is complete (with an error produced if not) and a function that merely queries
whether the type is complete. Either way we'll trigger instantiation if
necessary, but only the former will diagnose and recover from missing module
imports.
The intent of this change is to prevent a class of bugs where code would call
RequireCompleteType(..., 0) and then ignore the result. With modules, we must
check the return value and use it to determine whether the definition of the
type is visible.
This also fixes a debug info quality issue: calls to isCompleteType do not
trigger the emission of debug information for a type in limited-debug-info
mode. This allows us to avoid emitting debug information for type definitions
in more cases where we believe it is safe to do so.
llvm-svn: 256049
for the derived class into it. This is mostly just a cleanup, but could in
principle be a bugfix if there is some codepath that reaches here and didn't
previously require a complete type (I couldn't find any such codepath, though).
llvm-svn: 256037
address space unless address space is explicitly specified.
Correct the behavior of NULL constant detection -
generic AS void pointer should be accepted as a valid NULL constant.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D15293
llvm-svn: 255346
address space unless address space is explicitly specified.
Correct the behavior of NULL constant detection -
generic AS void pointer should be accepted as a valid NULL constant.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D15293
llvm-svn: 255337
`pass_object_size` is our way of enabling `__builtin_object_size` to
produce high quality results without requiring inlining to happen
everywhere.
A link to the design doc for this attribute is available at the
Differential review link below.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13263
llvm-svn: 254554
Summary:
This patch implements the 4.5 specification for the implicit data maps. OpenMP 4.5 specification changes the default way data is captured into a target region. All the non-aggregate kinds are passed by value by default. This required activating the capturing by value during SEMA for the target region. All the non-aggregate values that can be encoded in the size of a pointer are properly casted and forwarded to the runtime library. On top of fixing the previous weird behavior for mapping pointers in nested data regions (an explicit map was always required), this also improves performance as the number of allocations/transactions to the device per non-aggregate map are reduced from two to only one - instead of passing a reference and the value, only the value passed.
Explicit maps will be added later on once firstprivate, private, and map clauses' SEMA and parsing are available.
Reviewers: hfinkel, rjmccall, ABataev
Subscribers: cfe-commits, carlo.bertolli
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14940
llvm-svn: 254521
MSVC supports 'property' attribute and allows to apply it to the declaration of an empty array in a class or structure definition.
For example:
```
__declspec(property(get=GetX, put=PutX)) int x[];
```
The above statement indicates that x[] can be used with one or more array indices. In this case, i=p->x[a][b] will be turned into i=p->GetX(a, b), and p->x[a][b] = i will be turned into p->PutX(a, b, i);
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13336
llvm-svn: 254067
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Typeof.html
Differences from the GCC extension:
* __auto_type is also permitted in C++ (but only in places where
it could appear in C), allowing its use in headers that might
be shared across C and C++, or used from C++98
* __auto_type can be combined with a declarator, as with C++ auto
(for instance, "__auto_type *p")
* multiple variables can be declared in a single __auto_type
declaration, with the C++ semantics (the deduced type must be
the same in each case)
This patch also adds a missing restriction on applying typeof to
a bit-field, which GCC has historically rejected in C (due to
lack of clarity as to whether the operand should be promoted).
The same restriction also applies to __auto_type in C (in both
GCC and Clang).
This also fixes PR25449.
Patch by Nicholas Allegra!
llvm-svn: 252690
Previously, __weak was silently accepted and ignored in MRC mode.
That makes this a potentially source-breaking change that we have to
roll out cautiously. Accordingly, for the time being, actual support
for __weak references in MRC is experimental, and the compiler will
reject attempts to actually form such references. The intent is to
eventually enable the feature by default in all non-GC modes.
(It is, of course, incompatible with ObjC GC's interpretation of
__weak.)
If you like, you can enable this feature with
-Xclang -fobjc-weak
but like any -Xclang option, this option may be removed at any point,
e.g. if/when it is eventually enabled by default.
This patch also enables the use of the ARC __unsafe_unretained qualifier
in MRC. Unlike __weak, this is being enabled immediately. Since
variables are essentially __unsafe_unretained by default in MRC,
the only practical uses are (1) communication and (2) changing the
default behavior of by-value block capture.
As an implementation matter, this means that the ObjC ownership
qualifiers may appear in any ObjC language mode, and so this patch
removes a number of checks for getLangOpts().ObjCAutoRefCount
that were guarding the processing of these qualifiers. I don't
expect this to be a significant drain on performance; it may even
be faster to just check for these qualifiers directly on a type
(since it's probably in a register anyway) than to do N dependent
loads to grab the LangOptions.
rdar://9674298
llvm-svn: 251041
This fixes a bug where one can take the address of a conditionally
enabled function to drop its enable_if guards. For example:
int foo(int a) __attribute__((enable_if(a > 0, "")));
int (*p)(int) = &foo;
int result = p(-1); // compilation succeeds; calls foo(-1)
Overloading logic has been updated to reflect this change, as well.
Functions with enable_if attributes that are always true are still
allowed to have their address taken.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13607
llvm-svn: 250090
C allows for some implicit conversions that C++ does not, e.g. void* ->
char*. This patch teaches clang that these conversions are okay when
dealing with overloads in C.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13604
llvm-svn: 249995
that change turns out to not be reasonable: mutating the AST of a parsed
template during instantiation is not a sound thing to do, does not work across
chained PCH / modules builds, and is in any case a special-case workaround to a
more general problem that should be solved centrally.
llvm-svn: 249342
All global variables that are not enclosed in a declare target region
must be captured in the target region as local variables do. Currently,
there is no support for declare target, so this patch adds support for
capturing all the global variables used in a the target region.
llvm-svn: 249154
We get into this bad state when someone defines a new member function
for a class but forgets to add the declaration to the class body.
Calling the new member function from a member function template of the
class will crash during instantiation.
llvm-svn: 248925
Applied restrictions from OpenCL v2.0 s6.13.11.8
that mainly disallow operations on atomic types (except for taking their address - &).
The patch is taken from SPIR2.0 provisional branch, contributed by Guy Benyei!
llvm-svn: 248896
Summary:
This change adds support for `__builtin_ms_va_list`, a GCC extension for
variadic `ms_abi` functions. The existing `__builtin_va_list` support is
inadequate for this because `va_list` is defined differently in the Win64
ABI vs. the System V/AMD64 ABI.
Depends on D1622.
Reviewers: rsmith, rnk, rjmccall
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D1623
llvm-svn: 247941
Previously, in certain cases lax vector conversions could occur between scalar floating-point values and ExtVector types; these conversions would be simple bitcasts. We need to allow them with other vector types to support some common headers, but we don't need them for ExtVector. Preventing them here makes them behave like other operations involving scalars and ExtVectors.
llvm-svn: 247643
Given a reference to a pointer to member whose class's inheritance model
is unspecified, make sure we come up with an inheritance model in
plausible places. One place we were missing involved LValue to RValue
conversion, another involved unary type traits.
llvm-svn: 247248
We tried to provide a very nice diagnostic when diagnosing an assignment
to a const int & produced by a function call. However, we cannot always
determine what function was called.
This fixes PR24568.
llvm-svn: 246014
Adds parsing/sema analysis/serialization/deserialization for array sections in OpenMP constructs (introduced in OpenMP 4.0).
Currently it is allowed to use array sections only in OpenMP clauses that accepts list of expressions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10732
llvm-svn: 245937
The problem is that the arguments are of TheCall are reset later
to the ones in Args, making TypoExpr put back. Some TypoExpr that have
already been diagnosed and will assert later in Sema::getTypoExprState
llvm-svn: 245560
Remove the assumption of a Boolean type by checking if an expression is known
to have a boolean value. Disable warning in two other tests.
llvm-svn: 245507
This has been disabled for a long time, but:
1) Initializers work (and apparently they're re reason why this was disabled).
2) various tests happen to hit this code path and the invariant seems to be
always verified.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12110
Reviewed by: rsmith
llvm-svn: 245404
The z13 vector facility has an associated language extension,
closely modeled on AltiVec/VSX. The main differences are:
- vector long, vector float and vector pixel are not supported
- vector long long and vector double are supported (like VSX)
- comparison operators return a vector rather than a scalar integer
- shift operators behave like the OpenCL shift operators
- vector bool is only supported as argument to certain operators;
some operators allow mixing a bool with a non-bool vector
This patch adds clang support for the extension. It is closely modelled
on the AltiVec support. Similarly to the -faltivec option, there's a
new -fzvector option to enable the extensions (as well as an -mzvector
alias for compatibility with GCC). There's also a separate LangOpt.
The extension as implemented here is intended to be compatible with
the -mzvector extension recently implemented by GCC.
Based on a patch by Richard Sandiford.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11001
llvm-svn: 243642
There is currently no support in MSVC for using i128 as an integer
literal suffix. In fact, there appears to be no evidence that they have
ever supported this feature in any of their compilers. This was an over
generalization of their actual feature and is a nasty source of bugs.
Why is it a source of bugs? Because most code in clang expects that
evaluation of an integer constant expression won't give them something
that 'long long' can't represent. Instead of providing a meaningful
feature, i128 gives us cute ways of exploding the compiler.
llvm-svn: 243243
to consider the storage size of the vector instead of its
sizeof. In other words, ban <3 x int> to <4 x int> casts,
which produced invalid IR anyway.
Also, attempt to be a little more rigorous, or at least
explicit, about when enums are allowed in these casts.
rdar://21901132
llvm-svn: 243069
-fapple-kext is an exception because calls will still go through
the vtable in that mode. Add a note to make the user aware of that.
PR: 23215
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10935
llvm-svn: 242246
If the variable is marked as private in OpenMP construct, the reference to this variable should not keep type qualifiers for the original variable. Private copy is not volatile or constant, so we can use unqualified type for private copy.
llvm-svn: 242133
The Objective-C common-type computation had a few problems that
required a significant rework, including:
- Quadradic behavior when finding the common base type; now it's
linear.
- Keeping around type arguments when computing the common type
between a specialized and an unspecialized type
- Introducing redundant protocol qualifiers.
Part of rdar://problem/6294649. Also fixes rdar://problem/19572837 by
addressing a longstanding bug in
ASTContext::CollectInheritedProtocols().
llvm-svn: 241544
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
Regular function calls (such as to cabs()) run into the same problem
with handling dependent exprs, not just builtins with custom type
checking.
Fixes PR23775.
llvm-svn: 240443
Currently if the variable is captured in captured region, capture record for this region stores reference to this variable for future use. But we don't need to provide the reference to the original variable if it was explicitly marked as private in the 'private' clause of the OpenMP construct, this variable is replaced by private copy.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9550
llvm-svn: 240377
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
Summary:
This modifies Clang to reflect that under pre-C99 ISO C, decimal
constants may have type `unsigned long` even if they do not contain `u`
or `U` in their suffix (C90 subclause 6.1.3.2 paragraph 5). The same is
done for C++ without C++11 which--because of undefined behaviour--allows
for behaviour compatible with ISO C90 in the case of an unsuffixed
decimal literal and is otherwise identical to C90 in its treatment of
integer literals (C++03 subclause 2.13.1 [lex.icon] paragraph 2).
Messages are added to the `c99-compat` and `c++11-compat` groups to warn
on such literals, since they behave differently under the newer
standards.
Fixes PR 16678.
Test Plan:
A new test file is added to exercise both pre-C99/C++11 and C99/C++11-up
on decimal literals with no suffix or suffixes `l`/`L` for both 32-bit
and 64-bit `long`.
In the file, 2^31 (being `INT_MAX+1`) is tested for the expected type
using `__typeof__` and multiple declarations of the same entity. 2^63
is similarly tested when it is within the range of `unsigned long`.
Preprocessor arithmetic tests are added to ensure consistency given
that Clang (like GCC) uses greater than 32 bits for preprocessor
arithmetic even when `long` and `unsigned long` is 32 bits and a
pre-C99/C++11 mode is in effect.
Tests added:
test/Sema/PR16678.c
Reviewers: fraggamuffin, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9794
llvm-svn: 239356
We catch most of the various other __fp16 implicit conversions to
float, but not this one:
__fp16 a;
int i;
...
a += i;
For which we used to generate something 'fun' like:
%conv = sitofp i32 %i to float
%1 = tail call i16 @llvm.convert.to.fp16.f32(float %conv)
%add = add i16 %0, %1
Instead, when we have an __fp16 LHS and an integer RHS, we should
use float as the result type.
While there, add a bunch of missing tests for mixed
__fp16/integer expressions.
llvm-svn: 238625
Add a check for bool-like conversions for the condition expression of
conditional operators. This is similiar to the checking of condition
expressions of if statements, for-loops, while-loops, and do-while loops.
