It turns out that several implementations go through the trouble of
setting up a SourceManager and Lexer and abstracting this into a
function makes usage easier.
Also abstracts SourceManager-independent ranges out of
tooling::Refactoring and provides a convenience function to create them
from line ranges.
llvm-svn: 181997
a FieldDecl from it, and propagate both into the closure type and the
LambdaExpr.
You can't do much useful with them yet -- you can't use them within the body
of the lambda, because we don't have a representation for "the this of the
lambda, not the this of the enclosing context". We also don't have support or a
representation for a nested capture of an init-capture yet, which was intended
to work despite not being allowed by the current standard wording.
llvm-svn: 181985
This class is a StmtVisitor that distinguishes between block-level and
non-block-level statements in a CFG. However, it does so using a hard-coded
idea of which statements might be block-level, which probably isn't accurate
anymore. The only implementer of the CFGStmtVisitor hierarchy was the
analyzer's DeadStoresChecker, and the analyzer creates a linearized CFG
anyway (every non-trivial statement is a block-level statement).
This also allows us to remove the block-expr map ("BlkExprMap"), which
mapped statements to positions in the CFG. Apart from having a helper type
that really should have just been Optional<unsigned>, it was only being
used to ask /if/ a particular expression was block-level, for traversal
purposes in CFGStmtVisitor.
llvm-svn: 181945
DefaultBool is basically just "bool with a default constructor", so it
really should implicitly convert to bool. In fact, it should convert to
bool&, so that it could be passed to functions that take bools by reference.
This time, mark the operator bool& as implicit to promise that it's
deliberate.
llvm-svn: 181908
This commit improves Clang's diagnostics for string initialization.
Where it would previously say:
/tmp/a.c:3:9: error: array initializer must be an initializer list
wchar_t s[] = "Hi";
^
/tmp/a.c:4:6: error: array initializer must be an initializer list or string literal
char t[] = L"Hi";
^
It will now say
/tmp/a.c:3:9: error: initializing wide char array with non-wide string literal
wchar_t s[] = "Hi";
^
/tmp/a.c:4:6: error: initializing char array with wide string literal
char t[] = L"Hi";
^
As a bonus, it also fixes the fact that Clang would previously reject
this valid C11 code:
char16_t s[] = u"hi";
char32_t t[] = U"hi";
because it would only recognize the built-in types for char16_t and
char32_t, which do not exist in C.
llvm-svn: 181880
The most common (non-buggy) case are where such objects are used as
return expressions in bool-returning functions or as boolean function
arguments. In those cases I've used (& added if necessary) a named
function to provide the equivalent (or sometimes negative, depending on
convenient wording) test.
DiagnosticBuilder kept its implicit conversion operator owing to the
prevalent use of it in return statements.
One bug was found in ExprConstant.cpp involving a comparison of two
PointerUnions (PointerUnion did not previously have an operator==, so
instead both operands were converted to bool & then compared). A test
is included in test/SemaCXX/constant-expression-cxx1y.cpp for the fix
(adding operator== to PointerUnion in LLVM).
llvm-svn: 181869
found for a receiver, note where receiver class
is declaraed (this is most common when receiver is a forward
class). // rdar://3258331
llvm-svn: 181847
ASTDumper was already trying to do this & instead got an implicit bool
conversion by surprise (thus printing out 0 or 1 instead of the name of
the declaration). To avoid that issue & simplify call sites, simply make
it the normal/expected operator<<(raw_ostream&, ...) overload & simplify
all the existing call sites. (bonus: this function doesn't need to be a
member or friend, it's just using public API in DeclarationName)
llvm-svn: 181832
When I tested gcc's behaviour before, I forgot the extern "C", so it
would warn when the types *did* match.
So in the end
* __clear_cache takes two void pointers.
* aarch64 was correct before.
* libgcc's manual is wrong.
* this patch fixes arm.
llvm-svn: 181810
Current gcc's produce an error if __clear_cache is anything but
__clear_cache(char *a, char *b);
It looks like we had just implemented a gcc bug that is now fixed.
llvm-svn: 181784
This library supports all the features of the compile-time based ASTMatcher
library, but allows the user to specify and construct the matchers at runtime.
It contains the following modules:
- A variant type, to be used by the matcher factory.
- A registry, where the matchers are indexed by name and have a factory method
with a generic signature.
- A simple matcher expression parser, that can be used to convert a matcher
expression string into actual matchers that can be used with the AST at
runtime.
Many features where omitted from this first revision to simplify this code
review. The main ideas are still represented in this change and it already has
support working use cases.
Things that are missing:
- Support for polymorphic matchers. These requires supporting code in the
registry, the marshallers and the variant type.
- Support for numbers, char and bool arguments to the matchers. This requires
supporting code in the parser and the variant type.
- A command line program putting everything together and providing an already
functional tool.
Patch by Samuel Benzaquen.
llvm-svn: 181768
According to libgcc document __clear_cache takes two char*
pointers. I suspect GCC's actual behaviour is more subtle than that,
but char* should clearly be preferred to void*.
llvm-svn: 181762
We now support "Linux" and "Stroustrup" brace breaking styles, which
gets us one step closer to support formatting WebKit, KDE & Linux code.
