Remove some cognitive load by renaming clang/Serialization/Module.h to
clang/Serialization/ModuleFile.h, since it declares the ModuleFile
class. This also makes editing a bit easier, since the basename of the
file no long conflicts with clang/Basic/Module.h, which declares the
Module class. Also move lib/Serialization/Module.cpp to
lib/Serialization/ModuleFile.cpp.
This patch is motivated by (and factored out from)
https://reviews.llvm.org/D66121 which is a debug info bugfix. Starting
with DWARF 5 all Objective-C methods are nested inside their
containing type, and that patch implements this for synthesized
Objective-C properties.
1. SemaObjCProperty populates a list of synthesized accessors that may
need to inserted into an ObjCImplDecl.
2. SemaDeclObjC::ActOnEnd inserts forward-declarations for all
accessors for which no override was provided into their
ObjCImplDecl. This patch does *not* synthesize AST function
*bodies*. Moving that code from the static analyzer into Sema may
be a good idea though.
3. Places that expect all methods to have bodies have been updated.
I did not update the static analyzer's inliner for synthesized
properties to point back to the property declaration (see
test/Analysis/Inputs/expected-plists/nullability-notes.m.plist), which
I believed to be more bug than a feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68108
rdar://problem/53782400
Summary:
- HIP/CUDA host side needs to use device kernel symbol name to match the
device side binaries. Without a consistent naming between host- and
device-side compilations, it's risky that wrong device binaries are
executed. Consistent naming is usually not an issue until unnamed
types are used, especially the lambda. In this patch, the consistent
name mangling is addressed for the extended lambdas, i.e. the lambdas
annotated with `__device__`.
- In [Itanium C++ ABI][1], the mangling of the lambda is generally
unspecified unless, in certain cases, ODR rule is required to ensure
consisent naming cross TUs. The extended lambda is such a case as its
name may be part of a device kernel function, e.g., the extended
lambda is used as a template argument and etc. Thus, we need to force
ODR for extended lambdas as they are referenced in both device- and
host-side TUs. Furthermore, if a extended lambda is nested in other
(extended or not) lambdas, those lambdas are required to follow ODR
naming as well. This patch revises the current lambda mangle numbering
to force ODR from an extended lambda to all its parent lambdas.
- On the other side, the aforementioned ODR naming should not change
those lambdas' original linkages, i.e., we cannot replace the original
`internal` with `linkonce_odr`; otherwise, we may violate ODR in
general. This patch introduces a new field `HasKnownInternalLinkage`
in lambda data to decouple the current linkage calculation based on
mangling number assigned.
[1]: https://itanium-cxx-abi.github.io/cxx-abi/abi.html
Reviewers: tra, rsmith, yaxunl, martong, shafik
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68818
llvm-svn: 375309
file.
Reduces duplication and thereby reduces the risk that someone will
forget to update one of these places, as I did when adding
DefaultedDestructorIsConstexpr (though I've been unable to produce
a testcase for which that matters so far).
llvm-svn: 374484
has a constexpr destructor.
For constexpr variables, reject if the variable does not have constant
destruction. In all cases, do not emit runtime calls to the destructor
for variables with constant destruction.
llvm-svn: 373159
In order to enable future improvements to our attribute diagnostics,
this moves info from ParsedAttr into CommonAttributeInfo, then makes
this type the base of the *Attr and ParsedAttr types. Quite a bit of
refactoring took place, including removing a bunch of redundant Spelling
Index propogation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67368
llvm-svn: 371875
non-trivial C union types
This recommits r365985, which was reverted because it broke a few
projects using unions containing non-trivial ObjC pointer fields in
system headers. We now have a patch to fix the problem (see
https://reviews.llvm.org/D65256).
Original commit message:
This patch diagnoses uses of non-trivial C unions and structs/unions
containing non-trivial C unions in the following contexts, which require
default-initialization, destruction, or copying of the union objects,
instead of disallowing fields of non-trivial types in C unions, which is
what we currently do:
- function parameters.
- function returns.
- assignments.
- compound literals.
- block captures except capturing of `__block` variables by non-escaping blocks.
- local and global variable definitions.
- lvalue-to-rvalue conversions of volatile types.
See the discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D62988 for more background.
rdar://problem/50679094
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63753
llvm-svn: 371275
construct.
OpenMP 5.0 introduced new clause for declare target directive, device_type clause, which may accept values host, nohost, and any. Host means
that the function must be emitted only for the host, nohost - only for
the device, and any - for both, device and the host.
llvm-svn: 369775
This reverts commit r365985.
Prior to r365985, clang used to mark C union fields that have
non-trivial ObjC ownership qualifiers as unavailable if the union was
declared in a system header. r365985 stopped doing so, which caused the
swift compiler to crash when it tried to import a non-trivial union.
I have a patch that fixes the crash (https://reviews.llvm.org/D65256),
but I'm temporarily reverting the original patch until we can decide on
whether it's taking the right approach.
llvm-svn: 367076
non-trivial C union types
This patch diagnoses uses of non-trivial C unions and structs/unions
containing non-trivial C unions in the following contexts, which require
default-initialization, destruction, or copying of the union objects,
instead of disallowing fields of non-trivial types in C unions, which is
what we currently do:
- function parameters.
- function returns.
- assignments.
- compound literals.
- block captures except capturing of `__block` variables by non-escaping
blocks.
- local and global variable definitions.
- lvalue-to-rvalue conversions of volatile types.
See the discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D62988 for more background.
rdar://problem/50679094
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63753
llvm-svn: 365985
This moves Bitcode/Bitstream*, Bitcode/BitCodes.h to Bitstream/.
This is needed to avoid a circular dependency when using the bitstream
code for parsing optimization remarks.
Since Bitcode uses Core for the IR part:
libLLVMRemarks -> Bitcode -> Core
and Core uses libLLVMRemarks to generate remarks (see
IR/RemarkStreamer.cpp):
Core -> libLLVMRemarks
we need to separate the Bitstream and Bitcode part.
For clang-doc, it seems that it doesn't need the whole bitcode layer, so
I updated the CMake to only use the bitstream part.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63899
llvm-svn: 365091
The bitstream reader handles errors poorly. This has two effects:
* Bugs in file handling (especially modules) manifest as an "unexpected end of
file" crash
* Users of clang as a library end up aborting because the code unconditionally
calls `report_fatal_error`
The bitstream reader should be more resilient and return Expected / Error as
soon as an error is encountered, not way late like it does now. This patch
starts doing so and adopting the error handling where I think it makes sense.
There's plenty more to do: this patch propagates errors to be minimally useful,
and follow-ups will propagate them further and improve diagnostics.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42311
<rdar://problem/33159405>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63518
llvm-svn: 364464
Summary:
this revision adds Lexing, Parsing and Basic Semantic for the consteval specifier as specified by http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2018/p1073r3.html
with this patch, the consteval specifier is treated as constexpr but can only be applied to function declaration.
Changes:
- add the consteval keyword.
