and a '!defined(X)' if we find a broken header guard. This is suboptimal; we
should point the diagnostic at the 'X' token not the 'if' token, but it fixes
the crash.
llvm-svn: 184054
properly. This warning checks that the #ifndef and #define directives at
the beginning of a header refer to the same macro name. Includes a fix-it
hint to correct the header guard.
llvm-svn: 183867
When x is empty, x ## is suppressed, and when y gets expanded, the fact that it follows ## is not
available in the macro expansion result. The macro definition can be checked instead, the ## will
be available there regardless of what x expands to.
Fixes http://llvm.org/PR12767
Patch by Harald van Dijk!
llvm-svn: 182699
The most common (non-buggy) case are where such objects are used as
return expressions in bool-returning functions or as boolean function
arguments. In those cases I've used (& added if necessary) a named
function to provide the equivalent (or sometimes negative, depending on
convenient wording) test.
DiagnosticBuilder kept its implicit conversion operator owing to the
prevalent use of it in return statements.
One bug was found in ExprConstant.cpp involving a comparison of two
PointerUnions (PointerUnion did not previously have an operator==, so
instead both operands were converted to bool & then compared). A test
is included in test/SemaCXX/constant-expression-cxx1y.cpp for the fix
(adding operator== to PointerUnion in LLVM).
llvm-svn: 181869
After r180934 we may initiate module map parsing for modules not related to the module what we are building,
make sure we ignore the header file info of headers from such modules.
First part of rdar://13840148
llvm-svn: 181489
Add __has_feature and __has_extension checks for C++1y features (based on the provisional names from
the C++ features study group), and update documentation to match.
llvm-svn: 181342
Summary:
No functionality change. The existing tests for this pragma only verify
that we can preprocess it.
Reviewers: rsmith
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D751
llvm-svn: 181246
Previously, we would clone the current diagnostic consumer to produce
a new diagnostic consumer to use when building a module. The problem
here is that we end up losing diagnostics for important diagnostic
consumers, such as serialized diagnostics (where we'd end up with two
diagnostic consumers writing the same output file). With forwarding,
the diagnostics from all of the different modules being built get
forwarded to the one serialized-diagnostic consumer and are emitted in
a sane way.
Fixes <rdar://problem/13663996>.
llvm-svn: 181067
The "magical" builtin headers are the headers we provide as part of
the C standard library, which typically comes from /usr/include. We
essentially merge our headers into that location (due to cyclic
dependencies). This change makes sure that, when header search finds
one of our builtin headers, we figure out which module it actually
lives in. This case is fairly rare; one ends up having to include one
of the few built-in C headers we provide before including anything
from /usr/include to trigger it. Fixes <rdar://problem/13787184>.
llvm-svn: 180934
The system_header pragma (from GCC) is implemented using line notes in the
source manager. However, a line note's line number specifies the number
not for the current line, but for the next line. This was making all
line numbers appear off by one after the pragma.
Reported by Andy Gibbs, uncovered during r179677.
llvm-svn: 179709
The GNU line marker directive was sharing code with the #line directive, but some of the warnings/errors were reporting as #line directive diagnostics in both cases.
Previously:
#line 11foo1 ==> "#line directive requires a simple digit sequence"
# 11foo1 ==> "#line directive requires a simple digit sequence"
Now, we get:
#line 11foo1 ==> "#line directive requires a simple digit sequence"
# 11foo1 ==> "GNU line marker directive requires a simple digit sequence"
llvm-svn: 179139
Syntactically means the function macro parameter names do not need to use the same
identifiers in order for the definitions to be considered identical.
Syntactic equivalence is a microsoft extension for macro redefinitions and we'll also
use this kind of comparison to check for ambiguous macros coming from modules.
rdar://13562254
llvm-svn: 178671
Also update "test/Modules/macros.c" to test modified semantics:
-When there is an ambiguous macro, expand using the latest introduced version, not the first one.
-#undefs in submodules cause the macro to not be exported by that submodule, it doesn't cause
undefining of macros in the translation unit that imported that submodule.
This reduces macro namespace interference across modules.
llvm-svn: 178105
For each macro directive (define, undefine, visibility) have a separate object that gets chained
to the macro directive history. This has several benefits:
-No need to mutate a MacroDirective when there is a undefine/visibility directive. Stuff like
PPMutationListener become unnecessary.
