only add 'const' for variables captured by copy in potentially
evaluated expressions of non-mutable lambdas. (The "by copy" part was
missing).
llvm-svn: 150088
the sign bit doesn't have undefined behavior, but a signed left shift of a 1 bit
out of the sign bit still does. As promised to Howard :)
The suppression of the potential constant expression checking in system headers
is also removed, since the problem it was working around is gone.
llvm-svn: 150059
- Capturing variables by-reference and by-copy within a lambda
- The representation of lambda captures
- The creation of the non-static data members in the lambda class
that store the captured variables
- The initialization of the non-static data members from the
captured variables
- Pretty-printing lambda expressions
There are a number of FIXMEs, both explicit and implied, including:
- Creating a field for a capture of 'this'
- Improved diagnostics for initialization failures when capturing
variables by copy
- Dealing with temporaries created during said initialization
- Template instantiation
- AST (de-)serialization
- Binding and returning the lambda expression; turning it into a
proper temporary
- Lots and lots of semantic constraints
- Parameter pack captures
llvm-svn: 149977
can't produce a constant expression is not ill-formed (so long as some
instantiation of that function can produce a constant expression).
llvm-svn: 149802
value of class type, look for a unique conversion operator converting to
integral or unscoped enumeration type and use that. Implements [expr.const]p5.
Sema::VerifyIntegerConstantExpression now performs the conversion and returns
the converted result. Some important callers of Expr::isIntegralConstantExpr
have been switched over to using it (including all of those required for C++11
conformance); this switch brings a side-benefit of improved diagnostics and, in
several cases, simpler code. However, some language extensions and attributes
have not been moved across and will not perform implicit conversions on
constant expressions of literal class type where an ICE is required.
In passing, fix static_assert to perform a contextual conversion to bool on its
argument.
llvm-svn: 149776
template without a corresponding parameter pack, don't immediately
substitute the alias template. This is under discussion in the C++
committee, and may become ill-formed, but for now we match GCC.
llvm-svn: 149697
template. Such pack expansions can easily fail at template
instantiation time, if the expanded parameter packs are of the wrong
length. Fixes <rdar://problem/10040867>, PR9021, and the example that
came up today at Going Native.
llvm-svn: 149685
* support the gcc __builtin_constant_p() ? ... : ... folding hack in C++11
* check for unspecified values in pointer comparisons and pointer subtractions
llvm-svn: 149578
This is a mess. According to the C++11 standard, pointer subtraction only has
undefined behavior if the difference of the array indices does not fit into a
ptrdiff_t.
However, common implementations effectively perform a char* subtraction first,
and then divide the result by the element size, which can cause overflows in
some cases. Those cases are not considered to be undefined behavior by this
change; perhaps they should be.
llvm-svn: 149490
- Actually building the var -> capture mapping properly (there was an off-by-one error)
- Keeping track of the source location of each capture
- Minor QoI improvements, e.g, highlighing the prior capture if
there are multiple captures, pointing at the variable declaration we
found if we reject it.
As part of this, add standard citations for the various semantic
checks we perform, and note where we're not performing those checks as
we should.
llvm-svn: 149462
function definition can produce a constant expression. This also provides the
last few checks for [dcl.constexpr]p3 and [dcl.constexpr]p4.
llvm-svn: 149108
Fix some review comments.
Add a test for deduction when std::initializer_list isn't available yet.
Fix redundant error messages. This fixes and outstanding FIXME too.
llvm-svn: 148735
to an error, so that users can turn them off if necessary. Note that
this does *not* change the behavior of in a SFINAE context, where we
still flag an error even if the warning is disabled. This matches
GCC's behavior.
llvm-svn: 148701
values and non-type template arguments of integral and enumeration types.
This change causes some legal C++98 code to no longer compile in C++11 mode, by
enforcing the C++11 rule that narrowing integral conversions are not permitted
in the final implicit conversion sequence for the above cases.
llvm-svn: 148439
for it to be used in converted constant expression checking, and fix a couple
of issues:
- Conversion operators implicitly invoked prior to the narrowing conversion
were not being correctly handled when determining whether a constant value
was narrowed.
- For conversions from floating-point to integral types, the diagnostic text
incorrectly always claimed that the source expression was not a constant
expression.
llvm-svn: 148381
not integer constant expressions. In passing, fix the 'folding is an extension'
diagnostic to not claim we're accepting the code, since that's not true in
-pedantic-errors mode, and add this diagnostic to -Wgnu.
llvm-svn: 148209
- If the declarator is at the start of a line, and the previous line contained
another declarator and ended with a comma, then that comma was probably a
typo for a semicolon:
int n = 0, m = 1, l = 2, // k = 5;
myImportantFunctionCall(); // oops!
- If removing the parentheses would correctly initialize the object, then
produce a note suggesting that fix.
- Otherwise, if there is a simple initializer we can suggest which performs
value-initialization, then provide a note suggesting a correction to that
initializer.
Sema::Declarator now tracks the location of the comma prior to the declarator in
the declaration, if there is one, to facilitate providing the note. The code to
determine an appropriate initializer from the -Wuninitialized warning has been
factored out to allow use in both that and -Wvexing-parse.
llvm-svn: 148072
zero-initialize the first union member. Also fix a bug where initializing an
array of types compatible with wchar_t from a wide string literal failed in C,
and fortify the C++ tests in this area. This part can't be tested without a code
change to enable array evaluation in C (where an existing test fails).
llvm-svn: 148035
- reject definitions of enums within friend declarations
- require 'enum', not 'enum class', for non-declaring references to scoped
enumerations
llvm-svn: 147824
pointer-arithmetic-related undefined behavior and unspecified results. We
continue to fold such values, but now notice they aren't constant expressions.
llvm-svn: 147659
the Semantic Powers to only warn on class types (or dependent types), where the
constructor or destructor could do something interesting.
llvm-svn: 147642
scope, when no other indication is provided that the user intended to declare a
function rather than a variable.
Remove some false positives from the existing 'parentheses disambiguated as a
function' warning by suppressing it when the declaration is marked as 'typedef'
or 'extern'.
Add a new warning group -Wvexing-parse containing both of these warnings.
The new warning is enabled by default; despite a number of false positives (and
one bug) in clang's test-suite, I have only found genuine bugs with it when
running it over a significant quantity of real C++ code.
llvm-svn: 147599
Also temporarily remove the assumption from IR gen that we can emit IR for every
constant we can fold, since it isn't currently true in C++11, to fix PR11676.
Original comment from r147271:
constexpr: perform zero-initialization prior to / instead of performing a
constructor call when appropriate. Thanks to Eli for spotting this.
llvm-svn: 147384
Explicit instantiations following specializations are no-ops and hence have
no PointOfInstantiation. That was done correctly in most cases, but for a
specialization -> instantiation decl -> instantiation definition chain, the
definition didn't realize that it was a no-op. Fix that.
Also, when printing diagnostics for these no-ops, get the diag location from
the decl name location.
Add many test cases, one of them not yet passing (but it failed the same way
before this change). Fixes http://llvm.org/pr11558 and more.
llvm-svn: 147225
Split out a new ExpressionEvaluationContext flag for this case, and don't treat
it as unevaluated in C++11. This fixes some crash-on-invalids where we would
allow references to class members in potentially-evaluated constant expressions
in static member functions, and also fixes half of PR10177.
