Like in r126648, provide (empty) default implementation for pure virtual getMemoryBufferSizes(). Not all use cases have meaningful implementations.
llvm-svn: 130838
if they match that production, i.e. if they're template type parameters
or decltypes (or, as an obvious case not yet described in the ABI document,
if they're template template parameters applied to template arguments).
llvm-svn: 130824
Decl actually found via name lookup & overload resolution when that Decl
is different from the ValueDecl which is actually referenced by the
expression.
This can be used by AST consumers to correctly attribute references to
the spelling location of a using declaration, and otherwise gain insight
into the name resolution performed by Clang.
The public interface to DRE is kept as narrow as possible: we provide
a getFoundDecl() which always returns a NamedDecl, either the ValueDecl
referenced or the new, more precise NamedDecl if present. This way AST
clients can code against getFoundDecl without know when exactly the AST
has a split representation.
For an example of the data this provides consider:
% cat x.cc
namespace N1 {
struct S {};
void f(const S&);
}
void test(N1::S s) {
f(s);
using N1::f;
f(s);
}
% ./bin/clang -fsyntax-only -Xclang -ast-dump x.cc
[...]
void test(N1::S s) (CompoundStmt 0x5b02010 <x.cc:5:20, line:9:1>
(CallExpr 0x5b01df0 <line:6:3, col:6> 'void'
(ImplicitCastExpr 0x5b01dd8 <col:3> 'void (*)(const struct N1::S &)' <FunctionToPointerDecay>
(DeclRefExpr 0x5b01d80 <col:3> 'void (const struct N1::S &)' lvalue Function 0x5b01a20 'f' 'void (const struct N1::S &)'))
(ImplicitCastExpr 0x5b01e20 <col:5> 'const struct N1::S' lvalue <NoOp>
(DeclRefExpr 0x5b01d58 <col:5> 'N1::S':'struct N1::S' lvalue ParmVar 0x5b01b60 's' 'N1::S':'struct N1::S')))
(DeclStmt 0x5b01ee0 <line:7:3, col:14>
0x5b01e40 "UsingN1::;")
(CallExpr 0x5b01fc8 <line:8:3, col:6> 'void'
(ImplicitCastExpr 0x5b01fb0 <col:3> 'void (*)(const struct N1::S &)' <FunctionToPointerDecay>
(DeclRefExpr 0x5b01f80 <col:3> 'void (const struct N1::S &)' lvalue Function 0x5b01a20 'f' 'void (const struct N1::S &)' (UsingShadow 0x5b01ea0 'f')))
(ImplicitCastExpr 0x5b01ff8 <col:5> 'const struct N1::S' lvalue <NoOp>
(DeclRefExpr 0x5b01f58 <col:5> 'N1::S':'struct N1::S' lvalue ParmVar 0x5b01b60 's' 'N1::S':'struct N1::S'))))
Now we can tell that the second call is 'using' (no pun intended) the using
declaration, and *which* using declaration it sees. Without this, we can
mistake calls that go through using declarations for ADL calls, and have no way
to attribute names looked up with using declarations to the appropriate
UsingDecl.
llvm-svn: 130670
parameter node and use this to correctly mangle parameter
references in function template signatures.
A follow-up patch will improve the storage usage of these
fields; here I've just done the lazy thing.
llvm-svn: 130669
NestedNameSpecifierLoc. It predates when we had such an object.
Reference the NNSLoc directly in DREs, and embed it directly into the
MemberNameQualifier struct.
llvm-svn: 130668
Mostly trailing whitespace so that me editor nuking it doesn't muddy the
waters of subsequent commits that do change functionality.
Also nukes a stray statement that was harmless but redundant that
I introduced in r130666.
llvm-svn: 130667
a bitfield in the base class. DREs weren't using any bits here past the
normal Expr bits, so we have plenty of room. This makes the common case
of getting a Decl out of a DRE no longer need to do any masking etc.
Also, while here, clean up code to use the accessor methods rather than
directly poking these bits, and provide a nice comment for DREs that
includes the information previously attached to the bits going into the
pointer union.
No functionality changed here, but DREs should be a tad faster now.
llvm-svn: 130666
As might be surmised from their names, these aren't type traits, they're
expression traits. Amazingly enough, they're expression traits that we
have, and fully implement. These "type" traits are even parsed from the
same tokens as the expression traits. Luckily, the parser only tried the
expression trait parsing for these tokens, so this was all just a pile
of dead code.
llvm-svn: 130643
SubstTemplateTypeParmType to be 'getIdentifier' instead of 'getName' as
it returns an identifier. This makes them more consistent with the
NamedDecl interface.
