Specifically, the following features are not included in this commit:
- any sort of capturing within generic lambdas
- nested lambdas
- conversion operator for captureless lambdas
- ensuring all visitors are generic lambda aware
As an example of what compiles:
template <class F1, class F2>
struct overload : F1, F2 {
using F1::operator();
using F2::operator();
overload(F1 f1, F2 f2) : F1(f1), F2(f2) { }
};
auto Recursive = [](auto Self, auto h, auto ... rest) {
return 1 + Self(Self, rest...);
};
auto Base = [](auto Self, auto h) {
return 1;
};
overload<decltype(Base), decltype(Recursive)> O(Base, Recursive);
int num_params = O(O, 5, 3, "abc", 3.14, 'a');
Please see attached tests for more examples.
Some implementation notes:
- Add a new Declarator context => LambdaExprParameterContext to
clang::Declarator to allow the use of 'auto' in declaring generic
lambda parameters
- Augment AutoType's constructor (similar to how variadic
template-type-parameters ala TemplateTypeParmDecl are implemented) to
accept an IsParameterPack to encode a generic lambda parameter pack.
- Add various helpers to CXXRecordDecl to facilitate identifying
and querying a closure class
- LambdaScopeInfo (which maintains the current lambda's Sema state)
was augmented to house the current depth of the template being
parsed (id est the Parser calls Sema::RecordParsingTemplateParameterDepth)
so that Sema::ActOnLambdaAutoParameter may use it to create the
appropriate list of corresponding TemplateTypeParmDecl for each
auto parameter identified within the generic lambda (also stored
within the current LambdaScopeInfo). Additionally,
a TemplateParameterList data-member was added to hold the invented
TemplateParameterList AST node which will be much more useful
once we teach TreeTransform how to transform generic lambdas.
- SemaLambda.h was added to hold some common lambda utility
functions (this file is likely to grow ...)
- Teach Sema::ActOnStartOfFunctionDef to check whether it
is being called to instantiate a generic lambda's call
operator, and if so, push an appropriately prepared
LambdaScopeInfo object on the stack.
- Teach Sema::ActOnStartOfLambdaDefinition to set the
return type of a lambda without a trailing return type
to 'auto' in C++1y mode, and teach the return type
deduction machinery in SemaStmt.cpp to process either
C++11 and C++14 lambda's correctly depending on the flag.
- various tests were added - but much more will be needed.
A greatful thanks to all reviewers including Eli Friedman,
James Dennett and the ever illuminating Richard Smith. And
yet I am certain that I have allowed unidentified bugs to creep in;
bugs, that I will do my best to slay, once identified!
Thanks!
llvm-svn: 188977
No functionality change.
In Sema helper functions:
* renamed isTypeName as HasTypenameKeyword
In UsingDecl:
* renamed get/setUsingLocation to get/setUsingLoc
* renamed is/setTypeName as has/setTypename
llvm-svn: 186816
A class with a field of non-POD-for-layout type is not POD-for-layout.
This computation should not depend on whether the field is of POD type
in the language sense.
Fixes PR16537.
Patch by Josh Magee.
llvm-svn: 186741
Make sure we don't crash when checking whether an assignment operator
without any arguments is a special member. <rdar://problem/14397774>.
llvm-svn: 186137
a FieldDecl from it, and propagate both into the closure type and the
LambdaExpr.
You can't do much useful with them yet -- you can't use them within the body
of the lambda, because we don't have a representation for "the this of the
lambda, not the this of the enclosing context". We also don't have support or a
representation for a nested capture of an init-capture yet, which was intended
to work despite not being allowed by the current standard wording.
llvm-svn: 181985
statement in constexpr functions. Everything which doesn't require variable
mutation is also allowed as an extension in C++11. 'void' becomes a literal
type to support constexpr functions which return 'void'.
llvm-svn: 180022
Add a CXXDefaultInitExpr, analogous to CXXDefaultArgExpr, and use it both in
CXXCtorInitializers and in InitListExprs to represent a default initializer.
