A couple of missing "RequireNonAbstractType" calls in conditional operator
handling. I looked for opportunities to tie this check in to all relevant
callers of PerformCopyInitialization (couldn't be all callers since this is
called for base subobject copying too, where it's acceptable to copy abstract
types) but the callers varied too much & in many cases had substantial code
or conditionals on the RequireNonAbstractType call, the
PerformCopyInitialization call, or the code between the two calls.
llvm-svn: 163555
analysis that may give false positives because it is confused by aliasing, and
a less precise analysis that has fewer false positives, but may have false
negatives. The more precise warnings are enabled by -Wthread-safety-precise.
An additional note clarify the warnings in the precise case.
llvm-svn: 163537
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
unexpanded parameter pack is a pack expansion. Thus, as with a non-type template
parameter which is a pack expansion, it needs to be expanded early into a fixed
list of template parameters.
Since the expanded list of template parameters is not itself a parameter pack,
it is permitted to appear before the end of the template parameter list, so also
remove that restriction (for both template template parameter pack expansions and
non-type template parameter pack expansions).
llvm-svn: 163369
These types are defined differently on 32-bit and 64-bit platforms, and
trying to offer a fixit for one platform would only mess up the format
string for the other. The Apple-recommended solution is to cast to a type
that is known to be large enough and always use that to print the value.
This should only have an impact on compile time if the format string is
incorrect; in cases where the format string matches the definition on the
current platform, no warning will be emitted.
<rdar://problem/9135072&12164284>
llvm-svn: 163266
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
(__builtin_* etc.) so that it isn't possible to take their address.
Specifically, introduce a new type to represent a reference to a builtin
function, and a new cast kind to convert it to a function pointer in the
operand of a call. Fixes PR13195.
llvm-svn: 162962
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
__objc_yes/__objc_no to (BOOL)1/(BOOL)0 when
BOOL is declared; otherwise it resorts to
default of 'signed char'. This is important to
selecting the correct Numeric API numberWithBool:
Can't have a clang test for this. Will checkin and
executable llvm test. // rdar://12156616
llvm-svn: 162922
Summary:
Summary: Keep history of macro definitions and #undefs with corresponding source locations, so that we can later find out all macros active in a specified source location. We don't save the history in PCH (no need currently). Memory overhead is about sizeof(void*)*3*<number of macro definitions and #undefs>+<in-memory size of all #undef'd macros>
I've run a test on a file composed of 109 .h files from boost 1.49 on x86-64 linux.
Stats before this patch:
*** Preprocessor Stats:
73222 directives found:
19171 #define.
4345 #undef.
#include/#include_next/#import:
5233 source files entered.
27 max include stack depth
19210 #if/#ifndef/#ifdef.
2384 #else/#elif.
6891 #endif.
408 #pragma.
14466 #if/#ifndef#ifdef regions skipped
80023/451669/1270 obj/fn/builtin macros expanded, 85724 on the fast path.
127145 token paste (##) operations performed, 11008 on the fast path.
Preprocessor Memory: 5874615B total
BumpPtr: 4399104
Macro Expanded Tokens: 417768
Predefines Buffer: 8135
Macros: 1048576
#pragma push_macro Info: 0
Poison Reasons: 1024
Comment Handlers: 8
Stats with this patch:
...
Preprocessor Memory: 7541687B total
BumpPtr: 6066176
Macro Expanded Tokens: 417768
Predefines Buffer: 8135
Macros: 1048576
#pragma push_macro Info: 0
Poison Reasons: 1024
Comment Handlers: 8
In my test increase in memory usage is about 1.7Mb, which is ~28% of initial preprocessor's memory usage and about 0.8% of clang's total VMM allocation.
As for CPU overhead, it should only be noticeable when iterating over all macros, and should mostly consist of couple extra dereferences and one comparison per macro + skipping of #undef'd macros. It's less trivial to measure, though, as the preprocessor consumes a very small fraction of compilation time.
Reviewers: doug.gregor, klimek, rsmith, djasper
Reviewed By: doug.gregor
CC: cfe-commits, chandlerc
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D28
llvm-svn: 162810
and when used in property type declaration, is handled as type
attribute. Do not issue the warning when declaraing the property.
// rdar://12173491
llvm-svn: 162801
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
This warns in two specific situations:
1) For potentially swapped function arguments, e.g.
void foo(bool, float);
foo(1.7, false);
2) Misplaced brackets around function call arguments, e.g.
bool InRange = fabs(a - b < delta);
Where the last argument in a function call is implicitly converted
from bool to float, and the function returns a float which gets
implicitly converted to bool.
Patch by Andreas Eckleder!
llvm-svn: 162763
make sure we walk up the DC chain for the current context,
rather than allowing ourselves to get switched over to the
canonical DC chain. Fixes PR13642.
llvm-svn: 162616
CodeGen option to a LangOpt option. In turn, hoist the guard into the parser
so that we avoid the new (and fairly unstable) Sema/AST/CodeGen logic. This
should restore the behavior of clang to that prior to r158325.
<rdar://problem/12163681>
llvm-svn: 162602
Add a new static function, buildMSAsmPieces, that will break these strings down
into mnemonic and operands. Upon a match failure, the idea is to use the
ErrorInfo from MatchInstructionImpl to inspect the mnemonic/operand and
decide a course of action. Unfortunately, there's no easy way to test this at
the moment.
llvm-svn: 162321
class extensions a little. clang now allows readonly property
with no ownership rule (assign, unsafe_unretained, weak, retain,
strong, or copy) with a readwrite property with an ownership rule.
// rdar://12103400
llvm-svn: 162319
diagnostics for bad deployment targets and adding a few
more predicates. Includes a patch by Jonathan Schleifer
to enable ARC for ObjFW.
llvm-svn: 162252
The old error message stating that 'begin' was an undeclared identifier
is replaced with a new message explaining that the error is in the range
expression, along with which of the begin() and end() functions was
problematic if relevant.
Additionally, if the range was a pointer type or defines operator*,
attempt to dereference the range, and offer a FixIt if the modified range
works.
llvm-svn: 162248
First, when synthesizing an explicitly strong/retain/copy property
of Class type, don't pretend during compatibility checking that the
property is actually assign. Instead, resolve incompatibilities
by secretly changing the type of *implicitly* __unsafe_unretained
Class ivars to be strong. This is moderately evil but better than
what we were doing.
Second, when synthesizing the setter for a strong property of
non-retainable type, be sure to use objc_setProperty. This is
possible when the property is decorated with the NSObject
attribute. This is an ugly, ugly corner of the language, and
we probably ought to deprecate it.
The first is rdar://problem/12039404; the second was noticed by
inspection while fixing the first.
llvm-svn: 162244
Also, suggest 'readonly' even if the property has been given an ownership
attribute ('strong', 'weak', etc). This is used when properties are declared
readonly in the public interface but readwrite in a class extension.
<rdar://problem/11500004&11932285>
llvm-svn: 162220
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
elaborated type specifier in template instantiation: such a specifier is always
valid because it must be specified within the definition of the type.
llvm-svn: 162068
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
These require special handling, which we don't currently handle. This is being
put in place to ensure we don't do invalid symbol table lookups or try to parse
invalid assembly. The test cases just makes sure the latter isn't happening.
llvm-svn: 162050
variables, function or label references. The former is a potential clobber.
