In C, enum constants have the type of the enum's underlying integer type,
rather than the type of the enum. (This is not true in C++.) Thus, when a
block's return type is inferred from an enum constant, it is incompatible
with expressions that return the enum type.
In r158899, I told block returns to pretend that enum constants have enum
type, like in C++. Doug Gregor pointed out that this can break existing code.
Now, we don't check the types of return statements until the end of the block.
This lets us go back and add implicit casts in blocks with mixed enum
constants and enum-typed expressions.
<rdar://problem/11662489> (again)
llvm-svn: 159591
In C, enum constants have the type of the enum's underlying integer type,
rather than the type of the enum. (This is not true in C++.) This leads to
odd warnings when returning enum constants directly in blocks with inferred
return types. The easiest way out of this is to pretend that, like C++, enum
constants have enum type when being returned from a block.
<rdar://problem/11662489>
llvm-svn: 158899
error was asserting on anything that included Windows.h. MS-style inline asm is
still dropped, but at least now we're not completely silent about it.
llvm-svn: 158833
In addition, I've made the pointer and reference typedef 'void' rather than T*
just so they can't get misused. I would've omitted them entirely but
std::distance likes them to be there even if it doesn't use them.
This rolls back r155808 and r155869.
Review by Doug Gregor incorporating feedback from Chandler Carruth.
llvm-svn: 158104
@throw expression; l2r conversion can introduce new cleanups
in certain cases, like when the expression is an ObjC property
reference of retainable type in ARC.
llvm-svn: 156425
Sema::ConvertToIntegralOrEnumerationType() from PartialDiagnostics to
abstract "diagnoser" classes. Not much of a win here, but we're
-several PartialDiagnostics.
llvm-svn: 156217
off PartialDiagnostic. PartialDiagnostic is rather heavyweight for
something that is in the critical path and is rarely used. So, switch
over to an abstract-class-based callback mechanism that delays most of
the work until a diagnostic is actually produced. Good for ~11k code
size reduction in the compiler and 1% speedup in -fsyntax-only on the
code in <rdar://problem/11004361>.
llvm-svn: 156176
filter_decl_iterator had a weird mismatch where both op* and op-> returned T*
making it difficult to generalize this filtering behavior into a reusable
library of any kind.
This change errs on the side of value, making op-> return T* and op* return
T&.
(reviewed by Richard Smith)
llvm-svn: 155808
attached. Since we do not support any attributes which appertain to a statement
(yet), testing of this is necessarily quite minimal.
Patch by Alexander Kornienko!
llvm-svn: 154723
NSNumber, and boolean literals. This includes both Sema and Codegen support.
Included is also support for new Objective-C container subscripting.
My apologies for the large patch. It was very difficult to break apart.
The patch introduces changes to the driver as well to cause clang to link
in additional runtime support when needed to support the new language features.
Docs are forthcoming to document the implementation and behavior of these features.
llvm-svn: 152137
* if, switch, range-based for: warn if semicolon is on the same line.
* for, while: warn if semicolon is on the same line and either next
statement is compound statement or next statement has more
indentation.
Replacing the semicolon with {} or moving the semicolon to the next
line will always silence the warning.
Tests from SemaCXX/if-empty-body.cpp merged into SemaCXX/warn-empty-body.cpp.
llvm-svn: 150515
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
array new expression. This lays some groundwork for the implicit conversion to
integral or unscoped enumeration which C++11 ICEs undergo.
llvm-svn: 149772
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
Clang previously implemented -Wswitch-enum the same as -Wswitch. This patch
corrects the behavior to match GCC's. The critical/only difference being that
-Wswitch-enum is not silenced by the presence of a default case in the switch.
llvm-svn: 148679
For consistency with GCC & reasonable sanity. The FIXME suggests that the
original author was perhaps using the default check for some other purpose,
not realizing the more obvious limitation/false-negatives it creates, but this
doesn't seem to produce any regressions & fixes the included test.
llvm-svn: 148649
This warning acts as the complement to the main -Wswitch-enum warning (which
warns whenever a switch over enum without a default doesn't cover all values of
the enum) & has been an an-doc coding convention in LLVM and Clang in my
experience. The purpose is to ensure there's never a "dead" default in a
switch-over-enum because this would hide future -Wswitch-enum errors.