Also, switch back to using this interface to acquire the indentifier in
TypePrinter.cpp. I missed this in r130628.
llvm-svn: 130629
accompanying fixes to make it work today.
The core of this patch is to provide a link from a TemplateTypeParmType
back to the TemplateTypeParmDecl node which declared it. This in turn
provides much more precise information about the type, where it came
from, and how it functions for AST consumers.
To make the patch work almost a year after its first attempt, it needed
serialization support, and it now retains the old getName() interface.
Finally, it requires us to not attempt to instantiate the type in an
unsupported friend decl -- specifically those coming from template
friend decls but which refer to a specific type through a dependent
name.
A cleaner representation of the last item would be to build
FriendTemplateDecl nodes for these, storing their template parameters
etc, and to perform proper instantation of them like any other template
declaration. They can still be flagged as unsupported for the purpose of
access checking, etc.
This passed an asserts-enabled bootstrap for me, and the reduced test
case mentioned in the original review thread no longer causes issues,
likely fixed at somewhere amidst the 24k revisions that have elapsed.
llvm-svn: 130628
partial ordering of function templates, use a simple superset
relationship rather than the convertibility-implying
isMoreQualifiedThan/compatibilyIncludes relationship. Fixes partial
ordering between references and address-space-qualified references.
llvm-svn: 130612
types after looking through arrays. Arrays with an unknown bound seem to
be specifically allowed in the library type traits in C++0x, and GCC's
builtin __is_trivial returns 'true' for the type 'int[]'. Now Clang
agrees with GCC about __is_trivial here.
Also hardens these methods against dependent types by just returning false.
llvm-svn: 130605
a Type method isStandardLayoutType, to keep our user API matching the
type trait builtins as closely as possible. Also, implement it in terms
of other Type APIs rather than in terms of other type traits. This
models the implementation on that of isLiteralType and isTrivialType.
There remain some common problems with these traits still, so this is
a bit of a WIP. However, we can now fix all of these traits at the same
time and in a consistent manner.
llvm-svn: 130602
type trait. The previous implementation suffered from several problems:
1) It implemented all of the logic in RecordType by walking over every
base and field in a CXXRecordDecl and validating the constraints of
the standard. This made for very straightforward code, but is
extremely inefficient. It also is conceptually wrong, the logic tied
to the C++ definition of standard-layout classes should be in
CXXRecordDecl, not RecordType.
2) To address the performance problems with #1, a cache bit was added to
CXXRecordDecl, and at the completion of every C++ class, the
RecordType was queried to determine if it was a standard layout
class, and that state was cached. Two things went very very wrong
with this. First, the caching version of the query *was never
called*. Even within the recursive steps of the walk over all fields
and bases the caching variant was not called, making each query
a full *recursive* walk. Second, despite the cache not being used, it
was computed for every class declared, even when the trait was never
used in the program. This probably significantly regressed compile
time performance for edge-case files.
3) An ASTContext was required merely to query the type trait because
querying it performed the actual computations.
4) The caching bit wasn't managed correctly (uninitialized).
The new implementation follows the system for all the other traits on
C++ classes by encoding all the state needed in the definition data and
building up the trait incrementally as each base and member are added to
the definition of the class.
The idiosyncracies of the specification of standard-layout classes
requires more state than I would like; currently 5 bits. I could
eliminate one of the bits easily at the expense of both clarity and
resilience of the code. I might be able to eliminate one of the other
bits by computing its state in terms of other state bits in the
definition. I've already done that in one place where there was a fairly
simple way to achieve it.
It's possible some of the bits could be moved out of the definition data
and into some other structure which isn't serialized if the serialized
bloat is a problem. That would preclude serialization of a partial class
declaration, but that's likely already precluded.
Comments on any of these issues welcome.
llvm-svn: 130601
definition of POD. Specifically, this allows certain non-aggregate
types due to their data members being private.
The representation of C++11 POD testing is pretty gross. Any suggestions
for improvements there are welcome. Especially the name
'isCXX11PODType()' seems truly unfortunate.
llvm-svn: 130492
Teaches isLiteralType and isTrivialType to behave plausibly and most
importantly not crash on normal RecordDecls.
