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
By describing system header suppressions directly in tablegen we eliminate
special cases in getDiagnosticSeverity().
Dropping the reliance on builtin diagnostic classes when mapping also gets us
closer to the goal of reusing the diagnostic machinery for custom diagnostics.
No change in functionality.
llvm-svn: 211023
This begins to address cognitive dissonance caused by treating the Note
diagnostic level as a severity in the diagnostic engine.
No change in functionality.
llvm-svn: 210758
Replace a large monolitic function, with per-table functions which all nicely
fit on my screen. I also added documentation to each function that describes
what kind of tables are generated and which information is contained and
switched to range based for loops. Finally, I run clang-format over the moved
code.
I spent a significant amount of time to understand this code when reasoning
about possible extensions to the diagnostic interface to support 'remark'
diagnostics. This change will definitely help such an implementation, but
already by itself it will save other people a lot of time when trying to
understand this functionality.
Even though the patch touches the full function, it is mostly mechanical. No
functional change intended. The generated tblgen files are identical.
llvm-svn: 208136
A 'remark' is information that is not an error or a warning, but rather some
additional information provided to the user. In contrast to a 'note' a 'remark'
is an independent diagnostic, whereas a 'note' always depends on another
diagnostic.
A typical use case for remark nodes is information provided to the user, e.g.
information provided by the vectorizer about loops that have been vectorized.
This patch provides the initial implementation of 'remarks'. It includes the
actual definiton of the remark nodes, their printing as well as basic parameter
handling. We are reusing the existing diagnostic parameters which means a remark
can be enabled with normal '-Wdiagnostic-name' flags and can be upgraded to
an error using '-Werror=diagnostic-name'. '-Werror' alone does not upgrade
remarks.
This patch is by intention minimal in terms of parameter handling. More
experience and more discussions will most likely lead to further enhancements
in the parameter handling.
llvm-svn: 202475
substitution failure, allow a flag to be set on the Diagnostic object,
to mark it as 'causes substitution failure'.
Refactor Diagnostic.td and the tablegen to use an enum for SFINAE behavior
rather than a bunch of flags.
llvm-svn: 194444
The individual group and subgroups tables are now two large tables. The option table stores an index into these two tables instead of pointers. This reduces the size of the options tabe since it doesn't need to store pointers. It also reduces the number of relocations needed.
My build shows this reducing DiagnosticsIDs.o and the clang binary by ~20.5K. It also removes ~400 relocation entries from DiagnosticIDs.o.
llvm-svn: 189438
Not only is this inefficient for TableGen, it's annoying for maintenance
when renaming warning flags (unusual) or adding those flags to a group
(more likely).
This uses the new fix-it infrastructure for LLVM's SourceMgr/SMDiagnostic,
as well as a few changes to TableGen to track more source information.
llvm-svn: 172087
While -Wpedantic was reasonable, -Wno-pedantic would turn off a bunch of warnings that
are on by default. This counters the intention of this warning flag.
To fix this, -Wpedantic now includes extentions that are not on by default. The
remaining warnings will manifest anyway, and won't accidentally get turned off
by -Wno-pedantic.
Fixes <rdar://problem/12076105>
llvm-svn: 161695
included in warning groups. Warning groups can only contain warnings, because only
warnings can be mapped to errors or ignored.
This caught a few diagnostics that were incorrectly in diagnostic groups, and
could have resulted in a compiler crash when those diagnostic groups were mapped.
Fixes <rdar://problem/12044436>
llvm-svn: 161389
- Split pedantic driver flag test into separate test file, and XFAIL on cygwin,mingw32
- Fix bug in tablegen logic where a missing '{' caused errors to be included in -Wpedantic.
llvm-svn: 159892
I suspect FileCheck might match assertion failure, even if clang/test/Misc/warning-flags.c passed the test.
> 0. Program arguments: bin/./clang -### -pedantic -Wpedantic clang/test/Driver/warning-options.cpp
llvm-svn: 159886
This patch introduces some magic in tablegen to create a "Pedantic" diagnostic
group which automagically includes all warnings that are extensions. This
allows a user to suppress specific warnings traditionally under -pedantic used
an ordinary warning flag. This also allows users to use #pragma to silence
specific -pedantic warnings, or promote them to errors, within blocks of text
(just like any other warning).
-Wpedantic is NOT an alias for -pedantic. Instead, it provides another way
to (a) activate -pedantic warnings and (b) disable them. Where they differ
is that -pedantic changes the behavior of the preprocessor slightly, whereas
-Wpedantic does not (it just turns on the warnings).
The magic in the tablegen diagnostic emitter has to do with computing the minimal
set of diagnostic groups and diagnostics that should go into -Wpedantic, as those
diagnostics that already members of groups that themselves are (transitively) members
of -Wpedantic do not need to be included in the Pedantic group directly. I went
back and forth on whether or not to magically generate this group, and the invariant
was that we always wanted extension warnings to be included in -Wpedantic "some how",
but the bookkeeping would be very onerous to manage by hand.
-no-pedantic (and --no-pedantic) is included for completeness, and matches many of the
same kind of flags the compiler already supports. It does what it says: cancels out
-pedantic. One discrepancy is that if one specifies --no-pedantic and -Weverything or
-Wpedantic the pedantic warnings are still enabled (essentially the -W flags win). We
can debate the correct behavior here.
Along the way, this patch nukes some code in TextDiagnosticPrinter.cpp and CXStoredDiagnostic.cpp
that determine whether to include the "-pedantic" flag in the warning output. This is
no longer needed, as all extensions now have a -W flag.
This patch also significantly reduces the number of warnings not under flags from 229
to 158 (all extension warnings). That's a 31% reduction.
llvm-svn: 159875