- add parsing of consteval specifier for normal declarations and lambdas expressions.
- add the whether a declaration is constexpr is now represented by and enum everywhere except for variable because they can't be consteval.
- adapt diagnostic about constexpr to print constexpr or consteval depending on the case.
- add tests for basic semantic.
Reviewers: rsmith, martong, shafik
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: eraman, efriedma, rnkovacs, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61790
llvm-svn: 363362
This caused Clang to start erroring on the following:
struct S {
template <typename = int> explicit S();
};
struct T : S {};
struct U : T {
U();
};
U::U() {}
$ clang -c /tmp/x.cc
/tmp/x.cc:10:4: error: call to implicitly-deleted default constructor of 'T'
U::U() {}
^
/tmp/x.cc:5:12: note: default constructor of 'T' is implicitly deleted
because base class 'S' has no default constructor
struct T : S {};
^
1 error generated.
See discussion on the cfe-commits email thread.
This also reverts the follow-ups r359966 and r359968.
> this patch adds support for the explicit bool specifier.
>
> Changes:
> - The parsing for the explicit(bool) specifier was added in ParseDecl.cpp.
> - The storage of the explicit specifier was changed. the explicit specifier was stored as a boolean value in the FunctionDeclBitfields and in the DeclSpec class. now it is stored as a PointerIntPair<Expr*, 2> with a flag and a potential expression in CXXConstructorDecl, CXXDeductionGuideDecl, CXXConversionDecl and in the DeclSpec class.
> - Following the AST change, Serialization, ASTMatchers, ASTComparator and ASTPrinter were adapted.
> - Template instantiation was adapted to instantiate the potential expressions of the explicit(bool) specifier When instantiating their associated declaration.
> - The Add*Candidate functions were adapted, they now take a Boolean indicating if the context allowing explicit constructor or conversion function and this boolean is used to remove invalid overloads that required template instantiation to be detected.
> - Test for Semantic and Serialization were added.
>
> This patch is not yet complete. I still need to check that interaction with CTAD and deduction guides is correct. and add more tests for AST operations. But I wanted first feedback.
> Perhaps this patch should be spited in smaller patches, but making each patch testable as a standalone may be tricky.
>
> Patch by Tyker
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60934
llvm-svn: 360024
this patch adds support for the explicit bool specifier.
Changes:
- The parsing for the explicit(bool) specifier was added in ParseDecl.cpp.
- The storage of the explicit specifier was changed. the explicit specifier was stored as a boolean value in the FunctionDeclBitfields and in the DeclSpec class. now it is stored as a PointerIntPair<Expr*, 2> with a flag and a potential expression in CXXConstructorDecl, CXXDeductionGuideDecl, CXXConversionDecl and in the DeclSpec class.
- Following the AST change, Serialization, ASTMatchers, ASTComparator and ASTPrinter were adapted.
- Template instantiation was adapted to instantiate the potential expressions of the explicit(bool) specifier When instantiating their associated declaration.
- The Add*Candidate functions were adapted, they now take a Boolean indicating if the context allowing explicit constructor or conversion function and this boolean is used to remove invalid overloads that required template instantiation to be detected.
- Test for Semantic and Serialization were added.
This patch is not yet complete. I still need to check that interaction with CTAD and deduction guides is correct. and add more tests for AST operations. But I wanted first feedback.
Perhaps this patch should be spited in smaller patches, but making each patch testable as a standalone may be tricky.
Patch by Tyker
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60934
llvm-svn: 359949
explicit function specialization with the MemberSpecializationInfo used
everywhere else.
Not NFC: the ad-hoc pattern tracking was not being serialized /
deserialized properly. That's fixed here.
llvm-svn: 359747
allocators.
It is better to deduce omp_allocator_handle_t type from the predefined
allocators, because omp.h header might not define it explicitly. Plus,
it allows to identify the predefined allocators correctly when trying to
build the allcoator for the global variables.
llvm-svn: 356607
initializes a local auto variable or is assigned to a local auto
variable that is declared in the scope that introduced the block
literal.
rdar://problem/13289333
https://reviews.llvm.org/D58514
llvm-svn: 355012
For global variables with unordered initialization that are instantiated
within a module, we previously did not emit the global (or its
initializer) at all unless it was used in the importing translation unit
(and sometimes not even then!), leading to misbehavior and link errors.
We now emit the initializer for an instantiated global variable with
unordered initialization with side-effects in a module into every
translation unit that imports the module. This is unfortunate, but
mostly matches the behavior of a non-modular compilation and seems to be
the best that we can reasonably do.
llvm-svn: 353240
This patch implements parsing and sema for "omp declare mapper"
directive. User defined mapper, i.e., declare mapper directive, is a new
feature in OpenMP 5.0. It is introduced to extend existing map clauses
for the purpose of simplifying the copy of complex data structures
between host and device (i.e., deep copy). An example is shown below:
struct S { int len; int *d; };
#pragma omp declare mapper(struct S s) map(s, s.d[0:s.len]) // Memory region that d points to is also mapped using this mapper.
Contributed-by: Lingda Li <lildmh@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56326
llvm-svn: 352906
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
This attribute, called "objc_externally_retained", exposes clang's
notion of pseudo-__strong variables in ARC. Pseudo-strong variables
"borrow" their initializer, meaning that they don't retain/release
it, instead assuming that someone else is keeping their value alive.
If a function is annotated with this attribute, implicitly strong
parameters of that function aren't implicitly retained/released in
the function body, and are implicitly const. This is useful to expose
for performance reasons, most functions don't need the extra safety
of the retain/release, so programmers can opt out as needed.
This attribute can also apply to declarations of local variables,
with similar effect.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55865
llvm-svn: 350422
Move some diagnostics around between Diagnostic*Kinds.td files. Diagnostics
used in multiple places were moved to DiagnosticCommonKinds.td. Diagnostics
listed in the wrong place (ie, Sema diagnostics listed in
DiagnosticsParseKinds.td) were moved to the correct places. One diagnostic
split into two so that the diagnostic string is in the .td file instead of in
code. Cleaned up the diagnostic includes after all the changes.
llvm-svn: 349125
Use zip_longest in two locations that compare iterator ranges.
zip_longest allows the iteration using a range-based for-loop and to be
symmetric over both ranges instead of prioritizing one over the other.
In that latter case code have to handle the case that the first is
longer than the second, the second is longer than the first, and both
are of the same length, which must partially be checked after the loop.
With zip_longest, this becomes an element comparison within the loop
like the comparison of the elements themselves. The symmetry makes it
clearer that neither the first and second iterators are handled
differently. The iterators are not event used directly anymore, just
the ranges.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55468
llvm-svn: 348762
from those that aren't.
This patch changes the way __block variables that aren't captured by
escaping blocks are handled:
- Since non-escaping blocks on the stack never get copied to the heap
(see https://reviews.llvm.org/D49303), Sema shouldn't error out when
the type of a non-escaping __block variable doesn't have an accessible
copy constructor.
