This patch add __builtin_matrix_column_major_store to Clang,
as described in clang/docs/MatrixTypes.rst. In the initial version,
the stride is not optional yet.
Reviewers: rjmccall, jfb, rsmith, Bigcheese
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72782
This patch add __builtin_matrix_transpose to Clang, as described in
clang/docs/MatrixTypes.rst.
Reviewers: rjmccall, jfb, rsmith, Bigcheese
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72778
This patch implements matrix index expressions
(matrix[RowIdx][ColumnIdx]).
It does so by introducing a new MatrixSubscriptExpr(Base, RowIdx, ColumnIdx).
MatrixSubscriptExprs are built in 2 steps in ActOnMatrixSubscriptExpr. First,
if the base of a subscript is of matrix type, we create a incomplete
MatrixSubscriptExpr(base, idx, nullptr). Second, if the base is an incomplete
MatrixSubscriptExpr, we create a complete
MatrixSubscriptExpr(base->getBase(), base->getRowIdx(), idx)
Similar to vector elements, it is not possible to take the address of
a MatrixSubscriptExpr.
For CodeGen, a new MatrixElt type is added to LValue, which is very
similar to VectorElt. The only difference is that we may need to cast
the type of the base from an array to a vector type when accessing it.
Reviewers: rjmccall, anemet, Bigcheese, rsmith, martong
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76791
Commit 73152a2ec2 fixed type checking for
blocks with qualified id parameters. But there are existing APIs in
Apple SDKs relying on the old type checking behavior. Specifically,
these are APIs using NSItemProviderCompletionHandler in
Foundation/NSItemProvider.h. To keep existing code working and to allow
developers to use affected APIs introduce a compatibility mode that
enables the previous and the fixed type checking. This mode is enabled
only on Darwin platforms.
Reviewed By: jyknight, ahatanak
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79511
The 'class' or 'struct' keyword is only permitted as part of either an
enum definition or a standalone opaque-enum-declaration, not as part of
an elaborated type specifier. We previously failed to diagnose this, and
generally didn't properly implement the restrictions on elaborated type
specifiers for enumeration types.
In passing, also fixed incorrect parsing for enum-bases, which we
previously parsed as a type-name, but are actually a type-specifier-seq.
This matters for cases like 'enum E : int *p;', which is valid as a
Microsoft extension.
Plus some minor parse diagnostic improvements.
Bumped the recently-added ExtWarn for 'enum E : int x;' to be
DefaultError; this is not an intentional extension, so producing an
error by default seems appropriate, but the warning flag to disable it
may still be useful for code written against old Clang. The same
treatment is given here to the diagnostic for 'enum class E x;', which
we similarly have incorrectly accepted for many years. These diagnostics
continue to be suppressed under -fms-extensions and when compiling
Objective-C code. We will need to decide separately whether Objective-C
should follow the C++ rules or the (older) MSVC rules.
Previously we implemented non-standard disambiguation rules to
distinguish an enum-base from a bit-field but otherwise treated a :
after an elaborated-enum-specifier as introducing an enum-base. That
misparses various examples (anywhere an elaborated-type-specifier can
appear followed by a colon, such as within a ternary operator or
_Generic).
We now implement the C++11 rules, with the old cases accepted as
extensions where that seemed reasonable. These amount to:
* an enum-base must always be accompanied by an enum definition (except
in a standalone declaration of the form 'enum E : T;')
* in a member-declaration, 'enum E :' always introduces an enum-base,
never a bit-field
* in a type-specifier (or similar context), 'enum E :' is not
permitted; the colon means whatever else it would mean in that
context.
Fixed underlying types for enums are also permitted in Objective-C and
under MS extensions, plus as a language extension in all other modes.
The behavior in ObjC and MS extensions modes is unchanged (but the
bit-field disambiguation is a bit better); remaining language modes
follow the C++11 rules.
Fixes PR45726, PR39979, PR19810, PR44941, and most of PR24297, plus C++
core issues 1514 and 1966.
When a category/extension doesn't repeat a type bound, corresponding
type parameter is substituted with `id` when used as a type argument. As
a result, in the added test case it was causing errors like
> type argument 'T' (aka 'id') does not satisfy the bound ('id<NSCopying>') of type parameter 'T'
We are already checking that type parameters should be consistent
everywhere (see `checkTypeParamListConsistency`) and update
`ObjCTypeParamDecl` to have correct underlying type. And when we use the
type parameter as a method return type or a method parameter type, it is
substituted to the bounded type. But when we use the type parameter as a
type argument, we check `ObjCTypeParamType` that wasn't updated and
remains `id`.
Fix by updating not only `ObjCTypeParamDecl` UnderlyingType but also
TypeForDecl as we use the underlying type to create a canonical type for
`ObjCTypeParamType` (see `ASTContext::getObjCTypeParamType`).
This is a different approach to fixing the issue. The previous one was
02c2ab3d88 which was reverted in
4c539e8da1. The problem with the previous
approach was that `ObjCTypeParamType::desugar` was returning underlying
type for `ObjCTypeParamDecl` without applying any protocols stored in
`ObjCTypeParamType`. It caused inconsistencies in comparing types before
and after desugaring.
