The `{HeaderSearch,Preprocessor}::LookupFile()` functions take an out-parameter `const DirectoryLookup *&`. Most callers end up creating a `const DirectoryLookup *` variable that's otherwise unused.
This patch changes the out-parameter from reference to a pointer, making it possible to simply pass `nullptr` to the function without the ceremony.
Reviewed By: ahoppen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117312
This patch refactors the code that checks whether a file has just been included for the first time.
The `HeaderSearch::FirstTimeLexingFile` function is removed and the information is threaded to the original call site from `HeaderSearch::ShouldEnterIncludeFile`. This will make it possible to avoid tracking the number of includes in a follow up patch.
Depends on D114092.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114093
Some time back I extended GCC's '# NNN' line marker semantics.
Specifically popping to a blank filename will restore the filename to
that of the popped-to include. Restore to line 5 of including file
(escaped BOL #'s to avoid git eliding them):
\# 5 "" 2
Added documentation for this line control extension.
This was useful in developing modules tests, but turned out to also be
useful with machine-generated source code. Specifically, a generated
include file that itself includes fragments from elsewhere. The
ability to pop to the generated include file -- with its full path
prefix -- is useful for diagnostic & debug purposes. For instance
something like:
// Machine generated -- DO NOT EDIT
Type Var = {
\# 7 "encoded.dsl" 1 // push to snippet-container
{snippet, of, code}
\# 6 " 2 // Restore to machined-generated source
,
};
// user-code
...
\#include "dsl.h"
...
That pop to "" will restore the filename to '..includepath../dsl.h',
which is better than restoring to plain "dsl.h".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113425
Use the new sys::path::is_style_posix() and is_style_windows() in a few
places that need to detect the system's native path style.
In llvm/lib/Support/Path.cpp, this patch removes most uses of the
private `real_style()`, where is_style_posix() and is_style_windows()
are just a little tidier.
Elsewhere, this removes `_WIN32` macro checks. Added a FIXME to a
FileManagerTest that seemed fishy, but maintained the existing
behaviour.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112289
This patch propagates the import `SourceLocation` into `HeaderSearch::lookupModule`. This enables remarks on search path usage (implemented in D102923) to point to the source code that initiated header search.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111557
Also do not warn on `#define _foo` or `#undef _foo`.
Only global scope names starting with _[a-z] are reserved, not the use
of such an identifier in any other context.
This patch adds a new preprocessor extension ``#pragma clang final``
which enables warning on undefinition and re-definition of macros.
The intent of this warning is to extend beyond ``-Wmacro-redefined`` to
warn against any and all alterations to macros that are marked `final`.
This warning is part of the ``-Wpedantic-macros`` diagnostics group.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108567
This patch adds `#pragma clang deprecated` to enable deprecation of
preprocessor macros.
The macro must be defined before `#pragma clang deprecated`. When
deprecating a macro a custom message may be optionally provided.
Warnings are emitted at the use site of a deprecated macro, and can be
controlled via the `-Wdeprecated` warning group.
This patch takes some rough inspiration and a few lines of code from
https://reviews.llvm.org/D67935.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106732
> `#pragma clang include_instead(<header>)` is a pragma that can be used
> by system headers (and only system headers) to indicate to a tool that
> the file containing said pragma is an implementation-detail header and
> should not be directly included by user code.
>
> The library alternative is very messy code that can be seen in the first
> diff of D106124, and we'd rather avoid that with something more
> universal.
>
> This patch takes the first step by warning a user when they include a
> detail header in their code, and suggests alternative headers that the
> user should include instead. Future work will involve adding a fixit to
> automate the process, as well as cleaning up modules diagnostics to not
> suggest said detail headers. Other tools, such as clangd can also take
> advantage of this pragma to add the correct user headers.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106394
This caused compiler crashes in Chromium builds involving PCH and an include
directive with macro expansion, when Token::getLiteralData() returned null. See
the code review for details.
This reverts commit e8a64e5491.
