numbers as we deserialize class template partial specializations. We can't
assume that the old sequence numbers will work.
The sequence numbers are still deterministic, but are now a lot less
predictable for class template partial specializations in modules/PCH.
llvm-svn: 184811
John noticed that the fix for pr15930 (r181981) didn't handle indirect
uses of local types. For example, a pointer to local struct, or a
function that returns it.
One way to implement this would be to recursively look for local
types. This would look a lot like the linkage computation itself for
types.
To avoid code duplication and utilize the existing linkage cache, this
patch just makes the computation of "type with no linkage but
externally visible because it is from an inline function" part of the
linkage computation itself.
llvm-svn: 182711
specialization with modules enabled. Just don't merge them at all for now;
we'll revisit this when support for template merging is added.
In passing, make Decl::dump() a little safer to use with PCH/modules, by making
it not deserialize any additional declarations. From a debugger you can call
decls_begin() or similar first if you want to dump all child decls.
llvm-svn: 182544
a FieldDecl from it, and propagate both into the closure type and the
LambdaExpr.
You can't do much useful with them yet -- you can't use them within the body
of the lambda, because we don't have a representation for "the this of the
lambda, not the this of the enclosing context". We also don't have support or a
representation for a nested capture of an init-capture yet, which was intended
to work despite not being allowed by the current standard wording.
llvm-svn: 181985
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
Add serialization for captured statements and captured decls. Also add
a const_capture_iterator to CapturedStmt.
Test contributed by Wei Pan
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D727
llvm-svn: 181048
Add CapturedDecl to be the DeclContext for CapturedStmt, and perform semantic
analysis. Currently captures all variables by reference.
TODO: templates
Author: Ben Langmuir <ben.langmuir@intel.com>
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D433
llvm-svn: 179618
don't serialize a lookup map for the translation unit outside C++ mode, so we
can't tell when lookup within the TU needs to look within modules. Only apply
the fix outside C++ mode, and only to the translation unit.
llvm-svn: 178706
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x86_64-darwin10-gdb went back green
before it processed the reverted 178663, so it could not have been the culprit.
Revert "Revert 178663."
This reverts commit 4f8a3eb2ce5d4ba422483439e20c8cbb4d953a41.
llvm-svn: 178682
For variables and functions clang used to store two storage classes. The one
"as written" in the code and a patched one, which, for example, propagates
static to the following decls.
This apparently is from the days clang lacked linkage computation. It is now
redundant and this patch removes it.
llvm-svn: 178663
Introduce a new AST Decl node "EmptyDecl" to model empty-declaration. Have attributes from attribute-declaration appertain
to the EmptyDecl node by creating the AST representations of these attributes and attach them to the EmptyDecl node so these
attributes can be sema checked just as attributes attached to "normal" declarations.
llvm-svn: 175900
This commit introduces a set of related changes to ensure that the
declaration that shows up in the identifier chain after deserializing
declarations with a given identifier is, in fact, the most recent
declaration. The primary change involves waiting until after we
deserialize and wire up redeclaration chains before updating the
identifier chains. There is a minor optimization in here to avoid
recursively deserializing names as part of looking to see whether
top-level declarations for a given name exist.
A related change that became suddenly more urgent is to property
record a merged declaration when an entity first declared in the
current translation unit is later deserialized from a module (that had
not been loaded at the time of the original declaration). Since we key
off the canonical declaration (which is parsed, not from an AST file)
for emitted redeclarations, we simply record this as a merged
declaration during AST writing and let the readers merge them.
Re-fixes <rdar://problem/13189985>, presumably for good this time.
llvm-svn: 175447
until recursive loading is finished.
Otherwise we may end up with a template trying to deserialize a template
parameter that is in the process of getting loaded.
rdar://13135282
llvm-svn: 175329
the linkage of functions and variables while merging declarations from modules,
and we don't necessarily have enough of the rest of the AST loaded at that
point to allow us to compute linkage, so serialize it instead.
llvm-svn: 174943
name lookup has been performed in that context (this probably only happens in
C++).
1) Whenever we add names to a context, set a flag on it, and if we perform
lookup and discover that the context has had a lookup table built but has the
flag set, update all entries in the lookup table with additional names from
the external source.
2) When marking a DeclContext as having external visible decls, mark the
context in which lookup is performed, not the one we are adding. These won't
be the same if we're adding another copy of a pre-existing namespace.
llvm-svn: 174577
Title: [PR9027] volatile struct bug: member is not loaded at -O;
This is caused by last flag passed to @llvm.memcpy being false,
not honoring that aggregate has at least one 'volatile' data member
(even though aggregate itself has not been qualified as 'volatile'.