Specificially, this is to fix the problem of assert("message") not triggering
-Wstring-conversion when the assert macro uses a conditional operator.
llvm-svn: 237856
Previously we were setting LangOptions::GNUInline (which controls whether we
use traditional GNU inline semantics) if the language did not have the C99
feature flag set. The trouble with this is that C++ family languages also
do not have that flag set, so we ended up setting this flag in C++ modes
(and working around it in a few places downstream by also checking CPlusPlus).
The fix is to check whether the C89 flag is set for the target language,
rather than whether the C99 flag is cleared. This also lets us remove most
CPlusPlus checks. We continue to test CPlusPlus when deciding whether to
pre-define the __GNUC_GNU_INLINE__ macro for consistency with GCC.
There is a change in semantics in two other places
where we weren't checking both CPlusPlus and GNUInline
(FunctionDecl::doesDeclarationForceExternallyVisibleDefinition and
FunctionDecl::isInlineDefinitionExternallyVisible), but this change seems to
put us back into line with GCC's semantics (test case: test/CodeGen/inline.c).
While at it, forbid -fgnu89-inline in C++ modes, as GCC doesn't support it,
it didn't have any effect before, and supporting it just makes things more
complicated.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9333
llvm-svn: 237299
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 try to perform checks on the captures from the middle of
parsing the lambda's body, at the point where we detected that a variable
needed to be captured. This was wrong in a number of subtle ways. In
PR23334, we couldn't correctly handle the list of potential odr-uses
resulting from the capture, and our attempt to recover from that resulted
in a use-after-free.
We now defer building the initialization expression until we leave the lambda
body and return to the enclosing context, where the initialization does the
right thing. This patch only covers lambda-expressions, but we should apply
the same change to blocks and captured statements too.
llvm-svn: 235921
"multiple methods named '<selector>' found" warning by noting
the method that is actualy used. It also cleans up and refactors
code in this area and selects a method that matches actual arguments
in case of receiver being a forward class object.
rdar://19265430
llvm-svn: 235023
Previously, many error messages would simply be "read-only variable is not
assignable" This change provides more information about why the variable is
not assignable, as well as note to where the const is located.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4479
llvm-svn: 234677
This warns when using decls that are not available on all deployment targets.
For example, a call to
- (void)ppartialMethod __attribute__((availability(macosx,introduced=10.8)));
will warn if -mmacosx-version-min is set to less than 10.8.
To silence the warning, one has to explicitly redeclare the method like so:
@interface Whatever(MountainLionAPI)
- (void)ppartialMethod;
@end
This way, one cannot accidentally call a function that isn't available
everywhere. Having to add the redeclaration will hopefully remind the user
to add an explicit respondsToSelector: call as well.
Some projects build against old SDKs to get this effect, but building against
old SDKs suppresses some bug fixes -- see http://crbug.com/463171 for examples.
The hope is that SDK headers are annotated well enough with availability
attributes that new SDK + this warning offers the same amount of protection
as using an old SDK.
llvm-svn: 232750
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
The original commit failed to handle "shift assign" (<<=), which
broke the test mentioned in r228406. This is now fixed and the
test added to the lit tests under SemaOpenCL.
*** Original commit message from r228382 ***
OpenCL: handle shift operator with vector operands
Introduce a number of checks:
1. If LHS is a scalar, then RHS cannot be a vector.
2. Operands must be of integer type.
3. If both are vectors, then the number of elements must match.
Relax the requirement for "usual arithmetic conversions":
When LHS is a vector, a scalar RHS can simply be expanded into a
vector; OpenCL does not require that its rank be lower than the LHS.
For example, the following code is not an error even if the implicit
type of the constant literal is "int".
char2 foo(char2 v) { return v << 1; }
Consolidate existing tests under CodeGenOpenCL, and add more tests
under SemaOpenCL.
llvm-svn: 230464
This reverts commit r228382.
This breaks the following case: Reported by Jeroen Ketema:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20150202/122961.html
typedef __attribute__((ext_vector_type(3))) char char3;
void foo() {
char3 v = {1,1,1};
char3 w = {1,2,3};
w <<= v;
}
If I compile with:
clang -x cl file.c
Then an error is produced:
file.c:10:5: error: expression is not assignable
w <<= v;
~ ^
1 error generated.
llvm-svn: 228406
Introduce a number of checks:
1. If LHS is a scalar, then RHS cannot be a vector.
2. Operands must be of integer type.
3. If both are vectors, then the number of elements must match.
Relax the requirement for "usual arithmetic conversions":
When LHS is a vector, a scalar RHS can simply be expanded into a
vector; OpenCL does not require that its rank be lower than the LHS.
For example, the following code is not an error even if the implicit
type of the constant literal is "int".
char2 foo(char2 v) { return v << 1; }
Consolidate existing tests under CodeGenOpenCL, and add more tests
under SemaOpenCL.
llvm-svn: 228382
When the condition is a vector, OpenCL specifies additional
requirements on the operand types, and also the operations
required to determine the result type of the operator. This is a
combination of OpenCL v1.1 s6.3.i and s6.11.6, and the semantics
remain unchanged in later versions of OpenCL.
llvm-svn: 228118
In OpenCL 1.2, using double no longer requires using the pragma cl_khr_fp64,
instead a kernel is allowed to use double, but must first have queried
clGetDeviceInfo's CL_DEVICE_DOUBLE_FP_CONFIG.
Page 197, section 6.1.1 of the OpenCL 1.2 specification has a footnote 23
describing this behaviour.
I've also added test cases such that the pragma must be used if targeting
OpenCL 1.0 or 1.1, but is ignored in 1.2 and 2.0.
Patch by Neil Henning!
Reviewers: Pekka Jääskeläinen
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7245
llvm-svn: 227565
infinite recursion.
Also guard against said infinite recursion by adding an assert that will
trigger if CorrectDelayedTyposInExpr is called before a previous call to
CorrectDelayedTyposInExpr returns (i.e. if the TreeTransform run by
CorrectDelayedTyposInExpr calls a sequence of methods that
end up calling CorrectDelayedTyposInExpr, as the new test case had done
prior to this commit). Fixes PR22292.
llvm-svn: 227368
Under certain circumstances, the identifier mentioned in the diagnostic
won't match the intended correction even though the replacement
expression and the note pointing to the decl are both correct.
Basically, the TreeTransform assumes the TypoExpr's Consumer points to
the correct TypoCorrection, but the handling of typos that appear to be
ambiguous from the point of view of TransformTypoExpr would cause that
assumption to be violated by altering the Consumer's correction stream.
This fix allows the Consumer's correction stream to be reset to the
right TypoCorrection after successfully resolving the percieved ambiguity.
Included is a fix to suppress correcting the RHS of an assignment to the
LHS of that assignment for non-C++ code, to prevent a regression in
test/SemaObjC/provisional-ivar-lookup.m.
This fixes PR22297.
llvm-svn: 227251
In particular, remove the OpaqueExpr transformation from r225389 and
move the correction of the conditional from CheckConditionalOperands to
ActOnConditionalOp before the OpaqueExpr is created. This fixes the
typo correction behavior in C code that uses the GNU extension for a
binary ?: (without an expression between the "?" and the ":").
llvm-svn: 227220
clang currently calls MarkVTableUsed() for classes that get their virtual
methods called or that participate in a dynamic_cast. This is unnecessary,
since CodeGen only emits vtables when it generates constructor, destructor, and
vtt code. (*)
Note that Sema::MarkVTableUsed() doesn't cause the emission of a vtable.
Its main user-visible effect is that it instantiates virtual member functions
of template classes, to make sure that if codegen decides to write a vtable
all the entries in the vtable are defined.
While this shouldn't change the behavior of codegen (other than being faster),
it does make clang more permissive: virtual methods of templates (in particular
destructors) end up being instantiated less often. In particular, classes that
have members that are smart pointers to incomplete types will now get their
implicit virtual destructor instantiated less frequently. For example, this
used to not compile but does now compile:
template <typename T> struct OwnPtr {
~OwnPtr() { static_assert((sizeof(T) > 0), "TypeMustBeComplete"); }
};
class ScriptLoader;
struct Base { virtual ~Base(); };
struct Sub : public Base {
virtual void someFun() const {}
OwnPtr<ScriptLoader> m_loader;
};
void f(Sub *s) { s->someFun(); }
The more permissive behavior matches both gcc (where this is not often
observable, since in practice most things with virtual methods have a key
function, and Sema::DefineUsedVTables() skips vtables for classes with key
functions) and cl (which is my motivation for this change) – this fixes
PR20337. See this issue and the review thread for some discussions about
optimizations.
This is similar to r213109 in spirit. r225761 was a prerequisite for this
change.
Various tests relied on "a->f()" marking a's vtable as used (in the sema
sense), switch these to just construct a on the stack. This forces
instantiation of the implicit constructor, which will mark the vtable as used.
(*) The exception is -fapple-kext mode: In this mode, qualified calls to
virtual functions (`a->Base::f()`) still go through the vtable, and since the
vtable pointer off this doesn't point to Base's vtable, this needs to reference
Base's vtable directly. To keep this working, keep referencing the vtable for
virtual calls in apple kext mode.
llvm-svn: 227073
-Wself-move is similiar to -Wself-assign. This warning is triggered when
a value is attempted to be moved to itself. See r221008 for a bug that
would have been caught with this warning.
llvm-svn: 225581
Parser::ParseNamespace can get a little confused when it found itself
inside a compound statement inside of a non-static data member
initializer.
Try to determine that the statement expression's scope makes sense
before trying to parse it's contents.
llvm-svn: 225514
In SemaCUDA all implicit functions were considered host device, this led to
errors such as the following code snippet failing to compile:
struct Copyable {
const Copyable& operator=(const Copyable& x) { return *this; }
};
struct Simple {
Copyable b;
};
void foo() {
Simple a, b;
a = b;
}
Above the implicit copy assignment operator was inferred as host device but
there was only a host assignment copy defined which is an error in device
compilation mode.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6565
llvm-svn: 224358
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
Currently, if global variable is marked as a private OpenMP variable, the compiler crashes in debug version or generates incorrect code in release version. It happens because in the OpenMP region the original global variable is used instead of the generated private copy. It happens because currently globals variables are not captured in the OpenMP region.
This patch adds capturing of global variables iff private copy of the global variable must be used in the OpenMP region.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6259
llvm-svn: 224323
Don't send a value dependent expression into the expression evaluator,
HandleSizeof would crash. Making HandleSizeof handle dependent types
would noisily warn about the operation even if everything turns out OK
after instantiation.
This fixes PR21848.
llvm-svn: 224240
OpenCL v2.0 s6.5.5 restricts conversion of pointers to different address spaces:
- the named address spaces (__global, __local, and __private) => __generic - implicitly converted;
- __generic => named - with an explicit cast;
- named <=> named - disallowed;
- __constant <=> any other - disallowed.
llvm-svn: 222834
Sema::ActOnIdExpression to use the new functionality.
Among other things, this allows recovery in several cases where it
wasn't possible before (e.g. correcting a mistyped static_cast<>).
llvm-svn: 222464
nonnull attribute when comparison is always true/false.
Original patch by Steven Wu. I have added extra code to prevent issuing of
warning when the nonnull parameter is modified prior to the comparison.
This addition prevents false positives in the most obvious cases.
There may still be false positive warnings in some cases (as one of my tests
indicates), but benefit far outweighs such cases. rdar://18712242
llvm-svn: 222264
Summary:
Ok, here is somewhat addition to D6217 aiming to preserve old darwin behavior wrt the typedefed types. The actual change to SemaChecking turned out to be pretty gross, in particular:
1. We need to extract the typedef'ed type for proper diagnostics
2. We need to walk over paren expressions as well
Reviewers: chandlerc, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6256
llvm-svn: 222044
Summary:
Consider the following nifty 1 liner: (0 ? csqrtl(2.0f) : sqrtl(2.0f)). One can easily obtain such code from e.g. tgmath. Right now it produces an assertion because we fail to do the promotion real => _Complex real.
The case was properly handled previously (old handleOtherComplexFloatConversion routine), but was forgotten in the current version. This seems to be about fallout from r219557
Reviewers: chandlerc, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6217
llvm-svn: 221821
code for calling CorrectTypo.
Includes a needed fix for non-C++ code to not choke on TypoExprs (which
also resolves a TODO from r220698).
llvm-svn: 221736
an __unknown_anytype(...). In this case, we rebuild the
vararg function type specially to convert the call expression
to something that IRGen can handle. However, FunctionDecl
as rebuilt in RebuildUnknownAnyExpr::resolveDecl is bogus and
results in crash when accessing its params later on. This
patch fixes the crash by rebuilding the FunctionDecl to match
its new resolved type. rdar://15297105.
