Doxygen treats "@command" the same as "\command" in a doc comment, so
whenever we talk about Objective-C things like "@interface" we have to
make sure to escape them.
Let's try to keep Clang -Wdocumentation-clean!
llvm-svn: 178603
variable in a C99 inline (but not static-inline or extern-inline)
function definition.
The standard doesn't actually say that this doesn't apply to
"extern inline" definitions, but that seems like a useful extension,
and it at least doesn't have the obvious flaw that a static
mutable variable in an externally-available definition does.
rdar://13535367
llvm-svn: 178520
visible. There's a lot of potential badness in how we're modelling
these things, but getting this much correct is reasonably easy.
rdar://13535367
llvm-svn: 178488
We already avoided warning for
extern "C" const char *Version_string = "2.9";
now we also don't produce any warnings for
extern "C" {
extern const char *Version_string2 = "2.9";
}
llvm-svn: 178333
picking up cleanups from earlier in the statement. Also fix a
crash-on-invalid where a reference to an invalid decl from an
enclosing scope was causing an expression to fail to build, but
only *after* a cleanup was registered from that statement,
causing an assertion downstream.
The crash-on-valid is rdar://13459289.
llvm-svn: 177692
Before this patch we would compute the linkage lazily and cache it. When the
AST was modified in ways that could change the value, we would invalidate the
cache.
That was fairly brittle, since any code could ask for the a linkage before
the correct value was available.
We should change the API to one where the linkage is computed explicitly and
trying to get it when it is not available asserts.
This patch is a first step in that direction. We still compute the linkage
lazily, but instead of invalidating a cache, we assert that the AST
modifications didn't change the result.
llvm-svn: 176999
extern "C" {
void test5_f() {
extern int test5_b;
}
}
static float test5_b;
This patch makes us report one for
extern "C" {
void test6_f() {
extern int test6_b;
}
}
extern "C" {
static float test6_b;
}
Not because we think the declaration would be extern C, but because of the rule:
An entity with C language linkage shall not be declared with the same name as an entity in global scope...
We were just not looking past the extern "C" to see if the decl was in global
scope.
llvm-svn: 176875
Without this patch we produce an error for
extern "C" {
void f() {
extern int b;
}
}
extern "C" {
extern float b;
}
but not for
extern "C" {
void f() {
extern int b;
}
}
extern "C" {
float b;
}
llvm-svn: 176867
the normal attribute-merging path, because we can't merge alignment attributes
without knowing the complete set of alignment attributes which apply to a
particular declaration.
llvm-svn: 175861
control the visibility of a type for the purposes of RTTI
and template argument restrictions independently of how
visibility propagates to its non-type member declarations.
Also fix r175326 to not ignore template argument visibility
on a template explicit instantiation when a member has
an explicit attribute but the instantiation does not.
The type_visibility work is rdar://11880378
llvm-svn: 175587
The TypeLoc hierarchy used the llvm::cast machinery to perform undefined
behavior by casting pointers/references to TypeLoc objects to derived types
and then using the derived copy constructors (or even returning pointers to
derived types that actually point to the original TypeLoc object).
Some context is in this thread:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2012-December/056804.html
Though it's spread over a few months which can be hard to read in the mail
archive.
llvm-svn: 175462
I added hasCLanguageLinkage while fixing some language linkage bugs some
time ago so that I wouldn't have to check all users of isExternC. It turned
out to be a much longer detour than expected, but this patch finally
merges the two again. The isExternC function now implements just the
standard notion of having C language linkage.
llvm-svn: 175119
some cases where functions with no language linkage were being treated as having
C language linkage. In particular, don't warn in
extern "C" {
static NonPod foo();
}
Since getLanguageLinkage checks the language linkage, the linkage computation
cannot use the language linkage. Break the loop by checking just the context
in the linkage computation.
llvm-svn: 175117
If the member has an initializer, assume it was probably intended to be static
and suggest/recover with that.
If the member doesn't have an initializer, assume it was probably intended to
be const instead of constexpr and suggest that.
(if the attempt to apply these changes fails, don't make any suggestion &
produce the same diagnostic experience as before. The only case where this can
come up that I know of is with a mutable constexpr with an initializer, since
mutable is incompatible with static (but it's already incompatible with
const anyway))
llvm-svn: 173873
This required plumbing through a new flag to determine whether a ParmVarDecl is
actually a parameter of a function declaration (as opposed to a function
typedef etc, where the attribute is prohibited). Weirdly, this attribute (just
like [[noreturn]]) cannot be applied to a function type, just to a function
declaration (and its parameters).
llvm-svn: 173726
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
never key functions. We did not implement that rule for the
iOS ABI, which was driven by what was implemented in gcc-4.2.
However, implement it now for other ARM-based platforms.
llvm-svn: 173515
and split it out of -Wgnu into its own warning flag.
* In C++11, this is now a hard error (GCC has no extension here in C++11 mode).
The error can be disabled with -Wno-static-float-init, and has a fixit to
add 'constexpr'.
* In C++98, this is still an ExtWarn, but is now controlled by
-Wstatic-float-init as well as -Wgnu.
llvm-svn: 173414
Introduce a spelling index to Attr class, which is an index into the attribute spelling list of an attribute defined in Attr.td.
This index will determine the actual spelling used by an attribute, as it incorporates both the syntax and naming of the attribute.
When constructing an attribute AST node, the spelling index is computed based on attribute kind, scope (if it's a C++11 attribute), and
name, then passed to Attr that will use the index to print itself.
Thanks to Richard Smith for the idea and review.
llvm-svn: 173358
The warning is still under -Wuninitialized (although technically this
is defined behavior), but under a subgroup -Wstatic-self-init.
This addresses PR 10265.
llvm-svn: 172878
it apart from [[gnu::noreturn]] / __attribute__((noreturn)), since their
semantics are not equivalent (for instance, we treat [[gnu::noreturn]] as
affecting the function type, whereas [[noreturn]] does not).
llvm-svn: 172691
This fixes pr14946. The problem was that the linkage computation was done too
early, so things like "extern int a;" would be given external linkage, even if
a previous declaration was static.
llvm-svn: 172667
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
overriding and overridden method, allow the overridden method to have
a narrower contract (introduced earlier, deprecated/obsoleted later)
than the overriding method. Fixes <rdar://problem/12992023>.
llvm-svn: 172567
ActOnFinishFullExpr that some of its checks only apply to discarded-value
expressions. This adds missing checks for unexpanded variadic template
parameter packs to a handful of constructs.
llvm-svn: 172485
The testcase in pr14929 shows that this is extremely hard to do. If we choose
to apply the attribute, that causes the visibility of some decls to change and
that can happen really late (during codegen).
Current gcc warns and ignores the attribute in this testcase with a warning.
This suggest that the correct solution is to find a point in the compilation
where we can compute the visibility and
* assert it was never computed before
* reject any attempts to compute it again in the future (with warnings).
llvm-svn: 172305
which a particular declaration resides. Use this information to
customize the "definition of 'blah' must be imported from another
module" diagnostic with the module the user actually has to
import. Additionally, recover by importing that module, so we don't
complain about other names in that module.
Still TODO: coming up with decent Fix-Its for these cases, and expand
this recovery approach for other name lookup failures.
llvm-svn: 172290
(because they are part of some module) but have not been made visible
(because they are in a submodule that wasn't imported), filter out
those declarations unless both the old declaration and the new
declaration have external linkage. When one or both has internal
linkage, there should be no conflict unless both are imported.
llvm-svn: 171925
To do so we have to wait until we know that the type of a variable has been
deduced. Sema::FinalizeDeclaration is the first callback that is used for
decl with or without initializers.
llvm-svn: 171458
This patch moves hasCLanguageLinkage to be VarDecl and FunctionDecl methods
so that they can be used from SemaOverload.cpp and then fixes the logic
in Sema::IsOverload.
llvm-svn: 171193
the body of a functions. The problem was that hasBody looks at the entire chain
and causes problems to -fvisibility-inlines-hidden if the cache was not
invalidated.
Original message:
Cache visibility of decls.
This unifies the linkage and visibility caching. I first implemented this when
working on pr13844, but the previous fixes removed the performance advantage of
this one.
This is still a step in the right direction for making linkage and visibility
cheap to use.
llvm-svn: 171053
This unifies the linkage and visibility caching. I first implemented this when
working on pr13844, but the previous fixes removed the performance advantage of
this one.
