This fixes llvm.org/PR15033.
Also: Always break before a parameter, if the previous parameter was
split over multiple lines. This was necessary to make the right
decisions in for-loops, almost always makes the code more readable and
also fixes llvm.org/PR14873.
Before:
for (llvm::ArrayRef<NamedDecl *>::iterator I = FD->getDeclsInPrototypeScope()
.begin(), E = FD->getDeclsInPrototypeScope().end();
I != E; ++I) {
}
foo(bar(bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb,
ccccccccccccccccccccccccccccc), d, bar(e, f));
After:
for (llvm::ArrayRef<NamedDecl *>::iterator
I = FD->getDeclsInPrototypeScope().begin(),
E = FD->getDeclsInPrototypeScope().end();
I != E; ++I) {
}
foo(bar(bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb,
ccccccccccccccccccccccccccccc),
d, bar(e, f));
llvm-svn: 175741
This allows MemRegion and MemRegionManager to avoid asking over and over
again whether an class is a virtual base or a non-virtual base.
Minor optimization/cleanup; no functionality change.
llvm-svn: 175716
being included in C++. Don't define alignof or alignas in this case. Note that
the C++11 standard is broken in various ways here (it refers to the contents
of <stdalign.h> in C99, where that header did not exist, and doesn't mention
the alignas macro at all), but we do our best to do what it intended.
llvm-svn: 175708
Matches changes made to SVal's similar functions based on Jordan Rose's review
feedback to r175594.
Also change isKind to take a reference rather than a non-null pointer, while I'm
at it. (& make TypeLoc::isKind private)
llvm-svn: 175704
- When deciding if we can reuse a lazy binding, make sure to check if there
are additional bindings in the sub-region.
- When reading from a lazy binding, don't accidentally strip off casts or
base object regions. This slows down lazy binding reading a bit but is
necessary for type sanity when treating one class as another.
A bit of minor refactoring allowed these two checks to be unified in a nice
early-return-using helper function.
<rdar://problem/13239840>
llvm-svn: 175703
arguments in function prologue is done
with objc_StoreStrong to pair it with
similar objc_StoreStrong for release in function
epilogue. This is done with -O0 only.
// rdar://13145317
llvm-svn: 175698
'long' and 'long long' are different for the purposes of mangling.
This caused <rdar://problem/13254874>.
This reverts commit c2f994d31ec85e9af811af38eb1b28709aef0b2c.
llvm-svn: 175681
which allows grouping parens in an abstract-pack-declarator. This was already
mostly implemented, but missed some cases. Add an ExtWarn for use of this
extension until CWG ratifies it.
llvm-svn: 175660
We now indent the following correctly:
1. some + "literal" /* comment */
"literal";
2. breaking string literals after which we have another string literal.
llvm-svn: 175628
If the code author decides to put empty lines anywhere into the code we
should treat them equally, i.e. reduce them to the configured
MaxEmptyLinesToKeep.
With this change, we e.g. keep the newline in:
SomeType ST = {
// First value
a,
// Second value
b
};
llvm-svn: 175620
An alternative strategy to calculating the break on demand when hitting
a token that would need to be broken would be to put all possible breaks
inside the token into the optimizer.
Currently only supports breaking at spaces; more break points to come.
llvm-svn: 175613
control the visibility of a type for the purposes of RTTI
and template argument restrictions independently of how
visibility propagates to its non-type member declarations.
Also fix r175326 to not ignore template argument visibility
on a template explicit instantiation when a member has
an explicit attribute but the instantiation does not.
The type_visibility work is rdar://11880378
llvm-svn: 175587
for the data specific to a macro definition (e.g. what the tokens are), and
MacroDirective class which encapsulates the changes to the "macro namespace"
(e.g. the location where the macro name became active, the location where it was undefined, etc.)
(A MacroDirective always points to a MacroInfo object.)
Usually a macro definition (MacroInfo) is where a macro name becomes active (MacroDirective) but
splitting the concepts allows us to better model the effect of modules to the macro namespace
(also as a bonus it allows better modeling of push_macro/pop_macro #pragmas).
Modules can have their own macro history, separate from the local (current translation unit)
macro history; MacroDirectives will be used to model the macro history (changes to macro namespace).
For example, if "@import A;" imports macro FOO, there will be a new local MacroDirective created
to indicate that "FOO" became active at the import location. Module "A" itself will contain another
MacroDirective in its macro history (at the point of the definition of FOO) and both MacroDirectives
will point to the same MacroInfo object.