The fix to PR10177 exposed a case where template instantiation failed to provide
a source location for a diagnostic, so TreeTransform has been tweaked to supply
source locations when transforming a type. The source location is still not very
good, but MarkDeclarationsReferencedInType would need to operate on a TypeLoc to
improve it further.
Also fix MarkDeclarationReferenced in C++98 mode to trigger instantiation for
static data members of class templates which are used in constant expressions.
This fixes a link-time problem, but we still incorrectly treat the member as
non-constant. The rest of the fix for that issue is blocked on PCH support for
early-instantiated static data members, which will be added in a subsequent
patch.
llvm-svn: 146955
variable is initialized by a non-constant expression, and pass in the variable
being declared so that earlier-initialized fields' values can be used.
Rearrange VarDecl init evaluation to make this possible, and in so doing fix a
long-standing issue in our C++ constant expression handling, where we would
mishandle cases like:
extern const int a;
const int n = a;
const int a = 5;
int arr[n];
Here, n is not initialized by a constant expression, so can't be used in an ICE,
even though the initialization expression would be an ICE if it appeared later
in the TU. This requires computing whether the initializer is an ICE eagerly,
and saving that information in PCH files.
llvm-svn: 146856
fails within a call to a constexpr function. Add -fconstexpr-backtrace-limit
argument to driver and frontend, to control the maximum number of notes so
produced (default 10). Fix APValue printing to be able to pretty-print all
APValue types, and move the testing for this functionality from a unittest to
a -verify test now that it's visible in clang's output.
llvm-svn: 146749
diagnostic message are compared. If either is a substring of the other, then
no error is given. This gives rise to an unexpected case:
// expect-error{{candidate function has different number of parameters}}
will match the following error messages from Clang:
candidate function has different number of parameters (expected 1 but has 2)
candidate function has different number of parameters
It will also match these other error messages:
candidate function
function has different number of parameters
number of parameters
This patch will change so that the verification string must be a substring of
the diagnostic message before accepting. Also, all the failing tests from this
change have been corrected. Some stats from this cleanup:
87 - removed extra spaces around verification strings
70 - wording updates to diagnostics
40 - extra leading or trailing characters (typos, unmatched parens or quotes)
35 - diagnostic level was included (error:, warning:, or note:)
18 - flag name put in the warning (-Wprotocol)
llvm-svn: 146619
freebsd bots happy. In the longer term, we should have a mechanism for moving
constexpr recursion off the call stack, to support the default limit of 512
suggested by the standard.
llvm-svn: 146596
methods) to bool. E.g.
void foo() {}
if (f) { ... // <- Warns here.
}
Only applies to non-weak functions, and does not apply if the function address
is taken explicitly with the addr-of operator.
llvm-svn: 145849
when computing the exception specification of a copy or move constructor,
ignore non-static data member initializers. Fixes PR11418 /
<rdar://problem/10478642>.
llvm-svn: 145269
or MemberExpr which refers to it. As a side-effect, MemberExprs which refer to
static member functions and static data members are now emitted as constant
expressions.
llvm-svn: 144468
initializer; all other constexpr variables are merely required to be
initialized. In particular, a user-provided constexpr default constructor can be
used for such initialization.
llvm-svn: 144028
default", make a note of which is used when creating the
initial declaration. Previously, we would wait until later to handle
default/delete as a definition, but this is too late: when adding the
declaration, we already treated the declaration as "user-provided"
when in fact it was merely "user-declared".
Fixes PR10861 and PR10442, along with a bunch of FIXMEs.
llvm-svn: 144011
but trivially constructible and destructible variables in C++11 mode. Also
incidentally improve the precision of the wording for jump diagnostics in C++98
mode.
llvm-svn: 142619
Add test that a variadic base list which expands to 0 bases doesn't make the
class a non-aggregate. This test passed before the change, too.
llvm-svn: 142411
through varargs. This only happens when we're in an unevaluated
context, where we don't want to trigger an error anyway. Fixes PR11131
/ <rdar://problem/10288375>.
llvm-svn: 141986
part of template argument deduction is ill-formed, we mark it as
invalid and treat it as a deduction failure. If we happen to find that
specialization again, treat it as a deduction failure rather than
silently building a call to the declaration.
Fixes PR11117, a marvelous bug where deduction failed after creating
an invalid specialization, causing overload resolution to pick a
different candidate. Then we performed a similar overload resolution
later, and happily picked the invalid specialization to
call... resulting in a silent link failure.
llvm-svn: 141809
We'd also like for "C++11" or "c++11" to be used for the warning
groups, but without removing the old warning flags. Patches welcome;
I've run out of time to work on this today.
llvm-svn: 141801
and DefaultFunctionArrayLvalueConversion. To prevent
significant regression for should-this-be-a-call fixits,
and to repair some such regression from the introduction of
bound member placeholders, make those placeholder checks
try to build calls appropriately. Harden the build-a-call
logic while we're at it.
llvm-svn: 141738
constexpr constructor templates. Such checking is optional, and currently hard
to get right since clang doesn't generate implicit member initializers until
instantiation (even for non-dependent members).
This is needed for clang to accept libstdc++ from g++4.6 in c++0x mode.
llvm-svn: 141547
initializer to update the type of the declaration. For example, this
allows us to determine the size of an incomplete array from its
initializer. Fixes PR10288.
llvm-svn: 141543
Begin with just default constructors. One note is that as a side effect
of this, a conformance test was removed on the basis that this is almost
certainly a defect as with most of union initialization. As it is, clang
does not implement union initialization close to the standard as it's
quite broken as written. I hope to write a paper addressing the issues
eventually.
llvm-svn: 141528
conversion function whose result type is an lvalue reference. The
initialization code already handled this properly, but overload
resolution was allowing the binding. Fixes PR11003 /
<rdar://problem/10233078>.
llvm-svn: 141137
part on patches by Peter Collingbourne.
We diverge from the C++11 standard in a few areas, mostly related to checking
constexpr function declarations, and not just definitions. See WG21 paper
N3308=11-0078 for details.
Function invocation substitution is not available in this patch; constexpr
functions cannot yet be used from within constant expressions.
llvm-svn: 140926
We had an extension which allowed const static class members of floating-point type to have in-class initializers, 'as a C++0x extension'. However, C++0x does not allow this. The extension has been kept, and extended to all literal types in C++0x mode (with a fixit to add the 'constexpr' specifier).
llvm-svn: 140801
- This fixes a host of obscure bugs with regards to how warning mapping options composed with one another, and I believe makes the code substantially easier to read and reason about.
llvm-svn: 140770
This model uses the 'landingpad' instruction, which is pinned to the top of the
landing pad. (A landing pad is defined as the destination of the unwind branch
of an invoke instruction.) All of the information needed to generate the correct
exception handling metadata during code generation is encoded into the
landingpad instruction.
The new 'resume' instruction takes the place of the llvm.eh.resume intrinsic
call. It's lowered in much the same way as the intrinsic is.
llvm-svn: 140049
synthesized move assignment within an implicitly-defined move
assignment operator, be sure to treat the derived-to-base cast as an
xvalue (rather than an lvalue). Otherwise, we'll end up getting the
wrong constructor.
Optimize a direct call to a trivial move assignment operator to an
aggregate copy, as we do for trivial copy assignment operators, and
update the the assertion in CodeGenFunction::EmitAggregateCopy() to
cope with this optimization.