-No need to keep extra source locations for the undef/visibility locations for the define directive object
(which is the majority of the directives)
-Much easier to hide/unhide a section in the macro directive history.
-Easier to track the effects of the directives across different submodules.
llvm-svn: 178037
-Serialize the macro directives history into its own section
-Get rid of the macro updates section
-When de/serializing an identifier from a module, associate only one macro per
submodule that defined+exported it.
llvm-svn: 177761
* Clarify what MacroInfo::isBuiltinMacro means, as it really means something
more like "isMagicalMacro" or "requiresProcessingBeforeExpansion" -- the
macros defined in "<built-in>" are not considered built-in by this function;
* Escape __LINE__ as \__LINE__ in Doxygen comments so that the underscores
don't get replaced by *bold* output;
* Turn comments in MacroInfo.cpp into non-Doxygen comments, so that they
don't result in duplicated/badly formatted Doxygen output;
* Clean up a bunch of \brief formatting, and add a \file comment for
MacroInfo.h.
llvm-svn: 177581
Configuration macros are macros that are intended to alter how a
module works, such that we need to build different module variants
for different values of these macros. A module can declare its
configuration macros, in which case we will complain if the definition
of a configation macro on the command line (or lack thereof) differs
from the current preprocessor state at the point where the module is
imported. This should eliminate some surprises when enabling modules,
because "#define CONFIG_MACRO ..." followed by "#include
<module/header.h>" would silently ignore the CONFIG_MACRO setting. At
least it will no longer be silent about it.
Configuration macros are eventually intended to help reduce the number
of module variants that need to be built. When the list of
configuration macros for a module is exhaustive, we only need to
consider the settings for those macros when building/finding the
module, which can help isolate modules for various project-specific -D
flags that should never affect how modules are build (but currently do).
llvm-svn: 177466
The previous implementation missed the case where the elif condition was
evaluated from the context of an #ifdef that was false causing PR15539.
llvm-svn: 177345
In a module-enabled Cocoa PCH file, we spend a lot of time stat'ing the headers
in order to associate the FileEntries with their modules and support implicit
module import.
Use a more lazy scheme by enhancing HeaderInfoTable to store extra info about
the module that a header belongs to, and associate it with its module only when
there is a request for loading the header info for a particular file.
Part of rdar://13391765
llvm-svn: 176976
This allows resolving top-header filenames of modules to FileEntries when
we need them, not eagerly.
Note that that this breaks ABI for libclang functions
clang_Module_getTopLevelHeader / clang_Module_getNumTopLevelHeaders
but this is fine because they are experimental and not widely used yet.
llvm-svn: 176975
handle raw string literals here. C++11 doesn't yet specify how they will
behave, but discussion on core suggests that we should just strip off
everything but the r-char-sequence.
llvm-svn: 176779
continue parsing the directive rather than silently discarding it.
Allowing undef or redef of __TIME__ and __DATE__ is important to folks
who want stable, reproducible builds.
llvm-svn: 176540
It's beneficial when compiling to treat // as the start of a line
comment even in -std=c89 mode, since it's not valid C code (with a few
rare exceptions) and is usually intended as such. We emit a pedantic
warning and then continue on as if line comments were enabled.
This has been our behavior for quite some time.
However, people use the preprocessor for things besides C source files.
In today's prompting example, the input contains (unquoted) URLs, which
contain // but should still be preserved.
This change instructs the lexer to treat // as a plain token if Clang is
in C90 mode and generating preprocessed output rather than actually compiling.
<rdar://problem/13338743>
llvm-svn: 176526
its index in the preprocessed entities vector.
This is because the order of the entities in the vector can change in some (uncommon) cases.
llvm-svn: 175907
When parsing directives within skipped #if blocks, we don't want to retain
any whitespace. Previously we were just skipping comments, but it's not
possible to skip comments and retain other whitespace. This change matches
the usual behavior for parsing directives (i.e. the behavior outside of
skipped #if blocks).
<rdar://problem/13267695>
llvm-svn: 175840
for the data specific to a macro definition (e.g. what the tokens are), and
MacroDirective class which encapsulates the changes to the "macro namespace"
(e.g. the location where the macro name became active, the location where it was undefined, etc.)
