A while ago we allowed libclang to build a PCH that had compiler errors; this was to retain the performance
afforded by a PCH even if the user's code is in an intermediate state.
Extend this for the precompiled preamble as well.
rdar://14109828
llvm-svn: 183717
Add __has_feature and __has_extension checks for C++1y features (based on the provisional names from
the C++ features study group), and update documentation to match.
llvm-svn: 181342
Previously, we would clone the current diagnostic consumer to produce
a new diagnostic consumer to use when building a module. The problem
here is that we end up losing diagnostics for important diagnostic
consumers, such as serialized diagnostics (where we'd end up with two
diagnostic consumers writing the same output file). With forwarding,
the diagnostics from all of the different modules being built get
forwarded to the one serialized-diagnostic consumer and are emitted in
a sane way.
Fixes <rdar://problem/13663996>.
llvm-svn: 181067
Specifically, allow the flags that fall under this umbrella (i.e., -O3,
-ffast-math, and -fstrict-aliasing) to be overridden/disabled with the
individual -O[0|1|2|s|z]/-fno- flags.
This also fixes the handling of various floating point optimization
flags that are modified by -ffast-math (and thus -Ofast as well).
Part of rdar://13622687
llvm-svn: 180204
This was a suggestion by Jordan Rose since the documented format for these pragmas is without the parentheses. At the same time, I've increased test coverage too for the preprocessed output.
llvm-svn: 179771
The system_header pragma (from GCC) is implemented using line notes in the
source manager. However, a line note's line number specifies the number
not for the current line, but for the next line. This was making all
line numbers appear off by one after the pragma.
Reported by Andy Gibbs, uncovered during r179677.
llvm-svn: 179709
VerifyDiagnosticConsumer previously would not check that the diagnostic and
its matching directive referenced the same source file. Common practice was
to create directives that referenced other files but only by line number,
and this led to problems such as when the file containing the directive
didn't have enough lines to match the location of the diagnostic in the
other file, leading to bizarre file formatting and other oddities.
This patch causes VerifyDiagnosticConsumer to match source files as well as
line numbers. Therefore, a new syntax is made available for directives, for
example:
// expected-error@file:line {{diagnostic message}}
This extends the @line feature where "file" is the file where the diagnostic
is generated. The @line syntax is still available and uses the current file
for the diagnostic. "file" can be specified either as a relative or absolute
path - although the latter has less usefulness, I think! The #include search
paths will be used to locate the file and if it is not found an error will be
generated.
The new check is not optional: if the directive is in a different file to the
diagnostic, the file must be specified. Therefore, a number of test-cases
have been updated with regard to this.
This closes out PR15613.
llvm-svn: 179677
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
- There is no reason to have a modules specific flag for disabling
autolinking. Instead, convert the existing flag into -fno-autolink (which
should cover other autolinking code generation paths like #pragmas if and
when we support them).
llvm-svn: 179612
This is a Darwin-SDK-specific hash criteria used to identify a
particular SDK without having to hash the contents of all of its
headers. If other platforms have such versioned files, we should add
those checks here.
llvm-svn: 179346
Added TBAABaseType and TBAAOffset in LValue. These two fields are initialized to
the actual type and 0, and are updated in EmitLValueForField.
Path-aware TBAA tags are enabled for EmitLoadOfScalar and EmitStoreOfScalar.
Added command line option -struct-path-tbaa.
llvm-svn: 178797
Syntactically means the function macro parameter names do not need to use the same
identifiers in order for the definitions to be considered identical.
Syntactic equivalence is a microsoft extension for macro redefinitions and we'll also
use this kind of comparison to check for ambiguous macros coming from modules.
rdar://13562254
llvm-svn: 178671
This option can be useful for end users who want to know why they
ended up with a ton of different variants of the "std" module in their
module cache. This problem should go away over time, as we reduce the
need for module variants, but it will never go away entirely.
llvm-svn: 178148
For each macro directive (define, undefine, visibility) have a separate object that gets chained
to the macro directive history. This has several benefits:
-No need to mutate a MacroDirective when there is a undefine/visibility directive. Stuff like
PPMutationListener become unnecessary.
-No need to keep extra source locations for the undef/visibility locations for the define directive object
(which is the majority of the directives)
-Much easier to hide/unhide a section in the macro directive history.
-Easier to track the effects of the directives across different submodules.
llvm-svn: 178037
emit function names in .gcda files by default, and the flag turns that off!
Rename the flag to make it match what it actually does. This keeps the default
format compatible with gcc 4.2.
Also add a test for this flag.
llvm-svn: 177475
Configuration macros are macros that are intended to alter how a
module works, such that we need to build different module variants
for different values of these macros. A module can declare its
configuration macros, in which case we will complain if the definition
of a configation macro on the command line (or lack thereof) differs
from the current preprocessor state at the point where the module is
imported. This should eliminate some surprises when enabling modules,
because "#define CONFIG_MACRO ..." followed by "#include
<module/header.h>" would silently ignore the CONFIG_MACRO setting. At
least it will no longer be silent about it.
Configuration macros are eventually intended to help reduce the number
of module variants that need to be built. When the list of
configuration macros for a module is exhaustive, we only need to
consider the settings for those macros when building/finding the
module, which can help isolate modules for various project-specific -D
flags that should never affect how modules are build (but currently do).
llvm-svn: 177466
The global module index was querying the file manager for each of the
module files it knows about at load time, to prune out any out-of-date
information. The file manager would then cache the results of the
stat() falls used to find that module file.
Later, the same translation unit could end up trying to import one of the
module files that had previously been ignored by the module cache, but
after some other Clang instance rebuilt the module file to bring it
up-to-date. The stale stat() results in the file manager would
trigger a second rebuild of the already-up-to-date module, causing
failures down the line.
The global module index now lazily resolves its module file references
to actual AST reader module files only after the module file has been
loaded, eliminating the stat-caching race. Moreover, the AST reader
can communicate to its caller that a module file is missing (rather
than simply being out-of-date), allowing us to simplify the
module-loading logic and allowing the compiler to recover if a
dependent module file ends up getting deleted.
llvm-svn: 177367
I don't have a good testcase for this that does not depend on system headers.
It did not trigger with preprocessed output, and I had trouble reducing the example.
Fixes <rdar://problem/13324594>.
Thanks to Michael Greiner for reporting this issue.
llvm-svn: 177201
This allows resolving top-header filenames of modules to FileEntries when
we need them, not eagerly.
Note that that this breaks ABI for libclang functions
clang_Module_getTopLevelHeader / clang_Module_getNumTopLevelHeaders
but this is fine because they are experimental and not widely used yet.
llvm-svn: 176975
string to be emitted, and two properties about the files themselves.
Use $PWD to absolut-ify the path to the coverage file. Yes, this is what GCC
does. Reverts my own r175706.
llvm-svn: 176617
This patch is designed for minimal intrusion into normal preprocessing
and compilation; under -E -traditional-cpp, the lexer will still
generate tok::comment nodes since it is preserving all whitespace, but
the output printer will then throw it away.
<rdar://problem/13338680>
llvm-svn: 176534
and through to the debug info in the module. In order to make the
testcase a bit more efficient allow the filename to go through
compilation for compile and not assemble jobs and turn off the
extract for cases where we don't create an object.
llvm-svn: 175935
Add an ability to specify custom documentation block comment commands via a new
class CommentOptions. The intention is that this class will hold future
customizations for comment parsing, including defining documentation comments
with specific numbers of parameters, etc.
CommentOptions instance is a member of LangOptions.
CommentOptions is controlled by a new command-line parameter
-fcomment-block-commands=Foo,Bar,Baz.
llvm-svn: 175892
to control the check for the C 5.2.4.1 / C++ [implimits] restriction on nesting
levels for parentheses, brackets and braces.
Some code with heavy macro use exceeds the default limit of 256, but we don't
want to increase it generally to avoid stack overflow on stack-constrained
systems.
llvm-svn: 175855
for the data specific to a macro definition (e.g. what the tokens are), and
MacroDirective class which encapsulates the changes to the "macro namespace"
(e.g. the location where the macro name became active, the location where it was undefined, etc.)
(A MacroDirective always points to a MacroInfo object.)
Usually a macro definition (MacroInfo) is where a macro name becomes active (MacroDirective) but
splitting the concepts allows us to better model the effect of modules to the macro namespace
(also as a bonus it allows better modeling of push_macro/pop_macro #pragmas).
Modules can have their own macro history, separate from the local (current translation unit)
macro history; MacroDirectives will be used to model the macro history (changes to macro namespace).
For example, if "@import A;" imports macro FOO, there will be a new local MacroDirective created
to indicate that "FOO" became active at the import location. Module "A" itself will contain another
MacroDirective in its macro history (at the point of the definition of FOO) and both MacroDirectives
will point to the same MacroInfo object.
Introducing the separation of macro concepts is the first part towards better modeling of module macros.
llvm-svn: 175585
We treat this as an alternative to -fvisibility=<?>
which changes the default value visibility to "hidden"
and the default type visibility to "default".
Expose a -cc1 option for changing the default type
visibility, repurposing -fvisibility as the default
value visibility option (also setting type visibility
from it in the absence of a specific option).
rdar://13079314
llvm-svn: 175480
if it found any decls, rather than returning a list of found decls. This
removes a returning-ArrayRef-to-deleted-storage bug from
MultiplexExternalSemaSource (in code not exercised by any of the clang
binaries), reduces the work required in the found-no-decls case with PCH, and
importantly removes the need for DeclContext::lookup to be reentrant.
No functionality change intended!
llvm-svn: 174576
The use of this flag enables a modules optimization where a given set
of macros can be labeled as "ignored" by the modules
system. Definitions of those macros will be completely ignored when
building the module hash and will be stripped when actually building
modules. The overall effect is that this flag can be used to
drastically reduce the number of
Eventually, we'll want modules to tell us what set of macros they
respond to (the "configuration macros"), and anything not in that set
will be excluded. However, that requires a lot of per-module
information that must be accurate, whereas this option can be used
more readily.
Fixes the rest of <rdar://problem/13165109>.
llvm-svn: 174560
This can happen when one abuses precompiled headers by passing more -D
options when using a precompiled hedaer than when it was built. This
is intentionally permitted by precompiled headers (and is exploited by
some build environments), but causes problems for modules.
First part of <rdar://problem/13165109>, detecting when something when
horribly wrong.
llvm-svn: 174554
since only one of them is allowed in command-line, process them separately.
Otherwise, if more than one is specified in the command-line, one is processed normally
and the others are going to be treated and included as header files.
Related to radar://13140508
llvm-svn: 174385
Specifically, don't print snippets, caret diagnostics, or ranges for
lines over 4096 characters. We copy the line around a few times in our
diagnostics machinery, and we have to print a caret line that's just as
long. This uses a lot of memory just to create a poor user experience as
we print out a line much too long for anyone to read...or spend extra
energy trying to fit it to -fmessage-length.
<rdar://problem/13106850>
llvm-svn: 173976
Redefine the shallow mode to inline all functions for which we have a
definite definition (ipa=inlining). However, only inline functions that
are up to 4 basic blocks large and cut the max exploded nodes generated
per top level function in half.
This makes shallow faster and allows us to keep inlining small
functions. For example, we would keep inlining wrapper functions and
constructors/destructors.
With the new shallow, it takes 104s to analyze sqlite3, whereas
the deep mode is 658s and previous shallow is 209s.
llvm-svn: 173958
People use the C preprocessor for things other than C files. Some of them
have Unicode characters. We shouldn't warn about Unicode characters
appearing outside of identifiers in this case.
There's not currently a way for the preprocessor to tell if it's in -E mode,
so I added a new flag, derived from the PreprocessorOutputOptions. This is
only used by the Unicode warnings for now, but could conceivably be used by
other warnings or even behavioral differences later.
<rdar://problem/13107323>
llvm-svn: 173881
- The only group where it makes sense for the "ExternC" bit is System, so this
simplifies having to have the extra isCXXAware (or ImplicitExternC, depending
on what code you talk to) bit caried around.
llvm-svn: 173859
- This slightly decouples the path handling, since before the group sometimes
dominated the "use sysroot" bit, but it was still passed in via the API.
- No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 173855
implementation; this is much more inline with the original implementation
(i.e., pre-ubsan) and does not require run-time library support.
The trapping implementation can be invoked using either '-fcatch-undefined-behavior'
or '-fsanitize=undefined-trap -fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error', with the latter
being preferred. Eventually, the -fcatch-undefined-behavior' flag will be removed.
llvm-svn: 173848
-fno-modules-global-index -cc1 option to allow one to disable the
index for performance testing purposes, but with a 10% win in
-fsyntax-only time, there is no reason a user would do this.
llvm-svn: 173707
The -E output from clang did not produce the correct indentation on the first line.
This is because MoveToLine returned false, and when this happens,
the regular process for producing initial indentation is skipped.
Thanks to Eli for suggesting a way to simplify this to a one-line change.
llvm-svn: 173657
AST reader.
The global module index tracks all of the identifiers known to a set
of module files. Lookup of those identifiers looks first in the global
module index, which returns the set of module files in which that
identifier can be found. The AST reader only needs to look into those
module files and any module files not known to the global index (e.g.,
because they were (re)built after the global index), reducing the
number of on-disk hash tables to visit. For an example source I'm
looking at, we go from 237844 total identifier lookups into on-disk
hash tables down to 126817.
Unfortunately, this does not translate into a performance advantage.
