ranges as part of the ASTContext. This code is not and was never used,
but contributes ~250k to the size of the Cocoa.h precompiled
header.
llvm-svn: 99007
instantiations when we have the corresponding macro definition and by
removing macro definition information from our table when the macro is
undefined.
llvm-svn: 99004
record (which includes all macro instantiations and definitions). As
with all lay deserialization, this introduces a new external source
(here, an external preprocessing record source) that loads all of the
preprocessed entities prior to iterating over the entities.
The preprocessing record is an optional part of the precompiled header
that is disabled by default (enabled with
-detailed-preprocessing-record). When the preprocessor given to the
PCH writer has a preprocessing record, that record is written into the
PCH file. When the PCH reader is given a PCH file that contains a
preprocessing record, it will be lazily loaded (which, effectively,
implicitly adds -detailed-preprocessing-record). This is the first
case where we have sections of the precompiled header that are
added/removed based on a compilation flag, which is
unfortunate. However, this data consumes ~550k in the PCH file for
Cocoa.h (out of ~9.9MB), and there is a non-trivial cost to gathering
this detailed preprocessing information, so it's too expensive to turn
on by default. In the future, we should investigate a better encoding
of this information.
llvm-svn: 99002
eliminating the extra PopulatePreprocessingRecord object. This will
become useful once we start writing the preprocessing record to
precompiled headers.
llvm-svn: 98966
entity (if applicable) which was actually looked up. If a candidate was found
via a using declaration, this is the UsingShadowDecl; otherwise, if
the candidate is template specialization, this is the template; otherwise,
this is the function.
The point of this exercise is that "found declarations" are the entities
we do access control for, not their underlying declarations. Broadly speaking,
this patch fixes access control for using declarations.
There is a *lot* of redundant code calling into the overload-resolution APIs;
we really ought to clean that up.
llvm-svn: 98945
preprocessing record. Use that link with clang_getCursorReferenced()
and clang_getCursorDefinition() to match instantiations of a macro to
the definition of the macro.
llvm-svn: 98842
the macro definitions and macro instantiations that are found
during preprocessing. Preprocessing records are *not* generated by
default; rather, we provide a PPCallbacks subclass that hooks into the
existing callback mechanism to record this activity.
The only client of preprocessing records is CIndex, which keeps track
of macro definitions and instantations so that they can be exposed via
cursors. At present, only token annotation uses these facilities, and
only for macro instantiations; both will change in the near
future. However, with this change, token annotation properly annotates
macro instantiations that do not produce any tokens and instantiations
of macros that are later undef'd, improving our consistency.
Preprocessing directives that are not macro definitions are still
handled by clang_annotateTokens() via re-lexing, so that we don't have
to track every preprocessing directive in the preprocessing record.
Performance impact of preprocessing records is still TBD, although it
is limited to CIndex and therefore out of the path of the main compiler.
llvm-svn: 98836
directives while annotating tokens in CIndex. This functionality
should probably be factored out of this routine, but we're not there
yet.
llvm-svn: 98786
buffer was invalid when it was created, and use that bit to always set
the "Invalid" flag according to whether the buffer is invalid. This
ensures that all accesses to an invalid buffer are marked invalid,
improving recovery.
llvm-svn: 98690
presence or absence of header map arguments when using the precompiled
header would cause Clang to get confused about which headers had
already been included/imported, along with their controlling
macros. The fundamental problem is that the serialization of the
header search information was relying on the UIDs of FileEntry objects
at PCH generation time and PCH load time to be equivalent, which
effectively means that we had to probe the same files in the same
order. Differing header map arguments caused an extra FileEntry
lookup, but it's easy to imagine other minor command-line arguments
triggering this problem.
Header-search information is now encoded along with the
source-location entry for a file, so that we register information
about a file's properties as a header at the same time we create the
FileEntry for that file.
Fixes <rdar://problem/7743243>.
llvm-svn: 98636
SourceManager's getBuffer() and, therefore, could fail, along with
Preprocessor::getSpelling(). Use the Invalid parameters in the literal
parsers (string, floating point, integral, character) to make them
robust against errors that stem from, e.g., PCH files that are not
consistent with the underlying file system.
I still need to audit every use caller to all of these routines, to
determine which ones need specific handling of error conditions.
llvm-svn: 98608
SourceManager's getBuffer() (and similar) operations. This abstract
can be used to force callers to cope with errors in getBuffer(), such
as missing files and changed files. Fix a bunch of callers to use the
new interface.
Add some very basic checks for file consistency (file size,
modification time) into ContentCache::getBuffer(), although these
checks don't help much until we've updated the main callers (e.g.,
SourceManager::getSpelling()).
llvm-svn: 98585
on unqualified declarations.