`#pragma clang include_instead(<header>)` is a pragma that can be used
by system headers (and only system headers) to indicate to a tool that
the file containing said pragma is an implementation-detail header and
should not be directly included by user code.
The library alternative is very messy code that can be seen in the first
diff of D106124, and we'd rather avoid that with something more
universal.
This patch takes the first step by warning a user when they include a
detail header in their code, and suggests alternative headers that the
user should include instead. Future work will involve adding a fixit to
automate the process, as well as cleaning up modules diagnostics to not
suggest said detail headers. Other tools, such as clangd can also take
advantage of this pragma to add the correct user headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106394
C++23 will make these conversions ambiguous - so fix them to make the
codebase forward-compatible with C++23 (& a follow-up change I've made
will make this ambiguous/invalid even in <C++23 so we don't regress
this & it generally improves the code anyway)
This is mostly a mechanical change, but a testcase that contains
parts of the StringRef class (clang/test/Analysis/llvm-conventions.cpp)
isn't touched.
When applying the changes in 8edd3464af,
it seems that this bit got merged incorrectly and no test coverage
caught the issue. This fixes the diagnostic and adds a test.
WG14 adopted N2645 and WG21 EWG has accepted P2334 in principle (still
subject to full EWG vote + CWG review + plenary vote), which add
support for #elifdef as shorthand for #elif defined and #elifndef as
shorthand for #elif !defined. This patch adds support for the new
preprocessor directives.
Somewhat surprisingly, signature help is emitted as a side-effect of
computing the expected type of a function argument.
The reason is that both actions require enumerating the possible
function signatures and running partial overload resolution, and doing
this twice would be wasteful and complicated.
Change #1: document this, it's subtle :-)
However, sometimes we need to compute the expected type without having
reached the code completion cursor yet - in particular to allow
completion of designators.
eb4ab3358c did this but introduced a
regression - it emits signature help in the wrong location as a side-effect.
Change #2: only emit signature help if the code completion cursor was reached.
Currently there is PP.isCodeCompletionReached(), but we can't use it
because it's set *after* running code completion.
It'd be nice to set this implicitly when the completion token is lexed,
but ConsumeCodeCompletionToken() makes this complicated.
Change #3: call cutOffParsing() *first* when seeing a completion token.
After this, the fact that the Sema::Produce*SignatureHelp() functions
are even more confusing, as they only sometimes do that.
I don't want to rename them in this patch as it's another large
mechanical change, but we should soon.
Change #4: prepare to rename ProduceSignatureHelp() to GuessArgumentType() etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98488
Our diagnostics relating to static assertions were a bit confused. For
instance, when in MS compatibility mode in C (where we accept
static_assert even without including <assert.h>), we would fail
to warn the user that they were using the wrong spelling (even in
pedantic mode), we were missing a compatibility warning about using
_Static_assert in earlier standards modes, diagnostics for the optional
message were not reflected in C as they were in C++, etc.
More study has discovered this to not actually be useful: because
current C++20 implementations reject `#ifdef __VA_OPT__`, this can't
really be used as a feature-test mechanism. And it's not too hard to
detect __VA_OPT__ without this, for example:
#define THIRD_ARG(a, b, c, ...) c
#define HAS_VA_OPT(...) THIRD_ARG(__VA_OPT__(,), 1, 0, )
#if HAS_VA_OPT(?)
Partially reverts 0436ec2128.
These changes are intended to give code a path to move away from the GNU
,##__VA_ARGS__ extension, which is non-conforming in some situations and
which we'd like to disable in our conforming mode in those cases.
We determined that the MSVC implementation of std::aligned* isn't suited
to our needs. It doesn't support 16 byte alignment or higher, and it
doesn't really guarantee 8 byte alignment. See
https://github.com/microsoft/STL/issues/1533
Also reverts "ADT: Change AlignedCharArrayUnion to an alias of std::aligned_union_t, NFC"
Also reverts "ADT: Remove AlignedCharArrayUnion, NFC" to bring back
AlignedCharArrayUnion.
