used inside blocks. It fixes a crash in naming code
for __func__ etc. when used in a block declared globally.
It also brings back old naming convention for
predefined expression which was broken. rdar://18961148
llvm-svn: 222065
The most complex aspect of the convention is the handling of homogeneous
vector and floating point aggregates. Reuse the homogeneous aggregate
classification code that we use on PPC64 and ARM for this.
This convention also has a C mangling, and we apparently implement that
in both Clang and LLVM.
Reviewed By: majnemer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6063
llvm-svn: 221006
Mangling for blocks defined within blocks in an ObjectiveC context were also
broken by SVN r219393. Because the code in mangleName assumed that the code was
either C or C++, we would trigger assertions when trying to mangle the inner
blocks in an ObjectiveC context.
Add a test and use the ObjectiveC specific mangling when dealing with an
ObjectiveC method declaration.
llvm-svn: 219697
This addresses a regression introduced with SVN r219393. A block may be
contained within another block. In such a scenario, we would end up within a
BlockDecl, which is not a NamedDecl (as the names are synthesised). The cast to
a NamedDecl of the DeclContext would then assert as the types are unrelated.
Restore the mangling behaviour to that prior to SVN r219393. If the current
block is contained within a BlockDecl, walk up to the parent DeclContext,
recursively, until we have a non-BlockDecl. This is expected to be a NamedDecl.
Add in a couple of asserts to ensure that the assumption that we only encounter
a block within a NamedDecl or a BlockDecl.
llvm-svn: 219696
Fix a perennial source of confusion in the clang type system: Declarations and
function prototypes have parameters to which arguments are supplied, so calling
these 'arguments' was a stretch even in C mode, let alone C++ where default
arguments, templates and overloading make the distinction important to get
right.
Readability win across the board, especially in the casting, ADL and
overloading implementations which make a lot more sense at a glance now.
Will keep an eye on the builders and update dependent projects shortly.
No functional change.
llvm-svn: 199686
encodes the canonical rules for LLVM's style. I noticed this had drifted
quite a bit when cleaning up LLVM, so wanted to clean up Clang as well.
llvm-svn: 198686
This removes the dependency on the llvm mangler doing it for us. In isolation,
the benefit is that the testing of what mangling is applied is all in one place:
(C, C++) X (Itanium, Microsoft) are all handled by clang.
This also gives me hope that in the future the llvm mangler (and llvm-ar) will
not depend on TargetMachine.
llvm-svn: 192762
uncovered.
This required manually correcting all of the incorrect main-module
headers I could find, and running the new llvm/utils/sort_includes.py
script over the files.
I also manually added quite a few missing headers that were uncovered by
shuffling the order or moving headers up to be main-module-headers.
llvm-svn: 169237
literal helper functions. All helper functions (global
and locals) use block_invoke as their prefix. Local literal
helper names are prefixed by their enclosing mangled function
names. Blocks in non-local initializers (e.g. a global variable
or a C++11 field) are prefixed by their mangled variable name.
The descriminator number added to end of the name starts off
with blank (for first block) and _<N> (for the N+2-th block).
llvm-svn: 159206
process, perform a number of refactorings:
- Move MiscNameMangler member functions to MangleContext
- Remove GlobalDecl dependency from MangleContext
- Make MangleContext abstract and move Itanium/Microsoft functionality
to their own classes/files
- Implement ASTContext::createMangleContext and have CodeGen use it
No (intended) functionality change.
llvm-svn: 123386