Commit Graph

179 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Richard Smith 5159bbad8b PR38627: Fix handling of exception specification adjustment for
destructors.

We previously tried to patch up the exception specification after
completing the class, which went wrong when the exception specification
was needed within the class body (in particular, by a friend
redeclaration of the destructor in a nested class). We now mark the
destructor as having a not-yet-computed exception specification
immediately after creating it.

This requires delaying various checks against the exception
specification (where we'd previously have just got the wrong exception
specification, and now find we have an exception specification that we
can't compute yet) when those checks fire while the class is being
defined.

This also exposed an issue that we were missing a CodeSynthesisContext
for computation of exception specifications (otherwise we'd fail to make
the module containing the definition of the class visible when computing
its members' exception specs). Adding that incidentally also gives us a
diagnostic quality improvement.

This has also exposed an pre-existing problem: making the exception
specification evaluation context a non-SFINAE context (as it should be)
results in a bootstrap failure; PR38850 filed for this.

llvm-svn: 341499
2018-09-05 22:30:37 +00:00
Richard Smith 3e6101b4b7 Add missing testcase update for r337790.
llvm-svn: 337792
2018-07-24 01:23:36 +00:00
Richard Smith d87aab939a Restructure checking for, and warning on, lifetime extension.
This change implements C++ DR1696, which makes initialization of a
reference member of a class from a temporary object ill-formed. The
standard wording here is imprecise, but we interpret it as meaning that
any time a mem-initializer would result in lifetime extension, the
program is ill-formed.

This reinstates r337226, reverted in r337255, with a fix for the
InitializedEntity alignment problem that was breaking ARM buildbots.

llvm-svn: 337329
2018-07-17 22:24:09 +00:00
Florian Hahn 0aa117dd2c Temporarily revert r337226 "Restructure checking for, and warning on, lifetime extension."
This change breaks on ARM because pointers to clang::InitializedEntity are only
4 byte aligned and do not have 3 bits to store values. A possible solution
would be to change the fields in clang::InitializedEntity to enforce a bigger
alignment requirement.

The error message is

llvm/include/llvm/ADT/PointerIntPair.h:132:3: error: static_assert failed "PointerIntPair with integer size too large for pointer"
  static_assert(IntBits <= PtrTraits::NumLowBitsAvailable,
include/llvm/ADT/PointerIntPair.h:73:13: note: in instantiation of template class 'llvm::PointerIntPairInfo<const clang::InitializedEntity *, 3, llvm::PointerLikeTypeTraits<const clang::InitializedEntity *> >' requested here
    Value = Info::updateInt(Info::updatePointer(0, PtrVal),
llvm/include/llvm/ADT/PointerIntPair.h:51:5: note: in instantiation of member function 'llvm::PointerIntPair<const clang::InitializedEntity *, 3, (anonymous namespace)::LifetimeKind, llvm::PointerLikeTypeTraits<const clang::InitializedEntity *>, llvm::PointerIntPairInfo<const clang::InitializedEntity *, 3, llvm::PointerLikeTypeTraits<const clang::InitializedEntity *> > >::setPointerAndInt' requested here
    setPointerAndInt(PtrVal, IntVal);
    ^
llvm/tools/clang/lib/Sema/SemaInit.cpp:6237:12: note: in instantiation of member function 'llvm::PointerIntPair<const clang::InitializedEntity *, 3, (anonymous namespace)::LifetimeKind, llvm::PointerLikeTypeTraits<const clang::InitializedEntity *>, llvm::PointerIntPairInfo<const clang::InitializedEntity *, 3, llvm::PointerLikeTypeTraits<const clang::InitializedEntity *> > >::PointerIntPair' requested here
    return {Entity, LK_Extended};

Full log here:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-cmake-armv7-global-isel/builds/1330
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-cmake-armv7-full/builds/1394

llvm-svn: 337255
2018-07-17 09:23:31 +00:00
Richard Smith 0a9969b36b Restructure checking for, and warning on, lifetime extension.
This change implements C++ DR1696, which makes initialization of a
reference member of a class from a temporary object ill-formed. The
standard wording here is imprecise, but we interpret it as meaning that
any time a mem-initializer would result in lifetime extension, the
program is ill-formed.

llvm-svn: 337226
2018-07-17 00:11:41 +00:00
Aaron Ballman 93c6ba1d9d Improve -Warray-bounds to handle multiple array extents rather than only handling the top-most array extent.
Patch by Bevin Hansson.

llvm-svn: 330759
2018-04-24 19:21:04 +00:00
Richard Smith 69cf59ed26 PR36645: Go looking for an appropriate array bound when constant-evaluating a
name of an array object.

llvm-svn: 327099
2018-03-09 02:00:01 +00:00
Jordan Rose d4503da40c Unnamed bitfields don't block constant evaluation of constexpr ctors
C++14 [dcl.constexpr]p4 states that in the body of a constexpr
constructor,

> every non-variant non-static data member and base class sub-object
  shall be initialized

However, [class.bit]p2 notes that

> Unnamed bit-fields are not members and cannot be initialized.

