Token now has a class of kinds for "literals", which include
numeric constants, strings, etc. These tokens can optionally have
a pointer to the start of the token in the lexer buffer. This
makes it faster to get spelling and do other gymnastics, because we
don't have to go through source locations.
This change is performance neutral, but will make other changes
more feasible down the road.
llvm-svn: 63028
that every declaration lives inside a DeclContext.
Moved several things that don't have names but were ScopedDecls (and,
therefore, NamedDecls) to inherit from Decl rather than NamedDecl,
including ObjCImplementationDecl and LinkageSpecDecl. Now, we don't
store empty DeclarationNames for these things, nor do we try to insert
them into DeclContext's lookup structure.
The serialization tests are temporarily disabled. We'll re-enable them
once we've sorted out the remaining ownership/serialiazation issues
between DeclContexts and TranslationUnion, DeclGroups, etc.
llvm-svn: 62562
"FileID" a concept that is now enforced by the compiler's type checker
instead of yet-another-random-unsigned floating around.
This is an important distinction from the "FileID" currently tracked by
SourceLocation. *That* FileID may refer to the start of a file or to a
chunk within it. The new FileID *only* refers to the file (and its
#include stack and eventually #line data), it cannot refer to a chunk.
FileID is a completely opaque datatype to all clients, only SourceManager
is allowed to poke and prod it.
llvm-svn: 62407
the "physical" location of tokens, refer to the "spelling" location.
This is more concrete and useful, tokens aren't really physical objects!
llvm-svn: 62309
- IdentifierInfo can now (optionally) have its string data not be
co-located with itself. This is for use with PTH. This aspect is a
little gross, as getName() and getLength() now make assumptions
about a possible alternate representation of IdentifierInfo.
Perhaps we should make IdentifierInfo have virtual methods?
IdentifierTable:
- Added class "IdentifierInfoLookup" that can be used by
IdentifierTable to perform "string -> IdentifierInfo" lookups using
an auxilliary data structure. This is used by PTH.
- Perform tests show that IdentifierTable::get() does not slow down
because of the extra check for the IdentiferInfoLookup object (the
regular StringMap lookup does enough work to mitigate the impact of
an extra null pointer check).
- The upshot is that now that some IdentifierInfo objects might be
owned by the IdentiferInfoLookup object. This should be reviewed.
PTH:
- Modified PTHManager::GetIdentifierInfo to *not* insert entries in
IdentifierTable's string map, and instead create IdentifierInfo
objects on the fly when mapping from persistent IDs to
IdentifierInfos. This saves a ton of work with string copies,
hashing, and StringMap lookup and resizing. This change was
motivated because when processing source files in the PTH cache we
don't need to do any string -> IdentifierInfo lookups.
- PTHManager now subclasses IdentifierInfoLookup, allowing clients of
IdentifierTable to transparently use IdentifierInfo objects managed
by the PTH file. PTHManager resolves "string -> IdentifierInfo"
queries by doing a binary search over a sorted table of identifier
strings in the PTH file (the exact algorithm we use can be changed
as needed).
These changes lead to the following performance changes when using PTH on Cocoa.h:
- fsyntax-only: 10% performance improvement
- Eonly: 30% performance improvement
llvm-svn: 62273
lexical order of the corresponding identifier strings. This will be used for a
forthcoming optimization. This slows down PTH generation time by 7%. We can
revert this change if the optimization proves to not be valuable.
llvm-svn: 62248
its Decls in indented format. An Example:
$ cat t.cpp
class A {
int a;
void f();
};
void A::f() {
a = 3;
}
$ clang -print-decl-contexts t.cpp
[translation unit] 0x9754d7c
<typedef> __builtin_va_list
[class] A 0x9753310
<class> A 0x975ce20
<field> a
<c++ method> f
<c++ ctor> A
<c++ ctor> A
<c++ method> operator=
<c++ dtor> ~A
[c++ method] f [[0x9753310]]
Some comments: '<>' indicates a declaration, '[]' indicates a definition, '[[
]]' displays the semantic DeclContext which is different from the lexical
DeclContext. The symbols printed can definitely be changed in the future.
