This is a follow-up to r261512, which made the 'strict' availability
attribute flag behave like 'unavailable'. However, that fix was
insufficient. The following case would (erroneously) error when the
deployment target was older than 10.9:
struct __attribute__((availability(macosx,strict,introduced=10.9))) A;
__attribute__((availability(macosx,strict,introduced=10.9))) void f(A*);
The use of A* in the argument list for f is valid here, since f and A
have the same availability.
The fix is to return AR_Unavailable from DeclBase::getAvailability
instead of AR_NotYetIntroduced. This also reverts the special handling
added in r261163, instead relying on the well-tested logic for
AR_Unavailable.
rdar://problem/23791325
llvm-svn: 262915
Add parsing, sema analysis and serialization/deserialization for 'declare reduction' construct.
User-defined reductions are defined as
#pragma omp declare reduction( reduction-identifier : typename-list : combiner ) [initializer ( initializer-expr )]
These custom reductions may be used in 'reduction' clauses of OpenMP constructs. The combiner specifies how partial results can be combined into a single value. The
combiner can use the special variable identifiers omp_in and omp_out that are of the type of the variables being reduced with this reduction-identifier. Each of them will
denote one of the values to be combined before executing the combiner. It is assumed that the special omp_out identifier will refer to the storage that holds the resulting
combined value after executing the combiner.
As the initializer-expr value of a user-defined reduction is not known a priori the initializer-clause can be used to specify one. Then the contents of the initializer-clause
will be used as the initializer for private copies of reduction list items where the omp_priv identifier will refer to the storage to be initialized. The special identifier
omp_orig can also appear in the initializer-clause and it will refer to the storage of the original variable to be reduced.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11182
llvm-svn: 262582
This is like r262493, but for pragma detect_mismatch instead of pragma comment.
The two pragmas have similar behavior, so use the same approach for both.
llvm-svn: 262506
`#pragma comment` was handled by Sema calling a function on ASTConsumer, and
CodeGen then implementing this function and writing things to its output.
Instead, introduce a PragmaCommentDecl AST node and hang one off the
TranslationUnitDecl for every `#pragma comment` line, and then use the regular
serialization machinery. (Since PragmaCommentDecl has codegen relevance, it's
eagerly deserialized.)
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17799
llvm-svn: 262493
If the availability context is `FunctionTemplateDecl`, we should look
through it to the `FunctionDecl`. This prevents a diagnostic in the
following case:
class C __attribute__((unavailable));
template <class T> void foo(C&) __attribute__((unavailable));
This adds tests for availability in templates in many other cases, but
that was the only case that failed before this patch.
I added a feature `__has_feature(attribute_availability_in_templates)`
so users can test for this.
rdar://problem/24561029
llvm-svn: 262050
OMPCapturedExprDecl allows caopturing not only of fielddecls, but also
other expressions. It also allows to simplify codegen for several
clauses.
llvm-svn: 260492
OpenMP 4.5 introduces privatization of non-static data members of current class in non-static member functions.
To correctly handle such kind of privatization a new (pseudo)declaration VarDecl-based node is added. It allows to reuse an existing code for capturing variables in Lambdas/Block/Captured blocks of code for correct privatization and codegen.
llvm-svn: 260077
into IDNS_Tag in C++, because they conflict with redeclarations of tags. (This
doesn't affect elaborated-type-specifier lookup, which looks for IDNS_Type in
C++).
llvm-svn: 256985
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
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
Summary: It breaks the build for the ASTMatchers
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13893
llvm-svn: 250827
If a function declaration is found inside a template function as in:
template<class T> void f() {
void g(int x = T::v) except(T::w);
}
it must be instantiated along with the enclosing template function,
including default arguments and exception specification.
Together with the patch committed in r240974 this implements DR1484.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11194
llvm-svn: 245810
useless return value. Switch to using it directly when completing the
redeclaration chain for an anonymous declaration, and reduce the set of
declarations that we load in the process to just those of the right kind.
llvm-svn: 244161
Some const-correctness changes snuck in here too, since they were in the
area of code I was modifying.
This seems to make Clang actually work without Bus Error on
32bit-sparc.
Follow-up patches will factor out a trailing-object helper class, to
make classes using the idiom of appending objects to other objects
easier to understand, and to ensure (with static_assert) that required
alignment guarantees continue to hold.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10272
llvm-svn: 242554
Produce type parameter declarations for Objective-C type parameters,
and attach lists of type parameters to Objective-C classes,
categories, forward declarations, and extensions as
appropriate. Perform semantic analysis of type bounds for type
parameters, both in isolation and across classes/categories/extensions
to ensure consistency.
Also handle (de-)serialization of Objective-C type parameter lists,
along with sundry other things one must do to add a new declaration to
Clang.