This reverts commit 4d8bf870a8.
This reverts commit d10f9863a5.
This reverts commit 4b5dc150b9.
Prepare to delete `AlignedCharArrayUnion` by migrating its users over to
`std::aligned_union_t`.
I will delete `AlignedCharArrayUnion` and its tests in a follow-up
commit so that it's easier to revert in isolation in case some
downstream wants to keep using it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92516
`SourceManager::isMainFile` does not use the filename, so it doesn't
need the full `FileEntryRef`; in fact, it's misleading to take the name
because that makes it look relevant. Simplify the API, and in the
process remove some calls to `FileEntryRef::FileEntryRef` in the unit
tests (which were blocking making that private to `SourceManager`).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89507
Update clang/lib/Lex to stop relying on a `MemoryBuffer*`, using the
`MemoryBufferRef` from `getBufferOrNone` since both locations had logic
for checking validity of the buffer. There's potentially a functionality
change, since the logic was wrong (it checked for `nullptr`, which was
never returned by the old API), but if that was reachable the new
behaviour should be better.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89402
This is a prep patch for changing SourceManager to return
`Optional<MemoryBufferRef>` instead of `MemoryBuffer`. With that change the
address of the MemoryBuffer will be gone, so instead use the start of the
buffer as the key for this map.
No functionality change intended, as it's expected that the pointer identity
matches between the buffers and the buffer data.
Radar-Id: rdar://70139990
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89136
The commit 3c28a2dc6b introduced the check that checks if we're
trying to re-enter a main file when building a preamble. Unfortunately this slowed down the preamble
compilation by 80-90% in some test cases, as translateFile is really slow. This change checks
to see if the FileEntry is the main file without calling translateFile, but by using the new
isMainFile check instead. This speeds up preamble building by 1.5-2x for certain test cases that we have.
rdar://59361291
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79834
D52774 fixed a bug with typo correction of includes, but didn't add
a test.
D65907 then broke recovery of typo correction of includes again,
because it extracted the code that writes to Filename to a separate
function that took the parameter not by reference.
Fix that, and also don't repeat the slash normalization computation
and fix both lookup and regular file name after recovery.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79595
See PR45812 for motivation.
No explicit test since I couldn't figure out how to get the
current disk drive in lower case into a form in lit where I could
mkdir it and cd to it. But the change does have test coverage in
that I can remove the case normalization in lit, and tests failed
on several bots (and for me locally if in a pwd with a lower-case
drive) without that normalization prior to this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79531
The approach in D30000 assumes that the '/' returned by path::begin()
is the first element for absolute paths, but that's not true on
Windows.
Also, on Windows backslashes in include lines often end up escaped
so that there are two of them. Having backslashes in include lines
is undefined behavior in most cases and implementation-defined
behavior in C++20, but since clang treats it as normal repeated
path separators, the diagnostic should too.
Unbreaks -Wnonportable-include-path for absolute paths on Windows,
and unbreaks it on non-Windows in the case of absolute paths with
repeated directory separators.
This affects e.g. the `#include __FILE__` technique if the file
passed to clang has the wrong case for the drive letter. Before:
C:\src\llvm-project>bin\clang-cl.exe c:\src\llvm-project\test.cc
c:\\src\\llvm-project\\test.cc(4,10): warning: non-portable path to file
'"c\\srccllvm-projectctest.cc.'; specified path differs in case from
file name on disk [-Wnonportable-include-path]
^
Now:
C:\src\llvm-project> out\gn\bin\clang-cl c:\src\llvm-project\test.cc
c:\\src\\llvm-project\\test.cc(4,10): warning: non-portable path to file
'"C:\\src\\llvm-project\\test.cc"'; specified path differs in case from
file name on disk [-Wnonportable-include-path]
^
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79223
Fix a few bugs where we would fail to properly determine header to
module correspondence when determining whether to suggest a #include or
import, and suggest a #include more often in language modes where there
is no import syntax. Generally, if the target is in a header with
include guards or #pragma once, we should suggest either #including or
importing that header, and not importing a module that happens to
textually include it.