Re-applying after fixing intermittent test failures.
rdar://problem/54329242
Reviewed By: erik.pilkington
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72872
This fixes a common mistake (the 3 should be @3): NSNumber *n = 3. This extends
an existing check for NSString. Also, this only errs if the initializer isn't a
null pointer constant, so NSNumber *n = 0; continues to work. rdar://47029572
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78066
When a category/extension doesn't repeat a type bound, corresponding
type parameter is substituted with `id` when used as a type argument. As
a result, in the added test case it was causing errors like
> type argument 'T' (aka 'id') does not satisfy the bound ('id<NSCopying>') of type parameter 'T'
We are already checking that type parameters should be consistent
everywhere (see `checkTypeParamListConsistency`) and update
`ObjCTypeParamDecl` to have correct underlying type. And when we use the
type parameter as a method return type or a method parameter type, it is
substituted to the bounded type. But when we use the type parameter as a
type argument, we check `ObjCTypeParamType` that wasn't updated and
remains `id`.
Fix by updating not only `ObjCTypeParamDecl` UnderlyingType but also
TypeForDecl as we use the underlying type to create a canonical type for
`ObjCTypeParamType` (see `ASTContext::getObjCTypeParamType`).
This is a different approach to fixing the issue. The previous one was
02c2ab3d88 which was reverted in
4c539e8da1. The problem with the previous
approach was that `ObjCTypeParamType::desugar` was returning underlying
type for `ObjCTypeParamDecl` without applying any protocols stored in
`ObjCTypeParamType`. It caused inconsistencies in comparing types before
and after desugaring.
rdar://problem/54329242
Reviewed By: erik.pilkington
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72872
Some methods are sometimes declared in the @implementation blocks which
can cause undiagnosed clashes.
Just write a checkObjCDirectMethodClashes() for this purpose.
Also make sure that "unavailable" selectors do not inherit
objc_direct_members.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76643
Signed-off-by: Pierre Habouzit <phabouzit@apple.com>
Radar-ID: rdar://problem/59332804, rdar://problem/59782963
Fix a bug in IRGen where it wasn't destructing compound literals in C
that are ObjC pointer arrays or non-trivial structs. Also diagnose jumps
that enter or exit the lifetime of the compound literals.
rdar://problem/51867864
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64464
Compute and propagate conversion kind to diagnostics helper in C++
to provide more specific diagnostics about incorrect implicit
conversions in assignments, initializations, params, etc...
Duplicated some diagnostics as errors because C++ is more strict.
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74116
Add fixits for messaging self in MRR or using super, as the intent is
clear, and it turns out people do that a lot more than expected.
Allow for objc_direct_members on main interfaces, it's extremely useful
for internal only classes, and proves to be quite annoying for adoption.
Add some better warnings around properties direct/non-direct clashes (it
was done for methods but properties were a miss).
Add some errors when direct properties are marked @dynamic.
Radar-Id: rdar://problem/58355212
Signed-off-by: Pierre Habouzit <phabouzit@apple.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73755
Converting a pointer to an integer whose result cannot represented in the
integer type is undefined behavior is C and prohibited in C++. C++ already
has a diagnostic when casting. This adds a diagnostic for C.
Since this diagnostic uses the range of the conversion it also modifies
int-to-pointer-cast diagnostic to use a range.
Fixes PR8718: No warning on casting between pointer and non-pointer-sized int
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72231
Add fixits for messaging self in MRR or using super, as the intent is
clear, and it turns out people do that a lot more than expected.
Allow for objc_direct_members on main interfaces, it's extremely useful
for internal only classes, and proves to be quite annoying for adoption.
Add some better warnings around properties direct/non-direct clashes (it
was done for methods but properties were a miss).
Radar-Id: rdar://problem/58355212
Signed-off-by: Pierre Habouzit <phabouzit@apple.com>
Sending a message to `self` when it is const and within a class method
is safe because we know that `self` is the Class itself.
We can only relax this warning in ARC.
Signed-off-by: Pierre Habouzit <phabouzit@apple.com>
Radar-Id: rdar://problem/58581965
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72747
Because the name of a direct method must be agreed upon by the caller
and the implementation, certain bad practices that one can get away with
when using dynamism are fatal with direct methods.
To avoid really weird and unscruttable linker error, tighten the
front-end error reporting.
Rule 1:
Direct methods can only have at most one declaration in an @interface
container. Any redeclaration is strictly forbidden.
Today some amount of redeclaration is tolerated between the main
interface and categories for dynamic methods, but we can't have that.
Rule 2:
Direct method implementations can only be declared in a matching
@interface container: when implemented in the primary @implementation
then the declaration must be in the primary @interface or an
extension, and when implemented in a category, the declaration must be
in the @interface for the same category.
Also fix another issue with ObjCMethod::getCanonicalDecl(): when an
implementation lives in the primary @interface, then its canonical
declaration can be in any extension, even when it's not an accessor.
Add Sema tests to cover the new errors, and CG tests to beef up testing
around function names for categories and extensions.
Radar-Id: <rdar://problem/58054563>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71694
even when there is no explicit synthesize statement.
This fixes a regression introduced in https://reviews.llvm.org/D68108
that could lead to missing debug locations in cleanup code in
synthesized Objective-C++ properties.
rdar://57630879
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71084
__attribute__((objc_direct)) is an attribute on methods declaration, and
__attribute__((objc_direct_members)) on implementation, categories or
extensions.
A `direct` property specifier is added (@property(direct) type name)
These attributes / specifiers cause the method to have no associated
Objective-C metadata (for the property or the method itself), and the
calling convention to be a direct C function call.
The symbol for the method has enforced hidden visibility and such direct
calls are hence unreachable cross image. An explicit C function must be
made if so desired to wrap them.
