This patch renames getLinkage to getLinkageInternal. Only code that
needs to handle UniqueExternalLinkage specially should call this.
Linkage, as defined in the c++ standard, is provided by
getFormalLinkage. It maps UniqueExternalLinkage to ExternalLinkage.
Most places in the compiler actually want isExternallyVisible, which
handles UniqueExternalLinkage as internal.
llvm-svn: 181677
type returns a lambda defined within itself. The computation of linkage for the
function looked at the linkage of the lambda, and vice versa.
This is solved by not checking whether an 'auto' in a function return type
deduces to a type with unique external linkage. We don't need this check,
because the type deduced for 'auto' doesn't affect whether two
otherwise-identical declarations would name different functions, so we don't
need to give an ostensibly external-linkage function internal linkage for this
reason. (We also don't need unique-external linkage in C++11 onwards at all,
but that's not implemented yet.)
llvm-svn: 181675
inefficient; we perform a linear scan of switch labels to find the one matching
the condition, and then walk the body looking for that label. Both parts should
be straightforward to optimize.
llvm-svn: 181671
We could support the GCC extension DW_TAG_GNU_template_parameter_pack if
we're feeling adventurous, at some point - but I don't think GDB's doing
anything useful with it yet anyway.
llvm-svn: 181644
Sometimes people hack on their system headers. In such cases, they'll
need to delete their module cache, but may not know where it is. Add a
note to show them where it is.
llvm-svn: 181638
* Provide DW_TAG_template_value_parameter for pointers, function
pointers, member pointers, and member function pointers (still missing
support for template template parameters which GCC encodes as a
DW_TAG_GNU_template_template_param)
* Provide values for all but the (member & non-member) function pointer case.
Simple constant integer values for member pointers (offset within the
object) and address for the value pointer case. GCC doesn't provide a
value for the member function pointer case so I'm not sure how, if at
all, GDB supports encoding that. & non-member function pointers should
follow shortly in a subsequent patch.
* Null pointer value encodings of all of these types, including
correctly encoding null data member pointers as -1.
llvm-svn: 181634
In most cases it is, by just looking at the name. Also, this check prevents the heuristic from working in strange user settings.
radar://13839692
llvm-svn: 181615
Consider this example:
char *p = malloc(sizeof(char));
systemFunction(&p);
free(p);
In this case, when we call systemFunction, we know (because it's a system
function) that it won't free 'p'. However, we /don't/ know whether or not
it will /change/ 'p', so the analyzer is forced to invalidate 'p', wiping
out any bindings it contains. But now the malloc'd region looks like a
leak, since there are no more bindings pointing to it, and we'll get a
spurious leak warning.
The fix for this is to notice when something is becoming inaccessible due
to invalidation (i.e. an imperfect model, as opposed to being explicitly
overwritten) and stop tracking it at that point. Currently, the best way
to determine this for a call is the "indirect escape" pointer-escape kind.
In practice, all the patch does is take the "system functions don't free
memory" special case and limit it to direct parameters, i.e. just the
arguments to a call and not other regions accessible to them. This is a
conservative change that should only cause us to escape regions more
eagerly, which means fewer leak warnings.
This isn't perfect for several reasons, the main one being that this
example is treated the same as the one above:
char **p = malloc(sizeof(char *));
systemFunction(p + 1);
// leak
Currently, "addresses accessible by offsets of the starting region" and
"addresses accessible through bindings of the starting region" are both
considered "indirect" regions, hence this uniform treatment.
Another issue is our longstanding problem of not distinguishing const and
non-const bindings; if in the first example systemFunction's parameter were
a char * const *, we should know that the function will not overwrite 'p',
and thus we can safely report the leak.
<rdar://problem/13758386>
llvm-svn: 181607
Otherwise (when indenting from the wrapped -> or .), this looks
like a confusing indent.
Before:
aaaaaaa //
.aaaaaaa( //
aaaaaaa);
After:
aaaaaaa //
.aaaaaaa( //
aaaaaaa);
llvm-svn: 181595
Thereby, the macro is consistently formatted (including the trailing
escaped newlines) even if clang-format is invoked only on single lines
of the macro.
llvm-svn: 181590
Summary:
Adds actual config file reading to the clang-format utility.
Configuration file name is .clang-format. It is looked up for each input file
in its parent directories starting from immediate one. First found .clang-format
file is used. When using standard input, .clang-format is searched starting from
the current directory.
