With MSVC, PCH files are created along with an object file that needs to
be linked into the final library or executable. That object file
contains the code generated when building the headers. In particular, it
will include definitions of inline dllexport functions, and because they
are emitted in this object file, other files using the PCH do not need
to emit them. See the bug for an example.
This patch makes clang-cl match MSVC's behaviour in this regard, causing
significant compile-time savings when building dlls using precompiled
headers.
For example, in a 64-bit optimized shared library build of Chromium with
PCH, it reduces the binary size and compile time of
stroke_opacity_custom.obj from 9315564 bytes to 3659629 bytes and 14.6
to 6.63 s. The wall-clock time of building blink_core.dll goes from
38m41s to 22m33s. ("user" time goes from 1979m to 1142m).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48426
llvm-svn: 335466
Summary:
This kind of functionality is useful to other project apart from clang.
LLDB works with version numbers a lot, but it does not have a convenient
abstraction for this. Moving this class to a lower level library allows
it to be freely used within LLDB.
Since this class is used in a lot of places in clang, and it used to be
in the clang namespace, it seemed appropriate to add it to the list of
adopted classes in LLVM.h to avoid prefixing all uses with "llvm::".
Also, I didn't find any tests specific for this class, so I wrote a
couple of quick ones for the more interesting bits of functionality.
Reviewers: zturner, erik.pilkington
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47887
llvm-svn: 334399
Provide some free functions to reduce verbosity of endian-writing
a single value, and replace the endianness template parameter with
a field.
Part of PR37466.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47032
llvm-svn: 332757
For example, given:
void fn() {
struct T *p0;
struct T { int i; } *p1;
}
-ast-print produced:
void fn() {
struct T { int i; } *p0;
struct T { int i; } *p1;
}
Compiling that fails with a redefinition error.
Given:
void fn() {
struct T *p0;
struct __attribute__((deprecated)) T *p1;
}
-ast-print dropped the attribute.
Details:
For a tag specifier (that is, struct/union/class/enum used as a type
specifier in a declaration) that was also a tag declaration (that is,
first occurrence of the tag) or tag redeclaration (that is, later
occurrence that specifies attributes or a member list), clang printed
the tag specifier as either (1) the full tag definition if one
existed, or (2) the first tag declaration otherwise. Redefinition
errors were sometimes introduced, as in the first example above. Even
when that was impossible because no member list was ever specified,
attributes were sometimes lost, thus changing semantics and
diagnostics, as in the second example above.
This patch fixes a major culprit for these problems. It does so by
creating an ElaboratedType with a new OwnedDecl member wherever an
occurrence of a tag type is a (re)declaration of that tag type.
PrintingPolicy's IncludeTagDefinition used to trigger printing of the
member list, attributes, etc. for a tag specifier by using a tag
(re)declaration selected as described above. Now, it triggers the
same thing except it uses the tag (re)declaration stored in the
OwnedDecl. Of course, other tooling can now make use of the new
OwnedDecl as well.
Also, to be more faithful to the original source, this patch
suppresses printing of attributes inherited from previous
declarations.
Reviewed by: rsmith, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45463
llvm-svn: 332281
This is similar to the LLVM change https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290.
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\@brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\@brief //g' $i & done
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46320
llvm-svn: 331834
FunctionProtoType.
We previously re-evaluated the expression each time we wanted to know whether
the type is noexcept or not. We now evaluate the expression exactly once.
This is not quite "no functional change": it fixes a crasher bug during AST
deserialization where we would try to evaluate the noexcept specification in a
situation where we have not deserialized sufficient portions of the AST to
permit such evaluation.
llvm-svn: 331428
When a '>>' token is split into two '>' tokens (in C++11 onwards), or (as an
extension) when we do the same for other tokens starting with a '>', we can't
just use a location pointing to the first '>' as the location of the split
token, because that would result in our miscomputing the length and spelling
for the token. As a consequence, for example, a refactoring replacing 'A<X>'
with something else would sometimes replace one character too many, and
similarly diagnostics highlighting a template-id source range would highlight
one character too many.
Fix this by creating an expansion range covering the first character of the
'>>' token, whose spelling is '>'. For this to work, we generalize the
expansion range of a macro FileID to be either a token range (the common case)
or a character range (used in this new case).
llvm-svn: 331155
This patch is a tweak of changyu's patch: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40381. It differs in that the recognition of the 'concept' token is moved into the machinery that recognizes declaration-specifiers - this allows us to leverage the attribute handling machinery more seamlessly.
See the test file to get a sense of the basic parsing that this patch supports.
There is much more work to be done before concepts are usable...
Thanks Changyu!
llvm-svn: 330794
Right now we only use this information in one place, immediately after
we calculate it, but it's still nice information to have. The Swift
project is going to use this to tidy up its "API notes" feature (see
past discussion on cfe-dev that never quite converged).
Reviewed by Bruno Cardoso Lopes.
llvm-svn: 330452
registers.
This patch fixes a bug in r328731 that caused structs transitively
containing __weak fields to be passed in registers. The patch replaces
the flag RecordDecl::CanPassInRegisters with a 2-bit enum that indicates
whether the struct or structs containing the struct are forced to be
passed indirectly.
This reapplies r329617. r329617 didn't specify the underlying type for
enum ArgPassingKind, which caused regression tests to fail on a windows
bot.
rdar://problem/39194693
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45384
llvm-svn: 329635
registers.
This patch fixes a bug in r328731 that caused structs transitively
containing __weak fields to be passed in registers. The patch replaces
the flag RecordDecl::CanPassInRegisters with a 2-bit enum that indicates
whether the struct or structs containing the struct are forced to be
passed indirectly.
rdar://problem/39194693
llvm-svn: 329617
Found via codespell -q 3 -I ../clang-whitelist.txt
Where whitelist consists of:
archtype
cas
classs
checkk
compres
definit
frome
iff
inteval
ith
lod
methode
nd
optin
ot
pres
statics
te
thru
Patch by luzpaz! (This is a subset of D44188 that applies cleanly with a few
files that have dubious fixes reverted.)
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44188
llvm-svn: 329399
layout" rules.
The new rules say that a standard-layout struct has its first non-static
data member and all base classes at offset 0, and consider a class to
not be standard-layout if that would result in multiple subobjects of a
single type having the same address.