The latter is either an input or an output. Unfortunately, it's difficult to
test this patch at the moment, but the added test case will eventually do so.
llvm-svn: 162026
and remove ASTContext reference (which was frequently bound to a dereferenced
null pointer) from the recursive lump of printPretty functions. In so doing,
fix (at least) one case where we intended to use the 'dump' mode, but that
failed because a null ASTContext reference had been passed in.
llvm-svn: 162011
statement. For example,
if (x)
__asm out dx, ax __asm out dx, ax
results in a single inline asm statement (i.e., both "out dx, ax" statements are
predicated on if(x)).
llvm-svn: 161986
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
tablegen code, found by -fcatch-undefined-behavior. I would appreciate if
someone more familiar with the NEON code could point me in the direction of how
to write a test for this. We appear to have essentially no test coverage
whatsoever for these builtins.
llvm-svn: 161827
The AsmParser expects a single asm instruction, but valid ms-style inline asm
statements may contain multiple instructions.
This happens with asm blocks
__asm {
mov ebx, eax
mov ecx, ebx
}
or when multiple asm statements are adjacent to one another
__asm mov ebx, eax
__asm mov ecx, ebx
and
__asm mov ebx, eax __asm mov ecx, ebx
Currently, asm blocks are not properly handled.
llvm-svn: 161780
Not only look for the comment near the declaration itself, but also walk the
redeclaration chain: the previous declaration might have had a documentation
comment.
llvm-svn: 161722
things going on here that were problematic:
- We were missing the actual access check, or rather, it was suppressed
on account of being a redeclaration lookup.
- The access check would naturally happen during delay, which isn't
appropriate in this case.
- We weren't actually emitting dependent diagnostics associated with
class templates, which was unfortunate.
- Access was being propagated incorrectly for friend method declarations
that couldn't be matched at parse-time.
llvm-svn: 161652
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
asm statements are those that don't reference variable names, function names,
and labels.
Add logic to generate a patched AsmString that will eventually be consumed by
the AsmParser. No functional change at this point, so unfortunately no test
case.
llvm-svn: 161508
This is effectively a warning for code that violates core issue 903 & thus will
become standard error in the future, hopefully. It catches strange null
pointers such as: '\0', 1 - 1, const int null = 0; etc...
There's currently a flaw in this warning (& the warning for 'false' as a null
pointer literal as well) where it doesn't trigger on comparisons (ptr == '\0'
for example). Fix to come in a future patch.
Also, due to this only being a warning, not an error, it triggers quite
frequently on gtest code which tests expressions for null-pointer-ness in a
SFINAE context (so it wouldn't be a problem if this was an error as in an
actual implementation of core issue 903). To workaround this for now, the
diagnostic does not fire in unevaluated contexts.
Review by Sean Silva and Richard Smith.
llvm-svn: 161501
A conditional operator between glvalues of types cv1 T and cv2 T produces a
glvalue if the expressions are of the same value kind and one of cv1 and cv2
is a subset of the other.
A conditional operator between two null pointer constants is permitted if one
of them is of type std::nullptr_t.
llvm-svn: 161476
and the other is a glvalue of class type, don't forget to copy-initialize a
temporary when performing the lvalue-to-rvalue conversion on the glvalue.
Strangely, DefaultLvalueConversions misses this part of the lvalue-to-rvalue
conversions.
llvm-svn: 161450
for side-effects. Instead, check for side-effects after performing
initialization. Doing so also removes some strange corner cases and differences
between in-class initialization and constructor initialization.
llvm-svn: 161449
This is useful for example for %n in printf, which expects
a pointer to int with the same logic for checking as %d
would have in scanf.
llvm-svn: 161407
The one caller that's surrounded by nearby code manipulating the underlying
evaluation context list is left unmodified for readability.
Review by Sean Silva and Richard Smith.
llvm-svn: 161355
in duplicate -Wuninitialized warnings. Change so that only the check in
TryConstructorInitialization() will be used and a single warning be emitted.
llvm-svn: 161345
we know whether the function is virtual. But check it as soon as we do know;
in some cases we don't need to wait for an instantiation.
llvm-svn: 161316
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
on object pointers and whether pointer arithmetic on object pointers
is supported. Make ObjFW interpret subscripts as pseudo-objects.
Based on a patch by Jonathan Schleifer.
llvm-svn: 161028
type and then propagated to the function. This was failing for destructors,
constructors and constructors templates since they don't have a return type.
Fix that by directly calling processTypeAttrs on the dummy type we use as the
return type in these cases.
llvm-svn: 161020
sure to update the exception specification on the declaration as well as the
definition. If we're building in -fno-exceptions mode, nothing else will
trigger it to be updated.
llvm-svn: 161008
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
type of generated call to super dealloc is 'void'
and asserts if user's dealloc is not of 'void type.
This rule must be enforced in clang front-end (with a
fixit) if this is not the case, instead of asserting in CodeGen.
// rdar://11987838
llvm-svn: 160993
While '%n' can be used for evil in an attacker-controlled format string, there
isn't any acute danger in using it in a literal format string with an argument
of the appropriate type.
llvm-svn: 160984
expressions to have complete return types (or accessible destructors). If the
return type is required to be complete for some other reason (for instance, if
it is needed by overload resolution), then it will still be required to be
complete. This is apparently required in order to parse a MSVC11 header.
llvm-svn: 160924
Also, fix a subtle bug, which occurred due to lookupPrivateMethod
defined in DeclObjC.h not looking up the method inside parent's
categories.
Note, the code assumes that Class's parent object has the same methods
as what's in the Root class of a the hierarchy, which is a heuristic
that might not hold for hierarchies which do not descend from NSObject.
Would be great to fix this in the future.
llvm-svn: 160885
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
Rather than adding a ContainsUnexpandedParameterPack bit to essentially every
AST node, we tunnel the bit directly up to the surrounding lambda expression
when we reach a context where an unexpanded pack can not normally appear.
Thus any statement or declaration within a lambda can now potentially contain
an unexpanded parameter pack.
llvm-svn: 160705
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
variables that have static storage duration, it removes debug info on the
emitted initializer function but not all debug info about this variable.
llvm-svn: 160659
Make handler functions for thread safety attributes consistent with other attributes handler functions
by removing the bool parameter from some of the thread safety attributes handler functions and extracting
common checks out of different handler functions.
llvm-svn: 160635
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
change once it's been assigned. It can change in two ways:
1) In a template instantiation, the context declaration should be the
instantiated declaration, not the declaration in the template.
2) If a lambda appears in the pattern of a variadic pack expansion, the
mangling number will depend on the pack length.
llvm-svn: 160614
While we still want to consider this a hard error (non-POD variadic args are
normally a DefaultError warning), delaying the diagnostic allows us to give
better error messages, which also match the usual non-POD errors more closely.
In addition, this change improves the diagnostic messages for format string
argument type mismatches by passing down the type of the callee, so we can
say "variadic method" or "variadic function" appropriately.
<rdar://problem/11825593>
llvm-svn: 160517
Previously, we would ask for the SourceLocation of an argument even if
it were NULL (i.e. if Sema resulted in an ExprError trying to build it).
<rdar://problem/11890818>
llvm-svn: 160515
Panzer. I've not been able to trigger a failure caused by this, so no test yet.
