This commit introduces a set of related changes to ensure that the
declaration that shows up in the identifier chain after deserializing
declarations with a given identifier is, in fact, the most recent
declaration. The primary change involves waiting until after we
deserialize and wire up redeclaration chains before updating the
identifier chains. There is a minor optimization in here to avoid
recursively deserializing names as part of looking to see whether
top-level declarations for a given name exist.
A related change that became suddenly more urgent is to property
record a merged declaration when an entity first declared in the
current translation unit is later deserialized from a module (that had
not been loaded at the time of the original declaration). Since we key
off the canonical declaration (which is parsed, not from an AST file)
for emitted redeclarations, we simply record this as a merged
declaration during AST writing and let the readers merge them.
Re-fixes <rdar://problem/13189985>, presumably for good this time.
llvm-svn: 175447
Neither of the current clients of CFGRecStmtDeclVisitor are doing
anything with typedefs, so I assume type aliases (C++11 "using")
can be safely ignored. This was causing assertion failures in
the analyzer.
<rdar://problem/13228440>
llvm-svn: 175335
until recursive loading is finished.
Otherwise we may end up with a template trying to deserialize a template
parameter that is in the process of getting loaded.
rdar://13135282
llvm-svn: 175329
for distinguishing type vs. value visibility.
The changes to the visibility of explicit specializations
are intentional. The change to the "ugly" test case is
a consequence of a sensible implementation, and I am happy
to argue that this is better behavior. Other changes may
or may not be intended; it is quite difficult to divine
intent from some of the code I altered.
I've left behind a comment which I hope explains the
philosophy behind visibility computation.
llvm-svn: 175326
...after a host of optimizations related to the use of LazyCompoundVals
(our implementation of aggregate binds).
Originally applied in r173951.
Reverted in r174069 because it was causing hangs.
Re-applied in r174212.
Reverted in r174265 because it was /still/ causing hangs.
If this needs to be reverted again it will be punted to far in the future.
llvm-svn: 175234
The code generation stuff is going to set attributes on the functions it
generates. To do that it needs the target options. Pass them through.
llvm-svn: 175141
I added hasCLanguageLinkage while fixing some language linkage bugs some
time ago so that I wouldn't have to check all users of isExternC. It turned
out to be a much longer detour than expected, but this patch finally
merges the two again. The isExternC function now implements just the
standard notion of having C language linkage.
llvm-svn: 175119
some cases where functions with no language linkage were being treated as having
C language linkage. In particular, don't warn in
extern "C" {
static NonPod foo();
}
Since getLanguageLinkage checks the language linkage, the linkage computation
cannot use the language linkage. Break the loop by checking just the context
in the linkage computation.
llvm-svn: 175117
This has so far been disabled for Google style, but should be done
before breaking at nested name specifiers or in template parameters.
Before (in Google style):
template <typename T>
aaaaaaaa::aaaaa::aaaaaa<T, aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa> aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa<
T>::aaaaaaa() {}
After:
template <typename T>
aaaaaaaa::aaaaa::aaaaaa<T, aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa>
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa<T>::aaaaaaa() {}
llvm-svn: 175074
lexical storage but not visible storage' case in C++. It's unclear whether we
even need the special-case handling for C++, since it seems to be working
around our not serializing a lookup table for the TU in C. But in any case,
the assertion is incorrect.
llvm-svn: 174931
the "nonatomic" attribute in property redeclaration
in class extension. Also, improved on diagnostics in
this area while at it. // rdar://13156292
llvm-svn: 174821
visible.
The basic problem here is that a given translation unit can use
forward declarations to form pointers to a given type, say,
class X;
X *x;
and then import a module that includes a definition of X:
import XDef;
We will then fail when attempting to access a member of X, e.g.,
x->method()
because the AST reader did not know to look for a default of a class
named X within the new module.
This implementation is a bit of a C-centric hack, because the only
definitions that can have this property are enums, structs, unions,
Objective-C classes, and Objective-C protocols, and all of those are
either visible at the top-level or can't be defined later. Hence, we
can use the out-of-date-ness of the name and the identifier-update
mechanism to force the update.
In C++, we will not be so lucky, and will need a more advanced
solution, because the definitions could be in namespaces defined in
two different modules, e.g.,
// module 1
namespace N { struct X; }
// module 2
namespace N { struct X { /* ... */ }; }
One possible implementation here is for C++ to extend the information
associated with each identifier table to include the declaration IDs
of any definitions associated with that name, regardless of
context. We would have to eagerly load those definitions.
llvm-svn: 174794
Add warnings under -Wc++11-compat, -Wc++98-compat, and -Wc99-compat when a
particular UCN is incompatible with a different standard, and -Wunicode when
a UCN refers to a surrogate character in C++03.
llvm-svn: 174788
Rewriting the same predicates over and over again is bad for code size and
code maintainence. Using the functions in <ctype.h> is generally unsafe
unless they are specified to be locale-independent (i.e. only isdigit and
isxdigit).
