was constructed, e.g. for a property access.
This allows the selector identifier locations machinery for ObjCMessageExpr
to function correctly, in that there are not real locations to handle/report for
such a message.
llvm-svn: 148013
when deserialized, fixing random crashes in libclang.
Also simplifies how OpaqueValueExprs are [de]serialized.
The reader/writer automatically retains pointer equality of sub-statements (when a
statement node is referenced in multiple nodes), so no need to manually handle it.
llvm-svn: 145752
library, since modules cut across all of the libraries. Rename
serialization::Module to serialization::ModuleFile to side-step the
annoying naming conflict. Prune a bunch of ModuleMap.h includes that
are no longer needed (most files only needed the Module type).
llvm-svn: 145538
property references to use a new PseudoObjectExpr
expression which pairs a syntactic form of the expression
with a set of semantic expressions implementing it.
This should significantly reduce the complexity required
elsewhere in the compiler to deal with these kinds of
expressions (e.g. IR generation's special l-value kind,
the static analyzer's Message abstraction), at the lower
cost of specifically dealing with the odd AST structure
of these expressions. It should also greatly simplify
efforts to implement similar language features in the
future, most notably Managed C++'s properties and indexed
properties.
Most of the effort here is in dealing with the various
clients of the AST. I've gone ahead and simplified the
ObjC rewriter's use of properties; other clients, like
IR-gen and the static analyzer, have all the old
complexity *and* all the new complexity, at least
temporarily. Many thanks to Ted for writing and advising
on the necessary changes to the static analyzer.
I've xfailed a small diagnostics regression in the static
analyzer at Ted's request.
llvm-svn: 143867
statements. As noted in the documentation for the AST node, the
semantics of __if_exists/__if_not_exists are somewhat different from
the way Visual C++ implements them, because our parsed-template
representation can't accommodate VC++ semantics without serious
contortions. Hopefully this implementation is "good enough".
llvm-svn: 142901
in such a case just write out a reference of a previously serialized Stmt, instead
of serializing it all over again.
This saves memory + space + [de]serializing time, and avoids blowing up memory
with pathological cases. rdar://10293911
llvm-svn: 142696
Instead of always storing all source locations for the selector identifiers
we check whether all the identifiers are in a "standard" position; "standard" position is
-Immediately before the arguments: [foo first:1 second:2]
-With a space between the arguments: [foo first: 1 second: 2]
-For nullary selectors, immediately before ']': [foo release]
In such cases we infer the locations instead of storing them.
llvm-svn: 140987
ASTContext reference. Remove all of the extra checking and logic that
was used to cope with a NULL ASTContext. No effective functionality
change.
llvm-svn: 139413
type IDs into a single place, and make sure that all of the callers
use the appropriate functions to do the mapping. Since the mapping is
still the identity function, this is essentially a no-op.
llvm-svn: 135733
such that every declaration ID loaded from an AST file will go through
a central local -> global mapping function. At present, this change
does nothing, since the local -> global mapping function is the
identity function.
This is the mechanical part of the refactoring; a follow-up patch will
address a few remaining areas where it's not obvious whether we're
dealing with local or global IDs.
llvm-svn: 135711
Also add the missing serialization support for SEHTryStmt,
SEHFinallyStmt, and SEHExceptStmt, and fix and finish the
serialization support for AsTypeExpr. In addition, change
the code so that it will no longer link if a Stmt subclass
is missing serialization support.
llvm-svn: 135258
throw-expressions, such that we don't consider the NRVO when the
non-volatile automatic object comes from outside the innermost try
scope (C++0x [class.copymove]p13). In C++98/03, our ASTs were
incorrect but it didn't matter because IR generation doesn't actually
apply the NRVO here. In C++0x, however, we were moving from an object
when in fact we should have copied from it. Fixes PR10142 /
<rdar://problem/9714312>.
llvm-svn: 134548
type/expression/template argument/etc. is instantiation-dependent if
it somehow involves a template parameter, even if it doesn't meet the
requirements for the more common kinds of dependence (dependent type,
type-dependent expression, value-dependent expression).
