language options. Use that .def file to declare the LangOptions class
and initialize all of its members, eliminating a source of annoying
initialization bugs.
AST serialization changes are next up.
llvm-svn: 139605
builtin types (When requested). This is another step toward making
ASTUnit build the ASTContext as needed when loading an AST file,
rather than doing so after the fact. No actual functionality change (yet).
llvm-svn: 138985
synthesis. This new feature is currently placed under
-fobjc-default-synthesize-properties option
and is off by default pending further testing.
It will become the default feature soon.
// rdar://8843851
llvm-svn: 138913
loads the named module. The syntax itself is intentionally hideous and
will be replaced at some later point with something more
palatable. For now, we're focusing on the semantics:
- Module imports are handled first by the preprocessor (to get macro
definitions) and then the same tokens are also handled by the parser
(to get declarations). If both happen (as in normal compilation),
the second one is redundant, because we currently have no way to
hide macros or declarations when loading a module. Chris gets credit
for this mad-but-workable scheme.
- The Preprocessor now holds on to a reference to a module loader,
which is responsible for loading named modules. CompilerInstance is
the only important module loader: it now knows how to create and
wire up an AST reader on demand to actually perform the module load.
- We search for modules in the include path, using the module name
with the suffix ".pcm" (precompiled module) for the file name. This
is a temporary hack; we hope to improve the situation in the
future.
llvm-svn: 138679
For the test case added to function-redecl.cpp, we were previously complaining
about a mismatch in the parameter types, since the definition used the
typedef'd type.
llvm-svn: 138318
to modernity. Instead of passing down individual
context objects from parser to sema, establish decl
context in parser and have sema access current context
as needed. I still need to take of Doug's comment for
minor cleanups.
llvm-svn: 138040
Example:
template <class T>
class A {
public:
template <class U> void f(U p) { }
template <> void f(int p) { } // <== class scope specialization
};
This extension is necessary to parse MSVC standard C++ headers, MFC and ATL code.
BTW, with this feature in, clang can parse (-fsyntax-only) all the MSVC 2010 standard header files without any error.
llvm-svn: 137573
ASTContext with accessors/mutators. The only functional change is that
the AST writer won't bother writing the id/Class/SEL redefinition type
if it hasn't been explicitly set; previously, it ended up being
written as a synonym for the built-in id/Class/SEL.
llvm-svn: 137349
Having a function declaration and definition with different types for a
parameter where the types have same (textual) name can occur when an unqualified
type name resolves to types in different namespaces in each location.
The error messages have been extended by adding notes that point to the first
parameter of the function definition that doesn't match the declaration, instead
of a generic "member declaration nearly matches". The generic message is still
used in cases where the mismatch is not in the paramenter list, such as
mismatched cv qualifiers on the member function itself.
llvm-svn: 136891
integer, and initialise its TypeSourceInfo. The initialisation fixes a
crash when using pre-compiled preambles with C++ code-completion. From
Erik Verbruggen! Fixes PR10511.
llvm-svn: 136786
we could turn this into an on-disk hash table so we don't load the
whole thing the first time we need it. However, it tends to be very,
very small (i.e., empty) for most precompiled headers, so it isn't all
that interesting.
llvm-svn: 136352
methods, including indirectly overridden methods like those
declared in protocols and categories. There are mismatches
that we would like to diagnose but aren't yet, but this
is fine for now.
I looked at approaches that avoided doing this lookup
unless we needed it, but the infer-related-result-type
checks were doing it anyway, so I left it with the same
fast-path check for no previous declartions of that
selector.
llvm-svn: 135743
vector<int>
to
std::vector<int>
Patch by Kaelyn Uhrain, with minor tweaks + PCH support from me. Fixes
PR5776/<rdar://problem/8652971>.
Thanks Kaelyn!
llvm-svn: 134007
(or follow up) extern declaration with weak_import as
an actual definition. make clang follows this behavior.
// rdar://9538608
llvm-gcc treats an extern declaration with weak_import
llvm-svn: 133450
storage specifier is different from the storage specifier on the
template. If that storage specifier is the same, then we only warn.
Thanks to John for the prodding.
llvm-svn: 133236
Language-design credit goes to a lot of people, but I particularly want
to single out Blaine Garst and Patrick Beard for their contributions.
Compiler implementation credit goes to Argyrios, Doug, Fariborz, and myself,
in no particular order.
llvm-svn: 133103
struct {
typedef int A = 0;
};
According to the C++11 standard, this is not ill-formed, but does not have any ascribed meaning. We can't reasonably accept it, so treat it as ill-formed.
Also switch C++ from an incorrect 'fields can only be initialized in constructors' diagnostic for this case to C's 'illegal initializer (only variables can be initialized)'
llvm-svn: 132890
Related result types apply Cocoa conventions to the type of message
sends and property accesses to Objective-C methods that are known to
always return objects whose type is the same as the type of the
receiving class (or a subclass thereof), such as +alloc and
-init. This tightens up static type safety for Objective-C, so that we
now diagnose mistakes like this:
t.m:4:10: warning: incompatible pointer types initializing 'NSSet *'
with an
expression of type 'NSArray *' [-Wincompatible-pointer-types]
NSSet *array = [[NSArray alloc] init];
^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/System/Library/Frameworks/Foundation.framework/Headers/NSObject.h:72:1:
note:
instance method 'init' is assumed to return an instance of its
receiver
type ('NSArray *')
- (id)init;
^
It also means that we get decent type inference when writing code in
Objective-C++0x:
auto array = [[NSMutableArray alloc] initWithObjects:@"one", @"two",nil];
// ^ now infers NSMutableArray* rather than id
llvm-svn: 132868
- Removed fix-it hints from template instaniations since changes to the
templates are rarely helpful.
- Changed the caret in template instaniations from the class/struct name to the
class/struct keyword, matching the other warnings.
- Do not offer fix-it hints when multiple declarations disagree. Warnings are
still given.
- Once a definition is found, offer a fix-it hint to all previous declarations
with wrong tag.
- Declarations that disagree with a previous definition will get a fix-it hint
to change the declaration.
llvm-svn: 132831
specializing a member of an unspecialized template, and recover from
such errors without crashing. Fixes PR10024 / <rdar://problem/9509761>.
llvm-svn: 132677
class type (or array thereof), eliminating some redundant checks
(thanks Eli!) and adding some tests where the behavior differs in
C++98/03 vs. C++0x.
llvm-svn: 132218
makes it into a special member function. This is very bad and can lead
to all sorts of nastiness including implicit member functions violating
the One Definition Rule. This should probably be made ill-formed in a
later version of the standard, but for now we'll just warn.
llvm-svn: 132104
behind implicit moves. We now correctly identify move constructors and
assignment operators and update bits on the record correctly. Generation
of implicit moves (declarations or definitions) is not yet supported.
llvm-svn: 132080
type that turns one type into another. This is used as the basis to
implement __underlying_type properly - with TypeSourceInfo and proper
behavior in the face of templates.
llvm-svn: 132017
that the unevaluated subexpressions of &&, ||, and ? : are not
considered when determining whether the expression is a constant
expression. Also, turn the "used in its own initializer" warning into
a runtime-behavior warning, so that it doesn't fire when a variable is
used as part of an unevaluated subexpression of its own initializer.
Fixes PR9999.
llvm-svn: 131968
should use a constructor to default-initialize a
variable. InitializationSequence knows the rules for default
initialization, better. Fixes <rdar://problem/8501008>.
llvm-svn: 131796
Type::isUnsignedIntegerOrEnumerationType(), which are like
Type::isSignedIntegerType() and Type::isUnsignedIntegerType() but also
consider the underlying type of a C++0x scoped enumeration type.
Audited all callers to the existing functions, switching those that
need to also handle scoped enumeration types (e.g., those that deal
with constant values) over to the new functions. Fixes PR9923 /
<rdar://problem/9447851>.
llvm-svn: 131735
template<class U>
struct X1 {
template<class T> void f(T*);
template<> void f(int*) { }
};
Won't be so simple. I need to think more about it.
llvm-svn: 131362
They are actually grammatically considered definitions and parsed
accordingly.
This fixes the outstanding bugs regarding defaulting functions after
their declarations.
We now really nicely diagnose the following construct (try it!)
int foo() = delete, bar;
Still todo: Defaulted functions other than default constructors
Test cases (including for the above construct)
llvm-svn: 131228
I've edited one diagnostic which would print "copy constructor" for copy
constructors and "constructor" for any other constructor. If anyone is
extremely enamored with this, it can be reinstated with a simple boolean
flag rather than calling getSpecialMember, which is inappropriate.
llvm-svn: 131143
the semantic context referenced by the nested-name-specifier rather
than the syntactic form of the nested-name-specifier. The previous
incarnation was based on my complete misunderstanding of C++
[temp.expl.spec]. The latest C++0x working draft clarifies the
requirements here, and this rewrite is intended to follow that.
Along the way, improve source location information in the
diagnostics. For example, if we report that a specific type needs or
doesn't need a 'template<>' header, we dig out that type in the
nested-name-specifier and highlight its range.
Fixes: PR5907, PR9421, PR8277, PR8708, PR9482, PR9668, PR9877, and
<rdar://problem/9135379>.
llvm-svn: 131138
Focus is on default constructors for the time being. Currently the
exception specification and prototype are processed correctly. Codegen
might work but in all likelihood doesn't.
Note that due to an error, out-of-line defaulting of member functions is
currently impossible. It will continue to that until I muster up the
courage to admit that I secretly pray to epimetheus and that I need to
rework the way default gets from Parse -> Sema.
llvm-svn: 131115
- New isDefined() function checks for deletedness
- isThisDeclarationADefinition checks for deletedness
- New doesThisDeclarationHaveABody() does what
isThisDeclarationADefinition() used to do
- The IsDeleted bit is not propagated across redeclarations
- isDeleted() now checks the canoncial declaration
- New isDeletedAsWritten() does what it says on the tin.
- isUserProvided() now correct (thanks Richard!)
This fixes the bug that we weren't catching
void foo() = delete;
void foo() {}
as being a redefinition.
llvm-svn: 131013
Explictly defaultedness is correctly reflected on the AST, but there are
no changes to how that affects the definition of functions or much else
really.
llvm-svn: 130974
tag, filter out those ambiguous names that we found if they aren't
within the declaration context where this newly-defined tag will be
visible.
This is basically a hack, because we really need to fix the lookup of
tag declarations in this case to not find things it
shouldn't. However, it's better than what we had before, and it fixes
<rdar://problem/9168556>.
llvm-svn: 130810
parameters on the floor in certain cases:
class X {
template <typename T> friend typename A<T>::Foo;
};
This was parsed as a *non* template friend declaration some how, and
received an ExtWarn. Fixing the parser to actually provide the template
parameters to the freestanding declaration parse triggers the code which
specifically looks for such constructs and hard errors on them.
Along the way, this prevents us from trying to instantiate constructs
like the above inside of a outer template. This is important as loosing
the template parameters means we don't have a well formed declaration
and template instantiation will be unable to rebuild the AST. That fixes
a crash in the GCC test suite.
llvm-svn: 130772
parameter node and use this to correctly mangle parameter
references in function template signatures.
A follow-up patch will improve the storage usage of these
fields; here I've just done the lazy thing.
llvm-svn: 130669
in the classification of template names and using declarations. We now
properly typo-correct the leading identifiers in statements to types,
templates, values, etc. As an added bonus, this reduces the number of
lookups required for disambiguation.
llvm-svn: 130288
looking at the context and the correction and using a custom
diagnostic. Also, enable some Fix-It tests that were somewhat lamely
disabled.
llvm-svn: 130283
invalid expression rather than the far-more-generic "error". Fixes a
mild regression in error recovery uncovered by the GCC testsuite.
llvm-svn: 130128
performs name lookup for an identifier and resolves it to a
type/expression/template/etc. in the same step. This scheme is
intended to improve both performance (by reducing the number of
redundant name lookups for a given identifier token) and error
recovery (by giving Sema a chance to correct type names before the
parser has decided that the identifier isn't a type name). For
example, this allows us to properly typo-correct type names at the
beginning of a statement:
t.c:6:3: error: use of undeclared identifier 'integer'; did you mean
'Integer'?
integer *i = 0;
^~~~~~~
Integer
t.c:1:13: note: 'Integer' declared here
typedef int Integer;
^
Previously, we wouldn't give a Fix-It because the typo correction
occurred after the parser had checked whether "integer" was a type
name (via Sema::getTypeName(), which isn't allowed to typo-correct)
and therefore decided to parse "integer * i = 0" as an expression. By
typo-correcting earlier, we typo-correct to the type name Integer and
parse this as a declaration.
Moreover, in this context, we can also typo-correct identifiers to
keywords, e.g.,
t.c:7:3: error: use of undeclared identifier 'vid'; did you mean
'void'?
vid *p = i;
^~~
void
and recover appropriately.
Note that this is very much a work-in-progress. The new
Sema::ClassifyName is only used for expression-or-declaration
disambiguation in C at the statement level. The next steps will be to
make this work for the same disambiguation in C++ (where
functional-style casts make some trouble), then push it
further into the parser to eliminate more redundant name lookups.
Fixes <rdar://problem/7963833> for C and starts us down the path of
<rdar://problem/8172000>.
llvm-svn: 130082
cases that demonstrates exactly why this does indeed apply in 0x mode.
If isPOD is currently broken in 0x mode, we should fix that directly
rather than papering over it here.
llvm-svn: 130007
This fixes 1 error when parsing the MSVC 2008 header files.
Example:
template<class T> class A {
public:
typedef int TYPE;
};
template<class T> class B : public A<T> {
public:
A<T>::TYPE a; // no typename required because A<T> is a base class.
};
llvm-svn: 129425
This patch authored by Eric Niebler.
Many methods on the Sema class (e.g. ConvertPropertyForRValue) take Expr
pointers as in/out parameters (Expr *&). This is especially true for the
routines that apply implicit conversions to nodes in-place. This design is
workable only as long as those conversions cannot fail. If they are allowed
to fail, they need a way to report their failures. The typical way of doing
this in clang is to use an ExprResult, which has an extra bit to signal a
valid/invalid state. Returning ExprResult is de riguour elsewhere in the Sema
interface. We suggest changing the Expr *& parameters in the Sema interface
to ExprResult &. This increases interface consistency and maintainability.