Note that Objective-C type parameters are typedef name declarations,
like typedefs and C++11 type aliases, in support of type erasure.
Part of rdar://problem/6294649.
llvm-svn: 241541
There are still problems here, but this is a better starting point.
The main part of the change is: when doing a lookup that would accept visible
or hidden declarations, prefer to produce the latest visible declaration if
there are any visible declarations, rather than always producing the latest
declaration.
Thus, when we inherit default arguments (and other properties) from a previous
declaration, we inherit them from the previous visible declaration; if the
previous declaration is hidden, we already suppress inheritance of default
arguments.
There are a couple of other changes here that fix latent bugs exposed by this
change.
llvm-svn: 239371
With this change, enabling -fmodules-local-submodule-visibility results in name
visibility rules being applied to submodules of the current module in addition
to imported modules (that is, names no longer "leak" between submodules of the
same top-level module). This also makes it much safer to textually include a
non-modular library into a module: each submodule that textually includes that
library will get its own "copy" of that library, and so the library becomes
visible no matter which including submodule you import.
llvm-svn: 237473
Even if we have no external visible declarations, we may still have external
lexical decls that lookup() would import to fill its lookup table. It's simpler
and faster to always take the no-deserialization path through noload_lookup.
llvm-svn: 233046
rather than just the primary context. This is technically correct but results
in no functionality change (in Clang nor LLDB) because all users of this
functionality only use it on single-context DCs.
llvm-svn: 233045
for a DeclContext, and fix propagation of exception specifications along
redeclaration chains.
This reverts r232905, r232907, and r232907, which reverted r232793, r232853,
and r232853.
One additional change is present here to resolve issues with LLDB: distinguish
between whether lexical decls missing from the lookup table are local or are
provided by the external AST source, and still look in the external source if
that's where they came from.
llvm-svn: 232928
When we need to build the lookup table for a DeclContext, we used to pull in
all lexical declarations for the context; instead, just build a lookup table
for the local lexical declarations. We previously didn't guarantee that the
imported declarations would be in the returned map, but in some cases we'd
happen to put them all in there regardless. Now we're even lazier about this.
This unnecessary work was papering over some other bugs:
- LookupVisibleDecls would use the DC for name lookups in the TU in C, and
this was not guaranteed to find all imported names (generally, the DC for
the TU in C is not a reliable place to perform lookups). We now use an
identifier-based lookup mechanism for this.
- We didn't actually load in the list of eagerly-deserialized declarations
when importing a module (so external definitions in a module wouldn't be
emitted by users of those modules unless they happened to be deserialized
by the user of the module).
llvm-svn: 232793
of extern "C" declarations. This is simpler and vastly more efficient for
modules builds (we no longer need to load *all* extern "C" declarations to
determine if we have a redeclaration).
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 231538
This adds the -fapplication-extension option, along with the
ios_app_extension and macosx_app_extension availability attributes.
Patch by Ted Kremenek
llvm-svn: 230989
one can give us more lookup results (due to implicit special members). Be sure
to complete the redecl chain for every kind of DeclContext before performing a
lookup into it, rather than only doing so for NamespaceDecls.
llvm-svn: 230558
invalidate lookup_iterators and lookup_results for some name within a
DeclContext if the lookup results for a *different* name change.
llvm-svn: 230121
already have, check whether the name from the module is actually newer than the
existing declaration. If it isn't, we might (say) replace a visible declaration
with an injected friend, and thus make it invisible (or lose a default argument
or an array bound).
llvm-svn: 228661
context as anonymous for merging purposes. They can't be found by their names,
so we merge them based on their position within the surrounding context.
llvm-svn: 228485
Specifically, when we have this situation:
struct A {
template <typename T> struct B {
int m1 = sizeof(A);
};
B<int> m2;
};
We can't parse m1's initializer eagerly because we need A to be
complete. Therefore we wait until the end of A's class scope to parse
it. However, we can trigger instantiation of B before the end of A,
which will attempt to instantiate the field decls eagerly, and it would
build a bad field decl instantiation that said it had an initializer but
actually lacked one.
Fixed by deferring instantiation of default member initializers until
they are needed during constructor analysis. This addresses a long
standing FIXME in the code.
Fixes PR19195.
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5690
llvm-svn: 222192
in availability attribute by preserving this info.
in VersionTuple and using it in pretty printing of attributes
and yet using '.' as separator when diagnosing unavailable
message calls. rdar://18490958
llvm-svn: 219124
redefinitions of that namespace have already been loaded. When writing out the
names in a namespace, if we see a name that is locally declared and had
imported declarations merged on top of it, export the local declaration as the
lookup result, because it will be the most recent declaration of that entity in
the redeclaration chain of an importer of the module.
llvm-svn: 215518
This is a reapplication of r203236 with modifications to the definition of attrs() and following the new style guidelines on auto usage.
llvm-svn: 203362
This changes the iterators so that they are no longer implemented in terms of ranges (so it's a very partial revert of the existing rangification efforts).
llvm-svn: 203299
Lift the getFunctionDecl() utility out of the parser into a general
Decl::getAsFunction() and use it to simplify other parts of the implementation.
