from the given source. -emit-module behaves similarly to -emit-pch,
except that Sema is somewhat more strict about the contents of
-emit-module. In the future, there are likely to be more interesting
differences.
llvm-svn: 138595
Currently this includes -pedantic warnings as well; we'll need to consider whether these should
be included.
This works as expected with -Werror.
Test cases were added to Sema/warn-unused-parameters.c, but they should probably be broken off into
their own test file.
llvm-svn: 137910
all AST files have a normal METADATA record that has the same form
regardless of whether we refer to a chained PCH or any other kind of
AST file.
Introduce the IMPORTS record, which describes all of the AST files
that are imported by this AST file, and how (as a module, a PCH file,
etc.). Currently, we emit at most one entry to this record, to support
chained PCH.
llvm-svn: 137869
already-defined and forward-declared results. Already-defined results
are fine because they could be the start of a category. Fixes
<rdar://problem/9811691>.
llvm-svn: 136559
For PCH files, have only one open/close for temporary + rename to be safe from race conditions.
For all other output files open/close the output file directly.
Depends on llvm r136310. rdar://9082880 & http://llvm.org/PR9374.
llvm-svn: 136315
FullSourceLoc::getInstantiationLoc to ...::getExpansionLoc. This is part
of the API and documentation update from 'instantiation' as the term for
macros to 'expansion'.
llvm-svn: 135914
entities generated directly by the preprocessor from those loaded from
the external source (e.g., the ASTReader). By separating these two
sets of entities into different vectors, we allow both to grow
independently, and eliminate the need for preallocating all of the
loaded preprocessing entities. This is similar to the way the recent
SourceManager refactoring treats FileIDs and the source location
address space.
As part of this, switch over to building a continuous range map to
track preprocessing entities.
llvm-svn: 135646
-arcmt-migrate-emit-errors : Emits the pre-migration ARC errors but it doesn't affect anything else
-arcmt-migrate-report-output : Writes out the pre-migration ARC errors to the provided plist file
rdar://9791454
llvm-svn: 135491
source locations from source locations loaded from an AST/PCH file.
Previously, loading an AST/PCH file involved carefully pre-allocating
space at the beginning of the source manager for the source locations
and FileIDs that correspond to the prefix, and then appending the
source locations/FileIDs used for parsing the remaining translation
unit. This design forced us into loading PCH files early, as a prefix,
whic has become a rather significant limitation.
This patch splits the SourceManager space into two parts: for source
location "addresses", the lower values (growing upward) are used to
describe parsed code, while upper values (growing downward) are used
for source locations loaded from AST/PCH files. Similarly, positive
FileIDs are used to describe parsed code while negative FileIDs are
used to file/macro locations loaded from AST/PCH files. As a result,
we can load PCH/AST files even during parsing, making various
improvemnts in the future possible, e.g., teaching #include <foo.h> to
look for and load <foo.h.gch> if it happens to be already available.
This patch was originally written by Sebastian Redl, then brought
forward to the modern age by Jonathan Turner, and finally
polished/finished by me to be committed.
llvm-svn: 135484
This is switches all the interfaces points (and most of the commenst
/ local variables I saw on my way through) regarding the
NestedMacroInstantiations bit.
The libclang enums corresponding to this state were renamed, but
a legacy enum was added with the old name, and the same value to keep
existing clients working. I've added a documentation blurb for it, but
let me know if there is a canonical way to document legacy elemenst of
the libclang interface.
No functionality changed here, even in tests.
llvm-svn: 135141
and 'expansions' rather than 'instantiated' and 'contexts'.
This is the first of several patches migrating Clang's terminology
surrounding macros from 'instantiation' to 'expansion'.
llvm-svn: 135135
__unknown_anytype, and rewrite such message sends correctly.
I had to bite the bullet and actually add a debugger support mode for this
one, which is a bit unfortunate, but there really isn't anything else
I could imagine doing; this is clearly just debugger-specific behavior.
llvm-svn: 135051
This is a new mode of migration, where we avoid modifying the original files but
we emit temporary files instead.
<path> will be used to keep migration process metadata. Currently the temporary files
that are produced are put in the system's temp directory but we can put them
in the <path> if is necessary.
Also introduce new ARC migration functions in libclang whose only purpose,
currently, is to accept <path> and provide pairs of original file/transformed file
to map from the originals to the files after transformations are applied.
