members that have a definition. Also, use
CheckSpecializationInstantiationRedecl as part of this instantiation
to make sure that we diagnose the various kinds of problems that can
occur with explicit instantiations.
llvm-svn: 85270
template instantiation. Preserve it through PCH. Show it off to the indexer.
I'm healthily ignoring the vector type cases because we don't have a sensible
TypeLoc implementation for them anyway.
llvm-svn: 84994
in the DeclaratorInfo, if one is present.
Preserve source information through template instantiation. This is made
more complicated by the possibility that ParmVarDecls don't have DIs, which
is possibly worth fixing in the future.
Also preserve source information for function parameters in ObjC method
declarations.
llvm-svn: 84971
TypeLoc class names to be $(Type classname)Loc. Rewrite the visitor.
Provide skeleton implementations for all the new TypeLocs.
Handle all cases in PCH. Handle a few more cases when inserting
location information in SemaType.
It should be extremely straightforward to add new location information
to existing TypeLoc objects now.
llvm-svn: 84386
instantiation redeclaration semantics for function template
specializations and member functions of class template
specializations. Also, record the point of instantiation for
explicit-instantiated functions and static data members.
llvm-svn: 84188
template as a specialization. For example, this occurs with:
template<typename T>
struct X {
template<typename U> struct Inner { /* ... */ };
};
template<> template<typename T>
struct X<int>::Inner {
T member;
};
We need to treat templates that are member specializations as special
in two contexts:
- When looking for a definition of a member template, we look
through the instantiation chain until we hit the primary template
*or a member specialization*. This allows us to distinguish
between the primary "Inner" definition and the X<int>::Inner
definition, above.
- When computing all of the levels of template arguments needed to
instantiate a member template, don't add template arguments
from contexts outside of the instantiation of a member
specialization, since the user has already manually substituted
those arguments.
Fix up the existing test for p18, which was actually wrong (but we
didn't diagnose it because of our poor handling of member
specializations of templates), and add a new test for member
specializations of templates.
llvm-svn: 83974
track of the kind of specialization or instantiation. Also, check the
scope of the specialization and ensure that a specialization
declaration without an initializer is not a definition.
llvm-svn: 83533
function of a class template was implicitly instantiated, explicitly
instantiated (declaration or definition), or explicitly
specialized. The same MemberSpecializationInfo structure will be used
for static data members and member classes as well.
llvm-svn: 83509
first implementation recognizes when a function declaration is an
explicit function template specialization (based on the presence of a
template<> header), performs template argument deduction + ambiguity
resolution to determine which template is being specialized, and hooks
There are many caveats here:
- We completely and totally drop any explicitly-specified template
arguments on the floor
- We don't diagnose any of the extra semantic things that we should
diagnose.
- I haven't looked to see that we're getting the right linkage for
explicit specializations
On a happy note, this silences a bunch of errors that show up in
libstdc++'s <iostream>, although Clang still can't get through the
entire header.
llvm-svn: 82728
Several of the existing methods were identical to their respective
specializations, and so have been removed entirely. Several more 'leaf'
optimizations were introduced.
The getAsFoo() methods which imposed extra conditions, like
getAsObjCInterfacePointerType(), have been left in place.
llvm-svn: 82501
generated for an inline function definition, taking into account C99
and GNU inline/extern inline semantics. This solution is simpler,
cleaner, and fixes PR4536.
llvm-svn: 81670
instantiation of a member function template or member function of a
class template to be out-of-line if the definition of that function
template or member function was defined out-of-line. This ensures that
we get the correct linkage for explicit instantiations of out-of-line
definitions.
llvm-svn: 81562
- Diagnose attempts to add default arguments to templates (or member
functions of templates) after the initial declaration (DR217).
- Improve diagnostics when a default argument is redefined. Now, the
note will always point at the place where the default argument was
previously defined, rather than pointing to the most recent
declaration of the function.
llvm-svn: 81548
templates. We now distinguish between an explicit instantiation
declaration and an explicit instantiation definition, and know not to
instantiate explicit instantiation declarations. Unfortunately, there
is some remaining confusion w.r.t. instantiation of out-of-line member
function definitions that causes trouble here.
llvm-svn: 81053
DeclaratorDecl contains a DeclaratorInfo* to keep type source info.
