Also temporarily remove the assumption from IR gen that we can emit IR for every
constant we can fold, since it isn't currently true in C++11, to fix PR11676.
Original comment from r147271:
constexpr: perform zero-initialization prior to / instead of performing a
constructor call when appropriate. Thanks to Eli for spotting this.
llvm-svn: 147384
diagnostic message are compared. If either is a substring of the other, then
no error is given. This gives rise to an unexpected case:
// expect-error{{candidate function has different number of parameters}}
will match the following error messages from Clang:
candidate function has different number of parameters (expected 1 but has 2)
candidate function has different number of parameters
It will also match these other error messages:
candidate function
function has different number of parameters
number of parameters
This patch will change so that the verification string must be a substring of
the diagnostic message before accepting. Also, all the failing tests from this
change have been corrected. Some stats from this cleanup:
87 - removed extra spaces around verification strings
70 - wording updates to diagnostics
40 - extra leading or trailing characters (typos, unmatched parens or quotes)
35 - diagnostic level was included (error:, warning:, or note:)
18 - flag name put in the warning (-Wprotocol)
llvm-svn: 146619
expressions: expressions which refer to a logical rather
than a physical l-value, where the logical object is
actually accessed via custom getter/setter code.
A subsequent patch will generalize the AST for these
so that arbitrary "implementing" sub-expressions can
be provided.
Right now the only client is ObjC properties, but
this should be generalizable to similar language
features, e.g. Managed C++'s __property methods.
llvm-svn: 142914
increasingly prevailing case to the point that new features
like ARC don't even support the fragile ABI anymore.
This required a little bit of reshuffling with exceptions
because a check was assuming that ObjCNonFragileABI was
only being set in ObjC mode, and that's actually a bit
obnoxious to do.
Most, though, it involved a perl script to translate a ton
of test cases.
Mostly no functionality change for driver users, although
there are corner cases with disabling language-specific
exceptions that we should handle more correctly now.
llvm-svn: 140957
some arguments types are ns_consumed and some otherwise
matching types are not. This fixes the objc++ side only *auch*.
// rdar://10187884
llvm-svn: 140717
block pointers) that don't have any qualification to be POD types. We
were previously considering them to be non-POD types, because this was
convenient in C++ for is_pod-like traits. However, we now end up
inferring lifetime in such cases (template arguments infer __strong),
so it is not necessary.
Moreover, we want rvalues of object type (which have their lifetime
stripped) to be PODs to allow, e.g., va_arg(arglist, id) to function
properly. Fixes <rdar://problem/9758798>.
llvm-svn: 134993
structure to hold inferred information, then propagate each invididual
bit down to -cc1. Separate the bits of "supports weak" and "has a native
ARC runtime"; make the latter a CodeGenOption.
The tool chain is still driving this decision, because it's the place that
has the required deployment target information on Darwin, but at least it's
better-factored now.
llvm-svn: 134453
-Remove unnecessary 'return'.
-Remove unnecessary 'if' check (llvm_unreachable make sure attrStr will be non-null)
-Add a test of transferring ownership to a reference cast type.
llvm-svn: 134285
cast type has no ownership specified, implicitly "transfer" the ownership of the cast'ed type
to the cast type:
id x;
(NSString**)&x; // Casting as (__strong NSString**).
llvm-svn: 134275
cast type has no ownership specified, implicitly "transfer" the ownership of the cast'ed type
to the cast type:
id x;
static_cast<NSString**>(&x); // Casting as (__strong NSString**).
This currently only works for C++ named casts, C casts to follow.
llvm-svn: 134273
silently dropped ownership qualifiers that were being applied to
ownership-qualified, substituted type that was *not* a substituted
template type parameter. We now provide a diagnostic in such cases,
and recover by dropping the added qualifiers.
Document this behavior in the ARC specification.
llvm-svn: 133309
ownership-unqualified retainable object type as __strong. This allows
us to write, e.g.,
std::vector<id>
and we'll infer that the vector's element types have __strong
ownership semantics, which is far nicer than requiring:
std::vector<__strong id>
Note that we allow one to override the ownership qualifier of a
substituted template type parameter, e.g., given
template<typename T>
struct X {
typedef __weak T type;
};
X<id> is treated the same as X<__strong id>. At instantiation type,
the __weak in "__weak T" overrides the (inferred or specified)
__strong on the template argument type, so that we can still provide
metaprogramming transformations.
This is part of <rdar://problem/9595486>.
llvm-svn: 133303