The next commit will try to clean up uses of <ctype.h> functions within Clang.
llvm-svn: 174765
The checkPointerEscape callback previously did not specify how a
pointer escaped. This change includes an enum which describes the
different ways a pointer may escape. This enum is passed to the
checkPointerEscape callback when a pointer escapes. If the escape
is due to a function call, the call is passed. This changes
previous behavior where the call is passed as NULL if the escape
was due to indirectly invalidating the region the pointer referenced.
A patch by Branden Archer!
llvm-svn: 174677
This is a powerful tool when doing iterative refined matches,
where another match is started inside the match callback of the first
one; this allows for example to find out whether the node was in
the condition or body of its parent if-statement.
llvm-svn: 174605
name lookup has been performed in that context (this probably only happens in
C++).
1) Whenever we add names to a context, set a flag on it, and if we perform
lookup and discover that the context has had a lookup table built but has the
flag set, update all entries in the lookup table with additional names from
the external source.
2) When marking a DeclContext as having external visible decls, mark the
context in which lookup is performed, not the one we are adding. These won't
be the same if we're adding another copy of a pre-existing namespace.
llvm-svn: 174577
if it found any decls, rather than returning a list of found decls. This
removes a returning-ArrayRef-to-deleted-storage bug from
MultiplexExternalSemaSource (in code not exercised by any of the clang
binaries), reduces the work required in the found-no-decls case with PCH, and
importantly removes the need for DeclContext::lookup to be reentrant.
No functionality change intended!
llvm-svn: 174576
The use of this flag enables a modules optimization where a given set
of macros can be labeled as "ignored" by the modules
system. Definitions of those macros will be completely ignored when
building the module hash and will be stripped when actually building
modules. The overall effect is that this flag can be used to
drastically reduce the number of
Eventually, we'll want modules to tell us what set of macros they
respond to (the "configuration macros"), and anything not in that set
will be excluded. However, that requires a lot of per-module
information that must be accurate, whereas this option can be used
more readily.
Fixes the rest of <rdar://problem/13165109>.
llvm-svn: 174560
This can happen when one abuses precompiled headers by passing more -D
options when using a precompiled hedaer than when it was built. This
is intentionally permitted by precompiled headers (and is exploited by
some build environments), but causes problems for modules.
First part of <rdar://problem/13165109>, detecting when something when
horribly wrong.
llvm-svn: 174554
This is in preparation for adding other overloaded matchers. This change
alone is a net win in LOC.
I went through all matchers and looked whether we could now encode them
as macro, or simplify them with the matcher atoms that were not
available before.
llvm-svn: 174540
This was GCC's option to turn on UCN support, which we always have on now
in C99 and C++ modes.
Additionally, mark the -fno-extended-identifiers option as unsupported,
since we don't support disabling UCNs in C99 and C++ modes.
PR11538
llvm-svn: 174530
With this patch, clang-format can analyze the input file for two
properties:
1. Is "int *a" or "int* a" more common.
2. Are non-C++03 constructs used, e.g. A<A<A>>.
With Google-style, clang-format will now use the more common style for
(1) and format C++03 compatible, unless it finds C++11 constructs in the
input.
llvm-svn: 174504
A very common use case is to search for the first occurrence of
a certain node that is a descendant of another node. In that
case, selectFirst significantly simplifies the code at the client side.
llvm-svn: 174499
This is a more natural order of evaluation, and it is very important
for visualization in the static analyzer. Within Xcode, the arrows
will not jump from right to left, which looks very visually jarring.
It also provides a more natural location for dataflow-based diagnostics.
Along the way, we found a case in the analyzer diagnostics where we
needed to indicate that a variable was "captured" by a block.
-fsyntax-only timings on sqlite3.c show no visible performance change,
although this is just one test case.
Fixes <rdar://problem/13016513>
llvm-svn: 174447
We found that findAll has been implemented incorrectly multiple times
by various people using the matchers. To prevent further wasted
development effort, it makes sense to add it as convenience matcher
implemented as eachOf(m, forEachDescendant(m)).
This patch also updates the docs with the new matchers.
llvm-svn: 174320
eachOf gives closure on the forEach and forEachDescendant matchers.
Before, it was impossible to implement a findAll matcher, as matching
the node or any of its descendants was not expressible (since anyOf
only triggers the first match).
llvm-svn: 174315
This combines several changes:
* Calculation token type (e.g. for * and &) in the AnnotatingParser.
* Calculate the scope binding strength in the AnnotatingParser.
* Let <> and [] scopes bind stronger than () and {} scopes.
* Add minimal debugging output.
llvm-svn: 174307
...again. The problem has not been fixed and our internal buildbot is still
getting hangs.
This reverts r174212, originally applied in r173951, then reverted in r174069.
Will not re-apply until the entire project analyzes successfully on my
local machine.
llvm-svn: 174265
designator" diagnostic with more correct and more human-friendly "cannot take
address of rvalue of type 'T'".
For the case of & &T::f, provide a custom diagnostic, rather than unhelpfully
saying "cannot take address of rvalue of type '<overloaded function type>'".
