This is how this kind of initializers appear in the AST:
-The Init expression of the VarDecl is a functional type construction (of the VarDecl's type).
-The new VarDecl::hasCXXDirectInitializer() returns true.
e.g, for "int x(1);":
-VarDecl 'x' has Init with expression "int(1)" (CXXFunctionalCastExpr).
-hasCXXDirectInitializer() of VarDecl 'x' returns true.
A major benefit is that clients that don't particularly care about which exactly form was the initializer can handle both cases without special case code.
Note that codegening works now for "int x(1);" without any changes to CodeGen.
llvm-svn: 57178
do it instead. We should still handle __builtin_nan etc, but don't yet.
This fixes incorrect evaluation of __builtin_constant_p, a FIXME.
llvm-svn: 57156
condition as a constant even if the unevaluated side is a not a constant.
We don't do this when extensions are off, and we emit a warning when this
happens:
t.c:22:11: warning: expression is not a constant, but is accepted as one by GNU extensions
short t = __builtin_constant_p(5353) ? 42 : somefunc();
^ ~~~~~~~~~~
suggestions for improvement are welcome. This is obviously horrible, but
is required for real-world code.
llvm-svn: 57153
target indep code.
Note that this changes functionality on PIC16: it defines __INT_MAX__
correctly for it, and it changes sizeof(long) to 16-bits (to match
the size of pointer).
llvm-svn: 57132
This was the motivation of the following changes:
-'TentativeParsingResult' enum is replaced by a 'TPResult' class that basically encapsulates the enum.
-TPR_true, TPR_false, TPR_ambiguous, and TPR_error enum constants are replaced by TPResult::True(), TPResult::False(), etc. calls that return a TPResult object.
-Also fixed the subtle bug in Parser::isCXXFunctionDeclarator (caught by the above changes as a compilation error).
llvm-svn: 57125
'ParseTentative.cpp' implements the functionality needed to resolve ambiguous C++ statements, to either a declaration or an expression, by "tentatively parsing" them.
llvm-svn: 57084
This patch overhauls the "memory region" abstraction that was prototyped (but never really used) as part of the Store.h. This patch adds MemRegion.h and MemRegion.cpp, which defines the class MemRegion and its subclasses. This classes serve to define an abstract representation of memory, with regions being layered on other regions to to capture the relationships between fields and variables, variables and the address space they are allocated in, and so on.
The main motivation of this patch is that key parts of the analyzer assumed that all value bindings were to VarDecls. In the future this won't be the case, and this patch removes lval::DeclVal and replaces it with lval::MemRegionVal. Now all pieces of the analyzer must reason about abstract memory blocks instead of just variables.
There should be no functionality change from this patch, but it opens the door for significant improvements to the analyzer such as field-sensitivity and object-sensitivity, both which were on hold until the memory abstraction got generalized.
The memory region abstraction also allows type-information to literally be affixed to a memory region. This will allow the some now redundant logic to be removed from the retain/release checker.
llvm-svn: 57042