All problems described in http://llvm.org/PR25636 are implemented except for return value of the 'put' property. This patch fixes this problem with the indexed properties
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15174
llvm-svn: 255218
r251874 reworked the way we handle properties declared within
Objective-C class extensions, which had the effective of tightening up
property checking in a number of places. In this particular class of
cases, we end up complaining about "atomic" mismatches between an
implicitly-atomic, readonly property and a nonatomic, readwrite
property, which doesn't make sense because "atomic" is essentially
irrelevant to readonly properties.
Therefore, suppress this diagnostic when the readonly property is
implicitly atomic. Fixes rdar://problem/23803109.
llvm-svn: 255174
The code used "isa" to check the type and then "getAs" to look through
sugar; we need to look through the sugar when checking, too, otherwise
any kind of sugar (nullability qualifiers in the example; or a
typedef) will thwart this semantic check. Fixes rdar://problem/23804250.
llvm-svn: 255066
Currently, we emit warnings in some cases where nonnull function
parameters are compared against null. This patch extends this support
to warn when comparing the result of `returns_nonnull` functions
against null.
More specifically, we will now warn cases like:
int *foo() __attribute__((returns_nonnull));
int main() {
if (foo() == NULL) {} // warning: will always evaluate to false
}
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15324
llvm-svn: 255058
OpenMP 4.5 adds directives 'taskloop' and 'taskloop simd'. These directives support clause 'num_tasks'. Patch adds parsing/semantic analysis for this clause.
llvm-svn: 255008
OpenMP 4.5 adds 'taksloop' and 'taskloop simd' directives, which have 'grainsize' clause. Patch adds parsing/sema analysis of this clause.
llvm-svn: 254903
OpenMP 4.5 adds 'taskloop' and 'taskloop simd' directives. These directives have new 'nogroup' clause. Patch adds basic parsing/sema support for this clause.
llvm-svn: 254899
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20334
Unfortunately, clang currently checks for a certain brokenness of implementations of std::initializer_list in CodeGen (void
AggExprEmitter::VisitCXXStdInitializerListExpr), not in SemaInit. Until that is fixed, make sure we don't let broken attempts that are aggregates leak through into sema, which allows maintenance of expected invariants, and avoids triggering an assertion.
llvm-svn: 254889
do scope-based lookup when looking for redeclarations of them. Add some related
missing checks for the scope-based redeclaration lookup: properly filter the
list of found declarations to match the scope, and diagnose shadowing of a
template parameter name.
llvm-svn: 254663
The introduction of pass_object_size fixed a few bugs related to taking
the address of a function with enable_if attributes. This patch adds
tests for the cases that were fixed.
llvm-svn: 254646
This reverts commit r254143 which introduces a crash on the following input:
f(char *);
g(char *);
#pragma weak f = g
int g(char *p) {}
llvm-svn: 254605
This CL is for discussion how to better fix bit-filed layout compatibility issue with GCC (see PR25575 for test case and more details). Current clang behavior is compatible with GCC 4.1-4.3 series but it was fixed in 4.4+. Ignoring packed attribute looks very odd and because it was also fixed in GCC 4.4+, it makes sense also fix it in clang.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14872
llvm-svn: 254596
side-effect, so that we don't allow speculative evaluation of such expressions
during code generation.
This caused a diagnostic quality regression, so fix constant expression
diagnostics to prefer either the first "can't be constant folded" diagnostic or
the first "not a constant expression" diagnostic depending on the kind of
evaluation we're doing. This was always the intent, but didn't quite work
correctly before.
This results in certain initializers that used to be constant initializers to
no longer be; in particular, things like:
float f = 1e100;
are no longer accepted in C. This seems appropriate, as such constructs would
lead to code being executed if sanitizers are enabled.
llvm-svn: 254574
`pass_object_size` is our way of enabling `__builtin_object_size` to
produce high quality results without requiring inlining to happen
everywhere.