For the case of &array_temporary, treat it just like a class temporary
(including allowing it as an extension); the existing diagnostic wording
for the class temporary case works fine.
llvm-svn: 174262
Inlining these functions is essential for correctness. We often have
cases where we do not inline calls. For example, the shallow mode and
when reanalyzing previously inlined ObjC methods as top level.
llvm-svn: 174245
says, but that's a defect (to be filed). "Cls::purevfn()" is still an odr use.
Also fixes a bug that caused us to not mark the function referenced just
because we didn't want to mark it odr used.
llvm-svn: 174242
This change introduces a 'kind' attribute for the <Para> tag, that captures the
kind of the parent block command.
For example:
\todo Meow.
used to be just <Para>Meow.</Para>, but now it is
<Para kind="todo">Meow.</Para>
llvm-svn: 174216
This allows us to keep from chaining LazyCompoundVals in cases like this:
CGRect r = CGRectMake(0, 0, 640, 480);
CGRect r2 = r;
CGRect r3 = r2;
Previously we only made this optimization if the struct did not begin with
an aggregate member, to make sure that we weren't picking up an LCV for
the first field of the struct. But since LazyCompoundVals are typed, we can
make that inference directly by comparing types.
This is a pure optimization; the test changes are to guard against possible
future regressions.
llvm-svn: 174211
First, this implements a match() method on MatchFinder; this allows us
to get rid of the findAll implementation, as findAll is really a special
case of recursive matchers on match.
Instead of findAll, provide a convenience function match() that lets
users iterate easily over the results instead of needing to implement
callbacks.
llvm-svn: 174172
Introduces these negation forms explicitly and uses them to control a new
"altivec" target feature for PowerPC. This allows avoiding generating
Altivec instructions on processors that support Altivec.
The new test case verifies that the Altivec "lvx" instruction is not
used when -fno-altivec is present on the command line.
llvm-svn: 174140
Remove "IsMSDeclspec" argument from Align attribute since the arguments in Attr.td should
only model those appear in source code. Introduce attribute Accessor, and teach TableGen
to generate syntax kind accessors for Align attribute, and use those accessors to decide
if an alignment attribute is a declspec attribute.
llvm-svn: 174133
It's causing hangs on our internal analyzer buildbot. Will restore after
investigating.
This reverts r173951 / baa7ca1142990e1ad6d4e9d2c73adb749ff50789.
llvm-svn: 174069
In cooperation with the LLVM patch, this should implement all scalar front-end
parts of the C and C++ ABIs for AArch64.
This patch excludes the NEON support also reviewed due to an outbreak of
batshit insanity in our legal department. That will be committed soon bringing
the changes to precisely what has been approved.
Further reviews would be gratefully received.
llvm-svn: 174055
have a direct mismatch between some component of the template and some
component of the argument. The diagnostic now says what the mismatch was, but
doesn't yet say which part of the template doesn't match.
llvm-svn: 174039
Redefine the shallow mode to inline all functions for which we have a
definite definition (ipa=inlining). However, only inline functions that
are up to 4 basic blocks large and cut the max exploded nodes generated
per top level function in half.
This makes shallow faster and allows us to keep inlining small
functions. For example, we would keep inlining wrapper functions and
constructors/destructors.
With the new shallow, it takes 104s to analyze sqlite3, whereas
the deep mode is 658s and previous shallow is 209s.
llvm-svn: 173958
This is faster for the analyzer to process than inlining the constructor
and performing a member-wise copy, and it also solves the problem of
warning when a partially-initialized POD struct is copied.
Before:
CGPoint p;
p.x = 0;
CGPoint p2 = p; <-- assigned value is garbage or undefined
After:
CGPoint p;
p.x = 0;
CGPoint p2 = p; // no-warning
This matches our behavior in C, where we don't see a field-by-field copy.
<rdar://problem/12305288>
llvm-svn: 173951
This reimplements r173850 with a better approach:
(1) use a TableGen-generated matcher instead of doing a linear search;
(2) avoid allocations for new strings by converting code points to string
iterals with TableGen.
llvm-svn: 173931
People use the C preprocessor for things other than C files. Some of them
have Unicode characters. We shouldn't warn about Unicode characters
appearing outside of identifiers in this case.
There's not currently a way for the preprocessor to tell if it's in -E mode,
so I added a new flag, derived from the PreprocessorOutputOptions. This is
only used by the Unicode warnings for now, but could conceivably be used by
other warnings or even behavioral differences later.
<rdar://problem/13107323>
llvm-svn: 173881
If the member has an initializer, assume it was probably intended to be static
and suggest/recover with that.
If the member doesn't have an initializer, assume it was probably intended to
be const instead of constexpr and suggest that.
(if the attempt to apply these changes fails, don't make any suggestion &
produce the same diagnostic experience as before. The only case where this can
come up that I know of is with a mutable constexpr with an initializer, since
mutable is incompatible with static (but it's already incompatible with
const anyway))
llvm-svn: 173873
- The only group where it makes sense for the "ExternC" bit is System, so this
simplifies having to have the extra isCXXAware (or ImplicitExternC, depending
on what code you talk to) bit caried around.
llvm-svn: 173859
implementation; this is much more inline with the original implementation
(i.e., pre-ubsan) and does not require run-time library support.