This is still a step in the right direction for making linkage and visibility
cheap to use.
llvm-svn: 171048
This was removed with -Wunique-enum, which is still removed. The
corresponding thread on cfe-comments for that warning is here:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-dev/2012-September/024224.html
If we get specific user feedback for -Wduplicate-enum we can evaluate
whether or not to keep it.
llvm-svn: 170974
When we are visiting the extern declaration of 'i' in
static int i = 99;
int foo() {
extern int i;
return i;
}
We should not try to handle it as if it was an function static. That is, we
must consider the written storage class.
Fixing this then exposes that the assert in EmitGlobalVarDeclLValue and the
if leading to its call are not completely accurate. They were passing before
because the second decl was marked as having external storage. I changed them
to check the linkage, which I find easier to understand.
Last but not least, there is something strange going on with cuda and opencl.
My guess is that the linkage computation for these languages needs to be
audited, but I didn't want to change that in this patch so I just updated
the storage classes to keep the current behavior.
Thanks to Reed Kotler for reporting this.
llvm-svn: 170827
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
This fixes the storage class of extern decls that are merged with file level
statics. The patch also fixes the linkage computation so that they are
considered internal.
llvm-svn: 170406
This fixes the missing warning here:
struct S {
template <typename T>
void meth() {
char arr[3];
arr[4] = 0; // warning: array index 4 is past the end of the array
}
};
template <typename T>
void func() {
char arr[3];
arr[4] = 0; // no warning
}
llvm-svn: 170180
is switched of by about 0.8% (tested with int i<N>).
Additionally, this puts computing the diagnostic class into the hot
path more when parsing, in preparation for upcoming optimizations
in this area.
llvm-svn: 169976
Remove pre-standard restriction on explicitly-defaulted copy constructors with
'incorrect' parameter types, and instead just make those special members
non-trivial as the standard requires.
This required making CXXRecordDecl correctly handle classes which have both a
trivial and a non-trivial special member of the same kind.
This also fixes PR13217 by reimplementing DiagnoseNontrivial in terms of the
new triviality computation technology.
llvm-svn: 169667
with -Werror. Previously, compiling with -Werror would emit only the first
warning in a compilation unit, because clang assumes that once an error occurs,
further analysis is unlikely to return valid results. However, warnings that
have been upgraded to errors should not be treated as "errors" in this sense.
llvm-svn: 169649
Our error recovery path may have made the class anonymous, and that has a pretty
disastrous impact on any attempt to parse a class body containing constructors.
llvm-svn: 169374
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
Among other differences, GCC accepts
typedef int IA[];
typedef int A10[10];
static A10 *f(void);
static IA *f(void);
void g(void) {
(void)sizeof(*f());
}
but clang used to reject it with:
invalid application of 'sizeof' to an incomplete type 'IA' (aka 'int []')
The intention of c99's 6.2.7 seems to be that we should use the composite type
and accept as gcc does.
Doing the type merging required some extra fixes:
* Use the type from the function type in initializations, even if an parameter
is available.
* Fix the merging of the noreturn attribute in function types.
* Make CodeGen handle the fact that an parameter type can be different from
the corresponding type in the function type.
llvm-svn: 168895
It brought bunch of (possibly false) warnings.
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:60:22: warning: variable 'ID' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
char ModuleNDNM::ID=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:86:22: warning: variable 'ID' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
char ModuleNDM2::ID=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:106:21: warning: variable 'ID' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
char ModuleDNM::ID=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:217:16: warning: variable 'initcount' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
int LPass::initcount=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:218:16: warning: variable 'fincount' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
int LPass::fincount=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:259:16: warning: variable 'inited' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
int BPass::inited=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:260:16: warning: variable 'fin' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
int BPass::fin=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:283:24: warning: variable 'ID' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
char OnTheFlyTest::ID=0;
^
8 warnings generated.
llvm-svn: 168549
"clang -cc1 -fsyntax-only" on the preprocessed output of
#define M extern int a;
#define M2 M M
#define M4 M2 M2
#define M8 M4 M4
#define M16 M8 M8
#define M32 M16 M16
#define M64 M32 M32
#define M128 M64 M64
#define M256 M128 M128
#define M512 M256 M256
#define M1024 M512 M512
#define M2048 M1024 M1024
#define M4096 M2048 M2048
#define M8192 M4096 M4096
#define M16384 M8192 M8192
M16384
goes from 2.994s to 1.416s. GCC is at 0.022s, so we still have a long way to go.
llvm-svn: 168519
Separate out the notions of 'has a trivial special member' and 'has a
non-trivial special member', and use them appropriately. These are not
opposites of one another (there might be no special member, or in C++11 there
might be a trivial one and a non-trivial one). The CXXRecordDecl predicates
continue to produce incorrect results, but do so in fewer cases now, and
they document the cases where they might be wrong.
No functionality changes are intended here (they will come when the predicates
start producing the right answers...).
llvm-svn: 168119
This corrects the mangling and linkage of classes (& their member functions) in
cases like this:
struct foo {
struct {
void func() { ... }
} x;
};
we were accidentally giving this nested unnamed struct 'no' linkage where it
should've had the linkage of the outer class. The mangling was incorrecty too,
mangling as TU-wide unnamed type mangling of $_X rather than class-scoped
mangling of UtX_.
This also fixes -Wunused-member-function which would incorrectly diagnose
'func' as unused due to it having no linkage & thus appearing to be TU-local
when in fact it might be correctly used in another TU.
Similar mangling should be applied to function local classes in similar cases
but I've deferred that for a subsequent patch.
Review/discussion by Richard Smith, John McCall, & especially Eli Friedman.
llvm-svn: 167906
applied to CXXRecordDecls, where functions with that return type will
inherit the warn_unused_result attribute.
Also includes a tiny fix (with no discernable behavior change for
existing code) to re-sync AttributeDeclKind enum and
err_attribute_wrong_decl_type with warn_attribute_wrong_decl_type since
the enum is used with both diagnostic messages to chose the correct
description.
llvm-svn: 167783
The problem is as follows: C++11 has contexts which are not
potentially-evaluated, and yet in which we are required or encouraged to
perform constant evaluation. In such contexts, we are not permitted to
implicitly define special member functions for literal types, therefore
we cannot evalaute those constant expressions.
Punt on this in one more context for now by skipping checking constexpr
variable initializers if they occur in dependent contexts.
llvm-svn: 166956
whether the initializer is value-dependent rather than whether we are in a
dependent context. This allows us to detect some errors sooner, and fixes a
crash-on-invalid if a dependent type leaks out to a non-dependent context in
error recovery.
llvm-svn: 166898
might have been used in constant expressions, rather than suppressing it for
variables which are const. The important thing here is that such variables
can have their values used without actually being marked as 'used'.
llvm-svn: 166896
defined without a previous declaration. This is similar to
-Wmissing-prototypes, but for variables instead of functions.
Patch by Ed Schouten.
llvm-svn: 166498
since it also has an implicit exception specification. Downgrade the error to
an extwarn, since at least for operator delete, system headers like to declare
it as 'noexcept' whereas the implicit definition does not have an explicit
exception specification. Move the exception specification for user-declared
'operator delete' functions from the type-as-written into the type, to reflect
reality and to allow us to detect whether there was an implicit exception spec
or not.
llvm-svn: 166372
Also, unify ObjCShouldCallSuperDealloc and ObjCShouldCallSuperFinalize.
The two have identical behavior and will never be active at the same time.
There's one last simplification now, which is that if we see a call to
[super foo] and we are currently in a method named 'foo', we will
/unconditionally/ clear the ObjCShouldCallSuper flag, rather than check
first to see if we're in a method where calling super is required. There's
no reason to pay the extra lookup price here.
llvm-svn: 166285
When suggesting "foo::bar" as a correction for "fob::bar" we mistakenly
replaced only "bar" with "foo::bar" producing "fob::foo::bar" which was broken.
This corrects that replacement in as many places as I could find & provides
test cases for all those cases I could find a test case for. There are a couple
that don't seem to be reachable (one looks entirely dead, the other just
doesn't seem to ever get called with a namespace to namespace change).
Review by Richard Smith ( http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D57 ).
llvm-svn: 165817
For GNU attributes, instead of reusing attribute source
location for the scope location, use SourceLocation() since
GNU attributes don not have scope tokens.
llvm-svn: 165234
-Allow Sema to do more processing on the initial Expr before checking it.
-Remove the special conditions in HandleExpr()
-Move the code so that only one call site is needed.
-Removed the function from Sema and only call it locally.
-Warn on potentially evaluated reference variables, not just casts to r-values.