llvm-svn: 62136
C++ handle anonymous structs/unions in the same way. Addresses several
bugs:
<rdar://problem/6259534>
<rdar://problem/6481130>
<rdar://problem/6483159>
The test case in PR clang/1750 now passes with -fsyntax-only, but
CodeGen for inline assembler still fails.
llvm-svn: 62112
filters the decls seen by decl_iterator with two criteria: the dynamic
type of the declaration and a run-time predicate described by a member
function. This simplifies EnumDecl, RecordDecl, and ObjCContainerDecl
considerably. It has no measurable performance impact.
llvm-svn: 61994
Add isa/cast/dyncast support for ObjCContainerDecl.
Renamed classprop_iterator/begin/end to prop_iterator/begin/end (the class prefix was confusing).
More simplifications to Sema::ActOnAtEnd()...
Added/changed some FIXME's as a result of the above work.
llvm-svn: 61988
rewrite @class declarations that showed up within linkage
specifications because those @class declarations never made it any
place where the rewriter could find them.
Moved all of the ObjC*Decl nodes over to ScopedDecls, so that they can
live in the appropriate top-level or transparent DeclContext near the
top level, e.g., TranslationUnitDecl or LinkageSpecDecl. Objective-C
declarations now show up in a traversal of the declarations in a
DeclContext (they didn't before!). This way, the rewriter finds all
Objective-C declarations within linkage specifications.
llvm-svn: 61966
- ObjCContainerDecl's (ObjCInterfaceDecl/ObjCCategoryDecl/ObjCProtocolDecl), ObjCCategoryImpl, & ObjCImplementation are all DeclContexts.
- ObjCMethodDecl is now a ScopedDecl (so it can play nicely with DeclContext).
- ObjCContainerDecl now does iteration/lookup using DeclContext infrastructure (no more linear search:-)
- Removed ASTContext argument to DeclContext::lookup(). It wasn't being used and complicated it's use from an ObjC AST perspective.
- Added Sema::ProcessPropertyDecl() and removed Sema::diagnosePropertySetterGetterMismatch().
- Simplified Sema::ActOnAtEnd() considerably. Still more work to do.
- Fixed an incorrect casting assumption in Sema::getCurFunctionOrMethodDecl(), now that ObjCMethodDecl is a ScopedDecl.
- Removed addPropertyMethods from ObjCInterfaceDecl/ObjCCategoryDecl/ObjCProtocolDecl.
This passes all the tests on my machine. Since many of the changes are central to the way ObjC finds it's methods, I expect some fallout (and there are still a handful of FIXME's). Nevertheless, this should be a step in the right direction.
llvm-svn: 61929
DeclContexts whose members are visible from enclosing DeclContexts up
to (and including) the innermost enclosing non-transparent
DeclContexts. Transparent DeclContexts unify the mechanism to be used
for various language features, including C enumerations, anonymous
unions, C++0x inline namespaces, and C++ linkage
specifications. Please refer to the documentation in the Clang
internals manual for more information.
Only enumerations and linkage specifications currently use transparent
DeclContexts.
Still to do: use transparent DeclContexts to implement anonymous
unions and GCC's anonymous structs extension, and, later, the C++0x
features. We also need to tighten up the DeclContext/ScopedDecl link
to ensure that every ScopedDecl is in a single DeclContext, which
will ensure that we can then enforce ownership and reduce the memory
footprint of DeclContext.
llvm-svn: 61735
- Encode the token length with 2 bytes instead of 4.
- This reduces the size of the .pth file for Cocoa.h by 12%.
- This speeds up PTH time (-Eonly) on Cocoa.h by 1.6%.
llvm-svn: 61364
- Embed 'eom' tokens in PTH file.
- Use embedded 'eom' tokens to not lazily generate them in the PTHLexer.
This means that PTHLexer can always advance to the next token after
reading a token (instead of buffering tokens using a copy).