Linux brace breaking style:
namespace a
{
class A
{
void f()
{
if (x) {
f();
} else {
g();
}
}
}
}
Stroustrup brace breaking style:
namespace a {
class A {
void f()
{
if (x) {
f();
} else {
g();
}
}
}
}
llvm-svn: 181700
This patch renames getLinkage to getLinkageInternal. Only code that
needs to handle UniqueExternalLinkage specially should call this.
Linkage, as defined in the c++ standard, is provided by
getFormalLinkage. It maps UniqueExternalLinkage to ExternalLinkage.
Most places in the compiler actually want isExternallyVisible, which
handles UniqueExternalLinkage as internal.
llvm-svn: 181677
inefficient; we perform a linear scan of switch labels to find the one matching
the condition, and then walk the body looking for that label. Both parts should
be straightforward to optimize.
llvm-svn: 181671
Sometimes people hack on their system headers. In such cases, they'll
need to delete their module cache, but may not know where it is. Add a
note to show them where it is.
llvm-svn: 181638
Summary:
Adds actual config file reading to the clang-format utility.
Configuration file name is .clang-format. It is looked up for each input file
in its parent directories starting from immediate one. First found .clang-format
file is used. When using standard input, .clang-format is searched starting from
the current directory.
Added -dump-config option to easily create configuration files.
Reviewers: djasper, klimek
Reviewed By: klimek
CC: cfe-commits, jordan_rose, kimgr
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D758
llvm-svn: 181589
MSVC provides __wchar_t. This is the same as the built-in wchar_t type
from C++, but it is also available with -fno-wchar and in C.
The commit changes ASTContext to have two different types for this:
- WCharTy is the built-in type used for wchar_t in C++ and __wchar_t.
- WideCharTy is the type of a wide character literal. In C++ this is
the same as WCharTy, and in C it is an integer type compatible with
the type in <stddef.h>.
This fixes PR15815.
llvm-svn: 181587
EmitCapturedStmt creates a captured struct containing all of the captured
variables, and then emits a call to the outlined function. This is similar in
principle to EmitBlockLiteral.
GenerateCapturedFunction actually produces the outlined function. It is based
on GenerateBlockFunction, but is much simpler. The function type is determined
by the parameters that are in the CapturedDecl.
Some changes have been added to this patch that were reviewed as part of the
serialization patch and moving the parameters to the captured decl.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D640
llvm-svn: 181536
After r180934 we may initiate module map parsing for modules not related to the module what we are building,
make sure we ignore the header file info of headers from such modules.
First part of rdar://13840148
llvm-svn: 181489
Summary:
Most of this change is wiring the pragma all the way through from the
lexer, parser, and sema to codegen. I considered adding a Decl AST node
for this, but it seemed too heavyweight.
Mach-O already uses a metadata flag called "Linker Options" to do this
kind of auto-linking. This change follows that pattern.
LLVM knows how to forward the "Linker Options" metadata into the COFF
.drectve section where these flags belong. ELF support is not
implemented, but possible.
This is related to auto-linking, which is http://llvm.org/PR13016.
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D723
llvm-svn: 181426
return all the overloads instead of just picking the first possible declaration.
This removes an invalid note (and on occasion other invalid diagnostics) and
also makes clang's parsing recovery behave as if the text from its fixit were
applied.
llvm-svn: 181370
Summary:
Added parseConfiguration method, which reads FormatStyle from YAML
string. This supports all FormatStyle fields and an additional BasedOnStyle
field, which can be used to specify base style.
Reviewers: djasper, klimek
Reviewed By: djasper
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D754
llvm-svn: 181326
This fixes a crash due to SourceManager::getLocForEndOfFile() returning an off-by-one location
when the the FileID is for an empty file.
rdar://13803893
llvm-svn: 181285
- References to ObjC bit-field ivars are bit-field lvalues;
fixes rdar://13794269, which got me started down this.
- Introduce Expr::refersToBitField, switch a couple users to
it where semantically important, and comment the difference
between this and the existing API.
- Discourage Expr::getBitField by making it a bit longer and
less general-sounding.
- Lock down on const_casts of bit-field gl-values until we
hear back from the committee as to whether they're allowed.
llvm-svn: 181252
Summary:
No functionality change. The existing tests for this pragma only verify
that we can preprocess it.
Reviewers: rsmith
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D751
llvm-svn: 181246
The one user has been changed to use getLValue on the compound literal
expression and then use the normal bindLoc to assign a value. No need
to special case this in the StoreManager.
llvm-svn: 181214
Previously, this compound literal expression (a GNU extension in C++):
(AggregateWithDtor){1, 2}
resulted in this AST:
`-CXXBindTemporaryExpr [...] 'struct Point' (CXXTemporary [...])
`-CompoundLiteralExpr [...] 'struct AggregateWithDtor'
`-CXXBindTemporaryExpr [...] 'struct AggregateWithDtor' (CXXTemporary [...])
`-InitListExpr [...] 'struct AggregateWithDtor'
|-IntegerLiteral [...] 'int' 1
`-IntegerLiteral [...] 'int' 2
Note the two CXXBindTemporaryExprs. The InitListExpr is really part of the
CompoundLiteralExpr, not an object in its own right. By introducing a new
entity initialization kind in Sema specifically for compound literals, we
avoid the treatment of the inner InitListExpr as a temporary.
