return to one which does not return (has noreturn attribute)
should warn as it is an unsafe assignment. // rdar://10095762
c++ already handles this. This is the c version.
llvm-svn: 141141
CoreFoundation object-transfer properties audited, and add a #pragma
to cause them to be automatically applied to functions in a particular
span of code. This has to be implemented largely in the preprocessor
because of the requirement that the region be entirely contained in
a single file; that's hard to impose from the parser without registering
for a ton of callbacks.
llvm-svn: 140846
RUN: foo
RUN: bar || true
is equivalent to:
RUN: foo && bar || true
which is equivalent to:
RUN: (foo && bar) || true
This resulted in several of the fixit tests not really testing anything.
llvm-svn: 139132
of the function in question when applicable (that is, not for blocks).
Patch by Joerg Sonnenberger with some stylistic tweaks by me.
When discussing this weth Joerg, streaming the decl directly into the
diagnostic didn't work because we have a pointer-to-const, and the
overload doesn't accept such. In order to make my style tweaks to the
patch, I first changed the overload to accept a pointer-to-const, and
then changed the diagnostic printing layer to also use
a pointer-to-const, cleaning up a gross line of code along the way.
llvm-svn: 138854
incorrectly in the CFG, and also the static analyzer. This patch regresses the analyzer a bit, but
that needs to be followed up with a better solution.
Fixes <rdar://problem/10008112>.
llvm-svn: 138372
Currently this includes -pedantic warnings as well; we'll need to consider whether these should
be included.
This works as expected with -Werror.
Test cases were added to Sema/warn-unused-parameters.c, but they should probably be broken off into
their own test file.
llvm-svn: 137910
-Wunused was a mistake. It resulted in duplicate warnings and lots of
other hacks. Instead, this should be a special sub-category to
-Wunused-value, much like -Wunused-result is.
Moved to -Wunused-comparison, moved the implementation to piggy back on
the -Wunused-value implementation instead of rolling its own, different
mechanism for catching all of the "interesting" statements.
I like the unused-value mechanism for this better, but its currently
missing several top-level statements. For now, I've FIXME-ed out those
test cases. I'll enhance the generic infrastructure to catch these
statements in a subsequent patch.
This patch also removes the cast-to-void fixit hint. This hint isn't
available on any of the other -Wunused-value diagnostics, and if we want
it to be, we should add it generically rather than in one specific case.
llvm-svn: 137822
AnalysisBasedWarnings Sema layer and out of the Analysis library itself.
This returns the uninitialized values analysis to a more pure form,
allowing its original logic to correctly detect some categories of
definitely uninitialized values. Fixes PR10358 (again).
Thanks to Ted for reviewing and updating this patch after his rewrite of
several portions of this analysis.
llvm-svn: 135748
This is accomplished by forcing the needed expressions for -Wuninitialized to always be CFGElements in the CFG.
This allows us to remove a fair amount of the code for -Wuninitialized.
Some fallout:
- AnalysisBasedWarnings.cpp now specifically toggles the CFGBuilder to create a CFG that is suitable for -Wuninitialized. This
is a layering violation, since the logic for -Wuninitialized is in libAnalysis. This can be fixed with the proper refactoring.
- Some of the source locations for -Wunreachable-code warnings have shifted. While not ideal, this is okay because that analysis
already needs some serious reworking.
llvm-svn: 135480
patch, we actually move the state-machine for the value set backwards
one step. This can pretty easily lead to infinite loops where we
continually try to propagate a bit, succeed for one iteration, but then
back up because we find an uninitialized use.
A reduced test case from PR10379 is included.
llvm-svn: 135359
Note that because we don't usually touch the MMX registers anyway, all -mno-mmx needs to do is tweak the x86-32 calling convention a little for vectors that look like MMX vectors, and prevent the definition of __MMX__.
clang doesn't actually stop the user from using MMX inline asm operands or MMX builtins in -mno-mmx mode; as a QOI issue, it would be nice to diagnose, but I doubt it really matters much.
<rdar://problem/9694837>
llvm-svn: 134770
arithmetic into a couple of common routines. Use these to make the
messages more consistent in the various contexts, especially in terms of
consistently diagnosing binary operators with invalid types on both the
left- and right-hand side. Also, improve the grammar and wording of the
messages some, handling both two pointers and two (different) types.
