macro history.
When deserializing macro history, we arrange history such that the
macros that have definitions (that haven't been #undef'd) and are
visible come at the beginning of the list, which is what the
preprocessor and other clients of Preprocessor::getMacroInfo()
expect. If additional macro definitions become visible later, they'll
be moved toward the front of the list. Note that it's possible to have
ambiguities, but we don't diagnose them yet.
There is a partially-implemented design decision here that, if a
particular identifier has been defined or #undef'd within the
translation unit, that definition (or #undef) hides any macro
definitions that come from imported modules. There's still a little
work to do to ensure that the right #undef'ing happens.
Additionally, we'll need to scope the update records for #undefs, so
they only kick in when the submodule containing that update record
becomes visible.
llvm-svn: 165682
MacroInfo*. Instead of simply dumping an offset into the current file,
give each macro definition a proper ID with all of the standard
modules-remapping facilities. Additionally, when a macro is modified
in a subsequent AST file (e.g., #undef'ing a macro loaded from another
module or from a precompiled header), provide a macro update record
rather than rewriting the entire macro definition. This gives us
greater consistency with the way we handle declarations, and ties
together macro definitions much more cleanly.
Note that we're still not actually deserializing macro history (we
never were), but it's far easy to do properly now.
llvm-svn: 165560
whether that function/method already has a body (loaded from some
other AST file), as introduced in r165137. Delay this check until
after the redeclaration chains have been wired up.
While I'm here, make the loading of method bodies lazy.
llvm-svn: 165513
write out the macro history for that macro. Similarly, we need to cope
with reading a macro definition that has been #undef'd.
Take advantage of this new ability so that global code-completion
results can refer to #undef'd macros, rather than losing them
entirely. For multiply defined/#undef'd macros, we will still get the
wrong result, but it's better than getting no result.
llvm-svn: 165502
Check whether a pending instantiation needs to be instantiated (or whether an instantiation already exists).
Verify the size of the PendingInstantiations record (was only checking size of existing PendingInstantiations).
Migrate Obj-C++ part of redecl-merge into separate test, now that this is growing.
templates.mm: test that CodeGen has seen exactly one definition of template instantiations.
redecl-merge.m: use "@" specifier for expected-diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 164993
Lookup can nevertheless find them due to the serialized lookup table.
For instance when reading a template decl's templatedDecl, it will search for existing decls that it could be a redeclaration of, and find the half-read template decl.
Thus there is no point in asserting the names of decls.
llvm-svn: 164932
enough information so we can mangle them correctly in cases involving
dependent parameter types. (This specifically impacts cases involving
null pointers and cases involving parameters of reference type.)
Fix the mangler to use this information instead of trying to scavenge
it out of the parameter declaration.
<rdar://problem/12296776>.
llvm-svn: 164656
Summary: Passes all tests (+ the new one with code completion), but needs a thorough review in part related to modules.
Reviewers: doug.gregor
Reviewed By: alexfh
CC: cfe-commits, rsmith
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D41
llvm-svn: 164610
external visible decls, call DeclContext::setMustBuildLookupTable so that the
"lazy decls" bit of the LookupPtr is set.
Previously, in non-C++, if there were no new declarations causing the "lazy decls" bit
to be set, then DeclContext::lookups_begin() would fail to return the decls from the PCH.
Fixes rdar://12316296.
llvm-svn: 164351
(__builtin_* etc.) so that it isn't possible to take their address.
Specifically, introduce a new type to represent a reference to a builtin
function, and a new cast kind to convert it to a function pointer in the
operand of a call. Fixes PR13195.
llvm-svn: 162962
a defaulted special member function until the exception specification is needed
(using the same criteria used for the delayed instantiation of exception
specifications for function temploids).
EST_Delayed is now EST_Unevaluated (using 1330's terminology), and, like
EST_Uninstantiated, carries a pointer to the FunctionDecl which will be used to
resolve the exception specification.
This is enabled for all C++ modes: it's a little faster in the case where the
exception specification isn't used, allows our C++11-in-C++98 extensions to
work, and is still correct for C++98, since in that mode the computation of the
exception specification can't fail.
The diagnostics here aren't great (in particular, we should include implicit
evaluation of exception specifications for defaulted special members in the
template instantiation backtraces), but they're not much worse than before.
Our approach to the problem of cycles between in-class initializers and the
exception specification for a defaulted default constructor is modified a
little by this change -- we now reject any odr-use of a defaulted default
constructor if that constructor uses an in-class initializer and the use is in
an in-class initialzer which is declared lexically earlier. This is a closer
approximation to the current draft solution in core issue 1351, but isn't an
exact match (but the current draft wording isn't reasonable, so that's to be
expected).
llvm-svn: 160847
as "volatile", meaning there's a high enough chance that they may
change while we are trying to use them.
This flag is only enabled by libclang.
Currently "volatile" source files will be stat'ed immediately
before opening them, because the file size stat info
may not be accurate since when we got it (e.g. from the PCH).