Subclasses of DeclaratorDecl are FieldDecl, FunctionDecl, and VarDecl.
EnumConstantDecl still inherits from ValueDecl since it has no need for DeclaratorInfo.
Decl/Sema interfaces accept a DeclaratorInfo as parameter but no DeclaratorInfo is created yet.
llvm-svn: 79392
DeclaratorInfo will contain a flat memory block for source information about a type that came out of a declarator.
TypeLoc and its subclasses will be used by clients as wrappers to "traverse" the memory block and read the information.
Both DeclaratorInfo and TypeLoc are not utilized in this commit.
llvm-svn: 79391
1) Allow the Index library (and any other interested client) to walk
the set of declarations for a given tag (enum, union, class,
whatever). At the moment, this information is not readily available.
2) Reduce our dependence on TagDecl::TypeForDecl being mapped down
to a TagType (for which getDecl() will return the tag definition, if
one exists). This property won't exist for class template partial
specializations.
3) Make the canonical declaration of a TagDecl actually canonical,
e.g., so that it does not change when the tag is defined.
llvm-svn: 77523
Type::getAsReferenceType() -> Type::getAs<ReferenceType>()
Type::getAsRecordType() -> Type::getAs<RecordType>()
Type::getAsPointerType() -> Type::getAs<PointerType>()
Type::getAsBlockPointerType() -> Type::getAs<BlockPointerType>()
Type::getAsLValueReferenceType() -> Type::getAs<LValueReferenceType>()
Type::getAsRValueReferenceType() -> Type::getAs<RValueReferenceType>()
Type::getAsMemberPointerType() -> Type::getAs<MemberPointerType>()
Type::getAsReferenceType() -> Type::getAs<ReferenceType>()
Type::getAsTagType() -> Type::getAs<TagType>()
And remove Type::getAsReferenceType(), etc.
This change is similar to one I made a couple weeks ago, but that was partly
reverted pending some additional design discussion. With Doug's pending smart
pointer changes for Types, it seemed natural to take this approach.
llvm-svn: 77510
Note that this also fixes a bug that affects non-template code, where we
were not treating out-of-line static data members are "file-scope" variables,
and therefore not checking their initializers.
llvm-svn: 77002
until Doug Gregor's Type smart pointer code lands (or more discussion occurs).
These methods just call the new Type::getAs<XXX> methods, so we still have
reduced implementation redundancy. Having explicit getAsXXXType() methods makes
it easier to set breakpoints in the debugger.
llvm-svn: 76193
Note: One day, it might be useful to consider adding this info to DeclGroup (as the comments in FunctionDecl/VarDecl suggest). For now, I think this works fine. I considered moving this to ValueDecl (a common ancestor of FunctionDecl/VarDecl/FieldDecl), however this would add overhead to EnumConstantDecl (which would burn memory and isn't necessary).
llvm-svn: 75635
It iterates over all the redeclarations, regardless of the starting point. For example:
1) int f();
2) int f();
3) int f();
if you have the (2) FunctionDecl and call redecls_begin/redecls_end to iterate, you'll get this sequence:
(2)
(1)
(3)
The motivation to introduce this was that, previously, if (3) was a function definition,
and you called getBody() at (2), it would not return it, since getBody() iterated over the previous declarations only,
so it would only check (2) and (1).
llvm-svn: 75604
When a Decl subclass can have multiple re-declarations in the same declaration context (like FunctionDecl),
getPrimaryDecl() will return a particular Decl that all of them will point to as the "primary" declaration.
llvm-svn: 74800
The implementations of these methods can Use Decl::getASTContext() to get the ASTContext.
This commit touches a lot of files since call sites for these methods are everywhere.
I used pre-tokenized "carbon.h" and "cocoa.h" headers to do some timings, and there was no real time difference between before the commit and after it.
llvm-svn: 74501
This is simple enough, but then I thought it would be nice to make PrintingPolicy
get a LangOptions so that various things can key off "bool" and "C++" independently.
This spiraled out of control. There are many fixme's, but I think things are slightly
better than they were before.
