determine the primary context, rather than sometimes registering the lookup
table on the wrong context.
This exposed a couple of bugs:
* the odr violation check didn't deal properly with mergeable declarations
if the declaration retained by name lookup wasn't in the canonical
definition of the class
* the (broken) RewriteDecl mechanism would emit two name lookup tables for
the same DeclContext into the same module file (one as part of the
rewritten declaration and one as a visible update for the old declaration)
These are both fixed too.
llvm-svn: 244192
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
In llvm commit r243581, a reverse range adapter was added which allows
us to change code such as
for (auto I = Fields.rbegin(), E = Fields.rend(); I != E; ++I) {
in to
for (const FieldDecl *I : llvm::reverse(Fields))
This commit changes a few of the places in clang which are eligible to use
this new adapter.
llvm-svn: 243663
OpenMP 4.1 introduces optional argument '(n)' for 'ordered' clause, where 'n' is a number of loops that immediately follow the directive.
'n' must be constant positive integer expressions and it must be less or equal than the number of the loops in the resulting loop nest.
Patch adds parsing and semantic analysis for this optional argument.
llvm-svn: 243635
chain and fix the cases where it fires.
* Handle the __va_list_tag as a predefined decl. Previously we failed to merge
sometimes it because it's not visible to name lookup. (In passing, remove
redundant __va_list_tag typedefs that we were creating for some ABIs. These
didn't affect the mangling or representation of the type.)
* For Decls derived from Redeclarable that are not in fact redeclarable
(implicit params, function params, ObjC type parameters), remove them from
the list of expected redeclarable decls.
llvm-svn: 243259
more modules are added: visit modules depth-first rather than breadth-first.
The visitation is still (approximately) oldest-to-newest, and still guarantees
that a module is visited before anything it imports, so modules that are
imported by others sometimes need to jump to a later position in the visitation
order when more modules are loaded, but independent module trees don't
interfere with each other any more.
llvm-svn: 242863
the identifier table. This is redundant, since the TU-scope lookups are also
serialized as part of the TU DeclContext, and wasteful in a number of ways. We
still emit the decls for PCH / preamble builds, since for those we want
identical results, not merely semantically equivalent ones.
llvm-svn: 242855
- introduces a new cc1 option -fmodule-format=[raw,obj]
with 'raw' being the default
- supports arbitrary module container formats that libclang is agnostic to
- adds the format to the module hash to avoid collisions
- splits the old PCHContainerOperations into PCHContainerWriter and
a PCHContainerReader.
Thanks to Richard Smith for reviewing this patch!
llvm-svn: 242499
before the first imported declaration.
We don't need to track all formerly-canonical declarations of an entity; it's sufficient to track those ones for which no other formerly-canonical declaration was imported into the same module. We call those ones "key declarations", and use them as our starting points for collecting redeclarations and performing namespace lookups.
llvm-svn: 241999
This patch adds ObjectFilePCHContainerOperations uses the LLVM backend
to put the contents of a PCH into a __clangast section inside a COFF, ELF,
or Mach-O object file container.
This is done to facilitate module debugging by makeing it possible to
store the debug info for the types defined by a module alongside the AST.
rdar://problem/20091852
llvm-svn: 241620
Introduce co- and contra-variance for Objective-C type parameters,
which allows us to express that (for example) an NSArray is covariant
in its type parameter. This means that NSArray<NSMutableString *> * is
a subtype of NSArray<NSString *> *, which is expected of the immutable
Foundation collections.
Type parameters can be annotated with __covariant or __contravariant
to make them co- or contra-variant, respectively. This feature can be
detected by __has_feature(objc_generics_variance). Implements
rdar://problem/20217490.
llvm-svn: 241549
The __kindof type qualifier can be applied to Objective-C object
(pointer) types to indicate id-like behavior, which includes implicit
"downcasting" of __kindof types to subclasses and id-like message-send
behavior. __kindof types provide better type bounds for substitutions
into unspecified generic types, which preserves more type information.
llvm-svn: 241548
When messaging a method that was defined in an Objective-C class (or
category or extension thereof) that has type parameters, substitute
the type arguments for those type parameters. Similarly, substitute
into property accesses, instance variables, and other references.
This includes general infrastructure for substituting the type
arguments associated with an ObjCObject(Pointer)Type into a type
referenced within a particular context, handling all of the
substitutions required to deal with (e.g.) inheritance involving
parameterized classes. In cases where no type arguments are available
(e.g., because we're messaging via some unspecialized type, id, etc.),
we substitute in the type bounds for the type parameters instead.
Example:
@interface NSSet<T : id<NSCopying>> : NSObject <NSCopying>
- (T)firstObject;
@end
void f(NSSet<NSString *> *stringSet, NSSet *anySet) {
[stringSet firstObject]; // produces NSString*
[anySet firstObject]; // produces id<NSCopying> (the bound)
}
When substituting for the type parameters given an unspecialized
context (i.e., no specific type arguments were given), substituting
the type bounds unconditionally produces type signatures that are too
strong compared to the pre-generics signatures. Instead, use the
following rule:
- In covariant positions, such as method return types, replace type
parameters with “id” or “Class” (the latter only when the type
parameter bound is “Class” or qualified class, e.g,
“Class<NSCopying>”)
- In other positions (e.g., parameter types), replace type
parameters with their type bounds.
- When a specialized Objective-C object or object pointer type
contains a type parameter in its type arguments (e.g.,
NSArray<T>*, but not NSArray<NSString *> *), replace the entire
object/object pointer type with its unspecialized version (e.g.,
NSArray *).
llvm-svn: 241543
Objective-C type arguments can be provided in angle brackets following
an Objective-C interface type. Syntactically, this is the same
position as one would provide protocol qualifiers (e.g.,
id<NSCopying>), so parse both together and let Sema sort out the
ambiguous cases. This applies both when parsing types and when parsing
the superclass of an Objective-C class, which can now be a specialized
type (e.g., NSMutableArray<T> inherits from NSArray<T>).
Check Objective-C type arguments against the type parameters of the
corresponding class. Verify the length of the type argument list and
that each type argument satisfies the corresponding bound.
Specializations of parameterized Objective-C classes are represented
in the type system as distinct types. Both specialized types (e.g.,
NSArray<NSString *> *) and unspecialized types (NSArray *) are
represented, separately.
llvm-svn: 241542
Produce type parameter declarations for Objective-C type parameters,
and attach lists of type parameters to Objective-C classes,
categories, forward declarations, and extensions as
appropriate. Perform semantic analysis of type bounds for type
parameters, both in isolation and across classes/categories/extensions
to ensure consistency.
Also handle (de-)serialization of Objective-C type parameter lists,
along with sundry other things one must do to add a new declaration to
Clang.
Note that Objective-C type parameters are typedef name declarations,
like typedefs and C++11 type aliases, in support of type erasure.
Part of rdar://problem/6294649.
llvm-svn: 241541
Any extra features from -fmodule-feature are part of the module hash and
need to get validated on load. Also print them with -module-file-info.
llvm-svn: 240433
Parsing and sema analysis (without support for array sections in arguments) for 'depend' clause (used in 'task' directive, OpenMP 4.0).
llvm-svn: 240409
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 is a better approach to fixing the undefined behaviour I tried to
fix in r240228. This data doesn't necessarily have suitable alignment
for uint64_t, so use unaligned_uint64_t instead.
This fixes 225 test failures when clang is built with ubsan.
llvm-svn: 240247
We interpret Blob as an array of uint64_t here, but there's no reason
to think that it has suitable alignment. Instead, read the data in in
an alignment-safe way and store it in a std::vector.
This fixes 225 test failures when clang is built with ubsan.
llvm-svn: 240228
A PCHContainerOperations abstract interface provides operations for
creating and unwrapping containers for serialized ASTs (precompiled
headers and clang modules). The default implementation is
RawPCHContainerOperations, which uses a flat file for the output.
The main application for this interface will be an
ObjectFilePCHContainerOperations implementation that uses LLVM to
wrap the module in an ELF/Mach-O/COFF container to store debug info
alongside the AST.
rdar://problem/20091852
llvm-svn: 240225
Introduce context-sensitive, non-underscored nullability specifiers
(nonnull, nullable, null_unspecified) for Objective-C method return
types, method parameter types, and properties.
Introduce Objective-C-specific semantics, including computation of the
nullability of the result of a message send, merging of nullability
information from the @interface of a class into its @implementation,
etc .
This is the Objective-C part of rdar://problem/18868820.
llvm-svn: 240154
Added parsing, sema analysis and codegen for '#pragma omp taskgroup' directive (OpenMP 4.0).
The code for directive is generated the following way:
#pragma omp taskgroup
<body>
void __kmpc_taskgroup(<loc>, thread_id);
<body>
void __kmpc_end_taskgroup(<loc>, thread_id);
llvm-svn: 240011
Previously the last iteration for simd loop-based OpenMP constructs were generated as a separate code. This feature is not required and codegen is simplified.
llvm-svn: 239810
Based on previous discussion on the mailing list, clang currently lacks support
for C99 partial re-initialization behavior:
Reference: http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-dev/2013-April/029188.html
Reference: http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/dr_253.htm
This patch attempts to fix this problem.
Given the following code snippet,
struct P1 { char x[6]; };
struct LP1 { struct P1 p1; };
struct LP1 l = { .p1 = { "foo" }, .p1.x[2] = 'x' };
// this example is adapted from the example for "struct fred x[]" in DR-253;
// currently clang produces in l: { "\0\0x" },
// whereas gcc 4.8 produces { "fox" };
// with this fix, clang will also produce: { "fox" };
Differential Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5789
llvm-svn: 239446
If the type isn't trivially moveable emplace can skip a potentially
expensive move. It also saves a couple of characters.
Call sites were found with the ASTMatcher + some semi-automated cleanup.
memberCallExpr(
argumentCountIs(1), callee(methodDecl(hasName("push_back"))),
on(hasType(recordDecl(has(namedDecl(hasName("emplace_back")))))),
hasArgument(0, bindTemporaryExpr(
hasType(recordDecl(hasNonTrivialDestructor())),
has(constructExpr()))),
unless(isInTemplateInstantiation()))
No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 238601
MSVC 2015 includes the std::data() template function added to C++17. ADL
causes both cl.exe and clang-cl to prefer std::data over our static
helper here, and we get errors about converting int64_t* to StringRef.
Renaming it to bytes avoids the ambiguity.
llvm-svn: 237863
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
Emit warning when operand to `delete` is allocated with `new[]` or
operand to `delete[]` is allocated with `new`.
rev 2 update:
`getNewExprFromInitListOrExpr` should return `dyn_cast_or_null`
instead of `dyn_cast`, since `E` might be null.
Reviewers: rtrieu, jordan_rose, rsmith
Subscribers: majnemer, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4661
llvm-svn: 237608
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
This reverts commit 742dc9b6c9686ab52860b7da39c3a126d8a97fbc.
This is generating multiple segfaults in our internal builds.
Test case coming up shortly.
llvm-svn: 237391
Emit warning when operand to `delete` is allocated with `new[]` or
operand to `delete[]` is allocated with `new`.
Reviewers: rtrieu, jordan_rose, rsmith
Subscribers: majnemer, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4661
llvm-svn: 237368
xmmintrin.h includes emmintrin.h and vice versa if SSE2 is enabled. We break
this cycle for a modules build, and instead make the xmmintrin.h module
re-export the immintrin.h module. Also included is a fix for an assert in the
serialization code if a module exports another module that was declared later
in the same module map.
llvm-svn: 237321
'schedule' clause for combined directives requires additional processing. Special helper variable is generated, that is captured in the outlined parallel region for 'parallel for' region. This captured variable is used to store chunk expression from the 'schedule' clause in this 'parallel for' region.
llvm-svn: 237100
clang::MacroDefinition now models the currently-defined value of a macro. The
previous MacroDefinition type, which represented a record of a macro definition
directive for a detailed preprocessing record, is now called MacroDefinitionRecord.
llvm-svn: 236400
This flag specifies that the normal visibility rules should be used even for
local submodules (submodules of the currently-being-built module). Thus names
will only be visible if a header / module that declares them has actually been
included / imported, and not merely because a submodule that happened to be
built earlier declared those names. This also removes the need to modularize
bottom-up: textually-included headers will be included into every submodule
that includes them, since their include guards will not leak between modules.
So far, this only governs visibility of macros, not of declarations, so is not
ready for real use yet.
llvm-svn: 236350
It has no place there; it's not a property of the Module, and it makes
restoring the visibility set when we leave a submodule more difficult.
llvm-svn: 236300
Modules builds fundamentally have a non-linear macro history. In the interest
of better source fidelity, represent the macro definition information
faithfully: we have a linear macro directive history within each module, and at
any point we have a unique "latest" local macro directive and a collection of
visible imported directives. This also removes the attendent complexity of
attempting to create a correct MacroDirective history (which we got wrong
in the general case).