-Update tests.
llvm-svn: 164951
The motivating example:
if (self.weakProp)
use(self.weakProp);
As with any non-atomic test-then-use, it is possible a weak property to be
non-nil at the 'if', but be deallocated by the time it is used. The correct
way to write this example is as follows:
id tmp = self.weakProp;
if (tmp)
use(tmp);
The warning is controlled by -Warc-repeated-use-of-receiver, and uses the
property name and base to determine if the same property on the same object
is being accessed multiple times. In cases where the base is more
complicated than just a single Decl (e.g. 'foo.bar.weakProp'), it picks a
Decl for some degree of uniquing and reports the problem under a subflag,
-Warc-maybe-repeated-use-of-receiver. This gives a way to tune the
aggressiveness of the warning for a particular project.
The warning is not on by default because it is not flow-sensitive and thus
may have a higher-than-acceptable rate of false positives, though it is
less noisy than -Wreceiver-is-weak. On the other hand, it will not warn
about some cases that may be legitimate issues that -Wreceiver-is-weak
will catch, and it does not attempt to reason about methods returning weak
values.
Even though this is not a real "analysis-based" check I've put the bug
emission code in AnalysisBasedWarnings for two reasons: (1) to run on
every kind of code body (function, method, block, or lambda), and (2) to
suggest that it may be enhanced by flow-sensitive analysis in the future.
The second (smaller) half of this work is to extend it to weak locals
and weak ivars. This should use most of the same infrastructure.
Part of <rdar://problem/12280249>
llvm-svn: 164854
This makes the wording more informative, and consistent with the other
warnings about uninitialized variables.
Also, me and David who reviewed this couldn't figure out why we would
need to do a lookup to get the name of the variable; so just print the
name directly.
llvm-svn: 164366
This is some really old code (took me a while to find the test cases) & the
diagnostic text is slightly incorrect (it should really only apply to
re/declarations/, redefinitions are an error regardless of whether the types
match). Not sure if anyone cares about it, though.
For now this just makes the diagnostic more clear in less obvious cases where
the type of a declaration might not be explicitly written (eg: because it
uses decltype)
llvm-svn: 164313
is no compelling argument that this is a generally useful warning,
and imposes a strong stylistic argument on code beyond what it was
intended to find warnings in.
llvm-svn: 164083
Specifically, this should warn:
__block block_t a = ^{ a(); };
Furthermore, this case which previously warned now does not, since the value
of 'b' is captured before the assignment occurs:
block_t b; // not __block
b = ^{ b(); };
(This will of course warn under -Wuninitialized, as before.)
<rdar://problem/11015883>
llvm-svn: 163962
warning to an error. C++ bans it, and both GCC and EDG diagnose it as
an error. Microsoft allows it, so we still warn in Microsoft
mode. Fixes <rdar://problem/11135644>.
llvm-svn: 163831
in classes. Use it to flag those method implementations which don't
contain call to 'super' if they have 'super' class and it has the method
with this attribute set. This is wip. // rdar://6386358
llvm-svn: 163434
of a c-function for what it is. Otherwise, this func
is treated as an overloadable c-function resulting in
a crash much later. // rdar://11743706
llvm-svn: 163224
initiated enum constant has the same value as another enum constant.
For instance:
enum test { A, B, C = -1, D, E = 1 };
Clang will warn that:
A and D both have value 0
B and E both have value 1
A few exceptions are made to keep the noise down. Enum constants which are
initialized to another enum constant, or an enum constant plus or minus 1 will
not trigger this warning. Also, anonymous enums are not checked.
llvm-svn: 162938
variables without a storage class within a function, to implement
CUDA B.2.5: "__shared__ and __constant__ variables have implied static
storage [duration]."
llvm-svn: 162788
nested names as id-expressions, using the annot_primary_expr annotation, where
possible. This removes some redundant lookups, and also allows us to
typo-correct within tentative parsing, and to carry on disambiguating past an
identifier which we can determine will fail lookup as both a type and as a
non-type, allowing us to disambiguate more declarations (and thus offer
improved error recovery for such cases).
This also introduces to the parser the notion of a tentatively-declared name,
which is an identifier which we *might* have seen a declaration for in a
tentative parse (but only if we end up disambiguating the tokens as a
declaration). This is necessary to correctly disambiguate cases where a
variable is used within its own initializer.
llvm-svn: 162159
specifier is unsed in a declaration; as it may not make the symbol
local to linkage unit as intended. Suggest using "hidden" visibility
attribute instead. // rdar://7703982
llvm-svn: 162138
both a waste of time, and prone to crash due to the use of the
error-recovery path in parser. Fixes <rdar://problem/12103608>, which
has been driving me nuts.
llvm-svn: 162081
function arguments and arguments for variadic functions are of a particular
type which is determined by some other argument to the same function call.
Usecases include:
* MPI library implementations, where these attributes enable checking that
buffer type matches the passed MPI_Datatype;
* for HDF5 library there is a similar usecase as MPI;
* checking types of variadic functions' arguments for functions like
fcntl() and ioctl().
llvm-svn: 162067
as it does something unexpected (but gcc compatible).
Suggest use of __attribute__((visibility("hidden")))
on declaration instead. // rdar://7703982
llvm-svn: 161972
The reason for the recent fallout for "attaching comments to any redeclaration"
change are two false assumptions:
(1) a RawComment is attached to a single decl (not true for 'typedef struct X *Y'
where we want the comment to be attached to both X and Y);
(2) the whole redeclaration chain has only a single comment (obviously false, the
user can put a separate comment for each redeclaration).
To fix (1) I revert the part of the recent change where a 'Decl*' member was
introduced to RawComment. Now ASTContext has a separate DenseMap for mapping
'Decl*' to 'FullComment*'.
To fix (2) I just removed the test with this assumption. We might not parse
every comment in redecl chain if we already parsed at least one.
llvm-svn: 161878
This also provides isConst/Volatile/Restrict on FunctionTypes to coalesce
the implementation with other callers (& update those other callers).
Patch contributed by Sam Panzer (panzer@google.com).
llvm-svn: 161647
We handled the builtin version of this function in r157968, but the builtin
isn't used when compiling as -fno-constant-cfstrings.
This should complete <rdar://problem/6157200>.
llvm-svn: 161525
are not definitions. This follows the behavior of both gcc and earlier
versions of clang. Regression from r156531. <rdar://problem/12048621>.
llvm-svn: 161523
in duplicate -Wuninitialized warnings. Change so that only the check in
TryConstructorInitialization() will be used and a single warning be emitted.
llvm-svn: 161345
The only caveat is renumbering CXCommentKind enum for aesthetic reasons -- this
breaks libclang binary compatibility, but should not be a problem since API is
so new.
This also fixes PR13372 as a side-effect.
llvm-svn: 161087
accurate by asking the parser whether there was an ambiguity rather than trying
to reverse-engineer it from the DeclSpec. Make the with-parameters case have
better diagnostics by using semantic information to drive the warning,
improving the diagnostics and adding a fixit.
Patch by Nikola Smiljanic. Some minor changes by me to suppress diagnostics for
declarations of the form 'T (*x)(...)', which seem to have a very high false
positive rate, and to reduce indentation in 'warnAboutAmbiguousFunction'.
llvm-svn: 160998
a defaulted special member function until the exception specification is needed
(using the same criteria used for the delayed instantiation of exception
specifications for function temploids).
EST_Delayed is now EST_Unevaluated (using 1330's terminology), and, like
EST_Uninstantiated, carries a pointer to the FunctionDecl which will be used to
resolve the exception specification.
This is enabled for all C++ modes: it's a little faster in the case where the
exception specification isn't used, allows our C++11-in-C++98 extensions to
work, and is still correct for C++98, since in that mode the computation of the
exception specification can't fail.
The diagnostics here aren't great (in particular, we should include implicit
evaluation of exception specifications for defaulted special members in the
template instantiation backtraces), but they're not much worse than before.
Our approach to the problem of cycles between in-class initializers and the
exception specification for a defaulted default constructor is modified a
little by this change -- we now reject any odr-use of a defaulted default
constructor if that constructor uses an in-class initializer and the use is in
an in-class initialzer which is declared lexically earlier. This is a closer
approximation to the current draft solution in core issue 1351, but isn't an
exact match (but the current draft wording isn't reasonable, so that's to be
expected).
llvm-svn: 160847
A warning was added in r150128 for returning non-C compatible
user-defined types from functions with C linkage.