(patch reapplied after lldb issue was fixed in r221660).
llvm-svn: 221691
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
an __unknown_anytype(...). In this case, we rebuild the
vararg function type specially to convert the call expression
to something that IRGen can handle. However, FunctionDecl
as rebuilt in RebuildUnknownAnyExpr::resolveDecl is bogus and
results in crash when accessing its params later on. This
patch fixes the crash by rebuilding the FunctionDecl to match
its new resolved type. rdar://15297105.
John McCall, please review post-commit.
llvm-svn: 221404
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
Part of the infrastructure is a map from a TypoExpr to the Sema-specific
state needed to correct it, along with helpers to ease dealing with the
state.
The the typo count is propagated up the stack of
ExpressionEvaluationContextRecords when one is popped off of to
avoid accidentally dropping TypoExprs on the floor. For example,
the attempted correction of g() in test/CXX/class/class.mem/p5-0x.cpp
happens with an ExpressionEvaluationContextRecord that is popped off
the stack prior to ActOnFinishFullExpr being called and the tree
transform for TypoExprs being run.
llvm-svn: 220695
Previously loop hints such as #pragma loop vectorize_width(#) required a constant. This patch allows a constant expression to be used as well. Such as a non-type template parameter or an expression (2 * c + 1).
Reviewed by Richard Smith
llvm-svn: 219589
operators where one type is a C complex type, and to emit both the
efficient and correct implementation for complex arithmetic according to
C11 Annex G using this extra information.
For both multiply and divide the old code was writing a long-hand
reduced version of the math without any of the special handling of inf
and NaN recommended by the standard here. Instead of putting more
complexity here, this change does what GCC does which is to emit
a libcall for the fully general case.
However, the old code also failed to do the proper minimization of the
set of operations when there was a mixed complex and real operation. In
those cases, C provides a spec for much more minimal operations that are
valid. Clang now emits the exact suggested operations. This change isn't
*just* about performance though, without minimizing these operations, we
again lose the correct handling of infinities and NaNs. It is critical
that this happen in the frontend based on assymetric type operands to
complex math operations.
The performance implications of this change aren't trivial either. I've
run a set of benchmarks in Eigen, an open source mathematics library
that makes heavy use of complex. While a few have slowed down due to the
libcall being introduce, most sped up and some by a huge amount: up to
100% and 140%.
In order to make all of this work, also match the algorithm in the
constant evaluator to the one in the runtime library. Currently it is
a broken port of the simplifications from C's Annex G to the long-hand
formulation of the algorithm.
Splitting this patch up is very hard because none of this works without
the AST change to preserve non-complex operands. Sorry for the enormous
change.
Follow-up changes will include support for sinking the libcalls onto
cold paths in common cases and fastmath improvements to allow more
aggressive backend folding.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5698
llvm-svn: 219557
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
Clang warns (treated as error by default, but still ignored in system headers)
when passing non-POD arguments to variadic functions, and generates a trap
instruction to crash the program if that code is ever run.
Unfortunately, MSVC happily generates code for such calls without a warning,
and there is code in system headers that use it.
This makes Clang not insert the trap instruction when in -fms-compatibility
mode, while still generating the warning/error message.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5492
llvm-svn: 218640
that function, and apart from being slow, this is unnecessary: ADL can trigger
instantiations that are not permitted here. The standard isn't *completely*
clear here, but this seems like the intent, and in any case this approach is
permitted by [temp.inst]p7.
llvm-svn: 218330
We would end up marking the vtable of the derived class as used for no
reason. Because the call itself is qualified, it is never virtual, and
the vtable of the derived class isn't helpful. We would end up rejecting
code that MSVC accepts for no benefit.
See http://crbug.com/413478
llvm-svn: 217910
In line with SemaOpenMP.cpp, etc. CUDA-specific semantic analysis code goes into
a separate file. This is in anticipation of adding extra functionality here in
the near future.
No change in functionality.
Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5160
llvm-svn: 217043
In C++11, instantiation of exception specs is deferred. The instantiation is
done in MarkFunctionReferenced(), which wasn't called for non-OdrUsed functions,
which then caused an assert in codegen. Fixes PR19190, see the bug for details.
llvm-svn: 216562
Changes diagnostic options, language standard options, diagnostic identifiers, diagnostic wording to use c++14 instead of c++1y. It also modifies related test cases to use the updated diagnostic wording.
llvm-svn: 215982
Clang forgot that '++s.m' was a bitfield l-value and permit it's address
to be taken; this would crash at CodeGen-time.
Instead, propagate the object-kind when we see the prefix
increment/decrement.
This fixes PR20496.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4733
llvm-svn: 214386
ExtWarn/Warnings. Mostly the name of the warning was changed to match the
semantics, but in the PR20356 cases, the warning was about valid code, so the
diagnostic was changed from ExtWarn to Warning instead.
llvm-svn: 213443
This fixes compilation errors about incomplete types used with WebKit's
RefPtr template. Simply calling an out of line constructor should not
instantiate all inline and defaulted virtual methods.
Tested by building and testing several big piles of code on Linux.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4429
llvm-svn: 213109
MSVC accepts __noop without any trailing parens and treats it like a
literal zero. We don't treat __noop as an integer literal, but now at
least we can parse a naked __noop expression.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4476
llvm-svn: 212860
when casting a retainable object to a objc_bridge_related
CF type with the suggestion of applying the method
specified in the bridging attribute to the object.
// rdar://15932435
llvm-svn: 211807
Something went wrong with r211426, it is an older version of this code
and should not have been committed. It was reverted with r211434.
Original commit message:
We didn't properly implement support for the sized integer suffixes.
Suffixes like i16 were essentially ignored instead of mapping them to
the appropriately sized integer type.
This fixes PR20008.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4132
llvm-svn: 211441
This reverts commit r211426.
This broke the arm bots. The crash can be reproduced on X86 by running.
./bin/clang -cc1 -fsyntax-only -verify -fms-extensions ~/llvm/clang/test/Lexer/ms-extensions.c -triple arm-linux
llvm-svn: 211434
We didn't properly implement support for the sized integer suffixes.
Suffixes like i16 were essentially ignored instead of mapping them to
the appropriately sized integer type.
This fixes PR20008.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4132
llvm-svn: 211426
a qualified-id type because pointer is object of a forward
class declaration, include this info in a diagnostic note.
// rdar://10751015
llvm-svn: 211324
retainable ObjC pointers without requiring a bridge-cast
in the context of pointer comparison as this is in effect
a +0 context. // rdar://16627903
llvm-svn: 211243
The compilation pipeline doesn't actually need to know about the high-level
concept of diagnostic mappings, and hiding the final computed level presents
several simplifications and other potential benefits.
The only exceptions are opportunistic checks to see whether expensive code
paths can be avoided for diagnostics that are guaranteed to be ignored at a
certain SourceLocation.
This commit formalizes that invariant by introducing and using
DiagnosticsEngine::isIgnored() in place of individual level checks throughout
lex, parse and sema.
llvm-svn: 211005
Summary:
'sizeof' is a UnaryExprOrTypeTrait, and it can contain either a type or
an expression. This change threads a RecoveryTSI parameter through the
layers between TransformUnaryExprOrTypeTrait the point at which we look
up the type. If lookup finds a single type result after instantiation,
we now build TypeSourceInfo for it just like a normal transformation
would.
This fixes the last error in the hello world ATL app that I've been
working with, and it now links and runs with clang. Please try it and
file bugs!
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4108
llvm-svn: 210855
We currently allow unqualified lookup for instance methods but not
static methods because we can't recover with a semantic 'this->'
insertion.
ATL headers have static methods that do unqualified lookup into
dependent base classes. The pattern looks like:
template <typename T> struct Foo : T {
static int *getBarFromT() { return Bar; }
};
Now we recover as if the user had written:
template <typename T> struct Foo : T {
static int *getBarFromT() { return Foo::Bar; }
};
... which will eventually look up Bar in T at instantiation time.
Now we emit a diagnostic in both cases, and delay lookup in other
contexts where 'this' is available and refers to a class with dependent
bases.
Reviewed by: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4079
llvm-svn: 210611
expression of array-of-unknown-bound type, don't try to complete the array
bound, and return the alignment of the element type rather than 1.
llvm-svn: 210608
While matching a non-type template argument against a known template
type parameter we now modify the AST's TemplateArgumentLoc to assume the
user wrote typename. Under -fms-compatibility, we downgrade our
diagnostic from an error to an extwarn.
Reviewed by: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4049
llvm-svn: 210607
This implements the central part of support for dllimport/dllexport on
classes: allowing the attribute on class declarations, inheriting it
to class members, and forcing emission of exported members. It's based
on Nico Rieck's patch from http://reviews.llvm.org/D1099.
This patch doesn't propagate dllexport to bases that are template
specializations, which is an interesting problem. It also doesn't
look at the rules when redeclaring classes with different attributes,
I'd like to do that separately.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3877
llvm-svn: 209908
These note diags have the same message and can be unified further but for now
let's just bring them together.
Incidental change: Display a source range in the final attr diagnostic.
llvm-svn: 209728
caused us to perform copy-initialization for the parameters of an allocation
function called by a new-expression multiple times, resulting in us rejecting
allocations that passed non-copyable parameters (and much worse things in
MSVC compat mode, where we potentially called this function multiple times).
llvm-svn: 208724
This lets us diagnose and perform more complete semantic analysis when faced
with errors in the function body or declaration.
By recovering here we provide more consistent diagnostics, particularly during
interactive editing.
llvm-svn: 208394
C++. This seems like a pointless (and indeed harmful) restriction to me, so
I've suggested removing it to -core and disabled this diagnostic by default.
llvm-svn: 208254
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
Libraries specify enabled/disabled features using macro defs of 0/1, in such cases the -Wconstant-logical-operand
is noise.
rdar://15410291
llvm-svn: 207386
It is very similar to GCC's __PRETTY_FUNCTION__, except it prints the
calling convention.
Reviewers: majnemer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3311
llvm-svn: 205780
obviously won't work. Specifically, don't suggest methods (static or
not) from unrelated classes when the expression is a method call
through a specific object.
llvm-svn: 205653
(for an integer too large for any signed type) from Warning to ExtWarn -- it's
ill-formed in C++11 and C99 onwards, and UB during translation in C89 and
C++98. Add diagnostic groups for two relevant diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 203974
getTypeSize (which rounds up sizes) in order to issue diagnostics
when casting to mismatched vector sizes; instead of crashing in IRGen.
// rdar:// 16196902. Reviewed offline by John McCall.
llvm-svn: 203175
const char *format = "%s";
std::experimental::string_view view = "foo";
printf(format, view);
In this case, not only warn about a class type being used here, but also suggest that calling c_str() might be a good idea.
llvm-svn: 202461
null comparison when the pointer is known to be non-null.
This catches the array to pointer decay, function to pointer decay and
address of variables. This does not catch address of function since this
has been previously used to silence a warning.
Pointer to bool conversion is under -Wbool-conversion.
Pointer to null comparison is under -Wtautological-pointer-compare, a sub-group
of -Wtautological-compare.
void foo() {
int arr[5];
int x;
// warn on these conditionals
if (foo);
if (arr);
if (&x);
if (foo == null);
if (arr == null);
if (&x == null);
if (&foo); // no warning
}
llvm-svn: 202216
When a lax conversion featured a vector and a non-vector, we were
only requiring the non-vector to be a scalar type, but really it
needs to be a real type (i.e. integral or real floating); it is
not reasonable to allow a pointer, member pointer, or complex
type here.
r198474 required lax conversions to match in "data size", i.e.
element size * element count, forbidding matches that happen
only because a vector is rounded up to the nearest power of two
in size. Unfortunately, the erroneous logic was repeated in
several different places; unify them to use the new condition,
so that it triggers for arbitrary conversions and not just
those performed as part of binary operator checking.
rdar://15931426
llvm-svn: 200810
case when correcting for too many arguments (r191450 had only fixed the
problem for when there were too few arguments). Also fix the underlining
for both cases.
llvm-svn: 200268
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
the program, in C++. (We allow the latter as an extension, since we've always
permitted it, and GCC does the same, and our supported C++ ABIs don't do
anything special in main.)
llvm-svn: 199782
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
This reverts commit r199475 (which reverted r199416) with fixes for the
breakages.
We wouldn't lock an inheritance model if we saw a pointer-to-member
formed as a result of the address-of operator.
llvm-svn: 199482
There's been long-standing confusion over the role of these two options. This
commit makes the necessary changes to differentiate them clearly, following up
from r198936.
MicrosoftExt (aka. fms-extensions):
Enable largely unobjectionable Microsoft language extensions to ease
portability. This mode, also supported by gcc, is used for building software
like FreeBSD and Linux kernel extensions that share code with Windows drivers.
