type and fixes a long-standing code gen. crash reported in
at least two PRs and a radar. (radar 7405040 and pr5025).
There are couple of remaining issues that I would like for
Ted. and Doug to look at:
Ted, please look at failure in Analysis/MissingDealloc.m.
I have temporarily added an expected-warning to make the
test pass. This tests has a declaration of 'SEL' type which
may not co-exist with the new changes.
Doug, please look at a FIXME in PCHWriter.cpp/PCHReader.cpp.
I think the changes which I have ifdef'ed out are correct. They
need be considered for in a few Indexer/PCH test cases.
llvm-svn: 89561
The following attributes are currently supported in C++0x attribute
lists (and in GNU ones as well):
- align() - semantics believed to be conformant to n3000, except for
redeclarations and what entities it may apply to
- final - semantics believed to be conformant to CWG issue 817's proposed
wording, except for redeclarations
- noreturn - semantics believed to be conformant to n3000, except for
redeclarations
- carries_dependency - currently ignored (this is an optimization hint)
llvm-svn: 89543
incomplete array initialization, where we have the following in a
template:
int a[] = { 1, 2, something-value-dependent };
// ...
sizeof(a);
The type of "a" appears to be a non-dependent IncompleteArrayType, but
treating it as such makes the sizeof(a) fail at template definition
time. We now correctly handle this by morphing the IncompleteArrayType
into a DependentSizedArrayType with a NULL expression, indicating that
its size has no corresponding expression (and, therefore, the type is
distinct from others).
llvm-svn: 89366
two classes, one for typenames and one for values; this seems to have some
support from Doug if not necessarily from the extremely-vague-on-this-point
standard. Track the location of the 'typename' keyword in a using-typename
decl. Make a new lookup result for unresolved values and deal with it in
most places.
llvm-svn: 89184
sugared types. The basic problem is that our qualifier accessors
(getQualifiers, getCVRQualifiers, isConstQualified, etc.) only look at
the current QualType and not at any qualifiers that come from sugared
types, meaning that we won't see these qualifiers through, e.g.,
typedefs:
typedef const int CInt;
typedef CInt Self;
Self.isConstQualified() currently returns false!
Various bugs (e.g., PR5383) have cropped up all over the front end due
to such problems. I'm addressing this problem by splitting each
qualifier accessor into two versions:
- the "local" version only returns qualifiers on this particular
QualType instance
- the "normal" version that will eventually combine qualifiers from this
QualType instance with the qualifiers on the canonical type to
produce the full set of qualifiers.
This commit adds the local versions and switches a few callers from
the "normal" version (e.g., isConstQualified) over to the "local"
version (e.g., isLocalConstQualified) when that is the right thing to
do, e.g., because we're printing or serializing the qualifiers. Also,
switch a bunch of
Context.getCanonicalType(T1).getUnqualifiedType() == Context.getCanonicalType(T2).getQualifiedType()
expressions over to
Context.hasSameUnqualifiedType(T1, T2)
llvm-svn: 88969
permits, among other things, ripping apart and reconstructing
templates via partial specialization:
template<typename T>
struct DeepRemoveConst { typedef T type; };
template<typename T>
struct DeepRemoveConst<const T> {
typedef typename DeepRemoveConst<T>::type type;
};
template<template<typename> class TT, typename T>
struct DeepRemoveConst<TT<T> > {
typedef TT<typename DeepRemoveConst<T>::type> type;
};
Also, fix a longstanding thinko in the code handling partial ordering
of class template partial specializations. We were performing the
second deduction without clearing out the results of the first
deduction. It's amazing we got through so much code with such a
horrendous error :(
llvm-svn: 86893
parameters. Rather than storing them as either declarations (for the
non-dependent case) or expressions (for the dependent case), we now
(always) store them as TemplateNames.
The primary change here is to add a new kind of TemplateArgument,
which stores a TemplateName. However, making that change ripples to
every switch on a TemplateArgument's kind, also affecting
TemplateArgumentLocInfo/TemplateArgumentLoc, default template
arguments for template template parameters, type-checking of template
template arguments, etc.