The trapping implementation can be invoked using either '-fcatch-undefined-behavior'
or '-fsanitize=undefined-trap -fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error', with the latter
being preferred. Eventually, the -fcatch-undefined-behavior' flag will be removed.
llvm-svn: 173848
subsequent commands from being executed.
The diagnostics generation isn't designed for this use case, so add a note to
fix this in the very near future. For now, just generated the diagnostics for
the first failing command.
Part of rdar://12984531
llvm-svn: 173825
The style guide only forbids this for function declarations. So,
now
someFunction(
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa, aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa, aaaaaaaaaaaa);
Is allowed in Chromium mode.
llvm-svn: 173806
the diagnostic's warn_ name. Switch some places (notably C++11 attributes)
which really wanted an error over to a different diagnostic. Finally, suppress
the diagnostic entirely for __ptr32, __ptr64 and __w64, to avoid producing
diagnostics in important system headers.
llvm-svn: 173788
working, and add the missing attribute spellings. This brings _pascal,
_fastcall, _stdcall and _cdecl to life in -fborland-extensions mode.
llvm-svn: 173749
as a keyword. Rationalize existing attributes to use it as appropriate, and to
not lie about some __declspec attributes being GNU attributes. In passing,
remove a gross hack which was discarding attributes which we could handle. This
results in us actually respecting the __pascal keyword again.
llvm-svn: 173746
This required plumbing through a new flag to determine whether a ParmVarDecl is
actually a parameter of a function declaration (as opposed to a function
typedef etc, where the attribute is prohibited). Weirdly, this attribute (just
like [[noreturn]]) cannot be applied to a function type, just to a function
declaration (and its parameters).
llvm-svn: 173726
-fno-modules-global-index -cc1 option to allow one to disable the
index for performance testing purposes, but with a 10% win in
-fsyntax-only time, there is no reason a user would do this.
llvm-svn: 173707
ModuleManager::visit() by keeping a free list of the two data
structures used to store state (a preallocated stack and a visitation
number vector). Improves -fsyntax-only performance for my modules test
case by 2.8%. Modules has pulled ahead by almost 10% with the global
module index.
llvm-svn: 173692
for a CXFile containing device/inode/modification time.
Intended to be useful as a key associated with a unique file across
an indexing session.
rdar://13091837
llvm-svn: 173559
on a type. Currently, it gives a generic "expected unqualified-id" error.
The new error message is "cannot use (dot|arrow) operator on a type".
llvm-svn: 173556
-f(no-)color-diagnostics. In addition, dumpColor() function calls are added
to force color printing. No structural changes to -ast-dump.
llvm-svn: 173548
factor the realpath calls into FileManager::getCanonicalName() so we
can cache the results of this epically slow operation. 5% speedup on
my modules test, and realpath drops out of the profile.
llvm-svn: 173542
Title: [PR9027] volatile struct bug: member is not loaded at -O;
This is caused by last flag passed to @llvm.memcpy being false,
not honoring that aggregate has at least one 'volatile' data member
(even though aggregate itself has not been qualified as 'volatile'.
As a result, optimization optimizes away the memcpy altogether.
Patch review by John MaCall (I still need to fix up a test though).
llvm-svn: 173535
index, optimizing the operation that skips lookup in modules where we
know the identifier will not be found. This makes the global module
index optimization actually useful, providing an 8.5% speedup over
modules without the global module index for -fsyntax-only.
llvm-svn: 173529
never key functions. We did not implement that rule for the
iOS ABI, which was driven by what was implemented in gcc-4.2.
However, implement it now for other ARM-based platforms.
llvm-svn: 173515
and limiting ourselves to two memory allocations. 10% speedup in
-fsyntax-only time for modules.
With this change, we can actually see some performance different from
the global module index, but it's still about 1%.
llvm-svn: 173512
and split it out of -Wgnu into its own warning flag.
* In C++11, this is now a hard error (GCC has no extension here in C++11 mode).
The error can be disabled with -Wno-static-float-init, and has a fixit to
add 'constexpr'.
* In C++98, this is still an ExtWarn, but is now controlled by
-Wstatic-float-init as well as -Wgnu.
llvm-svn: 173414
AST reader.
The global module index tracks all of the identifiers known to a set
of module files. Lookup of those identifiers looks first in the global
module index, which returns the set of module files in which that
identifier can be found. The AST reader only needs to look into those
module files and any module files not known to the global index (e.g.,
because they were (re)built after the global index), reducing the
number of on-disk hash tables to visit. For an example source I'm
looking at, we go from 237844 total identifier lookups into on-disk
hash tables down to 126817.
Unfortunately, this does not translate into a performance advantage.
At best, it's a wash once the global module index has been built, but
that's ignore the cost of building the global module index (which
is itself fairly large). Profiles show that the global module index
code is far less efficient than it should be; optimizing it might give
enough of an advantage to justify its continued inclusion.
llvm-svn: 173405
for template instantiations, and use it to simplify the implementation of
FunctionDecl::isInlined().
This incidentally changes the result of isInlined on a declared-but-not-defined
non-inline member function from true to false. This is sort of a bug fix, but
currently isInlined is only called on function definitions, so it has no visible
effects.
llvm-svn: 173397
The idea is to introduce a higher level "user mode" option for
different use scenarios. For example, if one wants to run the analyzer
for a small project each time the code is built, they would use
the "shallow" mode.