Also included is a small change from Paul Robinson to only consider the
FailureKind if the overload candidate did actually fail.
llvm-svn: 160470
be defined as deleted, take cv-qualifiers on class members into account when
looking up the copy or move constructor or assignment operator which will be
used for them.
llvm-svn: 160418
and a function template instantiation, if there's a parameter pack in the
declaration and one at the same place in the instantiation, don't assume that
the pack wasn't expanded -- it may have expanded to nothing. Instead, go ahead
and check whether the parameter pack was expandable. We can do this as a
side-effect of the work we'd need to do anyway, to find how many parameters
were produced.
llvm-svn: 160416
[temp.deduct.call]p4 under Objective-C++ ARC, make sure to adjust the
qualifiers to introduce the implicit strong lifetime when
needed. Fixes <rdar://problem/11825671>.
llvm-svn: 160412
Checks against nil often appear as guards in macros, and comparing
Objective-C literals to nil has well-defined behavior (if tautological).
On OS X, 'nil' has not been typed as 'id' since 10.6 (possibly earlier),
so the warning was already not firing, but other runtimes continue to use
((id)0) or some variant. This change accepts comparisons to any null pointer;
to keep it simple, it looks through all casts (not just casts to 'id').
PR13276
llvm-svn: 160379
Suggested by Ted, since string literal comparison is at least slightly more
sensible than comparison of runtime literals. (Ambiguous language on
developer.apple.com implies that strings are guaranteed to be uniqued within
a translation unit and possibly across a linked binary.)
llvm-svn: 160378
Recovering as if the user had actually called -isEqual: is a bit too far from
the semantics of the program as written, /even though/ it's probably what they
intended.
llvm-svn: 160377
* Treat compound assignment as a use, at Jordy's request.
* Always add compound assignments into the CFG, so we can correctly diagnose the use in 'return x += 1;'
llvm-svn: 160334
as an array of its base class TemplateArgument. Switch the const
TemplateArgument* parameters of InstantiatingTemplate's constructors to
ArrayRef<TemplateArgument> to prevent this from happening again in the future.
llvm-svn: 160245
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
Chris pointed out that while the comparison is certainly problematic
and does not have well-defined behavior, it isn't any worse than some
of the other abuses that we merely warn about and doesn't need to make
the compilation fail.
Revert the release notes change (r159766) now that this is just a new warning.
llvm-svn: 159939
* When substituting a reference to a non-type template parameter pack where the
corresponding argument is a pack expansion, transform into an expression
which contains an unexpanded parameter pack rather than into an expression
which contains a pack expansion. This causes the SubstNonTypeTemplateParmExpr
to be inside the PackExpansionExpr, rather than outside, so the expression
still looks like a pack expansion and can be deduced.
* Teach MarkUsedTemplateParameters that we can deduce a reference to a template
parameter if it's wrapped in a SubstNonTypeTemplateParmExpr (such nodes are
added during alias template substitution).
llvm-svn: 159922
expression, skip over any SubstNonTypeTemplateParmExprs which alias templates
may have inserted before checking for a DeclRefExpr referring to a non-type
template parameter declaration.
llvm-svn: 159909
-ftemplate-depth limit. There are various ways to get an infinite (or merely
huge) stack of substitutions with no intervening instantiations. This is also
consistent with gcc's behavior.
llvm-svn: 159907
which will appear in the vtable as used, not just those ones which were
declared within the class itself. Fixes an issue reported as comment#3 in
PR12763 -- we sometimes assert in codegen if we try to emit a reference to a
function declaration which we've not marked as referenced. This also matches
gcc's observed behavior.
llvm-svn: 159895
very simple semantic analysis that just builds the AST; minor changes for lexer
to pick up source locations I didn't think about before.
Comments AST is modelled along the ideas of HTML AST: block and inline content.
* Block content is a paragraph or a command that has a paragraph as an argument
or verbatim command.
* Inline content is placed within some block. Inline content includes plain
text, inline commands and HTML as tag soup.
llvm-svn: 159790
actually perform value initialization rather than trying to fake it with a call
to the default constructor. Fixes various bugs related to the previously-missing
zero-initialization in this case.
I've also moved this and the other list initialization 'special case' from
TryConstructorInitialization into TryListInitialization where they belong.
llvm-svn: 159733
This required moving the ctors for IntegerLiteral and FloatingLiteral out of
line which shouldn't change anything as they are usually called through Create
methods that are already out of line.
ASTContext::Deallocate has been a nop for a long time, drop it from ASTVector
and make it independent from ASTContext.h
Pass the StorageAllocator directly to AccessedEntity so it doesn't need to
have a definition of ASTContext around.
llvm-svn: 159718
initializer.
I really feel like Clang should warn about this, but I can't describe
a good reason. GCC will warn on this in some cases under
-Wsequence-point, but it actually seems like a false positive for that
warning....
llvm-svn: 159631
c-functions declared in implementation should have their
parsing delayed until the end so, they can access forward
declared private methods. // rdar://10387088
llvm-svn: 159626
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
template instantiation. I wasn't able to reproduce this down to
anything small enough to put in our test suite, but it's "obviously"
okay to set the invalid bit earlier and precludes a
known-broken-but-not-marked-broken class from being used elsewhere.
llvm-svn: 159584
attached to a declaration in the completion string.
Since extracting comments isn't free, a new code completion option is
introduced.
A new code completion option that enables including brief comments
into CodeCompletionString should be a, err, code completion option.
But because ASTUnit caches global declarations during parsing before
even completion consumer is created, the option is duplicated as a
translation unit option (in both libclang and ASTUnit, like the option
to cache code completion results).
llvm-svn: 159539
This behaves like the existing GNU __alignof and C++11 alignof keywords;
most of the patch is simply adding the third token spelling to various places.
llvm-svn: 159494
type traits that assignment to/construction of a lifetime-qualified
object under ARC is *not* trivial. Fixes <rdar://problem/11738725>.
llvm-svn: 159401
to see if we had an underlying final class or method, but we would then
use the cast type to do the call, resulting in a direct call to the wrong
method.
llvm-svn: 159212
This works around a quirk in the way that explicit template specializations are
handled in Clang. We generate an implicit declaration from the original
template which the explicit specialization is considered to redeclare. This
trips up the explicit delete logic.
This change only works around that strange representation. At some point it'd
be nice to remove those extra declarations to make the AST more accurately
reflect the C++ semantics.
Review by Doug Gregor.
llvm-svn: 159167
resulted in it being reverted. A test for that bug was added in r158950.
Original comment:
If an object (such as a std::string) with an appropriate c_str() member function
is passed to a variadic function in a position where a format string indicates
that c_str()'s return type is desired, provide a note suggesting that the user
may have intended to call the c_str() member.
Factor the non-POD-vararg checking out of DefaultVariadicArgumentPromotion and
move it to SemaChecking in order to facilitate this. Factor the call checking
out of function call checking and block call checking, and extend it to cover
constructor calls too.
Patch by Sam Panzer!
llvm-svn: 159159
This adds support for the tls_model attribute. This allows the user to
choose a TLS model that is better than what LLVM would select by
default. For example, a variable might be declared as:
__thread int x __attribute__((tls_model("initial-exec")));
if it will not be used in a shared library that is dlopen'ed.
This depends on LLVM r159077.
llvm-svn: 159078
Heavily based on a patch from
Aaron Wishnick <aaron.s.wishnick@gmail.com>.