Patch by Enea Zaffanella! Minimal adjustments: allocate the ExtInfo nodes
with the ASTContext and delete them during Destroy(). I audited a bunch of
Destroy methods at the same time, to ensure that the correct teardown was
being done.
llvm-svn: 98540
the @implementation (instead of the @interface) and actually add
the ivar to the DeclContext (which we weren't doing before).
This allows us to simplify ASTContext::CollectNonClassIvars() by
removing ASTContext::CollectProtocolSynthesizedIvars(). Now all
ivars can be found by either inspecting the ObjCInterfaceDecl and
its companion ObjCImplementationDecl.
llvm-svn: 98280
I'm expecting this portion of the AST to grow and change, and I'd like to
be able to do that with minimal recompilation. If this proves unnecessary
when access control is fully-implemented, I'll fold the classes back into
DeclCXX.h.
llvm-svn: 98249
therefore not creating ElaboratedTypes, which are still pretty-printed
with the written tag).
Most of these testcase changes were done by script, so don't feel too
sorry for my fingers.
llvm-svn: 98149
injected class name of a class template or class template partial specialization.
This is a non-canonical type; the canonical type is still a template
specialization type. This becomes the TypeForDecl of the pattern declaration,
which cleans up some amount of code (and complicates some other parts, but
whatever).
Fixes PR6326 and probably a few others, primarily by re-establishing a few
invariants about TypeLoc sizes.
llvm-svn: 98134
we now may have identical states with different analysis context.
Set the right AnalysisContext in state when entering and leaving a callee.
With both of the above changes, we can pass the test case.
llvm-svn: 97724
that are hidden by other derived base subobjects reached along a
lookup path that does *not* pass through the hiding subobject (C++
[class.member.lookup]p6). Fixes PR6462.
llvm-svn: 97640
implemented a (codegen) target hook for __builtin_extend_pointer.
I'm also making it return a uint64_t instead of an unsigned word; this
comports with typical usage (i.e. the one use I know of).
I don't know if any of the existing targets requires this hook to be
set (other than x86 and x86_64, which I know do not).
llvm-svn: 97547
category. Use this in a few places to eliminate unnecessary TST cases and
do some future-proofing. Provide terrible manglings for typeof. Mangle
decltype with some hope of accuracy.
Our manglings for some of the cases covered in the testcase are different
from gcc's, which I've raised as an issue with the ABI list.
llvm-svn: 97523
which has the label map, switch statement stack, etc. Previously, we
had a single set of maps in Sema (for the function) along with a stack
of block scopes. However, this lead to funky behavior with nested
functions, e.g., in the member functions of local classes.
The explicit-stack approach is far cleaner, and we retain a 1-element
cache so that we're not malloc/free'ing every time we enter a
function. Fixes PR6382.
Also, tweaked the unused-variable warning suppression logic to look at
errors within a given Scope rather than within a given function. The
prior code wasn't looking at the right number-of-errors count when
dealing with blocks, since the block's count would be deallocated
before we got to ActOnPopScope. This approach works with nested
blocks/functions, and gives tighter error recovery.
llvm-svn: 97518
a fixme and PR6451.
Only perform jump checking if the containing function has no errors,
and add the infrastructure needed to do this.
On the testcase in the PR, we produce:
t.cc:6:3: error: illegal goto into protected scope
goto later;
^
t.cc:7:5: note: jump bypasses variable initialization
X x;
^
llvm-svn: 97497
template definition. Do this both by being more tolerant of errors in
our asserts and by not dropping a variable declaration completely when
its initializer is ill-formed. Fixes the crash-on-invalid in PR6375,
but not the original issue.
llvm-svn: 97463
an *almost* always incorrect case. This only does the lookahead
in the insanely unlikely case, so it shouldn't impact performance.
On this testcase:
struct foo {
}
typedef int x;
Before:
t.c:3:9: error: cannot combine with previous 'struct' declaration specifier
typedef int x;
^
After:
t.c:2:2: error: expected ';' after struct
}
^
;
llvm-svn: 97403
copy the source buffers provided rather than referencing them
directly, so that the caller can free those buffers immediately after
calling clang_createTranslationUnitFromSourceFile(). Otherwise, we
risk hitting those buffers later (when building source ranges, forming
diagnostics, etc.).
llvm-svn: 97296
Sema and into analyze_printf::ParseFormatString(). Also use a bitvector to determine
what arguments have been covered (instead of just checking to see if the last argument consumed is the max argument). This is prep. for support positional arguments (an IEEE extension).
llvm-svn: 97248
propagating error conditions out of the various annotate-me-a-snowflake
routines. Generally (but not universally) removes redundant diagnostics
as well as, you know, not crashing on bad code. On the other hand,
I have just signed myself up to fix fiddly parser errors for the next
week. Again.
llvm-svn: 97221
how we find the operator delete that matches withe operator new we
found in a C++ new-expression.