We track "is C++11 standard-layout class" separately from "is
standard-layout class" so that the ABIs that need this information can
still use it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45176
llvm-svn: 329332
ObjC and ObjC++ pass non-trivial structs in a way that is incompatible
with each other. For example:
typedef struct {
id f0;
__weak id f1;
} S;
// this code is compiled in c++.
extern "C" {
void foo(S s);
}
void caller() {
// the caller passes the parameter indirectly and destructs it.
foo(S());
}
// this function is compiled in c.
// 'a' is passed directly and is destructed in the callee.
void foo(S a) {
}
This patch fixes the incompatibility by passing and returning structs
with __strong or weak fields using the C ABI in C++ mode. __strong and
__weak fields in a struct do not cause the struct to be destructed in
the caller and __strong fields do not cause the struct to be passed
indirectly.
Also, this patch fixes the microsoft ABI bug mentioned here:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D41039?id=128767#inline-364710
rdar://problem/38887866
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44908
llvm-svn: 328731
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before
sorting. This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined
sorting order of objects having the same key.
To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of
std::sort.
llvm-svn: 328636
This patch uses the infrastructure added in r326307 for enabling
non-trivial fields to be declared in C structs to allow __weak fields in
C structs in ARC.
This recommits r327206, which was reverted because it caused
module-enabled builders to fail. I discovered that the
CXXRecordDecl::CanPassInRegisters flag wasn't being set correctly in
some cases after I moved it to RecordDecl.
Thanks to Eric Liu for helping me investigate the bug.
rdar://problem/33599681
https://reviews.llvm.org/D44095
llvm-svn: 327870
The patch adds nocf_check target independent attribute for disabling checks that were enabled by cf-protection flag.
The attribute can be appertained to functions and function pointers.
Attribute name follows GCC's similar attribute name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41880
llvm-svn: 327768
This patch uses the infrastructure added in r326307 for enabling
non-trivial fields to be declared in C structs to allow __weak fields in
C structs in ARC.
rdar://problem/33599681
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44095
llvm-svn: 327206
This patch removes the HashString function from StringExtraces and
replaces its uses with calls to djbHash from DJB.h.
This change is *almost* NFC. While the algorithm is identical, the
djbHash implementation in StringExtras used 0 as its default seed while
the implementation in DJB uses 5381. The latter has been shown to result
in less collisions and improved avalanching and is used by the DWARF
accelerator tables.
Because some test were implicitly relying on the hash order, I've
reverted to using zero as a seed for the following two files:
lld/include/lld/Core/SymbolTable.h
llvm/lib/Support/StringMap.cpp
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43615
llvm-svn: 326091
It looks like some of our tests depend on the ordering of hashed values.
I'm reverting my changes while I try to reproduce and fix this locally.
Failing builds:
lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/lld-x86_64-darwin13/builds/18388
lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-cmake-x86_64-sde-avx512-linux/builds/6743
lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/llvm-clang-lld-x86_64-scei-ps4-windows10pro-fast/builds/15607
llvm-svn: 326082
This removes the HashString function from StringExtraces and replaces
its uses with calls to djbHash from DJB.h
This is *almost* NFC. While the algorithm is identical, the djbHash
implementation in StringExtras used 0 as its seed while the
implementation in DJB uses 5381. The latter has been shown to result in
less collisions and improved avalanching.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D43615
(cherry picked from commit 77f7f965bc9499a9ae768a296ca5a1f7347d1d2c)
llvm-svn: 326081
diagnostic settings using _Pragma within a macro.
The AST writer had previously been assuming that all diagnostic state
transitions would occur within a FileID corresponding to a file. When a
diagnostic state change occured within a macro, it was unable to form a
location for that state change and would instead corrupt the diagnostic state
of the "root" node (and thus that of the main compilation).
Also introduce a "#pragma clang __debug diag_mapping" debugging utility
that I added to track this issue down.
llvm-svn: 324695
The 'trivial_abi' attribute can be applied to a C++ class, struct, or
union. It makes special functions of the annotated class (the destructor
and copy/move constructors) to be trivial for the purpose of calls and,
as a result, enables the annotated class or containing classes to be
passed or returned using the C ABI for the underlying type.
When a type that is considered trivial for the purpose of calls despite
having a non-trivial destructor (which happens only when the class type
or one of its subobjects is a 'trivial_abi' class) is passed to a
function, the callee is responsible for destroying the object.
For more background, see the discussions that took place on the mailing
list:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2017-November/055955.htmlhttp://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20180101/thread.html#214043
rdar://problem/35204524
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41039
llvm-svn: 324269
TemplateTemplateParmDecls of alias templates ended-up serialized as 'file-level decls' which was causing a crash while trying to index a PCH/module file that contained them.
Commit makes sure TemplateTemplateParmDecls are not recorded as such kind of decls.
Fixes crash of rdar://36608297
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42588
llvm-svn: 323549
The skipped preprocessor ranges are now serialized in the AST PCH file. This fixes, for example, libclang's clang_getSkippedRanges() returning zero ranges after reparsing a translation unit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20124
llvm-svn: 322503
- reverts r321622, r321625, and r321626.
- the use of bit-fields is still resulting in warnings - even though we can use static-asserts to harden the code and ensure the bit-fields are wide enough. The bots still complain of warnings being seen.
- to silence the warnings requires specifying the bit-fields with the underlying enum type (as opposed to the enum type itself), which then requires lots of unnecessary static casts of each enumerator within DeclSpec to the underlying-type, which even though could be seen as implementation details, it does hamper readability - and given the additional litterings, makes me question the value of the change.
So in short - I give up (for now at least).
Sorry about the noise.
llvm-svn: 321628
- Since these enums are used as bit-fields - for the bit-fields to be interpreted as unsigned, the underlying type must be specified as unsigned.
Previous failed attempt - wherein I did not specify an underlying type - was the sum of:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rC321614https://reviews.llvm.org/rC321615
llvm-svn: 321622
- the enum changes to TypeSpecifierType are breaking some tests - and will require a more careful integration.
Sorry about rushing these changes - thought I could sneak them in prior to heading out for new years ;)
llvm-svn: 321616
The current code would hit an assert in ASTWriter when trying to write
out the filename for a line table entry that didn't have any. Fix this
by allowing the -1 sentinel value to round-trip through serialization.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40746
llvm-svn: 319707
When a preamble ends in a conditional preprocessor block that is being
skipped, the preprocessor needs to continue skipping that block when
the preamble is used.