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 236176
Previously we'd defer this determination until writing the AST, which doesn't
allow us to use this information when building other submodules of the same
module. This change also allows us to use a uniform mechanism for writing
module macro records, independent of whether they are local or imported.
llvm-svn: 235614
This graph will be used to determine the current set of active macros. This is
foundation work for getting macro visibility correct across submodules of the
current module. No functionality change for now.
llvm-svn: 235461
This is substantially simpler, provides better space usage accounting in bcanalyzer,
and gives a more compact representation. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 235420
Emits the following code for the clause at the beginning of the outlined function for implicit threads:
if (<not a master thread>) {
...
<thread local copy of var> = <master thread local copy of var>;
...
}
<sync point>;
Checking for a non-master thread is performed by comparing of the address of the thread local variable with the address of the master's variable. Master thread always uses original variables, so you always know the address of the variable in the master thread.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9026
llvm-svn: 235075
#pragma omp for lastprivate(<var>)
for (i = a; i < b; ++b)
<BODY>;
This construct is translated into something like:
<last_iter> = alloca i32
<lastprivate_var> = alloca <type>
<last_iter> = 0
; No initializer for simple variables or a default constructor is called for objects.
; For arrays perform element by element initialization by the call of the default constructor.
...
OMP_FOR_START(...,<last_iter>, ..); sets <last_iter> to 1 if this is the last iteration.
<BODY>
...
OMP_FOR_END
if (<last_iter> != 0) {
<var> = <lastprivate_var> ; Update original variable with the lastprivate value.
}
call __kmpc_cancel_barrier() ; an implicit barrier to avoid possible data race.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8658
llvm-svn: 235074
More fallout from r228234; when looking up an identifier in a PCH that
imports the Cocoa module on Darwin, it was taking 2 to 5 seconds
because we were hammering the MapVector::erase() function, which is
O(n). For now, just clear() the contained SmallVector to get back to
0.25 - 0.5 seconds. This is probably not the long-term fix, because
without modules or without PCH the performance is more like 0.02
seconds.
llvm-svn: 234655
Added sema checks for forms of expressions/statements allowed under control of 'atomic capture' directive + generation of helper objects for future codegen.
llvm-svn: 233785
Adds atomic update codegen for the following forms of expressions:
x binop= expr;
x++;
++x;
x--;
--x;
x = x binop expr;
x = expr binop x;
If x and expr are integer and binop is associative or x is a LHS in a RHS of the assignment expression, and atomics are allowed for type of x on the target platform atomicrmw instruction is emitted.
Otherwise compare-and-swap sequence is emitted:
bb:
...
atomic load <x>
cont:
<expected> = phi [ <x>, label %bb ], [ <new_failed>, %cont ]
<desired> = <expected> binop <expr>
<res> = cmpxchg atomic &<x>, desired, expected
<new_failed> = <res>.field1;
br <res>field2, label %exit, label %cont
exit:
...
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8536
llvm-svn: 233513
I again added the "reasonable" assertions and they again fired during
a modules self-host.
This hopefully will un-break the self-host build bot. No test case handy
and adding one seems to have little or no value really.
llvm-svn: 233426
if the merged definition is visible, and perform lookups into all merged copies
of the definition (not just for special members) so that we can complete the
redecl chains for members of the class.
llvm-svn: 233420
declaration name so that we mark declarations for emission in
a deterministic order (and in turn give them deterministic IDs).
This is the last for loop or data structure I can find by inspection of
the AST writer which doesn't use a deterministic order.
Found by inspection, no test case.
llvm-svn: 233348
order based on order of insertion.
This should cause both our warnings about these and the modules
serialization to be deterministic as a consequence.
Found by inspection.
llvm-svn: 233343
DeclIDs so that in addition to be grouped by file, the order of these
groups is stable.
Found by inspection, no test case. Not sure this can be observed without
a randomized seed for the hash table, but we shouldn't be relying on the
hash table layout under any circumstances.
llvm-svn: 233339
traversing the identifier table.
No easy test case as this table is somewhere between hard and impossible
to observe as non-deterministically ordered. The table is a hash table
but we hash the string contents and never remove entries from the table
so the growth pattern, etc, is all completely fixed. However, relying on
the hash function being deterministic is specifically against the
long-term direction of LLVM's hashing datastructures, which are intended
to provide *no* ordering guarantees. As such, this defends against these
things by sorting the identifiers. Sorting identifiers right before we
emit them to a serialized form seems a low cost for predictability here.
llvm-svn: 233332
logic removed.
This logic was both inserting all builtins into the identifier table and
ensuring they would get serialized. The first happens unconditionally
now, and we always write out the entire identifier table. This code can
simply go away.
llvm-svn: 233331
constructors in the current lexical context even though name lookup
found them via some other context merged into the redecl chain.
This can only happen for implicit constructors which can only have the
name of the type of the current context, so we can fix this by simply
*always* merging those names first. This also has the advantage of
removing the walk of the current lexical context from the common case
when this is the only constructor name we need to deal with (implicit or
otherwise).
I've enhanced the tests to cover this case (and uncovered an unrelated
bug which I fixed in r233325).
llvm-svn: 233327
deserializing an inherited constructor.
This is the exact same logic we use when deserializing method overrides
for the same reason: the canonical decl may end up pinned to a different
decl when we are improting modules, we need to re-pin to the canonical
one during reading.
My test case for this will come in a subsequent commit. I was trying to
test a more tricky bug fix and the test case happened to tickle this bug
as well.
llvm-svn: 233325
Clang was inserting these into a dense map. While it never iterated the
dense map during normal compilation, it did when emitting a module. Fix
this by using a standard MapVector to preserve the order in which we
encounter the late parsed templates.
I suspect this still isn't ideal, as we don't seem to remove things from
this map even when we mark the templates as no longer late parsed. But
I don't know enough about this particular extension to craft a nice,
subtle test case covering this. I've managed to get the stress test to
at least do some late parsing and demonstrate the core problem here.
This patch fixes the test and provides deterministic behavior which is
a strict improvement over the prior state.
I've cleaned up some of the code here as well to be explicit about
inserting when that is what is actually going on.
llvm-svn: 233264
deterministically.
This fixes a latent issue where even Clang's Sema (and diagnostics) were
non-deterministic in the face of this pragma. The fix is super simple --
just use a MapVector so we track the order in which these are parsed (or
imported). Especially considering how rare they are, this seems like the
perfect tradeoff. I've also simplified the client code with judicious
use of auto and range based for loops.
I've added some pretty hilarious code to my stress test which now
survives the binary diff without issue.
llvm-svn: 233261
updated decl contexts get emitted.
Since this code was added, we have newer vastly simpler code for
handling this. The code I'm removing was very expensive and also
generated unstable order of declarations which made module outputs
non-deterministic.
All of the tests continue to pass for me and I'm able to check the
difference between the .pcm files after merging modules together.
llvm-svn: 233251
non-visible definition, skip the new definition and make the old one visible
instead of trying to parse it again and failing horribly. C++'s ODR allows
us to assume that the two definitions are identical.
llvm-svn: 233250
decl context lookup tables.
The first attepmt at this caused problems. We had significantly more
sources of non-determinism that I realized at first, and my change
essentially turned them from non-deterministic output into
use-after-free. Except that they weren't necessarily caught by tools
because the data wasn't really freed.
The new approach is much simpler. The first big simplification is to
inline the "visit" code and handle this directly. That works much
better, and I'll try to go and clean up the other caller of the visit
logic similarly.
The second key to the entire approach is that we need to *only* collect
names into a stable order at first. We then need to issue all of the
actual 'lookup()' calls in the stable order of the names so that we load
external results in a stable order. Once we have loaded all the results,
the table of results will stop being invalidated and we can walk all of
the names again and use the cheap 'noload_lookup()' method to quickly
get the results and serialize them.
To handle constructors and conversion functions (whose names can't be
stably ordered) in this approach, what we do is record only the visible
constructor and conversion function names at first. Then, if we have
any, we walk the decls of the class and add those names in the order
they occur in the AST. The rest falls out naturally.
This actually ends up simpler than the previous approach and seems much
more robust.
It uncovered a latent issue where we were building on-disk hash tables
for lookup results when the context was a linkage spec! This happened to
dodge all of the assert by some miracle. Instead, add a proper predicate
to the DeclContext class and use that which tests both for function
contexts and linkage specs.
It also uncovered PR23030 where we are forming somewhat bizarre negative
lookup results. I've just worked around this with a FIXME in place
because fixing this particular Clang bug seems quite hard.
I've flipped the first part of the test case I added for stability back
on in this commit. I'm taking it gradually to try and make sure the
build bots are happy this time.
llvm-svn: 233249
More than 2x speedup on modules builds with large redecl chains.
Roughly 15-20% speedup on non-modules builds for very large TUs.
Between 2-3% cost in memory on large TUs.
llvm-svn: 233228
lookup tables, we need to establish a stable ordering for constructing
the hash table. This is trickier than it might seem.
Most of these cases are easily handled by sorting the lookup results
associated with a specific name that has an identifier. However for
constructors and conversion functions, the story is more complicated.
Here we need to merge all of the constructors or conversion functions
together and this merge needs to be stable. We don't have any stable
ordering for either constructors or conversion functions as both would
require a stable ordering across types.
Instead, when we have constructors or conversion functions in the
results, we reconstruct a stable order by walking the decl context in
lexical order and merging them in the order their particular declaration
names are encountered. This doesn't generalize as there might be found
declaration names which don't actually occur within the lexical context,
but for constructors and conversion functions it is safe. It does
require loading the entire decl context if necessary to establish the
ordering but there doesn't seem to be a meaningful way around that.
Many thanks to Richard for talking through all of the design choices
here. While I wrote the code, he guided all the actual decisions about
how to establish the order of things.
No test case yet because the test case I have doesn't pass yet -- there
are still more sources of non-determinism. However, this is complex
enough that I wanted it to go into its own commit in case it causes some
unforseen issue or needs to be reverted.
llvm-svn: 233156
There are two aspects of non-determinism fixed here, which was the
minimum required to cause at least an empty module to be deterministic.
First, the random number signature is only inserted into the module when
we are building modules implicitly. The use case for these random
signatures is to work around the very fact that modules are not
deterministic in their output when working with the implicitly built and
populated module cache. Eventually this should go away entirely when
we're confident that Clang is producing deterministic output.
Second, the on-disk hash table is populated based on the order of
iteration over a DenseMap. Instead, use a MapVector so that we can walk
it in insertion order.
I've added a test that an empty module, when built twice, produces the
same binary PCM file.
llvm-svn: 233115
Previously we'd deserialize the list of mem-initializers for a constructor when
we deserialized the declaration of the constructor. That could trigger a
significant amount of unnecessary work (pulling in all base classes
recursively, for a start) and was causing problems for the modules buildbot due
to cyclic deserializations. We now deserialize these on demand.
This creates a certain amount of duplication with the handling of
CXXBaseSpecifiers; I'll look into reducing that next.
llvm-svn: 233052
* Strength reduce a std::function to a function pointer,
* Factor out checking the AST file magic number,
* Add a brief doc comment to readAStFileSignature
Thanks to Chandler for spotting these oddities.
llvm-svn: 233050
If there is at least one 'copyprivate' clause is associated with the single directive, the following code is generated:
```
i32 did_it = 0; \\ for 'copyprivate' clause
if(__kmpc_single(ident_t *, gtid)) {
SingleOpGen();
__kmpc_end_single(ident_t *, gtid);
did_it = 1; \\ for 'copyprivate' clause
}
<copyprivate_list>[0] = &var0;
...
<copyprivate_list>[n] = &varn;
call __kmpc_copyprivate(ident_t *, gtid, <copyprivate_list_size>,
<copyprivate_list>, <copy_func>, did_it);
...
void<copy_func>(void *LHSArg, void *RHSArg) {
Dst = (void * [n])(LHSArg);
Src = (void * [n])(RHSArg);
Dst[0] = Src[0];
... Dst[n] = Src[n];
}
```
All list items from all 'copyprivate' clauses are gathered into single <copyprivate list> (<copyprivate_list_size> is a size in bytes of this list) and <copy_func> is used to propagate values of private or threadprivate variables from the 'single' region to other implicit threads from outer 'parallel' region.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8410
llvm-svn: 232932
for a DeclContext, and fix propagation of exception specifications along
redeclaration chains.
This reverts r232905, r232907, and r232907, which reverted r232793, r232853,
and r232853.
One additional change is present here to resolve issues with LLDB: distinguish
between whether lexical decls missing from the lookup table are local or are
provided by the external AST source, and still look in the external source if
that's where they came from.
llvm-svn: 232928
The linear variable is privatized (similar to 'private') and its
value on current iteration is calculated, similar to the loop
counter variables.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8375
llvm-svn: 232890
give an exception specification to a declaration that didn't have an exception
specification in any of our imported modules, emit an update record ourselves.
Without this, code importing the current module would not see an exception
specification that we could see and might have relied on.
llvm-svn: 232870
When we need to build the lookup table for a DeclContext, we used to pull in
all lexical declarations for the context; instead, just build a lookup table
for the local lexical declarations. We previously didn't guarantee that the
imported declarations would be in the returned map, but in some cases we'd
happen to put them all in there regardless. Now we're even lazier about this.
This unnecessary work was papering over some other bugs:
- LookupVisibleDecls would use the DC for name lookups in the TU in C, and
this was not guaranteed to find all imported names (generally, the DC for
the TU in C is not a reliable place to perform lookups). We now use an
identifier-based lookup mechanism for this.