The name warning has a separate flag name so it can be disabled but it's grouped
under -Wswitch-enum & is on-by-default because of this.
The existing violations of this rule in test cases have had the warning disabled
& I've added a specific test for the new behavior (many negative cases already
exist in the same test file - and none regressed - so I didn't add more).
Reviewed by Ted Kremenek ( http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20120116/051690.html )
llvm-svn: 148640
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
Objective-C classes. This has two purposes: to consistently provide
"forward declaration here" notes when we hit an incomplete type, and
to give LLDB a chance to complete the type.
RequireCompleteType bits from Sean Callanan!
llvm-svn: 144573
property references to use a new PseudoObjectExpr
expression which pairs a syntactic form of the expression
with a set of semantic expressions implementing it.
This should significantly reduce the complexity required
elsewhere in the compiler to deal with these kinds of
expressions (e.g. IR generation's special l-value kind,
the static analyzer's Message abstraction), at the lower
cost of specifically dealing with the odd AST structure
of these expressions. It should also greatly simplify
efforts to implement similar language features in the
future, most notably Managed C++'s properties and indexed
properties.
Most of the effort here is in dealing with the various
clients of the AST. I've gone ahead and simplified the
ObjC rewriter's use of properties; other clients, like
IR-gen and the static analyzer, have all the old
complexity *and* all the new complexity, at least
temporarily. Many thanks to Ted for writing and advising
on the necessary changes to the static analyzer.
I've xfailed a small diagnostics regression in the static
analyzer at Ted's request.
llvm-svn: 143867
implicitly perform an lvalue-to-rvalue conversion if used on an lvalue
expression. Also improve the documentation of Expr::Evaluate* to indicate which
of them will accept expressions with side-effects.
llvm-svn: 143263
rvalue. An assertion to catch this is in ImpCastExprToType will follow, but
vector operations currently trip over this (due to omitting the usual arithmetic
conversions). Also add an assert to catch missing lvalue-to-rvalue conversions
on the LHS of ->.
llvm-svn: 143155
expressions: expressions which refer to a logical rather
than a physical l-value, where the logical object is
actually accessed via custom getter/setter code.
A subsequent patch will generalize the AST for these
so that arbitrary "implementing" sub-expressions can
be provided.
Right now the only client is ObjC properties, but
this should be generalizable to similar language
features, e.g. Managed C++'s __property methods.
llvm-svn: 142914
statements. As noted in the documentation for the AST node, the
semantics of __if_exists/__if_not_exists are somewhat different from
the way Visual C++ implements them, because our parsed-template
representation can't accommodate VC++ semantics without serious
contortions. Hopefully this implementation is "good enough".
llvm-svn: 142901
- Remodel Expr::EvaluateAsInt to behave like the other EvaluateAs* functions,
and add Expr::EvaluateKnownConstInt to capture the current fold-or-assert
behaviour.
- Factor out evaluation of bitfield bit widths.
- Fix a few places which would evaluate an expression twice: once to determine
whether it is a constant expression, then again to get the value.
llvm-svn: 141561
builtin types (When requested). This is another step toward making
ASTUnit build the ASTContext as needed when loading an AST file,
rather than doing so after the fact. No actual functionality change (yet).
llvm-svn: 138985
-Wunused was a mistake. It resulted in duplicate warnings and lots of
other hacks. Instead, this should be a special sub-category to
-Wunused-value, much like -Wunused-result is.
Moved to -Wunused-comparison, moved the implementation to piggy back on
the -Wunused-value implementation instead of rolling its own, different
mechanism for catching all of the "interesting" statements.
