compat.
llvm-svn: 150698
This is in preparation for being able to warn about 'q' and other
non-standard format string features.
It also allows us to print its name correctly.
llvm-svn: 150697
Holding the constructor directly makes no sense when list-initialized arrays come into play. The constructor is now held in a CXXConstructExpr, if construction is what is done. The new design can also distinguish properly between list-initialization and direct-initialization, as well as implicit default-initialization constructors and explicit value-initialization constructors. Finally, doing it this way removes redundance from the AST because CXXNewExpr doesn't try to handle both the allocation and the initialization responsibilities.
This breaks the static analysis of new expressions. I've filed PR12014 to track this.
llvm-svn: 150682
piece can always be generated.
The default end of diagnostic path piece was failing to generate on a
BlockEdge that was outgoing from a basic block without a terminator,
resulting in a very simple diagnostic being rendered (ex: no path
highlighting or custom visitors). Reuse another function, which is
essentially doing the same thing and correct it not to fail when a block
has no terminator.
llvm-svn: 150659
We are not properly handling the memory regions that escape into struct
fields, which led to a bunch of false positives. Be conservative here
and give up when a pointer escapes into a struct.
llvm-svn: 150658
* Fix bug when determining whether && / || are potential constant expressions
* Try harder when determining whether ?: is a potential constant expression
* Produce a diagnostic on sizeof(VLA) to provide a better source location
llvm-svn: 150657
The garbage collection metadata needs to be merged "intelligently", when two or
more modules are linked together, and not merely appended. (Appending creates a
section which is too large.) The module flags metadata method is the way to do
this.
<rdar://problem/8198537>
llvm-svn: 150648
pointers and block pointers). We use dummy definitions to keep the
invariant that an implicit, used definition has a body; IR generation
will substitute the actual contents, since they can't be represented
as C++.
For the block pointer case, compute the copy-initialization needed to
capture the lambda object in the block, which IR generation will need
later.
llvm-svn: 150645
-fno-objc-arc-exceptions. This will allow the optimizer to perform
optimizations which are only safe under that flag.
This is a part of rdar://10803830.
llvm-svn: 150644
partial types for contexts and forward decls while allowing us to
complete types later on for debug purposes.
This piggy-backs on the metadata replacement and rauw changes
for temporary nodes and takes advantage of the incremental
support I added in earlier. This allows us to, if we decide,
to limit adding methods and variables to structures in order
to limit the amount of debug information output into a .o file.
The caching is a bit complicated though so any thoughts on
untangling that are welcome.
llvm-svn: 150631
Snooping in other namespaces when the identifier being corrected is
already qualified (i.e. a valid CXXScopeSpec is passed to CorrectTypo)
and ranking synthesized namespace qualifiers relative to the existing
qualifier is now performed. Support for disambiguating the string
representation of synthesized namespace qualifers has also been added
(the change to test/Parser/cxx-using-directive.cpp is an example of an
ambiguous relative qualifier).
llvm-svn: 150622
This option was added in r129614 and doesn't have any use case that I'm aware
of. It's possible that external tools are using these names - and if that's
the case we can certainly reassess the functionality, but for now it lets us
shave out a few unneeded bits from clang.
Move the "StaticDiagNameIndex" table into the only remaining consumer, diagtool.
This removes the actual diagnostic name strings from clang entirely.
Reviewed by Chris Lattner & Ted Kremenek.
llvm-svn: 150612
function, provide a specialized diagnostic that indicates the kind of
special member function (default constructor, copy assignment
operator, etc.) and that it was implicitly deleted. Add a hook where
we can provide more detailed information later.
llvm-svn: 150611
This commit makes PrintfSpecifier::fixType() and ScanfSpecifier::fixType()
only fix a conversion specification enough that Clang wouldn't warn about it,
as opposed to always changing it to use the "canonical" conversion specifier.
(PR11975)
This preserves the user's choice of conversion specifier in cases like:
printf("%a", (long double)1);
where we previously suggested "%Lf", we now suggest "%La"
printf("%x", (long)1);
where we previously suggested "%ld", we now suggest "%lx".
llvm-svn: 150578
expression is referenced, defined, then referenced again, make sure we
instantiate it the second time it's referenced. This is the static data member
analogue of r150518.
llvm-svn: 150560
to be core constant expressions (including pointers and references to
temporaries), and makes constexpr calculations Turing-complete. A Turing machine
simulator is included as a testcase.
This opens up the possibilty of removing CCValue entirely, and removing some
copies from the constant evaluator in the process, but that cleanup is not part
of this change.
llvm-svn: 150557
is general goodness because representations of member pointers are
not always equivalent across member pointer types on all ABIs
(even though this isn't really standard-endorsed).