- Moved logic of 'ReadToken' into Lex. GetToken & ReadToken no longer exist.
- These changes result in a 3.3% speedup (-Eonly) on Cocoa.h.
- The code is a little gross. Many cleanups are possible and should be done.
llvm-svn: 61360
DeclContext. Instead, just keep the list of currently-active
declarations and only build the OverloadedFunctionDecl when we
absolutely need it.
This is a half-step toward eliminating the need to explicitly build
OverloadedFunctionDecls that store sets of overloaded
functions. This was suggested by Argiris a while back, and it's a good
thing for several reasons: first, it eliminates the messy logic that
currently tries to keep the OverloadedFunctionDecl in sync with the
declarations that are being added. Second, it will (eventually)
eliminate the need to allocate memory for overload sets, which could
help performance. Finally, it helps set us up for when name lookup can
return multiple (possibly ambiguous) results, as can happen with
lookup of class members in C++.
Next steps: make the IdentifierResolver store overloads as separate
entries in its list rather than replacing them with an
OverloadedFunctionDecl now, then see how far we can go toward
eliminating OverloadedFunctionDecl entirely.
llvm-svn: 61357
- Added a side-table per each token-cached file with the preprocessor conditional stack. This tracks what #if's are matched with what #endifs and where their respective tokens are in the PTH file. This will allow for quick skipping of excluded conditional branches in the Preprocessor.
- Performance testing shows the addition of this information (without actually utilizing it) leads to no performance regressions.
llvm-svn: 60911
and separates lexical name lookup from qualified name lookup. In
particular:
* Make DeclContext the central data structure for storing and
looking up declarations within existing declarations, e.g., members
of structs/unions/classes, enumerators in C++0x enums, members of
C++ namespaces, and (later) members of Objective-C
interfaces/implementations. DeclContext uses a lazily-constructed
data structure optimized for fast lookup (array for small contexts,
hash table for larger contexts).
* Implement C++ qualified name lookup in terms of lookup into
DeclContext.
* Implement C++ unqualified name lookup in terms of
qualified+unqualified name lookup (since unqualified lookup is not
purely lexical in C++!)
* Limit the use of the chains of declarations stored in
IdentifierInfo to those names declared lexically.
* Eliminate CXXFieldDecl, collapsing its behavior into
FieldDecl. (FieldDecl is now a ScopedDecl).
* Make RecordDecl into a DeclContext and eliminates its
Members/NumMembers fields (since one can just iterate through the
DeclContext to get the fields).
llvm-svn: 60878
This is a follow-up to fixing <rdar://problem/6213955> clang ObjC rewriter: rewriter doesn't appear to support @property and @synthesize.
llvm-svn: 60700
template<typename T> void f(T x) {
g(x); // g is a dependent name, so don't even bother to look it up
g(); // error: g is not a dependent name
}
Note that when we see "g(", we build a CXXDependentNameExpr. However,
if none of the call arguments are type-dependent, we will force the
resolution of the name "g" and replace the CXXDependentNameExpr with
its result.
GCC actually produces a nice error message when you make this
mistake, and even offers to compile your code with -fpermissive. I'll
do the former next, but I don't plan to do the latter.
llvm-svn: 60618
specific targets default them to on. Default blocks to on on 10.6 and later.
Add a -fblocks option that allows the user to override the target's default.
Use -fblocks in the various testcases that use blocks.
llvm-svn: 60563
- Implement RewritePropertySetter(). While the routine is simple, there were some tricky changes to RewriteFunctionBodyOrGlobalInitializer(), the main rewriter loop. It also required some additional instance data to distinguish setters from getters, as well as some changes to RewritePropertyGetter().
- Implement FIXME: for pretty printing ObjCPropertyRefExpr's.
- Changed ObjCPropertyRefExpr::getSourceRange() to point to the end of the property name (not the beginning). Also made a minor name change from "Loc"->"IdLoc" (to make it clear the Loc does not point to the ".").
llvm-svn: 60540
- Output 32 bit integers using bit-shifting + write of individual bytes.
