https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50069
When clang-tidy sees:
```
if (true) [[unlikely]] {
...
}
```
It thinks the braces are missing and add them again.
```
if (true) { [[unlikely]] {
...
}
}
```
This revision aims to prevent that incorrect code generation
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105479
The overload of the constructor will repeatedly fix the member variables that need to be initialized.
Removed the duplicate '{}'.
```
struct A {
A() {}
A(int) {}
int _var; // int _var{}{}; <-- wrong fix
};
```
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107641
This happens in createInvocationWithCommandLine but only clangd currently passes
ShouldRecoverOnErorrs (sic).
One cause of this (with correct command) is several -arch arguments for mac
multi-arch support.
Fixes https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/827
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107632
... to the one of signature hints.
In particular, completion items now also carry annotations, which client
code might be interested in.
Reviewed By: sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107365
It's quite useful to be able to hover over an #include and see the full
path to the header file.
Reviewed By: sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107137
Only the bare name is completed, with no args.
For args to be useful we need arg names. These *are* in the tablegen but
not currently emitted in usable form, so left this as future work.
C++11, C2x, GNU, declspec, MS syntax is supported, with the appropriate
spellings of attributes suggested.
`#pragma clang attribute` is supported but not terribly useful as we
only reach completion if parens are balanced (i.e. the line is not truncated)
There's no filtering of which attributes might make sense in this
grammatical context (e.g. attached to a function). In code-completion context
this is hard to do, and will only work in few cases :-(
There's also no filtering by langopts: this is because currently the
only way of checking is to try to produce diagnostics, which requires a
valid ParsedAttr which is hard to get.
This should be fairly simple to fix but requires some tablegen changes
to expose the logic without the side-effect.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107696
Add a check for enforcing minimum length for variable names. A default
minimum length of three characters is applied to regular variables
(including function parameters). Loop counters and exception variables
have a minimum of two characters. Additionally, the 'i', 'j' and 'k'
are accepted as legacy values.
All three sizes, as well as the list of accepted legacy loop counter
names are configurable.
The patch in http://reviews.llvm.org/D106431 landed in commit
4a097efe77 to the main branch.
However, this patch was also backported to upcoming release 13.0.0 in
commit 8dcdfc0de84f60b5b4af97ac5b357881af55bc6e, which makes this entry
in the release notes **NOT** a new thing for the purposes of 14.0.0.
Some files still contained the old University of Illinois Open Source
Licence header. This patch replaces that with the Apache 2 with LLVM
Exception licence.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107528
std::string, std::string_view, and absl::string_view all have a three-parameter version of find()
which has a "count" (or "n") paremeter limiting the size of the substring to search. We don't want
to propose changing to absl::StrContains in those cases. This change fixes that and adds unit tests
to confirm.
Reviewed By: ymandel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107837
Xcode uses `#pragma mark -` to draw a divider in the outline view
and `#pragma mark Note` to add `Note` in the outline view. For more
information, see https://nshipster.com/pragma/.
Since the LSP spec doesn't contain dividers for the symbol outline,
instead we treat `#pragma mark -` as a group with children - the
decls that come after it, implicitly terminating when the symbol's
parent ends.
The following code:
```
@implementation MyClass
- (id)init {}
- (int)foo;
@end
```
Would give an outline like
```
MyClass
> Overrides
> init
> Public Accessors
> foo
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105904
These aren't terribly common, but we currently mishandle them badly.
Not only do we not recogize the attributes themselves, but we often end up
selecting some node other than the parent (because source ranges aren't accurate
in the presence of attributes).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89785
We already strip all the inputs provided without `--`, this patch also
handles the cases with `--`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107637
This patch strips all the arch options in case of multiple ones. As it
results in multiple compiler jobs, which clangd cannot handle.
It doesn't pick any over the others as it is unclear which one the user wants
and defaulting to host architecture seems less surprising. Users also have the
ability to explicitly specify the architecture they want via clangd config
files.
Fixes https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/827.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107634
This is needed for clients that want to highlight virtual functions
differently.
Reviewed By: sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107145
This patch tries to fix command line too long problem on Windows for
https://reviews.llvm.org/D86671.
