The implementations of these methods can Use Decl::getASTContext() to get the ASTContext.
This commit touches a lot of files since call sites for these methods are everywhere.
I used pre-tokenized "carbon.h" and "cocoa.h" headers to do some timings, and there was no real time difference between before the commit and after it.
llvm-svn: 74501
This is simple enough, but then I thought it would be nice to make PrintingPolicy
get a LangOptions so that various things can key off "bool" and "C++" independently.
This spiraled out of control. There are many fixme's, but I think things are slightly
better than they were before.
One thing that can be improved: CFG should probably have an ASTContext pointer in it,
which would simplify its clients.
llvm-svn: 74493
function attributes. There are predefined macros that are defined when stack
protectors are used: __SSP__=1 with -fstack-protector and __SSP_ALL__=2 with
-fstack-protector-all.
llvm-svn: 74405
GRTransferFuncs had the conflated role of both constructing SVals (symbolic
expressions) as well as handling checker-specific logic. Now SValuator has the
role of constructing SVals from expressions and GRTransferFuncs just handles
checker-specific logic. The motivation is by separating these two concepts we
will be able to much more easily create richer constraint-generating logic
without coupling it to the main checker transfer function logic.
We now have one implementation of SValuator: SimpleSValuator.
SimpleSValuator is essentially the SVal-related logic that was in GRSimpleVals
(which is removed in this patch). This includes the logic for EvalBinOp,
EvalCast, etc. Because SValuator has a narrower role than the old
GRTransferFuncs, the interfaces are much simpler, and so is the implementation
of SimpleSValuator compared to GRSimpleVals. I also did a line-by-line review of
SVal-related logic in GRSimpleVals and cleaned it up while moving it over to
SimpleSValuator.
As a consequence of removing GRSimpleVals, there is no longer a
'-checker-simple' option. The '-checker-cfref' did everything that option did
but also ran the retain/release checker. Of course a user may not always wish to
run the retain/release checker, nor do we wish core analysis logic buried in the
checker-specific logic. The next step is to refactor the logic in CFRefCount.cpp
to separate out these pieces into the core analysis engine.
llvm-svn: 74229
Decl* is the declaration associated with this source location and Stmt* is the statement/expression that the location points to.
If the location does not point to a statement node, Stmt* is null.
ResolveLocationInAST (along with converting a file:line:column triplet to a SourceLocation) will be useful for an IDE client and for clang's test suite.
llvm-svn: 74197
Among other things, this makes the warning about unknown warning options mappable.
For example:
$ clang t.c -Werror -Wfoo
error: unknown warning option '-Wfoo' [-Wunknown-warning-option]
For another thing, they are properly color coded now too :)
llvm-svn: 73936
C++. This logic is required to trigger implicit instantiation of
function templates and member functions of class templates, which will
be implemented separately.
This commit includes support for -Wunused-parameter, printing warnings
for named parameters that are not used within a function/Objective-C
method/block. Fixes <rdar://problem/6505209>.
llvm-svn: 73797
-Introduce 'PCHReaderListener' which is an abstract interface for getting various information from the PCHReader.
-If PCHReader is constructed without a Preprocessor, it can still load the file and invoke the callbacks of PCHReaderListener.
-If PCHReader is constructed with an initialized Preprocessor, PCHValidator is used as a PCHReaderListener to validate the contents of the PCH file against the given Preprocessor.
llvm-svn: 73741
Add a type (ObjCObjectPointerType) and remove a type (ObjCQualifiedIdType).
This large/tedious patch is just a first step. Next step is to remove ObjCQualifiedInterfaceType. After that, I will remove the magic TypedefType for 'id' (installed by Sema). This work will enable various simplifications throughout clang (when dealing with ObjC types).
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 73649
ranges more similar to the console output. Consider:
#define FOO(X, Y) X/ Y
void foo(int *P, int *Q) {
FOO(P, Q);
}
Before we emitted:
t.c:4:3:{4:3-4:6}{4:3-4:6}: error: invalid operands to binary expression ('int *' and 'int *')
FOO(P, Q);
^~~~~~~~~
...