`-CXXBindTemporaryExpr [...] 'struct Point' (CXXTemporary [...])
`-CompoundLiteralExpr [...] 'struct AggregateWithDtor'
`-InitListExpr [...] 'struct AggregateWithDtor'
|-IntegerLiteral [...] 'int' 1
`-IntegerLiteral [...] 'int' 2
llvm-svn: 181212
This patch then adds all the usual platform-specific pieces for SystemZ:
driver support, basic target info, register names and constraints,
ABI info and vararg support. It also adds new tests to verify pre-defined
macros and inline asm, and updates a test for the minimum alignment change.
This version of the patch incorporates feedback from reviews by
Eric Christopher and John McCall. Thanks to all reviewers!
Patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 181211
This patch adds a new common code feature that allows platform code to
request minimum alignment of global symbols. The background for this is
that on SystemZ, the most efficient way to load addresses of global symbol
is the LOAD ADDRESS RELATIVE LONG (LARL) instruction. This instruction
provides PC-relative addressing, but only to *even* addresses. For this
reason, existing compilers will guarantee that global symbols are always
aligned to at least 2. [ Since symbols would otherwise already use a
default alignment based on their type, this will usually only affect global
objects of character type or character arrays. ] GCC also allows creating
symbols without that extra alignment by using explicit "aligned" attributes
(which then need to be used on both definition and each use of the symbol).
To enable support for this with Clang, this patch adds a
TargetInfo::MinGlobalAlign variable that provides a global minimum for the
alignment of every global object (unless overridden via explicit alignment
attribute), and adds code to respect this setting. Within this patch, no
platform actually sets the value to anything but the default 1, resulting
in no change in behaviour on any existing target.
This version of the patch incorporates feedback from reviews by
Eric Christopher and John McCall. Thanks to all reviewers!
Patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 181210
I was not able to find a case (other than the fix in r181163) where this
makes a difference, but it is a more obviously correct API to have.
llvm-svn: 181165
This change required some minor changes to LocationContextMap to have it map
from PathPieces to LocationContexts instead of PathDiagnosticCallPieces to
LocationContexts. These changes are in the other diagnostic
generation logic as well, but are functionally equivalent.
Interestingly, this optimize requires delaying "cleanUpLocation()" until
later; possibly after all edges have been optimized. This is because
we need PathDiagnosticLocations to refer to the semantic entity (e.g. a statement)
as long as possible. Raw source locations tell us nothing about
the semantic relationship between two locations in a path.
llvm-svn: 181084
Previously, we would clone the current diagnostic consumer to produce
a new diagnostic consumer to use when building a module. The problem
here is that we end up losing diagnostics for important diagnostic
consumers, such as serialized diagnostics (where we'd end up with two
diagnostic consumers writing the same output file). With forwarding,
the diagnostics from all of the different modules being built get
forwarded to the one serialized-diagnostic consumer and are emitted in
a sane way.
Fixes <rdar://problem/13663996>.
llvm-svn: 181067
Add serialization for captured statements and captured decls. Also add
a const_capture_iterator to CapturedStmt.
Test contributed by Wei Pan
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D727
llvm-svn: 181048
Move the creation of CapturedStmt parameters out of CodeGen and into
Sema, making it easier to customize the outlined function. The
ImplicitParamDecls are stored in the CapturedDecl using an
ASTContext-allocated array.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D722
llvm-svn: 181043
MSVC provides __wchar_t, either as an alias for the built-in wchar_t
type, or as a separate type depending on language (C vs C++) and flags
(-fno-wchar).
In -fms-extensions, Clang will simply accept __wchar_t as an alias for
whatever type is used for wide character literals. In -fms-compatibility, we
try to mimic MSVC's behavior by always making __wchar_t a builtin type.
This fixes PR15815.
llvm-svn: 181004
a lambda.
Bug #1 is that CGF's CurFuncDecl was "stuck" at lambda invocation
functions. Fix that by generally improving getNonClosureContext
to look through lambdas and captured statements but only report
code contexts, which is generally what's wanted. Audit uses of
CurFuncDecl and getNonClosureAncestor for correctness.
Bug #2 is that lambdas weren't specially mapping 'self' when inside
an ObjC method. Fix that by removing the requirement for that
and using the normal EmitDeclRefLValue path in LoadObjCSelf.
rdar://13800041
llvm-svn: 181000
the actual parser and support arbitrary id-expressions.
We're actually basically set up to do arbitrary expressions here
if we wanted to.
Assembly operands permit things like A::x to be written regardless
of language mode, which forces us to embellish the evaluation
context logic somewhat. The logic here under template instantiation
is incorrect; we need to preserve the fact that an expression was
unevaluated. Of course, template instantiation in general is fishy
here because we have no way of delaying semantic analysis in the
MC parser. It's all just fishy.
I've also fixed the serialization of MS asm statements.