Fixes PR10860.
llvm-svn: 139143
semantic analysis when taking the address of an xvalue. Instead, just
build the unary operator directly, since it's safe to do so (from the
IRgen and AST perspectives) for any glvalue. Fixes PR10822.
llvm-svn: 138935
collision between C99 hexfloats and C++0x user-defined literals by
giving C99 hexfloats precedence. Also, warning about user-defined
literals that conflict with hexfloats and those that have names that
are reserved by the implementation. Fixes <rdar://problem/9940194>.
llvm-svn: 138839
This makes the code duplication of implicit special member handling even worse,
but the cleanup will have to come later. For now, this works.
Follow-up with tests for explicit defaulting and enabling the __has_feature
flag to come.
llvm-svn: 138821
qualification of a type doesn't affect whether a conversion is a narrowing
conversion.
This doesn't work in template cases because SubstTemplateTypeParmType gets in
the way.
llvm-svn: 138735
to varargs functions in unevaluated contexts. AFAICT, there is no
standards justification for this, but it matches what other compilers do
and therefore preserves compatibility with certain template metaprogramming
idioms.
Should fix self-host.
llvm-svn: 138715
a member template, e.g.,
x.f<int>
if we have found a template in the type of x, but the lookup in the
current scope is ambiguous, just ignore the lookup in the current
scope. Fixes <rdar://problem/9915664>.
llvm-svn: 137255
[dcl.init.list] as is possible without generalized initializer lists or full
constant expression support, and adds a c++0x-compat warning in C++98 mode.
The FixIt currently uses a typedef's basename without qualification, which is
likely to be incorrect on some code. If it's incorrect on too much code, we
should write a function to get the string that refers to a type from a
particular context.
The warning is currently off by default. I'll fix LLVM and clang before turning
it on.
llvm-svn: 136181
Revert "For C++11, do more checking of initializer lists up-front, enabling some subset of the final functionality. C just leaves the function early. C++98 runs through the same code path, but has no changed functionality either."
This reverts commit ac420c5053d6aa41d59f782caad9e46e5baaf2c2.
llvm-svn: 135210
template<typename T> struct S { } f() { return 0; }
This case now produces a missing ';' diagnostic, since that seems like a much more likely error than an attempt to declare a function or variable in addition to the class template.
Treat this
llvm-svn: 135195
This is a first baby step towards supporting generalized initializer lists. This also removes an aggregate
test case that was just plain wrong, assuming that non-aggregates couldn't be initialized with initializer lists
in C++11 mode.
llvm-svn: 135177
throw-expressions, such that we don't consider the NRVO when the
non-volatile automatic object comes from outside the innermost try
scope (C++0x [class.copymove]p13). In C++98/03, our ASTs were
incorrect but it didn't matter because IR generation doesn't actually
apply the NRVO here. In C++0x, however, we were moving from an object
when in fact we should have copied from it. Fixes PR10142 /
<rdar://problem/9714312>.
llvm-svn: 134548
cast type has no ownership specified, implicitly "transfer" the ownership of the cast'ed type
to the cast type:
id x;
static_cast<NSString**>(&x); // Casting as (__strong NSString**).
This currently only works for C++ named casts, C casts to follow.
llvm-svn: 134273
vector<int>
to
std::vector<int>
Patch by Kaelyn Uhrain, with minor tweaks + PCH support from me. Fixes
PR5776/<rdar://problem/8652971>.
Thanks Kaelyn!
llvm-svn: 134007
arithmetic into a couple of common routines. Use these to make the
messages more consistent in the various contexts, especially in terms of
consistently diagnosing binary operators with invalid types on both the
left- and right-hand side. Also, improve the grammar and wording of the
messages some, handling both two pointers and two (different) types.
The wording of function pointer arithmetic diagnostics still strikes me
as poorly phrased, and I worry this makes them slightly more awkward if
more consistent. I'm hoping to fix that with a follow-on patch and test
case that will also make them more helpful when a typedef or template
type parameter makes the type completely opaque.
Suggestions on better wording are very welcome, thanks to Richard Smith
for some initial help on that front.
llvm-svn: 133906
deducing template parameter types. Recently Clang began enforcing the
more strict checking that the argument type and the deduced function
parameter type (after substitution) match, but that only consideres
qualification conversions.
One problem with this patch is that we check noreturn conversions and
qualification conversions independently. If a valid conversion would
require *both*, perhaps interleaved with each other, it will be
rejected. If this actually occurs (I'm not yet sure it does) and is in
fact a problem (I'm not yet sure it is), there is a FIXME to implement
more intelligent conversion checking.
However, this step at least allows Clang to resume accepting valid code
we're seeing in the wild.
llvm-svn: 133327
storage specifier is different from the storage specifier on the
template. If that storage specifier is the same, then we only warn.
Thanks to John for the prodding.
llvm-svn: 133236
checks that the deduced argument type for a function call matches the
actual argument type provided. The only place we've found where the
consistency checking should actually cause template argument deduction
failure is due to qualifier differences that don't fall into the realm
of qualification conversions (which are *not* checked when we
initially perform deduction). However, we're performing the full
checking as specified in the standard to ensure that no other cases
exist.
Fixes PR9233 / <rdar://problem/9039590>.
llvm-svn: 133163
in a noexcept exception specification because it isn't part of the
canonical type. This ensures that we keep the exact expression written
in the noexcept exception specification, rather than accidentally
"adopting" a previously-written and canonically "equivalent" function
prototype. Fixes PR10087.
llvm-svn: 132998
specializations within an explicit instantiation to default to off
(enabled by -pedantic). Nobody else seem to implement C++
[temp.explicit]p3. Fixes PR10093.
llvm-svn: 132704
specializing a member of an unspecialized template, and recover from
such errors without crashing. Fixes PR10024 / <rdar://problem/9509761>.
llvm-svn: 132677
the template parameter, perform the checking as a "specified" template
argument rather than a "deduced" template argument; the latter implies
stricter type checking that is not permitted for default template
arguments.
Also, cleanup our handling of substitution of explicit template
arguments for a function template. We were actually performing some
substitution of default arguments at this point!
Fixes PR10069.
llvm-svn: 132529
class type (or array thereof), eliminating some redundant checks
(thanks Eli!) and adding some tests where the behavior differs in
C++98/03 vs. C++0x.
llvm-svn: 132218
to be careful to emit landing pads that are always prepared to handle a
cleanup path. This is correct mostly because of the fix to the LLVM
inliner, r132200.
llvm-svn: 132209
so that it looks at the initializer of a local variable of class type
(or array thereof) to determine whether it's just an implicit
invocation of the trivial default constructor. Fixes PR10034.
llvm-svn: 132191
that the unevaluated subexpressions of &&, ||, and ? : are not
considered when determining whether the expression is a constant
expression. Also, turn the "used in its own initializer" warning into
a runtime-behavior warning, so that it doesn't fire when a variable is
used as part of an unevaluated subexpression of its own initializer.
