Implement support for try-catch blocks in constexpr functions, as
proposed in http://wg21.link/P1002 and voted in San Diego for c++20.
The idea is that we can still never throw inside constexpr, so the catch
block is never entered. A try-catch block like this:
try { f(); } catch (...) { }
is then morally equivalent to just
{ f(); }
Same idea should apply for function/constructor try blocks.
rdar://problem/45530773
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55097
llvm-svn: 348789
This exposes a (known) CodeGen bug: it can't cope with emitting lvalue
expressions that denote non-odr-used but usable-in-constant-expression
variables. See PR39528 for a testcase.
Reverted for now until that issue can be fixed.
llvm-svn: 346065
nullptr_t does not access memory.
We now reuse CK_NullToPointer to represent a conversion from a glvalue
of type nullptr_t to a prvalue of nullptr_t where necessary.
llvm-svn: 345562
Summary:
This change rejects the shadowing of a capture by a parameter in lambdas in C++17.
```
int main() {
int a;
auto f = [a](int a) { return a; };
}
```
results in:
```
main.cpp:3:20: error: a lambda parameter cannot shadow an explicitly captured entity
auto f = [a](int a) { return a; };
^
main.cpp:3:13: note: variable a is explicitly captured here
auto f = [a](int a) { return a; };
^
```
Reviewers: rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: lebedev.ri, erik.pilkington, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53595
llvm-svn: 345308
Rather, they are subexpressions of the enclosing lambda-expression, and
any temporaries in them are destroyed at the end of that
full-expression, or when the corresponding lambda-expression is
destroyed if they are lifetime-extended.
llvm-svn: 344801
This reverts commit https://reviews.llvm.org/rL344150 which causes
MachineOutliner related failures on the ppc64le multistage buildbot.
llvm-svn: 344526
This is currently a clang extension and a resolution
of the defect report in the C++ Standard.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46441
llvm-svn: 344150
render the function deleted instead of rendering the program ill-formed.
This change also adds an enabled-by-default warning for the case where
an explicitly-defaulted special member function of a non-template class
is implicitly deleted by the type checking rules. (This fires either due
to this language change or due to pre-C++20 reasons for the member being
implicitly deleted). I've tested this on a large codebase and found only
bugs (where the program means something that's clearly different from
what the programmer intended), so this is enabled by default, but we
should revisit this if there are problems with this being enabled by
default.
llvm-svn: 343285
triggers instantiation of constexpr functions.
We mostly implemented this since Clang 6, but missed the template
instantiation case.
We do not implement the '&cast-expression' special case. It appears to
be a mistake / oversight. I've mailed CWG to see if we can remove it.
llvm-svn: 343064
for loop if both members exist.
This resolves a DR whereby an errant 'begin' or 'end' member in a base
class could result in a derived class not being usable as a range with
non-member 'begin' and 'end'.
llvm-svn: 342925
A lambda's closure is initialized when the lambda is declared. For
implicit captures, the initialization code emitted from EmitLambdaExpr
references source locations *within the lambda body* in the function
containing the lambda. This results in a poor debugging experience: we
step to the line containing the lambda, then into lambda, out again,
over and over, until every capture's field is initialized.
To improve stepping behavior, assign the starting location of the lambda
to expressions which initialize an implicit capture within it.
rdar://39807527
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50927
llvm-svn: 342194
destructors.
We previously tried to patch up the exception specification after
completing the class, which went wrong when the exception specification
was needed within the class body (in particular, by a friend
redeclaration of the destructor in a nested class). We now mark the
destructor as having a not-yet-computed exception specification
immediately after creating it.
This requires delaying various checks against the exception
specification (where we'd previously have just got the wrong exception
specification, and now find we have an exception specification that we
can't compute yet) when those checks fire while the class is being
defined.
This also exposed an issue that we were missing a CodeSynthesisContext
for computation of exception specifications (otherwise we'd fail to make
the module containing the definition of the class visible when computing
its members' exception specs). Adding that incidentally also gives us a
diagnostic quality improvement.
This has also exposed an pre-existing problem: making the exception
specification evaluation context a non-SFINAE context (as it should be)
results in a bootstrap failure; PR38850 filed for this.
llvm-svn: 341499
Given 'typename T typename U', we would correctly diagnose the missing
comma, but incorrectly disambiguate the first parameter as being a
non-type parameter and complain that the 'T' is not a qualified-id.