The implicit `self` and `_cmd` arguments are preserved, however to
maintain compatibility with the usual `objc_msgSend` semantics,
3 fundamental precautions are taken:
1) for instance methods, `self` is nil-checked. On arm64 backends this
typically adds a single instruction (cbz x0, <closest-ret>) to the
codegen, for the vast majority of the cases when the return type is a
scalar.
2) for class methods, because the class may not be realized/initialized
yet, a call to `[self self]` is emitted. When the proper deployment
target is used, this is optimized to `objc_opt_self(self)`.
However, long term we might want to emit something better that the
optimizer can reason about. When inlining kicks in, these calls
aren't optimized away as the optimizer has no idea that a single call
is really necessary.
3) the calling convention for the `_cmd` argument is changed: the caller
leaves the second argument to the call undefined, and the selector is
loaded inside the body when it's referenced only.
As far as error reporting goes, the compiler refuses:
- making any overloads direct,
- making an overload of a direct method,
- implementations marked as direct when the declaration in the
interface isn't (the other way around is allowed, as the direct
attribute is inherited from the declaration),
- marking methods required for protocol conformance as direct,
- messaging an unqualified `id` with a direct method,
- forming any @selector() expression with only direct selectors.
As warnings:
- any inconsistency of direct-related calling convention when
@selector() or messaging is used,
- forming any @selector() expression with a possibly direct selector.
Lastly an `objc_direct_members` attribute is added that can decorate
`@implementation` blocks and causes methods only declared there (and in
no `@interface`) to be automatically direct. When decorating an
`@interface` then all methods and properties declared in this block are
marked direct.
Radar-ID: rdar://problem/2684889
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69991
Reviewed-By: John McCall
This patch is motivated by (and factored out from)
https://reviews.llvm.org/D66121 which is a debug info bugfix. Starting
with DWARF 5 all Objective-C methods are nested inside their
containing type, and that patch implements this for synthesized
Objective-C properties.
1. SemaObjCProperty populates a list of synthesized accessors that may
need to inserted into an ObjCImplDecl.
2. SemaDeclObjC::ActOnEnd inserts forward-declarations for all
accessors for which no override was provided into their
ObjCImplDecl. This patch does *not* synthesize AST function
*bodies*. Moving that code from the static analyzer into Sema may
be a good idea though.
3. Places that expect all methods to have bodies have been updated.
I did not update the static analyzer's inliner for synthesized
properties to point back to the property declaration (see
test/Analysis/Inputs/expected-plists/nullability-notes.m.plist), which
I believed to be more bug than a feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68108
rdar://problem/53782400
This introduced new errors, see below. Reverting until that can be investigated
properly.
#import <AVFoundation/AVFoundation.h>
void f(int width, int height) {
FourCharCode best_fourcc = kCMPixelFormat_422YpCbCr8_yuvs;
NSDictionary* videoSettingsDictionary = @{
(id)kCVPixelBufferPixelFormatTypeKey : @(best_fourcc),
};
}
$ clang++ -c /tmp/a.mm
/tmp/a.mm:6:5: error: cannot initialize a parameter of type
'KeyType<NSCopying> _Nonnull const' (aka 'const id') with an rvalue
of type 'id'
(id)kCVPixelBufferPixelFormatTypeKey : @(best_fourcc),
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1 error generated.
> When a category/extension doesn't repeat a type bound, corresponding
> type parameter is substituted with `id` when used as a type argument. As
> a result, in the added test case it was causing errors like
>
> > type argument 'T' (aka 'id') does not satisfy the bound ('id<NSCopying>') of type parameter 'T'
>
> We are already checking that type parameters should be consistent
> everywhere (see `checkTypeParamListConsistency`) and update
> `ObjCTypeParamDecl` to have correct underlying type. And when we use the
> type parameter as a method return type or a method parameter type, it is
> substituted to the bounded type. But when we use the type parameter as a
> type argument, we check `ObjCTypeParamType` that ignores the updated
> underlying type and remains `id`.
>
> Fix by desugaring `ObjCTypeParamType` to the underlying type, the same
> way we are doing with `TypedefType`.
>
> rdar://problem/54329242
>
> Reviewers: erik.pilkington, ahatanak
>
> Reviewed By: erik.pilkington
>
> Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, ributzka, cfe-commits
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66696
pointer types.
For example, in Objective-C mode, the initialization of 'x' in:
```
@implementation MyType
+ (void)someClassMethod {
MyType *x = self;
}
@end
```
is correctly diagnosed with an incompatible-pointer-types warning, but
in Objective-C++ mode, it is not diagnosed at all -- even though
incompatible pointer conversions generally become an error in C++.
This patch fixes that oversight, allowing implicit conversions
involving Class only to/from unqualified-id, and between qualified and
unqualified Class, where the protocols are compatible.
Note that this does change some behaviors in Objective-C, as well, as
shown by the modified tests.
Of particular note is that assignment from from 'Class<MyProtocol>' to
'id<MyProtocol>' now warns. (Despite appearances, those are not
compatible types. 'Class<MyProtocol>' is not expected to have instance
methods defined by 'MyProtocol', while 'id<MyProtocol>' is.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67983
llvm-svn: 375125
This is especially important for Objective-C++, which is entirely
missing this testing at the moment.
This annotates with "FIXME" the cases which I change in the next
patch -- I primarily wanted to document the current state of things so
that the effect of the code change is made clear.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67982
llvm-svn: 375124
When a category/extension doesn't repeat a type bound, corresponding
type parameter is substituted with `id` when used as a type argument. As
a result, in the added test case it was causing errors like
> type argument 'T' (aka 'id') does not satisfy the bound ('id<NSCopying>') of type parameter 'T'
We are already checking that type parameters should be consistent
everywhere (see `checkTypeParamListConsistency`) and update
`ObjCTypeParamDecl` to have correct underlying type. And when we use the
type parameter as a method return type or a method parameter type, it is
substituted to the bounded type. But when we use the type parameter as a
type argument, we check `ObjCTypeParamType` that ignores the updated
underlying type and remains `id`.