Fixes PR9999.
llvm-svn: 131968
should use a constructor to default-initialize a
variable. InitializationSequence knows the rules for default
initialization, better. Fixes <rdar://problem/8501008>.
llvm-svn: 131796
to a warning, since apparently libstdc++'s debug mode does this (and
we can recover safely). Add a Fix-It to insert the "inline", just for kicks.
llvm-svn: 131732
nested-name-specifier, re-evaluate the nested-name-specifier as if we
were entering that context (which we did!), so that we'll resolve a
template-id to a particular class template partial
specialization. Fixes PR9913.
llvm-svn: 131383
nested of an out-of-line declaration, only require a 'template<>'
header for each enclosing class template that hasn't been previously
specialized; previously, we were requiring 'template<>' for enclosing
class templates and members of class templates that hadn't been
previously specialized. Fixes <rdar://problem/9422013>.
llvm-svn: 131207
that they are C++0x extensions, and put them in the appropriate
group. We already support most of the semantics. Addresses
<rdar://problem/9407525>.
llvm-svn: 131153
I've edited one diagnostic which would print "copy constructor" for copy
constructors and "constructor" for any other constructor. If anyone is
extremely enamored with this, it can be reinstated with a simple boolean
flag rather than calling getSpecialMember, which is inappropriate.
llvm-svn: 131143
the semantic context referenced by the nested-name-specifier rather
than the syntactic form of the nested-name-specifier. The previous
incarnation was based on my complete misunderstanding of C++
[temp.expl.spec]. The latest C++0x working draft clarifies the
requirements here, and this rewrite is intended to follow that.
Along the way, improve source location information in the
diagnostics. For example, if we report that a specific type needs or
doesn't need a 'template<>' header, we dig out that type in the
nested-name-specifier and highlight its range.
Fixes: PR5907, PR9421, PR8277, PR8708, PR9482, PR9668, PR9877, and
<rdar://problem/9135379>.
llvm-svn: 131138
parameters on the floor in certain cases:
class X {
template <typename T> friend typename A<T>::Foo;
};
This was parsed as a *non* template friend declaration some how, and
received an ExtWarn. Fixing the parser to actually provide the template
parameters to the freestanding declaration parse triggers the code which
specifically looks for such constructs and hard errors on them.
Along the way, this prevents us from trying to instantiate constructs
like the above inside of a outer template. This is important as loosing
the template parameters means we don't have a well formed declaration
and template instantiation will be unable to rebuild the AST. That fixes
a crash in the GCC test suite.
llvm-svn: 130772
in the classification of template names and using declarations. We now
properly typo-correct the leading identifiers in statements to types,
templates, values, etc. As an added bonus, this reduces the number of
lookups required for disambiguation.
llvm-svn: 130288
member function, i.e. something of the form 'x.f' where 'f' is a non-static
member function. Diagnose this in the general case. Some of the new diagnostics
are probably worse than the old ones, but we now get this right much more
universally, and there's certainly room for improvement in the diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 130239
named by the nested-name-specifier is same or base of the class in which the member expression appears.
It seems we also had an ill-formed test case, mon dieu! Fixes rdar://8576107.
llvm-svn: 129493
weak linkage. Also, fix a problem where global weak variables
with non-trivial initializers were getting guard variables, or at
least were checking for them and then crashing.
llvm-svn: 129342
when the resolution took place due to a single template specialization
being named with an explicit template argument list. In this case, the
"resolution" doesn't take into account the target type at all, and
therefore can take place for functions, static member functions, and
*non-static* member functions. The latter weren't being properly checked
and their proper form enforced in this scenario. We now do so.
The result of this last form slipping through was some confusing logic
in IsStandardConversion handling of these resolved address-of
expressions which eventually exploded in an assert. Simplify this logic
a bit and add some more aggressive asserts to catch improperly formed
expressions getting into this routine.
Finally add systematic testing of member functions, both static and
non-static, in the various forms they can take. One of these is
essentially PR9563, and this commit fixes the crash in that PR. However,
the diagnostics for this are still pretty terrible. We at least are now
accepting the correct constructs and rejecting the invalid ones rather
than accepting invalid or crashing as before.
llvm-svn: 128456
overload, so that we actually do the resolution for full expressions
and emit more consistent, useful diagnostics. Also fixes an IRGen
crasher, where Sema wouldn't diagnose a resolvable bound member
function template-id used in a full-expression (<rdar://problem/9108698>).
llvm-svn: 127747
Change the interface to expose the new information and deal with the enormous fallout.
Introduce the new ExceptionSpecificationType value EST_DynamicNone to more easily deal with empty throw specifications.
Update the tests for noexcept and fix the various bugs uncovered, such as lack of tentative parsing support.
llvm-svn: 127537
of a C++0x inline namespace within enclosing namespaces, as noted in
C++0x [namespace.def]p8.
Fixes <rdar://problem/9006349>, a libc++ failure where Clang was
rejected an explicit specialization of std::swap (since libc++ puts it
into an inline, versioned namespace std::__1).
llvm-svn: 127162
of an expansion, and we have a paramameter that is not a parameter
pack, don't suppress substitution of parameter packs within this
context.
llvm-svn: 126819
* 'auto' was being rejected on abstract-declarators with trailing return
types and on typedefs with trailing return types. 'auto' is always
allowed in these cases. This was found while testing the fix for PR 9278.
* A very poor diagnostic was being issued for auto (f() -> int): "return
type must be 'auto', not 'auto'". This is closely related to PR 9060.
* Trailing return type handling was happening slightly too late,
resulting in the checks for functions returning arrays and functions
returning functions being missed.
llvm-svn: 126166
This actually rules out too much, since it also catches typedefs for pointers to functions with trailing return types:
typedef auto (*F)() -> int;
Fix for that (and the same issue in all abstract-declarators) to follow shortly.
llvm-svn: 126153
* Flag indicating 'we're parsing this auto typed variable's initializer' moved from VarDecl to Sema
* Temporary template parameter list for auto deduction is now allocated on the stack.
* Deduced 'auto' types are now uniqued.
llvm-svn: 126139
includes explicitly-specified template arguments) to a function
template specialization in cases where no deduction is performed or
deduction fails. Patch by Faisal Vali, fixes PR7505!
llvm-svn: 126048
a scoped enumeration type to an integral or floating type,
properly. There was an over-eager assertion, and it was missing the
floating-point case.
Fixes PR9107/<rdar://problem/8937402>.
llvm-svn: 125825
LabelDecl and LabelStmt. There is a 1-1 correspondence between the
two, but this simplifies a bunch of code by itself. This is because
labels are the only place where we previously had references to random
other statements, causing grief for AST serialization and other stuff.
This does cause one regression (attr(unused) doesn't silence unused
label warnings) which I'll address next.
This does fix some minor bugs:
1. "The only valid attribute " diagnostic was capitalized.
2. Various diagnostics printed as ''labelname'' instead of 'labelname'
3. This reduces duplication of label checking between functions and blocks.
Review appreciated, particularly for the cindex and template bits.
llvm-svn: 125733
parameter type to see what's behind it, so that we don't end up
printing silly things like "float const *" when "const float *" would
make more sense. Also, replace the pile of "isa" tests with a simple
switch enumerating all of the cases, making a few more obvious cases
use prefix qualifiers.
llvm-svn: 125729
the parser will complete the declarator with a valid decl and thus trigger
delayed diagnostics for it. It certainly looks like we were intentionally
returning null here, but I couldn't find any good reason for it, and there
wasn't a comment, so farewell to all that.
llvm-svn: 125556
access-control diagnostics which arise from the portion of the declarator
following the scope specifier, just in case access is granted by
friending the individual method. This can also happen with in-line
member function declarations of class templates due to templated-scope
friend declarations.
We were really playing fast-and-loose before with this sort of thing,
and it turned out to work because *most* friend functions are in file
scope. Making us delay regardless of context exposed several bugs with
how we were manipulating delay. I ended up needing a concept of a
context that's independent of the declarations in which it appears,
and then I actually had to make some things save contexts correctly,
but delay should be much cleaner now.