See also gcc.gnu.org/PR86998.
llvm-svn: 340074
in some member function calls.
Specifically, when calling a conversion function, we would fail to
create the AST node representing materialization of the class object.
llvm-svn: 338135
Previously, clang marked the specialization as invalid without emitting a
diagnostic. This lead to an assert in CodeGen.
rdar://41806724
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49085
llvm-svn: 337497
qualifiers from all levels matching a multidimensional array.
For example, this allows casting from
pointer to array of array of const volatile int
to
pointer to const pointer to volatile pointer to int
because the multidimensional array part of the source type corresponds
to a part of the destination type that contains both 'const' and
'volatile'.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49457
llvm-svn: 337422
This change implements C++ DR1696, which makes initialization of a
reference member of a class from a temporary object ill-formed. The
standard wording here is imprecise, but we interpret it as meaning that
any time a mem-initializer would result in lifetime extension, the
program is ill-formed.
This reinstates r337226, reverted in r337255, with a fix for the
InitializedEntity alignment problem that was breaking ARM buildbots.
llvm-svn: 337329
This change breaks on ARM because pointers to clang::InitializedEntity are only
4 byte aligned and do not have 3 bits to store values. A possible solution
would be to change the fields in clang::InitializedEntity to enforce a bigger
alignment requirement.
The error message is
llvm/include/llvm/ADT/PointerIntPair.h:132:3: error: static_assert failed "PointerIntPair with integer size too large for pointer"
static_assert(IntBits <= PtrTraits::NumLowBitsAvailable,
include/llvm/ADT/PointerIntPair.h:73:13: note: in instantiation of template class 'llvm::PointerIntPairInfo<const clang::InitializedEntity *, 3, llvm::PointerLikeTypeTraits<const clang::InitializedEntity *> >' requested here
Value = Info::updateInt(Info::updatePointer(0, PtrVal),
llvm/include/llvm/ADT/PointerIntPair.h:51:5: note: in instantiation of member function 'llvm::PointerIntPair<const clang::InitializedEntity *, 3, (anonymous namespace)::LifetimeKind, llvm::PointerLikeTypeTraits<const clang::InitializedEntity *>, llvm::PointerIntPairInfo<const clang::InitializedEntity *, 3, llvm::PointerLikeTypeTraits<const clang::InitializedEntity *> > >::setPointerAndInt' requested here
setPointerAndInt(PtrVal, IntVal);
^
llvm/tools/clang/lib/Sema/SemaInit.cpp:6237:12: note: in instantiation of member function 'llvm::PointerIntPair<const clang::InitializedEntity *, 3, (anonymous namespace)::LifetimeKind, llvm::PointerLikeTypeTraits<const clang::InitializedEntity *>, llvm::PointerIntPairInfo<const clang::InitializedEntity *, 3, llvm::PointerLikeTypeTraits<const clang::InitializedEntity *> > >::PointerIntPair' requested here
return {Entity, LK_Extended};
Full log here:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-cmake-armv7-global-isel/builds/1330http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-cmake-armv7-full/builds/1394
llvm-svn: 337255
This change implements C++ DR1696, which makes initialization of a
reference member of a class from a temporary object ill-formed. The
standard wording here is imprecise, but we interpret it as meaning that
any time a mem-initializer would result in lifetime extension, the
program is ill-formed.
llvm-svn: 337226
function parameter packs.
This makes our handling of non-trailing function parameter packs
consistent between the case of deduction at the top level in a function
call and other cases where deduction encounters a non-trailing function
parameter pack.
Instead of treating a non-trailing pack and all later parameters as
being non-deduced, we treat a non-trailing pack as exactly matching
any explicitly-specified template arguments (or being an empty pack
if there are no such arguments). This corresponds to the "never deduced"
rule in [temp.deduct.call]p1, but generalized to all deduction contexts.
Non-trailing template argument packs still result in the entire
template argument list being treated as non-deduced, as specified in
[temp.deduct.type]p9.
llvm-svn: 336962
types.