Therefore, we should make sure to filter them out of the check that
all fields are initialized.

Fixing this makes the constant evaluator a bit smarter, and
specifically allows constexpr constructors to avoid tripping
-Wglobal-constructors when the type contains unnamed bitfields.

Reviewed at https://reviews.llvm.org/D39035.

llvm-svn: 316408
2017-10-24 02:17:07 +00:00
Richard Smith 6f4f0f1865 Implement current CWG direction for support of arrays of unknown bounds in
constant expressions.

We permit array-to-pointer decay on such arrays, but disallow pointer
arithmetic (since we do not know whether it will have defined behavior).

This is based on r311970 and r301822 (the former by me and the latter by Robert
Haberlach). Between then and now, two things have changed: we have committee
feedback indicating that this is indeed the right direction, and the code
broken by this change has been fixed.

This is necessary in C++17 to continue accepting certain forms of non-type
template argument involving arrays of unknown bound.

llvm-svn: 316245
2017-10-20 22:56:25 +00:00
Richard Smith 263a0a33cc Don't warn about runtime behavior problems in variable initializers that we
know are going to be constant-evaluated.

Any relevant diagnostics should be produced by constant expression evaluation.

llvm-svn: 314067
2017-09-23 18:27:11 +00:00
Martin Bohme 1a7c369e08 Add test case that was broken by r311970.
See also discussion here:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL301963

As far as I can tell, this discussion was never resolved.

llvm-svn: 312109
2017-08-30 10:44:51 +00:00
Martin Bohme 542c84b2a1 Revert "Improve constant expression evaluation of arrays of unknown bound."
This reverts commit r311970.

Breaks internal tests.

llvm-svn: 312108
2017-08-30 10:44:46 +00:00
Richard Smith 2cd5604823 Improve constant expression evaluation of arrays of unknown bound.
The standard is not clear on how these are supposed to be handled, so we
conservatively treat as non-constant any cases whose value is unknown or whose
evaluation might result in undefined behavior.

llvm-svn: 311970
2017-08-29 01:52:13 +00:00
Richard Smith f6766bd246 Check that the initializer of a non-dependent constexpr variable is constant even within templates.
llvm-svn: 306327
2017-06-26 20:33:42 +00:00
Nick Lewycky c190f96b7d Revert r301785 (and r301787) because they caused PR32864.
The fix is that ExprEvaluatorBase::VisitInitListExpr should handle transparent exprs instead of exprs with one element. Fixing that uncovers one testcase failure because the AST for "constexpr _Complex float test2 = {1};" is wrong (the _Complex prvalue should not be const-qualified), and a number of test failures in test/OpenMP where the captured stmt contains an InitListExpr that is in syntactic form.

llvm-svn: 301891
2017-05-02 01:06:16 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 499968f8a5 Handle expressions with non-literal types like ignored expressions if we are supposed to continue evaluating them.
Also fix a crash casting a derived nullptr to a virtual base.

llvm-svn: 301785
2017-05-01 02:03:23 +00:00
Richard Smith 64cb9ca456 PR32034: Evaluate _Atomic(T) in-place when T is a class or array type.
This is necessary in order for the evaluation of an _Atomic initializer for
those types to have an associated object, which an initializer for class or
array type needs.

llvm-svn: 295886
2017-02-22 22:09:50 +00:00
Richard Smith d6cc198d53 Improve fix for PR28739
Don't try to map an APSInt addend to an int64_t in pointer arithmetic before
bounds-checking it. This gives more consistent behavior (outside C++11, we
consistently use 2s complement semantics for both pointer and integer overflow
in constant expressions) and fixes some cases where in C++11 we would fail to
properly check for out-of-bounds pointer arithmetic (if the 2s complement
64-bit overflow landed us back in-bounds).

