After post-commit review and community discussion, this seems like a
reasonable direction to continue, making ownership semantics explicit in
the source using the type system.
llvm-svn: 215324
This reverts commit r213308.
Reverting to have some on-list discussion/confirmation about the ongoing
direction of smart pointer usage in the LLVM project.
llvm-svn: 213324
This removes all references to OwningPtr, which should be fairly
undisruptive to out-of-tree projects since they are unlikely to use
clang-tools-extra as a library instead of a set of tools.
llvm-svn: 203382
always produce as pretty of results as it does in LLVM and Clang, but
I don't mind and the value of having a single canonical ordering is very
high IMO.
Let me know if you spot really serious problems here.
llvm-svn: 198703
Summary:
The clang-apply-replacements process is now invoked to apply
replacements between applying transforms. This resulted in a massive
simplification of the tool:
- FileOverrides class no longer needed.
- Change tracking and code formatting no longer needed.
- No more dependency on libclangApplyReplacements.
- Final syntax check is easier to do directly now than with a separate
header/source pair.
Replacement handling stuff abstracted into a new header/source pair to
de-clutter ClangModernize.cpp somewhat.
Tests updated.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1836
llvm-svn: 192032
The tool now supports a collection of arguments to turn on and provide settings
for the formatting of code affected by applying replacements:
* --format turns on formatting (default style is LLVM)
* --style controls code style settings
* --style-config allows one to explicitly indicate where a style config file
lives.
The libclangApplyReplacements interface has a new function to turn Replacements
into Ranges to be used with tooling::reformat().
llvm-svn: 191667
clang-modernize can now transform headers properly and the experimental
-headers option is no longer necessary.
Remember, at least -include is necessary for indicating which headers
are allowed to be changed.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1610
llvm-svn: 190158
There is no reason to expect this tool to be limited to C++11, it seems
very likely to be of on-going interest. It seems likely to be useful for
modernizing even as new libraries come out in TSes and other formats
than a complete standard. Fundamentally, we need something a bit more
general. After some discussion on the list, going with
'clang-modernize'.
I've tried to do a reasonably comprehensive job of fixing up the names,
but I may still have missed some. Feel free to poke me if you spot any
fallout here. Things I've tried reasonably hard to find and fix:
- cpp11-migrate -> clang-modernize
- Migrator -> Modernizer
- Clean up the introductory documentation that was C++11 specific.
I'll also point out that this tool continues to delight me. =] Also,
a huge thanks to those who have so carefully, thoroughly documented the
tool. The docs here are simply phenomenal. Every tool should be this
well documented. I hope I have updated the documentation reasonably
well, but I'm not very good at documentation, so review much
appreciated.
llvm-svn: 189960