Sadly I have no real way to test this. I stumbled onto it by
mis-implementing a warning.
llvm-svn: 130483
Patch authored by John Wiegley.
These are array type traits used for parsing code that employs certain
features of the Embarcadero C++ compiler: __array_rank(T) and
__array_extent(T, Dim).
llvm-svn: 130351
Patch authored by John Wiegley.
These type traits are used for parsing code that employs certain features of
the Embarcadero C++ compiler. Several of these constructs are also desired by
libc++, according to its project pages (such as __is_standard_layout).
llvm-svn: 130342
The size of the array may not be aligned according to alignment of its elements if an alignment attribute is
specified in a typedef. Fixes rdar://8665729 & http://llvm.org/PR5637.
llvm-svn: 130242
member function, i.e. something of the form 'x.f' where 'f' is a non-static
member function. Diagnose this in the general case. Some of the new diagnostics
are probably worse than the old ones, but we now get this right much more
universally, and there's certainly room for improvement in the diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 130239
Patch authored by David Abrahams.
These two expression traits (__is_lvalue_expr, __is_rvalue_expr) are used for
parsing code that employs certain features of the Embarcadero C++ compiler.
llvm-svn: 130122
I've sent off an email requesting clarification on a few things that
I wasn't sure how to handle.
This also necessitated making prefixes and unresolved-prefixes get
mangled separately.
llvm-svn: 130083
APInt::toString doesn't do those, but it's easy to postprocess that output,
and that's probably better than adding another knob to that method.
llvm-svn: 130081
operators in C++ record declarations.
This patch starts off by updating a bunch of the standard citations to
refer to the draft 0x standard so that the semantics intended for move
varianst is clear. Where necessary these are duplicated so they'll be
available in doxygen.
It adds bit fields to keep track of the state for the move constructs,
and updates all the code necessary to track this state (I think) as
members are declared for a class. It also wires the state into the
various trait-like accessors in the AST's API, and tests that the type
trait expressions now behave correctly in the presence of move
constructors and move assignment operators.
This isn't complete yet due to these glaring FIXMEs:
1) No synthesis of implicit move constructors or assignment operators.
2) I don't think we correctly enforce the new logic for both copy and
move trivial checks: that the *selected* copy/move
constructor/operator is trivial. Currently this requires *all* of them
to be trivial.
3) Some of the trait logic needs to be folded into the fine-grained
trivial bits to more closely match the wording of the standard. For
example, many of the places we currently set a bit to track POD-ness
could be removed by querying other more fine grained traits on
demand.
llvm-svn: 130076
This introduces a few APIs on the AST to bundle up the standard-based
logic so that programmatic clients have access to exactly the same
behavior.
There is only one serious FIXME here: checking for non-trivial move
constructors and move assignment operators. Those bits need to be added
to the declaration and accessors provided.
This implementation should be enough for the uses of __is_trivial in
libstdc++ 4.6's C++98 library implementation.
Ideas for more thorough test cases or any edge cases missing would be
appreciated. =D
llvm-svn: 130057
double data[20000000] = {0};
we would blow out the memory by creating 20M Exprs to fill out the initializer.
To fix this, if the initializer list initializes an array with more elements than
there are initializers in the list, have InitListExpr store a single 'ArrayFiller' expression
that specifies an expression to be used for value initialization of the rest of the elements.
Fixes rdar://9275920.
llvm-svn: 129896
alignment, which causes traps further down the line. Fixes
<rdar://problem/9109755>, which contains a test case far too large to
commit :(
llvm-svn: 129861
out-of-line destructors can result in the addition of redundant
destructors to a class. It's not harmful to the AST. Fixes
<rdar://problem/9158632>.
llvm-svn: 129860
gcc's unused warnings which don't get emitted if the function is referenced even in an unevaluated context
(e.g. in templates, sizeof, etc.). Also, saying that a function is 'unused' because it won't get codegen'ed
is somewhat misleading.
- Don't emit 'unused' warnings for functions that are referenced in any part of the user's code.
- A warning that an internal function/variable won't get emitted is useful though, so introduce
-Wunneeded-internal-declaration which will warn if a function/variable with internal linkage is not
"needed" ('used' from the codegen perspective), e.g:
static void foo() { }
template <int>
void bar() {
foo();
}
test.cpp:1:13: warning: function 'foo' is not needed and will not be emitted
static void foo() { }
^
Addresses rdar://8733476.
llvm-svn: 129794
CL_AddressableVoid is the expression classification used for void
expressions whose address can be taken, i.e. the result of [], *
or void variable references in C, as opposed to things like the
result of a void function call.
llvm-svn: 129783
AAPCS+VFP), similar to fastcall / stdcall / whatevercall seen on x86.