At best, it's a wash once the global module index has been built, but
that's ignore the cost of building the global module index (which
is itself fairly large). Profiles show that the global module index
code is far less efficient than it should be; optimizing it might give
enough of an advantage to justify its continued inclusion.
llvm-svn: 173405
The idea is to eventually place all analyzer options under
"analyzer-config". In addition, this lays the ground for introduction of
a high-level analyzer mode option, which will influence the
default setting for IPAMode.
llvm-svn: 173385
The global module index is a "global" index for all of the module
files within a particular subdirectory in the module cache, which
keeps track of all of the "interesting" identifiers and selectors
known in each of the module files. One can perform a fast lookup in
the index to determine which module files will have more information
about entities with a particular name/selector. This information can
help eliminate redundant lookups into module files (a serious
performance problem) and help with creating auto-import/auto-include
Fix-Its.
The global module index is created or updated at the end of a
translation unit that has triggered a (re)build of a module by
scraping all of the .pcm files out of the module cache subdirectory,
so it catches everything. As with module rebuilds, we use the file
system's atomicity to synchronize.
llvm-svn: 173301
* Fix a typo, s/BeginSourceAction/BeginSourceFile/, so that the documentation
for FrontendAction::BeginSourceFileAction links correctly to BeginSourceFile;
* Add some basic \file documentation for FrontendAction.h;
* More use of "\brief" instead of repeating the name of the entity being
documented;
* Stop using Doxygen-style "///" comments in FrontendAction.cpp, as they were
polluting the documentation for BeginSourceFile;
* Drop incorrect "\see" markup that broke Doxygen's formatting;
* Other minor documentation fixes.
llvm-svn: 173213
Also, it was the only reason that `argc` and `argv` were being passed
into createDiagnostics, so remove those parameters and clean up callers.
llvm-svn: 172945
This looks like it was copied from SetUpBuildDumpLog, which dumps to the
file `DiagOpts->DumpBuildInformation`. There is another member
`DiagOpts->DiagnosticLogFile` which appears to be unused. The fact that
this feature doesn't even print to the output file specified on the
command line makes me think that it should be ripped out.
llvm-svn: 172944
warning options to setup diagnostic state, but should not be emitting warnings as these would be
rudndant with what the frontend emits.
rdar://13001556
llvm-svn: 172497
which a particular declaration resides. Use this information to
customize the "definition of 'blah' must be imported from another
module" diagnostic with the module the user actually has to
import. Additionally, recover by importing that module, so we don't
complain about other names in that module.
Still TODO: coming up with decent Fix-Its for these cases, and expand
this recovery approach for other name lookup failures.
llvm-svn: 172290
code-completion results, the SourceManager state may be slightly
different when code-completing.
And we don't even care for diagnostics when code-completing, anyway.
llvm-svn: 170979
This still isn't quite right, but it fixes a crash.
I factored out findCommonParent because we need it on the result of
getImmediateExpansionRange: for a function macro, the beginning
and end of an expansion range can come out of different
macros/macro arguments, which means the resulting range is a complete
mess to handle consistently.
I also made some changes to how findCommonParent works; it works somewhat
better in some cases, and somewhat worse in others, but I think overall
it's a better balance. I'm coming to the conclusion that mapDiagnosticRanges
isn't using the right algorithm, though: chasing the caret is fundamentally
more complicated than any algorithm which only considers one FileID for the
caret can handle because each SourceLocation doesn't really have a single parent.
We need to follow the same path of choosing expansion locations and spelling
locations which the caret used to come up with the correct range
in the general case.
Fixes <rdar://problem/12847524>.
llvm-svn: 170049
a file or directory, allowing just a stat call if a file descriptor
is not needed.
Doing just 'stat' is faster than 'open/fstat/close'.
This has the effect of cutting down system time for validating the input files of a PCH.
llvm-svn: 169831
diagnostic from the emission of macro backtraces. Incidentally, we now get the
displayed source location for a diagnostic and the location for the caret from
the same place, rather than computing them separately. No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 169357
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
PreprocessingRecord and into its own class, PPConditionalDirectiveRecord.
Decoupling allows a client to use the functionality of PPConditionalDirectiveRecord
without needing a PreprocessingRecord.
llvm-svn: 169229
state so that all of the various clones end up rendering their
diagnostics into the same serialized-diagnostics file. This is
important when we actually want failures during module build to be
reported back to the translation unit that tried to import the
not-yet-built or out-of-date module. <rdar://problem/12565727>
llvm-svn: 169057
module, provide a module import stack similar to what we would get for
an include stack, e.g.,
In module 'DependsOnModule' imported from build-fail-notes.m:4:
In module 'Module' imported from DependsOnModule.framework/Headers/DependsOnModule.h:1:
Inputs/Module.framework/Headers/Module.h:15:12: note: previous definition is here
@interface Module
<rdar://problem/12696425>
llvm-svn: 169042
building module 'Foo' imported from..." notes (the same we we provide
"In file included from..." notes) in the diagnostic, so that we know
how this module got included in the first place. This is part of
<rdar://problem/12696425>.
llvm-svn: 169021
import of that module elsewhere, don't try to build the module again:
it won't work, and the experience is quite dreadful. We track this
information somewhat globally, shared among all of the related
CompilerInvocations used to build modules on-the-fly, so that a
particular Clang instance will only try to build a given module once.
Fixes <rdar://problem/12552849>.
llvm-svn: 168961
to the CodeCompletionTUInfo that is going to be used to get the results.
Previously we would use ASTUnit's CodeCompletionTUInfo which has its own allocator
that will go away when we reparse. That could result in a use-after-free bug when
getting the parent context name from a CodeCompletionString.
Addresses rdar://12568377.
llvm-svn: 168133
- This diverges from gcc, and confuses tools (like dtrace) which track # line
markers as a way to determine which content is in the context of the main
file.
llvm-svn: 168128
to a cc1 -fencode-extended-block-signature and pass it
to cc1 and recognize this option to produce extended block
type signature. // rdar://12109031
llvm-svn: 168063
more sense anyway - it determines how expressions are codegen'd. It also ensures
that -ffp-contract=fast has the intended effect when compiling LLVM IR.
llvm-svn: 168027
working with preprocessed testcases. This causes source locations in
diagnostics to point at the spelling location instead of the presumed location,
while still keeping the semantic effects of the line directives (entering and
leaving system-header mode, primarily).
llvm-svn: 168004
- The whole {File,Source}Manager is built around wanting to pre-determine the
size of files, so we can't fit this in naturally. Instead, we handle it like
we do STDIN, where we just replace the main file contents upfront.
llvm-svn: 167419
checks to enable. Remove frontend support for -fcatch-undefined-behavior,
-faddress-sanitizer and -fthread-sanitizer now that they don't do anything.
llvm-svn: 167413
-fno-sanitize=<sanitizers> argument to driver. These allow ASan, TSan, and the
various UBSan checks to be enabled and disabled separately. Right now, the
different modes can't be combined, but the intention is that combining UBSan
and the other sanitizers will be permitted in the near future.
Currently, the UBSan checks will all be enabled if any of them is; that will be
fixed by the next patch.
llvm-svn: 167411
header-search options into the module hash. We're just using
ADT/Hashing.hpp for this, which isn't as cryptographically strong as
I'd like, but it'll do. If someone contributes (say) and MD4
implementation, we'd happily switch to that.
llvm-svn: 167397
caret locations and source ranges in macros. Makes ranges more accurate
in some cases, and fixes an assertion failure.
Fixes <rdar://problem/12472249>.
llvm-svn: 167353
The stat cache became essentially useless ever since we started
validating all file entries in the PCH.
But the motivating reason for removing it now is that it also affected
correctness in this situation:
-You have a header without include guards (using "#pragma once" or #import)
-When creating the PCH:
-The same header is referenced in an #include with different filename cases.
-In the PCH, of course, we record only one file entry for the header file
-But we cache in the PCH file the stat info for both filename cases
-Then the source files are updated and the header file is updated in a way that
its size and modification time are the same but its inode changes
-When using the PCH:
-We validate the headers, we check that header file and we create a file entry with its current inode
-There's another #include with a filename with different case than the previously created file entry
-In order to get its stat info we go through the cached stat info of the PCH and we receive the old inode
-because of the different inodes, we think they are different files so we go ahead and include its contents.
Removing the stat cache will potentially break clients that are attempting to use the stat cache
as a way of avoiding having the actual input files available. If that use case is important, patches are welcome
to bring it back in a way that will actually work correctly (i.e., emit a PCH that is self-contained, coping with
literal strings, line/column computations, etc.).
This fixes rdar://5502805
llvm-svn: 167172
the macros that are #define'd or #undef'd on the command line. This
checking happens much earlier than the current macro-definition
checking and is far cleaner, because it does a direct comparison
rather than a diff of the predefines buffers. Moreover, it allows us
to use the result of this check to skip over PCH files within a
directory that have non-matching -D's or -U's on the command
line. Finally, it improves the diagnostics a bit for mismatches,
fixing <rdar://problem/8612222>.
The old predefines-buffer diff'ing will go away in a subsequent commit.
llvm-svn: 166641
After every 1000 CFGElements processed, the ExplodedGraph trims out nodes
that satisfy a number of criteria for being "boring" (single predecessor,
single successor, and more). Rather than controlling this with a cc1 option,
which can only disable this behavior, we now have an analyzer-config option,
'graph-trim-interval', which can change this interval from 1000 to something
else. Setting the value to 0 disables reclamation.
The next commit relies on this behavior to actually test anything.
llvm-svn: 166528
the various stakeholders bump up the reference count. In particular,
the diagnostics engine now keeps the DiagnosticOptions object alive.
llvm-svn: 166508
check each of the files within that directory to determine if any of
them is an AST file that matches the language and target options. If
so, the first matching AST file is loaded. This fixes a longstanding
discrepency with GCC's precompiled header implementation.
llvm-svn: 166469
implicitly-included PTH files during initialization, delaying the
mapping down to the "original source file" until after later in the
initialization process.
llvm-svn: 166452
failures they know how to tolerate, e.g., out-of-date input files or
configuration/version mismatches. Suppress the corresponding
diagnostics if the client can handle it.
No clients actually use this functionality, yet.
llvm-svn: 166449
Each option has a set of prefixes. When matching an argument such as
-funroll-loops. First the leading - is removed as it is a prefix. Then
a lower_bound search for "funroll-loops" is done against the option table by
option name. From there each option prefix + option name combination is tested
against the argument.
This allows us to support Microsoft style options where both / and - are valid
prefixes. It also simplifies the cases we already have where options come in
both - and -- forms. Almost every option for gnu-ld happens to have this form.
llvm-svn: 166444
This change was initially proposed as a solution to the problem highlighted by check-in r164677, i.e. that -verify will not cause a test-case failure where the compile command does not actually reference the file.
Patch reviewed by David Blaikie.
llvm-svn: 166281
are no known current users of column info. Robustify and fix up
a few tests in the process. Reduces the size of debug information
by a small amount.
Part of PR14106
llvm-svn: 166236
This reduces the spam make test leaves behind in /tmp. The assert isn't
particularly useful because it's not run with -disable-free (the default when
using the clang driver) but should cover all -cc1 tests.
llvm-svn: 165910
The ASTUnit needs to initialize an ASTWriter at the beginning of
parsing to fully handle serialization of a translation unit that
imports modules. Do this by introducing an option to enable it, which
corresponds to CXTranslationUnit_ForSerialization on the C API side.
llvm-svn: 165717
MacroInfo*. Instead of simply dumping an offset into the current file,
give each macro definition a proper ID with all of the standard
modules-remapping facilities. Additionally, when a macro is modified
in a subsequent AST file (e.g., #undef'ing a macro loaded from another
module or from a precompiled header), provide a macro update record
rather than rewriting the entire macro definition. This gives us
greater consistency with the way we handle declarations, and ties
together macro definitions much more cleanly.
Note that we're still not actually deserializing macro history (we
never were), but it's far easy to do properly now.
llvm-svn: 165560
have PPCallbacks::InclusionDirective pass the character range for the filename quotes or brackets.
rdar://11113134 & http://llvm.org/PR13880
llvm-svn: 164743
middle of UTF-8 characters, and avoid walking to such positions when adjusting
column ranges for display. Fixes a couple of hangs when rendering diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 163820
passing -fretain-comments-from-system-headers. By default, the
compiler no longer parses such documentation comments, as they
can result in a noticeable compile time/PCH slowdown.
Fixes <rdar://problem/11860820>.
llvm-svn: 163778
While destructors will continue to not be inlined (unless the analyzer
config option 'c++-inlining' is set to 'destructors'), leaving them out
of the CFG is an incomplete model of the behavior of an object, and
can cause false positive warnings (like PR13751, now working).
Destructors for temporaries are still not on by default, since
(a) we haven't actually checked this code to be sure it's fully correct
(in particular, we probably need to be very careful with regard to
lifetime-extension when a temporary is bound to a reference,
C++11 [class.temporary]p5), and
(b) ExprEngine doesn't actually do anything when it sees a temporary
destructor in the CFG -- not even invalidate the object region.
To enable temporary destructors, set the 'cfg-temporary-dtors' analyzer
config option to '1'. The old -cfg-add-implicit-dtors cc1 option, which
controlled all implicit destructors, has been removed.
llvm-svn: 163264
a comma separated collection of key:value pairs (which are strings). This
allows a general way to provide analyzer configuration data from the command line.
No clients yet.
llvm-svn: 162827
Summary:
Summary: Keep history of macro definitions and #undefs with corresponding source locations, so that we can later find out all macros active in a specified source location. We don't save the history in PCH (no need currently). Memory overhead is about sizeof(void*)*3*<number of macro definitions and #undefs>+<in-memory size of all #undef'd macros>
I've run a test on a file composed of 109 .h files from boost 1.49 on x86-64 linux.
Stats before this patch:
*** Preprocessor Stats:
73222 directives found:
19171 #define.
4345 #undef.
#include/#include_next/#import:
5233 source files entered.