This interface change is important for work supporting MS-style C++
properties. For reasons explained here
<http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-dev/2011-February/013180.html>,
seemingly trivial operations like rvalue/lvalue conversions that formerly
could not fail now can. (The reason is that given the semantics of the
feature, getter/setter method lookup cannot happen until the point of use, at
which point it may be found that the method does not exist, or it may have the
wrong type, or overload resolution may fail, or it may be inaccessible.)
llvm-svn: 129143
1) Change the CFG to include the DeclStmt for conditional variables, instead of using the condition itself as a faux DeclStmt.
2) Update ExprEngine (the static analyzer) to understand (1), so not to regress.
3) Update UninitializedValues.cpp to initialize all tracked variables to Uninitialized at the start of the function/method.
4) Only use the SelfReferenceChecker (SemaDecl.cpp) on global variables, leaving the dataflow analysis to handle other cases.
The combination of (1) and (3) allows the dataflow-based -Wuninitialized to find self-init problems when the initializer
contained control-flow.
llvm-svn: 128858
This is basically the same idea as the warning on uninitialized uses of
fields within an initializer list. As such, it is on by default and
under -Wuninitialized.
Original patch by Richard Trieu, with some massaging from me on the
wording and grouping of the diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 128376
AttributeLists do not accumulate over the lifetime of parsing, but are
instead reused. Also make the arguments array not require a separate
allocation, and make availability attributes store their stuff in
augmented memory, too.
llvm-svn: 128209
forward-looking "goto" statement, make sure to insert it *after* the
last declaration in the identifier resolver's declaration chain that
is either outside of the function/block/method's scope or that is
declared in that function/block/method's specific scope. Previously,
we could end up inserting the label ahead of declarations in inner
scopes, confusing C++ name lookup.
Fixes PR9491/<rdar://problem/9140426> and <rdar://problem/9135994>.
Note that the crash-on-invalid PR9495 is *not* fixed. That's a
separate issue.
llvm-svn: 127737
cannot yet be resolved, be sure to push the new label declaration into
the right place within the identifier chain. Otherwise, name lookup in
C++ gets confused when searching for names that are lexically closer
than the label. Fixes PR9463.
llvm-svn: 127623
Change the interface to expose the new information and deal with the enormous fallout.
Introduce the new ExceptionSpecificationType value EST_DynamicNone to more easily deal with empty throw specifications.
Update the tests for noexcept and fix the various bugs uncovered, such as lack of tentative parsing support.
llvm-svn: 127537
of a C++0x inline namespace within enclosing namespaces, as noted in
C++0x [namespace.def]p8.
Fixes <rdar://problem/9006349>, a libc++ failure where Clang was
rejected an explicit specialization of std::swap (since libc++ puts it
into an inline, versioned namespace std::__1).
llvm-svn: 127162
nested-name-speciciers within elaborated type names, e.g.,
enum clang::NestedNameSpecifier::SpecifierKind
Fixes in this iteration include:
(1) Compute the type-source range properly for a dependent template
specialization type that starts with "template template-id ::", as
in a member access expression
dep->template f<T>::f()
This is a latent bug I triggered with this change (because now we're
checking the computed source ranges for dependent template
specialization types). But the real problem was...
(2) Make sure to set the qualifier range on a dependent template
specialization type appropriately. This will go away once we push
nested-name-specifier locations into dependent template
specialization types, but it was the source of the
valgrind errors on the buildbots.
llvm-svn: 126765
information for qualifier type names throughout the parser to address
several problems.
The commit message from r126737:
Push nested-name-specifier source location information into elaborated
name types, e.g., "enum clang::NestedNameSpecifier::SpecifierKind".
Aside from the normal changes, this also required some tweaks to the
parser. Essentially, when we're looking at a type name (via
getTypeName()) specifically for the purpose of creating an annotation
token, we pass down the flag that asks for full type-source location
information to be stored within the returned type. That way, we retain
source-location information involving nested-name-specifiers rather
than trying to reconstruct that information later, long after it's
been lost in the parser.
With this change, test/Index/recursive-cxx-member-calls.cpp is showing
much improved results again, since that code has lots of
nested-name-specifiers.
llvm-svn: 126748
name types, e.g., "enum clang::NestedNameSpecifier::SpecifierKind".
Aside from the normal changes, this also required some tweaks to the
parser. Essentially, when we're looking at a type name (via
getTypeName()) specifically for the purpose of creating an annotation
token, we pass down the flag that asks for full type-source location
information to be stored within the returned type. That way, we retain
source-location information involving nested-name-specifiers rather
than trying to reconstruct that information later, long after it's
been lost in the parser.
With this change, test/Index/recursive-cxx-member-calls.cpp is showing
much improved results again, since that code has lots of
nested-name-specifiers.
llvm-svn: 126737
source-location information. We don't actually preserve this
information in any of the resulting TypeLocs (yet), so it doesn't
matter.
llvm-svn: 126693
* Flag indicating 'we're parsing this auto typed variable's initializer' moved from VarDecl to Sema
* Temporary template parameter list for auto deduction is now allocated on the stack.
* Deduced 'auto' types are now uniqued.
llvm-svn: 126139
making them be template instantiated in a more normal way and
make them handle attributes like other decls.
This fixes the used/unused label handling stuff, making it use
the same infrastructure as other decls.
llvm-svn: 125771
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
instead from the Scope; Inner scopes in bodies don't have DeclContexts associated with them.
Fixes http://llvm.org/PR9160 & rdar://problem/8966163.
llvm-svn: 125097
say "out-of-line definition differ from the declaration in the return type" instead of
the silly "functions that differ only in their return type cannot be overloaded".
Addresses rdar://7980179.
llvm-svn: 124939
The difference with gcc is that it warns if you overload virtual methods only if
the method doesn't also override any method. This is to cut down on the number of warnings
and make it more useful like reported here: http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=20423.
If we want to warn that not all overloads are overriden we can have an additional
warning like -Wpartial-override.
-Woverloaded-virtual, unlike gcc, is added to -Wmost. Addresses rdar://8757630.
llvm-svn: 124805
extremely rambunctious, both on parsing and on template instantiation.
Calm it down, fixing an internal consistency assert on anonymous enum
instantiation manglings.
llvm-svn: 124653
clang's -Wuninitialized-experimental warning.
While these don't look like real bugs, clang's
-Wuninitialized-experimental analysis is stricter
than GCC's, and these fixes have the benefit
of being general nice cleanups.
llvm-svn: 124072
Inheritable attributes on declarations may be inherited by any later
redeclaration at merge time. By contrast, a non-inheritable attribute
will not be inherited by later redeclarations. Non-inheritable
attributes may be semantically analysed early, allowing them to
influence the redeclaration/overloading process.
Before this change, the "overloadable" attribute received special
handling to be treated as non-inheritable, while all other attributes
were treated as inheritable. This patch generalises the concept,
while removing a FIXME. Some CUDA location attributes are also marked
as non-inheritable in order to support special overloading semantics
(to be introduced in a later patch).
The patch introduces a new Attr subclass, InheritableAttr, from
which all inheritable attributes derive. Non-inheritable attributes
simply derive from Attr.
N.B. I did not review every attribute to determine whether it should
be marked non-inheritable. This can be done later on an incremental
basis, as this change does not affect default functionality.
llvm-svn: 123959
there's a respectable point of instantiation. Also, make sure we do
this operation even when instantiating a dependently-typed variable.
llvm-svn: 123818
1) Declaration of function parameter packs
2) Instantiation of function parameter packs within function types.
3) Template argument deduction of function parameter packs when
matching two function types.
We're missing all of the important template-instantiation logic for
function template definitions, along with template argument deduction
from the argument list of a function call, so don't even think of
trying to use these for real yet.
llvm-svn: 122926
don't have access to (e.g., fprintf, which needs the library type
FILE), fail with a warning and forget about the builtin
entirely. Previously, we would actually provide an error, which breaks
autoconf's super-lame checks for fprintf, longjmp, etc. Fixes PR8316.
llvm-svn: 122744
parameter packs (C++0x [dcl.fct]p13), including disambiguation between
unnamed function parameter packs and varargs (C++0x [dcl.fct]p14) for
cases like
void f(T...)
where T may or may not contain unexpanded parameter packs.
llvm-svn: 122520
new gcc warning that complains on self-assignments and
self-initializations. Fix one bug found by the warning, in which one
clang::OverloadCandidate constructor failed to initialize its
FunctionTemplate member.
llvm-svn: 122459
inconsistent with the type that the builtin *should* have, forget
about the builtin altogether: we don't want subsequence analyses,
CodeGen, etc., to think that we have a proper builtin function.
C is protected from errors here because it allows one to use a
library builtin without having a declaration, and detects inconsistent
(re-)declarations of builtins during declaration merging. C++ was
unprotected, and therefore would crash.
Fixes PR8839.
llvm-svn: 122351
declarations. This is a work in progress, as I go through the C++
declaration grammar to identify where unexpanded parameter packs can
occur.
llvm-svn: 121912
Diagnostic pragmas are broken because we don't keep track of the diagnostic state changes and we only check the current/latest state.
Problems manifest if a diagnostic is emitted for a source line that has different diagnostic state than the current state; this can affect
a lot of places, like C++ inline methods, template instantiations, the lexer, etc.
Fix the issue by having the Diagnostic object keep track of the source location of the pragmas so that it is able to know what is the diagnostic state at any given source location.
Fixes rdar://8365684.
llvm-svn: 121873
within the class. Teach IR gen to look for function definitions in record
lexical contexts when deciding whether to emit a function whose address
was taken. Fixes PR8789.
llvm-svn: 121833
class to be passed around. The line between argument and return types and
everything else is kindof vague, but I think it's justifiable.
llvm-svn: 121752
and TemplateArgument with an operation that determines whether there
are any unexpanded parameter packs within that construct. Use this
information to diagnose the appearance of the names of parameter packs
that have not been expanded (C++ [temp.variadic]p5). Since this
property is checked often (every declaration, ever expression
statement, etc.), we extend Type and Expr with a bit storing the
result of this computation, rather than walking the AST each time to
determine whether any unexpanded parameter packs occur.
This commit is deficient in several ways, which will be remedied with
future commits:
- Expr has a bit to store the presence of an unexpanded parameter
pack, but it is never set.
- The error messages don't point out where the unexpanded parameter
packs were named in the type/expression, but they should.
- We don't check for unexpanded parameter packs in all of the places
where we should.
- Testing is sparse, pending the resolution of the above three
issues.
llvm-svn: 121724
space better. Remove this reference. To make that work, change some APIs
(most importantly, getDesugaredType()) to take an ASTContext& if they
need to return a QualType. Simultaneously, diminish the need to return a
QualType by introducing some useful APIs on SplitQualType, which is
just a std::pair<const Type *, Qualifiers>.
llvm-svn: 121478
zextOrTrunc(), and APSInt methods extend(), extOrTrunc() and new method
trunc(), to be const and to return a new value instead of modifying the
object in place.
llvm-svn: 121121
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
redeclarations of main appropriately rather than allowing it to be
overloaded. Also, disallowing declaring main as a template.
Fixes GCC DejaGNU g++.old-deja/g++.other/main1.C.
llvm-svn: 117029
construct an unsupported friend when there's a friend with a templated
scope specifier. Fixes a consistency crash, rdar://problem/8540527
llvm-svn: 116786
by marking the decl invalid isn't. Make some steps towards supporting these
and then hastily shut them down at the last second by marking them as
unsupported.
llvm-svn: 116661
flexible array member, so long as the flexibility array member is
either not initialized or is initialized with an empty initializer
list. Fixes <rdar://problem/8540437>.
llvm-svn: 116647
members. Provide a hard error when the qualification doesn't match the
current class type, or a warning + Fix-it if it does match the current
class type. Fixes PR8159.
llvm-svn: 116445
Fixes a crash and diagnoses the error condition of an unqualified
friend which doesn't resolve to something. I'm still not certain how
this is useful.
llvm-svn: 116393
of templated-scope friends by marking them invalid and white-listing all
accesses until such time as we implement them. Fixes a crash, this time
without a broken test case.
llvm-svn: 116364
waiting until we think we need it: we didn't catch all of the places
where we actually needed it, and we probably wouldn't ever. Fixes a
C++ PCH crasher.
llvm-svn: 115621
completely into CXXRecordDecl, by adding a new completeDefinition()
function. This required a little reshuffling of the final-overrider
checking code, since the "abstract" calculation in the presence of
abstract base classes needs to occur in
CXXRecordDecl::completeDefinition() but we don't want to compute final
overriders more than one in the common case.
llvm-svn: 115007
in CXXRecordDecl itself. Yes, this is also part of <rdar://problem/8459981>.
This reinstates r114924, with one crucial bug fix: we were ignoring
the implicit fields created by anonymous structs/unions when updating
the bits in CXXRecordDecl, which means that a class/struct containing
only an anonymous class/struct would be considered "empty". Hilarity
follows.
llvm-svn: 114980
Centralize the management of CXXRecordDecl::DefinitionData's Aggregate
and PlainOldData bits in CXXRecordDecl itself. Another milepost on the
road toward <rdar://problem/8459981>.
llvm-svn: 114977
one of them) was causing a series of failures:
http://google1.osuosl.org:8011/builders/clang-x86_64-darwin10-selfhost/builds/4518
svn merge -c -114929 https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk
--- Reverse-merging r114929 into '.':
U include/clang/Sema/Sema.h
U include/clang/AST/DeclCXX.h
U lib/Sema/SemaDeclCXX.cpp
U lib/Sema/SemaTemplateInstantiateDecl.cpp
U lib/Sema/SemaDecl.cpp
U lib/Sema/SemaTemplateInstantiate.cpp
U lib/AST/DeclCXX.cpp
svn merge -c -114925 https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk
--- Reverse-merging r114925 into '.':
G include/clang/AST/DeclCXX.h
G lib/Sema/SemaDeclCXX.cpp
G lib/AST/DeclCXX.cpp
svn merge -c -114924 https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk
--- Reverse-merging r114924 into '.':
G include/clang/AST/DeclCXX.h
G lib/Sema/SemaDeclCXX.cpp
G lib/Sema/SemaDecl.cpp
G lib/AST/DeclCXX.cpp
U lib/AST/ASTContext.cpp
svn merge -c -114921 https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk
--- Reverse-merging r114921 into '.':
G include/clang/AST/DeclCXX.h
G lib/Sema/SemaDeclCXX.cpp
G lib/Sema/SemaDecl.cpp
G lib/AST/DeclCXX.cpp
llvm-svn: 114933
HasTrivialConstructor, HasTrivialCopyConstructor,
HasTrivialCopyAssignment, and HasTrivialDestructor bits in
CXXRecordDecl's methods. This completes all but the Abstract bit and
the set of conversion functions, both of which will require a bit of
extra work. The majority of <rdar://problem/8459981> is now
implemented (but not all of it).
llvm-svn: 114929
already be determined by isCopyAssignmentOperator(), and was set too
late in the process for all clients to see the appropriate
value. Cleanup only; no functionality change.
llvm-svn: 114916
prototype scope, temporarily set the context of the enumeration
declaration to the translation unit. We do the same thing for
parameters, until we have an actual function declaration on which to
hang them. Fixes <rdar://problem/8435682>.