In particular, all library functions should always be AAPCS regardless of floating point ABI used.
llvm-svn: 129534
for __unknown_anytype resolution to destructively modify the AST. So that's
what it does now, which significantly simplifies some of the implementation.
Normal member calls work pretty cleanly now, and I added support for
propagating unknown-ness through &.
llvm-svn: 129331
represents a dynamic cast where we know that the result is always null.
For example:
struct A {
virtual ~A();
};
struct B final : A { };
struct C { };
bool f(B* b) {
return dynamic_cast<C*>(b);
}
llvm-svn: 129256
The idea is that you can create a VarDecl with an unknown type, or a
FunctionDecl with an unknown return type, and it will still be valid to
access that object as long as you explicitly cast it at every use. I'm
still going back and forth about how I want to test this effectively, but
I wanted to go ahead and provide a skeletal implementation for the LLDB
folks' benefit and because it also improves some diagnostic goodness for
placeholder expressions.
llvm-svn: 129065
a couple of operator overloads which form interesting expressions in the
AST.
I added test cases for both bugs with the c-index-test's token
annotation feature. Also, thanks to John McCall for confirming that this
is the correct solution.
llvm-svn: 128768
from how we process ordinary function calls, had a tremendous about of redundancy, and relied
strictly on inlining behavior (which was incomplete) to provide semantics instead of falling
back to the conservative analysis we use for C functions. This is a significant step into
making C++ analyzer support more useful.
llvm-svn: 128557
platform implies default visibility. To achieve these, refactor our
lookup of explicit visibility so that we search for both an explicit
VisibilityAttr and an appropriate AvailabilityAttr, favoring the
VisibilityAttr if it is present.
llvm-svn: 128336
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
they don't collide with file-scope extern functions from the same
translation unit. This is basically a matter of applying the same
logic to FunctionDecls as we were previously applying to VarDecls.
llvm-svn: 128072
add support for the OpenCL __private, __local, __constant and
__global address spaces, as well as the __read_only, _read_write and
__write_only image access specifiers. Patch originally by ARM;
language-specific address space support by myself.
llvm-svn: 127915
Change the interface to expose the new information and deal with the enormous fallout.
Introduce the new ExceptionSpecificationType value EST_DynamicNone to more easily deal with empty throw specifications.
Update the tests for noexcept and fix the various bugs uncovered, such as lack of tentative parsing support.
llvm-svn: 127537
template (not a specialization!), use the "injected" function template
arguments, which correspond to the template parameters of the function
template. This is required when substituting into the default template
parameters of template template parameters within a function template.
Fixes PR9016.
llvm-svn: 127092
use the translation unit as its declaration context, then deserialize
the actual lexical and semantic DeclContexts after the template
parameter is complete. This avoids problems when the DeclContext
itself (e.g., a class template) is dependent on the template parameter
(e.g., for the injected-class-name).
llvm-svn: 127056
Allow remapping a file by specifying another filename whose contents should be loaded if the original
file gets loaded. This allows to override files without having to create & load buffers in advance.
llvm-svn: 127052
to cope with non-type templates by providing appropriate
errors. Previously, we would either assert, crash, or silently build a
dependent type when we shouldn't. Fixes PR9226.
llvm-svn: 127037
DeclContext once we've created it. This mirrors what we do for
function parameters, where the parameters start out with
translation-unit context and then are adopted by the appropriate
DeclContext when it is created. Also give template parameters public
access and make sure that they don't show up for the purposes of name
lookup.
Fixes PR9400, a regression introduced by r126920, which implemented
substitution of default template arguments provided in template
template parameters (C++ core issue 150).
How on earth could the DeclContext of a template parameter affect the
handling of default template arguments?