A link to the design doc for this attribute is available at the
Differential review link below.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13263
llvm-svn: 254554
Summary:
This patch implements the 4.5 specification for the implicit data maps. OpenMP 4.5 specification changes the default way data is captured into a target region. All the non-aggregate kinds are passed by value by default. This required activating the capturing by value during SEMA for the target region. All the non-aggregate values that can be encoded in the size of a pointer are properly casted and forwarded to the runtime library. On top of fixing the previous weird behavior for mapping pointers in nested data regions (an explicit map was always required), this also improves performance as the number of allocations/transactions to the device per non-aggregate map are reduced from two to only one - instead of passing a reference and the value, only the value passed.
Explicit maps will be added later on once firstprivate, private, and map clauses' SEMA and parsing are available.
Reviewers: hfinkel, rjmccall, ABataev
Subscribers: cfe-commits, carlo.bertolli
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14940
llvm-svn: 254521
OpenMP 4.5 defines new clause 'priority' for 'task', 'taskloop' and 'taskloop simd' directives. Added parsing and sema analysis for 'priority' clause in 'task' and 'taskloop' directives.
llvm-svn: 254398
Function types can be extracted from member pointer types.
However, the type is not appropriate without first adjusting the calling
convention.
This fixes PR25661.
llvm-svn: 254323
Summary: This patch adds support for the interrupt attribute for mips32r2+.
Patch by Simon Dardis.
Reviewers: dsanders, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: aaron.ballman, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10802
llvm-svn: 254205
Summary: This patch adds support for the interrupt attribute for mips32r2+.
Reviewers: dsanders, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: aaron.ballman, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10802
llvm-svn: 254203
According to OpenMP 4.5 the parameter of 'ordered' clause must be greater than or equal to the parameter of 'collapse' clause. Patch adds this rule.
llvm-svn: 254141
We will still allow it in system headers, in macros from system headers, when
combined with an 'asm' label, and under the flag -Wno-register.
llvm-svn: 254097
MSVC supports 'property' attribute and allows to apply it to the declaration of an empty array in a class or structure definition.
For example:
```
__declspec(property(get=GetX, put=PutX)) int x[];
```
The above statement indicates that x[] can be used with one or more array indices. In this case, i=p->x[a][b] will be turned into i=p->GetX(a, b), and p->x[a][b] = i will be turned into p->PutX(a, b, i);
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13336
llvm-svn: 254067
If AS of a variable/parameter declaration is not set by the source,
OpenCL v2.0 s6.5 defines explicit rules for default ASes:
- The AS of global and local static variables defaults to global;
- All pointers point to generic AS.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D13168
llvm-svn: 253863
Also address a typo from a prior patch that performed a similar fix during Parsing of default non-type template arguments. I left the RAII ExpressionEvaluationContext variable Name as Unevaluated though we had switched the context to ConstantEvaluated.
There should be no functionality change here - since when expression evaluation context is popped off, for the most part these two contexts currently behave similarly in regards to lambda diagnostics and odr-use tracking.
Like its parsing counterpart, this patch presages the advent of constexpr lambda patches...
llvm-svn: 253590
Add support for vector mode attributes like "attribute((mode(V4SF)))". Also add warning about deprecated vector modes like GCC does.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14744
llvm-svn: 253551
driving a canonical difference between that and an unqualified
type is a really bad idea when both are valid. Instead, remember
that it was there in a non-canonical way, then look for that in
the one place we really care about it: block captures. The net
effect closely resembles the behavior of a decl attribute, except
still closely following ARC's standard qualifier parsing rules.
llvm-svn: 253534
We created a malformed TemplateSpecializationType: it was dependent but
had a RecordType as it's canonical type. This would lead getAs to
crash. r249090 worked around this but we should fix this for real by
providing a more appropriate template specialization type as the
canonical type.
This fixes PR24246.
llvm-svn: 253495
unsafe, since many operations on the types can trigger lazy deserialization of
more types and invalidate the iterators. This fixes a crasher, but I've not
been able to reduce it to a reasonable testcase yet.
llvm-svn: 253420
Currently, when there is a global register variable in a program that
is bound to an invalid register, clang/llvm prints an error message that
is not very user-friendly.
