lexer, add the token buffer underneath the caching lexer where possible and
push the tokens directly into the caching lexer otherwise. We previously
put the lexer into a corrupted state where we could not guarantee to provide
the tokens in the right order and would sometimes assert.
llvm-svn: 218333
Summary:
This fixes PR20023. In order to implement this scoping rule, we piggy
back on the existing LabelDecl machinery, by creating LabelDecl's that
will carry the "internal" name of the inline assembly label, which we
will rewrite the asm label to.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4589
llvm-svn: 218230
According to lore, we used to verifier-fail on:
void __thiscall f();
int main() { f(1); }
So that's fixed now. System headers use prototype-less __stdcall functions,
so make that a warning that's DefaultError -- then it fires on regular code
but is suppressed in system headers.
Since it's used in system headers, we have codegen tests for this; massage
them slightly so that they still compile.
llvm-svn: 218166
Summary:
Make DynTypedNode have the dynamic type of the object, instead of its static type.
Some optimizations that are in the works require that the nodes have the right type.
Reviewers: klimek
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5411
llvm-svn: 218127
They are added to adxintrin.h but outside __ADX__ block.
These intrinics generates adc and sbb correspondingly that were available before ADX
llvm-svn: 218118
warns when a guarded variable is passed by reference as a function argument.
This is released as a separate warning flag, because it could potentially
break existing code that uses thread safety analysis.
llvm-svn: 218087
r218053: Use exceptions() instead of getNumExceptions()/getExceptionType() to avoid
r218011: Work around MSVC parser bug by putting redundant braces around the body of
r217997: Skip parens when detecting whether we're instantiating a function declaration.
r217995: Instantiate exception specifications when instantiating function types (other
The Windows build was broken for 16 hours and no one had any good ideas of how to
fix it. Reverting for now to make the builders green. See the cfe-commits thread [1] for
more info.
This was the build error (from [2]):
C:\bb-win7\ninja-clang-i686-msc17-R\llvm-project\clang\lib\Sema\SemaTemplateInstantiate.cpp(1590) : error C2668: '`anonymous-namespace'::TemplateInstantiator::TransformFunctionProtoType' : ambiguous call to overloaded function
C:\bb-win7\ninja-clang-i686-msc17-R\llvm-project\clang\lib\Sema\SemaTemplateInstantiate.cpp(1313): could be 'clang::QualType `anonymous-namespace'::TemplateInstantiator::TransformFunctionProtoType<clang::Sema::SubstFunctionDeclType::<lambda_756edcbe7bd5c7584849a6e3a1491735>>(clang::TypeLocBuilder &,clang::FunctionProtoTypeLoc,clang::CXXRecordDecl *,unsigned int,Fn)'
with
[
Fn=clang::Sema::SubstFunctionDeclType::<lambda_756edcbe7bd5c7584849a6e3a1491735>
]
c:\bb-win7\ninja-clang-i686-msc17-r\llvm-project\clang\lib\sema\TreeTransform.h(4532): or 'clang::QualType clang::TreeTransform<Derived>::TransformFunctionProtoType<clang::Sema::SubstFunctionDeclType::<lambda_756edcbe7bd5c7584849a6e3a1491735>>(clang::TypeLocBuilder &,clang::FunctionProtoTypeLoc,clang::CXXRecordDecl *,unsigned int,Fn)'
with
[
Derived=`anonymous-namespace'::TemplateInstantiator,
Fn=clang::Sema::SubstFunctionDeclType::<lambda_756edcbe7bd5c7584849a6e3a1491735>
]
while trying to match the argument list '(clang::TypeLocBuilder, clang::FunctionProtoTypeLoc, clang::CXXRecordDecl *, unsigned int, clang::Sema::SubstFunctionDeclType::<lambda_756edcbe7bd5c7584849a6e3a1491735>)'
1. http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20140915/115011.html
2. http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/ninja-clang-i686-msc17-R/builds/10515/steps/build_clang_tools_1/logs/stdio
llvm-svn: 218058
The reasoning is that this construct is accepted by all compilers and valid in
C++11, so it doesn't seem like a useful warning to have enabled by default.
Building with -pedantic, -Wbind-to-temporary-copy, or -Wc++98-compat still
shows the warning.
The motivation is that I built re2, and this was the only warning that was
emitted during the build. Both changing re2 to fix the warning and detecting
clang and suppressing the warning in re2's build seem inferior than just giving
the compiler a good default for this warning.
