This change allow a CastExpr to have optional FPOptionsOverride object,
stored in trailing storage. Of all cast nodes only ImplicitCastExpr,
CStyleCastExpr, CXXFunctionalCastExpr and CXXStaticCastExpr are allowed
to have FPOptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85960
This is the initial part of the implementation of the C++20 likelihood
attributes. It handles the attributes in an if statement.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85091
Background:
-----------
There are two related argument types which can be sent into a diagnostic to
display the name of an entity: DeclarationName (ak_declarationname) or
NamedDecl* (ak_nameddecl) (there is also ak_identifierinfo for
IdentifierInfo*, but we are not concerned with it here).
A DeclarationName in a diagnostic will just be streamed to the output,
which will directly result in a call to DeclarationName::print.
A NamedDecl* in a diagnostic will also ultimately result in a call to
DeclarationName::print, but with two customisation points along the way:
The first customisation point is NamedDecl::getNameForDiagnostic which is
overloaded by FunctionDecl, ClassTemplateSpecializationDecl and
VarTemplateSpecializationDecl to print the template arguments, if any.
The second customisation point is NamedDecl::printName. By default it just
streams the stored DeclarationName into the output but it can be customised
to provide a user-friendly name for an entity. It is currently overloaded by
DecompositionDecl and MSGuidDecl.
What this patch does:
---------------------
For many diagnostics a DeclarationName is used instead of the NamedDecl*.
This bypasses the two customisation points mentioned above. This patches fix
this for diagnostics in Sema.cpp, SemaCast.cpp, SemaChecking.cpp, SemaDecl.cpp,
SemaDeclAttr.cpp, SemaDecl.cpp, SemaOverload.cpp and SemaStmt.cpp.
I have only modified diagnostics where I could construct a test-case which
demonstrates that the change is appropriate (either with this patch or the next
one).
Reviewed By: erichkeane, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84656
This warning was modified in 796ed03b84 to use the term "consteval"
for consteval functions. However the warning has never worked as
intended since the diagnostic's arguments are used in the wrong order.
This was unfortunately missed by 796ed03b84 since no test did exercise
this specific warning.
Additionally send the NamedDecl* into the diagnostic instead of just the
IdentifierInfo* to correctly work with special names and template
arguments.
Reliably mark the loop variable declaration in a range for as having an
invalid initializer if anything goes wrong building the initializer. We
previously based this determination on whether an error was emitted,
which is not a reliable signal due to error suppression (during error
recovery etc).
Also, properly mark the variable as having initializer errors rather
than simply marking it invalid. This is necessary to mark any structured
bindings as invalid too.
This generalizes the previous fix in
936ec89e91.
Summary:
With recovery-ast, we will get an undeduced `auto` return type for
"auto foo()->undef()" function declaration, the function decl still keeps
valid, it is dangerous, and breaks assumptions in clang, and leads crashes.
This patch invalidates these functions, if we deduce autos from the
return rexpression, which is similar to auto VarDecl.
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80221
the expression that is passed to it if it has a function type or array
type
lvalue-to-rvalue conversion should only be applied to non-function,
non-array types, but clang was applying the conversion to discarded
value expressions of array types.
rdar://problem/61203170
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78134
test cases
Add support for #pragma float_control
Reviewers: rjmccall, erichkeane, sepavloff
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72841
This reverts commit 85dc033cac, and makes
corrections to the test cases that failed on buildbots.
When passing a value of a struct/union type from secure to non-secure
state (that is returning from a CMSE entry function or passing an
argument to CMSE-non-secure call), there is a potential sensitive
information leak via the padding bits in the structure. It is not
possible in the general case to ensure those bits are cleared by using
Standard C/C++.
This patch makes the compiler emit code to clear such padding
bits. Since type information is lost in LLVM IR, the code generation
is done by Clang.
For each interesting record type, we build a bitmask, in which all the
bits, corresponding to user declared members, are set. Values of
record types are returned by coercing them to an integer. After the
coercion, the coerced value is masked (with bitwise AND) and then
returned by the function. In a similar manner, values of record types
are passed as arguments by coercing them to an array of integers, and
the coerced values themselves are masked.