This avoids crashes when trying to reference mmap'ed memory
from a file whose size is not what we expect.
Note that there's still a window for a racing issue to occur
but the window for it should be way smaller than before.
We can consider later on to avoid mmap completely on such files.
rdar://11612916
llvm-svn: 160074
currently we take address of std::vector's contents only after we finished
adding all comments (so no reallocation can happen), this will change in
future.
llvm-svn: 159845
coming from an AST file are registered for serialization.
A static data member instantiation of in a chained PCH could be missed
when serializing decls; the result was that when emitting the visible decls
map of its DeclContext, we would use a DeclID that was not actually emitted,
leading to crashes or hangs.
Fix this by making sure such decls are always registered for serialization.
Also introduce extra sanity checks to make sure we don't register new
declarations or types after we have serialized the types/decls block.
rdar://11728990
llvm-svn: 159550
For some targets a structure named __va_list_tag is built to help define
the __builtin_va_list type. However, __va_list_tag was not being treated as a
predefined type thus causing problems when serializing the AST. This commit
fixes that oversight by adding the necessary support to treat __va_list_tag
as a predefined type.
llvm-svn: 159508
../tools/clang/lib/Serialization/ASTReader.cpp:6316:9: warning: default label in switch which covers all enumeration values [-Wcovered-switch-default]
Also fix the indentation here to match the coding conventions.
llvm-svn: 158794
target Objective-C runtime down to the frontend: break this
down into a single target runtime kind and version, and compute
all the relevant information from that. This makes it
relatively painless to add support for new runtimes to the
compiler. Make the new -cc1 flag, -fobjc-runtime=blah-x.y.z,
available at the driver level as a better and more general
alternative to -fgnu-runtime and -fnext-runtime. This new
concept of an Objective-C runtime also encompasses what we
were previously separating out as the "Objective-C ABI", so
fragile vs. non-fragile runtimes are now really modelled as
different kinds of runtime, paving the way for better overall
differentiation.
As a sort of special case, continue to accept the -cc1 flag
-fobjc-runtime-has-weak, as a sop to PLCompatibilityWeak.
I won't go so far as to say "no functionality change", even
ignoring the new driver flag, but subtle changes in driver
semantics are almost certainly not intended.
llvm-svn: 158793
Also add a couple of unit tests to check the invalid-PCH error messages
to satisfy PR4568 and for the assertion (introduced in r149918 and fixed
in r158769) that would cause clang to crash when given an empty PCH.
llvm-svn: 158772
* Retain comments in the AST
* Serialize/deserialize comments
* Find comments attached to a certain Decl
* Expose raw comment text and SourceRange via libclang
llvm-svn: 158771
The integral APSInt value is now stored in a decomposed form and the backing
store for large values is allocated via the ASTContext. This way its not
leaked as TemplateArguments are never destructed when they are allocated in
the ASTContext. Since the integral data is immutable it is now shared between
instances, making copying TemplateArguments a trivial operation.
Currently getting the integral data out of a TemplateArgument requires creating
a new APSInt object. This is cheap when the value is small but can be expensive
if it's not. If this turns out to be an issue a more efficient accessor could
be added.
llvm-svn: 158150
In addition, I've made the pointer and reference typedef 'void' rather than T*
just so they can't get misused. I would've omitted them entirely but
std::distance likes them to be there even if it doesn't use them.
This rolls back r155808 and r155869.
Review by Doug Gregor incorporating feedback from Chandler Carruth.
llvm-svn: 158104
validate that we didn't override the contents of any of such files.
If this is detected, emit a diagnostic error and recover gracefully
by using the contents of the original file that the PCH was built from.
Part of rdar://11305263
llvm-svn: 156107
filter_decl_iterator had a weird mismatch where both op* and op-> returned T*
making it difficult to generalize this filtering behavior into a reusable
library of any kind.
This change errs on the side of value, making op-> return T* and op* return
T&.
(reviewed by Richard Smith)
llvm-svn: 155808
the declaration context as not having external visible storage any more.
This should improve performance as we won't needlessly reload the visible decls multiple times
and seems to fix the i386 crash in rdar://11327522.
llvm-svn: 155649
includes a patch from Matthias Kleine with a regression testcase!
Adds a new iterator 'data_iterator' to OnDiskHashTable which doesn't try to
reconstruct the external_key from the internal_key, which is useful for traits
that don't store enough information to do that mapping in their key. Also
deletes the 'item_iterator' from OnDiskHashTable as dead code.
llvm-svn: 154784
compiler errors or not.
-Control whether ASTReader should reject such a PCH by a boolean flag at ASTReader's creation time.
By default, such a PCH file will be rejected with an error when trying to load it.
[libclang] Allow clang_saveTranslationUnit to create a PCH file even if compiler errors
occurred.
-Have libclang API calls accept a PCH that had compiler errors.