Finally introduce the c-arcmt-test utility that exercises the new libclang functions,
update arcmt-test, and add tests for the whole process.
rdar://9735086.
llvm-svn: 134844
instantiation and improve diagnostics which are stem from macro
arguments to trace the argument itself back through the layers of macro
expansion.
This requires some tricky handling of the source locations, as the
argument appears to be expanded in the opposite direction from the
surrounding macro. This patch provides helper routines that encapsulate
the logic and explain the reasoning behind how we step through macros
during diagnostic printing.
This fixes the rest of the test cases originially in PR9279, and later
split out into PR10214 and PR10215.
There is still some more work we can do here to improve the macro
backtrace, but those will follow as separate patches.
llvm-svn: 134660
clang_codeCompleteGetContexts(), that provides the client with
information about the context in which code completion has occurred
and what kinds of entities make sense as completions at that
point. Patch by Connor Wakamo!
llvm-svn: 134615
structure to hold inferred information, then propagate each invididual
bit down to -cc1. Separate the bits of "supports weak" and "has a native
ARC runtime"; make the latter a CodeGenOption.
The tool chain is still driving this decision, because it's the place that
has the required deployment target information on Darwin, but at least it's
better-factored now.
llvm-svn: 134453
CompilerInvocation on the stack, because other objects (e.g., the
CompilerInstance) maintain an intrusive reference-counted pointer to
the CompilerInvocation. This doesn't matter in the normal case,
because we take back the CompilerInvocation. However, during crash
recovery, this leads to us trying to free an object on the stack, and
hilarity ensues. Fixes <rdar://problem/9652540>.
llvm-svn: 134245
This is a one line fix here:
+ // Don't print recursive instantiation notes from an instantiation note.
+ Loc = SM.getSpellingLoc(Loc);
While here, fix the testcase to be more precise (it got filecheck'ized
brutally), and fix EmitCaretDiagnostic to be private and to not pass down
the unused 'Level' argument.
llvm-svn: 133993
This is the only usage in clang's headers, and it's for a define
that only exists on CMake builds for the sake of the MSVC compiler,
so just use an ifdef instead.
Also add an include for config.h in a file that actually needs it,
and was picking it up by accident indirectly.
llvm-svn: 133710
use an "IgnoreSysRoot" argument. HeaderSearchOptions had been using the
opposite form with "IsSysRootRelative", which made for much confusion when
looking at true/false values in calls in AddPath. No functional change.
llvm-svn: 133550
The -cxx-isystem path is not prefixed with the sysroot directory, so it's
not a good way for the driver to set the system default C++ search path.
Instead, add -stdlib as a cc1 option and teach the frontend how to find the
headers. The driver can then just pass -stdlib through to "cc1".
llvm-svn: 133547
- Changes bit-field access policy to try to use (aligned) register sized accesses.
The idea here is that by using larger accesses we expose more coalescing
potential to the backend when we have situations like adjacent bit-fields in the
same structure (which is common), and that the backend should be smart enough to
narrow the accesses down when no coalescing is done or when it is shown not to
be profitable.
--
$ clang -m32 -O3 -S -o - t.c
_f0: ## @f0
pushl %ebp
movl %esp, %ebp
movl 8(%ebp), %eax
movb (%eax), %cl
andb $-128, %cl
orb $1, %cl
movb %cl, (%eax)
movb 1(%eax), %cl
andb $-128, %cl
orb $1, %cl
movb %cl, 1(%eax)
movb 2(%eax), %cl
andb $-128, %cl
orb $1, %cl
movb %cl, 2(%eax)
movb 3(%eax), %cl
andb $-128, %cl
orb $1, %cl
movb %cl, 3(%eax)
popl %ebp
ret
$ clang -m32 -O3 -S -o - t.c -Xclang -fuse-register-sized-bitfield-access
_f0: ## @f0
pushl %ebp
movl %esp, %ebp
movl 8(%ebp), %eax
movl $-2139062144, %ecx ## imm = 0xFFFFFFFF80808080
andl (%eax), %ecx
orl $16843009, %ecx ## imm = 0x1010101
movl %ecx, (%eax)
popl %ebp
ret
--
llvm-svn: 133532
an assembly file it worked correctly, while for a .c file it would given an
error about how --noexecstack is not a supported argument to -Wa.
llvm-svn: 133489
because the Angled directories and the System directories were not being uniqued
together, breaking #include_next. I'll see about a testcase, but it will be insane.
llvm-svn: 133212
These are somewhat special in that they wrap any other FrontendAction,
running various ARC transformations or checks prior to the standard
action's run. To implement them easily, this extends FrontendAction to
have a WrapperFrontendAction utility class which forwards all calls by
default to an inner action setup at construction time. This is then
subclassed to override the specific behavior needed by the different
ARCMT tools.
