In addition to the formal linkage rules, the Modules TS includes cases where
internal-linkage symbols within a module interface unit can be referenced from
outside the module via exported inline functions / templates. We give such
declarations "module-internal linkage", which is formally internal linkage, but
results in an externally-visible symbol.
llvm-svn: 307434
In C mode clang fails to merge the textually included definition with the one imported from a module. The C lookup rules fail to find the imported definition because its linkage is internal in non C++ mode.
This patch reinstates some of the ODR merging rules for typedefs of anonymous tags for languages other than C++.
Patch by Raphael Isemann and me (D34510).
llvm-svn: 306964
Redeclaration lookup should never find hidden enumerators in C, because
they do not have linkage (C11 6.2.2/6)
The linkage of an enumerator should be VisibleNoLinkage, and
isHiddenDeclarationVisible should be checking hasExternalFormalLinkage.
This is was reviewed as part of D31778, but splitted into a different
commit for clarity.
rdar://problem/31909368
llvm-svn: 306917
a c++17 aligned allocation/deallocation function that is unavailable in
the standard library on Apple platforms.
The aligned functions are implemented only in the following versions or
later versions of the OSes, so clang issues diagnostics if the deployment
target being targeted is older than these:
macosx: 10.13
ios: 11.0
tvos: 11.0
watchos: 4.0
The diagnostics are issued whenever the aligned functions are selected
except when the selected function has a definition in the same file.
If there is a user-defined function available somewhere else, option
-Wno-aligned-allocation-unavailable can be used to silence the
diagnostics.
rdar://problem/32664169
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34574
llvm-svn: 306722
Summary:
If the first parameter of the function is the ImplicitParamDecl, codegen
automatically marks it as an implicit argument with `this` or `self`
pointer. Added internal kind of the ImplicitParamDecl to separate
'this', 'self', 'vtt' and other implicit parameters from other kind of
parameters.
Reviewers: rjmccall, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33735
llvm-svn: 305075
Modifies FunctionDecl::isThisDeclarationADefinition so that it covers
all the cases checked by FunctionDecl::isDefined. Implements the latter
method by call to isThisDeclarationADefinition.
This change is a part of the patch D30170.
llvm-svn: 304684
rather than waiting until it's queried.
Currently this is only applied to local submodule visibility mode, as we don't
yet allocate storage for the owning module in non-local-visibility modules
compilations.
This reinstates r302965, reverted in r303037, with a fix for the reported
crash, which occurred when reparenting a local declaration to be a child of
a hidden imported declaration (specifically during template instantiation).
llvm-svn: 303224
module immediately
Also revert dependent r302969. This is leading to crashes.
Will provide more details reproduction instructions to Richard.
llvm-svn: 303037
rather than waiting until it's queried.
Currently this is only applied to local submodule visibility mode, as we don't
yet allocate storage for the owning module in non-local-visibility modules
compilations.
llvm-svn: 302965
When looking for the template instantiation pattern of a templated entity,
consistently select the definition of the pattern if there is one. This means
we'll pick the same owning module when we start instantiating a template that
we'll later pick when determining which modules are visible during that
instantiation.
This reinstates r300650, reverted in r300659, with a fix for a regression
reported by Chandler after commit.
llvm-svn: 300938
The original idea was that if the attribute on an operator,
that the return-value unused-ness wouldn't matter. However,
all of the operators except postfix inc/dec return
references! References don't result in this warning
anyway, so those are already excluded.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32207
llvm-svn: 300764
modules but exposes much more widespread issues. Example and more
information is on the review thread for r300650.
Original commit summary:
[modules] Properly look up the owning module for an instantiation of a merged template.
llvm-svn: 300659
When looking for the template instantiation pattern of a templated entity,
consistently select the definition of the pattern if there is one. This means
we'll pick the same owning module when we start instantiating a template that
we'll later pick when determining which modules are visible during that
instantiation.
llvm-svn: 300650
The code implements Richard Smith suggestion in comment 3 of the PR.
reviewer: Vassil Vassilev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31540
llvm-svn: 300443
In such a case, as when using the NS_ENUM macro, for indexing purposes treat the typedef as 'transparent',
meaning we treat its references as symbols of the underlying tag symbol.