Fix by desugaring `ObjCTypeParamType` to the underlying type, the same
way we are doing with `TypedefType`.
rdar://problem/54329242
Reviewers: erik.pilkington, ahatanak
Reviewed By: erik.pilkington
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, ributzka, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66696
llvm-svn: 374202
Summary:
Instead of asserting all typos are corrected in the sema destructor.
The sema destructor is not run in the common case of running the compiler
with the -disable-free cc1 flag (which is the default in the driver).
Having this assertion led to crashes in libclang and clangd, which are not
reproducible when running the compiler.
Asserting at the end of the TU could be an option, but finding all
missing typo correction cases is hard and having worse diagnostics instead
of a failing assertion is a better trade-off.
For more discussion on this, see:
https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-July/062872.html
Reviewers: sammccall, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: usaxena95, dgoldman, jkorous, vsapsai, rnk, kadircet, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64799
llvm-svn: 374152
Also, add a diagnostic group, -Wobjc-signed-char-bool, to control all these
related diagnostics.
rdar://51954400
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67559
llvm-svn: 372183
qualifications as unavailable if the union is declared in a system
header
r365985 stopped marking those fields as unavailable, which caused the
union's NonTrivialToPrimitive* bits to be set to true. This patch
restores the behavior prior to r365985, except that users can explicitly
specify the ownership qualification of the field to instruct the
compiler not to mark it as unavailable.
rdar://problem/53420753
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65256
llvm-svn: 371276
non-trivial C union types
This recommits r365985, which was reverted because it broke a few
projects using unions containing non-trivial ObjC pointer fields in
system headers. We now have a patch to fix the problem (see
https://reviews.llvm.org/D65256).
Original commit message:
This patch diagnoses uses of non-trivial C unions and structs/unions
containing non-trivial C unions in the following contexts, which require
default-initialization, destruction, or copying of the union objects,
instead of disallowing fields of non-trivial types in C unions, which is
what we currently do:
- function parameters.
- function returns.
- assignments.
- compound literals.
- block captures except capturing of `__block` variables by non-escaping blocks.
- local and global variable definitions.
- lvalue-to-rvalue conversions of volatile types.
See the discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D62988 for more background.
rdar://problem/50679094
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63753
llvm-svn: 371275
When checking if block types are compatible, we are checking for
compatibility their return types and parameters' types. As these types
have different variance, we need to check them in different order.
rdar://problem/52788423
Reviewers: erik.pilkington, arphaman
Reviewed By: arphaman
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, ributzka, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66831
llvm-svn: 370130
Only honour format_arg attributes on -[NSBundle localizedStringForKey] when its
argument has a format specifier in it, otherwise its likely to just be a key to
fetch localized strings.
Fixes rdar://23622446
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27165
llvm-svn: 368878
This patch adds the SVE built-in types defined by the Procedure Call
Standard for the Arm Architecture:
https://developer.arm.com/docs/100986/0000
It handles the types in all relevant places that deal with built-in types.
At the moment, some of these places bail out with an error, including:
(1) trying to generate LLVM IR for the types
(2) trying to generate debug info for the types
(3) trying to mangle the types using the Microsoft C++ ABI
(4) trying to @encode the types in Objective C
(1) and (2) are fixed by follow-on patches but (unlike this patch)
they deal mostly with target-specific LLVM details, so seemed like
a logically separate change. There is currently no spec for (3) and
(4), so reporting an error seems like the correct behaviour for now.
The intention is that the types will become sizeless types:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-June/062523.html
The main purpose of the sizeless type extension is to diagnose
impossible or dangerous uses of the types, such as any that would
require sizeof to have a meaningful defined value.
Until then, the patch sets the alignments of the types to the values
specified in the link above. It also sets the sizes of the types to
zero, which is chosen to be consistently wrong and shouldn't affect
correctly-written code (i.e. code that would compile even with the
sizeless type extension).
The patch adds the common subset of functionality needed to test the
sizeless type extension on the one hand and to provide SVE intrinsic
functions on the other. After this patch, the two pieces of work are
essentially independent.
The patch is based on one by Graham Hunter:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D59245
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62960
llvm-svn: 368413
This reverts commit r365985.
Prior to r365985, clang used to mark C union fields that have
non-trivial ObjC ownership qualifiers as unavailable if the union was
declared in a system header. r365985 stopped doing so, which caused the
swift compiler to crash when it tried to import a non-trivial union.
I have a patch that fixes the crash (https://reviews.llvm.org/D65256),
but I'm temporarily reverting the original patch until we can decide on
whether it's taking the right approach.
llvm-svn: 367076
non-trivial C union types
This patch diagnoses uses of non-trivial C unions and structs/unions
containing non-trivial C unions in the following contexts, which require
default-initialization, destruction, or copying of the union objects,
instead of disallowing fields of non-trivial types in C unions, which is
what we currently do:
- function parameters.
- function returns.
- assignments.
- compound literals.
- block captures except capturing of `__block` variables by non-escaping
blocks.
- local and global variable definitions.
- lvalue-to-rvalue conversions of volatile types.