Also move the cxx98compat version of this warning to CXX98CompatPedantic, and
update tests accordingly.
llvm-svn: 218008
than the type of a function declaration). We previously didn't instantiate
these at all! This also covers the pathological case where the only mention of
a parameter pack is within the exception specification; this gives us a second
way (other than alias templates) to reach the horrible state where a type
contains an unexpanded pack, but its canonical type does not.
llvm-svn: 217995
There are situations when clang knows that the C1 and C2 constructors
or the D1 and D2 destructors are identical. We already optimize some
of these cases, but cannot optimize it when the GlobalValue is
weak_odr.
The problem with weak_odr is that an old TU seeing the same code will
have a C1 and a C2 comdat with the corresponding symbols. We cannot
suddenly start putting the C2 symbol in the C1 comdat as we cannot
guarantee that the linker will not pick a .o with only C1 in it.
The solution implemented by GCC is to expand the ABI to have a comdat
whose name uses a C5/D5 suffix and always has both symbols. That is
what this patch implements.
llvm-svn: 217874
Patch by Rafael Auler!
This patch addresses PR15171 and teaches Clang how to call other tools
with response files, when the command line exceeds system limits. This
is a problem for Windows systems, whose maximum command-line length is
32kb.
I introduce the concept of "response file support" for each Tool object.
A given Tool may have full support for response files (e.g. MSVC's
link.exe) or only support file names inside response files, but no flags
(e.g. Apple's ld64, as commented in PR15171), or no support at all (the
default case). Therefore, if you implement a toolchain in the clang
driver and you want clang to be able to use response files in your
tools, you must override a method (getReponseFileSupport()) to tell so.
I designed it to support different kinds of tools and
internationalisation needs:
- VS response files ( UTF-16 )
- GNU tools ( uses system's current code page, windows' legacy intl.
support, with escaped backslashes. On unix, fallback to UTF-8 )
- Clang itself ( UTF-16 on windows, UTF-8 on unix )
- ld64 response files ( only a limited file list, UTF-8 on unix )
With this design, I was able to test input file names with spaces and
international characters for Windows. When the linker input is large
enough, it creates a response file with the correct encoding. On a Mac,
to test ld64, I temporarily changed Clang's behavior to always use
response files regardless of the command size limit (avoiding using huge
command line inputs). I tested clang with the LLVM test suite (compiling
benchmarks) and it did fine.
Test Plan: A LIT test that tests proper response files support. This is
tricky, since, for Unix systems, we need a 2MB response file, otherwise
Clang will simply use regular arguments instead of a response file. To
do this, my LIT test generate the file on the fly by cloning many -DTEST
parameters until we have a 2MB file. I found out that processing 2MB of
arguments is pretty slow, it takes 1 minute using my notebook in a debug
build, or 10s in a Release build. Therefore, I also added "REQUIRES:
long_tests", so it will only run when the user wants to run long tests.
In the full discussion in
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20130408/171463.html,
Rafael Espindola discusses a proper way to test
llvm::sys::argumentsFitWithinSystemLimits(), and, there, Chandler
suggests to use 10 times the current system limit (20MB resp file), so
we guarantee that the system will always use response file, even if a
new linux comes up that can handle a few more bytes of arguments.
However, by testing with a 20MB resp file, the test takes long 8 minutes
just to perform a silly check to see if the driver will use a response
file. I found it to be unreasonable. Thus, I discarded this approach and
uses a 2MB response file, which should be enough.
Reviewers: asl, rafael, silvas
Reviewed By: silvas
Subscribers: silvas, rnk, thakis, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4897
llvm-svn: 217792
This is another case of conditional ownership (in this case a raw
reference, plus a boolean to indicate whether the referenced object
should be deleted). While it's not ideal, I prefer to make the ownership
explicit with a unique_ptr than using a boolean flag (though it does
make the reference and the unique_ptr redundant in the sense that they
both refer to the same memory). At some point we might write a reusable
conditional ownership pointer (a stateful custom deleter for a unique_ptr
may be appropriate).
Based on a patch from a patch by Anton Yartsev.
llvm-svn: 217791
This adds a flag called -fseh-exceptions that uses the native Windows
.pdata and .xdata unwind mechanism to throw exceptions. The other EH
possibilities are DWARF and SJLJ exceptions.
Patch by Martell Malone!