(A MacroDirective always points to a MacroInfo object.)
Usually a macro definition (MacroInfo) is where a macro name becomes active (MacroDirective) but
splitting the concepts allows us to better model the effect of modules to the macro namespace
(also as a bonus it allows better modeling of push_macro/pop_macro #pragmas).
Modules can have their own macro history, separate from the local (current translation unit)
macro history; MacroDirectives will be used to model the macro history (changes to macro namespace).
For example, if "@import A;" imports macro FOO, there will be a new local MacroDirective created
to indicate that "FOO" became active at the import location. Module "A" itself will contain another
MacroDirective in its macro history (at the point of the definition of FOO) and both MacroDirectives
will point to the same MacroInfo object.
Introducing the separation of macro concepts is the first part towards better modeling of module macros.
llvm-svn: 175585
Add warnings under -Wc++11-compat, -Wc++98-compat, and -Wc99-compat when a
particular UCN is incompatible with a different standard, and -Wunicode when
a UCN refers to a surrogate character in C++03.
llvm-svn: 174788
Rewriting the same predicates over and over again is bad for code size and
code maintainence. Using the functions in <ctype.h> is generally unsafe
unless they are specified to be locale-independent (i.e. only isdigit and
isxdigit).
The next commit will try to clean up uses of <ctype.h> functions within Clang.
llvm-svn: 174765
This allows people to use Unicode in their #pragma mark and in macros
that exist only to be string-ized.
<rdar://problem/13107323&13121362>
llvm-svn: 174081
Compilation always sets this explicitly, but creating a preprocessor
manually should still put the 'IsPreprocessedOutput' flag in a valid state.
llvm-svn: 174077
People use the C preprocessor for things other than C files. Some of them
have Unicode characters. We shouldn't warn about Unicode characters
appearing outside of identifiers in this case.
There's not currently a way for the preprocessor to tell if it's in -E mode,
so I added a new flag, derived from the PreprocessorOutputOptions. This is
only used by the Unicode warnings for now, but could conceivably be used by
other warnings or even behavioral differences later.
<rdar://problem/13107323>
llvm-svn: 173881
if they were already concatenated in source using the spelling locations
even if they came from a macro expansion.
This fixes an issue where a GUID passed as macro argument ends up
malformed after preprocessing because we added spaces inside it.
rdar://13016645
llvm-svn: 173826
factor the realpath calls into FileManager::getCanonicalName() so we
can cache the results of this epically slow operation. 5% speedup on
my modules test, and realpath drops out of the profile.
llvm-svn: 173542
This is a missing piece for C99 conformance.
This patch handles UCNs by adding a '\\' case to LexTokenInternal and
LexIdentifier -- if we see a backslash, we tentatively try to read in a UCN.
If the UCN is not syntactically well-formed, we fall back to the old
treatment: a backslash followed by an identifier beginning with 'u' (or 'U').
Because the spelling of an identifier with UCNs still has the UCN in it, we
need to convert that to UTF-8 in Preprocessor::LookUpIdentifierInfo.
Of course, valid code that does *not* use UCNs will see only a very minimal
performance hit (checks after each identifier for non-ASCII characters,
checks when converting raw_identifiers to identifiers that they do not
contain UCNs, and checks when getting the spelling of an identifier that it
does not contain a UCN).
This patch also adds basic support for actual UTF-8 in the source. This is
treated almost exactly the same as UCNs except that we consider stray
Unicode characters to be mistakes and offer a fixit to remove them.
llvm-svn: 173369
that redefined a macro without undef'ing it first.
Proper reconstruction of the macro info history from modules will properly fix this in subsequent commits.
rdar://13016031
llvm-svn: 173281
Makes sure that a deserialized macro is only added to the preprocessor macro definitions only once.
Unfortunately I couldn't get a reduced test case.
rdar://13016031
llvm-svn: 172843
Previously we would serialize the macro redefinitions as a list, part of
the identifier, and try to chain them together across modules individually
without having the info that they were already chained at definition time.
Change this by serializing the macro redefinition chain and then try
to synthesize the chain parts across modules. This allows us to correctly
pinpoint when 2 different definitions are ambiguous because they came from
unrelated modules.