Added -dump-config option to easily create configuration files.
Reviewers: djasper, klimek
Reviewed By: klimek
CC: cfe-commits, jordan_rose, kimgr
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D758
llvm-svn: 181589
MSVC provides __wchar_t. This is the same as the built-in wchar_t type
from C++, but it is also available with -fno-wchar and in C.
The commit changes ASTContext to have two different types for this:
- WCharTy is the built-in type used for wchar_t in C++ and __wchar_t.
- WideCharTy is the type of a wide character literal. In C++ this is
the same as WCharTy, and in C it is an integer type compatible with
the type in <stddef.h>.
This fixes PR15815.
llvm-svn: 181587
Before, the actual operator of an overloaded operator declaration was
handled as a binary operator an thus, clang-format could not find valid
formattings for many examples, e.g.:
template <typename AAAAAAA, typename BBBBBBB>
AAAAAAA operator/(const AAAAAAA &a, BBBBBBB &b);
llvm-svn: 181585
for C++ constructors.
If the DIType for a class was generated by
CGDebugInfo::createContextChain(), the cache contains only a
limited DIType wihtout any declarations. Since EmitFunctionStart()
needs to find the canonical declaration for each method, we
construct the complete type before emitting any method.
rdar://problem/13116508
llvm-svn: 181561
This fixes several (7 out of 16) cases of PR14492 in the GDB 7.5 test
suite. It seems GDB was bailing out whenever it had even the slightest
problem with the template argument list (& I assume it didn't like
seeing template value parameters that were just simple names - perhaps
assuming that lone names must be types, not values)
llvm-svn: 181556
Both these tests were ultimately fixed by the check for
"isIncompleteType" & neither test case was really reduced to a minimal
form. On doing so it becomes apparent that the problem wasn't specific
to templates at all, so I've moved the test case to a more appropriate
test file and added FileCheck verification to it (to show the forward
declaration of the array element type as well as the array alignment and
size being 0 since it cannot be computed). That's about as far down this
rabbithole as I'm willing to go today, so the rest of the un-FileChecked
tests in test/CodeGenCXX/debug-info.cpp will have to go another day
without actually testing anything other than the fact that they don't
crash.
& improve the actually interesting test case in
test/CodeGenCXX/debug-info-templates.cpp which was my original goal (in
preparation for expanding it/fixing some related bugs in non-type
template parameters)
llvm-svn: 181552
Summary:
This only supports converting along non-virtual inheritance paths by
changing the field offset or the non-virtual base adjustment.
This implements three kinds of conversions:
- codegen for Value conversions
- Constant emission for APValue
- Constant folding for CastExprs
In almost all constant initialization settings
EmitMemberPointer(APValue) is called, except when the expression
contains a reinterpret cast.
reinterpret casts end up being a big corner case because the null value
changes between different kinds of member pointers.
Reviewers: rsmith
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D741
llvm-svn: 181543
This was added, untested (though the relevant crash was tested), in
r128725/PR9600. Removing it doesn't cause failures & nothing I can
imagine could cause this check to ever return 'true' (we should never be
dealing with dependent types here). The subsequent change to check
"isIncompleteType" (r128855/PR9608) makes a lot more sense.
llvm-svn: 181542
EmitCapturedStmt creates a captured struct containing all of the captured
variables, and then emits a call to the outlined function. This is similar in
principle to EmitBlockLiteral.
GenerateCapturedFunction actually produces the outlined function. It is based
on GenerateBlockFunction, but is much simpler. The function type is determined
by the parameters that are in the CapturedDecl.
Some changes have been added to this patch that were reviewed as part of the
serialization patch and moving the parameters to the captured decl.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D640
llvm-svn: 181536
object x, x's subobjects can be constructed by constexpr constructor even if
they are of non-literal type, and can be read and written even though they're
not members of a constexpr object or temporary.
llvm-svn: 181506
clang would omit 'C' for 'copy' properties and '&' for 'retain' properties if
the property was also 'readonly'. Fix this, which makes clang match gcc4.2's
behavior.
Fixes PR15928.
llvm-svn: 181491
After r180934 we may initiate module map parsing for modules not related to the module what we are building,
make sure we ignore the header file info of headers from such modules.