Take advantage of the new information to teach IR-generation how
to do these reinterprets in constant initializers. Make sure this
works when intermingled with hierarchy conversions (although
this is not part of our motivating use case). Doing this in the
constant-evaluator would probably have been better, but that would
require a *lot* of extra structure in the representation of
constant member pointers: you'd really have to track an arbitrary
chain of hierarchy conversions and reinterpretations in order to
get this right. Ultimately, this seems less complex. I also
wasn't quite sure how to extend the constant evaluator to handle
foldings that we don't actually want to treat as extended
constant expressions.
llvm-svn: 150551
lambda expressions. Because these issue was pulled back from Ready
status at the Kona meeting, we still emit an ExtWarn when using
default arguments for lambda expressions.
llvm-svn: 150519
template is defined, and then the specialization is referenced again, don't
forget to instantiate the template on the second reference. Use the source
location of the first reference as the point of instantiation, though.
llvm-svn: 150518
* if, switch, range-based for: warn if semicolon is on the same line.
* for, while: warn if semicolon is on the same line and either next
statement is compound statement or next statement has more
indentation.
Replacing the semicolon with {} or moving the semicolon to the next
line will always silence the warning.
Tests from SemaCXX/if-empty-body.cpp merged into SemaCXX/warn-empty-body.cpp.
llvm-svn: 150515
used to construct an object of union type with a deleted default constructor
(plus fixes for some related value-initialization corner cases).
llvm-svn: 150502
Replace the simple Levenshtein edit distance for typo correction
candidates--and the hacky way adding namespace qualifiers would affect
the edit distance--with a synthetic "edit distance" comprised of several
factors and their relative weights. This also allows the typo correction
callback object to convey more information about the viability of a
correction candidate than simply viable or not viable.
llvm-svn: 150495
the instantiation of a constexpr function temploid is now always constexpr, a
defaulted constexpr function temploid is often ill-formed by the rule in
[dcl.fct.def.default]p2 that an explicitly-defaulted constexpr function must
have a constexpr implicit definition. To avoid making loads of completely
reasonable code ill-formed, do not apply that rule to templates.
llvm-svn: 150453
in realloc map.
If there is no dependency, the reallocated ptr will get garbage
collected before we know that realloc failed, which would lead us to
missing a memory leak warning.
Also added new test cases, which we can handle now.
Plus minor cleanups.
llvm-svn: 150446
expression with the original call operator, so that we don't try to
separately instantiate the call operator. Test and tweak a few more
bits for template instantiation of lambda expressions.
llvm-svn: 150440
constructor, and that constructor is used to initialize an object of static
storage duration such that all members and bases are initialized by constant
expressions, constant initialization is performed. In this case, the object
can still have a non-trivial destructor, and if it does, we must emit a dynamic
initializer which performs no initialization and instead simply registers that
destructor.
llvm-svn: 150419
expressions. This is mostly a simple refact, splitting the main "start
a lambda expression" function into smaller chunks that are driven
either from the parser (Sema::ActOnLambdaExpr) or during AST
transformation (TreeTransform::TransformLambdaExpr). A few minor
interesting points:
- Added new entry points for TreeTransform, so that we can
explicitly establish the link between the lambda closure type in the
template and the lambda closure type in the instantiation.
- Added a bit into LambdaExpr specifying whether it had an explicit
result type or not. We should have had this anyway.
This code is 'lightly' tested.
llvm-svn: 150417
1) Support the case when realloc fails to reduce False Positives. (We
essentially need to restore the state of the pointer being reallocated.)
2) Realloc behaves differently under special conditions (from pointer is
null, size is 0). When detecting these cases, we should consider
under-constrained states (size might or might not be 0). The
old version handled this in a very hacky way. The code did not
differentiate between definite and possible (no consideration for
under-constrained states). Further, after processing each special case,
the realloc processing function did not return but chained to the next
special case processing. So you could end up in an execution in which
you first see the states in which size is 0 and realloc ~ free(),
followed by the states corresponding to size is not 0 followed by the
evaluation of the regular realloc behavior.
llvm-svn: 150402
1358, 1360, 1452 and 1453.
- Instantiations of constexpr functions are always constexpr. This removes the
need for separate declaration/definition checking, which is now gone.
- This makes it possible for a constexpr function to be virtual, if they are
only dependently virtual. Virtual calls to such functions are not constant
expressions.
- Likewise, it's now possible for a literal type to have virtual base classes.
A constexpr constructor for such a type cannot actually produce a constant
expression, though, so add a special-case diagnostic for a constructor call
to such a type rather than trying to evaluate it.
- Classes with trivial default constructors (for which value initialization can
produce a fully-initialized value) are considered literal types.
- Classes with volatile members are not literal types.
