process, perform a number of refactorings:
- Move MiscNameMangler member functions to MangleContext
- Remove GlobalDecl dependency from MangleContext
- Make MangleContext abstract and move Itanium/Microsoft functionality
to their own classes/files
- Implement ASTContext::createMangleContext and have CodeGen use it
No (intended) functionality change.
llvm-svn: 123386
Currently, all AST consumers are located in the Frontend library,
meaning that in a shared library configuration, Frontend has a
dependency on Rewrite, Checker and CodeGen. This is suboptimal for
clients which only wish to make use of the frontend. CodeGen in
particular introduces a large number of unwanted dependencies.
This patch breaks the dependency by moving all AST consumers with
dependencies on Rewrite, Checker and/or CodeGen to their respective
libraries. The patch therefore introduces dependencies in the other
direction (i.e. from Rewrite, Checker and CodeGen to Frontend).
After applying this patch, Clang builds correctly using CMake and
shared libraries ("cmake -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON").
N.B. This patch includes file renames which are indicated in the
patch body.
Changes in this revision of the patch:
- Fixed some copy-paste mistakes in the header files
- Modified certain aspects of the coding to comply with the LLVM
Coding Standards
llvm-svn: 106010
The macros required for DeclNodes use have changed to match the use of
StmtNodes. The FooFirst enumerator constants have been named firstFoo
to match usage elsewhere.
llvm-svn: 105165
This class only supports name mangling (which is apparently used during C/ObjC
codegen). For now only the Itanium C++ ABI is supported. Patches to add a
second C++ ABI are forthcoming.
llvm-svn: 104630
ABI to the CodeGen library. Since C++ code-generation is so
incomplete, we can't exercise much of this mangling code. However, a
few smoke tests show that it's doing the same thing as GCC. When C++
codegen matures, we'll extend the ABI tester to verify name-mangling
as well, and complete the implementation here.
At this point, the major client of name mangling is in the uses of the
new "overloadable" attribute in C, which allows overloading. Any
"overloadable" function in C (or in an extern "C" block in C++) will
be mangled the same way that the corresponding C++ function would be
mangled.
llvm-svn: 64413