Note that while we underline the macro args that the range info just includes FOO
without its macros. This change teaches the printed ranges to include macro args
also so that we get:
t.c:4:3:{4:3-4:12}{4:3-4:12}: error: invalid operands to binary expression ('int *' and 'int *')
FOO(P, Q);
^~~~~~~~~
...
This fixes rdar://6939599
llvm-svn: 73378
hack which introduces some strange inconsistencies in compatibility
for block pointers.
Note that unlike an earlier revision proposed on cfe-commits, this patch
still allows declaring block pointers without a prototype.
llvm-svn: 73041
walks through DeclContexts properly, and prints more of the
information available in the AST. The functionality is still available
via -ast-print, -ast-dump, etc., and also via the new member functions
Decl::dump() and Decl::print().
llvm-svn: 72597
printing logic to help customize the output. For now, we use this
rather than a special flag to suppress the "struct" when printing
"struct X" and to print the Boolean type as "bool" in C++ but "_Bool"
in C.
llvm-svn: 72590
specifier resulted in the creation of a new TagDecl node, which
happens either when the tag specifier was a definition or when the tag
specifier was the first declaration of that tag type. This information
has several uses, the first of which is implemented in this commit:
1) In C++, one is not allowed to define tag types within a type
specifier (e.g., static_cast<struct S { int x; } *>(0) is
ill-formed) or within the result or parameter types of a
function. We now diagnose this.
2) We can extend DeclGroups to contain information about any tags
that are declared/defined within the declaration specifiers of a
variable, e.g.,
struct Point { int x, y, z; } p;
This will help improve AST printing and template instantiation,
among other things.
3) For C99, we can keep track of whether a tag type is defined
within the type of a parameter, to properly cope with cases like,
e.g.,
int bar(struct T2 { int x; } y) {
struct T2 z;
}
We can also do similar things wherever there is a type specifier,
e.g., to keep track of where the definition of S occurs in this
legal C99 code:
(struct S { int x, y; } *)0
llvm-svn: 72555
within a template now have a link back to the enumeration from which
they were instantiated. This means that we can now find the
instantiation of an anonymous enumeration.
llvm-svn: 72482
an integral constant expression, maintain a cache of the value and the
is-an-ICE flag within the VarDecl itself. This eliminates
exponential-time behavior of the Fibonacci template metaprogram.
llvm-svn: 72428
compiled with -fobjc-sender-dependent-dispatch. This is used in AOP, COP, implementing object
planes, and a few other things.
Patch by David Chisnall.
llvm-svn: 72275
- Skip semantic analysis of the "if" condition if it is type-dependent.
- Added the location of the "else" keyword into IfStmt, so that we can
provide it for type-checking after template instantiation.
llvm-svn: 71875
buffer. This caused exciting nonsense like this:
$ clang t.c -fsyntax-only -UMACRO
In file included from <built-in>:104:
<command line>:1:14: warning: extra tokens at end of #undef directive [-Wextra-tokens]
#undef MACRO 1
^
//
1 diagnostic generated.
rdar://6891800
llvm-svn: 71860
template to the FunctionDecls from which they were instantiated. This
is a necessary first step to support instantiation of the definitions
of such functions, but by itself does essentially nothing.
llvm-svn: 71792
The "instantiated from" messages coming from the caret diagnostics system are
basically walking the macro expansion tree, emitting each level as it goes. However, it was
skipping certain leaves in the tree by skipping up the entire instantiation arm every time
it went up one spelling arm. This caused it to miss some things. For example, in this
testcase:
#define M1(x) x
#define M2 1;
void foo() {
M1(M2)
}
we now print:
/Users/sabre/Desktop/clang-unused-value-macro.c:6:2: warning: expression result unused
M1(M2)
^~~~~~
/Users/sabre/Desktop/clang-unused-value-macro.c:6:5: note: instantiated from:
M1(M2)
^~
/Users/sabre/Desktop/clang-unused-value-macro.c:3:12: note: instantiated from:
#define M2 1;
^
Previously we didn't print the last line, so we never emitted the caret pointing to the 1!