For union types, we effectively clear only bits, which aren't part of
any member, since we don't know which is the currently active one.
The compiler will issue a warning, whenever a union is passed to
non-secure state.
Values of half-precision floating-point types are passed in the least
significant bits of a 32-bit register (GPR or FPR) with the most
significant bits unspecified. Since this is also a potential leak of
sensitive information, this patch also clears those unspecified bits.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76369
Summary:
This patch contains 2 separate changes:
1) the initializer of a variable should play no part in decl "invalid" bit;
2) preserve the invalid initializer via recovery exprs;
With 1), we will regress the diagnostics (one big regression is that we loose
the "selected 'begin' function with iterator type" diagnostic in for-range stmt;
but with 2) together, we don't have regressions (the new diagnostics seems to be
improved).
Reviewers: sammccall
Reviewed By: sammccall
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78116
This is the second part loosely extracted from D71179 and cleaned up.
This patch provides semantic analysis support for `omp begin/end declare
variant`, mostly as defined in OpenMP technical report 8 (TR8) [0].
The sema handling makes code generation obsolete as we generate "the
right" calls that can just be handled as usual. This handling also
applies to the existing, albeit problematic, `omp declare variant
support`. As a consequence a lot of unneeded code generation and
complexity is removed.
A major purpose of this patch is to provide proper `math.h`/`cmath`
support for OpenMP target offloading. See PR42061, PR42798, PR42799. The
current code was developed with this feature in mind, see [1].
The logic is as follows:
If we have seen a `#pragma omp begin declare variant match(<SELECTOR>)`
but not the corresponding `end declare variant`, and we find a function
definition we will:
1) Create a function declaration for the definition we were about to generate.
2) Create a function definition but with a mangled name (according to
`<SELECTOR>`).
3) Annotate the declaration with the `OMPDeclareVariantAttr`, the same
one used already for `omp declare variant`, using and the mangled
function definition as specialization for the context defined by
`<SELECTOR>`.
When a call is created we inspect it. If the target has an
`OMPDeclareVariantAttr` attribute we try to specialize the call. To this
end, all variants are checked, the best applicable one is picked and a
new call to the specialization is created. The new call is used instead
of the original one to the base function. To keep the AST printing and
tooling possible we utilize the PseudoObjectExpr. The original call is
the syntactic expression, the specialized call is the semantic
expression.
[0] https://www.openmp.org/wp-content/uploads/openmp-TR8.pdf
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/D61399#change-496lQkg0mhRN
Reviewers: kiranchandramohan, ABataev, RaviNarayanaswamy, gtbercea, grokos, sdmitriev, JonChesterfield, hfinkel, fghanim, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: bollu, guansong, openmp-commits, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75779
Summary:
After we parse the switch condition, we don't do the type check for
type-dependent expr (e.g. TypoExpr) (in Sema::CheckSwitchCondition), then the
TypoExpr is corrected to an invalid-type expr (in Sema::MakeFullExpr) and passed
to the ActOnStartOfSwitchStmt, which triggers the assertion.
Fix https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/311
Reviewers: sammccall
Subscribers: ilya-biryukov, kadircet, usaxena95, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76592
Summary:
The messages for two of the warnings are misleading:
* warn_for_range_const_reference_copy suggests that the initialization
of the loop variable results in a copy. But that's not always true,
we just know that some conversion happens, potentially invoking a
constructor or conversion operator. The constructor might copy, as in
the example that lead to this message [1], but it might also not.
However, the constructed object is bound to a reference, which is
potentially misleading, so we rewrite the message to emphasize that.
We also make sure that we print the reference type into the warning
message to clarify that this warning only appears when operator*
returns a reference.
* warn_for_range_variable_always_copy suggests that a reference type
loop variable initialized from a temporary "is always a copy". But
we don't know this, the range might just return temporary objects
which aren't copies of anything. (Assuming RVO a copy constructor
might never have been called.)