Fixes bogus "ambiguous expansion of macro" warning when a macro in a PCH
is redefined without undef'ing it first.
rdar://13016031
llvm-svn: 172620
will have a shared library with the same name as its framework (and no
suffix!) within its .framework directory. Detect this both when
inferring the whole top-level framework and when parsing a module map.
llvm-svn: 172439
metadata for linking against the libraries/frameworks for imported
modules.
The module map language is extended with a new "link" directive that
specifies what library or framework to link against when a module is
imported, e.g.,
link "clangAST"
or
link framework "MyFramework"
Importing the corresponding module (or any of its submodules) will
eventually link against the named library/framework.
For now, I've added some placeholder global metadata that encodes the
imported libraries/frameworks, so that we can test that this
information gets through to the IR. The format of the data is still
under discussion.
llvm-svn: 172437
there are macro expansions inside macro arguments where the arguments are
not expanded in the same order as listed; don't assert that all macro expansions
are in source order.
rdar://12397063
llvm-svn: 172018
a file or directory, allowing just a stat call if a file descriptor
is not needed.
Doing just 'stat' is faster than 'open/fstat/close'.
This has the effect of cutting down system time for validating the input files of a PCH.
llvm-svn: 169831
directive as a macro expansion.
This is more of a "macro reference" than a macro expansion but it's close enough
for libclang's purposes. If it causes issues we can revisit and introduce a new
kind of cursor.
llvm-svn: 169666
uncovered.
This required manually correcting all of the incorrect main-module
headers I could find, and running the new llvm/utils/sort_includes.py
script over the files.
I also manually added quite a few missing headers that were uncovered by
shuffling the order or moving headers up to be main-module-headers.
llvm-svn: 169237
PreprocessingRecord and into its own class, PPConditionalDirectiveRecord.
Decoupling allows a client to use the functionality of PPConditionalDirectiveRecord
without needing a PreprocessingRecord.
llvm-svn: 169229
Fixes a crash printing diagnostics on the gcc testsuite, and also makes
diagnostic range printing print nicer results for token pastes.
llvm-svn: 169068
import of that module elsewhere, don't try to build the module again:
it won't work, and the experience is quite dreadful. We track this
information somewhat globally, shared among all of the related
CompilerInvocations used to build modules on-the-fly, so that a
particular Clang instance will only try to build a given module once.
Fixes <rdar://problem/12552849>.
llvm-svn: 168961
string literal needs cleaning (because it contains line-splicing in the
encoding prefix or in the ud-suffix), do not clean the section between the
double-quotes -- that's the "raw" bit!
llvm-svn: 168776
This makes LexCharConstant() look more like LexStringLiteral(), which doesn't
have this bug. Add tests for eof after \ for several other cases.
llvm-svn: 168269
common LexStringLiteral function. In doing so, some consistency problems have
been ironed out (e.g. where the first token in the string literal was lexed
with macro expansion, but subsequent ones were not) and also an erroneous
diagnostic has been corrected.
LexStringLiteral is complemented by a FinishLexStringLiteral function which
can be used in the situation where the first token of the string literal has
already been lexed.
llvm-svn: 168266
the related comma pasting extension.
In certain cases, we used to get two diagnostics for what is essentially one
extension. This change suppresses the first diagnostic in certain cases
where we know we're going to print the second diagnostic. The
diagnostic is redundant, and it can't be suppressed in the definition
of the macro because it points at the use of the macro, so we want to
avoid printing it if possible.
The implementation works by detecting constructs which look like comma
pasting at the time of the definition of the macro; this information
is then used when the macro is used. (We can't actually detect
whether we're using the comma pasting extension until the macro is
actually used, but we can detecting constructs which will be comma
pasting if the varargs argument is elided.)
<rdar://problem/12292192>
llvm-svn: 167907
is empty in a variadic macro expansion. This fixes a divergence in support for
the ", ## __VA_ARGS__" GCC extension which differed in behaviour when in strict
C99 mode (note: there is no change in behaviour has been made in the gnu99 mode
that clang uses by default). In addition, there is improved support for the
Microsoft alternative extension ", __VA_ARGS__".
llvm-svn: 167613
allowing a module map to be placed one level above the '.framework'
directories to specify that all .frameworks within that directory can
be inferred as framework modules. One can also specifically exclude
frameworks known not to work.