I'll clean up the duplicated function in CodeGen as
a follow-up, later today or tomorrow.
llvm-svn: 159060
* 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
Revert "If an object (such as a std::string) with an appropriate c_str() member function"
This reverts commit 7d96f6106bfbd85b1af06f34fdbf2834aad0e47e.
llvm-svn: 158949
This now correctly covers, I believe, all the pointer types:
* 'any' pointers (both function and data normal pointers and ObjC object pointers)
* member pointers (both function and data)
* block pointers
llvm-svn: 158931
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++.) This leads to
odd warnings when returning enum constants directly in blocks with inferred
return types. The easiest way out of this is to pretend that, like C++, enum
constants have enum type when being returned from a block.
<rdar://problem/11662489>
llvm-svn: 158899
Also, don't warn if the used function is __attribute__((const)), in which case
it's not supposed to use global variables anyway.
The inline-in-inline thing is a heuristic, and one that's possibly incorrect
fairly often because the function being inlined could definitely use global
variables. However, even some C standard library functions are written using
other (trivial) static-inline functions in the headers, and we definitely don't
want to be warning on that (or on anything that /uses/ these trivial inline
functions). So we're using "inlined" as a marker for "fairly trivial".
(Note that __attribute__((pure)) does /not/ guarantee safety like ((const),
because ((const)) does not guarantee that global variables are not being used,
and the warning is about globals not being shared across TUs.)
llvm-svn: 158898
express library-level dependencies within Clang.
This is no more verbose really, and plays nicer with the rest of the
CMake facilities. It should also have no change in functionality.
llvm-svn: 158888
is passed to a variadic function in a position where a format string indicates
that c_str()'s return type is desired, provide a note suggesting that the user
may have intended to call the c_str() member.
Factor the non-POD-vararg checking out of DefaultVariadicArgumentPromotion and
move it to SemaChecking in order to facilitate this. Factor the call checking
out of function call checking and block call checking, and extend it to cover
constructor calls too.
Patch by Sam Panzer!
llvm-svn: 158887
"write" attribute (copy/retain/etc.). But, property declaration in
primary class and protcols are tentative as they may be overridden
into a 'readwrite' property in class extensions. Postpone diagnosing
such warnings until the class implementation is seen.
// rdar://11656982
llvm-svn: 158869
in microsoft mode. Fixes PR12701.
The code for this was already in 2 of the 3 branches of a
conditional and missing in the 3rd branch, so lift it above
the conditional.
llvm-svn: 158842
It's very easy for anonymous external linkage to propagate in C++ through
return types and parameter types. Likewise, it's possible that a template
containing an inline function is only used with parameters that have internal
linkage. Actually diagnosing where the internal linkage comes from is fairly
difficult (both to locate and then to print nicely). Finally, since we only
have one translation unit available, we can't even prove that any of this
violates the ODR.
This warning needs better-defined behavior in C++ before it can really go in.
Rewording of the C warning (which /is/ specified by C99) coming shortly.
llvm-svn: 158836
error was asserting on anything that included Windows.h. MS-style inline asm is
still dropped, but at least now we're not completely silent about it.
llvm-svn: 158833
That commit added a new library just to hold the RawCommentList. I've
started a discussion on the commit thread about whether that is really
meritted -- it certainly doesn't seem necessary at this stage.
However, the immediate problem is that the AST library has a hard
dependency on the Comment library, but the dependencies were set up
completely backward. In addition to the layering violation, this had an
unfortunate effect if scattering the Comments library dependency
throughout the build system, but inconsistently so -- several parts of
the CMake dependencies were missing and only showed up due to transitive
deps or the fact that the target wasn't being built by tho bots.
It turns out that the Comments library can't (currently) be a well
formed layer *below* the AST library either, as it has an API that
accepts an ASTContext. That parameter is currently unused, so maybe that
was a mistake?
Anyways, it really seems like this is logically part of the AST --
that's the whole point of the ASTContext providing access to it as far
as I can tell -- so I've merged it into the AST library to solve the
immediate layering violation problems and remove some of the churn from
our library dependencies.
llvm-svn: 158807
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
* Retain comments in the AST
* Serialize/deserialize comments
* Find comments attached to a certain Decl
* Expose raw comment text and SourceRange via libclang
llvm-svn: 158771
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
name as an existing ivar since this is common source of error
when people remove @synthesize to take advantage of autosynthesis.
// rdar://11671080
llvm-svn: 158756
The original r158700 caused crashes in the gcc test suite,
g++.abi/vtable3a.C among others. It also caused failures in the libc++
test suite.
llvm-svn: 158749
Note that this is mostly a structural patch that handles the change from the old
spelling style to the new one. One consequence of this is that all AT_foo_bar
enum values have changed to not be based off of the first spelling, but rather
off of the class name, so they are now AT_FooBar and the like (a straw poll on
IRC showed support for this). Apologies for code churn.
Most attributes have GNU spellings as a temporary solution until everything else
is sorted out (such as a Keyword spelling, which I intend to add if someone else
doesn't beat me to it). This is definitely a WIP.
I've also killed BaseCheckAttr since it was unused, and I had to go through
every attribute anyway.
llvm-svn: 158700
because it expects a reference and receives a non-l-value.
For example, given:
int foo(int &);
template<int x> void b() { foo(x); }
clang will now print "expects an l-value for 1st argument" instead of
"no known conversion from 'int' to 'int &' for 1st argument". The change
in wording (and associated code to detect the case) was prompted by
comment #5 in PR3104, and should be the last bit of work needed for the
bug.
llvm-svn: 158691
Per post-commit review, it's not appropriate to use ExtWarn in C++, because
we can't prove that the inline function will actually be defined in more than
one place (and thus we can't prove that this violates the ODR).
This removes the warning entirely from uses in the main source file in C++.
llvm-svn: 158689
This includes treating anonymous namespaces like internal linkage, and allowing
const variables to be used even if internal. The whole thing's been broken out
into a separate function to avoid nested ifs.
llvm-svn: 158683
This handles the very common case of people writing inline functions in their
main source files and not tagging them as inline. These cases should still
behave as the user intended. (The diagnostic is still emitted as an extension.)
I'm reworking this code anyway to account for C++'s equivalent restriction in
[basic.def.odr]p6, but this should get some bots back to green.
llvm-svn: 158666
Now, as long as the 'Namespaces' variable is correct inside Attr.td, the
generated code will correctly admit a C++11 attribute only when it has the
appropriate namespace(s).
llvm-svn: 158661
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
* Escaped "::" and "<" as needed in Doxygen comments;
* Marked up code examples with \code...\endcode;
* Documented a \param that is current, instead of a few that aren't;
* Fixed up some \file and \brief comments.
llvm-svn: 158562
Specifically, @[] and @{} didn't have a type associated with them; we now
use "NSArray *" and "NSDictionary *", respectively. @"" has the type
"NSString *". @(), unfortunately, has type "id", since it (currently) may
be either an NSNumber or an NSString.
Add a test for all the Objective-C at-expression completions.
<rdar://problem/11507708&11507668&11507711>
llvm-svn: 158533
This is explicitly forbidden in C99 6.7.4p3. This is /not/ forbidden in C++,
probably because by default file-scope const/constexpr variables have internal
linkage, while functions have external linkage. There's also the issue of
anonymous namespaces to consider. Nevertheless, there should probably be a
similar warning, since the semantics of inlining a function that references
a variable with internal linkage do not seem well-defined.