Incidentally, the spaces between the lines is really noisy, I think we should reconsider
this heuristic (which adds them when the printed code starts too close to the start of the
line).
The regression test can't use -verify, because -verify doesn't catch notes for macro
instantiation history.
llvm-svn: 71025
'objc_ownership_cfretain' -> 'cf_ownership_retain'
'objc_ownership_cfrelease' -> 'cf_ownership_release'
Motivation: Core Foundation objects can be used in isolation from Objective-C,
and this forces users to reason about the separate semantics of CF objects. More
Sema support pending.
llvm-svn: 70884
1) First of all, we treat _ as part of an identifier and not as
punctuation (oops).
2) Second of all, always make sure that the token that the ^ is
pointing at is fully within the "interesting" part of the range.
llvm-svn: 70831
- The diagnostic is still poor, however. Doug, can you investigate?
- Improved the test case to not depend on the file name, now it can
be extended to actually check the formatting of the diagnostics
(I'm hoping grep -A is portable here).
llvm-svn: 70807
fix-it hint is much worse than no fix-it hint. (Fixes PR4084).
When we need to truncate a source line to fix in the terminal, make
sure to take the width of the fix-it information into account, too.
llvm-svn: 70656
show an ellipsis where we have removed text. An example:
/Users/dgregor/Projects/llvm/tools/clang/test/Misc/message-length.c:18:120:
warning:
comparison of distinct pointer types ('int *' and 'float *')
...a_func_to_call(ip == FloatPointer, ip[ALongIndexName], ...
~~ ^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~
llvm-svn: 70655
word-wrapping by default in Emacs; yay!). Thanks, Daniel.
Use LLVM's System layer rather than calling isatty() directly.
Fix a thinko in printing the indentation string that was causing some
weird output.
llvm-svn: 70654
might be wider than we're supposed to print. In this case, we try to
select the "important" subregion of the source line, which contains
everything that we want to show (e.g., with underlining and the caret
itself) and tries to also contain some of the context.
From the fantastically long line in the test case, we get an error
message that slices down to this:
message-length.c:18:120: warning: comparison of distinct pointer types
('int *' and 'float *')
a_func_to_call(ip == FloatPointer, ip[ALongIndexName],
~~ ^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~
There are a bunch of gee-it-sounds-good heuristics in here, which seem
to do well on the various simple tests I've thrown at it. However,
we're going to need to look at a bunch more diagnostics to tweak these
heuristics.
This is the second part of <rdar://problem/6711348>. Almost there!
llvm-svn: 70597
Also, put a line of whitespace between the diagnostic and the source
code/caret line when the start of the actual source code text lines up
(or nearly lines up) with the most recent line of the diagnostic. For
example, here it's okay for the last line of the diagnostic to be
(vertically) next to the source line, because there is horizontal
whitespace to separate them:
decl-expr-ambiguity.cpp:12:16: error: function-style cast to a builtin
type can only take one argument
typeof(int)(a,5)<<a;
However, here is a case where we need the vertical separation (since
there is no horizontal separation):
message-length.c:10:46: warning: incompatible pointer types initializing 'void
(int, float, char, float)', expected 'int (*)(int, float, short,
float)'
int (*fp1)(int, float, short, float) = f;
This is part one of <rdar://problem/6711348>.
llvm-svn: 70578
compatible with VC++ and GCC. The codegen/mangling angle hasn't
been fully ironed out yet. Note that we accept int128_t even in
32-bit mode, unlike gcc.
llvm-svn: 70464
- Add an (optional) short description for BugReports for clients that want
to distinguish between long and short descriptions for bugs
- Make the bug report for VLA less obscene for Plist diagnostics by using
the short description
llvm-svn: 70415
which eliminates the storage for IdentifierInfo in the "uninteresting
identifier" cases. Sadly, this only brought back 7k of the 500k we
lost :(
llvm-svn: 70325
line when using a PCH that were not provided when building the PCH
file. If those names were used as identifiers somewhere in the PCH
file, reject the PCH file.