See the discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D62988 for more background.
rdar://problem/50679094
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63753
llvm-svn: 365985
This reverts r365382 (git commit 8b1becf2e3)
Appears to regress this semi-reduced fragment of valid code from windows
SDK headers:
#define InterlockedIncrement64 _InterlockedIncrement64
extern "C" __int64 InterlockedIncrement64(__int64 volatile *Addend);
#pragma intrinsic(_InterlockedIncrement64)
unsigned __int64 InterlockedIncrement(unsigned __int64 volatile *Addend) {
return (unsigned __int64)(InterlockedIncrement64)((volatile __int64 *)Addend);
}
Found on a buildbot here, but no mail was sent due to it already being
red:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/sanitizer-windows/builds/48067
llvm-svn: 365393
If the type didn't exist, we used to emit a really bad error:
t.m:3:12: error: expected ')'
-(nullable NoSuchType)foo3;
^
rdar://50925632
llvm-svn: 364489
Swift requires certain classes to be not just initialized lazily on first
use, but actually allocated lazily using information that is only available
at runtime. This is incompatible with ObjC class initialization, or at least
not efficiently compatible, because there is no meaningful class symbol
that can be put in a class-ref variable at load time. This leaves ObjC
code unable to access such classes, which is undesirable.
objc_class_stub says that class references should be resolved by calling
a new ObjC runtime function with a pointer to a new "class stub" structure.
Non-ObjC compilers (like Swift) can simply emit this structure when ObjC
interop is required for a class that cannot be statically allocated,
then apply this attribute to the `@interface` in the generated ObjC header
for the class.
This attribute can be thought of as a generalization of the existing
`objc_runtime_visible` attribute which permits more efficient class
resolution as well as supporting the additon of categories to the class.
Subclassing these classes from ObjC is currently not allowed.
Patch by Slava Pestov!
llvm-svn: 362054
Nullability attributes weren't being stripped for AttributedTypes that
were wrapped in a MacroQualifiedType. This fix adds a check for this
type and a test.
llvm-svn: 361205
The warning isn't very useful when the function is an ObjC method.
rdar://problem/41561853
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61147
llvm-svn: 359864
If an address_space attribute is defined in a macro, print the macro instead
when diagnosing a warning or error for incompatible pointers with different
address_spaces.
We allow this for all attributes (not just address_space), and for multiple
attributes declared in the same macro.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51329
llvm-svn: 359826
We correct some typos in `ActOnArraySubscriptExpr` and
`ActOnOMPArraySectionExpr`, so when their result is `ExprError`, we can
end up correcting delayed typos in the same expressions again. In
general it is OK but when `NumTypos` is incorrect, we can hit the
assertion
> Assertion failed: (Entry != DelayedTypos.end() && "Failed to get the state for a TypoExpr!"), function getTypoExprState, file clang/lib/Sema/SemaLookup.cpp, line 5219.
Fix by replacing some subscript `ExprResult` with typo-corrected expressions
instead of keeping the original expressions. Thus if original expressions
contained `TypoExpr`, we'll use corrected expressions instead of trying to
correct them again.
rdar://problem/47403222
Reviewers: rsmith, erik.pilkington, majnemer
Reviewed By: erik.pilkington
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60848
llvm-svn: 359713
of an auto"
This commit changed the initializer expression passed into
initialization (stripping off an enclosing pair of parentheses or
braces) and subtly changing the meaning of programs, typically by
inserting bogus calls to copy constructors.
See the added testcase in test/SemaCXX/cxx1y-init-captures.cpp for an
example of the breakage.
llvm-svn: 359066
retaining block and all of the enclosing blocks are non-escaping.
If the block implicitly retaining self doesn't escape, there is no risk
of creating retain cycles, so clang shouldn't diagnose it and force
users to add self-> to silence the diagnostic.
Also, fix a bug where clang was failing to diagnose an implicitly
retained self inside a c++ lambda nested inside a block.
rdar://problem/25059955
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60736
llvm-svn: 358624
We want to make objc_nonlazy_class apply to implementations, but ran into this.
There doesn't seem to be any reason that this isn't supported.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60542
llvm-svn: 358200
This test was duplicated, and the last declaration had some syntax errors since
the invalid attribute caused the @implementation to be skipped by the parser.
llvm-svn: 358136
moveAttrFromListToList only makes sense when moving an attribute to a list with
a pool that's either equivalent, or has a shorter lifetime. Therefore, using it
to move a ParsedAttr from a declarator to a declaration specifier doesn't make
sense, since the declaration specifier's pool outlives the declarator's. The
patch adds a new function, ParsedAttributes::takeOneFrom, which transfers the
attribute from one pool to another, fixing the use-after-deallocate.
rdar://49175426
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60101
llvm-svn: 357516
We were allocating the implicit attribute in the declarator's attribute pool,
but putting into the declaration specifier's ParsedAttributesView. If there are
multiple declarators, then we'll use the attribute from the declaration
specifier after clearing out the declarators attribute pool. Fix this by
allocating the attribute in the declaration specifier's pool.
rdar://48529718
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59327
llvm-svn: 356187
expression inside the parentheses is a valid UTF-8 string literal.
Previously clang emitted an expression like @("abc") as a message send
to stringWithUTF8String. This commit makes clang emit the boxed
expression as a compile-time constant instead.
This commit also has the effect of silencing the nullable-to-nonnull
conversion warning clang started emitting after r317727, which
originally motivated this commit (see https://oleb.net/2018/@keypath).
rdar://problem/42684601
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58729
llvm-svn: 355662
declaring an unavailable method in the subclass's extension that
overrides the designated initializer in the base class.
r243676 made changes to allow declaring the unavailable method in the
subclass interface to silence the warning. This commit additionally
allows declaring the unavailable method in the class extension.
rdar://problem/42731306
llvm-svn: 355175
Fixes the warning about incompatible pointer types on assigning to a
subclass of type argument an expression of type `__kindof TypeParam`.