This will also need CodeGen support. On a happy note, we're now a
"nans" away from building tramp3d-v4.
llvm-svn: 97209
equality comparisons, and conditional operators, produce a composite
pointer type with the appropriate additional "const" qualifiers if the
pointer types would otherwise be incompatible. This is a small
extension (also present in GCC and EDG in a slightly different form)
that permits code like:
void** i; void const** j;
i == j;
with the following extwarn:
t.cpp:5:5: warning: comparison of distinct pointer types ('void **' and
'void const **') uses non-standard composite pointer type
'void const *const *' [-pedantic]
i == j;
~ ^ ~
Fixes PR6346, and I'll be filing a core issue about this with the C++
committee.
llvm-svn: 97177
This patch implements the CallEnter/CallExit idea of Ted.
Add two interfaces to GRSubEngine: ProcessCallEnter, ProcessCallExit.
The CallEnter program point uses caller's location context. The
CallExit program point uses callee's location context.
CallEnter is built by GRStmtNodeBuilder. CallExit is built by
GREndPathNodeBuilder.
llvm-svn: 97122
class types, dependent types, and namespaces. I had previously
weakened this invariant while working on parsing pseudo-destructor
expressions, but recent work in that area has made these changes
unnecessary.
llvm-svn: 97112
This is the way I would like to move the frontend function towards -- distinct
pieces of functionality should be exposed only via FrontendAction
implementations which have clean and relatively-stable APIs.
This also isolates the surface area in clang which depends on LLVM CodeGen.
llvm-svn: 97110
expressions that look like pseudo-destructors, e.g.,
p->T::~T()
where p has dependent type.
At template instantiate time, we determine whether we actually have a
pseudo-destructor or a member access, and funnel down to the
appropriate routine in Sema.
Fixes PR6380.
llvm-svn: 97092
CXXPseudoDestructorExpr.
Update template instantiation for pseudo-destructor expressions to use
this source information and to make use of
Sema::BuildPseudoDestructorExpr when the base expression is dependent
or refers to a scalar type.
llvm-svn: 97079
pseudo-destructor expressions, and builds the CXXPseudoDestructorExpr
node directly. Currently, this only affects pseudo-destructor
expressions when they are parsed, but not after template
instantiation. That's coming next...
Improve parsing of pseudo-destructor-names. When parsing the
nested-name-specifier and we hit the sequence of tokens X :: ~, query
the actual module to determine whether X is a type-name (in which case
the X :: is part of the pseudo-destructor-name but not the
nested-name-specifier) or not (in which case the X :: is part of the
nested-name-specifier).
llvm-svn: 97058
destructor calls, e.g.,
p->T::~T
We now detect when the member access that we've parsed, e.g.,
p-> or x.
may be a pseudo-destructor expression, either because the type of p or
x is a scalar or because it is dependent (and, therefore, may become a
scalar at template instantiation time).
We then parse the pseudo-destructor grammar specifically:
::[opt] nested-name-specifier[opt] type-name :: ∼ type-name
and hand those results to a new action, ActOnPseudoDestructorExpr,
which will cope with both dependent member accesses of destructors and
with pseudo-destructor expressions.
This commit affects the parsing of pseudo-destructors, only; the
semantic actions still go through the semantic actions for member
access expressions. That will change soon.
llvm-svn: 97045
of the block descriptor field. This field is the ObjC style @encode
signature of the implementation function, and was to this point
conditionally provided in the block literal data structure. That
provisional support is removed.
Additionally, eliminate unused enumerations for the block literal flags field.
The first shipping ABI unconditionally set (1<<29) but this bit is unused
by the runtime, so the second ABI will unconditionally have (1<<30) set so
that the runtime can in fact distinguish whether the additional data is
present or not.
llvm-svn: 96989
1) emit base destructors as aliases to their unique base class destructors
under some careful conditions. This is enabled for the same targets that can
support complete-to-base aliases, i.e. not darwin.
2) Emit non-variadic complete constructors for classes with no virtual bases
as calls to the base constructor. This is enabled on all targets and in
theory can trigger in situations that the alias optimization can't (mostly
involving virtual bases, mostly not yet supported).
