code to find and add Objective-C methods (starting at an
ObjCContainerDecl) into a single, static function. Also, make sure
that we search into the implementations of classes and categories to
find even more methods.
llvm-svn: 89163
current DeclContext. These "imaginary" declarations pose issues for
clients searching DeclContext for actual declarations. Instead,
register them for name lookup, and add the ObjCInterfaceDecl later to
the DeclContext when we hit an actual @interface declaration.
This also fixes a bug where the invariant that the Decls in a
DeclContext are sorted in order of their appearance is no longer
violated. What could happen is that an @class causes an
ObjCInterfaceDecl to get added first to the DeclContext, then the
ObjCClassDecl itself is added, and then later the SourceLocation of
the ObjCInterfaceDecl is updated with the correct location (which is
later in the file). This breaks an assumed invariant in
ResolveLocation.cpp (and possibly other clients).
llvm-svn: 89160
strip the sugar off in getFoundDecl() and getAsSingleDecl(), but leave it on for
clients like overload resolution who want to use the iterators.
Refactor a few pieces of overload resolution to strip off using declarations in
a single place. Don't do anything useful with the extra context knowledge yet.
llvm-svn: 89061
Also, make the "don't know how to instantiate a particular kind of
declaration" diagnostic nicer, so we don't have to trap Clang in a
debugger to figure out what went wrong.
llvm-svn: 89050
LookupResult RAII powers to diagnose ambiguity in the results. Other diagnostics
(e.g. access control and deprecation) will be moved to automatically trigger
during lookup as part of this same mechanism.
This abstraction makes it much easier to encapsulate aliasing declarations
(e.g. using declarations) inside the lookup system: eventually, lookup will
just produce the aliases in the LookupResult, and the standard access methods
will naturally strip the aliases off.
llvm-svn: 89027
sugared types. The basic problem is that our qualifier accessors
(getQualifiers, getCVRQualifiers, isConstQualified, etc.) only look at
the current QualType and not at any qualifiers that come from sugared
types, meaning that we won't see these qualifiers through, e.g.,
typedefs:
typedef const int CInt;
typedef CInt Self;
Self.isConstQualified() currently returns false!
Various bugs (e.g., PR5383) have cropped up all over the front end due
to such problems. I'm addressing this problem by splitting each
qualifier accessor into two versions:
- the "local" version only returns qualifiers on this particular
QualType instance
- the "normal" version that will eventually combine qualifiers from this
QualType instance with the qualifiers on the canonical type to
produce the full set of qualifiers.
This commit adds the local versions and switches a few callers from
the "normal" version (e.g., isConstQualified) over to the "local"
version (e.g., isLocalConstQualified) when that is the right thing to
do, e.g., because we're printing or serializing the qualifiers. Also,
switch a bunch of
Context.getCanonicalType(T1).getUnqualifiedType() == Context.getCanonicalType(T2).getQualifiedType()
expressions over to
Context.hasSameUnqualifiedType(T1, T2)
llvm-svn: 88969
that we're dealing with canonical types like the documentation say
(yay, CanQualType). Alas, this is another instance where using
getQualifiers() on a non-canonical QualType got us in trouble.
Good news: with this fix, Clang can now parse all of its own headers!
llvm-svn: 88848
set, expand overloaded function declarations. Long-term, this should
actually be done by the name-lookup code rather than here, but this
part of the code (involving using declarations) is getting a makeover
now and the test-case is useful.
llvm-svn: 88846
type, use full qualified name lookup rather than the poking the
declaration context directly. This makes sure that we see operator()'s
in superclasses. Also, move the complete-type check before this name
lookup.
llvm-svn: 88842
- Also, perform calculated implicit cast sequences if they're determined to work. This finally diagnoses static_cast to ambiguous or implicit bases and fixes two long-standing fixmes in the test case. For the C-style cast, this requires propagating the access check suppression pretty deep into other functions.
- Pass the expressions for TryStaticCast and TryStaticImplicitCast by reference. This should lead to a better AST being emitted for such casts, and also fixes a memory leak, because CheckReferenceInit and PerformImplicitConversion wrap the node passed to them. These wrappers were previously lost.
llvm-svn: 88809
cast) that is converting to a class type, enumerate its constructors
as in any other direct initialization. This ensures that we get the
proper conversion sequence.
llvm-svn: 88751
like a copy constructor to the overload set, just ignore it. This
ensures that we don't try to use such a constructor as a copy
constructor *without* triggering diagnostics at the point of
declaration.
Note that we *do* diagnose such copy constructors when explicitly
written by the user (e.g., as an explicit specialization).
llvm-svn: 88733
a class type from itself or a derived class thereof, enumerate
constructors and permit user-defined conversions to the arguments of
those constructors. This fixes the wacky implicit conversion sequence
used in std::auto_ptr's lame emulation of move semantics.
llvm-svn: 88670
instantiation), be sure to finish the expression statement by
providing a FullExprArg, making sure that temporaries get
destroyed. Fixes an obscure failure when parsing
llvm/LinkAllPasses.h.
llvm-svn: 88668
- Provide Sema in callbacks, instead of requiring it in constructor. This
eliminates the need for a factory function. Clients now just pass the object
to consume the results in directly.