The command line is too long with check_clang_tidy.py program on Windows,
because the configuration is long for regression test. Fix this issue by
passing the settings in file instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107325
The encoding used for opening files depends on the OS and might be different
from UTF-8 (e.g. on Windows it can be CP-1252). The documentation files use
UTF-8 and might be incompatible with other encodings. For example, right now
`clang-tools-extra/docs/clang-tidy/checks/abseil-no-internal-dependencies.rst`
has non-ASCII quotes and running `add_new_check.py` fails on Windows, because
it tries to read the file with incompatible encoding.
Use `io.open` for compatibility with both Python 2 and Python 3.
Reviewed By: kbobyrev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106792
Happens when DestContext is LinkageSpecDecl and hense CurContext happens to be
both not TagDecl and NamespaceDecl.
Minimal reproducer: trigger define outline in
```
namespace ns {
extern "C" {
typedef int foo;
}
foo Fo^o(int id) { return id; }
}
```
Reviewed By: kadircet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107047
FixIt, and add support for initialization check of scoped enum
In C++, the enumeration is never Integer, and the enumeration condition judgment is added to avoid compiling errors when it is initialized to an integer.
Add support for initialization check of scope enum.
As the following case show, clang-tidy will give a wrong automatic fix:
enum Color {Red, Green, Blue};
enum class Gender {Male, Female};
void func() {
Color color; // Color color = 0; <--- fix bug
Gender gender; // <--- no warning
}
Reviewd By: aaron.ballman, whisperity
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D106431
This is a gauage metric that sets particular remote-index instances as
used. It should enable accumulation of multiple streams to see number of clangd
processes making use of remote index, broken down by remote index address.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106796
Background-indexing is fine, because it uses GlobalCompilationDatabase
to fetch the compile commands (hence uses CommandMangler), and creates
invocation through buildCompilerInvocation.
Depends on D106639.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106669
It is not great to list diag ids by hand, but I don't see any other
solution unless diagnostics are annotated with these explicitly, which is a
bigger change in clang and I am not sure if would be worth it.
Diagnostics handled by this patch is by no means exhaustive, there might be
other checks that don't mention "unused"/"deprecated" in their names. But it
feels like this should be enough to catch common diagnostics and can be extended
over time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107040
Many concepts emulation libraries, such as the one found in Range v3, tend to
use non-type template parameters for the enable_if type expression, due to
their versatility in template functions and constructors containing variadic
template parameter packs.
Unfortunately the bugprone-forwarding-reference-overload check does not
handle non-type template parameters, as was first noted in this bug report:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38081
This patch fixes this long standing issue and allows for the check to be suppressed
with the use of a non-type template parameter containing enable_if or enable_if_t in
the type expression, so long as it has a default literal value.
An otherwise unexercised code path related to trying to model
"array-to-pointer decay" resulted in a null pointer dereference crash
when parameters of type "reference to array" were encountered.
Fixes crash report http://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50995.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D106946
Useful in logs to understand issues around some platforms we don't have much
experience with (e.g. m1, mingw)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105681
With GCC <6 constructing a function_ref from a free function reference
leads to it referencing a temporary function pointer. If the lifetime of
that temporary is insufficient it can crash.
Fixes https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/800
Pushes input for the compile action to the end while separating with a
`--` before applying other manglings. This ensures edits that effect only the
arguments that come after them works, like changing parse language via -x.
Fixes https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/555.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106527
The original code appears to be OK per the spec, but we've had 3 reports of
crashes with certain unofficial builds of clangd that look a lot like old
compilers (GCC 5.4?) getting lifetime rules wrong.
Fixes https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/800
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106654
Take full advantage of AND's iterator children size estimation: use early reset
in sync() and prevent large overhead. The idea is that the children at the
beginning of the list are smaller and cheaper to advance. Very large children
negate the effect of this performance optimisation and hence should be
advanced only when absolutely necessary. By reducing the number of large
iterators' updates, we increase the performance by a large margin.
This change was tested on a comprehensive query dataset. The performance
boost increases with the average length of the query, on small queries it is
close to 45% but the longer they go the closer it gets to 60% and beyond.
Reviewed By: sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106528
Make the check handle cases of the "common type" involved in the mix
being non-trivial, e.g. pointers, references, attributes, these things
coming from typedefs, etc.
This results in clearer diagnostics that have more coverage in their
explanation, such as saying `const int &` as common type instead of
`int`.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D106442
Add string list option of type names analagous to `AllowedTypes` which lets
users specify a list of ExcludedContainerTypes.