When we see an instantiation-dependent type, we know we always need to
perform substitution into that instantiation-dependent type. This
keeps us from short-circuiting evaluation in places where we
shouldn't, and lets us properly implement C++0x [temp.type]p2.
In theory, this would also allow us to properly mangle
instantiation-dependent-but-not-dependent decltype types per the
Itanium C++ ABI, but we aren't quite there because we still mangle
based on the canonical type in cases like, e.g.,
template<unsigned> struct A { };
template<typename T>
void f(A<sizeof(sizeof(decltype(T() + T())))>) { }
template void f<int>(A<sizeof(sizeof(int))>);
and therefore get the wrong answer.
llvm-svn: 134225
MaterializeTemporaryExpr captures a reference binding to a temporary
value, making explicit that the temporary value (a prvalue) needs to
be materialized into memory so that its address can be used. The
intended AST invariant here is that a reference will always bind to a
glvalue, and MaterializeTemporaryExpr will be used to convert prvalues
into glvalues for that binding to happen. For example, given
const int& r = 1.0;
The initializer of "r" will be a MaterializeTemporaryExpr whose
subexpression is an implicit conversion from the double literal "1.0"
to an integer value.
IR generation benefits most from this new node, since it was
previously guessing (badly) when to materialize temporaries for the
purposes of reference binding. There are likely more refactoring and
cleanups we could perform there, but the introduction of
MaterializeTemporaryExpr fixes PR9565, a case where IR generation
would effectively bind a const reference directly to a bitfield in a
struct. Addresses <rdar://problem/9552231>.
llvm-svn: 133521
Language-design credit goes to a lot of people, but I particularly want
to single out Blaine Garst and Patrick Beard for their contributions.
Compiler implementation credit goes to Argyrios, Doug, Fariborz, and myself,
in no particular order.
llvm-svn: 133103
__builtin_astype(): Used to reinterpreted as another data type of the same size using for both scalar and vector data types.
Added test case.
llvm-svn: 132612
Decl actually found via name lookup & overload resolution when that Decl
is different from the ValueDecl which is actually referenced by the
expression.
This can be used by AST consumers to correctly attribute references to
the spelling location of a using declaration, and otherwise gain insight
into the name resolution performed by Clang.
The public interface to DRE is kept as narrow as possible: we provide
a getFoundDecl() which always returns a NamedDecl, either the ValueDecl
referenced or the new, more precise NamedDecl if present. This way AST
clients can code against getFoundDecl without know when exactly the AST
has a split representation.
For an example of the data this provides consider:
% cat x.cc
namespace N1 {
struct S {};
void f(const S&);
}
void test(N1::S s) {
f(s);
using N1::f;
f(s);
}
% ./bin/clang -fsyntax-only -Xclang -ast-dump x.cc
[...]
void test(N1::S s) (CompoundStmt 0x5b02010 <x.cc:5:20, line:9:1>
(CallExpr 0x5b01df0 <line:6:3, col:6> 'void'
(ImplicitCastExpr 0x5b01dd8 <col:3> 'void (*)(const struct N1::S &)' <FunctionToPointerDecay>
(DeclRefExpr 0x5b01d80 <col:3> 'void (const struct N1::S &)' lvalue Function 0x5b01a20 'f' 'void (const struct N1::S &)'))
(ImplicitCastExpr 0x5b01e20 <col:5> 'const struct N1::S' lvalue <NoOp>
(DeclRefExpr 0x5b01d58 <col:5> 'N1::S':'struct N1::S' lvalue ParmVar 0x5b01b60 's' 'N1::S':'struct N1::S')))
(DeclStmt 0x5b01ee0 <line:7:3, col:14>
0x5b01e40 "UsingN1::;")
(CallExpr 0x5b01fc8 <line:8:3, col:6> 'void'
(ImplicitCastExpr 0x5b01fb0 <col:3> 'void (*)(const struct N1::S &)' <FunctionToPointerDecay>
(DeclRefExpr 0x5b01f80 <col:3> 'void (const struct N1::S &)' lvalue Function 0x5b01a20 'f' 'void (const struct N1::S &)' (UsingShadow 0x5b01ea0 'f')))
(ImplicitCastExpr 0x5b01ff8 <col:5> 'const struct N1::S' lvalue <NoOp>
(DeclRefExpr 0x5b01f58 <col:5> 'N1::S':'struct N1::S' lvalue ParmVar 0x5b01b60 's' 'N1::S':'struct N1::S'))))
Now we can tell that the second call is 'using' (no pun intended) the using
declaration, and *which* using declaration it sees. Without this, we can
mistake calls that go through using declarations for ADL calls, and have no way
to attribute names looked up with using declarations to the appropriate
UsingDecl.