First part of rdar://13840148
llvm-svn: 181489
With style where the *s go with the type:
Before: typedef bool* (Class:: *Member)() const;
After: typedef bool* (Class::*Member)() const;
llvm-svn: 181439
If the LHS of a binary expression is broken, clang-format should also
break after the operator as otherwise:
- The RHS can be easy to miss
- It can look as if clang-format doesn't understand operator precedence
Before:
bool aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa = aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa !=
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb && ccccccccc == ddddddddddd;
After:
bool aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa =
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa != bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb &&
ccccccccc == ddddddddddd;
As an additional note, clang-format would also be ok with the following
formatting, it just has a higher penalty (IMO correctly so).
bool aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa = aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa !=
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb &&
ccccccccc == ddddddddddd;
llvm-svn: 181430
Summary:
Most of this change is wiring the pragma all the way through from the
lexer, parser, and sema to codegen. I considered adding a Decl AST node
for this, but it seemed too heavyweight.
Mach-O already uses a metadata flag called "Linker Options" to do this
kind of auto-linking. This change follows that pattern.
LLVM knows how to forward the "Linker Options" metadata into the COFF
.drectve section where these flags belong. ELF support is not
implemented, but possible.
This is related to auto-linking, which is http://llvm.org/PR13016.
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D723
llvm-svn: 181426
Before:
aaaaaaaa::
aaaaaaaa::
aaaaaaaa();
After:
aaaaaaaa::
aaaaaaaa::
aaaaaaaa();
The reason for the change is that:
a) we are not sure which is better
b) it is a really rare edge case
c) it simplifies the code
d) it currently causes problems with memoization
llvm-svn: 181421
Basic support is implemented here - it still doesn't account for
declared-but-not-defined variables or functions. It cannot handle out of
order (declared, 'using', then defined) cases for variables, but can
handle that for functions (& can handle declared, 'using'd, and not
defined at all cases for types).
llvm-svn: 181393
return all the overloads instead of just picking the first possible declaration.
This removes an invalid note (and on occasion other invalid diagnostics) and
also makes clang's parsing recovery behave as if the text from its fixit were
applied.
llvm-svn: 181370
This is a fix for PR15895, where Clang will crash when trying to print a
template diff and the template uses an address of operator. This resulted
from expecting a DeclRefExpr when the Expr could have also been
UnaryOperator->DeclRefExpr.
llvm-svn: 181365
Add __has_feature and __has_extension checks for C++1y features (based on the provisional names from
the C++ features study group), and update documentation to match.
llvm-svn: 181342
Summary:
Added parseConfiguration method, which reads FormatStyle from YAML
string. This supports all FormatStyle fields and an additional BasedOnStyle
field, which can be used to specify base style.
Reviewers: djasper, klimek
Reviewed By: djasper
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D754
llvm-svn: 181326
Emacs seems to have a line that is just past the last character of the
buffers content. This needs to be handled specially so that clang-format
is not called with an invalid -offset.
llvm-svn: 181299
unnamed bitfields.
Unnamed bitfields won't have an explicit copy operation
in the AST, which breaks the strong form of the invariant.
rdar://13816940
llvm-svn: 181289
This fixes a crash due to SourceManager::getLocForEndOfFile() returning an off-by-one location
when the the FileID is for an empty file.
rdar://13803893
llvm-svn: 181285
- fix paper links to point to isocpp.org, where most of the papers are already up
- update "SVN" features to "Clang 3.3" to distinguish them from features which we
complete after the branch
- document use of -std=c++1y to enable c++1y support
llvm-svn: 181283
- References to ObjC bit-field ivars are bit-field lvalues;
fixes rdar://13794269, which got me started down this.
- Introduce Expr::refersToBitField, switch a couple users to
it where semantically important, and comment the difference
between this and the existing API.
- Discourage Expr::getBitField by making it a bit longer and
less general-sounding.
- Lock down on const_casts of bit-field gl-values until we
hear back from the committee as to whether they're allowed.
llvm-svn: 181252
Summary:
No functionality change. The existing tests for this pragma only verify
that we can preprocess it.
Reviewers: rsmith
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D751
llvm-svn: 181246
The one user has been changed to use getLValue on the compound literal
expression and then use the normal bindLoc to assign a value. No need
to special case this in the StoreManager.
llvm-svn: 181214
This occurs because in C++11 the compound literal syntax can trigger a
constructor call via list-initialization. That is, "Point{x, y}" and
"(Point){x, y}" end up being equivalent. If this occurs, the inner
CXXConstructExpr will have already handled the object construction; the
CompoundLiteralExpr just needs to propagate that value forwards.