This change is light on testing. It should fix several pre-existing
problems with template template parameters, such as:
- the inability to use dependent template names as template template
arguments
- template template parameter default arguments cannot be
instantiation
However, there are enough pieces missing that more implementation is
required before we can adequately test template template parameters.
llvm-svn: 86777
dependently-sized array type with a given expression might end up
returning a non-canonical type; see through that non-canonical type to
the underlying canonical type. Yes, I have a test case; no, I can't
reduce it to the point where it's worth checking in :(
llvm-svn: 85633
used in a conditional expression by finding the most-derived common
super class of the two and qualifies the resulting type by the
intersection of the protocl qualifier list of the two objective-c
pointer types. ( this is continuation of radar 7334235).
llvm-svn: 85554
types. Preserve it through template instantiation. Preserve it through PCH,
although TSTs themselves aren't serializable, so that's pretty much meaningless.
llvm-svn: 85500
the DeclaratorInfo, one for semantic analysis), just build a single type whose
canonical type will reflect the semantic analysis (assuming the type is
well-formed, of course).
To make that work, make a few changes to the type system:
* allow the nominal pointee type of a reference type to be a (possibly sugared)
reference type. Also, preserve the original spelling of the reference type.
Both of these can be ignored on canonical reference types.
* Remove ObjCProtocolListType and preserve the associated source information on
the various ObjC TypeLocs. Preserve the spelling of protocol lists except in
the canonical form.
* Preserve some level of source type structure on parameter types, but
canonicalize on the canonical function type. This is still a WIP.
Drops code size, makes strides towards accurate source location representation,
slight (~1.7%) progression on Cocoa.h because of complexity drop.
llvm-svn: 84907
TemplateTypeParmType with the substituted type directly; instead, replace it
with a SubstTemplateTypeParmType which will note that the type was originally
written as a template type parameter. This makes it reasonable to preserve
source information even through template substitution.
Also define the new SubstTemplateTypeParmType class, obviously.
For consistency with current behavior, we stringize these types as if they
were the underlying type. I'm not sure this is the right thing to do.
At any rate, I paled at adding yet another clause to the don't-desugar 'if'
statement, so I extracted a function to do it. The new function also does
The Right Thing more often, I think: e.g. if we have a chain of typedefs
leading to a vector type, we will now desugar all but the last one.
llvm-svn: 84412
TypeLoc records for declarations; it should not be necessary to represent it
directly in the type system.
Please complain if you were using these classes and feel you can't replicate
previous functionality using the TypeLoc API.
llvm-svn: 84222
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
This is used only for keeping detailed type source information for protocol references,
it should not participate in the semantics of the type system.
Its protocol list is not canonicalized.
llvm-svn: 83093
Type hierarchy. Demote 'volatile' to extended-qualifier status. Audit our
use of qualifiers and fix a few places that weren't dealing with qualifiers
quite right; many more remain.
llvm-svn: 82705
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
templates, e.g.,
x.template get<T>
We can now parse these, represent them within an UnresolvedMemberExpr
expression, then instantiate that expression node in simple cases.
This allows us to stumble through parsing LLVM's Casting.h.
llvm-svn: 81300
directly in the AST. The current thinking is to create these
only in C++ mode for efficiency. But for now, they're not being
created at all; patch to follow.
This will let us do things like verify that tags match during
template instantation, as well as signal that an elaborated type
specifier was used for clients that actually care.
Optimally, the TypeLoc hierarchy should be adjusted to carry tag
location information as well.
llvm-svn: 81057
their members, including member class template, member function
templates, and member classes and functions of member templates.
To actually parse the nested-name-specifiers that qualify the name of
an out-of-line definition of a member template, e.g.,
template<typename X> template<typename Y>
X Outer<X>::Inner1<Y>::foo(Y) {
return X();
}
we need to look for the template names (e.g., "Inner1") as a member of
the current instantiation (Outer<X>), even before we have entered the
scope of the current instantiation. Since we can't do this in general
(i.e., we should not be looking into all dependent
nested-name-specifiers as if they were the current instantiation), we
rely on the parser to tell us when it is parsing a declaration
specifier sequence, and, therefore, when we should consider the
current scope specifier to be a current instantiation.
Printing of complicated, dependent nested-name-specifiers may be
somewhat broken by this commit; I'll add tests for this issue and fix
the problem (if it still exists) in a subsequent commit.
llvm-svn: 80044
where sizeof(short) == sizeof(int). Move UsualArithmeticConversionsType
out of Sema, since it was only there as a historical artifact. Patch by
Enea Zaffanella.
llvm-svn: 79412
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
This currently breaks test/SemaObjC/id-isa-ref.m and issues some spurious warnings when you attempt to assign a struct objc_class* value to a Class variable. The test case probably should fail as it's written, because without the definition of Class the compiler should not assume struct objc_class* is a valid receiver type, but it's left broken because it would be nice if we could get that passing too for the special case of isa.
Approved by snaroff.
llvm-svn: 79248
consistent model for handling size expressions for VLAs.