The message for warn_for_range_copy is a bit repetitive: the type of a
VarDecl and its initialization Expr are the same up to cv-qualifiers,
because Sema will insert implicit casts or constructor calls to make
them match.
[1] https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32823
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, Mordante, rtrieu
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75613
When Wrange-loop-analysis issues a diagnostic on a dependent type in a
template the diagnostic may not be valid for all instantiations. Therefore
the diagnostic is suppressed during the instantiation. Non dependent types
still issue a diagnostic.
The same can happen when using macros. Therefore the diagnostic is
disabled for macros.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44556
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73007
No longer generate a diagnostic when a small trivially copyable type is
used without a reference. Before the test looked for a POD type and had no
size restriction. Since the range-based for loop is only available in
C++11 and POD types are trivially copyable in C++11 it's not required to
test for a POD type.
Since copying a large object will be expensive its size has been
restricted. 64 bytes is a common size of a cache line and if the object is
aligned the copy will be cheap. No performance impact testing has been
done.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72212
The Wrange-loop-analyses warns if a copy is made. Suppress this warning when
a temporary is bound to a rvalue reference.
While fixing this issue also found a copy-paste error in test6, which is also
fixed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71806
While here, wordsmith the error a bit. Now clang says:
error: filter expression has non-integral type 'Foo'
Fixes PR43779
Reviewers: amccarth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69969
The static analyzer is warning about potential null dereferences, but we should be able to use castAs<> directly and if not assert will fire for us.
llvm-svn: 373824
Summary:
- Even though only `void` is still accepted as the deduced return type,
enabling deduction/instantiation on the return type allows more
consistent coding.
Reviewers: tra, jlebar
Subscribers: cfe-commits, yaxunl
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68031
llvm-svn: 372898
This is groundwork for C++20's P0784R7, where non-trivial destructors
can be constexpr, so we need ExprWithCleanups markers in constant
expressions.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 372359
For `map`, the following restriction changed in OpenMP 5.0:
* OpenMP 4.5 [2.15.5.1, Restrictions]: "A list item cannot appear in
both a map clause and a data-sharing attribute clause on the same
construct.
* OpenMP 5.0 [2.19.7.1, Restrictions]: "A list item cannot appear in
both a map clause and a data-sharing attribute clause on the same
construct unless the construct is a combined construct."
This patch removes this restriction in the case of combined constructs
and OpenMP 5.0, and it updates Sema not to capture a scalar by copy in
the target region when `firstprivate` and `map` appear for that scalar
on a combined target construct.
This patch also adds a fixme to a test that now reveals that a
diagnostic about loop iteration variables is dropped in the case of
OpenMP 5.0. That bug exists regardless of this patch's changes.
Reviewed By: ABataev, jdoerfert, hfinkel, kkwli0
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65835
llvm-svn: 369619
As passed in the Cologne meeting and treated by Core as a DR,
[[nodiscard]] was applied to constructors so that they can be diagnosed
in cases where the user forgets a variable name for a type.
The intent is to enable the library to start using this on the
constructors of scope_guard/lock_guard.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64914
llvm-svn: 367027
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
and returned to the context in which 'this' should be captured.
This means we now always mark 'this' referenced from the context in
which it's actually referenced, rather than potentially from some
context nested within that.
llvm-svn: 362182
the captured region scope.
This removes a case where we would build expressions (and mark
declarations odr-used) in the wrong scope.
Remove the now-unused 'capture initializer' field on sema::Capture
(except for 'this' captures, which still need to be cleaned up).
No functionality change intended (except that we now very slightly more
precisely determine whether we need to use a capture or not when another
captured region encloses an OpenMP captured region).
llvm-svn: 362179
capturing expression or statement.
No functionality change yet. The intent is that we will also delay
building the initialization expression until the enclosing context, so
that:
a) we build the initialization expression in the right context, and
b) we can elide captures that are not odr-used, as suggested by P0588R1.