We already have a mechanism in `ASTContext::canAssignObjCInterfaces`
that handles `ObjCObjectType` with `__kindof`. But it wasn't triggered
because during type substitution `__kindof TypeParam` was represented as
`AttributedType` with attribute `ObjCKindOf` and equivalent type
`TypeArg`. For assignment type checking we use canonical types so
attributed type was desugared and the attribute was ignored.
The fix is in checking transformed `AttributedType` and pushing
`__kindof` down into `ObjCObjectType` when necessary.
rdar://problem/38514910
Reviewers: ahatanak, erik.pilkington, doug.gregor
Reviewed By: doug.gregor
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, manmanren, jordan_rose, doug.gregor, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57076
llvm-svn: 354189
`QualType::substObjCTypeArgs` doesn't go past non-canonical types and as
the result misses some of the substitutions like `ObjCTypeParamType`.
Update `SimpleTransformVisitor` to traverse past the type sugar.
Reviewers: ahatanak, erik.pilkington
Reviewed By: erik.pilkington
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57270
llvm-svn: 354164
We were warning on valid ObjC property reference exprs, and passing
in the wrong arguments to DiagnoseFloatingImpCast (leading to a badly
worded diagnostic).
rdar://47644670
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58145
llvm-svn: 354074
This fixes a regression that was caused by r335084, which reversed
the order that attributes are applied. objc_method_family can change
whether a method is an init method, so the order that these
attributes are applied matters. The commit fixes this by delaying the
init check until after all attributes have been applied.
rdar://47829358
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58152
llvm-svn: 353976
This patch fixes a bug where clang doesn’t reject union fields of
non-trivial C struct types. For example:
```
// This struct is non-trivial under ARC.
struct S0 {
id x;
};
union U0 {
struct S0 s0; // clang should reject this.
struct S0 s1; // clang should reject this.
};
void test(union U0 a) {
// Previously, both 'a.s0.x' and 'a.s1.x' were released in this
// function.
}
```
rdar://problem/46677858
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55659
llvm-svn: 353459
A non-lazy class will be initialized eagerly when the Objective-C runtime is
loaded. This is required for certain system classes which have instances allocated in
non-standard ways, such as the classes for blocks and constant strings.
Adding this attribute is essentially equivalent to providing a trivial
+load method but avoids the (fairly small) load-time overheads associated
with defining and calling such a method.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56555
llvm-svn: 353116
attributes from declaration over attributes from '#pragma clang attribute'
Before this commit users had an issue when using #pragma clang attribute with
availability attributes:
The explicit attribute that's specified next to the declaration is not
guaranteed to be preferred over the attribute specified in the pragma.
This commit fixes this by introducing a priority field to the availability
attribute to control how they're merged. Attributes with higher priority are
applied over attributes with lower priority for the same platform. The
implicitly inferred attributes are given the lower priority. This ensures that:
- explicit attributes are preferred over all other attributes.
- implicitly inferred attributes that are inferred from an explicit attribute
are discarded if there's an explicit attribute or an attribute specified
using a #pragma for the same platform.
- implicitly inferred attributes that are inferred from an attribute in the
#pragma are not used if there's an explicit, explicit #pragma, or an
implicit attribute inferred from an explicit attribute for the declaration.
This is the resulting ranking:
`platform availability > platform availability from pragma > inferred availability > inferred availability from pragma`
rdar://46390243
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56892
llvm-svn: 352084
declared in a parent class from within the @implementation context
This commit extends r350768 and allows the use of methods marked as unavailable
that are declared in a parent class/category from within the @implementation of
the class where the method is marked as unavailable.
This allows users to call init that's marked as unavailable even if they don't
define it.
rdar://47134898
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56816
llvm-svn: 351459
Mention the deployment target, and don't say "partial" which doesn't
really mean anything to users.
rdar://problem/33601513
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56523
llvm-svn: 351108
variable during auto type deduction, use the rewritten initializer when
performing initialization of the variable.
This silences spurious -Warc-repeated-use-of-weak warnings that are
issued when the initializer uses a weak ObjC pointer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55662
llvm-svn: 350917
placeholder expressions while an unevaluated context is still on the
expression evaluation context stack.
This prevents recordUseOfWeek from being called when a weak variable is
used as an operand of a decltype or a typeof expression and fixes
spurious -Warc-repeated-use-of-weak warnings.
rdar://problem/45742525
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55662
llvm-svn: 350887
the @implementation context
In Objective-C, it's common for some frameworks to mark some methods like init
as unavailable in the @interface to prohibit their usage. However, these
frameworks then often implemented said method and refer to it in another method
that acts as a factory for that object. The recent change to how messages to
self are type checked in clang (r349841) introduced a regression which started
to prohibit this pattern with an X is unavailable error. This commit addresses
the aforementioned regression.
rdar://47134898
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56469
llvm-svn: 350768
This attribute, called "objc_externally_retained", exposes clang's
notion of pseudo-__strong variables in ARC. Pseudo-strong variables
"borrow" their initializer, meaning that they don't retain/release
it, instead assuming that someone else is keeping their value alive.
If a function is annotated with this attribute, implicitly strong
parameters of that function aren't implicitly retained/released in
the function body, and are implicitly const. This is useful to expose
for performance reasons, most functions don't need the extra safety
of the retain/release, so programmers can opt out as needed.