This makes the text more clear for the case when the type isn't
decidedly non-C compatible, but incomplete.
llvm-svn: 160681
structor class under ARC, that struct/class does not have a trivial
move constructor or move assignment operator. Fixes the rest of
<rdar://problem/11738725>.
llvm-svn: 160615
struct __attribute__((visibility("hidden"))) zed {
};
struct __attribute__((visibility("hidden"))) zed;
Which is a bit silly and got a lot noisier now that we correctly handle
visibility pragmas. This patch fixes that and also has some extra quality
improvements:
* We now produce an error instead of a warning for
struct __attribute__((visibility("hidden"))) zed {
};
struct __attribute__((visibility("default"))) zed;
* The "after definition" warning now points to the new attribute that is
ignored instead of pointing to the declaration.
llvm-svn: 160227
to the same signature. Fix a bug in the type printer which would cause this
diagnostic to print wonderful types like 'const const int *'.
llvm-svn: 160161
diagnostics implemented -- see testcases.
I created a new TableGen file for comment diagnostics,
DiagnosticCommentKinds.td, because comment diagnostics don't logically
fit into AST diagnostics file. But I don't feel strongly about it.
This also implements support for self-closing HTML tags in comment
lexer and parser (for example, <br />).
In order to issue precise diagnostics CommentSema needs to know the
declaration the comment is attached to. There is no easy way to find a decl by
comment, so we match comments and decls in lockstep: after parsing one
declgroup we check if we have any new, not yet attached comments. If we do --
then we do the usual comment-finding process.
It is interesting that this automatically handles trailing comments.
We pick up not only comments that precede the declaration, but also
comments that *follow* the declaration -- thanks to the lookahead in
the lexer: after parsing the declgroup we've consumed the semicolon
and looked ahead through comments.
Added -Wdocumentation-html flag for semantic HTML errors to allow the user to
disable only HTML warnings (but not HTML parse errors, which we emit as
warnings in -Wdocumentation).
llvm-svn: 160078
In C, enum constants have the type of the enum's underlying integer type,
rather than the type of the enum. (This is not true in C++.) Thus, when a
block's return type is inferred from an enum constant, it is incompatible
with expressions that return the enum type.
In r158899, I told block returns to pretend that enum constants have enum
type, like in C++. Doug Gregor pointed out that this can break existing code.
Now, we don't check the types of return statements until the end of the block.
This lets us go back and add implicit casts in blocks with mixed enum
constants and enum-typed expressions.
<rdar://problem/11662489> (again)
llvm-svn: 159591
* Primarily fixed \param commands with names not matching any actual
parameters of the documented functions. In many cases this consists
just of fixing up the parameter name in the \param to match the code,
in some it means deleting obsolete documentation and occasionally it
means documenting the parameter that has replaced the older one that
was documented, which sometimes means some simple reverse-engineering
of the docs from the implementation;
* Fixed \param ParamName [out] to the correct format with [out] before
the parameter name;
* Fixed some \brief summaries.
llvm-svn: 158980
target Objective-C runtime down to the frontend: break this
down into a single target runtime kind and version, and compute
all the relevant information from that. This makes it
relatively painless to add support for new runtimes to the
compiler. Make the new -cc1 flag, -fobjc-runtime=blah-x.y.z,
available at the driver level as a better and more general
alternative to -fgnu-runtime and -fnext-runtime. This new
concept of an Objective-C runtime also encompasses what we
were previously separating out as the "Objective-C ABI", so
fragile vs. non-fragile runtimes are now really modelled as
different kinds of runtime, paving the way for better overall
differentiation.
As a sort of special case, continue to accept the -cc1 flag
-fobjc-runtime-has-weak, as a sop to PLCompatibilityWeak.
I won't go so far as to say "no functionality change", even
ignoring the new driver flag, but subtle changes in driver
semantics are almost certainly not intended.
llvm-svn: 158793
Add error checking for the static qualifier which is now allowed in certain situations for OpenCL 1.2. Use the CL version to turn on this feature.
Added test case for 1.2 static storage class feature.
llvm-svn: 158759
method definition that has its '{' attached to the method name without
a space.
With a method like:
-(id)meth{
.....
}
the logic in ObjCMethodDecl that determined the selector locations got
confused because it was initialized based on an end location for '{' but
that end location changed to '}' after the method was finished.
Fix this by having an immutable end location for the declarator and
for getLocEnd() get the end location from the body itself.
Fixes rdar://11659739.
llvm-svn: 158583
This could happen for cases like this:
- (NSArray *)getAllNames:(NSArray *)images {
NSMutableArray *results = [NSMutableArray array];
for (auto img in images) {
[results addObject:img.name];
}
return results;
}
Here the property access will fail because 'img' has type 'id', rather than,
say, NSImage.
This warning will not fire in templated code, since the 'id' could have
come from a template parameter.
llvm-svn: 158239
In addition, I've made the pointer and reference typedef 'void' rather than T*
just so they can't get misused. I would've omitted them entirely but
std::distance likes them to be there even if it doesn't use them.
This rolls back r155808 and r155869.
Review by Doug Gregor incorporating feedback from Chandler Carruth.
llvm-svn: 158104
This is a large class of false positives where anonymous enums are used to
declare constants (see Clang's Diagnostics.h for example). A small number of
true positives could probably be found in this bucket by still warning if the
anonymous enum is used in a declarator (enum { ... } x;) but so far we don't
believe this to be a source of significant benefit so I haven't bothered to
preserve those cases.
General offline review/acknowledgment by rtrieu.
llvm-svn: 157713
that the methods have the same number of parameters, although we
certainly assumed this in many places. Objective-C can be insane
sometimes. Fixes <rdar://problem/11460990>.
llvm-svn: 157025
// FIXME: This needs to happen before we merge declarations. Then,
// let attribute merging cope with attribute conflicts.
This was already being done for variables, but for functions we were merging
then first and then applying the attributes. To avoid duplicating merging
logic, some of the helpers in SemaDeclAttr.cpp become methods that can
handle merging two attributes in one decl or inheriting attributes from one
decl to another.
With this change we are now able to produce errors for variables with
incompatible visibility attributes or warn about unused dllimports in
variables.
This changes the attribute list iteration back to being in reverse source
code order, as that matches what decl merging does and avoids differentiating
the two cases is the merge*Attr methods.
llvm-svn: 156531
Added support for conditional operators and tightened the exclusion of the
unary operator from all operators to only the address of operator.
llvm-svn: 156450
for having a uniform logic for adding attributes to a decl. This in turn
is needed to fix the FIXME:
// FIXME: This needs to happen before we merge declarations. Then,
// let attribute merging cope with attribute conflicts.
ProcessDeclAttributes(S, NewFD, D,
/*NonInheritable=*/false, /*Inheritable=*/true);
The idea is that mergeAvailabilityAttr will become a method. Once attributes
are processed before merging, it will be called from handleAvailabilityAttr to
handle multiple attributes in one decl:
void f(int) __attribute__((availability(ios,deprecated=3.0),
availability(ios,introduced=2.0)));
and from SemaDecl.cpp to handle multiple decls:
void f(int) __attribute__((availability(ios,deprecated=3.0)));
void f(int) __attribute__((availability(ios,introduced=2.0)));
As a bonus, use the new structure to diagnose incompatible availability
attributes added to different decls (see included testcases).
llvm-svn: 156269
refactorings in that revision, and some of the subsequent bugfixes, which
seem to be relevant even without delayed exception specification parsing.
llvm-svn: 156031
filter_decl_iterator had a weird mismatch where both op* and op-> returned T*
making it difficult to generalize this filtering behavior into a reusable
library of any kind.
This change errs on the side of value, making op-> return T* and op* return
T&.
(reviewed by Richard Smith)
llvm-svn: 155808
exception specifications on member functions until after the closing
'}' for the containing class. This allows, for example, a member
function to throw an instance of its own class. Fixes PR12564 and a
fairly embarassing oversight in our C++98/03 support.
llvm-svn: 154844
in the declaration of a non-static member function after the
(optional) cv-qualifier-seq, which in practice means in the exception
specification and late-specified return type.
The new scheme here used to manage 'this' outside of a member function
scope is more general than the Scope-based mechanism previously used
for non-static data member initializers and late-parsesd attributes,
because it can also handle the cv-qualifiers on the member
function. Note, however, that a separate pass is required for static
member functions to determine whether 'this' was used, because we
might not know that we have a static function until after declaration
matching.
Finally, this introduces name mangling for 'this' and for the implicit
'this', which is intended to match GCC's mangling. Independent
verification for the new mangling test case would be appreciated.
Fixes PR10036 and PR12450.
llvm-svn: 154799
Infinite recursion was happening when DiagnoseInvalidRedeclaration
called ActOnFunctionDeclarator to check if a typo correction works when
the correction was just to the nested-name-specifier because the wrong
DeclContext was being passed in. Unlike a number of functions
surrounding typo correction, the DeclContext passed in for a function is
the context of the function name after applying any nested name
specifiers, not the lexical DeclContext where the
function+nested-name-specifier appears.
llvm-svn: 153962
move constructor/move assignment operator are not declared, rather than being
defined as deleted, so move operations on the derived class fall back to
copying rather than moving.