Also provide a libclang API to check for such typedefs.
llvm-svn: 298392
This commit adds support for a new attribute that will be used to
distinguish between extensible and inextensible enums. There are three
main purposes of this attribute:
1. Give better control over when enum-related warnings are issued.
For example, in the code below, clang will not issue a -Wassign-enum
warning if the enum is marked "open":
enum __attribute__((enum_extensibility(closed))) EnumClosed {
B0 = 1, B1 = 10
};
enum __attribute__((enum_extensibility(open))) EnumOpen {
C0 = 1, C1 = 10
};
enum EnumClosed ec = 100; // warning issued
enum EnumOpen eo = 100; // no warning
2. Enable code-completion and debugging tools to offer better
suggestions.
3. Make it easier for swift's clang importer to determine which swift
type an enum should be mapped to.
For more details, see the discussion I started on cfe-dev:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2017-February/052748.html
rdar://problem/12764379
rdar://problem/23145650
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30766
llvm-svn: 298332
It looks like the only use of AddDeallocation is to indirectly call the
destructors of objects. In one case I found
(TypeAliasTemplateDecl::Common), the destructor is a nop, so registering
it to run later seems pointless.
All of the other *::Common types have non-trivial dtors, so deleting the
useless AddDeallocation felt somewhat fragile. Happy to kill it + turn
the is_trivial_dtor check into a static_assert if people think that'd be
better.
llvm-svn: 295029
Summary:
We do not currently track the source locations for exception specifications such
that their source range can be queried through the AST. This leads to trying to
write more complex code to determine the source range for uses like FixItHints
(see D18575 for an example). In addition to use within tools like clang-tidy, I
think this information may become more important to track as exception
specifications become more integrated into the type system.
Patch by Don Hinton.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: malcolm.parsons, sbarzowski, alexfh, hintonda, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20428
llvm-svn: 291771
This saves two pointers from FunctionDecl that were being used for some
rare and questionable C-only functionality. The DeclsInPrototypeScope
ArrayRef was added in r151712 in order to parse this kind of C code:
enum e {x, y};
int f(enum {y, x} n) {
return x; // should return 1, not 0
}
The challenge is that we parse 'int f(enum {y, x} n)' it its own
function prototype scope that gets popped before we build the
FunctionDecl for 'f'. The original change was doing two questionable
things:
1. Saving all tag decls introduced in prototype scope on a TU-global
Sema variable. This is problematic when you have cases like this, where
'x' and 'y' shouldn't be visible in 'f':
void f(void (*fp)(enum { x, y } e)) { /* no x */ }
This patch fixes that, so now 'f' can't see 'x', which is consistent
with GCC.
2. Storing the decls in FunctionDecl in ActOnFunctionDeclarator so that
they could be used in ActOnStartOfFunctionDef. This is just an
inefficient way to move information around. The AST lives forever, but
the list of non-parameter decls in prototype scope is short lived.
Moving these things to the Declarator solves both of these issues.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: jmolloy, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27279
llvm-svn: 289225
Previously we were asserting that this declaration doesn't have a body
*and* won't have a body after we continue parsing. This is too strong
and breaks the go-bindings test during codegen.
llvm-svn: 285412
Summary:
In CUDA compilation, we call isInlineDefinitionExternallyVisible (via
getGVALinkageForFunction) on functions while parsing their definitions.
At the point in time when we call getGVALinkageForFunction, we haven't
yet added the body to the function, so we trip this assert. But as far
as I can tell, this is harmless.
To work around this, we add a new flag to FunctionDecl, "WillHaveBody".
There was other code that was working around the existing assert with a
really awful hack -- this change lets us get rid of that hack.