This attribute can also apply to declarations of local variables,
with similar effect.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55865
llvm-svn: 350422
use the pointer to the class as the result type of the message
Prior to this commit, messages to self in class methods were treated as instance
methods to a Class value. When these methods returned instancetype the compiler
only saw id through the instancetype, and not the Interface *. This caused
problems when that return value was a receiver in a message send, as the
compiler couldn't select the right method declaration and had to rely on a
selection from the global method pool.
This commit modifies the semantics of such message sends and uses class messages
that are dispatched to the interface that corresponds to the class that contains
the class method. This ensures that instancetypes are correctly interpreted by
the compiler. This change is safe under ARC (as self can't be reassigned),
however, it also applies to MRR code as we are assuming that the user isn't
doing anything unreasonable.
rdar://20940997
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36790
llvm-svn: 349841
This moves everything primarily testing the functionality of -ast-dump and -ast-print into their own directory, rather than leaving the tests spread around the testing directory.
llvm-svn: 348017
A mask type is a 1 to 8-byte string that follows the "mask." annotation
in the format string. This enables obfuscating data in the event the
provided privacy level isn't enabled.
rdar://problem/36756282
llvm-svn: 346211
Previously we supported these in C++, ObjC, and C with -fms-extensions.
rdar://43831380
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52339
llvm-svn: 343360
When defined in NSObject, +new will call -init. If -init has been marked
unavailable, diagnose uses of +new.
rdar://18335828
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51189
llvm-svn: 341874
This is a warning about using 'assign' instead of 'unsafe_unretained'
in Objective-C property declarations. It's off by default because there
isn't consensus in the Objective-C steering group that this is the right
thing to do, but we're nonetheless okay with adding it because there's a
substantial pool of Objective-C programmers who will appreciate the warning.
Patch by Alfred Zien!
llvm-svn: 341489
expression
Clang emits invalid protocol metadata when a @protocol expression is used with a
forward-declared protocol. The protocol metadata is missing protocol conformance
list of the protocol since we don't have access to the definition of it in the
compiled translation unit. The linker then might end up picking the invalid
metadata when linking which will lead to incorrect runtime protocol conformance
checks.
This commit makes sure that Clang fails to compile code that uses a @protocol
expression with a forward-declared protocol. This ensures that Clang does not
emit invalid protocol metadata. I added an extra assert in CodeGen to ensure
that this kind of issue won't happen in other places.
rdar://32787811
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49462
llvm-svn: 340102
Recommit of r335084 after revert in r335516.
... instead of prepending it at the beginning (the original behavior
since implemented in r122535 2010-12-23). This builds up an
AttributeList in the the order in which the attributes appear in the
source.
The reverse order caused nodes for attributes in the AST (e.g. LoopHint)
to be in the reverse order, and therefore printed in the wrong order in
-ast-dump. Some TODO comments mention this. The order was explicitly
reversed for enable_if attribute overload resolution and name mangling,
which is not necessary anymore with this patch.
The change unfortunately has some secondary effect, especially on
diagnostic output. In the simplest cases, the CHECK lines or expected
diagnostic were changed to the the new output. If the kind of
error/warning changed, the attributes' order was changed instead.
This unfortunately causes some 'previous occurrence here' hints to be
textually after the main marker. This typically happens when attributes
are merged, but are incompatible to each other. Interchanging the role
of the the main and note SourceLocation will also cause the case where
two different declaration's attributes (in contrast to multiple
attributes of the same declaration) are merged to be reverse. There is
no easy fix because sometimes previous attributes are merged into a new
declaration's attribute list, sometimes new attributes are added to a
previous declaration's attribute list. Since 'previous occurrence here'
pointing to locations after the main marker is not rare, I left the
markers as-is; it is only relevant when the attributes are declared in
the same declaration anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48100
llvm-svn: 338800
to the result type of a message send if the result type cannot have a
nullability specifier.
Previously, clang would print the following message when the code in
nullability.m was compiled:
"incompatible integer to pointer conversion initializing 'int *' with
an expression of type 'int _Nullable'"
This is wrong as 'int' isn't supposed to have any nullability
specifiers.
rdar://problem/40830514
llvm-svn: 338048
The '%tu'/'%td' as formatting specifiers have been used to print out the
NSInteger/NSUInteger values for a long time. Typically their ABI matches, but that's
not the case on watchOS. The ABI difference boils down to the following:
- Regular 32-bit darwin targets (like armv7) use 'ptrdiff_t' of type 'int',
which matches 'NSInteger'.
- WatchOS arm target (armv7k) uses 'ptrdiff_t' of type 'long', which doesn't
match 'NSInteger' of type 'int'.
Because of this ABI difference these specifiers trigger -Wformat warnings only
for watchOS builds, which is really inconvenient for cross-platform code.
This patch avoids this -Wformat warning for '%tu'/'%td' and NS[U]Integer only,
and instead uses the new -Wformat-pedantic warning that JF introduced in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D47290. This is acceptable because Darwin guarantees that,
despite the watchOS ABI differences, sizeof(ptrdiff_t) == sizeof(NS[U]Integer),
and alignof(ptrdiff_t) == alignof(NS[U]Integer) so the warning is therefore noisy
for pedantic reasons.
I'll update public documentation to ensure that this behaviour is properly
communicated.
rdar://41739204
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48852
llvm-svn: 336396
Summary:
Pick D42933 back up, and make NSInteger/NSUInteger with %zu/%zi specifiers on Darwin warn only in pedantic mode. The default -Wformat recently started warning for the following code because of the added support for analysis for the '%zi' specifier.