Types matching this list will not trigger the check when an expensive variable
is copy initialized from a const accessor method they provide, i.e.:
```
ExcludedContainerTypes = 'ExcludedType'
void foo() {
ExcludedType<ExpensiveToCopy> Container;
const ExpensiveToCopy NecessaryCopy = Container.get();
}
```
Even though an expensive to copy variable is copy initialized the check does not
trigger because the container type is excluded.
This is useful for container types that don't own their data, such as view types
where modification of the returned references in other places cannot be reliably
tracked, or const incorrect types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106173
Reviewed-by: ymandel
This can happen when a template with two parameter types is instantiated with a
single type. The fix would only be valid for this instantiation but fail for
others that rely on an implicit type conversion.
The test cases illustrate when the check should trigger and when not.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106011
@vabridgers identified a way to crash the check by running on code that
involve `AttributedType`s. This patch fixes the check to first and
foremost not crash, but also improves the logic handling qualifiers.
If the types contain any additional (not just CVR) qualifiers that are
not the same, they will not be deemed mixable. The logic for CVR-Mixing
and the `QualifiersMix` check option remain unchanged.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, vabridgers
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D106361
* Due to the LLVM's JSON library changes (?), FuzzyFindRequest serialization is
no longer valid since arrays are serialized as llvm::json::Array already.
Hence, current implementation creates a nested array.
* YAML format is no longer the default, mention this for the benchmark.
* FIXME is no longer relevant. I ran benchmarks that showed no improvement with
priority_queue years ago.
Reviewed By: sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106432
This seems to be a more useful behavior for tools that use preambles.
I believe it doesn't affect real compiles: the PCH is only included once
when used, and recursive inclusion of the main-file *within* the PCH
isn't supported in any case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106204
This patch removes a duplicate checks in the top-level comments in `clang-tools-extra/clangd/ParsedAST.h`
Reviewed By: kadircet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106227
If a clang-tidy child process exits with a signal then run-clang-tidy will exit
with an error but there is no hint why in the output, since the clang-tidy
doesn't log anything and may not even have had the opportunity to do so
depending on the signal used.
`subprocess.CompletedProcess.returncode` is the negative signal number in this
case.
I hit this in a CI system where the parallelism used exceeded the RAM assigned
to the container causing the OOM killer to SIGKILL clang-tidy processes.
Reviewed By: sylvestre.ledru
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99081
Finds function calls where the call arguments might be provided in an
incorrect order, based on the comparison (via string metrics) of the
parameter names and the argument names against each other.
A diagnostic is emitted if an argument name is similar to a *different*
parameter than the one currently passed to, and it is sufficiently
dissimilar to the one it **is** passed to currently.
False-positive warnings from this check are useful to indicate bad
naming convention issues, even if a swap isn't necessary.
This check does not generate FixIts.
Originally implemented by @varjujan as his Master's Thesis work.
The check was subsequently taken over by @barancsuk who added type
conformity checks to silence false positive matches.
The work by @whisperity involved driving the check's review and fixing
some more bugs in the process.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, alexfh
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20689
Co-authored-by: János Varjú <varjujanos2@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lilla Barancsuk <barancsuklilla@gmail.com>
We can build it with -Werror=global-constructors now. This helps
in situation where libSupport is embedded as a shared library,
potential with dlopen/dlclose scenario, and when command-line
parsing or other facilities may not be involved. Avoiding the
implicit construction of these cl::opt can avoid double-registration
issues and other kind of behavior.
Reviewed By: lattner, jpienaar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105959
We can build it with -Werror=global-constructors now. This helps
in situation where libSupport is embedded as a shared library,
potential with dlopen/dlclose scenario, and when command-line
parsing or other facilities may not be involved. Avoiding the
implicit construction of these cl::opt can avoid double-registration
issues and other kind of behavior.
Reviewed By: lattner, jpienaar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105959
We can build it with -Werror=global-constructors now. This helps
in situation where libSupport is embedded as a shared library,
potential with dlopen/dlclose scenario, and when command-line
parsing or other facilities may not be involved. Avoiding the
implicit construction of these cl::opt can avoid double-registration
issues and other kind of behavior.
Reviewed By: lattner, jpienaar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105959
This reduces the size of the dependency graph and makes incremental
development a little more pleasant (less rebuilding).
This introduces a bit of complexity/fragility as some tests verify
clang-tidy behavior. I attempted to isolate these and build/run as much
of the tests as possible in both configs to prevent rot.