There's an additional complication here: because the default initializer can
refer to the initialized object via its 'this' pointer, we need to make sure
that 'this' points to the right thing within the evaluation.
llvm-svn: 179958
We keep the "as written" storage class, but that is a fuzzy concept for
instantiations. With this patch instantiations of methods of class templates
now get a storage class that is based on the semantics of isStatic(). With this
can simplify isStatic() itself.
llvm-svn: 179521
This slightly propagates an existing hack that delays when we provide
access specifiers for the visible conversion functions of a class by
copying the available access specifier early. The only client this
affects is LLDB, which tends to discover and add conversion functions
after the class is technically "complete". As such, the only
observable difference is in LLDB, so the testing will go there.
llvm-svn: 179029
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x86_64-darwin10-gdb went back green
before it processed the reverted 178663, so it could not have been the culprit.
Revert "Revert 178663."
This reverts commit 4f8a3eb2ce5d4ba422483439e20c8cbb4d953a41.
llvm-svn: 178682
For variables and functions clang used to store two storage classes. The one
"as written" in the code and a patched one, which, for example, propagates
static to the following decls.
This apparently is from the days clang lacked linkage computation. It is now
redundant and this patch removes it.
llvm-svn: 178663
visible.
The basic problem here is that a given translation unit can use
forward declarations to form pointers to a given type, say,
class X;
X *x;
and then import a module that includes a definition of X:
import XDef;
We will then fail when attempting to access a member of X, e.g.,
x->method()
because the AST reader did not know to look for a default of a class
named X within the new module.
This implementation is a bit of a C-centric hack, because the only
definitions that can have this property are enums, structs, unions,
Objective-C classes, and Objective-C protocols, and all of those are
either visible at the top-level or can't be defined later. Hence, we
can use the out-of-date-ness of the name and the identifier-update
mechanism to force the update.
In C++, we will not be so lucky, and will need a more advanced
solution, because the definitions could be in namespaces defined in
two different modules, e.g.,
// module 1
namespace N { struct X; }
// module 2
namespace N { struct X { /* ... */ }; }
One possible implementation here is for C++ to extend the information
associated with each identifier table to include the declaration IDs
of any definitions associated with that name, regardless of
context. We would have to eagerly load those definitions.
llvm-svn: 174794
Title: [PR9027] volatile struct bug: member is not loaded at -O;
This is caused by last flag passed to @llvm.memcpy being false,
not honoring that aggregate has at least one 'volatile' data member
(even though aggregate itself has not been qualified as 'volatile'.
As a result, optimization optimizes away the memcpy altogether.
Patch review by John MaCall (I still need to fix up a test though).
llvm-svn: 173535
This does limit these typedefs to being sequences, but no current usage
requires them to be contiguous (we could expand this to a more general
iterator pair range concept at some point).
Also, it'd be nice if SmallVector were constructible directly from an ArrayRef
but this is a bit tricky since ArrayRef depends on SmallVectorBaseImpl for the
inverse conversion. (& generalizing over all range-like things, while nice,
would require some nontrivial SFINAE I haven't thought about yet)
llvm-svn: 170482
the cases where we can't determine whether special members would be trivial
while building the class, we eagerly declare those special members. The impact
of this is bounded, since it does not trigger implicit declarations of special
members in classes which merely *use* those classes.
In order to determine whether we need to apply this rule, we also need to
eagerly declare move operations and destructors in cases where they might be
deleted. If a move operation were supposed to be deleted, it would instead
be suppressed, and we could need overload resolution to determine if we fall
back to a trivial copy operation. If a destructor were implicitly deleted,
it would cause the move constructor of any derived classes to be suppressed.