This commit depends on an LLVM commit.
llvm-svn: 180976
BugReporter is used to process ALL bug reports. By using a shared map,
we are having mappings from different PathDiagnosticPieces to LocationContexts
well beyond the point where we are processing a given report. This
state is inherently error prone, and is analogous to using a global
variable. Instead, just create a temporary map, one per report,
and when we are done with it we throw it away. No extra state.
llvm-svn: 180974
This change partly addresses a heinous problem we have with the
parsing of attribute arguments that are a lone identifier. Previously,
we would end up parsing the 'align' attribute of this as an expression
"(Align)":
template<unsigned Size, unsigned Align>
class my_aligned_storage
{
__attribute__((align((Align)))) char storage[Size];
};
while this would parse as a "parameter name" 'Align':
template<unsigned Size, unsigned Align>
class my_aligned_storage
{
__attribute__((align(Align))) char storage[Size];
};
The code that handles the alignment attribute would completely ignore
the parameter name, so the while the first of these would do what's
expected, the second would silently be equivalent to
template<unsigned Size, unsigned Align>
class my_aligned_storage
{
__attribute__((align)) char storage[Size];
};
i.e., use the maximal alignment rather than the specified alignment.
Address this by sniffing the "Args" provided in the TableGen
description of attributes. If the first argument is "obviously"
something that should be treated as an expression (rather than an
identifier to be matched later), parse it as an expression.
Fixes <rdar://problem/13700933>.
llvm-svn: 180973
This change partly addresses a heinous problem we have with the
parsing of attribute arguments that are a lone identifier. Previously,
we would end up parsing the 'align' attribute of this as an expression
"(Align)":
template<unsigned Size, unsigned Align>
class my_aligned_storage
{
__attribute__((align((Align)))) char storage[Size];
};
while this would parse as a "parameter name" 'Align':
template<unsigned Size, unsigned Align>
class my_aligned_storage
{
__attribute__((align(Align))) char storage[Size];
};
The code that handles the alignment attribute would completely ignore
the parameter name, so the while the first of these would do what's
expected, the second would silently be equivalent to
template<unsigned Size, unsigned Align>
class my_aligned_storage
{
__attribute__((align)) char storage[Size];
};
i.e., use the maximal alignment rather than the specified alignment.
Address this by sniffing the "Args" provided in the TableGen
description of attributes. If the first argument is "obviously"
something that should be treated as an expression (rather than an
identifier to be matched later), parse it as an expression.
Fixes <rdar://problem/13700933>.
llvm-svn: 180970
...and don't consider '0' to be a null pointer constant if it's the
initializer for a float!
Apparently null pointer constant evaluation looks through both
MaterializeTemporaryExpr and ImplicitCastExpr, so we have to be more
careful about types in the callers. For RegionStore this just means giving
up a little more; for ExprEngine this means handling the
MaterializeTemporaryExpr case explicitly.
Follow-up to r180894.
llvm-svn: 180944
Previously, this was scattered across Environment (literal expressions),
ExprEngine (default arguments), and RegionStore (global constants). The
former special-cased several kinds of simple constant expressions, while
the latter two deferred to the AST's constant evaluator.
Now, these are all unified as SValBuilder::getConstantVal(). To keep
Environment fast, the special cases for simple constant expressions have
been left in, but the main benefits are that (a) unusual constants like
ObjCStringLiterals now work as default arguments and global constant
initializers, and (b) we're not duplicating code between ExprEngine and
RegionStore.
This actually caught a bug in our test suite, which is awesome: we stop
tracking allocated memory if it's passed as an argument along with some
kind of callback, but not if the callback is 0. We were testing this in
a case where the callback parameter had a default value, but that value
was 0. After this change, the analyzer now (correctly) flags that as a
leak!
<rdar://problem/13773117>
llvm-svn: 180894
are now two distinct canonical 'AutoType's: one is the undeduced 'auto'
placeholder type, and the other is a deduced-but-dependent type. All
deduced-to-a-non-dependent-type cases are still non-canonical.
llvm-svn: 180789
Much of this patch outside of PathDiagnostics.h are just minor
syntactic changes due to the return type for operator* and the like
changing for the iterator, so the real focus should be on
PathPieces itself.
This change is motivated so that we can do efficient insertion
and removal of individual pieces from within a PathPiece, just like
this was a kind of "IR" for static analyzer diagnostics. We
currently implement path transformations by iterating over an
entire PathPiece and making a copy. This isn't very natural for
some algorithms.
We use an ilist here instead of std::list because we want operations
to rip out/insert nodes in place, just like IR manipulation. This
isn't being used yet, but opens the door for more powerful
transformation algorithms on diagnostic paths.
llvm-svn: 180741
Add a CapturedStmt.h similar to Lambda.h to reduce the typing required to get
to the CapturedRegionKind enum. This also allows codegen to access this enum
without including Sema/ScopeInfo.h.
Also removes some duplicated code for capturing 'this' between CapturedStmt and
Lambda.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D712
llvm-svn: 180710
-Make sure that a deserialized external decl gets added to the TU scope.
-When associating an identifier with a set of decls, use the most recent local ones,
if they exist, otherwise associating decls from modules (that came after a local one)
will lead to an incomplete reconstructed re-declaration chain.
rdar://13712705
llvm-svn: 180634
patch -n r180198.
When reporting on missing property accessor implementation in
categories, do not report when they are declared in primary class,
class's protocol, or one of it super classes or in of the other
categories. // rdar://13713098
llvm-svn: 180580
This enables formattings like:
#define A \
int aaaa; \
int b; \
int ccc; \
int dddddddddd;
Enabling this for Google/Chromium styles only as I don't know whether it
is desired for Clang/LLVM.
llvm-svn: 180253
categories, do not report when they are declared in primary class,
class's protocol, or one of it super classes. This is because,
its class is going to implement them. // rdar://13713098
llvm-svn: 180198
The 2 functions were computing the same location using different logic (each one had edge case bugs that the other
one did not). Refactor them to rely on the same logic.