This makes explicit (and more restricted) behavior modules have had
"forever", where *any* .framework was assumed to be able to be built
as a module. That's not necessarily true, so we white-list directories
(with exclusions) when those directories have been audited.
llvm-svn: 167482
the various stakeholders bump up the reference count. In particular,
the diagnostics engine now keeps the DiagnosticOptions object alive.
llvm-svn: 166508
description. Previously, one could emulate this behavior by placing
the header in an always-unavailable submodule, but Argyrios guilted me
into expressing this idea properly.
llvm-svn: 165921
macro history.
When deserializing macro history, we arrange history such that the
macros that have definitions (that haven't been #undef'd) and are
visible come at the beginning of the list, which is what the
preprocessor and other clients of Preprocessor::getMacroInfo()
expect. If additional macro definitions become visible later, they'll
be moved toward the front of the list. Note that it's possible to have
ambiguities, but we don't diagnose them yet.
There is a partially-implemented design decision here that, if a
particular identifier has been defined or #undef'd within the
translation unit, that definition (or #undef) hides any macro
definitions that come from imported modules. There's still a little
work to do to ensure that the right #undef'ing happens.
Additionally, we'll need to scope the update records for #undefs, so
they only kick in when the submodule containing that update record
becomes visible.
llvm-svn: 165682
MacroInfo*. Instead of simply dumping an offset into the current file,
give each macro definition a proper ID with all of the standard
modules-remapping facilities. Additionally, when a macro is modified
in a subsequent AST file (e.g., #undef'ing a macro loaded from another
module or from a precompiled header), provide a macro update record
rather than rewriting the entire macro definition. This gives us
greater consistency with the way we handle declarations, and ties
together macro definitions much more cleanly.
Note that we're still not actually deserializing macro history (we
never were), but it's far easy to do properly now.
llvm-svn: 165560
Summary:
When issuing a diagnostic message for the -Wimplicit-fallthrough diagnostics, always try to find the latest macro, defined at the point of fallthrough, which is immediately expanded to "[[clang::fallthrough]]", and use it's name instead of the actual sequence.
Known issues:
* uses PP.getSpelling() to compare macro definition with a string (anyone can suggest a convenient way to fill a token array, or maybe lex it in runtime?);
* this can be generalized and used in other similar cases, any ideas where it should reside then?
Reviewers: doug.gregor, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D50
llvm-svn: 164858
have PPCallbacks::InclusionDirective pass the character range for the filename quotes or brackets.
rdar://11113134 & http://llvm.org/PR13880
llvm-svn: 164743
This makes the behavior clearer concerning literals with the maximum
number of digits. For a 32-bit example, 4,000,000,000 is a valid uint32_t,
but 5,000,000,000 is not, so we'd have to count 10-digit decimal numbers
as "unsafe" (meaning we have to check for overflow when parsing them,
just as we would for numbers with 11 digits or higher). This is the same,
only with 64 bits to play with.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 164639
top-level frameworks can actually be symlinked over to embedded
frameworks, and accessed via the top-level framework's headers. In
this case, we need to determine that the framework was *actually* an
embedded framework, so we can load the appropriate top-level module.
llvm-svn: 164620
Summary: Passes all tests (+ the new one with code completion), but needs a thorough review in part related to modules.
Reviewers: doug.gregor
Reviewed By: alexfh
CC: cfe-commits, rsmith
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D41
llvm-svn: 164610
specific module (__building_module(modulename)) and to get the name of
the current module as an identifier (__MODULE__).
Used to help headers behave differently when they're being included as
part of building a module. Oh, the irony.
llvm-svn: 164605
Fixed by pointing the end location of the preprocessed entity for the #include
at the closing '>', instead of the start of '<'.
rdar://11113134
llvm-svn: 163588
(__is_pod, __is_signed, etc.) to normal identifiers if they are
encountered in certain places in the grammar where we know that prior
versions of libstdc++ or libc++ use them, to still allow the use of
these keywords as type traits. Fixes <rdar://problem/9836262> and PR10184.
llvm-svn: 162937
within its own argument list. The original definition is used for the immediate
expansion, but the new definition is used for any subsequent occurences within
the argument list or after the expansion.
llvm-svn: 162906
Summary:
The problem was with the following sequence:
#pragma push_macro("long")
#undef long
#pragma pop_macro("long")
in case when "long" didn't represent a macro.