One thing that can be improved: CFG should probably have an ASTContext pointer in it,
which would simplify its clients.
llvm-svn: 74493
- Track implicit instantiations vs. the not-yet-supported explicit
specializations
- Give implicit instantiations of function templates (and member
functions of class templates) linkonce_odr linkage.
- Improve name mangling for function template specializations,
including the template arguments of the instantiation and the return
type of the function.
Note that our name-mangling is improved, but not correct: we still
don't mangle substitutions, although the manglings we produce can be
demangled.
llvm-svn: 74466
-Introduce Decl::getASTContext() which returns the reference from the TranslationUnitDecl that it is contained in.
The general idea is that Decls can point to their own ASTContext so that it is no longer required to "manually" keep track and make sure that you pass the correct ASTContext to Decls' methods, e.g. methods like Decl::getAttrs should eventually not require a ASTContext parameter.
llvm-svn: 74434
For a FunctionDecl that has been instantiated due to template argument
deduction, we now store the primary template from which it was
instantiated and the deduced template arguments. From this
information, we can instantiate the body of the function template.
llvm-svn: 74232
templates.
For example, this now type-checks (but does not instantiate the body
of deref<int>):
template<typename T> T& deref(T* t) { return *t; }
void test(int *ip) {
int &ir = deref(ip);
}
Specific changes/additions:
* Template argument deduction from a call to a function template.
* Instantiation of a function template specializations (just the
declarations) from the template arguments deduced from a call.
* FunctionTemplateDecls are stored directly in declaration contexts
and found via name lookup (all forms), rather than finding the
FunctionDecl and then realizing it is a template. This is
responsible for most of the churn, since some of the core
declaration matching and lookup code assumes that all functions are
FunctionDecls.
llvm-svn: 74213
Add initial support for NamespaceDecl, VarDecl, and FunctionDecl:
-NamespaceDecl range is from name to '}'
-VarDecl is from name to possible init expression
-FunctionDecl is from name to last parameter name or to end of its function body.
llvm-svn: 73821
preprocessor and initialize it early in clang-cc. This
ensures that __has_builtin works in all modes, not just
when ASTContext is around.
llvm-svn: 73319
printing logic to help customize the output. For now, we use this
rather than a special flag to suppress the "struct" when printing
"struct X" and to print the Boolean type as "bool" in C++ but "_Bool"
in C.
llvm-svn: 72590
given DeclContext is dependent on type parameters. Use this to
properly determine whether a TagDecl is dependent; previously, we were
missing the case where the TagDecl is a local class of a member
function of a class template (phew!).
Also, make sure that, when we instantiate declarations within a member
function of a class template (or a function template, eventually),
that we add those declarations to the "instantiated locals" map so
that they can be found when instantiating declaration references.
Unfortunately, I was not able to write a useful test for this change,
although the assert() that fires when uncommenting the FIXME'd line in
test/SemaTemplate/instantiate-declref.cpp tells the "experienced user"
that we're now doing the right thing.
llvm-svn: 72526
an integral constant expression, maintain a cache of the value and the
is-an-ICE flag within the VarDecl itself. This eliminates
exponential-time behavior of the Fibonacci template metaprogram.
llvm-svn: 72428
template, introduce that member function into the template
instantiation stack. Also, add diagnostics showing the member function
within the instantiation stack and clean up the qualified-name
printing so that we get something like:
note: in instantiation of member function 'Switch1<int, 2, 2>::f'
requested here
in the template instantiation backtrace.
llvm-svn: 72015
specialization" within a C++ template, and permit name lookup into the
current instantiation. For example, given:
template<typename T, typename U>
struct X {
typedef T type;
X* x1; // current instantiation
X<T, U> *x2; // current instantiation
X<U, T> *x3; // not current instantiation
::X<type, U> *x4; // current instantiation
X<typename X<type, U>::type, U>: *x5; // current instantiation
};
llvm-svn: 71471
template. The injected-class-name is either a type or a template,
depending on whether a '<' follows it. As a type, the
injected-class-name's template argument list contains its template
parameters in declaration order.
As part of this, add logic for canonicalizing declarations, and be
sure to canonicalize declarations used in template names and template
arguments.