Reduce isFunctionOrFunctionTemplate() to a simple type check that works the
same was as the other is* functions and move unwrapping of shadowed decls to
callers so it doesn't get run twice.
Shuffle around canSkipFunctionBody() to reduce virtual dispatch on ASTConsumer.
There's no need to query when we already know the body can't be skipped.
llvm-svn: 199794
can't accidentally be allocated the wrong way (missing prefix data for decls
from AST files, for instance) and simplifies the CreateDeserialized functions a
little. An extra DeclContext* parameter to the not-from-AST-file operator new
allows us to ensure that we don't accidentally call the wrong one when
deserializing (when we don't have a DeclContext), allows some extra checks, and
prepares for some planned modules-related changes to Decl allocation.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 195426
bit fields of zero size. Warnings are generated in C++ mode and if
only such type is defined inside extern "C" block.
The patch fixed PR5065.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2151
llvm-svn: 194653
name lookup from lazily deserializing the other declarations with the same
name, by tracking a bit to indicate whether a name in a DeclContext might have
additional external results. This also allows lazier reconciling of the lookup
table if a module import adds decls to a pre-existing DC.
However, this exposes a pre-existing bug, which causes a regression in
test/Modules/decldef.mm: if we have a reference to a declaration, and a
later-imported module adds a redeclaration, nothing causes us to load that
redeclaration when we use or emit the reference (which can manifest as a
reference to an undefined inline function, a use of an incomplete type, and so
on). decldef.mm has been extended with an additional testcase which fails with
or without this change.
llvm-svn: 190293
When an AST file is built based on another AST file, it can use a decl from
the fist file, and therefore mark the "isUsed" bit. We need to note this in
the AST file so that the bit is set correctly when the second AST file is
loaded.
This patch introduces the distinction between setIsUsed() and markUsed() so
that we don't call into the ASTMutationListener callback when it wouldn't
be appropriate.
Fixes PR16635.
llvm-svn: 190016
of local classes. We were previously handling this by performing qualified
lookup within a function declaration(!!); replace it with the proper scope
lookup.
llvm-svn: 188050
decls. That can reenter deserialization and explode horribly by trying to merge
a declaration that we've not got very far through deserializing yet.
llvm-svn: 186236
constructing a lookup table.
Previously, buildLookup would add lookup table entries for each item lexically
within the DC, and adding the first entry with a given name would trigger the
external source to add all its entries with that name. Then buildLookup would
carry on and re-add those entries all over again.
Instead, follow a simple rule: a declaration from an external source is only
ever made visible by the external source. One exception to this: since we don't
usually build a lookup table for the TU in C, and we never serialize one, we
don't expect the external source to provide lookups in the TU in C, so we build
those ones ourselves.
llvm-svn: 184696
whether they replace any existing lookups in the context, rather than
accumulating a bunch of lookup results referring to the same entity.
llvm-svn: 184679
I was not able to find a case (other than the fix in r181163) where this
makes a difference, but it is a more obviously correct API to have.
llvm-svn: 181165
a lambda.
Bug #1 is that CGF's CurFuncDecl was "stuck" at lambda invocation
functions. Fix that by generally improving getNonClosureContext
to look through lambdas and captured statements but only report
code contexts, which is generally what's wanted. Audit uses of
CurFuncDecl and getNonClosureAncestor for correctness.
Bug #2 is that lambdas weren't specially mapping 'self' when inside
an ObjC method. Fix that by removing the requirement for that
and using the normal EmitDeclRefLValue path in LoadObjCSelf.
rdar://13800041
llvm-svn: 181000
Add CapturedDecl to be the DeclContext for CapturedStmt, and perform semantic
analysis. Currently captures all variables by reference.
TODO: templates
Author: Ben Langmuir <ben.langmuir@intel.com>
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D433
llvm-svn: 179618
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x86_64-darwin10-gdb went back green
before it processed the reverted 178663, so it could not have been the culprit.
Revert "Revert 178663."
This reverts commit 4f8a3eb2ce5d4ba422483439e20c8cbb4d953a41.
llvm-svn: 178682
For variables and functions clang used to store two storage classes. The one
"as written" in the code and a patched one, which, for example, propagates
static to the following decls.