The location of the warning reported in text/command line output format will now match that of the plist file.
There is one change in the plist output as well. When reporting an error on a BinaryOperator, we use the location of the
operator instead of the beginning of the BinaryOperator expression. This matches our output on command line and
looks better in most cases.
llvm-svn: 180165
statement in constexpr functions. Everything which doesn't require variable
mutation is also allowed as an extension in C++11. 'void' becomes a literal
type to support constexpr functions which return 'void'.
llvm-svn: 180022
C++1y, so stop adding the 'const' there. Provide a compatibility warning for
code relying on this in C++11, with a fix-it hint. Update our lazily-written
tests to add the const, except for those ones which were testing our
implementation of this rule.
llvm-svn: 179969
Still to do here:
- we have a collection of syntactic accepts-invalids to diagnose
- support non-PODs in VLAs, including dynamic initialization /
destruction
- runtime checks (and throw std::bad_array_length) for bad bound
- support VLA capture by reference in lambdas
- properly support VLAs in range-based for (don't recompute bound)
llvm-svn: 179962
Add a CXXDefaultInitExpr, analogous to CXXDefaultArgExpr, and use it both in
CXXCtorInitializers and in InitListExprs to represent a default initializer.
There's an additional complication here: because the default initializer can
refer to the initialized object via its 'this' pointer, we need to make sure
that 'this' points to the right thing within the evaluation.
llvm-svn: 179958
Sourcery CodeBench and modern FSF Mips toolchains require a bit more
complicated algorithm to calculate headers, libraries and sysroot paths
than implemented by Clang driver now. The main problem is that all these
paths depend on a set of command line arguments additionally to a target
triple value. For example, let $TC is a toolchain installation directory.
If we compile big-endian 32-bit mips code, crtbegin.o is in the
$TC/lib/gcc/mips-linux-gnu/4.7.2 folder and the toolchain's linker requires
--sysroot=$TC/mips-linux-gnu/libc argument. If we compile little-endian
32-bit soft-float mips code, crtbegin.o is in the
$TC/lib/gcc/mips-linux-gnu/4.7.2/soft-float/el folder and the toolchain's
linker requires --sysroot=$TC/mips-linux-gnu/libc/soft-float/el argument.
1. Calculate MultiarchSuffix using all necessary command line options and
use this MultiarchSuffix to detect crtbegin.o location in the
GCCInstallationDetector::ScanLibDirForGCCTriple() routine.
2. If a user does not provide --sysroot argument to the driver explicitly,
calculate new sysroot value based on command line options. Then use this
calculated sysroot path:
a. To populate a file search paths list in the Linux::Linux() constructor.
b. To find Mips toolchain specific include headers directories
in the Linux::AddClangSystemIncludeArgs() routine.
c. To provide -–sysroot argument for a linker.
Note:
- The FSF's tree slightly differs (folder names) and is not supported
yet.
- New addExternCSystemIncludeIfExits() routine is a temporary solution.
I plan to move path existence check to the addExternCSystemInclude()
routine by a separate commit.
The patch reviewed by Rafael Espindola.
http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D644
llvm-svn: 179934
Introduce a new helper function, which computes the first symbolic region in
the base region chain. The corresponding symbol has been used for assuming that
a pointer is null. Now, it will also be used for checking if it is null.
This ensures that we are tracking a null pointer correctly in the BugReporter.
llvm-svn: 179916
We always register the visitor on a node in which the value we are tracking is live and constrained. However,
the visitation can restart at a node, later on the path, in which the value is under constrained because
it is no longer live. Previously, we just silently stopped tracking in that case.
llvm-svn: 179731
Typo correction for an unqualified name needs to walk through all of the identifier tables of all modules.
When we have a global index, just walk its identifier table only.
rdar://13425732
llvm-svn: 179730
VerifyDiagnosticConsumer previously would not check that the diagnostic and
its matching directive referenced the same source file. Common practice was
to create directives that referenced other files but only by line number,
and this led to problems such as when the file containing the directive
didn't have enough lines to match the location of the diagnostic in the
other file, leading to bizarre file formatting and other oddities.
This patch causes VerifyDiagnosticConsumer to match source files as well as
line numbers. Therefore, a new syntax is made available for directives, for
example:
// expected-error@file:line {{diagnostic message}}
This extends the @line feature where "file" is the file where the diagnostic
is generated. The @line syntax is still available and uses the current file
for the diagnostic. "file" can be specified either as a relative or absolute
path - although the latter has less usefulness, I think! The #include search
paths will be used to locate the file and if it is not found an error will be
generated.
The new check is not optional: if the directive is in a different file to the
diagnostic, the file must be specified. Therefore, a number of test-cases
have been updated with regard to this.
This closes out PR15613.
llvm-svn: 179677
will fire on code such as:
cout << x == 0;
which the compiler will intrepret as
(cout << x) == 0;
This warning comes with two fixits attached to notes, one for parentheses to
silence the warning, and another to evaluate the comparison first.
llvm-svn: 179662
This is done by extending ObjCMethodList (which is only used by the global method pool) to have 2 extra bits of information.