27 max include stack depth
19210 #if/#ifndef/#ifdef.
2384 #else/#elif.
6891 #endif.
408 #pragma.
14466 #if/#ifndef#ifdef regions skipped
80023/451669/1270 obj/fn/builtin macros expanded, 85724 on the fast path.
127145 token paste (##) operations performed, 11008 on the fast path.
Preprocessor Memory: 5874615B total
BumpPtr: 4399104
Macro Expanded Tokens: 417768
Predefines Buffer: 8135
Macros: 1048576
#pragma push_macro Info: 0
Poison Reasons: 1024
Comment Handlers: 8
Stats with this patch:
...
Preprocessor Memory: 7541687B total
BumpPtr: 6066176
Macro Expanded Tokens: 417768
Predefines Buffer: 8135
Macros: 1048576
#pragma push_macro Info: 0
Poison Reasons: 1024
Comment Handlers: 8
In my test increase in memory usage is about 1.7Mb, which is ~28% of initial preprocessor's memory usage and about 0.8% of clang's total VMM allocation.
As for CPU overhead, it should only be noticeable when iterating over all macros, and should mostly consist of couple extra dereferences and one comparison per macro + skipping of #undef'd macros. It's less trivial to measure, though, as the preprocessor consumes a very small fraction of compilation time.
Reviewers: doug.gregor, klimek, rsmith, djasper
Reviewed By: doug.gregor
CC: cfe-commits, chandlerc
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D28
llvm-svn: 162810
CodeGen option to a LangOpt option. In turn, hoist the guard into the parser
so that we avoid the new (and fairly unstable) Sema/AST/CodeGen logic. This
should restore the behavior of clang to that prior to r158325.
<rdar://problem/12163681>
llvm-svn: 162602
Under -analyzer-ipa=basic-inlining, only C functions, blocks, and C++ static
member functions are inlined -- essentially, the calls that behave like simple
C function calls. This is essentially the behavior in Xcode 4.4.
C++ support still has some rough edges, and we don't want users to be worried
about them if they download and run their own checker. (In particular, the
massive number of false positives for analyzing LLVM comes from inlining
defensively-written code in contexts where more aggressive assumptions are
implicitly made. This problem is not unique to C++, but it is exacerbated by
the higher proportion of code that lives in header files in C++.)
The eventual goal is to be comfortable enough with C++ support (and simple
Objective-C support) to advance to -analyzer-ipa=inlining as the default
behavior. See the IPA design notes for more details.
llvm-svn: 162318
if a diagnostic is emitted outside of any source file. The fix mirrors the
corresponding code in TextDiagnosticPrinter. This required moving the
functional parts of SDiagRenderer into SDiagWriter so they can be reused in the
non-rendering codepath.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 162253
diagnostics for bad deployment targets and adding a few
more predicates. Includes a patch by Jonathan Schleifer
to enable ARC for ObjFW.
llvm-svn: 162252
In Debug builds, VerifyDiagnosticConsumer checks any files with diagnostics
to make sure we got the chance to parse them for directives (expected-warning
and friends). This check previously relied on every parsed file having a
FileEntry, which broke the cling interpreter's test suite.
This commit changes the extra debug checking to mark a file as unparsed
as soon as we see a diagnostic from that file. At the very end, any files
that are still marked as unparsed are checked for directives, and a fatal
error is emitted (as before) if we find out that there were directives we
missed. -verify directives should always live in actual parsed files, not
in PCH or AST files.
Patch by Andy Gibbs, with slight modifications by me.
llvm-svn: 162171
Instead of adding it to each individual subclass in
Targets.cpp, simply check the appropriate target
values.
Where before it was only on x86_64 and ppc64, it's now
also defined on mips64 and nvptx64.
Also add a bunch of negative tests to ensure it is *not*
defined on any other architectures while we're here.
llvm-svn: 161685
The old behavior was to re-scan any files (like modules) where we may have
directives but won't actually be parsing during the -verify invocation.
Now, we keep the old behavior in Debug builds as a sanity check (though
modules are a known entity), and expect all legitimate directives to come
from comments seen by the preprocessor.
This also affects the ARC migration tool, which captures diagnostics in
order to filter some out. This change adds an explicit cleanup to
CaptureDiagnosticsConsumer in order to let its sub-consumer handle the
real end of diagnostics.
This was originally split into four patches, but the tests do not run
cleanly without all four, so I've combined them into one commit.
Patches by Andy Gibbs, with slight modifications from me.
llvm-svn: 161650
Add some tests for __OPTIMIZE_SIZE__ and __NO_INLINE__,
removing the superfluous copies in the target-specific
tests, since it's target-independent.
This uncovered a bug in the handling of -Oz: it would
attempt to store the value 2 in the 1-bit bitfield OptimizeSize,
leaving a value of 0 and never defining __OPTIMIZE_SIZE__.
llvm-svn: 161495
in the default search path. Compilers on *BSD OS's only include /usr/include by
default.
Contributed by Brad Smith <brad@comstyle.com>
llvm-svn: 161173
The __BYTE_ORDER__ predefined macro was added in GCC 4.6:
http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.6.0/cpp/Common-Predefined-Macros.html
It's used like the following:
#if __BYTE_ORDER__ == __ORDER_LITTLE_ENDIAN__
...
#elif __BYTE_ORDER__ == __ORDER_BIG_ENDIAN__
...
#else
#error insane architecture like the pdp-11
#endif
There's a similar macro, __FLOAT_WORD_ORDER__, but it looks like it
mainly exist to accommodate fairly obscure architectures and ARM's
old FPA instructions, so it doesn't seem nearly as useful.
The tests are updated to check for the correct(at least, based on
clang's current output) value of the macro on each target. So now the
suite will catch bugs like the one fixed in r157626.
llvm-svn: 160879
This time, make sure we don't try to print fixits with newline characters,
since they don't have a valid column width, and they don't look good anyway.
PR13417 (and originally <rdar://problem/11877454>)
llvm-svn: 160561
This macro was being unconditionally set to zero, preceded by a FIXME comment.
This fixes <rdar://problem/11845441>. Patch by Michael Gottesman!
llvm-svn: 160491
This code is very sensitive to the difference between "columns" as printed
and "bytes" (SourceManager columns). All variables are now named explicitly
and our assumptions are (hopefully) documented as both comment and assertion.
Whether parseable fixits should use byte offsets or Unicode character counts
is pending discussion on the mailing list; currently the implementation uses
bytes (and has no problems on lines containing multibyte characters).
This has been added to the user manual.
<rdar://problem/11877454>
llvm-svn: 160319
as "volatile", meaning there's a high enough chance that they may
change while we are trying to use them.
This flag is only enabled by libclang.
Currently "volatile" source files will be stat'ed immediately
before opening them, because the file size stat info
may not be accurate since when we got it (e.g. from the PCH).
This avoids crashes when trying to reference mmap'ed memory
from a file whose size is not what we expect.
Note that there's still a window for a racing issue to occur
but the window for it should be way smaller than before.
We can consider later on to avoid mmap completely on such files.
rdar://11612916
llvm-svn: 160074
This is accomplished by making VerifyDiagnosticsConsumer a CommentHandler,
which then only reads the -verify directives that are actually in live
blocks of code. It also makes it simpler to handle -verify directives that
appear in header files, though we still have to manually reparse some files
depending on how they are generated.
This requires some test changes. In particular, all PCH tests now have their
-verify directives outside the "header" portion of the file, using the @line
syntax added in r159978. Other tests have been modified mostly to make it
clear what is being tested, and to prevent polluting the expected output with
the directives themselves.
Patch by Andy Gibbs! (with slight modifications)
The new Frontend/verify-* tests exercise the functionality of this commit,
as well as r159978, r159979, and r160053 (Andy's other -verify enhancements).
llvm-svn: 160068
Previously we'd halt at the fatal error as expected, but not actually emit
any -verify-related diagnostics. This lets us catch cases that emit a
/different/ fatal error from the one we expected.
This is implemented by adding a "force emit" mode to DiagnosticBuilder, which
will cause diagnostics to immediately be emitted regardless of current
suppression. Needless to say this should probably be used /very/ sparingly.
Patch by Andy Gibbs! Tests for all of Andy's -verify patches coming soon.
llvm-svn: 160053
void f(); // expected-note 0+ {{previous declaration is here}}
void g(); // expected-note 0-1 {{previous declaration is here}}
The old "+" syntax is still an alias for "1+", and single numbers still work.
Patch by Andy Gibbs!
llvm-svn: 159979
// expected-warning@10 {{some text}}
The line number may be absolute (as above), or relative to the current
line by prefixing the number with either '+' or '-'.
Patch by Andy Gibbs!
llvm-svn: 159978
- Split pedantic driver flag test into separate test file, and XFAIL on cygwin,mingw32
- Fix bug in tablegen logic where a missing '{' caused errors to be included in -Wpedantic.
llvm-svn: 159892
I suspect FileCheck might match assertion failure, even if clang/test/Misc/warning-flags.c passed the test.
> 0. Program arguments: bin/./clang -### -pedantic -Wpedantic clang/test/Driver/warning-options.cpp
llvm-svn: 159886
This patch introduces some magic in tablegen to create a "Pedantic" diagnostic
group which automagically includes all warnings that are extensions. This
allows a user to suppress specific warnings traditionally under -pedantic used
an ordinary warning flag. This also allows users to use #pragma to silence
specific -pedantic warnings, or promote them to errors, within blocks of text
(just like any other warning).
-Wpedantic is NOT an alias for -pedantic. Instead, it provides another way
to (a) activate -pedantic warnings and (b) disable them. Where they differ
is that -pedantic changes the behavior of the preprocessor slightly, whereas
-Wpedantic does not (it just turns on the warnings).
The magic in the tablegen diagnostic emitter has to do with computing the minimal
set of diagnostic groups and diagnostics that should go into -Wpedantic, as those
diagnostics that already members of groups that themselves are (transitively) members
of -Wpedantic do not need to be included in the Pedantic group directly. I went
back and forth on whether or not to magically generate this group, and the invariant
was that we always wanted extension warnings to be included in -Wpedantic "some how",
but the bookkeeping would be very onerous to manage by hand.
-no-pedantic (and --no-pedantic) is included for completeness, and matches many of the
same kind of flags the compiler already supports. It does what it says: cancels out
-pedantic. One discrepancy is that if one specifies --no-pedantic and -Weverything or
-Wpedantic the pedantic warnings are still enabled (essentially the -W flags win). We
can debate the correct behavior here.
Along the way, this patch nukes some code in TextDiagnosticPrinter.cpp and CXStoredDiagnostic.cpp
that determine whether to include the "-pedantic" flag in the warning output. This is
no longer needed, as all extensions now have a -W flag.
This patch also significantly reduces the number of warnings not under flags from 229
to 158 (all extension warnings). That's a 31% reduction.
llvm-svn: 159875
This flag sets the 'fp-contract' mode, which controls the formation of fused
floating point operations. Available modes are:
- Fast: Form fused operations anywhere.
- On: Form fused operations where allowed by FP_CONTRACT. This is the default
mode.
- Off: Don't form fused operations (in future this may be relaxed to forming
fused operations where it can be proved that the result won't be
affected).
Currently clang doesn't support the FP_CONTRACT pragma, so the 'On' and 'Off'
modes are equivalent.
llvm-svn: 159794
very simple semantic analysis that just builds the AST; minor changes for lexer
to pick up source locations I didn't think about before.
Comments AST is modelled along the ideas of HTML AST: block and inline content.
* Block content is a paragraph or a command that has a paragraph as an argument
or verbatim command.
* Inline content is placed within some block. Inline content includes plain
text, inline commands and HTML as tag soup.
llvm-svn: 159790
attached to a declaration in the completion string.
Since extracting comments isn't free, a new code completion option is
introduced.
A new code completion option that enables including brief comments
into CodeCompletionString should be a, err, code completion option.
But because ASTUnit caches global declarations during parsing before
even completion consumer is created, the option is duplicated as a
translation unit option (in both libclang and ASTUnit, like the option
to cache code completion results).
llvm-svn: 159539
comparison between two templated types when they both appear in a diagnostic.
Type elision will remove indentical template arguments, which can be disabled
with -fno-elide-type. Cyan highlighting is applied to the differing types.
For more formatting, -fdiagnostic-show-template-tree will output the template
type as an indented text tree, with differences appearing inline. Template
tree works with or without type elision.
llvm-svn: 159216
express library-level dependencies within Clang.
This is no more verbose really, and plays nicer with the rest of the
CMake facilities. It should also have no change in functionality.
llvm-svn: 158888
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
Add error checking for the static qualifier which is now allowed in certain situations for OpenCL 1.2. Use the CL version to turn on this feature.
Added test case for 1.2 static storage class feature.
llvm-svn: 158759
option. On the driver, check if we are using libraries from gcc 4.7 or newer
and if so pass -fuse-init-array to the frontend.
The crtbegin*.o files in gcc 4.7 no longer call the constructors listed in
.ctors, so we have to use .init_array.
llvm-svn: 158694
This simplifies the code a little bit, since these functions all took a
SourceManager parameter and called a bunch of methods on it, and makes
the functions available to other users.
llvm-svn: 158676
1. Teach Lexer that pragma lexers are like macro expansions at EOF.
2. Treat pragmas like #define/#undef when printing.
3. If we just printed a directive, add a newline before any more tokens.
(4. Miscellaneous cleanup in PrintPreprocessedOutput.cpp)
PR10594 and <rdar://problem/11562490> (two separate related problems)
llvm-svn: 158571
This reduces the number of warnings generated by Doxygen by about 100
(roughly 10%). Issues addressed:
(1) Primarily, backslash-escaped "@foo" and "#bah" in Doxygen comments
when they're not supposed to be Doxygen commands or links, and
similarly for "<baz>" when it's not intended as as HTML tag;
(2) Changed some \t commands (which don't exist) to \c ("to refer to a
word of code", as the Doxygen manual says);
(3) \precondition becomes \pre;
(4) When touching comments, deleted a couple of spurious spaces in them;
(5) Changed some \n and \r to \\n and \\r;
(6) Fixed one tiny typo: #pragms -> #pragma.