<rdar://problem/13804098>
llvm-svn: 181213
Previously, this compound literal expression (a GNU extension in C++):
(AggregateWithDtor){1, 2}
resulted in this AST:
`-CXXBindTemporaryExpr [...] 'struct Point' (CXXTemporary [...])
`-CompoundLiteralExpr [...] 'struct AggregateWithDtor'
`-CXXBindTemporaryExpr [...] 'struct AggregateWithDtor' (CXXTemporary [...])
`-InitListExpr [...] 'struct AggregateWithDtor'
|-IntegerLiteral [...] 'int' 1
`-IntegerLiteral [...] 'int' 2
Note the two CXXBindTemporaryExprs. The InitListExpr is really part of the
CompoundLiteralExpr, not an object in its own right. By introducing a new
entity initialization kind in Sema specifically for compound literals, we
avoid the treatment of the inner InitListExpr as a temporary.
`-CXXBindTemporaryExpr [...] 'struct Point' (CXXTemporary [...])
`-CompoundLiteralExpr [...] 'struct AggregateWithDtor'
`-InitListExpr [...] 'struct AggregateWithDtor'
|-IntegerLiteral [...] 'int' 1
`-IntegerLiteral [...] 'int' 2
llvm-svn: 181212
This patch then adds all the usual platform-specific pieces for SystemZ:
driver support, basic target info, register names and constraints,
ABI info and vararg support. It also adds new tests to verify pre-defined
macros and inline asm, and updates a test for the minimum alignment change.
This version of the patch incorporates feedback from reviews by
Eric Christopher and John McCall. Thanks to all reviewers!
Patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 181211
This patch adds a new common code feature that allows platform code to
request minimum alignment of global symbols. The background for this is
that on SystemZ, the most efficient way to load addresses of global symbol
is the LOAD ADDRESS RELATIVE LONG (LARL) instruction. This instruction
provides PC-relative addressing, but only to *even* addresses. For this
reason, existing compilers will guarantee that global symbols are always
aligned to at least 2. [ Since symbols would otherwise already use a
default alignment based on their type, this will usually only affect global
objects of character type or character arrays. ] GCC also allows creating
symbols without that extra alignment by using explicit "aligned" attributes
(which then need to be used on both definition and each use of the symbol).
To enable support for this with Clang, this patch adds a
TargetInfo::MinGlobalAlign variable that provides a global minimum for the
alignment of every global object (unless overridden via explicit alignment
attribute), and adds code to respect this setting. Within this patch, no
platform actually sets the value to anything but the default 1, resulting
in no change in behaviour on any existing target.
This version of the patch incorporates feedback from reviews by
Eric Christopher and John McCall. Thanks to all reviewers!
Patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 181210
We've added the RS880 variant in the LLVM backend to represent an R600
GPU with no vertex cache, so we need to update the GPU mappings for
-mcpu.
llvm-svn: 181202
LLVM/Clang basically don't use such comments and for Google-style,
include-lines are explicitly exempt from the column limit. Also, for
most cases, where the column limit is violated, the "better" solution
would be to move the comment to before the include, which clang-format
cannot do (yet).
llvm-svn: 181191
clang-format did not indent any declarations/definitions when breaking
after the type. With this change, it indents for all declarations but
does not indent for function definitions, i.e.:
Before:
const SomeLongTypeName&
some_long_variable_name;
typedef SomeLongTypeName
SomeLongTypeAlias;
const SomeLongReturnType*
SomeLongFunctionName();
const SomeLongReturnType*
SomeLongFunctionName() { ... }
After:
const SomeLongTypeName&
some_long_variable_name;
typedef SomeLongTypeName
SomeLongTypeAlias;
const SomeLongReturnType*
SomeLongFunctionName();
const SomeLongReturnType*
SomeLongFunctionName() { ... }
While it might seem inconsistent to indent function declarations, but
not definitions, there are two reasons for that:
- Function declarations are very similar to declarations of function
type variables, so there is another side to consistency to consider.
- There can be many function declarations on subsequent lines and not
indenting can make them harder to identify. Function definitions
are already separated by their body and not indenting
makes the function name slighly easier to find.
llvm-svn: 181187