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
On Windows, when the LLVM toolchain is in the current path (%PATH%), fusing the linker yields c:\{path}\lld.exe whereas the hip tests did not expect the .exe part.
This only happens if LLD is not present in the build folder, which consequently makes the code in Driver::GetProgramPath() to fall back to %PATH% and platform-specific search, which includes the .exe part (see https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/master/clang/lib/Driver/Driver.cpp#L4733).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76631
TableGen and .def files (which are meant to be used with the preprocessor) come
with obvious downsides. One of those issues is that generated switch-case
branches have to be identical. This pushes corner cases either to an outer code
block, or into the generated code.
Inspect the removed code in AnalysisConsumer::DigestAnalyzerOptions. You can see
how corner cases like a not existing output file, the analysis output type being
set to PD_NONE, or whether to complement the output with additional diagnostics
on stderr lay around the preprocessor generated code. This is a bit problematic,
as to how to deal with such errors is not in the hands of the users of this
interface (those implementing output types, like PlistDiagnostics etc).
This patch changes this by moving these corner cases into the generated code,
more specifically, into the called functions. In addition, I introduced a new
output type for convenience purposes, PD_TEXT_MINIMAL, which always existed
conceptually, but never in the actual Analyses.def file. This refactoring
allowed me to move TextDiagnostics (renamed from ClangDiagPathDiagConsumer) to
its own file, which it really deserved.
Also, those that had the misfortune to gaze upon Analyses.def will probably
enjoy the sight that a clang-format did on it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76509
The only reason we export symbols from these tools is to support
plugins; if we don't have plugins, exporting symbols just bloats the
executable and makes LTO less effective.
See review of D75879 for the discussion that led to this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76527
Upon calling one of the functions `std::advance()`, `std::prev()` and
`std::next()` iterators could get out of their valid range which leads
to undefined behavior. If all these funcions are inlined together with
the functions they call internally (e.g. `__advance()` called by
`std::advance()` in some implementations) the error is detected by
`IteratorRangeChecker` but the bug location is inside the STL
implementation. Even worse, if the budget runs out and one of the calls
is not inlined the bug remains undetected. This patch fixes this
behavior: all the bugs are detected at the point of the STL function
invocation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76379
Its been a while since my CheckerRegistry related patches landed, allow me to
refresh your memory:
During compilation, TblGen turns
clang/include/clang/StaticAnalyzer/Checkers/Checkers.td into
(build directory)/tools/clang/include/clang/StaticAnalyzer/Checkers/Checkers.inc.
This is a file that contains the full name of the checkers, their options, etc.
The class that is responsible for parsing this file is CheckerRegistry. The job
of this class is to establish what checkers are available for the analyzer (even
from plugins and statically linked but non-tblgen generated files!), and
calculate which ones should be turned on according to the analyzer's invocation.
CheckerManager is the class that is responsible for the construction and storage
of checkers. This process works by first creating a CheckerRegistry object, and
passing itself to CheckerRegistry::initializeManager(CheckerManager&), which
will call the checker registry functions (for example registerMallocChecker) on
it.
The big problem here is that these two classes lie in two different libraries,
so their interaction is pretty awkward. This used to be far worse, but I
refactored much of it, which made things better but nowhere near perfect.
---
This patch changes how the above mentioned two classes interact. CheckerRegistry
is mainly used by CheckerManager, and they are so intertwined, it makes a lot of
sense to turn in into a field, instead of a one-time local variable. This has
additional benefits: much of the information that CheckerRegistry conveniently
holds is no longer thrown away right after the analyzer's initialization, and
opens the possibility to pass CheckerManager in the shouldRegister* function
rather then LangOptions (D75271).
There are a few problems with this. CheckerManager isn't the only user, when we
honor help flags like -analyzer-checker-help, we only have access to a
CompilerInstance class, that is before the point of parsing the AST.
CheckerManager makes little sense without ASTContext, so I made some changes and
added new constructors to make it constructible for the use of help flags.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75360
Summary:
Copy of https://reviews.llvm.org/D72446, submitting with Ilya's permission.
Only used to assign roles to child nodes for now. This is more efficient
than doing range-based queries.