A TagType is dependent if the declaration it references is dependent.
I'm not happy about the rather complicated protocol needed to use
ASTContext::getTemplateSpecializationType.
llvm-svn: 71408
mode and in the presence of __gnu_inline__ attributes. This should fix
both PR3989 and PR4069.
As part of this, we now keep track of all of the attributes attached
to each declaration even after we've performed declaration
merging. This fixes PR3264.
llvm-svn: 70292
parameters in a functiondecl, even if the decl is invalid and has a confusing
Declarator. On the testcase, we now emit one beautiful diagnostic:
t.c:2:1: error: unknown type name 'unknown_type'
unknown_type f(void*)
^
GCC 4.0 produces:
t.c:2: error: syntax error before ‘f’
t.c: In function ‘f’:
t.c:2: error: parameter name omitted
and GCC 4.2:
t.c:2: error: expected ‘=’, ‘,’, ‘;’, ‘asm’ or ‘__attribute__’ before ‘f’
llvm-svn: 70016
remove a special case that was apparently for typeof() and
generalize the code in SemaDecl that handles typedefs to
handle any sugar type (including typedef, typeof, etc).
Improve comment to make it more clear what is going on.
llvm-svn: 70015
tentative definitions off to the ASTConsumer at the end of the
translation unit.
Eliminate CodeGen's internal tracking of tentative definitions, and
instead hook into ASTConsumer::CompleteTentativeDefinition. Also,
tweak the definition-deferal logic for C++, where there are no
tentative definitions.
Fixes <rdar://problem/6808352>, and will make it much easier for
precompiled headers to cope with tentative definitions in the future.
llvm-svn: 69681
"Hello, World!", this takes us from deserializing 6469
statements/expressions down to deserializing 1
statement/expression. It only translated into a 1% improvement on the
Carbon-prefixed 403.gcc, but (a) it's the right thing to do, and (b)
we expect this to matter more once we lazily deserialize identifiers.
llvm-svn: 69407
lazy PCH deserialization. Propagate that argument wherever it needs to
be. No functionality change, except that I've tightened up a few PCH
tests in preparation.
llvm-svn: 69406
allow non-literal format strings that are variables that (a) permanently bind to
a string constant and (b) whose string constants are resolvable within the same
translation unit.
llvm-svn: 67404
be CompoundStmts. I think this is a valid assumption, and felt that the API
should reflect it. Others please validate this assumption to make sure I didn't
break anything.
llvm-svn: 66814
need them to evaluate redeclarations or call a function that hasn't
already been declared. We now keep a DenseMap of these locally-scoped
declarations so that they are not visible but can be quickly found,
e.g., when we're looking for previous declarations or before we go
ahead and implicitly declare a function that's being called. Fixes
PR3672.
llvm-svn: 65792
giving them rough classifications (normal types, never-canonical
types, always-dependent types, abstract type representations) and
making it far easier to make sure that we've hit all of the cases when
decoding types.
Switched some switch() statements on the type class over to using this
mechanism, and filtering out those things we don't care about. For
example, CodeGen should never see always-dependent or non-canonical
types, while debug info generation should never see always-dependent
types. More switch() statements on the type class need to be moved
over to using this approach, so that we'll get warnings when we add a
new type then fail to account for it somewhere in the compiler.
As part of this, some types have been renamed:
TypeOfExpr -> TypeOfExprType
FunctionTypeProto -> FunctionProtoType
FunctionTypeNoProto -> FunctionNoProtoType
There shouldn't be any functionality change...
llvm-svn: 65591
nicely sugared type that shows how the user wrote the actual
specialization. This sugared type won't actually show up until we
start doing instantiations.
llvm-svn: 65577
only from a function definition (that does not have a prototype) are
only used to determine the compatible with other declarations of that
same function. In particular, when referencing the function we pretend
as if it does not have a prototype. Implement this behavior, which
fixes PR3626.
llvm-svn: 65460
- When we are declaring a function in local scope, we can merge with
a visible declaration from an outer scope if that declaration
refers to an entity with linkage. This behavior now works in C++
and properly ignores entities without linkage.
- Diagnose the use of "static" on a function declaration in local
scope.