llvm-svn: 70321
for identifiers to separate "interesting" from "uninteresting"
identifiers. However, to cope with compiler invocations where the
predefines buffers mismatch, we need to be able to search the complete
identifier table. Cocoa.h.pch is now about 500k larger that it used to
be :(
llvm-svn: 70320
PCH file and the predefines buffer used when including the PCH
file. We (explicitly) detect conflicting macro definitions (rejecting
the PCH file) and about missing macro definitions (they'll be
automatically pulled from the PCH file anyway).
We're missing some checking to make sure that new macro definitions
won't have any impact on the PCH file itself (e.g., #define'ing an
identifier that the PCH file used).
llvm-svn: 70316
Clang version value rather than hard-coding "1.0".
Add PCH and Clang version information into the PCH file. Reject PCH
files with the wrong version information.
llvm-svn: 70264
essentially the same thing we do with pretokenized headers. stat()
caching improves performance of the Cocoa-prefixed "Hello, World" by
45%.
llvm-svn: 70223
as 'objc_ownership_cfretain' except that the method acts like a CFRetain instead
of a [... retain] (important in GC modes). Checker support is wired up, but
currently only for Objective-C message expressions (not function calls).
llvm-svn: 70218
parm var decls in leopard cocoa.h end up using this abbreviation,
which shrinks the bitcode file by about 50K: 7217736->7167120.
Before:
Block ID #12 (DECLS_BLOCK):
Num Instances: 1
Total Size: 2.23595e+07b/2.79494e+06B/698736W
% of file: 38.7233
Num SubBlocks: 0
Num Abbrevs: 0
Num Records: 139387
% Abbrev Recs: 0
After:
Block ID #12 (DECLS_BLOCK):
Num Instances: 1
Total Size: 2.02405e+07b/2.53006e+06B/632516W
% of file: 35.301
Num SubBlocks: 0
Num Abbrevs: 1
Num Records: 139387
% Abbrev Recs: 19.2902
llvm-svn: 70199
file. In particular, only eagerly load source location entries for
files and for the predefines buffer. Other buffers and
macro-instantiation source location entries are loaded lazily.
With the Cocoa-prefixed "Hello, World", we only load 815/26555 source
location entities. This halves the amount of user time we spend in
this "Hello, World" program with -fsyntax-only (down to .007s).
This optimization is part 1 of 2 for the source manager. This
eliminates most of the user time in loading a PCH file. We still spend
too much time initialize File structures (especially in the calls to
stat), so we need to either make the loading of source location
entries for files lazy or import the stat cache from the PTH
implementation.
llvm-svn: 70196
eventually get an option to turn this off, but it is nice for looking at
statistics. For example, the types block now prints:
Block ID #11 (TYPES_BLOCK_ID):
Num Instances: 1
Total Size: 895100b/111888B/27971.9W
% of file: 1.55801
Num SubBlocks: 0
Num Abbrevs: 0
Num Records: 14899
% Abbrev Recs: 0
Code Histogram:
5478 TYPE_FUNCTION_PROTO
2683 TYPE_TYPEDEF
2460 TYPE_POINTER
2047 TYPE_ENUM
1553 TYPE_RECORD
283 TYPE_CONSTANT_ARRAY
274 TYPE_OBJC_INTERFACE
76 TYPE_INCOMPLETE_ARRAY
10 TYPE_VECTOR
9 TYPE_OBJC_QUALIFIED_ID
5 TYPE_FUNCTION_NO_PROTO
5 TYPE_EXT_QUAL
3 TYPE_TYPEOF_EXPR
llvm-svn: 70166
- Deal with the Receiver/ClassInfo shared storage in ObjCMessageExpr
- Implement PCH support for ImplicitParamDecl
- Fix the handling of the body of an ObjCMethodDecl
- Several cast -> cast_or_null fixes
- Make Selector::getIdentifierInfoForSlot work for 1-argument, NULL
selectors.