This fixes PR34570.
llvm-svn: 317308
for instantiating its definition.
We model the 'inline'ness as being instantiated with the static data member in
order to track whether the declaration has become a definition yet.
llvm-svn: 317147
This feature is not (yet) approved by the C++ committee, so this is liable to
be reverted or significantly modified based on committee feedback.
No functionality change intended for existing code (a new type must be defined
in namespace std to take advantage of this feature).
llvm-svn: 315662
This patch relates to: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33666 This adds support
for template parameters to be passed to the address_space attribute.
The main goal is to add further flexibility to the attribute and allow
for it to be used easily with templates.
The main additions are a new type (DependentAddressSpaceType) alongside
its TypeLoc and its mangling. As well as the logic required to support
dependent address spaces which mainly resides in TreeTransform.h and
SemaType.cpp.
llvm-svn: 314649
Introduce a new "export_as" directive for top-level modules, which
indicates that the current module is a "private" module whose symbols
will eventually be exported through the named "public" module. This is
in support of a common pattern in the Darwin ecosystem where a single
public framework is constructed of several private frameworks, with
(currently) header duplication and some support from the linker.
Addresses rdar://problem/34438420.
llvm-svn: 313316
This follows the scheme agreed with Nathan Sidwell, which can be found here:
https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/cxx-modules?action=AttachFile
This will be proposed to the itanium-cxx-abi list once we have some experience
with how well it works; the ABI for this TS should be considered unstable until
it is part of the Itanium C++ ABI.
llvm-svn: 312467
Extend the -fmodule-file option to support the [<name>=]<file> value format.
If the name is omitted, then the old semantics is preserved (the module file
is loaded whether needed or not). If the name is specified, then the mapping
is treated as just another prebuilt module search mechanism, similar to
-fprebuilt-module-path, and the module file is only loaded if actually used
(e.g., via import). With one exception: this mapping also overrides module
file references embedded in other modules (which can be useful if module files
are moved/renamed as often happens during remote compilation).
This override semantics requires some extra work: we now store the module name
in addition to the file name in the serialized AST representation.
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35020
llvm-svn: 312220
Extend the -fmodule-file option to support the [<name>=]<file> value format.
If the name is omitted, then the old semantics is preserved (the module file
is loaded whether needed or not). If the name is specified, then the mapping
is treated as just another prebuilt module search mechanism, similar to
-fprebuilt-module-path, and the module file is only loaded if actually used
(e.g., via import). With one exception: this mapping also overrides module
file references embedded in other modules (which can be useful if module files
are moved/renamed as often happens during remote compilation).
This override semantics requires some extra work: we now store the module name
in addition to the file name in the serialized AST representation.
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35020
llvm-svn: 312105
constructors when deciding whether classes should be passed indirectly.
This fixes ABI differences between Clang and GCC:
* Previously, Clang ignored the move constructor when making this
determination. It now takes the move constructor into account, per
https://github.com/itanium-cxx-abi/cxx-abi/pull/17 (this change may
seem recent, but the ABI change was agreed on the Itanium C++ ABI
list a long time ago).
* Previously, Clang's behavior when the copy constructor was deleted
was unstable -- depending on whether the lazy declaration of the
copy constructor had been triggered, you might get different behavior.
We now eagerly declare the copy constructor whenever its deletedness
is unclear, and ignore deleted copy/move constructors when looking for
a trivial such constructor.
This also fixes an ABI difference between Clang and MSVC:
* If the copy constructor would be implicitly deleted (but has not been
lazily declared yet), for instance because the class has an rvalue
reference member, we would pass it directly. We now pass such a class
indirectly, matching MSVC.
Based on a patch by Vassil Vassilev, which was based on a patch by Bernd
Schmidt, which was based on a patch by Reid Kleckner!
This is a re-commit of r310401, which was reverted in r310464 due to ARM
failures (which should now be fixed).
llvm-svn: 310983
constructors when deciding whether classes should be passed indirectly.
This fixes ABI differences between Clang and GCC:
* Previously, Clang ignored the move constructor when making this
determination. It now takes the move constructor into account, per
https://github.com/itanium-cxx-abi/cxx-abi/pull/17 (this change may
seem recent, but the ABI change was agreed on the Itanium C++ ABI
list a long time ago).
* Previously, Clang's behavior when the copy constructor was deleted
was unstable -- depending on whether the lazy declaration of the
copy constructor had been triggered, you might get different behavior.
We now eagerly declare the copy constructor whenever its deletedness
is unclear, and ignore deleted copy/move constructors when looking for
a trivial such constructor.
This also fixes an ABI difference between Clang and MSVC:
* If the copy constructor would be implicitly deleted (but has not been
lazily declared yet), for instance because the class has an rvalue
reference member, we would pass it directly. We now pass such a class
indirectly, matching MSVC.
llvm-svn: 310401
'#pragma pack (pop)' and suspicious uses of '#pragma pack' in included files
The second recommit (r309106) was reverted because the "non-default #pragma
pack value chages the alignment of struct or union members in the included file"
warning proved to be too aggressive for external projects like Chromium
(https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=749197). This recommit
makes the problematic warning a non-default one, and gives it the
-Wpragma-pack-suspicious-include warning option.
The first recommit (r308441) caused a "non-default #pragma pack value might
change the alignment of struct or union members in the included file" warning
in LLVM itself. This recommit tweaks the added warning to avoid warnings for
#includes that don't have any records that are affected by the non-default
alignment. This tweak avoids the previously emitted warning in LLVM.
Original message:
This commit adds a new -Wpragma-pack warning. It warns in the following cases:
- When a translation unit is missing terminating #pragma pack (pop) directives.
- When entering an included file if the current alignment value as determined
by '#pragma pack' directives is different from the default alignment value.
- When leaving an included file that changed the state of the current alignment
value.
rdar://10184173
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35484
llvm-svn: 309386
The warning fires on non-suspicious code in Chromium. Reverting until a
solution is figured out.
> Recommit r308327 2nd time: Add a warning for missing
> '#pragma pack (pop)' and suspicious uses of '#pragma pack' in included files
>
> The first recommit (r308441) caused a "non-default #pragma pack value might
> change the alignment of struct or union members in the included file" warning
> in LLVM itself. This recommit tweaks the added warning to avoid warnings for
> #includes that don't have any records that are affected by the non-default
> alignment. This tweak avoids the previously emitted warning in LLVM.
