than reusing the "overridden buffer" mechanism. This will allow us to make
embedded files and overridden files behave differently in future.
llvm-svn: 254121
Summary: It breaks the build for the ASTMatchers
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13893
llvm-svn: 250827
Also fix completely broken and untested code which was hiding the
primary bug. The !LLVM_ON_UNIX branch of the ifdef was actually a no-op.
I ran into this in the wild. It was causing failures in our SDK build.
Ideally we'd have a perfect llvm::sys::fs::canonical, but at least this
is a step in the right direction, and fixes an obviously broken case.
In some sense the test case I've added here is an integration test. We
should have these routines thoroughly unit tested in llvm::sys::fs.
llvm-svn: 243597
- introduces a new cc1 option -fmodule-format=[raw,obj]
with 'raw' being the default
- supports arbitrary module container formats that libclang is agnostic to
- adds the format to the module hash to avoid collisions
- splits the old PCHContainerOperations into PCHContainerWriter and
a PCHContainerReader.
Thanks to Richard Smith for reviewing this patch!
llvm-svn: 242499
This patch adds ObjectFilePCHContainerOperations uses the LLVM backend
to put the contents of a PCH into a __clangast section inside a COFF, ELF,
or Mach-O object file container.
This is done to facilitate module debugging by makeing it possible to
store the debug info for the types defined by a module alongside the AST.
rdar://problem/20091852
llvm-svn: 241620
Now that SmallString is a first-class citizen, most SmallString::str()
calls are not required. This patch removes a whole bunch of them, yet
there are lots more.
There are two use cases where str() is really needed:
1) To use one of StringRef member functions which is not available in
SmallString.
2) To convert to std::string, as StringRef implicitly converts while
SmallString do not. We may wish to change this, but it may introduce
ambiguity.
llvm-svn: 232622
components. These sometimes get synthetically added, and we don't want -Ifoo
and -I./foo to be treated fundamentally differently here.
llvm-svn: 224055
Because we may change the name of a FileEntry inside getFile, the name
returned by FileEntry::getName() could be destroyed. This was causing a
use-after-free when searching the HeaderFileInfo on-disk hashtable for a
module or pch.
llvm-svn: 217385
With modules we start accessing headers for the first time while reading
the module map, which often has very different paths from the include
scanning logic.
Using the name by which the file was accessed gets us one step closer to
the right solution, which is using a FileName abstraction that decouples
the name by which a file was accessed from the FileEntry.
llvm-svn: 215541
And in the process, discover that FileManager::removeStatCache had a
double-delete when removing an element from the middle of the list (at
the beginning or the end of the list, there was no problem) and add a
unit test to exercise the code path (which successfully crashed when run
(with modifications to match the old API) without this patch applied)
llvm-svn: 215388
It's also possible to just write "= nullptr", but there's some question
of whether that's as readable, so I leave it up to authors to pick which
they prefer for now. If we want to discuss standardizing on one or the
other, we can do that at some point in the future.
llvm-svn: 213439
Successfully loaded module files may be referenced in other
ModuleManagers, so don't invalidate them. Two related things are fixed:
1) I thought the last module in the manager was always the one that
failed, but it isn't. So check explicitly against the list of
vetted modules from ReadASTCore.
2) We now keep the file descriptor of pcm file open, which avoids the
possibility of having two different pcms for the same module loaded when
building in parallel with headers being modified during a build.
<rdar://problem/16835846>
llvm-svn: 211330
If we lookup a path using its 'real' path first, we need to ensure that
when we run header search we still use the VFS-mapped path or we will
not be able to find the corresponding module for the header.
The real problem is that we tie the name of a file to its underlying
FileEntry, which is uniqued by inode, so we only ever get the first name
it is looked up by. This doesn't work with modules, which rely on a
specific file system structure. I'm hoping to have time to write up a
proposal for fixing this more permanently soon, but as a stopgap this
patch updates the name of the file's directory if it comes from a VFS
mapping.
llvm-svn: 209534
Was r202442
There were two issues with the original patch that have now been fixed.
1. We were memset'ing over a FileEntry in a test case. After adding a
std::string to FileEntry, this still happened to not break for me.
2. I didn't pass the FileManager into the new compiler instance in
compileModule. This was hidden in some cases by the fact I didn't
clear the module cache in the test.
Also, I changed the copy constructor for FileEntry, which was memcpy'ing
in a (now) unsafe way.
llvm-svn: 202539
Pass through the externally-visible names that we got from the VFS down
to FileManager, and test that this is the name showing up in __FILE__,
diagnostics, and debug information.
llvm-svn: 202442
Keep the copy constructor around, and add a FIXME that we should really
remove it as soon as we have C++11 std::map's emplace function.
llvm-svn: 202439
This cleans up some constructors that would not be safe once FileEntry
owns the storage for its name. These were already suspect, since they
wouldn't work if the FileEntry had an open file descriptor. The only
user for these constructors was in UniqueFileContainer, which wasn't a
very useful abstraction anyway. So it and UniqueDirContainer have been
replaced with std::map<UniqueID, *>.
This change should not affect anything outside the FileManager.
llvm-svn: 202420
Previously reverted in r201755 due to causing an assertion failure.
I've removed the offending assertion, and taught the CompilerInstance to
create a default virtual file system inside createFileManager. In the
future, we should be able to reach into the CompilerInvocation to
customize this behaviour without breaking clients that don't care.
llvm-svn: 201818
This unifies the unix and windows versions of FileManager::UniqueDirContainer
and FileManager::UniqueFileContainer by using UniqueID.
We cannot just replace "struct stat" with llvm::sys::fs::file_status, since we
want to be able to construct fake ones, and file_status has different members
on unix and windows.
What the patch does is:
* Record only the information that clang is actually using.
* Use llvm::sys::fs::status instead of stat and fstat.
* Use llvm::sys::fs::UniqueID
* Delete the old windows versions of UniqueDirContainer and
UniqueFileContainer since the "unix" one now works on windows too.
llvm-svn: 187619