There is more work to do in this area, since we have existing bugs
with tags being declared/defined in function parameter lists. This fix
is correct, and we'll end up extending it when we deal with those
existing bugs.
llvm-svn: 114135
For large floats/integers, APFloat/APInt will allocate memory from the heap to represent these numbers.
Unfortunately, when we use a BumpPtrAllocator to allocate IntegerLiteral/FloatingLiteral nodes the memory associated with
the APFloat/APInt values will never get freed.
I introduce the class 'APNumericStorage' which uses ASTContext's allocator for memory allocation and is used internally by FloatingLiteral/IntegerLiteral.
Fixes rdar://7637185
llvm-svn: 112361
One who seeks the Tao unlearns something new every day.
Less and less remains until you arrive at non-action.
When you arrive at non-action,
nothing will be left undone.
llvm-svn: 112244
class extensions (nonfragile-abi2).For every class @interface and class
extension @interface, if the last ivar is a bitfield of any type,
then add an implicit `char :0` ivar to the end of that interface.
llvm-svn: 111857
- move DeclSpec &c into the Sema library
- move ParseAST into the Parse library
Reflect this change in a thousand different includes.
Reflect this change in the link orders.
llvm-svn: 111667
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
than GCC 4.2 here when building 32-bit (where GCC will allow
allocation of an array for which we can't get a valid past-the-end
pointer), and emulate its odd behavior in 64-bit where it only allows
63 bits worth of storage in the array. The former is a correctness
issue; the latter is harmless in practice (you wouldn't be able to use
such an array anyway) and helps us pass a GCC DejaGNU test.
Fixes <rdar://problem/8212293>.
llvm-svn: 111338
Unused warnings for functions:
-static functions
-functions in anonymous namespace
-class methods in anonymous namespace
-class method specializations in anonymous namespace
-function specializations in anonymous namespace
Unused warnings for variables:
-static variables
-variables in anonymous namespace
-static data members in anonymous namespace
-static data members specializations in anonymous namespace
Reveals lots of opportunities for dead code removal in llvm codebase that will
interest my esteemed colleagues.
llvm-svn: 111086
-static variables
-variables in anonymous namespace (fixes rdar://7794535)
-static data members in anonymous namespace
-static data members specializations in anonymous namespace
llvm-svn: 111027
-static function declarations
-functions in anonymous namespace
-class methods in anonymous namespace
-class method specializations in anonymous namespace
-function specializations in anonymous namespace
llvm-svn: 111026
and create separate decl nodes for forward declarations and the
definition," which appears to be causing significant Objective-C
breakage.
llvm-svn: 110803
- Eagerly create ObjCInterfaceTypes for declarations.
- The two above changes lead to a 0.5% increase in memory use and no speed regression when parsing Cocoa.h. On the other hand, now chained PCH works when there's a forward declaration in one PCH and the interface definition in another.
- Add HandleInterestingDecl to ASTConsumer. PCHReader passes the "interesting" decls it finds to this function instead of HandleTopLevelDecl. The default implementation forwards to HandleTopLevelDecl, but ASTUnit's handler for example ignores them. This fixes a potential crash when lazy loading of PCH data would cause ASTUnit's "top level" declaration collection to change while being iterated.
llvm-svn: 110610
This takes some trickery since CastExpr has subclasses (and indeed,
is abstract).
Also, smoosh the CastKind into the bitfield from Expr.
Drops two words of storage from Expr in the common case of expressions
which don't need inheritance paths. Avoids a separate allocation and
another word of overhead in cases needing inheritance paths. Also has
the advantage of not leaking memory, since destructors for AST nodes are
never run.
llvm-svn: 110507
a switch or goto somewhere in the function. Indirect gotos trigger the
jump-checker regardless, because the conditions there are slightly more
elaborate and it's too marginal a case to be worth optimizing.
Turns off the jump-checker in a lot of cases in C++. rdar://problem/7702918
llvm-svn: 109962
represent builtins that have the "scanf" attribution (via the format attribute) just
like we do with printf functions. Follow-up work is needed to add similar support
for fscanf et al.
This is to support format-string checking for scanf functions.
llvm-svn: 108499
definition, we're likely going to end up breaking the invariants of
the template system, e.g., that the depths of template parameter lists
match up with the nesting template of the template. So, make sure we
mark such ill-formed declarations as invalid or don't even build them
at all.
llvm-svn: 108372
aren't dropping all exception specifications on destructors, the
exception specifications on implicitly-declared destructors were
detected as being wrong (which they were).
Introduce logic to provide a proper exception-specification for
implicitly-declared destructors. This also fixes PR6972.
Note that the other implicitly-declared special member functions also
need to get exception-specifications. I'll deal with that in a
subsequent commit.
llvm-svn: 107385
disambiguation keywords outside of templates in C++98/03. Previously,
the warning would fire when the associated nested-name-specifier was
not dependent, but that was a misreading of the C++98/03 standard:
now, we complain only when we're outside of any template.
llvm-svn: 106161
introduced by using decls are hidden even if their template parameter lists
or return types differ from the "overriding" declaration.
Propagate using shadow declarations around more effectively when looking up
template-ids. Reperform lookup for template-ids in member expressions so that
access control is properly set up.
Fix some number of latent bugs involving template-ids with totally invalid
base types. You can only actually get these with a scope specifier, since
otherwise the template-id won't parse as a template-id.
Fixes PR7384.
llvm-svn: 106093
provides C "integer type" semantics in C and C++ "integral type"
semantics in C++.
Note that I still need to update isIntegerType (and possibly other
predicates) using the same approach I've taken for
isIntegralType(). The two should have the same meaning, but currently
don't (!).
llvm-svn: 106074
in C++ that involve both integral and enumeration types. Convert all
of the callers to Type::isIntegralType() that are meant to work with
both integral and enumeration types over to
Type::isIntegralOrEnumerationType(), to prepare to eliminate
enumeration types as integral types.
llvm-svn: 106071
objective-c++ class objects which have GC'able objc object
pointers and need to use ObjC's objc_memmove_collectable
API (radar 8070772).
llvm-svn: 106061
case of an elaborated-type-specifier like 'typename A<T>::foo', and
DependentTemplateSpecializationType represents the case of an
elaborated-type-specifier like 'typename A<T>::template B<T>'. The TypeLoc
representation of a DependentTST conveniently exactly matches that of an
ElaboratedType wrapping a TST.
Kill off the explicit rebuild methods for RebuildInCurrentInstantiation;
the standard implementations work fine because the nested name specifier
is computable in the newly-entered context.
llvm-svn: 105801
that is missing the 'template' keyword, e.g.,
t->getAs<T>()
where getAs is a member of an unknown specialization. C++ requires
that we treat "getAs" as a value, but that would fail to parse since T
is the name of a type. We would then fail at the '>', since a type
cannot be followed by a '>'.
This is a very common error for C++ programmers to make, especially
since GCC occasionally allows it when it shouldn't (as does Visual
C++). So, when we are in this case, we use tentative parsing to see if
the tokens starting at "<" can only be parsed as a template argument
list. If so, we produce a diagnostic with a fix-it that states that
the 'template' keyword is needed:
test/SemaTemplate/dependent-template-recover.cpp:5:8: error: 'template' keyword
is required to treat 'getAs' as a dependent template name
t->getAs<T>();
^
template
This is just a start of this patch; I'd like to apply the same
approach to everywhere that a template-id with dependent template name
can be parsed.
llvm-svn: 104406
ObjCObjectType, which is basically just a pair of
one of {primitive-id, primitive-Class, user-defined @class}
with
a list of protocols.
An ObjCObjectPointerType is therefore just a pointer which always points to
one of these types (possibly sugared). ObjCInterfaceType is now just a kind
of ObjCObjectType which happens to not carry any protocols.
Alter a rather large number of use sites to use ObjCObjectType instead of
ObjCInterfaceType. Store an ObjCInterfaceType as a pointer on the decl rather
than hashing them in a FoldingSet. Remove some number of methods that are no
longer used, at least after this patch.
By simplifying ObjCObjectPointerType, we are now able to easily remove and apply
pointers to Objective-C types, which is crucial for a certain kind of ObjC++
metaprogramming common in WebKit.
llvm-svn: 103870
return value optimization. Sema marks return statements with their
NRVO candidates (which may or may not end up using the NRVO), then, at
the end of a function body, computes and marks those variables that
can be allocated into the return slot.
I've checked this locally with some debugging statements (not
committed), but there won't be any tests until CodeGen comes along.
llvm-svn: 103865
"used" (e.g., we will refer to the vtable in the generated code) and
when they are defined (i.e., because we've seen the key function
definition). Previously, we were effectively tracking "potential
definitions" rather than uses, so we were a bit too eager about emitting
vtables for classes without key functions.
The new scheme:
- For every use of a vtable, Sema calls MarkVTableUsed() to indicate
the use. For example, this occurs when calling a virtual member
function of the class, defining a constructor of that class type,
dynamic_cast'ing from that type to a derived class, casting
to/through a virtual base class, etc.
- For every definition of a vtable, Sema calls MarkVTableUsed() to
indicate the definition. This happens at the end of the translation
unit for classes whose key function has been defined (so we can
delay computation of the key function; see PR6564), and will also
occur with explicit template instantiation definitions.
- For every vtable defined/used, we mark all of the virtual member
functions of that vtable as defined/used, unless we know that the key
function is in another translation unit. This instantiates virtual
member functions when needed.
- At the end of the translation unit, Sema tells CodeGen (via the
ASTConsumer) which vtables must be defined (CodeGen will define
them) and which may be used (for which CodeGen will define the
vtables lazily).
From a language perspective, both the old and the new schemes are
permissible: we're allowed to instantiate virtual member functions
whenever we want per the standard. However, all other C++ compilers
were more lazy than we were, and our eagerness was both a performance
issue (we instantiated too much) and a portability problem (we broke
Boost test cases, which now pass).
Notes:
(1) There's a ton of churn in the tests, because the order in which
vtables get emitted to IR has changed. I've tried to isolate some of
the larger tests from these issues.
(2) Some diagnostics related to
implicitly-instantiated/implicitly-defined virtual member functions
have moved to the point of first use/definition. It's better this
way.
(3) I could use a review of the places where we MarkVTableUsed, to
see if I missed any place where the language effectively requires a
vtable.
Fixes PR7114 and PR6564.
llvm-svn: 103718
particular, don't complain about unused variables that have dependent
type until instantiation time, so that we can look at the type of the
variable. Moreover, only complain about unused variables that have
neither a user-declared constructor nor a non-trivial destructor.
llvm-svn: 103362
typedef int functype(int, int);
functype func;
also instantiate the synthesized function parameters for the resulting
function declaration.
With this change, Boost.Wave builds and passes all of its regression
tests.
llvm-svn: 103025
(-Wunused-exception-parameter) than normal variables, since it's more
common to name and then ignore an exception parameter. This warning is
neither enabled by default nor by -Wall. Fixes <rdar://problem/7931045>.
llvm-svn: 102931
entering the current instantiation. Set up a little to preserve type location
information for typename types while we're in there.
Fixes a Boost failure.
llvm-svn: 102673
when they are not complete (since we could not match them up to
anything) and ensuring that enum parsing can cope with dependent
elaborated-type-specifiers. Fixes PR6915 and PR6649.
llvm-svn: 102247
(e.g., no typename, enum, class, etc.), e.g., because the context is
one that is known to refer to a type. Patch from Enea Zaffanella!
llvm-svn: 102243
arguments. Rather than having the parser call ActOnParamDeclarator
(which is a bit of a hack), call a new ActOnObjCExceptionDecl
action. We'll be moving more functionality into this handler to
perform earlier checking of @catch.
llvm-svn: 102222
way that C does. Among other differences, elaborated type specifiers
are defined to skip "non-types", which, as you might imagine, does not
include typedefs. Rework our use of IDNS masks to capture the semantics
of different kinds of declarations better, and remove most current lookup
filters. Removing the last remaining filter is more complicated and will
happen in a separate patch.
Fixes PR 6885 as well some spectrum of unfiled bugs.
llvm-svn: 102164
function declaration, since it may end up being changed (e.g.,
"extern" can become "static" if a prior declaration was static). Patch
by Enea Zaffanella and Paolo Bolzoni.
llvm-svn: 101826
in case it ends up doing something that might trigger diagnostics
(template instantiation, ambiguity reporting, access
reporting). Noticed while working on PR6831.
llvm-svn: 101412
ASTContext::getTypeSize() rather than ASTContext::getIntWidth() for
the width of an integral type. The former includes padding for bools
(to the target's size) while the latter does not, so we woud end up
zero-extending bools to the target width when we shouldn't. Fixes a
crash-on-valid in the included test.
llvm-svn: 101372
generally recover from typos in keywords (since we would effectively
have to mangle the token stream). However, there are still benefits to
typo-correcting with keywords:
- We don't make stupid suggestions when the user typed something
that is similar to a keyword.
- We can suggest the keyword in a diagnostic (did you mean
"static_cast"?), even if we can't recover and therefore don't have
a fix-it.
llvm-svn: 101274
function's type is (strictly speaking) non-dependent. This ensures
that, e.g., default function arguments get instantiated properly.
And, since I couldn't resist, collapse the two implementations of
function-parameter instantiation into calls to a single, new function
(Sema::SubstParmVarDecl), since the two had nearly identical code (and
each had bugs the other didn't!). More importantly, factored out the
semantic analysis of a parameter declaration into
Sema::CheckParameter, which is called both by
Sema::ActOnParamDeclarator (when parameters are parsed) and when a
parameter is instantiated. Previously, we were missing some
Objective-C and address-space checks on instantiated function
parameters.