<rdar://problem/11577619>
llvm-svn: 158531
* Removed \param comments for parameters that no longer exist;
* Fixed a "\para" typo to "\param";
* Escaped @, # and \ symbols as needed in Doxygen comments;
* Added use of \brief to output short summaries.
llvm-svn: 158498
* Escape #, < and @ symbols where Doxygen would try to interpret them;
* Fix several function param documentation where names had got out of sync;
* Delete param documentation referring to parameters that no longer exist.
llvm-svn: 158472
OBJC_AT_KEYWORD_NAME take a string literal argument where previously
its second argument was an unquoted token; macro invocations such as
OBJC_AT_KEYWORD_NAME(NeedAt,{) confuse Doxygen's parser.
While I'm wary of changing code (rather than just comments) to work
around Doxygen's limitations, in this case the change makes the code
more readable for human beings as well, and the macro derived no
benefit from using the preprocessor's stringification operator, as
it never has need of the unquoted token.
I've also included a couple of trivial drive-by fixes to doc comments.
llvm-svn: 158440
We need an efficient mechanism to determine whether a defaulted default
constructor is constexpr, in order to determine whether a class is a literal
type, so keep the incrementally-built form on CXXRecordDecl. Remove the
on-demand computation of same, so that we only have one method for determining
whether a default constructor is constexpr. This doesn't affect correctness,
since default constructor lookup is much simpler than selecting a constructor
for copying or moving.
We don't need a corresponding mechanism for defaulted copy or move constructors,
since they can't affect whether a type is a literal type. Conversely, checking
whether such functions are constexpr can require non-trivial effort, so we defer
such checks until the copy or move constructor is required.
Thus we now only compute whether a copy or move constructor is constexpr on
demand, and only compute whether a default constructor is constexpr in advance.
This is unfortunate, but seems like the best solution.
llvm-svn: 158290
an explicitly-defaulted default constructor would be constexpr. This is
necessary in weird (but well-formed) cases where a class has more than one copy
or move constructor.
Cleanup of now-unused parts of CXXRecordDecl to follow.
llvm-svn: 158289
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
Objective-C literals conceptually always create new objects, but may be
optimized by the compiler or runtime (constant folding, singletons, etc).
Comparing addresses of these objects is relying on this optimization
behavior, which is really an implementation detail.
In the case of == and !=, offer a fixit to a call to -isEqual:, if the
method is available. This fixit is directly on the error so that it is
automatically applied.
Most of the time, this is really a newbie mistake, hence the fixit.
llvm-svn: 158230
AST: For auto-synthesized ivars give them the location of the related
property (previously they had no source location). This allows them
to be indexed by libclang.
libclang: Make sure synthesized ivars are indexed before the methods that
may reference them.
Fixes rdar://11607001.
llvm-svn: 158189
The integral APSInt value is now stored in a decomposed form and the backing
store for large values is allocated via the ASTContext. This way its not
leaked as TemplateArguments are never destructed when they are allocated in
the ASTContext. Since the integral data is immutable it is now shared between
instances, making copying TemplateArguments a trivial operation.
Currently getting the integral data out of a TemplateArgument requires creating
a new APSInt object. This is cheap when the value is small but can be expensive
if it's not. If this turns out to be an issue a more efficient accessor could
be added.
llvm-svn: 158150
Before, the note showed the location where you could insert __bridge variants,
but the actual fixit edit came after the cast.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 158131
This was a problem for people who write 'return(result);'
Also fix ARCMT's corresponding code, though there's no test case for this
because implicit casts like this are rejected by the migrator for being
ambiguous, and explicit casts have no problem.
<rdar://problem/11577346>
llvm-svn: 158130
are otherwise too short to try to correct.
The TODOs added to two of the tests are for existing deficiencies in the
typo correction code that could be exposed by using longer identifiers.
llvm-svn: 158109
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
Within the guts of CheckFormatHandler, the IsObjCLiteral flag was being used in
two ways: to see if null bytes were allowed, and to see if the '%@' specifier
is allowed.* The former usage has been changed to an explicit test and the
latter pushed down to CheckPrintfHandler and renamed ObjCContext, since it
applies to CFStrings as well.
* This also changes how wide chars are interpreted; in OS X Foundation, the
wide character type is 'unichar', a typedef for short, rather than wchar_t.
llvm-svn: 157968
temporary or an array subobject of a class temporary, and the resulting value
is used to initialize a pointer which outlives the temporary. Such a pointer
is always left dangling after the initialization completes and the array's
lifetime ends.
In order to detect this situation, this change also adds an
LValueClassification of LV_ArrayTemporary for temporaries of array type which
aren't subobjects of class temporaries. These occur in C++11 T{...} and GNU C++
(T){...} expressions, when T is an array type. Previously we treated the former
as a generic prvalue and the latter as a class temporary.
llvm-svn: 157955
involving 'restrict', place restrict on the pointer type rather than
on the pointee type. Also make sure that we gather restrict from the
pointer type. Fixes PR12854 and the major part of PR11093.
llvm-svn: 157910
Before:
test.cc:2:18: note: place parentheses around the == expression to silence this warning
if (0 == flags & 0xdd)
^
( )
Now:
test.cc:2:18: note: place parentheses around the == expression to silence this warning
if (0 == flags & 0xdd)
^
( )
llvm-svn: 157897
but different nested name specifiers to quietly clobber each other so
only one remains if they do not refer to the same NamedDecl. Fixes
PR12951.
llvm-svn: 157823
the confusion among all of the uses of Best* in relation to the set of
possible typo correction results. Also add a method to return the set of
typo corrections that have the single best edit distance--it returns the
second half of the first pair in TypoEditDistanceMap (with
getBestEditDistance already returning the first half).
llvm-svn: 157781
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
getter result type is safe but does not match with property
type resulting in spurious warning followed by crash in
IRGen. // rdar://11515196
llvm-svn: 157641
This comes up in the begin/end calls of a range-for (see the included test
case). Other suggestions are welcome, though this seems to do the trick without
regressing anything.
llvm-svn: 157553
-Wsometimes-uninitialized diagnostics to make it clearer that the cause
of the issue may be a condition which must always evaluate to true or
false, rather than an uninitialized variable.
To emphasize this, add a new note with a fixit which removes the
impossible condition or replaces it with a constant.
Also, downgrade the diagnostic from -Wsometimes-uninitialized to
-Wconditional-uninitialized when it applies to a range-based for loop,
since the condition is not written explicitly in the code in that case.
llvm-svn: 157511
-Wsometimes-uninitialized. This detects cases where an explicitly-written branch
inevitably leads to an uninitialized variable use (so either the branch is dead
code or there is an uninitialized use bug).
This chunk of warnings tentatively lives within -Wuninitialized, in order to
give it more visibility to existing Clang users.
llvm-svn: 157458
Where diagnostic about unfound property is not
issued in the context where a setter is looked up
in situation in which name and property name differ
in their first letter case. // rdar://11363363
llvm-svn: 157407
volatile reference to a temporary is not viable. My interpretation is that
DR1152 was a bugfix, not a rule change for C++11, so this is not conditional on
the language mode. This matches g++'s behavior.
llvm-svn: 157370
start with a cv-qualifier. DeclaratorDecl::getTypeSpecStartLoc() does not
produce the location of the first type-specifier (the cv-qualifier) in this
case, because we don't track source locations for cv-qualifiers.