>
> Original message:
>
> This commit adds a new -Wpragma-pack warning. It warns in the following cases:
>
> - When a translation unit is missing terminating #pragma pack (pop) directives.
> - When entering an included file if the current alignment value as determined
> by '#pragma pack' directives is different from the default alignment value.
> - When leaving an included file that changed the state of the current alignment
> value.
>
> rdar://10184173
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35484
llvm-svn: 309186
'#pragma pack (pop)' and suspicious uses of '#pragma pack' in included files
The first recommit (r308441) caused a "non-default #pragma pack value might
change the alignment of struct or union members in the included file" warning
in LLVM itself. This recommit tweaks the added warning to avoid warnings for
#includes that don't have any records that are affected by the non-default
alignment. This tweak avoids the previously emitted warning in LLVM.
Original message:
This commit adds a new -Wpragma-pack warning. It warns in the following cases:
- When a translation unit is missing terminating #pragma pack (pop) directives.
- When entering an included file if the current alignment value as determined
by '#pragma pack' directives is different from the default alignment value.
- When leaving an included file that changed the state of the current alignment
value.
rdar://10184173
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35484
llvm-svn: 309106
This seems to have broken the sanitizer-x86_64-linux buildbot. Reverting until
it's fixed, especially since this landed just before the 5.0 branch.
> This commit adds a new -Wpragma-pack warning. It warns in the following cases:
>
> - When a translation unit is missing terminating #pragma pack (pop) directives.
> - When entering an included file if the current alignment value as determined
> by '#pragma pack' directives is different from the default alignment value.
> - When leaving an included file that changed the state of the current alignment
> value.
>
> rdar://10184173
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35484
llvm-svn: 308455
and suspicious uses of '#pragma pack' in included files
This commit adds a new -Wpragma-pack warning. It warns in the following cases:
- When a translation unit is missing terminating #pragma pack (pop) directives.
- When entering an included file if the current alignment value as determined
by '#pragma pack' directives is different from the default alignment value.
- When leaving an included file that changed the state of the current alignment
value.
rdar://10184173
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35484
llvm-svn: 308441
of '#pragma pack' in included files
This commit adds a new -Wpragma-pack warning. It warns in the following cases:
- When a translation unit is missing terminating #pragma pack (pop) directives.
- When entering an included file if the current alignment value as determined
by '#pragma pack' directives is different from the default alignment value.
- When leaving an included file that changed the state of the current alignment
value.
rdar://10184173
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35484
llvm-svn: 308327
- Extracted the reading of the tokens out into a separate function.
- Replace 'Argument' with 'Parameter' when referring to the identifiers of the macro definition (as opposed to the supplied arguments - MacroArgs - during the macro invocation).
This is in preparation for submitting patches for review to implement __VA_OPT__ which will otherwise just keep lengthening the HandleDefineDirective function and making it less comprehensible.
I will also directly update some extra clang tooling that is broken by the change from Argument to Parameter.
Hopefully the bots will stay appeased.
Thanks!
llvm-svn: 308190
- Extracted the reading of the tokens out into a separate function.
- Replace 'Argument' with 'Parameter' when referring to the identifiers of the macro definition (as opposed to the supplied arguments - MacroArgs - during the macro invocation).
This is in preparation for submitting patches for review to implement __VA_OPT__ which will otherwise just keep lengthening the HandleDefineDirective function and making it less comprehensible.
Thanks!
llvm-svn: 308157
These cases occur frequently for declarations in the global module (above the
module-declaration) in a Modules TS module interface. When we merge a
definition from another module into such a module-private definition, ensure
that we transitively make everything lexically within that definition visible
to that translation unit.
llvm-svn: 307129
This patch adds support for a `header` declaration in a module map to specify
certain `stat` information (currently, size and mtime) about that header file.
This has two purposes:
- It removes the need to eagerly `stat` every file referenced by a module map.
Instead, we track a list of unresolved header files with each size / mtime
(actually, for simplicity, we track submodules with such headers), and when
attempting to look up a header file based on a `FileEntry`, we check if there
are any unresolved header directives with that `FileEntry`'s size / mtime and
perform deferred `stat`s if so.
- It permits a preprocessed module to be compiled without the original files
being present on disk. The only reason we used to need those files was to get
the `stat` information in order to do header -> module lookups when using the
module. If we're provided with the `stat` information in the preprocessed
module, we can avoid requiring the files to exist.
Unlike most `header` directives, if a `header` directive with `stat`
information has no corresponding on-disk file the enclosing module is *not*
marked unavailable (so that behavior is consistent regardless of whether we've
resolved a header directive, and so that preprocessed modules don't get marked
unavailable). We could actually do this for all `header` directives: the only
reason we mark the module unavailable if headers are missing is to give a
diagnostic slightly earlier (rather than waiting until we actually try to build
the module / load and validate its .pcm file).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33703
llvm-svn: 304515
to the original module map.
Also use the path and name of the original module map when emitting that
information into the .pcm file. The upshot of this is that the produced .pcm
file will track information for headers in their original locations (where the
module was preprocessed), not relative to whatever directory the preprocessed
module map was in when it was built.
llvm-svn: 304346
Previously, a preamble only included #if blocks (and friends like
ifdef) if there was a corresponding #endif before any declaration or
definition. The problem is that any header file that uses include guards
will not have a preamble generated, which can make code-completion very
slow.
To prevent errors about unbalanced preprocessor conditionals in the
preamble, and unbalanced preprocessor conditionals after a preamble
containing unfinished conditionals, the conditional stack is stored
in the pch file.
This fixes PR26045.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15994
llvm-svn: 304207
inferring based on the current module at the point of creation.
This should result in no functional change except when building a preprocessed
module (or more generally when using #pragma clang module begin/end to switch
module in the middle of a file), in which case it allows us to correctly track
the owning module for declarations. We can't map from FileID to module in the
preprocessed module case, since all modules would have the same FileID.
There are still a couple of remaining places that try to infer a module from a
source location; I'll clean those up in follow-up changes.
llvm-svn: 303322
I think this is a false positive in GCC's warning, but nonetheless, we
should try to be warning-free. Smaller reproducer (reproduces with GCC
6.3):
https://godbolt.org/g/cJuO2z
llvm-svn: 302003
The intent for an explicit module build is that the diagnostics produced within
the module are those that were configured when the module was built, not those
that are enabled within a user of the module. This includes diagnostics that
don't actually show up until the module is used (for instance, diagnostics
produced during template instantiation and weird cases like -Wpadded).