This is motivated because we aren't guaranteed to load 32-bit ints of the mmaped PTH file at 4-byte offsets.
- Don't emit flags for IdentifierInfos. These are lazily populated by the Preprocessor/Parser.
- Only write out tokens for files with absolute paths. This is potentially temporary, but simplifies things for now.
llvm-svn: 60435
- Creator function pointers are saved in ManagerRegistry.
- The Register* class is used to notify ManagerRegistry new module is
available.
- AnalysisManager queries ManagerRegistry for configurable module. Then it
passes them to GRExprEngine, in turn to GRStateManager.
llvm-svn: 60143
- a table including the IdentifierInfo data
- an index from persistent IdentifierInfo IDs to indices within this file.
- Enhance PTH generation to write out file map information, mapping inodes to tokens.
llvm-svn: 60132
converting a pointer to one Objective-C interface into a pointer to another
Objective-C interface, and conversions with 'id'. The semantics seems
to match GCC, although they seem somewhat ad hoc.
Fixed a few cases where we assumed the C++ definition of isObjectType,
but were getting the C definition, causing failures in trouble with
conversions to void pointers.
llvm-svn: 60130
uses of getName() with uses of getDeclName(). This upgrades a bunch of
diags to take DeclNames instead of std::strings.
This also tweaks a couple of diagnostics to be cleaner and changes
CheckInitializerTypes/PerformInitializationByConstructor to pass
around DeclarationNames instead of std::strings.
llvm-svn: 59947
assert if the name is not an identifier. Update callers to do the right
thing and avoid this method in unsafe cases. This also fixes an objc
warning that was missing a space, and migrates a couple more to taking
IdentifierInfo and QualTypes instead of std::strings.
llvm-svn: 59936
a new NamedDecl::getAsString() method.
Change uses of Selector::getName() to just pass in a Selector
where possible (e.g. to diagnostics) instead of going through
an std::string.
This also adds new formatters for objcinstance and objcclass
as described in the dox.
llvm-svn: 59933
with a raw lexer instead of a PP lexer. This means that -verify doesn't scan
#include'd headers for expected-error/warning strings, and it also means that it
doesn't ignore them in #if 0.
llvm-svn: 59774
built-in operator candidates. Test overloading of '&' and ','.
In C++, a comma expression is an lvalue if its right-hand
subexpression is an lvalue. Update Expr::isLvalue accordingly.
llvm-svn: 59643
post-decrement, including support for generating all of the built-in
operator candidates for these operators.
C++ and C have different rules for the arguments to the builtin unary
'+' and '-'. Implemented both variants in Sema::ActOnUnaryOp.
In C++, pre-increment and pre-decrement return lvalues. Update
Expr::isLvalue accordingly.
llvm-svn: 59638
are formed. In particular, a diagnostic with all its strings and ranges is now
packaged up and sent to DiagnosticClients as a DiagnosticInfo instead of as a
ton of random stuff. This has the benefit of simplifying the interface, making
it more extensible, and allowing us to do more checking for things like access
past the end of the various arrays passed in.
In addition to introducing DiagnosticInfo, this also substantially changes how
Diagnostic::Report works. Instead of being passed in all of the info required
to issue a diagnostic, Report now takes only the required info (a location and
ID) and returns a fresh DiagnosticInfo *by value*. The caller is then free to
stuff strings and ranges into the DiagnosticInfo with the << operator. When
the dtor runs on the DiagnosticInfo object (which should happen at the end of
the statement), the diagnostic is actually emitted with all of the accumulated
information. This is a somewhat tricky dance, but it means that the
accumulated DiagnosticInfo is allowed to keep pointers to other expression
temporaries without those pointers getting invalidated.