I'm so glad you asked! The link is
Sema::getTemplateInstantiationArgs(), which determines the outer
template argument lists that correspond to a given declaration. When
we're instantiating a default template argument for a template
template parameter within the body of a template definition (not it's
instantiation, per core issue 150), we weren't getting any outer
template arguments because the context of the template template
parameter was the translation unit. Now that the context of the
template template parameter is its owning template, we get the
template arguments from the injected-class-name of the owning
template, so substitution works as it should.
llvm-svn: 127004
computing for a nested decl with explicit visibility. This is all part
of the general philosophy of explicit visibility attributes, where
any information that was obviously available at the attribute site
should probably be ignored. Fixes PR9371.
llvm-svn: 126992
template arguments. I believe that this is the last place in the AST
where we were storing a source range for a nested-name-specifier
rather than a proper nested-name-specifier location structure. (Yay!)
There is still a lot of cleanup to do in the TreeTransform, which
doesn't take advantage of nested-name-specifiers with source-location
information everywhere it could.
llvm-svn: 126844
of an Objective-C method to be overridden on a case-by-case basis. This
is a higher-level tool than ns_returns_retained &c.; it lets users specify
that not only does a method have different retain/release semantics, but
that it semantically acts differently than one might assume from its name.
This in turn is quite useful to static analysis.
llvm-svn: 126839
conventional categories into Basic and AST. Update the self-init checker
to use this logic; CFRefCountChecker is complicated enough that I didn't
want to touch it.
llvm-svn: 126817
template specialization types. This also required some parser tweaks,
since we were losing track of the nested-name-specifier's source
location information in several places in the parser. Other notable
changes this required:
- Sema::ActOnTagTemplateIdType now type-checks and forms the
appropriate type nodes (+ source-location information) for an
elaborated-type-specifier ending in a template-id. Previously, we
used a combination of ActOnTemplateIdType and
ActOnTagTemplateIdType that resulted in an ElaboratedType wrapped
around a DependentTemplateSpecializationType, which duplicated the
keyword ("class", "struct", etc.) and nested-name-specifier
storage.
- Sema::ActOnTemplateIdType now gets a nested-name-specifier, which
it places into the returned type-source location information.
- Sema::ActOnDependentTag now creates types with source-location
information.
llvm-svn: 126808
template specialization types. There are still a few rough edges to
clean up with some of the parser actions dropping
nested-name-specifiers too early.
llvm-svn: 126776
nested-name-speciciers within elaborated type names, e.g.,
enum clang::NestedNameSpecifier::SpecifierKind
Fixes in this iteration include:
(1) Compute the type-source range properly for a dependent template
specialization type that starts with "template template-id ::", as
in a member access expression
dep->template f<T>::f()
This is a latent bug I triggered with this change (because now we're
checking the computed source ranges for dependent template
specialization types). But the real problem was...
(2) Make sure to set the qualifier range on a dependent template
specialization type appropriately. This will go away once we push
nested-name-specifier locations into dependent template
specialization types, but it was the source of the
valgrind errors on the buildbots.
llvm-svn: 126765
information for qualifier type names throughout the parser to address
several problems.
The commit message from r126737:
Push nested-name-specifier source location information into elaborated
name types, e.g., "enum clang::NestedNameSpecifier::SpecifierKind".
Aside from the normal changes, this also required some tweaks to the
parser. Essentially, when we're looking at a type name (via
getTypeName()) specifically for the purpose of creating an annotation
token, we pass down the flag that asks for full type-source location
information to be stored within the returned type. That way, we retain
source-location information involving nested-name-specifiers rather
than trying to reconstruct that information later, long after it's
been lost in the parser.
With this change, test/Index/recursive-cxx-member-calls.cpp is showing
much improved results again, since that code has lots of
nested-name-specifiers.
llvm-svn: 126748
name types, e.g., "enum clang::NestedNameSpecifier::SpecifierKind".
Aside from the normal changes, this also required some tweaks to the
parser. Essentially, when we're looking at a type name (via
getTypeName()) specifically for the purpose of creating an annotation
token, we pass down the flag that asks for full type-source location
information to be stored within the returned type. That way, we retain
source-location information involving nested-name-specifiers rather
than trying to reconstruct that information later, long after it's
been lost in the parser.
With this change, test/Index/recursive-cxx-member-calls.cpp is showing
much improved results again, since that code has lots of
nested-name-specifiers.
llvm-svn: 126737
DependentNameTypeLoc. Teach the recursive AST visitor and libclang how to
walk DependentNameTypeLoc nodes.
