Include search paths can be relative paths. The loadSubdirectoryModuleMaps function
should account for that and respect the -working-directory parameter given to Clang.
rdar://46045849
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54503
llvm-svn: 346822
Before this patch, clang would emit a (module-)forward declaration for
template instantiations that are not anchored by an explicit template
instantiation, but still are guaranteed to be available in an imported
module. Unfortunately detecting the owning module doesn't reliably
work when local submodule visibility is enabled and the template is
inside a cross-module namespace.
This make clang debuggable again with -gmodules and LSV enabled.
rdar://problem/41552377
llvm-svn: 345109
There is a bit of code at the end of AddDeclaration that should be run on
every exit of the function. However, there was an early exit beforehand
that could be triggered, which causes a small amount of data to skip the
hashing, leading to false positive mismatch. Use a separate function so
that this code is always run.
llvm-svn: 342199
Summary:
Reproducer and errors:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37878
lookupModule was falling back to loadSubdirectoryModuleMaps when it couldn't
find ModuleName in (proper) search paths. This was causing iteration over all
files in the search path subdirectories for example "/usr/include/foobar" in
bugzilla case.
Users don't expect Clang to load modulemaps in subdirectories implicitly, and
also the disk access is not cheap.
if (AllowExtraModuleMapSearch) true with ObjC with @import ModuleName.
Reviewers: rsmith, aprantl, bruno
Subscribers: cfe-commits, teemperor, v.g.vassilev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48367
llvm-svn: 337430
Summary:
Reproducer and errors:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37878
lookupModule was falling back to loadSubdirectoryModuleMaps when it couldn't
find ModuleName in (proper) search paths. This was causing iteration over all
files in the search path subdirectories for example "/usr/include/foobar" in
bugzilla case.
Users don't expect Clang to load modulemaps in subdirectories implicitly, and
also the disk access is not cheap.
if (AllowExtraModuleMapSearch) true with ObjC with @import ModuleName.
Reviewers: rsmith, aprantl, bruno
Subscribers: cfe-commits, teemperor, v.g.vassilev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48367
llvm-svn: 336660
Not doing so causes the AST writter to assert since the decl in question
never gets emitted. This is fine when modules is not used, but otherwise
we need to serialize something other than garbage.
rdar://problem/39844933
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47297
llvm-svn: 336031
ODRHash aims to provide Cross-TU stable hashing. Making clang::Type pointer
part of the hash connects (remotely) the ODRHash with the TU-specific
::Profile hasher.
r332281 exposed the issue by changing the way the ASTContext different
elaborated types if there is an owning tag. In that case, ODRHash stores two
different types in its TypeMap which yields false ODR violation in modules.
The current state of implementation shouldn't need the TypeMap concept
anymore. Rip it out.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48524
llvm-svn: 335853
Using @import in framework headers inhibit the use of such headers
when not using modules, this is specially bad for headers that end
up in the SDK (or any other system framework). Add a warning to give
users some indication that this is discouraged.
rdar://problem/39192894
llvm-svn: 335780
Framework vendors usually layout their framework headers in the
following way:
Foo.framework/Headers -> "public" headers
Foo.framework/PrivateHeader -> "private" headers
Since both headers in both directories can be found with #import
<Foo/some-header.h>, it's easy to make mistakes and include headers in
Foo.framework/PrivateHeader from headers in Foo.framework/Headers, which
usually configures a layering violation on Darwin ecosystems. One of the
problem this causes is dep cycles when modules are used, since it's very
common for "private" modules to include from the "public" ones; adding
an edge the other way around will trigger cycles.
Add a warning to catch those cases such that:
./A.framework/Headers/A.h:1:10: warning: public framework header includes private framework header 'A/APriv.h'
#include <A/APriv.h>
^
rdar://problem/38712182
llvm-svn: 335542
Introduce -Wquoted-include-in-framework-header, which should fire a warning
whenever a quote include appears in a framework header and suggest a fix-it.
For instance, for header A.h added in the tests, this is how the warning looks
like:
./A.framework/Headers/A.h:2:10: warning: double-quoted include "A0.h" in framework header, expected angle-bracketed instead [-Wquoted-include-in-framework-header]
#include "A0.h"
^~~~~~
<A/A0.h>
./A.framework/Headers/A.h:3:10: warning: double-quoted include "B.h" in framework header, expected angle-bracketed instead [-Wquoted-include-in-framework-header]
#include "B.h"
^~~~~
<B.h>
This helps users to prevent frameworks from using local headers when in fact
they should be targetting system level ones.
The warning is off by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47157
rdar://problem/37077034
llvm-svn: 335375
Introduce -Wquoted-include-in-framework-header, which should fire a warning
whenever a quote include appears in a framework header and suggest a fix-it.