This commit improves the diagnostic and moves the check that used to be
in the backend to Sema. In addition, it makes changes to error out if
the size of the register doesn't match the declared variable size.
e.g., volatile register int B asm ("rbp");
rdar://problem/23084219
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13834
llvm-svn: 253405
other than the top level, we issue an error. This breaks a fair amount of C++
code wrapping C libraries, where the C library is #included within a namespace
/ extern "C" combination, because the C library (probably) includes C++
standard library headers which may be within modules.
Without modules, this setup is harmless if (and *only* if) the corresponding
standard library module was already included outside the namespace, so
downgrade the error to a default-error extension in that case, so that it can
be selectively disabled for such misbehaving libraries.
llvm-svn: 253398
is_empty, is_polymorphic, and is_abstract didn't handle incomplete types
correctly. Only non-union class types must be complete for these
traits.
is_final and is_sealed don't care about the particular spelling of the
FinalAttr.
is_interface_class should always return false regardless of its input.
The type trait can only be satisfied in a mode we do not support (/CLR).
llvm-svn: 253184
Clang tries to figure out if a call to abs is suspicious by looking
through implicit casts to look at the underlying, implicitly converted
type.
Interestingly, C has implicit conversions from pointer-ish types like
function to less exciting types like int. This trips up our 'abs'
checker because it doesn't know which variant of 'abs' is appropriate.
Instead, diagnose 'abs' called on function types upfront. This sort of
thing is highly suspicious and is likely indicative of a missing
pointer dereference/function call/array index operation.
This fixes PR25532.
llvm-svn: 253156
r233345 started being stricter about typedef names for linkage purposes
in non-visible modules, but broke languages without the ODR.
rdar://23527954
llvm-svn: 253123
the linkage of the enumeration. For enumerators of unnamed enumerations, extend
the -Wmodules-ambiguous-internal-linkage extension to allow selecting an
arbitrary enumerator (but only if they all have the same value, otherwise it's
ambiguous).
llvm-svn: 253010
The ``disable_tail_calls`` attribute instructs the backend to not
perform tail call optimization inside the marked function.
For example,
int callee(int);
int foo(int a) __attribute__((disable_tail_calls)) {
return callee(a); // This call is not tail-call optimized.
}
Note that this attribute is different from 'not_tail_called', which
prevents tail-call optimization to the marked function.
rdar://problem/8973573
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12547
llvm-svn: 252986
declarations in redeclaration lookup. A declaration is now visible to
lookup if:
* It is visible (not in a module, or in an imported module), or
* We're doing redeclaration lookup and it's externally-visible, or
* We're doing typo correction and looking for unimported decls.
We now support multiple modules having different internal-linkage or no-linkage
definitions of the same name for all entities, not just for functions,
variables, and some typedefs. As previously, if multiple such entities are
visible, any attempt to use them will result in an ambiguity error.
This patch fixes the linkage calculation for a number of entities where we
previously didn't need to get it right (using-declarations, namespace aliases,
and so on). It also classifies enumerators as always having no linkage, which
is a slight deviation from the C++ standard's definition, but not an observable
change outside modules (this change is being discussed on the -core reflector
currently).
This also removes the prior special case for tag lookup, which made some cases
of this work, but also led to bizarre, bogus "must use 'struct' to refer to type
'Foo' in this scope" diagnostics in C++.
llvm-svn: 252960
DR407, the C++ standard doesn't really say how this should work. Here's what we
do (which is consistent with DR407 as far as I can tell):
* When performing name lookup for an elaborated-type-specifier, a tag
declaration hides a typedef declaration that names the same type.
* When performing any other kind of lookup, a typedef declaration hides
a tag declaration that names the same type.