We will later take advantage of this info in global method pool for the overridden methods calculation.
llvm-svn: 179652
during checker registration. There are no immediate clients of this,
but this provides a way for checkers to query the options table
at startup instead.
llvm-svn: 179626
APIs that access the configuration table without clients reasoning
about the string table. The string table is an implementation
detail.
llvm-svn: 179625
Changes necessary to arm_neon.td for the generation of Neon tests.
This is the first of six patches to add to the arm neon tablegen
generator the capability of generating tests to verify that the various
ARM intrinsics are implemented properly.
The changes include such items as:
1. Adding attributes to the Inst record so that additional metadata that is only
needed for the tests can be specified in TableGen.
2. Adding wrapper classes for operator (i.e. ``Op'') intrinsics which before
were simply notates as Inst. This allows us to classify what sort of test
to generate for said intrinsic and further since the classes do not effect
the behavior of the Inst base class, allow for normal functioning.
Reviewed by Bob Wilson.
llvm-svn: 179624
Add CapturedDecl to be the DeclContext for CapturedStmt, and perform semantic
analysis. Currently captures all variables by reference.
TODO: templates
Author: Ben Langmuir <ben.langmuir@intel.com>
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D433
llvm-svn: 179618
- There is no reason to have a modules specific flag for disabling
autolinking. Instead, convert the existing flag into -fno-autolink (which
should cover other autolinking code generation paths like #pragmas if and
when we support them).
llvm-svn: 179612
This reverts commit r179436.
Due to caching, it was possible that we could miss overridden methods that
were introduced by categories later on.
Along with reverting the commit I also included a test case that would have caught this.
llvm-svn: 179547
It was being used correctly, but it is a very dangerous API to have around.
Instead, move the logic from the filtering to when we are deciding if we should
link two decls.
llvm-svn: 179523
two new options –msingle-float and –mdouble-float. These options can be
used simultaneously with float ABI selection options (-mfloat-abi,
-mhard-float, -msoft-float). They mark whether a floating-point
coprocessor supports double-precision operations.
llvm-svn: 179481
Use an newly introduce ASTContext::getBaseObjCCategoriesAfterInterface() which caches its
results instead of re-calculating the categories multiple times.
llvm-svn: 179436
The main benefit is to speed-up SourceManager::isBeforeInTranslationUnit which is common to query
the included/expanded location of the same FileID multiple times.
llvm-svn: 179435
This new option is the default, but it is useful to have a flag to override
-mno-implicit-float by putting -mimplicit-float later on the command line.
llvm-svn: 179309
Summary:
Handles all inheritance models for both data and function member
pointers.
Also implements isZeroInitializable() and refactors some of the null
member pointer code.
MSVC supports converting member pointers through virtual bases, which
clang does not (yet?) support. Implementing that extension is covered
by http://llvm.org/15713
Reviewers: rjmccall
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D613
llvm-svn: 179305
For this source:
const int &ref = someStruct.bitfield;
We used to generate this AST:
DeclStmt [...]
`-VarDecl [...] ref 'const int &'
`-MaterializeTemporaryExpr [...] 'const int' lvalue
`-ImplicitCastExpr [...] 'const int' lvalue <NoOp>
`-MemberExpr [...] 'int' lvalue bitfield .bitfield [...]
`-DeclRefExpr [...] 'struct X' lvalue ParmVar [...] 'someStruct' 'struct X'
Notice the lvalue inside the MaterializeTemporaryExpr, which is very
confusing (and caused an assertion to fire in the analyzer - PR15694).
We now generate this:
DeclStmt [...]
`-VarDecl [...] ref 'const int &'
`-MaterializeTemporaryExpr [...] 'const int' lvalue
`-ImplicitCastExpr [...] 'int' <LValueToRValue>
`-MemberExpr [...] 'int' lvalue bitfield .bitfield [...]
`-DeclRefExpr [...] 'struct X' lvalue ParmVar [...] 'someStruct' 'struct X'
Which makes a lot more sense. This allows us to remove code in both
CodeGen and AST that hacked around this special case.
The commit also makes Clang accept this (legal) C++11 code:
int &&ref = std::move(someStruct).bitfield
PR15694 / <rdar://problem/13600396>
llvm-svn: 179250
constructor. This isn't quite perfect (as usual, we don't handle default
arguments correctly yet, and we don't deal with copy/move constructors for
arguments correctly either, but this will be fixed when we implement core issue
1351.
This completes our support for inheriting constructors.
llvm-svn: 179154
The GNU line marker directive was sharing code with the #line directive, but some of the warnings/errors were reporting as #line directive diagnostics in both cases.
Previously:
#line 11foo1 ==> "#line directive requires a simple digit sequence"
# 11foo1 ==> "#line directive requires a simple digit sequence"
Now, we get:
#line 11foo1 ==> "#line directive requires a simple digit sequence"
# 11foo1 ==> "GNU line marker directive requires a simple digit sequence"
llvm-svn: 179139
isVirtual - matches CXXMethodDecl nodes for virtual methods
isOverride - matches CXXMethodDecl nodes for methods that override virtual methods from a base class.
