following amusing sequence:
- AST writing schedules writing a type X* that it had never seen
before
- AST writing starts writing another declaration, ends up
deserializing X* from a prior AST file. Now we have two type IDs for
the same type!
- AST writer tries to write X*. It only has the lower-numbered ID
from the the prior AST file, so references to the higher-numbered ID
that was scheduled for writing go off into lalaland.
To fix this, keep the higher-numbered ID so we end up writing the type
twice. Since this issue occurs so rarely, and type records are
generally rather small, I deemed this better than the alternative: to
keep a separate mapping from the higher-numbered IDs to the
lower-numbered IDs, which we would end up having to check whenever we
want to deserialize any type.
Fixes <rdar://problem/8511624>, I think.
llvm-svn: 115647
produces a simple "display" name that captures the
arguments/parameters for a function, function template, class
template, or class template specialization.
llvm-svn: 115428
- Idempotent operations are on by default, to match --analyze in the driver.
- Integrated stats calculation based on parsing warnings emitted with the -analyzer-stats flag. The new -stats flag enables this.
- New -maxloop flag to pass down a maxloop value to the analyzer.
llvm-svn: 115123
This matches the behavior for setters.
Also pass the class extension to ProcessPropertyDecl as the lexical DeclContext, even when not redeclaring the @property.
This fixes the remaining issues in <rdar://problem/7410145>.
llvm-svn: 114477
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
I will not mix declaration and statements in C90.
llvm-svn: 113821
to an "overloaded" set of declarations. This cursor kind works for
unresolved references to functions/templates (e.g., a call within a
template), using declarations, and Objective-C class and protocol
forward declarations.
llvm-svn: 113805
currently expect that to be useful for plugins, and this is important for
startup performance:
--
ddunbar@lordcrumb:tmp$ touch empty.c
ddunbar@lordcrumb:tmp$ runN 100 ~/llvm.obj.64/Release/bin/clang -c empty.c
name avg min med max SD total
user 0.0054 0.0052 0.0054 0.0055 0.0000 0.5350
sys 0.0084 0.0090 0.0078 0.0087 0.0008 0.8390
wall 0.0149 0.0149 0.0149 0.0149 0.0003 1.4943
ddunbar@lordcrumb:tmp$ runN 100 ~/llvm.obj.64/Release/bin/clang -c empty.c
name avg min med max SD total
user 0.0036 0.0036 0.0036 0.0038 0.0000 0.3646
sys 0.0072 0.0071 0.0068 0.0070 0.0006 0.7158
wall 0.0123 0.0123 0.0122 0.0136 0.0003 1.2262
--
llvm-svn: 113638
constructor, in source order. Also introduces a new reference kind for
class members, which is used here (for member initializers) and will
also be used for designated initializers and offsetof.
llvm-svn: 113545
last of the C++-specific expressions where we have decent source
information in the AST already. In particular, various
object-construction expressions (CXXNewExpr, CXXTemporaryObjectExpr)
still have poor source-location information that needs to be addressed.
llvm-svn: 112981