- IRGen doesn't have to use the specialized byref structure (see
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/Block-ABI-Apple.html#id8) for a
non-escaping __block variable anymore. Instead IRGen can emit the
variable as a normal variable and copy the reference to the block
literal. Byref copy/dispose helpers aren't needed either.
This reapplies r343518 after fixing a use-after-free bug in function
Sema::ActOnBlockStmtExpr where the BlockScopeInfo was dereferenced after
it was popped and deleted.
rdar://problem/39352313
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51564
llvm-svn: 343542
from those that aren't.
This patch changes the way __block variables that aren't captured by
escaping blocks are handled:
- Since non-escaping blocks on the stack never get copied to the heap
(see https://reviews.llvm.org/D49303), Sema shouldn't error out when
the type of a non-escaping __block variable doesn't have an accessible
copy constructor.
- IRGen doesn't have to use the specialized byref structure (see
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/Block-ABI-Apple.html#id8) for a
non-escaping __block variable anymore. Instead IRGen can emit the
variable as a normal variable and copy the reference to the block
literal. Byref copy/dispose helpers aren't needed either.
This reapplies r341754, which was reverted in r341757 because it broke a
couple of bots. r341754 was calling markEscapingByrefs after the call to
PopFunctionScopeInfo, which caused the popped function scope to be
cleared out when the following code was compiled, for example:
$ cat test.m
struct A {
id data[10];
};
void foo() {
__block A v;
^{ (void)v; };
}
This commit calls markEscapingByrefs before calling PopFunctionScopeInfo
to prevent that from happening.
rdar://problem/39352313
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51564
llvm-svn: 343518
Add support for OMP5.0 requires directive and unified_address clause.
Patches to follow will include support for additional clauses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52359
llvm-svn: 343063
declare reduction.
If the declare reduction construct with the non-dependent type is
defined in the template construct, the compiler might crash on the
template instantition. Reworked the whole instantiation scheme for the
declare reduction constructs to fix this problem correctly.
llvm-svn: 342151
submodule visibility is disabled.
Attempting to pick a specific declaration to make visible when the
module containing the merged declaration becomes visible is error-prone,
as we don't yet know which declaration we'll choose to be the definition
when we are informed of the merging.
This reinstates r342019, reverted in r342020. The regression previously
observed after this commit was fixed in r342096.
llvm-svn: 342097
submodule visibility is disabled.
Attempting to pick a specific declaration to make visible when the
module containing the merged declaration becomes visible is error-prone,
as we don't yet know which declaration we'll choose to be the definition
when we are informed of the merging.
llvm-svn: 342019
from those that aren't.
This patch changes the way __block variables that aren't captured by
escaping blocks are handled:
- Since non-escaping blocks on the stack never get copied to the heap
(see https://reviews.llvm.org/D49303), Sema shouldn't error out when
the type of a non-escaping __block variable doesn't have an accessible
copy constructor.
- IRGen doesn't have to use the specialized byref structure (see
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/Block-ABI-Apple.html#id8) for a
non-escaping __block variable anymore. Instead IRGen can emit the
variable as a normal variable and copy the reference to the block
literal. Byref copy/dispose helpers aren't needed either.
rdar://problem/39352313
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51564
llvm-svn: 341754
Specifically, AttributedType now tracks a regular attr::Kind rather than
having its own parallel Kind enumeration, and AttributedTypeLoc now
holds an Attr* instead of holding an ad-hoc collection of Attr fields.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50526
This reinstates r339623, reverted in r339638, with a fix to not fail
template instantiation if we instantiate a QualType with no associated
type source information and we encounter an AttributedType.
llvm-svn: 340215
The compiler may produce unexpected error messages/crashes when declare
target variables were used. Patch fixes problems with the declarations
marked as declare target to or link.
llvm-svn: 339805
This breaks compiling atlwin.h in Chromium. I'm sure the code is invalid
in some way, but we put a lot of work into accepting it, and I'm sure
rejecting it was not an intended consequence of this refactoring. :)
llvm-svn: 339638
Specifically, AttributedType now tracks a regular attr::Kind rather than
having its own parallel Kind enumeration, and AttributedTypeLoc now
holds an Attr* instead of holding an ad-hoc collection of Attr fields.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50526
llvm-svn: 339623
Clang generates copy and dispose helper functions for each block literal
on the stack. Often these functions are equivalent for different blocks.
This commit makes changes to merge equivalent copy and dispose helper
functions and reduce code size.
To enable merging equivalent copy/dispose functions, the captured object
infomation is encoded into the helper function name. This allows IRGen
to check whether an equivalent helper function has already been emitted
and reuse the function instead of generating a new helper function
whenever a block is defined. In addition, the helper functions are
marked as linkonce_odr to enable merging helper functions that have the
same name across translation units and marked as unnamed_addr to enable
the linker's deduplication pass to merge functions that have different
names but the same content.
rdar://problem/42640608
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50152
llvm-svn: 339438
Recommit of r335084 after revert in r335516.
... instead of prepending it at the beginning (the original behavior
since implemented in r122535 2010-12-23). This builds up an
AttributeList in the the order in which the attributes appear in the
source.
The reverse order caused nodes for attributes in the AST (e.g. LoopHint)
to be in the reverse order, and therefore printed in the wrong order in
-ast-dump. Some TODO comments mention this. The order was explicitly
reversed for enable_if attribute overload resolution and name mangling,
which is not necessary anymore with this patch.
The change unfortunately has some secondary effect, especially on
diagnostic output. In the simplest cases, the CHECK lines or expected
diagnostic were changed to the the new output. If the kind of
error/warning changed, the attributes' order was changed instead.
This unfortunately causes some 'previous occurrence here' hints to be
textually after the main marker. This typically happens when attributes
are merged, but are incompatible to each other. Interchanging the role
of the the main and note SourceLocation will also cause the case where
two different declaration's attributes (in contrast to multiple
attributes of the same declaration) are merged to be reverse. There is
no easy fix because sometimes previous attributes are merged into a new
declaration's attribute list, sometimes new attributes are added to a
previous declaration's attribute list. Since 'previous occurrence here'
pointing to locations after the main marker is not rare, I left the
markers as-is; it is only relevant when the attributes are declared in
the same declaration anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48100
llvm-svn: 338800
We can't read a deduced return type until we are sure that the types referred
to by it are not in the middle of being loaded. So defer all reading of such
deduced return types until the end of the recursive deserialization step.
Also, when we load a function type that has a deduced return type, update all
other redeclarations of the function to have that deduced return type.
llvm-svn: 338798
DeclContext has a little less than 8 bytes free due to the alignment
requirements on 64 bits archs. This set of patches moves the
bit-fields from classes deriving from DeclContext into DeclContext.
On 32 bits archs this increases the size of DeclContext by 4 bytes
but this is balanced by an equal or larger reduction in the size
of the classes deriving from it.
On 64 bits archs the size of DeclContext stays the same but
most of the classes deriving from it shrink by 8/16 bytes.