Fixes PR6733.
llvm-svn: 101029
nested-name-specifier (e.g., "class T::foo") fails to find a tag
member in the scope nominated by the
nested-name-specifier. Previously, we gave a bland
error: 'Nested' does not name a tag member in the specified scope
which didn't actually say where we were looking, which was rather
horrible when the nested-name-specifier was instantiated. Now, we give
something a bit better:
error: no class named 'Nested' in 'NoDepBase<T>'
llvm-svn: 100060
This introduces FunctionType::ExtInfo to hold the calling convention and the
noreturn attribute. The next patch will extend it to include the regparm
attribute and fix the bug.
llvm-svn: 99920
since we have absolutely no way to match them when they are declared
nor do we have a way to represent these parsed-but-not-checked friend
declarations.
llvm-svn: 99407
template <> friend void foo(int);
we need to change it to
friend void foo<>(int);
or else the user won't get the template specialization they obviously want.
llvm-svn: 99390
entering a function or block definition, not on every single declaration.
Unfortunately we don't have previous-lookup results around when it's time
to make this decision, so we have to redo the lookup. The alternative is
to use delayed diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 99172
This object controls when the warnings are executed, allowing the client code
in Sema to selectively disable warnings as needed.
Centralizing the logic for analysis-based warnings allows us to optimize
when and how they are run.
Along the way, remove the redundant logic for the 'check fall-through' warning
for blocks; now the same logic is used for both blocks and functions.
llvm-svn: 99085
ActOnStartCXXMemberDeclaration. We haven't started the field collector on this
class yet, so don't stop it. Fixes a crash in the VS buildbot and a memory error
on all the others.
llvm-svn: 98760
on unqualified declarations.
Patch by Enea Zaffanella! Minimal adjustments: allocate the ExtInfo nodes
with the ASTContext and delete them during Destroy(). I audited a bunch of
Destroy methods at the same time, to ensure that the correct teardown was
being done.
llvm-svn: 98540
instantiation. Based on a patch by Enea Zaffanella! I found a way to
reduce some of the redundancy between TreeTransform's "standard"
FunctionProtoType transformation and TemplateInstantiator's override,
and I killed off the old SubstFunctionType by adding type source info
for the last cases where we were creating FunctionDecls without TSI
(at least that get passed through template instantiation).
llvm-svn: 98252
injected class name of a class template or class template partial specialization.
This is a non-canonical type; the canonical type is still a template
specialization type. This becomes the TypeForDecl of the pattern declaration,
which cleans up some amount of code (and complicates some other parts, but
whatever).
Fixes PR6326 and probably a few others, primarily by re-establishing a few
invariants about TypeLoc sizes.
llvm-svn: 98134
uninitialized. This seems not to be the case in C++0x, where we still
call the (trivial) default constructor for a POD class
(!). Previously, we had implemented only the C++0x rules; now we
implement both. Fixes PR6536.
llvm-svn: 97928
which has the label map, switch statement stack, etc. Previously, we
had a single set of maps in Sema (for the function) along with a stack
of block scopes. However, this lead to funky behavior with nested
functions, e.g., in the member functions of local classes.
The explicit-stack approach is far cleaner, and we retain a 1-element
cache so that we're not malloc/free'ing every time we enter a
function. Fixes PR6382.
Also, tweaked the unused-variable warning suppression logic to look at
errors within a given Scope rather than within a given function. The
prior code wasn't looking at the right number-of-errors count when
dealing with blocks, since the block's count would be deallocated
before we got to ActOnPopScope. This approach works with nested
blocks/functions, and gives tighter error recovery.
llvm-svn: 97518
re-declare them. This fixes PR6317. Also add the beginnings of an interesting
test case for p1 of [class.friend] which also covers PR6317.
llvm-svn: 97499
a fixme and PR6451.
Only perform jump checking if the containing function has no errors,
and add the infrastructure needed to do this.
On the testcase in the PR, we produce:
t.cc:6:3: error: illegal goto into protected scope
goto later;
^
t.cc:7:5: note: jump bypasses variable initialization
X x;
^
llvm-svn: 97497
errors, e.g.:
t.c:1:21: error: redefinition of parameter 'x'
int test(int x, int x);
^
t.c:1:14: note: previous declaration is here
int test(int x, int x);
^
llvm-svn: 96769
fixing up a few callers that thought they were propagating NoReturn
information but were in fact saying something about exception
specifications.
llvm-svn: 96766
are for out of line declarations more easily. This simplifies the logic and
handles the case of out-of-line class definitions correctly. Fixes PR6107.
llvm-svn: 96729
array allocated using the allocator in ASTContext. This addresses
these strings getting leaked when using a BumpPtrAllocator (in
ASTContext).
Fixes: <rdar://problem/7636765>
llvm-svn: 95853
Sema::ActOnUninitializedDecl over to InitializationSequence (with
default initialization), eliminating redundancy. More importantly, we
now check that a const definition in C++ has an initilizer, which was
an #if 0'd code for many, many months. A few other tweaks were needed
to get everything working again:
- Fix all of the places in the testsuite where we defined const
objects without initializers (now that we diagnose this issue)
- Teach instantiation of static data members to find the previous
declaration, so that we build proper redeclaration
chains. Previously, we had the redeclaration chain but built it
too late to be useful, because...
- Teach instantiation of static data member definitions not to try
to check an initializer if a previous declaration already had an
initializer. This makes sure that we don't complain about static
const data members with in-class initializers and out-of-line
definitions.
- Move all of the incomplete-type checking logic out of
Sema::FinalizeDeclaratorGroup; it makes more sense in
ActOnUnitializedDecl.
There may still be a few places where we can improve these
diagnostics. I'll address that as a separate commit.
llvm-svn: 95657
follows (as conservatively as possible) gcc's current behavior: attributes
written on return types that don't apply there are applied to the function
instead, etc. Only parse CC attributes as type attributes, not as decl attributes;
don't accepet noreturn as a decl attribute on ValueDecls, either (it still
needs to apply to other decls, like blocks). Consistently consume CC/noreturn
information throughout codegen; enforce this by removing their default values
in CodeGenTypes::getFunctionInfo().
llvm-svn: 95436
of a C++ record. Exposed a lot of problems where various routines were
silently doing The Wrong Thing (or The Acceptable Thing in The Wrong Order)
when presented with a non-definition. Also cuts down on memory usage.
llvm-svn: 95330
WHAT!?!
It turns out that Type::isPromotableIntegerType() was not considering
enumeration types to be promotable, so we would never do the
promotion despite having properly computed the promotion type when the
enum was defined. Various operations on values of enum type just
"worked" because we could still compute the integer rank of an enum
type; the oddity, however, is that operations such as "add an enum and
an unsigned" would often have an enum result type (!). The bug
actually showed up as a spurious -Wformat diagnostic
(<rdar://problem/7595366>), but in theory it could cause miscompiles.
In this commit:
- Enum types with a promotion type of "int" or "unsigned int" are
promotable.
- Tweaked the computation of promotable types for enums
- For all of the ABIs, treat enum types the same way as their
underlying types (*not* their promotion types) for argument passing
and return values
- Extend the ABI tester with support for enumeration types
llvm-svn: 95117
- In C++, prior to the closing '}', set the type of enumerators
based on the type of their initializer. Don't perform unary
conversions on the enumerator values.
- In C++, handle overflow when an enumerator has no initializer and
its value cannot be represented in the type of the previous
enumerator.
- In C, handle overflow more gracefully, by complaining and then
falling back to the C++ rules.
- In C, if the enumerator value is representable in an int, convert the
expression to the type 'int'.
Fixes PR5854 and PR4515.
llvm-svn: 95031
(1) libAnalysis is a generic analysis library that can be used by
Sema. It defines the CFG, basic dataflow analysis primitives, and
inexpensive flow-sensitive analyses (e.g. LiveVariables).
(2) libChecker contains the guts of the static analyzer, incuding the
path-sensitive analysis engine and domain-specific checks.
Now any clients that want to use the frontend to build their own tools
don't need to link in the entire static analyzer.
This change exposes various obvious cleanups that can be made to the
layout of files and headers in libChecker. More changes pending. :)
This change also exposed a layering violation between AnalysisContext
and MemRegion. BlockInvocationContext shouldn't explicitly know about
BlockDataRegions. For now I've removed the BlockDataRegion* from
BlockInvocationContext (removing context-sensitivity; although this
wasn't used yet). We need to have a better way to extend
BlockInvocationContext (and any LocationContext) to add
context-sensitivty.
llvm-svn: 94406
translation unit. This is temporary for function and block parameters;
template parameters can just stay this way, since Templates aren't
DeclContexts. This gives us the nice property that everything created
in a record DC should have access in C++.
llvm-svn: 94122
CallExprs as those edges help cause a n^2 explosion in the number of
destructor calls. Other consumers, such as static analysis, that
would like to have more a more complete CFG can select the inclusion
of those edges as CFG build time.
This also fixes up the two compilation users of CFGs to be tolerant of
having or not having those edges. All catch code is assumed be to
live if we didn't generate the exceptional edges for CallExprs.
llvm-svn: 94074
function template declared within a class template did not match a
function in another scope. We really need to rework how
friends-in-templates are semantically checked.
llvm-svn: 93642
do not look into base classes if there are any dependent base
classes. Instead, note in the lookup result that we couldn't look into
any dependent bases. Use that new result kind to detect when this case
occurs, so that we can fall back to treating the type/value/etc. as a
member of an unknown specialization.
Fixes an issue where we were resolving lookup at template definition
time and then missing an ambiguity at template instantiation time.
llvm-svn: 93497
finds nothing), and the current instantiation has dependent base
classes, treat the qualified lookup as if it referred to an unknown
specialization. Fixes PR6031.
llvm-svn: 93433
need an error term for the CFG. I suspect we'll always have to cope
with getCFG returning 0, though, I'd love to see even that possibility
removed.
llvm-svn: 93411
that name constructors, the endless joys of out-of-line constructor
definitions, and various other corner cases that the previous hack
never imagined. Fixes PR5688 and tightens up semantic analysis for
constructor names.
Additionally, fixed a problem where we wouldn't properly enter the
declarator scope of a parenthesized declarator. We were entering the
scope, then leaving it when we saw the ")"; now, we re-enter the
declarator scope before parsing the parameter list.
Note that we are forced to perform some tentative parsing within a
class (call it C) to tell the difference between
C(int); // constructor
and
C (f)(int); // member function
which is rather unfortunate. And, although it isn't necessary for
correctness, we use the same tentative-parsing mechanism for
out-of-line constructors to improve diagnostics in icky cases like:
C::C C::f(int); // error: C::C refers to the constructor name, but
// we complain nicely and recover by treating it as
// a type.
llvm-svn: 93322
latter may (eventually) perform multiple levels of desugaring (thus
breaking the newly-added tests) and the former is faster. Thanks, John!
llvm-svn: 93192
they redefine is a class-name but not a typedef-name, per C++0x
[dcl.typedef]p4. The code in the test was valid C++98 and is valid
C++0x, but an unintended consequence of DR56 made it ill-formed in
C++03 (which we were luck enough to implement). Fixes PR5455.
llvm-svn: 93188
result for a nested class whose first non-pure virtual member function
has an inline body. Previously, we were checking for the key function
before we had seen the (delayed) inline body.
llvm-svn: 92839
deterministic and work properly with templates. Once a class that
needs a vtable has been defined, we now do one if two things:
- If the class has no key function, we place the class on a list of
classes whose virtual functions will need to be "marked" at the
end of the translation unit. The delay until the end of the
translation unit is needed because we might see template
specializations of these virtual functions.
- If the class has a key function, we do nothing; when the key
function is defined, the class will be placed on the
aforementioned list.
At the end of the translation unit, we "mark" all of the virtual
functions of the classes on the list as used, possibly causing
template instantiation and other classes to be added to the
list. This gets LLVM's lib/Support/CommandLine.cpp compiling again.
llvm-svn: 92821
- All classes can have a key function; templates don't change that.
non-template classes when computing the key function.
- We always mark all of the virtual member functions of class
template instantiations.
- The vtable for an instantiation of a class template has weak
linkage.
We could probably use available_externally linkage for vtables of
classes instantiated by explicit instantiation declarations (extern
templates), but GCC doesn't do this and I'm not 100% that the ABI
permits it.
llvm-svn: 92753
assembly code. This avoids changing the bahvior when normal asm("")
statements are used.
The type of code affected would be:
void* t4(void) { __asm mov eax, fs:[0x10] }
I hope people like this version, if not, let me know.
llvm-svn: 92531
constructs:
- Instance variable lookup ("foo->ivar" and, in instance methods, "ivar")
- Property name lookup ("foo.prop")
- Superclasses
- Various places where a class name is required
- Protocol names (e.g., id<proto>)
This seems to cover many of the common places where typos could occur.
llvm-svn: 92449
attach the appropriate attributes to it. I don't think
this manifests as any real change though, we're still
not getting the right LLVM IR attributes out of codegen.
llvm-svn: 92316
tring str2;
we produce the following diagnostic + fix-it:
typo.cpp:15:1: error: unknown type name 'tring'; did you mean 'string'?
tring str2;
^~~~~
string
To make this really useful, we'll need to introduce typo correction in
many more places (wherever we do name lookup), and implement
declaration-vs-expression heuristics that cope with typos
better. However, for now this will handle the simple cases where we
already get good "unknown type name" diagnostics.
The LookupVisibleDecls functions are intended to be used by code
completion as well as typo correction; that refactoring will happen
later.
llvm-svn: 92308
Darwin's sekrit fourth argument. This should probably be factored to
let targets make target-specific decisions about what main() should look like.
Fixes rdar://problem/7414990
or if different platforms have radically different ideas of what they want in
llvm-svn: 92128
Sema::getTypeName.
"LookupNestedNameSpecifierName" isn't quite the right kind of lookup, though;
it doesn't ignore namespaces. Someone more familiar with the lookup code
should fix this properly.
llvm-svn: 91809
Because of the rules of base-class lookup* and the restrictions on typedefs, it
was actually impossible for this to cause any problems more serious than the
spurious acceptance of
template <class T> class A : B<A> { ... };
instead of
template <class T> class A : B<A<T> > { ... };
but I'm sure we can all agree that that is a very important restriction which
is well worth making another Parser->Sema call for.
(*) n.b. clang++ does not implement these rules correctly; we are not ignoring
non-type names
llvm-svn: 91792
the redeclaration problems in the [temp.explicit]p3 testcase worse, but I can
live with that; they'll need to be fixed more holistically anyhow.
llvm-svn: 91771
small bug fixes in SemaInit, switch over SemaDecl to use it more often, and
change a bunch of diagnostics which are different with the new initialization
code.
llvm-svn: 91767
different functions and pick the function at lookup initialization time.
