lambda as referring to a local in an enclosing scope if we're in the
enclosing scope of the lambda (not it's function call operator). Also,
turn the test into an IR generation test, since that's where the
crashes occurred. Really fixes PR12746 / <rdar://problem/11465120>.
llvm-svn: 156926
The new debug.ExprInspection checker looks for calls to clang_analyzer_eval,
and emits a warning of TRUE, FALSE, or UNKNOWN (or UNDEFINED) based on the
constrained value of its (boolean) argument. It does not modify the analysis
state though the conditions tested can result in branches (e.g. through the
use of short-circuit operators).
llvm-svn: 156919
This test is run after TestAbbreviations and was making runCmd("h") fail
in that test, on the second tested architecture (two commands would be
avilable for "h": "help" and "hello").
Later I'm sending a patch for review to add some information to the error
message for that case.
llvm-svn: 156918
options, to enable easier testing of the innards of LLVM that are
enabled by such optimization strategies.
Note that this doesn't provide the (much needed) function attribute
support for -Oz (as opposed to -Os), but still seems like a positive
step to better test the logic that Clang currently relies on.
Patch by Patrik Hägglund.
llvm-svn: 156913
generated code (for Intrinsic::getType) into a table. This handles common cases right now,
but I plan to extend it to handle all cases and merge in type verification logic as well
in follow-on patches.
llvm-svn: 156905
This improves the conversion diagnostics (by correctly pointing to the loop
construct for conversions that may've been caused by the contextual conversion
to bool caused by a condition expression) and also causes the NULL conversion
warnings to be correctly suppressed when crossing a macro boundary in such a
context. (previously, since the conversion context location was incorrect, the
suppression could not be performed)
Reported by Nico Weber as feedback to r156826.
llvm-svn: 156901
Make sure our debugger STDIN read thread shuts down quickly when we are done with it. We had a case where the owner of the file handle was not closing it and caused spins.
llvm-svn: 156879
It is now possible to coalesce weird skewed sub-register copies by
picking a super-register class larger than both original registers. The
included test case produces code like this:
vld2.32 {d16, d17, d18, d19}, [r0]!
vst2.32 {d18, d19, d20, d21}, [r0]
We still perform interference checking as if it were a normal full copy
join, so this is still quite conservative. In particular, the f1 and f2
functions in the included test case still have remaining copies because
of false interference.
llvm-svn: 156878