In passing, also fix some cases where we'd perform possibly-overflowing
arithmetic on CharUnits (which have a signed underlying type) during constant
expression evaluation.

llvm-svn: 293595
2017-01-31 02:23:02 +00:00
Richard Smith d6a150829b PR23135: Don't instantiate constexpr functions referenced in unevaluated operands where possible.
This implements something like the current direction of DR1581: we use a narrow
syntactic check to determine the set of places where a constant expression
could be evaluated, and only instantiate a constexpr function or variable if
it's referenced in one of those contexts, or is odr-used.

It's not yet clear whether this is the right set of syntactic locations; we
currently consider all contexts within templates that would result in odr-uses
after instantiation, and contexts within list-initialization (narrowing
conversions take another victim...), as requiring instantiation. We could in
principle restrict the former cases more (only const integral / reference
variable initializers, and contexts in which a constant expression is required,
perhaps). However, this is sufficient to allow us to accept libstdc++ code,
which relies on GCC's behavior (which appears to be somewhat similar to this
approach).

llvm-svn: 291318
2017-01-07 00:48:55 +00:00
Richard Smith 1cf4541c4f Bail out if we try to build a DeclRefExpr naming an invalid declaration.
Most code paths would already bail out in this case, but certain paths,
particularly overload resolution and typo correction, would not. Carrying on
with an invalid declaration could in some cases result in crashes due to
downstream code relying on declaration invariants that are not necessarily
met for invalid declarations, and in other cases just resulted in undesirable
follow-on diagnostics.

llvm-svn: 291030
2017-01-04 23:14:16 +00:00
George Burgess IV b531698ff0 Emit CCEDiags when evaluating a const variable.
This addresses post-review feedback from r290577.

llvm-svn: 290584
2016-12-27 05:33:20 +00:00
George Burgess IV e37633713d Add the alloc_size attribute to clang, attempt 2.
This is a recommit of r290149, which was reverted in r290169 due to msan
failures. msan was failing because we were calling
`isMostDerivedAnUnsizedArray` on an invalid designator, which caused us
to read uninitialized memory. To fix this, the logic of the caller of
said function was simplified, and we now have a `!Invalid` assert in
`isMostDerivedAnUnsizedArray`, so we can catch this particular bug more
easily in the future.

Fingers crossed that this patch sticks this time. :)

Original commit message:

This patch does three things:
- Gives us the alloc_size attribute in clang, which lets us infer the
  number of bytes handed back to us by malloc/realloc/calloc/any user
  functions that act in a similar manner.
- Teaches our constexpr evaluator that evaluating some `const` variables
  is OK sometimes. This is why we have a change in
  test/SemaCXX/constant-expression-cxx11.cpp and other seemingly
  unrelated tests. Richard Smith okay'ed this idea some time ago in
  person.
- Uniques some Blocks in CodeGen, which was reviewed separately at
  D26410. Lack of uniquing only really shows up as a problem when
  combined with our new eagerness in the face of const.

llvm-svn: 290297
2016-12-22 02:50:20 +00:00
Chandler Carruth d7738fe6ad Revert r290149: Add the alloc_size attribute to clang.
This commit fails MSan when running test/CodeGen/object-size.c in
a confusing way. After some discussion with George, it isn't really
clear what is going on here. We can make the MSan failure go away by
testing for the invalid bit, but *why* things are invalid isn't clear.
And yet, other code in the surrounding area is doing precisely this and
testing for invalid.

George is going to take a closer look at this to better understand the
nature of the failure and recommit it, for now backing it out to clean
up MSan builds.

llvm-svn: 290169
2016-12-20 08:28:19 +00:00
George Burgess IV a747027bc6 Add the alloc_size attribute to clang.
This patch does three things:

- Gives us the alloc_size attribute in clang, which lets us infer the
  number of bytes handed back to us by malloc/realloc/calloc/any user
  functions that act in a similar manner.
- Teaches our constexpr evaluator that evaluating some `const` variables
  is OK sometimes. This is why we have a change in
  test/SemaCXX/constant-expression-cxx11.cpp and other seemingly
  unrelated tests. Richard Smith okay'ed this idea some time ago in
  person.
- Uniques some Blocks in CodeGen, which was reviewed separately at
  D26410. Lack of uniquing only really shows up as a problem when
  combined with our new eagerness in the face of const.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D14274

llvm-svn: 290149
2016-12-20 01:05:42 +00:00
Richard Smith 30e304e2a6 Remove custom handling of array copies in lambda by-value array capture and
copy constructors of classes with array members, instead using
ArrayInitLoopExpr to represent the initialization loop.