In theory we could actually divide the criteria functions into N different
functions for the N cases, but it's so not worth it.
Among other things, lets us invoke LookupQualifiedName without recomputing
IDNS info every time.
Do some refactoring in SemaDecl to avoid an awkward special case in LQN
that was only necessary for redeclaration testing for anonymous structs/unions ---
which could be done more efficiently with a scoped lookup anyway.
llvm-svn: 91676
than using its own partial implementation of initialization.
Switched CheckInitializerTypes over to
InitializedEntity/InitializationKind, to help move us closer to
InitializationSequence.
Added InitializedEntity::getName() to retrieve the name of the entity,
for diagnostics that care about such things.
Implemented support for default initialization in
InitializationSequence.
Clean up the determination of the "source expressions" for an
initialization sequence in InitializationSequence::Perform.
Taught CXXConstructExpr to store more location information.
llvm-svn: 91492
attribute to function pointers. It also fixes Sema to check function
pointers for the noreturn attribute when checking for fallthrough.
Patch by Chip Davis, with a slight fix to pass the testsuite.
llvm-svn: 91408
declaration. Rename note_using_decl to note_using, which is possibly less confusing.
Add a test for non-class-scope using decl collisions and be sure to note the case
we can't diagnose yet.
llvm-svn: 91057
are a couple of O(n^2) operations in this, some analogous to the usual O(n^2)
redeclaration problem and some not. In particular, retroactively removing
shadow declarations when they're hidden by later decls is pretty unfortunate.
I'm not yet convinced it's worse than the alternative, though.
llvm-svn: 91045
new notion of an "initialization sequence", which encapsulates the
computation of the initialization sequence along with diagnostic
information and the capability to turn the computed sequence into an
expression. At present, I've only switched one CheckReferenceInit
callers over to this new mechanism; more will follow.
Aside from (hopefully) being much more true to the standard, the
diagnostics provided by this reference-initialization code are a bit
better than before. Some examples:
p5-var.cpp:54:12: error: non-const lvalue reference to type 'struct
Derived'
cannot bind to a value of unrelated type 'struct Base'
Derived &dr2 = b; // expected-error{{non-const lvalue reference to
...
^ ~
p5-var.cpp:55:9: error: binding of reference to type 'struct Base' to
a value of
type 'struct Base const' drops qualifiers
Base &br3 = bc; // expected-error{{drops qualifiers}}
^ ~~
p5-var.cpp:57:15: error: ambiguous conversion from derived class
'struct Diamond' to base class 'struct Base':
struct Diamond -> struct Derived -> struct Base
struct Diamond -> struct Derived2 -> struct Base
Base &br5 = diamond; // expected-error{{ambiguous conversion from
...
^~~~~~~
p5-var.cpp:59:9: error: non-const lvalue reference to type 'long'
cannot bind to
a value of unrelated type 'int'
long &lr = i; // expected-error{{non-const lvalue reference to type
...
^ ~
p5-var.cpp:74:9: error: non-const lvalue reference to type 'struct
Base' cannot
bind to a temporary of type 'struct Base'
Base &br1 = Base(); // expected-error{{non-const lvalue reference to
...
^ ~~~~~~
p5-var.cpp:102:9: error: non-const reference cannot bind to bit-field
'i'
int & ir1 = (ib.i); // expected-error{{non-const reference cannot
...
^ ~~~~~~
p5-var.cpp:98:7: note: bit-field is declared here
int i : 17; // expected-note{{bit-field is declared here}}
^
llvm-svn: 90992
"integer promotion" type associated with an enum decl, and use this type to
determine which type to promote to. This type obeys C++ [conv.prom]p2 and
is therefore generally signed unless the range of the enumerators forces
it to be unsigned.
Kills off a lot of false positives from -Wsign-compare in C++, addressing
rdar://7455616
llvm-svn: 90965
using value decls; we optimistically assume they won't turn into conflicts.
Teach it to tell the caller *why* the function doesn't overload with the returned
decl; this will be useful for using hiding.
llvm-svn: 90939
DeclContext, so they don't completely disappear from the AST.
I don't particularly like this fix, but I don't see any obviously better way
to deal with it, and I think it's pretty clearly an improvement; comments
welcome.
llvm-svn: 90835
instantiation, to ensure that we mark class template specilizations as
abstract when we need to and perform checking of abstract classes.
Also, move the checking that determines whether we are creating a
variable of abstract class type *after* we check whether the type is
complete. Otherwise, we won't see when we have an abstract class
template specialization that is implicitly instantiated by this
declaration. This is the "something else" that Sebastian had noted
earlier.
llvm-svn: 90467
common to both parsing and template instantiation, so that we'll find
overridden virtuals for member functions of class templates when they
are instantiated.
Additionally, factor out the checking for pure virtual functions, so
that it will be executed both at parsing time and at template
instantiation time.
These changes fix PR5656 (for real), although one more tweak
w.r.t. member function templates will be coming along shortly.
llvm-svn: 90241
Create a new UnresolvedMemberExpr for these lookups. Assorted hackery
around qualified member expressions; this will all go away when we
implement the correct (i.e. extremely delayed) implicit-member semantics.
llvm-svn: 90161
function templates (in C++98), friend function templates, and
out-of-line definitions of members of class templates.
Also handles merging of default template arguments from previous
declarations of function templates, for C++0x. However, we don't yet
make use of those default template arguments.
llvm-svn: 89872
type and fixes a long-standing code gen. crash reported in
at least two PRs and a radar. (radar 7405040 and pr5025).
There are couple of remaining issues that I would like for
Ted. and Doug to look at:
Ted, please look at failure in Analysis/MissingDealloc.m.
I have temporarily added an expected-warning to make the
test pass. This tests has a declaration of 'SEL' type which
may not co-exist with the new changes.
Doug, please look at a FIXME in PCHWriter.cpp/PCHReader.cpp.
I think the changes which I have ifdef'ed out are correct. They
need be considered for in a few Indexer/PCH test cases.
llvm-svn: 89561
The following attributes are currently supported in C++0x attribute
lists (and in GNU ones as well):
- align() - semantics believed to be conformant to n3000, except for
redeclarations and what entities it may apply to
- final - semantics believed to be conformant to CWG issue 817's proposed
wording, except for redeclarations
- noreturn - semantics believed to be conformant to n3000, except for
redeclarations
- carries_dependency - currently ignored (this is an optimization hint)
llvm-svn: 89543
name 'T' is looked up in the expression
t.~T()
Previously, we weren't looking into the type of "t", and therefore
would fail when T actually referred to an injected-class-name. Fixes
PR5530.
llvm-svn: 89493
two classes, one for typenames and one for values; this seems to have some
support from Doug if not necessarily from the extremely-vague-on-this-point
standard. Track the location of the 'typename' keyword in a using-typename
decl. Make a new lookup result for unresolved values and deal with it in
most places.
llvm-svn: 89184
LookupResult RAII powers to diagnose ambiguity in the results. Other diagnostics
(e.g. access control and deprecation) will be moved to automatically trigger
during lookup as part of this same mechanism.
This abstraction makes it much easier to encapsulate aliasing declarations
(e.g. using declarations) inside the lookup system: eventually, lookup will
just produce the aliases in the LookupResult, and the standard access methods
will naturally strip the aliases off.
llvm-svn: 89027
sugared types. The basic problem is that our qualifier accessors
(getQualifiers, getCVRQualifiers, isConstQualified, etc.) only look at
the current QualType and not at any qualifiers that come from sugared
types, meaning that we won't see these qualifiers through, e.g.,
typedefs:
typedef const int CInt;
typedef CInt Self;
Self.isConstQualified() currently returns false!
Various bugs (e.g., PR5383) have cropped up all over the front end due
to such problems. I'm addressing this problem by splitting each
qualifier accessor into two versions:
- the "local" version only returns qualifiers on this particular
QualType instance
- the "normal" version that will eventually combine qualifiers from this
QualType instance with the qualifiers on the canonical type to
produce the full set of qualifiers.
This commit adds the local versions and switches a few callers from
the "normal" version (e.g., isConstQualified) over to the "local"
version (e.g., isLocalConstQualified) when that is the right thing to
do, e.g., because we're printing or serializing the qualifiers. Also,
switch a bunch of
Context.getCanonicalType(T1).getUnqualifiedType() == Context.getCanonicalType(T2).getQualifiedType()
expressions over to
Context.hasSameUnqualifiedType(T1, T2)
llvm-svn: 88969
handling template template parameters properly. This refactoring:
- Parses template template arguments as id-expressions, representing
the result of the parse as a template name (Action::TemplateTy)
rather than as an expression (lame!).
- Represents all parsed template arguments via a new parser-specific
type, ParsedTemplateArgument, which stores the kind of template
argument (type, non-type, template) along with all of the source
information about the template argument. This replaces an ad hoc
set of 3 vectors (one for a void*, which was either a type or an
expression; one for a bit telling whether the first was a type or
an expression; and one for a single source location pointing at
the template argument).
- Moves TemplateIdAnnotation into the new Parse/Template.h. It never
belonged in the Basic library anyway.
llvm-svn: 86708
ArrayType>()) does not instantiate. Update all callers that used this
unsafe feature to use the appropriate ASTContext::getAs*ArrayType method.
llvm-svn: 86596
appears in a deprecated context. In the new strategy, we emit the warnings
as usual unless we're currently parsing a declaration, where "declaration" is
restricted to mean a decl group or a few special cases in Objective C. If
we *are* parsing a declaration, we queue up the deprecation warnings until
the declaration has been completely parsed, and then emit them only if the
decl is not deprecated.
We also standardize the bookkeeping for deprecation so as to avoid special cases.
llvm-svn: 85998
yet another copy of the unqualified-id parsing code.
Also, use UnqualifiedId to simplify the Action interface for building
id-expressions. ActOnIdentifierExpr, ActOnCXXOperatorFunctionIdExpr,
ActOnCXXConversionFunctionExpr, and ActOnTemplateIdExpr have all been
removed in favor of the new ActOnIdExpression action.
llvm-svn: 85904
representation of a C++ unqualified-id, along with a single parsing
function (Parser::ParseUnqualifiedId) that will parse all of the
various forms of unqualified-id in C++.
Replace the representation of the declarator name in Declarator with
the new UnqualifiedId class, simplifying declarator-id parsing
considerably and providing more source-location information to
Sema. In the future, I hope to migrate all of the other
unqualified-id-parsing code over to this single representation, then
begin to merge actions that are currently only different because we
didn't have a unqualified notion of the name in the parser.
llvm-svn: 85851
types. Preserve it through template instantiation. Preserve it through PCH,
although TSTs themselves aren't serializable, so that's pretty much meaningless.
llvm-svn: 85500
process decl attributes instead of dropping them on the floor.
This allows us to diagnose cases like the testcase. Also don't
diagnose deprecated stuff in ActOnTag: not all uses of tags
may be 'uses', and SemaType does this now.
llvm-svn: 85071
types) out of Sema::getTypeName into ConvertDeclSpecToType. getTypeName
is sometimes used as a predicate in the parser, so it could cause redundant
diags to be emitted. This is also needed by two upcoming enhancements.
llvm-svn: 85070
IIDecl cannot be null. There is no need to check for both C++ mode and
presence of CXXRecordDecl. ObjC interfaces can't have ScopeSpecs.
llvm-svn: 85057
type looking using getTypeName() and every property access was using
NextToken() to do lookahead to see if the identifier is followed by
a '.'. Rearrange this code to not need lookahead and only do the
type lookup if we have "identifier." in the token stream. Also
improve a diagnostic a bit.
llvm-svn: 85056
template instantiation. Preserve it through PCH. Show it off to the indexer.
I'm healthily ignoring the vector type cases because we don't have a sensible
TypeLoc implementation for them anyway.
llvm-svn: 84994
in the DeclaratorInfo, if one is present.
Preserve source information through template instantiation. This is made
more complicated by the possibility that ParmVarDecls don't have DIs, which
is possibly worth fixing in the future.
Also preserve source information for function parameters in ObjC method
declarations.
llvm-svn: 84971
to all callers. Switch a few other users of CK_Unknown to proper cast
kinds.
Note that there are still some situations where we end up with
CK_Unknown; they're pretty easy to find with grep. There
are still a few missing conversion kinds, specifically
pointer/int/float->bool and the various combinations of real/complex
float/int->real/complex float/int.
llvm-svn: 84623
TypeLoc records for declarations; it should not be necessary to represent it
directly in the type system.
Please complain if you were using these classes and feel you can't replicate
previous functionality using the TypeLoc API.
llvm-svn: 84222
unknown type name, e.g.,
foo::bar x;
when "bar" does not refer to a type in "foo".
With this change, the parser now calls into the action to perform
diagnostics and can try to recover by substituting in an appropriate
type. For example, this allows us to easily diagnose some missing
"typename" specifiers, which we now do:
test/SemaCXX/unknown-type-name.cpp:29:1: error: missing 'typename'
prior to dependent type name 'A<T>::type'
A<T>::type A<T>::f() { return type(); }
^~~~~~~~~~
typename
Fixes PR3990.
llvm-svn: 84053
what we found when we looked into <blah>", where <blah> is a
DeclContext*. We can now format DeclContext*'s in nice ways, e.g.,
"namespace N", "the global namespace", "'class Foo'".
This is part of PR3990, but we're not quite there yet.
llvm-svn: 84028
template as a specialization. For example, this occurs with:
template<typename T>
struct X {
template<typename U> struct Inner { /* ... */ };
};
template<> template<typename T>
struct X<int>::Inner {
T member;
};
We need to treat templates that are member specializations as special
in two contexts:
- When looking for a definition of a member template, we look
through the instantiation chain until we hit the primary template
*or a member specialization*. This allows us to distinguish
between the primary "Inner" definition and the X<int>::Inner
definition, above.
- When computing all of the levels of template arguments needed to
instantiate a member template, don't add template arguments
from contexts outside of the instantiation of a member
specialization, since the user has already manually substituted
those arguments.
Fix up the existing test for p18, which was actually wrong (but we
didn't diagnose it because of our poor handling of member
specializations of templates), and add a new test for member
specializations of templates.
llvm-svn: 83974
function templates.
This commit ensures that friend function templates are constructed as
FunctionTemplateDecls rather than partial FunctionDecls (as they
previously were). It then implements template instantiation for friend
function templates, injecting the friend function template only when
no previous declaration exists at the time of instantiation.
