This fixes dead store warnings of the type "dead assignment" reported
by CLang Static Analyzer on the following file:
- tools/c-index-test/c-index-test.c.
Patch by Apelete Seketeli <apelete@seketeli.net>!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19831
llvm-svn: 268453
Summary:
I have exposed the following function through libclang and the clang.cindex python bindings:
clang_CXXConstructor_isConvertingConstructor,
clang_CXXConstructor_isCopyConstructor,
clang_CXXConstructor_isDefaultConstructor,
clang_CXXConstructor_isMoveConstructor,
clang_CXXMethod_isDefaulted
I need (some of) these methods for a C++ code model I am building in Python to drive a code generator.
Reviewers: compnerd, skalinichev
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15469
llvm-svn: 267706
This behavior is enabled when the new CXTranslationUnit_KeepGoing
option is passed to clang_parseTranslationUnit{,2}. It is geared
towards use by IDEs and similar consumers of the clang-c API where
fatal errors may arise when parsing incomplete code mid-edit, or
when include paths are not properly configured yet. In such situations
one still wants to get as much information as possible about a TU.
Previously, the semantic analysis would not instantiate templates
or report additional fatal errors after the first fatal error was
encountered.
Fixes PR24268.
Patch by Milian Wolff.
llvm-svn: 262318
When reparsing a translation unit with preamble generation turned on,
no includes are found. This is due to the fact that all SLocs from
AST/PCH files are skipped as they are 'loaded', and inclusions from a
preamble are also 'loaded'. So, in case a file has a preamble, it first
needs to process those loaded inclusions, and then check for any local
inclusions. This latter one is for any includes that are not part of the
preamble, like includes half-way through a file.
This fixes PR24748.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14329
llvm-svn: 256939
Summary:
The current default is to create the preamble on the first reparse, aka
second parse. This is useful for clients that do not want to block when
opening a file because serializing the preamble takes a bit of time.
However, this makes the reparse much more expensive and that may be on the
critical path as it's the first interaction a user has with the source code.
YouCompleteMe currently optimizes for the first code interaction by parsing
the file twice when loaded. That's just unnecessarily slow and this flag
helps to avoid that.
Reviewers: doug.gregor, klimek
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15490
llvm-svn: 255635
Right now clang_Cursor_getMangling will attempt to mangle any
declaration, even if the declaration isn't mangled (extern C). This
results in a partially mangled name which isn't useful for much. This
patch makes clang_Cursor_getMangling return an empty string if the
declaration isn't mangled.
Patch by Michael Wu <mwu@mozilla.com>.
llvm-svn: 253909
This function permits the mangling of a C++ 'structor. Depending on the ABI and
the declaration, the declaration may contain more than one associated symbol for
a given declaration. This allows the consumer to retrieve all of the associated
symbols for the declaration the cursor points to.
llvm-svn: 252853
Right now clang_Cursor_getMangling will attempt to mangle any
declaration, even if the declaration isn't mangled (extern C). This
results in a partially mangled name which isn't useful for much. This
patch makes clang_Cursor_getMangling return an empty string if the
declaration isn't mangled.
Patch by Michael Wu <mwu@mozilla.com>.
llvm-svn: 249639
Right now clang_Cursor_getMangling will attempt to mangle any
declaration, even if the declaration isn't mangled (extern "C"). This
results in a partially mangled name which isn't useful for much. This
patch makes clang_Cursor_getMangling return an empty string if the
declaration isn't mangled.
Patch by Michael Wu <mwu@mozilla.com>.
llvm-svn: 249437
a bad call to memcpy.
When we only have a buffer from one of the two reparse calls, we can
just return that buffer rather than going through the realloc/memcpy
dance.
Found with UBsan.
llvm-svn: 243950
Complains:
/home/buildbots/sanitizerslave1/sanitizer-ppc64-1/build/llvm/tools/clang/tools/c-index-test/c-index-test.c:829:30: error: format specifies type 'long' but the argument has type 'long long' [-Werror,-Wformat]
I, TAK, clang_Cursor_getTemplateArgumentValue(Cursor, I));
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I'm not sure now how this should be fixed. %lld is non-standard
and not accepted by mingw on Windows while PRId64 is bad for this bot.
Is long long longer than 64 bits here? if not, why is PRId64
incompatible with it? something seems wrong.
Probably all the datatypes should be replaced to unsigned or uint64_t
depending upin requirements instead of the non standard long long.
llvm-svn: 237346
It should bring the bots back.
Original messagses:
r227448:
Remove unnecessary default.
r227438:
Fix Index/print-type.cpp test following r227432.
r227432:
libclang: Add three functions useful for dealing with anonymous fields:
clang_Cursor_getOffsetOfField
clang_Cursor_isAnonymous
clang_Type_visitFields
Python: Add corresponding methods for dealing with anonymous fields.