As discussed on cxx-abi-dev, C++11's selected constructor rules are also
retroactively applied as a defect resolution in C++03 mode, in order to
identify that class B has a non-trivial copy constructor (since it calls
A's constructor template, not A's copy constructor):
struct A { template<typename T> A(T &); };
struct B { mutable A a; };
llvm-svn: 169673
Remove pre-standard restriction on explicitly-defaulted copy constructors with
'incorrect' parameter types, and instead just make those special members
non-trivial as the standard requires.
This required making CXXRecordDecl correctly handle classes which have both a
trivial and a non-trivial special member of the same kind.
This also fixes PR13217 by reimplementing DiagnoseNontrivial in terms of the
new triviality computation technology.
llvm-svn: 169667
properly, rather than faking it up by pretending that a reference member makes
the default constructor non-trivial. That leads to rejects-valids when putting
such types inside unions.
llvm-svn: 169662
uncovered.
This required manually correcting all of the incorrect main-module
headers I could find, and running the new llvm/utils/sort_includes.py
script over the files.
I also manually added quite a few missing headers that were uncovered by
shuffling the order or moving headers up to be main-module-headers.
llvm-svn: 169237
constructor/assignment operator with a const-qualified parameter type. The
prior method for determining this incorrectly used overload resolution.
llvm-svn: 168775
allocated using the allocator associated with an ASTContext.
Use this inside CXXRecordDecl::DefinitionData instead of an UnresolvedSet to
avoid a potential memory leak.
rdar://12761275
llvm-svn: 168771
Separate out the notions of 'has a trivial special member' and 'has a
non-trivial special member', and use them appropriately. These are not
opposites of one another (there might be no special member, or in C++11 there
might be a trivial one and a non-trivial one). The CXXRecordDecl predicates
continue to produce incorrect results, but do so in fewer cases now, and
they document the cases where they might be wrong.
No functionality changes are intended here (they will come when the predicates
start producing the right answers...).
llvm-svn: 168119
non-trivial if they would not call a move operation, even if they would in fact
call a trivial copy operation. A proper fix is to follow, but this small
directed fix is intended for porting to the 3.2 release branch.
llvm-svn: 167920
definition info; it needs to be there because the mangler needs to
access it before we're finished defining the lambda class.
PR12808.
llvm-svn: 164186
This is the other half of C++11 [class.cdtor]p4 (the destructor side
was added in r161915). This also fixes an issue with post-call checks
where the 'this' value was already being cleaned out of the state, thus
being omitted from a reconstructed CXXConstructorCall.
llvm-svn: 161981
When performing the simplistic overload resolution for single-argument methods,
don't check the best overload for ambiguity with itself when the best overload
doesn't happen to be the first one.
Fixes PR13480.
llvm-svn: 160961
structor class under ARC, that struct/class does not have a trivial
move constructor or move assignment operator. Fixes the rest of
<rdar://problem/11738725>.
llvm-svn: 160615
to see if we had an underlying final class or method, but we would then
use the cast type to do the call, resulting in a direct call to the wrong
method.
llvm-svn: 159212
We need an efficient mechanism to determine whether a defaulted default
constructor is constexpr, in order to determine whether a class is a literal
type, so keep the incrementally-built form on CXXRecordDecl. Remove the
on-demand computation of same, so that we only have one method for determining
whether a default constructor is constexpr. This doesn't affect correctness,
since default constructor lookup is much simpler than selecting a constructor
for copying or moving.
We don't need a corresponding mechanism for defaulted copy or move constructors,
since they can't affect whether a type is a literal type. Conversely, checking
whether such functions are constexpr can require non-trivial effort, so we defer
such checks until the copy or move constructor is required.
Thus we now only compute whether a copy or move constructor is constexpr on
demand, and only compute whether a default constructor is constexpr in advance.
This is unfortunate, but seems like the best solution.
llvm-svn: 158290
constexpr until we get to the end of the class definition. When that happens,
be sure to remember that the class actually does have a constexpr constructor.