Oh, and make sure that explicit specialization declarations are not
friends.
llvm-svn: 83970
that are declarations (rather than definitions). Also, be sure to set
the access specifiers properly when instantiating the declarations of
member function templates.
llvm-svn: 83911
function and member function templates that are not definitions. Add
more tests to ensure that explicit specializations of member function
templates prevent instantiation.
llvm-svn: 83550
templates, and keep track of how those member classes were
instantiated or specialized.
Make sure that we don't try to instantiate an explicitly-specialized
member class of a class template, when that explicit specialization
was a declaration rather than a definition.
llvm-svn: 83547
track of the kind of specialization or instantiation. Also, check the
scope of the specialization and ensure that a specialization
declaration without an initializer is not a definition.
llvm-svn: 83533
templates. Previously, these weren't handled as specializations at
all. The AST for representing these as specializations is still a work
in progress.
llvm-svn: 83498
for bases, members, overridden virtual methods, etc. The operations
isDerivedFrom and lookupInBases are now provided by CXXRecordDecl,
rather than by Sema, so that CodeGen and other clients can use them
directly.
llvm-svn: 83396
of the flow-control checks for falling off the end of a function,
since the return type may instantiate to void. Similarly, if a
return statement has an expression and the return type of the function
is void, don't complain if the expression is type-dependent, since
that type could instantiate to void.
Fixes PR5071.
llvm-svn: 83222
functions that occur in multiple declaration contexts, e.g., because
some were found via using declarations. Now, isDeclInScope will build
a new overload set (when needed) containing only those declarations
that are actually in scope. This eliminates a problem found with
libstdc++'s <iostream>, where the presence of using
In the longer term, I'd like to eliminate Sema::isDeclInScope in favor
of better handling of the RedeclarationOnly flag in the name-lookup
routines. That way, name lookup only returns the entities that matter,
rather than taking the current two-pass approach of producing too many
results and then filtering our the wrong results. It's not efficient,
and I'm sure that we aren't filtering everywhere we should be.
llvm-svn: 82954
class templates. We now treat friend class templates much more like
normal class templates, except that they still get special name lookup
rules. Fixes PR5057 and eliminates a bunch of spurious diagnostics in
<iostream>.
llvm-svn: 82848
template void f<int>(int);
~~~~~~
Previously, we silently dropped the template arguments. With this
change, we now use the template arguments (when available) as the
explicitly-specified template arguments used to aid template argument
deduction for explicit template instantiations.
llvm-svn: 82806
first implementation recognizes when a function declaration is an
explicit function template specialization (based on the presence of a
template<> header), performs template argument deduction + ambiguity
resolution to determine which template is being specialized, and hooks
There are many caveats here:
- We completely and totally drop any explicitly-specified template
arguments on the floor
- We don't diagnose any of the extra semantic things that we should
diagnose.
- I haven't looked to see that we're getting the right linkage for
explicit specializations
On a happy note, this silences a bunch of errors that show up in
libstdc++'s <iostream>, although Clang still can't get through the
entire header.
llvm-svn: 82728
Type hierarchy. Demote 'volatile' to extended-qualifier status. Audit our
use of qualifiers and fix a few places that weren't dealing with qualifiers
quite right; many more remain.
llvm-svn: 82705
Several of the existing methods were identical to their respective
specializations, and so have been removed entirely. Several more 'leaf'
optimizations were introduced.
The getAsFoo() methods which imposed extra conditions, like
getAsObjCInterfacePointerType(), have been left in place.
llvm-svn: 82501
give them the appropriate exception specifications. This,
unfortunately, requires us to maintain and/or implicitly generate
handles to namespace "std" and the class "std::bad_alloc". However,
every other approach I've come up with was more hackish, and this
standard requirement itself is quite the hack.
Fixes PR4829.
llvm-svn: 81939
generated for an inline function definition, taking into account C99
and GNU inline/extern inline semantics. This solution is simpler,
cleaner, and fixes PR4536.
llvm-svn: 81670
such initializations properly convert constructor arguments and fill
in default arguments where necessary. This also makes the ownership
model more clear.
llvm-svn: 81394
order because it was doing so while iterating over a densemap.
There are still similar problems in other places, for example
WeakUndeclaredIdentifiers is still written to the PCH file in a nondeterminstic
order, and we emit warnings about #pragma weak in nondeterminstic order.
llvm-svn: 81236
ways: remove elab types during desugaring, enhance pretty-printing to allow
tags to be suppressed without suppressing scopes, look through elab types
when associating a typedef name with an anonymous record type.
llvm-svn: 81065
of any previous declaration in case we replace it in a class's declaration table.
Fixes bug 4858. This sort of thing makes me reconsider putting friend declarations in
declaration lists.
llvm-svn: 80750
declarations of same, introduce a single AST class and add appropriate bits
(encoded in the namespace) for whether a decl is "real" or not. Much hackery
about previously-declared / not-previously-declared, but it's essentially
mandated by the standard that friends alter lookup, and this is at least
fairly non-intrusive.
Refactor the Sema methods specific to friends for cleaner flow and less nesting.
Incidentally solve a few bugs, but I remain confident that we can put them back.
llvm-svn: 80353
templates within class templates, producing a member function template
of a class template specialization. If you can parse that, I'm
sorry. Example:
template<typename T>
struct X {
template<typename U> void f(T, U);
};
When we instantiate X<int>, we now instantiate the declaration
X<int>::f, which looks like this:
template<typename U> void X<int>::f(int, U);
The path this takes through
TemplateDeclInstantiator::VisitCXXMethodDecl is convoluted and
ugly, but I don't know how to improve it yet. I'm resting my hopes on
the multi-level substitution required to instantiate definitions of
nested templates, which may simplify this code as well.
More testing to come...
llvm-svn: 80252
TypenameType if getTypeName is looking at a member of an unknown
specialization. This allows us to properly parse class templates that
derived from type that could only otherwise be described by a typename type,
e.g.,
template<class T> struct X {};
template<typename T> struct Y : public X<T>::X { };
Fixes PR4381.
llvm-svn: 80123
qualified name does not actually refer into a class/class
template/class template partial specialization.
Improve printing of nested-name-specifiers to eliminate redudant
qualifiers. Also, make it possible to output a nested-name-specifier
through a DiagnosticBuilder, although there are relatively few places
that will use this leeway.
llvm-svn: 80056
their members, including member class template, member function
templates, and member classes and functions of member templates.
To actually parse the nested-name-specifiers that qualify the name of
an out-of-line definition of a member template, e.g.,
template<typename X> template<typename Y>
X Outer<X>::Inner1<Y>::foo(Y) {
return X();
}
we need to look for the template names (e.g., "Inner1") as a member of
the current instantiation (Outer<X>), even before we have entered the
scope of the current instantiation. Since we can't do this in general
(i.e., we should not be looking into all dependent
nested-name-specifiers as if they were the current instantiation), we
rely on the parser to tell us when it is parsing a declaration
specifier sequence, and, therefore, when we should consider the
current scope specifier to be a current instantiation.
Printing of complicated, dependent nested-name-specifiers may be
somewhat broken by this commit; I'll add tests for this issue and fix
the problem (if it still exists) in a subsequent commit.
llvm-svn: 80044
accurately. Prevents the assert from triggering incorrectly when friending
functions first declared in extern "C" contexts. Fixes bug 4757.
llvm-svn: 80016
the logic is there for out-of-line definitions with multiple levels of
nested templates, but this is still a work-in-progress: we're having
trouble determining when we should look into a dependent
nested-name-specifier.
llvm-svn: 80003
DeclaratorDecl contains a DeclaratorInfo* to keep type source info.
Subclasses of DeclaratorDecl are FieldDecl, FunctionDecl, and VarDecl.
EnumConstantDecl still inherits from ValueDecl since it has no need for DeclaratorInfo.
Decl/Sema interfaces accept a DeclaratorInfo as parameter but no DeclaratorInfo is created yet.
llvm-svn: 79392
This currently breaks test/SemaObjC/id-isa-ref.m and issues some spurious warnings when you attempt to assign a struct objc_class* value to a Class variable. The test case probably should fail as it's written, because without the definition of Class the compiler should not assume struct objc_class* is a valid receiver type, but it's left broken because it would be nice if we could get that passing too for the special case of isa.
Approved by snaroff.
llvm-svn: 79248
FriendFunctionDecl, and create instances as appropriate.
The design of FriendFunctionDecl is still somewhat up in the air; you can
befriend arbitrary types of functions --- methods, constructors, etc. ---
and it's not clear that this representation captures that very well.
We'll have a better picture when we start consuming this data in access
control.
llvm-svn: 78653
This is necessary because #pragma pack and __attribute__((packed)) have different semantics. No functionality change yet, but this lays the groundwork for fixing a record layout bug.
llvm-svn: 78483
we were going to enter into the scope of a class template or class
template partial specialization, rebuild that type so that it can
refer to members of the current instantiation, as in code like
template<typename T>
struct X {
typedef T* pointer;
pointer data();
};
template<typename T>
typename X<T>::pointer X<T>::data() { ... }
Without rebuilding the return type of this out-of-line definition, the
canonical return type of the out-of-line definition (a TypenameType)
will not match the canonical return type of the declaration (the
canonical type of T*).
llvm-svn: 78316
elsewhere. Very slightly decouples DeclSpec users from knowing the exact
diagnostics to report, and makes it easier to provide different diagnostics in
some places.
llvm-svn: 77990
Type::getAsReferenceType() -> Type::getAs<ReferenceType>()
Type::getAsRecordType() -> Type::getAs<RecordType>()
Type::getAsPointerType() -> Type::getAs<PointerType>()
Type::getAsBlockPointerType() -> Type::getAs<BlockPointerType>()
Type::getAsLValueReferenceType() -> Type::getAs<LValueReferenceType>()
Type::getAsRValueReferenceType() -> Type::getAs<RValueReferenceType>()
Type::getAsMemberPointerType() -> Type::getAs<MemberPointerType>()
Type::getAsReferenceType() -> Type::getAs<ReferenceType>()
Type::getAsTagType() -> Type::getAs<TagType>()
And remove Type::getAsReferenceType(), etc.
This change is similar to one I made a couple weeks ago, but that was partly
reverted pending some additional design discussion. With Doug's pending smart
pointer changes for Types, it seemed natural to take this approach.
llvm-svn: 77510
and __has_trivial_constructor builtin pseudo-functions and
additionally implements __has_trivial_copy and __has_trivial_assign,
from John McCall!
llvm-svn: 76916
point that covers templates and non-templates. This should eliminate
the flood of warnings I introduced yesterday.
Removed the ActOnClassTemplate action, which is no longer used.
llvm-svn: 76881
value. This is on by default, and controlled by -Wreturn-type (-Wmost
-Wall). I believe there should be very few false positives, though
the most interesting case would be:
int() { bar(); }
when bar does:
bar() { while (1) ; }
Here, we assume functions return, unless they are marked with the
noreturn attribute. I can envision a fixit note for functions that
never return normally that don't have a noreturn attribute to add a
noreturn attribute.
If anyone spots other false positives, let me know!
llvm-svn: 76821
templates, e.g.,
template<typename T>
struct Outer {
struct Inner;
};
template<typename T>
struct Outer<T>::Inner {
// ...
};
Implementing this feature required some extensions to ActOnTag, which
now takes a set of template parameter lists, and is the precursor to
removing the ActOnClassTemplate function from the parser Action
interface. The reason for this approach is simple: the parser cannot
tell the difference between a class template definition and the
definition of a member of a class template; both have template
parameter lists, and semantic analysis determines what that template
parameter list means.
There is still some cleanup to do with ActOnTag and
ActOnClassTemplate. This commit provides the basic functionality we
need, however.
llvm-svn: 76820
until Doug Gregor's Type smart pointer code lands (or more discussion occurs).
These methods just call the new Type::getAs<XXX> methods, so we still have
reduced implementation redundancy. Having explicit getAsXXXType() methods makes
it easier to set breakpoints in the debugger.
llvm-svn: 76193
Note: One day, it might be useful to consider adding this info to DeclGroup (as the comments in FunctionDecl/VarDecl suggest). For now, I think this works fine. I considered moving this to ValueDecl (a common ancestor of FunctionDecl/VarDecl/FieldDecl), however this would add overhead to EnumConstantDecl (which would burn memory and isn't necessary).
llvm-svn: 75635
- Declaration context of ParmVarDecls (that we got from the Declarator) was not their containing function.
- C++ out-of-line method definitions didn't get an access specifier.
Both were exposed by a crash when emitting a C++ method to a PCH file (assert at Decl::CheckAccessDeclContext()).
llvm-svn: 75597
The idea is to segregate Objective-C "object" pointers from general C pointers (utilizing the recently added ObjCObjectPointerType). The fun starts in Sema::GetTypeForDeclarator(), where "SomeInterface *" is now represented by a single AST node (rather than a PointerType whose Pointee is an ObjCInterfaceType). Since a significant amount of code assumed ObjC object pointers where based on C pointers/structs, this patch is very tedious. It should also explain why it is hard to accomplish this in smaller, self-contained patches.
This patch does most of the "heavy lifting" related to moving from PointerType->ObjCObjectPointerType. It doesn't include all potential "cleanups". The good news is additional cleanups can be done later (some are noted in the code). This patch is so large that I didn't want to include any changes that are purely aesthetic.
By making the ObjC types truly built-in, they are much easier to work with (and require fewer "hacks"). For example, there is no need for ASTContext::isObjCIdStructType() or ASTContext::isObjCClassStructType()! We believe this change (and the follow-up cleanups) will pay dividends over time.
Given the amount of code change, I do expect some fallout from this change (though it does pass all of the clang tests). If you notice any problems, please let us know asap! Thanks.
llvm-svn: 75314
FILE type, rather than using name lookup to find FILE within the
translation unit. Within precompiled headers, FILE is treated as yet
another "special type" (like __builtin_va_list).
This change should provide a performance improvement (not verified),
since the lookup into the translation unit declaration
forces the (otherwise unneeded) construction of a large hash table.
More importantly, with precompiled headers, the construction
of that table requires deserializing most of the top-level
declarations from the precompiled header, which are then unused.
Fixes PR 4509.
llvm-svn: 74911
Remove ASTContext parameter from DeclContext's methods. This change cascaded down to other Decl's methods and changes to call sites started "escalating".
Timings using pre-tokenized "cocoa.h" showed only a ~1% increase in time run between and after this commit.
llvm-svn: 74506
The implementations of these methods can Use Decl::getASTContext() to get the ASTContext.
This commit touches a lot of files since call sites for these methods are everywhere.