The general idea is that we want libclang to stay functional even if a PCH had a compiler error.
rdar://10976363.
llvm-svn: 152192
Introduce PreprocessingRecord::rangeIntersectsConditionalDirective() which returns
true if a given range intersects with a conditional directive block.
llvm-svn: 152018
from the one stored in the PCH/AST, while trying to load a SLocEntry.
We verify that all files of the PCH did not change before loading it but this is not enough because:
- The AST may have been 1) kept around, 2) to do queries on it.
- We may have 1) verified the PCH and 2) started parsing.
Between 1) and 2) files may change and we are going to have crashes because the rest of clang
cannot deal with the ASTReader failing to read a SLocEntry.
Handle this by recovering gracefully in such a case, by initializing the SLocEntry
with the info from the PCH/AST as well as reporting failure by the ASTReader.
rdar://10888929
llvm-svn: 151004
id-expression 'x' will compute the type based on the assumption that
'x' will be captured, even if it isn't captured, per C++11
[expr.prim.lambda]p18. There are two related refactors that go into
implementing this:
1) Split out the check that determines whether we should capture a
particular variable reference, along with the computation of the
type of the field, from the actual act of capturing the
variable.
2) Always compute the result of decltype() within Sema, rather than
AST, because the decltype() computation is now context-sensitive.
llvm-svn: 150347
to pretty-print such function types better, and to fix a case where we were not
instantiating templates in lexical order. In passing, move the Variadic bit from
Type's bitfields to FunctionProtoType to get the Type bitfields down to 32 bits.
Also ensure that we always substitute the return type of a function when
substituting explicitly-specified arguments, since that can cause us to bail
out with a SFINAE error before we hit a hard error in parameter substitution.
llvm-svn: 150241
We were passing a decl to the consumer after all pending deserializations were finished
but this was not enough; due to processing by the consumer we may end up into yet another
deserialization process but the way FinishedDeserializing() was setup we would not ensure
that everything was fully deserialized before returning to the consumer.
Separate ASTReader::FinishedDeserializing() into two semantic actions.
The first is ensuring that a deserialization process ends up will fully deserialized decls/types even
if the process is started by the consumer.
The second is pushing "interesting" decls to the consumer; we make sure that we don't re-enter this
section recursively be checking a variable.
llvm-svn: 150160
The new info is propagated to TSTLoc on template instantiation, getting rid of 3 FIXMEs in TreeTransform.h and another one Parser.cpp.
Simplified code in TypeSpecLocFiller visitor methods for DTSTLoc and DependentNameTypeLoc by removing what now seems to be dead code (adding corresponding assertions).
llvm-svn: 149923
single attribute ("system") that allows us to mark a module as being a
"system" module. Each of the headers that makes up a system module is
considered to be a system header, so that we (for example) suppress
warnings there.
If a module is being inferred for a framework, and that framework
directory is within a system frameworks directory, infer it as a
system framework.
llvm-svn: 149143
the direct serialization of the linked-list structure. Instead, use a
scheme similar to how we handle redeclarations, with redeclaration
lists on the side. This addresses several issues:
- In cases involving mixing and matching of many categories across
many modules, the linked-list structure would not be consistent
across different modules, and categories would get lost.
- If a module is loaded after the class definition and its other
categories have already been loaded, we wouldn't see any categories
in the newly-loaded module.
llvm-svn: 149112
return pre-built lists. Instead, it feeds the methods it deserializes
to Sema so that Sema can unique them, which keeps the chains shorter.
llvm-svn: 148889
when it actually has changed (and not, e.g., when we've simply attached a
deserialized macro definition). Good for ~1.5% reduction in module
file size, mostly in the identifier table.
llvm-svn: 148808
generational scheme for identifiers that avoids searching the hash
tables of a given module more than once for a given
identifier. Previously, loading any new module invalidated all of the
previous lookup results for all identifiers, causing us to perform the
lookups repeatedly.
llvm-svn: 148412
corresponding to TagType and ObjCInterfaceType. Previously, we would
serialize the definition (if available) or the canonical declaration
(if no definition was available). However, this can end up forcing the
deserialization of the definition even through we might not want to
yet.
Instead, always serialize the canonical declaration reference in the
TagType/ObjCInterfaceType entry, and as part of loading a pending
definition, update the "decl" pointer within the type node to point at
the definition. This is more robust in hard-to-isolate cases
where the *Type gets built and filled in before we see the definition.
llvm-svn: 148323
chains, again. The prior implementation was very linked-list oriented, and
the list-splicing logic was both fairly convoluted (when loading from
multiple modules) and failed to preserve a reasonable ordering for the
redeclaration chains.
This new implementation uses a simpler strategy, where we store the
ordered redeclaration chains in an array-like structure (indexed based
on the first declaration), and use that ordering to add individual
deserialized declarations to the end of the existing chain. That way,
the chain mimics the ordering from its modules, and a bug somewhere is
far less likely to result in a broken linked list.
llvm-svn: 148222
Redeclarable<RedeclarableTemplateDecl>, eliminating a bunch of
redeclaration-chain logic both in RedeclarableTemplateDecl and
especially in its (de-)serialization.