- Make Selector::getAsString() work with NULL selectors.
- Fix the names of VisitObjCAtCatchStmt and VisitObjCAtFinallyStmt
in the PCH reader and writer; these were never getting called.
At this point, all of the pch-test tests pass for C and Objective-C.
llvm-svn: 70163
necessary and iterate until all types and declarations have been
written. This reduces the Cocoa.h PCH file size by about 4% (since we
don't write types we don't need), and fixes problems where writing a
declaration generates a new type.
This doesn't seem to have any impact on performance either way.
llvm-svn: 70109
most of which are ignored. Instead, move the __COUNTER__ value out to
a PCH-level record (since it is handled eagerly) and move the header
file information into the SourceManager block (which is also,
currently, loaded eagerly).
This results in another 17% performance improvement in the
Cocoa-prefixed "Hello, World" with PCH.
llvm-svn: 70097
PCH file. In the Cocoa-prefixed "Hello, World" benchmark, this takes
us from reading 503 identifiers down to 37 and from 470 macros down to
4. It also results in an 8% performance improvement.
llvm-svn: 70094
identifier's ID. In this case, we know where the identifier's entry is
located in the hash table (it starts right before the identifier
string itself), so skip the hash table lookup and read the entry
directly. The performance improvement here is, gain, hard to quantify,
but it's the right thing to do.
llvm-svn: 70078
"interesting" identifiers (e.g., those where the IdentifierInfo has
some useful information) from "uninteresting" identifiers (where the
IdentifierInfo is just a name). This makes the hash table smaller (so
searching in it should be faster) and, when loading "uninteresting"
identifiers, we skip the lookup in the hash table.
PCH file size is slightly smaller than before (since we don't emit the
contents of the uninteresting IdentifierInfo structures). The
Cocoa.h-prefixed "Hello, World" doesn't show any speedup, although
we're getting to the point where system noise is a bit issue.
llvm-svn: 70075
allocating IdentifierInfos with a pointer into the string data stored
in the PCH file rather than having an entry in the identifier table's
string map. However, we don't actually get these savings at the
moment, because we go through the IdentifierTable when loading
identifiers from the on-disk hash table.
This commit is for record-keeping purposes only. I'll be reverting
this change (and the PCH layout tweak that preceded it) because it
appears that implementing this optimization will collide with another,
future optimization to reduce the size of the on-disk hash table for
identifiers. That optimization is likely to provide more benefit (with
less voodoo).
llvm-svn: 70070
that the PCH reader does not have to decode the VBR encoding at PCH
load time.
Also, reduce the size of the identifier offsets from 64 bits down to
32 bits. The identifier table itself isn't going to grow to more than
4GB :)
Overall, this results in a 13% speedup in the Cocoa-prefixed "Hello,
World" benchmark.
llvm-svn: 70063
blobs, so that we don't need to do any work to get these arrays into
memory at PCH load time.
This gives another 19% performance improvement to the Cocoa-prefixed
"Hello, World!".
llvm-svn: 70059
This results in a 10% speedup on the Cocoa-prefixed "Hello, World!",
all of which is (not surprisingly) user time. There was a tiny
reduction in the size of the PCH file for Cocoa.h, because certain
selectors aren't being written twice.
I'm using two new tricks here that I'd like to replicate elsewhere:
(1) The selectors not used in the global method pool are packed into
the blob after the global method pool's on-disk hash table and
stored as keys, so that all selectors are in the same blob.
(2) We record the offsets of each selector key when we write it into
the global method pool (or after it, in the same blob). The offset
table is written as a blob, so that we don't need to pack/unpack a
SmallVector with its contents.
llvm-svn: 70055
to the checker yet, but essentially it allows a user to specify that an
Objective-C method or C function increments the reference count of a passed
object.
llvm-svn: 70005
up to the checker yet, but essentially it allows a user to specify that an
Objective-C method or C function returns an owned an Objective-C object.
llvm-svn: 70001
(1) Make sure to pad on-disk hash tables with 4 bytes, not 2, since
the reader assumes that bucket data is aligned on 4-byte
boundaries.