This patch touches documentation/comments only.
llvm-svn: 158422
override whether headers are system headers by checking for prefixes of the
header name specified in the #include directive.
This allows warnings to be disabled for third-party code which is found in
specific subdirectories of include paths.
llvm-svn: 158418
This occurs when you have two insertions and the first one is so long that the
second fixit's column is before the first fixit ends. The edits themselves
don't actually overlap, but our command-line preview does.
llvm-svn: 158229
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
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=12924
This issue was that the source location was pointing to a
non-printable character and so CaretEnd was pointing one
_column_ past the caret but not one _character_ past the
caret. So the conversion between column and byte locations
wasn't working (because the conversion is only valid from
the first column or byte of a character).
llvm-svn: 157372
for subtle misspellings such as -Wno-unused-command-line-arguments instead of
-Wno-unused-command-line-argument.
Also fix the diagnostic messages to properly handle -Wno- options. Previously,
the positive version was always emitted (i.e., -Wfoo was emitted for -Wno-foo).
rdar://11461500
llvm-svn: 156937
from the frontend when the location is invalid and the SourceManager null.
Instead of keeping the SourceManager object in DiagnosticRenderer, propagate it
to the calls accordingly (as reference when it is expected to not be null, or pointer
when it may be null).
This effectively makes DiagnosticRenderer not tied to a specific SourceManager,
removing a hack from TextDiagnosticPrinter.
rdar://11386874
llvm-svn: 156536
When enabled, clang generates bounds checks for array and pointers dereferences. Work to follow in LLVM's backend.
OK'ed by Chad; thanks for the review.
llvm-svn: 156431
It reduces the amount of emitted debug information:
1) DIEs in .debug_info have types DW_TAG_compile_unit, DW_TAG_subprogram,
DW_TAG_inlined_subroutine (for opt builds) and DW_TAG_lexical_block only.
2) .debug_str contains only function names.
3) No debug data for types/namespaces/variables is emitted.
4) The data in .debug_line is enough to produce valid stack traces with
function names and line numbers.
Reviewed by Eric Christopher.
llvm-svn: 156160
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
Unprintable source in diagnostics is transformed to a printable form and then
displayed with reversed colors if possible. Unprintable characters are
displayed as <U+NNNN> while bytes that do not represent valid characters are
shown as <XX>.
Column adjustments to diagnostic carets, highlighted ranges, and fixups are
made both for characters escaped as above and for characters which are
printable but take up more than a single column.
llvm-svn: 154980
This reverts commit e9a3b76ba589a8a884e978273beaed0d97cf9861.
Revert "fix display of source lines with null characters"
This reverts commit 70712b276e40bbe11e5063dfc7e82ce3209929cd.
llvm-svn: 154950
Unprintable source in diagnostics is transformed to a printable form and then
displayed with reversed colors if possible. Unprintable characters are
displayed as <U+NNNN> while bytes that do not represent valid characters are
shown as <XX>.
Column adjustments to diagnostic carets, highlighted ranges, and fixups are
made both for characters escaped as above and for characters which are
printable but take up more than a single column.
llvm-svn: 154946
__atomic_test_and_set, __atomic_clear, plus a pile of undocumented __GCC_*
predefined macros.
Implement library fallback for __atomic_is_lock_free and
__c11_atomic_is_lock_free, and implement __atomic_always_lock_free.
Contrary to their documentation, GCC's __atomic_fetch_add family don't
multiply the operand by sizeof(T) when operating on a pointer type.
libstdc++ relies on this quirk. Remove this handling for all but the
__c11_atomic_fetch_add and __c11_atomic_fetch_sub builtins.
Contrary to their documentation, __atomic_test_and_set and __atomic_clear
take a first argument of type 'volatile void *', not 'void *' or 'bool *',
and __atomic_is_lock_free and __atomic_always_lock_free have an argument
of type 'const volatile void *', not 'void *'.
With this change, libstdc++4.7's <atomic> passes libc++'s atomic test suite,
except for a couple of libstdc++ bugs and some cases where libc++'s test
suite tests for properties which implementations have latitude to vary.
llvm-svn: 154640
CompilerInstance::setCodeCompletionConsumer instead, in order to change
the SkipFunctionBodies flag accordingly. Also fixed
setCodeCompletionConsumer to take a reset() to null into account.
llvm-svn: 154585
output the errors that occurred even if we did not get an AST (e.g. because the
PCH failed to load).
Also honor displayDiagnostics in clang_indexSourceFile().
rdar://11203489
llvm-svn: 154472
code-completion related strings specific to a translation unit (ASTContext and related data)
CodeCompletionAllocator does such limited caching, by caching the name assigned
to a DeclContext*, but that is not the appropriate place since that object has
a lifetime that can extend beyond that of an ASTContext.
Introduce CodeCompletionTUInfo which will be always tied to a translation unit
to do this kind of caching and move the caching of CodeCompletionAllocator into this
object, and propagate it to all the places where it will be needed.
The plan is to extend the caching where appropriate, using CodeCompletionTUInfo,
to avoid re-calculating code-completion strings.
Part of rdar://10796159.
llvm-svn: 154408
First, this patch cleans up the parsing of the PIC and PIE family of
options in the driver. The existing logic failed to claim arguments all
over the place resulting in kludges that marked the options as unused.
Instead actually walk all of the arguments and claim them properly.
We now treat -f{,no-}{pic,PIC,pie,PIE} as a single set, accepting the
last one on the commandline. Previously there were lots of ordering bugs
that could creep in due to the nature of the parsing. Let me know if
folks would like weird things such as "-fPIE -fno-pic" to turn on PIE,
but disable full PIC. This doesn't make any sense to me, but we could in
theory support it.
Options that seem to have intentional "trump" status (-static, -mkernel,
etc) continue to do so and are commented as such.
Next, a -pie-level flag is threaded into the frontend, rigged to
a language option, and handled preprocessor, setting up the appropriate
defines. We'll now have the correct defines when compiling with -fpie.
The one place outside of the preprocessor that was inspecting the PIC
level (as opposed to the relocation model, which is set and handled
separately, yay!) is in the GNU ObjC runtime. I changed it to exactly
preserve existing behavior. If folks want to change its behavior in the
face of PIE, they can do that in a separate patch.
Essentially the only functionality changed here is the preprocessor
defines and bug-fixes to the argument management.
Tests have been updated and extended to test all of this a bit more
thoroughly.
llvm-svn: 154291
flag as GCC uses: -fstrict-enums). There is a *lot* of code making
unwarranted assumptions about the underlying type of enums, and it
doesn't seem entirely reasonable to eagerly break all of it.
Much more importantly, the current state of affairs is *very* good at
optimizing based upon this information, which causes failures that are
very distant from the actual enum. Before we push for enabling this by
default, I think we need to implement -fcatch-undefined-behavior support
for instrumenting and trapping whenever we store or load a value outside
of the range. That way we can track down the misbehaving code very
quickly.
I discussed this with Rafael, and currently the only important cases he
is aware of are the bool range-based optimizations which are staying
hard enabled. We've not seen any issue with those either, and they are
much more important for performance.
llvm-svn: 153550
The analyzer gives up path exploration under certain conditions. For
example, when the same basic block has been visited more than 4 times.
With inlining turned on, this could lead to decrease in code coverage.
Specifically, if we give up inside the inlined function, the rest of
parent's basic blocks will not get analyzed.
This commit introduces an option to enable re-run along the failed path,
in which we do not inline the last inlined call site. This is done by
enqueueing the node before the processing of the inlined call site
with a special policy encoded in the state. The policy tells us not to
inline the call site along the path.
This lead to ~10% increase in the number of paths analyzed. Even though
we expected a much greater coverage improvement.
The option is turned off by default for now.
llvm-svn: 153534
list of identifiers that that 'public' names at the end of the
translation unit, e.g., defined macros or identifiers with top-level
names, in sorted order. Meant to support <rdar://problem/10921596>.
llvm-svn: 153522
Due to lack of move semantics we would create a temporary std::string from the
string literal, copy it into the vector and discard the temporary. This leads
to massive code bloat, optimizing it saves 50k on i386-linux-Release+Asserts.
While there add a two-element overload for push_back, simplifying code a bit.
llvm-svn: 153441
-fno-inline-functions.
This behaves much like -fno-inline in gcc, but based on a discussion with
Daniel it was decided that -fno-inline-functions should subsume -fno-inline.
Please speak up if you object. The -fno-inline flag remains ignored.
Final part of rdar://10972766
llvm-svn: 152754
Previously, only diagnostics thrown by the cc1 process were
actually honoring the diagnostic options given on the command line,
like -Werror.
Reuse the existing code in Frontend currently used for cc1,
adjusting it to not interpret -Wl, linker flags as warnings.
Also fix a faulty test exposed by this change.
It wasn't actually testing anything, and was giving this warning:
clang-3: warning: argument unused during compilation: '-verify'
Which -Werror didn't turn into an error because it was output
by the driver, not the cc1 process, and diagnostic options
weren't parsed by the driver. And you couldn't see the warning
when running the test suite.
Fixes PR12181.
Patch by Dylan Noblesmith <nobled@dreamwidth.org>.
llvm-svn: 152660
We do not reanalyze a function, which has already been analyzed as an
inlined callee. As per PRELIMINARY testing, this gives over
50% run time reduction on some benchmarks without decreasing of the
number of bugs found.
Turning the mode on by default.
llvm-svn: 152440
PR12196: The module hash strings are not actually hashing the compiler version
string; the entire version string is being included in the hash. Depending on
the module cache directory name, that can lead to failures where the path
names become too long. As a temporary workaround, just remove the version
string from the hash.
llvm-svn: 152266
compiler errors or not.
-Control whether ASTReader should reject such a PCH by a boolean flag at ASTReader's creation time.
By default, such a PCH file will be rejected with an error when trying to load it.
[libclang] Allow clang_saveTranslationUnit to create a PCH file even if compiler errors
occurred.
-Have libclang API calls accept a PCH that had compiler errors.
The general idea is that we want libclang to stay functional even if a PCH had a compiler error.
rdar://10976363.
llvm-svn: 152192
the new Objective-C NSArray/NSDictionary/NSNumber literal syntax.
This introduces a new library, libEdit, which provides a new way to support
migration of code that improves on the original ARC migrator. We now believe
that most of its functionality can be refactored into the existing libraries,
and thus this new library may shortly disappear.
llvm-svn: 152141
In the included testcase, soma thinks that we already have a definition after we
see the out of line decl. Codegen puts it in a deferred list, to be output if
a use is seen. This would break when we saw an explicit template instantiation
definition, since codegen would not be notified.
This patch adds a method to the consumer interface so that soma can notify
codegen that this decl is now required.
llvm-svn: 152024
Introduce PreprocessingRecord::rangeIntersectsConditionalDirective() which returns
true if a given range intersects with a conditional directive block.
llvm-svn: 152018
- This is a more reliable default, as it behaves better on failure and also
ensures that we create *new* files (instead of reusing existing inodes). This
is useful for other applications (like lldb) which want to cache inode's to
know when a file has been rewritten.
llvm-svn: 151961
command line options for inlining tuning.
This adds the option for stack depth bound as well as function size
bound.
+ minor doxygenification
llvm-svn: 151930
Unconditionally define __C99FEATURES__ when using C++ on Solaris. This is a
(hopefully temporary) work around for libc++ exposing C99-but-not-C++98
features in C++98 mode.
llvm-svn: 151889
This flag enables ThreadSanitizer instrumentation committed to llvm as r150423.
The patch includes one test for -fthread-sanitizer and one similar test for -faddress-sanitizer.
This patch does not modify the linker flags (as we do it for -faddress-sanitizer) because the run-time library is not yet
committed and it's structure in compiler-rt is not 100% clear.
The users manual wil be changed in a separate commit.
llvm-svn: 151846
This option was added in r129614 and doesn't have any use case that I'm aware
of. It's possible that external tools are using these names - and if that's
the case we can certainly reassess the functionality, but for now it lets us
shave out a few unneeded bits from clang.
Move the "StaticDiagNameIndex" table into the only remaining consumer, diagtool.
This removes the actual diagnostic name strings from clang entirely.
Reviewed by Chris Lattner & Ted Kremenek.
llvm-svn: 150612
And remove HAVE_CLANG_CONFIG_H, now that the header is generated
in the autoconf build, too.
Reverts r149571/restores r149504, now that config.h is generated
correctly by LLVM's configure in all build configurations.
llvm-svn: 150487
pulled into DiagnosticNoteRenderer, and common DiagnosticRenderer that
assumes that all custom diagnostic messages are notes. Also extend
DiagnosticRenderer to work with StoredDiagnostics in preparation for
subsequent changes.
llvm-svn: 150455
This seems to negatively affect compile time onsome ObjC tests
(which use a lot of partial diagnostics I assume). I have to come
up with a way to keep them inline without including Diagnostic.h
everywhere. Now adding a new diagnostic requires a full rebuild
of e.g. the static analyzer which doesn't even use those diagnostics.
This reverts commit 6496bd10dc3a6d5e3266348f08b6e35f8184bc99.
This reverts commit 7af19b817ba964ac560b50c1ed6183235f699789.
This reverts commit fdd15602a42bbe26185978ef1e17019f6d969aa7.
This reverts commit 00bd44d5677783527d7517c1ffe45e4d75a0f56f.