MSVCCompat (aka. -fms-compatibility, formerly MicrosoftMode):
Turn on a special mode supporting 'heinous' extensions for drop-in
compatibility with the Microsoft Visual C++ product. Standards-compilant C and
C++ code isn't guaranteed to work in this mode. Implies MicrosoftExt.
Note that full -fms-compatibility mode is currently enabled by default on the
Windows target, which may need tuning to serve as a reasonable default.
See cfe-commits for the full discourse, thread 'r198497 - Move MS predefined
type_info out of InitializePredefinedMacros'
No change in behaviour.
llvm-svn: 199209
consideration the num-of-elements*width-of-element width.
Disallow casts when such width is not equal between the vector types otherwise
we may end up with an invalid LLVM bitcast.
rdar://15722308.
llvm-svn: 198474
- 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
Fixes <rdar://problem/15584219> and <rdar://problem/12241361>.
This change looks large, but all it does is reuse and consolidate
the delayed diagnostic logic for deprecation warnings with unavailability
warnings. By doing so, it showed various inconsistencies between the
diagnostics, which were close, but not consistent. It also revealed
some missing "note:"'s in the deprecated diagnostics that were showing
up in the unavailable diagnostics, etc.
This change also changes the wording of the core deprecation diagnostics.
Instead of saying "function has been explicitly marked deprecated"
we now saw "'X' has been been explicitly marked deprecated". It
turns out providing a bit more context is useful, and often we
got the actual term wrong or it was not very precise
(e.g., "function" instead of "destructor"). By just saying the name
of the thing that is deprecated/deleted/unavailable we define
this issue away. This diagnostic can likely be further wordsmithed
to be shorter.
llvm-svn: 197627
The problem here is more serious than the fix implies. Adding a field
to a class updates the triviality bits for the class (among other
things). Failing to require a complete type before adding the field
meant that these updates don't happen in the well-formed case where
the capture is an uninstantiated class template specialization,
leading the lambda itself to be treated as having a trivial copy
constructor when it shouldn't. Fixes <rdar://problem/15560464>.
llvm-svn: 197623
cstring, converted to NSString, produce the
matching AST for it. This also required some
refactoring of the previous code. // rdar://14106083
llvm-svn: 197605
of objc_bridge_related attribute; eliminate
unnecessary diagnostics which is issued elsewhere,
fixit now produces a valid AST tree per convention.
This results in some simplification in handling of
this attribute as well. // rdar://15499111
llvm-svn: 197436
With the introduction of explicit address space casts into LLVM, there's
a need to provide a new cast kind the front-end can create for C/OpenCL/CUDA
and code to produce address space casts from those kinds when appropriate.
Patch by Michele Scandale!
llvm-svn: 197036
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
attribute in sema and issuing a variety of diagnostics lazily
for misuse of this attribute (and what to do) when converting
from CF types to ObjectiveC types (and vice versa).
// rdar://15499111
llvm-svn: 196629
For an init capture, process the initialization expression
right away. For lambda init-captures such as the following:
const int x = 10;
auto L = [i = x+1](int a) {
return [j = x+2,
&k = x](char b) { };
};
keep in mind that each lambda init-capture has to have:
- its initialization expression executed in the context
of the enclosing/parent decl-context.
- but the variable itself has to be 'injected' into the
decl-context of its lambda's call-operator (which has
not yet been created).
Each init-expression is a full-expression that has to get
Sema-analyzed (for capturing etc.) before its lambda's
call-operator's decl-context, scope & scopeinfo are pushed on their
respective stacks. Thus if any variable is odr-used in the init-capture
it will correctly get captured in the enclosing lambda, if one exists.
The init-variables above are created later once the lambdascope and
call-operators decl-context is pushed onto its respective stack.
Since the lambda init-capture's initializer expression occurs in the
context of the enclosing function or lambda, therefore we can not wait
till a lambda scope has been pushed on before deciding whether the
variable needs to be captured. We also need to process all
lvalue-to-rvalue conversions and discarded-value conversions,
so that we can avoid capturing certain constant variables.
For e.g.,
void test() {
const int x = 10;
auto L = [&z = x](char a) { <-- don't capture by the current lambda
return [y = x](int i) { <-- don't capture by enclosing lambda
return y;
}
};
If x was not const, the second use would require 'L' to capture, and
that would be an error.
Make sure TranformLambdaExpr is also aware of this.
Patch approved by Richard (Thanks!!)
http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2092
llvm-svn: 196454
- If a deprecated class refers to another deprecated class, do not warn.
- @implementations of a deprecated class can refer to other deprecated things.
Fixes <rdar://problem/15407366> and <rdar://problem/15466783>.
llvm-svn: 195259
Both Richard and I felt that the current wording in the working paper needed some tweaking - Please see http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2035 for additional context and references to core-reflector messages that discuss wording tweaks.
What is implemented is what we had intended to specify in Bristol; but, recently felt that the specification might benefit from some tweaking and fleshing.
As a rough attempt to explain the semantics: If a nested lambda with a default-capture names a variable within its body, and if the enclosing full expression that contains the name of that variable is instantiation-dependent - then an enclosing lambda that is capture-ready (i.e. within a non-dependent context) must capture that variable, if all intervening nested lambdas can potentially capture that variable if they need to, and all intervening parent lambdas of the capture-ready lambda can and do capture the variable.
Of note, 'this' capturing is also currently underspecified in the working paper for generic lambdas. What is implemented here is if the set of candidate functions in a nested generic lambda includes both static and non-static member functions (regardless of viability checking - i.e. num and type of parameters/arguments) - and if all intervening nested-inner lambdas between the capture-ready lambda and the function-call containing nested lambda can capture 'this' and if all enclosing lambdas of the capture-ready lambda can capture 'this', then 'this' is speculatively captured by that capture-ready lambda.
Hopefully a paper for the C++ committee (that Richard and I had started some preliminary work on) is forthcoming.
This essentially makes generic lambdas feature complete, except for known bugs. The more prominent ones (and the ones I am currently aware of) being:
- generic lambdas and init-captures are broken - but a patch that fixes this is already in the works ...
- nested variadic expansions such as:
auto K = [](auto ... OuterArgs) {
vp([=](auto ... Is) {
decltype(OuterArgs) OA = OuterArgs;
return 0;
}(5)...);
return 0;
};
auto M = K('a', ' ', 1, " -- ", 3.14);
currently cause crashes. I think I know how to fix this (since I had done so in my initial implementation) - but it will probably take some work and back & forth with Doug and Richard.
A warm thanks to all who provided feedback - and especially to Doug Gregor and Richard Smith for their pivotal guidance: their insight and prestidigitation in such matters is boundless!
Now let's hope this commit doesn't upset the buildbot gods ;)
Thanks!
llvm-svn: 194188
Summary:
Similar to __FUNCTION__, MSVC exposes the name of the enclosing mangled
function name via __FUNCDNAME__. This implementation is very naive and
unoptimized, it is expected that __FUNCDNAME__ would be used rarely in
practice.
Reviewers: rnk, rsmith, thakis
CC: cfe-commits, silvas
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2109
llvm-svn: 194181
-fobjc-subscripting-legacy-runtime which is off
by default and on only when using ObjectiveC
legacy runtime. Use this flag to allow
array and dictionary subscripting and disallow
objectiveC pointer arithmatic in ObjectiveC
legacy runtime. // rdar://15363492
llvm-svn: 193889
Specifically, this warns when a character literal is added (using '+') to a
variable with type 'char *' (or any other pointer to character type). Like
-Wstring-plus-int, there is a fix-it to change "foo + 'a'" to "&foo['a']"
iff the character literal is on the right side of the string.
Patch by Anders Rönnholm!
llvm-svn: 193418
Commit r191484 treated constexpr function templates as normal function
templates with respect to delaying their parsing. However, this is
unnecessarily restrictive because there is no compatibility concern with
constexpr, MSVC doesn't support it.
Instead, simply disable delayed template parsing for constexpr function
templates. This largely reverts the changes made in r191484 but keeps
it's unit test.
This fixes PR17661.
llvm-svn: 193274
If unqualified id lookup fails while parsing a class template with a
dependent base, clang with -fms-compatibility will pretend the user
prefixed the name with 'this->' in order to delay the lookup. However,
if there was a unary ampersand, Sema::ActOnDependentIdExpression() will
create a DependentDeclRefExpr, which is not what we wanted at all. Fix
this by building the CXXDependentScopeMemberExpr directly instead.
In order to be fully MSVC compatible, we would have to defer all
attempts at name lookup to instantiation time. However, until we have
real problems with system headers that can't be parsed, we'll put off
implementing that.
Fixes PR16014.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1892
llvm-svn: 192727
The bool conversion operator on InstantiatingTemplate never added value and
only served to obfuscate the template instantiation routines.
This replaces the conversion and its callers with an explicit isInvalid()
function to make it clear what's going on at a glance.
llvm-svn: 192177
extension. The GCC folks have decided to support this even though the standard
committee have not yet approved this feature.
Patch by Hristo Venev!
llvm-svn: 192128
In chicago, Doug had requested that I go ahead and commit the refactor as a separate change, if all the tests passed.
Lets hope the buildbots stay quiet.
Thanks!
llvm-svn: 192087
Currently, IR generation can't handle file-scope compound literals with
non-constant initializers in C++.
Fixes PR17415 (the first crash in the bug).
(We should probably change (T){1,2,3} to use the same codepath as T{1,2,3} in
C++ eventually, given that the semantics of the latter are actually defined by
the standard.)
llvm-svn: 191719
putting them in the call operator's DeclContext. This better matches the
language wording and avoids some cases where code gets confused by them for
namespace-scope lambdas and the like.
llvm-svn: 191606
Functions declared as constexpr must have their parsing delayed in
-fdelayed-template-parsing mode so as not to upset later template
instantiation.
N.B. My reading of the standard makes it seem like delayed template
parsing is at odds with constexpr. We may want to make refinements in
other places in clang to make constexpr play nicer with this feature.
This fixes PR17334.
llvm-svn: 191484
I noticed the wrong text was being replaced with the correction while
working on expanding the "namespace-aware" typo correction to include
classes.
llvm-svn: 191450
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:
- lambdas, blocks or captured statements in templates were not
handled which causes codegen crashes.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1628
llvm-svn: 190784
This expands very slightly what -Wtautological-compare considers to be
tautological to include implicit accesses to C++ fields and ObjC ivars.
I don't want to turn this into a full expression-identity check, but
these additions seem pretty well-contained, and maintain the theme
of checking for "x == x".
<rdar://problem/14431127>
llvm-svn: 190118
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
- __func__ or __FUNCTION__ returns captured statement's parent
function name, not the one compiler generated.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1491
Reviewed by bkramer
llvm-svn: 189219
Basically, isInMainFile considers line markers, and isWrittenInMainFile
doesn't. Distinguishing between the two is useful when dealing with
files which are preprocessed files or rewritten with -frewrite-includes
(so we don't, for example, print useless warnings).
llvm-svn: 188968
1. We now print the return type of lambdas and return type deduced functions
as "auto". Trailing return types with decltype print the underlying type.
2. Use the lambda or block scope for the PredefinedExpr type instead of the
parent function. This fixes PR16946, a strange mismatch between type of the
expression and the actual result.
3. Verify the type in CodeGen.
4. The type for blocks is still wrong. They are numbered and the name is not
known until CodeGen.
llvm-svn: 188900
function: it can't be 'void' and it can't be an initializer list. We give a
hard error for these rather than treating them as undefined behavior (we can
and probably should do the same for non-POD types in C++11, but as of this
change we don't).
Slightly rework the checking of variadic arguments in a function with a format
attribute to ensure that certain kinds of format string problem (non-literal
string, too many/too few arguments, ...) don't suppress this error.
llvm-svn: 187735
Sema::PerformObjectMemberConversion assumed that the Qualifier it was
given holds a type. However, the specifier could hold just a namespace.
In this case, we should ignore the qualifier and not attempt to cast to
it.
llvm-svn: 187715
passing a retainable object arg to a CF audited function
expecting a CF object type. Issue a normal type mismatch
diagnostic. This is wip // rdar://14569171
llvm-svn: 187532
It turns out that Plum Hall depends on us not emitting an error on
integer literals which fit into long long, but fit into
unsigned long long. So C99 conformance requires not conforming to C99. :)
llvm-svn: 187172
Switch some warnings over to errors which should never have been warnings
in the first place. (Also, a minor fix to the preprocessor rules for
integer literals while I'm here.)
llvm-svn: 186903
getLocForEndOfToken() isn't guaranteed to succeed; if it doesn't, make sure
we do something sane.