(-print-stats diff here https://reviews.llvm.org/D49728)
When doing an -fsyntax-only on all of Boost this result
in a 3.6% reduction in the size of all Decls and
a 1% reduction in the run time due to the lower cache
miss rate.
For now CXXRecordDecl is not touched but there is
an easy 6 (if I count correctly) bytes gain available there
by moving some bits from DefinitionData into the free
space of DeclContext. This will be the subject of another patch.
This patch sequence also enable the possibility of refactoring
FunctionDecl: To save space some bits from classes deriving from
FunctionDecl were moved to FunctionDecl. This resulted in a
lot of stuff in FunctionDecl which do not belong logically to it.
After this set of patches however it is just a simple matter of
adding a SomethingDeclBitfields in DeclContext and moving the
bits to it from FunctionDecl.
This first patch introduces the anonymous union in DeclContext
and all the *DeclBitfields classes holding the bit-fields, and moves
the bits from TagDecl, EnumDecl and RecordDecl into DeclContext.
This patch is followed by https://reviews.llvm.org/D49732,
https://reviews.llvm.org/D49733 and https://reviews.llvm.org/D49734.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49729
Patch By: bricci
llvm-svn: 338630
parameters can have default arguments.
At least for function templates and class template partial
specializations, it's possible for a template parameter with a default
argument to be followed by a non-pack template parameter with no default
argument, and this case was not properly handled here.
Testcase by Steve O'Brien!
llvm-svn: 338438
merged function definitions; also merge functions with deduced return
types.
This seems like two independent fixes, but unfortunately they are hard
to separate because it's challenging to reliably test either one of them
without also testing the other.
A complication arises with deduced return type support: we need the type
of the function in order to know how to merge it, but we can't load the
actual type of the function because it might reference an entity
declared within the function (and we need to have already merged the
function to correctly merge that entity, which we would need to do to
determine if the function types match). So we instead compare the
declared function type when merging functions, and defer loading the
actual type of a function with a deduced type until we've finished
loading and merging the function.
This reverts r336175, reinstating r336021, with one change (for PR38015):
we look at the TypeSourceInfo of the first-so-far declaration of each
function when considering whether to merge two functions. This works
around a problem where the calling convention in the TypeSourceInfo for
subsequent redeclarations may not match if it was implicitly adjusted.
llvm-svn: 336240
This caused test failures in 32-bit builds (PR38015).
> merged function definitions; also merge functions with deduced return
> types.
>
> This seems like two independent fixes, but unfortunately they are hard
> to separate because it's challenging to reliably test either one of them
> without also testing the other.
>
> A complication arises with deduced return type support: we need the type
> of the function in order to know how to merge it, but we can't load the
> actual type of the function because it might reference an entity
> declared within the function (and we need to have already merged the
> function to correctly merge that entity, which we would need to do to
> determine if the function types match). So we instead compare the
> declared function type when merging functions, and defer loading the
> actual type of a function with a deduced type until we've finished
> loading and merging the function.
llvm-svn: 336175
merged function definitions; also merge functions with deduced return
types.
This seems like two independent fixes, but unfortunately they are hard
to separate because it's challenging to reliably test either one of them
without also testing the other.
A complication arises with deduced return type support: we need the type
of the function in order to know how to merge it, but we can't load the
actual type of the function because it might reference an entity
declared within the function (and we need to have already merged the
function to correctly merge that entity, which we would need to do to
determine if the function types match). So we instead compare the
declared function type when merging functions, and defer loading the
actual type of a function with a deduced type until we've finished
loading and merging the function.
llvm-svn: 336021
not the corresponding location information) earlier.
We need the type as written in order to properly merge functions with
deduced return types, so we need to load that early. But we don't want
to load the location information early, because that contains
problematic things such as the function parameters.
llvm-svn: 336016
... instead of prepending it at the beginning (the original behavior
since implemented in r122535 2010-12-23). This builds up an
AttributeList in the the order in which the attributes appear in the
source.
The reverse order caused nodes for attributes in the AST (e.g. LoopHint)
to be in the reverse, and therefore printed in the wrong order by
-ast-dump. Some TODO comments mention this. The order was explicitly
reversed for enable_if attribute overload resolution and name mangling,
which is not necessary anymore with this patch.
The change unfortunately has some secondary effects, especially for
diagnostic output. In the simplest cases, the CHECK lines or expected
diagnostic were changed to the the new output. If the kind of
error/warning changed, the attribute's order was changed instead.
It also causes some 'previous occurrence here' hints to be textually
after the main marker. This typically happens when attributes are
merged, but are incompatible. Interchanging the role of the the main
and note SourceLocation will also cause the case where two different
declaration's attributes (in contrast to multiple attributes of the
same declaration) are merged to be reversed. There is no easy fix
because sometimes previous attributes are merged into a new
declaration's attribute list, sometimes new attributes are added to a
previous declaration's attribute list. Since 'previous occurrence here'
pointing to locations after the main marker is not rare, I left the
markers as-is; it is only relevant when the attributes are declared in
the same declaration anyway, which often is on the same line.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48100
llvm-svn: 335084
Summary:
This is the second attempt of r333500 (Update NRVO logic to support early return).
The previous one was reverted for a miscompilation for an incorrect NRVO set up on templates such as:
```
struct Foo {};
template <typename T>
T bar() {
T t;
if (false)
return T();
return t;
}
```
Where, `t` is marked as non-NRVO variable before its instantiation. However, while its instantiation, it's left an NRVO candidate, turned into an NRVO variable later.
Reviewers: rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47586
llvm-svn: 335019
Summary:
The previous implementation misses an opportunity to apply NRVO (Named Return Value
Optimization) below. That discourages user to write early return code.
```
struct Foo {};
Foo f(bool b) {
if (b)
return Foo();
Foo oo;
return oo;
}
```
That is, we can/should apply RVO for a local variable if:
* It's directly returned by at least one return statement.
* And, all reachable return statements in its scope returns the variable directly.
While, the previous implementation disables the RVO in a scope if there are multiple return
statements that refers different variables.
On the new algorithm, local variables are in NRVO_Candidate state at first, and a return
statement changes it to NRVO_Disabled for all visible variables but the return statement refers.
Then, at the end of the function AST traversal, NRVO is enabled for variables in NRVO_Candidate
state and refers from at least one return statement.
Reviewers: rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: xbolva00, Quuxplusone, arthur.j.odwyer, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47067
llvm-svn: 333500
This is similar to the LLVM change https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290.
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\@brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\@brief //g' $i & done
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46320
llvm-svn: 331834
Support for ObjC/C ODR-like semantics with structural equivalence
checking was added back in r306918. There enums are handled and also
checked for structural equivalence. However, at use time of
EnumConstantDecl, support was missing for preventing ambiguous
name lookup.
Add the missing bits for properly merging EnumConstantDecl.
rdar://problem/38374569
llvm-svn: 331232
During deserialization clang is currently missing the merging of
protocols into the canonical interface for the class extension.