I also encapsulated all the delayed-diagnostics machinery in a single
subobject of Sema; this is a pattern we might want to consider rolling
out to other components of Sema.
llvm-svn: 125485
- BlockDeclRefExprs always store VarDecls
- BDREs no longer store copy expressions
- BlockDecls now store a list of captured variables, information about
how they're captured, and a copy expression if necessary
With that in hand, change IR generation to use the captures data in
blocks instead of walking the block independently.
Additionally, optimize block layout by emitting fields in descending
alignment order, with a heuristic for filling in words when alignment
of the end of the block header is insufficient for the most aligned
field.
llvm-svn: 125005
it's okay for the following template parameters to not have default
arguments (since those template parameters can still be
deduced). Also, downgrade the error about default template arguments
in function templates to an extension warning, since this is a
harmless C++0x extension.
llvm-svn: 124855
argument but doesn't (because previous template parameters had default
arguments), clear out all of the default arguments so that we maintain
the invariant that a template parameter has a default argument only if
subsequence template parameters also have default arguments.
Fixes a crash-on-invalid <rdar://problem/8913649>.
llvm-svn: 124345
derived-to-base cast that also casts away constness (one of the cases
for static_cast followed by const_cast) would be treated as a bit-cast
rather than a derived-to-base class, causing miscompiles and
heartburn.
Fixes <rdar://problem/8913298>.
llvm-svn: 124340
overload a function without a ref-qualifier (C++0x
[over.load]p2). This, apparently, completes the implementation of
rvalue references for *this.
llvm-svn: 124321
reference binding is for the implicit object parameter of a member
function with a ref-qualifier. My previous comment, that we didn't
need to track this explicitly, was wrong: we do in fact get
rvalue-references-prefer-rvalues overloading with ref-qualifiers.
llvm-svn: 124313
the presence and form of a ref-qualifier. Note that we do *not* yet
implement the restriction in C++0x [over.load]p2 that requires either
all non-static functions with a given parameter-type-list to have a
ref-qualifier or none of them to have a ref-qualifier.
llvm-svn: 124297
- Add ref-qualifiers to the type system; they are part of the
canonical type. Print & profile ref-qualifiers
- Translate the ref-qualifier from the Declarator chunk for
functions to the function type.
- Diagnose mis-uses of ref-qualifiers w.r.t. static member
functions, free functions, constructors, destructors, etc.
- Add serialization and deserialization of ref-qualifiers.
llvm-svn: 124281
for reference binding (C++ [over.rank.ics]p3b1sb4), so that we prefer
the binding of an lvalue reference to a function lvalue over the
binding of an rvalue reference. This change resolves the ambiguity
with std::forward and lvalue references to function types in a way
that seems consistent with the original rvalue references proposal.
My proposed wording for this change is shown in
isBetterReferenceBindingKind(); we'll try to get this change adopted
in the C++0x working paper as well.
llvm-svn: 124236
(C++0x [over.ics.rank]p3) when one binding is an lvalue reference and
the other is an rvalue reference that binds to an rvalue. In
particular, we were using the predict "is an rvalue reference" rather
than "is an rvalue reference that binds to an rvalue", which was
incorrect in the one case where an rvalue reference can bind to an
lvalue: function references.
This particular issue cropped up with std::forward, where Clang was
picking an std::forward overload while forwarding an (lvalue)
reference to a function. However (and unfortunately!), the right
answer for this code is that the call to std::forward is
ambiguous. Clang now gets that right, but we need to revisit the
std::forward implementation in libc++.
llvm-svn: 124216
T) when taking the address of an overloaded function or matching a
specialization to a template (C++0x [temp.deduct.type]p10). Fixes
PR9044.
llvm-svn: 124197
implementation used by overload resolution to support rvalue
references. The original commits caused PR9026 and some
hard-to-reproduce self-host breakage.
The only (crucial!) difference between this commit and the previous
commits is that we now properly check the SuppressUserConversions flag
before attempting to perform a second user-defined conversion in
reference binding, breaking the infinite recursion chain of
user-defined conversions.
Rvalue references should be working a bit better now.
llvm-svn: 124121
when returning an NRVO candidate expression. For example, this
properly picks the move constructor when dealing with code such as
MoveOnlyType f() { MoveOnlyType mot; return mot; }
The previously-XFAIL'd rvalue-references test case now works, and has
been moved into the appropriate paragraph-specific test case.
llvm-svn: 123992
resolution to match the latest C++0x working paper's semantics. The
implementation now matching up with the reference-binding
implementation used for initialization.
llvm-svn: 123977
call (C++0x [temp.deduct.call]p3).
As part of this, start improving the reference-binding implementation
used in the computation of implicit conversion sequences (for overload
resolution) to reflect C++0x semantics. It still needs more work and
testing, of course.
llvm-svn: 123966
specification. In particular, an rvalue reference can bind to an
initializer expression that is an lvalue if the referent type and the
initializer expression type are not reference-related. This is a newer
formulation to the previous "rvalue references can never bind to
lvalues" rule.
llvm-svn: 123952
working paper's structure. The only functional change here is that we
now handling binding to array rvalues, which we would previously reject.
llvm-svn: 123918
involving rvalue references, to start scoping out what is and what
isn't implemented. In the process, tweak some standards citations,
type desugaring, and teach the tentative parser about && in
ptr-operator.
llvm-svn: 123913
together. In particular:
- Handle the use of captured parameter pack names within blocks
(BlockDeclRefExpr understands parameter packs now)
- Handle the declaration and expansion of parameter packs within a block's
parameter list, e.g., ^(Args ...args) { ... })
- Handle instantiation of blocks where the return type was not
explicitly specified. (unrelated, but necessary for my tests).
Together, these fixes should make blocks and variadic templates work
reasonably well together. Note that BlockDeclRefExpr is still broken
w.r.t. its computation of type and value dependence, which will still
cause problems for blocks in templates.
llvm-svn: 123849
a pack expansion, e.g., the parameter pack Values in:
template<typename ...Types>
struct Outer {
template<Types ...Values>
struct Inner;
};
This new implementation approach introduces the notion of an
"expanded" non-type template parameter pack, for which we have already
expanded the types of the parameter pack (to, say, "int*, float*",
for Outer<int*, float*>) but have not yet expanded the values. Aside
from creating these expanded non-type template parameter packs, this
patch updates template argument checking and non-type template
parameter pack instantiation to make use of the appropriate types in
the parameter pack.
llvm-svn: 123845
non-variadic function template over a variadic one. This matches GCC
and the intent of the C++0x wording, in a way that I think is likely
to be acceptable to the committee.
llvm-svn: 123581
template template parameter pack that cannot be fully expanded because
its enclosing pack expansion could not be expanded. This form of
TemplateName plays the same role as SubstTemplateTypeParmPackType and
SubstNonTypeTemplateParmPackExpr do for template type parameter packs
and non-type template parameter packs, respectively.
We should now handle these multi-level pack expansion substitutions
anywhere. The largest remaining gap in our variadic-templates support
is that we cannot cope with non-type template parameter packs whose
type is a pack expansion.
llvm-svn: 123521
that captures the substitution of a non-type template argument pack
for a non-type template parameter pack within a pack expansion that
cannot be fully expanded. This follows the approach taken by
SubstTemplateTypeParmPackType.
llvm-svn: 123506
expansion in it, we may end up instantiating to an empty
expression-list. In this case, the variable is uninitialized; tweak
the instantiation logic to handle this case. Fixes PR8977.
llvm-svn: 123449
expansion, when it is known due to the substitution of an out
parameter pack. This allows us to properly handle substitution into
pack expansions that involve multiple parameter packs at different
template parameter levels, even when this substitution happens one
level at a time (as with partial specializations of member class
templates and the signatures of member function templates).