No test here: I've not found a way to test this with a lit-style test, and
introducing a gtest test for this seems unwarranted. Suggestions welcome!
Patch by Daniel Jasper!
llvm-svn: 157311
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
about argument type mismatch.
This gives a nicer diagnostic in cases like
printf(fmt,
i);
where previously the snippet just pointed at 'fmt' (with a note at the
definition of fmt).
It's a wash for cases like
printf("%f",
i);
where previously we snippeted the offending portion of the format string,
but didn't indicate which argument was at fault.
llvm-svn: 156968
lambda as referring to a local in an enclosing scope if we're in the
enclosing scope of the lambda (not it's function call operator). Also,
turn the test into an IR generation test, since that's where the
crashes occurred. Really fixes PR12746 / <rdar://problem/11465120>.
llvm-svn: 156926
This improves the conversion diagnostics (by correctly pointing to the loop
construct for conversions that may've been caused by the contextual conversion
to bool caused by a condition expression) and also causes the NULL conversion
warnings to be correctly suppressed when crossing a macro boundary in such a
context. (previously, since the conversion context location was incorrect, the
suppression could not be performed)
Reported by Nico Weber as feedback to r156826.
llvm-svn: 156901
This fixes the included test case & was reported by Nico Weber.
It's a little bit nasty using the difference in the conversion context, but
seems to me like a not unreasonable solution. I did have to fix up the
conversion context for conditional operators (it seems correct to me to include
the context for which we're actually doing the comparison - across all the
nested conditionals, rather than the innermost conditional which might not
actually have the problematic implicit conversion at all) and template default
arguments (this is a bit of a hack, since we don't have the source location of
the '=' anymore, so I just used the start of the parameter - open to
suggestions there)
llvm-svn: 156861
Previously we would reject it as illegal using a value of
enum type and on ObjC++ it was illegal to use an enumerator
as well.
rdar://11454917
llvm-svn: 156843
Moves the bool bail-out down a little in SemaChecking - so now
-Wnull-conversion and -Wliteral-conversion can fire when the target type is
bool.
Also improve the wording/details in the -Wliteral-conversion warning to match
the -Wconstant-conversion.
llvm-svn: 156826
* Don't copy the visibility attribute during instantiations. We have to be able
to distinguish
struct HIDDEN foo {};
template<class T>
DEFAULT void bar() {}
template DEFAULT void bar<foo>();
from
struct HIDDEN foo {};
template<class T>
DEFAULT void bar() {}
template void bar<foo>();
* If an instantiation has an attribute, it takes precedence over an attribute
in the template.
* With instantiation attributes handled with the above logic, we can now
select the minimum visibility when looking at template arguments.
llvm-svn: 156821
into one. These were all performing almost identical checks, with different bugs
in each of them.
This fixes PR12806 (we weren't setting the exception specification for an
explicitly-defaulted, non-user-provided default constructor) and enforces
8.4.2/2's rule that an in-class defaulted member must exactly match the implicit
parameter type.
llvm-svn: 156802
Currently cold functions are marked with the "optsize" attribute in CodeGen
so they are always optimized for size. The hot attribute is just ignored,
LLVM doesn't have a way to express hotness at the moment.
llvm-svn: 156723
Once we've found a "good" method, we don't need to check its argument types
again. (Even if we might have later found a "bad" method, we were already
caching the method we first looked up.)
llvm-svn: 156719
__attribute__((aligned)). Fixes <rdar://problem/11435441>, a
regression I introduced in r156003. This is the narrow fix; a more
comprehensive fix is coming.
llvm-svn: 156657
// 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
in ObjCMethodDecl to indicate whether the method does not override any other method,
which is the majority of cases.
That way we can avoid unnecessary work doing lookups, especially when PCH is involved.
rdar://11360082
llvm-svn: 156476
candidate template ignored: substitution failed [with T = int]: no type named 'type' in 'std::enable_if<false, void>'
Instead, just say:
candidate template ignored: disabled by 'enable_if' [with T = int]
... and point at the enable_if condition which (we assume) failed.
This is applied to all cases where the user writes 'typename enable_if<...>::type' (optionally prefixed with a nested name specifier), and 'enable_if<...>' names a complete class type which does not have a member named 'type', and this results in a candidate function being ignored in a SFINAE context. Thus it catches 'std::enable_if', 'std::__1::enable_if', 'boost::enable_if' and 'llvm::enable_if'.
llvm-svn: 156463
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
@throw expression; l2r conversion can introduce new cleanups
in certain cases, like when the expression is an ObjC property
reference of retainable type in ARC.
llvm-svn: 156425
match gcc behavior for two conflicting visibilities in the same decl. It also
makes handling of dllimport/dllexport more natural.
As a bonus we now warn on the dllimport in
void __attribute__((dllimport)) foo13();
void __attribute__((dllexport)) foo13();
as does gcc.
llvm-svn: 156343
overload candidate, and include its message in any subsequent 'candidate not
viable due to substitution failure' note we may produce.
To keep the note small (since the 'overload resolution failed' diagnostics are
often already very verbose), the text of the SFINAE diagnostic is included as
part of the text of the note, and any notes which were attached to it are
discarded.
There happened to be spare space in OverloadCandidate into which a
PartialDiagnosticAt could be squeezed, and this patch goes to lengths to avoid
unnecessary PartialDiagnostic copies, resulting in no slowdown that I could
measure. (Removal in passing of some PartialDiagnostic copies has resulted in a
slightly smaller clang binary overall.) Even on a torture test, I was unable to
measure a memory increase of above 0.2%.
llvm-svn: 156297
so that we actually accumulate all the delayed diagnostics. Do
this so that we can restore those diagnostics to good standing
if it turns out that we were wrong to suppress, e.g. if the
tag specifier is actually an elaborated type specifier and not
a declaration.
llvm-svn: 156291
in-class initializer for one of its fields. Value-initialization of such
a type should use the in-class initializer!
The former was just a bug, the latter is a (reported) standard defect.
llvm-svn: 156274
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
to get a const char* if necessary.
This avoids unnecessary conversions when we want to use the result of getName as
a StringRef.
Part of rdar://10796159
llvm-svn: 156227
Sema::ConvertToIntegralOrEnumerationType() from PartialDiagnostics to
abstract "diagnoser" classes. Not much of a win here, but we're
-several PartialDiagnostics.
llvm-svn: 156217
getTypeSourceInfo() without checking for NULL.
FieldDecls may have NULL TypeSourceInfo, and in
fact some FieldDecls generated by Clang -- and
all FieldDecls generated by LLDB -- have no
TypeSourceInfo.
This patch makes IsTailPaddedMemberArray check
for NULL.
llvm-svn: 156186
off PartialDiagnostic. PartialDiagnostic is rather heavyweight for
something that is in the critical path and is rarely used. So, switch
over to an abstract-class-based callback mechanism that delays most of
the work until a diagnostic is actually produced. Good for ~11k code
size reduction in the compiler and 1% speedup in -fsyntax-only on the
code in <rdar://problem/11004361>.
llvm-svn: 156176
Teach ASTContext about WIntType, and have it taken from TargetInfo like WCharType. Should fix test/Sema/format-strings.c for ARM, with the exception of one subtest which will fail if wint_t and wchar_t are the same size and wint_t is signed, wchar_t is unsigned.
There'll be a followup commit to fix that.