As a result, optimization optimizes away the memcpy altogether.
Patch review by John MaCall (I still need to fix up a test though).
llvm-svn: 173535
consider (sub)module visibility.
The bulk of this change replaces myriad hand-rolled loops over the
linked list of Objective-C categories/extensions attached to an
interface declaration with loops using one of the four new category
iterator kinds:
visible_categories_iterator: Iterates over all visible categories
and extensions, hiding any that have their "hidden" bit set. This is
by far the most commonly used iterator.
known_categories_iterator: Iterates over all categories and
extensions, ignoring the "hidden" bit. This tends to be used for
redeclaration-like traversals.
visible_extensions_iterator: Iterates over all visible extensions,
hiding any that have their "hidden" bit set.
known_extensions_iterator: Iterates over all extensions, whether
they are visible to normal name lookup or not.
The effect of this change is that any uses of the visible_ iterators
will respect module-import visibility. See the new tests for examples.
Note that the old accessors for categories and extensions are gone;
there are *Raw() forms for some of them, for those (few) areas of the
compiler that have to manipulate the linked list of categories
directly. This is generally discouraged.
Part two of <rdar://problem/10634711>.
llvm-svn: 172665
This does limit these typedefs to being sequences, but no current usage
requires them to be contiguous (we could expand this to a more general
iterator pair range concept at some point).
Also, it'd be nice if SmallVector were constructible directly from an ArrayRef
but this is a bit tricky since ArrayRef depends on SmallVectorBaseImpl for the
inverse conversion. (& generalizing over all range-like things, while nice,
would require some nontrivial SFINAE I haven't thought about yet)
llvm-svn: 170482
the cases where we can't determine whether special members would be trivial
while building the class, we eagerly declare those special members. The impact
of this is bounded, since it does not trigger implicit declarations of special
members in classes which merely *use* those classes.
In order to determine whether we need to apply this rule, we also need to
eagerly declare move operations and destructors in cases where they might be
deleted. If a move operation were supposed to be deleted, it would instead
be suppressed, and we could need overload resolution to determine if we fall
back to a trivial copy operation. If a destructor were implicitly deleted,
it would cause the move constructor of any derived classes to be suppressed.
As discussed on cxx-abi-dev, C++11's selected constructor rules are also
retroactively applied as a defect resolution in C++03 mode, in order to
identify that class B has a non-trivial copy constructor (since it calls
A's constructor template, not A's copy constructor):
struct A { template<typename T> A(T &); };
struct B { mutable A a; };
llvm-svn: 169673
properly, rather than faking it up by pretending that a reference member makes
the default constructor non-trivial. That leads to rejects-valids when putting
such types inside unions.
llvm-svn: 169662
uncovered.
This required manually correcting all of the incorrect main-module
headers I could find, and running the new llvm/utils/sort_includes.py
script over the files.
I also manually added quite a few missing headers that were uncovered by
shuffling the order or moving headers up to be main-module-headers.
llvm-svn: 169237
constructor/assignment operator with a const-qualified parameter type. The
prior method for determining this incorrectly used overload resolution.
llvm-svn: 168775
reference instead of relying on computing it.
In general, if storage is no issue, it is preferable to deserialize info from
the PCH instead of trying to recompute it after the PCH was loaded.
The incentive to change this now was due to r155303 changing how friend template
classes in dependent contexts are handled; such classes can now be chained to
a previous template class but the computed InjectedClassNameType may be different
due to the extra template parameters from the dependent context.
The new handling requires more investigation but, in the meantime, writing out
InjectedClassNameType fixes PCH issue in rdar://12627738.
llvm-svn: 167425
has ivars that require destruction, but none that require anything
except zero-initialization. This is common in ARC and (when true
throughout a class hierarchy) permits the elimination of an
unnecessary message-send during allocation.
llvm-svn: 166088
This more accurately reflects its use: this flag is set when a method
matches the getter or setter name for a property in the same class,
and does not actually specify whether or not the definition of the method
will be synthesized (either implicitly or explicitly with @synthesize).
This renames the setter and backing field as well, and changes the
(soon-to-be-obsolete?) XML dump format to use 'property_accessor'
instead of 'synthesized'.
llvm-svn: 165626
whether that function/method already has a body (loaded from some
other AST file), as introduced in r165137. Delay this check until
after the redeclaration chains have been wired up.
While I'm here, make the loading of method bodies lazy.
llvm-svn: 165513
ImportDecl's module ID was not written out and the reader accepted as module ID
the serialized:
Record.push_back(!IdentifierLocs.empty());
llvm-svn: 165087