The model is essentially as follows: VLA types own their associated
expression. In some cases, we need to create multiple VLA types to
represent a given VLA (for canonical types, or qualifiers on array types,
or type merging). If we need to create multiple types based off of
the same VLA declaration, we use the new refcounting functionality so they can
all own the expression. The VLASizeMap in CodeGenFunction then uses the size
expression to identify the group of VLA types based off of the same original
declaration.
I'm not particularly attached to the VLA types owning the expression,
but we're stuck with at least until someone comes up with a way
to walk the VLA expressions for a declaration.
I did the parallel fix in ASTContext for DependentSizedArrayType, but I
haven't really looked closely at it, so there might still be issues
there.
I'll clean up the code duplication in ASTContext in a followup commit.
llvm-svn: 79071
for those extra-esoteric cases. Not that any two given C++ compilers
agree on this test case, but this change gives us a strong definition
of equivalent types.
llvm-svn: 77664
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
A template name can refer to a set of overloaded function
templates. Model this in TemplateName, which can now refer to an
OverloadedFunctionDecl that contains function templates. This removes
an unspeakable hack in Sema::isTemplateName.
llvm-svn: 77488
template arguments, as in template specialization types. This permits
matching out-of-line definitions of members for class templates that
involve non-type template parameters.
llvm-svn: 77462
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
and __has_trivial_constructor builtin pseudo-functions and
additionally implements __has_trivial_copy and __has_trivial_assign,
from John McCall!
llvm-svn: 76916
- Move Sema::ObjCQualifiedIdTypesAreCompatible(), Sema::QualifiedIdConformsQualifiedId(), and a couple helper functions to ASTContext.
- Change ASTContext::canAssignObjCInterfaces() to use ASTContext:: ObjCQualifiedIdTypesAreCompatible().
- Tweak several test cases to accommodate the new/improved type checking.
llvm-svn: 76830
an interface/category with its implementation (if one exists).
- Introduce ObjCInterfaceDecl::get/setImplementation() and ObjCCategoryDecl::get/setImplementation() that use the above methods.
- Add a compiler error for when a category is reimplemented.
llvm-svn: 76508
- Remove Sema::CheckPointeeTypesForAssignment(), a temporary API I added to ease migration to ObjCObjectPointerType. Convert Sema::CheckAssignmentConstraints() to no longer depend on the temporary API.
- Sema::ConvertDeclSpecToType(): Replace a couple FIXME's with an important comment/example.
- Sema::GetTypeForDeclarator(): Get the protocol's from the interface, NOT the declspec (to support the following C typedef idiom: "typedef C<P> T; T *obj").
- Sema::ObjCQualifiedIdTypesAreCompatible(): Removed some dead code.
- ASTContext::getObjCEncodingForTypeImpl(): Some minor cleanups.
llvm-svn: 76443
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
This method is intended to eventually replace the individual
Type::getAsXXXType<> methods.
The motivation behind this change is twofold:
1) Reduce redundant implementations of Type::getAsXXXType() methods. Most of
them are basically copy-and-paste.
2) By centralizing the implementation of the getAs<Type> logic we can more
smoothly move over to Doug Gregor's proposed canonical type smart pointer
scheme.
Along with this patch:
a) Removed 'Type::getAsPointerType()'; now clients use getAs<PointerType>.
b) Removed 'Type::getAsBlockPointerTypE()'; now clients use getAs<BlockPointerType>.
llvm-svn: 76098
This removes the static data/methods on ObjCObjectPointerType while preserving the nice API (no need to fiddle with ASTContext:-).
This patch also adds Type::isObjCBuiltinType().
This should be the last fairly large patch related to recrafting the ObjC type system. The follow-on patches should be fairly small.
llvm-svn: 75808
I don't love the name, however it simplifies the code and is a worthwhile change. If/when we come up with a better name, we can do a search/replace.
llvm-svn: 75650
The idea is to segregate Objective-C "object" pointers from general C pointers (utilizing the recently added ObjCObjectPointerType). The fun starts in Sema::GetTypeForDeclarator(), where "SomeInterface *" is now represented by a single AST node (rather than a PointerType whose Pointee is an ObjCInterfaceType). Since a significant amount of code assumed ObjC object pointers where based on C pointers/structs, this patch is very tedious. It should also explain why it is hard to accomplish this in smaller, self-contained patches.
This patch does most of the "heavy lifting" related to moving from PointerType->ObjCObjectPointerType. It doesn't include all potential "cleanups". The good news is additional cleanups can be done later (some are noted in the code). This patch is so large that I didn't want to include any changes that are purely aesthetic.