This is a stopgap solution, which still doesn't cover the case of a class with
multiple copy constructors (only some of which are constexpr). We should be
performing constructor lookup when implicitly defining a constructor in order
to determine whether all constructors it invokes are constexpr.
llvm-svn: 158228
In addition, I've made the pointer and reference typedef 'void' rather than T*
just so they can't get misused. I would've omitted them entirely but
std::distance likes them to be there even if it doesn't use them.
This rolls back r155808 and r155869.
Review by Doug Gregor incorporating feedback from Chandler Carruth.
llvm-svn: 158104
in-class initializer for one of its fields. Value-initialization of such
a type should use the in-class initializer!
The former was just a bug, the latter is a (reported) standard defect.
llvm-svn: 156274
filter_decl_iterator had a weird mismatch where both op* and op-> returned T*
making it difficult to generalize this filtering behavior into a reusable
library of any kind.
This change errs on the side of value, making op-> return T* and op* return
T&.
(reviewed by Richard Smith)
llvm-svn: 155808
data members for deleted or user-provided destructors.
Now it's computed in advance, serialize it, and in passing fix all the other
record DefinitionData flags whose serialization was missing.
llvm-svn: 151441
block pointer that returns a block literal which captures (by copy)
the lambda closure itself. Some aspects of the block literal are left
unspecified, namely the capture variable (which doesn't actually
exist) and the body (which will be filled in by IRgen because it can't
be written as an AST).
Because we're switching to this model, this patch also eliminates
tracking the copy-initialization expression for the block capture of
the conversion function, since that information is now embedded in the
synthesized block literal. -1 side tables FTW.
llvm-svn: 151131
arguments. There are two aspects to this:
- Make sure that when marking the declarations referenced in a
default argument, we don't try to mark local variables, both because
it's a waste of time and because the semantics are wrong: we're not
in a place where we could capture these variables again even if it
did make sense.
- When a lambda expression occurs in a default argument of a
function template, make sure that the corresponding closure type is
considered dependent, so that it will get properly instantiated. The
second bit is a bit of a hack; to fix it properly, we may have to
rearchitect our handling of default arguments, parsing them only
after creating the function definition. However, I'd like to
separate that work from the lambdas work.
llvm-svn: 151076
conversion to function pointer. Rather than having IRgen synthesize
the body of this function, we instead introduce a static member
function "__invoke" with the same signature as the lambda's
operator() in the AST. Sema then generates a body for the conversion
to function pointer which simply returns the address of __invoke. This
approach makes it easier to evaluate a call to the conversion function
as a constant, makes the linkage of the __invoke function follow the
normal rules for member functions, and may make life easier down the
road if we ever want to constexpr'ify some of lambdas.
Note that IR generation is responsible for filling in the body of
__invoke (Sema just adds a dummy body), because the body can't
generally be expressed in C++.
Eli, please review!
llvm-svn: 150783
pointers and block pointers). We use dummy definitions to keep the
invariant that an implicit, used definition has a body; IR generation
will substitute the actual contents, since they can't be represented
as C++.
For the block pointer case, compute the copy-initialization needed to
capture the lambda object in the block, which IR generation will need
later.
llvm-svn: 150645
CXXRecordDecl in a way that actually makes some sense:
- LambdaExpr contains all of the information for initializing the
lambda object, including the capture initializers and associated
array index variables.
- CXXRecordDecl's LambdaDefinitionData contains the captures, which
are needed to understand the captured variable references in the
body of the lambda.
llvm-svn: 150401
LambdaExpr over to the CXXRecordDecl. This allows us to eliminate the
back-link from the closure type to the LambdaExpr, which will simplify
and lazify AST deserialization.
llvm-svn: 150393
1358, 1360, 1452 and 1453.
- Instantiations of constexpr functions are always constexpr. This removes the
need for separate declaration/definition checking, which is now gone.
- This makes it possible for a constexpr function to be virtual, if they are
only dependently virtual. Virtual calls to such functions are not constant
expressions.