As part of this, eliminate the RedeclarableTemplate<> class template,
which was an abstraction that didn't actually save anything.
llvm-svn: 148181
modules. Teach name lookup into namespaces to search in each of the
merged DeclContexts as well as the (now-primary) DeclContext. This
supports the common case where two different modules put something
into the same namespace.
llvm-svn: 147778
is hidden from name lookup. The previous hack of tweaking the
ModulePrivate bit when loading a declaration from a hidden submodule
was brittle.
Note that we now have 34 bits in Decl. I'll fix that next.
llvm-svn: 147658
in the module map. This provides a bit more predictability for the
user, as well as eliminating the need to sort the submodules when
serializing them.
llvm-svn: 147564
for Objective-C protocols, including:
- Using the first declaration as the canonical declaration
- Using the definition as the primary DeclContext
- Making sure that all declarations have a pointer to the definition
data, and that we know which declaration is the definition
- Serialization support for redeclaration chains and for adding
definitions to already-serialized declarations.
However, note that we're not taking advantage of much of this code
yet, because we're still re-using ObjCProtocolDecls.
llvm-svn: 147410
features needed for a particular module to be available. This allows
mixed-language modules, where certain headers only work under some
language variants (e.g., in C++, std.tuple might only be available in
C++11 mode).
llvm-svn: 147387
set of (previously-canonical) declaration IDs to the module file, so
that future AST reader instances that load the module know which
declarations are merged. This is important in the fairly tricky case
where a declaration of an entity, e.g.,
@class X;
occurs before the import of a module that also declares that
entity. We merge the declarations, and record the fact that the
declaration of X loaded from the module was merged into the (now
canonical) declaration of X that we parsed.
llvm-svn: 147181
declaration of that same class that either came from some other module
or occurred in the translation unit loading the module. In this case,
we need to merge the two redeclaration chains immediately so that all
such declarations have the same canonical declaration in the resulting
AST (even though they don't in the module files we've imported).
Focusing on Objective-C classes until I'm happy with the design, then
I'll both (1) extend this notion to other kinds of declarations, and
(2) optimize away this extra checking when we're not dealing with
modules. For now, doing this checking for PCH files/preambles gives us
better testing coverage.
llvm-svn: 147123
hitting a submodule that was never actually created, e.g., because
that header wasn't parsed. In such cases, complain (because the
module's umbrella headers don't cover everything) and fall back to
including the header.
Later, we'll add a warning at module-build time to catch all such
cases. However, this fallback is important to eliminate assertions in
the ASTWriter when this happens.
llvm-svn: 146933
with a definition pointer (e.g., C++ and Objective-C classes), zip
through the redeclaration chain to make sure that all of the
declarations point to the definition data.
As part of this, realized again why the first redeclaration of an
entity in a file is important, and brought back that idea.
llvm-svn: 146886
imported modules that don't introduce any new entities of a particular
kind. Allow these entries to be replaced with entries for another
loaded module.
In the included test case, selectors exhibit this behavior.
llvm-svn: 146870
chains. The previous implementation relied heavily on the declaration
chain being stored as a (circular) linked list on disk, as it is in
memory. However, when deserializing from multiple modules, the
different chains could get mixed up, leading to broken declaration chains.
The new solution keeps track of the first and last declarations in the
chain for each module file. When we load a declaration, we search all
of the module files for redeclarations of that declaration, then
splice together all of the lists into a coherent whole (along with any
redeclarations that were actually parsed).
As a drive-by fix, (de-)serialize the redeclaration chains of
TypedefNameDecls, which had somehow gotten missed previously. Add a
test of this serialization.
This new scheme creates a redeclaration table that is fairly large in
the PCH file (on the order of 400k for Cocoa.h's 12MB PCH file). The
table is mmap'd in and searched via a binary search, but it's still
quite large. A future tweak will eliminate entries for declarations
that have no redeclarations anywhere, and should
drastically reduce the size of this table.
llvm-svn: 146841
including deserializing their bodies, so that any other declarations that
get referenced in the body will be fully deserialized by the time we pass them to the consumer.
Could not reduce to a test case unfortunately. rdar://10587158.
llvm-svn: 146817
part of HeaderSearch. This function just normalizes filenames for use
inside of a synthetic include directive, but it is used in both the
Frontend and Serialization libraries so it needs a common home.
llvm-svn: 146227
diagnostics. Conflating them was highly confusing and makes it harder to
establish a firm layering separation between these two libraries.
llvm-svn: 146207
umbrella headers in the sense that all of the headers within that
directory (and eventually its subdirectories) are considered to be
part of the module with that umbrella directory. However, unlike
umbrella headers, which are expected to include all of the headers
within their subdirectories, Clang will automatically include all of
the headers it finds in the named subdirectory.