The user mode option will influence the default settings for the
lower-level analyzer options. For now, this just influences the ipa
modes, but we plan to find more optimal settings for them.
llvm-svn: 173386
The idea is to eventually place all analyzer options under
"analyzer-config". In addition, this lays the ground for introduction of
a high-level analyzer mode option, which will influence the
default setting for IPAMode.
llvm-svn: 173385
This is a missing piece for C99 conformance.
This patch handles UCNs by adding a '\\' case to LexTokenInternal and
LexIdentifier -- if we see a backslash, we tentatively try to read in a UCN.
If the UCN is not syntactically well-formed, we fall back to the old
treatment: a backslash followed by an identifier beginning with 'u' (or 'U').
Because the spelling of an identifier with UCNs still has the UCN in it, we
need to convert that to UTF-8 in Preprocessor::LookUpIdentifierInfo.
Of course, valid code that does *not* use UCNs will see only a very minimal
performance hit (checks after each identifier for non-ASCII characters,
checks when converting raw_identifiers to identifiers that they do not
contain UCNs, and checks when getting the spelling of an identifier that it
does not contain a UCN).
This patch also adds basic support for actual UTF-8 in the source. This is
treated almost exactly the same as UCNs except that we consider stray
Unicode characters to be mistakes and offer a fixit to remove them.
llvm-svn: 173369
Introduce a spelling index to Attr class, which is an index into the attribute spelling list of an attribute defined in Attr.td.
This index will determine the actual spelling used by an attribute, as it incorporates both the syntax and naming of the attribute.
When constructing an attribute AST node, the spelling index is computed based on attribute kind, scope (if it's a C++11 attribute), and
name, then passed to Attr that will use the index to print itself.
Thanks to Richard Smith for the idea and review.
llvm-svn: 173358
The global module index is a "global" index for all of the module
files within a particular subdirectory in the module cache, which
keeps track of all of the "interesting" identifiers and selectors
known in each of the module files. One can perform a fast lookup in
the index to determine which module files will have more information
about entities with a particular name/selector. This information can
help eliminate redundant lookups into module files (a serious
performance problem) and help with creating auto-import/auto-include
Fix-Its.
The global module index is created or updated at the end of a
translation unit that has triggered a (re)build of a module by
scraping all of the .pcm files out of the module cache subdirectory,
so it catches everything. As with module rebuilds, we use the file
system's atomicity to synchronize.
llvm-svn: 173301
GCC implements -Wvla as "warn on every VLA" (this is useful to find every VLA,
for example, if they are forbidden by coding guidelines). Currently Clang
implements -Wvla as "warn on VLA when it is an extension".
The attached patch makes our behavior match GCC. The existing vla extwarn is
moved under -Wvla-extension and is still included into -Wgnu.
This fixes PR5953.
llvm-svn: 173286
This only affects styles where BinPackParameters is false.
With AllowAllParametersOnNextLine:
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa(
aaaaaaaaaa, aaaaaaaaaa, aaaaaaaaaa, aaaaaaaaaaa, aaaaaaaaaaa);
Without it:
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa(aaaaaaaaaa,
aaaaaaaaaa,
aaaaaaaaaa,
aaaaaaaaaaa,
aaaaaaaaaaa);
llvm-svn: 173246
* Fix a typo, s/BeginSourceAction/BeginSourceFile/, so that the documentation
for FrontendAction::BeginSourceFileAction links correctly to BeginSourceFile;
* Add some basic \file documentation for FrontendAction.h;
* More use of "\brief" instead of repeating the name of the entity being
documented;
* Stop using Doxygen-style "///" comments in FrontendAction.cpp, as they were
polluting the documentation for BeginSourceFile;
* Drop incorrect "\see" markup that broke Doxygen's formatting;
* Other minor documentation fixes.
llvm-svn: 173213
This allows users to promote -Wincompatible-pointer-type warnings to
errors but keep those for "discard qualifiers" as warnings (if they
so desire).
Addresses <rdar://problem/13062738>.
llvm-svn: 173184
This change also makes the serialisation store the required semantics,
fixing an issue where PPC128 was always assumed when re-reading a
128-bit value.
llvm-svn: 173139
lexical declarations looking for properties when we could more
efficiently check for property mismatches at property declaration
time. Good for ~1% of -fsyntax-only time when most of the properties
we're checking against come from an AST file.
llvm-svn: 173079
did a redundant traversal of the lexical declarations in the
superclass. Instead, when we declare a new property, look into the
superclass to see whether we're redeclaring the property. Goot for 1%
of -fsyntax-only time on Cocoa.h and a little less than 3% on my
modules test case.
llvm-svn: 173073
forming the identifier, e.g., as part of a selector or a declaration
name, don't actually deserialize any information about the
identifier. Instead, simply mark it "out-of-date" and we'll load the
the information on demand. 2% speedup on the modules testcase I'm
looking at; should also help PCH.
llvm-svn: 173056
DeclContext. When the DeclContext is of a kind that can only be
defined once and never updated, we limit the search to the module file
that conatins the lookup table. Provides a 15% speedup in one
modules-heavy source file.
llvm-svn: 173050
Also, it was the only reason that `argc` and `argv` were being passed
into createDiagnostics, so remove those parameters and clean up callers.
llvm-svn: 172945
Suppress the warning by just not emitting the report. The sink node
would get generated, which is fine since we did reach a bad state.
