Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Fariborz Jahanian 586be883ca fixes location of "availability" attribute so warning is displayed at
its line. // rdar://10711037

llvm-svn: 148747
2012-01-23 23:38:32 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 79451e68b2 test/Sema/attr-availability.c: Add explicit -triple x86_64-apple-darwin9, for now.
llvm-svn: 146321
2011-12-10 07:50:30 +00:00
Fariborz Jahanian 88d510da9d Add ability to supply additional message to availability macros,
// rdar://10095131

llvm-svn: 146304
2011-12-10 00:28:41 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 6f47e5cabf For the availability attribute, allow a declaration to be deprecated
in the same version that it is introduced. Stuff happens.

llvm-svn: 137214
2011-08-10 15:31:35 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 20b2ebd785 Implement a new 'availability' attribute, that allows one to specify
which versions of an OS provide a certain facility. For example,

  void foo()
  __attribute__((availability(macosx,introduced=10.2,deprecated=10.4,obsoleted=10.6)));

says that the function "foo" was introduced in 10.2, deprecated in
10.4, and completely obsoleted in 10.6. This attribute ties in with
the deployment targets (e.g., -mmacosx-version-min=10.1 specifies that
we want to deploy back to Mac OS X 10.1). There are several concrete
behaviors that this attribute enables, as illustrated with the
function foo() above:

  - If we choose a deployment target >= Mac OS X 10.4, uses of "foo"
    will result in a deprecation warning, as if we had placed
    attribute((deprecated)) on it (but with a better diagnostic)
  - If we choose a deployment target >= Mac OS X 10.6, uses of "foo"
    will result in an "unavailable" warning (in C)/error (in C++), as
    if we had placed attribute((unavailable)) on it
  - If we choose a deployment target prior to 10.2, foo() is
    weak-imported (if it is a kind of entity that can be weak
    imported), as if we had placed the weak_import attribute on it.

Naturally, there can be multiple availability attributes on a
declaration, for different platforms; only the current platform
matters when checking availability attributes.

The only platforms this attribute currently works for are "ios" and
"macosx", since we already have -mxxxx-version-min flags for them and we
have experience there with macro tricks translating down to the
deprecated/unavailable/weak_import attributes. The end goal is to open
this up to other platforms, and even extension to other "platforms"
that are really libraries (say, through a #pragma clang
define_system), but that hasn't yet been designed and we may want to
shake out more issues with this narrower problem first.

Addresses <rdar://problem/6690412>.

As a drive-by bug-fix, if an entity is both deprecated and
unavailable, we only emit the "unavailable" diagnostic.

llvm-svn: 128127
2011-03-23 00:50:03 +00:00