- Diagnose the declaration of a static function after a non-static
declaration of the same function.
- Propagate the storage specifier to a function declaration from a
prior declaration (PR3425)
- Don't name-mangle "main"
llvm-svn: 65360
- Implement instance/class overloading in ObjCContainerDecl (removing a FIXME). This involved hacking NamedDecl::declarationReplaces(), which took awhile to figure out (didn't realize replace was the default).
- Changed Sema::ActOnInstanceMessage() to remove redundant warnings when dealing with protocols. For now, I've omitted the "protocol" term in the diagnostic. It simplifies the code flow and wan't always 100% accurate (e.g. "Foo<Prot>" looks in the class interface, not just the protocol).
- Changed several test cases to jive with the above changes.
llvm-svn: 65292
functions, so if we're declaring a static we should implicitly declare
a library function by the same name (e.g., malloc, strdup). Fixes PR3592.
llvm-svn: 64736
about, whether they are builtins or not. Use this to add the
appropriate "format" attribute to NSLog, NSLogv, asprintf, and
vasprintf, and to translate builtin attributes (from Builtins.def)
into actual attributes on the function declaration.
Use the "printf" format attribute on function declarations to
determine whether we should do format string checking, rather than
looking at an ad hoc list of builtins and "known" function names.
Be a bit more careful about when we consider a function a "builtin" in
C++.
llvm-svn: 64561
etc.) when we perform name lookup on them. This ensures that we
produce the correct signature for these functions, which has two
practical impacts:
1) When we're supporting the "implicit function declaration" feature
of C99, these functions will be implicitly declared with the right
signature rather than as a function returning "int" with no
prototype. See PR3541 for the reason why this is important (hint:
GCC always predeclares these functions).
2) If users attempt to redeclare one of these library functions with
an incompatible signature, we produce a hard error.
This patch does a little bit of work to give reasonable error
messages. For example, when we hit case #1 we complain that we're
implicitly declaring this function with a specific signature, and then
we give a note that asks the user to include the appropriate header
(e.g., "please include <stdlib.h> or explicitly declare 'malloc'"). In
case #2, we show the type of the implicit builtin that was incorrectly
declared, so the user can see the problem. We could do better here:
for example, when displaying this latter error message we say
something like:
'strcpy' was implicitly declared here with type 'char *(char *, char
const *)'
but we should really print out a fake code line showing the
declaration, like this:
'strcpy' was implicitly declared here as:
char *strcpy(char *, char const *)
This would also be good for printing built-in candidates with C++
operator overloading.
The set of C library functions supported by this patch includes all
functions from the C99 specification's <stdlib.h> and <string.h> that
(a) are predefined by GCC and (b) have signatures that could cause
codegen issues if they are treated as functions with no prototype
returning and int. Future work could extend this set of functions to
other C library functions that we know about.
llvm-svn: 64504
- Changes Lookup*Name functions to return NamedDecls, instead of
Decls. Unfortunately my recent statement that it will simplify lot of
code, was not quite right, but it simplifies some...
- Makes MergeLookupResult SmallPtrSet instead of vector, following
Douglas suggestions.
- Adds %qN format for printing qualified names to Diagnostic.
- Avoids searching for using-directives in Scopes, which are not
DeclScope, during unqualified name lookup.
llvm-svn: 63739
This will simplify runtime replacement of ASTContext's allocator. Keeping the allocator private (and removing getAllocator() entirely) is also goodness.
llvm-svn: 63135
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
even when we are still defining the TagDecl. This is required so that
qualified name lookup of a class name within its definition works (see
the new bits in test/SemaCXX/qualified-id-lookup.cpp).
As part of this, move the nested redefinition checking code into
ActOnTag. This gives us diagnostics earlier (when we try to perform
the nested redefinition, rather than when we try to complete the 2nd
definition) and removes some code duplication.
llvm-svn: 62386
introduce a Scope for the body of a tag. This reduces the number of
semantic differences between C and C++ structs and unions, and will
help with other features (e.g., anonymous unions) in C. Some important
points:
- Fields are now in the "member" namespace (IDNS_Member), to keep
them separate from tags and ordinary names in C. See the new test
in Sema/member-reference.c for an example of why this matters. In
C++, ordinary and member name lookup will find members in both the
ordinary and member namespace, so the difference between
IDNS_Member and IDNS_Ordinary is erased by Sema::LookupDecl (but
only in C++!).