- We didn't actually load in the list of eagerly-deserialized declarations
when importing a module (so external definitions in a module wouldn't be
emitted by users of those modules unless they happened to be deserialized
by the user of the module).
llvm-svn: 232793
Now that SmallString is a first-class citizen, most SmallString::str()
calls are not required. This patch removes a whole bunch of them, yet
there are lots more.
There are two use cases where str() is really needed:
1) To use one of StringRef member functions which is not available in
SmallString.
2) To convert to std::string, as StringRef implicitly converts while
SmallString do not. We may wish to change this, but it may introduce
ambiguity.
llvm-svn: 232622
consumers of that module.
Previously, such a file would only be available if the module happened to
actually import something from that module.
llvm-svn: 232583
namespace to not merge properly.
We have an invariant here: after a declaration reads its canonical declaration,
it can assume the canonical declaration is fully merged. This invariant can be
violated if deserializing some declaration triggers the deserialization of a
later declaration, because that later declaration can in turn deserialize a
redeclaration of that first declaration before it is fully merged.
The anonymous namespace for a namespace gets stored with the first declaration
of that namespace, which may be before its parent namespace, so defer loading
it until after we've finished merging the surrounding namespace.
llvm-svn: 232455
building its redecl chains, make sure we pull in the redeclarations of those
canonical declarations.
It's pretty difficult to reach a situation where we can find more canonical
declarations of an entity while building its redecl chains; I think the
provided testcase (4 modules and 7 declarations) cannot be reduced further.
llvm-svn: 232411
with a subset of the existing target CPU features or mismatched CPU
names.
While we can't check that the CPU name used to build the module will end
up being able to codegen correctly for the translation unit, we actually
check that the imported features are a subset of the existing features.
While here, rewrite the code to use std::set_difference and have it
diagnose all of the differences found.
Test case added which walks the set relationships and ensures we
diagnose all the right cases and accept the others.
No functional change for implicit modules here, just better diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 232248
headers even if they arrived when merging non-system modules.
The idea of this code is that we don't want to warn the user about
macros defined multiple times by their system headers with slightly
different definitions. We should have this behavior if either the
macro comes from a system module, or the definition within the module
comes from a system header. Previously, we would warn on ambiguous
macros being merged when they came from a users modules even though they
only showed up via system headers.
By surviving this we can handle common system header macro differences
like differing 'const' qualification of pointers due to some headers
predating 'const' being valid in C code, even when those systems headers
are pre-built into a system module.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8310
llvm-svn: 232149
definition, be sure to update the definition data on all declarations, not just
the canonical one, since the pattern might not be in the list of pending
definitions (if it used to be canonical itself).
One-line fix by me; reduced testcase by Daniel Jasper!
llvm-svn: 231950
specification, update all prior declarations if the new one has an explicit
exception specification and the prior ones don't.
Patch by Vassil Vassilev! Some minor tweaking and test case by me.
llvm-svn: 231738
move the operator delete updating into a separate update record so we can cope
with updating another module's destructor's operator delete.
llvm-svn: 231735
of extern "C" declarations. This is simpler and vastly more efficient for
modules builds (we no longer need to load *all* extern "C" declarations to
determine if we have a redeclaration).
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 231538
We used to save out and eagerly load a (potentially huge) table of merged
formerly-canonical declarations when we loaded each module. This was extremely
inefficient in the presence of large amounts of merging, and didn't actually
save any merging lookup work, because we still needed to perform name lookup to
check that our merged declaration lists were complete. This also resulted in a
loss of laziness -- even if we only needed an early declaration of an entity, we
would eagerly pull in all declarations that had been merged into it regardless.
We now store the relevant fragments of the table within the declarations
themselves. In detail:
* The first declaration of each entity within a module stores a list of first
declarations from imported modules that are merged into it.
* Loading that declaration pre-loads those other entities, so that they appear
earlier within the redeclaration chain.
* The name lookup tables list the most recent local lookup result, if there
is one, or all directly-imported lookup results if not.
llvm-svn: 231424
dynamic classes in the translation unit and check whether each one's key
function is defined when we got to the end of the TU (and when we got to the
end of each module). This is really terrible for modules performance, since it
causes unnecessary deserialization of every dynamic class in every compilation.
We now use a much simpler (and, in a modules build, vastly more efficient)
system: when we see an out-of-line definition of a virtual function, we check
whether that function was in fact its class's key function. (If so, we need to
emit the vtable.)
llvm-svn: 230830
undeserialized specializations (because we merged an imported declaration of
the same template since we last added one), don't bother reading in the
specializations themselves just so we can write out their IDs again.
llvm-svn: 230805
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies and testcase requirements. Over the last iteration this
version adds
- missing target requirements for testcases that specify an x86 triple,
- a missing clangCodeGen.a dependency to libClang.a in the make build.
rdar://problem/19104245
llvm-svn: 230423
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
rdar://problem/19104245
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies. Take 3.
llvm-svn: 230305
invalidate lookup_iterators and lookup_results for some name within a
DeclContext if the lookup results for a *different* name change.
llvm-svn: 230121
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
rdar://problem/19104245
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies. Take 2.
llvm-svn: 230089
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
rdar://problem/19104245
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies.
llvm-svn: 230067
There are two issues here:
1) It's too late to rebuild at this point, because we won't go through
removeModules and when we try to reload the new .pcm we'll get the old
one instead. We might be able to call removeModules after an OutOfDate
here, but I'm not yet confident that it is always safe to do so.
2) In practice, this check fails spuriously when the umbrella header
appears to change because of a VFS change that means it maps to a
different copy of the same file. Because of this, we just skip the
check for now.
llvm-svn: 230064
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
rdar://problem/19104245
llvm-svn: 230044
the one in the current compiler invocation. If they differ reject the PCH.
This protects against the badness occurring from getting modules loaded from different module caches (see crashes).
rdar://19889860
llvm-svn: 229909
The member gets invalidated as elements are added to the dense set. Directly
access the underlying pointer instead. Not sure how to create a test case for
this :-(. Maybe Richard can help.
llvm-svn: 229673
entity, put the originally-canonical decl IDs in the right places in the redecl
chain rather than reordering them all to the start. If we don't ensure that the
redecl chain order is consistent with the topological module order, we can fail
to make a declaration visible if later declarations are in more IDNSs than
earlier ones (for instance, because the earlier decls are invisible friends).
llvm-svn: 228978
When mangling the module map path into a .pcm file name, also mangle the
IsSystem bit, which can also depend on the header search paths. For
example, the user may change from -I to -isystem. This can affect
diagnostics in the importing TU.
llvm-svn: 228966
context as anonymous for merging purposes. They can't be found by their names,
so we merge them based on their position within the surrounding context.
llvm-svn: 228485
of that entity, ensure that the redeclaration chain is reordered properly on
reload. Otherwise, the result of name lookup for that entity may point to an
entity that is too old; if that's an injected friend name or the like, that
can result in the name not being found at all.
llvm-svn: 228371
object. In such a case, use the TU's DC for merging global decls rather than
giving up when we find there is no TU scope.
Ultimately, we should probably avoid all loading of decls when preprocessing,
but there are other reasonable use cases for loading an AST file with no Sema
object for which this is the right thing.
llvm-svn: 228234
encountered any definition for the class; this happens when the definition is
added by an update record that is not yet loaded. In such a case, eagerly pick
the original parent of the member as the canonical definition of the class
rather than muddling through with the canonical declaration (the latter can
lead to us failing to merge properly later if the canonical definition turns
out to be some other declaration).
llvm-svn: 226977
record, and that class declaration is not the canonical definition of the
class, be sure to add the class to the list of classes that are consulted when
we look up a special member in the canonical definition.
llvm-svn: 226778
on top of a local declaration of the same entity, we still need to remember
that we loaded the first one or we may fail to merge the second one properly.
llvm-svn: 226765
load the definition data from the declaration itself. In that case, merge
properly; don't assume the prior definition is the same as our own.
llvm-svn: 226761
This just tweaks the fix from r224892 (which handled PCHs) to work with
modules, where we will serialize each method individually and hence the
hasMoreThanOneDecl bit needs to be updated as we add the methods.
llvm-svn: 225659
This fixes PR21587, what r221933 fixed for regular programs is now also
fixed for decls coming from PCH files.
Use another bit from the count/bits uint16_t for storing the "more than one
decl" bit. This reduces the number of bits for the count from 14 to 13.
The selector with the most overloads in Cocoa.h has ~55 overloads, so 13 bits
should still be plenty. Since this changes the meaning of a serialized bit
pattern, also increase clang::serialization::VERSION_MAJOR.
Storing the "more than one decl" state of only the first overload isn't quite
correct, but Sema::AreMultipleMethodsInGlobalPool() currently only looks at
the state of the first overload so it's good enough for now.
llvm-svn: 224892
Remove ObjCMethodList::Count, instead store a "has more than one decl" bit in
the low bit of the ObjCMethodDecl pointer, using a PointerIntPair.
Most of this patch is replacing ".Method" with ".getMethod()".
No intended behavior change.
llvm-svn: 224876
Bitfield RefersToEnclosingLocal of Stmt::DeclRefExprBitfields renamed to RefersToCapturedVariable to reflect latest changes introduced in commit 224323. Also renamed method Expr::refersToEnclosingLocal() to Expr::refersToCapturedVariable() and comments for constant arguments.
No functional changes.
llvm-svn: 224329
the simplest case, which is used when no chunk_size is specified in
the schedule(static) or no 'schedule' clause is specified - the
iteration space is divided by the library into chunks that are
approximately equal in size, and at most one chunk is distributed
to each thread. In this case, we do not need an outer loop in each
thread - each thread requests once which iterations range it should
handle (using __kmpc_for_static_init runtime call) and then runs the
inner loop on this range.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5865
llvm-svn: 224233
components. These sometimes get synthetically added, and we don't want -Ifoo
and -I./foo to be treated fundamentally differently here.
llvm-svn: 224055
module, use the path from the module map file in preference to the path from
the .pcm file when resolving relative paths in the .pcm file. This allows
diagnostics (and .d output) to give relative paths if the module was found via
a relative path.
llvm-svn: 223577
the root of the module and use paths relative to that directory wherever
possible. This is a step towards allowing explicit modules to be relocated
without being rebuilt, which is important for some kinds of distributed builds,
for good paths in diagnostics, and for appropriate .d output.
This is a recommit of r223443, reverted in r223465; when joining together
imported file paths, we now use the system's separator rather than always
using '/'. This avoids path mismatches between the original module build and
the module user on Windows (at least, in some cases). A more comprehensive
fix will follow.
llvm-svn: 223539
the root of the module and use paths relative to that directory wherever
possible. This is a step towards allowing explicit modules to be relocated
without being rebuilt, which is important for some kinds of distributed builds,
for good paths in diagnostics, and for appropriate .d output.
llvm-svn: 223443
rather than trying to extract this information from the FileEntry after the
fact.
This has a number of beneficial effects. For instance, diagnostic messages for
failed module builds give a path relative to the "module root" rather than an
absolute file path, and the contents of the module includes file is no longer
dependent on what files the including TU happened to inspect prior to
triggering the module build.
llvm-svn: 223095
to be newer than we were expecting. That happens if .pcm's get moved between
file systems during a distributed build. (It's still not OK for them to actually
be different, though, so we still check the size and signature matches.)
llvm-svn: 222507
special member function.
No test yet: the only testcases we have for this issue are extremely complex.
Testcase will be added once I get a reasonable reduction.
llvm-svn: 222506
According to OpenMP standard, Section 2.12.6, atomic Construct, '#pragma omp atomic read' is allowed to be used only for expression statements of form 'v = x;', where x and v (as applicable) are both l-value expressions with scalar type. Patch adds checks for it.
llvm-svn: 222231
For all threadprivate variables which have constructor/destructor emit call to void __kmpc_threadprivate_register(ident_t * <Current Location>, void *<Original Global Addr>, kmpc_ctor <Constructor>, kmpc_cctor NULL, kmpc_dtor <Destructor>);
In expressions all references to such variables are replaced by calls to void *__kmpc_threadprivate_cached(ident_t *<Current Location>, kmp_int32 <Current Thread Id>, void *<Original Global Addr>, size_t <Size of Data>, void ***<Pointer to autogenerated cache – array of private copies of threadprivate variable>);
Test test/OpenMP/threadprivate_codegen.cpp checks that codegen is correct. Also it checks that codegen is correct after serialization/deserialization and one of passes verifies debug info.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4002
llvm-svn: 221663
is enabled. Unlike system headers, we want to be more careful about
modifications to user headers, because it's still easy to edit a header
while you're building.
llvm-svn: 221634
This is a new form of expression of the form:
(expr op ... op expr)
where one of the exprs is a parameter pack. It expands into
(expr1 op (expr2onwards op ... op expr))
(and likewise if the pack is on the right). The non-pack operand can be
omitted; in that case, an empty pack gives a fallback value or an error,
depending on the operator.
llvm-svn: 221573
We may need to verify the signature on subsequent imports as well, just
like we verify the size/modtime:
@import A;
@import B; // imports A
@import C; // imports A
llvm-svn: 221569
Use the bitmask to store the set of enabled sanitizers instead of a
bitfield. On the negative side, it makes syntax for querying the
set of enabled sanitizers a bit more clunky. On the positive side, we
will be able to use SanitizerKind to eventually implement the
new semantics for -fsanitize-recover= flag, that would allow us
to make some sanitizers recoverable, and some non-recoverable.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 221558
An updated implemnentation of VLA types capturing based on previously committed solution for Lambdas.