By making the ObjC types truly built-in, they are much easier to work with (and require fewer "hacks"). For example, there is no need for ASTContext::isObjCIdStructType() or ASTContext::isObjCClassStructType()! We believe this change (and the follow-up cleanups) will pay dividends over time.
Given the amount of code change, I do expect some fallout from this change (though it does pass all of the clang tests). If you notice any problems, please let us know asap! Thanks.
llvm-svn: 75314
FILE type, rather than using name lookup to find FILE within the
translation unit. Within precompiled headers, FILE is treated as yet
another "special type" (like __builtin_va_list).
This change should provide a performance improvement (not verified),
since the lookup into the translation unit declaration
forces the (otherwise unneeded) construction of a large hash table.
More importantly, with precompiled headers, the construction
of that table requires deserializing most of the top-level
declarations from the precompiled header, which are then unused.
Fixes PR 4509.
llvm-svn: 74911
declaration in the AST.
The new ASTContext::getCommentForDecl function searches for a comment
that is attached to the given declaration, and returns that comment,
which may be composed of several comment blocks.
Comments are always available in an AST. However, to avoid harming
performance, we don't actually parse the comments. Rather, we keep the
source ranges of all of the comments within a large, sorted vector,
then lazily extract comments via a binary search in that vector only
when needed (which never occurs in a "normal" compile).
Comments are written to a precompiled header/AST file as a blob of
source ranges. That blob is only lazily loaded when one requests a
comment for a declaration (this never occurs in a "normal" compile).
The indexer testbed now supports comment extraction. When the
-point-at location points to a declaration with a Doxygen-style
comment, the indexer testbed prints the associated comment
block(s). See test/Index/comments.c for an example.
Some notes:
- We don't actually attempt to parse the comment blocks themselves,
beyond identifying them as Doxygen comment blocks to associate them
with a declaration.
- We won't find comment blocks that aren't adjacent to the
declaration, because we start our search based on the location of
the declaration.
- We don't go through the necessary hops to find, for example,
whether some redeclaration of a declaration has comments when our
current declaration does not. Similarly, we don't attempt to
associate a \param Foo marker in a function body comment with the
parameter named Foo (although that is certainly possible).
- Verification of my "no performance impact" claims is still "to be
done".
llvm-svn: 74704
Remove ASTContext parameter from DeclContext's methods. This change cascaded down to other Decl's methods and changes to call sites started "escalating".
Timings using pre-tokenized "cocoa.h" showed only a ~1% increase in time run between and after this commit.
llvm-svn: 74506
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
Add a type (ObjCObjectPointerType) and remove a type (ObjCQualifiedIdType).
This large/tedious patch is just a first step. Next step is to remove ObjCQualifiedInterfaceType. After that, I will remove the magic TypedefType for 'id' (installed by Sema). This work will enable various simplifications throughout clang (when dealing with ObjC types).
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 73649
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
hack which introduces some strange inconsistencies in compatibility
for block pointers.
Note that unlike an earlier revision proposed on cfe-commits, this patch
still allows declaring block pointers without a prototype.
llvm-svn: 73041
in merge_types. It is incomplete. We probably want to issue
a warning if user attempts to change the attribute from __weak to
__strong or vice-vera. It also assumes that a __weak/__strong
attribute can not be specified with other (currently one) type
attriute.
llvm-svn: 72711
properties at the moment:
1. It allows stuff like "__strong id x; __weak id x;".
2. For constructs like "__strong id x; id x;", subsequent references to
x lose the objc_gc attribute.
3. This incorrectly allows merges involving the address_space attribute.
4. Constructs like "id x; /* some code using x */ __weak id x;" don't
apply the objc_gc attribute consistently to all uses of x.
The first three can probably be fixed relatively easily; the fourth
would be extremely difficult to fix.
llvm-svn: 72683
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
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
compensating for super classes). This was making the reported class
sizes for empty classes very, very wrong.
- Also, we now report the size info for an empty class like gcc (as
the offset of the start, not as 0, 0).
- Add a few more test cases we were mishandling before (padding bit
field at end of struct, for example).
llvm-svn: 70938
- This implements gcc style Objective-C interface layout (I
think). Currently it is always off, there is no functionality
change unless this is passed.
For the curious, the deal is that gcc lays out the fields of a
subclass as if they were part of the superclass. That is, the
subclass fields immediately follow the super class fields instead
of being padded to the alignment of the superclass structure.
