ambiguous name where none of the declarations found are actually
templates. In this case, make sure we clear out the ambiguous-path
data when recomputing the lookup result kind. Fixes PR8439.
llvm-svn: 117112
declaration have the 'readwrite' attribute. This is a common case, and we can issue a more lucid diagnostic.
Fixes <rdar://problem/7629420>.
llvm-svn: 117045
themselves have no template parameters. This is actually a restriction
due to the grammar of template template parameters, but we choose to
diagnose it in Sema to provide better recovery.
llvm-svn: 117032
redeclarations of main appropriately rather than allowing it to be
overloaded. Also, disallowing declaring main as a template.
Fixes GCC DejaGNU g++.old-deja/g++.other/main1.C.
llvm-svn: 117029
nil. Otherwise we can get false paths where a second @synchronized using the mutex
can have a bogus warning. Fixes <rdar://problem/8578650>.
llvm-svn: 117016
entities in the preprocessing record. Previously, we would only end up
getting the first token of a preprocessing record annotated
correctly. For example, given
#include "foo.h"
we would only get the '#' annotated as an inclusion directive; the
'include' and '"foo.h"' tokens would be given the general 'processing
directive' annotation.
Now, we get proper annotations for entities in the preprocessing
record.
llvm-svn: 117001
This adds an option to set the _MSC_VER macro without
recompiling. This is very useful when testing compatibility
with the Windows SDK and c++stdlib headers.
-fmsc-version=<version> (defaults to VS2003 (1300))
llvm-svn: 116999
inclusion directives, keeping track of every #include, #import,
etc. in the translation unit. We keep track of the source location and
kind of the inclusion, how the file name was spelled, and the
underlying file to which the inclusion resolved.
llvm-svn: 116952
FunctionType! I didn't realize it was available, until rjmccall
pointed out that DeclaratorDecl made the typeloc available. This
makes FunctionDecl recursion *much* easier, because the typeloc can
take care of default parameters, so we no longer have to do that
separately, which means we can just do a normal type traversal instead
of this special-case WalkUp stuff we did before.
The only downside -- and it's minor -- is that because the TypeLoc
handles both the return type and the argument types, we can't recurse
on the explicit template args in the right place (which would be
between them). I do it beforehand instead. So for
int MyFunc<float>(char x);
we get callbacks in the order: float, int, char.
Reviewed by chandlerc
llvm-svn: 116945
As far as I can see, gcc is right to think this! The following change
will cause a nice segfault rather than undefined behaviour if this case
occurs. Someone who understands what this code is supposed to do should
probably take a proper look.
llvm-svn: 116917