This exposed a bug in the static analyzer where it was unable to differentiate
between zero-initialized and unknown array values, which has also been fixed
here.

llvm-svn: 289618
2016-12-14 00:03:17 +00:00
Richard Smith b8c0f553ed DR1295 and cleanup for P0135R1: Make our initialization code more directly
mirror the description in the standard. Per DR1295, this means that binding a
const / rvalue reference to a bit-field no longer "binds directly", and per
P0135R1, this means that we materialize a temporary in reference binding
after adjusting cv-qualifiers and before performing a derived-to-base cast.

In C++11 onwards, this should have fixed the last case where we would
materialize a temporary of the wrong type (with a subobject adjustment inside
the MaterializeTemporaryExpr instead of outside), but we still have to deal
with that possibility in C++98, unless we want to start using xvalues to
represent materialized temporaries there too.

llvm-svn: 289250
2016-12-09 18:49:13 +00:00
Richard Smith b3189a1802 DR1213: element access on an array xvalue or prvalue produces an xvalue. In the
latter case, a temporary array object is materialized, and can be
lifetime-extended by binding a reference to the member access. Likewise, in an
array-to-pointer decay, an rvalue array is materialized before being converted
into a pointer.

This caused IR generation to stop treating file-scope array compound literals
as having static storage duration in some cases in C++; that has been rectified
by modeling such a compound literal as an lvalue. This also improves clang's
compatibility with GCC for those cases.

llvm-svn: 288654
2016-12-05 07:49:14 +00:00
Richard Smith 8dbc6b2617 Make diagnostic for use of default member initializer before enclosing class is
complete a little more general; it is produced in other cases than the one that
it previously talked about.

llvm-svn: 287713
2016-11-22 22:55:12 +00:00
Faisal Vali 0528a31ddf Fix PR28366: Handle variables from enclosing local scopes more gracefully during constant expression evaluation.
Only look for a variable's value in the constant expression evaluation activation frame, if the variable was indeed declared in that frame, otherwise it might be a constant expression and be usable within a nested local scope or emit an error.


void f(char c) { 
  struct X {
    static constexpr char f() { 
      return c; // error gracefully here as opposed to crashing.
    }
  };
  int I = X::f();
}

llvm-svn: 286748
2016-11-13 06:09:16 +00:00
Richard Smith 5e9746f520 DR583, DR1512: Implement a rewrite to C++'s 'composite pointer type' rules.
This has two significant effects:

1) Direct relational comparisons between null pointer constants (0 and nullopt)
   and pointers are now ill-formed. This was always the case for C, and it
   appears that C++ only ever permitted by accident. For instance, cases like
     nullptr < &a
   are now rejected.

2) Comparisons and conditional operators between differently-cv-qualified
   pointer types now work, and produce a composite type that both source
   pointer types can convert to (when possible). For instance, comparison
   between 'int **' and 'const int **' is now valid, and uses an intermediate
   type of 'const int *const *'.

Clang previously supported #2 as an extension.

We do not accept the cases in #1 as an extension. I've tested a fair amount of
code to check that this doesn't break it, but if it turns out that someone is
relying on this, we can easily add it back as an extension.

This is a re-commit of r284800.

llvm-svn: 284890
2016-10-21 22:00:42 +00:00
Renato Golin 41189656ed Revert "DR583, DR1512: Implement a rewrite to C++'s 'composite pointer type' rules."
This reverts commit r284800, as it failed all ARM/AArch64 bots.

llvm-svn: 284811
2016-10-21 08:03:49 +00:00
Richard Smith 0c1c53e3fa DR583, DR1512: Implement a rewrite to C++'s 'composite pointer type' rules.
This has two significant effects:

1) Direct relational comparisons between null pointer constants (0 and nullopt)
   and pointers are now ill-formed. This was always the case for C, and it
   appears that C++ only ever permitted by accident. For instance, cases like
     nullptr < &a
   are now rejected.

2) Comparisons and conditional operators between differently-cv-qualified
   pointer types now work, and produce a composite type that both source
   pointer types can convert to (when possible). For instance, comparison
   between 'int **' and 'const int **' is now valid, and uses an intermediate
   type of 'const int *const *'.

Clang previously supported #2 as an extension.

We do not accept the cases in #1 as an extension. I've tested a fair amount of
code to check that this doesn't break it, but if it turns out that someone is
relying on this, we can easily add it back as an extension.

llvm-svn: 284800
2016-10-21 02:36:37 +00:00
Richard Smith 5179eb7821 P0136R1, DR1573, DR1645, DR1715, DR1736, DR1903, DR1941, DR1959, DR1991:
Replace inheriting constructors implementation with new approach, voted into
C++ last year as a DR against C++11.