For instance, for header A.h added in the tests, this is how the warning looks
like:
./A.framework/Headers/A.h:2:10: warning: double-quoted include "A0.h" in framework header, expected angle-bracketed instead [-Wquoted-include-in-framework-header]
#include "A0.h"
^~~~~~
<A/A0.h>
./A.framework/Headers/A.h:3:10: warning: double-quoted include "B.h" in framework header, expected angle-bracketed instead [-Wquoted-include-in-framework-header]
#include "B.h"
^~~~~
<B.h>
This helps users to prevent frameworks from using local headers when in fact
they should be targetting system level ones.
The warning is off by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47157
rdar://problem/37077034
llvm-svn: 335184
When in the context of suggestion the fix-it from .Private to _Private
for private modules, trim off the 'explicit' and add 'framework' when
appropriate.
rdar://problem/41030554
llvm-svn: 334859
When a module declaration for a framework lacks the 'framework'
qualifier, the listed headers aren't found (because there's no
trigger for the special framework style path lookup) and the module
is silently not built. This leads to frameworks not being modularized
by accident, which is pretty bad.
Add a warning and suggest the user to add the 'framework' qualifier
when we can prove that it's the case.
rdar://problem/39193062
llvm-svn: 333718
A @import targeting a top level module from a private module map file
(@import Foo_Private), would fail if there's any submodule declaration
around (module Foo.SomeSub) in the same private module map.
This happens because compileModuleImpl, when building Foo_Private, will
start with the private module map and will not parse the public one,
which leads to unsuccessful parsing of Foo.SomeSub, since top level Foo
was never parsed.
Declaring other submodules in the private module map is not common and
should usually be avoided, but it shouldn't fail to build. Canonicalize
compileModuleImpl to always look at the public module first, so that all
necessary information is available when parsing the private one.
rdar://problem/39822328
llvm-svn: 331322
Support for ObjC/C ODR-like semantics with structural equivalence
checking was added back in r306918. There enums are handled and also
checked for structural equivalence. However, at use time of
EnumConstantDecl, support was missing for preventing ambiguous
name lookup.
Add the missing bits for properly merging EnumConstantDecl.
rdar://problem/38374569
llvm-svn: 331232
During deserialization clang is currently missing the merging of
protocols into the canonical interface for the class extension.
This merging only currently happens during parsing and should also
be considered during deserialization.
rdar://problem/38724303
llvm-svn: 331063
Without these comments, by "luck" the contents of SomeKit's SKWidget.h
are precisely the same as SomeKitCore's SomeKitCore.h. This can create
havoc if anything canonicalizes on the inode and your filesystem assigns
a common inode to files with identical file content. Alternatively, if
your build system uses symlinks into a content-addressed-storage (as
Google's does), you end up with these files being symlinks to the same
file.
The end result is that Clang deduplicates them internally, and then
believes that the SomeKit framework includes the SomeKitCore.h header,
and does not include the SKWidget.h in SomeKit. This in turn results in
warnings in this test and eventually errors as Clang becomes confused
because the umbrella header for SomeKitCore has already been included
into another framework's module (SomeKit). Yay.
If anyone has a better idea about how to avoid this, I'm all ears.
Nothing other than causing the file content to change worked for me.
llvm-svn: 330184
framework module SomeKitCore {
...
export_as SomeKit
}
Given the module above, while generting autolink information during
codegen, clang should to emit '-framework SomeKitCore' only if SomeKit
was not imported in the relevant TU, otherwise it should use '-framework
SomeKit' instead.
rdar://problem/38269782
llvm-svn: 330152
Summary:
This patch extend getTargetDefines and implement handleTargetFeatures
and hasFeature. and define corresponding marco for those features.
Reviewers: asb, apazos, eli.friedman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44727
Patch by Kito Cheng.
llvm-svn: 329278
During reading C++ definition data for lambda we can access
CXXRecordDecl representing lambda before we finished reading the
definition data. This can happen by reading a captured variable which is
VarDecl, then reading its decl context which is CXXMethodDecl `operator()`,
then trying to merge redeclarable methods and accessing
enclosing CXXRecordDecl. The call stack looks roughly like
VisitCXXRecordDecl
ReadCXXRecordDefinition
VisitVarDecl
VisitCXXMethodDecl
mergeRedeclarable
getPrimaryContextForMerging
If we add fake definition data at this point, later we'll hit the assertion
Assertion failed: (!DD.IsLambda && !MergeDD.IsLambda && "faked up lambda definition?"), function MergeDefinitionData, file clang/lib/Serialization/ASTReaderDecl.cpp, line 1675.
The fix is to assign definition data before reading it. Fixes PR32556.
rdar://problem/37461072
Reviewers: rsmith, bruno
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits, jkorous-apple, aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43494
llvm-svn: 328153
When skipping building the module for a private framework module,
LangOpts.CurrentModule isn't enough for implict modules builds; for
instance, in case a private module is built while building a public one,
LangOpts.CurrentModule doesn't reflect the -fmodule-name being passed
down, but instead the module name which triggered the build.