This reverts commit ef9b60ffed980864a8db26ad30344be429e58ff5.
llvm-svn: 150006
- Move the offending methods out of line and fix transitive includers.
- This required changing an enum in the PPCallback API into an unsigned.
llvm-svn: 149782
want to provide "po"-like functionality which
treats the result of an expression implicitly as
"id" (if it is not otherwise known) and prints
it as an Objective-C object.
This has in the past been gated by the
"DebuggerSupport" language option, but that is
too general. Debuggers also provide other commands
like "print" that do not make any assumptions
about whether the object is an Objective-C object.
This patch makes the assumption conditional on a
new language option: DebuggerCastResultToId. I
have also made corresponding modifications to the
testsuite.
llvm-svn: 149735
That llvm change removed the -trap-func backend option, so that using
-ftrap-function with clang would cause the backend to complain. Fix it
by adding the trap function name to the CodeGenOptions and passing it through
to the TargetOptions.
llvm-svn: 149679
that just uses the new toolchain probing logic. This fixes linking with -m32 on
64 bit systems (the /32 dir was not being added to the search).
llvm-svn: 149652
into using non-absolute system includes (<foo>)...
... and introduce another hack that is simultaneously more heineous
and more effective. We whitelist Clang-supplied headers that augment
or override system headers (such as float.h, stdarg.h, and
tgmath.h). For these headers, Clang does not provide a module
mapping. Instead, a system-supplied module map can refer to these
headers in a system module, and Clang will look both in its own
include directory and wherever the system-supplied module map
suggests, then adds either or both headers. The end result is that
Clang-supplied headers get merged into the system-supplied module for
the C standard library.
As a drive-by, fix up a few dependencies in the _Builtin_instrinsics
module.
llvm-svn: 149611
And remove HAVE_CLANG_CONFIG_H, now that the header is generated
in the autoconf build, too. (clang r149497 / llvm r149498)
Also include the config.h header after all other headers, per
the LLVM coding standards.
It also turns out WindowsToolChain.cpp wasn't using the config
header at all, so that include's just deleted now.
llvm-svn: 149504
builds, and bring mm_alloc.h into the fold. Start playing some tricks
with these builtin modules to mirror the include_next tricks that the
headers already perform.
llvm-svn: 149434
for getting the name of the module file, unifying the code for
searching for a module with a given name (into lookupModule()) and
separating out the mapping to a module file (into
getModuleFileName()). No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 149197
like Darwin that don't support it. We should also complain about
invalid -fvisibility=protected, but that information doesn't seem
to exist at the most appropriate time, so I've left a FIXME behind.
llvm-svn: 149186
single attribute ("system") that allows us to mark a module as being a
"system" module. Each of the headers that makes up a system module is
considered to be a system header, so that we (for example) suppress
warnings there.
If a module is being inferred for a framework, and that framework
directory is within a system frameworks directory, infer it as a
system framework.
llvm-svn: 149143
-Wno-everything remap all warnings to ignored.
We can now use "-Wno-everything -W<warning>" to ignore all warnings except
specific ones.
llvm-svn: 149121
leaves "finalize' behind and in arc mode, does not
include it. This allows the migrated source to be compiled
in both gc and arc mode. // rdar://10532441
llvm-svn: 149079
provide the layout of records, rather than letting Clang compute
the layout itself. LLDB provides the motivation for this feature:
because various layout-altering attributes (packed, aligned, etc.)
don't get reliably get placed into DWARF, the record layouts computed
by LLDB from the reconstructed records differ from the actual layouts,
and badness occurs. This interface lets the DWARF data drive layout,
so we don't need the attributes preserved to get the answer write.
The testing methodology for this change is fun. I've introduced a
variant of -fdump-record-layouts called -fdump-record-layouts-simple
that always has the simple C format and provides size/alignment/field
offsets. There is also a -cc1 option -foverride-record-layout=<file>
to take the output of -fdump-record-layouts-simple and parse it to
produce a set of overridden layouts, which is introduced into the AST
via a testing-only ExternalASTSource (called
LayoutOverrideSource). Each test contains a number of records to lay
out, which use various layout-changing attributes, and then dumps the
layouts. We then run the test again, using the preprocessor to
eliminate the layout-changing attributes entirely (which would give us
different layouts for the records), but supplying the
previously-computed record layouts. Finally, we diff the layouts
produced from the two runs to be sure that they are identical.
Note that this code makes the assumption that we don't *have* to
provide the offsets of bases or virtual bases to get the layout right,
because the alignment attributes don't affect it. I believe this
assumption holds, but if it does not, we can extend
LayoutOverrideSource to also provide base offset information.
Fixes the Clang side of <rdar://problem/10169539>.
llvm-svn: 149055
-fixit-recompile
applies fixits and recompiles the result
-fixit-to-temporary
applies fixits to temporary files
-fix-only-warnings">,
applies fixits for warnings only, not errors
Combining "-fixit-recompile -fixit-to-temporary" allows testing the result of fixits
without touching the original sources.
llvm-svn: 149027
return pre-built lists. Instead, it feeds the methods it deserializes
to Sema so that Sema can unique them, which keeps the chains shorter.
llvm-svn: 148889
specific to migrator. Use its first option to
warn migrating from GC to arc when
NSAllocateCollectable/NSReallocateCollectable is used.
// rdar://10532541
llvm-svn: 148887
- Add atomic-to/from-nonatomic cast types
- Emit atomic operations for arithmetic on atomic types
- Emit non-atomic stores for initialisation of atomic types, but atomic stores and loads for every other store / load
- Add a __atomic_init() intrinsic which does a non-atomic store to an _Atomic() type. This is needed for the corresponding C11 stdatomic.h function.
- Enables the relevant __has_feature() checks. The feature isn't 100% complete yet, but it's done enough that we want people testing it.
Still to do:
- Make the arithmetic operations on atomic types (e.g. Atomic(int) foo = 1; foo++;) use the correct LLVM intrinsic if one exists, not a loop with a cmpxchg.
- Add a signal fence builtin
- Properly set the fenv state in atomic operations on floating point values
- Correctly handle things like _Atomic(_Complex double) which are too large for an atomic cmpxchg on some platforms (this requires working out what 'correctly' means in this context)
- Fix the many remaining corner cases
llvm-svn: 148242
in the module map. This provides a bit more predictability for the
user, as well as eliminating the need to sort the submodules when
serializing them.
llvm-svn: 147564
module imports from -fauto-module-import to -fmodules. The new name
will eventually be used to enable modules, and the #include/#import
mapping is a crucial part of the feature.
llvm-svn: 147447
Clang driver. This involves a bunch of silly option parsing code to try
to carefully emulate GCC's options. Currently, this takes a conservative
approach, and unless all of the unsafe optimizations are enabled, none
of them are. The fine grained control doesn't seem particularly useful.
If it ever becomes useful, we can add that to LLVM first, and then
expose it here.
This also fixes a few tiny bugs in the flag management around
-fhonor-infinities and -fhonor-nans; the flags now form proper sets both
for enabling and disabling, with the last flag winning.
I've also implemented a moderately terrifying GCC feature where
a language change is also provided by the '-ffast-math' flag by defining
the __FAST_MATH__ preprocessor macro. This feature is tracked and
serialized in the frontend but it isn't used yet. A subsequent patch
will add the preprocessor macro and tests for it.
I've manually tested that codegen appears to respect this, but I've not
dug in enough to see if there is an easy way to test codegen options w/o
relying on the particulars of LLVM's optimizations.
llvm-svn: 147434
features needed for a particular module to be available. This allows
mixed-language modules, where certain headers only work under some
language variants (e.g., in C++, std.tuple might only be available in
C++11 mode).
llvm-svn: 147387
This fixes the FIXMEs in ParseAnalyzeArgs. (Also a
precursor to moving the analyzer into an AST plugin.)
For consistency, do the same with AssemblerInvocation.
llvm-svn: 147218
hitting a submodule that was never actually created, e.g., because
that header wasn't parsed. In such cases, complain (because the
module's umbrella headers don't cover everything) and fall back to
including the header.
Later, we'll add a warning at module-build time to catch all such
cases. However, this fallback is important to eliminate assertions in
the ASTWriter when this happens.
llvm-svn: 146933
It had been causing test "Misc/diag-verify.cpp" failure on ms cl.exe. The emission was ordered unexpectedly as below;
First) error: 'error' diagnostics seen but not expected:
Second) error: 'error' diagnostics expected but not seen:
llvm-svn: 146830
the policy of how diagnostics are lowered/rendered, while TextDiagnostic handles
the actual pretty-printing.
This is a first part of reworking SerializedDiagnosticPrinter to use the same
inclusion-stack/macro-expansion logic as TextDiagnostic.
llvm-svn: 146819
fails within a call to a constexpr function. Add -fconstexpr-backtrace-limit
argument to driver and frontend, to control the maximum number of notes so
produced (default 10). Fix APValue printing to be able to pretty-print all
APValue types, and move the testing for this functionality from a unittest to
a -verify test now that it's visible in clang's output.
llvm-svn: 146749
diagnostic message are compared. If either is a substring of the other, then
no error is given. This gives rise to an unexpected case:
// expect-error{{candidate function has different number of parameters}}
will match the following error messages from Clang:
candidate function has different number of parameters (expected 1 but has 2)
candidate function has different number of parameters
It will also match these other error messages:
candidate function
function has different number of parameters
number of parameters
This patch will change so that the verification string must be a substring of
the diagnostic message before accepting. Also, all the failing tests from this
change have been corrected. Some stats from this cleanup:
87 - removed extra spaces around verification strings
70 - wording updates to diagnostics
40 - extra leading or trailing characters (typos, unmatched parens or quotes)
35 - diagnostic level was included (error:, warning:, or note:)
18 - flag name put in the warning (-Wprotocol)
llvm-svn: 146619
belonged in the Serialization library, it's setting up a compilation,
not just deserializing.
This should fix PR11512, making Serialization actually be layered below
Frontend, a long standing layering violation in Clang.
llvm-svn: 146233
part of HeaderSearch. This function just normalizes filenames for use
inside of a synthetic include directive, but it is used in both the
Frontend and Serialization libraries so it needs a common home.
llvm-svn: 146227
umbrella headers in the sense that all of the headers within that
directory (and eventually its subdirectories) are considered to be
part of the module with that umbrella directory. However, unlike
umbrella headers, which are expected to include all of the headers
within their subdirectories, Clang will automatically include all of
the headers it finds in the named subdirectory.
The intent here is to allow a module map to trivially turn a
subdirectory into a module, where the module's structure can mimic the
directory structure.
llvm-svn: 146165
header to also support umbrella directories. The umbrella directory
for an umbrella header is the directory in which the umbrella header
resides.
No functionality change yet, but it's coming.
llvm-svn: 146158
-Allow it to be used with multiple BeginSourceFile/EndSourceFile calls; for this introduce
a "finish" callback method in the DiagnosticConsumer. SDiagsWriter finishes up the serialization
file inside this method.
-Make it independent of any particular DiagnosticsEngine; make it use the SourceManager of the
Diagnostic object.
-Ignore null source ranges.
llvm-svn: 146020
explicit submodules or umbrella headers from submodules. Instead,
build the entire module at once, and let the name-hiding mechanisms
hide the contents of explicit submodules at load time.
llvm-svn: 145940
(sub)module, all of the names may be hidden, just the macro names may
be exposed (for example, after the preprocessor has seen the import of
the module but the parser has not), or all of the names may be
exposed. Importing a module makes its names, and the names in any of
its non-explicit submodules, visible to name lookup (transitively).
This commit only introduces the notion of name visible and marks
modules and submodules as visible when they are imported. The actual
name-hiding logic in the AST reader will follow (along with test cases).
llvm-svn: 145586
library, since modules cut across all of the libraries. Rename
serialization::Module to serialization::ModuleFile to side-step the
annoying naming conflict. Prune a bunch of ModuleMap.h includes that
are no longer needed (most files only needed the Module type).
llvm-svn: 145538
submodules. This information will eventually be used for name hiding
when dealing with submodules. For now, we only use it to ensure that
the module "key" returned when loading a module will always be a
module (rather than occasionally being a FileEntry).
llvm-svn: 145497
check whether the named submodules themselves are actually
valid, and drill down to the named submodule (although we don't do
anything with it yet). Perform typo correction on the submodule names
when possible.
llvm-svn: 145477
return the module itself (in the module map) rather than returning the
umbrella header used to build the module. While doing this, make sure
that we're inferring modules for frameworks to build that module.
llvm-svn: 145310
inside an objc container that "contains" other file-level declarations.
When getting the array of file-level declarations that overlap with a file region,
we failed to report that the region overlaps with an objc container, if
the container had other file-level declarations declared lexically inside it.
Fix this by marking such declarations as "isTopLevelDeclInObjCContainer" in the AST
and handling them appropriately.
llvm-svn: 145109
semantics and defaults as the corresponding g++ arguments. The historical g++
argument -ftemplate-depth-N is kept for compatibility, but modern g++ versions
no longer document that option.
Add -cc1 argument -fconstexpr-depth N to implement the corresponding
functionality.
The -ftemplate-depth=N part of this fixes PR9890.
llvm-svn: 145045
a bug where the reference count is copied in the copy constructor, which means that there were cases when the CompilerInvocation
objects created by ASTUnit were actually leaked. When I fixed that bug locally, it showed that a whole bunch of code assumed
that the LangOptions object that was part of CompilerInvocation was still alive. By making it heap-allocated and reference counted,
we can keep it around after the CompilerInvocation object goes away.
As part of this change, change CompilerInvocation:getLangOptions() to return a pointer, acting as another clue that this
object may outlive the CompilerInvocation object.