I like the unused-value mechanism for this better, but its currently
missing several top-level statements. For now, I've FIXME-ed out those
test cases. I'll enhance the generic infrastructure to catch these
statements in a subsequent patch.
This patch also removes the cast-to-void fixit hint. This hint isn't
available on any of the other -Wunused-value diagnostics, and if we want
it to be, we should add it generically rather than in one specific case.
llvm-svn: 137822
code is very likely to be buggy, but its going to require more
significant changes on the part of the user to correct it in this case.
llvm-svn: 137820
a complement to the warnings we provide in condition expressions. Much
like we warn on conditions such as:
int x, y;
...
if (x = y) ... // Almost always a typo of '=='
This warning applies the complementary logic to "top-level" statements,
or statements whose value is not consumed or used in some way:
int x, y;
...
x == y; // Almost always a type for '='
We also mirror the '!=' vs. '|=' logic.
The warning is designed to fire even for overloaded operators for two reasons:
1) Especially in the presence of widespread templates that assume
operator== and operator!= perform the expected comparison operations,
it seems unreasonable to suppress warnings on the offchance that
a user has written a class that abuses these operators, embedding
side-effects or other magic within them.
2) There is a trivial source modification to silence the warning for
truly exceptional cases:
(void)(x == y); // No warning
A (greatly reduced) form of this warning has already caught a number of
bugs in our codebase, so there is precedent for it actually firing. That
said, its currently off by default, but enabled under -Wall.
There are several fixmes left here that I'm working on in follow-up
patches, including de-duplicating warnings from -Wunused, sharing code
with -Wunused's implementation (and creating a nice place to hook
diagnostics on "top-level" statements), and handling cases where a proxy
object with a bool conversion is returned, hiding the operation in the
cleanup AST nodes.
Suggestions for any of this code more than welcome. Also, I'd really
love suggestions for better naming than "top-level".
llvm-svn: 137819
ActOnStartOfSwitchStmt (i.e. before binding up a full-expression)
instead of ActOnFinishSwitchStmt.
Among other things, this means that property l-values are properly
converted inside the full-expression.
llvm-svn: 137014
for-in statements; specifically, make sure to close over any
temporaries or cleanups it might require. In ARC, this has
implications for the lifetime of the collection, so emit it
with a retain and release it upon exit from the loop.
rdar://problem/9817306
llvm-svn: 136204
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
they should still be officially __strong for the purposes of errors,
block capture, etc. Make a new bit on variables, isARCPseudoStrong(),
and set this for 'self' and these enumeration-loop variables. Change
the code that was looking for the old patterns to look for this bit,
and change IR generation to find this bit and treat the resulting
variable as __unsafe_unretained for the purposes of init/destroy in
the two places it can come up.
llvm-svn: 133243
Language-design credit goes to a lot of people, but I particularly want
to single out Blaine Garst and Patrick Beard for their contributions.
Compiler implementation credit goes to Argyrios, Doug, Fariborz, and myself,
in no particular order.
llvm-svn: 133103
Related result types apply Cocoa conventions to the type of message
sends and property accesses to Objective-C methods that are known to
always return objects whose type is the same as the type of the
receiving class (or a subclass thereof), such as +alloc and
-init. This tightens up static type safety for Objective-C, so that we
now diagnose mistakes like this:
t.m:4:10: warning: incompatible pointer types initializing 'NSSet *'
with an
expression of type 'NSArray *' [-Wincompatible-pointer-types]
NSSet *array = [[NSArray alloc] init];
^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/System/Library/Frameworks/Foundation.framework/Headers/NSObject.h:72:1:
note:
instance method 'init' is assumed to return an instance of its
receiver
type ('NSArray *')
- (id)init;
^
It also means that we get decent type inference when writing code in
Objective-C++0x:
auto array = [[NSMutableArray alloc] initWithObjects:@"one", @"two",nil];
// ^ now infers NSMutableArray* rather than id
llvm-svn: 132868
return <expression> ;
in blocks with a 'void' result type, so long as <expression> has type
'void'. This follows the rules for C++ functions.
llvm-svn: 132658
with a type-dependent expression, infer the placeholder type
'Context.DependentTy' to indicate that this is just a
placeholder. Fixes PR9982 / <rdar://problem/9486685>.
llvm-svn: 132657
Type::isUnsignedIntegerOrEnumerationType(), which are like
Type::isSignedIntegerType() and Type::isUnsignedIntegerType() but also
consider the underlying type of a C++0x scoped enumeration type.