Note that the diagnostic we provide when there is an arity mismatch
between an outer parameter pack and an inner parameter pack in this
case isn't as clear as the normal diagnostic for an arity
mismatch. However, this doesn't matter because these cases are very,
very rare and (even then) only typically occur in a SFINAE context.
The other kinds of pack expansions (expression, template, etc.) still
need to support optional tracking of the number of expansions, and we
need the moral equivalent of SubstTemplateTypeParmPackType for
substituted argument packs of template template and non-type template
parameters.
llvm-svn: 123448
involve template parameter packs at multiple template levels that
occur within the signatures members of class templates (and partial
specializations thereof). This is a work-in-progress that is deficient
in several ways, notably:
- It only works for template type parameter packs, but we need to
also support non-type template parameter packs and template template
parameter packs.
- It doesn't keep track of the lengths of the substituted argument
packs in the expansion, so it can't properly diagnose length
mismatches.
However, this is a concrete step in the right direction.
llvm-svn: 123425
when we're actually matching a template template argument to a
template template parameter. Otherwise, use strict matching.
Fixes <rdar://problem/8859985> clang++: variadics and out-of-line definitions.
llvm-svn: 123385
matching of variadic template template parameters to template
arguments. This paragraph was the subject of ISO C++ committee
document N2555: Extending Variadic Template Template Parameters.
llvm-svn: 123348
another pack expansion type. This can happen when rebuilding types in
the current instantiation.
Fixes <rdar://problem/8848837> (Clang crashing on libc++ <functional>).
llvm-svn: 123316
and function templates that contain variadic templates. This involves
three small-ish changes:
(1) When transforming a pack expansion, if the transformed argument
still contains unexpanded parameter packs, build a pack
expansion. This can happen during the substitution that occurs into
class template partial specialiation template arguments during
partial ordering.
(2) When performing template argument deduction where the argument
is a pack expansion, match against the pattern of that pack
expansion.
(3) When performing template argument deduction against a non-pack
parameter, or a non-expansion template argument, deduction fails if
the argument itself is a pack expansion (C++0x
[temp.deduct.type]p22).
llvm-svn: 123279
number of explicit call arguments. This actually fixes an erroneous
test for [temp.deduct.partial]p11, where we were considering
parameters corresponding to arguments beyond those that were
explicitly provided.
llvm-svn: 123244
parameters it expanded to, map exactly the number of function
parameters that were expanded rather than just running to the end of
the instantiated parameter list. This finishes the implementation of
the last sentence of C++0x [temp.deduct.call]p1.
llvm-svn: 123213
sentence of [temp.deduct.call]p1, both of which concern the
non-deducibility of parameter packs not at the end of a
parameter-type-list. The latter isn't fully implemented yet; see the
new FIXME.
llvm-svn: 123210
expression kinds. This is (indirectly) a test verifying that the
recursive AST visitor is visiting the children of these expression
nodes.
llvm-svn: 123198
pack expansions in template argument lists and function parameter
lists. The implementation of this paragraph should be complete
*except* for cases where we're substituting into one of the unexpanded
packs in a pack expansion; that's a general issue I haven't solved yet.
llvm-svn: 123188
allows an argument pack determines via explicit specification of
function template arguments to be extended by further, deduced
arguments. For example:
template<class ... Types> void f(Types ... values);
void g() {
f<int*, float*>(0, 0, 0); // Types is deduced to the sequence int*, float*, int
}
There are a number of FIXMEs in here that indicate places where we
need to implement + test retained expansions, plus a number of other
places in deduction where we need to correctly cope with the
explicitly-specified arguments when deducing an argument
pack. Furthermore, it appears that the RecursiveASTVisitor needs to be
auditied; it's missing some traversals (especially w.r.t. template
arguments) that cause it not to find unexpanded parameter packs when
it should.
The good news, however, is that the tr1::tuple implementation now
works fully, and the tr1::bind example (both from N2080) is actually
working now.
llvm-svn: 123163
tuple class template. This implementation is boosted directly from the
variadic templates proposal. N2080.
Note that one section is #ifdef'd out. I'll implement that aspect of
template argument deduction next.
llvm-svn: 123016
parameters into parameter types, so that substitution of
explicitly-specified function template arguments uses the same
path. This enables the use of explicitly-specified function template
arguments with variadic templates.
llvm-svn: 122986
template whose last parameter is a parameter pack. This allows us to
form a call to, e.g.,
template<typename ...Args1, typename ...Args2>
void f(std::pair<Args1, Args2> ...pairs);
given zero or more instances of "pair".
llvm-svn: 122973
1) Declaration of function parameter packs
2) Instantiation of function parameter packs within function types.
3) Template argument deduction of function parameter packs when
matching two function types.
We're missing all of the important template-instantiation logic for
function template definitions, along with template argument deduction
from the argument list of a function call, so don't even think of
trying to use these for real yet.
llvm-svn: 122926
expansions with something that is easier to use correctly: a new
template argment kind, rather than a bit on an existing kind. Update
all of the switch statements that deal with template arguments, fixing
a few latent bugs in the process. I"m happy with this representation,
now.
And, oh look! Template instantiation and deduction work for template
template argument pack expansions.
llvm-svn: 122896
for template template argument pack expansions. This allows fun such
as:
template<template<class> class ...> struct apply_impl { /*...*/ };
template<template<class> class ...Metafunctions> struct apply {
typedef typename apply_impl<Metafunctions...>::type type;
};
However, neither template argument deduction nor template
instantiation is implemented for template template argument packs, so
this functionality isn't useful yet.
I'll probably replace the encoding of template template
argument pack expansions in TemplateArgument so that it's harder to
accidentally forget about the expansion. However, this is a step in
the right general direction.
llvm-svn: 122890
specializations. We weren't dealing with any of the cases where the
type of the non-type template argument differs from the type of the
corresponding template parameter in the primary template. We would
think that the template parameter in the partial specialization was
not deducible (and warn about it, incorrectly), then fail to convert a
deduced parameter to the type of the template parameter in the partial
specialization (which may involve truncation, among other
things). Fixes PR8905.
llvm-svn: 122851
declaration name of the array when present. This ensures that
a poor-man's C++03 static_assert will include the user error message
often embedded in the name.
Update all the tests to reflect the new wording, and add a test for the
name behavior.
llvm-svn: 122802
template argument (described by an expression, of course). For
example:
template<int...> struct int_tuple { };
template<int ...Values>
struct square {
typedef int_tuple<(Values*Values)...> type;
};
It also lays the foundation for pack expansions in an initializer-list.
llvm-svn: 122751
caused an assertion when dealing with non-type template parameter
packs. Add some tests for deduction and instantiation of non-type
template parameter packs.
llvm-svn: 122534
extract the appropriate argument from the argument pack (based on the
current substitution index, of course). Simple instantiation of pack
expansions involving non-type template parameter packs now works.
llvm-svn: 122532
packs, e.g.,
template<typename T, unsigned ...Dims> struct multi_array;
along with semantic analysis support for finding unexpanded non-type
template parameter packs in types, expressions, and so on.