If a move operation on the derived class is explicitly defaulted, the
unmovable subobject will be copied instead of being moved.
llvm-svn: 153883
concerning qualified declarator-ids. We now diagnose extraneous
qualification at namespace scope (which we had previously missed) and
diagnose these qualification errors for all kinds of declarations; it
was rather uneven before. Fixes <rdar://problem/11135644>.
llvm-svn: 153577
typo correction to introduce a nested-name-specifier; we aren't
prepared to handle it here. Fixes PR12297 / <rdar://problem/11075219>.
llvm-svn: 153445
scoped enumeration members. Later uses of an enumeration temploid as a nested
name specifier should cause its instantiation. Plus some groundwork for
explicit specialization of member enumerations of class templates.
llvm-svn: 152750
The deferred lookup table building step couldn't accurately tell which Decls
should be included in the lookup table, and consequently built different tables
in some cases.
Fix this by removing lazy building of DeclContext name lookup tables. In
practice, the laziness was frequently not worthwhile in C++, because we
performed lookup into most DeclContexts. In C, it had a bit more value,
since there is no qualified lookup.
In the place of lazy lookup table building, we simply don't build lookup tables
for function DeclContexts at all. Such name lookup tables are not useful, since
they don't capture the scoping information required to correctly perform name
lookup in a function scope.
The resulting performance delta is within the noise on my testing, but appears
to be a very slight win for C++ and a very slight loss for C. The C performance
can probably be recovered (if it is a measurable problem) by avoiding building
the lookup table for the translation unit.
llvm-svn: 152608
track whether the referenced declaration comes from an enclosing
local context. I'm amenable to suggestions about the exact meaning
of this bit.
llvm-svn: 152491
enum is scoped or not, which is not relevant here. Instead, phrase the loop in
the same terms that the standard uses, instead of this awkward set of
conditions that is *nearly* equal.
llvm-svn: 152489
When an error made a record member invalid, the record would stay as "isBeingDefined" and
not "completeDefinition". Even easily recoverable errors ended up propagating records in
such "beingDefined" state, for example:
struct A {
~A() const; // expected-error {{'const' qualifier is not allowed on a destructor}}
};
struct B : A {}; // A & B would stay as "not complete definition" and "being defined".
This weird state was impending lookups in the records and hitting assertion in the ASTWriter.
Part of rdar://11007039
llvm-svn: 152432
- getSourceRange().getBegin() is about as awesome a pattern as .copy().size().
I already killed the hot paths so this doesn't seem to impact performance on my
tests-of-the-day, but it is a much more sensible (and shorter) pattern.
llvm-svn: 152419
- This function is not at all free; pass it around along some hot paths instead
of recomputing it deep inside various VarDecl methods.
llvm-svn: 152363
The bug that was caught by Apple's internal buildbots was valid and also showed another bug in my implementation.
These are now fixed, with regression tests added to catch them both (not Darwin-specific).
Original log:
====================
Revert r151638 because it causes assertion hit on PCH creation for Cocoa.h
Original log:
---------------------
Correctly track tags and enum members defined in the prototype of a function, and ensure they are properly scoped.
This fixes code such as:
enum e {x, y};
int f(enum {y, x} n) {
return 0;
}
This finally fixes PR5464 and PR5477.
---------------------
I also reverted r151641 which was enhancement on top of r151638.
====================
llvm-svn: 151712
Original log:
---------------------
Correctly track tags and enum members defined in the prototype of a function, and ensure they are properly scoped.
This fixes code such as:
enum e {x, y};
int f(enum {y, x} n) {
return 0;
}
This finally fixes PR5464 and PR5477.
---------------------
I also reverted r151641 which was enhancement on top of r151638.
llvm-svn: 151667
Don't try to typo-correct a method redeclaration to declarations not in
the current record as it could lead to infinite recursion if CorrectTypo
finds more than one correction candidate in a parent record.
llvm-svn: 150735
constructor, and that constructor is used to initialize an object of static
storage duration such that all members and bases are initialized by constant
expressions, constant initialization is performed. In this case, the object
can still have a non-trivial destructor, and if it does, we must emit a dynamic
initializer which performs no initialization and instead simply registers that
destructor.
llvm-svn: 150419
1358, 1360, 1452 and 1453.
- Instantiations of constexpr functions are always constexpr. This removes the
need for separate declaration/definition checking, which is now gone.
- This makes it possible for a constexpr function to be virtual, if they are
only dependently virtual. Virtual calls to such functions are not constant
expressions.
- Likewise, it's now possible for a literal type to have virtual base classes.
A constexpr constructor for such a type cannot actually produce a constant
expression, though, so add a special-case diagnostic for a constructor call
to such a type rather than trying to evaluate it.
- Classes with trivial default constructors (for which value initialization can
produce a fully-initialized value) are considered literal types.
- Classes with volatile members are not literal types.
- constexpr constructors can be members of non-literal types. We do not yet use
static initialization for global objects constructed in this way.
llvm-svn: 150359
instead of having a special-purpose function.
- ActOnCXXDirectInitializer, which was mostly duplication of
AddInitializerToDecl (leading e.g. to PR10620, which Eli fixed a few days
ago), is dropped completely.
- MultiInitializer, which was an ugly hack I added, is dropped again.
- We now have the infrastructure in place to distinguish between
int x = {1};
int x({1});
int x{1};
-- VarDecl now has getInitStyle(), which indicates which of the above was used.
-- CXXConstructExpr now has a flag to indicate that it represents list-
initialization, although this is not yet used.
- InstantiateInitializer was renamed to SubstInitializer and simplified.
- ActOnParenOrParenListExpr has been replaced by ActOnParenListExpr, which
always produces a ParenListExpr. Placed that so far failed to convert that
back to a ParenExpr containing comma operators have been fixed. I'm pretty
sure I could have made a crashing test case before this.
The end result is a (I hope) considerably cleaner design of initializers.
More importantly, the fact that I can now distinguish between the various
initialization kinds means that I can get the tricky generalized initializer
test cases Johannes Schaub supplied to work. (This is not yet done.)
This commit passed self-host, with the resulting compiler passing the tests. I
hope it doesn't break more complicated code. It's a pretty big change, but one
that I feel is necessary.
llvm-svn: 150318
o Correct the handling of the restrictions on usage of cv-qualified and
ref-qualified function types.
o Fix a bug where such types were rejected in template type parameter default
arguments, due to such arguments not being treated as a template type arg
context.
o Remove the ExtWarn for usage of such types as template arguments; that was
a standard defect, not a GCC extension.
o Improve the wording and unify the code for diagnosing cv-qualifiers with the
code for diagnosing ref-qualifiers.
llvm-svn: 150244
can't produce a constant expression is not ill-formed (so long as some
instantiation of that function can produce a constant expression).
llvm-svn: 149802
value of class type, look for a unique conversion operator converting to
integral or unscoped enumeration type and use that. Implements [expr.const]p5.
Sema::VerifyIntegerConstantExpression now performs the conversion and returns
the converted result. Some important callers of Expr::isIntegralConstantExpr
have been switched over to using it (including all of those required for C++11
conformance); this switch brings a side-benefit of improved diagnostics and, in
several cases, simpler code. However, some language extensions and attributes
have not been moved across and will not perform implicit conversions on
constant expressions of literal class type where an ICE is required.
In passing, fix static_assert to perform a contextual conversion to bool on its
argument.
llvm-svn: 149776
Fix some review comments.
Add a test for deduction when std::initializer_list isn't available yet.
Fix redundant error messages. This fixes and outstanding FIXME too.
llvm-svn: 148735
values and non-type template arguments of integral and enumeration types.
This change causes some legal C++98 code to no longer compile in C++11 mode, by
enforcing the C++11 rule that narrowing integral conversions are not permitted
in the final implicit conversion sequence for the above cases.
llvm-svn: 148439
Includes tests highlighting the cases where accuracy has improved
(there is one call that does no filtering beyond selecting the set
of allowed keywords, and one call that only triggers for ObjC code
for which a test by someone who knows ObjC would be welcome). Also
fixes a small typo in one of the suggestion messages, and drops a
malformed "expected-note" for a suggestion that did not occur even
when the malformed note was committed as r145930.
llvm-svn: 148420
we have a redeclarable type, and only use the new virtual versions
(getPreviousDeclImpl() and getMostRecentDeclImpl()) when we don't have
that type information. This keeps us from penalizing users with strict
type information (and is the moral equivalent of a "final" method).