Reviewers: rsmith, tra
Subscribers: aemerson, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25640
llvm-svn: 285410
1) Merge and demote variable definitions when we find a redefinition in
MergeVarDecls, not only when we find one in AddInitializerToDecl (we only reach
the second case if it's the addition of the initializer itself that converts an
existing declaration into a definition).
2) When rebuilding a redeclaration chain for a variable, if we merge two
definitions together, mark the definitions as merged so the retained definition
is made visible whenever the demoted definition would have been.
Original commit message (from r283882):
[modules] PR28752: Do not instantiate variable declarations which are not visible.
Original patch by Vassil Vassilev! Changes listed above are mine.
llvm-svn: 284284
Summary:
Emitting deferred diagnostics during codegen was a hack. It did work,
but usability was poor, both for us as compiler devs and for users. We
don't codegen if there are any sema errors, so for users this meant that
they wouldn't see deferred errors if there were any non-deferred errors.
For devs, this meant that we had to carefully split up our tests so that
when we tested deferred errors, we didn't emit any non-deferred errors.
This change moves checking for deferred errors into Sema. See the big
comment in SemaCUDA.cpp for an overview of the idea.
This checking adds overhead to compilation, because we have to maintain
a partial call graph. As a result, this change makes deferred errors a
CUDA-only concept (whereas before they were a general concept). If
anyone else wants to use this framework for something other than CUDA,
we can generalize at that time.
This patch makes the minimal set of test changes -- after this lands,
I'll go back through and do a cleanup of the tests that we no longer
have to split up.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits, rsmith, tra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25541
llvm-svn: 284158
Original message:
"[modules] PR28752: Do not instantiate variable declarations which are not visible.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D24508
Patch developed in collaboration with Richard Smith!"
llvm-svn: 284008
This affects functions with the C++11 [[ noreturn ]] and C11 _Noreturn
specifiers.
Patch by Victor Leschuk!
https://reviews.llvm.org/D23168
llvm-svn: 278942
Summary:
This patch lets you create diagnostics that are emitted if and only if a
particular FunctionDecl is codegen'ed.
This is necessary for CUDA, where some constructs -- e.g. calls from
host+device functions to host functions when compiling for device -- are
allowed to appear in semantically-correct programs, but only if they're
never codegen'ed.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits, tra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23241
llvm-svn: 278735
Reapply r277787. For memset (and others) we can get diagnostics like:
struct stat { int x; };
void foo(struct stat *stamps) {
bzero(stamps, sizeof(stamps));
memset(stamps, 0, sizeof(stamps));
}
t.c:7:28: warning: 'memset' call operates on objects of type 'struct stat' while the size is based on a different type 'struct stat *' [-Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess]
memset(stamps, 0, sizeof(stamps));
~~~~~~ ^~~~~~
t.c:7:28: note: did you mean to dereference the argument to 'sizeof' (and multiply it by the number of elements)?
memset(stamps, 0, sizeof(stamps));
^~~~~~
This patch implements the same class of warnings for bzero.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22525
rdar://problem/18963514
llvm-svn: 278264
For memset (and others) we can get diagnostics like:
struct stat { int x; };
void foo(struct stat *stamps) {
bzero(stamps, sizeof(stamps));
memset(stamps, 0, sizeof(stamps));
}
t.c:7:28: warning: 'memset' call operates on objects of type 'struct stat' while the size is based on a different type 'struct stat *' [-Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess]
memset(stamps, 0, sizeof(stamps));
~~~~~~ ^~~~~~
t.c:7:28: note: did you mean to dereference the argument to 'sizeof' (and multiply it by the number of elements)?
memset(stamps, 0, sizeof(stamps));
^~~~~~
This patch implements the same class of warnings for bzero.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22525
rdar://problem/18963514
llvm-svn: 277787
We continue accepting "macosx" but canonicalize it to "macos", When emitting
diagnostics, we use "macOS" instead of "OS X".