Audited all callers to the existing functions, switching those that
need to also handle scoped enumeration types (e.g., those that deal
with constant values) over to the new functions. Fixes PR9923 /
<rdar://problem/9447851>.
llvm-svn: 131735
Changed the integer type that range-based for-loops used. Switched to pointer difference type, which satisfies the new assert in IntegerLiteral.
llvm-svn: 130739
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
This patch authored by Eric Niebler.
Many methods on the Sema class (e.g. ConvertPropertyForRValue) take Expr
pointers as in/out parameters (Expr *&). This is especially true for the
routines that apply implicit conversions to nodes in-place. This design is
workable only as long as those conversions cannot fail. If they are allowed
to fail, they need a way to report their failures. The typical way of doing
this in clang is to use an ExprResult, which has an extra bit to signal a
valid/invalid state. Returning ExprResult is de riguour elsewhere in the Sema
interface. We suggest changing the Expr *& parameters in the Sema interface
to ExprResult &. This increases interface consistency and maintainability.
This interface change is important for work supporting MS-style C++
properties. For reasons explained here
<http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-dev/2011-February/013180.html>,
seemingly trivial operations like rvalue/lvalue conversions that formerly
could not fail now can. (The reason is that given the semantics of the
feature, getter/setter method lookup cannot happen until the point of use, at
which point it may be found that the method does not exist, or it may have the
wrong type, or overload resolution may fail, or it may be inaccessible.)
llvm-svn: 129143
C++ exceptions, even when exceptions have been turned off using -fno-exceptions.
Make the -fobjc-exceptions flag do the same thing, but for Objective-C exceptions.
C++ and Objective-C exceptions can also be disabled using -fno-cxx-excptions and
-fno-objc-exceptions.
llvm-svn: 126630
diagnostics that occur in unreachable code (e.g., -Warray-bound).
We only pay the cost of doing the reachability analysis when we issue one of these diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 126290
When the mismatch is due to a larger input operand that is
a constant, truncate it down to the size of the output. This
allows us to accept some cases in the linux kernel and elsewhere.
Pedantically speaking, we generate different code than GCC, though
I can't imagine how it would matter:
Clang:
movb $-1, %al
frob %al
GCC:
movl $255, %eax
frob %al
llvm-svn: 126148
appropriate attribute. Add a bit more testing that finds a pretty bad
regression (since ~forever) in this warning. Fix it with a nice 2 line
change. =]
llvm-svn: 126098
making them be template instantiated in a more normal way and
make them handle attributes like other decls.
This fixes the used/unused label handling stuff, making it use
the same infrastructure as other decls.
llvm-svn: 125771
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
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
NRVO candidate for a return statement, to
Sema::getCopyElisionCandidate(), and teach it enough to also determine
the NRVO candidate for a throw expression. We still don't use the
latter information, however.
Along the way, implement core issue 1148, which eliminates copy
elision from catch parameters and clarifies that copy elision cannot
occur from function parameters (which we already implemented).
llvm-svn: 123982
the declaration-specifiers and on the declarator itself are moved
to the appropriate declarator chunk. This permits a greatly
simplified model for how to apply these attributes, as well as
allowing a much more efficient query for the GC attribute.
Now all qualifier queries follow the same basic strategy of
"local qualifiers, local qualifiers on the canonical type,
then look through arrays". This can be easily optimized by
changing the canonical qualified-array-type representation.
Do not process type attributes as decl attributes on declarations
with declarators.