In any other case where lookup finds both a typedef and a tag (that is, when
they name different types), the lookup will be ambiguous. If lookup finds a
tag and a typedef that name the same type, and finds anything else, the lookup
will always be ambiguous (even if the other entity would hide the tag, it does
not also hide the typedef).
llvm-svn: 252959
This failed to solve the problem it was aimed at, and introduced just as many
issues as it resolved. Realistically, we need to deal with the possibility that
multiple modules might define different internal linkage symbols with the same
name, and this isn't a problem unless two such symbols are simultaneously
visible.
The case where two modules define equivalent internal linkage symbols is
handled by r252063: if lookup finds multiple sufficiently-similar entities from
different modules, we just pick one of them as an extension (but we keep them
separate).
llvm-svn: 252957
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Typeof.html
Differences from the GCC extension:
* __auto_type is also permitted in C++ (but only in places where
it could appear in C), allowing its use in headers that might
be shared across C and C++, or used from C++98
* __auto_type can be combined with a declarator, as with C++ auto
(for instance, "__auto_type *p")
* multiple variables can be declared in a single __auto_type
declaration, with the C++ semantics (the deduced type must be
the same in each case)
This patch also adds a missing restriction on applying typeof to
a bit-field, which GCC has historically rejected in C (due to
lack of clarity as to whether the operand should be promoted).
The same restriction also applies to __auto_type in C (in both
GCC and Clang).
This also fixes PR25449.
Patch by Nicholas Allegra!
llvm-svn: 252690
std::initializer_list<T> type. Instead, the list must contain a single element
and the type is deduced from that.
In Clang 3.7, we warned by default on all the cases that would change meaning
due to this change. In Clang 3.8, we will support only the new rules -- per
the request in N3922, this change is applied as a Defect Report against earlier
versions of the C++ standard.
This change is not entirely trivial, because for lambda init-captures we
previously did not track the difference between direct-list-initialization and
copy-list-initialization. The difference was not previously observable, because
the two forms of initialization always did the same thing (the elements of the
initializer list were always copy-initialized regardless of the initialization
style used for the init-capture).
llvm-svn: 252688
The attrubite is applicable to functions and variables and changes
the linkage of the subject to internal.
This is the same functionality as C-style "static", but applicable to
class methods; and the same as anonymouns namespaces, but can apply
to individual methods of a class.
Following the proposal in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2015-October/045580.html
llvm-svn: 252648
This attribute is used to prevent tail-call optimizations to the marked
function. For example, in the following piece of code, foo1 will not be
tail-call optimized:
int __attribute__((not_tail_called)) foo1(int);
int foo2(int a) {
return foo1(a); // Tail-call optimization is not performed.
}
The attribute has effect only on statically bound calls. It has no
effect on indirect calls. Also, virtual functions and objective-c
methods cannot be marked as 'not_tail_called'.
rdar://problem/22667622
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12922
llvm-svn: 252369
internal linkage entities in different modules from r250884 to apply to all
names, not just function names.
This is really awkward: we don't want to merge internal-linkage symbols from
separate modules, because they might not actually be defining the same entity.
But we don't want to reject programs that use such an ambiguous symbol if those
internal-linkage symbols are in fact equivalent. For now, we're resolving the
ambiguity by picking one of the equivalent definitions as an extension.
llvm-svn: 252063
Summary: Diagnose when the 'concept' specifier is used on a typedef or function parameter.
Reviewers: rsmith, hubert.reinterpretcast, aaron.ballman, faisalv
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14316
llvm-svn: 252061
This new builtin template allows for incredibly fast instantiations of
templates like std::integer_sequence.
Performance numbers follow:
My work station has 64 GB of ram + 20 Xeon Cores at 2.8 GHz.
__make_integer_seq<std::integer_sequence, int, 90000> takes 0.25
seconds.
std::make_integer_sequence<int, 90000> takes unbound time, it is still
running. Clang is consuming gigabytes of memory.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13786
llvm-svn: 252036
Now that the properties created within Objective-C class extensions go
into the extension themselves, we don't need any of the extra
complexity here.
llvm-svn: 251949
particular don't assume that two declarations of the same kind in the same
context are declaring the same entity. That's not true when the same name is
declared multiple times as internal-linkage symbols within a module.