This merging only currently happens during parsing and should also
be considered during deserialization.
rdar://problem/38724303
llvm-svn: 331063
This patch is a tweak of changyu's patch: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40381. It differs in that the recognition of the 'concept' token is moved into the machinery that recognizes declaration-specifiers - this allows us to leverage the attribute handling machinery more seamlessly.
See the test file to get a sense of the basic parsing that this patch supports.
There is much more work to be done before concepts are usable...
Thanks Changyu!
llvm-svn: 330794
registers.
This patch fixes a bug in r328731 that caused structs transitively
containing __weak fields to be passed in registers. The patch replaces
the flag RecordDecl::CanPassInRegisters with a 2-bit enum that indicates
whether the struct or structs containing the struct are forced to be
passed indirectly.
This reapplies r329617. r329617 didn't specify the underlying type for
enum ArgPassingKind, which caused regression tests to fail on a windows
bot.
rdar://problem/39194693
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45384
llvm-svn: 329635
registers.
This patch fixes a bug in r328731 that caused structs transitively
containing __weak fields to be passed in registers. The patch replaces
the flag RecordDecl::CanPassInRegisters with a 2-bit enum that indicates
whether the struct or structs containing the struct are forced to be
passed indirectly.
rdar://problem/39194693
llvm-svn: 329617
layout" rules.
The new rules say that a standard-layout struct has its first non-static
data member and all base classes at offset 0, and consider a class to
not be standard-layout if that would result in multiple subobjects of a
single type having the same address.
We track "is C++11 standard-layout class" separately from "is
standard-layout class" so that the ABIs that need this information can
still use it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45176
llvm-svn: 329332
The AST for the fragment
```
@interface I
@end
template <typename>
void decode(I *p) {
for (I *k in p) {}
}
void decode(I *p) {
decode<int>(p);
}
```
differs heavily when templatized and non-templatized:
```
|-FunctionTemplateDecl 0x7fbfe0863940 <line:4:1, line:7:1> line:5:6 decode
| |-TemplateTypeParmDecl 0x7fbfe0863690 <line:4:11> col:11 typename depth 0 index 0
| |-FunctionDecl 0x7fbfe08638a0 <line:5:1, line:7:1> line:5:6 decode 'void (I *__strong)'
| | |-ParmVarDecl 0x7fbfe08637a0 <col:13, col:16> col:16 referenced p 'I *__strong'
| | `-CompoundStmt 0x7fbfe0863b88 <col:19, line:7:1>
| | `-ObjCForCollectionStmt 0x7fbfe0863b50 <line:6:3, col:20>
| | |-DeclStmt 0x7fbfe0863a50 <col:8, col:13>
| | | `-VarDecl 0x7fbfe08639f0 <col:8, col:11> col:11 k 'I *const __strong'
| | |-ImplicitCastExpr 0x7fbfe0863a90 <col:16> 'I *' <LValueToRValue>
| | | `-DeclRefExpr 0x7fbfe0863a68 <col:16> 'I *__strong' lvalue ParmVar 0x7fbfe08637a0 'p' 'I *__strong'
| | `-CompoundStmt 0x7fbfe0863b78 <col:19, col:20>
| `-FunctionDecl 0x7fbfe0863f80 <line:5:1, line:7:1> line:5:6 used decode 'void (I *__strong)'
| |-TemplateArgument type 'int'
| |-ParmVarDecl 0x7fbfe0863ef8 <col:13, col:16> col:16 used p 'I *__strong'
| `-CompoundStmt 0x7fbfe0890cf0 <col:19, line:7:1>
| `-ObjCForCollectionStmt 0x7fbfe0890cc8 <line:6:3, col:20>
| |-DeclStmt 0x7fbfe0890c70 <col:8, col:13>
| | `-VarDecl 0x7fbfe0890c00 <col:8, col:11> col:11 k 'I *__strong' callinit
| | `-ImplicitValueInitExpr 0x7fbfe0890c60 <<invalid sloc>> 'I *__strong'
| |-ImplicitCastExpr 0x7fbfe0890cb0 <col:16> 'I *' <LValueToRValue>
| | `-DeclRefExpr 0x7fbfe0890c88 <col:16> 'I *__strong' lvalue ParmVar 0x7fbfe0863ef8 'p' 'I *__strong'
| `-CompoundStmt 0x7fbfe0863b78 <col:19, col:20>
```
Note how in the instantiated version ImplicitValueInitExpr unexpectedly appears.
While objects are auto-initialized under ARC, it does not make sense to
have an initializer for a for-loop variable, and it makes even less
sense to have such a different AST for instantiated and non-instantiated
version.
Digging deeper, I have found that there are two separate Sema* files for
dealing with templates and for dealing with non-templatized code.
In a non-templatized version, an initialization was performed only for
variables which are not loop variables for an Objective-C loop and not
variables for a C++ for-in loop:
```
if (FRI && (Tok.is(tok::colon) || isTokIdentifier_in())) {
bool IsForRangeLoop = false;
if (TryConsumeToken(tok::colon, FRI->ColonLoc)) {
IsForRangeLoop = true;
if (Tok.is(tok::l_brace))
FRI->RangeExpr = ParseBraceInitializer();
else
FRI->RangeExpr = ParseExpression();
}
Decl *ThisDecl = Actions.ActOnDeclarator(getCurScope(), D);
if (IsForRangeLoop)
Actions.ActOnCXXForRangeDecl(ThisDecl);
Actions.FinalizeDeclaration(ThisDecl);
D.complete(ThisDecl);
return Actions.FinalizeDeclaratorGroup(getCurScope(), DS, ThisDecl);
}
SmallVector<Decl *, 8> DeclsInGroup;
Decl *FirstDecl = ParseDeclarationAfterDeclaratorAndAttributes(
D, ParsedTemplateInfo(), FRI);
```
However the code in SemaTemplateInstantiateDecl was inconsistent,
guarding only against C++ for-in loops.
rdar://38391075
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44989
llvm-svn: 328749
ObjC and ObjC++ pass non-trivial structs in a way that is incompatible
with each other. For example:
typedef struct {
id f0;
__weak id f1;
} S;
// this code is compiled in c++.
extern "C" {
void foo(S s);
}
void caller() {
// the caller passes the parameter indirectly and destructs it.
foo(S());
}
// this function is compiled in c.
// 'a' is passed directly and is destructed in the callee.
void foo(S a) {
}
This patch fixes the incompatibility by passing and returning structs
with __strong or weak fields using the C ABI in C++ mode. __strong and
__weak fields in a struct do not cause the struct to be destructed in
the caller and __strong fields do not cause the struct to be passed
indirectly.
Also, this patch fixes the microsoft ABI bug mentioned here:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D41039?id=128767#inline-364710
rdar://problem/38887866
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44908
llvm-svn: 328731
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before
sorting. This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined
sorting order of objects having the same key.