The intent here is to allow a module map to trivially turn a
subdirectory into a module, where the module's structure can mimic the
directory structure.
llvm-svn: 146165
header to also support umbrella directories. The umbrella directory
for an umbrella header is the directory in which the umbrella header
resides.
No functionality change yet, but it's coming.
llvm-svn: 146158
to re-export anything that it imports. This opt-in feature makes a
module behave more like a header, because it can be used to re-export
the transitive closure of a (sub)module's dependencies.
llvm-svn: 145811
"main" files that import modules. When loading any of these kinds of
AST files, we make the modules that were imported visible into the
translation unit that loaded the PCH file or preamble.
llvm-svn: 145737
precompiled header. Previously, we were trying to gather predefines
buffers from all kinds of AST files (which doesn't make sense) and
were performing some validation when AST files were loaded as main
files.
With these tweaks, using PCH files that import modules no longer fails
immediately (due to mismatched predefines buffers). However, module
visibility is lost, so this feature does not yet work.
llvm-svn: 145709
only the macro definitions from visible (sub)modules will actually be
visible. This provides the same behavior for macros that r145640
provided for declarations.
llvm-svn: 145683
(sub)module, all of the names may be hidden, just the macro names may
be exposed (for example, after the preprocessor has seen the import of
the module but the parser has not), or all of the names may be
exposed. Importing a module makes its names, and the names in any of
its non-explicit submodules, visible to name lookup (transitively).
This commit only introduces the notion of name visible and marks
modules and submodules as visible when they are imported. The actual
name-hiding logic in the AST reader will follow (along with test cases).
llvm-svn: 145586
a standard global/local scheme, so that submodule definitions will
eventually be able to refer to submodules in other top-level
modules. We'll need this functionality soonish.
llvm-svn: 145549
library, since modules cut across all of the libraries. Rename
serialization::Module to serialization::ModuleFile to side-step the
annoying naming conflict. Prune a bunch of ModuleMap.h includes that
are no longer needed (most files only needed the Module type).
llvm-svn: 145538
we may end up having added more pending stuff to do, so go in a loop until everything
is cleared out.
This fixes the error in rdar://10278815 which has a certain David Lynch-esque quality..
error: unknown type name 'BOOL'; did you mean 'BOOL'?
llvm-svn: 145536
submodules. This information will eventually be used for name hiding
when dealing with submodules. For now, we only use it to ensure that
the module "key" returned when loading a module will always be a
module (rather than occasionally being a FileEntry).
llvm-svn: 145497
inside an objc container that "contains" other file-level declarations.
When getting the array of file-level declarations that overlap with a file region,
we failed to report that the region overlaps with an objc container, if
the container had other file-level declarations declared lexically inside it.
Fix this by marking such declarations as "isTopLevelDeclInObjCContainer" in the AST
and handling them appropriately.
llvm-svn: 145109
file in the source manager. This allows us to properly create and use
modules described by module map files without umbrella headers (or
with incompletely umbrella headers). More generally, we can actually
build a PCH file that makes use of file -> buffer remappings, which
could be useful in libclang in the future.
llvm-svn: 144830
In certain cases ASTReader would call the normal DiagnosticsEngine API to initialize
the state of diagnostic pragmas but DiagnosticsEngine would try to compare source locations
leading to crash because the main FileID was not yet initialized.
Yet another case of the ASTReader trying to use the normal APIs and inadvertently breaking
invariants. Fix this by having the ASTReader set up the internal state directly.
llvm-svn: 144153
that it retains source location information for the type. Aside from
general goodness (being able to walk the types described in that
information), we now have a proper representation for dependent
delegating constructors. Fixes PR10457 (for real).
llvm-svn: 143410
Introduce a FILE_SORTED_DECLS [de]serialization record that contains
a file sorted array of file-level DeclIDs in a PCH/Module.
The rationale is to allow "targeted" deserialization of decls inside
a range of a source file.
Cocoa PCH increased by 0.8%
Difference of creation time for Cocoa PCH is below the noise level.
llvm-svn: 143238
of decl bit offsets.
This allows us to easily get at the location of a decl without deserializing it.
It increases size of Cocoa PCH by only 0.2%.
llvm-svn: 143123
AST file more lazy, so that we don't eagerly load that information for
all known identifiers each time a new AST file is loaded. The eager
reloading made some sense in the context of precompiled headers, since
very few identifiers were defined before PCH load time. With modules,
however, a huge amount of code can get parsed before we see an
@import, so laziness becomes important here.
The approach taken to make this information lazy is fairly simple:
when we load a new AST file, we mark all of the existing identifiers
as being out-of-date. Whenever we want to access information that may
come from an AST (e.g., whether the identifier has a macro definition,
or what top-level declarations have that name), we check the
out-of-date bit and, if it's set, ask the AST reader to update the
IdentifierInfo from the AST files. The update is a merge, and we now
take care to merge declarations before/after imports with declarations
from multiple imports.