This is just the minimal change to get this stuff working, but this will allow
us to eliminate the zillions of variant "Diag" methods scattered throughout
(e.g.) sema. For example, instead of calling:
Diag(BuiltinLoc, diag::err_overload_no_match, typeNames,
SourceRange(BuiltinLoc, RParenLoc));
We will soon be able to just do:
Diag(BuiltinLoc, diag::err_overload_no_match)
<< typeNames << SourceRange(BuiltinLoc, RParenLoc));
This scales better to support arbitrary types being passed in (not just
strings) in a type-safe way. Go operator overloading?!
llvm-svn: 59502
representing the names of declarations in the C family of
languages. DeclarationName is used in NamedDecl to store the name of
the declaration (naturally), and ObjCMethodDecl is now a NamedDecl.
llvm-svn: 59441
- Resume running the always inliner pass always now that LLVM has
been improved and functions with debug info can be inlined.
- Remove unused header.
llvm-svn: 59223
functions for built-in operators, e.g., the builtin
bool operator==(int const*, int const*)
can be used for the expression "x1 == x2" given:
struct X {
operator int const*();
} x1, x2;
The scheme for handling these built-in operators is relatively simple:
for each candidate required by the standard, create a special kind of
candidate function for the built-in. If overload resolution picks the
built-in operator, we perform the appropriate conversions on the
arguments and then let the normal built-in operator take care of it.
There may be some optimization opportunity left: if we can reduce the
number of built-in operator overloads we generate, overload resolution
for these cases will go faster. However, one must be careful when
doing this: GCC generates too few operator overloads in our little
test program, and fails to compile it because none of the overloads it
generates match.
Note that we only support operator overload for non-member binary
operators at the moment. The other operators will follow.
As part of this change, ImplicitCastExpr can now be an lvalue.
llvm-svn: 59148
operators. For example, one can now write "x + y" where x or y is a
class or enumeration type, and Clang will perform overload resolution
for "+" based on the overloaded operators it finds.
The other kinds of overloadable operators in C++ will follow this same
approach.
Three major issues remain:
1) We don't find member operators
2) Since we don't have user-defined conversion operators, we can't
call any of the built-in overloaded operators in C++ [over.built].
3) Once we've done the semantic checks, we drop the overloaded
operator on the floor; it doesn't get into the AST at all.
llvm-svn: 58821
were being treated as type names for non-Objective-C files.
- Other lines are just because MinimalAction didn't have access to
the LangOptions.
llvm-svn: 58498
With this commit, stuff like this is very close to working...
[foo barf:^(int){ printf("whatever\n"); }];
Here is what is currently translates to...
((id (*)(id, SEL, void (^)(int)))(void *)objc_msgSend)((id)foo, sel_registerName("barf:"), (void (*)(int))__main_block_func_0);
I just need make sure the funky cast on objc_msgSend() is converted from "void (^)(int)" to "void (*)(int)". Since the cast doesn't appear in the source code, it needs to be converted in RewriteObjC::SynthMessageExpr().
llvm-svn: 58348
- Add support for -MP (phony targets).
- Use raw_ostream for output instead of std::string concatenation.
- Break long lines in a GCC (4.2) compatible manner.
- Output dependents in #included order (to match GCC).
llvm-svn: 58265
- CastExpr is the root of all casts
- ImplicitCastExpr is (still) used for all explicit casts
- ExplicitCastExpr is now the root of all *explicit* casts
- ExplicitCCastExpr (new name needed!?) is a C-style cast in C or C++
- CXXFunctionalCastExpr inherits from ExplicitCastExpr
- CXXNamedCastExpr inherits from ExplicitCastExpr and is the root of all
of the C++ named cast expression types (static_cast, dynamic_cast, etc.)
- Added classes CXXStaticCastExpr, CXXDynamicCastExpr,
CXXReinterpretCastExpr, and CXXConstCastExpr to
Also, fixed returned-stack-addr.cpp, which broke once when we fixed
reinterpret_cast to diagnose double->int* conversions and again when
we eliminated implicit conversions to reference types. The fix is in
both testcase and SemaChecking.cpp.
Most of this patch is simply support for the renaming. There's very
little actual change in semantics.
llvm-svn: 58264