- We always introduce a Scope and push a DeclContext when we're
defining a tag, in both C and C++. Previously, we had different
actions and different Scope/CurContext behavior for enums, C
structs/unions, and C++ structs/unions/classes. Now, it's one pair
of actions. (Yay!)
There's still some fuzziness in the handling of struct/union/enum
definitions within other struct/union/enum definitions in C. We'll
need to do some more cleanup to eliminate some reliance on CurContext
before we can solve this issue for real. What we want is for something
like this:
struct X {
struct T { int x; } t;
};
to introduce T into translation unit scope (placing it at the
appropriate point in the IdentifierResolver chain, too), but it should
still have struct X as its lexical declaration
context. PushOnScopeChains isn't smart enough to do that yet, though,
so there's a FIXME test in nested-redef.c
llvm-svn: 61940
Duplicate-member checking within classes is still a little messy, and
anonymous unions are still completely broken in C. We'll need to unify
the handling of fields in C and C++ to make this code applicable in
both languages.
llvm-svn: 61878
structures and classes) in C++. Covers name lookup and the synthesis
and member access for the unnamed objects/fields associated with
anonymous unions.
Some C++ semantic checks are still missing (anonymous unions can't
have function members, static data members, etc.), and there is no
support for anonymous structs or unions in C.
llvm-svn: 61840
attached to an identifier. Instead, all overloaded functions will be
pushed into scope, and we'll synthesize an OverloadedFunctionDecl on
the fly when we need it.
llvm-svn: 61386
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
operator+, directly, using the same mechanism as all other special
names.
Removed the "special" identifiers for the overloaded operators from
the identifier table and IdentifierInfo data structure. IdentifierInfo
is back to representing only real identifiers.
Added a new Action, ActOnOperatorFunctionIdExpr, that builds an
expression from an parsed operator-function-id (e.g., "operator
+"). ActOnIdentifierExpr used to do this job, but
operator-function-ids are no longer represented by IdentifierInfo's.
Extended Declarator to store overloaded operator names.
Sema::GetNameForDeclarator now knows how to turn the operator
name into a DeclarationName for the overloaded operator.
Except for (perhaps) consolidating the functionality of
ActOnIdentifier, ActOnOperatorFunctionIdExpr, and
ActOnConversionFunctionExpr into a common routine that builds an
appropriate DeclRefExpr by looking up a DeclarationName, all of the
work on normalizing declaration names should be complete with this
commit.
llvm-svn: 59526
destructors, and conversion functions. The placeholders were used to
work around the fact that the parser and some of Sema really wanted
declarators to have simple identifiers; now, the code that deals with
declarators will use DeclarationNames.
llvm-svn: 59469
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
operators in C++. Overloaded operators can be called directly via
their operator-function-ids, e.g., "operator+(foo, bar)", but we don't
yet implement the semantics of operator overloading to handle, e.g.,
"foo + bar".
llvm-svn: 58817
Instead of using two sets of Decl kinds (Struct/Union/Class and CXXStruct/CXXUnion/CXXClass), use one 'Record' and one 'CXXRecord' Decl kind and make tag kind a property of TagDecl.
Cleans up the code a bit and better reflects that Decl class structure.
llvm-svn: 57541
- Modify BlockExpr to reference the BlockDecl.
This is "cleanup" necessary to improve our lookup semantics for blocks (to fix <rdar://problem/6272905> clang block rewriter: parameter to function not imported into block?).
Still some follow-up work to finish this (forthcoming).
llvm-svn: 57298
This is a temporary solution to help with the block rewriter (though it certainly has general utility).
Once DeclGroup's are implemented, this SourceLocation should be stored with it (since it applies to all the decls).
llvm-svn: 56985
This change effects both RecordDecls and CXXRecordDecls, but does not effect EnumDecls (yet).
The motivation of this patch is as follows:
- Capture more source information, necessary for refactoring/rewriting clients.