- Likewise, it's now possible for a literal type to have virtual base classes.
A constexpr constructor for such a type cannot actually produce a constant
expression, though, so add a special-case diagnostic for a constructor call
to such a type rather than trying to evaluate it.
- Classes with trivial default constructors (for which value initialization can
produce a fully-initialized value) are considered literal types.
- Classes with volatile members are not literal types.
- constexpr constructors can be members of non-literal types. We do not yet use
static initialization for global objects constructed in this way.
llvm-svn: 150359
This seems to negatively affect compile time onsome ObjC tests
(which use a lot of partial diagnostics I assume). I have to come
up with a way to keep them inline without including Diagnostic.h
everywhere. Now adding a new diagnostic requires a full rebuild
of e.g. the static analyzer which doesn't even use those diagnostics.
This reverts commit 6496bd10dc3a6d5e3266348f08b6e35f8184bc99.
This reverts commit 7af19b817ba964ac560b50c1ed6183235f699789.
This reverts commit fdd15602a42bbe26185978ef1e17019f6d969aa7.
This reverts commit 00bd44d5677783527d7517c1ffe45e4d75a0f56f.
This reverts commit ef9b60ffed980864a8db26ad30344be429e58ff5.
llvm-svn: 150006
Fix all the files that depended on transitive includes of Diagnostic.h.
With this patch in place changing a diagnostic no longer requires a full rebuild of the StaticAnalyzer.
llvm-svn: 149781
* support the gcc __builtin_constant_p() ? ... : ... folding hack in C++11
* check for unspecified values in pointer comparisons and pointer subtractions
llvm-svn: 149578
we have a redeclarable type, and only use the new virtual versions
(getPreviousDeclImpl() and getMostRecentDeclImpl()) when we don't have
that type information. This keeps us from penalizing users with strict
type information (and is the moral equivalent of a "final" method).
Plus, settle on the names getPreviousDecl() and getMostRecentDecl()
throughout.
llvm-svn: 148187
to Redeclarable<NamespaceDecl>, so that we benefit from the improveed
redeclaration deserialization and merging logic provided by
Redeclarable<T>. Otherwise, no functionality change.
As a drive-by fix, collapse the "inline" bit into the low bit of the
original namespace/anonymous namespace, saving 8 bytes per
NamespaceDecl on x86_64.
llvm-svn: 147729
default", make a note of which is used when creating the
initial declaration. Previously, we would wait until later to handle
default/delete as a definition, but this is too late: when adding the
declaration, we already treated the declaration as "user-provided"
when in fact it was merely "user-declared".
Fixes PR10861 and PR10442, along with a bunch of FIXMEs.
llvm-svn: 144011
that it retains source location information for the type. Aside from
general goodness (being able to walk the types described in that
information), we now have a proper representation for dependent
delegating constructors. Fixes PR10457 (for real).
llvm-svn: 143410
Add test that a variadic base list which expands to 0 bases doesn't make the
class a non-aggregate. This test passed before the change, too.
llvm-svn: 142411
- Remodel Expr::EvaluateAsInt to behave like the other EvaluateAs* functions,
and add Expr::EvaluateKnownConstInt to capture the current fold-or-assert
behaviour.
- Factor out evaluation of bitfield bit widths.
- Fix a few places which would evaluate an expression twice: once to determine
whether it is a constant expression, then again to get the value.
llvm-svn: 141561
This makes the code duplication of implicit special member handling even worse,
but the cleanup will have to come later. For now, this works.
Follow-up with tests for explicit defaulting and enabling the __has_feature
flag to come.
llvm-svn: 138821
Language-design credit goes to a lot of people, but I particularly want
to single out Blaine Garst and Patrick Beard for their contributions.