This apparently is from the days clang lacked linkage computation. It is now
redundant and this patch removes it.
llvm-svn: 178663
Introduce a new AST Decl node "EmptyDecl" to model empty-declaration. Have attributes from attribute-declaration appertain
to the EmptyDecl node by creating the AST representations of these attributes and attach them to the EmptyDecl node so these
attributes can be sema checked just as attributes attached to "normal" declarations.
llvm-svn: 175900
some cases where functions with no language linkage were being treated as having
C language linkage. In particular, don't warn in
extern "C" {
static NonPod foo();
}
Since getLanguageLinkage checks the language linkage, the linkage computation
cannot use the language linkage. Break the loop by checking just the context
in the linkage computation.
llvm-svn: 175117
visible.
The basic problem here is that a given translation unit can use
forward declarations to form pointers to a given type, say,
class X;
X *x;
and then import a module that includes a definition of X:
import XDef;
We will then fail when attempting to access a member of X, e.g.,
x->method()
because the AST reader did not know to look for a default of a class
named X within the new module.
This implementation is a bit of a C-centric hack, because the only
definitions that can have this property are enums, structs, unions,
Objective-C classes, and Objective-C protocols, and all of those are
either visible at the top-level or can't be defined later. Hence, we
can use the out-of-date-ness of the name and the identifier-update
mechanism to force the update.
In C++, we will not be so lucky, and will need a more advanced
solution, because the definitions could be in namespaces defined in
two different modules, e.g.,
// module 1
namespace N { struct X; }
// module 2
namespace N { struct X { /* ... */ }; }
One possible implementation here is for C++ to extend the information
associated with each identifier table to include the declaration IDs
of any definitions associated with that name, regardless of
context. We would have to eagerly load those definitions.
llvm-svn: 174794
overloads of a name by claiming that there are no lookup results for that name
in modules while loading the names from the module. Lookups in deserialization
really don't want to find names which they themselves are in the process of
introducing. This also has the pleasant side-effect of automatically caching
PCH lookups which found no names.
The runtime here is still quadratic in the number of overloads, but the
constant is lower.
llvm-svn: 174685
name lookup has been performed in that context (this probably only happens in
C++).
1) Whenever we add names to a context, set a flag on it, and if we perform
lookup and discover that the context has had a lookup table built but has the
flag set, update all entries in the lookup table with additional names from
the external source.
2) When marking a DeclContext as having external visible decls, mark the
context in which lookup is performed, not the one we are adding. These won't
be the same if we're adding another copy of a pre-existing namespace.
llvm-svn: 174577
if it found any decls, rather than returning a list of found decls. This
removes a returning-ArrayRef-to-deleted-storage bug from
MultiplexExternalSemaSource (in code not exercised by any of the clang
binaries), reduces the work required in the found-no-decls case with PCH, and
importantly removes the need for DeclContext::lookup to be reentrant.
No functionality change intended!
llvm-svn: 174576
which a particular declaration resides. Use this information to
customize the "definition of 'blah' must be imported from another
module" diagnostic with the module the user actually has to
import. Additionally, recover by importing that module, so we don't
complain about other names in that module.
Still TODO: coming up with decent Fix-Its for these cases, and expand
this recovery approach for other name lookup failures.
llvm-svn: 172290
This does limit these typedefs to being sequences, but no current usage
requires them to be contiguous (we could expand this to a more general
iterator pair range concept at some point).
Also, it'd be nice if SmallVector were constructible directly from an ArrayRef
but this is a bit tricky since ArrayRef depends on SmallVectorBaseImpl for the
inverse conversion. (& generalizing over all range-like things, while nice,
would require some nontrivial SFINAE I haven't thought about yet)
llvm-svn: 170482
uncovered.
This required manually correcting all of the incorrect main-module
headers I could find, and running the new llvm/utils/sort_includes.py
script over the files.
I also manually added quite a few missing headers that were uncovered by
shuffling the order or moving headers up to be main-module-headers.
llvm-svn: 169237
It brought bunch of (possibly false) warnings.
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:60:22: warning: variable 'ID' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
char ModuleNDNM::ID=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:86:22: warning: variable 'ID' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
char ModuleNDM2::ID=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:106:21: warning: variable 'ID' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
char ModuleDNM::ID=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:217:16: warning: variable 'initcount' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
int LPass::initcount=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:218:16: warning: variable 'fincount' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
int LPass::fincount=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:259:16: warning: variable 'inited' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
int BPass::inited=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:260:16: warning: variable 'fin' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
int BPass::fin=0;
^
llvm/unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp:283:24: warning: variable 'ID' is not needed and will not be emitted [-Wunneeded-internal-declaration]
char OnTheFlyTest::ID=0;
^
8 warnings generated.
llvm-svn: 168549
"clang -cc1 -fsyntax-only" on the preprocessed output of
#define M extern int a;
#define M2 M M
#define M4 M2 M2
#define M8 M4 M4
#define M16 M8 M8
#define M32 M16 M16
#define M64 M32 M32
#define M128 M64 M64
#define M256 M128 M128
#define M512 M256 M256
#define M1024 M512 M512
#define M2048 M1024 M1024
#define M4096 M2048 M2048
#define M8192 M4096 M4096
#define M16384 M8192 M8192
M16384
goes from 2.994s to 1.416s. GCC is at 0.022s, so we still have a long way to go.
llvm-svn: 168519
places. I've turned this off for the GNU runtimes --- I don't know if
they support weak class import, but it's easy enough for them to opt in.