The wording of function pointer arithmetic diagnostics still strikes me
as poorly phrased, and I worry this makes them slightly more awkward if
more consistent. I'm hoping to fix that with a follow-on patch and test
case that will also make them more helpful when a typedef or template
type parameter makes the type completely opaque.
Suggestions on better wording are very welcome, thanks to Richard Smith
for some initial help on that front.
llvm-svn: 133906
pointers I found while working on the NULL arithmetic warning. We here
always assuming the LHS was the pointer, instead of using the selected
pointer expression.
llvm-svn: 133428
pretty. In particular this makes it much easier for me to read messages
such as:
x.cc:42: ?: has lower ...
Where I'm inclined to associate the third ':' with a missing column
number, but in fact column numbers have been turned off. Similar
punctuation collisions happened elsewhere as well.
llvm-svn: 133121
Change the output for -Wshift-overflow and
-Wshift-sign-overflow to an unsigned hexadecimal. It makes
more sense for looking at bits than a signed decimal does.
Also, change the diagnostic's wording from "overrides"
to "sets".
This uses a new optional argument in APInt::toString()
that adds the '0x' prefix to hexademical numbers.
This fixes PR 9651.
Patch by nobled@dreamwidth.org!
llvm-svn: 133033
as constant size arrays. This has slightly different semantics in some insane cases, but allows
us to accept some constructs that GCC does. Continue to be pedantic in -std=c99 and other
modes. This addressed rdar://8733881 - error "variable-sized object may not be initialized"; g++ accepts same code
llvm-svn: 132983
- Move a test from test/SemaTemplate/instantiate-expr-3.cpp, it did not belong there
- Incomplete and abstract types are considered hard errors
llvm-svn: 132979
This is a follow-up to r132565, and should address the rest of PR9969:
Warn about cases such as
int foo(A a, bool b) {
return a + b ? 1 : 2; // user probably meant a + (b ? 1 : 2);
}
also when + is an overloaded operator call.
llvm-svn: 132784
Warn in cases such as "x + someCondition ? 42 : 0;",
where the condition expression looks arithmetic, and has
a right-hand side that looks boolean.
This (partly) addresses http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=9969
llvm-svn: 132565
The size of the array may not be aligned according to alignment of its elements if an alignment attribute is
specified in a typedef. Fixes rdar://8665729 & http://llvm.org/PR5637.
llvm-svn: 130242
-Wwrite-strings. First and foremost, once the positive form of the flag
was passed, it could never be disabled by passing -Wno-write-strings.
Also, the diagnostic engine couldn't in turn use -Wwrite-strings to
control diagnostics (as GCC does) because it was essentially hijacked to
drive the language semantics.
Fix this by giving CC1 a clean '-fconst-strings' flag to enable
const-qualified strings in C and ObjC compilations. Corresponding
'-fno-const-strings' is also added. Then the driver is taught to
introduce '-fconst-strings' in the CC1 command when '-Wwrite-strings'
dominates.
This entire flag is basically GCC-bug-compatibility driven, so we also
match GCC's bug where '-w' doesn't actually disable -Wwrite-strings. I'm
open to changing this though as it seems insane.
llvm-svn: 130051
gcc's unused warnings which don't get emitted if the function is referenced even in an unevaluated context
(e.g. in templates, sizeof, etc.). Also, saying that a function is 'unused' because it won't get codegen'ed
is somewhat misleading.
- Don't emit 'unused' warnings for functions that are referenced in any part of the user's code.
- A warning that an internal function/variable won't get emitted is useful though, so introduce
-Wunneeded-internal-declaration which will warn if a function/variable with internal linkage is not
"needed" ('used' from the codegen perspective), e.g:
static void foo() { }
template <int>
void bar() {
foo();
}
test.cpp:1:13: warning: function 'foo' is not needed and will not be emitted
static void foo() { }
^
Addresses rdar://8733476.
llvm-svn: 129794
CL_AddressableVoid is the expression classification used for void
expressions whose address can be taken, i.e. the result of [], *
or void variable references in C, as opposed to things like the
result of a void function call.
llvm-svn: 129783
rewriting the literal when the value is integral. It is not uncommon to
see code written as:
const int kBigNumber = 42e5;
Without any real awareness that this is no longer an ICE. The note helps
automate and ease the process of fixing code that violates the warning.
llvm-svn: 129243
definitely have a path leading to them, and possibly have a path leading
to them; reflect that distinction in the warning text emitted.
llvm-svn: 129126
marked explicitly as uninitialized through direct self initialization:
int x = x;
With r128894 we prevented warnings about this code, and this patch
teaches the analysis engine to continue analyzing subsequent uses of
'x'. This should wrap up PR9624.