Fixes PR16673. I'm not sure how to write a testcase for this short of grepping
through the diagnostic output.
llvm-svn: 186889
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
Sema needs to be able to accurately determine what will be
emitted as a constant initializer and what will not, so
we get accurate errors in C and accurate -Wglobal-constructors
warnings in C++. This makes Expr::isConstantInitializer match
CGExprConstant as closely as possible.
llvm-svn: 186464
Combined with typo correction's new ability to apply global/absolute nested
name specifiers to possible corrections, cases such as in PR12287 where the
desired function is being shadowed by a lexically closer function with the
same name but a different number of parameters will now include a FixIt.
On a side note, since the test for this change caused
test/SemaCXX/typo-correction.cpp to exceed the typo correction limit for
a single file, I've included a test case for exceeding the limit and added
some comments to both the original and part two of typo-correction.cpp
warning future editors of the files about the limit.
llvm-svn: 185881
Use UsualArithmeticConversions unconditionally in analysis of
comparisons and conditional operators: the method performs
the usual arithmetic conversions if both sides are arithmetic, and
usual unary conversions if they are not. This is just a cleanup
for conditional operators; for comparisons, it fixes the issue that
we would try to check isArithmetic() on an atomic type.
Also, fix GetExprRange() in SemaChecking.cpp so it deals with variables
of atomic type correctly.
Fixes PR15537.
llvm-svn: 185857
The removal is tried by retrying the failed lookup of a correction
candidate with either the MemberContext or SS (CXXScopeSpecifier) or
both set to NULL if they weren't already. If the candidate identifier
is then looked up successfully, make a note in the candidate that the
SourceRange should include any existing nested name specifier even if
the candidate isn't adding a different one (i.e. the candidate has a
NULL NestedNameSpecifier).
Also tweak the diagnostic messages to differentiate between a suggestion
that just replaces the identifer but leaves the existing nested name
specifier intact and one that replaces the entire qualified identifier,
in cases where the suggested replacement is unqualified.
llvm-svn: 185487
Blocks, like lambdas, can be written in contexts which are required to be
treated as the same under ODR. Unlike lambdas, it isn't possible to actually
take the address of a block, so the mangling of the block itself doesn't
matter. However, objects like static variables inside a block do need to
be mangled in a consistent way.
There are basically three components here. One, block literals need a
consistent numbering. Two, objects/types inside a block literal need
to be mangled using it. Three, objects/types inside a block literal need
to have their linkage computed correctly.
llvm-svn: 185372
passing arguments in the fixed style.
We have an abstraction for deciding this, but it's (1) deep in
IR-generation, (2) necessarily tied to exact argument lists, and
(3) triggered by unprototyped function types, which we can't
legitimately make in C++ mode. So this solution, wherein Sema
rewrites the function type to an exact prototype but leaves the
variadic bit enabled so as to request x86-64-like platforms to
pass the extra variadic info, is very much a hack, but it's one
that works in practice on the platforms that LLDB will support
in the medium term --- the only place we know of where it's a
problem is instance methods in Windows, where variadic functions
are implicitly cdecl. We may have a more abstracted base on which
to build a solution by then.
rdar://13731520
llvm-svn: 185112
As noted by Richard in the post:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20130624/082605.html, the following code should not add an entry
into PendingLocalImplicitInstantiations, since local instantiations
should only occur within the context of other instantiations:
int foo(double y) {
struct Lambda {
template<class T> T operator()(T t) const { return t; };
} lambda;
return lambda(y);
}
Hence the attached code does the following:
1) In MarkFunctionReferenced, check if ActiveInstantiations.size()
is non-zero before adding to PendingLocalImplicitInstantiations.
2) In InstantiateFunctionDefinition, we swap out/in
PendingLocalImplicitInstantiations so that only those
pending local instantiations that are added during the instantiation
of the current function are instantiated recursively.
llvm-svn: 184903
-performSelector: and friends return a value that is boxed as an Objective-C
pointer. Sometimes it is an Objective-C pointer, sometimes it isn't.
Some clients may wish to silence this warning based on calling
this method.
Fixes <rdar://problem/14147304>
llvm-svn: 184789
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
Previously, it only ever fired for zeros which formed null pointers.
Now, hilariously, in C++98 this was almost anything. Including tricks
like warning on the divisor in this code:
typedef char c3[3];
size_t f(c3* ptr) {
return (sizeof(ptr) / sizeof(*ptr)) / (size_t)(!(sizeof(ptr) % sizeof(*ptr)));
}
Why the RHS of the outer divide is a null pointer constant is a sordid
tale of sorrow. Anyways, the committee fixed this for C++11 and onward
as part of core isssue 903, and Richard recently implemented this fix
causing the warning to go away here (and elsewhere).
This patch restores the warning here and adds it for numerous other
somewhat obvious gaffes:
int g(int x) {
return x / (int)(0.0);
}
The patch is essentially just using the full power of our constant
folding in Clang to produce the warning, but insisting that it must fold
to an *integer* which is zero so that we don't get false positives
anywhere.
llvm-svn: 183970
This warning triggers on the logical not of a non-boolean expression on the
left hand side of comparison. Often, the user meant to negate the comparison,
not just the left hand side of the comparison. Two notes are also emitted,
the first with a fix-it to add parentheses around the comparison, and the other
to put parenthesis around the not expression to silence the warning.
bool not_equal(int x, int y) {
return !x == y; // warn here
}
return !(x == y); // first fix-it, to negate comparison.
return (!x) == y; // second fix-it, to silence warning.
llvm-svn: 183688
is evaluated in a condition expression and then
dereferenced to envoke the block. This is
pr15663 and I applied a slight variation of the
patch with a test case. (patch is from
Arthur O'Dwyer). Also // rdar://14085217
llvm-svn: 183471
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
common function. The C++1y contextual implicit conversion rules themselves are
not yet implemented, however.
This also fixes a subtle bug where template instantiation context notes were
dropped for diagnostics coming from conversions for integral constant
expressions -- we were implicitly slicing a SemaDiagnosticBuilder into a
DiagnosticBuilder when producing these diagnostics, and losing their context
notes in the process.
llvm-svn: 182406
is used for Objective-C++’s dictionary subscripting. This is done by filtering
out all placeholder types before check on lowering of the
common expression is done. // rdar://1374918.
Reviewed by John McCall.
llvm-svn: 182120
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
The most common (non-buggy) case are where such objects are used as
return expressions in bool-returning functions or as boolean function
arguments. In those cases I've used (& added if necessary) a named
function to provide the equivalent (or sometimes negative, depending on
convenient wording) test.
DiagnosticBuilder kept its implicit conversion operator owing to the
prevalent use of it in return statements.
One bug was found in ExprConstant.cpp involving a comparison of two
PointerUnions (PointerUnion did not previously have an operator==, so
instead both operands were converted to bool & then compared). A test
is included in test/SemaCXX/constant-expression-cxx1y.cpp for the fix
(adding operator== to PointerUnion in LLVM).
llvm-svn: 181869
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
MSVC provides __wchar_t. This is the same as the built-in wchar_t type
from C++, but it is also available with -fno-wchar and in C.
The commit changes ASTContext to have two different types for this:
- WCharTy is the built-in type used for wchar_t in C++ and __wchar_t.
- WideCharTy is the type of a wide character literal. In C++ this is
the same as WCharTy, and in C it is an integer type compatible with
the type in <stddef.h>.
This fixes PR15815.
llvm-svn: 181587
EmitCapturedStmt creates a captured struct containing all of the captured
variables, and then emits a call to the outlined function. This is similar in
principle to EmitBlockLiteral.
GenerateCapturedFunction actually produces the outlined function. It is based
on GenerateBlockFunction, but is much simpler. The function type is determined
by the parameters that are in the CapturedDecl.
Some changes have been added to this patch that were reviewed as part of the
serialization patch and moving the parameters to the captured decl.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D640
llvm-svn: 181536
- References to ObjC bit-field ivars are bit-field lvalues;
fixes rdar://13794269, which got me started down this.
- Introduce Expr::refersToBitField, switch a couple users to
it where semantically important, and comment the difference
between this and the existing API.
- Discourage Expr::getBitField by making it a bit longer and
less general-sounding.
- Lock down on const_casts of bit-field gl-values until we
hear back from the committee as to whether they're allowed.
llvm-svn: 181252
Previously, this compound literal expression (a GNU extension in C++):
(AggregateWithDtor){1, 2}
resulted in this AST:
`-CXXBindTemporaryExpr [...] 'struct Point' (CXXTemporary [...])
`-CompoundLiteralExpr [...] 'struct AggregateWithDtor'
`-CXXBindTemporaryExpr [...] 'struct AggregateWithDtor' (CXXTemporary [...])
`-InitListExpr [...] 'struct AggregateWithDtor'
|-IntegerLiteral [...] 'int' 1
`-IntegerLiteral [...] 'int' 2
Note the two CXXBindTemporaryExprs. The InitListExpr is really part of the
CompoundLiteralExpr, not an object in its own right. By introducing a new
entity initialization kind in Sema specifically for compound literals, we
avoid the treatment of the inner InitListExpr as a temporary.
`-CXXBindTemporaryExpr [...] 'struct Point' (CXXTemporary [...])
`-CompoundLiteralExpr [...] 'struct AggregateWithDtor'
`-InitListExpr [...] 'struct AggregateWithDtor'
|-IntegerLiteral [...] 'int' 1
`-IntegerLiteral [...] 'int' 2
llvm-svn: 181212
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
temporary to an lvalue before taking its address. This removes a weird special
case from the AST representation, and allows the constant expression evaluator
to deal with it without (broken) hacks.
llvm-svn: 180866
a dependent-scope id expression when a templated member function of a
non-templated class references an unknown identifier, since instantiation won't
rebuild it (and we can tell at parse time that it'll never work). Based on a
patch by Faisal Vali!
llvm-svn: 180701
will fire on code such as:
cout << x == 0;
which the compiler will intrepret as
(cout << x) == 0;
This warning comes with two fixits attached to notes, one for parentheses to
silence the warning, and another to evaluate the comparison first.
llvm-svn: 179662
Add CapturedDecl to be the DeclContext for CapturedStmt, and perform semantic
analysis. Currently captures all variables by reference.
TODO: templates
Author: Ben Langmuir <ben.langmuir@intel.com>
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D433
llvm-svn: 179618
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x86_64-darwin10-gdb went back green
before it processed the reverted 178663, so it could not have been the culprit.
Revert "Revert 178663."
This reverts commit 4f8a3eb2ce5d4ba422483439e20c8cbb4d953a41.
llvm-svn: 178682
For variables and functions clang used to store two storage classes. The one
"as written" in the code and a patched one, which, for example, propagates
static to the following decls.
This apparently is from the days clang lacked linkage computation. It is now
redundant and this patch removes it.
llvm-svn: 178663
variable in a C99 inline (but not static-inline or extern-inline)
function definition.
The standard doesn't actually say that this doesn't apply to
"extern inline" definitions, but that seems like a useful extension,
and it at least doesn't have the obvious flaw that a static
mutable variable in an externally-available definition does.
rdar://13535367
llvm-svn: 178520
'isa' ivar is accessed provided it is the first
ivar. Fixit hint will follow in another patch.
This is continuation of // rdar://13503456
llvm-svn: 178313
picking up cleanups from earlier in the statement. Also fix a
crash-on-invalid where a reference to an invalid decl from an
enclosing scope was causing an expression to fail to build, but
only *after* a cleanup was registered from that statement,
causing an assertion downstream.
The crash-on-valid is rdar://13459289.
llvm-svn: 177692
Before this patch we would compute the linkage lazily and cache it. When the
AST was modified in ways that could change the value, we would invalidate the
cache.
That was fairly brittle, since any code could ask for the a linkage before
the correct value was available.
We should change the API to one where the linkage is computed explicitly and
trying to get it when it is not available asserts.
This patch is a first step in that direction. We still compute the linkage
lazily, but instead of invalidating a cache, we assert that the AST
modifications didn't change the result.
llvm-svn: 176999
The TypeLoc hierarchy used the llvm::cast machinery to perform undefined
behavior by casting pointers/references to TypeLoc objects to derived types
and then using the derived copy constructors (or even returning pointers to
derived types that actually point to the original TypeLoc object).
Some context is in this thread:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2012-December/056804.html
Though it's spread over a few months which can be hard to read in the mail
archive.
llvm-svn: 175462
instantiation in order to permit devirtualization later in codegen, skip over
pure functions since those can't be devirtualization targets.
llvm-svn: 175116
MarkMemberReferenced instead of marking functions referenced directly. An audit
of callers to MarkFunctionReferenced and DiagnoseUseOfDecl also caused a few
other changes:
* don't mark functions odr-used when considering them for an initialization
sequence. Do mark them referenced though.
* the function nominated by the cleanup attribute should be diagnosed.