Compiler implementation credit goes to Argyrios, Doug, Fariborz, and myself,
in no particular order.
llvm-svn: 133103
behind implicit moves. We now correctly identify move constructors and
assignment operators and update bits on the record correctly. Generation
of implicit moves (declarations or definitions) is not yet supported.
llvm-svn: 132080
hasTrivialDefaultConstructor() really really means it now.
Also implement a fun standards bug regarding aggregates. Doug, if you'd
like, I can un-implement that bug if you think it is truly a defect.
The bug is that non-special-member constructors are never considered
user-provided, so the following is an aggregate:
struct foo {
foo(int);
};
It's kind of bad, but the solution isn't obvious - should
struct foo {
foo (int) = delete;
};
be an aggregate or not?
Lastly, add a missing initialization to FunctionDecl.
llvm-svn: 131101
type trait. The previous implementation suffered from several problems:
1) It implemented all of the logic in RecordType by walking over every
base and field in a CXXRecordDecl and validating the constraints of
the standard. This made for very straightforward code, but is
extremely inefficient. It also is conceptually wrong, the logic tied
to the C++ definition of standard-layout classes should be in
CXXRecordDecl, not RecordType.
2) To address the performance problems with #1, a cache bit was added to
CXXRecordDecl, and at the completion of every C++ class, the
RecordType was queried to determine if it was a standard layout
class, and that state was cached. Two things went very very wrong
with this. First, the caching version of the query *was never
called*. Even within the recursive steps of the walk over all fields
and bases the caching variant was not called, making each query
a full *recursive* walk. Second, despite the cache not being used, it
was computed for every class declared, even when the trait was never
used in the program. This probably significantly regressed compile
time performance for edge-case files.
3) An ASTContext was required merely to query the type trait because
querying it performed the actual computations.
4) The caching bit wasn't managed correctly (uninitialized).
The new implementation follows the system for all the other traits on
C++ classes by encoding all the state needed in the definition data and
building up the trait incrementally as each base and member are added to
the definition of the class.
The idiosyncracies of the specification of standard-layout classes
requires more state than I would like; currently 5 bits. I could
eliminate one of the bits easily at the expense of both clarity and
resilience of the code. I might be able to eliminate one of the other
bits by computing its state in terms of other state bits in the
definition. I've already done that in one place where there was a fairly
simple way to achieve it.
It's possible some of the bits could be moved out of the definition data
and into some other structure which isn't serialized if the serialized
bloat is a problem. That would preclude serialization of a partial class
declaration, but that's likely already precluded.
Comments on any of these issues welcome.
llvm-svn: 130601
Patch authored by John Wiegley.
These type traits are used for parsing code that employs certain features of
the Embarcadero C++ compiler. Several of these constructs are also desired by
libc++, according to its project pages (such as __is_standard_layout).
llvm-svn: 130342
operators in C++ record declarations.
This patch starts off by updating a bunch of the standard citations to
refer to the draft 0x standard so that the semantics intended for move
varianst is clear. Where necessary these are duplicated so they'll be
available in doxygen.
It adds bit fields to keep track of the state for the move constructs,
and updates all the code necessary to track this state (I think) as
members are declared for a class. It also wires the state into the
various trait-like accessors in the AST's API, and tests that the type
trait expressions now behave correctly in the presence of move
constructors and move assignment operators.
This isn't complete yet due to these glaring FIXMEs:
1) No synthesis of implicit move constructors or assignment operators.
2) I don't think we correctly enforce the new logic for both copy and
move trivial checks: that the *selected* copy/move
constructor/operator is trivial. Currently this requires *all* of them
to be trivial.
3) Some of the trait logic needs to be folded into the fine-grained
trivial bits to more closely match the wording of the standard. For
example, many of the places we currently set a bit to track POD-ness
could be removed by querying other more fine grained traits on
demand.
llvm-svn: 130076
This introduces a few APIs on the AST to bundle up the standard-based
logic so that programmatic clients have access to exactly the same
behavior.