llvm-svn: 130670
NestedNameSpecifierLoc. It predates when we had such an object.
Reference the NNSLoc directly in DREs, and embed it directly into the
MemberNameQualifier struct.
llvm-svn: 130668
Mostly trailing whitespace so that me editor nuking it doesn't muddy the
waters of subsequent commits that do change functionality.
Also nukes a stray statement that was harmless but redundant that
I introduced in r130666.
llvm-svn: 130667
a bitfield in the base class. DREs weren't using any bits here past the
normal Expr bits, so we have plenty of room. This makes the common case
of getting a Decl out of a DRE no longer need to do any masking etc.
Also, while here, clean up code to use the accessor methods rather than
directly poking these bits, and provide a nice comment for DREs that
includes the information previously attached to the bits going into the
pointer union.
No functionality changed here, but DREs should be a tad faster now.
llvm-svn: 130666
Patch authored by John Wiegley.
These are array type traits used for parsing code that employs certain
features of the Embarcadero C++ compiler: __array_rank(T) and
__array_extent(T, Dim).
llvm-svn: 130351
Patch authored by David Abrahams.
These two expression traits (__is_lvalue_expr, __is_rvalue_expr) are used for
parsing code that employs certain features of the Embarcadero C++ compiler.
llvm-svn: 130122
double data[20000000] = {0};
we would blow out the memory by creating 20M Exprs to fill out the initializer.
To fix this, if the initializer list initializes an array with more elements than
there are initializers in the list, have InitListExpr store a single 'ArrayFiller' expression
that specifies an expression to be used for value initialization of the rest of the elements.
Fixes rdar://9275920.
llvm-svn: 129896
arguments at the same offset, since it's needed when creating the empty
DeclRefExpr when deserializing. Fixes a memory corruption issue that would lead
to random bugs and crashes.
llvm-svn: 127125
UnresolvedLookupExpr and UnresolvedMemberExpr.
Also, improve the computation that checks whether the base of a member
expression (either unresolved or dependent-scoped) is implicit. The
previous check didn't cover all of the cases we use in our
representation, which threw off source-location information for these
expressions (which, in turn, caused some breakage in libclang's token
annotation).
llvm-svn: 126681
CXXDependentScopeMemberExpr, and clean up instantiation of
nested-name-specifiers with dependent template specialization types in
the process.
llvm-svn: 126663
class and to bind the shared value using OpaqueValueExpr. This fixes an
unnoticed problem with deserialization of these expressions where the
deserialized form would lose the vital pointer-equality trait; or rather,
it fixes it because this patch also does the right thing for deserializing
OVEs.
Change OVEs to not be a "temporary object" in the sense that copy elision is
permitted.
This new representation is not totally unawkward to work with, but I think
that's really part and parcel with the semantics we're modelling here. In
particular, it's much easier to fix things like the copy elision bug and to
make the CFG look right.
I've tried to update the analyzer to deal with this in at least some
obvious cases, and I think we get a much better CFG out, but the printing
of OpaqueValueExprs probably needs some work.
llvm-svn: 125744