* operator new/delete should be diagnosed when building a 'new' expression.
llvm-svn: 174951
designator" diagnostic with more correct and more human-friendly "cannot take
address of rvalue of type 'T'".
For the case of & &T::f, provide a custom diagnostic, rather than unhelpfully
saying "cannot take address of rvalue of type '<overloaded function type>'".
For the case of &array_temporary, treat it just like a class temporary
(including allowing it as an extension); the existing diagnostic wording
for the class temporary case works fine.
llvm-svn: 174262
says, but that's a defect (to be filed). "Cls::purevfn()" is still an odr use.
Also fixes a bug that caused us to not mark the function referenced just
because we didn't want to mark it odr used.
llvm-svn: 174242
Prior to the patch, Clang does not properly promote types when a complex
integer operand is combined with an integer via a binary operator, or when
one is assigned to the other in either order. This patch detects when
promotion is needed (and permissible) and generates the necessary code.
The test assmes no target has the same size operands for "char" and
"long long," and that no target performs arithmetic on char operands without
extending them to a larger format first. If there are any targets for
which this is not the case, they should be XFAILed.
llvm-svn: 174181
__fp16 isn't covered by the standard, but this resolves the oddity that float
gets promoted when passed variadically, but not the smaller type. This is
required by the AArch64 ABI, and a sane action elsewhere.
llvm-svn: 173918
expressions which have undefined behavior due to multiple unsequenced
modifications or an unsequenced modification and use of a variable.
llvm-svn: 172690
In the source
static void f();
static void f();
template<typename T>
static void g() {
f();
}
static void f() {
}
void h() {
g<int>();
}
the call to f refers to the second decl, but it is only marked used at the end
of the translation unit during instantiation, after the third f decl has been
linked in.
With this patch we mark all subsequent decls used, so that it is easy to check
if a symbol is used or not.
llvm-svn: 171888
with respect to the lower "left-hand-side bitwidth" bits, even when negative);
see OpenCL spec 6.3j. This patch both implements this behaviour in the code
generator and "constant folding" bits of Sema, and also prevents tests
to detect undefinedness in terms of the weaker C99 or C++ specifications
from being applied.
llvm-svn: 171755
Along the way, fix a bug in CheckLiteralKind(), previously in diagnoseObjCLiteralComparison, where we didn't ignore parentheses
in boxed expressions for purpose of classification.
In other words, both @42 and @(42) should be classified as numeric
literals.
llvm-svn: 170931
CXXScalarValueInitExpr (or an ImplicitValueInitExpr), strip it back down to an
empty pair of parentheses so that the initialization code can tell that we're
performing value-initialization.
llvm-svn: 170867
uncovered.
This required manually correcting all of the incorrect main-module
headers I could find, and running the new llvm/utils/sort_includes.py
script over the files.
I also manually added quite a few missing headers that were uncovered by
shuffling the order or moving headers up to be main-module-headers.
llvm-svn: 169237
Among other differences, GCC accepts
typedef int IA[];
typedef int A10[10];
static A10 *f(void);
static IA *f(void);
void g(void) {
(void)sizeof(*f());
}
but clang used to reject it with:
invalid application of 'sizeof' to an incomplete type 'IA' (aka 'int []')
The intention of c99's 6.2.7 seems to be that we should use the composite type
and accept as gcc does.
Doing the type merging required some extra fixes:
* Use the type from the function type in initializations, even if an parameter
is available.
* Fix the merging of the noreturn attribute in function types.
* Make CodeGen handle the fact that an parameter type can be different from
the corresponding type in the function type.
llvm-svn: 168895
objc_loadWeak. This retains and autorelease the weakly-refereced
object. This hidden autorelease sometimes makes __weak variable alive even
after the weak reference is erased, because the object is still referenced
by an autorelease pool. This patch overcomes this behavior by loading a
weak object via call to objc_loadWeakRetained(), followng it by objc_release
at appropriate place, thereby removing the hidden autorelease. // rdar://10849570
llvm-svn: 168740
Separate out the notions of 'has a trivial special member' and 'has a
non-trivial special member', and use them appropriately. These are not
opposites of one another (there might be no special member, or in C++11 there
might be a trivial one and a non-trivial one). The CXXRecordDecl predicates
continue to produce incorrect results, but do so in fewer cases now, and
they document the cases where they might be wrong.
No functionality changes are intended here (they will come when the predicates
start producing the right answers...).
llvm-svn: 168119
BinaryOperator::Opcode. This is bad form, and the behavior of the static_cast
in this case is unspecified according to the standard.
Fixes a warning that showed up from r167992 on self-host.
llvm-svn: 168010
positions of Objective-C methods.
It is possible to recover a lot of type information about
Objective-C methods from the reflective metadata for their
implementations. This information is not rich when it
comes to struct types, however, and it is not possible to
produce a type in the debugger's round-tripped AST which
will really do anything useful during type-checking.
Therefore we allow __unknown_anytype in these positions,
which essentially disables type-checking for that argument.
We infer the parameter type to be the unqualified type of
the argument expression unless that expression is an
explicit cast, in which case it becomes the type-as-written
of that cast.
rdar://problem/12565338
llvm-svn: 167896
This warning was failing to fire under ARC because of the implicit
lifetime casts added around the object literal expression.
<rdar://problem/11300873>, again.
llvm-svn: 167648
instantiate it if it can be instantiated and implicitly define it if it can be
implicitly defined. This matches g++'s approach. Remove some cases from
SemaOverload which were marking functions as referenced when just planning how
overload resolution would proceed; such cases are not actually references.
llvm-svn: 167514
found: if an overloaded operator& is present before a template definition,
the expression &T::foo is represented as a CXXOperatorCallExpr, not as a
UnaryOperator, so we didn't notice that it's permitted to reference a non-static
data member of an unrelated class.
While investigating this, I discovered another problem in this area: we are
treating template default arguments as unevaluated contexts during substitution,
resulting in performing incorrect checks for uses of non-static data members in
C++11. That is not fixed by this patch (I'll look into this soon; it's related
to the failure to correctly instantiate constexpr function templates), but was
resulting in this bug not firing in C++11 mode (except with -Wc++98-compat).
Original message:
PR14124: When performing template instantiation of a qualified-id outside of a
class, diagnose if the qualified-id instantiates to a non-static class member.
llvm-svn: 166385
initialized by a reference constant expression.
Our odr-use modeling still needs work here: we don't yet implement the 'set of
potential results of an expression' DR.
llvm-svn: 166361
When suggesting "foo::bar" as a correction for "fob::bar" we mistakenly
replaced only "bar" with "foo::bar" producing "fob::foo::bar" which was broken.
This corrects that replacement in as many places as I could find & provides
test cases for all those cases I could find a test case for. There are a couple
that don't seem to be reachable (one looks entirely dead, the other just
doesn't seem to ever get called with a namespace to namespace change).
Review by Richard Smith ( http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D57 ).
llvm-svn: 165817
This only applies if the type has a name. (we could potentially do something
crazy with decltype in C++11 to qualify members of unnamed types but that
seems excessive)
It might be nice to also suggest a fixit for "&this->i", "&foo->i",
and "&foo.i" but those expressions produce 'bound' member functions that have
a different AST representation & make error recovery a little trickier. Left
as future work.
llvm-svn: 165763
Then, switch users of PropertyIfSetterOrGetter and LookupPropertyDecl
(the latter by name) over to findPropertyDecl. This actually makes
-Wreceiver-is-weak a bit stronger than it was before.
llvm-svn: 165628
This appears to be consistent with GCC's implementation of the same warning
under -Wparentheses. Suppressing a << b + c for cases where 'a' is a user
defined type for compatibility with C++ stream IO. Otherwise suggest
parentheses around the addition or subtraction subexpression.
(this came up when MSVC was complaining (incorrectly, so far as I can tell)
about a perceived violation of this within the LLVM codebase, PR14001)
llvm-svn: 165283
Clang will now honor the FP_CONTRACT pragma and emit LLVM
fmuladd intrinsics for expressions of the form A * B + C (when they occur in a
single statement).
llvm-svn: 164989
Like properties, loading from a weak ivar twice in the same function can
give you inconsistent results if the object is deallocated between the
two loads. It is safer to assign to a strong local variable and use that.
Second half of <rdar://problem/12280249>.
llvm-svn: 164855
The motivating example:
if (self.weakProp)
use(self.weakProp);
As with any non-atomic test-then-use, it is possible a weak property to be
non-nil at the 'if', but be deallocated by the time it is used. The correct
way to write this example is as follows:
id tmp = self.weakProp;
if (tmp)
use(tmp);
The warning is controlled by -Warc-repeated-use-of-receiver, and uses the
property name and base to determine if the same property on the same object
is being accessed multiple times. In cases where the base is more
complicated than just a single Decl (e.g. 'foo.bar.weakProp'), it picks a
Decl for some degree of uniquing and reports the problem under a subflag,
-Warc-maybe-repeated-use-of-receiver. This gives a way to tune the
aggressiveness of the warning for a particular project.
The warning is not on by default because it is not flow-sensitive and thus
may have a higher-than-acceptable rate of false positives, though it is
less noisy than -Wreceiver-is-weak. On the other hand, it will not warn
about some cases that may be legitimate issues that -Wreceiver-is-weak
will catch, and it does not attempt to reason about methods returning weak
values.
Even though this is not a real "analysis-based" check I've put the bug
emission code in AnalysisBasedWarnings for two reasons: (1) to run on
every kind of code body (function, method, block, or lambda), and (2) to
suggest that it may be enhanced by flow-sensitive analysis in the future.
The second (smaller) half of this work is to extend it to weak locals
and weak ivars. This should use most of the same infrastructure.
Part of <rdar://problem/12280249>
llvm-svn: 164854
typeid (and a couple other non-standard places where we can transform an
unevaluated expression into an evaluated expression) is special
because it introduces an an expression evaluation context,
which conflicts with the mechanism to compute the current
lambda mangling context. PR12123.
I would appreciate if someone would double-check that we get the mangling
correct with this patch.
llvm-svn: 164658
Specifically, this should warn:
__block block_t a = ^{ a(); };
Furthermore, this case which previously warned now does not, since the value
of 'b' is captured before the assignment occurs:
block_t b; // not __block
b = ^{ b(); };
(This will of course warn under -Wuninitialized, as before.)
<rdar://problem/11015883>
llvm-svn: 163962
(__builtin_* etc.) so that it isn't possible to take their address.
Specifically, introduce a new type to represent a reference to a builtin
function, and a new cast kind to convert it to a function pointer in the
operand of a call. Fixes PR13195.
llvm-svn: 162962
__objc_yes/__objc_no to (BOOL)1/(BOOL)0 when
BOOL is declared; otherwise it resorts to
default of 'signed char'. This is important to
selecting the correct Numeric API numberWithBool:
Can't have a clang test for this. Will checkin and
executable llvm test. // rdar://12156616
llvm-svn: 162922
both a waste of time, and prone to crash due to the use of the
error-recovery path in parser. Fixes <rdar://problem/12103608>, which
has been driving me nuts.
llvm-svn: 162081
This is effectively a warning for code that violates core issue 903 & thus will
become standard error in the future, hopefully. It catches strange null
pointers such as: '\0', 1 - 1, const int null = 0; etc...
There's currently a flaw in this warning (& the warning for 'false' as a null
pointer literal as well) where it doesn't trigger on comparisons (ptr == '\0'
for example). Fix to come in a future patch.
Also, due to this only being a warning, not an error, it triggers quite
frequently on gtest code which tests expressions for null-pointer-ness in a
SFINAE context (so it wouldn't be a problem if this was an error as in an
actual implementation of core issue 903). To workaround this for now, the
diagnostic does not fire in unevaluated contexts.
Review by Sean Silva and Richard Smith.
llvm-svn: 161501
The one caller that's surrounded by nearby code manipulating the underlying
evaluation context list is left unmodified for readability.
Review by Sean Silva and Richard Smith.
llvm-svn: 161355
on object pointers and whether pointer arithmetic on object pointers
is supported. Make ObjFW interpret subscripts as pseudo-objects.
Based on a patch by Jonathan Schleifer.
llvm-svn: 161028
a defaulted special member function until the exception specification is needed
(using the same criteria used for the delayed instantiation of exception
specifications for function temploids).
EST_Delayed is now EST_Unevaluated (using 1330's terminology), and, like
EST_Uninstantiated, carries a pointer to the FunctionDecl which will be used to
resolve the exception specification.
This is enabled for all C++ modes: it's a little faster in the case where the
exception specification isn't used, allows our C++11-in-C++98 extensions to
work, and is still correct for C++98, since in that mode the computation of the
exception specification can't fail.
The diagnostics here aren't great (in particular, we should include implicit
evaluation of exception specifications for defaulted special members in the
template instantiation backtraces), but they're not much worse than before.