The results of this optimization are fairly dramatic. On a small
application that brings in 14 non-trivial modules, this takes modules
from being > 3x slower than a "perfect" PCH file down to 30% slower
for a full rebuild. A partial rebuild (where the PCH file or modules
can be re-used) is down to 7% slower. Making the PCH file just a
little imperfect (e.g., adding two smallish modules used by a bunch of
.m files that aren't in the PCH file) tips the scales in favor of the
modules approach, with 24% faster partial rebuilds.
This is just a first step; the lazy scheme could possibly be improved
by adding versioning, so we don't search into modules we already
searched. Moreover, we'll need similar lazy schemes for all of the
other lookup data structures, such as DeclContexts.
llvm-svn: 143100
expressions: expressions which refer to a logical rather
than a physical l-value, where the logical object is
actually accessed via custom getter/setter code.
A subsequent patch will generalize the AST for these
so that arbitrary "implementing" sub-expressions can
be provided.
Right now the only client is ObjC properties, but
this should be generalizable to similar language
features, e.g. Managed C++'s __property methods.
llvm-svn: 142914
preprocessed entities that are #included in the range that we are interested.
This is useful when we are interested in preprocessed entities of a specific file, e.g
when we are annotating tokens. There is also an optimization where we cache the last
result of PreprocessingRecord::getPreprocessedEntitiesInRange and we re-use it if
there is a call with the same range as before.
rdar://10313365
llvm-svn: 142887
PreprocessingRecord's getPreprocessedEntitiesInRange.
Also remove all the stuff that were added in ASTUnit that are unnecessary now
that we do a binary search for preprocessed entities and deserialize only
what is necessary.
llvm-svn: 140063
check whether the requested location points inside the precompiled preamble,
in which case the returned source location will be a "loaded" one.
llvm-svn: 140060
which will do a binary search and return a pair of iterators
for preprocessed entities in the given source range.
Source ranges of preprocessed entities are stored twice currently in
the PCH/Module file but this will be fixed in a subsequent commit.
llvm-svn: 140058
don't call ReadSLocEntryRecord() directly because the entry may have
already been loaded in which case calling ReadSLocEntryRecord()
directly would trigger an assertion in SourceManager.
llvm-svn: 140052
-Use an array of offsets for all preprocessed entities
-Get rid of the separate array of offsets for just macro definitions;
for references to macro definitions use an index inside the preprocessed
entities array.
-Deserialize each preprocessed entity lazily, at first request; not in bulk.
Paves the way for binary searching of preprocessed entities that will offer
efficiency and will simplify things on the libclang side a lot.
llvm-svn: 139809
to the consumer without being fully deserialized).
The regression was on compiling boost.python and it was too difficult to get a reduced
test case unfortunately.
Also modify the logic of how objc methods are getting passed to the consumer;
codegen depended on receiving objc methods before the implementation decl.
Since the interesting objc methods are ones with a body and such methods only
exist inside an ObjCImplDecl, deserialize and pass to consumer all the methods
of ObCImplDecl when we see one.
Fixes http://llvm.org/PR10922 & rdar://10117105.
llvm-svn: 139644
language options. Use that .def file to declare the LangOptions class
and initialize all of its members, eliminating a source of annoying
initialization bugs.
AST serialization changes are next up.
llvm-svn: 139605
modifying directly for the preamble.
This avoids an awful, hard to find, bug where "PreprocessorOpts.DisablePCHValidation = true"
would be persistent for subsequent reparses of the translation unit which would result
in defines, present in command-line but not in the PCH, being ignored.
Fixes rdar://9615399.
llvm-svn: 139512
ASTContext reference. Remove all of the extra checking and logic that
was used to cope with a NULL ASTContext. No effective functionality
change.
llvm-svn: 139413
identifier, also make them visible in the translation unit," which
isn't needed now that John's eliminated the AST dependency in blocks
CodeGen.
llvm-svn: 139408
'id' that can be used (only!) via a contextual keyword as the result
type of an Objective-C message send. 'instancetype' then gives the
method a related result type, which we have already been inferring for
a variety of methods (new, alloc, init, self, retain). Addresses
<rdar://problem/9267640>.
llvm-svn: 139275
Preprocessor, eliminating the constructor that was used by ASTUnit
(which didn't provide an ASTContext or Prepreprocessor). Ensuring that
both objects are non-NULL will simplify module loading (but none of
that is done yet).
llvm-svn: 138986
include guards don't show up as macro definitions in every translation
unit that imports a module. Macro definitions can, however, be
exported with the intentionally-ugly #__export_macro__
directive. Implement this feature by not even bothering to serialize
non-exported macros to a module, because clients of that module need
not (should not) know that these macros even exist.
llvm-svn: 138943
The initial incentive was to fix a crash when PCH chaining categories
to an interface, but the fix was done in the "modules way" that I hear
is popular with the kids these days.