Reviewed by Chandler and Hans at http://llvm.org/reviews/r/8
llvm-svn: 156165
performing the search for overridden methods. We very rarely see the
same container twice, and in those rare cases we still have the
fallback of the second SmallPtrSet to eliminate duplicates. Good for
~1.5% -fsyntax-only speedup on the code in <rdar://problem/11004361>.
llvm-svn: 156103
Some of the NSAssert macros in OS X 10.7 are implemented in a way that
adds extra arguments that trigger the -Wformat-extra-args warning.
Earlier versions of clang failed to detect those -Wformat issues, but now
that clang is reporting those problems, we need to quiet them since there's
nothing to be done to fix them. <rdar://problem/11317765>
I don't know how to write a testcase for this. Suggestions welcome.
Patch by Ted Kremenek!
llvm-svn: 156092
cases in switch statements. Also add a [[clang::fallthrough]] attribute, which
can be used to suppress the warning in the case of intentional fallthrough.
Patch by Alexander Kornienko!
The handling of C++11 attribute namespaces in this patch is temporary, and will
be replaced with a cleaner mechanism in a subsequent patch.
llvm-svn: 156086
#define TEST int y; int x = y;
void foo() {
TEST
}
-Wuninitialized gives this warning:
invalid-loc.cc:4:3: warning: variable 'y' is uninitialized when used here
[-Wuninitialized]
TEST
^~~~
invalid-loc.cc:2:29: note: expanded from macro 'TEST'
#define TEST int y; int x = y;
^
note: initialize the variable 'y' to silence this warning
1 warning generated.
The second note lacks filename, line number, and code snippet. This change
will remove the fixit and only point to variable declaration.
invalid-loc.cc:4:3: warning: variable 'y' is uninitialized when used here
[-Wuninitialized]
TEST
^~~~
invalid-loc.cc:2:29: note: expanded from macro 'TEST'
#define TEST int y; int x = y;
^
invalid-loc.cc:4:3: note: variable 'y' is declared here
TEST
^
invalid-loc.cc:2:14: note: expanded from macro 'TEST'
#define TEST int y; int x = y;
^
1 warning generated.
llvm-svn: 156045
refactorings in that revision, and some of the subsequent bugfixes, which
seem to be relevant even without delayed exception specification parsing.
llvm-svn: 156031
TableGen-generated StringMatcher, for a 1.2% speedup in -fparse-only
time in <rdar://problem/11004361>. Thanks to Benjamin for pointing me
at StringMatcher!
llvm-svn: 156003
folding its one check into the normal path for checking overridden
Objective-C methods. Good for another 3.6% speedup on the test case in
<rdar://problem/11004361>.
llvm-svn: 155961
declared in a subclass has consistent parameter types with a method
having the same selector in a superclass performs a significant number
of lookups into the class hierarchy. In the example in
<rdar://problem/11004361>, we spend 4.7% of -fsyntax-only time in
these lookups.
Optimize away most of the calls to this routine
(Sema::CompareMethodParamsInBaseAndSuper) by first checking whether we
have ever seen *any* method with that selector (using the global
selector table). Since most selectors are unique, we can avoid the
cost of this name lookup in many cases, for a 3.3% speedup.
llvm-svn: 155958
BuildObjCNumericLiteral() and BuildObjCBoxedExpr() now both using
PerformCopyInitialization() rather than PerformImplicitConversion(),
which suppresses errors.
In BuildObjCBoxedExpr(): no longer calling .getCanonicalType(),
ValueType->getAs() will remove the minimal amount of sugar.
Using ValueType->isBuiltinType() instead of isa<BuiltinType>(ValueType).
llvm-svn: 155949
[basic.lookup.classref]p1 and p4, which concerns name lookup for
nested-name-specifiers and template names, respectively, in a member
access expression. C++98/03 forces us to look both in the scope of the
object and in the current scope, then compare the results. C++11 just
takes the result from the scope of the object, if something is
found. Fixes <rdar://problem/11328502>.
llvm-svn: 155935
I broke this in r155838 by not actually instantiating non-dependent default arg
expressions. The motivation for that change was to avoid producing duplicate
conversion warnings for such default args (we produce them once when we parse
the template - there's no need to produce them at each instantiation) but
without actually instantiating the default arg, things break in weird ways.
Technically, I think we could still get the right diagnostic experience without
the bugs if we instantiated the non-dependent args (for non-dependent params
only) immediately, rather than lazily. But I'm not sure if such a refactoring/
change would be desirable so here's the conservative fix for now.
llvm-svn: 155893
Similar to r155808 - this mistake has been made in a few iterators.
Based on Chandler Carruth's feedback to r155808 I added an implicit conversion
to Decl* to ease adoption/usage. Useful for the pointer comparison, but not the
dyn_cast (due to template argument deduction causing the conversion not to be
used) - there for future convenience, though. This idiom (op T* for iterators)
seems to be fairly idiomatic within the LLVM codebase & I'll likely add it as I
fix up the other iterators here.
llvm-svn: 155869
being used in an exception specification in a way which isn't otherwise
ill-formed in C++98: this warning also incorrectly triggered on uses of 'this'
inside thread-safety attributes, and the mechanism required to tell these cases
apart is more complex than can be justified by the (minimal) value of this part
of -Wc++98-compat.
llvm-svn: 155857
of a local variable, make sure we don't infinitely recurse when the
reference binds to itself.
e.g:
int* func() {
int& i = i; // assign non-exist variable to a reference which has same name.
return &i; // return pointer
}
rdar://11345441
llvm-svn: 155856
Apparently we weren't checking default arguments when they were instantiated.
This adds the check, fixes the lack of instantiation caching (which seems like
it was mostly implemented but just missed the last step), and avoids
implementing non-dependent default args (for non-dependent parameter types) as
uninstantiated default arguments (so that we don't warn once for every
instantiation when it's not instantiation dependent).
Reviewed by Richard Smith.
llvm-svn: 155838
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
i32 __builtin_annotation(i32, string);
Applying it to i64 (e.g., long long) generates the following IR.
trunc i64 {{.*}} to i32
call i32 @llvm.annotation.i32
zext i32 {{.*}} to i64
The redundant truncation and extension make the result difficult to use.
This patch makes __builtin_annotation() generic.
type __builtin_annotation(type, string);
For the i64 example, it simplifies the generated IR to:
call i64 @llvm.annotation.i64
Patch by Xi Wang!
llvm-svn: 155764
- -Wc++98-compat depends on the c++98 definition
- Now __is_pod returns the right thing in c++11 and c++98 mode
- All changes to the type traits test are validated against g++ 4.7
llvm-svn: 155756
This is mainly for attempting to recover in cases where a class provides
a custom operator-> and a '.' was accidentally used instead of '->' when
accessing a member of the object returned by the current object's
operator->.
llvm-svn: 155580
Don't try to query whether an incomplete type has a trivial copy constructor
when determining whether a move constructor should be declared.
llvm-svn: 155575
pretend there was no previous declaration -- that can lead us to injecting
a class template (with no access specifier) into a class scope. Instead,
just avoid the problematic checks.
llvm-svn: 155303
Set the source location for the "member reference base type ... is not a
structure or union" diag to point at the operator rather than the member name.