This commit doesn't fix the CompilerInvocation leak itself. That will come when I commit the fix to llvm::RefCountedBase<T> to
mainline LLVM.
llvm-svn: 144930
header, create our own in-memory buffer to parse all of the
appropriate headers, and use that to build the module. This isn't
end-to-end testable yet; that's coming next.
llvm-svn: 144797
warnings/errors for unknown warning options. getDiagnosticsInGroup returns false if the
diagnostics is found and true otherwise. Thus, if we're reporting and we have a valid
diagnostic, we were actually setting the flag and causing mayhem.
rdar://10444207
llvm-svn: 144670
We don't actually need a separate flag for non-sysrooted paths as the
driver has to manage the sysroot anyways. The driver is not infrequently
adding paths to the header search based on their existence on the
filesystem. For that, it has to add the sysroot anyways, we should pass
it on down to CC1 already joined. More importantly, the driver cannot in
all cases distinguish between sysrooted paths and paths that are
relative to the Clang binary's installation directory. Essentially, we
always need to ignore the system root for these internal header search
options. It turns out in most of the places we were already providing
the system root in the driver, and then another one in CC1 so this fixes
several bugs.
llvm-svn: 143917
the first (and diff-noisiest) step to making Linux header searching
tremendously more principled and less brittle. Note that this step
should have essentially no functional impact. We still search the exact
same set of paths in the exact same order. The only change here is where
the code implementing such a search lives.
This has one obvious negative impact -- we now pass a ludicrous number
of flags to the CC1 layer. That should go away as I re-base this logic
on the logic to detect a GCC installation. I want to do this in two
phases so the bots can tell me if this step alone breaks something, and
so that the diffs of the refactoring make more sense.
llvm-svn: 143822
actually manage the builtin header file includes as well as the system
ones.
This one is actually debatable whether it belongs in the driver or not,
as the builtin includes are really an internal bit of implementation
goop for Clang. However, they must be included at *exactly* the right
point in the sequence of header files, which makes it essentially
impossible to have this be managed by the Frontend and the rest by the
Driver. I have terrible ideas that would "work", but I think they're
worse than putting this in the driver and making the Frontend library
even more ignorant of the environment and system on which it is being
run.
Also fix the fact that we weren't properly respecting the flags which
suppress standard system include directories.
Note that this still leaves all of the Clang tests which run CC1
directly and include builtin header files broken on Windows. I'm working
on a followup patch to address that.
llvm-svn: 143801
encode the *exact* semantics which the header search paths internally
built by the Frontend layer have had, which is both non-user-provided,
and at times adding the implicit extern "C" bit to the directory entry.
There are lots of CC1 options that are very close, but none do quite
this, and they are all already overloaded for other purposes. In some
senses this makes the command lines more clean as it clearly indicates
which flags are exclusively used to implement internal detection of
"standard" header search paths.
Lots of the implementation of this is really crufty, due to the
surrounding cruft. It doesn't seem worth investing lots of time cleaning
this up as it isn't new, and hopefully *lots* of this code will melt
away as header search inside of the frontend becomes increasingly
trivial.
llvm-svn: 143798
Windows. There are still FIXMEs and lots of problems with this code.
Some of them will be addressed shortly by my follow-up patches, but most
are going to wait until we isolate this code and can fix it properly.
This version should be no worse than what we had before.
llvm-svn: 143752
A PCH file keeps track of #pragma diagnostics state; when loading the preamble, they conflicted
with the #pragma diagnostic state already present in the DiagnosticsEngine object due to
parsing the preamble.
Fix this by clearing the state of the DiagnosticsEngine object.
Fixes rdar://10363572 && http://llvm.org/PR11254.
llvm-svn: 143644
This is intended for direct access of the ASTReader for uses that make
little sense to try to shoehorn in the ExternalASTSource interface.
llvm-svn: 143465
because we don't want to take this performance hit when doing code completion
Log of r143342:
Move caching of code-completion results from ASTUnit::Reparse to ASTUnit::CodeComplete,
so that it will happen when we are doing code-completion, not reparsing.
llvm-svn: 143367
search logic. The Debian multiarch seems to have completely changed from
when these were originally added, and I'd like to remove a bunch of
them, but I'll be lazy and delay that until this logic is hoisted into
the driver where it belongs.
This should resolve PR11223.
llvm-svn: 143345
The motivation for this new DiagnosticConsumer is to provide a way for tools invoking the compiler
to get its diagnostics via a libclang interface, rather than textually parsing the compiler output.
This gives us flexibility to change the compiler's textual output, but have a structured data format
for clients to use to get the diagnostics via a stable API.
I have no tests for this, but llvm-bcanalyzer so far shows that the emitted file is well-formed.
More work to follow.
llvm-svn: 143259
preprocessed entities that are #included in the range that we are interested.
This is useful when we are interested in preprocessed entities of a specific file, e.g
when we are annotating tokens. There is also an optimization where we cache the last
result of PreprocessingRecord::getPreprocessedEntitiesInRange and we re-use it if
there is a call with the same range as before.
rdar://10313365
llvm-svn: 142887
as part of the hash rather than ignoring them. This means we'll end up
building more module variants (overall), but it allows configuration
macros such as NDEBUG to work so long as they're specified via command
line. More to come in this space.
llvm-svn: 142187
formatting as any other diagnostic, they will be properly line wrapped and
otherwise pretty printed. Let's take advantage of that and the new factoring to
add some helpful information to them (much like template backtrace notes and
other notes): the name of the macro whose expansion is being noted. This makes
a world of difference if caret diagnostics are disabled, making the expansion
notes actually useful in this case. It also helps ensure that in edge cases the
information the user needs is present. Consider:
% nl -ba t5.cc
1 #define M(x, y, z) \
2 y
3
4 M(
5 1,
6 2,
7 3);
We now produce:
% ./bin/clang -fsyntax-only t5.cc
t5.cc:6:3: error: expected unqualified-id
2,
^
t5.cc:2:3: note: expanded from macro: M
y
^
1 error generated.
Without the added information in the note, the name of the macro being expanded
would never be shown.
This also deletes a FIXME to use the diagnostic formatting. It's not yet clear
to me that we *can* do this reasonably, and the production of this message was
my primary goal here anyways.
I'd love any comments or suggestions on improving these notes, their wording,
etc. Currently, I need to make them provide more helpful information in the
presence of a token-pasting buffer, and I'm pondering adding something along
the lines of "expanded from argument N of macro: ...".
llvm-svn: 142127
this long quest: actually use the note printing machinery for each macro
expansion note rather than a hacky version of it. This will colorize and
format the notes the same as any other. There is still some stuff to fix
here, but it's one step closer.
No test case changes because currently we don't do anything differently
that I can FileCheck for -- I don't really want to try matching the
color escape codes... Suggestions for how to test this are welcome. =]
llvm-svn: 142121
standing deficiency: we were providing no macro backtrace information
whenever caret diagnostics were turned off. This sinks the logic for
suppressing the code snippet and caret to the code that actually prints
tho code snippet and caret. Along the way, clean up the naming of
functions, remove some now fixed FIXMEs, and generally improve the
wording and logic of this process.
Add a test case exerecising this functionality. It is notable that the
resulting messages are extremely low quality. I'm working on a follow-up
patch that should address this and have left a FIXME in the test case.
llvm-svn: 142120
the SourceManager doesn't change, and the source files don't change.
This greatly simplifies the interfaces and interactions. The lifetime of
the TextDiagnostic object forms the 'session' over which we attempt to
condense and deduplicate information in diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 142104
been there. Also delete their redundant doxyments in favor of those in
the source file. I'm putting the doxyments for private and static
helpers into the implementation file, and only the public interface
doxyments into the header. If folks have strong opinions about this type
of split, feel free to chime in, I'm happy to re-organize.
llvm-svn: 142087
making it accessible to anyone from the Frontend library. Still a good
bit of cleanup to do here, but its a good milestone. This ensures that
*all* of the functionality needed to implement the DiagnosticConsumer is
exposed via the generic interface in some form. No sneaky re-use of
static functions.
llvm-svn: 142086
diagnostics to control suppression of redundant information. It now
follows the same model as all the other state, and has a bit more clear
semantics.
This is making the duality of the state a bit annoying, and I've added
a FIXME to resolve it. The problem is that I need to lift the
TextDiagnostic up into an externally visible layer before that can
happen.
llvm-svn: 142083
TextDiagnosticPrinter argument to the TextDiagnostic helper class. This
cements the proper ordering of things: TextDiagnostic is now a viable
stand-alone class for emitting pretty-printed textual diagnostics to
a terminal.
llvm-svn: 142070
utility. This is a particularly nice win because it removes a pile of
parameters from these routines. Also name them a bit better. I'm trying
to follow the pattern of 'emit' routines writing directly to what is
expected to be the final output, while 'print' routines take a output
stream argument and can be used to build up intermediate buffers, etc.
Also, fix a bug I spotted by inspection from my last commit where
'LastLoc' and 'LastNonNoteLoc' were reversed. It's really scary that
this didn't trigger a single test failure. Will be working on tests for
more of this functionality now.
llvm-svn: 142069
across emissions.
1) The include stack printing is conditioned on non-note diagnostics,
not just on warning diagnostics.
2) Those should be full source locations as they're tied to a source
manager.
3) We should pass in the prior state to the TextDiagnostic constructor,
allow it to mutate as diagnostics are emitted, and then cache the
final state before tearing it down.
Some of this remains incomplete, specifically #3 isn't finished for the
non-note location. That'll come when the include stack printing sinks
down a level.
This also highlights how *completely* bug-ridden this code is. For
example, we currently do all these comparisons of a FullSourceLoc and
a SourceLocation... which silently does a SourceLocation to
SourceLocation comparison, completely disregarding the source manager
from whence one of the arguments came. Oops! Good thing in practice this
wasn't important, but it could in theory be suppressing caret
diagnostics in a second TU on a single clang invocation. I'm hoping to
hammer these bugs out as the refactorings occur, although for so many of
them it's really unlikely I can dream up a test case that would show the
potentially buggy behavior.
llvm-svn: 142067
consumer. The TextDiagnostic interface now has a generic entry point for
emitting a diagnostic which uses a minimal interface that should be
compatible with StoredDiagnostics such as are available in libclang etc.
Some unfortunate shuffling of static functions as things get relocated.
Also some unfortunate public interface points added to
TextDiagnosticPrinter, but those are the next bits to get moved so they
won't last long.
llvm-svn: 142064
to operate directly on the source location and ranges associated with
a diagnostic rather than digging them out of the diagnostic. This had
a side benefit of cleaning up its code a tiny bit by using the ArrayRef
interface.
No functionality changed.
llvm-svn: 142063
Also note that it is actually doing much more than it should. This paves
the way for building a more generic 'Emit' routine that is the real
entry point here.
llvm-svn: 142035
creation, so that only a single Clang instance will rebuild a given
module at once (and the others will wait).
We still don't clean up the lock files when we crash, which is a
rather unfortunate problem. I'll handle that next, and there is
certainly a *lot* of room for further improvements.
llvm-svn: 141179
increasingly prevailing case to the point that new features
like ARC don't even support the fragile ABI anymore.
This required a little bit of reshuffling with exceptions
because a check was assuming that ObjCNonFragileABI was
only being set in ObjC mode, and that's actually a bit
obnoxious to do.
Most, though, it involved a perl script to translate a ton
of test cases.
Mostly no functionality change for driver users, although
there are corner cases with disabling language-specific
exceptions that we should handle more correctly now.
llvm-svn: 140957
- The TextDiagnosticPrinter code is still fragile as it is just "reverse engineering" what the diagnostic engine is doing. Not my current priority to fix though.
llvm-svn: 140752
DiagnosticsEngine::setDiagnosticGroup{ErrorAsFatal,WarningAsError} methods which
more accurately model the correct API -- no internal change to the diagnostics
engine yet though.
- Also, stop honoring -Werror=everything (etc.) as a valid (but oddly behaved) option.
llvm-svn: 140747
we have the ability to create a new, distict diagnostic consumer when
we go off and build a module. This avoids the currently horribleness
where the same diagnostic consumer sees diagnostics for multiple
translation units (and multiple SourceManagers!) causing all sorts of havok.
llvm-svn: 140743
message. Specifically, we now only line-wrap the first line of te
diagnostic message and assume the remainder is manually formatted. While
adding it back, simplify the logic for doing this.
Finally, add a test that ensures we actually preserve this feature. =D
*Now* its not dead code. Thanks to Doug for the test case.
llvm-svn: 140538
when working with a diagnostic attached to a source location. Also
comment more thoroughly why its important to handle non-location
diagnostic messages separately.
Finally, hoist the creation of the TextDiagnostic object up to the
beginning of the location-based diagnostics. This paves the way for
sinking more and more of the logic into this class. When everything
below this constructor is sunk into the TextDiagnostic class it should
be sufficiently "feature complete" to accomplish my two goals:
1) Have the printing of a macro expansion note use the exact same code
as any other note.
2) Be able to implement clang_formatDiagnostic in terms of this class.
llvm-svn: 140526
a dedicated path. The logic for such diagnostics is much simpler than
for others.
This begins to make an important separation in this routine. We expect
most (and most interesting) textual diagnostics to be made in the
presence of at least *some* source locations and a source manager.
However the DiagnosticConsumer must be prepared to diagnose errors even
when the source manager doesn't (yet) exist or when there is no location
information at all. In order to sink more and more logic into the
TextDiagnostic class while minimizing its complexity, my plan is to
force the DiagnosticConsumer to special case diagnosing any locationless
messages and then hand the rest to the TextDiagnostic class. I'd
appreciate any comments on this design. It requires a bit of code
duplication in order to keep interfaces simple. Alternatively, if we
really need TextDiagnostic to be capable of handling diagnostics even in
the absence of a viable SourceManager, then this split isn't necessary.
llvm-svn: 140525
function. Doing this conveniently requires moving the word wrapping to
use a StringRef which seems generally an improvement. There is a lot
that could be simplified in the word wrapping by using StringRef that
I haven't looked at yet...
llvm-svn: 140524
a "loaded" location of the precompiled preamble.
