to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
A PCHContainerOperations abstract interface provides operations for
creating and unwrapping containers for serialized ASTs (precompiled
headers and clang modules). The default implementation is
RawPCHContainerOperations, which uses a flat file for the output.
The main application for this interface will be an
ObjectFilePCHContainerOperations implementation that uses LLVM to
wrap the module in an ELF/Mach-O/COFF container to store debug info
alongside the AST.
rdar://problem/20091852
llvm-svn: 240225
uncovered.
This required manually correcting all of the incorrect main-module
headers I could find, and running the new llvm/utils/sort_includes.py
script over the files.
I also manually added quite a few missing headers that were uncovered by
shuffling the order or moving headers up to be main-module-headers.
llvm-svn: 169237
top-level declarations that occurred inside an ObjC container.
This is useful to keep track of such decls otherwise when e.g. a function
is declared inside an objc interface, it is not passed to HandleTopLevelDecl
and it is not inside the DeclContext of the interface that is returned.
llvm-svn: 142232
and create separate decl nodes for forward declarations and the
definition," which appears to be causing significant Objective-C
breakage.
llvm-svn: 110803
- Eagerly create ObjCInterfaceTypes for declarations.
- The two above changes lead to a 0.5% increase in memory use and no speed regression when parsing Cocoa.h. On the other hand, now chained PCH works when there's a forward declaration in one PCH and the interface definition in another.
- Add HandleInterestingDecl to ASTConsumer. PCHReader passes the "interesting" decls it finds to this function instead of HandleTopLevelDecl. The default implementation forwards to HandleTopLevelDecl, but ASTUnit's handler for example ignores them. This fixes a potential crash when lazy loading of PCH data would cause ASTUnit's "top level" declaration collection to change while being iterated.
llvm-svn: 110610
productions (except the already broken ObjC cases like @class X,Y;) in
the parser that can produce more than one Decl return a DeclGroup instead
of a Decl, etc.
This allows elimination of the Decl::NextDeclarator field, and exposes
various clients that should look at all decls in a group, but which were
only looking at one (such as the dumper, printer, etc). These have been
fixed.
Still TODO:
1) there are some FIXME's in the code about potentially using
DeclGroup for better location info.
2) ParseObjCAtDirectives should return a DeclGroup due to @class etc.
3) I'm not sure what is going on with StmtIterator.cpp, or if it can
be radically simplified now.
4) I put a truly horrible hack in ParseTemplate.cpp.
I plan to bring up #3/4 on the mailing list, but don't plan to tackle
#1/2 in the short term.
llvm-svn: 68002
TranslationUnit object instead of an ASTContext. By default it calls
Initialize(ASTConstext& Context) (to match with the current interface used by
most ASTConsumers).
Modified the ObjC-Rewriter to use InitializeTU, and to tell the TranslationUnit
to not free its Decls. This is a workaround for: <rdar://problem/5966749>
llvm-svn: 51825
lib dir and move all the libraries into it. This follows the main
llvm tree, and allows the libraries to be built in parallel. The
top level now enforces that all the libs are built before Driver,
but we don't care what order the libs are built in. This speeds
up parallel builds, particularly incremental ones.
llvm-svn: 48402