We previously tried to use the "parameter is a reference" logic here,
but that doesn't work because it gets P and A backwards. Instead, add
a separate implementation of the "deduced A can be less qualified than
A" rule.
This also exposes that we incorrectly stripped cv-qualifiers from the
referent of A if it was a reference. However, if we don't do that, we
get the wrong results when P is a reference. In an attempt to match
what sanity dictates and what other implementations are doing, we now
remove cv-qualifiers from A and P unless both are reference types. I've
brought this up on the core reflector too, to try to get the standard
fixed.
llvm-svn: 336867
with another in template argument deduction.
We happened to typically get away with getting this wrong, because the
cases where we'd produce a bogus deduction were caught by the final
"deduced A is compatible with A" check.
llvm-svn: 336852
This allows more qualification conversions, eg. conversion from
'int *(*)[]' -> 'const int *const (*)[]'
is now permitted, along with all the consequences of that: more types
are similar, more cases are permitted by const_cast, and conversely,
fewer "casting away constness" cases are permitted by reinterpret_cast.
llvm-svn: 336745
The "casts away constness" check doesn't care at all how the different
layers of the source and destination type were formed: for example, if
the source is a pointer and the destination is a pointer-to-member, the
types are still decomposed and their pointee qualifications are still
checked.
This rule is bizarre and somewhat ridiculous, so as an extension we
accept code making use of such reinterpret_casts with a warning outside
of SFINAE contexts.
llvm-svn: 336738
buildbots.
On Windows targets, enums always get an underlying type of 'int', even
if they have wider enumerators. (This is non-conforming, but it's
effectively part of the target ABI.)
llvm-svn: 336013
not like bit-fields.
We used to get this right "by accident", because conversions for the
selected built-in overloaded operator would convert the enum bit-field
to its corresponding underlying type early. But after DR1687 that no
longer happens.
Technically this change should also apply to C, where bit-fields only
have special promotion rules if the bit-field's declared type is
_Bool, int, signed int, or unsigned int, but for GCC compatibility we
only look at the bit-width and not the underlying type when performing
bit-field integral promotions in C.
llvm-svn: 335925
conversions are only applied to operands of class type, and the second
standard conversion sequence is not applied.
When diagnosing an invalid builtin binary operator, talk about the
original types rather than the converted types. If these differ by a
user-defined conversion, tell the user what happened.
llvm-svn: 335781
members of dependent contexts.
This permits cases where the names before and after the '::' in a
dependent inherited constructor using-declaration do not match, but
where we can nonetheless tell when parsing the template that a
constructor is being named. Under (open) core language DR 2070, such
cases will probably be ill-formed, but r335182 does not quite give
that result and didn't intend to change this, so restore the old
behavior for now.
llvm-svn: 335381
Diagnose the name of the class being shadowed by using declarations, and
improve the diagnostics for the case where the name of the class is
shadowed by a non-static data member in a class with constructors. In
the latter case, we now always give the "member with the same name as
its class" diagnostic regardless of the relative order of the member and
the constructor, rather than giving an inscrutible diagnostic if the
constructor appears second.
llvm-svn: 335182
Summary:
This patch adds the newly added `%sub` diagnostic modifier to cleanup repetition in the overload candidate diagnostics.
I think this should be good to go.
@rsmith: Some of the notes now emit `function template` where they only said `function` previously. It seems OK to me, but I would like your sign off on it.
Reviewers: rsmith, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits, rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47101
llvm-svn: 333485
If the name after 'template' is an unresolved using declaration (not containing
'typename'), then we don't yet know if it's a valid template-name, so don't
reject it prior to instantiation. Instead, treat it as naming a dependent
member of the current instantiation.
llvm-svn: 332291
For 'x::template y', consistently give a "no member named 'y' in 'x'"
diagnostic if there is no such member, and give a 'template keyword not
followed by a template' name error if there is such a member but it's not a
template. In the latter case, add a note pointing at the non-template.
Don't suggest inserting a 'template' keyword in 'X::Y<' if X is dependent
if the lookup of X::Y was actually not a dependent lookup and found only
non-templates.
llvm-svn: 332076
template arguments.
This fixes some cases where we'd incorrectly accept "A::template B" when B is a
kind of template that requires template arguments (in particular, a variable
template or a concept).
llvm-svn: 331013