(getCanonicalDecl is cheap now, so we can just use it here.)
llvm-svn: 251898
A 'readonly' Objective-C property declared in the primary class can
effectively be shadowed by a 'readwrite' property declared within an
extension of that class, so long as the types and attributes of the
two property declarations are compatible.
Previously, this functionality was implemented by back-patching the
original 'readonly' property to make it 'readwrite', destroying source
information and causing some hideously redundant, incorrect
code. Simplify the implementation to express how this should actually
be modeled: as a separate property declaration in the extension that
shadows (via the name lookup rules) the declaration in the primary
class. While here, correct some broken Fix-Its, eliminate a pile of
redundant code, clean up the ARC migrator's handling of properties
declared in extensions, and fix debug info's naming of methods that
come from categories.
A wonderous side effect of doing this write is that it eliminates the
"AddedObjCPropertyInClassExtension" method from the AST mutation
listener, which in turn eliminates the last place where we rewrite
entire declarations in a chained PCH file or a module file. This
change (which fixes rdar://problem/18475765) will allow us to
eliminate the rewritten-decls logic from the serialization library,
and fixes a crash (rdar://problem/23247794) illustrated by the
test/PCH/chain-categories.m example.
llvm-svn: 251874
We permit implicit conversion from pointer-to-function to
pointer-to-object when -fms-extensions is specified. This is rather
unfortunate, move this into -fms-compatibility and only permit it within
system headers unless -Wno-error=microsoft-cast is specified.
llvm-svn: 251738
Handle blocks in the tree transform for the typo correction as otherwise, the
capture may miss. This would trigger an assertion. Thanks to Doug Gregor for
the help with this!
Fixes PR25001.
llvm-svn: 251729
GCC has a warning called -Wdouble-promotion, which warns you when
an implicit conversion increases the width of a floating point type.
This is useful when writing code for architectures that can perform
hardware FP ops on floats, but must fall back to software emulation for
larger types (i.e. double, long double).
This fixes PR15109 <https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=15109>.
Thanks to Carl Norum for the patch!
llvm-svn: 251588
Fake arguments are automatically handled for serialization, cloning,
and other representational tasks, but aren't included in pretty-printing
or parsing (should we eventually ever automate that).
This is chiefly useful for attributes that can be written by the
user, but which are also frequently synthesized by the compiler,
and which we'd like to remember details of the synthesis for.
As a simple example, use this to narrow the cases in which we were
generating a specialized note for implicitly unavailable declarations.
llvm-svn: 251469
1. Make the warning more strict in C mode. r172696 added code to suppress
warnings from macro expansions in system headers, which checks
`SourceMgr.isMacroBodyExpansion(E->IgnoreParens()->getExprLoc())`. Consider
this snippet:
#define FOO(x) (x)
void f(int a) {
FOO(a);
}
In C, the line `FOO(a)` is an `ImplicitCastExpr(ParenExpr(DeclRefExpr))`,
while it's just a `ParenExpr(DeclRefExpr)` in C++. So in C++,
`E->IgnoreParens()` returns the `DeclRefExpr` and the check tests the
SourceLoc of `a`. In C, the `ImplicitCastExpr` has the effect of checking the
SourceLoc of `FOO`, which is a macro body expansion, which causes the
diagnostic to be skipped. It looks unintentional that clang does different
things for C and C++ here, so use `IgnoreParenImpCasts` instead of
`IgnoreParens` here. This has the effect of the warning firing more often
than previously in C code – it now fires as often as it fires in C++ code.