Also tweak a comment per review by Jordan.
llvm-svn: 158860
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
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
Reintroduce lazy name lookup table building, ensuring that the lazy building step
produces the same lookup table that would be built by the eager step.
Avoid building a lookup table for the translation unit outside C++, even in cases
where we can't recover the contents of the table from the declaration chain on
the translation unit, since we're not going to perform qualified lookup into it
anyway. Continue to support lazily building such lookup tables for now, though,
since ASTMerge uses them.
In my tests, this performs very similarly to ToT with r152608 backed out, for C,
Obj-C and C++, and does not suffer from PR10447.
llvm-svn: 152905
The deferred lookup table building step couldn't accurately tell which Decls
should be included in the lookup table, and consequently built different tables
in some cases.
Fix this by removing lazy building of DeclContext name lookup tables. In
practice, the laziness was frequently not worthwhile in C++, because we
performed lookup into most DeclContexts. In C, it had a bit more value,
since there is no qualified lookup.
In the place of lazy lookup table building, we simply don't build lookup tables
for function DeclContexts at all. Such name lookup tables are not useful, since
they don't capture the scoping information required to correctly perform name
lookup in a function scope.
The resulting performance delta is within the noise on my testing, but appears
to be a very slight win for C++ and a very slight loss for C. The C performance
can probably be recovered (if it is a measurable problem) by avoiding building
the lookup table for the translation unit.
llvm-svn: 152608
arguments. There are two aspects to this:
- Make sure that when marking the declarations referenced in a
default argument, we don't try to mark local variables, both because
it's a waste of time and because the semantics are wrong: we're not
in a place where we could capture these variables again even if it
did make sense.
- When a lambda expression occurs in a default argument of a
function template, make sure that the corresponding closure type is
considered dependent, so that it will get properly instantiated. The
second bit is a bit of a hack; to fix it properly, we may have to
rearchitect our handling of default arguments, parsing them only
after creating the function definition. However, I'd like to
separate that work from the lambdas work.
llvm-svn: 151076
we have a redeclarable type, and only use the new virtual versions
(getPreviousDeclImpl() and getMostRecentDeclImpl()) when we don't have
that type information. This keeps us from penalizing users with strict
type information (and is the moral equivalent of a "final" method).
Plus, settle on the names getPreviousDecl() and getMostRecentDecl()
throughout.
llvm-svn: 148187
modules. Teach name lookup into namespaces to search in each of the
merged DeclContexts as well as the (now-primary) DeclContext. This
supports the common case where two different modules put something
into the same namespace.
llvm-svn: 147778
to Redeclarable<NamespaceDecl>, so that we benefit from the improveed
redeclaration deserialization and merging logic provided by
Redeclarable<T>. Otherwise, no functionality change.
As a drive-by fix, collapse the "inline" bit into the low bit of the
original namespace/anonymous namespace, saving 8 bytes per
NamespaceDecl on x86_64.
llvm-svn: 147729
into the two unused lower bits of the NextDeclInContext link, dropping
the number of bits in Decl down to 32, and saving 8 bytes per
declaration on x86-64.
llvm-svn: 147660
storage for the global declaration ID. Declarations that are parsed
(rather than deserialized) are unaffected, so the number of
declarations that pay this cost tends to be relatively small (since
relatively few declarations are ever deserialized).
This replaces a largish DenseMap within the AST reader. It's not
strictly a win in terms of memory use---not every declaration was
added to that DenseMap in the first place---but it's cleaner to have
this information available for every deserialized declaration, so that
future clients can rely on it.
llvm-svn: 147617
for Objective-C protocols, including:
- Using the first declaration as the canonical declaration
- Using the definition as the primary DeclContext
- Making sure that all declarations have a pointer to the definition
data, and that we know which declaration is the definition
- Serialization support for redeclaration chains and for adding
definitions to already-serialized declarations.
However, note that we're not taking advantage of much of this code
yet, because we're still re-using ObjCProtocolDecls.
llvm-svn: 147410
redeclaration chain for Objective-C classes, including:
- Using the first declaration as the canonical declaration.
- Using the definition as the primary DeclContext
- Making sure that all declarations have a pointer to the definition
data, and the definition knows that it is the definition.
- Serialization support for when a definition gets added to a
declaration that comes from an AST file.
However, note that we're not taking advantage of much of this code
yet, because we're still re-using ObjCInterfaceDecls.
llvm-svn: 146667
property references to use a new PseudoObjectExpr
expression which pairs a syntactic form of the expression
with a set of semantic expressions implementing it.