Author: Philip Dunstan <phil@philipdunstan.com>
llvm-svn: 179126
Previously, the analyzer used isIntegerType() everywhere, which uses the C
definition of "integer". The C++ predicate with the same behavior is
isIntegerOrUnscopedEnumerationType().
However, the analyzer is /really/ using this to ask if it's some sort of
"integrally representable" type, i.e. it should include C++11 scoped
enumerations as well. hasIntegerRepresentation() sounds like the right
predicate, but that includes vectors, which the analyzer represents by its
elements.
This commit audits all uses of isIntegerType() and replaces them with the
general isIntegerOrEnumerationType(), except in some specific cases where
it makes sense to exclude scoped enumerations, or any enumerations. These
cases now use isIntegerOrUnscopedEnumerationType() and getAs<BuiltinType>()
plus BuiltinType::isInteger().
isIntegerType() is hereby banned in the analyzer - lib/StaticAnalysis and
include/clang/StaticAnalysis. :-)
Fixes real assertion failures. PR15703 / <rdar://problem/12350701>
llvm-svn: 179081
When two template decls with the same name are used in this diagnostic,
force them to print their qualified names. This changes the bad message of:
candidate template ignored: could not match 'array' against 'array'
to the better message of:
candidate template ignored: could not match 'NS2::array' against 'NS1::array'
llvm-svn: 179056
This slightly propagates an existing hack that delays when we provide
access specifiers for the visible conversion functions of a class by
copying the available access specifier early. The only client this
affects is LLDB, which tends to discover and add conversion functions
after the class is technically "complete". As such, the only
observable difference is in LLDB, so the testing will go there.
llvm-svn: 179029
Added TBAABaseType and TBAAOffset in LValue. These two fields are initialized to
the actual type and 0, and are updated in EmitLValueForField.
Path-aware TBAA tags are enabled for EmitLoadOfScalar and EmitStoreOfScalar.
Added command line option -struct-path-tbaa.
llvm-svn: 178797
This mostly reverts 178733, but keeps the tests.
I don't claim to understand how hidden sub modules work or when we need to see
them (is that documented?), but this has the same semantics and avoids adding
hasExternalLinkageUncached which has the same foot gun potential as the old
hasExternalLinkage.
Last but not least, not computing linkage when it is not needed is more
efficient.
llvm-svn: 178739
caching the linkage for a declaration before we set up its redeclaration chain,
when determining whether a declaration could be a redeclaration of something
from an unimported submodule. We actually want to look at the declaration as if
it were not a redeclaration here, so compute the linkage but don't cache it.
llvm-svn: 178733
of a property just in case the property's getter happens to be +1.
We won't synthesize a getter for such a property, but we will allow
the user to define a +1 method for it.
rdar://13115896
llvm-svn: 178731
don't serialize a lookup map for the translation unit outside C++ mode, so we
can't tell when lookup within the TU needs to look within modules. Only apply
the fix outside C++ mode, and only to the translation unit.
llvm-svn: 178706
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x86_64-darwin10-gdb went back green
before it processed the reverted 178663, so it could not have been the culprit.
Revert "Revert 178663."
This reverts commit 4f8a3eb2ce5d4ba422483439e20c8cbb4d953a41.
llvm-svn: 178682
Syntactically means the function macro parameter names do not need to use the same
identifiers in order for the definitions to be considered identical.
Syntactic equivalence is a microsoft extension for macro redefinitions and we'll also
use this kind of comparison to check for ambiguous macros coming from modules.
rdar://13562254
llvm-svn: 178671
smarts so that it doesn't approve of keywords and/or type names when it
knows (based on its flags) that those kinds of corrections are not
wanted.
llvm-svn: 178668
For variables and functions clang used to store two storage classes. The one
"as written" in the code and a patched one, which, for example, propagates
static to the following decls.
This apparently is from the days clang lacked linkage computation. It is now
redundant and this patch removes it.
llvm-svn: 178663
Doxygen treats "@command" the same as "\command" in a doc comment, so
whenever we talk about Objective-C things like "@interface" we have to
make sure to escape them.
Let's try to keep Clang -Wdocumentation-clean!
llvm-svn: 178603
Summary:
This makes it possible to share code between lib/AST/MicrosoftCXXABI.cpp
and lib/CodeGen/MicrosoftCXXABI.cpp. No functionality change.
Also adds comments about the layout of the member pointer structs as I
currently understand them.
Reviewers: rjmccall
CC: timurrrr, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D590
llvm-svn: 178548
variable in a C99 inline (but not static-inline or extern-inline)
function definition.
The standard doesn't actually say that this doesn't apply to
"extern inline" definitions, but that seems like a useful extension,
and it at least doesn't have the obvious flaw that a static
mutable variable in an externally-available definition does.
rdar://13535367
llvm-svn: 178520
Refactor invalidateRegions to take SVals instead of Regions as input and teach RegionStore
about processing LazyCompoundVal as a top-level “escaping” value.
This addresses several false positives that get triggered by the NewDelete checker, but the
underlying issue is reproducible with other checkers as well (for example, MallocChecker).
llvm-svn: 178518
This is a heuristic to make up for the fact that the analyzer doesn't
model C++ containers very well. One example is modeling that
'std::distance(I, E) == 0' implies 'I == E'. In the future, it would be
nice to model this explicitly, but for now it just results in a lot of
false positives.