We serialized and restored the diagnostic state for individual warning groups,
but previously did not track the state for flags like -Werror and -Weverything,
which are implemented as separate bits rather than as part of the diagnostics
mapping information.
llvm-svn: 301992
The modules side of r299226, which serializes #pragma pack state,
doesn't work well.
The main purpose was to make -include and -include-pch match semantics
(the PCH side). We also started serializing #pragma pack in PCMs, in
the hopes of making modules and non-modules builds more consistent. But
consider:
$ cat a.h
$ cat b.h
#pragma pack(push, 2)
$ cat module.modulemap
module M {
module a { header "a.h" }
module b { header "b.h" }
}
$ cat t.cpp
#include "a.h"
#pragma pack(show)
As of r299226, the #pragma pack(show) gives "2", even though we've only
included "a.h".
- With -fmodules-local-submodule-visibility, this is clearly wrong. We
should get the default state (8 on x86_64).
- Without -fmodules-local-submodule-visibility, this kind of matches how
other things work (as if include-the-whole-module), but it's still
really terrible, and it doesn't actually make modules and non-modules
builds more consistent.
This commit disables the serialization for modules, essentially a
partial revert of r299226.
Going forward:
1. Having this #pragma pack stuff escape is terrible design (or, more
often, a horrible bug). We should prioritize adding warnings (maybe
-Werror by default?).
2. If we eventually reintroduce this for modules, it should only apply
to -fmodules-local-submodule-visibility, and it should be tracked on
a per-submodule basis.
llvm-svn: 300380
This allows using and testing these two features separately. (noteably,
debug info is, so far as I know, always a win (basically). But function
modular codegen is currently a loss for highly optimized code - where
most of the linkonce_odr definitions are optimized away, so providing
weak_odr definitions is only overhead)
llvm-svn: 300104
r293123 started serializing diagnostic pragma state for modules. This
makes the serialization work properly for implicit modules.
An implicit module build (using Clang's internal build system) uses the
same PCM file location for different `-Werror` levels.
E.g., if a TU has `-Werror=format` and tries to load a PCM built without
`-Werror=format`, a new PCM will be built in its place (and the new PCM
should have the same signature, since r297655). In the other direction,
if a TU does not have `-Werror=format` and tries to load a PCM built
with `-Werror=format`, it should "just work".
The idea is to evolve the PCM toward the strictest -Werror flags that
anyone tries.
r293123 started serializing the diagnostic pragma state for each PCM.
Since this encodes the -Werror settings at module-build time, it breaks
the implicit build model.
This commit filters the diagnostic state in order to simulate the
current compilation's diagnostic settings. Firstly, it ignores the
module's serialized first diagnostic state, replacing it with the state
from this compilation's command-line. Secondly, if a pragma warning was
upgraded to error/fatal when generating the PCM (e.g., due to `-Werror`
on the command-line), it checks whether it should still be upgraded in
its current context.
llvm-svn: 300025
Emit the final diagnostic state last to match source order. This also
prepares for a follow-up commit for implicit modules.
There's no real functionaliy change, just a slightly different AST file
format.
llvm-svn: 300024
Calculating the hash in Sema::ActOnTagFinishDefinition could happen before
all sub-Decls were parsed or processed, which would produce the wrong hash
value. Change to calculating the hash on the first use and storing the value
instead. Also, avoid using the macros that were only for Boolean fields and
use an explicit checker during the DefintionData merge. No functional change,
but was this blocking other ODRHash patches.
llvm-svn: 299989
Matching the function-homing support for modular codegen. Any type
implicitly (implicit template specializations) or explicitly defined in
a module is attached to that module's object file and omitted elsewhere
(only a declaration used if necessary for references).
llvm-svn: 299987
Some decls are created not where they are written, but in other module
files/users (implicit special members and function template implicit
specializations). To correctly identify them, use a bit next to the definition
to track the modular codegen property.
Discussed whether the module file bit could be omitted in favor of
reconstituting from the modular codegen decls list - best guess today is that
the efficiency improvement of not having to deserialize the whole list whenever
any function is queried by a module user is worth it for the small size
increase of this redundant (list + bit-on-def) representation.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29901
llvm-svn: 299982
This patch serializes the state of #pragma pack. It preserves the state of the
pragma from a PCH/from modules in a file that uses that PCH/those modules.
rdar://21359084
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31241
llvm-svn: 299226
Sema holds the current FPOptions which is adjusted by 'pragma STDC
FP_CONTRACT'. This then gets propagated into expression nodes as they are
built.
This encapsulates FPOptions so that this propagation happens opaquely rather
than directly with the fp_contractable on/off bit. This allows controlled
transitioning of fp_contractable to a ternary value (off, on, fast). It will
also allow adding more fast-math flags later.
This is toward moving fp-contraction=fast from an LLVM TargetOption to a
FastMathFlag in order to fix PR25721.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31166
llvm-svn: 298877
This reverts commit r298185, effectively reapplying r298165, after fixing the
new unit tests (PR32338). The memory buffer generator doesn't null-terminate
the MemoryBuffer it creates; this version of the commit informs getMemBuffer
about that to avoid the assert.
Original commit message follows:
----
Clang's internal build system for implicit modules uses lock files to
ensure that after a process writes a PCM it will read the same one back
in (without contention from other -cc1 commands). Since PCMs are read
from disk repeatedly while invalidating, building, and importing, the
lock is not released quickly. Furthermore, the LockFileManager is not
robust in every environment. Other -cc1 commands can stall until
timeout (after about eight minutes).
This commit changes the lock file from being necessary for correctness
to a (possibly dubious) performance hack. The remaining benefit is to
reduce duplicate work in competing -cc1 commands which depend on the
same module. Follow-up commits will change the internal build system to
continue after a timeout, and reduce the timeout. Perhaps we should
reconsider blocking at all.
This also fixes a use-after-free, when one part of a compilation
validates a PCM and starts using it, and another tries to swap out the
PCM for something new.
The PCMCache is a new type called MemoryBufferCache, which saves memory
buffers based on their filename. Its ownership is shared by the
CompilerInstance and ModuleManager.