(2) Don't emit the number of factory methods twice. This was
throwing off the data counts and therefore causing lookups to
fail. I've added asserts so that this class of error cannot happen
again.
llvm-svn: 69991
pools, combined). The methods in the global method pool are lazily
loaded from an on-disk hash table when Sema looks into its version of
the hash tables.
llvm-svn: 69989
As part of this, make ObjCImplDecl inherit from NamedDecl (since
ObjCImplementationDecls now need to have names so that they can be
found). This brings ObjCImplDecl very, very close to
ObjCContainerDecl; we may be able to merge them soon.
llvm-svn: 69941
their own namespace (IDNS_Protocol) and use the normal name-lookup
routines to find them. Aside from the simplification this provides
(one less DenseMap!), it means that protocols will be lazily
deserialized from PCH files.
Make the code size of the selector table block match the code size of
the type and decl blocks.
llvm-svn: 69939
SEL, Class, Protocol, CFConstantString, and
__objcFastEnumerationState. With this, we can now run the Objective-C
methods and properties PCH tests.
llvm-svn: 69932
This enables class recognition to work with PCH. I believe this means we can remove Sema::ObjCInterfaceDecls and it's usage within Sema::LookupName(). Will investigate.
llvm-svn: 69891
file needs to store. CodeGen needs to see these definitions (via
HandleTopLevelDecl), otherwise it won't be able to generate code for
them.
This patch notifies the consumer (e.g., CodeGen) about function
definitions and variable definitions when the corresponding
declarations are deserialized. Hence, we don't eagerly deserialize the
declarations for every variable or function that has a definition in
the PCH file. This gives another 5% speedup for the Carbon-prefixed
"Hello, World!", and brings our PCH statistics down to something far
more reasonable:
*** PCH Statistics:
13/20693 types read (0.062823%)
17/59230 declarations read (0.028702%)
54/44914 identifiers read (0.120230%)
0/32954 statements read (0.000000%)
5/6187 macros read (0.080815%)
llvm-svn: 69820
PCH files now contain complete information about builtins, including
any declarations that have been synthesized as part of building the
PCH file. When using a PCH file, we do not initialize builtins at all;
when needed, they'll be found in the PCH file.
This optimization translations into a 9% speedup for "Hello, World!"
with Carbon.h as a prefix header and roughly a 5% speedup for 403.gcc
with its prefix header. We're also reading less of the PCH file for
"Hello, World!":
*** PCH Statistics:
286/20693 types read (1.382110%)
1630/59230 declarations read (2.751984%)
764/44914 identifiers read (1.701029%)
1/32954 statements read (0.003035%)
5/6187 macros read (0.080815%)
down from
*** PCH Statistics:
411/20693 types read (1.986179%)
2553/59230 declarations read (4.310316%)
1093/44646 identifiers read (2.448148%)
1/32954 statements read (0.003035%)
21/6187 macros read (0.339421%)
llvm-svn: 69815
- If we don't find a file looking relative to the current working
directory, fall back to header search. This is closer to what would
happen if the lookup was starting from right directory in the first
place (except it will find files in the directory of the main
source file, which I *think* should not be found).
- PR3992.
llvm-svn: 69794
by marking the predefines buffer as a system header. The problem
with stdint is that it was getting problems like this:
/Volumes/Projects/cvs/llvm/Debug/lib/clang/1.0/include/stdint.h:43:9: warning: 'long long' is an extension when C99 mode is not enabled
typedef __INT64_TYPE__ int64_t;
^
<built-in>:73:29: note: instantiated from:
#define __INT64_TYPE__ long long
^
We correctly silence warnings in system headers, but only if the
spelling location of the token came from the system header. This is
designed so that if you use a system macro in your code that you don't
get punished for its definition. This is all cool except that the
predefines buffer wasn't considered a system header.
llvm-svn: 69770
This optimization improves performance on the Carbon-prefixed "Hello,
World!" example by 57%. For reference, we're now about 2.25x faster
than GCC PCH. We're also pulling in far less of the PCH file:
*** PCH Statistics:
411/20693 types read (1.986179%)
2553/59230 declarations read (4.310316%)
1093/44646 identifiers read (2.448148%)
1/32954 statements read (0.003035%)
21/6187 macros read (0.339421%)
llvm-svn: 69755
identifiers from a precompiled header.