This also consolidates some duplicated code building capture fields into
a single place.
llvm-svn: 361893
Summary:
e.g.
auto foo() {
return no_such_thing; // Return value is a TypoExpr
}
using T = decltype(foo()); // Uh-oh, undeduced auto.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61649
llvm-svn: 360224
Because diagnostics and their notes are not connected at the API level,
if the error message for an overload is emitted, then the overload
candidates are completed - if a diagnostic is emitted during that work,
the notes related to overload candidates would be attached to the latter
diagnostic, not the original error. Sort of worse, if the latter
diagnostic was disabled, the notes are disabled.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61357
llvm-svn: 359854
If an address_space attribute is defined in a macro, print the macro instead
when diagnosing a warning or error for incompatible pointers with different
address_spaces.
We allow this for all attributes (not just address_space), and for multiple
attributes declared in the same macro.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51329
llvm-svn: 359826
Adapted targetDiag for the CUDA and used for the delayed diagnostics in
asm constructs. Works for both host and device compilation sides.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58463
llvm-svn: 354671
Summary:
Adapted targetDiag for the CUDA and used for the delayed diagnostics in
asm constructs. Works for both host and device compilation sides.
Reviewers: tra, jlebar
Subscribers: jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58463
llvm-svn: 354593
expression is a discarded-value expression.
Summary:
We used to get this wrong in three ways:
1) During parsing, an expression-statement followed by the }) ending a
statement expression was always treated as producing the value of the
statement expression. That's wrong for ({ if (1) expr; })
2) During template instantiation, various kinds of statement (most
statements not appearing directly in a compound-statement) were not
treated as discarded-value expressions, resulting in missing volatile
loads (etc).
3) In all contexts, an expression-statement with attributes was not
treated as producing the value of the statement expression, eg
({ [[attr]] expr; }).
Also fix incorrect enforcement of OpenMP rule that directives can "only
be placed in the program at a position where ignoring or deleting the
directive would result in a program with correct syntax". In particular,
a label (be it goto, case, or default) should not affect whether
directives are permitted.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, rjmccall
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57984
llvm-svn: 354090
Fixed diagnostic emission for the exceptions support in case of the
compilation of OpenMP code for the devices. From now on, it uses delayed
diagnostics mechanism, previously used for CUDA only. It allow to
diagnose not allowed used of exceptions only in functions that are going
to be codegen'ed.
llvm-svn: 353542
It is important to delay the emission of the diagnostic messages for the
functions unless it is proved that the function is going to be used on
the device side. It is required to support compilation with some of the
target-specific system headers.
llvm-svn: 353540
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
Rather than sprinkle calls to DiagnoseUnusedExprResult() around in places where we want diagnostics, we now diagnose unused expression statements and full expressions in a more generic way when acting on the final expression statement. This results in more appropriate diagnostics for [[nodiscard]] where we were previously lacking them, such as when the body of a for loop is not a compound statement.
This patch fixes PR39837.
llvm-svn: 350404
When a function returns a type and that type was declared [[nodiscard]], we diagnose any unused results from that call as though the function were marked nodiscard. The same behavior should apply to calls through a function pointer.
This addresses PR31526.
llvm-svn: 350317
It seems the two failing tests can be simply fixed after r348037
Fix 3 cases in Analysis/builtin-functions.cpp
Delete the bad CodeGen/builtin-constant-p.c for now
llvm-svn: 348053
Kept the "indirect_builtin_constant_p" test case in test/SemaCXX/constant-expression-cxx1y.cpp
while we are investigating why the following snippet fails:
extern char extern_var;
struct { int a; } a = {__builtin_constant_p(extern_var)};
llvm-svn: 348039
This was reverted in r347656 due to me thinking it caused a miscompile of
Chromium. Turns out it was the Chromium code that was broken.
llvm-svn: 347756
This caused a miscompile in Chrome (see crbug.com/908372) that's
illustrated by this small reduction:
static bool f(int *a, int *b) {
return !__builtin_constant_p(b - a) || (!(b - a));
}
int arr[] = {1,2,3};
bool g() {
return f(arr, arr + 3);
}
$ clang -O2 -S -emit-llvm a.cc -o -
g() should return true, but after r347417 it became false for some reason.