Reviewed By: asl, rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3419
llvm-svn: 217790
Summary:
le64 is a generic little-endian 64-bit processor, mimicking le32.
Also see the associated LLVM change.
Test Plan: make check-all
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5318
llvm-svn: 217694
r217556 introduced an operator<<(std::ostream &, StringRef) that seems
to self recurse on some systems, because str.data(), which is a char *,
was being implicitly converted back to StringRef in overload
resolution.
This manifested as SemaCXX/warn-thread-safety-analysis.cpp timing out
in release builds and overflowing the stack in debug builds. One of
the failing systems that saw this is here:
http://lab.llvm.org:8013/builders/clang-x86_64-darwin11-nobootstrap-RAincremental/builds/4636
Using ostream's write method instead of operator<< should get the bots
going again.
llvm-svn: 217621
off by default, issue a warning if %s directive is used
in formart argument of a function/method declared as
__attribute__((format(CF/NSString, ...)))
To complete rdar://18182443
llvm-svn: 217619
Summary:
cl.exe recognizes /o as a deprecated and undocumented option similar to
/Fe. This patch adds support for this option to clang-cl for /Fe, /Fo
and /Fi. It also ensures that the last option among /o and /F* wins,
if both specified.
This is required at least for building autoconf based software, since
autoconf uses -o to specify the executable output.
This fixes http://llvm.org/PR20894.
Test Plan: The patch includes automated tests.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5308
llvm-svn: 217615
Numerous changes, including:
* Changed the way variables and instructions are handled in basic blocks to
be more efficient.
* Eliminated SExprRef.
* Simplified futures.
* Fixed documentation.
* Compute dominator and post dominator trees.
llvm-svn: 217556
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
On a single line:
switch (a) {
case 1: x = 1; return;
case 2: x = 2; return;
default: break;
}
Not on a single line:
switch (a) {
case 1:
x = 1;
return;
case 2:
x = 2;
return;
default:
break;
}
This partly addresses llvm.org/PR16535. In the long run, we probably want to
lay these out in columns.
llvm-svn: 217501
off by default, issue a warning if %s directive is used in
certain CF/NS formatting APIs, to assist user in deprecating
use of such %s in these APIs. rdar://18182443
llvm-svn: 217467
Before:
var regex = / a\//; int i;
After:
var regex = /a\//;
int i;
This required pushing the Lexer into its wrapper class and generating a
new one in this specific case. Otherwise, the sequence get lexed as a
//-comment. This is hacky, but I don't know a better way (short of
supporting regex literals in the Lexer).
Pushing the Lexer down seems to make all the call sites simpler.
llvm-svn: 217444
This was horribly broken due to how the sort predicate works. We would
report a conflict for files with a replacement in the same position but
different names if the length differed. Just ignore paths as this is often
what the user wants. Files can occur with different names (due to symlinks
or relative paths) and we don't ever want to do the same edit in one file
twice.
llvm-svn: 217439
Summary:
This patch implements a new UBSan check, which verifies
that function arguments declared to be nonnull with __attribute__((nonnull))
are actually nonnull in runtime.
To implement this check, we pass FunctionDecl to CodeGenFunction::EmitCallArgs
(where applicable) and if function declaration has nonnull attribute specified
for a certain formal parameter, we compare the corresponding RValue to null as
soon as it's calculated.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits, rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5082
llvm-svn: 217389
Because we may change the name of a FileEntry inside getFile, the name
returned by FileEntry::getName() could be destroyed. This was causing a
use-after-free when searching the HeaderFileInfo on-disk hashtable for a
module or pch.
llvm-svn: 217385
This makes use of the recently-added @llvm.assume intrinsic to implement a
__builtin_assume(bool) intrinsic (to provide additional information to the
optimizer). This hooks up __assume in MS-compatibility mode to mirror
__builtin_assume (the semantics have been intentionally kept compatible), and
implements GCC's __builtin_assume_aligned as assume((p - o) & mask == 0). LLVM
now contains special logic to deal with assumptions of this form.
llvm-svn: 217349
made the 8-bit masks actually 8-bit arguments to these intrinsics.
These builtins are a mess. Many were missing the I qualifier which
I added where obviously correct. Most aren't tested, but I've updated
the relevant tests. I've tried to catch all the things that should
become 'c' in this round.
It's also frustrating because the set of these is really ad-hoc and
doesn't really map that cleanly to the set supported by either GCC or
LLVM. Oh well...
llvm-svn: 217311