Expectation is that (some) developers will use this locally, but
buildbots etc will keep testing clang-tidy.
Fixes https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/233
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105679
When deleting the copy assignment statement because copied variable is not used
only remove trailing comments on the same line.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105734
Reviewed-by: ymandel
Structured bindings can currently trigger the check and lead to a wrong
fix. Because the DecompositionDecl itself is not used and the check does not
iterate through its the decl's bindings to verify whether the bindings' holding
vars are used this leads to the whole statement to be deleted.
To support structured bindings properly 3 cases would need to be considered.
1. All holding vars are not used -> The statement can be deleted.
2. All holding vars are used as const or not used -> auto can be converted to const auto&.
3. Neither case is true -> leave unchanged.
In the check we'll have to separate the logic that determines this from the code
that produces the diagnostic and fixes and first determine which of the cases
we're dealing with before creating fixes.
Since this is a bigger refactoring we'll disable structured bindings for now to
prevent incorrect fixes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105727
Reviewed-by: ymandel
C++23 will make these conversions ambiguous - so fix them to make the
codebase forward-compatible with C++23 (& a follow-up change I've made
will make this ambiguous/invalid even in <C++23 so we don't regress
this & it generally improves the code anyway)
This adds a new llvm::thread class with the same interface as std::thread
except there is an extra constructor that allows us to set the new thread's
stack size. On Darwin even the default size is boosted to 8MB to match the main
thread.
It also switches all users of the older C-style `llvm_execute_on_thread` API
family over to `llvm::thread` followed by either a `detach` or `join` call and
removes the old API.
Moved definition of DefaultStackSize into the .cpp file to hopefully
fix the build on some (GCC-6?) machines.
This adds a new llvm::thread class with the same interface as std::thread
except there is an extra constructor that allows us to set the new thread's
stack size. On Darwin even the default size is boosted to 8MB to match the main
thread.
It also switches all users of the older C-style `llvm_execute_on_thread` API
family over to `llvm::thread` followed by either a `detach` or `join` call and
removes the old API.
Compiling clangd with Clang modules and libc++ revealed that
`support/Threading.h` uses `std::atomic` but wasn't including the
correct header.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105400
BlockUntilIdle is supposed to return false if it fails.
If an intermediate step fails to clear the queue, we shouldn't
charge ahead and assert on the state of the queue.
For files directly under clangd/, -Iclang-tools-extra/clangd (and the
equivalent for generated files) are not required, as CMake/the compiler puts
these directories on the include path by default.
However this means each subdirectory needs to
include_directories(.. ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/..) etc, and this
proved annoying and error-prone to maintain and debug.
Since include_directories is inherited by subdirectories, we just
configure this explicitly at the top level instead.
This reverts b56e5f8a10 (and follow-up f6db88535c) and instead
restores the state we had before 0c96a92d8666b8: ClangdMain.cpp
includes Features.inc before including Transport.h.
This is a bit ugly, but it matches the former state and making Transport.h
include Features.h means that xpc/ needs to be able to find the generated
Features.inc, wich is also a bit ugly.
Without this patch clangd silently process compiler instance prepare failure and only LSP errors "Invalid AST" could be found in logs.
E.g. the reason of the problem https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/734 is impossible to understand without verbose logs or with disabled background index.
This patch adds more information into logs to help understand the reason of such failures.
Logs without this patch:
```
E[...] Could not build a preamble for file test.cpp version 1
```
Logs with this patch:
```
E[...] Could not build a preamble for file test.cpp version 1: CreateTargetInfo() return null
..
E[...] Failed to prepare a compiler instance: unknown target ABI 'lp64'
```
Reviewed By: sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104056
That commit removed the include of Features.inc from ClangdLSPServer.h,
but ClangdMain.cpp relied on this include to pull in Features.inc for
the #if at the bottom of Transport.h.
Since the include is needed in Transport.h, just add it to there
directly.
Objective-C lets you use the `self.prop` syntax as sugar for both
`[self prop]` and `[self setProp:]`, but clangd previously did not
provide a semantic token for `prop`.
Now, we provide a semantic token, treating it like a normal property
except it's backed by a `ObjCMethodDecl` instead of a
`ObjCPropertyDecl`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104117
This displays as: `Size: 4 bytes (+4 padding)`
Also stop showing (byte) offset/size for bitfields. They're not
meaningful and using them to calculate padding is dangerous!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98377