The actual heuristic checks if the base type has a member named 'begin' or
'iterator'. If so, we treat the constructors and destructors of that type
as opaque, rather than inlining them.
This is intended to drastically reduce the number of false positives
reported with experimental destructor support turned on. We can tweak the
heuristic in the future, but we'd rather err on the side of false negatives
for now.
<rdar://problem/13497258>
llvm-svn: 178516
Certain properties of a function can determine ahead of time whether or not
the function is inlineable, such as its kind, its signature, or its
location. We can cache this value in the FunctionSummaries map to avoid
rechecking these static properties for every call.
Note that the analyzer may still decide not to inline a specific call to
a function because of the particular dynamic properties of the call along
the current path.
No intended functionality change.
llvm-svn: 178515
The summaries lasted for the lifetime of the map anyway; no reason to
include an extra allocation.
Also, use SmallBitVector instead of BitVector to track the visited basic
blocks -- most functions will have less than 64 basic blocks -- and
use bitfields for the other fields to reduce the size of the structure.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 178514
This is controlled by the 'suppress-c++-stdlib' analyzer-config flag.
It is currently off by default.
This is more suppression than we'd like to do, since obviously there can
be user-caused issues within 'std', but it gives us the option to wield
a large hammer to suppress false positives the user likely can't work
around.
llvm-svn: 178513
visible. There's a lot of potential badness in how we're modelling
these things, but getting this much correct is reasonably easy.
rdar://13535367
llvm-svn: 178488
We can check if the receiver is nil in the node that corresponds to the StmtPoint of the message send.
At that point, the receiver is guaranteed to be live. We will find at least one unreclaimed node due to
my previous commit (look for StmtPoint instead of PostStmt) and the fact that the nil receiver nodes are tagged.
+ a couple of extra tests.
llvm-svn: 178381
When using modules we should not ignore overridden methods from
categories that are hidden because the module is not visible.
This will give more consistent results (when imports change) and it's more
correct since the methods are indeed overridden even if they are not "visible"
for lookup purposes.
rdar://13350796
llvm-svn: 178374
Add a new callback that notifies checkers when a const pointer escapes. Currently, this only works
for const pointers passed as a top level parameter into a function. We need to differentiate the const
pointers escape from regular escape since the content pointed by const pointer will not change;
if it’s a file handle, a file cannot be closed; but delete is allowed on const pointers.
This should suppress several false positives reported by the NewDelete checker on llvm codebase.
llvm-svn: 178310
We should only suppress a bug report if the IDCed or null returned nil value is directly related to the value we are warning about. This was
not the case for nil receivers - we would suppress a bug report that had an IDCed nil receiver on the path regardless of how it’s
related to the warning.
1) Thread EnableNullFPSuppression parameter through the visitors to differentiate between tracking the value which
is directly responsible for the bug and other values that visitors are tracking (ex: general tracking of nil receivers).
2) in trackNullOrUndef specifically address the case when a value of the message send is nil due to the receiver being nil.
llvm-svn: 178309
likely be implicitly truncated:
* All forms of Bitwise-and, bitwise-or, and integer multiplication.
* The assignment form of integer addition, subtraction, and exclusive-or
* The RHS of the comma operator
* The LHS of left shifts.
llvm-svn: 178273
This is an optional variant of the CFG. This allows analyses to model whether
or not a static initializer has run, e.g.:
static Foo x = bar();
For basic dataflow analysis in Sema we will just assume that the initializer
always runs. For the static analyzer we can use this branch to accurately
track whether or not initializers are on.
This patch just adds the (opt-in) functionality to the CFG. The
static analyzer still needs to be modified to adopt this feature.
llvm-svn: 178263
gcc provides -mmfcrf and -mno-mfcrf for controlling what we call
the mfocrf target feature. Also, PPC is now making use of the
static function AddTargetFeature used by the Mips Driver code.
llvm-svn: 178227
* Give the right diagnostic for 'restrict' applied to a non-pointer, non-reference type.
* Don't reject 'restrict' applied indirectly to an Objective-C object pointer type (eg, through template instantiation).
llvm-svn: 178200
When we are consuming the current token just to enter a new token stream, we push
the current token in the back of the stream so that we get it again.
Unfortunately this had the effect where if the current token is a code-completion one,
we would code-complete once during consuming it and another time after the stream ended.
Fix this by making sure that, in this case, ConsumeAnyToken() will consume a code-completion
token without invoking code-completion.
rdar://12842503
llvm-svn: 178199
The visitor should look for the PreStmt node as the receiver is nil in the PreStmt and this is the node. Also, tag the nil
receiver nodes with a special tag for consistency.
llvm-svn: 178152
This option can be useful for end users who want to know why they
ended up with a ton of different variants of the "std" module in their
module cache. This problem should go away over time, as we reduce the
need for module variants, but it will never go away entirely.
llvm-svn: 178148
the system macro uses a not identical definition compared to a macro from the clang headers.
For example (these come from different modules):
\#define LONG_MAX __LONG_MAX__ (clang's limits.h)
\#define LONG_MAX 0x7fffffffffffffffL (system's limits.h)
in which case don't mark them ambiguous to avoid the "ambiguous macro expansion" warning.
llvm-svn: 178109