This also reverts the follow-up commits.
r347417:
> Re-Reinstate 347294 with a fix for the failures.
>
> Don't try to emit a scalar expression for a non-scalar argument to
> __builtin_constant_p().
>
> Third time's a charm!
r347446:
> The result of is.constant() is unsigned.
r347480:
> A __builtin_constant_p() returns 0 with a function type.
r347512:
> isEvaluatable() implies a constant context.
>
> Assume that we're in a constant context if we're asking if the expression can
> be compiled into a constant initializer. This fixes the issue where a
> __builtin_constant_p() in a compound literal was diagnosed as not being
> constant, even though it's always possible to convert the builtin into a
> constant.
r347531:
> A "constexpr" is evaluated in a constant context. Make sure this is reflected
> if a __builtin_constant_p() is a part of a constexpr.
llvm-svn: 347656
A ConstantExpr class represents a full expression that's in a context where a
constant expression is required. This class reflects the path the evaluator
took to reach the expression rather than the syntactic context in which the
expression occurs.
In the future, the class will be expanded to cache the result of the evaluated
expression so that it's not needlessly re-evaluated
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53475
llvm-svn: 345692
Only store the NRVO candidate if needed in ReturnStmt.
A good chuck of all of the ReturnStmt have no NRVO candidate
(more than half when parsing all of Boost). For all of them
this saves one pointer. This has no impact on children().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53716
Reviewed By: rsmith
llvm-svn: 345605
Don't store the data for the condition variable if not needed.
This cuts the size of WhileStmt by up to a pointer.
The order of the children is kept the same.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53715
Reviewed By: rjmccall
llvm-svn: 345597
Don't store the data for the init statement and condition variable
if not needed. This cuts the size of SwitchStmt by up to 2 pointers.
The order of the children is intentionally kept the same.
Also use the newly available space in the bit-fields of Stmt
to store the bit representing whether all enums have been covered
instead of using a PointerIntPair.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53714
Reviewed By: rjmccall
llvm-svn: 345510
Don't store the data for case statements of the form LHS ... RHS if not
needed. This cuts the size of CaseStmt by 1 pointer + 1 SourceLocation in
the common case.
Also use the newly available space in the bit-fields of Stmt to store the
keyword location of SwitchCase and move the small accessor
SwitchCase::getSubStmt to the header.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53609
Reviewed By: rjmccall
llvm-svn: 345472
Only store the needed data in IfStmt. This cuts the size of IfStmt
by up to 3 pointers + 1 SourceLocation. The order of the children
is intentionally kept the same even though it would be more
convenient to put the optional trailing objects last. Additionally
use the newly available space in the bit-fields of Stmt to store
the location of the "if".
The result of this is that for the common case of an
if statement of the form:
if (some_cond)
some_statement
the size of IfStmt is brought down to 8 bytes + 2 pointers,
instead of 8 bytes + 5 pointers + 2 SourceLocation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53607
Reviewed By: rjmccall
llvm-svn: 345464
There is a small difference in the scope flags for C89 versus the other C/C++
dialects. This change ensures that the -Wcomma warning won't be duplicated or
issued in the wrong location. Also, the test case is refactored into C and C++
parts, with the C++ parts guarded by a #ifdef to allow the test to run in both
modes.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32370
llvm-svn: 345228
For now, disable the "variable in loop condition not modified" warning to not
be emitted when there is a structured binding variable in the loop condition.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39285
llvm-svn: 344828
for loop if both members exist.
This resolves a DR whereby an errant 'begin' or 'end' member in a base
class could result in a derived class not being usable as a range with
non-member 'begin' and 'end'.
llvm-svn: 342925
Check each case value in turn while parsing it, performing the
conversion to the switch type within the context of the expression
itself. This will become necessary in order to properly handle cleanups
for temporaries created as part of the case label (in an upcoming
patch). For now it's just good hygiene.
This necessitates moving the checking for the switch condition itself to
earlier, so that the destination type is available when checking the
case labels.