NSInteger i = NSIntegerMax;
NSLog(@"max NSInteger = %zi", i);
The problem is that on armv7 %zi is 'long', and NSInteger is typedefed to 'int' in Foundation. We should avoid this warning as it's inconvenient to our users: it's target specific (happens only on armv7 and not arm64), and breaks their existing code. We should also silence the warning for the '%zu' specifier to ensure consistency. This is acceptable because Darwin guarantees that, despite the unfortunate choice of typedef, sizeof(size_t) == sizeof(NS[U]Integer), the warning is therefore noisy for pedantic reasons. Once this is in I'll update public documentation.
Related discussion on cfe-dev:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2018-May/058050.html
<rdar://36874921&40501559>
Reviewers: ahatanak, vsapsai, alexshap, aaron.ballman, javed.absar, jfb, rjmccall
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, aheejin, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47290
llvm-svn: 335393
This reapplies r334224 and adds explicit triples to some tests to fix
them on Windows (where otherwise they would have run with the default
windows-msvc triple, which I'm changing the behavior for).
Original commit message:
The body of a `@finally` needs to be executed on both exceptional and
non-exceptional paths. On landingpad platforms, this is straightforward:
the `@finally` body is emitted as a normal (non-exceptional) cleanup,
and then a catch-all is emitted which branches to that cleanup (the
cleanup has code to conditionally re-throw based on a flag which is set
by the catch-all).
Unfortunately, we can't use the same approach for MSVC exceptions, where
the catch-all will be emitted as a catchpad. We can't just branch to the
cleanup from within the catchpad, since we can only exit it via a
catchret, at which point the exception is destroyed and we can't
rethrow. We could potentially emit the finally body inside the catchpad
and have the normal cleanup path somehow branch into it, but that would
require some new IR construct that could branch into a catchpad.
Instead, after discussing it with Reid Kleckner, we decided that
frontend outlining was the best approach, similar to how SEH `__finally`
works today. We decided to use CapturedStmt (which was also suggested by
Reid) rather than CaptureFinder (which is what `__finally` uses) since
the latter doesn't handle a lot of cases we care about, e.g. self
accesses, property accesses, block captures, etc. Extending
CaptureFinder to handle those additional cases proved unwieldy, whereas
CapturedStmt already took care of all of those. In theory `__finally`
could also be moved over to CapturedStmt, which would remove some
existing limitations (e.g. the inability to capture this), although
CaptureFinder would still be needed for SEH filters.
The one case supported by `@finally` but not CapturedStmt (or
CaptureFinder for that matter) is arbitrary control flow out of the
`@finally`, e.g. having a return statement inside a `@finally`. We can
add that support as a follow-up, but in practice we've found it to be
used very rarely anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47564
llvm-svn: 334251
This reverts commit r334224.
This is causing buildbot failures on Windows, presumably because some
tests don't specify a triple. I'll test this on Windows locally and
recommit with the tests fixed.
llvm-svn: 334240
The body of a `@finally` needs to be executed on both exceptional and
non-exceptional paths. On landingpad platforms, this is straightforward:
the `@finally` body is emitted as a normal (non-exceptional) cleanup,
and then a catch-all is emitted which branches to that cleanup (the
cleanup has code to conditionally re-throw based on a flag which is set
by the catch-all).
Unfortunately, we can't use the same approach for MSVC exceptions, where
the catch-all will be emitted as a catchpad. We can't just branch to the
cleanup from within the catchpad, since we can only exit it via a
catchret, at which point the exception is destroyed and we can't
rethrow. We could potentially emit the finally body inside the catchpad
and have the normal cleanup path somehow branch into it, but that would
require some new IR construct that could branch into a catchpad.
Instead, after discussing it with Reid Kleckner, we decided that
frontend outlining was the best approach, similar to how SEH `__finally`
works today. We decided to use CapturedStmt (which was also suggested by
Reid) rather than CaptureFinder (which is what `__finally` uses) since
the latter doesn't handle a lot of cases we care about, e.g. self
accesses, property accesses, block captures, etc. Extending
CaptureFinder to handle those additional cases proved unwieldy, whereas
CapturedStmt already took care of all of those. In theory `__finally`
could also be moved over to CapturedStmt, which would remove some
existing limitations (e.g. the inability to capture this), although
CaptureFinder would still be needed for SEH filters.
The one case supported by `@finally` but not CapturedStmt (or
CaptureFinder for that matter) is arbitrary control flow out of the
`@finally`, e.g. having a return statement inside a `@finally`. We can
add that support as a follow-up, but in practice we've found it to be
used very rarely anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47564
llvm-svn: 334224
-Warc-repeated-use-of-weak may trigger a segmentation fault when the Decl
being checked is outside of a function scope, leaving the current function
info pointer null. This adds a check before using the function info.
llvm-svn: 333471
Summary:
Remove the call to DiagnoseUseOfDecl in LookupMemberExpr because:
1. LookupMemberExpr eagerly lookup both getter and setter, reguardless
if they are used or not. It causes wrong diagnostics if you are only
using getter.
2. LookupMemberExpr only diagnoses getter, but not setter.
3. ObjCPropertyOpBuilder already DiagnoseUseOfDecl when building getter
and setter. Doing it again in LookupMemberExpr causes duplicated
diagnostics.
rdar://problem/38479756
Reviewers: erik.pilkington, arphaman, doug.gregor
Reviewed By: arphaman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47280
llvm-svn: 333148