When computing the type of a block, synthesize a prototype
function declarator chunk if the decl-spec type was not a
function. This simplifies the logic for building block signatures.
Change the logic which inserts an objc_read_weak on a block
literal to only fire if the block has a __weak __block variable,
rather than if the return type of the block is __weak qualified,
which is not actually a sensible thing to ask.
llvm-svn: 122871
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
space better. Remove this reference. To make that work, change some APIs
(most importantly, getDesugaredType()) to take an ASTContext& if they
need to return a QualType. Simultaneously, diminish the need to return a
QualType by introducing some useful APIs on SplitQualType, which is
just a std::pair<const Type *, Qualifiers>.
llvm-svn: 121478
zextOrTrunc(), and APSInt methods extend(), extOrTrunc() and new method
trunc(), to be const and to return a new value instead of modifying the
object in place.
llvm-svn: 121121
not actually frequently used, because ImpCastExprToType only creates a node
if the types differ. So explicitly create an ICE in the lvalue-to-rvalue
conversion code in DefaultFunctionArrayLvalueConversion() as well as several
other new places, and consistently deal with the consequences throughout the
compiler.
In addition, introduce a new cast kind for loading an ObjCProperty l-value,
and make sure we emit those nodes whenever an ObjCProperty l-value appears
that's not on the LHS of an assignment operator.
This breaks a couple of rewriter tests, which I've x-failed until future
development occurs on the rewriter.
Ted Kremenek kindly contributed the analyzer workarounds in this patch.
llvm-svn: 120890
and use a better and more general approach, where NullStmt has a flag to indicate whether it was preceded by an empty macro.
Thanks to Abramo Bagnara for the hint!
llvm-svn: 119887
using new/delete and OwningPtrs. After memory profiling Clang, I witnessed periodic leaks of these
objects; digging deeper into the code, it was clear that our management of these objects was a mess. The ownership rules were murky at best, and not always followed. Worse, there are plenty of error paths where we could screw up.
This patch introduces AttributeList::Factory, which is a factory class that creates AttributeList
objects and then blows them away all at once. While conceptually simple, most of the changes in
this patch just have to do with migrating over to the new interface. Most of the changes have resulted in some nice simplifications.
This new strategy currently holds on to all AttributeList objects during the lifetime of the Parser
object. This is easily tunable. If we desire to have more bound the lifetime of AttributeList
objects more precisely, we can have the AttributeList::Factory object (in Parser) push/pop its
underlying allocator as we enter/leave key methods in the Parser. This means that we get
simple memory management while still having the ability to finely control memory use if necessary.
Note that because AttributeList objects are now BumpPtrAllocated, we may reduce malloc() traffic
in many large files with attributes.
This fixes the leak reported in: <rdar://problem/8650003>
llvm-svn: 118675
a helper function (AdjustAPSInt) and use that
for adjusting the high bounds of case ranges
before APSInt comparisons. Fixes
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=8135
Some minor refacorings while I am here.
llvm-svn: 115355
covered by individual case statements. Flow-based analyses may wish to consult this information,
and recording this in the AST allows us to obviate reconstructing this information later when
we build the CFG.
llvm-svn: 113447
should probably be removed if it has no purpose, but I just #if'd it out
in case it's usefulIdempotentOperationChecker::isTruncationExtensionAssignment
should probably be removed if it has no purpose, but I just #if'd it out
in case it's useful
llvm-svn: 112949
a switch or goto somewhere in the function. Indirect gotos trigger the
jump-checker regardless, because the conditions there are slightly more
elaborate and it's too marginal a case to be worth optimizing.