I used pre-tokenized "carbon.h" and "cocoa.h" headers to do some timings, and there was no real time difference between before the commit and after it.
llvm-svn: 74501
templates.
For example, this now type-checks (but does not instantiate the body
of deref<int>):
template<typename T> T& deref(T* t) { return *t; }
void test(int *ip) {
int &ir = deref(ip);
}
Specific changes/additions:
* Template argument deduction from a call to a function template.
* Instantiation of a function template specializations (just the
declarations) from the template arguments deduced from a call.
* FunctionTemplateDecls are stored directly in declaration contexts
and found via name lookup (all forms), rather than finding the
FunctionDecl and then realizing it is a template. This is
responsible for most of the churn, since some of the core
declaration matching and lookup code assumes that all functions are
FunctionDecls.
llvm-svn: 74213
C++. This logic is required to trigger implicit instantiation of
function templates and member functions of class templates, which will
be implemented separately.
This commit includes support for -Wunused-parameter, printing warnings
for named parameters that are not used within a function/Objective-C
method/block. Fixes <rdar://problem/6505209>.
llvm-svn: 73797
<rdar://problem/6952203>.
To do this, we actually remove a not-quite-correct optimization in the
C++ name lookup routines. We'll revisit this optimization for the
general case once more C++ is working.
llvm-svn: 73659
visible anywhere normally because the printf format checks for
this case, and we don't print out attribute values anywhere. Original
patch by Roberto Bagnara.
llvm-svn: 73157
definition variadic. I'm not completely sure it's legal, but the
standard can be interpreted as making it legal, and gcc seems to think
it's legal, so I didn't add an extension warning.
llvm-svn: 72689
walks through DeclContexts properly, and prints more of the
information available in the AST. The functionality is still available
via -ast-print, -ast-dump, etc., and also via the new member functions
Decl::dump() and Decl::print().
llvm-svn: 72597
instantiation of tags local to member functions of class templates
(and, eventually, function templates) works when the tag is defined as
part of the decl-specifier-seq, e.g.,
struct S { T x, y; } s1;
Also, make sure that we don't try to default-initialize a dependent
type.
llvm-svn: 72568
specifier resulted in the creation of a new TagDecl node, which
happens either when the tag specifier was a definition or when the tag
specifier was the first declaration of that tag type. This information
has several uses, the first of which is implemented in this commit:
1) In C++, one is not allowed to define tag types within a type
specifier (e.g., static_cast<struct S { int x; } *>(0) is
ill-formed) or within the result or parameter types of a
function. We now diagnose this.
2) We can extend DeclGroups to contain information about any tags
that are declared/defined within the declaration specifiers of a
variable, e.g.,
struct Point { int x, y, z; } p;
This will help improve AST printing and template instantiation,
among other things.
3) For C99, we can keep track of whether a tag type is defined
within the type of a parameter, to properly cope with cases like,
e.g.,
int bar(struct T2 { int x; } y) {
struct T2 z;
}
We can also do similar things wherever there is a type specifier,
e.g., to keep track of where the definition of S occurs in this
legal C99 code:
(struct S { int x, y; } *)0
llvm-svn: 72555
an integral constant expression, maintain a cache of the value and the
is-an-ICE flag within the VarDecl itself. This eliminates
exponential-time behavior of the Fibonacci template metaprogram.
llvm-svn: 72428
alternatives, but please correct me if I'm wrong.
I eventually plan to assert in mergeTypes that we aren't in C++ mode
because composite types are fundamentally not a part of C++. The
remaining callers for code in the regression tests are
Sema::WarnConflictingTypedMethods and CodeGenFunction::EmitFunctionProlog;
I'm not quite sure what the correct approach is for those callers.
llvm-svn: 71946
template<typename T>
struct X {
struct Inner;
};
template struct X<int>::Inner;
This change is larger than it looks because it also fixes some
a problem with nested-name-specifiers and tags. We weren't requiring
the DeclContext associated with the scope specifier of a tag to be
complete. Therefore, when looking for something like "struct
X<int>::Inner", we weren't instantiating X<int>.
This, naturally, uncovered a problem with member pointers, where we
were requiring the left-hand side of a member pointer access
expression (e.g., x->*) to be a complete type. However, this is wrong:
the semantics of this expression does not require a complete type (EDG
agrees).
Stuart vouched for me. Blame him.
llvm-svn: 71756
template class X<int>;
This also cleans up the propagation of template information through
declaration parsing, which is used to improve some diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 71608
Per the FIXME, it might be interesting to track whether the inline keyword
was also used on the method, but for now we don't do this. Testcase pending.
llvm-svn: 71589
specialization" within a C++ template, and permit name lookup into the
current instantiation. For example, given:
template<typename T, typename U>
struct X {
typedef T type;
X* x1; // current instantiation
X<T, U> *x2; // current instantiation
X<U, T> *x3; // not current instantiation
::X<type, U> *x4; // current instantiation
X<typename X<type, U>::type, U>: *x5; // current instantiation
};
llvm-svn: 71471
template. The injected-class-name is either a type or a template,
depending on whether a '<' follows it. As a type, the
injected-class-name's template argument list contains its template
parameters in declaration order.
As part of this, add logic for canonicalizing declarations, and be
sure to canonicalize declarations used in template names and template
arguments.
A TagType is dependent if the declaration it references is dependent.
I'm not happy about the rather complicated protocol needed to use
ASTContext::getTemplateSpecializationType.
llvm-svn: 71408
1. In a struct field redefinition, don't mark the struct erroneous. The
field is erroneous, but the struct is otherwise well formed.
2. Don't emit diagnostics about functions that are known to be broken already.
Either fix is sufficient to silence the second diagnostic in the example,
but the combination is better :)
llvm-svn: 70371
mode and in the presence of __gnu_inline__ attributes. This should fix
both PR3989 and PR4069.
As part of this, we now keep track of all of the attributes attached
to each declaration even after we've performed declaration
merging. This fixes PR3264.
llvm-svn: 70292
that if we're going to print an extension warning anyway,
there's no point to changing behavior based on NoExtensions: it will
only make error recovery worse.
Note that this doesn't cause any behavior change because NoExtensions
isn't used by the current front-end. I'm still considering what to do about
the remaining use of NoExtensions in IdentifierTable.cpp.
llvm-svn: 70273
before r69391: typedef redefinition is an error by default, but if
*either* the old or new definition are from a system header, we silence
it.
llvm-svn: 70177
always return a non-null QualType + error bit. This fixes a bunch of
cases that didn't check for null result (and could thus crash) and eliminates
some crappy code scattered throughout sema.
This also improves the diagnostics in the recursive struct case to eliminate
a bogus second error. It also cleans up the case added to function.c by forming
a proper function type even though the declarator is erroneous, allowing the
parameter to be added to the function. Before:
t.c:2:1: error: unknown type name 'unknown_type'
unknown_type f(void*P)
^
t.c:4:3: error: use of undeclared identifier 'P'
P+1;
^
After:
t.c:2:1: error: unknown type name 'unknown_type'
unknown_type f(void*P)
^
llvm-svn: 70023
This gets rid of a bunch of random InvalidDecl bools in sema, changing
us to use the following approach:
1. When analyzing a declspec or declarator, if an error is found, we
set a bit in Declarator saying that it is invalid.
2. Once the Decl is created by sema, we immediately set the isInvalid
bit on it from what is in the declarator. From this point on, sema
consistently looks at and sets the bit on the decl.
This gives a very clear separation of concerns and simplifies a bunch
of code. In addition to this, this patch makes these changes:
1. it renames DeclSpec::getInvalidType() -> isInvalidType().
2. various "merge" functions no longer return bools: they just set the
invalid bit on the dest decl if invalid.
3. The ActOnTypedefDeclarator/ActOnFunctionDeclarator/ActOnVariableDeclarator
methods now set invalid on the decl returned instead of returning an
invalid bit byref.
4. In SemaType, refering to a typedef that was invalid now propagates the
bit into the resultant type. Stuff declared with the invalid typedef
will now be marked invalid.
5. Various methods like CheckVariableDeclaration now return void and set the
invalid bit on the decl they check.
There are a few minor changes to tests with this, but the only major bad
result is test/SemaCXX/constructor-recovery.cpp. I'll take a look at this
next.
llvm-svn: 70020
parameters in a functiondecl, even if the decl is invalid and has a confusing
Declarator. On the testcase, we now emit one beautiful diagnostic:
t.c:2:1: error: unknown type name 'unknown_type'
unknown_type f(void*)
^
GCC 4.0 produces:
t.c:2: error: syntax error before ‘f’
t.c: In function ‘f’:
t.c:2: error: parameter name omitted
and GCC 4.2:
t.c:2: error: expected ‘=’, ‘,’, ‘;’, ‘asm’ or ‘__attribute__’ before ‘f’
llvm-svn: 70016
remove a special case that was apparently for typeof() and
generalize the code in SemaDecl that handles typedefs to
handle any sugar type (including typedef, typeof, etc).
Improve comment to make it more clear what is going on.
llvm-svn: 70015
typedef void foo(void);
We get a typedef for a functiontypeproto with no arguments, not
one with one argument and type void. This means the code being
removed in SemaDecl is dead.
llvm-svn: 70013
by correctly propagating the fact that the type was invalid up to the
attributeRuns decl, then returning an ExprError when attributeRuns is
formed (like we do for normal declrefexprs).
llvm-svn: 69998
SEL, Class, Protocol, CFConstantString, and
__objcFastEnumerationState. With this, we can now run the Objective-C
methods and properties PCH tests.
llvm-svn: 69932
in a bunch of declarations from the PCH file. We're down to loading
very few declarations in Carbon-prefixed "Hello, World!":
*** PCH Statistics:
6/20693 types read (0.028995%)
7/59230 declarations read (0.011818%)
50/44914 identifiers read (0.111324%)
0/32954 statements read (0.000000%)
5/6187 macros read (0.080815%)
llvm-svn: 69825
tentative definitions off to the ASTConsumer at the end of the
translation unit.
Eliminate CodeGen's internal tracking of tentative definitions, and
instead hook into ASTConsumer::CompleteTentativeDefinition. Also,
tweak the definition-deferal logic for C++, where there are no
tentative definitions.
Fixes <rdar://problem/6808352>, and will make it much easier for
precompiled headers to cope with tentative definitions in the future.
llvm-svn: 69681
statements don't end up in the LabelMap so we don't have a quick way
to filter them. We could add state to Sema (a "has vla" and "has
jump" bit) to try to filter this out, but that would be sort of gross
and I'm not convinced it is the best way. Thoughts welcome.
llvm-svn: 69476
specific bad case instead of on the switch. Putting it on the
switch means you don't know what case is the problem. For
example:
scope-check.c:54:3: error: illegal switch case into protected scope
case 2:
^
scope-check.c:53:9: note: jump bypasses initialization of variable length array
int a[x];
^
llvm-svn: 69462
produce better diagnostics, and be more correct in ObjC cases (fixing
rdar://6803963).
An example is that we now diagnose:
int test1(int x) {
goto L;
int a[x];
int b[x];
L:
return sizeof a;
}
with:
scope-check.c:15:3: error: illegal goto into protected scope
goto L;
^
scope-check.c:17:7: note: scope created by variable length array
int b[x];
^
scope-check.c:16:7: note: scope created by variable length array
int a[x];
^
instead of just saying "invalid jump". An ObjC example is:
void test1() {
goto L;
@try {
L: ;
} @finally {
}
}
t.m:6:3: error: illegal goto into protected scope
goto L;
^
t.m:7:3: note: scope created by @try block
@try {
^
There are a whole ton of fixme's for stuff to do, but I believe that this
is a monotonic improvement over what we had.
llvm-svn: 69437
lazy PCH deserialization. Propagate that argument wherever it needs to
be. No functionality change, except that I've tightened up a few PCH
tests in preparation.
llvm-svn: 69406
1. We had logic in sema to decide whether or not to emit the error
based on manually checking whether in a system header file.
2. we were allowing redefinitions of typedefs in class scope in C++
if in header file.
3. there was no way to force typedef redefinitions to be accepted
by the C compiler, which annoys me when stripping linemarkers out
of .i files.
The fix is to split the C++ class typedef redefinition path from the
C path, and change the C path to be a warning that normally maps to
error. This causes it to properly be ignored in system headers,
etc. and gives us a way to control it. Passing
-Wtypedef-redefinition now turns the error into a warning.
One behavior change is that we now diagnose cases where you redefine
a typedef in your .c file that was defined in a header file. This
seems like reasonable behavior, and the diagnostic now indicates that
it can be controlled with -Wtypedef-redefinition.
llvm-svn: 69391
caused by: <rdar://problem/6252084> [sema] jumps into Obj-C exception blocks should be disallowed.
Sema::RecursiveCalcLabelScopes() and Sema::RecursiveCalcJumpScopes() need to pop the ScopeStack within the statement iteration loop (was outside the loop).
Eli, please review (thanks).
llvm-svn: 69165
- Exposed quite a few Sema issues and a CodeGen crash.
- See FIXMEs in test case, and in SemaDecl.cpp (PR3983).
I'm skeptical that __private_extern__ should actually be a storage
class value. I think that __private_extern__ basically amounts to
extern A __attribute__((visibility("hidden")))
and would be better off handled (a) as that, or (b) with an extra bit
in the VarDecl.
llvm-svn: 69020
struct xyz { int y; };
enum abc { ZZZ };
static xyz b;
abc c;
we used to produce:
t2.c:4:8: error: unknown type name 'xyz'
static xyz b;
^
t2.c:5:1: error: unknown type name 'abc'
abc c;
^
we now produce:
t2.c:4:8: error: use of tagged type 'xyz' without 'struct' tag
static xyz b;
^
struct
t2.c:5:1: error: use of tagged type 'abc' without 'enum' tag
abc c;
^
enum
GCC produces the normal:
t2.c:4: error: expected ‘=’, ‘,’, ‘;’, ‘asm’ or ‘__attribute__’ before ‘b’
t2.c:5: error: expected ‘=’, ‘,’, ‘;’, ‘asm’ or ‘__attribute__’ before ‘c’
rdar://6783347
llvm-svn: 68914
1) improve localizability by not passing english strings in.
2) improve location for arguments.
3) print the objc type being passed.
Before:
method-bad-param.m:15:1: error: Objective-C type cannot be passed by value
-(void) my_method:(foo) my_param
^
after:
method-bad-param.m:15:25: error: Objective-C interface type 'foo' cannot be passed by value
-(void) my_method:(foo) my_param
^
llvm-svn: 68872
buffer generated for the current translation unit. If they are
different, complain and then ignore the PCH file. This effectively
checks for all compilation options that somehow would affect
preprocessor state (-D, -U, -include, the dreaded -imacros, etc.).
