We should ignore paren casts when making sure that the semantic expression
in a PseudoObjectExpr for an ObjC getter is a message send.
This has no other intended functionality change.
Adding a test for this exposed an interesting issue in another test case
that only manifests under ARC. trackNullOrUndefValue() is not properly
suppressing for nil values that are the result of nil propagation from a nil
receiver when the nil is returned from a function. I've added a FIXME for that
missing suppression.
rdar://problem/27290568
llvm-svn: 279181
Teach trackNullOrUndefValue() how to properly look through PseudoObjectExprs
to find the underlying semantic method call for property getters. This fixes a
crash when looking through class property getters that I introduced in r265839.
rdar://problem/26796666
llvm-svn: 273340
Don't emit a path note marking the return site if the return statement does not
have a valid location. This fixes an assertion failure I introduced in r265839.
llvm-svn: 266031
Teach trackNullOrUndefValue() how to look through PseudoObjectExprs to find
the underlying method call for property getters. This makes over-suppression
of 'return nil' in getters consistent with the similar over-suppression for
method and function calls.
rdar://problem/24437252
llvm-svn: 265839
There were actually two bugs here:
- if we decided to look for an interesting lvalue or call expression, we
wouldn't go find its node if we also knew we were at a (different) call.
- if we looked through one message send with a nil receiver, we thought we
were still looking at an argument to the original call.
Put together, this kept us from being able to track the right values, which
means sub-par diagnostics and worse false-positive suppression.
Noticed by inspection.
llvm-svn: 180996