This version captures the whole VLA type instead of particular variables which are part of VLA size expression and allows to use previusly calculated size of VLA type in captured regions. Required for OpenMP.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5099
llvm-svn: 220850
explicitly using the resulting .pcm file. Unlike for an implicit module build,
we don't need nor want to require these flags to match between the module
and its users.
llvm-svn: 220780
Since the order of the IDs in the AST file (e.g. DeclIDs, SelectorIDs)
is not stable, it is not safe to load an AST file that depends on
another AST file that has been rebuilt since the importer was built,
even if "nothing changed". We previously used size and modtime to check
this, but I've seen cases where a module rebuilt quickly enough to foil
this check and caused very hard to debug build errors.
To save cycles when we're loading the AST, we just generate a random
nonce value and check that it hasn't changed when we load an imported
module, rather than actually hash the whole file.
This is slightly complicated by the fact that we need to verify the
signature inside addModule, since we might otherwise consider that a
mdoule is "OutOfDate" when really it is the importer that is out of
date. I didn't see any regressions in module load time after this
change.
llvm-svn: 220493
This allows a module to specify that it logically contains a file, but that
said file is non-modular and intended for textual inclusion. This allows
layering checks to work properly in the presence of such files.
llvm-svn: 220448
Implicit module builds are not well-suited to a lot of build systems. In
particular, they fare badly in distributed build systems, and they lead to
build artifacts that are not tracked as part of the usual dependency management
process. This change allows explicitly-built module files (which are already
supported through the -emit-module flag) to be explicitly loaded into a build,
allowing build systems to opt to manage module builds and dependencies
themselves.
This is only the first step in supporting such configurations, and it should
be considered experimental and subject to change or removal for now.
llvm-svn: 220359
This patch generates some helper variables which used as a private copies of the corresponding original variables inside an OpenMP 'parallel' directive. These generated variables are initialized by default (with the default constructor, if any). In outlined function references to original variables are replaced by the references to these private helper variables. At the end of the initialization of the private variables and implicit barier is set by calling __kmpc_barrier(...) runtime function to be sure that all threads were initialized using original values of the variables.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4752
llvm-svn: 220262
Now that we no longer add mappings when there are no local entities,
there is no need to always bump the size of the tables that correspond
to ContinuousRangeMaps.
llvm-svn: 220208
This is a better fix for 'duplicate key' problems in module continuous
range maps (vs what I added in r215810) by not adding any mappings at
all when there are no local entities. Now it also covers selectors,
which were not always being bumped because the record SELECTOR_OFFSET is
not always emitted. I'll back out most of r215810 in a future commit,
since it should no longer be needed.
llvm-svn: 220207
Plumb through the full QualType of the TemplateArgument::Declaration, as
it's insufficient to only know whether the type is a reference or
pointer (that was necessary for mangling, but insufficient for debug
info). This shouldn't increase the size of TemplateArgument as
TemplateArgument::Integer is still longer by another 32 bits.
Several bits of code were testing that the reference-ness of the
parameters matched, but this seemed to be insufficient (various other
features of the type could've mismatched and wouldn't've been caught)
and unnecessary, at least insofar as removing those tests didn't cause
anything to fail.
(Richard - perchaps you can hypothesize why any of these checks might
need to test reference-ness of the parameters (& explain why
reference-ness is part of the mangling - I would've figured that for the
reference-ness to be different, a prior template argument would have to
be different). I'd be happy to add them in/beef them up and add test
cases if there's a reason for them)
llvm-svn: 219900
initializers, and captured VLA types so that we can
answer questions like "is this a bit-field" without
looking at the enclosing DeclContext. NFC.
llvm-svn: 219522
Assertion failed: "Computed __func__ length differs from type!"
Reworked PredefinedExpr representation with internal StringLiteral field for function declaration.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5365
llvm-svn: 219393
Includes parsing and semantic analysis for 'omp teams' directive support from OpenMP 4.0. Adds additional analysis to 'omp target' directive with 'omp teams' directive.
llvm-svn: 219385
This patch generates some helper variables that used as private copies of the corresponding original variables inside an OpenMP 'parallel' directive. These generated variables are initialized by copy using values of the original variables (with the copy constructor, if any). For arrays, initializator is generated for single element and in the codegen procedure this initial value is automatically propagated between all elements of the private copy.
In outlined function, references to original variables are replaced by the references to these private helper variables. At the end of the initialization of the private variables an implicit barier is generated by calling __kmpc_barrier(...) runtime function to be sure that all threads were initialized using original values of the variables.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5140
llvm-svn: 219306
This patch generates some helper variables that used as private copies of the corresponding original variables inside an OpenMP 'parallel' directive. These generated variables are initialized by copy using values of the original variables (with the copy constructor, if any). For arrays, initializator is generated for single element and in the codegen procedure this initial value is automatically propagated between all elements of the private copy.
In outlined function, references to original variables are replaced by the references to these private helper variables. At the end of the initialization of the private variables an implicit barier is generated by calling __kmpc_barrier(...) runtime function to be sure that all threads were initialized using original values of the variables.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5140
llvm-svn: 219297
This patch generates some helper variables that used as private copies of the corresponding original variables inside an OpenMP 'parallel' directive. These generated variables are initialized by copy using values of the original variables (with the copy constructor, if any). For arrays, initializator is generated for single element and in the codegen procedure this initial value is automatically propagated between all elements of the private copy.
In outlined function, references to original variables are replaced by the references to these private helper variables. At the end of the initialization of the private variables an implicit barier is generated by calling __kmpc_barrier(...) runtime function to be sure that all threads were initialized using original values of the variables.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5140
llvm-svn: 219295
Includes parsing and semantic analysis for 'omp teams' directive support from OpenMP 4.0. Adds additional analysis to 'omp target' directive with 'omp teams' directive.
llvm-svn: 219197
This patch implements collapsing of the loops (in particular, in
presense of clause 'collapse'). It calculates number of iterations N
and expressions nesessary to calculate the nested loops counters
values based on new iteration variable (that goes from 0 to N-1)
in Sema. It also adds Codegen for 'omp simd', which uses
(and tests) this feature.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5184
llvm-svn: 218743
We build a NestedNameSpecifier that records the CXXRecordDecl in which
__super appeared. Name lookup is performed in all base classes of the
recorded CXXRecordDecl. Use of __super is allowed only inside class and
member function scope.
llvm-svn: 218484
1. We were hitting the NextIsPrevious assertion because we were trying
to merge decl chains that were independent of each other because we had
no Sema object to allow them to find existing decls. This is fixed by
delaying loading the "preloaded" decls until Sema is available.
2. We were trying to get identifier info from an annotation token, which
asserts. The fix is to special-case the module annotations in the
preprocessed output printer.
Fixed in a single commit because when you hit 1 you almost invariably
hit 2 as well.
llvm-svn: 217550
The warning warns on TypedefNameDecls -- typedefs and C++11 using aliases --
that are !isReferenced(). Since the isReferenced() bit on TypedefNameDecls
wasn't used for anything before this warning it wasn't always set correctly,
so this patch also adds a few missing MarkAnyDeclReferenced() calls in
various places for TypedefNameDecls.
This is made a bit complicated due to local typedefs possibly being used only
after their local scope has closed. Consider:
template <class T>
void template_fun(T t) {
typename T::Foo s3foo; // YYY
(void)s3foo;
}
void template_fun_user() {
struct Local {
typedef int Foo; // XXX
} p;
template_fun(p);
}
Here the typedef in XXX is only used at end-of-translation unit, when YYY in
template_fun() gets instantiated. To handle this, typedefs that are unused when
their scope exits are added to a set of potentially unused typedefs, and that
set gets checked at end-of-TU. Typedefs that are still unused at that point then
get warned on. There's also serialization code for this set, so that the
warning works with precompiled headers and modules. For modules, the warning
is emitted when the module is built, for precompiled headers each time the
header gets used.
Finally, consider a function using C++14 auto return types to return a local
type defined in a header:
auto f() {
struct S { typedef int a; };
return S();
}
Here, the typedef escapes its local scope and could be used by only some
translation units including the header. To not warn on this, add a
RecursiveASTVisitor that marks all delcs on local types returned from auto
functions as referenced. (Except if it's a function with internal linkage, or
the decls are private and the local type has no friends -- in these cases, it
_is_ safe to warn.)
Several of the included testcases (most of the interesting ones) were provided
by Richard Smith.
(gcc's spelling -Wunused-local-typedefs is supported as an alias for this
warning.)
llvm-svn: 217298
on CXXRecordDecls when merging definitions, and make it pass by not trying to
save and restore this flag across AST serialization/deserialization. For
CXXRecordDecls, we have a separate mechanism to manage this.
llvm-svn: 216633
Only those callers who are dynamically passing ownership should need the
3 argument form. Those accepting the default ("do pass ownership")
should do so explicitly with a unique_ptr now.
llvm-svn: 216614
pattern of an alias template declaration. Use this to merge alias templates
properly when they're members of class template specializations.
llvm-svn: 216437
declarations. We can't expect to find them in the canonical definition
of the class, because that's not where they live.
This means we no longer reject real ODR violations with friend declarations,
but we weren't consistently doing so anyway.
llvm-svn: 216369
Predefined decls like 'Protocol' in objc are not loaded from AST files,
so we cannot rely on loading the canonical decl to complete the redecl
chain for redeclarations of these decls. The broken redecl chain was
non-circular, so looping over redecls() would hang.
llvm-svn: 215929
tables that correspond to ContinuousRangeMaps, since the keys to those
maps need to be unique, or we may map to the wrong offset.
This fixes a crash + malformed AST file seen when loading some modules
that import Cocoa on Darwin, which is a module with no contents except
imports of other modules. Unfortunately I have not been able to find a
reduced test case that reproduces this problem.
Also add an assert that we aren't mapping one key to multiple values
in CRM. We ought to be able to say there are no duplicate keys at all,
but there are a bunch of 0 -> 0 mappings that are showing up, probably
coming from the source location table.
llvm-svn: 215810
members from all redefinitions of a class that have them, in case the special
member is defined in one module but only declared in another.
llvm-svn: 215675
definitions (because some other declaration declares a special member that
isn't present in the canonical definition), we need to search *all* of them; we
can't just stop when we find the requested name in any of the definitions,
because that can fail to find things (and in particular, it can fail to find
the member of the canonical declaration and return a bogus ODR failure).
llvm-svn: 215612
redefinitions of that namespace have already been loaded. When writing out the
names in a namespace, if we see a name that is locally declared and had
imported declarations merged on top of it, export the local declaration as the
lookup result, because it will be the most recent declaration of that entity in
the redeclaration chain of an importer of the module.
llvm-svn: 215518
We already verified the primary module map file (either the one that
defines the top-level module, or the one that allows inferring it if it
is an inferred framework module). Now we also verify any other module
map files that define submodules, such as when there is a
module.private.modulemap file.
llvm-svn: 215455
According to the gcc docs, -include uses the current working directory
for the lookup instead of the main source file.
This patch gets rid of NormalizeIncludePath (which relied on an
implementation detail of FileManager / FileEntry for the include path
logic to work), and instead hands the correct lookup information down to
LookupFile.
This will allow us to change the FileEntry's behavior regarding its Name
caching.
llvm-svn: 215433
class Module. It's almost always going to be the same as
getContainingModule() for top-level modules, so just add a map to cover
the remaining cases. This lets us do less bookkeeping to keep the
ModuleMap fields up to date.
llvm-svn: 215268
also emit the updated 'operator delete' looked up for that destructor. Switch
from UpdateDecl to an actual update record when this happens due to implicitly
defining a special member function and unify this code path and the one for
instantiating a function definition.
llvm-svn: 215132
intent when we added remark support, but was never implemented in the general
case, because the first -R flags didn't need it. (-Rpass= had special handling
to accomodate its argument.)
-Rno-foo, -Reverything, and -Rno-everything can be used to turn off a remark,
or to turn on or off all remarks. Per discussion on cfe-commits, -Weverything
does not affect remarks, and -Reverything does not affect warnings or errors.
The only "real" -R flag we have right now is -Rmodule-build; that flag is
effectively renamed from -Wmodule-build to -Rmodule-build by this change.
-Wpass and -Wno-pass (and their friends) are also renamed to -Rpass and
-Rno-pass by this change; it's not completely clear whether we intended to have
a -Rpass (with no =pattern), but that is unchanged by this commit, other than
the flag name. The default pattern is effectively one which matches no passes.
In future, we may want to make the default pattern be .*, so that -Reverything
works for -Rpass properly.
llvm-svn: 215046
they're somehow missing a body. Looks like this was left behind when the loop
was generalized, and it's not been problematic before because without modules,
a used, implicit special member function declaration must be a definition.