Template instantiation involving non-type template parameter packs
probably doesn't work yet. That'll come soon.
llvm-svn: 122527
parameter packs (C++0x [dcl.fct]p13), including disambiguation between
unnamed function parameter packs and varargs (C++0x [dcl.fct]p14) for
cases like
void f(T...)
where T may or may not contain unexpanded parameter packs.
llvm-svn: 122520
specialization's template arguments against the primary template's
template arguments using the obvious, correct method of checking the
injected-class-name type (C++ [temp.class.spec]p9b3). The previous
incarnation of this comparison attempted to use its own formulation of
the injected-class-name, which is redudant and, with the introduction
of variadic templates, became wrong (again).
llvm-svn: 122508
template argument corresponding to a template parameter pack is an
argument pack of a pack expansion of that template parameter
pack. Implements C++0x [temp.dep.type]p2 (at least, as much of it as
we can).
llvm-svn: 122498
parameter packs. In particular, a parameter pack not otherwise deduced
is deduced to an empty parameter pack.
The C++0x wording here is a bit unfortunate; this should really only
apply to function templates, and it mentions "trailing" parameter
packs, which doesn't really make sense in the context of function
templates. Will file a core issue separately.
llvm-svn: 122463
the presence of a pack expansion anywhere except at the end of a
template-argument-list causes the entire template-argument-list to be
a non-deduced context.
llvm-svn: 122461
single routine. Extend that routine to handle consistency
checking for template argument packs, so that we can compare the
deduced packs for template parameter packs across different pack
expansions.
llvm-svn: 122452
pattern is a template argument, which involves repeatedly deducing
template arguments using the pattern of the pack expansion, then
bundling the resulting deductions into an argument pack.
We can now handle a variety of simple list-handling metaprograms using
variadic templates. See, e.g., the new "count" metaprogram.
llvm-svn: 122439
dependent template specialization type, the number of template
arguments need not match precisely. Rather than checking the number of
arguments eagerly (which does not consider argument packs), let the
deduction routine for template argument lists cope with too many/too
few arguments.
llvm-svn: 122425
deduction. Unify all of the looping over template arguments for
deduction purposes into a single place, where argument pack expansion
occurs; this is also the hook for deducing from pack expansions, which
itself is not yet implemented.
For now, at least we can handle a basic "count" metafunction written
with variadics. See the new test for the formulation that works.
llvm-svn: 122418
whose patterns are template arguments. We can now instantiate, e.g.,
typedef tuple<pair<OuterTypes, InnerTypes>...> type;
where OuterTypes and InnerTypes are template type parameter packs.
There is a horrible inefficiency in
TemplateArgumentLoc::getPackExpansionPattern(), where we need to
create copies of TypeLoc data because our interfaces traffic in
TypeSourceInfo pointers where they should traffic in TypeLocs
instead. I've isolated in efficiency in this one routine; once we
refactor our interfaces to traffic in TypeLocs, we can eliminate it.
llvm-svn: 122278
a parameter pack, check the parameter pack against each of the
template arguments it corresponds to, then pack the converted
arguments into a template argument pack. Allows us to use variadic
class templates so long as instantiation isn't required, e.g.,
template<typename... Types> struct Tuple;
Tuple<int, float> *t2;
llvm-svn: 122251
pack expansions, e.g. given
template<typename... Types> struct tuple;
template<typename... Types>
struct tuple_of_refs {
typedef tuple<Types&...> types;
};
the type of the "types" typedef is a PackExpansionType whose pattern
is Types&.
This commit introduces support for creating pack expansions for
template type arguments, as above, but not for any other kind of pack
expansion, nor for any form of instantiation.
llvm-svn: 122223
declarations. This is a work in progress, as I go through the C++
declaration grammar to identify where unexpanded parameter packs can
occur.
llvm-svn: 121912
parameter packs within a statement, type, etc. Use this visitor to
provide improved diagnostics for the presence of unexpanded parameter
packs in a full expression, base type, declaration type, etc., by
highlighting the unexpanded parameter packs and providing their names,
e.g.,
test/CXX/temp/temp.decls/temp.variadic/p5.cpp:28:85: error: declaration type
contains unexpanded parameter packs 'VeryInnerTypes',
'OuterTypes', ...
...VeryInnerTypes, OuterTypes>, pair<InnerTypes, OuterTypes> > types;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ^
llvm-svn: 121883
whether the expression contains an unexpanded parameter pack, in the
same vein as the changes to the Type hierarchy. Compute this bit
within all of the Expr subclasses.
This change required a bunch of reshuffling of dependency
calculations, mainly to consolidate them inside the constructors and
to fuse multiple loops that iterate over arguments to determine type
dependence, value dependence, and (now) containment of unexpanded
parameter packs.
Again, testing is painfully sparse, because all of the diagnostics
will change and it is more important to test the to-be-written visitor
that collects unexpanded parameter packs.
llvm-svn: 121831
and TemplateArgument with an operation that determines whether there
are any unexpanded parameter packs within that construct. Use this
information to diagnose the appearance of the names of parameter packs
that have not been expanded (C++ [temp.variadic]p5). Since this
property is checked often (every declaration, ever expression
statement, etc.), we extend Type and Expr with a bit storing the
result of this computation, rather than walking the AST each time to
determine whether any unexpanded parameter packs occur.
This commit is deficient in several ways, which will be remedied with
future commits:
- Expr has a bit to store the presence of an unexpanded parameter
pack, but it is never set.
- The error messages don't point out where the unexpanded parameter
packs were named in the type/expression, but they should.
- We don't check for unexpanded parameter packs in all of the places
where we should.
- Testing is sparse, pending the resolution of the above three
issues.
llvm-svn: 121724
store it on the expression node. Also store an "object kind",
which distinguishes ordinary "addressed" l-values (like
variable references and pointer dereferences) and bitfield,
@property, and vector-component l-values.
Currently we're not using these for much, but I aim to switch
pretty much everything calculating l-valueness over to them.
For now they shouldn't necessarily be trusted.
llvm-svn: 119685
particular, we only add the implement object parameter type if only
one of the function templates is a non-static member function
template.
Moreover, since this DR differs from existing practice in C++98/03,
this commit implements the existing practice (which ignores the
first parameter of the function template that is not the non-static
member function template) in C++98/03 mode.
llvm-svn: 119145
in the order they occur within the class template, delaying
out-of-line member template partial specializations until after the
class has been fully instantiated. This fixes a regression introduced
by r118454 (itself a fix for PR8001).
llvm-svn: 118704
only keep deduction results for successful deductions, so that they
can be compared against each other. Fixes PR8462, from Richard Smith!
llvm-svn: 117983
members in class subobjects of different types. So long as the
underlying declaration sets are the same, and the declaration sets
involve non-instance members, this is not an ambiguity.
llvm-svn: 117163
themselves have no template parameters. This is actually a restriction
due to the grammar of template template parameters, but we choose to
diagnose it in Sema to provide better recovery.
llvm-svn: 117032
redeclarations of main appropriately rather than allowing it to be
overloaded. Also, disallowing declaring main as a template.
Fixes GCC DejaGNU g++.old-deja/g++.other/main1.C.
llvm-svn: 117029
construct an unsupported friend when there's a friend with a templated
scope specifier. Fixes a consistency crash, rdar://problem/8540527
llvm-svn: 116786
Fixes a crash and diagnoses the error condition of an unqualified
friend which doesn't resolve to something. I'm still not certain how
this is useful.
llvm-svn: 116393
that are suppressed during template argument deduction. This change
queues diagnostics computed during template argument deduction. Then,
if the resulting function template specialization or partial
specialization is chosen by overload resolution or partial ordering
(respectively), we will emit the queued diagnostics at that point.