To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of
std::sort.
llvm-svn: 328636
During reading C++ definition data for lambda we can access
CXXRecordDecl representing lambda before we finished reading the
definition data. This can happen by reading a captured variable which is
VarDecl, then reading its decl context which is CXXMethodDecl `operator()`,
then trying to merge redeclarable methods and accessing
enclosing CXXRecordDecl. The call stack looks roughly like
VisitCXXRecordDecl
ReadCXXRecordDefinition
VisitVarDecl
VisitCXXMethodDecl
mergeRedeclarable
getPrimaryContextForMerging
If we add fake definition data at this point, later we'll hit the assertion
Assertion failed: (!DD.IsLambda && !MergeDD.IsLambda && "faked up lambda definition?"), function MergeDefinitionData, file clang/lib/Serialization/ASTReaderDecl.cpp, line 1675.
The fix is to assign definition data before reading it. Fixes PR32556.
rdar://problem/37461072
Reviewers: rsmith, bruno
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits, jkorous-apple, aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43494
llvm-svn: 328153
This patch uses the infrastructure added in r326307 for enabling
non-trivial fields to be declared in C structs to allow __weak fields in
C structs in ARC.
This recommits r327206, which was reverted because it caused
module-enabled builders to fail. I discovered that the
CXXRecordDecl::CanPassInRegisters flag wasn't being set correctly in
some cases after I moved it to RecordDecl.
Thanks to Eric Liu for helping me investigate the bug.
rdar://problem/33599681
https://reviews.llvm.org/D44095
llvm-svn: 327870
This patch uses the infrastructure added in r326307 for enabling
non-trivial fields to be declared in C structs to allow __weak fields in
C structs in ARC.
rdar://problem/33599681
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44095
llvm-svn: 327206
So I wrote a clang-tidy check to lint out redundant `isa`, `cast`, and
`dyn_cast`s for fun. This is a portion of what it found for clang; I
plan to do similar cleanups in LLVM and other subprojects when I find
time.
Because of the volume of changes, I explicitly avoided making any change
that wasn't highly local and obviously correct to me (e.g. we still have
a number of foo(cast<Bar>(baz)) that I didn't touch, since overloading
is a thing and the cast<Bar> did actually change the type -- just up the
class hierarchy).
I also tried to leave the types we were cast<>ing to somewhere nearby,
in cases where it wasn't locally obvious what we were dealing with
before.
llvm-svn: 326416
The 'trivial_abi' attribute can be applied to a C++ class, struct, or
union. It makes special functions of the annotated class (the destructor
and copy/move constructors) to be trivial for the purpose of calls and,
as a result, enables the annotated class or containing classes to be
passed or returned using the C ABI for the underlying type.
When a type that is considered trivial for the purpose of calls despite
having a non-trivial destructor (which happens only when the class type
or one of its subobjects is a 'trivial_abi' class) is passed to a
function, the callee is responsible for destroying the object.
For more background, see the discussions that took place on the mailing
list:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2017-November/055955.htmlhttp://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20180101/thread.html#214043
rdar://problem/35204524
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41039
llvm-svn: 324269
GCC's attribute 'target', in addition to being an optimization hint,
also allows function multiversioning. We currently have the former
implemented, this is the latter's implementation.
This works by enabling functions with the same name/signature to coexist,
so that they can all be emitted. Multiversion state is stored in the
FunctionDecl itself, and SemaDecl manages the definitions.
Note that it ends up having to permit redefinition of functions so
that they can all be emitted. Additionally, all versions of the function
must be emitted, so this also manages that.
Note that this includes some additional rules that GCC does not, since
defining something as a MultiVersion function after a usage has been made illegal.
The only 'history rewriting' that happens is if a function is emitted before
it has been converted to a multiversion'ed function, at which point its name
needs to be changed.
Function templates and virtual functions are NOT yet supported (not supported
in GCC either).
Additionally, constructors/destructors are disallowed, but the former is
planned.
llvm-svn: 322028
Attempting to recompute it are doomed to fail because the IDNS of a declaration
is not necessarily preserved across serialization and deserialization (in turn
because whether a friend declaration is visible depends on whether some prior
non-friend declaration exists).
llvm-svn: 321921
Extend the hashing to functions, which allows detection of function definition
mismatches across modules. This is a re-commit of r320230.
llvm-svn: 321395
whether they have an initializer.
We cannot distinguish between a declaration of a variable template
specialization and a definition of one that lacks an initializer without this,
and would previously mistake the latter for the former.
llvm-svn: 319605
The anonymous union did NOT save us storage, but instead behaved as if we added an additional integer data member to FunctionDecl.
For additional context, the anonymous union renders the bit fields as non-adjacent and prevents them from sharing the same 'memory location' (i.e. bit-storage) by requiring the anonymous union object to be appropriately aligned.
This was confirmed through discussion with Richard Smith in Albuquerque (ISO C++ Meeting)
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL316292
llvm-svn: 317984
for instantiating its definition.
We model the 'inline'ness as being instantiated with the static data member in
order to track whether the declaration has become a definition yet.
llvm-svn: 317147
In order to identify the copy deduction candidate, I considered two approaches:
- attempt to determine whether an implicit guide is a copy deduction candidate by checking certain properties of its subsituted parameter during overload-resolution.
- using one of the many bits (WillHaveBody) from FunctionDecl (that CXXDeductionGuideDecl inherits from) that are otherwise irrelevant for deduction guides
After some brittle gymnastics w the first strategy, I settled on the second, although to avoid confusion and to give that bit a better name, i turned it into a member of an anonymous union.
Given this identification 'bit', the tweak to overload resolution was a simple reordering of the deduction guide checks (in SemaOverload.cpp::isBetterOverloadCandidate), in-line with Jason Merrill's p0620r0 drafting which made it into the working paper. Concordant with that, I made sure the copy deduction candidate is always added.
References:
See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34970
See http://wg21.link/p0620r0
llvm-svn: 316292
This feature is not (yet) approved by the C++ committee, so this is liable to
be reverted or significantly modified based on committee feedback.
No functionality change intended for existing code (a new type must be defined
in namespace std to take advantage of this feature).
llvm-svn: 315662
This is breaking a build of https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp and so
likely not really NFC. Also reverted subsequent r314956/7.
I'll forward reproduction instructions to Richard.
llvm-svn: 315439
In its place, track on the canonical function declaration whether there is a
declaration with a body (and if so, which one). This brings function definition
handling in line with what we do in all other contexts, and is necessary to
allow us to merge declarations within multiple definitions of the same function
(eg, PR33924).
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 314955
move constructor.
Previously user-defined reduction initializer was considered as an
assignment expression, not as initializer. Fixed this by treating the
initializer expression as an initializer.
llvm-svn: 312638
constructors when deciding whether classes should be passed indirectly.
This fixes ABI differences between Clang and GCC:
* Previously, Clang ignored the move constructor when making this
determination. It now takes the move constructor into account, per
https://github.com/itanium-cxx-abi/cxx-abi/pull/17 (this change may
seem recent, but the ABI change was agreed on the Itanium C++ ABI
list a long time ago).
* Previously, Clang's behavior when the copy constructor was deleted
was unstable -- depending on whether the lazy declaration of the
copy constructor had been triggered, you might get different behavior.