This was resulting in us trying to emit a constructor declaration rather than
a definition, and producing a constructor missing its member initializers.
llvm-svn: 214473
of a function has a resolved exception specification, then all declarations of
the function do.
We should probably improve the AST representation to make this implicit (perhaps
only store the exception specification on the canonical declaration), but this
fixes things for now.
The testcase for this (which used to assert) also exposes the actual bug I was
trying to reduce here: we sometimes fail to emit the body of an imported
special member function definition. Fix for that to follow.
llvm-svn: 214458
FunctionProtoType::ExtProtoInfo. Most of the users of these fields don't care
about the other ExtProtoInfo bits and just want to talk about the exception
specification.
llvm-svn: 214450
* Add abbreviation for CXXMethodDecl and for FunctionProtoType. These come up
a *lot* in C++ modules.
* Allow typedef declarations to use the abbreviation if they're class members,
or if they're used.
In passing, add more record name records for Clang AST node kinds.
The downside is that we had already used up our allotment of 12 abbreviations,
so this pushes us to an extra bit on each record to support the extra abbrev
kinds, which increases file size by ~1%. This patch *barely* pays for that
through the other improvements, but we've got room for another 18 abbrevs,
so we should be able to make it much more profitable with future changes.
llvm-svn: 214024
* Track override set across module load and save
* Track originating module to allow proper re-export of #undef
* Make override set properly transitive when it picks up a #undef
This fixes nearly all of the remaining macro issues with self-host.
llvm-svn: 213922
thorough tests.
Original commit message:
[modules] Fix macro hiding bug exposed if:
* A submodule of module A is imported into module B
* Another submodule of module A that is not imported into B exports a macro
* Some submodule of module B also exports a definition of the macro, and
happens to be the first submodule of B that imports module A.
In this case, we would incorrectly determine that A's macro redefines B's
macro, and so we don't need to re-export B's macro at all.
This happens with the 'assert' macro in an LLVM self-host. =(
llvm-svn: 213416
This is breaking the system modules on Darwin, because something that
was defined and re-exported no longer is. Might be this patch, or might
just be a really poor interaction with an existing visibility bug.
This reverts commit r213348.
llvm-svn: 213395
* A submodule of module A is imported into module B
* Another submodule of module A that is not imported into B exports a macro
* Some submodule of module B also exports a definition of the macro, and
happens to be the first submodule of B that imports module A.
In this case, we would incorrectly determine that A's macro redefines B's
macro, and so we don't need to re-export B's macro at all.
This happens with the 'assert' macro in an LLVM self-host. =(
llvm-svn: 213348
-- a constructor list initialization that unpacked an initializer list into
constructor arguments and
-- a list initialization that created as std::initializer_list and passed it
as the first argument to a constructor
in the AST. Use this flag while instantiating templates to provide the right
semantics for the resulting initialization.
llvm-svn: 213224
redeclaration chains when pulling in a declaration. We need the redecl chain
unless we know some other declaration will trigger it to be pulled in; that
happens if our originally-canonical declaration had all the knowledge that
we have (and isn't us).
llvm-svn: 213043
into their container; we won't find them there. These things are already being
merged when they're added to their primary template's folding set, so this
merging is redundant (and causes us to reject-valid because we think we've
found an odr violation).
llvm-svn: 212788
Successfully loaded module files may be referenced in other
ModuleManagers, so don't invalidate them. Two related things are fixed:
1) I thought the last module in the manager was always the one that
failed, but it isn't. So check explicitly against the list of
vetted modules from ReadASTCore.
2) We now keep the file descriptor of pcm file open, which avoids the
possibility of having two different pcms for the same module loaded when
building in parallel with headers being modified during a build.
<rdar://problem/16835846>
llvm-svn: 211330
This reverts commit r211096. Looks like it broke the msvc build:
SemaOpenMP.cpp(140) : error C4519: default template arguments are only allowed on a class template
llvm-svn: 211113
This begins to address cognitive dissonance caused by treating the Note
diagnostic level as a severity in the diagnostic engine.
No change in functionality.
llvm-svn: 210758
Diagnostic mappings are used to calculate the final severity of diagnostic
instances.
Detangle the implementation to reflect the terminology used in documentation
and bindings.
No change in functionality.
llvm-svn: 210518
This reapplies r209910 with a fix for the assertion failures hit on the
buildbots.
original commit message:
I thought we could get away without this, but it means that the
FileEntry objects actually refer to the wrong files, since pcms are not
updated inplace, they are atomically renamed into place after compiling
a module.
So we are close to the original behaviour of invalidating the cache for
all modules being removed, but now we should only invalidate the ones
that depend on whichever module failed to load.
Unfortunately I haven't come up with a new test that didn't require
a race between parallel invocations of clang.
<rdar://problem/17038180>
llvm-svn: 209922
I thought we could get away without this, but it means that the
FileEntry objects actually refer to the wrong files, since pcms are not
updated inplace, they are atomically renamed into place after compiling
a module.
So we are close to the original behaviour of invalidating the cache for
all modules being removed, but now we should only invalidate the ones
that depend on whichever module failed to load.
Unfortunately I haven't come up with a new test that didn't require
a race between parallel invocations of clang.
<rdar://problem/17038180>
llvm-svn: 209910
member functions), ensure that the redecl chain never transitions from 'inline'
to 'not inline', since that violates an AST invariant.
llvm-svn: 209794
This patch implements support for selectively disabling optimizations on a
range of function definitions through a pragma. The implementation is that
all function definitions in the range are decorated with attribute
'optnone'.
#pragma clang optimize off
// All function definitions in here are decorated with 'optnone'.
#pragma clang optimize on
// Compilation resumes as normal.
llvm-svn: 209510
instantiated in another module, and the instantiation uses a partial
specialization, include the partial specialization and its template arguments
in the update record. We'll need them if someone imports the second module and
tries to instantiate a member of the template.
llvm-svn: 209472
ASTReaderListener's documentation states that visitInputFile will be
called based on the return values of needsInputFileVisitation and
needsSystemInputFileVisitation, but ChainedASTReaderListener may call
these methods on a child listener based on the values returned by the
other child.
Even worse, the calls to visitInputFile may be short-circuited due to
the use of the boolean or, so the calls to visit may not occur at all
for the second listener.
This updates ChainedASTReaderListener::visitInputFile to propagate the
ASTReaderListener behaviour to both children.
llvm-svn: 209394
It appears that Windows doesn't like renaming over open files, which we
do in clearOutputFiles. The file being compiled should be safe to
removed, but this isn't very satisfying - we don't want to manually
manage the lifetime of files we cannot prove have no references.
llvm-svn: 209195
declaration of that entity in from one of those modules, keep track of the fact
that we've not completed the redeclaration chain yet so that we can pull the
remaining declarations in from the other module if they're needed.
llvm-svn: 209161
Follow-up fix for 209138. Actually, since we already have this file
open, we don't want to refresh the stat() info, since that might be
newer than what we have open (bad!).
llvm-svn: 209143
FileManager::invalidateCache is not safe to call when there may be
existing references to the file. What module load failure needs is
to refresh so stale stat() info isn't stored.
This may be the last user of invalidateCache; I'll take a look and
remove it if possible in a future commit.
This caused a use-after-free error as well as a spurious error message
that a module was "found in both 'X.pcm' and 'X.pcm'" in some cases.
llvm-svn: 209138
ensure that querying the first declaration for its most recent declaration
checks for redeclarations from the imported module.
This works as follows:
* The 'most recent' pointer on a canonical declaration grows a pointer to the
external AST source and a generation number (space- and time-optimized for
the case where there is no external source).
* Each time the 'most recent' pointer is queried, if it has an external source,
we check whether it's up to date, and update it if not.
* The ancillary data stored on the canonical declaration is allocated lazily
to avoid filling it in for declarations that end up being non-canonical.
We'll still perform a redundant (ASTContext) allocation if someone asks for
the most recent declaration from a decl before setPreviousDecl is called,
but such cases are probably all bugs, and are now easy to find.
Some finessing is still in order here -- in particular, we use a very general
mechanism for handling the DefinitionData pointer on CXXRecordData, and a more
targeted approach would be more compact.
Also, the MayHaveOutOfDateDef mechanism should now be expunged, since it was
addressing only a corner of the full problem space here. That's not covered
by this patch.
Early performance benchmarks show that this makes no measurable difference to
Clang performance without modules enabled (and fixes a major correctness issue
with modules enabled). I'll revert if a full performance comparison shows any
problems.
llvm-svn: 209046
Use this to fix the leak of DeserializedDeclsDumper and DeserializedDeclsChecker
in FrontendAction (found by LSan), PR19560.
The "delete this" bool is necessary because both PCHGenerator and ASTUnit
return the same object from both getDeserializationListener() and
getASTMutationListener(), so ASTReader can't just have a unique_ptr.
It's also not possible to just let FrontendAction (or CompilerInstance) own
these listeners due to lifetime issues (see comments on PR19560).
Finally, ASTDeserializationListener can't easily be refcounted, since several of
the current listeners are allocated on the stack.
Having this bool isn't ideal, but it's a pattern that's used in other places in
the codebase too, and it seems better than leaking.
llvm-svn: 208277
Summary:
Previously, we would generate a single name for all reference
temporaries and allow LLVM to rename them for us. Instead, number the
reference temporaries as we build them in Sema.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3554
llvm-svn: 207776
We need to open an ASTFile while checking its expected size and
modification time, or another clang instance can modify the file between
the stat() and the open().
llvm-svn: 207735
This fixes a bug where an update record causes us to load an entity that refers
to an entity we've not finished loading yet, resulting in badness.
llvm-svn: 207603
Fixed by moving ProcessWarningOptions from Frontend into Basic. All of
the dependencies for ProcessWarningOptions were already in Basic, so
this was a small change.
llvm-svn: 207549
This patch checks whether the diagnostic options that could lead to
errors (principally -Werror) are consistent between when a module was
built and when it is loaded. If there are new -Werror flags, then the
module is rebuilt. In order to canonicalize the options we do this
check at the level of the constructed DiagnosticsEngine, which contains
the final set of diag to diagnostic level mappings. Currently we only
rebuild with the new diagnostic options, but we intend to refine this in
the future to include the union of the new and old flags, since we know
the old ones did not cause errors. System modules are only rebuilt when
-Wsystem-headers is enabled.
One oddity is that unlike checking language options, we don’t perform
this diagnostic option checking when loading from a precompiled header.
The reason for this is that the compiler cannot rebuild the PCH, so
anything that requires it to be rebuilt effectively leaks into the build
system. And in this case, that would mean the build system
understanding the complex relationship between diagnostic options and
the underlying diagnostic mappings, which is unreasonable. Skipping the
check is safe, because these options do not affect the generated AST.
You simply won’t get new build errors due to changed -Werror options
automatically, which is also true for non-module cases.
llvm-svn: 207477
together. This is extremely hairy, because in general we need to have loaded
both the template and the pattern before we can determine whether either should
be merged, so we temporarily violate the rule that all merging happens before
reading a decl ends, but *only* in the case where a template's pattern is being
loaded while loading the template itself.
In order to accomodate this for class templates, delay loading the injected
class name type for the pattern of the template until after we've loaded the
template itself, if we happen to load the template first.
llvm-svn: 207063
This paves the way to making OnDiskHashTable work with hashes that are
not 32 bits wide and to making OnDiskHashTable work very large hash
tables. The LLVM change to use these types is upcoming.
llvm-svn: 206640
To differentiate between two modules with the same name, we will
consider the path the module map file that they are defined by* part of
the ‘key’ for looking up the precompiled module (pcm file).
Specifically, this patch renames the precompiled module (pcm) files from
cache-path/<module hash>/Foo.pcm
to
cache-path/<module hash>/Foo-<hash of module map path>.pcm
In addition, I’ve taught the ASTReader to re-resolve the names of
imported modules during module loading so that if the header search
context changes between when a module was originally built and when it
is loaded we can rebuild it if necessary. For example, if module A
imports module B
first time:
clang -I /path/to/A -I /path/to/B ...
second time:
clang -I /path/to/A -I /different/path/to/B ...
will now rebuild A as expected.
* in the case of inferred modules, we use the module map file that
allowed the inference, not the __inferred_module.map file, since the
inferred file path is the same for every inferred module.
llvm-svn: 206201
Currently the on disk hash table's key_iterator and data_iterator make
the assumption that the table data starts exactly four bytes after the
base of the table. This happens to be true for all of the tables we
currently iterate over, but not for all of the OnDiskHashTables we
currently use. For example, key_ and data_iterator would iterate over
meaningless data if they were used on the hash tables in PTHLexer.
We make the API safer by breaking this into two types. One doesn't
have the iterators, and the other must be told where the payload
starts.
llvm-svn: 206189
Committed this by accident before it was done last time.
Original message:
Rather than rolling our own functions to read little endian data
from a buffer, we can use the support in llvm's Endian.h.
No functional change.
llvm-svn: 205062
Committed this by accident before it was done last time.
Original message:
Rather than rolling our own functions to write little endian data
to an ostream, we can use the support in llvm's EndianStream.h.