This addresses most of PR6784. However, the check for unnamed/local
template arguments (which existed before this change) is still only
skin-deep, and needs to be extended to look deeper into types. It must
be improved to finish PR6784.
llvm-svn: 116373
of templated-scope friends by marking them invalid and white-listing all
accesses until such time as we implement them. Fixes a crash, this time
without a broken test case.
llvm-svn: 116364
argument deduction, make sure to check the correctness of deduced template
type arguments (which we had previously skipped) along with other
kinds of template arguments. This fixes part of PR6784, but we're
still swallowing the extension warning about unnamed/local template
arguments.
llvm-svn: 116327
has not yet been parsed, note that the default argument hasn't been
parsed and keep track of all of the instantiations of that function
parameter. When its default argument does get parsed, imbue the
instantiations with that default argument. Fixes PR8245.
llvm-svn: 116324
prototype scope, temporarily set the context of the enumeration
declaration to the translation unit. We do the same thing for
parameters, until we have an actual function declaration on which to
hang them. Fixes <rdar://problem/8435682>.
There is more work to do in this area, since we have existing bugs
with tags being declared/defined in function parameter lists. This fix
is correct, and we'll end up extending it when we deal with those
existing bugs.
llvm-svn: 114135
error to a warning if we're in a case that would be allowed in
C++0x. This "fixes" PR8084 by making Clang accept more code than GCC
and (non-strict) EDG do.
Also, add the missing test case for the C++0x semantics, which should
have been in r113717.
llvm-svn: 113718
be a semantic requirement that a built-in overloaded operator is not
added to the overload set of there is already a user-defined
overloaded operator with the same parameter types. Fixes PR8087.
llvm-svn: 113713
restrictions. The note's not really on the right place given its wording,
but putting a second note on the call site (or muddying the wording) doesn't
appeal.
There are corner cases where this can be wrong, but I'm not concerned.
llvm-svn: 112950
instantiating the parameters. In a perfect world, this wouldn't
matter, and compilers are free to instantiate in any order they
want. However, every other compiler seems to instantiate the return
type first, and some code (in this case, Boost.Polygon) depends on
this and SFINAE to avoid instantiating something that shouldn't be
instantiated.
We could fight this battle, and insist that Clang is allowed to do
what it does, but it's not beneficial: it's more predictable to
instantiate this way, in source order. When we implement
late-specified return types, we'll need to instantiate the return type
last when it was late-specified, hence the FIXME.
We now compile Boost.Polygon properly.
llvm-svn: 112561
deduction where the parameter is a function reference, function
pointer, or member function pointer and the argument is an overloaded
function. Fixes <rdar://problem/8360106>, a template argument
deduction issue found by Boost.Filesystem.
llvm-svn: 112523
an object of type I, if the current access target is protected
when named in a class N, consider the friends of the classes P
where I <= P <= N and where a notional member of N would be
non-forbidden in P.
llvm-svn: 112358
templates when only the declaration is in scope. This requires deferring the
instantiation to be lazy, and ensuring the definition is required for that
translation unit. We re-use the existing pending instantiation queue,
previously only used to track implicit instantiations which were required to be
lazy. Fixes PR7979.
A subsequent change will rename *PendingImplicitInstantiations to
*PendingInstatiations for clarity given its broader role.
llvm-svn: 112037
only form pointers-to-member if the expression has the appropriate
form. This avoids assertions later on on invalid code, but also
allows us to properly resolve mixed-staticity overloads.
llvm-svn: 111987
qua templates. The current fix suppresses the access check entirely
in this case; to do better, we'd need to be able to say that a
particular lookup result came from a particular injected class name,
which is not easy to do with the current representation of LookupResult.
This is on my known-problems list.
llvm-svn: 111009
that actually refer to the same underlying type, it is not an
ambiguity; add uniquing support based on the canonical type of type
declarations. Fixes <rdar://problem/8296180>.
llvm-svn: 110806
implicit conversion sequences. In particular, model the "standard
conversion" from a class to its own type (or a base type) directly as
a standard conversion in the normal path *without* trying to determine
if there is a valid copy constructor. This appears to match the intent
of C++ [over.best.ics]p6 and more closely matches GCC and EDG.
As part of this, model non-lvalue reference initialization via
user-defined conversion in overloading the same way we handle it in
InitializationSequence, separating the "general user-defined
conversion" and "conversion to compatible class type" cases.
The churn in the overload-call-copycon.cpp test case is because the
test case was originally wrong; it assumed that we should do more
checking for copy constructors that we actually should, which affected
overload resolution.
Fixes PR7055. Bootstrapped okay.
llvm-svn: 110773
just means "not a function type", not "not a function type or void". This
changes behavior slightly, but generally in a way which accepts more code.
llvm-svn: 110303
at -O0. The only change from the previous patch is that we don't try
to generate virtual method thunks for an available_externally
function.
llvm-svn: 108230
-O0, since we won't be using the definitions for anything anyway. For
lib/System/Path.o when built in Debug+Asserts mode, this leads to a 4%
improvement in compile time (and suppresses 440 function bodies).
<rdar://problem/7987644>
llvm-svn: 108156
typedefs won't have the same canonical declaration (since they are
distinct), so we need to check for this case specifically. Fixes
<rdar://problem/8018262>.
llvm-svn: 107833
CXXConstructExpr/CXXTemporaryObjectExpr/CXXNewExpr as
appropriate. Fixes PR7556, and provides a slide codegen improvement
when copy-initializing a POD class type from a value-initialized
temporary. Previously, we weren't eliding the copy.
llvm-svn: 107827
self-host. Hopefully these results hold up on different platforms.
I tried to keep the GNU ObjC runtime happy, but it's hard for me to test.
Reimplement how clang generates IR for exceptions. Instead of creating new
invoke destinations which sequentially chain to the previous destination,
push a more semantic representation of *why* we need the cleanup/catch/filter
behavior, then collect that information into a single landing pad upon request.
Also reorganizes how normal cleanups (i.e. cleanups triggered by non-exceptional
control flow) are generated, since it's actually fairly closely tied in with
the former. Remove the need to track which cleanup scope a block is associated
with.
Document a lot of previously poorly-understood (by me, at least) behavior.
The new framework implements the Horrible Hack (tm), which requires every
landing pad to have a catch-all so that inlining will work. Clang no longer
requires the Horrible Hack just to make exceptions flow correctly within
a function, however. The HH is an unfortunate requirement of LLVM's EH IR.
llvm-svn: 107631
This is more targeted, as it simply provides toggle actions for the parser to
turn access checking on and off. We then use these to suppress access checking
only while we parse the template-id (included scope specifier) of an explicit
instantiation and explicit specialization of a class template. The
specialization behavior is an extension, as it seems likely a defect that the
standard did not exempt them as it does explicit instantiations.
This allows the very common practice of specializing trait classes to work for
private, internal types. This doesn't address instantiating or specializing
function templates, although those apparently already partially work.
The naming and style for the Action layer isn't my favorite, comments and
suggestions would be appreciated there.
llvm-svn: 106993
introduced by using decls are hidden even if their template parameter lists
or return types differ from the "overriding" declaration.
Propagate using shadow declarations around more effectively when looking up
template-ids. Reperform lookup for template-ids in member expressions so that
access control is properly set up.
Fix some number of latent bugs involving template-ids with totally invalid
base types. You can only actually get these with a scope specifier, since
otherwise the template-id won't parse as a template-id.
Fixes PR7384.
llvm-svn: 106093