Introducing the separation of macro concepts is the first part towards better modeling of module macros.
llvm-svn: 175585
RegionStoreManager::getInterestingValues() returns a pointer to a
std::vector that lives inside a DenseMap, which is constructed on demand.
However, constructing one such value can lead to constructing another
value, which will invalidate the reference created earlier.
Fixed by delaying the new entry creation until the function returns.
llvm-svn: 175582
attributes yet, so just issue the appropriate diagnostics. Also generalize the
fixit for attributes-in-the-wrong-place code and reuse it here, if attributes
are placed after the access-specifier or 'virtual' in a base specifier.
llvm-svn: 175575
If a base object is at a 0 offset, RegionStoreManager may find a lazy
binding for the entire object, then try to attach a FieldRegion or
grandparent CXXBaseObjectRegion on top of that (skipping the intermediate
region). We now preserve as many layers of base object regions necessary
to make the types match.
<rdar://problem/13239840>
llvm-svn: 175556
The key bug was
if (Other.StartOfLineLevel < StartOfLineLevel) ..
instead of
if (Other.StartOfLineLevel != StartOfLineLevel) ..
Also cleaned up the function to be more consistent in the comparisons.
llvm-svn: 175500
We treat this as an alternative to -fvisibility=<?>
which changes the default value visibility to "hidden"
and the default type visibility to "default".
Expose a -cc1 option for changing the default type
visibility, repurposing -fvisibility as the default
value visibility option (also setting type visibility
from it in the absence of a specific option).
rdar://13079314
llvm-svn: 175480
The TypeLoc hierarchy used the llvm::cast machinery to perform undefined
behavior by casting pointers/references to TypeLoc objects to derived types
and then using the derived copy constructors (or even returning pointers to
derived types that actually point to the original TypeLoc object).
Some context is in this thread:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2012-December/056804.html
Though it's spread over a few months which can be hard to read in the mail
archive.
llvm-svn: 175462
This commit introduces a set of related changes to ensure that the
declaration that shows up in the identifier chain after deserializing
declarations with a given identifier is, in fact, the most recent
declaration. The primary change involves waiting until after we
deserialize and wire up redeclaration chains before updating the
identifier chains. There is a minor optimization in here to avoid
recursively deserializing names as part of looking to see whether
top-level declarations for a given name exist.
A related change that became suddenly more urgent is to property
record a merged declaration when an entity first declared in the
current translation unit is later deserialized from a module (that had
not been loaded at the time of the original declaration). Since we key
off the canonical declaration (which is parsed, not from an AST file)
for emitted redeclarations, we simply record this as a merged
declaration during AST writing and let the readers merge them.
Re-fixes <rdar://problem/13189985>, presumably for good this time.
llvm-svn: 175447
In builder-type calls, it can be very confusing to just indent
parameters from the start of the line. Instead, indent 4 from the
correct function call.
Before:
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa()->aaaaaa(bbbbb)->aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa( // break
aaaaaaaaaaaaaa);
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa *aaaaaaaaa = aaaaaa->aaaaaaaaaaaa()->aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa(
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa)
->aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa();
After:
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa()->aaaaaa(bbbbb)->aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa( // break
aaaaaaaaaaaaaa);
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa *aaaaaaaaa = aaaaaa->aaaaaaaaaaaa()
->aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa(
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa)
->aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa();
llvm-svn: 175444
An unwrapped line can get moved around if there is no newline before
it and the previous line was formatted.
Example:
template<typename T> // Cursor is on this line when hitting "format"
T *getFETokenInfo() const { return static_cast<T*>(FETokenInfo); }
"return .." is the second unwrapped line in this scenario. I does not
touch any reformatted region. Thus, the result of formatting is:
template <typename T> T *getFETokenInfo() const { return static_cast<T *>(FETokenInfo); }
After second format (and arguably desired end-result):
template <typename T> T *getFETokenInfo() const {
return static_cast<T *>(FETokenInfo);
}
This fixes: llvm.org/PR15060.
llvm-svn: 175440
This fixes llvm.org/PR15248.
Before:
Test::Test(int b) : a(b *b) {}
for (int i = 0; i < a *a; ++i) {}
After:
Test::Test(int b) : a(b * b) {}
for (int i = 0; i < a * a; ++i) {}
llvm-svn: 175439
This allows Clang to detect and deal wih __atomic_* operations properly on
AArch64. Previously we produced an error when encountering them at high
optimisation levels.
llvm-svn: 175438
bitfield related issues.