The PlatformName in TargetInfo is changed from "macosx" to "macos" so we can
directly compare the Platform in AvailabilityAttr with the PlatformName
in TargetInfo.
rdar://26795172
rdar://26800775
llvm-svn: 274064
declared before it is used. Because we don't use normal name lookup to find
these, the normal code to filter out non-visible names from name lookup results
does not apply.
llvm-svn: 268585
This patch add support for GCC attribute((ifunc("resolver"))) for
targets that use ELF as object file format. In general ifunc is a
special kind of function alias with type @gnu_indirect_function. LLVM
patch http://reviews.llvm.org/D15525
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15524
llvm-svn: 265917
Add parsing, sema analysis and serialization/deserialization for 'declare reduction' construct.
User-defined reductions are defined as
#pragma omp declare reduction( reduction-identifier : typename-list : combiner ) [initializer ( initializer-expr )]
These custom reductions may be used in 'reduction' clauses of OpenMP constructs. The combiner specifies how partial results can be combined into a single value. The
combiner can use the special variable identifiers omp_in and omp_out that are of the type of the variables being reduced with this reduction-identifier. Each of them will
denote one of the values to be combined before executing the combiner. It is assumed that the special omp_out identifier will refer to the storage that holds the resulting
combined value after executing the combiner.
As the initializer-expr value of a user-defined reduction is not known a priori the initializer-clause can be used to specify one. Then the contents of the initializer-clause
will be used as the initializer for private copies of reduction list items where the omp_priv identifier will refer to the storage to be initialized. The special identifier
omp_orig can also appear in the initializer-clause and it will refer to the storage of the original variable to be reduced.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11182
llvm-svn: 262582
This is like r262493, but for pragma detect_mismatch instead of pragma comment.
The two pragmas have similar behavior, so use the same approach for both.
llvm-svn: 262506
`#pragma comment` was handled by Sema calling a function on ASTConsumer, and
CodeGen then implementing this function and writing things to its output.
Instead, introduce a PragmaCommentDecl AST node and hang one off the
TranslationUnitDecl for every `#pragma comment` line, and then use the regular
serialization machinery. (Since PragmaCommentDecl has codegen relevance, it's
eagerly deserialized.)
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17799
llvm-svn: 262493
The library functions defined in the C99 standard headers
are not available (OpenCL v1.2 s6.9.f).
This change stops treating OpenCL builtin functions as standard C lib
functions to eliminate warning messages about printf format string.
Patch by Liu Yaxun (Sam)!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16812
llvm-svn: 260671
__GetExceptionInfo triggered Sema::LazilyCreateBuiltin which tries to
create a non-templated function decl. This is unnecessary and
ill-advised, there is no need for us to create a declaration for such a
builtin.
This fixes PR26298.
llvm-svn: 258762
into IDNS_Tag in C++, because they conflict with redeclarations of tags. (This
doesn't affect elaborated-type-specifier lookup, which looks for IDNS_Type in
C++).
llvm-svn: 256985
keys, and PointerIntPairs where the pointee types are incomplete
out-of-line to where we have the complete type.
This is the standard pattern used throughout the AST library to address
the inherently mutually cross referenced nature of the AST.
This is part of a series of patches to allow LLVM to check for complete
pointee types when computing its pointer traits. This is absolutely
necessary to get correct (or reproducible) results for things like how
many low bits are guaranteed to be zero.
llvm-svn: 256612
indicating the nature of the default argument in a ParmVarDecl.
Instead, this adds a proper enum stored exclusively in the ParmVarDecl
bits (which we have plenty of) for this. This even allows us to track
a previously unrepresented state in Clang when we parse a function
declaration with a default argument on a parameter but we cannot even
form an invalid expression node (for example, it is an invalid token).
Now, we can model this state in the AST at least, and potentially
improve recovery in this area in the future.
I've also cleaned up the functions managing both variable initializer
expressions and parameter default argument expresssions as much as
possible. I've left some comments about further improvements based on
a discussion with Richard Smith. Lots of credit to him for walking me
through exactly which of the *many* tradeoffs here he felt was the best
fit.
Should be NFC for now. I've tried my best to preserve existing behavior.