We now eagerly declare the copy constructor whenever its deletedness
is unclear, and ignore deleted copy/move constructors when looking for
a trivial such constructor.
This also fixes an ABI difference between Clang and MSVC:
* If the copy constructor would be implicitly deleted (but has not been
lazily declared yet), for instance because the class has an rvalue
reference member, we would pass it directly. We now pass such a class
indirectly, matching MSVC.
Based on a patch by Vassil Vassilev, which was based on a patch by Bernd
Schmidt, which was based on a patch by Reid Kleckner!
This is a re-commit of r310401, which was reverted in r310464 due to ARM
failures (which should now be fixed).
llvm-svn: 310983
constructors when deciding whether classes should be passed indirectly.
This fixes ABI differences between Clang and GCC:
* Previously, Clang ignored the move constructor when making this
determination. It now takes the move constructor into account, per
https://github.com/itanium-cxx-abi/cxx-abi/pull/17 (this change may
seem recent, but the ABI change was agreed on the Itanium C++ ABI
list a long time ago).
* Previously, Clang's behavior when the copy constructor was deleted
was unstable -- depending on whether the lazy declaration of the
copy constructor had been triggered, you might get different behavior.
We now eagerly declare the copy constructor whenever its deletedness
is unclear, and ignore deleted copy/move constructors when looking for
a trivial such constructor.
This also fixes an ABI difference between Clang and MSVC:
* If the copy constructor would be implicitly deleted (but has not been
lazily declared yet), for instance because the class has an rvalue
reference member, we would pass it directly. We now pass such a class
indirectly, matching MSVC.
llvm-svn: 310401
These cases occur frequently for declarations in the global module (above the
module-declaration) in a Modules TS module interface. When we merge a
definition from another module into such a module-private definition, ensure
that we transitively make everything lexically within that definition visible
to that translation unit.
llvm-svn: 307129
It was reverted in r305460 but the issue appears to only break our self-host
libcxx modules bot. Reapplying it will give us a chance to get a reproducer and
fix the issue.
llvm-svn: 306903
We use this when running a preprocessor-only action on an AST file in order to
avoid paying the runtime cost of loading the extra information.
llvm-svn: 306760
Summary:
In change 2ba19793512, the ASTReader logic for ObjC interfaces was modified to
preserve the first definition-data read, "merging" later definitions into it
rather than overwriting it (though this "merging" is, in practice, a no-op that
discards the later definition-data).
Unfortunately this change was only made to ObjC interfaces, not protocols; this
means that when (for example) loading a protocol that references an interface,
if both the protocol and interface are multiply defined (as can easily happen
if the same header is read from multiple contexts), an _inconsistent_ pair of
definitions is loaded: first-read for the interface and last-read for the
protocol.
This in turn causes very subtle downstream bugs in the Swift ClangImporter,
which filters the results of name lookups based on the owning module of a
definition; inconsistency between a pair of related definitions causes name
lookup failures at various stages of compilation.
To fix these downstream issues, this change replicates the logic applied to
interfaces in change 2ba19793512, but for ObjC protocols.
rdar://30851899
Reviewers: doug.gregor, rsmith
Reviewed By: doug.gregor
Subscribers: jordan_rose, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34741
llvm-svn: 306583
declarations that are owned but unconditionally visible.
This allows us to set declarations as visible even if they have a local owning
module, without losing information. In turn, that means that our Objective-C
support can keep on incorrectly assuming the "hidden" bit on the declaration is
the whole story with regard to name visibility. This will also be useful once
we support the C++ Modules TS export semantics.
Objective-C name visibility is still incorrect in any case where the "hidden"
bit is not the complete story: for instance, in Objective-C++ the set of
visible categories will be wrong during template instantiation, and with local
submodule visibility enabled it will be wrong when building modules. Fixing that
will require a major overhaul of how visibility is handled for Objective-C (and
particularly for categories).
llvm-svn: 306075
Currently, we load all template specialization if we have more than one module
attached and we touch anything around the template definition.
This patch registers the template specializations as lazily-loadable entities.
In some TUs it reduces the amount of deserializations by 1%.
llvm-svn: 305120
Summary:
If the first parameter of the function is the ImplicitParamDecl, codegen
automatically marks it as an implicit argument with `this` or `self`
pointer. Added internal kind of the ImplicitParamDecl to separate
'this', 'self', 'vtt' and other implicit parameters from other kind of
parameters.
Reviewers: rjmccall, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33735
llvm-svn: 305075
As discussed in D30793, we have some unsafe calls to isConsumerInterestedIn().
This patch implements Richard's suggestion (from the inline comment) that we
should track if we just deserialized an declaration. If we just deserialized,
we can skip the unsafe call because we know it's interesting. If we didn't just
deserialize the declaration, calling isConsumerInterestedIn() should be safe.
We tried to create a test case for this but we were not successful.
Patch by Raphael Isemann (D32499)!
llvm-svn: 303432
This patch implements the suggestion in D29753 that calling DeclMustBeEmitted in
the middle of deserialization should be avoided and that the actual check should
be deferred until it's safe to do so.
This patch fixes a crash when accessing the invalid redecl chains while trying
to evaluate the value of a const VarDecl that contains a function call.
Patch by Raphael Isemann (D30793)!
llvm-svn: 300110
Calculating the hash in Sema::ActOnTagFinishDefinition could happen before
all sub-Decls were parsed or processed, which would produce the wrong hash
value. Change to calculating the hash on the first use and storing the value
instead. Also, avoid using the macros that were only for Boolean fields and
use an explicit checker during the DefintionData merge. No functional change,
but was this blocking other ODRHash patches.
llvm-svn: 299989
Matching the function-homing support for modular codegen. Any type
implicitly (implicit template specializations) or explicitly defined in
a module is attached to that module's object file and omitted elsewhere
(only a declaration used if necessary for references).
llvm-svn: 299987
Some decls are created not where they are written, but in other module
files/users (implicit special members and function template implicit
specializations). To correctly identify them, use a bit next to the definition
to track the modular codegen property.
Discussed whether the module file bit could be omitted in favor of
reconstituting from the modular codegen decls list - best guess today is that
the efficiency improvement of not having to deserialize the whole list whenever
any function is queried by a module user is worth it for the small size
increase of this redundant (list + bit-on-def) representation.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29901
llvm-svn: 299982
This enhances the AST to keep track of locations of the names in those ObjC property attributes, and reports them for indexing.
Patch by Nathan Hawes!
https://reviews.llvm.org/D30907
llvm-svn: 297972
This is a stopgap fix for PR31863, a regression introduced in r276159.
Consider this snippet:
struct FVector;
struct FVector {};
struct FBox {
FVector Min;
FBox(int);
};
namespace {
FBox InvalidBoundingBox(0);
}
While parsing the DECL_VAR for 'struct FBox', clang recursively read all the
dep decls until it finds the DECL_CXX_RECORD forward declaration for 'struct
FVector'. Then, it resumes all the way up back to DECL_VAR handling in
`ReadDeclRecord`, where it checks if `isConsumerInterestedIn` for the decl.