Each module stores the local chain of categories and we combine them
when the interface is loaded. We also warn if non-dependent modules
introduce duplicate named categories.
llvm-svn: 138926
to "when loading a particular module" validation, since it was only
validating local information anyway. This shouldn't change anything.
llvm-svn: 138583
given selector, rather than walking the chain backwards. Teach its
visitor how to merge multiple result sets into a single result set,
combining the results of selector lookup in several different modules
into a single result set.
llvm-svn: 138556
table when serializing an AST file. This was a holdover from the days
before chained PCH, and is a complete waste of time and storage
now. It's a good thing it's useless, because I have no idea how I
would have implemented MaterializeVisibleDecls efficiently in the
presence of modules.
llvm-svn: 138496
which supports both pre-order and post-order traversal via a visitor
mechanism. Use this depth-first search with a post-order traversal to
give predictable ordering semantics when walking all of the lexical
declarations in the translation unit.
Eventually, module imports will occur in the source code rather than
at the beginning, and we'll have to revisit this walk.
llvm-svn: 138490
module DAG-based lookup scheme. This required some reshuffling, so
that each module stores its own mapping from DeclContexts to their
lexical and visible sets for those DeclContexts (rather than one big
"chain").
Overall, this allows simple qualified name lookup into the translation
unit to gather results from multiple modules, with the lookup results
in module B shadowing the lookup results in module A when B imports A.
Walking all of the lexical declarations in a module DAG is still a
mess; we'll end up walking the loaded module list backwards, which
works fine for chained PCH but doesn't make sense in a DAG. I'll
tackle this issue as a separate commit.
llvm-svn: 138463
Currently getMacroArgExpandedLocation is very inefficient and for the case
of a location pointing at the main file it will end up checking almost all of
the SLocEntries. Make it faster:
-Use a map of macro argument chunks to their expanded source location. The map
is for a single source file, it's stored in the file's ContentCache and lazily
computed, like the source lines cache.
-In SLocEntry's FileInfo add an 'unsigned NumCreatedFIDs' field that keeps track
of the number of FileIDs (files and macros) that were created during preprocessing
of that particular file SLocEntry. This is useful when computing the macro argument
map in skipping included files while scanning for macro arg FileIDs that lexed from
a specific source file. Due to padding, the new field does not increase the size
of SLocEntry.
llvm-svn: 138225
different modules) more robust. It already handled (simple) merges of
the set of declarations attached to that identifier, so add a test
case that shows us getting two different declarations for the same
identifier (one struct, one function) from different modules, and are
able to use both of them.
llvm-svn: 138189
modules (those that no other module depends on) and performs a search
over all of the modules, visiting a new module only when all of the
modules that depend on it have already been visited. The visitor can
abort the search for all modules that a module depends on, which
allows us to minimize the number of lookups necessary when performing
a search.
Switch identifier lookup from a linear walk over the set of modules to
this module visitation operation. The behavior is the same for simple
PCH and chained PCH, but provides the proper search order for
modules. Verified with printf debugging, since we don't have enough in
place to actually test this.
llvm-svn: 138187
has already been loaded before allocating a new Module structure. If
the module has already been loaded (uniquing based on file name), then
just return the existing module rather than trying to load it again.
This allows us to load a DAG of modules. Introduce a simple test case
that forms a diamond-shaped module graph, and illustrates that a
source file importing the bottom of the diamond can see declarations
in all four of the modules that make up the diamond.
Note that this version moves the file-opening logic into the module
manager, rather than splitting it between the module manager and the
AST reader. More importantly, it properly handles the
weird-but-possibly-useful case of loading an AST file from "-".
llvm-svn: 138030
Teach ModuleManager::addModule() to check whether a particular module
has already been loaded before allocating a new Module structure. If
the module has already been loaded (uniquing based on file name), then
just return the existing module rather than trying to load it again.
This allows us to load a DAG of modules. Introduce a simple test case
that forms a diamond-shaped module graph, and illustrates that a
source file importing the bottom of the diamond can see declarations
in all four of the modules that make up the diamond.
llvm-svn: 137971
has already been loaded before allocating a new Module structure. If
the module has already been loaded (uniquing based on file name), then
just return the existing module rather than trying to load it again.
This allows us to load a DAG of modules. Introduce a simple test case
that forms a diamond-shaped module graph, and illustrates that a
source file importing the bottom of the diamond can see declarations
in all four of the modules that make up the diamond.
llvm-svn: 137925
-import-module) vs. loaded because some other module depends on
them. As part of doing this, pass down the module that caused a module
to be loaded directly, rather than assuming that we're loading a
chain. Finally, write out all of the directly-loaded modules when
serializing an AST file (using the new IMPORTS record), so that an AST
file can depend on more than one other AST file, all of which will be
loaded when that AST file is loaded. This allows us to form and load a
tree of modules, but we can't yet load a DAG of modules.
llvm-svn: 137923
all AST files have a normal METADATA record that has the same form
regardless of whether we refer to a chained PCH or any other kind of
AST file.