2. Suppress the warning if it would warn on `UNREFERENCED_PARAMETER`.
`UNREFERENCED_PARAMETER` is a commonly used macro on Windows and it happens
to uselessly trigger -Wunused-value. As discussed in the thread
"rfc: winnt.h's UNREFERENCED_PARAMETER() vs clang's -Wunused-value" on
cfe-dev, fix this by special-casing this specific macro. (This costs a string
comparison and some fast-path lexing per warning, but the warning is emitted
rarely. It fires once in Windows.h itself, so this code runs at least once
per TU including Windows.h, but it doesn't run hundreds of times.)
http://reviews.llvm.org/D13969
llvm-svn: 251441
allow them to be written in certain kinds of user declaration and
diagnose on the use-site instead.
Also, improve and fix some diagnostics relating to __weak and
properties.
rdar://23228631
llvm-svn: 251384
Summary:
In `MismatchingNewDeleteDetector::analyzeInClassInitializer`, if
`Field`'s initializer expression is null, lookup the field in
implicit instantiation, and use found field's the initializer.
Reviewers: rsmith, rtrieu
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9898
llvm-svn: 251335
Previously, __weak was silently accepted and ignored in MRC mode.
That makes this a potentially source-breaking change that we have to
roll out cautiously. Accordingly, for the time being, actual support
for __weak references in MRC is experimental, and the compiler will
reject attempts to actually form such references. The intent is to
eventually enable the feature by default in all non-GC modes.
(It is, of course, incompatible with ObjC GC's interpretation of
__weak.)
If you like, you can enable this feature with
-Xclang -fobjc-weak
but like any -Xclang option, this option may be removed at any point,
e.g. if/when it is eventually enabled by default.
This patch also enables the use of the ARC __unsafe_unretained qualifier
in MRC. Unlike __weak, this is being enabled immediately. Since
variables are essentially __unsafe_unretained by default in MRC,
the only practical uses are (1) communication and (2) changing the
default behavior of by-value block capture.
As an implementation matter, this means that the ObjC ownership
qualifiers may appear in any ObjC language mode, and so this patch
removes a number of checks for getLangOpts().ObjCAutoRefCount
that were guarding the processing of these qualifiers. I don't
expect this to be a significant drain on performance; it may even
be faster to just check for these qualifiers directly on a type
(since it's probably in a register anyway) than to do N dependent
loads to grab the LangOptions.
rdar://9674298
llvm-svn: 251041
headers. If those headers end up being textually included twice into the same
module, we get ambiguity errors.
Work around this by downgrading the ambiguity error to a warning if multiple
identical internal-linkage functions appear in an overload set, and just pick
one of those functions as the lookup result.
llvm-svn: 250884
This time, I went with the first approach from
http://reviews.llvm.org/D6700, where clang actually attempts to form an
implicit member reference from an UnresolvedLookupExpr. We know that
there are only two possible outcomes at this point, a DeclRefExpr of the
FieldDecl or an error, but its safer to reuse the existing machinery for
this.
llvm-svn: 250856
Microsoft's ATL headers make use of this MSVC extension, add support for
it and issue a diagnostic under -Wmicrosoft-exception-spec.
This fixes PR25265.
llvm-svn: 250854
Clang will now accept this valid C++11 code:
struct A { int field; };
struct B : A {
using A::field;
enum { TheSize = sizeof(field) };
};
Previously we would classify the 'field' reference as something other
than a field, and then forget to apply the C++11 rule to allow
non-static data member references in unevaluated contexts.
This usually arises in class templates that want to reference fields of
a dependent base in an unevaluated context outside of an instance
method. Such contexts do not allow references to 'this', so the only way
to access the field is with a using decl and an implicit member
reference.
llvm-svn: 250839
Summary: It breaks the build for the ASTMatchers
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13893
llvm-svn: 250827
This reverts commit r250592.
It has issues around unevaluated contexts, like this:
template <class T> struct A { T i; };
template <class T>
struct B : A<T> {
using A<T>::i;
typedef decltype(i) U;
};
template struct B<int>;
llvm-svn: 250774
During the initial template parse for this code, 'member' is unresolved
and we don't know anything about it:
struct A { int member };
template <typename T>
struct B : public T {
using T::member;
static void f() {
(void)member; // Could be static or non-static.
