The C and C++ standards require the argument to __has_cpp_attribute and
__has_c_attribute to be expanded ([cpp.cond]p5). It would make little sense
to expand the argument to those operators but not expand the argument to
__has_attribute and __has_declspec, so those were both also changed in this
patch.
Note that it might make sense for the other builtins to also expand their
argument, but it wasn't as clear to me whether the behavior would be correct
there, and so they were left for a future revision.
WG14 N2481 was adopted with minor modifications at the latest WG14 meetings.
The only modification to the paper was to correct the date for the deprecated
attribute to be 201904L (the corrected date value will be present in WG14
N2553 when it gets published).
__has_cpp_attribute is not available in C mode, and __has_c_attribute
should not be available in C++ mode. This also adds a test to
demonstrate that we properly handle scoped attribute tokens even in C
mode.
This gives library implementers a way to use standards-based attributes that do not conflict with user-defined macros of the same name. Attributes in C2x require this behavior normatively (C2x 6.7.11p4), but there's no reason to not have the same behavior in C++, especially given that such attributes may be used by a C library consumed by a C++ compilation.
llvm-svn: 369033
This behaves similar to the __has_cpp_attribute builtin macro in that it allows users to detect whether an attribute is supported with the [[]] spelling syntax, which can be enabled in C with -fdouble-square-bracket-attributes.
llvm-svn: 320088