If we're giving this diagnostic because of a typo'd '.' in place of a ';' at
the end of a line, the caret previously pointed at the identifier on the
following line, which isn't as helpful as it could be. Pointing the caret at
the '.' makes it more obvious what the problem is.
llvm-svn: 155267
non-const reference parameter type if the class had any subobjects with deleted
copy constructors. This causes a rejects-valid if the class's copy constructor
is explicitly defaulted (as happens for some implementations of std::pair etc).
llvm-svn: 155218
up an elaborated type specifier in a friend declaration, only look for type
declarations, per [basic.lookup.elab]p2. If we know that the redeclaration
lookup for a friend class template in a dependent context finds a non-template,
don't delay the diagnostic to instantiation time.
llvm-svn: 155187
which are checked in the parser, and analysis warnings that require the
full analysis. This allows attribute syntax to be checked independently
of the full thread safety analysis. Also introduces a new warning for the
case where a string is used as a lock expression; this allows the analysis
to gracefully handle expressions that would otherwise cause a parse error.
llvm-svn: 155129
specifications on member function templates of class templates and other such
nested beasties. Store the function template from which we are to instantiate
an exception specification rather than trying to deduce it. Plus some
additional test cases.
llvm-svn: 155076
Follow up to r154924: check that we are in a static CMethodDecl to enable the Microsoft bug emulation regarding access to protected member during PTM creation. Not just any static function.
llvm-svn: 154982
We have a new flavor of exception specification, EST_Uninstantiated. A function
type with this exception specification carries a pointer to a FunctionDecl, and
the exception specification for that FunctionDecl is instantiated (if needed)
and used in the place of the function type's exception specification.
When a function template declaration with a non-trivial exception specification
is instantiated, the specialization's exception specification is set to this
new 'uninstantiated' kind rather than being instantiated immediately.
Expr::CanThrow has migrated onto Sema, so it can instantiate exception specs
on-demand. Also, any odr-use of a function triggers the instantiation of its
exception specification (the exception specification could be needed by IRGen).
In passing, fix two places where a DeclRefExpr was created but the corresponding
function was not actually marked odr-used. We used to get away with this, but
don't any more.
Also fix a bug where instantiating an exception specification which refers to
function parameters resulted in a crash. We still have the same bug in default
arguments, which I'll be looking into next.
This, plus a tiny patch to fix libstdc++'s common_type, is enough for clang to
parse (and, in very limited testing, support) all of libstdc++4.7's standard
headers.
llvm-svn: 154886
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
attached. Since we do not support any attributes which appertain to a statement
(yet), testing of this is necessarily quite minimal.
Patch by Alexander Kornienko!
llvm-svn: 154723
shadow of a block expression with non-trivial destructed cleanups,
we should flag that in the enclosing function, not in the block
that we're about to pop.
llvm-svn: 154646
The codepath already only works for source bits > target bits, it's just that
it was testing for the source expr bits to be exactly 64. This meant simple
cases (int i = x_long / 2) were missed & ended up under the general
-Wconversion warning, which a user might not have enabled.
llvm-svn: 154626
in general (such an atomic has boolean representation) and
specifically for IR generation of __c11_atomic_init. The latter also
means actually using initialization semantics for this initialization,
rather than just creating a store.
On a related note, make sure we actually put in non-atomic-to-atomic
conversions when performing an implicit conversion sequence. IR
generation is far too kind here, but we still want the ASTs to make
sense.
llvm-svn: 154612
types. The second and third conversions in the sequence are based on
the conversion for the underlying type, so that we get sensible
overloading behavior for, e.g., _Atomic(int) vs. _Atomic(float).
As part of this, actually implement the lvalue-to-rvalue conversion
for atomic types. There is probably a pile of code in SemaExpr that
can now be deleted, but I haven't tracked it down yet.
llvm-svn: 154596
This is not quite sufficient for libstdc++'s <atomic>: we still need
__atomic_test_and_set and __atomic_clear, and may need a more complete
__atomic_is_lock_free implementation.
We are also missing an implementation of __atomic_always_lock_free,
__atomic_nand_fetch, and __atomic_fetch_nand, but those aren't needed
for libstdc++.
llvm-svn: 154579
<stdatomic.h> header.
In passing, fix LanguageExtensions to note that C11 and C++11 are no longer
"upcoming standards" but are now actually standardized.
llvm-svn: 154513
code-completion related strings specific to a translation unit (ASTContext and related data)
CodeCompletionAllocator does such limited caching, by caching the name assigned
to a DeclContext*, but that is not the appropriate place since that object has
a lifetime that can extend beyond that of an ASTContext.
Introduce CodeCompletionTUInfo which will be always tied to a translation unit
to do this kind of caching and move the caching of CodeCompletionAllocator into this
object, and propagate it to all the places where it will be needed.
The plan is to extend the caching where appropriate, using CodeCompletionTUInfo,
to avoid re-calculating code-completion strings.
Part of rdar://10796159.
llvm-svn: 154408
base-class subojects.
Incidentally, thinking about virtual bases makes it clear to me that
we're not appropriately computing the access to the virtual base's
member because we're not computing the best possible access to the
virtual base at all; in fact, we're basically assuming it's public.
I'll file a separate PR about that.
llvm-svn: 154346
to define a special member function as deleted so that it properly
establishes an object context for the accesses to the base subobject
members.
llvm-svn: 154343
Specifically, using a an integer outside [0, 1] as a boolean constant seems to
be an easy mistake to make with things like "x == a || b" where the author
intended "x == a || x == b".
The bug caused by calling SkipUntil with three token kinds was also identified
by a VC diagnostic & reported by Francois Pichet as review feedback for my
commit r154163. I've included test cases to verify the error recovery that was
broken/poorly implemented due to this bug.
The other fix (lib/Sema/SemaExpr.cpp) seems like that code was never actually
reached in any of Clang's tests & is related to Objective C features I'm not
familiar with, so I've not been able to construct a test case for it. Perhaps
someone else can.
llvm-svn: 154325
- The [class.protected] restriction is non-trivial for any instance
member, even if the access lacks an object (for example, if it's
a pointer-to-member constant). In this case, it is equivalent to
requiring the naming class to equal the context class.
- The [class.protected] restriction applies to accesses to constructors
and destructors. A protected constructor or destructor can only be
used to create or destroy a base subobject, as a direct result.
- Several places were dropping or misapplying object information.
The standard could really be much clearer about what the object type is
supposed to be in some of these accesses. Usually it's easy enough to
find a reasonable answer, but still, the standard makes a very confident
statement about accesses to instance members only being possible in
either pointer-to-member literals or member access expressions, which
just completely ignores concepts like constructor and destructor
calls, using declarations, unevaluated field references, etc.
llvm-svn: 154248
the template instantiation of statement-expressions.
I think it was jyasskin who had a crashing testcase in this area;
hopefully this fixes it and he can find his testcase and check it in.
llvm-svn: 154189
The warning this inhibits, -Wobjc-root-class, is opt-in for now. However, all clang unit tests that would trigger
the warning have been updated to use -Wno-objc-root-class. <rdar://problem/7446698>
llvm-svn: 154187
* s/nonstatic/non-static/ in the diagnostics, since the latter form outvoted
the former by 28-2 in our diagnostics.
* Fix the "use of member in static member function" diagnostic to correctly
detect this situation inside a block or lambda.
* Produce a more specific "invalid use of non-static member" diagnostic for
the case where a nested class member refers to a member of a
lexically-surrounding class.
llvm-svn: 154073