Our approach to the problem of cycles between in-class initializers and the
exception specification for a defaulted default constructor is modified a
little by this change -- we now reject any odr-use of a defaulted default
constructor if that constructor uses an in-class initializer and the use is in
an in-class initialzer which is declared lexically earlier. This is a closer
approximation to the current draft solution in core issue 1351, but isn't an
exact match (but the current draft wording isn't reasonable, so that's to be
expected).
llvm-svn: 160847
change once it's been assigned. It can change in two ways:
1) In a template instantiation, the context declaration should be the
instantiated declaration, not the declaration in the template.
2) If a lambda appears in the pattern of a variadic pack expansion, the
mangling number will depend on the pack length.
llvm-svn: 160614
While we still want to consider this a hard error (non-POD variadic args are
normally a DefaultError warning), delaying the diagnostic allows us to give
better error messages, which also match the usual non-POD errors more closely.
In addition, this change improves the diagnostic messages for format string
argument type mismatches by passing down the type of the callee, so we can
say "variadic method" or "variadic function" appropriately.
<rdar://problem/11825593>
llvm-svn: 160517
Checks against nil often appear as guards in macros, and comparing
Objective-C literals to nil has well-defined behavior (if tautological).
On OS X, 'nil' has not been typed as 'id' since 10.6 (possibly earlier),
so the warning was already not firing, but other runtimes continue to use
((id)0) or some variant. This change accepts comparisons to any null pointer;
to keep it simple, it looks through all casts (not just casts to 'id').
PR13276
llvm-svn: 160379
Suggested by Ted, since string literal comparison is at least slightly more
sensible than comparison of runtime literals. (Ambiguous language on
developer.apple.com implies that strings are guaranteed to be uniqued within
a translation unit and possibly across a linked binary.)
llvm-svn: 160378
Recovering as if the user had actually called -isEqual: is a bit too far from
the semantics of the program as written, /even though/ it's probably what they
intended.
llvm-svn: 160377
as an array of its base class TemplateArgument. Switch the const
TemplateArgument* parameters of InstantiatingTemplate's constructors to
ArrayRef<TemplateArgument> to prevent this from happening again in the future.
llvm-svn: 160245
Chris pointed out that while the comparison is certainly problematic
and does not have well-defined behavior, it isn't any worse than some
of the other abuses that we merely warn about and doesn't need to make
the compilation fail.
Revert the release notes change (r159766) now that this is just a new warning.
llvm-svn: 159939
-ftemplate-depth limit. There are various ways to get an infinite (or merely
huge) stack of substitutions with no intervening instantiations. This is also
consistent with gcc's behavior.
llvm-svn: 159907
In C, enum constants have the type of the enum's underlying integer type,
rather than the type of the enum. (This is not true in C++.) Thus, when a
block's return type is inferred from an enum constant, it is incompatible
with expressions that return the enum type.
In r158899, I told block returns to pretend that enum constants have enum
type, like in C++. Doug Gregor pointed out that this can break existing code.
Now, we don't check the types of return statements until the end of the block.
This lets us go back and add implicit casts in blocks with mixed enum
constants and enum-typed expressions.
<rdar://problem/11662489> (again)
llvm-svn: 159591
to see if we had an underlying final class or method, but we would then
use the cast type to do the call, resulting in a direct call to the wrong
method.
llvm-svn: 159212
resulted in it being reverted. A test for that bug was added in r158950.
Original comment:
If an object (such as a std::string) with an appropriate c_str() member function
is passed to a variadic function in a position where a format string indicates
that c_str()'s return type is desired, provide a note suggesting that the user
may have intended to call the c_str() member.
Factor the non-POD-vararg checking out of DefaultVariadicArgumentPromotion and
move it to SemaChecking in order to facilitate this. Factor the call checking
out of function call checking and block call checking, and extend it to cover
constructor calls too.
Patch by Sam Panzer!
llvm-svn: 159159
Heavily based on a patch from
Aaron Wishnick <aaron.s.wishnick@gmail.com>.
I'll clean up the duplicated function in CodeGen as
a follow-up, later today or tomorrow.
llvm-svn: 159060
Revert "If an object (such as a std::string) with an appropriate c_str() member function"
This reverts commit 7d96f6106bfbd85b1af06f34fdbf2834aad0e47e.
llvm-svn: 158949
Also, don't warn if the used function is __attribute__((const)), in which case
it's not supposed to use global variables anyway.
The inline-in-inline thing is a heuristic, and one that's possibly incorrect
fairly often because the function being inlined could definitely use global
variables. However, even some C standard library functions are written using
other (trivial) static-inline functions in the headers, and we definitely don't
want to be warning on that (or on anything that /uses/ these trivial inline
functions). So we're using "inlined" as a marker for "fairly trivial".
(Note that __attribute__((pure)) does /not/ guarantee safety like ((const),
because ((const)) does not guarantee that global variables are not being used,
and the warning is about globals not being shared across TUs.)
llvm-svn: 158898
is passed to a variadic function in a position where a format string indicates
that c_str()'s return type is desired, provide a note suggesting that the user
may have intended to call the c_str() member.
Factor the non-POD-vararg checking out of DefaultVariadicArgumentPromotion and
move it to SemaChecking in order to facilitate this. Factor the call checking
out of function call checking and block call checking, and extend it to cover
constructor calls too.
Patch by Sam Panzer!
llvm-svn: 158887
in microsoft mode. Fixes PR12701.
The code for this was already in 2 of the 3 branches of a
conditional and missing in the 3rd branch, so lift it above
the conditional.
llvm-svn: 158842
It's very easy for anonymous external linkage to propagate in C++ through
return types and parameter types. Likewise, it's possible that a template
containing an inline function is only used with parameters that have internal
linkage. Actually diagnosing where the internal linkage comes from is fairly
difficult (both to locate and then to print nicely). Finally, since we only
have one translation unit available, we can't even prove that any of this
violates the ODR.
This warning needs better-defined behavior in C++ before it can really go in.
Rewording of the C warning (which /is/ specified by C99) coming shortly.
llvm-svn: 158836
target Objective-C runtime down to the frontend: break this
down into a single target runtime kind and version, and compute
all the relevant information from that. This makes it
relatively painless to add support for new runtimes to the
compiler. Make the new -cc1 flag, -fobjc-runtime=blah-x.y.z,
available at the driver level as a better and more general
alternative to -fgnu-runtime and -fnext-runtime. This new
concept of an Objective-C runtime also encompasses what we
were previously separating out as the "Objective-C ABI", so
fragile vs. non-fragile runtimes are now really modelled as
different kinds of runtime, paving the way for better overall
differentiation.
As a sort of special case, continue to accept the -cc1 flag
-fobjc-runtime-has-weak, as a sop to PLCompatibilityWeak.
I won't go so far as to say "no functionality change", even
ignoring the new driver flag, but subtle changes in driver
semantics are almost certainly not intended.
llvm-svn: 158793
Per post-commit review, it's not appropriate to use ExtWarn in C++, because
we can't prove that the inline function will actually be defined in more than
one place (and thus we can't prove that this violates the ODR).
This removes the warning entirely from uses in the main source file in C++.
llvm-svn: 158689
This includes treating anonymous namespaces like internal linkage, and allowing
const variables to be used even if internal. The whole thing's been broken out
into a separate function to avoid nested ifs.
llvm-svn: 158683
This handles the very common case of people writing inline functions in their
main source files and not tagging them as inline. These cases should still
behave as the user intended. (The diagnostic is still emitted as an extension.)
I'm reworking this code anyway to account for C++'s equivalent restriction in
[basic.def.odr]p6, but this should get some bots back to green.
llvm-svn: 158666
This is explicitly forbidden in C99 6.7.4p3. This is /not/ forbidden in C++,
probably because by default file-scope const/constexpr variables have internal
linkage, while functions have external linkage. There's also the issue of
anonymous namespaces to consider. Nevertheless, there should probably be a
similar warning, since the semantics of inlining a function that references
a variable with internal linkage do not seem well-defined.
<rdar://problem/11577619>
llvm-svn: 158531
Objective-C literals conceptually always create new objects, but may be
optimized by the compiler or runtime (constant folding, singletons, etc).
Comparing addresses of these objects is relying on this optimization
behavior, which is really an implementation detail.
In the case of == and !=, offer a fixit to a call to -isEqual:, if the
method is available. This fixit is directly on the error so that it is
automatically applied.
Most of the time, this is really a newbie mistake, hence the fixit.
llvm-svn: 158230
The integral APSInt value is now stored in a decomposed form and the backing
store for large values is allocated via the ASTContext. This way its not
leaked as TemplateArguments are never destructed when they are allocated in
the ASTContext. Since the integral data is immutable it is now shared between
instances, making copying TemplateArguments a trivial operation.
Currently getting the integral data out of a TemplateArgument requires creating
a new APSInt object. This is cheap when the value is small but can be expensive
if it's not. If this turns out to be an issue a more efficient accessor could
be added.
llvm-svn: 158150
In addition, I've made the pointer and reference typedef 'void' rather than T*
just so they can't get misused. I would've omitted them entirely but
std::distance likes them to be there even if it doesn't use them.
This rolls back r155808 and r155869.
Review by Doug Gregor incorporating feedback from Chandler Carruth.
llvm-svn: 158104
temporary or an array subobject of a class temporary, and the resulting value
is used to initialize a pointer which outlives the temporary. Such a pointer
is always left dangling after the initialization completes and the array's
lifetime ends.
In order to detect this situation, this change also adds an
LValueClassification of LV_ArrayTemporary for temporaries of array type which
aren't subobjects of class temporaries. These occur in C++11 T{...} and GNU C++
(T){...} expressions, when T is an array type. Previously we treated the former
as a generic prvalue and the latter as a class temporary.
llvm-svn: 157955
Before:
test.cc:2:18: note: place parentheses around the == expression to silence this warning
if (0 == flags & 0xdd)
^
( )
Now:
test.cc:2:18: note: place parentheses around the == expression to silence this warning
if (0 == flags & 0xdd)
^
( )
llvm-svn: 157897
This comes up in the begin/end calls of a range-for (see the included test
case). Other suggestions are welcome, though this seems to do the trick without
regressing anything.
llvm-svn: 157553
lambda as referring to a local in an enclosing scope if we're in the
enclosing scope of the lambda (not it's function call operator). Also,
turn the test into an IR generation test, since that's where the
crashes occurred. Really fixes PR12746 / <rdar://problem/11465120>.
llvm-svn: 156926
This fixes the included test case & was reported by Nico Weber.
It's a little bit nasty using the difference in the conversion context, but
seems to me like a not unreasonable solution. I did have to fix up the
conversion context for conditional operators (it seems correct to me to include
the context for which we're actually doing the comparison - across all the
nested conditionals, rather than the innermost conditional which might not
actually have the problematic implicit conversion at all) and template default
arguments (this is a bit of a hack, since we don't have the source location of
the '=' anymore, so I just used the start of the parameter - open to
suggestions there)
llvm-svn: 156861
Sema::ConvertToIntegralOrEnumerationType() from PartialDiagnostics to
abstract "diagnoser" classes. Not much of a win here, but we're
-several PartialDiagnostics.
llvm-svn: 156217
off PartialDiagnostic. PartialDiagnostic is rather heavyweight for
something that is in the critical path and is rarely used. So, switch
over to an abstract-class-based callback mechanism that delays most of
the work until a diagnostic is actually produced. Good for ~11k code
size reduction in the compiler and 1% speedup in -fsyntax-only on the
code in <rdar://problem/11004361>.
llvm-svn: 156176
Apparently we weren't checking default arguments when they were instantiated.
This adds the check, fixes the lack of instantiation caching (which seems like
it was mostly implemented but just missed the last step), and avoids
implementing non-dependent default args (for non-dependent parameter types) as
uninstantiated default arguments (so that we don't warn once for every
instantiation when it's not instantiation dependent).
Reviewed by Richard Smith.
llvm-svn: 155838
filter_decl_iterator had a weird mismatch where both op* and op-> returned T*
making it difficult to generalize this filtering behavior into a reusable
library of any kind.
This change errs on the side of value, making op-> return T* and op* return
T&.
(reviewed by Richard Smith)
llvm-svn: 155808
- -Wc++98-compat depends on the c++98 definition
- Now __is_pod returns the right thing in c++11 and c++98 mode
- All changes to the type traits test are validated against g++ 4.7
llvm-svn: 155756
specifications on member function templates of class templates and other such
nested beasties. Store the function template from which we are to instantiate
an exception specification rather than trying to deduce it. Plus some
additional test cases.
llvm-svn: 155076
We have a new flavor of exception specification, EST_Uninstantiated. A function
type with this exception specification carries a pointer to a FunctionDecl, and
the exception specification for that FunctionDecl is instantiated (if needed)
and used in the place of the function type's exception specification.