Instead, handle specially locations of preprocessed entities:
-When looking up for preprocessed entities, map main file locations inside the
preamble range to a preamble loaded location.
-When getting the source range of a preprocessing cursor, map preamble loaded
locations back to main file locations.
Fixes rdar://10175093 & http://llvm.org/PR10999
llvm-svn: 140519
characters. I could find no newline character in a diagnostic message,
and adding an assert to this code never fires in the testsuite.
I think this code is essentially dead, and was previously used for
a different purpose. If I just don't understand how it is we can end up
with a newline here please let me know (with a test case?) and I'll
revert.
llvm-svn: 140497
to handle non-caret diagnostics as well in order to be fully useful in
libclang etc. Also sketch out some more of my plans on this refactoring.
llvm-svn: 140476
tracking the start and stop of macro expansion suppression. Also remove
the Columns variable which was just a convenience variable based on
DiagOpts. Instead we materialize it in the one piece of code that cared.
llvm-svn: 140475
TextDiagnosticPrinter into the CaretDiagnostic class. Several
interesting results from this:
- This removes a significant per-diagnostic bit of state from the
CaretDiagnostic class, which should eventually allow us to re-use the
object.
- It removes a redundant recursive walk of the macro expansion stack
just to compute the depth. We don't need the depth until we're
unwinding anyways, so we can just mark when we reach it.
- It also paves the way for several simplifications we can do to how we
implement the suppression.
llvm-svn: 140474
This moves the existing code for CPATH into the driver and adds the environment lookup and path splitting there.
The paths are then passed down to cc1 with -I options (CPATH), added after the normal user-specified include dirs.
Language specific paths are passed via -LANG-isystem and the actual filtering is performed in the frontend.
I tried to match GCC's behavior as close as possible
Fixes PR8971.
llvm-svn: 140341
OpenCL is different from AltiVec in the way it supports vector literals. OpenCL
is strict with regards to semantic checks. For example, implicit conversions
and explicit casts between vectors of different types are disallowed.
Fixes PR10975. Submitted by: Anton Lokhmotov <Anton.lokhmotov@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 140270
PreprocessingRecord's getPreprocessedEntitiesInRange.
Also remove all the stuff that were added in ASTUnit that are unnecessary now
that we do a binary search for preprocessed entities and deserialize only
what is necessary.
llvm-svn: 140063
check whether the requested location points inside the precompiled preamble,
in which case the returned source location will be a "loaded" one.
llvm-svn: 140060
Microsoft specific tweaking will now fall into 2 categories:
- fms-extension: Microsoft specific extensions that should never change the meaning of an otherwise well formed code. Currently map to LangOptions::Microsoft. (To be clearer, I am planning to change the name to LangOptions::MicrosoftExt).
- fms-compatibility: Really a MSVC emulation mode. Map to LangOptions::MicrosoftMode. Can change the meaning of an otherwise standard conformant program.
llvm-svn: 139978
-Use an array of offsets for all preprocessed entities
-Get rid of the separate array of offsets for just macro definitions;
for references to macro definitions use an index inside the preprocessed
entities array.
-Deserialize each preprocessed entity lazily, at first request; not in bulk.
Paves the way for binary searching of preprocessed entities that will offer
efficiency and will simplify things on the libclang side a lot.
llvm-svn: 139809
target triple to separate modules built under different
conditions. The hash is used to create a subdirectory in the module
cache path where other invocations of the compiler (with the same
version, language options, etc.) can find the precompiled modules.
llvm-svn: 139662
language options. Use that .def file to declare the LangOptions class
and initialize all of its members, eliminating a source of annoying
initialization bugs.
AST serialization changes are next up.
llvm-svn: 139605
already provided. This required a little bit of clean-up in the way
that VerifyDiagnosticsClient managed ownership of its underlying
"primary" client, because now it will no longer always take ownership.
llvm-svn: 139570
but there is a corresponding umbrella header in a framework, build the
module on-the-fly so it can be immediately loaded at the import
statement. This is very much proof-of-concept code, with details to be
fleshed out over time.
llvm-svn: 139558
where the compiler will look for module files. Eliminates the
egregious hack where we looked into the header search paths for
modules.
llvm-svn: 139538
modifying directly for the preamble.
This avoids an awful, hard to find, bug where "PreprocessorOpts.DisablePCHValidation = true"
would be persistent for subsequent reparses of the translation unit which would result
in defines, present in command-line but not in the PCH, being ignored.
Fixes rdar://9615399.
llvm-svn: 139512
feature akin to the ARC runtime checks. Removes a terrible hack where
IR gen needed to find the declarations of those symbols in the translation
unit.
llvm-svn: 139404
function. This is really the beginning of the second phase of
refactorings here. The end goal is to have (roughly) three interfaces:
1) Base class to format a single diagnostic suitable for display on the
console.
2) Extension of the base class which also displays a caret diagnostic
suitable for display on the console.
3) An adaptor that implements the DiagnosticClient by delegating to #1
and/or #2 as appropriate.
Once we have these, things like libclang's formatDiagnostic can use #1
and #2 to provide really well formatted (and consistently formatted!)
textual formatting of diagnostics.
Getting there is going to be quite a bit of shuffling. I'm basically
sketching out where the interface boundaries can be drawn for #1 and #2
within the existing classes. That lets me shuffle with a minimum of fuss
and delta. Once that's done, and any of the related interfaces that need
to change are updated, I'll hoist these into separate headers and
re-implement libclang in terms of their interfaces. Long WIP, but
comments at each step welcome. =D
llvm-svn: 139228
a stack array of a magical size with an assert() that we never
overflowed it. That seems incredibly risky. We also have a very nice API
for bundling up a vector we expect to usually have a small size without
loss of functionality or security if the size is excessive.
The fallout is to remove the last pointer+size parameter pair that are
traced through the recursive caret diagnostic emission.
llvm-svn: 139217
a defined interface. This isn't as nice as the previous one, but should
get better as I push through better data types in all these functions.
Also, I'm hoping to pull some aspects of this out into a common routine
(such as tab expansion).
Again, WIP, comments welcome as I'm going through.
llvm-svn: 139190
The function was only counting lines that included tokens and not empty lines,
but MaxLines (mainly initiated to the line where the code-completion point resides)
is a count of overall lines (even empty ones).
llvm-svn: 139085
Preprocessor, eliminating the constructor that was used by ASTUnit
(which didn't provide an ASTContext or Prepreprocessor). Ensuring that
both objects are non-NULL will simplify module loading (but none of
that is done yet).
llvm-svn: 138986
builtin types (When requested). This is another step toward making
ASTUnit build the ASTContext as needed when loading an AST file,
rather than doing so after the fact. No actual functionality change (yet).
llvm-svn: 138985
and language-specific initialization. Use this to allow ASTUnit to
create a preprocessor object *before* loading the AST file. No actual
functionality change.
llvm-svn: 138983
LangOptions, rather than making distinct copies of
LangOptions. Granted, LangOptions doesn't actually get modified, but
this will eventually make it easier to construct ASTContext and
Preprocessor before we know all of the LangOptions.
llvm-svn: 138959
include guards don't show up as macro definitions in every translation
unit that imports a module. Macro definitions can, however, be
exported with the intentionally-ugly #__export_macro__
directive. Implement this feature by not even bothering to serialize
non-exported macros to a module, because clients of that module need
not (should not) know that these macros even exist.
llvm-svn: 138943
(unsurprisingly) caret diagnostics. This is designed to bring some
organization to the monstrous EmitCaretDiagnostic function, and allow
factoring it more easily and with less mindless parameter passing.
Currently this just lifts the existing function into a method, and
splits off the obviously invariant arguments to be class members. No
functionality is changed, and there are still lots of warts to let
existing code continue functioning as-is. Definitely WIP, more cleanups
to follow.
llvm-svn: 138921
, such as list of forward @class decls, in a DeclGroup
node. Deal with its consequence throught clang. This
is in preparation for more Sema work ahead. // rdar://8843851.
Feel free to reverse if it breaks something important
and I am unavailable.
llvm-svn: 138709
loads the named module. The syntax itself is intentionally hideous and
will be replaced at some later point with something more
palatable. For now, we're focusing on the semantics:
- Module imports are handled first by the preprocessor (to get macro
definitions) and then the same tokens are also handled by the parser
(to get declarations). If both happen (as in normal compilation),
the second one is redundant, because we currently have no way to
hide macros or declarations when loading a module. Chris gets credit
for this mad-but-workable scheme.
- The Preprocessor now holds on to a reference to a module loader,
which is responsible for loading named modules. CompilerInstance is
the only important module loader: it now knows how to create and
wire up an AST reader on demand to actually perform the module load.
- We search for modules in the include path, using the module name
with the suffix ".pcm" (precompiled module) for the file name. This
is a temporary hack; we hope to improve the situation in the
future.
llvm-svn: 138679
from the given source. -emit-module behaves similarly to -emit-pch,
except that Sema is somewhat more strict about the contents of
-emit-module. In the future, there are likely to be more interesting
differences.
llvm-svn: 138595
Currently this includes -pedantic warnings as well; we'll need to consider whether these should
be included.
This works as expected with -Werror.
Test cases were added to Sema/warn-unused-parameters.c, but they should probably be broken off into
their own test file.
llvm-svn: 137910
all AST files have a normal METADATA record that has the same form
regardless of whether we refer to a chained PCH or any other kind of
AST file.
Introduce the IMPORTS record, which describes all of the AST files
that are imported by this AST file, and how (as a module, a PCH file,
etc.). Currently, we emit at most one entry to this record, to support
chained PCH.
llvm-svn: 137869
already-defined and forward-declared results. Already-defined results
are fine because they could be the start of a category. Fixes
<rdar://problem/9811691>.
llvm-svn: 136559
For PCH files, have only one open/close for temporary + rename to be safe from race conditions.
For all other output files open/close the output file directly.
Depends on llvm r136310. rdar://9082880 & http://llvm.org/PR9374.
llvm-svn: 136315
FullSourceLoc::getInstantiationLoc to ...::getExpansionLoc. This is part
of the API and documentation update from 'instantiation' as the term for
macros to 'expansion'.
llvm-svn: 135914
entities generated directly by the preprocessor from those loaded from
the external source (e.g., the ASTReader). By separating these two
sets of entities into different vectors, we allow both to grow
independently, and eliminate the need for preallocating all of the
loaded preprocessing entities. This is similar to the way the recent
SourceManager refactoring treats FileIDs and the source location
address space.
As part of this, switch over to building a continuous range map to
track preprocessing entities.
llvm-svn: 135646
-arcmt-migrate-emit-errors : Emits the pre-migration ARC errors but it doesn't affect anything else
-arcmt-migrate-report-output : Writes out the pre-migration ARC errors to the provided plist file
rdar://9791454
llvm-svn: 135491
source locations from source locations loaded from an AST/PCH file.
Previously, loading an AST/PCH file involved carefully pre-allocating
space at the beginning of the source manager for the source locations
and FileIDs that correspond to the prefix, and then appending the
source locations/FileIDs used for parsing the remaining translation
unit. This design forced us into loading PCH files early, as a prefix,
whic has become a rather significant limitation.
This patch splits the SourceManager space into two parts: for source
location "addresses", the lower values (growing upward) are used to
describe parsed code, while upper values (growing downward) are used
for source locations loaded from AST/PCH files. Similarly, positive
FileIDs are used to describe parsed code while negative FileIDs are
used to file/macro locations loaded from AST/PCH files. As a result,
we can load PCH/AST files even during parsing, making various
improvemnts in the future possible, e.g., teaching #include <foo.h> to
look for and load <foo.h.gch> if it happens to be already available.
This patch was originally written by Sebastian Redl, then brought
forward to the modern age by Jonathan Turner, and finally
polished/finished by me to be committed.
llvm-svn: 135484
This is switches all the interfaces points (and most of the commenst
/ local variables I saw on my way through) regarding the
NestedMacroInstantiations bit.
The libclang enums corresponding to this state were renamed, but
a legacy enum was added with the old name, and the same value to keep
existing clients working. I've added a documentation blurb for it, but
let me know if there is a canonical way to document legacy elemenst of
the libclang interface.
No functionality changed here, even in tests.
llvm-svn: 135141
and 'expansions' rather than 'instantiated' and 'contexts'.
This is the first of several patches migrating Clang's terminology
surrounding macros from 'instantiation' to 'expansion'.
llvm-svn: 135135
__unknown_anytype, and rewrite such message sends correctly.
I had to bite the bullet and actually add a debugger support mode for this
one, which is a bit unfortunate, but there really isn't anything else
I could imagine doing; this is clearly just debugger-specific behavior.
llvm-svn: 135051
This is a new mode of migration, where we avoid modifying the original files but
we emit temporary files instead.
<path> will be used to keep migration process metadata. Currently the temporary files
that are produced are put in the system's temp directory but we can put them
in the <path> if is necessary.
Also introduce new ARC migration functions in libclang whose only purpose,
currently, is to accept <path> and provide pairs of original file/transformed file
to map from the originals to the files after transformations are applied.
Finally introduce the c-arcmt-test utility that exercises the new libclang functions,
update arcmt-test, and add tests for the whole process.
rdar://9735086.
llvm-svn: 134844
instantiation and improve diagnostics which are stem from macro
arguments to trace the argument itself back through the layers of macro
expansion.