In passing, improve the notes we attach to the corresponding
diagnostics: calling an entity that we couldn't see "previous" is
confusing.
If a PCH is used for compilation, SourceManager::isInMainFile()
returns true even for the "<built-in>" predefines area. Using -D
only for the TU compilation may trigger -Wunused-macros for it.
It is admitedly a bit fishy to set a macro only for a TU and not
for the PCH, but this works fine if the PCH does not use the macro
(I couldn't find a statement on this for Clang, but GCC explicitly
allows this in the docs).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73846
Summary:
This is guaranteed to be a no-op without the preamble, so should be a
no-op with it too.
Partially fixes https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/337
This doesn't yet work for #ifndef guards, which are not recognized in preambles.
see D78038
I can't for the life of me work out how to test this outside clangd.
The original reentrant preamble diagnostic was untested, I added a test
to clangd for that too.
Reviewers: kadircet
Subscribers: ilya-biryukov, jkorous, arphaman, usaxena95, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78366
Summary:
As discussed in http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-October/063459.html
the overflow of the souce locations (limited to 2^31 chars) can generate all sorts of
weird things (bogus warnings, hangs, crashes, miscompilation and correct compilation).
In debug mode this assert would fail. So it might be a good start, as in PR42301,
to detect the failure and exit with a proper error message.
Reviewers: rsmith, thakis, miyuki
Reviewed By: miyuki
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70183
Summary:
Before this patch adding a new /D flag when compiling a source file that consumed a PCH with clang-cl would issue a diagnostic and then fail. With the patch, the diagnostic is still issued but the definition is accepted. This matches the msvc behavior. The fuzzy-pch-msvc.c is a clone of the existing fuzzy-pch.c tests with some msvc specific rework.
msvc diagnostic:
warning C4605: '/DBAR=int' specified on current command line, but was not specified when precompiled header was built
Output of the CHECK-BAR test prior to the code change:
<built-in>(1,9): warning: definition of macro 'BAR' does not match definition in precompiled header [-Wclang-cl-pch]
#define BAR int
^
D:\repos\llvm\llvm-project\clang\test\PCH\fuzzy-pch-msvc.c(12,1): error: unknown type name 'BAR'
BAR bar = 17;
^
D:\repos\llvm\llvm-project\clang\test\PCH\fuzzy-pch-msvc.c(23,4): error: BAR was not defined
# error BAR was not defined
^
1 warning and 2 errors generated.
Reviewers: rnk, thakis, hans, zturner
Subscribers: mikerice, aganea, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72405
This include search logic has an extra parameter to deal with Windows
includes with backslashes, which get normalized to forward slashes on
non-Windows under -fms-compatibility.
Hoist the conditional operator out of LookupHeaderIncludeOrImport and
pass the result in instead of repeating the ?: expression everywhere.
llvm-svn: 372926
-frewrite-includes calls PP.SetMacroExpansionOnlyInDirectives() to avoid
macro expansions that are useless in that mode, but this can lead
to -Wunused-macros false positives. As -frewrite-includes does not emit
normal warnings, block -Wunused-macros too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65371
llvm-svn: 372026
In order to enable future improvements to our attribute diagnostics,
this moves info from ParsedAttr into CommonAttributeInfo, then makes
this type the base of the *Attr and ParsedAttr types. Quite a bit of
refactoring took place, including removing a bunch of redundant Spelling
Index propogation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67368
llvm-svn: 371875
This commit adds an optimization to clang-scan-deps and clang's preprocessor that skips excluded preprocessor
blocks by bumping the lexer pointer, and not lexing the tokens until reaching appropriate #else/#endif directive.
The skip positions and lexer offsets are computed when the file is minimized, directly from the minimized tokens.
On an 18-core iMacPro with macOS Catalina Beta I got 10-15% speed-up from this optimization when running clang-scan-deps on
the compilation database for a recent LLVM and Clang (3511 files).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67127
llvm-svn: 371656