No functional change.
llvm-svn: 205061
Rather than rolling our own functions to read little endian data from
a buffer, we can use the support in llvm's Endian.h.
No functional change.
llvm-svn: 205045
Rather than rolling our own functions to write little endian data to
an ostream, we can use the support in llvm's EndianStream.h.
No functional change.
llvm-svn: 205044
correctly order comments in SourceManager::isBeforeInTranslationUnit() order
Unfortunately, this is not as simple as it was implemented previously, and
actually requires doing a merge sort.
llvm-svn: 204936
an out-of-date external decls list). This happens if we declare some names,
force the lookup table for the decl context to be built, import a module that
adds more decls for the name, then write out our module without looking up the
name.
llvm-svn: 204694
specialization from a module. (This can also happen for function template
specializations in PCHs if they're instantiated eagerly, because they're
constexpr or have a deduced return type.)
llvm-svn: 204547
at which that PCH imported each visible submodule of the module. Such locations
are needed when synthesizing macro directives resulting from the import.
llvm-svn: 204417
block as decl and type emission. This allows decl updates include statements
and expressions. No functionality change (but the generated PCM files are
incompatible with earlier versions of Clang).
llvm-svn: 204385
What's going on in the test case (without the patch applied) is this:
When the header is parsed, decltype(B()) is canonicalized to decltype(Y()),
because that was the first parsed equivalent decltype expression. Hence, the
TemplateSpecializationType for Id<decltype(B())> ends up with
SubstTemplateTypeParmType(T, decltype(Y())) as the AliasedType member.
When the PCH file is included and the AST reader reads Id<decltype(B())>, it
sees decltype(B()) before decltype(Y()). So, this time decltype(B()) ends up
being the canonical type for both decltypes, which leads to an assert violation
when the reader calls getSubstTemplateTypeParmType with the non-canonical
decltype(Y()) as the replacement type.
Reviewers: rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
CC: cfe-commits, aemerson
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D3073
llvm-svn: 204005
This is because the PCH is tied to the module files, if one of the module files changes or gets removed
the build system should re-build the PCH file.
rdar://16321245
llvm-svn: 203885
Drive-by fixing some incorrect types where a for loop would be improperly using ObjCInterfaceDecl::protocol_iterator. No functional changes in these cases.
llvm-svn: 203842
When building an AST file, we don't want to output HeaderFileInfo
structures for files that are not actually used as headers in the
current context. This can lead to assuming that unrelated files have
include counts of 0, defeating multiple-include prevention.
This is accomplished by adding an IsValid bit to the HFI.
llvm-svn: 203813
Add module dependencies to the dependency files created by -MD/-MMD/etc.
by attaching an ASTReaderListener that will call into the dependency
file generator when a module input file is seen in the serialized AST.
llvm-svn: 203208
submodule macro overriding within the same top-level module (necessary for the
testcase to be remotely reasonable). Incidentally reduces the number of libc++
testsuite regressions with modules enabled from 7 to 6.
llvm-svn: 203063
predicate. The wrapper used by SetVector was erroneously requiring an
adaptable predicate. It has been fixed and we really don't want to
require an indirect call for every predicate evaluation.
llvm-svn: 202744
it, importers of B should not see the macro. This is complicated by the fact
that A's macro could also be visible through a different path. The rules (as
hashed out on cfe-commits) are included as a documentation update in this
change.
With this, the number of regressions in libc++'s testsuite when modules are
enabled drops from 47 to 7. Those remaining 7 are also macro-related, and are
due to remaining bugs in this change (in particular, the handling of submodules
is imperfect).
llvm-svn: 202560
This does;
- clang_tablegen() adds each tblgen'd target to global property CLANG_TABLEGEN_TARGETS as list.
- List of targets is added to LLVM_COMMON_DEPENDS.
- all clang libraries and targets depend on generated headers.
You might wonder this would be regression, but in fact, this is little loss.
- Almost all of clang libraries depend on tblgen'd files and clang-tblgen.
- clang-tblgen may cause short stall-out but doesn't cause unconditional rebuild.
- Each library's dependencies to tblgen'd files might vary along headers' structure.
It made hard to track and update *really optimal* dependencies.
Each dependency to intrinsics_gen and ClangSACheckers is left as DEPENDS.
llvm-svn: 201842
Previously reverted in r201755 due to causing an assertion failure.
I've removed the offending assertion, and taught the CompilerInstance to
create a default virtual file system inside createFileManager. In the
future, we should be able to reach into the CompilerInvocation to
customize this behaviour without breaking clients that don't care.
llvm-svn: 201818
the build
When Clang loads the module, it verifies the user source files that the module
was built from. If any file was changed, the module is rebuilt. There are two
problems with this:
1. correctness: we don't verify system files (there are too many of them, and
stat'ing all of them would take a lot of time);
2. performance: the same module file is verified again and again during a
single build.
This change allows the build system to optimize source file verification. The
idea is based on the fact that while the project is being built, the source
files don't change. This allows us to verify the module only once during a
single build session. The build system passes a flag,
-fbuild-session-timestamp=, to inform Clang of the time when the build started.
The build system also requests to enable this feature by passing
-fmodules-validate-once-per-build-session. If these flags are not passed, the
behavior is not changed. When Clang verifies the module the first time, it
writes out a timestamp file. Then, when Clang loads the module the second
time, it finds a timestamp file, so it can compare the verification timestamp
of the module with the time when the build started. If the verification
timestamp is too old, the module is verified again, and the timestamp file is
updated.
llvm-svn: 201224
This triggered a miscompilation of code using Boost's function_template.hpp
when it was included inside a PCH file. A local static within
that header would be treated as local extern, resulting in the wrong
mangling. This only occurred during PCH deserialization.
Fixes <rdar://problem/15975816> and <rdar://problem/15926311>.
llvm-svn: 201130
We don't stat the system headers to check for stalenes during regular
PCH loading for performance reasons. When explicitly saying
-verify-pch, we want to check all the dependencies - user or system.
llvm-svn: 200979
This option will:
- load the given pch file
- verify it is not out of date by stat'ing dependencies, and
- return 0 on success and non-zero on error
llvm-svn: 200884
Add the ImportDecl to the set of interesting delcarations that are
deserialized eagerly when an AST file is loaded (rather than lazily like
most decls). This is required to get auto linking to work when there is
no explicit import in the main file. Also resolve a FIXME to rename
'ExternalDefinitions', since that is only one of the things that need eager
deserialization. The new name is 'EagerlyDeserializedDecls'. The corresponding
AST bitcode is also renamed.
llvm-svn: 200505
A return type is the declared or deduced part of the function type specified in
the declaration.
A result type is the (potentially adjusted) type of the value of an expression
that calls the function.
Rule of thumb:
* Declarations have return types and parameters.
* Expressions have result types and arguments.
llvm-svn: 200082
Fix a perennial source of confusion in the clang type system: Declarations and
function prototypes have parameters to which arguments are supplied, so calling
these 'arguments' was a stretch even in C mode, let alone C++ where default
arguments, templates and overloading make the distinction important to get
right.
Readability win across the board, especially in the casting, ADL and
overloading implementations which make a lot more sense at a glance now.
Will keep an eye on the builders and update dependent projects shortly.
No functional change.
llvm-svn: 199686
Show the top-level pch file as the culprit, rather than the immediate
dependency when a pch file imports a pcm from a module. To clarify the
relationship, the pch import stack is printed as notes. The old behaviour was
misleading when a pch imported a pcm (from a module), since removing the pcm
would not fix the problem, whereas rebuilding the pch would.
llvm-svn: 199446
This makes the C++ ABI depend entirely on the target: MS ABI for -win32 triples,
Itanium otherwise. It's no longer possible to do weird combinations.
To be able to run a test with a specific ABI without constraining it to a
specific triple, new substitutions are added to lit: %itanium_abi_triple and
%ms_abi_triple can be used to get the current target triple adjusted to the
desired ABI. For example, if the test suite is running with the i686-pc-win32
target, %itanium_abi_triple will expand to i686-pc-mingw32.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2545
llvm-svn: 199250
- Remove the additions to ObjCMethodDecl & ObjCIVarDecl that were getting de/serialized and consolidate
all functionality for the checking for this warning in Sema::DiagnoseUnusedBackingIvarInAccessor
- Don't check immediately after the method body is finished, check when the @implementation is finished.
This is so we can see if the ivar was referenced by any other method, even if the method was defined after the accessor.
- Don't silence the warning if any method is called from the accessor silence it if the accessor delegates to another method via self.
rdar://15727325
llvm-svn: 198432
Remove UnaryTypeTraitExpr and switch all remaining type trait related handling
over to TypeTraitExpr.
The UTT/BTT/TT enum prefix and evaluation code is retained pending further
cleanup.
This is part of the ongoing work to unify type traits following the removal of
BinaryTypeTraitExpr in r197273.
llvm-svn: 198271
This caused some crazy crashes involving std::unordered_map being
deserialized from a PCH file and then template instantiation requiring
an explicit instantiation location; unfortunately I don't really know
how to come up with a minimal test case.
llvm-svn: 197764
We started by trying to deserialize decltype(func-param) in a trailing return
type, which causes the function parameter decl to be deserialized, which pulls
in the function decl, which pulls the function type, which pulls the same
decltype() in the return type, and then we crashed.
llvm-svn: 197644
There's nothing special about type traits accepting two arguments.
This commit eliminates BinaryTypeTraitExpr and switches all related handling
over to TypeTraitExpr.
Also fixes a CodeGen failure with variadic type traits appearing in a
non-constant expression.
The BTT/TT prefix and evaluation code is retained as-is for now but will soon
be further cleaned up.
This is part of the ongoing work to unify type traits.
llvm-svn: 197273
more than one such initializer in a union, make mem-initializers override
default initializers for other union members, handle anonymous unions with
anonymous struct members better. Fix a couple of semi-related bugs exposed by
the tests for same.
llvm-svn: 196892
Summary:
In general, this type node can be used to represent any type adjustment
that occurs implicitly without losing type sugar. The immediate use of
this is to adjust the calling conventions of member function pointer
types without breaking template instantiation.
Fixes PR17996.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2332
llvm-svn: 196451
designated initializers of an interface.
If the interface declaration does not have methods marked as designated
initializers then the interface inherits the designated initializers of
its super class.
llvm-svn: 196315
This change fixes Richard's testcase for r193815. Now we include non-explicit
submodules into the list of exports.
The test failed previously because:
- recursive_visibility_a1.inner is not imported (only recursive_visibility_a1 is),
- thus the 'inner' submodule is not showing up in any of the import lists,
- and because of this getExportedModules() is not returning the
correct module set -- it only considers modules that are imported.
The fix is to make Module::getExportedModules() include non-explicit submodules
into the list of exports.
llvm-svn: 194018
would be deleted are still declared, but are ignored by overload resolution.
Also, don't delete such members if a subobject has no corresponding move
operation and a non-trivial copy. This causes us to implicitly declare move
operations in more cases, but risks move-assigning virtual bases multiple
times in some circumstances (a warning for that is to follow).
llvm-svn: 193969
requires ! feature
The purpose of this is to allow (for instance) the module map for /usr/include
to exclude <tgmath.h> and <complex.h> when building in C++ (these headers are
instead provided by the C++ standard library in this case, and the glibc C
<tgmath.h> header would otherwise try to include <complex.h>, resulting in a
module cycle).
llvm-svn: 193549
A prior commit of this patch was reverted because it was within the blamelist's purview of a failing test. The failure of that test has been addressed here: http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20131021/091546.html. Therefore I am recommitting this patch (all tests pass on windows, except for the usual modules & index suspects that never pass on my box).
Some background: Both Doug and Richard had asked me in Chicago to remove the circular reference in CXXRecordDecl to LambdaExpr by factoring out and storing the needed information from LambdaExpr directly into CXXRecordDecl.
In addition, I have added an IsGenericLambda flag - this makes life a little easier when we implement capturing, and are Sema-analyzing the body of a lambda (and the calloperator hasn't been wired to the closure class yet). Any inner lambdas can have potential captures that could require walking up the scope chain and checking if any generic lambdas are capture-ready. This 'bit' makes some of that checking easier.
No change in functionality.
This patch was approved by Doug with minor modifications (comments were cleaned up, and all data members were converted from bool/enum to unsigned, as requested):
http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1856
Thanks!
llvm-svn: 193246
They were causing CodeGenCXX/mangle-exprs.cpp to fail.
Revert "Remove the circular reference to LambdaExpr in CXXRecordDecl."
Revert "Again: Teach TreeTransform and family how to transform generic lambdas nested within templates and themselves."
llvm-svn: 193226
Both Doug and Richard had asked me to remove the circular reference in CXXRecordDecl to LambdaExpr by factoring out and storing the needed information from LambdaExpr directly into CXXRecordDecl.
No change in functionality.
In addition, I have added an IsGenericLambda flag - this makes life a little easier when we implement capturing, and are Sema-analyzing the body of a lambda (and the calloperator hasn't been wired to the closure class yet). Any inner lambdas can have potential captures that could require walking up the scope chain and checking if any generic lambdas are capture-ready. This 'bit' makes some of that checking easier.