There is still an open question of whether we should suppress the
maybe-uninitialized warnings resulting from variables initialized in
this fashion. The definitely-uninitialized uses should always be warned.
llvm-svn: 128932
int x = x;
GCC disables its warnings on this construct as a way of indicating that
the programmer intentionally wants the variable to be uninitialized.
Only the warning on the initializer is turned off in this iteration.
This makes the code a lot more ugly, but starts commenting the
surprising behavior here. This is a WIP, I want to refactor it
substantially for clarity, and to determine whether subsequent warnings
should be suppressed or not.
llvm-svn: 128894
1) Change the CFG to include the DeclStmt for conditional variables, instead of using the condition itself as a faux DeclStmt.
2) Update ExprEngine (the static analyzer) to understand (1), so not to regress.
3) Update UninitializedValues.cpp to initialize all tracked variables to Uninitialized at the start of the function/method.
4) Only use the SelfReferenceChecker (SemaDecl.cpp) on global variables, leaving the dataflow analysis to handle other cases.
The combination of (1) and (3) allows the dataflow-based -Wuninitialized to find self-init problems when the initializer
contained control-flow.
llvm-svn: 128858
Note this can potentially be enhanced to detect if the __block variable
is actually written by the block, or only when the block "escapes" or
is actually used, but that requires more analysis than it is probably worth
for this simple check.
llvm-svn: 128681
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
enumeration type to another in C, classify enumeration constants as if
they had the type of their enclosing enumeration. Fixes
<rdar://problem/9116337>.
llvm-svn: 127514
expressions. Consider the code:
int64_t i = 10 << 30;
This compiles fine, but most developers expect it to produce the value
for 10 gigs, not -2 gigs. This is actually undefined behavior because
the LHS is a signed integer type.
The warning is currently gated behind -Wshift-overflow.
There is a special case where only the sign bit is overridden that gets
a custom error message and is by default ignored. This case is much less
likely to cause observed buggy behavior, it's just undefined behavior
according to the spec. This warning can be enabled with
-Wshift-sign-overflow.
Original patch by Oleg Slezberg, with style tweaks and some correctness
fixes by me.
llvm-svn: 126342
several ways. We now warn for more of the return types, and correctly
locate the ignored ones. Also adds fix-it hints to remove the ignored
qualifiers. Fixes much of PR9058, although not all of it.
Patch by Hans Wennborg, a couple of minor style tweaks from me.
llvm-svn: 126321
diagnostics that occur in unreachable code (e.g., -Warray-bound).
We only pay the cost of doing the reachability analysis when we issue one of these diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 126290
enum X : long { Value = 0x100000000 };
when in Microsoft-extension mode (-fms-extensions). This (now C++0x)
feature has been supported since Microsoft Visual Studio .NET 2003.
llvm-svn: 126243
making them be template instantiated in a more normal way and
make them handle attributes like other decls.
This fixes the used/unused label handling stuff, making it use
the same infrastructure as other decls.
llvm-svn: 125771
specifically targets literals which are implicitly converted, a those
are more often unintended and trivial to fix. This can be especially
helpful for diagnosing what makes 'const int x = 1e6' not an ICE.
Original patch authored by Jim Meehan with contributions from other
Googlers and a few cleanups from myself.
llvm-svn: 125745
LabelDecl and LabelStmt. There is a 1-1 correspondence between the
two, but this simplifies a bunch of code by itself. This is because
labels are the only place where we previously had references to random
other statements, causing grief for AST serialization and other stuff.
This does cause one regression (attr(unused) doesn't silence unused
label warnings) which I'll address next.
This does fix some minor bugs:
1. "The only valid attribute " diagnostic was capitalized.
2. Various diagnostics printed as ''labelname'' instead of 'labelname'
3. This reduces duplication of label checking between functions and blocks.
Review appreciated, particularly for the cindex and template bits.
llvm-svn: 125733
is unqualified but its initialized is qualified.
This is for c only and fixes the imm. problem.
c++ is more involved and is wip.