- The ModuleManager stores PCMs there that it loads from disk, never
touching the disk if the cache is hot.
- When modules fail to validate, they're removed from the cache.
- When a CompilerInstance is spawned to build a new module, each
already-loaded PCM is assumed to be valid, and is frozen to avoid
the use-after-free.
- Any newly-built module is written directly to the cache to avoid the
round-trip to the filesystem, making lock files unnecessary for
correctness.
Original patch by Manman Ren; most testcases by Adrian Prantl!
llvm-svn: 298278
Clang's internal build system for implicit modules uses lock files to
ensure that after a process writes a PCM it will read the same one back
in (without contention from other -cc1 commands). Since PCMs are read
from disk repeatedly while invalidating, building, and importing, the
lock is not released quickly. Furthermore, the LockFileManager is not
robust in every environment. Other -cc1 commands can stall until
timeout (after about eight minutes).
This commit changes the lock file from being necessary for correctness
to a (possibly dubious) performance hack. The remaining benefit is to
reduce duplicate work in competing -cc1 commands which depend on the
same module. Follow-up commits will change the internal build system to
continue after a timeout, and reduce the timeout. Perhaps we should
reconsider blocking at all.
This also fixes a use-after-free, when one part of a compilation
validates a PCM and starts using it, and another tries to swap out the
PCM for something new.
The PCMCache is a new type called MemoryBufferCache, which saves memory
buffers based on their filename. Its ownership is shared by the
CompilerInstance and ModuleManager.
- The ModuleManager stores PCMs there that it loads from disk, never
touching the disk if the cache is hot.
- When modules fail to validate, they're removed from the cache.
- When a CompilerInstance is spawned to build a new module, each
already-loaded PCM is assumed to be valid, and is frozen to avoid
the use-after-free.
- Any newly-built module is written directly to the cache to avoid the
round-trip to the filesystem, making lock files unnecessary for
correctness.
Original patch by Manman Ren; most testcases by Adrian Prantl!
llvm-svn: 298165
Since bitcode uses VBR encoding, large numbers are more expensive than
small ones. Instead of emitting a UINT_MAX sentinel after each sequence
of state-change pairs, emit the size of the sequence as a prefix.
This should have no functionality change besides saving bits from the
encoding.
llvm-svn: 297770
Change ASTFileSignature from a random 32-bit number to the hash of the
PCM content.
- Move definition ASTFileSignature to Basic/Module.h so Module and
ASTSourceDescriptor can use it.
- Change the signature from uint64_t to std::array<uint32_t,5>.
- Stop using (saving/reading) the size and modification time of PCM
files when there is a valid SIGNATURE.
- Add UNHASHED_CONTROL_BLOCK, and use it to store the SIGNATURE record
and other records that shouldn't affect the hash. Because implicit
modules reuses the same file for multiple levels of -Werror, this
includes DIAGNOSTIC_OPTIONS and DIAG_PRAGMA_MAPPINGS.
This helps to solve a PCH + implicit Modules dependency issue: PCH files
are handled by the external build system, whereas implicit modules are
handled by internal compiler build system. This prevents invalidating a
PCH when the compiler overwrites a PCM file with the same content
(modulo the diagnostic differences).
Design and original patch by Manman Ren!
llvm-svn: 297655
Essentially, as a base class constructor does not construct virtual bases, such
a constructor for an abstract class does not need the corresponding base class
construction to be valid, and likewise for destructors.
This creates an awkward situation: clang will sometimes generate references to
the complete object and deleting destructors for an abstract class (it puts
them in the construction vtable for a derived class). But we can't generate a
"correct" version of these because we can't generate references to base class
constructors any more (if they're template specializations, say, we might not
have instantiated them and can't assume any other TU will emit a copy).
Fortunately, we don't need to, since no correct program can ever invoke them,
so instead emit symbols that just trap.
We should stop emitting references to these symbols, but still need to emit
definitions for compatibility.
llvm-svn: 296275
Reserve a spot for ODR hash in CXXRecordDecl and in its modules storage.
Default the hash value to 0 for all classes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 295533
A slightly weaker form of ODR checking than previous attempts, but hopefully
won't break the modules build bot. Future work will be needed to catch all
cases.
When objects are imported for modules, there is a chance that a name collision
will cause an ODR violation. Previously, only a small number of such
violations were detected. This patch provides a stronger check based on
AST nodes.
The information needed to uniquely identify an object is taken from the AST and
put into a one-dimensional byte stream. This stream is then hashed to give
a value to represent the object, which is stored with the other object data
in the module.
When modules are loaded, and Decl's are merged, the hash values of the two
Decl's are compared. Only Decl's with matched hash values will be merged.
Mismatch hashes will generate a module error, and if possible, point to the
first difference between the two objects.
The transform from AST to byte stream is a modified depth first algorithm.
Due to references between some AST nodes, a pure depth first algorithm could
generate loops. For Stmt nodes, a straight depth first processing occurs.
For Type and Decl nodes, they are replaced with an index number and only on
first visit will these nodes be processed. As an optimization, boolean
values are saved and stored together in reverse order at the end of the
byte stream to lower the ammount of data that needs to be hashed.
Compile time impact was measured at 1.5-2.0% during module building, and
negligible during builds without module building.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 295421
Recommit r293585 that was reverted in r293611 with new fixes. The previous
issue was determined to be an overly aggressive AST visitor from forward
declared objects. The visitor will now only deeply visit certain Decl's and
only do a shallow information extraction from all other Decl's.
When objects are imported for modules, there is a chance that a name collision
will cause an ODR violation. Previously, only a small number of such
violations were detected. This patch provides a stronger check based on
AST nodes.
The information needed to uniquely identify an object is taken from the AST and
put into a one-dimensional byte stream. This stream is then hashed to give
a value to represent the object, which is stored with the other object data
in the module.
When modules are loaded, and Decl's are merged, the hash values of the two
Decl's are compared. Only Decl's with matched hash values will be merged.
Mismatch hashes will generate a module error, and if possible, point to the
first difference between the two objects.
The transform from AST to byte stream is a modified depth first algorithm.
Due to references between some AST nodes, a pure depth first algorithm could
generate loops. For Stmt nodes, a straight depth first processing occurs.
