1. We were hitting the NextIsPrevious assertion because we were trying
to merge decl chains that were independent of each other because we had
no Sema object to allow them to find existing decls. This is fixed by
delaying loading the "preloaded" decls until Sema is available.
2. We were trying to get identifier info from an annotation token, which
asserts. The fix is to special-case the module annotations in the
preprocessed output printer.
Fixed in a single commit because when you hit 1 you almost invariably
hit 2 as well.
llvm-svn: 217550
The warning warns on TypedefNameDecls -- typedefs and C++11 using aliases --
that are !isReferenced(). Since the isReferenced() bit on TypedefNameDecls
wasn't used for anything before this warning it wasn't always set correctly,
so this patch also adds a few missing MarkAnyDeclReferenced() calls in
various places for TypedefNameDecls.
This is made a bit complicated due to local typedefs possibly being used only
after their local scope has closed. Consider:
template <class T>
void template_fun(T t) {
typename T::Foo s3foo; // YYY
(void)s3foo;
}
void template_fun_user() {
struct Local {
typedef int Foo; // XXX
} p;
template_fun(p);
}
Here the typedef in XXX is only used at end-of-translation unit, when YYY in
template_fun() gets instantiated. To handle this, typedefs that are unused when
their scope exits are added to a set of potentially unused typedefs, and that
set gets checked at end-of-TU. Typedefs that are still unused at that point then
get warned on. There's also serialization code for this set, so that the
warning works with precompiled headers and modules. For modules, the warning
is emitted when the module is built, for precompiled headers each time the
header gets used.
Finally, consider a function using C++14 auto return types to return a local
type defined in a header:
auto f() {
struct S { typedef int a; };
return S();
}
Here, the typedef escapes its local scope and could be used by only some
translation units including the header. To not warn on this, add a
RecursiveASTVisitor that marks all delcs on local types returned from auto
functions as referenced. (Except if it's a function with internal linkage, or
the decls are private and the local type has no friends -- in these cases, it
_is_ safe to warn.)
Several of the included testcases (most of the interesting ones) were provided
by Richard Smith.
(gcc's spelling -Wunused-local-typedefs is supported as an alias for this
warning.)
llvm-svn: 217298
It seems (I guess) in ObjC that va_list is provided without the need for
inclusions. I verified that with this change the test still crashes in
the absence of the fix committed in r217275.
llvm-svn: 217290
This innocuous statement to get the identifier info for __va_list_tag
was causing an assertion failure:
NextIsPrevious() && "decl became non-canonical unexpectedly"
if the __va_list_tag identifier was found in a PCH in some
circumstances, because it was looked up before the ASTReader had a Sema
object to use to find existing decls to merge with.
We could possibly move getting the identifier info even later, or make
it lazy if we wanted to, but this seemed like the minimal change.
Now why a PCH would have this identifier in the first place is a bit
mysterious. This seems to be related to the global module index in some
way, because when the test case is built without the global module index
it will not emit an identifier for __va_list_tag into the PCH, but with
the global module index it does.
llvm-svn: 217275
determining whether a declaration is out of line, instead of assuming
that the semantic and lexical DeclContext will be the same declaration
whenever they're the same entity.
This fixes behavior of declarations within merged classes and enums.
llvm-svn: 217008
pattern of an alias template declaration. Use this to merge alias templates
properly when they're members of class template specializations.
llvm-svn: 216437
declarations. We can't expect to find them in the canonical definition
of the class, because that's not where they live.
This means we no longer reject real ODR violations with friend declarations,
but we weren't consistently doing so anyway.
llvm-svn: 216369
declared, rather than putting them into the template parameter scope. We
previously had *no record* in the scope for class template declarations, once
those declarations completed and their template parameter scopes were popped.
This in turn caused us to be unable to merge class template declarations that
were declared in the global scope (where we use scope lookup rather than
DeclContext lookup for merging), when loading a module.
llvm-svn: 216311
members from all redefinitions of a class that have them, in case the special
member is defined in one module but only declared in another.
llvm-svn: 215675
definitions (because some other declaration declares a special member that
isn't present in the canonical definition), we need to search *all* of them; we
can't just stop when we find the requested name in any of the definitions,
because that can fail to find things (and in particular, it can fail to find
the member of the canonical declaration and return a bogus ODR failure).
llvm-svn: 215612
recursively within the emission of another inline function. This ultimately
led to us emitting the same inline function definition twice, which we then
rejected because we believed we had a mangled name conflict.
llvm-svn: 215579
With modules we start accessing headers for the first time while reading
the module map, which often has very different paths from the include
scanning logic.