Patch by Loïc Jaquemet
llvm-svn: 227472
Due to what can only be described as a CRT bug, stdout and amazingly
even stderr are not always flushed upon process termination, especially
when the system is under high threading pressure. I have found two
repros for this:
1) In lib\Support\Threading.cpp, change sys::Mutex to an
std::recursive_mutex and run check-clang. Usually between 30 and 40
tests will fail.
2) Add OutputDebugStrings in code that runs during static initialization
and static shutdown. This will sometimes generate similar failures.
After a substantial amount of troubleshooting and debugging, I found
that I could reproduce this from the command line without running
check-clang. Simply make the mutex change described in #1, then
manually run the following command many times by running it once, then
pressing Up -> Enter very quickly:
D:\src\llvm\build\vs2013\Debug\bin\c-index-test.EXE -cursor-at=D:\src\llvm\tools\clang\test\Index\targeted-preamble.h:2:15 D:\src\llvm\tools\clang\test\Index\targeted-cursor.c -include D:\src\llvm\build\vs2013\tools\clang\test\Index\Output\targeted-cursor.c.tmp.h -Xclang -error-on-deserialized-decl=NestedVar1 -Xclang -error-on-deserialized-decl=TopVar | D:\src\llvm\build\vs2013\Debug\bin\FileCheck.EXE D:\src\llvm\tools\clang\test\Index\targeted-cursor.c -check-prefix=PREAMBLE-CURSOR1
Sporadically they will fail, and attaching a debugger to a failed
instance indicates that stdin of FileCheck.exe is empty.
Note that due to the repro in #2, we can rule out a bug in the STL's
mutex implementation, and instead conclude that this is a real flake in
the windows test harness.
Test Plan:
Without patch: Ran check-clang 10 times and saw over 30 Unexpected failures on every run.
With patch: Ran check-clang 10 times and saw 0 unexpected failures across all runs.
Reviewers: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4021
Patch by Zachary Turner!
llvm-svn: 210225
This corrects long-standing misuses of LLVM's internal config.h.
In most cases the public llvm-config.h header was intended and we can now
remove the old hacks thanks to LLVM r210144.
The config.h header is private, won't be installed and should no longer be
included by clang or other modules.
llvm-svn: 210145
The loop body used to contain a switch statement; it looks like r96685 replaced
that with an if/else if/else but accidentally left one of the three break
statements from the switch behind, skipping the clang_disposeString() call
for replacements (and the rest of the loop too, which apparently doesn't make
a differences for the test cases we have).
r96685: http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20100215/027754.html
This too might possibly the last leak in clang (PR19521).
llvm-svn: 208483
this is wasteful, blah blah, but this is a test utility only. It turns
out that without doing this, libxml2 will always leak a bunch of the XML
data, and that is causing failures with LSan. This is also quite a bit
simpler and I don't think it is slow enough to really be a show stopper.
If someone yells about the runtime of c-index-test, we can do other
things to try to mitigate it, but the current strategy wasn't working
well.
llvm-svn: 207882
It's possible that the "comment AST" may be replaced or split out in the
midterm, any anyway this makes the headers easier to read.
Developers don't currently need to include "clang-c/Documentation.h" explicitly
and there's no macro to test for availability yet.
The raw comment and brief comment accessors have been kept in Index.h though
brief support may also move here as a separate proposal.
This is not a deprecation, just a gentle separation of concerns as we look to
simplify the built-in representation of comment nodes and support external
comment processors.
llvm-svn: 207392
The change was landed without review or test cases.
It trivially broke almost any stable application checking for Severity >=
CXDiagnostic_Error or indeed any other kind of severity comparison upon
encountering a 'remark'.
Mapped to CXDiagnostic_Warning until a workable solution is proposed to the
list that preserves API stability.
(It's also not clear why the rest of r202475 wasn't simply implemented as a
modifier to the existing 'warning' level.)
llvm-svn: 207319
The idea is to give visibility to more type kinds, especially for getting
a better grasp of what appears as unexposed type kind with libclang.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3325
llvm-svn: 205921
A 'remark' is information that is not an error or a warning, but rather some
additional information provided to the user. In contrast to a 'note' a 'remark'
is an independent diagnostic, whereas a 'note' always depends on another
diagnostic.
A typical use case for remark nodes is information provided to the user, e.g.
information provided by the vectorizer about loops that have been vectorized.
This patch provides the initial implementation of 'remarks'. It includes the
actual definiton of the remark nodes, their printing as well as basic parameter
handling. We are reusing the existing diagnostic parameters which means a remark
can be enabled with normal '-Wdiagnostic-name' flags and can be upgraded to
an error using '-Werror=diagnostic-name'. '-Werror' alone does not upgrade
remarks.
This patch is by intention minimal in terms of parameter handling. More
experience and more discussions will most likely lead to further enhancements
in the parameter handling.
llvm-svn: 202475