store it on the expression node. Also store an "object kind",
which distinguishes ordinary "addressed" l-values (like
variable references and pointer dereferences) and bitfield,
@property, and vector-component l-values.
Currently we're not using these for much, but I aim to switch
pretty much everything calculating l-valueness over to them.
For now they shouldn't necessarily be trusted.
llvm-svn: 119685
This takes some trickery since CastExpr has subclasses (and indeed,
is abstract).
Also, smoosh the CastKind into the bitfield from Expr.
Drops two words of storage from Expr in the common case of expressions
which don't need inheritance paths. Avoids a separate allocation and
another word of overhead in cases needing inheritance paths. Also has
the advantage of not leaking memory, since destructors for AST nodes are
never run.
llvm-svn: 110507
statements. Instead of the @try having a single @catch, where all of
the @catch's were chained (using an O(n^2) algorithm nonetheless),
@try just holds an array of its @catch blocks. The resulting AST is
slightly more compact (not important) and better represents the actual
language semantics (good).
llvm-svn: 102221
expressions, to improve source-location information, clarify the
actual receiver of the message, and pave the way for proper C++
support. The ObjCMessageExpr node represents four different kinds of
message sends in a single AST node:
1) Send to a object instance described by an expression (e.g., [x method:5])
2) Send to a class described by the class name (e.g., [NSString method:5])
3) Send to a superclass class (e.g, [super method:5] in class method)
4) Send to a superclass instance (e.g., [super method:5] in instance method)
Previously these four cases where tangled together. Now, they have
more distinct representations. Specific changes:
1) Unchanged; the object instance is represented by an Expr*.
2) Previously stored the ObjCInterfaceDecl* referring to the class
receiving the message. Now stores a TypeSourceInfo* so that we know
how the class was spelled. This both maintains typedef information
and opens the door for more complicated C++ types (e.g., dependent
types). There was an alternative, unused representation of these
sends by naming the class via an IdentifierInfo *. In practice, we
either had an ObjCInterfaceDecl *, from which we would get the
IdentifierInfo *, or we fell into the case below...
3) Previously represented by a class message whose IdentifierInfo *
referred to "super". Sema and CodeGen would use isStr("super") to
determine if they had a send to super. Now represented as a
"class super" send, where we have both the location of the "super"
keyword and the ObjCInterfaceDecl* of the superclass we're
targetting (statically).
4) Previously represented by an instance message whose receiver is a
an ObjCSuperExpr, which Sema and CodeGen would check for via
isa<ObjCSuperExpr>(). Now represented as an "instance super" send,
where we have both the location of the "super" keyword and the
ObjCInterfaceDecl* of the superclass we're targetting
(statically). Note that ObjCSuperExpr only has one remaining use in
the AST, which is for "super.prop" references.
The new representation of ObjCMessageExpr is 2 pointers smaller than
the old one, since it combines more storage. It also eliminates a leak
when we loaded message-send expressions from a precompiled header. The
representation also feels much cleaner to me; comments welcome!
This patch attempts to maintain the same semantics we previously had
with Objective-C message sends. In several places, there are massive
changes that boil down to simply replacing a nested-if structure such
as:
if (message has a receiver expression) {
// instance message
if (isa<ObjCSuperExpr>(...)) {
// send to super
} else {
// send to an object
}
} else {
// class message
if (name->isStr("super")) {
// class send to super
} else {
// send to class
}
}
with a switch
switch (E->getReceiverKind()) {
case ObjCMessageExpr::SuperInstance: ...
case ObjCMessageExpr::Instance: ...
case ObjCMessageExpr::SuperClass: ...
case ObjCMessageExpr::Class:...
}
There are quite a few places (particularly in the checkers) where
send-to-super is effectively ignored. I've placed FIXMEs in most of
them, and attempted to address send-to-super in a reasonable way. This
could use some review.
llvm-svn: 101972
Type hierarchy. Demote 'volatile' to extended-qualifier status. Audit our
use of qualifiers and fix a few places that weren't dealing with qualifiers
quite right; many more remain.
llvm-svn: 82705
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
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
- Exposed quite a few Sema issues and a CodeGen crash.
- See FIXMEs in test case, and in SemaDecl.cpp (PR3983).
I'm skeptical that __private_extern__ should actually be a storage
class value. I think that __private_extern__ basically amounts to
extern A __attribute__((visibility("hidden")))
and would be better off handled (a) as that, or (b) with an extra bit
in the VarDecl.
llvm-svn: 69020
LHS type and the computation result type; this encodes information into
the AST which is otherwise non-obvious. Fix Sema to always come up with the
right answer for both of these types. Fix IRGen and the analyzer to
account for these changes. This fixes PR2601. The approach is inspired
by PR2601 comment 2.
Note that this changes real *= complex in CodeGen from a silent
miscompilation to an explicit error.
I'm not really sure that the analyzer changes are correct, or how to
test them... someone more familiar with the analyzer should check those
changes.
llvm-svn: 67889
as reported to the user and as manipulated by #line. This is what __FILE__,
__INCLUDE_LEVEL__, diagnostics and other things should follow (but not
dependency generation!).
This patch also includes several cleanups along the way:
- SourceLocation now has a dump method, and several other places
that did similar things now use it.
- I cleaned up some code in AnalysisConsumer, but it should probably be
simplified further now that NamedDecl is better.
- TextDiagnosticPrinter is now simplified and cleaned up a bit.
This patch is a prerequisite for #line, but does not actually provide
any #line functionality.
llvm-svn: 63098
that every declaration lives inside a DeclContext.
Moved several things that don't have names but were ScopedDecls (and,
therefore, NamedDecls) to inherit from Decl rather than NamedDecl,
including ObjCImplementationDecl and LinkageSpecDecl. Now, we don't
store empty DeclarationNames for these things, nor do we try to insert
them into DeclContext's lookup structure.
The serialization tests are temporarily disabled. We'll re-enable them
once we've sorted out the remaining ownership/serialiazation issues
between DeclContexts and TranslationUnion, DeclGroups, etc.
llvm-svn: 62562
the "physical" location of tokens, refer to the "spelling" location.
This is more concrete and useful, tokens aren't really physical objects!
llvm-svn: 62309
semantics and improve our handling of default arguments. Specifically,
we follow this order:
- As soon as the see the '}' in the class definition, the class is
complete and we add any implicit declarations (default constructor,
copy constructor, etc.) to the class.
- If there are any default function arguments, parse them
- If there were any inline member function definitions, parse them
As part of this change, we now keep track of the the fact that we've
seen unparsed default function arguments within the AST. See the new
ParmVarDecl::hasUnparsedDefaultArg member. This allows us to properly
cope with calls inside default function arguments to other functions
where we're making use of the default arguments.
Made some C++ error messages regarding failed initializations more
specific.
llvm-svn: 61406
assert if the name is not an identifier. Update callers to do the right
thing and avoid this method in unsafe cases. This also fixes an objc
warning that was missing a space, and migrates a couple more to taking
IdentifierInfo and QualTypes instead of std::strings.
llvm-svn: 59936
a new NamedDecl::getAsString() method.
Change uses of Selector::getName() to just pass in a Selector
where possible (e.g. to diagnostics) instead of going through
an std::string.
This also adds new formatters for objcinstance and objcclass
as described in the dox.
llvm-svn: 59933