// rdar://8979379
llvm-svn: 125386
to issue the warning at an uninitialized variable's
declaration, but to issue notes at possible
uninitialized uses (which could be multiple).
llvm-svn: 123994
analysis for short-circuited operations. For branch written like "if (x && y)",
we maintain two sets of dataflow values for the outgoing
branches. This suppresses some common false positives
for -Wuninitialized-experimental.
This change introduces some assertion failures
when running on the LLVM codebase. WIP.
llvm-svn: 123923
outermost array types and not on the element type. Move the CanonicalType
member from Type to ExtQualsTypeCommonBase; the canonical type on an ExtQuals
node includes the qualifiers on the ExtQuals. Assorted optimizations enabled
by this change.
getQualifiers(), hasQualifiers(), etc. should all now implicitly look through
array types.
llvm-svn: 123817
references by monitoring whether an access to
a variable is solely to compute it's lvalue or
to do an lvalue-to-rvalue conversion (i.e., a load).
llvm-svn: 123777
For example:
void f(long long){ printf("long long"); }
void f(unsigned long long) { printf("unsigned long long"); }
int main() {
f(0xffffffffffffffffLL);
}
Will print "long long" using MSVC.
This patch also fixes 16 compile errors related to overloading issues when parsing the MSVC 2008 C++ standard lib.
llvm-svn: 123231
the declaration-specifiers and on the declarator itself are moved
to the appropriate declarator chunk. This permits a greatly
simplified model for how to apply these attributes, as well as
allowing a much more efficient query for the GC attribute.
Now all qualifier queries follow the same basic strategy of
"local qualifiers, local qualifiers on the canonical type,
then look through arrays". This can be easily optimized by
changing the canonical qualified-array-type representation.
Do not process type attributes as decl attributes on declarations
with declarators.
When computing the type of a block, synthesize a prototype
function declarator chunk if the decl-spec type was not a
function. This simplifies the logic for building block signatures.
Change the logic which inserts an objc_read_weak on a block
literal to only fire if the block has a __weak __block variable,
rather than if the return type of the block is __weak qualified,
which is not actually a sensible thing to ask.
llvm-svn: 122871
declaration name of the array when present. This ensures that
a poor-man's C++03 static_assert will include the user error message
often embedded in the name.
Update all the tests to reflect the new wording, and add a test for the
name behavior.
llvm-svn: 122802
don't have access to (e.g., fprintf, which needs the library type
FILE), fail with a warning and forget about the builtin
entirely. Previously, we would actually provide an error, which breaks
autoconf's super-lame checks for fprintf, longjmp, etc. Fixes PR8316.
llvm-svn: 122744
not actually frequently used, because ImpCastExprToType only creates a node
if the types differ. So explicitly create an ICE in the lvalue-to-rvalue
conversion code in DefaultFunctionArrayLvalueConversion() as well as several
other new places, and consistently deal with the consequences throughout the
compiler.
In addition, introduce a new cast kind for loading an ObjCProperty l-value,
and make sure we emit those nodes whenever an ObjCProperty l-value appears
that's not on the LHS of an assignment operator.
This breaks a couple of rewriter tests, which I've x-failed until future
development occurs on the rewriter.
Ted Kremenek kindly contributed the analyzer workarounds in this patch.
llvm-svn: 120890
This does not work so well with the -fno-lax-vector-conversions option for
testing the arm_neon.h header but that is a really useful test, so I split
this out to a separate Sema test to check for the warning.
llvm-svn: 120694
assert(a || b && "bad");
since this is safe. This way we avoid a big source of such warnings which in this case are practically useless.
Note that we don't handle *all* cases where precedence wouldn't matter because of constants since
this is a bit costly to check, and IMO clarifying precedence with parentheses is good for
readability in general.
llvm-svn: 119533
of the enumerators rather than the actual expressible range. This is
great when dealing with opaque *values* of that type, but when computing
the range of the type for purposes of converting *into* it, it produces
warnings in cases we don't care about (e.g. enum_t x = 500;). Divide
the logic into these two cases and use the more conservative range for
targets.
llvm-svn: 118735
own subcategory, -Wconstant-conversion, which is on by default.
Tweak the constant folder to give better results in the invalid
case of a negative shift amount.
Implements rdar://problem/6792488
llvm-svn: 118636