- CodeCompleteConsumer is cheap to construct, so building it whenever we are
doing code completion is reasonable.
Doug, please review.
llvm-svn: 87099
1. For
A f() {
return A();
}
we were incorrectly calling the A destructor on the returned object.
2. For
void f(A);
void g() {
A a;
f(a);
}
we were incorrectly not calling the copy constructor.
llvm-svn: 87082
non-type template parameters or constants of pointer-to-member
type. Once checked, be sure to retain those pointer-to-member
constants as expressions if they are dependent, or as declarations if
they are not dependent.
llvm-svn: 87010
member type (e.g., T Class::*Member), build a pointer-to-member
constant expression. Previously, we we just building a simple
declaration reference expression, which meant that the expression was
not treated as a pointer to member.
llvm-svn: 87000
in "if" statements like:
if (CanQual<ReferenceType> RefType = T.getAs<ReferenceType>())
Thanks to Clang for pointing out this mistake :)
llvm-svn: 86995
- Comparing template parameter lists to determine if we have a redeclaration
- Comparing template parameter lists to determine if we have equivalent
template template parameters
- Comparing template parameter lists to determine whether a template
template argument is valid for a given template template parameter.
Previously, we did not distinguish between the last two cases, which
got us into trouble when we were looking for exact type matches
between the types of non-type template parameters that were dependent
types. Now we do, so we properly delay checking of template template
arguments until instantiation time.
Also, fix an accidental fall-through in a case statement that was
causing crashes.
llvm-svn: 86992
template template parameter.
When building a template-id type, check whether the template-name
itself is dependent (even if the template arguments are not!) and
handle it as a template-id type.
llvm-svn: 86913
permits, among other things, ripping apart and reconstructing
templates via partial specialization:
template<typename T>
struct DeepRemoveConst { typedef T type; };
template<typename T>
struct DeepRemoveConst<const T> {
typedef typename DeepRemoveConst<T>::type type;
};
template<template<typename> class TT, typename T>
struct DeepRemoveConst<TT<T> > {
typedef TT<typename DeepRemoveConst<T>::type> type;
};
Also, fix a longstanding thinko in the code handling partial ordering
of class template partial specializations. We were performing the
second deduction without clearing out the results of the first
deduction. It's amazing we got through so much code with such a
horrendous error :(
llvm-svn: 86893
with its corresponding template parameter. This can happen when we
performed some substitution into the default template argument and
what we had doesn't match any more, e.g.,
template<int> struct A;
template<typename T, template<T> class X = A> class B;
B<long> b;
Previously, we'd emit a pretty but disembodied diagnostic showing how
the default argument didn't match the template parameter. The
diagnostic was good, but nothing tied it to the *use* of the default
argument in "B<long>". This commit fixes that.
Also, tweak the counting of active template instantiations to avoid
counting non-instantiation records, such as those we create for
(surprise!) checking default arguments, instantiating default
arguments, and performing substitutions as part of template argument
deduction.
llvm-svn: 86884
template-type-parameter specific template argument checking code and
up to the template argument checking loop. In theory, this should make
variadic templates work better; in practice, they don't well enough
for us to care anyway (YET!), so this is mostly a re-organization to
simplify CheckTemplateArgument.
llvm-svn: 86868
template template parameter, substitute any prior template arguments
into the template template parameter. This, for example, allows us to
properly check the template template argument for a class such as:
template<typename T, template<T Value> class X> struct Foo;
The actual implementation of this feature was trivial; most of the
change is dedicated to giving decent diagnostics when this
substitution goes horribly wrong. We now get a note like:
note: while substituting prior template arguments into template
template parameter 'X' [with T = float]
As part of this change, enabled some very pedantic checking when
comparing template template parameter lists, which shook out a bug in
our overly-eager checking of default arguments of template template
parameters. We now perform only minimal checking of such default
arguments when they are initially parsed.
llvm-svn: 86864
parameters. Rather than storing them as either declarations (for the
non-dependent case) or expressions (for the dependent case), we now
(always) store them as TemplateNames.
The primary change here is to add a new kind of TemplateArgument,
which stores a TemplateName. However, making that change ripples to
every switch on a TemplateArgument's kind, also affecting
TemplateArgumentLocInfo/TemplateArgumentLoc, default template
arguments for template template parameters, type-checking of template
template arguments, etc.
This change is light on testing. It should fix several pre-existing
problems with template template parameters, such as:
- the inability to use dependent template names as template template
arguments
- template template parameter default arguments cannot be
instantiation
However, there are enough pieces missing that more implementation is
required before we can adequately test template template parameters.
llvm-svn: 86777
handling template template parameters properly. This refactoring:
- Parses template template arguments as id-expressions, representing
the result of the parse as a template name (Action::TemplateTy)
rather than as an expression (lame!).