Plus, settle on the names getPreviousDecl() and getMostRecentDecl()
throughout.
llvm-svn: 148187
I was forced to change test/SemaCXX/linkage.cpp because we aren't actually modeling extern "C" in the AST the way that testcase expects; we were not printing a warning only because we skipped the relevant check. Someone who actually understands the semantics here should fix that.
llvm-svn: 148158
- If the declarator is at the start of a line, and the previous line contained
another declarator and ended with a comma, then that comma was probably a
typo for a semicolon:
int n = 0, m = 1, l = 2, // k = 5;
myImportantFunctionCall(); // oops!
- If removing the parentheses would correctly initialize the object, then
produce a note suggesting that fix.
- Otherwise, if there is a simple initializer we can suggest which performs
value-initialization, then provide a note suggesting a correction to that
initializer.
Sema::Declarator now tracks the location of the comma prior to the declarator in
the declaration, if there is one, to facilitate providing the note. The code to
determine an appropriate initializer from the -Wuninitialized warning has been
factored out to allow use in both that and -Wvexing-parse.
llvm-svn: 148072
- reject definitions of enums within friend declarations
- require 'enum', not 'enum class', for non-declaring references to scoped
enumerations
llvm-svn: 147824
is important because it's fairly common for headers (especially system
headers) to want to provide only those typedefs needed for that
particular header, based on some guard macro, e.g.,
#ifndef _SIZE_T
#define _SIZE_T
typedef long size_t;
#endif
which is repeated in a number of headers. The guard macro protects
against duplicate definitions. However, this means that only the first
occurrence of this pattern actually defines size_t, so the submodule
corresponding to this header has the only visible definition. If a
user then imports a different submodule from the same module, size_t
will be known but not visible, and therefore cannot be used.
By allowing redefinition of typedefs, each header that wants to define
size_t can do so independently, so it will be available in the
corresponding submodules.
llvm-svn: 147775
the Semantic Powers to only warn on class types (or dependent types), where the
constructor or destructor could do something interesting.
llvm-svn: 147642
the AST reader doesn't actually perform a merge, because name lookup
knows how to merge identical typedefs together.
As part of this, teach C/Objective-C name lookup to return multiple
results in all cases, rather than first digging through the attributes
to see if the value is overloadable. This way, we'll catch ambiguous
lookups in C/Objective-C.
llvm-svn: 147498
visibility restrictions. This ensures that all declarations of the
same entity end up in the same redeclaration chain, even if some of
those declarations aren't visible. While this may seem unfortunate to
some---why can't two C modules have different functions named
'f'?---it's an acknowedgment that a module does not introduce a new
"namespace" of names.
As part of this, stop merging the 'module-private' bit from previous
declarations to later declarations, because we want each declaration
in a module to stand on its own because this can effect, for example,
submodule visibility.
Note that this notion of names that are invisible to normal name
lookup but are available for redeclaration lookups is how we should
implement friend declarations and extern declarations within local
function scopes. I'm not tackling that problem now.
llvm-svn: 146980
variable is initialized by a non-constant expression, and pass in the variable
being declared so that earlier-initialized fields' values can be used.
Rearrange VarDecl init evaluation to make this possible, and in so doing fix a
long-standing issue in our C++ constant expression handling, where we would
mishandle cases like:
extern const int a;
const int n = a;
const int a = 5;
int arr[n];
Here, n is not initialized by a constant expression, so can't be used in an ICE,
even though the initialization expression would be an ICE if it appeared later
in the TU. This requires computing whether the initializer is an ICE eagerly,
and saving that information in PCH files.
llvm-svn: 146856
applies to an actual definition. Plus, clarify the purpose of this
field and give the accessor a different name, since getLocEnd() is
supposed to be the same as getSourceRange().getEnd().
llvm-svn: 146694
they are treated as errors.
Doing typo correction when these are just warnings slows down the
compilation of source which deliberately uses implicit function
declarations.
llvm-svn: 146153
bound to not have side effects(!). Add constant-folding support for expressions
of void type, to ensure that we can still fold ((void)0, 1) as an array bound.
llvm-svn: 146000
(sub)module, all of the names may be hidden, just the macro names may
be exposed (for example, after the preprocessor has seen the import of
the module but the parser has not), or all of the names may be
exposed. Importing a module makes its names, and the names in any of
its non-explicit submodules, visible to name lookup (transitively).
This commit only introduces the notion of name visible and marks
modules and submodules as visible when they are imported. The actual
name-hiding logic in the AST reader will follow (along with test cases).
llvm-svn: 145586
library, since modules cut across all of the libraries. Rename
serialization::Module to serialization::ModuleFile to side-step the
annoying naming conflict. Prune a bunch of ModuleMap.h includes that
are no longer needed (most files only needed the Module type).
llvm-svn: 145538
This supports single-element initializer lists for references according to DR1288, as well as creating temporaries and binding to them for other initializer lists.
llvm-svn: 145186
inside an objc container that "contains" other file-level declarations.
When getting the array of file-level declarations that overlap with a file region,
we failed to report that the region overlaps with an objc container, if
the container had other file-level declarations declared lexically inside it.
Fix this by marking such declarations as "isTopLevelDeclInObjCContainer" in the AST
and handling them appropriately.
llvm-svn: 145109
initializer; all other constexpr variables are merely required to be
initialized. In particular, a user-provided constexpr default constructor can be
used for such initialization.
llvm-svn: 144028
default", make a note of which is used when creating the
initial declaration. Previously, we would wait until later to handle
default/delete as a definition, but this is too late: when adding the
declaration, we already treated the declaration as "user-provided"
when in fact it was merely "user-declared".
Fixes PR10861 and PR10442, along with a bunch of FIXMEs.
llvm-svn: 144011
wrong class, make sure to drop it immediately; we don't want that
constructor to be available within the DeclContext. Fixes
<rdar://problem/9677163>.
llvm-svn: 143506
implicitly perform an lvalue-to-rvalue conversion if used on an lvalue
expression. Also improve the documentation of Expr::Evaluate* to indicate which
of them will accept expressions with side-effects.
llvm-svn: 143263
AST file more lazy, so that we don't eagerly load that information for
all known identifiers each time a new AST file is loaded. The eager
reloading made some sense in the context of precompiled headers, since
very few identifiers were defined before PCH load time. With modules,
however, a huge amount of code can get parsed before we see an
@import, so laziness becomes important here.
The approach taken to make this information lazy is fairly simple:
when we load a new AST file, we mark all of the existing identifiers
as being out-of-date. Whenever we want to access information that may
come from an AST (e.g., whether the identifier has a macro definition,
or what top-level declarations have that name), we check the
out-of-date bit and, if it's set, ask the AST reader to update the
IdentifierInfo from the AST files. The update is a merge, and we now
take care to merge declarations before/after imports with declarations
from multiple imports.
The results of this optimization are fairly dramatic. On a small
application that brings in 14 non-trivial modules, this takes modules
from being > 3x slower than a "perfect" PCH file down to 30% slower
for a full rebuild. A partial rebuild (where the PCH file or modules
can be re-used) is down to 7% slower. Making the PCH file just a
little imperfect (e.g., adding two smallish modules used by a bunch of
.m files that aren't in the PCH file) tips the scales in favor of the
modules approach, with 24% faster partial rebuilds.
This is just a first step; the lazy scheme could possibly be improved
by adding versioning, so we don't search into modules we already
searched. Moreover, we'll need similar lazy schemes for all of the
other lookup data structures, such as DeclContexts.
llvm-svn: 143100
be sure to consider all of the possible lookup results. We were
assert()'ing (but behaving correctly) for unresolved values. Fixes
PR11134 / <rdar://problem/10290422>.
llvm-svn: 142652
but trivially constructible and destructible variables in C++11 mode. Also
incidentally improve the precision of the wording for jump diagnostics in C++98
mode.
llvm-svn: 142619
shadows a template parameter. Complain about the shadowing (or not,
under -fms-extensions), but don't invalidate the declaration. Merely
forget about the template parameter declaration.
llvm-svn: 142596
The main motivation was to do typo correction in C++ "new" statements,
though picking it up in other places where type names are expected was
pretty much a freebie.
llvm-svn: 141621
- Remodel Expr::EvaluateAsInt to behave like the other EvaluateAs* functions,
and add Expr::EvaluateKnownConstInt to capture the current fold-or-assert
behaviour.
- Factor out evaluation of bitfield bit widths.