When we do accept the PCH file, throw away the contents of the
predefines buffer rather than parsing them, since all of the results
of that parsing are already stored in the PCH file. This eliminates
the ugliness with the redefinition of __builtin_va_list, among other
things.
llvm-svn: 68838
de-serialization of abstract syntax trees.
PCH support serializes the contents of the abstract syntax tree (AST)
to a bitstream. When the PCH file is read, declarations are serialized
as-needed. For example, a declaration of a variable "x" will be
deserialized only when its VarDecl can be found by a client, e.g.,
based on name lookup for "x" or traversing the entire contents of the
owner of "x".
This commit provides the framework for serialization and (lazy)
deserialization, along with support for variable and typedef
declarations (along with several kinds of types). More
declarations/types, along with important auxiliary structures (source
manager, preprocessor, etc.), will follow.
llvm-svn: 68732
failures that involve malformed types, e.g., "typename X::foo" where
"foo" isn't a type, or "std::vector<void>" that doens't instantiate
properly.
Similarly, be a bit smarter in our handling of ambiguities that occur
in Sema::getTypeName, to eliminate duplicate error messages about
ambiguous name lookup.
This eliminates two XFAILs in test/SemaCXX, one of which was crying
out to us, trying to tell us that we were producing repeated error
messages.
llvm-svn: 68251
productions (except the already broken ObjC cases like @class X,Y;) in
the parser that can produce more than one Decl return a DeclGroup instead
of a Decl, etc.
This allows elimination of the Decl::NextDeclarator field, and exposes
various clients that should look at all decls in a group, but which were
only looking at one (such as the dumper, printer, etc). These have been
fixed.
Still TODO:
1) there are some FIXME's in the code about potentially using
DeclGroup for better location info.
2) ParseObjCAtDirectives should return a DeclGroup due to @class etc.
3) I'm not sure what is going on with StmtIterator.cpp, or if it can
be radically simplified now.
4) I put a truly horrible hack in ParseTemplate.cpp.
I plan to bring up #3/4 on the mailing list, but don't plan to tackle
#1/2 in the short term.
llvm-svn: 68002
pointer. Its purpose in life is to be a glorified void*, but which does not
implicitly convert to void* or other OpaquePtr's with a different UID.
Introduce Action::DeclPtrTy which is a typedef for OpaquePtr<0>. Change the
entire parser/sema interface to use DeclPtrTy instead of DeclTy*. This
makes the C++ compiler enforce that these aren't convertible to other opaque
types.
We should also convert ExprTy, StmtTy, TypeTy, AttrTy, BaseTy, etc,
but I don't plan to do that in the short term.
The one outstanding known problem with this patch is that we lose the
bitmangling optimization where ActionResult<DeclPtrTy> doesn't know how to
bitmangle the success bit into the low bit of DeclPtrTy. I will rectify
this with a subsequent patch.
llvm-svn: 67952
specializations can be treated as a template. Finally, we can parse
and process the first implementation of Fibonacci I wrote!
Note that this code does not handle all of the cases where
injected-class-names can be treated as templates. In particular,
there's an ambiguity case that we should be able to handle (but
can't), e.g.,
template <class T> struct Base { };
template <class T> struct Derived : Base<int>, Base<char> {
typename Derived::Base b; // error: ambiguous
typename Derived::Base<double> d; // OK
};
llvm-svn: 67720
templates, including in-class initializers. For example:
template<typename T, T Divisor>
class X {
public:
static const T value = 10 / Divisor;
};
instantiated with, e.g.,
X<int, 5>::value
to get the value '2'.
llvm-svn: 67715
the declarations of member classes are instantiated when the owning
class template is instantiated. The definitions of such member classes
are instantiated when a complete type is required.
This change also introduces the injected-class-name into a class
template specialization.
llvm-svn: 67707
class C {
void g(C c);
virtual void f() = 0;
};
In this case, C is not known to be abstract when doing semantic analysis on g. This is done by recursively traversing the abstract class and checking the types of member functions.
llvm-svn: 67594
a class template. At present, we can only instantiation normal
methods, but not constructors, destructors, or conversion operators.
As ever, this contains a bit of refactoring in Sema's type-checking. In
particular:
- Split ActOnFunctionDeclarator into ActOnFunctionDeclarator
(handling the declarator itself) and CheckFunctionDeclaration
(checking for the the function declaration), the latter of which
is also used by template instantiation.
- We were performing the adjustment of function parameter types in
three places; collect those into a single new routine.
- When the type of a parameter is adjusted, allocate an
OriginalParmVarDecl to keep track of the type as it was written.
- Eliminate a redundant check for out-of-line declarations of member
functions; hide more C++-specific checks on function declarations
behind if(getLangOptions().CPlusPlus).
llvm-svn: 67575
library function, accept this declaration and pretend that we do not
know that this is a library function. autoconf depends on this
(broken) behavior.
llvm-svn: 67541
F f;
where F is a typedef of a function type, then the function "f" has a
prototype. This is a slight tweak to Chris's suggested fix in
PR3817. Fixes PR3817 and PR3840.
llvm-svn: 67313
dependent qualified-ids such as
Fibonacci<N - 1>::value
where N is a template parameter. These references are "unresolved"
because the name is dependent and, therefore, cannot be resolved to a
declaration node (as we would do for a DeclRefExpr or
QualifiedDeclRefExpr). UnresolvedDeclRefExprs instantiate to
DeclRefExprs, QualifiedDeclRefExprs, etc.
Also, be a bit more careful about keeping only a single set of
specializations for a class template, and instantiating from the
definition of that template rather than a previous declaration. In
general, we need a better solution for this for all TagDecls, because
it's too easy to accidentally look at a declaration that isn't the
definition.
We can now process a simple Fibonacci computation described as a
template metaprogram.
llvm-svn: 67308
specialization names. This way, we keep track of sugared types like
std::vector<Real>
I believe we are now using QualifiedNameTypes everywhere we can. Next
step: QualifiedDeclRefExprs.
llvm-svn: 67268
qualified name, e.g.,
foo::x
so that we retain the nested-name-specifier as written in the source
code and can reproduce that qualified name when printing the types
back (e.g., in diagnostics). This is PR3493, which won't be complete
until finished the other tasks mentioned near the end of this commit.
The parser's representation of nested-name-specifiers, CXXScopeSpec,
is now a bit fatter, because it needs to contain the scopes that
precede each '::' and keep track of whether the global scoping
operator '::' was at the beginning. For example, we need to keep track
of the leading '::', 'foo', and 'bar' in
::foo::bar::x
The Action's CXXScopeTy * is no longer a DeclContext *. It's now the
opaque version of the new NestedNameSpecifier, which contains a single
component of a nested-name-specifier (either a DeclContext * or a Type
*, bitmangled).
The new sugar type QualifiedNameType composes a sequence of
NestedNameSpecifiers with a representation of the type we're actually
referring to. At present, we only build QualifiedNameType nodes within
Sema::getTypeName. This will be extended to other type-constructing
actions (e.g., ActOnClassTemplateId).
Also on the way: QualifiedDeclRefExprs will also store a sequence of
NestedNameSpecifiers, so that we can print out the property
nested-name-specifier. I expect to also use this for handling
dependent names like Fibonacci<I - 1>::value.
llvm-svn: 67265
Type pointer. This allows our nested-name-specifiers to retain more
information about the actual spelling (e.g., which typedef did the
user name, or what exact template arguments were used in the
template-id?). It will also allow us to have dependent
nested-name-specifiers that don't map to any DeclContext.
llvm-svn: 67140
quite as great as it sounds, because, while we can refer to the
enumerator values outside the template, e.g.,
adder<long, 3, 4>::value
we can't yet refer to them with dependent names, so no Fibonacci
(yet).
InstantiateClassTemplateSpecialization is getting messy; next commit
will put it into a less-ugly state.
llvm-svn: 67092
be CompoundStmts. I think this is a valid assumption, and felt that the API
should reflect it. Others please validate this assumption to make sure I didn't
break anything.
llvm-svn: 66814
class members to the corresponding in-class declaration.
Diagnose the erroneous use of 'static' on out-of-line definitions of
class members.
llvm-svn: 66740
template. More importantly, start to sort out the issues regarding
complete types and nested-name-specifiers, especially the question of:
when do we instantiate a class template specialization that occurs to
the left of a '::' in a nested-name-specifier?
llvm-svn: 66662
definitions. We were rejecting tentative definitions of incomplete
(which is bad), and now we don't.
This fix is partial because we don't do the end-of-translation-unit
initialization for tentative definitions that don't ever have any
initializers specified.
llvm-svn: 66584
prototype of the same function, where the promoted parameter types in
the K&R definition are not compatible with the types in the
prototype. Fixes PR2821.
llvm-svn: 66301
response to attempts to diagnose an "incomplete" type. This will force
us to use DiagnoseIncompleteType more regularly (rather than looking at
isIncompleteType), but that's also a good thing.
Implicit instantiation is still very simplistic, and will create a new
definition for the class template specialization (as it should) but it
only actually instantiates the base classes and attaches
those. Actually instantiating class members will follow.
Also, instantiate the types of non-type template parameters before
checking them, allowing, e.g.,
template<typename T, T Value> struct Constant;
to work properly.
llvm-svn: 65924
need them to evaluate redeclarations or call a function that hasn't
already been declared. We now keep a DenseMap of these locally-scoped
declarations so that they are not visible but can be quickly found,
e.g., when we're looking for previous declarations or before we go
ahead and implicitly declare a function that's being called. Fixes
PR3672.
llvm-svn: 65792
notice because it was a negative test with a fix suggested by
Jean-Daniel Dupas. Convert the test from a negative to a positive
test to catch stuff like this.
llvm-svn: 65708
- Move the 'LabelMap' from Sema to Scope. To avoid layering problems, the second element is now a 'StmtTy *', which makes the LabelMap a bit more verbose to deal with.
- Add 'ActiveScope' to Sema. Managed by ActOnStartOfFunctionDef(), ObjCActOnStartOfMethodDef(), ActOnBlockStmtExpr().
- Changed ActOnLabelStmt(), ActOnGotoStmt(), ActOnAddrLabel(), and ActOnFinishFunctionBody() to use the new ActiveScope.
- Added FIXME to workaround in ActOnFinishFunctionBody() (for dealing with C++ nested functions).
llvm-svn: 65694
As far as I know, this catches all cases of jumping into the scope of a
variable with a variably modified type (excluding statement
expressions) in C. This is missing some stuff we probably want to check
(other kinds of variably modified declarations, statement expressions,
indirect gotos/addresses of labels in a scope, ObjC @try/@finally, cleanup
attribute), the diagnostics aren't very good, and it's not particularly
efficient, but it's a decent start.
This patch is a slightly modified version of the patch I attached to
PR3259, and it fixes that bug. I was sort of planning on improving
it, but I think it's okay as-is, especially since it looks like CodeGen
doesn't have any use for this sort of data structure. The only
significant change I can think of from the version I attached to PR3259
is that this version skips running the checking code when a function
doesn't contain any labels.
This patch doesn't cover case statements, which also need similar
checking; I'm not sure how we should deal with that. Extending the goto
checking to also check case statements wouldn't be too hard; it's just a
matter of keeping track of the scope of the closest switch and checking that
the scope of every case is the same as the scope of the switch. That said,
it would likely be a performance hit to run this check on every
function (it's an extra pass over the entire function), so we probably want
some other solution.
llvm-svn: 65678
giving them rough classifications (normal types, never-canonical
types, always-dependent types, abstract type representations) and
making it far easier to make sure that we've hit all of the cases when
decoding types.
Switched some switch() statements on the type class over to using this
mechanism, and filtering out those things we don't care about. For
example, CodeGen should never see always-dependent or non-canonical
types, while debug info generation should never see always-dependent
types. More switch() statements on the type class need to be moved
over to using this approach, so that we'll get warnings when we add a
new type then fail to account for it somewhere in the compiler.
As part of this, some types have been renamed:
TypeOfExpr -> TypeOfExprType
FunctionTypeProto -> FunctionProtoType
FunctionTypeNoProto -> FunctionNoProtoType
There shouldn't be any functionality change...
llvm-svn: 65591
anymore. If we want to reuse bits and pieces to add strict checking for
constant initializers, we can dig them out of SVN history; the existing
code won't be useful as-is.
llvm-svn: 65502
only from a function definition (that does not have a prototype) are
only used to determine the compatible with other declarations of that
same function. In particular, when referencing the function we pretend
as if it does not have a prototype. Implement this behavior, which
fixes PR3626.
llvm-svn: 65460
external declarations to also support external variable
declarations. Unified the code for these two cases into two new
subroutines.
Note that we fail to diagnose cases like the one Neil pointed
out, where a visible non-external declaration hides an external
declaration by the same name. That will require some reshuffling of
name lookup.
llvm-svn: 65385
that declaration to global scope so that it can be found from other
scopes. This allows us to diagnose redeclaration errors for external
declarations across scopes. We also warn when name lookup finds such
an out-of-scope declaration. This is part of <rdar://problem/6127293>;
we'll also need to do the same thing for variables.
llvm-svn: 65373
- When we are declaring a function in local scope, we can merge with
a visible declaration from an outer scope if that declaration
refers to an entity with linkage. This behavior now works in C++
and properly ignores entities without linkage.
- Diagnose the use of "static" on a function declaration in local
scope.
- Diagnose the declaration of a static function after a non-static
declaration of the same function.
- Propagate the storage specifier to a function declaration from a
prior declaration (PR3425)
- Don't name-mangle "main"
llvm-svn: 65360
assertion when the ivars and method list was reset into the existing
interface. To fix this, mark decls as invalid when they are redefined,
and don't insert ivars/methods into invalid decls.
llvm-svn: 65340
helper isConstantInitializer) to check whether an initializer is
constant. This passes tests, but it's possible that it'll cause
regressions with real-world code.
Future work:
1. The diagnostics obtained this way are lower quality at the moment;
some work both here and in Evaluate is needed for accurate diagnostics.
2. We probably need some extra code when we're in -pedantic mode so we
can strictly enforce the rules in C99 6.6p7.
3. Dead code cleanup (this should wait until after 2, because we might
want to re-use some of the code).
llvm-svn: 65265
This prevents emitting diagnostics which are almost certainly useless.
(Note that the test is checking that we emit only one diagnostic.)
llvm-svn: 65101