Finally, FrontendTool is taught how to create these wrapper actions from
the existing flags and options structures.
The result is that clangFrontend no longer depends on clangARCMigrate.
This is very important, as clangARCMigrate *heavily* depends on
clangFrontend. Fundamentally ARCMigrate is at the same layer as
a library like Rewrite, sitting firmly on top of the Frontend, but tied
together with the FrontendTool when building the clang binary itself.
llvm-svn: 133161
AFAIK, RHEL5 (and its clones) provides g++44 as the package "gcc44-c++".
By default, g++-4.1.1 is available, though, its libstdc++ would not be suitable to clang++.
llvm-svn: 133156
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
Patch by Matthieu Monrocq with tweaks by me to avoid StringRefs in the static
diagnostic data structures, which resulted in a huge global-var-init function.
Depends on llvm commit r132046.
llvm-svn: 132047
prints the file, line, and column of a diagnostic. We currently
support Clang's normal format, MSVC, and Vi formats.
Note that we no longer change the diagnostic format based on
-fms-extensions.
Patch by Andrew Fish!
llvm-svn: 131794
- New isDefined() function checks for deletedness
- isThisDeclarationADefinition checks for deletedness
- New doesThisDeclarationHaveABody() does what
isThisDeclarationADefinition() used to do
- The IsDeleted bit is not propagated across redeclarations
- isDeleted() now checks the canoncial declaration
- New isDeletedAsWritten() does what it says on the tin.
- isUserProvided() now correct (thanks Richard!)
This fixes the bug that we weren't catching
void foo() = delete;
void foo() {}
as being a redefinition.
llvm-svn: 131013
CXTranslationUnit_NestedMacroInstantiations, which indicates whether
we want to see "nested" macro instantiations (e.g., those that occur
inside other macro instantiations) within the detailed preprocessing
record. Many clients (e.g., those that only care about visible tokens)
don't care about this information, and in code that uses preprocessor
metaprogramming, this information can have a very high cost.
Addresses <rdar://problem/9389320>.
llvm-svn: 130990
This is more efficient as it's all done at once at the end of the TU.
This could still get expensive, so a flag is provided to disable it. As
an added bonus, the diagnostics will now print out a cycle.
The PCH test is XFAILed because we currently can't deal with a note
emitted in the header and I, being tired, see no other way to verify the
serialization of delegating constructors. We should probably address
this problem /somehow/ but no good solution comes to mind.
llvm-svn: 130836
matches GCC behavior which libstdc++ uses to limit #warning-based
messages about deprecation.
The machinery involves threading this through a new '-fdeprecated-macro'
flag for CC1. The flag defaults to "on", similarly to -Wdeprecated. We
turn the flag off in the driver when the warning is turned off (modulo
matching some GCC bugs). We record this as a language option, and key
the preprocessor on the option when introducing the define.
A separate flag rather than a '-D' flag allows us to properly represent
the difference between C and C++ builds (only C++ receives the define),
and it allows the specific behavior of following -Wdeprecated without
potentially impacting the set of user-provided macro flags.
llvm-svn: 130055
-Wwrite-strings. First and foremost, once the positive form of the flag
was passed, it could never be disabled by passing -Wno-write-strings.
Also, the diagnostic engine couldn't in turn use -Wwrite-strings to
control diagnostics (as GCC does) because it was essentially hijacked to
drive the language semantics.
Fix this by giving CC1 a clean '-fconst-strings' flag to enable
const-qualified strings in C and ObjC compilations. Corresponding
'-fno-const-strings' is also added. Then the driver is taught to
introduce '-fconst-strings' in the CC1 command when '-Wwrite-strings'
dominates.
This entire flag is basically GCC-bug-compatibility driven, so we also
match GCC's bug where '-w' doesn't actually disable -Wwrite-strings. I'm
open to changing this though as it seems insane.
llvm-svn: 130051
compile time) and .gcda emission (at runtime). --coverage enables both.
This does not yet add the profile_rt library to the link step if -fprofile-arcs
is enabled when linking.
llvm-svn: 129956