Motivation
Due to the way code is structured in some of these macros, we do not
reason correctly about it and report false positives. Specifically, the
following loop reports a use-after-free. Because of the way the code is
structured inside of the macro, the analyzer assumes that the list can
have cycles, so you end up with use-after-free in the loop, that is
safely deleting elements of the list. (The user does not have a way to
teach the analyzer about shape of data structures.)
SLIST_FOREACH_SAFE(item, &ctx->example_list, example_le, tmpitem) {
if (item->index == 3) { // if you remove each time, no complaints
assert((&ctx->example_list)->slh_first == item);
SLIST_REMOVE(&ctx->example_list, item, example_s, example_le);
free(item);
}
}
llvm-svn: 172883
The warning is still under -Wuninitialized (although technically this
is defined behavior), but under a subgroup -Wstatic-self-init.
This addresses PR 10265.
llvm-svn: 172878
partially-substituted parameter pack in a template, forget about the
partially-substituted parameter pack: it is now completed. Fixes
<rdar://problem/12176336>.
llvm-svn: 172859
Makes sure that a deserialized macro is only added to the preprocessor macro definitions only once.
Unfortunately I couldn't get a reduced test case.
rdar://13016031
llvm-svn: 172843
return type of a function by canonicalizing them away. They are
useless anyway, and conflict with our rules for template argument
deduction and __strong. Fixes <rdar://problem/12367446>.
llvm-svn: 172768
AT_producer. Which includes clang's version information so we can tell
which version of the compiler was used.
This is second of the two steps to allow us to do this. The first was a
change to llvm-mc with revision 172630 to provide a method to set the
AT_producer string. This second step has the clang driver passing the value
of getClangFullVersion() via the new flag -dwarf-debug-producer when invoking
the integrated assembler on assembly source files. Then using the new
setDwarfDebugProducer() method to set the AT_producer string.
rdar://12888242
llvm-svn: 172758
it apart from [[gnu::noreturn]] / __attribute__((noreturn)), since their
semantics are not equivalent (for instance, we treat [[gnu::noreturn]] as
affecting the function type, whereas [[noreturn]] does not).
llvm-svn: 172691
expressions which have undefined behavior due to multiple unsequenced
modifications or an unsequenced modification and use of a variable.
llvm-svn: 172690
if we can see the elements of the arrays.
for example:
NSDictionary *dict = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjects:[NSArray arrayWithObjects:@"1", @"2", nil] forKeys:[NSArray arrayWithObjects:@"A", @"B", nil]];
-->
NSDictionary *dict = @{ @"A" : @"1", @"B" : @"2" };
rdar://12428166
llvm-svn: 172679
consider (sub)module visibility.
The bulk of this change replaces myriad hand-rolled loops over the
linked list of Objective-C categories/extensions attached to an
interface declaration with loops using one of the four new category
iterator kinds:
visible_categories_iterator: Iterates over all visible categories
and extensions, hiding any that have their "hidden" bit set. This is
by far the most commonly used iterator.
known_categories_iterator: Iterates over all categories and
extensions, ignoring the "hidden" bit. This tends to be used for
redeclaration-like traversals.
visible_extensions_iterator: Iterates over all visible extensions,
hiding any that have their "hidden" bit set.
known_extensions_iterator: Iterates over all extensions, whether
they are visible to normal name lookup or not.
The effect of this change is that any uses of the visible_ iterators
will respect module-import visibility. See the new tests for examples.
Note that the old accessors for categories and extensions are gone;
there are *Raw() forms for some of them, for those (few) areas of the
compiler that have to manipulate the linked list of categories
directly. This is generally discouraged.
Part two of <rdar://problem/10634711>.
llvm-svn: 172665
Previously we would serialize the macro redefinitions as a list, part of
the identifier, and try to chain them together across modules individually
without having the info that they were already chained at definition time.
Change this by serializing the macro redefinition chain and then try
to synthesize the chain parts across modules. This allows us to correctly
pinpoint when 2 different definitions are ambiguous because they came from
unrelated modules.
Fixes bogus "ambiguous expansion of macro" warning when a macro in a PCH
is redefined without undef'ing it first.
rdar://13016031
llvm-svn: 172620
"Bin-packing" here means allowing multiple parameters on one line, if a
function call/declaration is spread over multiple lines.
This is required by the Chromium style guide and probably desired for
the Google style guide. Not making changes to LLVM style as I don't have
enough data.