- Fix a few places which would evaluate an expression twice: once to determine
whether it is a constant expression, then again to get the value.
llvm-svn: 141561
which enables support for C99 storage-class specifiers.
This extension is intended to be used by implementations to implement
OpenCL C built-in functions.
llvm-svn: 141271
Instead of always storing all source locations for the selector identifiers
we check whether all the identifiers are in a "standard" position; "standard" position is
-Immediately before the arguments: -(id)first:(int)x second:(int)y;
-With a space between the arguments: -(id)first: (int)x second: (int)y;
-For nullary selectors, immediately before ';': -(void)release;
In such cases we infer the locations instead of storing them.
llvm-svn: 140989
part on patches by Peter Collingbourne.
We diverge from the C++11 standard in a few areas, mostly related to checking
constexpr function declarations, and not just definitions. See WG21 paper
N3308=11-0078 for details.
Function invocation substitution is not available in this patch; constexpr
functions cannot yet be used from within constant expressions.
llvm-svn: 140926
CoreFoundation object-transfer properties audited, and add a #pragma
to cause them to be automatically applied to functions in a particular
span of code. This has to be implemented largely in the preprocessor
because of the requirement that the region be entirely contained in
a single file; that's hard to impose from the parser without registering
for a ton of callbacks.
llvm-svn: 140846
We had an extension which allowed const static class members of floating-point type to have in-class initializers, 'as a C++0x extension'. However, C++0x does not allow this. The extension has been kept, and extended to all literal types in C++0x mode (with a fixit to add the 'constexpr' specifier).
llvm-svn: 140801
merging for overrides. One might want to make a method's availability
in a superclass different from that of its subclass. Fixes
<rdar://problem/10166223>.
llvm-svn: 140406
language options. Use that .def file to declare the LangOptions class
and initialize all of its members, eliminating a source of annoying
initialization bugs.
AST serialization changes are next up.
llvm-svn: 139605
builtin types (When requested). This is another step toward making
ASTUnit build the ASTContext as needed when loading an AST file,
rather than doing so after the fact. No actual functionality change (yet).
llvm-svn: 138985
synthesis. This new feature is currently placed under
-fobjc-default-synthesize-properties option
and is off by default pending further testing.
It will become the default feature soon.
// rdar://8843851
llvm-svn: 138913
loads the named module. The syntax itself is intentionally hideous and
will be replaced at some later point with something more
palatable. For now, we're focusing on the semantics:
- Module imports are handled first by the preprocessor (to get macro
definitions) and then the same tokens are also handled by the parser
(to get declarations). If both happen (as in normal compilation),
the second one is redundant, because we currently have no way to
hide macros or declarations when loading a module. Chris gets credit
for this mad-but-workable scheme.
- The Preprocessor now holds on to a reference to a module loader,
which is responsible for loading named modules. CompilerInstance is
the only important module loader: it now knows how to create and
wire up an AST reader on demand to actually perform the module load.
- We search for modules in the include path, using the module name
with the suffix ".pcm" (precompiled module) for the file name. This
is a temporary hack; we hope to improve the situation in the
future.
llvm-svn: 138679
For the test case added to function-redecl.cpp, we were previously complaining
about a mismatch in the parameter types, since the definition used the
typedef'd type.
llvm-svn: 138318
to modernity. Instead of passing down individual
context objects from parser to sema, establish decl
context in parser and have sema access current context
as needed. I still need to take of Doug's comment for
minor cleanups.
llvm-svn: 138040
Example:
template <class T>
class A {
public:
template <class U> void f(U p) { }
template <> void f(int p) { } // <== class scope specialization
};
This extension is necessary to parse MSVC standard C++ headers, MFC and ATL code.
BTW, with this feature in, clang can parse (-fsyntax-only) all the MSVC 2010 standard header files without any error.
llvm-svn: 137573
ASTContext with accessors/mutators. The only functional change is that
the AST writer won't bother writing the id/Class/SEL redefinition type
if it hasn't been explicitly set; previously, it ended up being
written as a synonym for the built-in id/Class/SEL.
llvm-svn: 137349
Having a function declaration and definition with different types for a
parameter where the types have same (textual) name can occur when an unqualified
type name resolves to types in different namespaces in each location.
The error messages have been extended by adding notes that point to the first
parameter of the function definition that doesn't match the declaration, instead
of a generic "member declaration nearly matches". The generic message is still
used in cases where the mismatch is not in the paramenter list, such as
mismatched cv qualifiers on the member function itself.
llvm-svn: 136891
integer, and initialise its TypeSourceInfo. The initialisation fixes a
crash when using pre-compiled preambles with C++ code-completion. From
Erik Verbruggen! Fixes PR10511.
llvm-svn: 136786
we could turn this into an on-disk hash table so we don't load the
whole thing the first time we need it. However, it tends to be very,
very small (i.e., empty) for most precompiled headers, so it isn't all
that interesting.
llvm-svn: 136352
methods, including indirectly overridden methods like those
declared in protocols and categories. There are mismatches
that we would like to diagnose but aren't yet, but this
is fine for now.
I looked at approaches that avoided doing this lookup
unless we needed it, but the infer-related-result-type
checks were doing it anyway, so I left it with the same
fast-path check for no previous declartions of that
selector.
llvm-svn: 135743
vector<int>
to
std::vector<int>
Patch by Kaelyn Uhrain, with minor tweaks + PCH support from me. Fixes
PR5776/<rdar://problem/8652971>.
Thanks Kaelyn!
llvm-svn: 134007
(or follow up) extern declaration with weak_import as
an actual definition. make clang follows this behavior.
// rdar://9538608
llvm-gcc treats an extern declaration with weak_import
llvm-svn: 133450
storage specifier is different from the storage specifier on the
template. If that storage specifier is the same, then we only warn.
Thanks to John for the prodding.
llvm-svn: 133236
Language-design credit goes to a lot of people, but I particularly want
to single out Blaine Garst and Patrick Beard for their contributions.
Compiler implementation credit goes to Argyrios, Doug, Fariborz, and myself,
in no particular order.
llvm-svn: 133103
struct {
typedef int A = 0;
};
According to the C++11 standard, this is not ill-formed, but does not have any ascribed meaning. We can't reasonably accept it, so treat it as ill-formed.
Also switch C++ from an incorrect 'fields can only be initialized in constructors' diagnostic for this case to C's 'illegal initializer (only variables can be initialized)'
llvm-svn: 132890
Related result types apply Cocoa conventions to the type of message
sends and property accesses to Objective-C methods that are known to
always return objects whose type is the same as the type of the
receiving class (or a subclass thereof), such as +alloc and
-init. This tightens up static type safety for Objective-C, so that we
now diagnose mistakes like this:
t.m:4:10: warning: incompatible pointer types initializing 'NSSet *'
with an
expression of type 'NSArray *' [-Wincompatible-pointer-types]
NSSet *array = [[NSArray alloc] init];
^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/System/Library/Frameworks/Foundation.framework/Headers/NSObject.h:72:1:
note:
instance method 'init' is assumed to return an instance of its
receiver
type ('NSArray *')
- (id)init;
^
It also means that we get decent type inference when writing code in
Objective-C++0x:
auto array = [[NSMutableArray alloc] initWithObjects:@"one", @"two",nil];
// ^ now infers NSMutableArray* rather than id
llvm-svn: 132868
- Removed fix-it hints from template instaniations since changes to the
templates are rarely helpful.
- Changed the caret in template instaniations from the class/struct name to the
class/struct keyword, matching the other warnings.
- Do not offer fix-it hints when multiple declarations disagree. Warnings are
still given.
- Once a definition is found, offer a fix-it hint to all previous declarations
with wrong tag.
- Declarations that disagree with a previous definition will get a fix-it hint
to change the declaration.
llvm-svn: 132831
specializing a member of an unspecialized template, and recover from
such errors without crashing. Fixes PR10024 / <rdar://problem/9509761>.
llvm-svn: 132677
class type (or array thereof), eliminating some redundant checks
(thanks Eli!) and adding some tests where the behavior differs in
C++98/03 vs. C++0x.
llvm-svn: 132218
makes it into a special member function. This is very bad and can lead
to all sorts of nastiness including implicit member functions violating
the One Definition Rule. This should probably be made ill-formed in a
later version of the standard, but for now we'll just warn.
llvm-svn: 132104
behind implicit moves. We now correctly identify move constructors and
assignment operators and update bits on the record correctly. Generation
of implicit moves (declarations or definitions) is not yet supported.
llvm-svn: 132080
type that turns one type into another. This is used as the basis to
implement __underlying_type properly - with TypeSourceInfo and proper
behavior in the face of templates.
llvm-svn: 132017
that the unevaluated subexpressions of &&, ||, and ? : are not
considered when determining whether the expression is a constant
expression. Also, turn the "used in its own initializer" warning into
a runtime-behavior warning, so that it doesn't fire when a variable is
used as part of an unevaluated subexpression of its own initializer.