Turns off the jump-checker in a lot of cases in C++. rdar://problem/7702918
llvm-svn: 109962
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
type to an integral or enumeration type in the size of an array new
expression, e.g.,
new int[ConvertibleToInt(10)];
This is a GNU and C++0x extension.
llvm-svn: 107229
have integral or enumeration type, so that we still check the contents
of the switch body. My previous patch made this worse; now we're back
to where we were previously.
llvm-svn: 107223
enumeration type out into a separate, reusable routine. The only
functionality change here is that we recover a little more
aggressively from ill-formed switch conditions.
llvm-svn: 107222
types, updating callers of both isFloatingType() and
isRealFloatingType() accordingly. Caught at least one issue where we
allowed one to declare a vector of vectors (!), along with cleaning up
the standard-conversion logic for C++.
llvm-svn: 106595
if/while/switch/for statements to ensure that walking the children of
these statements actually works. Previously, we stored the condition
variable as a VarDecl. However, StmtIterator isn't able to walk from a
VarDecl to a set of statements, and would (in some circumstances) walk
beyond the end of the list of statements, cause Bad Behavior.
In this change, we've gone back to representing the condition
variables as DeclStmts. While not as memory-efficient as VarDecls, it
greatly simplifies iteration over the children.
Fixes the remainder of <rdar://problem/8104754>.
llvm-svn: 106504
in C++ that involve both integral and enumeration types. Convert all
of the callers to Type::isIntegralType() that are meant to work with
both integral and enumeration types over to
Type::isIntegralOrEnumerationType(), to prepare to eliminate
enumeration types as integral types.
llvm-svn: 106071
ObjCObjectType, which is basically just a pair of
one of {primitive-id, primitive-Class, user-defined @class}
with
a list of protocols.
An ObjCObjectPointerType is therefore just a pointer which always points to
one of these types (possibly sugared). ObjCInterfaceType is now just a kind
of ObjCObjectType which happens to not carry any protocols.
Alter a rather large number of use sites to use ObjCObjectType instead of
ObjCInterfaceType. Store an ObjCInterfaceType as a pointer on the decl rather
than hashing them in a FoldingSet. Remove some number of methods that are no
longer used, at least after this patch.
By simplifying ObjCObjectPointerType, we are now able to easily remove and apply
pointers to Objective-C types, which is crucial for a certain kind of ObjC++
metaprogramming common in WebKit.
llvm-svn: 103870
return statements. We perform NRVO only when all of the return
statements in the function return the same variable. Fixes some link
failures in Boost.Interprocess (which is relying on NRVO), and
probably improves performance for some C++ applications.
llvm-svn: 103867
return value optimization. Sema marks return statements with their
NRVO candidates (which may or may not end up using the NRVO), then, at
the end of a function body, computes and marks those variables that
can be allocated into the return slot.
I've checked this locally with some debugging statements (not
committed), but there won't be any tests until CodeGen comes along.
llvm-svn: 103865
"return" statement and mark the corresponding CXXConstructExpr as
elidable. Teach CodeGen that eliding a temporary is different from
eliding an object construction.
This is just a baby step toward NRVO.
llvm-svn: 103849
if/switch/while/do/for statements. Previously, we would end up either:
(1) Forgetting to destroy temporaries created in the condition (!),
(2) Destroying the temporaries created in the condition *before*
converting the condition to a boolean value (or, in the case of a
switch statement, to an integral or enumeral value), or
(3) In a for statement, destroying the condition's temporaries at
the end of the increment expression (!).
We now destroy temporaries in conditions at the right times. This
required some tweaking of the Parse/Sema interaction, since the parser
was building full expressions too early in many places.
Fixes PR7067.
llvm-svn: 103187
function-parameter checking and splitting it into the normal
ActOn*/Build* pair in Sema. We now use VarDecl to represent the @catch
parameter rather than the ill-fitting ParmVarDecl.
llvm-svn: 102347
statements. Instead of the @try having a single @catch, where all of
the @catch's were chained (using an O(n^2) algorithm nonetheless),
@try just holds an array of its @catch blocks. The resulting AST is
slightly more compact (not important) and better represents the actual
language semantics (good).
llvm-svn: 102221
input and output types when the smaller value isn't mentioned in the
asm string. Extend this support from integers to also allowing
fp values to be mismatched (if not mentioned in the asm string).
llvm-svn: 102188