With this enabled, we format stuff like:
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa(aaaaaaaaaa,
aaaaaaaaaa,
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa).aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa();
llvm-svn: 172617
overriding and overridden method, allow the overridden method to have
a narrower contract (introduced earlier, deprecated/obsoleted later)
than the overriding method. Fixes <rdar://problem/12992023>.
llvm-svn: 172567
warning options to setup diagnostic state, but should not be emitting warnings as these would be
rudndant with what the frontend emits.
rdar://13001556
llvm-svn: 172497
ActOnFinishFullExpr that some of its checks only apply to discarded-value
expressions. This adds missing checks for unexpanded variadic template
parameter packs to a handful of constructs.
llvm-svn: 172485
will have a shared library with the same name as its framework (and no
suffix!) within its .framework directory. Detect this both when
inferring the whole top-level framework and when parsing a module map.
llvm-svn: 172439
metadata for linking against the libraries/frameworks for imported
modules.
The module map language is extended with a new "link" directive that
specifies what library or framework to link against when a module is
imported, e.g.,
link "clangAST"
or
link framework "MyFramework"
Importing the corresponding module (or any of its submodules) will
eventually link against the named library/framework.
For now, I've added some placeholder global metadata that encodes the
imported libraries/frameworks, so that we can test that this
information gets through to the IR. The format of the data is still
under discussion.
llvm-svn: 172437
Now, "if (a) return;" is only allowed, if this option is set.
Also add a Chromium style which is currently identical to Google style
except for this option.
llvm-svn: 172431
1) Supported by Clang, and
2) Supported by GCC, and
3) Documented in GCC's manual.
g++ allows its C++11-style attributes to appertain only to the entity being
declared, and never to a type (even for a type attribute), so we do the same.
llvm-svn: 172382
The testcase in pr14929 shows that this is extremely hard to do. If we choose
to apply the attribute, that causes the visibility of some decls to change and
that can happen really late (during codegen).
Current gcc warns and ignores the attribute in this testcase with a warning.
This suggest that the correct solution is to find a point in the compilation
where we can compute the visibility and
* assert it was never computed before
* reject any attempts to compute it again in the future (with warnings).
llvm-svn: 172305
which a particular declaration resides. Use this information to
customize the "definition of 'blah' must be imported from another
module" diagnostic with the module the user actually has to
import. Additionally, recover by importing that module, so we don't
complain about other names in that module.
Still TODO: coming up with decent Fix-Its for these cases, and expand
this recovery approach for other name lookup failures.
llvm-svn: 172290
Previously, -Wunused-comparison ignored comparisons in both macro bodies and
macro arguments, but we would still emit a -Wunused-value warning for either.
Now we correctly emit -Wunused-comparison for expressions in macro arguments.
Also, add isMacroBodyExpansion to SourceManager, to go along with
isMacroArgExpansion.
llvm-svn: 172279
RefactoringTool::run() always writes the result of rewrites to disk.
Instead, make this optional and provide a method for getting the
refactoring results in a memory buffer instead.
Also made ClangTool polymorphic so RefactoringTool could inherit from it
to properly express the IS-A relationship. This change also provides
access to ClangTool's public interface, e.g. mapVirtualFile() which is
important once refactored buffers start living in memory instead of on
disk.
Reviewers: klimek
llvm-svn: 172219
Added option to put each constructor initializer on its own line
if not all initializers fit on a single line. Enabling this for
Google style now as the style guide (arguable) suggests it. Not
sure whether we also want it for LLVM.
llvm-svn: 172196
Objective-C method declarations look like this:
- (returntype)name:(type)argname anothername:(type)arg2name;
In google style, there's no space after the leading '-' but one after
"(returntype)" instead (but none after the argument types), see
http://google-styleguide.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/objcguide.xml#Method_Declarations_and_Definitions
Not inserting the space after '-' is easy, but to insert the space after the
return type, the formatter needs to know that a closing parenthesis ends the
return type. To do this, I tweaked the code in parse() to check for this, which
in turn required moving detection of TT_ObjCMethodSpecifier from annotate() to
parse(), because parse() runs before annotate().
(To keep things interesting, the return type is optional, but it's almost
always there in practice.)
http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D280
llvm-svn: 172140
This will be a new style requirement going forwards: a diagnostic can only
use the implicit InGroup<DiagGroup<"foo">> syntax if "foo" is not used by
any other diagnostics; as soon as it is, it needs an explicit group.
This also brings some stray "conversion" diagnostics into the
"Value Conversion Issue" category, instead of the more generic
"Semantic Issue" category. I consider this an improvement!
- warn_impcast_complex_scalar
- warn_impcast_float_integer
- warn_impcast_float_precision
- warn_impcast_integer_precision
- warn_impcast_vector_scalar
llvm-svn: 172088
Before: int (^myBlock) (int) = ^(int num) {}
A<void ()>;
int (*b)(int);
After: int (^myBlock)(int) = ^(int num) {}
A<void()>;
int(*b)(int);
For function types and function pointer types, this patch only makes
the behavior consistent (for types that are keywords and other types).
For the latter function pointer type declarations, we'll probably
want to add a space after "int".
Also added LangOpts.Bool = 1, so we handle "A<bool()>" appropriately
Moved the LangOpts-settings to a public place for use by tests
and clang-format binary.
llvm-svn: 172065
in case condition type. // rdar://11577384.