There is only one serious FIXME here: checking for non-trivial move
constructors and move assignment operators. Those bits need to be added
to the declaration and accessors provided.
This implementation should be enough for the uses of __is_trivial in
libstdc++ 4.6's C++98 library implementation.
Ideas for more thorough test cases or any edge cases missing would be
appreciated. =D
llvm-svn: 130057
out-of-line destructors can result in the addition of redundant
destructors to a class. It's not harmful to the AST. Fixes
<rdar://problem/9158632>.
llvm-svn: 129860
This successfully performs constructor lookup and verifies that a
delegating initializer is the only initializer present.
This does not perform loop detection in the initialization, but it also
doesn't codegen delegating constructors at all, so this won't cause
runtime infinite loops yet.
llvm-svn: 126552
UnresolvedUsingValueDecl to use NestedNameSpecifierLoc rather than the
extremely-lossy NestedNameSpecifier/SourceRange pair it used to use,
improving source-location information.
Various infrastructure updates to support NestedNameSpecifierLoc:
- AST/PCH (de-)serialization
- Recursive AST visitor
- libclang traversal (including the first tests of this
functionality)
llvm-svn: 126459
lead to a serious slowdown (4%) on parsing of Cocoa.h. This memory
optimization should be revisited later, when we have time to look at
the generated code.
llvm-svn: 126033
when returning an NRVO candidate expression. For example, this
properly picks the move constructor when dealing with code such as
MoveOnlyType f() { MoveOnlyType mot; return mot; }
The previously-XFAIL'd rvalue-references test case now works, and has
been moved into the appropriate paragraph-specific test case.
llvm-svn: 123992
and visibility of declarations, because it was extremely messy and it
increased the size of NamedDecl.
An improved implementation is forthcoming.
llvm-svn: 121012
struct X {
X() : au_i1(123) {}
union {
int au_i1;
float au_f1;
};
};
clang will now deal with au_i1 explicitly as an IndirectFieldDecl.
llvm-svn: 120900
declarations.
The motivation for this patch is that linkage/visibility computations
are linear in the number of redeclarations of an entity, and we've run
into a case where a single translation unit has > 6500 redeclarations
of the same (unused!) external variable. Since each redeclaration
involves a linkage check, the resulting quadratic behavior makes Clang
slow to a crawl. With this change, a simple test with 512
redeclarations of a variable syntax-checks ~20x faster than
before.
That said, I hate this change, and will probably end up reverting it
in a few hours. Reasons to hate it:
- It makes NamedDecl larger, since we don't have enough free bits in
Decl to squeeze in the extra information about caching.
- There are way too many places where we need to invalidate this
cache, because the visibility of a declaration can change due to
redeclarations (!). Despite self-hosting and passing the testsuite,
I have no confidence that I've found all of places where this cache
needs to be invalidated.
llvm-svn: 120808
constructor template will not be used to copy a class object to a
value of its own type. We were eliminating all constructor templates
whose specializations look like a copy constructor, which eliminated
important candidates. Fixes PR8182.
llvm-svn: 118418
its initial creation/deserialization and store the changes in a chained PCH.
The idea is that the AST entities call methods on the ASTMutationListener to give notifications
of changes; the PCHWriter implements the ASTMutationListener interface and stores the incremental changes
of the updated entity. WIP
llvm-svn: 117235
into CXXRecordDecl. The only part that we do not handle this way are
using declarations, since that would require extra name lookup that we
don't currently want to pay for. This fixes <rdar://problem/8459981>,
so that LLDB can build a CXXRecordDecl and magically get all of the
right bits set.
llvm-svn: 115026
completely into CXXRecordDecl, by adding a new completeDefinition()
function. This required a little reshuffling of the final-overrider
checking code, since the "abstract" calculation in the presence of
abstract base classes needs to occur in
CXXRecordDecl::completeDefinition() but we don't want to compute final
overriders more than one in the common case.
llvm-svn: 115007