This patch was approved by Doug with minor modifications (comments were cleaned up, and all data members were converted from bool/enum to unsigned, as requested):
http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1856
Thanks!
llvm-svn: 193223
modules.
With this fixed, I no longer see any test regressions in the libc++ test suite
when enabling a single-module module.map for libc++ (other than issues with my
system headers).
llvm-svn: 193219
* NamedDecl and CXXMethodDecl were missing getMostRecentDecl.
* The const version can just forward to the non const.
* getMostRecentDecl can use cast instead of cast_or_null.
This then removes some casts from the callers.
llvm-svn: 193039
If we have multiple definitions of the same entity from different modules, we
nominate the first definition which we see as being the canonical definition.
If we load a declaration from a different definition and we can't find a
corresponding declaration in the canonical definition, issue a diagnostic.
This is insufficient to prevent things from going horribly wrong in all cases
-- we might be in the middle of emitting IR for a function when we trigger some
deserialization and discover that it refers to an incoherent piece of the AST,
by which point it's probably too late to bail out -- but we'll at least produce
a diagnostic.
llvm-svn: 192950
This change doesn't go all the way to making fields redeclarable; instead, it
makes them 'mergeable', which means we can find the canonical declaration, but
not much else (and for a declaration that's not from a module, the canonical
declaration is always that declaration).
llvm-svn: 192092
Specifically, the following features are not included in this commit:
- any sort of capturing within generic lambdas
- generic lambdas within template functions and nested
within other generic lambdas
- conversion operator for captureless lambdas
- ensuring all visitors are generic lambda aware
(Although I have gotten some useful feedback on my patches of the above and will be incorporating that as I submit those patches for commit)
As an example of what compiles through this commit:
template <class F1, class F2>
struct overload : F1, F2 {
using F1::operator();
using F2::operator();
overload(F1 f1, F2 f2) : F1(f1), F2(f2) { }
};
auto Recursive = [](auto Self, auto h, auto ... rest) {
return 1 + Self(Self, rest...);
};
auto Base = [](auto Self, auto h) {
return 1;
};
overload<decltype(Base), decltype(Recursive)> O(Base, Recursive);
int num_params = O(O, 5, 3, "abc", 3.14, 'a');
Please see attached tests for more examples.
This patch has been reviewed by Doug and Richard. Minor changes (non-functionality affecting) have been made since both of them formally looked at it, but the changes involve removal of supernumerary return type deduction changes (since they are now redundant, with richard having committed a recent patch to address return type deduction for C++11 lambdas using C++14 semantics).
Some implementation notes:
- Add a new Declarator context => LambdaExprParameterContext to
clang::Declarator to allow the use of 'auto' in declaring generic
lambda parameters
- Add various helpers to CXXRecordDecl to facilitate identifying
and querying a closure class
- LambdaScopeInfo (which maintains the current lambda's Sema state)
was augmented to house the current depth of the template being
parsed (id est the Parser calls Sema::RecordParsingTemplateParameterDepth)
so that SemaType.cpp::ConvertDeclSpecToType may use it to immediately
generate a template-parameter-type when 'auto' is parsed in a generic
lambda parameter context. (i.e we do NOT use AutoType deduced to
a template parameter type - Richard seemed ok with this approach).
We encode that this template type was generated from an auto by simply
adding $auto to the name which can be used for better diagnostics if needed.
- SemaLambda.h was added to hold some common lambda utility
functions (this file is likely to grow ...)
- Teach Sema::ActOnStartOfFunctionDef to check whether it
is being called to instantiate a generic lambda's call
operator, and if so, push an appropriately prepared
LambdaScopeInfo object on the stack.
- various tests were added - but much more will be needed.
There is obviously more work to be done, and both Richard (weakly) and Doug (strongly)
have requested that LambdaExpr be removed form the CXXRecordDecl LambdaDefinitionaData
in a future patch which is forthcoming.
A greatful thanks to all reviewers including Eli Friedman, James Dennett,
and especially the two gracious wizards (Richard Smith and Doug Gregor)
who spent hours providing feedback (in person in Chicago and on the mailing lists).
And yet I am certain that I have allowed unidentified bugs to creep in; bugs, that I will do my best to slay, once identified!
Thanks!
llvm-svn: 191453
Review: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1546.
I have picked up this patch form Lawrence
(http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1063) and did a few changes.
From the original change description (updated as appropriate):
This patch adds a check that ensures that modules only use modules they
have so declared. To this end, it adds a statement on intended module
use to the module.map grammar:
use module-id
A module can then only use headers from other modules if it 'uses' them.
This enforcement is off by default, but may be turned on with the new
option -fmodules-decluse.
When enforcing the module semantics, we also need to consider a source
file part of a module. This is achieved with a compiler option
-fmodule-name=<module-id>.
The compiler at present only applies restrictions to the module directly
being built.
llvm-svn: 191283
1. Fixed constructor of shared clause.
2. Some macros for clauses processing are replaced by private template methods.
3. Additional checks in sema analysis of OpenMP clauses.
llvm-svn: 191265
variable from being the function to being the enclosing namespace scope (in
C++) or the TU (in C). This allows us to fix a selection of related issues
where we would build incorrect redeclaration chains for such declarations, and
fail to notice type mismatches.
Such declarations are put into a new IdentifierNamespace, IDNS_LocalExtern,
which is only found when searching scopes, and not found when searching
DeclContexts. Such a declaration is only made visible in its DeclContext if
there are no non-LocalExtern declarations.
llvm-svn: 191064
LLVM supports applying conversion instructions to vectors of the same number of
elements (fptrunc, fptosi, etc.) but there had been no way for a Clang user to
cause such instructions to be generated when using builtin vector types.
C-style casting on vectors is already defined in terms of bitcasts, and so
cannot be used for these conversions as well (without leading to a very
confusing set of semantics). As a result, this adds a __builtin_convertvector
intrinsic (patterned after the OpenCL __builtin_astype intrinsic). This is
intended to aid the creation of vector intrinsic headers that create generic IR
instead of target-dependent intrinsics (in other words, this is a generic
_mm_cvtepi32_ps). As noted in the documentation, the action of
__builtin_convertvector is defined in terms of the action of a C-style cast on
each vector element.
llvm-svn: 190915
Summary:
When selecting a mangling for an anonymous tag type:
- We should first try it's typedef'd name.
- If that doesn't work, we should mangle in the name of the declarator
that specified it as a declaration specifier.
- If that doesn't work, fall back to a static mangling of
<unnamed-type>.
This should make our anonymous type mangling compatible.
This partially fixes PR16994; we would need to have an implementation of
scope numbering to get it right (a separate issue).
Reviewers: rnk, rsmith, rjmccall, cdavis5x
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1540
llvm-svn: 190892
it is an implicit instantiation of a class template specialization), pick the
first-loaded definition to be the canonical definition, and merge all other
definitions into it.
This is still rather incomplete -- we need to extend every form of declaration
that can appear within a CXXRecordDecl to be redeclarable if it came from an
AST file (this includes fields, enumerators, ...).
llvm-svn: 190315
When an AST file is built based on another AST file, it can use a decl from
the fist file, and therefore mark the "isUsed" bit. We need to note this in
the AST file so that the bit is set correctly when the second AST file is
loaded.
This patch introduces the distinction between setIsUsed() and markUsed() so
that we don't call into the ASTMutationListener callback when it wouldn't
be appropriate.
Fixes PR16635.
llvm-svn: 190016
these in eagerly if we're not actually processing a translation unit. The added
laziness here also avoids us loading in parts of a CXXRecordDecl earlier than an
upcoming class template specialization merging patch would like.
Ideally, we should mark the vtable as used when we see a definition for the key
function, rather than having a separate pass over dynamic classes at the end of
the TU. The existing approach is pretty bad for PCH/modules, since it forcibly
loads the declarations of all key functions in all imported modules, whether or
not those key functions are defined.
llvm-svn: 189627
This was only used to ensure that the traversal order was the same as the
insertion order, but that guarantee was already being provided by the use
of a FoldingSetVector.
llvm-svn: 189075
Specifically, the following features are not included in this commit:
- any sort of capturing within generic lambdas
- nested lambdas
- conversion operator for captureless lambdas
- ensuring all visitors are generic lambda aware
As an example of what compiles:
template <class F1, class F2>
struct overload : F1, F2 {
using F1::operator();
using F2::operator();
overload(F1 f1, F2 f2) : F1(f1), F2(f2) { }
};
auto Recursive = [](auto Self, auto h, auto ... rest) {
return 1 + Self(Self, rest...);
};
auto Base = [](auto Self, auto h) {
return 1;
};
overload<decltype(Base), decltype(Recursive)> O(Base, Recursive);
int num_params = O(O, 5, 3, "abc", 3.14, 'a');
Please see attached tests for more examples.
Some implementation notes:
- Add a new Declarator context => LambdaExprParameterContext to
clang::Declarator to allow the use of 'auto' in declaring generic
lambda parameters
- Augment AutoType's constructor (similar to how variadic
template-type-parameters ala TemplateTypeParmDecl are implemented) to
accept an IsParameterPack to encode a generic lambda parameter pack.
- Add various helpers to CXXRecordDecl to facilitate identifying
and querying a closure class
- LambdaScopeInfo (which maintains the current lambda's Sema state)
was augmented to house the current depth of the template being
parsed (id est the Parser calls Sema::RecordParsingTemplateParameterDepth)
so that Sema::ActOnLambdaAutoParameter may use it to create the
appropriate list of corresponding TemplateTypeParmDecl for each
auto parameter identified within the generic lambda (also stored
within the current LambdaScopeInfo). Additionally,
a TemplateParameterList data-member was added to hold the invented
TemplateParameterList AST node which will be much more useful
once we teach TreeTransform how to transform generic lambdas.
- SemaLambda.h was added to hold some common lambda utility
functions (this file is likely to grow ...)
- Teach Sema::ActOnStartOfFunctionDef to check whether it
is being called to instantiate a generic lambda's call
operator, and if so, push an appropriately prepared
LambdaScopeInfo object on the stack.
- Teach Sema::ActOnStartOfLambdaDefinition to set the
return type of a lambda without a trailing return type
to 'auto' in C++1y mode, and teach the return type
deduction machinery in SemaStmt.cpp to process either
C++11 and C++14 lambda's correctly depending on the flag.
- various tests were added - but much more will be needed.
A greatful thanks to all reviewers including Eli Friedman,
James Dennett and the ever illuminating Richard Smith. And
yet I am certain that I have allowed unidentified bugs to creep in;
bugs, that I will do my best to slay, once identified!
Thanks!
llvm-svn: 188977
In addition to storing more useful information in the AST, this
fixes a semantic check in template instantiation which checks whether
the l-paren location is valid.
Fixes PR16903.
llvm-svn: 188495
When a local extern declaration redeclares some other entity, the type of that
entity is merged with the prior type if the prior declaration is visible (in C)
or is declared in the same scope (in C++).
- Make LookupRedeclarationWithLinkage actually work in C++, use it in the right
set of cases, and make it track whether it found a shadowed declaration.
- Track whether we found a declaration in the same scope (for C++) including
across serialization and template instantiation.
llvm-svn: 188307
Summary:
Source-centric tools need access to the location of a C++11
lambda expression's capture-default ('&' or '=') when it's present.
It's possible for them to find it by re-lexing and re-implementing
rules that Clang's parser has already applied, but the cost of storing
the SourceLocation and making it available to them is 32 bits per
LambdaExpr (a small delta, proportionally), and the simplification in
client code is significant.
Reviewers: rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
CC: cfe-commits, klimek, revane
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1192
llvm-svn: 188121
The problem was that an enum without closing semicolon could be associated as a forward enum
in an erroneous declaration, leading to the identifier being associated with the enum decl but
without a declaration actually referencing it.
This resulted in not having it serialized before serializing the identifier that is associated with.
Also prevent the ASTUnit from querying the serialized DeclID for an invalid top-level decl; it may not
have been serialized.
rdar://14539667
llvm-svn: 187914
This field is just IsDefaulted && !IsDeleted; in all places it's used,
a simple check for isDefaulted() is superior anyway, and we were forgetting
to set it in a few cases.
Also eliminate CXXDestructorDecl::IsImplicitlyDefined, for the same reasons.
No intended functionality change.
llvm-svn: 187891
in one module but is only declared as a friend in another module, keep it
visible in the result of the merge.
This is incomplete on two axes:
1) Our handling of local extern declarations is basically broken (we put them
in the wrong decl context, and don't find them in redeclaration lookup, unless
they've previously been declared), and this results in them making friends
visible after a merge.
2) Eventually we'll need to mark that this has happened, and more carefully
check whether a declaration should be visible if it was only visible in some
of the modules in which it was declared. Fortunately it's rare for the
identifier namespace of a declaration to change along its redeclaration chain.
llvm-svn: 187639
The headers in the compiler's own resource include directory are
system headers, which means we don't stat() them eagerly when loading
a module. Use module.map as a proxy for these headers and the compiler
itself. Fixes <rdar://problem/13856838>.
llvm-svn: 186870
No functionality change.
In Sema helper functions:
* renamed isTypeName as HasTypenameKeyword
In UsingDecl:
* renamed get/setUsingLocation to get/setUsingLoc
* renamed is/setTypeName as has/setTypename
llvm-svn: 186816
This is the same way GenericSelectionExpr works, and it's generally a
more consistent approach.
