getCanonicalType() to make sure that the type we got back is actually
canonical. This is the case for most types, which always build a
canonical type when given canonical components. However, some types that
involve expressions in their canonicalization (e.g., array types with
dependent sizes) don't always build canonical types from canonical
components, because there is no such thing as a "canonical"
expression. Therefore, we do this extra mapping to ensure that the
canonical types we store are actually canonical.
llvm-svn: 117344
This adds them where missing, and traces them through PCH. We fix at least one
bug in the extents found by the Index library, and make a lot of refactoring
tools which care about the exact formulation of a constructor call easier to
write. Also some minor cleanups to more consistently follow the friend pattern
instead of the setter pattern when rebuilding a serialized AST.
Patch originally by Samuel Benzaquen.
llvm-svn: 117254
In that case a chained PCH will record the updates to the DefinitionData pointer of forward references.
If a forward reference mutated into a definition re-write it into the chained PCH, this is too big of a change.
llvm-svn: 117239
- Pass around RecordDataImpl instead of the concrete RecordData so that any SmallVector can be used.
- Move ASTDeclWriter::WriteCXXDefinitionData to ASTWriter::AddCXXDefinitionData.
llvm-svn: 117236
its initial creation/deserialization and store the changes in a chained PCH.
The idea is that the AST entities call methods on the ASTMutationListener to give notifications
of changes; the PCHWriter implements the ASTMutationListener interface and stores the incremental changes
of the updated entity. WIP
llvm-svn: 117235
more closely parallel the computation of linkage. This gets us to a state
much closer to what gcc emits, modulo bugs, which will undoubtedly arise in
abundance.
llvm-svn: 117147
This adds an option to set the _MSC_VER macro without
recompiling. This is very useful when testing compatibility
with the Windows SDK and c++stdlib headers.
-fmsc-version=<version> (defaults to VS2003 (1300))
llvm-svn: 116999
inclusion directives, keeping track of every #include, #import,
etc. in the translation unit. We keep track of the source location and
kind of the inclusion, how the file name was spelled, and the
underlying file to which the inclusion resolved.
llvm-svn: 116952
by marking the decl invalid isn't. Make some steps towards supporting these
and then hastily shut them down at the last second by marking them as
unsupported.
llvm-svn: 116661
identifiers to determine good typo-correction candidates. Once we've
identified those candidates, we perform name lookup on each of them
and the consider the results.
This optimization makes typo correction > 2x faster on a benchmark
example using a single typo (NSstring) in a tiny file that includes
Cocoa.h from a precompiled header, since we are deserializing far less
information now during typo correction.
There is a semantic change here, which is interesting. The presence of
a similarly-named entity that is not visible can now affect typo
correction. This is both good (you won't get weird corrections if the
thing you wanted isn't in scope) and bad (you won't get good
corrections if there is a similarly-named-but-completely-unrelated
thing). Time will tell whether it was a good choice or not.
llvm-svn: 116528
instead of deserializing the complete declaration context of the record.
Iterating over the fields of a record is very common (e.g to determine the layout), unfortunately we needlessly deserialize every declaration
that the declaration context of the record contains; this can be bad for large C++ classes that contain a lot of methods.
Fix this by allow deserialization of just the fields when we want to iterate over them.
Progress for rdar://7260160.
llvm-svn: 116507
following amusing sequence:
- AST writing schedules writing a type X* that it had never seen
before
- AST writing starts writing another declaration, ends up
deserializing X* from a prior AST file. Now we have two type IDs for
the same type!
- AST writer tries to write X*. It only has the lower-numbered ID
from the the prior AST file, so references to the higher-numbered ID
that was scheduled for writing go off into lalaland.
To fix this, keep the higher-numbered ID so we end up writing the type
twice. Since this issue occurs so rarely, and type records are
generally rather small, I deemed this better than the alternative: to
keep a separate mapping from the higher-numbered IDs to the
lower-numbered IDs, which we would end up having to check whenever we
want to deserialize any type.
Fixes <rdar://problem/8511624>, I think.
llvm-svn: 115647