This should significantly reduce the complexity required
elsewhere in the compiler to deal with these kinds of
expressions (e.g. IR generation's special l-value kind,
the static analyzer's Message abstraction), at the lower
cost of specifically dealing with the odd AST structure
of these expressions. It should also greatly simplify
efforts to implement similar language features in the
future, most notably Managed C++'s properties and indexed
properties.
Most of the effort here is in dealing with the various
clients of the AST. I've gone ahead and simplified the
ObjC rewriter's use of properties; other clients, like
IR-gen and the static analyzer, have all the old
complexity *and* all the new complexity, at least
temporarily. Many thanks to Ted for writing and advising
on the necessary changes to the static analyzer.
I've xfailed a small diagnostics regression in the static
analyzer at Ted's request.
llvm-svn: 143867
addDeclInternal(). This function suppresses any
calls to FindExternalVisibleDeclsByName() while
a Decl is added to a DeclContext. This behavior
is required for the ASTImporter, because in the
case of the LLDB client the ASTImporter would be
called recursively to import the visible decls,
which leads to assertions because the recursive
call is seeing partially-formed types.
I also modified the ASTImporter to use
addDeclInternal() in all places where it would
otherwise use addDecl(). This fix should not
affect the rest of Clang, passes Clang's
testsuite, and fixes several serious LLDB bugs.
llvm-svn: 142634
avoids loading data from an external source, since those lookups were
causing some "interesting" recursion in LLDB.
This code is not efficient. I plan to remedy this inefficiency in a
follow-up commit.
llvm-svn: 142023
the fields if they are already loaded, just ignore them when we are building
the chain in BuildDeclChain.
This fixes an lldb issue where fields were removed and not getting re-added
because lldb is based on ASTImporter adding decls to DeclContext and fields
were already added before by the ASTImporter.
We should really simplify the interaction between DeclContext <-> lldb
going forward..
rdar://10246067
llvm-svn: 141418
builtin types (When requested). This is another step toward making
ASTUnit build the ASTContext as needed when loading an AST file,
rather than doing so after the fact. No actual functionality change (yet).
llvm-svn: 138985
, such as list of forward @class decls, in a DeclGroup
node. Deal with its consequence throught clang. This
is in preparation for more Sema work ahead. // rdar://8843851.
Feel free to reverse if it breaks something important
and I am unavailable.
llvm-svn: 138709
after having already deserialized the fields, clear out the fields
first. This makes sure that we keep all of the declarations in the
lexical context (including those implicitly added by later
type-checking) within the same list. A test case for this behavior is
coming as part of another commit; testing for this problem in
isolation is a nightmare.
llvm-svn: 138661
table when serializing an AST file. This was a holdover from the days
before chained PCH, and is a complete waste of time and storage
now. It's a good thing it's useless, because I have no idea how I
would have implemented MaterializeVisibleDecls efficiently in the
presence of modules.
llvm-svn: 138496
Example:
template <class T>
class A {
public:
template <class U> void f(U p) { }
template <> void f(int p) { } // <== class scope specialization
};
This extension is necessary to parse MSVC standard C++ headers, MFC and ATL code.
BTW, with this feature in, clang can parse (-fsyntax-only) all the MSVC 2010 standard header files without any error.
llvm-svn: 137573
to allow clients to specify that they've already (correctly) loaded
declarations, and that no further action is needed.
Also, make sure that we clear the "has external lexical declarations"
bit before calling FindExternalLexicalDecls(), to avoid infinite
recursion.
llvm-svn: 135306
works in a 'while(false)' loop. Simplify this code; it was
complicated only in anticipation of C++0x lambdas, and it can
become complicated again when those happen. :)
llvm-svn: 133761
gcc's unused warnings which don't get emitted if the function is referenced even in an unevaluated context
(e.g. in templates, sizeof, etc.). Also, saying that a function is 'unused' because it won't get codegen'ed
is somewhat misleading.
- Don't emit 'unused' warnings for functions that are referenced in any part of the user's code.