This is part of a series of patches to allow LLVM to check for complete
pointee types when computing its pointer traits. This is absolutely
necessary to get correct (or reproducible) results for things like how
many low bits are guaranteed to be zero.
llvm-svn: 256609
declaration. This fixes an issue where we would reject (due to a claimed
ambiguity) a case where lookup finds multiple NamespaceAliasDecls from
different scopes that nominate the same namespace.
The C++ standard doesn't make it clear that such a case is in fact valid (which
I'm working on fixing), but there are no relevant rules that distinguish using
declarations and namespace alias declarations here, so it makes sense to treat
them the same way.
llvm-svn: 256601
r233345 started being stricter about typedef names for linkage purposes
in non-visible modules, but broke languages without the ODR.
rdar://23527954
llvm-svn: 253123
the linkage of the enumeration. For enumerators of unnamed enumerations, extend
the -Wmodules-ambiguous-internal-linkage extension to allow selecting an
arbitrary enumerator (but only if they all have the same value, otherwise it's
ambiguous).
llvm-svn: 253010
declarations in redeclaration lookup. A declaration is now visible to
lookup if:
* It is visible (not in a module, or in an imported module), or
* We're doing redeclaration lookup and it's externally-visible, or
* We're doing typo correction and looking for unimported decls.
We now support multiple modules having different internal-linkage or no-linkage
definitions of the same name for all entities, not just for functions,
variables, and some typedefs. As previously, if multiple such entities are
visible, any attempt to use them will result in an ambiguity error.
This patch fixes the linkage calculation for a number of entities where we
previously didn't need to get it right (using-declarations, namespace aliases,
and so on). It also classifies enumerators as always having no linkage, which
is a slight deviation from the C++ standard's definition, but not an observable
change outside modules (this change is being discussed on the -core reflector
currently).
This also removes the prior special case for tag lookup, which made some cases
of this work, but also led to bizarre, bogus "must use 'struct' to refer to type
'Foo' in this scope" diagnostics in C++.
llvm-svn: 252960
The attrubite is applicable to functions and variables and changes
the linkage of the subject to internal.
This is the same functionality as C-style "static", but applicable to
class methods; and the same as anonymouns namespaces, but can apply
to individual methods of a class.
Following the proposal in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2015-October/045580.html
llvm-svn: 252648
Summary: Use "auto" when the type name is redundant
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14501
llvm-svn: 252494
particular don't assume that two declarations of the same kind in the same
context are declaring the same entity. That's not true when the same name is
declared multiple times as internal-linkage symbols within a module.
(getCanonicalDecl is cheap now, so we can just use it here.)
llvm-svn: 251898
No ABI for C++ currently makes it possible to implement the standard
100% perfectly. We wrongly hid some of our compatible behavior behind
-fms-compatibility instead of tying it to the compiler ABI.
llvm-svn: 249656
- Remove virtual SC_OpenCLWorkGroupLocal storage type specifier
as it conflicts with static local variables now and prevents
diagnosing static local address space variables correctly.
- Allow static local and global variables (OpenCL2.0 s6.8 and s6.5.1).
- Improve diagnostics of allowed ASes for variables in different scopes:
(i) Global or static local variables have to be in global
or constant ASes (OpenCL1.2 s6.5, OpenCL2.0 s6.5.1);
(ii) Non-kernel function variables can't be declared in local
or constant ASes (OpenCL1.1 s6.5.2 and s6.5.3).
http://reviews.llvm.org/D13105
llvm-svn: 248906
A class without a name for linkage purposes gets a name along the lines
of <unnamed-type-foo> where foo is either the name of a declarator which
defined it (like a variable or field) or a
typedef-name (like a typedef or alias-declaration).
We handled the declarator case correctly but it would fall down during
template instantiation if the declarator didn't share the tag's type.
We failed to handle the typedef-name case at all.