The original commit broke Takumi's builder. The bug was caused by bitfield sizes
being determined by their underlying type, rather than the field info. A similar
issue with bitfield alignments showed up on closer testing. Both have been fixed
in this patch.
llvm-svn: 175389
An ivar ofset cannot be marked as invariant load in all cases. The ivar offset
is a lazily initialised constant, which is dependent on an objc_msgSend
invocation to perform a fixup of the offset. If the load is being performed on
a method implemented by the class then this load can safely be marked as an
inviarant because a message must have been passed to the class at some point,
forcing the ivar offset to be resolved.
An additional heuristic that can be used to identify an invariant load would be
if the ivar offset base is a parameter to an objc method. However, without the
parameters available at hand, this is currently not possible.
Reviewed-by: John McCall <rjmccall@apple.com>
Signed-off-by: Saleem Abdulrasool <compnerd@compnerd.org>
llvm-svn: 175386
linkonce_odr. Emit construction vtables as internal in this case, since the ABI
does not guarantee that they will be availble externally.
llvm-svn: 175330
until recursive loading is finished.
Otherwise we may end up with a template trying to deserialize a template
parameter that is in the process of getting loaded.
rdar://13135282
llvm-svn: 175329
for distinguishing type vs. value visibility.
The changes to the visibility of explicit specializations
are intentional. The change to the "ugly" test case is
a consequence of a sensible implementation, and I am happy
to argue that this is better behavior. Other changes may
or may not be intended; it is quite difficult to divine
intent from some of the code I altered.
I've left behind a comment which I hope explains the
philosophy behind visibility computation.
llvm-svn: 175326
The current heuristic assumes that there can't be binary operators in
builder-type calls (excluding assigments). However, it also excluded
< and > in general, which is wrong. Now they are only excluded if they
are template parameters.
Before:
return aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa->aaaaa().aaaaaaaaaaaaa()i
.aaaaaa() < aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa->aaaaa().aaaaaaaaaaaaa().aaaaaa();
After:
return aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa->aaaaa().aaaaaaaaaaaaa().aaaaaa() <
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa->aaaaa().aaaaaaaaaaaaa().aaaaaa();
llvm-svn: 175291
This got lost and was untested as the same effect is achieved by
avoiding bin packing, which is active in Google style by default.
However, moving forward, we want more control over the bin packing
option(s) and thus, this flag should work as expected.
llvm-svn: 175277
This is almost always more readable.
Before:
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
? aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa : aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa;
After:
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
? aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
: aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa;
llvm-svn: 175262
This just adds a very simple check that if a DerivedToBase CastExpr is
operating on a value with known C++ object type, and that type is not the
base type specified in the AST, then the cast is invalid and we should
return UnknownVal.
In the future, perhaps we can have a checker that specifies that this is
illegal, but we still shouldn't assert even if the user turns that checker
off.
PR14872
llvm-svn: 175239
...after a host of optimizations related to the use of LazyCompoundVals
(our implementation of aggregate binds).
Originally applied in r173951.
Reverted in r174069 because it was causing hangs.
Re-applied in r174212.
Reverted in r174265 because it was /still/ causing hangs.
If this needs to be reverted again it will be punted to far in the future.
llvm-svn: 175234
Previously, we were scanning the current store. Now, we properly scan the
store that the LazyCompoundVal came from, which may have very different
live symbols.
llvm-svn: 175232
Previously, whenever we had a LazyCompoundVal, we crawled through the
entire store snapshot looking for bindings within the LCV's region. Now, we
just ask for the subregion bindings of the lazy region and only visit those.
This is an optimization (so no test case), but it may allow us to clean up
more dead bindings than we were previously.
llvm-svn: 175230
This is going to be used in the next commit.
While I'm here, tighten up assumptions about symbolic offset
BindingKeys, and make offset calculation explicitly handle all
MemRegion kinds.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 175228
In C++, constants captured by lambdas (and blocks) are not actually stored
in the closure object, since they can be expanded at compile time. In this
case, they will have no binding when we go to look them up. Previously,
RegionStore thought they were uninitialized stack variables; now, it checks
to see if they are a constant we know how to evaluate, using the same logic
as r175026.
This particular code path is only for scalar variables. Constant arrays and
structs are still unfortunately unhandled; we'll need a stronger solution
for those.
This may have a small performance impact, but only for truly-undefined
local variables, captures in a non-inlined block, and non-constant globals.
Even then, in the non-constant case we're only doing a quick type check.
<rdar://problem/13105553>
llvm-svn: 175194