Fixed crash and removed code duplication for #undef/pop_macro case. Added regression tests.
Reviewers: doug.gregor, klimek
Reviewed By: doug.gregor
CC: cfe-commits, chapuni
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D31
llvm-svn: 162845
Summary:
Summary: Keep history of macro definitions and #undefs with corresponding source locations, so that we can later find out all macros active in a specified source location. We don't save the history in PCH (no need currently). Memory overhead is about sizeof(void*)*3*<number of macro definitions and #undefs>+<in-memory size of all #undef'd macros>
I've run a test on a file composed of 109 .h files from boost 1.49 on x86-64 linux.
Stats before this patch:
*** Preprocessor Stats:
73222 directives found:
19171 #define.
4345 #undef.
#include/#include_next/#import:
5233 source files entered.
27 max include stack depth
19210 #if/#ifndef/#ifdef.
2384 #else/#elif.
6891 #endif.
408 #pragma.
14466 #if/#ifndef#ifdef regions skipped
80023/451669/1270 obj/fn/builtin macros expanded, 85724 on the fast path.
127145 token paste (##) operations performed, 11008 on the fast path.
Preprocessor Memory: 5874615B total
BumpPtr: 4399104
Macro Expanded Tokens: 417768
Predefines Buffer: 8135
Macros: 1048576
#pragma push_macro Info: 0
Poison Reasons: 1024
Comment Handlers: 8
Stats with this patch:
...
Preprocessor Memory: 7541687B total
BumpPtr: 6066176
Macro Expanded Tokens: 417768
Predefines Buffer: 8135
Macros: 1048576
#pragma push_macro Info: 0
Poison Reasons: 1024
Comment Handlers: 8
In my test increase in memory usage is about 1.7Mb, which is ~28% of initial preprocessor's memory usage and about 0.8% of clang's total VMM allocation.
As for CPU overhead, it should only be noticeable when iterating over all macros, and should mostly consist of couple extra dereferences and one comparison per macro + skipping of #undef'd macros. It's less trivial to measure, though, as the preprocessor consumes a very small fraction of compilation time.
Reviewers: doug.gregor, klimek, rsmith, djasper
Reviewed By: doug.gregor
CC: cfe-commits, chandlerc
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D28
llvm-svn: 162810
diagnostics for bad deployment targets and adding a few
more predicates. Includes a patch by Jonathan Schleifer
to enable ARC for ObjFW.
llvm-svn: 162252
current directory, propagate the framework and in-index-header-map
from the including header's information down to the included header's
information. Fixes <rdar://problem/11261291>.
As with everything header-map related, we can't really test this in
isolation within Clang, so it's tested elsewhere.
llvm-svn: 161759
This tests for the ability to include a "message" field in availability
attributes, like so:
extern void ATSFontGetName(const char *oName)
__attribute__((availability(macosx,introduced=8.0,deprecated=9.0,
message="use CTFontCopyFullName")));
This was actually supported in Clang 3.1, but we got a request for a
__has_feature so that header files can use this more safely. It's
unfortunate that the 3.1 release doesn't include this, however.
<rdar://problem/11886458>
llvm-svn: 160699
In future changes we should:
* use __builtin_trap rather than derefing 'random' volatile pointers.
* avoid dumping temporary files into /tmp when running tests, instead
preferring a location that is properly cleaned up by lit.
Review by Chandler Carruth.
llvm-svn: 159469
undefined behaviour, and move the diagnostic for '' from an Error into
an ExtWarn in this group. This is important for some users of the preprocessor,
and is necessary for gcc compatibility.
llvm-svn: 159335
express library-level dependencies within Clang.
This is no more verbose really, and plays nicer with the rest of the
CMake facilities. It should also have no change in functionality.
llvm-svn: 158888
places. I've turned this off for the GNU runtimes --- I don't know if
they support weak class import, but it's easy enough for them to opt in.
Also tweak a comment per review by Jordan.
llvm-svn: 158860
target Objective-C runtime down to the frontend: break this
down into a single target runtime kind and version, and compute
all the relevant information from that. This makes it
relatively painless to add support for new runtimes to the
compiler. Make the new -cc1 flag, -fobjc-runtime=blah-x.y.z,
available at the driver level as a better and more general
alternative to -fgnu-runtime and -fnext-runtime. This new
concept of an Objective-C runtime also encompasses what we
were previously separating out as the "Objective-C ABI", so
fragile vs. non-fragile runtimes are now really modelled as
different kinds of runtime, paving the way for better overall
differentiation.