When a function template declaration with a non-trivial exception specification
is instantiated, the specialization's exception specification is set to this
new 'uninstantiated' kind rather than being instantiated immediately.
Expr::CanThrow has migrated onto Sema, so it can instantiate exception specs
on-demand. Also, any odr-use of a function triggers the instantiation of its
exception specification (the exception specification could be needed by IRGen).
In passing, fix two places where a DeclRefExpr was created but the corresponding
function was not actually marked odr-used. We used to get away with this, but
don't any more.
Also fix a bug where instantiating an exception specification which refers to
function parameters resulted in a crash. We still have the same bug in default
arguments, which I'll be looking into next.
This, plus a tiny patch to fix libstdc++'s common_type, is enough for clang to
parse (and, in very limited testing, support) all of libstdc++4.7's standard
headers.
llvm-svn: 154886
shadow of a block expression with non-trivial destructed cleanups,
we should flag that in the enclosing function, not in the block
that we're about to pop.
llvm-svn: 154646
types. The second and third conversions in the sequence are based on
the conversion for the underlying type, so that we get sensible
overloading behavior for, e.g., _Atomic(int) vs. _Atomic(float).
As part of this, actually implement the lvalue-to-rvalue conversion
for atomic types. There is probably a pile of code in SemaExpr that
can now be deleted, but I haven't tracked it down yet.
llvm-svn: 154596
Specifically, using a an integer outside [0, 1] as a boolean constant seems to
be an easy mistake to make with things like "x == a || b" where the author
intended "x == a || x == b".
The bug caused by calling SkipUntil with three token kinds was also identified
by a VC diagnostic & reported by Francois Pichet as review feedback for my
commit r154163. I've included test cases to verify the error recovery that was
broken/poorly implemented due to this bug.
The other fix (lib/Sema/SemaExpr.cpp) seems like that code was never actually
reached in any of Clang's tests & is related to Objective C features I'm not
familiar with, so I've not been able to construct a test case for it. Perhaps
someone else can.
llvm-svn: 154325
the template instantiation of statement-expressions.
I think it was jyasskin who had a crashing testcase in this area;
hopefully this fixes it and he can find his testcase and check it in.
llvm-svn: 154189
the diagnostic for assigning to a copied block capture. This has
the pleasant side-effect of letting us special-case the diagnostic
for assigning to a copied lambda capture as well, without introducing
a new non-modifiable enumerator for it.
llvm-svn: 152593
track whether the referenced declaration comes from an enclosing
local context. I'm amenable to suggestions about the exact meaning
of this bit.
llvm-svn: 152491
- getSourceRange().getBegin() is about as awesome a pattern as .copy().size().
I already killed the hot paths so this doesn't seem to impact performance on my
tests-of-the-day, but it is a much more sensible (and shorter) pattern.
llvm-svn: 152419
- This function is not at all free; pass it around along some hot paths instead
of recomputing it deep inside various VarDecl methods.
llvm-svn: 152363
analysis to make the AST representation testable. They are represented by a
new UserDefinedLiteral AST node, which is a sugared CallExpr. All semantic
properties, including full CodeGen support, are achieved for free by this
representation.
UserDefinedLiterals can never be dependent, so no custom instantiation
behavior is required. They are mangled as if they were direct calls to the
underlying literal operator. This matches g++'s apparent behavior (but not its
actual mangling, which is broken for literal-operator-ids).
User-defined *string* literals are now fully-operational, but the semantic
analysis is quite hacky and needs more work. No other forms of user-defined
literal are created yet, but the AST support for them is present.
This patch committed after midnight because we had already hit the quota for
new kinds of literal yesterday.
llvm-svn: 152211
blocks with unknown return types. This allows
LLDB to call blocks even when their return types
aren't provided in the debug information.
llvm-svn: 152147
NSNumber, and boolean literals. This includes both Sema and Codegen support.
Included is also support for new Objective-C container subscripting.
My apologies for the large patch. It was very difficult to break apart.
The patch introduces changes to the driver as well to cause clang to link
in additional runtime support when needed to support the new language features.
Docs are forthcoming to document the implementation and behavior of these features.
llvm-svn: 152137
early, since their values can be used in constant expressions in C++11. For
odr-use checking, the opposite change is required, since references are
odr-used whether or not they satisfy the requirements for appearing in a
constant expression.
llvm-svn: 151881
But it is in the underlying c part of clang. clang crashes
in IRGen when passing an incomplete type argument to
variadic function (instead of diagnosing the bug).
// rdar://10961370
llvm-svn: 151862
explicit conversion functions to initialize the argument to a
copy/move constructor that itself is the subject of direct
initialization. Since we don't have that much context in overload
resolution, we end up threading more flags :(.
Fixes <rdar://problem/10903741> / PR10456.
llvm-svn: 151409
function call (or a comma expression with a function call on its right-hand
side), possibly parenthesized, then the return type is not required to be
complete and a temporary is not bound. Other subexpressions inside a decltype
expression do not get this treatment.
This is implemented by deferring the relevant checks for all calls immediately
within a decltype expression, then, when the expression is fully-parsed,
checking the relevant constraints and stripping off any top-level temporary
binding.
Deferring the completion of the return type exposed a bug in overload
resolution where completion of the argument types was not attempted, which
is also fixed by this change.
llvm-svn: 151117
arguments. There are two aspects to this:
- Make sure that when marking the declarations referenced in a
default argument, we don't try to mark local variables, both because
it's a waste of time and because the semantics are wrong: we're not
in a place where we could capture these variables again even if it
did make sense.
- When a lambda expression occurs in a default argument of a
function template, make sure that the corresponding closure type is
considered dependent, so that it will get properly instantiated. The
second bit is a bit of a hack; to fix it properly, we may have to
rearchitect our handling of default arguments, parsing them only
after creating the function definition. However, I'd like to
separate that work from the lambdas work.
llvm-svn: 151076
default arguments of function parameters. This simple-sounding task is
complicated greatly by two issues:
(1) Default arguments aren't actually a real context, so we need to
maintain extra state within lambda expressions to track when a
lambda was actually in a default argument.
(2) At the time that we parse a default argument, the FunctionDecl
doesn't exist yet, so lambda closure types end up in the enclosing
context. It's not clear that we ever want to change that, so instead
we introduce the notion of the "effective" context of a declaration
for the purposes of name mangling.
llvm-svn: 151011
eliminating a bunch of redundant code and properly modeling how the
captures of outside blocks/lambdas affect the types seen by inner
captures.
This new scheme makes two passes over the capturing scope stack. The
first pass goes up the stack (from innermost to outermost), assessing
whether the capture looks feasible and stopping when it either hits
the scope where the variable is declared or when it finds an existing
capture. The second pass then walks down the stack (from outermost to
innermost), capturing the variable at each step and updating the
captured type and the type that an expression referring to that
captured variable would see. It also checks type-specific
restrictions, such as the inability to capture an array within a
block. Note that only the first odr-use of each
variable needs to do the full walk; subsequent uses will find the
capture immediately, so multiple walks need not occur.
The same routine that builds the captures can also compute the type of
the captures without signaling errors and without actually performing
the capture. This functionality is used to determine the type of
declaration references as well as implementing the weird decltype((x))
rule within lambda expressions.
The capture code now explicitly takes sides in the debate over C++
core issue 1249, which concerns the type of captures within nested
lambdas. We opt to use the more permissive, more useful definition
implemented by GCC rather than the one implemented by EDG.
llvm-svn: 150875
even if they are not within a function scope. Teach template
instantiation to treat them as such, and make sure that we have a
local instantiation scope when instantiating default arguments and
static data members.
llvm-svn: 150725
Holding the constructor directly makes no sense when list-initialized arrays come into play. The constructor is now held in a CXXConstructExpr, if construction is what is done. The new design can also distinguish properly between list-initialization and direct-initialization, as well as implicit default-initialization constructors and explicit value-initialization constructors. Finally, doing it this way removes redundance from the AST because CXXNewExpr doesn't try to handle both the allocation and the initialization responsibilities.
This breaks the static analysis of new expressions. I've filed PR12014 to track this.
llvm-svn: 150682
pointers and block pointers). We use dummy definitions to keep the
invariant that an implicit, used definition has a body; IR generation
will substitute the actual contents, since they can't be represented
as C++.
For the block pointer case, compute the copy-initialization needed to
capture the lambda object in the block, which IR generation will need
later.
llvm-svn: 150645
expression is referenced, defined, then referenced again, make sure we
instantiate it the second time it's referenced. This is the static data member
analogue of r150518.
llvm-svn: 150560
template is defined, and then the specialization is referenced again, don't
forget to instantiate the template on the second reference. Use the source
location of the first reference as the point of instantiation, though.
llvm-svn: 150518
expressions. This is mostly a simple refact, splitting the main "start
a lambda expression" function into smaller chunks that are driven
either from the parser (Sema::ActOnLambdaExpr) or during AST
transformation (TreeTransform::TransformLambdaExpr). A few minor
interesting points:
- Added new entry points for TreeTransform, so that we can
explicitly establish the link between the lambda closure type in the
template and the lambda closure type in the instantiation.
- Added a bit into LambdaExpr specifying whether it had an explicit
result type or not. We should have had this anyway.
This code is 'lightly' tested.
llvm-svn: 150417
id-expression 'x' will compute the type based on the assumption that
'x' will be captured, even if it isn't captured, per C++11
[expr.prim.lambda]p18. There are two related refactors that go into
implementing this:
1) Split out the check that determines whether we should capture a
particular variable reference, along with the computation of the
type of the field, from the actual act of capturing the
variable.
2) Always compute the result of decltype() within Sema, rather than
AST, because the decltype() computation is now context-sensitive.
llvm-svn: 150347
instead of having a special-purpose function.
- ActOnCXXDirectInitializer, which was mostly duplication of
AddInitializerToDecl (leading e.g. to PR10620, which Eli fixed a few days
ago), is dropped completely.
- MultiInitializer, which was an ugly hack I added, is dropped again.
- We now have the infrastructure in place to distinguish between
int x = {1};
int x({1});
int x{1};
-- VarDecl now has getInitStyle(), which indicates which of the above was used.
-- CXXConstructExpr now has a flag to indicate that it represents list-
initialization, although this is not yet used.
- InstantiateInitializer was renamed to SubstInitializer and simplified.
- ActOnParenOrParenListExpr has been replaced by ActOnParenListExpr, which
always produces a ParenListExpr. Placed that so far failed to convert that
back to a ParenExpr containing comma operators have been fixed. I'm pretty
sure I could have made a crashing test case before this.
The end result is a (I hope) considerably cleaner design of initializers.
More importantly, the fact that I can now distinguish between the various
initialization kinds means that I can get the tricky generalized initializer
test cases Johannes Schaub supplied to work. (This is not yet done.)
This commit passed self-host, with the resulting compiler passing the tests. I
hope it doesn't break more complicated code. It's a pretty big change, but one
that I feel is necessary.
llvm-svn: 150318
nested captures. We currently don't get odr-use correct in array
bounds, so that bit is commented out while we sort out what we need to
do.
llvm-svn: 150255
- Complete the lambda class when we finish the lambda expression
(previously, it was left in the "being completed" state)
- Actually return the LambdaExpr object and bind to the resulting
temporary when needed.
- Detect when cleanups are needed while capturing a variable into a
lambda (e.g., due to default arguments in the copy constructor), and
make sure those cleanups apply for the whole of the lambda
expression.
llvm-svn: 150123
only add 'const' for variables captured by copy in potentially
evaluated expressions of non-mutable lambdas. (The "by copy" part was
missing).
llvm-svn: 150088
a typedef of std::pair. This slightly improves type-safety, but mostly
makes code using it clearer to read as well as making it possible to add
methods to the type.
Add such a method for efficiently single-step desugaring a split type.
Add a method to single-step desugaring a locally-unqualified type.
Implement both the SplitQualType and QualType methods in terms of that.
Also, fix a typo ("ObjCGLifetime").
llvm-svn: 150028
- Capturing variables by-reference and by-copy within a lambda
- The representation of lambda captures
- The creation of the non-static data members in the lambda class
that store the captured variables
- The initialization of the non-static data members from the
captured variables
- Pretty-printing lambda expressions
There are a number of FIXMEs, both explicit and implied, including:
- Creating a field for a capture of 'this'
- Improved diagnostics for initialization failures when capturing
variables by copy
- Dealing with temporaries created during said initialization
- Template instantiation
- AST (de-)serialization
- Binding and returning the lambda expression; turning it into a
proper temporary
- Lots and lots of semantic constraints
- Parameter pack captures
llvm-svn: 149977