}
};
template class B<A>;
The pattern declaration contains an UnresolvedLookupExpr rather than an
UnresolvedMemberExpr because `f` is static, and `member` should never be
a field. However, if the code is invalid, it may become a field, in
which case we should diagnose it.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6700
llvm-svn: 250592
Previously, our logic when taking the address of an overloaded function
would not consider enable_if attributes, so long as all of the enable_if
conditions on a given candidate were true. So, two functions with
identical signatures (one with enable_if attributes, the other without),
would be considered equally good overloads. If we were calling the
function instead of taking its address, then the function with enable_if
attributes would be preferred.
This patch makes us prefer the candidate with enable_if regardless of if
we're calling or taking the address of an overloaded function.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13795
llvm-svn: 250486
context (but otherwise at the top level) to be disabled, to support use of C++
standard library implementations that (legitimately) mark their <blah.h>
headers as being C++ headers from C libraries that wrap things in 'extern "C"'
a bit too enthusiastically.
llvm-svn: 250137
This fixes a bug where one can take the address of a conditionally
enabled function to drop its enable_if guards. For example:
int foo(int a) __attribute__((enable_if(a > 0, "")));
int (*p)(int) = &foo;
int result = p(-1); // compilation succeeds; calls foo(-1)
Overloading logic has been updated to reflect this change, as well.
Functions with enable_if attributes that are always true are still
allowed to have their address taken.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13607
llvm-svn: 250090
Fixed a bug where we'd emit multiple diagnostics if there was a problem
taking the address of an overloaded template function.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13664
llvm-svn: 250078
C allows for some implicit conversions that C++ does not, e.g. void* ->
char*. This patch teaches clang that these conversions are okay when
dealing with overloads in C.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13604
llvm-svn: 249995
The inference of _Nullable for weak Objective-C properties was broken
in several ways:
* It was back-patching the type information very late in the process
of checking the attributes for an Objective-C property, which is
just wrong.
* It was using ad hoc checks to try to suppress the warning about
missing nullability specifiers (-Wnullability-completeness), which
didn't actual work in all cases (rdar://problem/22985457)
* It was inferring _Nullable even outside of assumes-nonnull regions,
which is wrong.
Putting the inference of _Nullable for weak Objective-C properties in
the same place as all of the other inference logic fixes all of these
ills.
llvm-svn: 249896
Summary:
Currently when a function annotated with __attribute__((nonnull)) is called in an unevaluated context with a null argument a -Wnonnull warning is emitted.
This warning seems like a false positive unless the call expression is potentially evaluated. Change this behavior so that the non-null warnings use DiagRuntimeBehavior so they wont emit when they won't be evaluated.
Reviewers: majnemer, rsmith
Subscribers: mclow.lists, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13408
llvm-svn: 249787
consider the following:
enum E *p;
enum E { e };
The above snippet is not ANSI C because 'enum E' has not bee defined
when we are processing the declaration of 'p'; however, it is a popular
extension to make the above work. This would fail using the Microsoft
enum semantics because the definition of 'E' would implicitly have a
fixed underlying type of 'int' which would trigger diagnostic messages
about a mismatch between the declaration and the definition.
Instead, treat fixed underlying types as not fixed for the purposes of
the diagnostic.
llvm-svn: 249674
Enums without an explicit, fixed, underlying type are implicitly given a
fixed 'int' type for ABI compatibility with MSVC. However, we can
enforce the standard-mandated rules on these types as-if we didn't know
this fact if the tag is not part of a definition.
llvm-svn: 249667
No ABI for C++ currently makes it possible to implement the standard
100% perfectly. We wrongly hid some of our compatible behavior behind
-fms-compatibility instead of tying it to the compiler ABI.
llvm-svn: 249656
that change turns out to not be reasonable: mutating the AST of a parsed
template during instantiation is not a sound thing to do, does not work across
chained PCH / modules builds, and is in any case a special-case workaround to a
more general problem that should be solved centrally.
llvm-svn: 249342