As a sort of special case, continue to accept the -cc1 flag
-fobjc-runtime-has-weak, as a sop to PLCompatibilityWeak.
I won't go so far as to say "no functionality change", even
ignoring the new driver flag, but subtle changes in driver
semantics are almost certainly not intended.
llvm-svn: 158793
* Escaped # and < characters in Doxygen comments as needed;
* Removed a Doxygen comment in HeaderSearch.cpp that was redundant with
the corresponding comment in the header file.
llvm-svn: 158776
* Retain comments in the AST
* Serialize/deserialize comments
* Find comments attached to a certain Decl
* Expose raw comment text and SourceRange via libclang
llvm-svn: 158771
The original r158700 caused crashes in the gcc test suite,
g++.abi/vtable3a.C among others. It also caused failures in the libc++
test suite.
llvm-svn: 158749
r158085 added some logic to track predefined declarations. The main reason we
had predefined declarations in the input was because the __builtin_va_list
declarations were injected into the preprocessor input. As of r158592 we
explicitly build the __builtin_va_list declarations. Therefore the predefined
decl tracking is no longer needed.
llvm-svn: 158732
Note that this is mostly a structural patch that handles the change from the old
spelling style to the new one. One consequence of this is that all AT_foo_bar
enum values have changed to not be based off of the first spelling, but rather
off of the class name, so they are now AT_FooBar and the like (a straw poll on
IRC showed support for this). Apologies for code churn.
Most attributes have GNU spellings as a temporary solution until everything else
is sorted out (such as a Keyword spelling, which I intend to add if someone else
doesn't beat me to it). This is definitely a WIP.
I've also killed BaseCheckAttr since it was unused, and I had to go through
every attribute anyway.
llvm-svn: 158700
* Removed docs for Lexer::makeFileCharRange from Lexer.cpp, as they're in
the header file;
* Reworked the documentation for SkipBlockComment so that it doesn't confuse
Doxygen's comment parsing;
* Added another summary with \brief markup.
llvm-svn: 158618
1. Teach Lexer that pragma lexers are like macro expansions at EOF.
2. Treat pragmas like #define/#undef when printing.
3. If we just printed a directive, add a newline before any more tokens.
(4. Miscellaneous cleanup in PrintPreprocessedOutput.cpp)
PR10594 and <rdar://problem/11562490> (two separate related problems)
llvm-svn: 158571
modes. For languages other than C99/C11, this isn't quite a conforming
extension, and for C++11, it breaks some reasonable code containing
user-defined literals.
In languages which don't officially have hexfloats, pare back this extension
to only apply in cases where the token starts 0x and does not contain an
underscore. The extension is still not quite conforming, but it's a lot closer
now.
llvm-svn: 158487
override whether headers are system headers by checking for prefixes of the
header name specified in the #include directive.
This allows warnings to be disabled for third-party code which is found in
specific subdirectories of include paths.
llvm-svn: 158418
The preprocessor's handling of diagnostic push/pops is stateful, so
encountering pragmas during a re-parse causes problems. HTMLRewrite
already filters out normal # directives including #pragma, so it's
clear it's not expected to be interpreting pragmas in this mode.
This fix adds a flag to Preprocessor to explicitly disable pragmas.
The "right" fix might be to separate pragma lexing from pragma
parsing so that we can throw away pragmas like we do preprocessor
directives, but right now it's important to get the fix in.
Note that this has nothing to do with the "hack" of re-using the
input preprocessor in HTMLRewrite. Even if we someday copy the
preprocessor instead of re-using it, the copy would (and should) include
the diagnostic level tables and have the same problems.
llvm-svn: 158214
This was a problem for people who write 'return(result);'
Also fix ARCMT's corresponding code, though there's no test case for this
because implicit casts like this are rejected by the migrator for being
ambiguous, and explicit casts have no problem.
<rdar://problem/11577346>
llvm-svn: 158130
In standard C since C89, a 'translation-unit' is syntactically defined to have
at least one "external-declaration", which is either a decl or a function
definition. In Clang the latter gives us a declaration as well.