- Currently gcc uses the tight layout in 32-bit and 64-bit modes, and
llvm-gcc uses it in 32-bit only, for reasons which aren't clear
yet. We probably want to switch to matching gcc, once this makes it
through testing... my hope is that we can also fix llvm-gcc in
order to maintain compatibility between the compilers.
llvm-svn: 70827
via CollectObjCIvars.
- In places where we need them, we should have the implementation and
access the properties through it.
This is a fairly substantial functionality change:
1. @encode no longer encodes synthesized ivars, ever.
2. The ivar layout bitmap no longer encodes information for
synthesized ivars in superclasses. Well, actually I had already
broken that, but it is intentional now.
We are now differing substantially from llvm-gcc and gcc
here. However, in my opinion this fundamentally *must* work if
non-fragile classes are to work. Without this change, the result of
@encode and the ivar layout depend on the order that the
implementation is seen in a file (if it is in the same file with its
superclass). Since both scenarios should work the same, our behavior
is now consistent with gcc behavior as if an implementation is never
seen following an implementation of its superclass.
Note that #2 is only a functionality change when (A) an
implementation appears in the same translation unit with the
implementation of its superclass, and (B) the superclass has
synthesized ivars. My belief is that this situation does not occur in
practice.
I am not yet sure of the role/semantics of @encode when synthesized
ivars are present... it's use is fairly unsound in a non-fragile world.
llvm-svn: 70822
struct.
- We still need to do more lookup than necessary because ivars don't
live in a reasonable DeclContext.
- The only remaining client of the interface shadow struct is the
ivar layout bitmap.
llvm-svn: 70756
- These routines should now be independent of the Sema state.
- This is nearly zero functionality change, the distinction only
matters in the non-fragile ABI, and the consumers that care about
this distinction should be using getASTObjCImplementationLayout.
llvm-svn: 70692
- The difference from getASTObjCInterfaceLayout is that the computes
the layout including synthesized ivars.
- No functionality change, they currently both compute the same thing
-- whether that includes synthesized ivars or not depends on when
they get called!!!
llvm-svn: 70690
"aligned" attribute. Previously, we were skipping over these
attributes when we jumped directly to the canonical type. Now,
ASTContext::getTypeInfo walks through typedefs and other
"non-canonical" types manually, looking for "aligned" attributes on
typedefs.
As part of this change, I moved the GNU-specific logic (such as
determining the alignment of void or of a function pointer) out of the
expression evaluator and into ASTContext::getTypeInfo.
llvm-svn: 70497
compatible with VC++ and GCC. The codegen/mangling angle hasn't
been fully ironed out yet. Note that we accept int128_t even in
32-bit mode, unlike gcc.
llvm-svn: 70464
SEL, Class, Protocol, CFConstantString, and
__objcFastEnumerationState. With this, we can now run the Objective-C
methods and properties PCH tests.
llvm-svn: 69932
methods, class methods, and property implementations) and instead
place all of these entities into the DeclContext.
This eliminates more linear walks when looking for class or instance
methods and should make PCH (de-)serialization of ObjCDecls trivial
(and lazy).
llvm-svn: 69849
PCH files now contain complete information about builtins, including
any declarations that have been synthesized as part of building the
PCH file. When using a PCH file, we do not initialize builtins at all;
when needed, they'll be found in the PCH file.
This optimization translations into a 9% speedup for "Hello, World!"
with Carbon.h as a prefix header and roughly a 5% speedup for 403.gcc
with its prefix header. We're also reading less of the PCH file for
"Hello, World!":
*** PCH Statistics:
286/20693 types read (1.382110%)
1630/59230 declarations read (2.751984%)
764/44914 identifiers read (1.701029%)
1/32954 statements read (0.003035%)
5/6187 macros read (0.080815%)
down from
*** PCH Statistics:
411/20693 types read (1.986179%)
2553/59230 declarations read (4.310316%)
1093/44646 identifiers read (2.448148%)
1/32954 statements read (0.003035%)
21/6187 macros read (0.339421%)
llvm-svn: 69815
Rework the shadow struct that is layed out for Objective-C classes.
- Superclasses are now always laid out in their shadow structure at
the first field.
- Prior to this, the entire class heirarchy was flattened into a
single structure which meant that alignment, padding, and bitfields
were incorrect (the ASTRecordLayout was correct however, which
meant our debug info didn't coincide with ivar offsets, for
example).
- This is still very suboptimal (for example, ivar are looked up
recursively, but I believe the ivar layout itself is now at least
close to correct.
- <rdar://problem/6773388> error: objc[29823]: layout bitmap sliding
backwards
llvm-svn: 69811
- Superclasses are now always laid out their shadow structure at the
first field.