Test is conditionalized on x86_64-apple triple as
I am not sure if the INT_MAX/LONG_MAX values in the test
will pass this test for other hosts.
llvm-svn: 172016
-Wint-to-pointer-cast, added to match GCC's warning by the same name, doesn't
need to be in any other groups (as it isn't in any groups in GCC either).
Found in post-commit review by Ted Kremenek.
llvm-svn: 171893
With the new setting, we are not going to inline any functions that are
more than 50 basic blocks. (The analyzer is 20% faster on several
especially bad benchmarks with the new default.)
llvm-svn: 171891
bits from the number of parameters. This brings the bitfields down from 33 bits
to 32 bits, reducing the size of Types by 4 bytes on 32-bit systems.
llvm-svn: 171827
The issue here is that if we have 2 leaks reported at the same line for
which we cannot print the corresponding region info, they will get
treated as the same by issue_hash+description. We need to AUGMENT the
issue_hash with the allocation info to differentiate the two issues.
Add the "hash" (offset from the beginning of a function) representing
allocation site to solve the issue.
We might want to generalize solution in the future when we decide to
track more than just the 2 locations from the diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 171825
Following r168626, in class declaration or definition, there are a combination of syntactic locations
where C++11 attributes could appear, and among those the only valid location permitted by standard is
between class-key and class-name. So for those attributes appear at wrong locations, fixit is used to
move them to expected location and we recover by applying them to the class specifier.
llvm-svn: 171757
Uses of clang_getSpellingLocation should eventually move to calling
clang_getFileLocation, and clang_getSpellingLocation should do what
its name represents and actually point at the 'spelling' location, e.g.
inside a macro definition if the spelling of a token came from that.
llvm-svn: 171486
This patch moves hasCLanguageLinkage to be VarDecl and FunctionDecl methods
so that they can be used from SemaOverload.cpp and then fixes the logic
in Sema::IsOverload.
llvm-svn: 171193
Changed getLocStart() and getLocEnd() to be required for Stmts, and make
getSourceRange() optional. The default implementation for getSourceRange()
is build the range by calling getLocStart() and getLocEnd().
llvm-svn: 171067
the body of a functions. The problem was that hasBody looks at the entire chain
and causes problems to -fvisibility-inlines-hidden if the cache was not
invalidated.
Original message:
Cache visibility of decls.
This unifies the linkage and visibility caching. I first implemented this when
working on pr13844, but the previous fixes removed the performance advantage of
this one.
This is still a step in the right direction for making linkage and visibility
cheap to use.
llvm-svn: 171053
This unifies the linkage and visibility caching. I first implemented this when
working on pr13844, but the previous fixes removed the performance advantage of
this one.
This is still a step in the right direction for making linkage and visibility
cheap to use.
llvm-svn: 171048
Apply all formatting changes that clang-format would apply to its own source
code. All choices seem to improve readability (or at least not make it worse).
No functional changes.
llvm-svn: 171039
This was removed with -Wunique-enum, which is still removed. The
corresponding thread on cfe-comments for that warning is here:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-dev/2012-September/024224.html
If we get specific user feedback for -Wduplicate-enum we can evaluate
whether or not to keep it.
llvm-svn: 170974
Along the way, fix a bug in CheckLiteralKind(), previously in diagnoseObjCLiteralComparison, where we didn't ignore parentheses
in boxed expressions for purpose of classification.
In other words, both @42 and @(42) should be classified as numeric
literals.
llvm-svn: 170931
the values in the constructor. The constructor implementation is trivial
beyond the value initialisations. Patch by Saleem Abdulrasool!
llvm-svn: 170929
Unfortunately, we don't seem to have a standard way to do this. I'm using
the __OPTIMIZE__ GNU extension that Clang also defines, but that doesn't
help MSVC. I suppose we could remove the check entirely, but it's useful
for developing new constraint managers.
llvm-svn: 170915
deterministic.
Commit message for r170826:
[analyzer] Traverse the Call Graph in topological order.
Modify the call graph by removing the parentless nodes. Instead all
nodes are children of root to ensure they are all reachable. Remove the
tracking of nodes that are "top level" or global. This information is
not used and can be obtained from the Decls stored inside
CallGraphNodes.
Instead of existing ordering hacks, analyze the functions in topological
order over the Call Graph.
Together with the addition of devirtualizable ObjC message sends and
blocks to the call graph, this gives around 6% performance improvement
on several large ObjC benchmarks.
llvm-svn: 170906
Modify the call graph by removing the parentless nodes. Instead all
nodes are children of root to ensure they are all reachable. Remove the
tracking of nodes that are "top level" or global. This information is
not used and can be obtained from the Decls stored inside
CallGraphNodes.
Instead of existing ordering hacks, analyze the functions in topological
order over the Call Graph.
Together with the addition of devirtualizable ObjC message sends and
blocks to the call graph, this gives around 6% performance improvement
on several large ObjC benchmarks.
llvm-svn: 170826
This paves the road for constructing a better function dependency graph.
If we analyze a function before the functions it calls and inlines,
there is more opportunity for optimization.
Note, we add call edges to the called methods that correspond to
function definitions (declarations with bodies).
llvm-svn: 170825