Introduce the IMPORTS record, which describes all of the AST files
that are imported by this AST file, and how (as a module, a PCH file,
etc.). Currently, we emit at most one entry to this record, to support
chained PCH.
llvm-svn: 137869
type over into the AST context, then make that declaration a
predefined declaration in the AST format. This ensures that different
AST files will at least agree on the (global) declaration ID for 'id',
and eliminates one of the "special" types in the AST file format.
llvm-svn: 137429
declaration that never actually gets serialized. Instead, serialize
the various kinds of update records (lexical decls, visible decls, the
addition of an anonymous namespace) for the translation unit, even if
we're not chaining. This way, we won't have to deal with multiple
loaded translation unit declarations.
llvm-svn: 137395
either "special" type has already been initialized. Previously, we did
this check based on just the first special type (__builtin_va_list),
but now we have some NULL special type entries to content with.
llvm-svn: 137373
enumerations from the ASTContext into CodeGen, so that we don't need
to serialize it to AST files. This appears to be the last of the
low-hanging fruit for SpecialTypes.
llvm-svn: 137124
layout of a constant NSString from the ASTContext over to CodeGen,
since this is solely CodeGen's responsibility. Eliminates one of the
unnecessary "special" types that we serialize.
llvm-svn: 137121
the last of the ID/offset/index mappings that I know
of. Unfortunately, the "gap" method of testing doesn't work here due
to the way the preprocessing record performs iteration. We'll do more
testing once multi-AST loading is possible.
llvm-svn: 136902
IDs will never cross module boundaries, since they're tied to the
CXXDefinitionData, so just use a local mapping throughout. Eliminate
the global -> local tables and supporting data.
llvm-svn: 136847
AST file, along with an enumeration naming those predefined
declarations. No functionality change, but this will make it easier to
introduce new predefined declarations, when/if we need them.
llvm-svn: 136781
reader, to allow AST files to be loaded with their declarations
remapped to different ID numbers. Fix a number of places where we were
either failing to map local declaration IDs into global declaration
IDs or where interpreting the local declaration IDs within the wrong
module.
I've tested this via the usual "random gaps" method. It works well
except for the preamble tests, because our handling of the precompiled
preamble requires declaration and preprocessed entity to be stable
when parsing code and then loading that back into memory. This
property will hold in general, but my randomized testing naturally
breaks this property to get more coverage. In the future, I expect
that the precompiled preamble logic won't need this property.
I am very unhappy with the current handling of the translation unit,
which is a rather egregious hack. We're going to have to do something
very different here for loading multiple AST files, because we don't
want to have to cope with merging two translation units. Likely, we'll
just handle translation units entirely via "update" records, and
predefine a single, fixed declaration ID for the translation
unit. That will come later.
llvm-svn: 136779
by eliminating the type ID from constructor, destructor, and
conversion function names. There are several reasons for this change:
- A given type (say, int*) isn't guaranteed to have a single, unique
type ID within a chain of PCH files. Hence, we could end up hashing
based on the wrong type ID, causing name lookup to fail.
- The mapping from types back to type IDs required one DenseMap
entry for every type that was ever deserialized, which was an
unacceptable cost to support just the name lookup of constructors,
destructors, and conversion functions. Plus, this mapping could
never actually work with chained or multiple PCH, based on the first
bullet.
Once we have eliminated the type from the hash function, these
problems go away, as does my horrible "reverse type remap" hack, which
was doomed from the start (see bullet #1 above) and far too
complicated.
However, note that removing the type from the hash function means that
all constructors, destructors, and conversion functions have the same
hash key, so I've updated the caller to double-check that the
declarations found have the appropriate name.
llvm-svn: 136708
reader. This scheme permits an AST file to be loaded with its type IDs
shifted anywhere in the type ID space.
At present, the type indices are still allocated in the same boring
way they always have been, just by adding up the number of types in
each PCH file within the chain. However, I've done testing with this
patch by randomly sliding the base indices at load time, to ensure
that remapping is occurring as expected. I may eventually formalize
this in some testing flag, but loading multiple (non-chained) AST
files at once will eventually exercise the same code.
There is one known problem with this patch, which involves name lookup
of operator names (e.g., "x.operator int*()") in cases where multiple
PCH files in the chain. The hash function itself depends on having a
stable type ID, which doesn't happen with chained PCH and *certainly*
doesn't happen when sliding type IDs around. We'll need another
approach. I'll tackle that next.
llvm-svn: 136693
reader statistics), to show the local-to-global mappings. The only
such mapping we have (at least, for now) is for source location
offsets.
llvm-svn: 136687
were (Module*, Offset) with equivalent maps whose value type is just a
Module*. The offsets have moved into corresponding "Base" fields
within the Module itself, where they will also be helpful for
local->global translation (eventually).
llvm-svn: 136441
point, ASTReader::InitializeSema() has very little interesting work,
*except* issues stemming from preloaded declarations. That's something
we'll still need to cope with.
llvm-svn: 136378
completely broken deserialization mapping code we had for VTableUses,
which would have broken horribly as soon as our local-to-global ID
mapping became interesting.
llvm-svn: 136371