- A warning that an internal function/variable won't get emitted is useful though, so introduce
-Wunneeded-internal-declaration which will warn if a function/variable with internal linkage is not
"needed" ('used' from the codegen perspective), e.g:
static void foo() { }
template <int>
void bar() {
foo();
}
test.cpp:1:13: warning: function 'foo' is not needed and will not be emitted
static void foo() { }
^
Addresses rdar://8733476.
llvm-svn: 129794
which versions of an OS provide a certain facility. For example,
void foo()
__attribute__((availability(macosx,introduced=10.2,deprecated=10.4,obsoleted=10.6)));
says that the function "foo" was introduced in 10.2, deprecated in
10.4, and completely obsoleted in 10.6. This attribute ties in with
the deployment targets (e.g., -mmacosx-version-min=10.1 specifies that
we want to deploy back to Mac OS X 10.1). There are several concrete
behaviors that this attribute enables, as illustrated with the
function foo() above:
- If we choose a deployment target >= Mac OS X 10.4, uses of "foo"
will result in a deprecation warning, as if we had placed
attribute((deprecated)) on it (but with a better diagnostic)
- If we choose a deployment target >= Mac OS X 10.6, uses of "foo"
will result in an "unavailable" warning (in C)/error (in C++), as
if we had placed attribute((unavailable)) on it
- If we choose a deployment target prior to 10.2, foo() is
weak-imported (if it is a kind of entity that can be weak
imported), as if we had placed the weak_import attribute on it.
Naturally, there can be multiple availability attributes on a
declaration, for different platforms; only the current platform
matters when checking availability attributes.
The only platforms this attribute currently works for are "ios" and
"macosx", since we already have -mxxxx-version-min flags for them and we
have experience there with macro tricks translating down to the
deprecated/unavailable/weak_import attributes. The end goal is to open
this up to other platforms, and even extension to other "platforms"
that are really libraries (say, through a #pragma clang
define_system), but that hasn't yet been designed and we may want to
shake out more issues with this narrower problem first.
Addresses <rdar://problem/6690412>.
As a drive-by bug-fix, if an entity is both deprecated and
unavailable, we only emit the "unavailable" diagnostic.
llvm-svn: 128127
use the translation unit as its declaration context, then deserialize
the actual lexical and semantic DeclContexts after the template
parameter is complete. This avoids problems when the DeclContext
itself (e.g., a class template) is dependent on the template parameter
(e.g., for the injected-class-name).
llvm-svn: 127056
DeclContext once we've created it. This mirrors what we do for
function parameters, where the parameters start out with
translation-unit context and then are adopted by the appropriate
DeclContext when it is created. Also give template parameters public
access and make sure that they don't show up for the purposes of name
lookup.
Fixes PR9400, a regression introduced by r126920, which implemented
substitution of default template arguments provided in template
template parameters (C++ core issue 150).
How on earth could the DeclContext of a template parameter affect the
handling of default template arguments?
I'm so glad you asked! The link is
Sema::getTemplateInstantiationArgs(), which determines the outer
template argument lists that correspond to a given declaration. When
we're instantiating a default template argument for a template
template parameter within the body of a template definition (not it's
instantiation, per core issue 150), we weren't getting any outer
template arguments because the context of the template template
parameter was the translation unit. Now that the context of the
template template parameter is its owning template, we get the
template arguments from the injected-class-name of the owning
template, so substitution works as it should.
llvm-svn: 127004
lead to a serious slowdown (4%) on parsing of Cocoa.h. This memory
optimization should be revisited later, when we have time to look at
the generated code.
llvm-svn: 126033
reducing the size of all declarations by one pointer. For a 64-bit
Clang parsing Cocoa.h, this saves ~630k of memory (about 3.5% of
ASTContext's memory usage for this header).
llvm-svn: 125756
LabelDecl and LabelStmt. There is a 1-1 correspondence between the
two, but this simplifies a bunch of code by itself. This is because
labels are the only place where we previously had references to random
other statements, causing grief for AST serialization and other stuff.
This does cause one regression (attr(unused) doesn't silence unused
label warnings) which I'll address next.
This does fix some minor bugs:
1. "The only valid attribute " diagnostic was capitalized.
2. Various diagnostics printed as ''labelname'' instead of 'labelname'
3. This reduces duplication of label checking between functions and blocks.
Review appreciated, particularly for the cindex and template bits.
llvm-svn: 125733
parameter packs, along with ParmVarDecl::isParameterPack(), which
looks for function parameter packs. Use these routines to fix some
obvious FIXMEs.
llvm-svn: 122904
packs, e.g.,
template<typename T, unsigned ...Dims> struct multi_array;
along with semantic analysis support for finding unexpanded non-type
template parameter packs in types, expressions, and so on.
Template instantiation involving non-type template parameter packs
probably doesn't work yet. That'll come soon.
llvm-svn: 122527
and visibility of declarations, because it was extremely messy and it
increased the size of NamedDecl.
An improved implementation is forthcoming.
llvm-svn: 121012
declarations.
The motivation for this patch is that linkage/visibility computations
are linear in the number of redeclarations of an entity, and we've run
into a case where a single translation unit has > 6500 redeclarations
of the same (unused!) external variable. Since each redeclaration
involves a linkage check, the resulting quadratic behavior makes Clang
slow to a crawl. With this change, a simple test with 512
redeclarations of a variable syntax-checks ~20x faster than
before.