- Prior to this, the entire class heirarchy was flattened into a
single structure which meant that alignment, padding, and bitfields
weren't packed correctly (the ASTRecordLayout was correct however,
which meant our debug info didn't coincide with ivar offsets, for
example).
- This is still very suboptimal, but I believe the ivar layout itself
is now at least close to correct.
- <rdar://problem/6773388> error: objc[29823]: layout bitmap sliding
backwards
llvm-svn: 69771
@implementation that closes a @class delcaration.
- I don't know how to make a test case for this, but this strengthens
the invariants that hold internally. The functionality change here
is the edit to SemaDeclObjC.cpp.
llvm-svn: 69728
This fixes <rdar://problem/6782722> XCDataTipsManager.m registers, observes notifications in class methods.
The radar above is the result of clang typing 'self' in a class method as 'Class', which results in some spurious warnings (GCC types 'self' in a class method as 'id').
I considered changing the type of 'self' to 'id' (to conform to GCC), however this resulted in *many* test cases breaking. In addition, I really prefer a more strongly typed 'self'.
All in all, this is the least obtrusive fix I could find for removing the spurious warnings (though we do loose some valid warnings).
llvm-svn: 69041
de-serialization of abstract syntax trees.
PCH support serializes the contents of the abstract syntax tree (AST)
to a bitstream. When the PCH file is read, declarations are serialized
as-needed. For example, a declaration of a variable "x" will be
deserialized only when its VarDecl can be found by a client, e.g.,
based on name lookup for "x" or traversing the entire contents of the
owner of "x".
This commit provides the framework for serialization and (lazy)
deserialization, along with support for variable and typedef
declarations (along with several kinds of types). More
declarations/types, along with important auxiliary structures (source
manager, preprocessor, etc.), will follow.
llvm-svn: 68732
types. It is no longer needed now that the code generator
re-lays-out interfaces if they are defines after being laid out
from a forward decl.
llvm-svn: 68194
In a case like:
@class foo;
foo *P;
addRecordToClass was making an empty shadow struct for the foo interface and
completing it. Later when an:
@interface foo
...
@endif
foo *Q;
was seen, ASTContext::addRecordToClass would think that foo was already laid
out and not lay out the definition. This fixes it to create a forward declared
struct the first time around, then complete it when the definition is seen.
Note that this causes two tests to regress, because something is trying to get
the size of the forward declared structs returned by this. Previously, this
would end up getting a size of zero but now it properly dies. I'm not sure
what the right solution is for this, so I xfailed the tests.
Fariborz, please take a look at this. The testcase in rdar://6676794 now gets
farther, but dies later because the objc ivar is not assigned a field number.
As an aside, I really don't like the fact that the objc front-end is creating
shadow C structs for ObjC types. This seems like an implementation detail of
the code generator that could be fixed by better factoring of the extant code.
llvm-svn: 68106
within nested-name-specifiers, e.g., for the "apply" in
typename MetaFun::template apply<T1, T2>::type
At present, we can't instantiate these nested-name-specifiers, so our
testing is sketchy.
llvm-svn: 68081
representation handles the various ways in which one can name a
template, including unqualified references ("vector"), qualified
references ("std::vector"), and dependent template names
("MetaFun::template apply").
One immediate effect of this change is that the representation of
nested-name-specifiers in type names for class template
specializations (e.g., std::vector<int>) is more accurate. Rather than
representing std::vector<int> as
std::(vector<int>)
we represent it as
(std::vector)<int>
which more closely follows the C++ grammar.
Additionally, templates are no longer represented as declarations
(DeclPtrTy) in Parse-Sema interactions. Instead, I've introduced a new
OpaquePtr type (TemplateTy) that holds the representation of a
TemplateName. This will simplify the handling of dependent
template-names, once we get there.
llvm-svn: 68074
instantiation for C++ typename-specifiers such as
typename T::type
The parsing of typename-specifiers is relatively easy thanks to
annotation tokens. When we see the "typename", we parse the
typename-specifier and produce a typename annotation token. There are
only a few places where we need to handle this. We currently parse the
typename-specifier form that terminates in an identifier, but not the
simple-template-id form, e.g.,
typename T::template apply<U, V>
Parsing of nested-name-specifiers has a similar problem, since at this
point we don't have any representation of a class template
specialization whose template-name is unknown.
Semantic analysis is only partially complete, with some support for
template instantiation that works for simple examples.
llvm-svn: 67875
uniqued representation that should both save some memory and make it
far easier to properly build canonical types for types involving
dependent nested-name-specifiers, e.g., "typename T::Nested::type".