Instead, keep track of the association between the two and keep it up to
date in the face of template instantiation.
llvm-svn: 246469
This initial commit serves as an example -- the remainder of the
classes using pointer arithmetic for trailing objects will be
converted in subsequent changes.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11298
llvm-svn: 244262
useless return value. Switch to using it directly when completing the
redeclaration chain for an anonymous declaration, and reduce the set of
declarations that we load in the process to just those of the right kind.
llvm-svn: 244161
Some const-correctness changes snuck in here too, since they were in the
area of code I was modifying.
This seems to make Clang actually work without Bus Error on
32bit-sparc.
Follow-up patches will factor out a trailing-object helper class, to
make classes using the idiom of appending objects to other objects
easier to understand, and to ensure (with static_assert) that required
alignment guarantees continue to hold.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10272
llvm-svn: 242554
The patch is generated using this command:
$ tools/extra/clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py -fix \
-checks=-*,llvm-namespace-comment -header-filter='llvm/.*|clang/.*' \
work/llvm/tools/clang
To reduce churn, not touching namespaces spanning less than 10 lines.
llvm-svn: 240270
This patch adds initial support for the -fsanitize=kernel-address flag to Clang.
Right now it's quite restricted: only out-of-line instrumentation is supported, globals are not instrumented, some GCC kasan flags are not supported.
Using this patch I am able to build and boot the KASan tree with LLVMLinux patches from github.com/ramosian-glider/kasan/tree/kasan_llvmlinux.
To disable KASan instrumentation for a certain function attribute((no_sanitize("kernel-address"))) can be used.
llvm-svn: 240131
VarDeclBitfields contained bits which are never present in parameters.
Split these out so that ParmVarDeclBitfields wouldn't grow past 32-bits
if another field was added.
llvm-svn: 237648
With this change, enabling -fmodules-local-submodule-visibility results in name
visibility rules being applied to submodules of the current module in addition
to imported modules (that is, names no longer "leak" between submodules of the
same top-level module). This also makes it much safer to textually include a
non-modular library into a module: each submodule that textually includes that
library will get its own "copy" of that library, and so the library becomes
visible no matter which including submodule you import.
llvm-svn: 237473
(For example needed to parse system header inputscope.h, which first has
an extern "C" selectany IID and then later an extern "C" declaration of that
same IID.)
llvm-svn: 235174
Things can't both be in comdats and have common linkage, so never give things
in comdats common linkage. Common linkage is only used in .c files, and the
only thing that can trigger a comdat in c is selectany from what I can tell.
Fixes PR23243.
Also address an over-the-shoulder review comment from rnk by moving the
hasAttr<SelectAnyAttr>() in Decl.cpp around a bit. It only makes a minor
difference for selectany on global variables, so it goes well with the rest of
this patch.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9042
llvm-svn: 235053
The previous implementation would copy the attribute from the class to
functions that have the class as their return type when the functions
are first declared. This proved to have two flaws:
1) if the class is forward-declared without the attribute and a
function or method with the class as a its return type is declared,
and afterward the class is defined with warn_unused_result, the
function or method would never inherit the attribute, and
2) the check simply failed for functions and methods that are part of
a template instantiation, regardless of whether the class with
warn_unused_result is part of a specific instantiation or part of
the template itself (presumably because those function/method
declaration does not hit the same code path as a non-template one
and so never inherits the attribute).
The new approach is to instead modify the two places where a function or
method call is checked for the warn_unused_result attribute on the decl
by extending the checks to also look for the attribute on the decl's
return type.
Additionally, the check for return types that have the warn_unused_result
now excludes pointers and references to such types, as such return types do
not necessarily imply a transfer of ownership for the underlying object
being referred to by the return value. This does not change the behavior
of functions that are directly given the warn_unused_result attribute.
llvm-svn: 234526
MSVC 2013 can't even parse __declspec(align(sizeof(foo))). We'll have to
wait until MSVC 2015 for this.
This partially reverts commit r233911.
llvm-svn: 233912
This isn't perfect as it still assumes sizeof(void*) == alignof(void*),
but we can fix that when compiler support gets better.
Shrinks some Stmts that happen to inherit from Stmt and have a
SourceLocation as the first member (64 bit archs only).
llvm-svn: 233911