Instead of synthesizing a set of derived class constructors for each inherited
base class constructor, we make the constructors of the base class visible to
constructor lookup in the derived class, using the normal rules for
using-declarations.

For constructors, UsingShadowDecl now has a ConstructorUsingShadowDecl derived
class that tracks the requisite additional information. We create shadow
constructors (not found by name lookup) in the derived class to model the
actual initialization, and have a new expression node,
CXXInheritedCtorInitExpr, to model the initialization of a base class from such
a constructor. (This initialization is special because it performs real perfect
forwarding of arguments.)

In cases where argument forwarding is not possible (for inalloca calls,
variadic calls, and calls with callee parameter cleanup), the shadow inheriting
constructor is not emitted and instead we directly emit the initialization code
into the caller of the inherited constructor.

Note that this new model is not perfectly compatible with the old model in some
corner cases. In particular:
 * if B inherits a private constructor from A, and C uses that constructor to
   construct a B, then we previously required that A befriends B and B
   befriends C, but the new rules require A to befriend C directly, and
 * if a derived class has its own constructors (and so its implicit default
   constructor is suppressed), it may still inherit a default constructor from
   a base class

llvm-svn: 274049
2016-06-28 19:03:57 +00:00
Richard Smith c0d04a2567 Fix rejects-valid on constexpr function that accesses a not-yet-defined 'extern
const' variable. That variable might be defined as 'constexpr', so we cannot
prove that a use of it could never be a constant expression.

llvm-svn: 270774
2016-05-25 22:06:25 +00:00
Olivier Goffart 8bc0caa2e9 Fix ICE with constexpr and friend functions
Fix a crash while parsing this code:

  struct X  {
    friend constexpr int foo(X*) { return 12; }
    static constexpr int j = foo(static_cast<X*>(nullptr));
  };

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16973

llvm-svn: 260675
2016-02-12 12:34:44 +00:00
Richard Smith 0c6124ba82 PR17381: Treat undefined behavior during expression evaluation as an unmodeled
side-effect, so that we don't allow speculative evaluation of such expressions
during code generation.

This caused a diagnostic quality regression, so fix constant expression
diagnostics to prefer either the first "can't be constant folded" diagnostic or
the first "not a constant expression" diagnostic depending on the kind of
evaluation we're doing. This was always the intent, but didn't quite work
correctly before.

This results in certain initializers that used to be constant initializers to
no longer be; in particular, things like:

  float f = 1e100;

are no longer accepted in C. This seems appropriate, as such constructs would
lead to code being executed if sanitizers are enabled.

llvm-svn: 254574
2015-12-03 01:36:22 +00:00
Richard Smith d209967a68 Remove warning on over-wide bit-field of boolean type; there's no risk that
someone thought all the bits would be value bits in this case.

Also fix the wording of the warning -- it claimed that the width of 'bool' is
8, which is not correct; the width is 1 bit, whereas the size is 8 bits in our
implementation.

llvm-svn: 248435
2015-09-23 22:07:44 +00:00
Rachel Craik 022bdc7d73 C11 _Bool bitfield diagnostic
Summary: Implement DR262 (for C). This patch will mainly affect bitfields of type _Bool

Reviewers: fraggamuffin, rsmith

Subscribers: hubert.reinterpretcast, cfe-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10018

llvm-svn: 247618
2015-09-14 21:27:36 +00:00
Richard Smith 52a980a97f PR24597: Fix in-place evaluation of call expressions to provide a proper "this"
pointer to an RVO construction of a returned object.

llvm-svn: 246263
2015-08-28 02:43:42 +00:00
Nico Weber 337d5aa58f Move fixit for const init from note to diag, weaken to warning in MS mode.
r235046 turned "extern __declspec(selectany) int a;" from a declaration into
a definition to fix PR23242 (required for compatibility with mc.exe output).
However, this broke parsing Windows headers: A  d3d11 headers contain something
like

  struct SomeStruct {};
  extern const __declspec(selectany) SomeStruct some_struct;

This is now a definition, and const objects either need an explicit default
ctor or an initializer so this errors out with 

  d3d11.h(1065,48) :
    error: default initialization of an object of const type
           'const CD3D11_DEFAULT' without a user-provided default constructor

(cl.exe just doesn't implement this rule, independent of selectany.)