This approach will greatly simplify the representation of
CXXScopeSpec. That'll be next.
llvm-svn: 67799
isObjCObjectPointerType to work with qualified types. Adjust test for
changes.
If the SemaExpr changes are wrong or break existing code, feel free to
delete the "ExprTy.addConst();" line and revert my changes to
test/Sema/block-literal.c.
llvm-svn: 67489
qualified name, e.g.,
foo::x
so that we retain the nested-name-specifier as written in the source
code and can reproduce that qualified name when printing the types
back (e.g., in diagnostics). This is PR3493, which won't be complete
until finished the other tasks mentioned near the end of this commit.
The parser's representation of nested-name-specifiers, CXXScopeSpec,
is now a bit fatter, because it needs to contain the scopes that
precede each '::' and keep track of whether the global scoping
operator '::' was at the beginning. For example, we need to keep track
of the leading '::', 'foo', and 'bar' in
::foo::bar::x
The Action's CXXScopeTy * is no longer a DeclContext *. It's now the
opaque version of the new NestedNameSpecifier, which contains a single
component of a nested-name-specifier (either a DeclContext * or a Type
*, bitmangled).
The new sugar type QualifiedNameType composes a sequence of
NestedNameSpecifiers with a representation of the type we're actually
referring to. At present, we only build QualifiedNameType nodes within
Sema::getTypeName. This will be extended to other type-constructing
actions (e.g., ActOnClassTemplateId).
Also on the way: QualifiedDeclRefExprs will also store a sequence of
NestedNameSpecifiers, so that we can print out the property
nested-name-specifier. I expect to also use this for handling
dependent names like Fibonacci<I - 1>::value.
llvm-svn: 67265
such as replacing 'T' in vector<T>. There are a few aspects to this:
- Extend TemplateArgument to allow arbitrary expressions (an
Expr*), and switch ClassTemplateSpecializationType to store
TemplateArguments rather than it's own type-or-expression
representation.
- ClassTemplateSpecializationType can now store dependent types. In
that case, the canonical type is another
ClassTemplateSpecializationType (with default template arguments
expanded) rather than a declaration (we don't build Decls for
dependent types).
- Split ActOnClassTemplateId into ActOnClassTemplateId (called from
the parser) and CheckClassTemplateId (called from
ActOnClassTemplateId and InstantiateType). They're smart enough to
handle dependent types, now.
llvm-svn: 66509
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
I know, these follow the exact same rules as pointers, so I just made
them use the same codepath. Someone more familiar with ObjC should
double-check this, though.
llvm-svn: 65261
Found while researching <rdar://problem/6497631> Message lookup is sometimes different than gcc's.
Will never be seen in user code. Needed to pass dejagnu testsuite.
llvm-svn: 65244
Should clang have a config.h or should we use the config.h of llvm or using the preprocessor is OK? I did a quick fix here, but having a guideline on how to handle non portable function would be great (or ask ted to stop breaking the windows build :)).
llvm-svn: 65233
Move two key ObjC typechecks from Sema::CheckPointerTypesForAssignment() to ASTContext::mergeTypes().
This allows us to take advantage of the recursion in ASTContext::mergeTypes(), removing some bogus warnings.
This test case I've added includes an example where we still warn (and GCC doesn't). Need to talk with folks and decide what to do. At this point, the major bogosities should be fixed.
llvm-svn: 65231
- Renamed to getDeclAlignInBytes since most other query functions
work in bits.
- Fun to track down as isIntegerConstantExpr was getting it right,
but Evaluate() was getting it wrong. Maybe we should assert they
compute the same thing when they succeed?
llvm-svn: 64828
which consequently caused a Seg fault. during meta-data
generation. It also addresses an issue related to
late binding of newly synthesize ivars (when we support it).
llvm-svn: 64563
Currently only used for 128-bit integers.
Note that we can't use the fixed-width integer types for other integer
modes without other changes because glibc headers redefines (u)int*_t
and friends using the mode attribute. For example, this means that uint64_t
has to be compatible with unsigned __attribute((mode(DI))), and
uint64_t is currently defined to long long. And I have a feeling we'll
run into issues if we try to define uint64_t as something which isn't
either long or long long.
This doesn't get the alignment right in most cases, including
the 128-bit integer case; I'll file a PR shortly. The gist of the issue
is that the targets don't really expose the information necessary to
figure out the alignment outside of the target description, so there's a
non-trivial amount of work involved in getting it working right. That
said, the alignment used is conservative, so the only issue with the
current implementation is ABI compatibility.