One of the condition for `isConsumerInterestedIn` to return false is if the
VarDecl is imported from a module `D->getImportedOwningModule()`, because it
will get emitted when we import the relevant module. However, before checking
if it comes from a module, clang checks if `Ctx.DeclMustBeEmitted(D)`, which
triggers the emission of 'struct FBox'. Since one of its fields is still
incomplete, it crashes.
Instead, check if `D->getImportedOwningModule()` is true before calling
`Ctx.DeclMustBeEmitted(D)`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29753
rdar://problem/30173654
llvm-svn: 296656
Essentially, as a base class constructor does not construct virtual bases, such
a constructor for an abstract class does not need the corresponding base class
construction to be valid, and likewise for destructors.
This creates an awkward situation: clang will sometimes generate references to
the complete object and deleting destructors for an abstract class (it puts
them in the construction vtable for a derived class). But we can't generate a
"correct" version of these because we can't generate references to base class
constructors any more (if they're template specializations, say, we might not
have instantiated them and can't assume any other TU will emit a copy).
Fortunately, we don't need to, since no correct program can ever invoke them,
so instead emit symbols that just trap.
We should stop emitting references to these symbols, but still need to emit
definitions for compatibility.
llvm-svn: 296275
The goal of this is to fix a bug in modules where we'd merge
FunctionDecls that differed in their pass_object_size attributes. Since
we can overload on the presence of pass_object_size attributes, this
behavior is incorrect.
We don't represent `N` in `pass_object_size(N)` as part of
ExtParameterInfo, since it's an error to overload solely on the value of
N. This means that we have a bug if we have two modules that declare
functions that differ only in their pass_object_size attrs, like so:
// In module A, from a.h
void foo(char *__attribute__((pass_object_size(0))));
// In module B, from b.h
void foo(char *__attribute__((pass_object_size(1))));
// In module C, in main.c
#include "a.h"
#include "b.h"
At the moment, we'll merge the foo decls, when we should instead emit a
diagnostic about an invalid overload. We seem to have similar (silent)
behavior if we overload only on the return type of `foo` instead; I'll
try to find a good place to put a FIXME (or I'll just file a bug) soon.
This patch also fixes a bug where we'd not output the proper extended
parameter info for declarations with pass_object_size attrs.
llvm-svn: 296076
Reserve a spot for ODR hash in CXXRecordDecl and in its modules storage.
Default the hash value to 0 for all classes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 295533
A slightly weaker form of ODR checking than previous attempts, but hopefully
won't break the modules build bot. Future work will be needed to catch all
cases.
When objects are imported for modules, there is a chance that a name collision
will cause an ODR violation. Previously, only a small number of such
violations were detected. This patch provides a stronger check based on
AST nodes.
The information needed to uniquely identify an object is taken from the AST and
put into a one-dimensional byte stream. This stream is then hashed to give
a value to represent the object, which is stored with the other object data
in the module.
When modules are loaded, and Decl's are merged, the hash values of the two
Decl's are compared. Only Decl's with matched hash values will be merged.
Mismatch hashes will generate a module error, and if possible, point to the
first difference between the two objects.
The transform from AST to byte stream is a modified depth first algorithm.
Due to references between some AST nodes, a pure depth first algorithm could
generate loops. For Stmt nodes, a straight depth first processing occurs.
For Type and Decl nodes, they are replaced with an index number and only on
first visit will these nodes be processed. As an optimization, boolean
values are saved and stored together in reverse order at the end of the
byte stream to lower the ammount of data that needs to be hashed.
Compile time impact was measured at 1.5-2.0% during module building, and
negligible during builds without module building.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 295421
Recommit r293585 that was reverted in r293611 with new fixes. The previous
issue was determined to be an overly aggressive AST visitor from forward
declared objects. The visitor will now only deeply visit certain Decl's and
only do a shallow information extraction from all other Decl's.
When objects are imported for modules, there is a chance that a name collision
will cause an ODR violation. Previously, only a small number of such
violations were detected. This patch provides a stronger check based on
AST nodes.
The information needed to uniquely identify an object is taken from the AST and
put into a one-dimensional byte stream. This stream is then hashed to give
a value to represent the object, which is stored with the other object data
in the module.
When modules are loaded, and Decl's are merged, the hash values of the two
Decl's are compared. Only Decl's with matched hash values will be merged.
Mismatch hashes will generate a module error, and if possible, point to the
first difference between the two objects.
The transform from AST to byte stream is a modified depth first algorithm.
Due to references between some AST nodes, a pure depth first algorithm could
generate loops. For Stmt nodes, a straight depth first processing occurs.
For Type and Decl nodes, they are replaced with an index number and only on
first visit will these nodes be processed. As an optimization, boolean
values are saved and stored together in reverse order at the end of the
byte stream to lower the ammount of data that needs to be hashed.
Compile time impact was measured at 1.5-2.0% during module building, and
negligible during builds without module building.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 295284
Two functions that differ only in their enable_if attributes are
considered overloads, so we should check for those when we're trying to
figure out if two functions are mergeable.
We need to do the same thing for pass_object_size, as well. Looks like
that'll be a bit less trivial, since we sometimes do these merging
checks before we have pass_object_size attributes available (see the
merge checks in ASTDeclReader::VisitFunctionDecl that happen before we
read parameters, and merge checks in calls to ReadDeclAs<>()).
llvm-svn: 295252
Summary:
This adds associated constraints as a property of class templates.
An error is produced if redeclarations are not similarly constrained.
Reviewers: rsmith, faisalv, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits, nwilson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25674
llvm-svn: 294697
We're seeing what we believe are false positives. (It's hard to tell with the
available diagnostics, and I'm not sure how to reduce them yet).
I'll send Richard reproduction details offline.
djasper/chandlerc suggested this should be a warning for now, to make rolling it
out feasible.
llvm-svn: 293611
When objects are imported for modules, there is a chance that a name collision
will cause an ODR violation. Previously, only a small number of such
violations were detected. This patch provides a stronger check based on
AST nodes.
The information needed to uniquely identify an object is taked from the AST and
put into a one-dimensional byte stream. This stream is then hashed to give
a value to represent the object, which is stored with the other object data
in the module.
When modules are loaded, and Decl's are merged, the hash values of the two
Decl's are compared. Only Decl's with matched hash values will be merged.
Mismatch hashes will generate a module error, and if possible, point to the
first difference between the two objects.
The transform from AST to byte stream is a modified depth first algorithm.
Due to references between some AST nodes, a pure depth first algorithm could
generate loops. For Stmt nodes, a straight depth first processing occurs.
For Type and Decl nodes, they are replaced with an index number and only on
first visit will these nodes be processed. As an optimization, boolean
values are saved and stored together in reverse order at the end of the
byte stream to lower the ammount of data that needs to be hashed.
Compile time impact was measured at 1.5-2.0% during module building, and
negligible during builds without module building.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 293585