Also, teach libclang about TypedefDecl source ranges, so that we get
those. The massive churn in test/Index/recursive-cxx-member-calls.cpp
is a good thing: we're annotating a lot more of this test correctly
now.
llvm-svn: 126729
source-location information into a NestedNameSpecifierLocBuilder
class, which lives within the AST library and centralize all knowledge
of the format of nested-name-specifier location information here.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 126716
UnresolvedLookupExpr and UnresolvedMemberExpr.
Also, improve the computation that checks whether the base of a member
expression (either unresolved or dependent-scoped) is implicit. The
previous check didn't cover all of the cases we use in our
representation, which threw off source-location information for these
expressions (which, in turn, caused some breakage in libclang's token
annotation).
llvm-svn: 126681
CXXDependentScopeMemberExpr, and clean up instantiation of
nested-name-specifiers with dependent template specialization types in
the process.
llvm-svn: 126663
dependent template names. There is still a lot of redundant code in
TreeTransform to cope with TemplateSpecializationTypes, which I'll
remove in stages.
llvm-svn: 126656
* Add default implementations (no-op) for ExternalASTSource's pure virtual functions. There are valid use cases that can live with these defaults.
* Move ExternalASTSource's out of line implementations into separate source file.
* Whitespace, forward decl, #include cleanup.
llvm-svn: 126648
they are known to be exact multiples of the width of the char type. Add a
test case to CodeGen/union.c that would have caught the problem with the
previous attempt. No change in functionality intended.
llvm-svn: 126628
nested-name-specifier, e.g.,
T::template apply<U>::
represent the dependent template name specialization as a
DependentTemplateSpecializationType, rather than a
TemplateSpecializationType with a dependent TemplateName.
llvm-svn: 126593
This successfully performs constructor lookup and verifies that a
delegating initializer is the only initializer present.
This does not perform loop detection in the initialization, but it also
doesn't codegen delegating constructors at all, so this won't cause
runtime infinite loops yet.
llvm-svn: 126552
silliness, and actually use the existing facilities of raw_ostream to do
escaping.
This will also hopefully fix an assert when building with signed char
(MSVC I think).
llvm-svn: 126505
UnresolvedUsingValueDecl to use NestedNameSpecifierLoc rather than the
extremely-lossy NestedNameSpecifier/SourceRange pair it used to use,
improving source-location information.
Various infrastructure updates to support NestedNameSpecifierLoc:
- AST/PCH (de-)serialization
- Recursive AST visitor
- libclang traversal (including the first tests of this
functionality)
llvm-svn: 126459
I tried to add test cases for these, but I can't because variables
aren't warned on the way functions are and the codegen layer appears to
use different logic for determining that 'a' and 'g' in the test case
should receive C mangling. I've included the test so that if we ever
switch the codegen layer to use these functions, we won't regress due to
latent bugs.
llvm-svn: 126453
nested-name-specifiers throughout the parser, and provide a new class
(NestedNameSpecifierLoc) that contains a nested-name-specifier along
with its type-source information.
Right now, this information is completely useless, because we don't
actually store the source-location information anywhere in the
AST. Call this Step 1/N.
llvm-svn: 126391
way it keeps track of namespaces. Previously, we would map from the
namespace alias to its underlying namespace when building a
nested-name-specifier, losing source information in the process.
llvm-svn: 126358
with getter and setter methods in both bit units and CharUnits. This will help
simplify some of the unit mismatch in the parts of the code where sizes are
known to be exact multiples of the width of the char type.
Assertions in the getters help guard against accidentally converting to
CharUnits when sizes are not exact multiples of the char width.
llvm-svn: 126354
invocation function into the debug info. Rather than faking up a class,
which is tricky because of the custom layout we do, we just emit a struct
directly from the layout information we've already got.
Also, don't emit an unnecessarily parameter alloca for this "variable".
llvm-svn: 126255
When the mismatch is due to a larger input operand that is
a constant, truncate it down to the size of the output. This
allows us to accept some cases in the linux kernel and elsewhere.
Pedantically speaking, we generate different code than GCC, though
I can't imagine how it would matter:
Clang:
movb $-1, %al
frob %al
GCC:
movl $255, %eax
frob %al
llvm-svn: 126148
* Flag indicating 'we're parsing this auto typed variable's initializer' moved from VarDecl to Sema
* Temporary template parameter list for auto deduction is now allocated on the stack.