Store the actual -fmodule-name in LangOpts.ModuleName and actually
check a name was provided during compiler invocation in order to
skip building the private module.
rdar://problem/38434694
llvm-svn: 328053
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
All use declarations need to be directly placed in the top-level module
anyway, knowing the submodule doesn't really help. The header that has
the offending #include can easily be seen in the diagnostics source
location.
Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43673
llvm-svn: 326023
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
In certain combinations of templated classes and friend functions, the body
of friend functions does not get propagated along with function signature.
Exclude friend functions for hashing to avoid this case.
llvm-svn: 322350
Any hashing for methods should be able to compile this test case without
emitting an error. Since the class and method come from the same header from
each module, there should be no messages about ODR violations.
llvm-svn: 321924
When modules come from module map files explicitly specified by
-fmodule-map-file= arguments, allow those to override/shadow modules
with the same name that are found implicitly by header search. If such a
module is looked up by name (e.g. @import), we will always find the one
from -fmodule-map-file. If we try to use a shadowed module by including
one of its headers report an error.
This enables developers to force use of a specific copy of their module
to be used if there are multiple copies that would otherwise be visible,
for example if they develop modules that are installed in the default
search paths.
Patch originally by Ben Langmuir,
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20151116/143425.html
Based on cfe-dev discussion:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2015-November/046164.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31269
rdar://problem/23612102
llvm-svn: 321855
When modules come from module map files explicitly specified by
-fmodule-map-file= arguments, allow those to override/shadow modules
with the same name that are found implicitly by header search. If such a
module is looked up by name (e.g. @import), we will always find the one
from -fmodule-map-file. If we try to use a shadowed module by including
one of its headers report an error.
This enables developers to force use of a specific copy of their module
to be used if there are multiple copies that would otherwise be visible,
for example if they develop modules that are installed in the default
search paths.
Patch originally by Ben Langmuir,
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20151116/143425.html
Based on cfe-dev discussion:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2015-November/046164.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31269
rdar://problem/23612102
llvm-svn: 321781
When a type is only used as a template parameter and that type is the
only type imported from another #include'd module, no skeleton CU for
that module is generated, so a consumer doesn't know where to find the
type definition. By emitting an import declaration, we can force a
skeleton CU to be generated for each imported module.
rdar://problem/36266156
llvm-svn: 321754
We used to advertise private modules to be declared as submodules
(Foo.Private). This has proven to not scale well since private headers
might carry several dependencies, introducing unwanted content into the
main module and often causing dep cycles.
Change the canonical way to name it to Foo_Private, forcing private
modules as top level ones, and provide warnings under -Wprivate-module
to suggest fixes for other private naming. Update documentation to
reflect that.
rdar://problem/31173501
llvm-svn: 321337
Since they'll likely (not always - if the address is taken, etc) be
inlined away, even at -O0, separately provided weak definitions are
likely to be unused so skip all of that.
llvm-svn: 317279
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
declarations that are made visible after the dummy is parsed and ODR verified
Prior to this commit the
"(getContainingDC(DC) == CurContext && "The next DeclContext should be lexically contained in the current one."),"
assertion failure was triggered during semantic analysis of the dummy
tag declaration that was declared in another tag declaration because its
lexical context did not point to the outer tag decl.
rdar://32292196
llvm-svn: 310706
When non-modular headers are imported while not building a module but
in -fmodules mode, be conservative and preserve the default #import
semantic: do not reenter headers.
rdar://problem/33745031
llvm-svn: 310605
This patch adds an early exit to CGDebugInfo::completeClassData() when
compiling with -gmodules and the to-be-completed type is available in
a clang module.
rdar://problem/23599990
llvm-svn: 308938
Allow ODR for ObjC/C in the sense that we won't keep more that
one definition around (merge them). However, ensure the decl
pass the structural compatibility check in C11 6.2.7/1, for that,
reuse the structural equivalence checks used by the ASTImporter.
Few other considerations:
- Create error diagnostics for tag types mismatches and thread
them into the structural equivalence checks.
- Note that by doing this we only support redefinition between types
that are considered "compatible types" by C.
This is mixed approach of the suggestions discussed in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2017-March/053257.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31778
rdar://problem/31909368
llvm-svn: 306918
Summary:
Add a test for the change to ASTReader that reproduces the
logic for consolidating multiple ObjC interface definitions to the
case of multiple ObjC protocol definitions.
This test is a modified copy of the test that accompanied the original
change to interfaces, in 2ba1979.
Reviewers: bruno
Reviewed By: bruno
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34788
llvm-svn: 306732