Fixes PR9999.
llvm-svn: 131968
should use a constructor to default-initialize a
variable. InitializationSequence knows the rules for default
initialization, better. Fixes <rdar://problem/8501008>.
llvm-svn: 131796
Type::isUnsignedIntegerOrEnumerationType(), which are like
Type::isSignedIntegerType() and Type::isUnsignedIntegerType() but also
consider the underlying type of a C++0x scoped enumeration type.
Audited all callers to the existing functions, switching those that
need to also handle scoped enumeration types (e.g., those that deal
with constant values) over to the new functions. Fixes PR9923 /
<rdar://problem/9447851>.
llvm-svn: 131735
template<class U>
struct X1 {
template<class T> void f(T*);
template<> void f(int*) { }
};
Won't be so simple. I need to think more about it.
llvm-svn: 131362
They are actually grammatically considered definitions and parsed
accordingly.
This fixes the outstanding bugs regarding defaulting functions after
their declarations.
We now really nicely diagnose the following construct (try it!)
int foo() = delete, bar;
Still todo: Defaulted functions other than default constructors
Test cases (including for the above construct)
llvm-svn: 131228
I've edited one diagnostic which would print "copy constructor" for copy
constructors and "constructor" for any other constructor. If anyone is
extremely enamored with this, it can be reinstated with a simple boolean
flag rather than calling getSpecialMember, which is inappropriate.
llvm-svn: 131143
the semantic context referenced by the nested-name-specifier rather
than the syntactic form of the nested-name-specifier. The previous
incarnation was based on my complete misunderstanding of C++
[temp.expl.spec]. The latest C++0x working draft clarifies the
requirements here, and this rewrite is intended to follow that.
Along the way, improve source location information in the
diagnostics. For example, if we report that a specific type needs or
doesn't need a 'template<>' header, we dig out that type in the
nested-name-specifier and highlight its range.
Fixes: PR5907, PR9421, PR8277, PR8708, PR9482, PR9668, PR9877, and
<rdar://problem/9135379>.
llvm-svn: 131138
Focus is on default constructors for the time being. Currently the
exception specification and prototype are processed correctly. Codegen
might work but in all likelihood doesn't.
Note that due to an error, out-of-line defaulting of member functions is
currently impossible. It will continue to that until I muster up the
courage to admit that I secretly pray to epimetheus and that I need to
rework the way default gets from Parse -> Sema.
llvm-svn: 131115
- New isDefined() function checks for deletedness
- isThisDeclarationADefinition checks for deletedness
- New doesThisDeclarationHaveABody() does what
isThisDeclarationADefinition() used to do
- The IsDeleted bit is not propagated across redeclarations
- isDeleted() now checks the canoncial declaration
- New isDeletedAsWritten() does what it says on the tin.
- isUserProvided() now correct (thanks Richard!)
This fixes the bug that we weren't catching
void foo() = delete;
void foo() {}
as being a redefinition.
llvm-svn: 131013
Explictly defaultedness is correctly reflected on the AST, but there are
no changes to how that affects the definition of functions or much else
really.
llvm-svn: 130974
tag, filter out those ambiguous names that we found if they aren't
within the declaration context where this newly-defined tag will be
visible.
This is basically a hack, because we really need to fix the lookup of
tag declarations in this case to not find things it
shouldn't. However, it's better than what we had before, and it fixes
<rdar://problem/9168556>.
llvm-svn: 130810
parameters on the floor in certain cases:
class X {
template <typename T> friend typename A<T>::Foo;
};
This was parsed as a *non* template friend declaration some how, and
received an ExtWarn. Fixing the parser to actually provide the template
parameters to the freestanding declaration parse triggers the code which
specifically looks for such constructs and hard errors on them.
Along the way, this prevents us from trying to instantiate constructs
like the above inside of a outer template. This is important as loosing
the template parameters means we don't have a well formed declaration
and template instantiation will be unable to rebuild the AST. That fixes
a crash in the GCC test suite.
llvm-svn: 130772
parameter node and use this to correctly mangle parameter
references in function template signatures.
A follow-up patch will improve the storage usage of these
fields; here I've just done the lazy thing.
llvm-svn: 130669
in the classification of template names and using declarations. We now
properly typo-correct the leading identifiers in statements to types,
templates, values, etc. As an added bonus, this reduces the number of
lookups required for disambiguation.
llvm-svn: 130288
looking at the context and the correction and using a custom
diagnostic. Also, enable some Fix-It tests that were somewhat lamely
disabled.
llvm-svn: 130283
invalid expression rather than the far-more-generic "error". Fixes a
mild regression in error recovery uncovered by the GCC testsuite.
llvm-svn: 130128
performs name lookup for an identifier and resolves it to a
type/expression/template/etc. in the same step. This scheme is
intended to improve both performance (by reducing the number of
redundant name lookups for a given identifier token) and error
recovery (by giving Sema a chance to correct type names before the
parser has decided that the identifier isn't a type name). For
example, this allows us to properly typo-correct type names at the
beginning of a statement:
t.c:6:3: error: use of undeclared identifier 'integer'; did you mean
'Integer'?
integer *i = 0;
^~~~~~~
Integer
t.c:1:13: note: 'Integer' declared here
typedef int Integer;
^
Previously, we wouldn't give a Fix-It because the typo correction
occurred after the parser had checked whether "integer" was a type
name (via Sema::getTypeName(), which isn't allowed to typo-correct)
and therefore decided to parse "integer * i = 0" as an expression. By
typo-correcting earlier, we typo-correct to the type name Integer and
parse this as a declaration.
Moreover, in this context, we can also typo-correct identifiers to
keywords, e.g.,
t.c:7:3: error: use of undeclared identifier 'vid'; did you mean
'void'?
vid *p = i;
^~~
void
and recover appropriately.
Note that this is very much a work-in-progress. The new
Sema::ClassifyName is only used for expression-or-declaration
disambiguation in C at the statement level. The next steps will be to
make this work for the same disambiguation in C++ (where
functional-style casts make some trouble), then push it
further into the parser to eliminate more redundant name lookups.
Fixes <rdar://problem/7963833> for C and starts us down the path of
<rdar://problem/8172000>.
llvm-svn: 130082
cases that demonstrates exactly why this does indeed apply in 0x mode.
If isPOD is currently broken in 0x mode, we should fix that directly
rather than papering over it here.
llvm-svn: 130007
This fixes 1 error when parsing the MSVC 2008 header files.
Example:
template<class T> class A {
public:
typedef int TYPE;
};
template<class T> class B : public A<T> {
public:
A<T>::TYPE a; // no typename required because A<T> is a base class.
};
llvm-svn: 129425
This patch authored by Eric Niebler.
Many methods on the Sema class (e.g. ConvertPropertyForRValue) take Expr
pointers as in/out parameters (Expr *&). This is especially true for the
routines that apply implicit conversions to nodes in-place. This design is
workable only as long as those conversions cannot fail. If they are allowed
to fail, they need a way to report their failures. The typical way of doing
this in clang is to use an ExprResult, which has an extra bit to signal a
valid/invalid state. Returning ExprResult is de riguour elsewhere in the Sema
interface. We suggest changing the Expr *& parameters in the Sema interface
to ExprResult &. This increases interface consistency and maintainability.
This interface change is important for work supporting MS-style C++
properties. For reasons explained here
<http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-dev/2011-February/013180.html>,
seemingly trivial operations like rvalue/lvalue conversions that formerly
could not fail now can. (The reason is that given the semantics of the
feature, getter/setter method lookup cannot happen until the point of use, at
which point it may be found that the method does not exist, or it may have the
wrong type, or overload resolution may fail, or it may be inaccessible.)
llvm-svn: 129143
1) Change the CFG to include the DeclStmt for conditional variables, instead of using the condition itself as a faux DeclStmt.
2) Update ExprEngine (the static analyzer) to understand (1), so not to regress.
3) Update UninitializedValues.cpp to initialize all tracked variables to Uninitialized at the start of the function/method.
4) Only use the SelfReferenceChecker (SemaDecl.cpp) on global variables, leaving the dataflow analysis to handle other cases.
The combination of (1) and (3) allows the dataflow-based -Wuninitialized to find self-init problems when the initializer
contained control-flow.
llvm-svn: 128858