* Deduced 'auto' types are now uniqued.
llvm-svn: 126139
logic from CXXMemberCallExpr and by making it check for
CXXOperatorCallExpr in order to defer. This is not really an awesome solution,
but I don't have a better idea.
llvm-svn: 126114
lead to a serious slowdown (4%) on parsing of Cocoa.h. This memory
optimization should be revisited later, when we have time to look at
the generated code.
llvm-svn: 126033
without defining them. This should be an error, but I'm paranoid about
"uses" that end up not actually requiring a definition. I'll revisit later.
Also, teach IR generation to not set internal linkage on variable
declarations, just for safety's sake. Doing so produces an invalid module
if the variable is not ultimately defined.
Also, fix several places in the test suite where we were using internal
functions without definitions.
llvm-svn: 126016
that was ignored in a few places (most notably, code
completion). Introduce Selector::getNameForSlot() for the common case
where we only care about the name. Audit all uses of
getIdentifierInfoForSlot(), switching many over to getNameForSlot(),
fixing a few crashers.
Fixed <rdar://problem/8939352>, a code-completion crasher.
llvm-svn: 125977
bugs from other clients that don't expect to see a LabelDecl in a DeclStmt,
but if so they should be easy to fix.
This implements most of PR3429 and rdar://8287027
llvm-svn: 125817
making them be template instantiated in a more normal way and
make them handle attributes like other decls.
This fixes the used/unused label handling stuff, making it use
the same infrastructure as other decls.
llvm-svn: 125771
reducing the size of all declarations by one pointer. For a 64-bit
Clang parsing Cocoa.h, this saves ~630k of memory (about 3.5% of
ASTContext's memory usage for this header).
llvm-svn: 125756
class and to bind the shared value using OpaqueValueExpr. This fixes an
unnoticed problem with deserialization of these expressions where the
deserialized form would lose the vital pointer-equality trait; or rather,
it fixes it because this patch also does the right thing for deserializing
OVEs.
Change OVEs to not be a "temporary object" in the sense that copy elision is
permitted.
This new representation is not totally unawkward to work with, but I think
that's really part and parcel with the semantics we're modelling here. In
particular, it's much easier to fix things like the copy elision bug and to
make the CFG look right.
I've tried to update the analyzer to deal with this in at least some
obvious cases, and I think we get a much better CFG out, but the printing
of OpaqueValueExprs probably needs some work.
llvm-svn: 125744
LabelDecl and LabelStmt. There is a 1-1 correspondence between the
two, but this simplifies a bunch of code by itself. This is because
labels are the only place where we previously had references to random
other statements, causing grief for AST serialization and other stuff.
This does cause one regression (attr(unused) doesn't silence unused
label warnings) which I'll address next.
This does fix some minor bugs:
1. "The only valid attribute " diagnostic was capitalized.
2. Various diagnostics printed as ''labelname'' instead of 'labelname'
3. This reduces duplication of label checking between functions and blocks.
Review appreciated, particularly for the cindex and template bits.
llvm-svn: 125733
parameter type to see what's behind it, so that we don't end up
printing silly things like "float const *" when "const float *" would
make more sense. Also, replace the pile of "isa" tests with a simple
switch enumerating all of the cases, making a few more obvious cases
use prefix qualifiers.
llvm-svn: 125729
is unqualified but its initialized is qualified.
This is for c only and fixes the imm. problem.
c++ is more involved and is wip.
// rdar://8979379
llvm-svn: 125386
linkage into Decl.cpp. Disable this logic for extern "C" functions, because
the operative rule there is weaker. Fixes rdar://problem/8898466
llvm-svn: 125268
there were only three virtual methods of any significance.
The primary way to grab child iterators now is with
Stmt::child_range children();
Stmt::const_child_range children() const;
where a child_range is just a std::pair of iterators suitable for
being llvm::tie'd to some locals. I've left the old child_begin()
and child_end() accessors in place, but it's probably a substantial
penalty to grab the iterators individually now, since the
switch-based dispatch is kindof inherently slower than vtable
dispatch. Grabbing them together is probably a slight win over the
status quo, although of course we could've achieved that with vtables, too.
I also reclassified SwitchCase (correctly) as an abstract Stmt
class, which (as the first such class that wasn't an Expr subclass)
required some fiddling in a few places.
There are somewhat gross metaprogramming hooks in place to ensure
that new statements/expressions continue to implement
getSourceRange() and children(). I had to work around a recent clang
bug; dgregor actually fixed it already, but I didn't want to
introduce a selfhosting dependency on ToT.
llvm-svn: 125183