As a nice side-effect, we get slightly improved diagnostic quality and
error recovery by separating the case expression checking from the case
statement checking and from tracking whether there are discarded case
labels.
llvm-svn: 338056
Basically, "AttributeList" loses all list-like mechanisms, ParsedAttributes is
switched to use a TinyPtrVector (and a ParsedAttributesView is created to
have a non-allocating attributes list). DeclaratorChunk gets the later kind,
Declarator/DeclSpec keep ParsedAttributes.
Iterators are added to the ParsedAttribute types so that for-loops work.
llvm-svn: 336945
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
enabled for the host.
If the compilation for the host enables C++ exceptions, but they are not
supported by the device, we still need to allow the code with the
exception handling constructs outside of the target regions.
llvm-svn: 331372
Summary:
This patch adds two new diagnostics, which are off by default:
**-Wreturn-std-move**
This diagnostic is enabled by `-Wreturn-std-move`, `-Wmove`, or `-Wall`.
Diagnose cases of `return x` or `throw x`, where `x` is the name of a local variable or parameter, in which a copy operation is performed when a move operation would have been available. The user probably expected a move, but they're not getting a move, perhaps because the type of "x" is different from the return type of the function.
A place where this comes up in the wild is `stdext::inplace_function<Sig, N>` which implements conversion via a conversion operator rather than a converting constructor; see https://github.com/WG21-SG14/SG14/issues/125#issue-297201412
Another place where this has come up in the wild, but where the fix ended up being different, was
try { ... } catch (ExceptionType ex) {
throw ex;
}
where the appropriate fix in that case was to replace `throw ex;` with `throw;`, and incidentally to catch by reference instead of by value. (But one could contrive a scenario where the slicing was intentional, in which case throw-by-move would have been the appropriate fix after all.)
Another example (intentional slicing to a base class) is dissected in https://github.com/accuBayArea/Slides/blob/master/slides/2018-03-07.pdf
**-Wreturn-std-move-in-c++11**
This diagnostic is enabled only by the exact spelling `-Wreturn-std-move-in-c++11`.
Diagnose cases of "return x;" or "throw x;" which in this version of Clang *do* produce moves, but which prior to Clang 3.9 / GCC 5.1 produced copies instead. This is useful in codebases which care about portability to those older compilers.
The name "-in-c++11" is not technically correct; what caused the version-to-version change in behavior here was actually CWG 1579, not C++14. I think it's likely that codebases that need portability to GCC 4.9-and-earlier may understand "C++11" as a colloquialism for "older compilers." The wording of this diagnostic is based on feedback from @rsmith.
**Discussion**
Notice that this patch is kind of a negative-space version of Richard Trieu's `-Wpessimizing-move`. That diagnostic warns about cases of `return std::move(x)` that should be `return x` for speed. These diagnostics warn about cases of `return x` that should be `return std::move(x)` for speed. (The two diagnostics' bailiwicks do not overlap: we don't have to worry about a `return` statement flipping between the two states indefinitely.)
I propose to write a paper for San Diego that would relax the implicit-move rules so that in C++2a the user //would// see the moves they expect, and the diagnostic could be re-worded in a later version of Clang to suggest explicit `std::move` only "in C++17 and earlier." But in the meantime (and/or forever if that proposal is not well received), this diagnostic will be useful to detect accidental copy operations.
Reviewers: rtrieu, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: lebedev.ri, Rakete1111, rsmith, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43322
Patch by Arthur O'Dwyer.
llvm-svn: 329914
Found via codespell -q 3 -I ../clang-whitelist.txt
Where whitelist consists of:
archtype
cas
classs
checkk
compres
definit
frome
iff
inteval
ith
lod
methode
nd
optin
ot
pres
statics
te
thru
Patch by luzpaz! (This is a subset of D44188 that applies cleanly with a few
files that have dubious fixes reverted.)
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44188
llvm-svn: 329399
This commit generalizes NRVO to cover C structs (both trivial and
non-trivial structs).
rdar://problem/33599681
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44968
llvm-svn: 328809