This patch changes the primary name lookup method for entities within
a precompiled header. Previously, we would load all of the names of
declarations at translation unit scope into a large DenseMap (inside
the TranslationUnitDecl's DeclContext), and then perform a special
"last resort" lookup into this DeclContext when we knew there was a
PCH file (see Sema::LookupName). Now, when we see an identifier named
for the first time, we load all of the declarations with that name
that are visible from the translation unit into the IdentifierInfo's
chain of declarations. Thus, the explicit "look into the translation
unit's DeclContext" code is gone, and Sema effectively uses the same
IdentifierInfo-based name lookup mechanism whether we are using a PCH
file or not.
This approach should help PCH scale with the size of the input program
rather than the size of the PCH file. The "Hello, World!" application
with Carbon.h as a PCH file now loads 20% of the identifiers in the
PCH file rather than 85% of the identifiers.
90% of the 20% of identifiers loaded are actually loaded when we
deserialize the preprocessor state. The next step is to make the
preprocessor load macros lazily, which should drastically reduce the
number of types, declarations, and identifiers loaded for "Hello,
World".
llvm-svn: 69737
that also includes the contents of the IdentifierInfo itself (the
various fields and flags, along with the chain of identifiers visible
at the top level that have that name).
We don't make any use of the hash table yet, except that our
identifier ID -> string mapping points into the hash table now.
llvm-svn: 69625
also gets access to the Sema object performing semantic analysis. This
will be used by the PCH writer to serialize Sema state.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 69595
AST context's __builtin_va_list type will be set when the PCH file is
loaded. This fixes the crash when CodeGen'ing a va_arg expression
pulled in from a PCH file.
llvm-svn: 69421
"Hello, World!", this takes us from deserializing 6469
statements/expressions down to deserializing 1
statement/expression. It only translated into a 1% improvement on the
Carbon-prefixed 403.gcc, but (a) it's the right thing to do, and (b)
we expect this to matter more once we lazily deserialize identifiers.
llvm-svn: 69407
lazy PCH deserialization. Propagate that argument wherever it needs to
be. No functionality change, except that I've tightened up a few PCH
tests in preparation.
llvm-svn: 69406
kind PCH handles that has an expression as an operand, so most of this
work is in the infrastructure to rebuild expression trees from the
serialized representation. We now store expressions in post-order
(e.g., Reverse Polish Notation), so that we can easily rebuild the
appropriate expression tree.
llvm-svn: 69101
This allows it to accurately measure tokens, so that we get:
t.cpp:8:13: error: unknown type name 'X'
static foo::X P;
~~~~~^
instead of the woefully inferior:
t.cpp:8:13: error: unknown type name 'X'
static foo::X P;
~~~~ ^
Most of this is just plumbing to push the reference around.
llvm-svn: 69099
non-inline external definitions (and tentative definitions) that are
found at the top level. The corresponding declarations are stored in a
record in the PCH file, so that they can be provided to the
ASTConsumer (via HandleTopLevelDecl) when the PCH file is read.
llvm-svn: 69005
the unlikely event that the filename IDs in the stored line table end
up being different from the filename IDs in the newly-created line
table.
llvm-svn: 68965
buffer generated for the current translation unit. If they are
different, complain and then ignore the PCH file. This effectively
checks for all compilation options that somehow would affect
preprocessor state (-D, -U, -include, the dreaded -imacros, etc.).
When we do accept the PCH file, throw away the contents of the
predefines buffer rather than parsing them, since all of the results
of that parsing are already stored in the PCH file. This eliminates
the ugliness with the redefinition of __builtin_va_list, among other
things.
llvm-svn: 68838