- Pave the way to resolve ownership issues with RecordDecls with the forthcoming
addition of DeclGroups.
Current caveats:
- Until DeclGroups are in place, we will leak RecordDecls not explicitly
referenced by the AST. For example:
typedef struct { ... } x;
The RecordDecl for the struct will be leaked because the TypedefDecl doesn't
refer to it. This will be solved with DeclGroups.
- This patch also (temporarily) breaks CodeGen. More below.
High-level changes:
- As before, TagType still refers to a TagDecl, but it doesn't own it. When
a struct/union/class is first referenced, a RecordType and RecordDecl are
created for it, and the RecordType refers to that RecordDecl. Later, if
a new RecordDecl is created, the pointer to a RecordDecl in RecordType is
updated to point to the RecordDecl that defines the struct/union/class.
- TagDecl and RecordDecl now how a method 'getDefinition()' to return the
TagDecl*/RecordDecl* that refers to the TagDecl* that defines a particular
enum/struct/class/union. This is useful from going from a RecordDecl* that
defines a forward declaration to the RecordDecl* that provides the actual
definition. Note that this also works for EnumDecls, except that in this case
there is no distinction between forward declarations and definitions (yet).
- Clients should no longer assume that 'isDefinition()' returns true from a
RecordDecl if the corresponding struct/union/class has been defined.
isDefinition() only returns true if a particular RecordDecl is the defining
Decl. Use 'getDefinition()' instead to determine if a struct has been defined.
- The main changes to Sema happen in ActOnTag. To make the changes more
incremental, I split off the processing of enums and structs et al into two
code paths. Enums use the original code path (which is in ActOnTag) and
structs use the ActOnTagStruct. Eventually the two code paths will be merged,
but the idea was to preserve the original logic both for comparison and not to
change the logic for both enums and structs all at once.
- There is NO CHAINING of RecordDecls for the same RecordType. All RecordDecls
that correspond to the same type simply have a pointer to that type. If we
need to figure out what are all the RecordDecls for a given type we can build
a backmap.
- The diff in CXXRecordDecl.[cpp,h] is actually very small; it just mimics the
changes to RecordDecl. For some reason 'svn' marks the entire file as changed.
Why is CodeGen broken:
- Codegen assumes that there is an equivalence between RecordDecl* and
RecordType*. This was true before because we only created one RecordDecl* for
a given RecordType*, but it is no longer true. I believe this shouldn't be too
hard to change, but the patch was big enough as it is.
I have tested this patch on both the clang test suite, and by running the static analyzer over Postgresql and a large Apple-internal project (mix of Objective-C and C).
llvm-svn: 55839
The motivation behind this change is that chaining the RecordDecls is simply unnecessary. Once we create multiple RecordDecls for the same struct/union/class, clients that care about all the declarations of the same struct can build a back map by seeing which Decls refer to the same RecordType.
llvm-svn: 55821
- Remove method 'isForwardDecl'; this functionality is already provided by
'isDefinition()'
- Move method definitions to be co-located with other RecordDecl methods.
llvm-svn: 55649
- Added method 'isForwardDeclaration', a predicate method that returns true
if a RecordDecl represents a forward declaration.
- Added method 'getDefinitionDecl', a query method that returns a pointer to
the RecordDecl that provides the actual definition of a struct/union.
llvm-svn: 55642
- Change constructor and create methods to accept a CXXRecordDecl* (RecordDecl*)
instead of a ScopedDecl* for PrevDecl. This causes the type checking
to be more tight and doesn't break any code.
RecordDecl:
- Don't use the NextDeclarator field in ScopedDecl to represent the previous
declaration. This is a conflated use of the NextDeclarator field, which will
be removed anyway when DeclGroups are fully implemented.
- Instead, represent (a soon to be implemented) chain of RecordDecls using a
NextDecl field. The last RecordDecl in the chain is always the 'defining'
RecordDecl that owns the FieldDecls. The other RecordDecls in the chain
are forward declarations.
llvm-svn: 55640
encountered. Mixing up the decls is unintuitive, and confuses the AST
destruction code. Fixes PR2360.