The tricky bit about this warning is that our predefines can contain external
declarations (__builtin_va_list and the 128-bit integer types). Therefore our
AST parser now makes sure we have at least one declaration that doesn't come
from the predefines buffer.
Also, remove bogus warning about empty source files. This doesn't catch source
files that only contain comments, and never fired anyway because of our
predefines.
PR12665 and <rdar://problem/9165548>
llvm-svn: 158085
so we can destroy it even if it was constructed with "DelayInitialization = true",
and we didn't end up calling Preprocessor::Initialize.
Fixes crashes in rdar://11558355
llvm-svn: 157892
- Developers of system frameworks need a way for their framework to be treated as a "system framework" during development. Otherwise, they are unable to properly test how their framework behaves when installed because of the semantic changes (in warning behavior) applied to system frameworks.
llvm-svn: 154105
cached during the non-cached lex, otherwise we are going to drop them.
Fixes a bogus "_Pragma takes a parenthesized string literal" error when
expanding consecutive _Pragmas in a macro argument.
Part of rdar://11168596
llvm-svn: 153994
If we are pre-expanding a macro argument don't actually "activate"
the pragma at that point, activate the pragma whenever we encounter
it again in the token stream.
This ensures that we will activate it in the correct location
or that we will ignore it if it never enters the token stream, e.g:
\#define EMPTY(x)
\#define INACTIVE(x) EMPTY(x)
INACTIVE(_Pragma("clang diagnostic ignored \"-Wconversion\""))
This also fixes the crash in rdar://11168596.
llvm-svn: 153959
"#include MACRO(STUFF)".
-As an inclusion position for the included file, use the file location of the file where it
was included but *after* the macro expansions. We want the macro expansions to be considered
as before-in-translation-unit for everything in the included file.
-In the preprocessing record take into account that only inclusion directives can be encountered
as "out-of-order" (by comparing the start of the range which for inclusions is the hash location)
and use binary search if there is an extreme number of macro expansions in the include directive.
Fixes rdar://11111779
llvm-svn: 153527
Enable incremental parsing by the Preprocessor,
where more code can be provided after an EOF.
It mainly prevents the tearing down of the topmost lexer.
To be used like this:
PP.enableIncrementalProcessing();
while (getMoreSource()) {
while (Parser.ParseTopLevelDecl(ADecl)) {...}
}
PP.enableIncrementalProcessing(false);
llvm-svn: 152914
basic source character set in C++98. Add -Wc++98-compat diagnostics for same in
literals in C++11. Extend such support to cover string literals as well as
character literals, and mark N2170 as done.
This seems too minor to warrant a release note to me. Let me know if you disagree.
llvm-svn: 152444
first codepoint! Also, don't reject empty raw string literals for spurious
"encoding" issues. Also, don't rely on undefined behavior in ConvertUTF.c.
llvm-svn: 152344
starting with an underscore is ill-formed.
Since this rule rejects programs that were using <inttypes.h>'s macros, recover
from this error by treating the ud-suffix as a separate preprocessing-token,
with a DefaultError ExtWarn. The approach of treating such cases as two tokens
is under discussion for standardization, but is in any case a conforming
extension and allows existing codebases to keep building while the committee
makes up its mind.
Reword the warning on the definition of literal operators not starting with
underscores (which are, strangely, legal) to more explicitly state that such
operators can't be called by literals. Remove the special-case diagnostic for
hexfloats, since it was both triggering in the wrong cases and incorrect.
llvm-svn: 152287
NSNumber, and boolean literals. This includes both Sema and Codegen support.
Included is also support for new Objective-C container subscripting.
My apologies for the large patch. It was very difficult to break apart.
The patch introduces changes to the driver as well to cause clang to link
in additional runtime support when needed to support the new language features.
Docs are forthcoming to document the implementation and behavior of these features.
llvm-svn: 152137
grammar requires a string-literal and not a user-defined-string-literal. The
two constructs are still represented by the same TokenKind, in order to prevent
a combinatorial explosion of different kinds of token. A flag on Token tracks
whether a ud-suffix is present, in order to prevent clients from needing to look
at the token's spelling.
llvm-svn: 152098
Introduce PreprocessingRecord::rangeIntersectsConditionalDirective() which returns
true if a given range intersects with a conditional directive block.
llvm-svn: 152018