These are bundled together because I didn't think it worthwhile to split them,
not because they really need to be.
llvm-svn: 96842
errors, e.g.:
t.c:1:21: error: redefinition of parameter 'x'
int test(int x, int x);
^
t.c:1:14: note: previous declaration is here
int test(int x, int x);
^
llvm-svn: 96769
fixing up a few callers that thought they were propagating NoReturn
information but were in fact saying something about exception
specifications.
llvm-svn: 96766
typedef int Int;
int *p;
p->Int::~Int();
This weakens the invariant that the only types in nested-name-specifiers are tag types (restricted to class types in C++98/03). However, we weaken this invariant as little as possible, accepting arbitrary types in nested-name-specifiers only when we're in a member access expression that looks like a pseudo-destructor expression.
llvm-svn: 96743
are for out of line declarations more easily. This simplifies the logic and
handles the case of out-of-line class definitions correctly. Fixes PR6107.
llvm-svn: 96729
to initializer expressions in an array allocated using ASTContext.
This plugs a memory leak when ASTContext uses a BumpPtrAllocator to
allocate memory for AST nodes.
In my mind this isn't an ideal solution; it would be nice to have
a general "vector"-like class that allocates memory using ASTContext,
but whose guts could be separated from the methods of InitListExpr
itself. I haven't gone and taken this approach yet because it isn't
clear yet if we'll eventually want an alternate solution for recylcing
memory using by InitListExprs as we are constructing the ASTs.
llvm-svn: 96642
knobs to control formatting. Eventually, I'd like to merge the
implementation of this code with the TextDiagnosticPrinter, so that
it's easy for CIndex clients to produce beautiful diagnostics like the
clang compiler does.
Use this new function to display diagnostics within c-index-test.
llvm-svn: 96603
we attach diagnostics to translation units and code-completion
results, so they can be queried at any time.
To facilitate this, the new StoredDiagnostic class stores a diagnostic
in a serializable/deserializable form, and ASTUnit knows how to
capture diagnostics in this stored form. CIndex's CXDiagnostic is a
thin wrapper around StoredDiagnostic, providing a C interface to
stored or de-serialized diagnostics.
I've XFAIL'd one test case temporarily, because currently we end up
storing diagnostics in an ASTUnit that's never returned to the user
(because it contains errors). I'll introduce a temporary fix for this
soon; the real fix will be to allow us to return and query invalid ASTs.
llvm-svn: 96592
which describes temporary objects of class type in C++. Use this to
provide a more-specific, remappable diagnostic when takin the address
of such a temporary.
llvm-svn: 96396
now cope with the destruction of types named as dependent templates,
e.g.,
y->template Y<T>::~Y()
Nominally, we implement C++0x [basic.lookup.qual]p6. However, we don't
follow the letter of the standard here because that would fail to
parse
template<typename T, typename U>
X0<T, U>::~X0() { }
properly. The problem is captured in core issue 339, which gives some
(but not enough!) guidance. I expect to revisit this code when the
resolution of 339 is clear, and/or we start capturing better source
information for DeclarationNames.
Fixes PR6152.
llvm-svn: 96367
comparing their types under the assumption that they are equivalent,
rather than importing the types and then checking for compatibility. A
few minor tweaks here:
- Teach structural matching to handle compatibility between
function types with prototypes and those without prototypes.
- Teach structural matching that an incomplete record decl is the
same as any other record decl with the same name.
- Keep track of pairs of declarations that we have already checked
(but failed to find as structurally matching), so we don't emit
diagnostics repeatedly.
- When importing a typedef of an anonymous tag, be sure to link the
imported tag type to its typedef.
With these changes, we survive a repeated import of <stdlib.h> and
<stdio.h>. Alas, the ASTNodeImporter is getting a little grotty.
llvm-svn: 96298
two types in different AST contexts are equivalent. Rather than
transforming the type from one context into the other context, we
perform a deep structural comparison of the types. This change
addresses a serious problem with recursive data types like
struct ListNode {
int value;
struct ListNode *Next;
} xList;
llvm-svn: 96278
those declared in it. This is to allow duplicate
property diagnostics for properties declared in class extensions
multiple times (radar 7629420) and for future use.
llvm-svn: 96276
of operating on each code decl. This exposes two flaws in AnalysisConsumer
that should eventually be fixed:
(1) It is not possible to associate multiple "actions" with a single
command line argument. This will require the notion of an
"analysis" group, and possibly tablegen support. (although eventually
we want to support dynamically loading analyses as well)
(2) AnalysisConsumer may not actually be scanning the declarations in namespaces.
We'll experiment first in LLVMConventionsChecker before changing the
behavior in AnalysisConsumer.
llvm-svn: 96183
Currently these checks are intended to be largely syntactical, but may get more
sophisticated over time.
As an initial foray into this brave new world, emit a static analyzer warning
when binding a temporary 'std::string' to an 'llvm::StringRef' where the
lifetime of the 'std::string' does not outlive the 'llvm::StringRef'.
llvm-svn: 96147
or that's been hidden by a non-type (in C++).
The ideal C++ diagnostic here would note the hiding declaration, but this
is a good start.
llvm-svn: 96141