Note that there is a need to look up the characteristics and
declarations of a function associated with a particular name or decl,
but the original swapping code doesn't solve it properly.
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-dev/2008-May/001644.html is one
suggestion for how to fix that.
llvm-svn: 51584
Fixed a bug in ParmVarDecl::param_end(): Handle the case where there are no
ParmVarDecls for a FunctionDecl, but its function prototype has formal arguments
(can happen with typedefs).
llvm-svn: 51297
1) Sema::ParseAST now constructs a TranslationUnit object to own the top-level Decls, which releases the top-level Decls upon exiting ParseAST.
2) Bug fix: TranslationUnit::~TranslationUnit handles the case where a Decl is added more than once as a top-level Decl.
3) Decl::Destroy is now a virtual method, obviating the need for a special dispatch based on DeclKind.
3) FunctionDecl::Destroy now releases its Body using its Destroy method.
4) Added Stmt::Destroy and Stmt::DestroyChildren, which recursively delete the child ASTs of a Stmt and call their dstors. We may need to special case dstor/Destroy methods for particular Stmt subclasses that own other dynamically allocated objects besides AST nodes.
5) REGRESSION: We temporarily are not deallocating attributes; a FIXME is provided.
llvm-svn: 51286
-NamespaceDecl for the AST
-Checks for name clashes between namespaces and tag/normal declarations.
This commit doesn't implement proper name lookup for namespaces.
llvm-svn: 50321
DeclContext *CtxDecl -> DeclContext *DeclCtx
DeclContext *CD -> DeclContext *DC
It makes the code more consistent."
Patch by Zhongxing Xu!
llvm-svn: 50105
-Added TranslationUnitDecl class to serve as top declaration context
-ASTContext gets a TUDecl member and a getTranslationUnitDecl() function
-All ScopedDecls get the TUDecl as DeclContext when declared at global scope
llvm-svn: 49855
This is a fairly mechanical/large change. As a result, I avoided making any changes/simplifications that weren't directly related. I did break two Analysis tests. I also have a couple FIXME's in UninitializedValues.cpp. Ted, can you take a look? If the bug isn't obvious, I am happy to dig in and fix it (since I broke it).
llvm-svn: 49748
#1: To be consistent with FieldDecl::getContextDecl(), which serves the same purpose.
#2: From my perspective, getContext() is too general (and used by several other classes for different purposes).
llvm-svn: 49224
-Added ContextDecl (no TranslationUnitDecl)
-ScopedDecl class has a ContextDecl member
-FieldDecl class has a ContextDecl member, so that a Field or a ObjCIvar can be traced back to their RecordDecl/ObjCInterfaceDecl easily
-FunctionDecl, ObjCMethodDecl, TagDecl, ObjCInterfaceDecl inherit from ContextDecl. With TagDecl as ContextDecl, enum constants have a EnumDecl as their context.
-Moved Decl class to a "DeclBase.h" along with ContextDecl class
-CurContext is handled by Sema
llvm-svn: 49208
- Added a DenseMap to associate an IdentifierInfo with the ObjCCompatibleAliasDecl.
- Renamed LookupScopedDecl->LookupDecl and changed it's return type to Decl. Also added lookup for ObjCCompatibleAliasDecl's.
- Removed Sema::LookupInterfaceDecl(). Converted clients to used LookupDecl().
- Some minor indentation changes.
Will deal with ObjCInterfaceDecl and getObjCInterfaceDecl() in a separate commit...
llvm-svn: 49058
Fix objc ivar lookup. Ivar lookup should occur between lookup
of method-local values and lookup of globals. Emulate this with
some logic in the handling of Sema::ActOnIdentifierExpr.
Two todo's left:
1) sema shouldn't turn a bare reference to an ivar into "self->ivar"
in the AST. This is a hack.
2) The new ScopedDecl::isDefinedOutsideFunctionOrMethod method does
not correctly handle typedefs and enum constants yet.
llvm-svn: 48972
lib dir and move all the libraries into it. This follows the main
llvm tree, and allows the libraries to be built in parallel. The
top level now enforces that all the libs are built before Driver,
but we don't care what order the libs are built in. This speeds
up parallel builds, particularly incremental ones.
llvm-svn: 48402