In the future, will be exposed in the public API of syntax trees.
Reviewers: gribozavr2
Reviewed By: gribozavr2
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76355
Whenever the analyzer budget runs out just at the point where
`std::advance()`, `std::prev()` or `std::next()` is invoked the function
are not inlined. This results in strange behavior such as
`std::prev(v.end())` equals `v.end()`. To prevent this model these
functions if they were not inlined. It may also happend that although
`std::advance()` is inlined but a function it calls inside (e.g.
`__advance()` in some implementations) is not. This case is also handled
in this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76361
Summary:
Align sequential generic type constraints on a type.
Indent sequential generic type constraints on different types as continuations.
Do not allow '(' and '<' within a generic type constraint to open new scopes.
Reviewers: krasimir
Subscribers: cfe-commits, MyDeveloperDay
Tags: #clang-format, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76597
This makes it possible for plugin attributes to actually do something, and also
removes a lot of boilerplate for simple attributes in SemaDeclAttr.cpp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31342
There's inconsistency in handling array types between the
`distributeFunctionTypeAttrXXX` functions and the
`FunctionTypeUnwrapper` in `SemaType.cpp`.
This patch lets `FunctionTypeUnwrapper` apply function type attributes
through array types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75109
This is failing on several buildbots with some inexplicable (to me,
right now) crashes. Let's see if this change is adequate to unblock the
buildbots & further understanding can be gained later.
This fix doesn't seem to be right (function_ref can/should be passed by
value) so I'm reverted it to see if the buildbots decide to explain
what's wrong.
This reverts commit 857bf5da35.
Extract common code to a function. To prepare for
adding an option for CUDA/HIP host and device only
option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76455
This type was already well designed - having a protected destructor, and
derived classes being final/public non-virtual destructors, the type
couldn't be destroyed polymorphically & accidentally cause slicing.
This reverts commit 736385c0b4.
There are a few places with unexpected indents that trip over sphinx and
other syntax errors.
Also, the C++ syntax highlighting does not work for
class [[gsl::Owner(int)]] IntOwner {
Use a regular code:: block instead.
There are a few other warnings errors remaining, of the form
'Duplicate explicit target name: "cmdoption-clang--prefix"'. They seem
to be caused by the following
.. option:: -B<dir>, --prefix <arg>, --prefix=<arg>
I am no Restructured Text expert, but it seems like sphinx 1.8.5
tries to generate the same target for the --prefix <arg> and
--prefix=<arg>. This pops up in a lot of places and I am not sure how to
best resolve it
Reviewers: jfb, Bigcheese, dexonsmith, rjmccall
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76534
Summary: If the size parameter of `__builtin_memcpy_inline` comes from an un-instantiated template parameter current code would crash.
Reviewers: efriedma, courbet
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76504
Summary:
Since the conditional operator cannot be used with vector conditions
in C, we need a builtin to be able to express this operation in C
source.
Reviewers: aheejin
Subscribers: dschuff, sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76538
Make the install-llvm-libraries-stripped and install-clang-libraries-stripped
targets depend on the individual library stripped install targets, so
that they actually install the libraries.
The ".sdk" component is usually the last one in the -isysroot, so it
makes more sense to scan from the back. Also, technically, someone
could install Xcode into a directory ending with .sdk, which would
break this heuristic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76097
The .i files in the clang tests (2 files) were not run by lit :
clang/test/CodeGen/debug-info-preprocessed-file.i
clang/test/FrontEnd/processed-input.i
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75853
accept as an extension.
This attempts to accept the same cases a GCC, plus cases where a
comparison is rewritten to an operator== with an integral but non-bool
return type; this is sufficient to avoid most problems with various
major open-source projects (such as ICU) and appears to fix all but one
of the comparison-related C++20 build breaks in LLVM.
This approach is being pursued for standardization.
Before this patch a Clang module skeleton CU would have a
DW_AT_comp_dir pointing to the directory of the module map file, and
this information was not used by anyone. Even worse, LLDB actually
resolves relative DWO paths by appending it to DW_AT_comp_dir. This
patch sets it to the same directory that is used as the main CU's
compilation directory, which would make the LLDB code work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76377