A large part of this patch is devoted to caching the value of the condition
of a ChooseExpr; it's needed to avoid threading an ASTContext into
IgnoreParens().
Fixes <rdar://problem/14438917>.
llvm-svn: 186738
decls. That can reenter deserialization and explode horribly by trying to merge
a declaration that we've not got very far through deserializing yet.
llvm-svn: 186236
numbers as we deserialize class template partial specializations. We can't
assume that the old sequence numbers will work.
The sequence numbers are still deterministic, but are now a lot less
predictable for class template partial specializations in modules/PCH.
llvm-svn: 184811
The goal of this sugar node is to be able to look at an arbitrary
FunctionType and tell if any of the parameters were decayed from an
array or function type. Ultimately this is necessary to implement
Microsoft's C++ name mangling scheme, which mangles decayed arrays
differently from normal pointers.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1014
llvm-svn: 184763
Introduce CXXStdInitializerListExpr node, representing the implicit
construction of a std::initializer_list<T> object from its underlying array.
The AST representation of such an expression goes from an InitListExpr with a
flag set, to a CXXStdInitializerListExpr containing a MaterializeTemporaryExpr
containing an InitListExpr (possibly wrapped in a CXXBindTemporaryExpr).
This more detailed representation has several advantages, the most important of
which is that the new MaterializeTemporaryExpr allows us to directly model
lifetime extension of the underlying temporary array. Using that, this patch
*drastically* simplifies the IR generation of this construct, provides IR
generation support for nested global initializer_list objects, fixes several
bugs where the destructors for the underlying array would accidentally not get
invoked, and provides constant expression evaluation support for
std::initializer_list objects.
llvm-svn: 183872
A while ago we allowed libclang to build a PCH that had compiler errors; this was to retain the performance
afforded by a PCH even if the user's code is in an intermediate state.
Extend this for the precompiled preamble as well.
rdar://14109828
llvm-svn: 183717
handle temporaries which have been lifetime-extended to static storage duration
within constant expressions. This correctly handles nested lifetime extension
(through reference members of aggregates in aggregate initializers) but
non-constant-expression emission hasn't yet been updated to do the same.
llvm-svn: 183283
In a certain code-path we were not deserializing an anonymous field initializer correctly,
leading to a crash when trying to IRGen it.
This is a simpler version of a patch by Yunzhong Gao!
llvm-svn: 182974
John noticed that the fix for pr15930 (r181981) didn't handle indirect
uses of local types. For example, a pointer to local struct, or a
function that returns it.
One way to implement this would be to recursively look for local
types. This would look a lot like the linkage computation itself for
types.
To avoid code duplication and utilize the existing linkage cache, this
patch just makes the computation of "type with no linkage but
externally visible because it is from an inline function" part of the
linkage computation itself.
llvm-svn: 182711
specialization with modules enabled. Just don't merge them at all for now;
we'll revisit this when support for template merging is added.
In passing, make Decl::dump() a little safer to use with PCH/modules, by making
it not deserialize any additional declarations. From a debugger you can call
decls_begin() or similar first if you want to dump all child decls.
llvm-svn: 182544
a FieldDecl from it, and propagate both into the closure type and the
LambdaExpr.
You can't do much useful with them yet -- you can't use them within the body
of the lambda, because we don't have a representation for "the this of the
lambda, not the this of the enclosing context". We also don't have support or a
representation for a nested capture of an init-capture yet, which was intended
to work despite not being allowed by the current standard wording.
llvm-svn: 181985
This patch renames getLinkage to getLinkageInternal. Only code that
needs to handle UniqueExternalLinkage specially should call this.
Linkage, as defined in the c++ standard, is provided by
getFormalLinkage. It maps UniqueExternalLinkage to ExternalLinkage.
Most places in the compiler actually want isExternallyVisible, which
handles UniqueExternalLinkage as internal.
llvm-svn: 181677
Sometimes people hack on their system headers. In such cases, they'll
need to delete their module cache, but may not know where it is. Add a
note to show them where it is.
llvm-svn: 181638
After r180934 we may initiate module map parsing for modules not related to the module what we are building,
make sure we ignore the header file info of headers from such modules.
First part of rdar://13840148
llvm-svn: 181489
Add serialization for captured statements and captured decls. Also add
a const_capture_iterator to CapturedStmt.
Test contributed by Wei Pan
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D727
llvm-svn: 181048
the actual parser and support arbitrary id-expressions.
We're actually basically set up to do arbitrary expressions here
if we wanted to.
Assembly operands permit things like A::x to be written regardless
of language mode, which forces us to embellish the evaluation
context logic somewhat. The logic here under template instantiation
is incorrect; we need to preserve the fact that an expression was
unevaluated. Of course, template instantiation in general is fishy
here because we have no way of delaying semantic analysis in the
MC parser. It's all just fishy.
I've also fixed the serialization of MS asm statements.
This commit depends on an LLVM commit.
llvm-svn: 180976
are now two distinct canonical 'AutoType's: one is the undeduced 'auto'
placeholder type, and the other is a deduced-but-dependent type. All
deduced-to-a-non-dependent-type cases are still non-canonical.
llvm-svn: 180789
-Make sure that a deserialized external decl gets added to the TU scope.
-When associating an identifier with a set of decls, use the most recent local ones,
if they exist, otherwise associating decls from modules (that came after a local one)
will lead to an incomplete reconstructed re-declaration chain.
rdar://13712705
llvm-svn: 180634
Add a CXXDefaultInitExpr, analogous to CXXDefaultArgExpr, and use it both in
CXXCtorInitializers and in InitListExprs to represent a default initializer.
There's an additional complication here: because the default initializer can
refer to the initialized object via its 'this' pointer, we need to make sure
that 'this' points to the right thing within the evaluation.
llvm-svn: 179958
Typo correction for an unqualified name needs to walk through all of the identifier tables of all modules.
When we have a global index, just walk its identifier table only.
rdar://13425732
llvm-svn: 179730
This is done by extending ObjCMethodList (which is only used by the global method pool) to have 2 extra bits of information.
We will later take advantage of this info in global method pool for the overridden methods calculation.
llvm-svn: 179652
Add CapturedDecl to be the DeclContext for CapturedStmt, and perform semantic
analysis. Currently captures all variables by reference.
TODO: templates
Author: Ben Langmuir <ben.langmuir@intel.com>
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D433
llvm-svn: 179618
don't serialize a lookup map for the translation unit outside C++ mode, so we
can't tell when lookup within the TU needs to look within modules. Only apply
the fix outside C++ mode, and only to the translation unit.
llvm-svn: 178706
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x86_64-darwin10-gdb went back green
before it processed the reverted 178663, so it could not have been the culprit.
Revert "Revert 178663."
This reverts commit 4f8a3eb2ce5d4ba422483439e20c8cbb4d953a41.
llvm-svn: 178682
Syntactically means the function macro parameter names do not need to use the same
identifiers in order for the definitions to be considered identical.
Syntactic equivalence is a microsoft extension for macro redefinitions and we'll also
use this kind of comparison to check for ambiguous macros coming from modules.
rdar://13562254
llvm-svn: 178671
For variables and functions clang used to store two storage classes. The one
"as written" in the code and a patched one, which, for example, propagates
static to the following decls.
This apparently is from the days clang lacked linkage computation. It is now
redundant and this patch removes it.
llvm-svn: 178663
This option can be useful for end users who want to know why they
ended up with a ton of different variants of the "std" module in their
module cache. This problem should go away over time, as we reduce the
need for module variants, but it will never go away entirely.
llvm-svn: 178148
the system macro uses a not identical definition compared to a macro from the clang headers.
For example (these come from different modules):
\#define LONG_MAX __LONG_MAX__ (clang's limits.h)
\#define LONG_MAX 0x7fffffffffffffffL (system's limits.h)
in which case don't mark them ambiguous to avoid the "ambiguous macro expansion" warning.
llvm-svn: 178109
For each macro directive (define, undefine, visibility) have a separate object that gets chained
to the macro directive history. This has several benefits:
-No need to mutate a MacroDirective when there is a undefine/visibility directive. Stuff like
PPMutationListener become unnecessary.
-No need to keep extra source locations for the undef/visibility locations for the define directive object
(which is the majority of the directives)
-Much easier to hide/unhide a section in the macro directive history.
-Easier to track the effects of the directives across different submodules.
llvm-svn: 178037
-Serialize the macro directives history into its own section
-Get rid of the macro updates section
-When de/serializing an identifier from a module, associate only one macro per
submodule that defined+exported it.
llvm-svn: 177761
The refactoring in r177367 introduced a serious performance bug where
the "lazy" resolution of module file names in the global module index
to actual module file entries in the module manager would perform
repeated negative stats(). The new interaction requires the module
manager to inform the global module index when a module file has been
loaded, eliminating the extraneous stat()s and a bunch of bookkeeping
on both sides.
llvm-svn: 177750
Configuration macros are macros that are intended to alter how a
module works, such that we need to build different module variants
for different values of these macros. A module can declare its
configuration macros, in which case we will complain if the definition
of a configation macro on the command line (or lack thereof) differs
from the current preprocessor state at the point where the module is
imported. This should eliminate some surprises when enabling modules,
because "#define CONFIG_MACRO ..." followed by "#include
<module/header.h>" would silently ignore the CONFIG_MACRO setting. At
least it will no longer be silent about it.
Configuration macros are eventually intended to help reduce the number
of module variants that need to be built. When the list of
configuration macros for a module is exhaustive, we only need to
consider the settings for those macros when building/finding the
module, which can help isolate modules for various project-specific -D
flags that should never affect how modules are build (but currently do).
llvm-svn: 177466
The global module index was querying the file manager for each of the
module files it knows about at load time, to prune out any out-of-date
information. The file manager would then cache the results of the
stat() falls used to find that module file.
Later, the same translation unit could end up trying to import one of the
module files that had previously been ignored by the module cache, but
after some other Clang instance rebuilt the module file to bring it
up-to-date. The stale stat() results in the file manager would
trigger a second rebuild of the already-up-to-date module, causing
failures down the line.
The global module index now lazily resolves its module file references
to actual AST reader module files only after the module file has been
loaded, eliminating the stat-caching race. Moreover, the AST reader
can communicate to its caller that a module file is missing (rather
than simply being out-of-date), allowing us to simplify the
module-loading logic and allowing the compiler to recover if a
dependent module file ends up getting deleted.
llvm-svn: 177367
When we're building a precompiled header or module against an SDK on
Darwin, there will be a file SDKSettings.plist in the sysroot. Since
stat()'ing every system header on which a module or PCH file depends
is performance suicide, we instead stat() just SDKSettings.plist. This
hack works well on Darwin; it's unclear how we want to handle this on
other platforms. If there is a canonical file, we should use it; if
not, we either have to take the performance hit of stat()'ing system
headers repeatedly or roll the dice by not checking anything.
llvm-svn: 177194
In a module-enabled Cocoa PCH file, we spend a lot of time stat'ing the headers
in order to associate the FileEntries with their modules and support implicit
module import.
Use a more lazy scheme by enhancing HeaderInfoTable to store extra info about
the module that a header belongs to, and associate it with its module only when
there is a request for loading the header info for a particular file.
Part of rdar://13391765
llvm-svn: 176976
This allows resolving top-header filenames of modules to FileEntries when
we need them, not eagerly.
Note that that this breaks ABI for libclang functions
clang_Module_getTopLevelHeader / clang_Module_getNumTopLevelHeaders
but this is fine because they are experimental and not widely used yet.
llvm-svn: 176975
It passes to the visitor, that the caller provides, CXCursor_InclusionDirective cursors for
all the include directives in a particular file.
llvm-svn: 176682
Stat'ing all the headers from the PCH to make sure they are up-to-date takes significant time.
In a particular source file (whose PCH file included Cocoa.h) from total -fsyntax-only time
12% was just stat calls. Change pre-validation to only check non-system headers.
There are some notable disadvantages:
-If a system header, that is not include-guarded, changes after the PCH was created, we will not
find it in the header info table and we will #import it, effectively #importing it twice, thus
we will emit some error due to a multiple definition and after that the "header was modified" error will likely
be emitted, for example something like:
NSDictionary.h:12:1: error: duplicate interface definition for class 'NSDictionary'
@interface NSDictionary : NSObject <NSCopying, NSMutableCopying, NSSecureCoding, NSFastEnumeration>
^
NSDictionary.h:12:12: note: previous definition is here
@interface NSDictionary : NSObject <NSCopying, NSMutableCopying, NSSecureCoding, NSFastEnumeration>
^
fatal error: file 'NSDictionary.h' has been modified since the precompiled header was built
Though we get the "header was modified" error, this is a bit confusing.
-Theoretically it is possible that such a system header will cause no errors but it will just cause an
unfortunate semantic change, though I find this rather unlikely.
The advantages:
-Reduces compilation time when using a huge PCH like the Cocoa ones
-System headers change very infrequent and when they do, users/build systems should be able to know that
re-building from scratch is needed.
Addresses rdar://13056262
llvm-svn: 176567