For Type and Decl nodes, they are replaced with an index number and only on
first visit will these nodes be processed. As an optimization, boolean
values are saved and stored together in reverse order at the end of the
byte stream to lower the ammount of data that needs to be hashed.
Compile time impact was measured at 1.5-2.0% during module building, and
negligible during builds without module building.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 295284
Following up on r291465 after a regression in r276159. When we use
-fmodule-name=X while building a PCH, modular headers in X will be
textually included and the compiler knows that we are not building
module X, so don't serialize such headers in the PCH as being part of a
module, because at this point they are not.
This was causing subtle bugs and malformed AST crashes, for instance,
when using the PCH in subsequent compiler invocation with -fmodules, the
HFI for a modular header would map to the PCH, which would force a
module load of and unexistent module ID.
rdar://problem/30171164
llvm-svn: 294361
We model deduction-guides as functions with a new kind of name that identifies
the template whose deduction they guide; the bulk of this patch is adding the
new name kind. This gives us a clean way to attach an extensible list of guides
to a class template in a way that doesn't require any special handling in AST
files etc (and we're going to need these functions we come to performing
deduction).
llvm-svn: 294266
The Module::WithCodegen flag was only being set when the module was
parsed from a ModuleMap. Instead set it late, in the ASTWriter to match
the layer where the MODULAR_CODEGEN_DECLs list is determined (the
WithCodegen flag essentially means "are this module's decls in
MODULAR_CODEGEN_DECLs").
When simultaneous emission of AST file and modular object is implemented
this may need to change - the Module::WithCodegen flag will need to be
set earlier, and ideally the MODULAR_CODEGEN_DECLs gathering will
consult this flag (that's not possible right now since Decls destined
for an AST File don't have a Module - only if they're /read/ from a
Module is that true - I expect that would need to change as well).
llvm-svn: 293692
We're seeing what we believe are false positives. (It's hard to tell with the
available diagnostics, and I'm not sure how to reduce them yet).
I'll send Richard reproduction details offline.
djasper/chandlerc suggested this should be a warning for now, to make rolling it
out feasible.
llvm-svn: 293611
When objects are imported for modules, there is a chance that a name collision
will cause an ODR violation. Previously, only a small number of such
violations were detected. This patch provides a stronger check based on
AST nodes.
The information needed to uniquely identify an object is taked from the AST and
put into a one-dimensional byte stream. This stream is then hashed to give
a value to represent the object, which is stored with the other object data
in the module.
When modules are loaded, and Decl's are merged, the hash values of the two
Decl's are compared. Only Decl's with matched hash values will be merged.
Mismatch hashes will generate a module error, and if possible, point to the
first difference between the two objects.
The transform from AST to byte stream is a modified depth first algorithm.
Due to references between some AST nodes, a pure depth first algorithm could
generate loops. For Stmt nodes, a straight depth first processing occurs.
For Type and Decl nodes, they are replaced with an index number and only on
first visit will these nodes be processed. As an optimization, boolean
values are saved and stored together in reverse order at the end of the
byte stream to lower the ammount of data that needs to be hashed.
Compile time impact was measured at 1.5-2.0% during module building, and
negligible during builds without module building.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 293585
First pass at generating weak definitions of inline functions from module files
(& skipping (-O0) or emitting available_externally (optimizations)
definitions where those modules are used).
External functions defined in modules are emitted into the modular
object file as well (this may turn an existing ODR violation (if that
module were imported into multiple translations) into valid/linkable
code).
Internal symbols (static functions, for example) are not correctly
supported yet. The symbol will be produced, internal, in the modular
object - unreferenceable from the users.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28845
llvm-svn: 293456
Hide the pointer indirection in ModuleManager::begin, ModuleManager::end,
ModuleManager::rbegin, and ModuleManager::rend. Besides tidying up the call
sites, this is preparation for making ownership of ModuleFile explicit.
llvm-svn: 293394
This change adds a new type node, DeducedTemplateSpecializationType, to
represent a type template name that has been used as a type. This is modeled
around AutoType, and shares a common base class for representing a deduced
placeholder type.
We allow deduced class template types in a few more places than the standard
does: in conditions and for-range-declarators, and in new-type-ids. This is
consistent with GCC and with discussion on the core reflector. This patch
does not yet support deduced class template types being named in typename
specifiers.
llvm-svn: 293207
Rather than storing a single flat list of SourceLocations where the diagnostic
state changes (in source order), we now store a separate list for each FileID
in which there is a diagnostic state transition. (State for other files is
built and cached lazily, on demand.) This has two consequences:
1) We can now sensibly support modules, and properly track the diagnostic state
for modular headers (this matters when, for instance, triggering instantiation
of a template defined within a module triggers diagnostics).
2) It's much faster than the old approach, since we can now just do a binary
search on the offsets within the FileID rather than needing to call
isBeforeInTranslationUnit to determine source order (which is surprisingly
slow). For some pathological (but real world) files, this reduces total
compilation time by more than 10%.
For now, the diagnostic state points for modules are loaded eagerly. It seems
feasible to defer this until diagnostic state information for one of the
module's files is needed, but that's not part of this patch.
llvm-svn: 293123
D28684 changed llvm::zlib to return Error instead of Status.
It was accepted and committed in r292214, but then reverted in r292217
because I missed that clang code also needs to be updated.
Patch do that.
D28684 recommitted again as r292226
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28807
llvm-svn: 292227
Summary:
We do not currently track the source locations for exception specifications such
that their source range can be queried through the AST. This leads to trying to
write more complex code to determine the source range for uses like FixItHints
(see D18575 for an example). In addition to use within tools like clang-tidy, I
think this information may become more important to track as exception
specifications become more integrated into the type system.
Patch by Don Hinton.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: malcolm.parsons, sbarzowski, alexfh, hintonda, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20428
llvm-svn: 291771
In r276159, we started to say that a module X is defined in a pch if we specify
-fmodule-name when building the pch. This caused a regression that reports
module X is defined in both pch and pcm if we generate the pch with
-fmodule-name=X and then in a separate clang invocation, we include the pch and
also import X.pcm.
This patch adds an option CompilingPCH similar to CompilingModule. When we use
-fmodule-name=X while building a pch, modular headers in X will be textually
included and the compiler knows that we are not building module X, so we don't
put module X in SUBMODULE_DEFINITION of the pch.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D28415
llvm-svn: 291465
Added a map to associate types and declarations with extensions.