- Represents all parsed template arguments via a new parser-specific
type, ParsedTemplateArgument, which stores the kind of template
argument (type, non-type, template) along with all of the source
information about the template argument. This replaces an ad hoc
set of 3 vectors (one for a void*, which was either a type or an
expression; one for a bit telling whether the first was a type or
an expression; and one for a single source location pointing at
the template argument).
- Moves TemplateIdAnnotation into the new Parse/Template.h. It never
belonged in the Basic library anyway.
llvm-svn: 86708
using directives, and fix a bug thereby exposed: since we're playing
tricks with pointers, we need to make certain we're always using the same
pointers for things.
Also tweak an existing error message.
llvm-svn: 86679
ArrayType>()) does not instantiate. Update all callers that used this
unsafe feature to use the appropriate ASTContext::getAs*ArrayType method.
llvm-svn: 86596
templates. The instantiation of these default arguments must be (and
now, is) delayed until the template argument is actually used, at
which point we substitute all levels of template arguments
concurrently.
llvm-svn: 86578
unless we start implementing command-line switches which override the default
calling convention, so the effect is mostly to silence unknown attribute
warnings.)
llvm-svn: 86571
and implicitly defined constructors. This has a number of benefits:
1. Less code.
2. Explicit and implicit constructors get the same diagnostics.
3. The AST explicitly contains constructor calls from implicit default
constructors. This allows handing some cases that previously weren't handled
correctly in IRGen without any additional code. Specifically, implicit default
constructors containing calls to constructors with default arguments are now
handled correctly.
llvm-svn: 86500
instead of all assignment operators. The mistake messes up IRGen because
it ends up assuming that the assignment operator is actually the implicit
copy assignment operator, and therefore tries to emit the RHS as an lvalue.
llvm-svn: 86307
- Introduce more code-completion string "chunk" kinds that describe
symbols, the actual text that the user is expected to type, etc.
- Make the generation of macro results optional, since it can be
slow
- Make code-completion accessible through the C API, marshalling the
code-completion results through a temporary file (ick) to maintain
process separation.
The last doesn't have tests yet.
llvm-svn: 86306
specification of 'assign' (no warning to be issued),
when a continuation class makes a 'readonly' attribute
'readwrite' but also specifies the 'assign' attribute.
(this matches gcc's behavior and prevents exessive
warnings)/
llvm-svn: 86297
* If the unsigned type is smaller than the signed type, never warn, because
its value will not change when zero-extended to the larger type.
* If we're testing for (in)equality, and the unsigned value is an integer
constant whose sign bit is not set, never warn, because even though the
signed value might change, it can't affect the result of the equality.
Also make the comparison test cases much more rigorous, and have them expose
the subtle differences between C and C++ here.
llvm-svn: 86242
get_origin->x
where get_origin is actually a function and the user has forgotten the
parentheses. Instead of giving a lame note for the fix-it, give a
full-fledge error, early, then build the call expression to try to
recover.
llvm-svn: 86238
class type, don't perform the array-to-pointer or function-to-pointer
conversions, because we may end up binding a reference to a function
or array.
With this change, FileCheck now passes -fsyntax-only!
llvm-svn: 86211
always zero in this context" warning logic. Also, make the diagnostic
itself more precise when referring to pointer values ("NULL" vs. "zero").
llvm-svn: 86143
(without complaining if it fails) to get proper semantics: reference
binding with a derived-to-base conversion and the enumeration of
constructors for user-defined conversions. There are probably more
cases to fix, but my prior attempt at statically ensuring that
complete-type checking always happens failed. Perhaps I'll try again.
With this change, Clang can parse include/llvm/*.h!
llvm-svn: 86129
DiagnoseSignCompare into Sema::CheckSignCompare and call it from more places.
Add some enumerator tests. These seem to expose some oddities in the
types we're converting C++ enumerators to; in particular, they're converting
to unsigned before int, which seems to contradict 4.5 [conv.prom] p2.
Note to self: stop baiting Doug in my commit messages.
llvm-svn: 86128
still be dependent or invoke an overloaded operator. Previously, we
only supported builtin operators.
BinaryOperator/CompoundAssignOperator didn't have this issue because
we always built a CXXOperatorCallExpr node, even when name lookup
didn't find any functions to save until instantiation time. Now, that
code builds a BinaryOperator or CompoundAssignOperator rather than a
CXXOperatorCallExpr, to save some space.
llvm-svn: 86087
type of the object even when it is dependent. Specifically, this makes
sure that we get the right type for "this->", which is important when
performing name lookup into this scope to determine whether an
identifier or operator-function-id is a template name.
llvm-svn: 86060
expressions, keep track of whether we are immediately taking the
address of the expression. Pass this flag when building a declaration
name expression so that we handle pointer-to-member constants
properly.
llvm-svn: 86017