That said, I hate this change, and will probably end up reverting it
in a few hours. Reasons to hate it:
- It makes NamedDecl larger, since we don't have enough free bits in
Decl to squeeze in the extra information about caching.
- There are way too many places where we need to invalidate this
cache, because the visibility of a declaration can change due to
redeclarations (!). Despite self-hosting and passing the testsuite,
I have no confidence that I've found all of places where this cache
needs to be invalidated.
llvm-svn: 120808
A new AST node is introduced:
def IndirectField : DDecl<Value>;
IndirectFields are injected into the anonymous's parent scope and chain back to
the original field. Name lookup for anonymous entities now result in an
IndirectFieldDecl instead of a FieldDecl.
There is no functionality change, the code generated should be the same.
llvm-svn: 119919
- tags with C linkage should ignore visibility=hidden
- functions and variables with explicit visibility attributes should
ignore the linkage of their types
Either of these should be sufficient to fix PR8457.
Also, FileCheck-ize a test case.
llvm-svn: 117351
its initial creation/deserialization and store the changes in a chained PCH.
The idea is that the AST entities call methods on the ASTMutationListener to give notifications
of changes; the PCHWriter implements the ASTMutationListener interface and stores the incremental changes
of the updated entity. WIP
llvm-svn: 117235
instead of deserializing the complete declaration context of the record.
Iterating over the fields of a record is very common (e.g to determine the layout), unfortunately we needlessly deserialize every declaration
that the declaration context of the record contains; this can be bad for large C++ classes that contain a lot of methods.
Fix this by allow deserialization of just the fields when we want to iterate over them.
Progress for rdar://7260160.
llvm-svn: 116507
DeclaredCopyConstructor bits in CXXRecordDecl's DefinitionData
structure. Rather than having Sema call addedConstructor or set the
bits directly at semi-random places, move all of the logic for
managing these bits into CXXRecordDecl itself and tie the
addedConstructor call into DeclContext::addDecl().
This makes it easier for AST-building clients to get the right bits
set in DefinitionData, and is one small part of <rdar://problem/8459981>.
llvm-svn: 114889
When including a PCH and later re-emitting to another PCH, the name lookup tables of DeclContexts
may be incomplete, since we now lazily deserialize the visible decls of a particular name.
Fix the issue by iterating over the un-deserialized visible decls and completing the lookup tables
of DeclContexts before writing them out.
llvm-svn: 111698
*Huge* improvement over the amount of deserializing that we do for C++ lookup.
e.g, if he have the Carbon header precompiled and include it on a file containing this:
int x;
these are the before/after stats:
BEFORE:
*** AST File Statistics:
578 stat cache hits
4 stat cache misses
548/30654 source location entries read (1.787695%)
15907/16501 types read (96.400223%)
53525/59955 declarations read (89.275291%)
33993/43525 identifiers read (78.099945%)
41516/51891 statements read (80.006165%)
77/5317 macros read (1.448185%)
0/6335 lexical declcontexts read (0.000000%)
1/5424 visible declcontexts read (0.018437%)
AFTER using the on-disk table:
*** AST File Statistics:
578 stat cache hits
4 stat cache misses
548/30654 source location entries read (1.787695%)
10/16501 types read (0.060602%)
9/59955 declarations read (0.015011%)
161/43525 identifiers read (0.369902%)
20/51891 statements read (0.038542%)
6/5317 macros read (0.112846%)
0/6335 lexical declcontexts read (0.000000%)
2/5424 visible declcontexts read (0.036873%)
There's only one issue affecting mostly the precompiled preambles which I will address soon.
llvm-svn: 111636
Now all classes derived from Attr are generated from TableGen.
Additionally, Attr* is no longer its own linked list; SmallVectors or
Attr* are used. The accompanying LLVM commit contains the updates to
TableGen necessary for this.
Some other notes about newly-generated attribute classes:
- The constructor arguments are a SourceLocation and a Context&,
followed by the attributes arguments in the order that they were
defined in Attr.td
- Every argument in Attr.td has an appropriate accessor named getFoo,
and there are sometimes a few extra ones (such as to get the length
of a variadic argument).
Additionally, specific_attr_iterator has been introduced, which will
iterate over an AttrVec, but only over attributes of a certain type. It
can be accessed through either Decl::specific_attr_begin/end or
the global functions of the same name.
llvm-svn: 111455
to the consumer until the DeclContext is fully prepared.
Before, due to recursive loading, we could be in a situation where we would try to deserialize the decls of a DeclContext which was already doing that, and bad things would happen. In the specific case I encountered, the lexical decls would
form a cycle and we would enter infinite loop territory.
llvm-svn: 109857
- Stop reading in (and thus deserializing) every declaration in the TU when creating a dependent PCH.
- Switch the storage of a decl context's lexical declarations to a blob containing the IDs instead of a record. This is the only sane way of supporting update records later on.
llvm-svn: 109474