- constexpr constructors can be members of non-literal types. We do not yet use
static initialization for global objects constructed in this way.
llvm-svn: 150359
[dcl.type.simple]p4, which treats all xvalues as returning T&&. We had
previously implemented a pre-standard variant of decltype() that
doesn't cope with, e.g., static_ast<T&&>(e) very well.
llvm-svn: 150348
id-expression 'x' will compute the type based on the assumption that
'x' will be captured, even if it isn't captured, per C++11
[expr.prim.lambda]p18. There are two related refactors that go into
implementing this:
1) Split out the check that determines whether we should capture a
particular variable reference, along with the computation of the
type of the field, from the actual act of capturing the
variable.
2) Always compute the result of decltype() within Sema, rather than
AST, because the decltype() computation is now context-sensitive.
llvm-svn: 150347
r149987 changed the way parsing happens inside an @implementation;
it aggregates the declarations inside and reports them together as a DeclGroup.
This had the side effect that function declarations were reported together with
their definition, while the rewriter expected for function declarations to be
reported immediately to the consumer and thus not have a body.
Fix this by having the rewriter actually check with isThisDeclarationADefinition()
to make sure the body comes from the current decl before rewriting it.
llvm-svn: 150325
instead of having a special-purpose function.
- ActOnCXXDirectInitializer, which was mostly duplication of
AddInitializerToDecl (leading e.g. to PR10620, which Eli fixed a few days
ago), is dropped completely.
- MultiInitializer, which was an ugly hack I added, is dropped again.
- We now have the infrastructure in place to distinguish between
int x = {1};
int x({1});
int x{1};
-- VarDecl now has getInitStyle(), which indicates which of the above was used.
-- CXXConstructExpr now has a flag to indicate that it represents list-
initialization, although this is not yet used.
- InstantiateInitializer was renamed to SubstInitializer and simplified.
- ActOnParenOrParenListExpr has been replaced by ActOnParenListExpr, which
always produces a ParenListExpr. Placed that so far failed to convert that
back to a ParenExpr containing comma operators have been fixed. I'm pretty
sure I could have made a crashing test case before this.
The end result is a (I hope) considerably cleaner design of initializers.
More importantly, the fact that I can now distinguish between the various
initialization kinds means that I can get the tricky generalized initializer
test cases Johannes Schaub supplied to work. (This is not yet done.)
This commit passed self-host, with the resulting compiler passing the tests. I
hope it doesn't break more complicated code. It's a pretty big change, but one
that I feel is necessary.
llvm-svn: 150318
memory.
(As per one test case, the existing checker thought that this could
cause a lot of false positives - not sure if that's valid, to be
verified.)
llvm-svn: 150313
cv-unqualified type. This is essential in order to allow move-only objects of
const-qualified types to be copy-initialized via a converting constructor.
llvm-svn: 150309
When creating the MCSubtargetInfo, the assembler driver uses the CPU and
feature string to construct a more accurate model of what instructions
are and are not legal.
rdar://10840476
llvm-svn: 150273
default is '=', and reword the warning about explicitly capturing
'this' in such lambdas to indicate that only explicit capture is
banned.
Introduce Fix-Its for this and other "save the programmer from
themself" rules regarding what can be explicitly captured and what
must be implicitly captured.
llvm-svn: 150256
nested captures. We currently don't get odr-use correct in array
bounds, so that bit is commented out while we sort out what we need to
do.
llvm-svn: 150255
have finished parsing the body, so that name lookup will never find
anything within the closure type. Then, add this operator() and the
conversion function (if available) before completing the class.
llvm-svn: 150252
o Correct the handling of the restrictions on usage of cv-qualified and
ref-qualified function types.
o Fix a bug where such types were rejected in template type parameter default
arguments, due to such arguments not being treated as a template type arg
context.
o Remove the ExtWarn for usage of such types as template arguments; that was
a standard defect, not a GCC extension.
o Improve the wording and unify the code for diagnosing cv-qualifiers with the
code for diagnosing ref-qualifiers.
llvm-svn: 150244
to pretty-print such function types better, and to fix a case where we were not
instantiating templates in lexical order. In passing, move the Variadic bit from
Type's bitfields to FunctionProtoType to get the Type bitfields down to 32 bits.
Also ensure that we always substitute the return type of a function when
substituting explicitly-specified arguments, since that can cause us to bail
out with a SFINAE error before we hit a hard error in parameter substitution.
llvm-svn: 150241
This changes function prolog in such a way as to avoid out-of-bounds
stack store in the case when coerce-to type has a larger storage size
than the real argument type.
Fixes PR11905.
llvm-svn: 150238
incomplete class type which has an overloaded operator&, it's now just
unspecified whether the overloaded operator or the builtin is used.
llvm-svn: 150234
has been declared in its primary class, superclass,
or in one of their protocols, no need to issue unimplemented method.
// rdar://10823023
llvm-svn: 150206