This makes it trivial to add some sort of "bitwidth" attribute to make
arbitrary-width integers; I'll do that in a followup.
We could also use this for stuff like the following for compatibility
with gcc, but I have a feeling it would be a better idea for clang to be
consistent between C and C++ modes rather than follow gcc's example for
C mode.
struct {unsigned long long x : 33;} x;
unsigned long long a(void) {return x.x+1;}
llvm-svn: 64434
- rename isObjCIdType/isObjCClassType -> isObjCIdStructType/isObjCClassStructType. The previous name didn't do what you would expect.
- add back isObjCIdType/isObjCClassType to do what you would expect. Not currently used, however many of the isObjCIdStructType/isObjCClassStructType clients could be converted over time.
- move static Sema function areComparableObjCInterfaces to ASTContext (renamed to areComparableObjCPointerTypes, since it now operates on pointer types).
llvm-svn: 64385
to a class template. For example, the template-id 'vector<int>' now
has a nice, sugary type in the type system. What we can do now:
- Parse template-ids like 'vector<int>' (where 'vector' names a
class template) and form proper types for them in the type system.
- Parse icky template-ids like 'A<5>' and 'A<(5 > 0)>' properly,
using (sadly) a bool in the parser to tell it whether '>' should
be treated as an operator or not.
This is a baby-step, with major problems and limitations:
- There are currently two ways that we handle template arguments
(whether they are types or expressions). These will be merged, and,
most likely, TemplateArg will disappear.
- We don't have any notion of the declaration of class template
specializations or of template instantiations, so all template-ids
are fancy names for 'int' :)
llvm-svn: 64153
canonicalize by template parameter depth, index, and name, and the
unnamed version of a template parameter serves as the canonical.
TemplateTypeParmDecl no longer needs to inherit from
TemplateParmPosition, since depth and index information is present
within the type.
llvm-svn: 63899
Also changed FunctionTypeProto to be allocated with 8-byte alignment (noticed by Doug). I couldn't think of any reason to allocate on 16-byte boundaries. If anyone remembers why we were doing this, let me know!
llvm-svn: 63137
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
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
full encoding of the class which has an ivar of pointer to this
class. Its name is encoded in the type for the ivar in the
ivar-list metadata. This patch conforms to the above rule.
llvm-svn: 61282
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
expressions, and value-dependent expressions. This permits us to parse
some template definitions.
This is not a complete solution; we're missing type- and
value-dependent computations for most of the expression types, and
we're missing checks for dependent types and type-dependent
expressions throughout Sema.
llvm-svn: 60615
parameters, with some semantic analysis:
- Template parameters are introduced into template parameter scope
- Complain about template parameter shadowing (except in Microsoft mode)
Note that we leak template parameter declarations like crazy, a
problem we'll remedy once we actually create proper declarations for
templates.
Next up: dependent types and value-dependent/type-dependent
expressions.
llvm-svn: 60597
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
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
ASTContext::isObjCObjectPointerType() needs to consider blocks as objects.
Note: My previous commit was done in the test directory...as a result, this commit was necessary.
llvm-svn: 57914
- Mechanism for detecting if a structure should be expanded wasn't
reliable. Simplified by just keeping track of what we should be
expanding.
- This fixes a bug in using NSInvocation to invoke a method which
returned a structure, which in used by Key Value Observing, which
in the end, caused a miscompile in poor little Sketch.
llvm-svn: 57675
is to encode the state of the #pragma pack stack as an attribute when
the structure is declared.
- Extend PackedAttr to take an alignment (in bits), and reuse for
both __attribute__((packed)) (which takes no argument, instead
packing tightly (to "minimize the memory required") and for #pragma
pack (which allows specification of the maximum alignment in
bytes). __attribute__((packed)) is just encoded as Alignment=1.
This conflates two related but different mechanisms, but it didn't
seem worth another attribute.
- I have attempted to follow the MSVC semantics as opposed to the gcc
ones, since if I understand correctly #pragma pack originated with
MSVC. The semantics are generally equivalent except when the stack
is altered during the definition of a structure; its not clear if
anyone does this in practice. See testcase if curious.
llvm-svn: 57623
- Replace string comparisons with pre-defined idents.
- Avoid calling isBuiltinObjCType() to avoid two checks.
- Remove isBuiltinObjCType(), since it was only used in Sema::MergeTypeDefDecl().
- Have Sema::MergeTypeDefDecl() set the new type.
This is a moidified version of an patch by David Chisnall.
llvm-svn: 55990