Using the name by which the file was accessed gets us one step closer to
the right solution, which is using a FileName abstraction that decouples
the name by which a file was accessed from the FileEntry.
llvm-svn: 215541
redefinitions of that namespace have already been loaded. When writing out the
names in a namespace, if we see a name that is locally declared and had
imported declarations merged on top of it, export the local declaration as the
lookup result, because it will be the most recent declaration of that entity in
the redeclaration chain of an importer of the module.
llvm-svn: 215518
We already verified the primary module map file (either the one that
defines the top-level module, or the one that allows inferring it if it
is an inferred framework module). Now we also verify any other module
map files that define submodules, such as when there is a
module.private.modulemap file.
llvm-svn: 215455
anyway. If -ast-dump *is* also provided, then dump the AST declarations as well
as the lookup results. This is invaluable for cross-correlating the lookup
information with the declarations actually found.
llvm-svn: 215393
one, perform the import if the types match even if the imported declaration is
hidden. Otherwise, NamedDecl::declarationReplaces will drop one of the name
lookup entries, making the typedef effectively inaccessible from one of the
modules that declared it.
llvm-svn: 215306
also emit the updated 'operator delete' looked up for that destructor. Switch
from UpdateDecl to an actual update record when this happens due to implicitly
defining a special member function and unify this code path and the one for
instantiating a function definition.
llvm-svn: 215132
Piping stderr into "count 0" in tests doesn't work - things like guard
malloc write to stderr and mess up the count. This comes up all the
time, so I've added a feature to FileCheck to fix it this time.
Fixes test failures caused by r215046 under guard malloc.
llvm-svn: 215129
intent when we added remark support, but was never implemented in the general
case, because the first -R flags didn't need it. (-Rpass= had special handling
to accomodate its argument.)
-Rno-foo, -Reverything, and -Rno-everything can be used to turn off a remark,
or to turn on or off all remarks. Per discussion on cfe-commits, -Weverything
does not affect remarks, and -Reverything does not affect warnings or errors.
The only "real" -R flag we have right now is -Rmodule-build; that flag is
effectively renamed from -Wmodule-build to -Rmodule-build by this change.
-Wpass and -Wno-pass (and their friends) are also renamed to -Rpass and
-Rno-pass by this change; it's not completely clear whether we intended to have
a -Rpass (with no =pattern), but that is unchanged by this commit, other than
the flag name. The default pattern is effectively one which matches no passes.
In future, we may want to make the default pattern be .*, so that -Reverything
works for -Rpass properly.
llvm-svn: 215046
they're somehow missing a body. Looks like this was left behind when the loop
was generalized, and it's not been problematic before because without modules,
a used, implicit special member function declaration must be a definition.
This was resulting in us trying to emit a constructor declaration rather than
a definition, and producing a constructor missing its member initializers.
llvm-svn: 214473
of a function has a resolved exception specification, then all declarations of
the function do.
We should probably improve the AST representation to make this implicit (perhaps
only store the exception specification on the canonical declaration), but this
fixes things for now.
The testcase for this (which used to assert) also exposes the actual bug I was
trying to reduce here: we sometimes fail to emit the body of an imported
special member function definition. Fix for that to follow.
llvm-svn: 214458
* Track override set across module load and save
* Track originating module to allow proper re-export of #undef
* Make override set properly transitive when it picks up a #undef
This fixes nearly all of the remaining macro issues with self-host.
llvm-svn: 213922
This flag specifies that we are building an implementation file of the
module <name>, preventing importing <name> as a module. This does not
consider this to be the 'current module' for the purposes of doing
modular checks like decluse or non-modular-include warnings, unlike
-fmodule-name.
This is needed as a stopgap until:
1) we can resolve relative includes to a VFS-mapped module (or can
safely import a header textually and as part of a module)
and ideally
2) we can safely do incremental rebuilding when implementation files
import submodules.
llvm-svn: 213767
thorough tests.
Original commit message:
[modules] Fix macro hiding bug exposed if:
* A submodule of module A is imported into module B
* Another submodule of module A that is not imported into B exports a macro
* Some submodule of module B also exports a definition of the macro, and
happens to be the first submodule of B that imports module A.
In this case, we would incorrectly determine that A's macro redefines B's
macro, and so we don't need to re-export B's macro at all.
This happens with the 'assert' macro in an LLVM self-host. =(
llvm-svn: 213416
This is breaking the system modules on Darwin, because something that
was defined and re-exported no longer is. Might be this patch, or might
just be a really poor interaction with an existing visibility bug.
This reverts commit r213348.
llvm-svn: 213395
Because references must be initialized using some evaluated expression, they
must point to something, and a callee can assume the reference parameter is
dereferenceable. Taking advantage of a new attribute just added to LLVM, mark
them as such.
Because dereferenceability in addrspace(0) implies nonnull in the backend, we
don't need both attributes. However, we need to know the size of the object to
use the dereferenceable attribute, so for incomplete types we still emit only
nonnull.
llvm-svn: 213386
* A submodule of module A is imported into module B
* Another submodule of module A that is not imported into B exports a macro
* Some submodule of module B also exports a definition of the macro, and
happens to be the first submodule of B that imports module A.
In this case, we would incorrectly determine that A's macro redefines B's
macro, and so we don't need to re-export B's macro at all.
This happens with the 'assert' macro in an LLVM self-host. =(
llvm-svn: 213348
The attempt in r212980 was broken because we might not fail if
LLVM_ON_UNIX is enabled for cross compiling to Windows, and it didn't
consider mingw either.
llvm-svn: 212989