Refactored existing diagnostic for disabled types associated with extensions and extended it to declarations for generic situation.
Fixed some bugs for types associated with extensions.
Allow users to use pragma to declare types and functions for supported extensions, e.g.
#pragma OPENCL EXTENSION the_new_extension_name : begin
// declare types and functions associated with the extension here
#pragma OPENCL EXTENSION the_new_extension_name : end
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21698
llvm-svn: 289979
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
This adds the access qualifier to the Pipe Type, rather than using a class
hierarchy.
It also fixes mergeTypes for Pipes, by disallowing merges. Only identical
pipe types can be merged. The test case in invalid-pipes-cl2.0.cl is added
to check that.
llvm-svn: 288332
No block info block should need to define local abbreviations, so we can
always use a code width of 2.
Also change all block info block writers to use EnterBlockInfoBlock.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26168
llvm-svn: 285660
Summary:
This is possible now that MapVector supports move-only values.
Depends on D25404.
Reviewers: timshen
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25405
llvm-svn: 283766
Summary:
These cause us to consider all functions in-between to be __host__
__device__.
You can nest these pragmas; you just can't have more 'end's than
'begin's.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: tra, jhen, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24975
llvm-svn: 283677
the resulting specialization is not referenced by the rest of the AST. This
both avoids performing unnecessary reinstantiations in downstream users of the
AST file and fixes a bug (breaking modules self-host right now) where we would
sometimes fail to emit a definition of a class template specialization if we
imported just a declaration of it from elsewhere (see new testcase for reduced
example).
llvm-svn: 283489
We also need to add ObjCTypeParamTypeLoc. ObjCTypeParamType supports the
representation of "T <protocol>" where T is a type parameter. Before this,
we use TypedefType to represent the type parameter for ObjC.
ObjCTypeParamType has "ObjCTypeParamDecl *OTPDecl" and it extends from
ObjCProtocolQualifiers. It is a non-canonical type and is canonicalized
to the underlying type with the protocol qualifiers.
rdar://24619481
rdar://25060179
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23079
llvm-svn: 281355
Processing update records (and loading a module, in general) might trigger
unexpected calls to the ASTWriter (being a mutation listener). Now we have a
mechanism to suppress those calls to the ASTWriter but notify other possible
mutation listeners.
Fixes https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=28332
Patch by Cristina Cristescu and me.
Reviewed by Richard Smith (D21800).
llvm-svn: 276473
we first touch any part of that module. Instead, defer them until the first
time that module is (transitively) imported. The initializer step for a module
then recursively initializes modules that its own headers imported.
For example, this avoids running the <iostream> global initializer in programs
that don't actually use iostreams, but do use other parts of the standard
library.
llvm-svn: 276159
Summary:
Space for storing the //constraint-expression// of the
//requires-clause// associated with a `TemplateParameterList` is
arranged by taking a bit out of the `NumParams` field for the purpose
of determining whether there is a //requires-clause// or not, and by
adding to the trailing objects tied to the `TemplateParameterList`. An
accessor is provided.
An appropriate argument is supplied to `TemplateParameterList::Create`
at the various call sites.
Serialization changes will addressed as the Concepts implementation
becomes more solid.
Drive-by fix:
This change also replaces the custom
`FixedSizeTemplateParameterListStorage` implementation with one that
follows the interface provided by `llvm::TrailingObjects`.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, faisalv, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits, nwilson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D19322
llvm-svn: 276069
This patch adds a __nth_element builtin that allows fetching the n-th type of a
parameter pack with very little compile-time overhead. The patch was inspired by
r252036 and r252115 by David Majnemer, which add a similar __make_integer_seq
builtin for efficiently creating a std::integer_sequence.
Reviewed as D15421. http://reviews.llvm.org/D15421
llvm-svn: 274316
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
Handles the cases where old __va_list_tag is coming from a module and the new
is not, needing an update record.
Fixes https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27890
Patch by Cristina Cristescu, Richard Smith and me.
llvm-svn: 273159
When we import a module that defines a builtin identifier from prefix header and
precompile the prefix header, the macro information related to the identifier
is lost.
If we don't precompile the prefix header, the source file can still see the
macro information. The reason is that we write out the identifier in the pch
but not the macro information since the macro is not defined locally.
This is related to r251565. In that commit, if we read a builtin identifier from
a module that wasn't "interesting" to that module, we will still write it out to
a PCH that imports that module.
The fix is to write exported module macros for PCH as well.
rdar://24666630
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20383
llvm-svn: 271310
a base class via a using-declaration. If a class has a using-declaration
declaring either a constructor or an assignment operator, eagerly declare its
special members in case they need to displace a shadow declaration from a
using-declaration.
llvm-svn: 269398
Support OpenMP version 4.5 syntax for #pragma omp declare target.
Syntax:
#pragma omp declare target (extended-list) new-line
or
#pragma omp declare target clause[ [,] clause ... ] new-line
Where clause is one of the following:
to(extended-list)
link(list)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20011
llvm-svn: 268925
a selector, the entry should be complete, containing everything introduced by
that module and all modules it imports.
Before writing out the method pool of a module, we sync up the out of date
selectors by pulling in methods for the selectors, from all modules it imports.
In ReadMethodPool, after pulling in the method pool entry for module A, this
lets us skip the modules that module A imports.
rdar://problem/25900131
llvm-svn: 268091
The Decl::isUsed has a value for every decl. In non-module builds it is very
difficult (but possible) to break this invariant but when we walk up the redecl
chain we find the neccessary information.
When deserializing the decls from a module it is much more difficult to update
correctly this invariant. The patch centralizes the information whether a decl
is used in the canonical decl marking the entire entity as being used.
Fixes https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27401
Patch by Cristina Cristescu and me.
Thanks to Richard Smith who helped to debug and understand the issue!
Reviewed by Richard Smith.
llvm-svn: 267691
table for a module / PCH, never map from a normal declaration of a class to an
injected-class-name declaration (or vice versa). Those declarations live in
distinct lookup tables and should not be confused.
We really shouldn't be using a CXXRecordDecl to represent an
injected-class-name in the first place; I've filed PR27532 so we don't forget.
llvm-svn: 267632
a table entry in the corresponding decl, store an offset from the current
record to the relevant CXX_BASE_SPECIFIERS record. This results in fewer
indirections and a minor .pcm file size reduction.
llvm-svn: 266266