To work around this, weaken this error into a warning for selectany decls
in microsoft mode, and recover with zero-initialization.

Doing this is a bit hairy since it adds a fixit on an error emitted
by InitializationSequence – this means it needs to build a correct AST, which
in turn means InitializationSequence::Failed() cannot return true when this
fixit is applied. As a workaround, the patch adds a fixit member to
InitializationSequence, and InitializationSequence::Perform() prints the
diagnostic if the fixit member is set right after its call to Diagnose.
That function is usually called when InitializationSequences are used –
InitListChecker::PerformEmptyInit() doesn't call it, but the InitListChecker
case never performs default-initialization, so this is technically OK.

This is the alternative, original fix for PR20208 that got reviewed in the
thread "[patch] Improve diagnostic on default-initializing const variables
(PR20208)".  This change basically reverts r213725, adds the original fix for
PR20208, and makes the error a warning in Microsoft mode.

llvm-svn: 235166
2015-04-17 08:32:38 +00:00
Richard Smith 46598206b5 PR17938: This has already been fixed, add regression test.
llvm-svn: 229146
2015-02-13 19:49:59 +00:00
David Majnemer 0fe3f4d731 Sema: Don't crash when variable is redefined as a constexpr function
We have a diagnostic describing that constexpr changed in C++14 when
compiling in C++11 mode.  While doing this, it examines the previous
declaration and assumes that it is a function.  However it is possible,
in the context of error recovery, for this to not be the case.

llvm-svn: 225518
2015-01-09 10:33:23 +00:00
Aaron Ballman 6c93b3e29c Adding a -Wunused-value warning for expressions with side effects used in an unevaluated expression context, such as sizeof(), or decltype(). Also adds a similar warning when the expression passed to typeid() *is* evaluated, since it is equally likely that the user would expect the expression operand to be unevaluated in that case.
llvm-svn: 224465
2014-12-17 21:57:17 +00:00
Richard Smith 513955c487 Support constant evaluation for member calls on std::initializer_list
temporaries.

llvm-svn: 224449
2014-12-17 19:24:30 +00:00
David Majnemer 8c92b87cd0 AST: Limit zero-sized constexpr behavior to array types
Restricting this "extension" to array types maximizes our standards
conformance while not miscompiling real-world programs.

llvm-svn: 224215
2014-12-14 08:40:47 +00:00
David Majnemer 2887ad35c5 Sema: Constexpr functions must have return statements which have an expr
clang lets programmers be pretty cavalier when it comes to void return
statements in functions which have non-void return types.  However, we
cannot be so forgiving in constexpr functions: evaluation will go off
the rails very quickly.

Instead, keep the return statement in the AST but mark the function as
invalid.  Doing so gives us nice diagnostics while making constexpr
evaluation halt.

This fixes PR21859.

llvm-svn: 224189
2014-12-13 08:12:56 +00:00
David Majnemer 27db35878d AST: Incomplete types might be zero sized
Comparing the address of an object with an incomplete type might return
true with a 'distinct' object if the former has a size of zero.
However, such an object should compare unequal with null.

llvm-svn: 224040
2014-12-11 19:36:24 +00:00
David Majnemer b511603281 AST: Don't assume two zero sized objects live at different addresses
Zero sized objects may overlap with each other or any other object.

This fixes PR21786.

llvm-svn: 223852
2014-12-09 23:32:34 +00:00
Richard Smith be6dd818fb Fix bug where a trivial constexpr copy/move operation couldn't copy from an
empty non-constexpr object. Such a copy doesn't break any of the constexpr
rules.

llvm-svn: 222387
2014-11-19 21:27:17 +00:00
Reid Kleckner d60b82f93e Handle use of default member initializers before end of outermost class
Specifically, when we have this situation:
  struct A {
    template <typename T> struct B {
      int m1 = sizeof(A);
    };
    B<int> m2;
  };

We can't parse m1's initializer eagerly because we need A to be
complete.  Therefore we wait until the end of A's class scope to parse
it. However, we can trigger instantiation of B before the end of A,
which will attempt to instantiate the field decls eagerly, and it would
build a bad field decl instantiation that said it had an initializer but
actually lacked one.

Fixed by deferring instantiation of default member initializers until
they are needed during constructor analysis. This addresses a long
standing FIXME in the code.

Fixes PR19195.

Reviewed By: rsmith

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5690

llvm-svn: 222192
2014-11-17 23:36:45 +00:00