This requires some tricky handling of the source locations, as the
argument appears to be expanded in the opposite direction from the
surrounding macro. This patch provides helper routines that encapsulate
the logic and explain the reasoning behind how we step through macros
during diagnostic printing.
This fixes the rest of the test cases originially in PR9279, and later
split out into PR10214 and PR10215.
There is still some more work we can do here to improve the macro
backtrace, but those will follow as separate patches.
llvm-svn: 134660
clang_codeCompleteGetContexts(), that provides the client with
information about the context in which code completion has occurred
and what kinds of entities make sense as completions at that
point. Patch by Connor Wakamo!
llvm-svn: 134615
structure to hold inferred information, then propagate each invididual
bit down to -cc1. Separate the bits of "supports weak" and "has a native
ARC runtime"; make the latter a CodeGenOption.
The tool chain is still driving this decision, because it's the place that
has the required deployment target information on Darwin, but at least it's
better-factored now.
llvm-svn: 134453
CompilerInvocation on the stack, because other objects (e.g., the
CompilerInstance) maintain an intrusive reference-counted pointer to
the CompilerInvocation. This doesn't matter in the normal case,
because we take back the CompilerInvocation. However, during crash
recovery, this leads to us trying to free an object on the stack, and
hilarity ensues. Fixes <rdar://problem/9652540>.
llvm-svn: 134245
This is a one line fix here:
+ // Don't print recursive instantiation notes from an instantiation note.
+ Loc = SM.getSpellingLoc(Loc);
While here, fix the testcase to be more precise (it got filecheck'ized
brutally), and fix EmitCaretDiagnostic to be private and to not pass down
the unused 'Level' argument.
llvm-svn: 133993
This is the only usage in clang's headers, and it's for a define
that only exists on CMake builds for the sake of the MSVC compiler,
so just use an ifdef instead.
Also add an include for config.h in a file that actually needs it,
and was picking it up by accident indirectly.
llvm-svn: 133710
use an "IgnoreSysRoot" argument. HeaderSearchOptions had been using the
opposite form with "IsSysRootRelative", which made for much confusion when
looking at true/false values in calls in AddPath. No functional change.
llvm-svn: 133550
The -cxx-isystem path is not prefixed with the sysroot directory, so it's
not a good way for the driver to set the system default C++ search path.
Instead, add -stdlib as a cc1 option and teach the frontend how to find the
headers. The driver can then just pass -stdlib through to "cc1".
llvm-svn: 133547
- Changes bit-field access policy to try to use (aligned) register sized accesses.
The idea here is that by using larger accesses we expose more coalescing
potential to the backend when we have situations like adjacent bit-fields in the
same structure (which is common), and that the backend should be smart enough to
narrow the accesses down when no coalescing is done or when it is shown not to
be profitable.
--
$ clang -m32 -O3 -S -o - t.c
_f0: ## @f0
pushl %ebp
movl %esp, %ebp
movl 8(%ebp), %eax
movb (%eax), %cl
andb $-128, %cl
orb $1, %cl
movb %cl, (%eax)
movb 1(%eax), %cl
andb $-128, %cl
orb $1, %cl
movb %cl, 1(%eax)
movb 2(%eax), %cl
andb $-128, %cl
orb $1, %cl
movb %cl, 2(%eax)
movb 3(%eax), %cl
andb $-128, %cl
orb $1, %cl
movb %cl, 3(%eax)
popl %ebp
ret
$ clang -m32 -O3 -S -o - t.c -Xclang -fuse-register-sized-bitfield-access
_f0: ## @f0
pushl %ebp
movl %esp, %ebp
movl 8(%ebp), %eax
movl $-2139062144, %ecx ## imm = 0xFFFFFFFF80808080
andl (%eax), %ecx
orl $16843009, %ecx ## imm = 0x1010101
movl %ecx, (%eax)
popl %ebp
ret
--
llvm-svn: 133532
an assembly file it worked correctly, while for a .c file it would given an
error about how --noexecstack is not a supported argument to -Wa.
llvm-svn: 133489
because the Angled directories and the System directories were not being uniqued
together, breaking #include_next. I'll see about a testcase, but it will be insane.
llvm-svn: 133212
These are somewhat special in that they wrap any other FrontendAction,
running various ARC transformations or checks prior to the standard
action's run. To implement them easily, this extends FrontendAction to
have a WrapperFrontendAction utility class which forwards all calls by
default to an inner action setup at construction time. This is then
subclassed to override the specific behavior needed by the different
ARCMT tools.
Finally, FrontendTool is taught how to create these wrapper actions from
the existing flags and options structures.
The result is that clangFrontend no longer depends on clangARCMigrate.
This is very important, as clangARCMigrate *heavily* depends on
clangFrontend. Fundamentally ARCMigrate is at the same layer as
a library like Rewrite, sitting firmly on top of the Frontend, but tied
together with the FrontendTool when building the clang binary itself.
llvm-svn: 133161
AFAIK, RHEL5 (and its clones) provides g++44 as the package "gcc44-c++".
By default, g++-4.1.1 is available, though, its libstdc++ would not be suitable to clang++.
llvm-svn: 133156
Language-design credit goes to a lot of people, but I particularly want
to single out Blaine Garst and Patrick Beard for their contributions.
Compiler implementation credit goes to Argyrios, Doug, Fariborz, and myself,
in no particular order.
llvm-svn: 133103
Related result types apply Cocoa conventions to the type of message
sends and property accesses to Objective-C methods that are known to
always return objects whose type is the same as the type of the
receiving class (or a subclass thereof), such as +alloc and
-init. This tightens up static type safety for Objective-C, so that we
now diagnose mistakes like this:
t.m:4:10: warning: incompatible pointer types initializing 'NSSet *'
with an
expression of type 'NSArray *' [-Wincompatible-pointer-types]
NSSet *array = [[NSArray alloc] init];
^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/System/Library/Frameworks/Foundation.framework/Headers/NSObject.h:72:1:
note:
instance method 'init' is assumed to return an instance of its
receiver
type ('NSArray *')
- (id)init;
^
It also means that we get decent type inference when writing code in
Objective-C++0x:
auto array = [[NSMutableArray alloc] initWithObjects:@"one", @"two",nil];
// ^ now infers NSMutableArray* rather than id
llvm-svn: 132868
Patch by Matthieu Monrocq with tweaks by me to avoid StringRefs in the static
diagnostic data structures, which resulted in a huge global-var-init function.
Depends on llvm commit r132046.
llvm-svn: 132047
prints the file, line, and column of a diagnostic. We currently
support Clang's normal format, MSVC, and Vi formats.
Note that we no longer change the diagnostic format based on
-fms-extensions.
Patch by Andrew Fish!
llvm-svn: 131794
- New isDefined() function checks for deletedness
- isThisDeclarationADefinition checks for deletedness
- New doesThisDeclarationHaveABody() does what
isThisDeclarationADefinition() used to do
- The IsDeleted bit is not propagated across redeclarations
- isDeleted() now checks the canoncial declaration
- New isDeletedAsWritten() does what it says on the tin.
- isUserProvided() now correct (thanks Richard!)
This fixes the bug that we weren't catching
void foo() = delete;
void foo() {}
as being a redefinition.
llvm-svn: 131013
CXTranslationUnit_NestedMacroInstantiations, which indicates whether
we want to see "nested" macro instantiations (e.g., those that occur
inside other macro instantiations) within the detailed preprocessing
record. Many clients (e.g., those that only care about visible tokens)
don't care about this information, and in code that uses preprocessor
metaprogramming, this information can have a very high cost.
Addresses <rdar://problem/9389320>.
llvm-svn: 130990
This is more efficient as it's all done at once at the end of the TU.
This could still get expensive, so a flag is provided to disable it. As
an added bonus, the diagnostics will now print out a cycle.
The PCH test is XFAILed because we currently can't deal with a note
emitted in the header and I, being tired, see no other way to verify the
serialization of delegating constructors. We should probably address
this problem /somehow/ but no good solution comes to mind.
llvm-svn: 130836
matches GCC behavior which libstdc++ uses to limit #warning-based
messages about deprecation.
The machinery involves threading this through a new '-fdeprecated-macro'
flag for CC1. The flag defaults to "on", similarly to -Wdeprecated. We
turn the flag off in the driver when the warning is turned off (modulo
matching some GCC bugs). We record this as a language option, and key
the preprocessor on the option when introducing the define.
A separate flag rather than a '-D' flag allows us to properly represent
the difference between C and C++ builds (only C++ receives the define),
and it allows the specific behavior of following -Wdeprecated without
potentially impacting the set of user-provided macro flags.
llvm-svn: 130055
-Wwrite-strings. First and foremost, once the positive form of the flag
was passed, it could never be disabled by passing -Wno-write-strings.
Also, the diagnostic engine couldn't in turn use -Wwrite-strings to
control diagnostics (as GCC does) because it was essentially hijacked to
drive the language semantics.
Fix this by giving CC1 a clean '-fconst-strings' flag to enable
const-qualified strings in C and ObjC compilations. Corresponding
'-fno-const-strings' is also added. Then the driver is taught to
introduce '-fconst-strings' in the CC1 command when '-Wwrite-strings'
dominates.
This entire flag is basically GCC-bug-compatibility driven, so we also
match GCC's bug where '-w' doesn't actually disable -Wwrite-strings. I'm
open to changing this though as it seems insane.
llvm-svn: 130051
compile time) and .gcda emission (at runtime). --coverage enables both.
This does not yet add the profile_rt library to the link step if -fprofile-arcs
is enabled when linking.
llvm-svn: 129956
required modifying a few tests that specifically use note include stacks
to check the source manager's view of include stacks. I've simply added
the flag to these tests for now, they may have to be more substantially
changed if we decide to remove support for note include stacks
altogether.
Also, add a test for include stacks on notes that was supposed to go in
with the previous commit.
llvm-svn: 128390
These stacks are often less important than those on primary diagnostics.
As the number of notes grows, this becomes increasingly important. The
include stack printing is clever and doesn't print stacks for adjacent
diagnostics from the same file, but when a note is in between a sequence
of errors in a header file, and the notes all refer to some other file,
we end up getting a worst-case ping-pong of include stacks that take up
a great deal of vertical space.
Still, for now, the default behavior isn't changed. We can evaluate user
feedback with the flag.
Patch by Richard Trieu, a couple of style tweaks from me.
llvm-svn: 128371
line options, instead of leveraging the blanket -mllvm option.
- This allows using the frontend itself without requiring the backend have
those options available (i.e., if the target wasn't built).
llvm-svn: 128087
This change requires making a bunch of fundamental Clang structures (optionally) reference counted to allow correct
ownership semantics of these objects (e.g., ASTContext) to play out between an active ASTUnit and CompilerInstance
object.
llvm-svn: 128011
add support for the OpenCL __private, __local, __constant and
__global address spaces, as well as the __read_only, _read_write and
__write_only image access specifiers. Patch originally by ARM;
language-specific address space support by myself.
llvm-svn: 127915
Issue this as an IR-gen error; it's not really worthwhile doing this
"right", i.e. in Sema, because IR gen knows a lot of tricks beyond
what the constant evaluator knows.
llvm-svn: 127854
should report the original file name for contents of files that were overriden by other files,
otherwise it should report the name of the new file. Default is true.
Also add similar field in PreprocessorOptions and pass similar parameter in ASTUnit::LoadFromCommandLine.
llvm-svn: 127289
too low-level to actually be useful but is just interesting enough for
people to try to use it (which won't actually work beyond toy examples).
To bring back the AST printer, it needs to be:
- Complete, covering all of C/C++/Objective-C
- Documented, with appropriate Schema against which we can validate
the output
- Designed for C/C++/Objective-C, not Clang's specific ASTs
- Stable across Clang versions
- Well-tested
llvm-svn: 127141
Allow remapping a file by specifying another filename whose contents should be loaded if the original
file gets loaded. This allows to override files without having to create & load buffers in advance.
llvm-svn: 127052
The previous name was inaccurate as this token in fact appears at
the end of every preprocessing directive, not just macro definitions.
No functionality change, except for a diagnostic tweak.
llvm-svn: 126631
way it keeps track of namespaces. Previously, we would map from the
namespace alias to its underlying namespace when building a
nested-name-specifier, losing source information in the process.
llvm-svn: 126358
It works like -isystem and the search path keeps -isystem and
-cxx-isystem in order relative to each other. -cxx-isystem is only used
for C++ sources though. Drop the existing -cxx-system-include option for
cc1 as it is now redundant.
llvm-svn: 126167
enumeration type, prioritize the enumeration constants and don't
provide completions for any other expressions. Fixes <rdar://problem/7283668>.
llvm-svn: 125991
This removes the final dependency edge from any lib outside of CodeGen
to core. As a result we can, and do, trim the dependency on core
from libclang, PrintFunctionNames, the unit tests and c-index-test.
While at it, review and trim other unneeded dependencies.
llvm-svn: 125820
code-completion results accessed via libclang, to extend the lifetime
of the allocator used for cached global code-completion results at
least until these completion results are destroyed. Fixes
<rdar://problem/8997369>.
llvm-svn: 125678
completions. We now compute a hash of the names of all top-level
declarations and macro definitions, and invalidate the cache when the
hash value changes.
llvm-svn: 125670
Store in PCH the directory that the PCH was originally created in.
If a header file is not found at the path that we expect it to be and the PCH file
was moved from its original location, try to resolve the file by assuming that
header+PCH were moved together and the header is in the same place relative to the PCH.
llvm-svn: 125576
-Checkers will be defined in the tablegen file 'Checkers.td'.
-Apart from checkers, we can define checker "packages" that will contain a collection of checkers.
-Checkers can be enabled with -analyzer-checker=<name> and disabled with -analyzer-disable-checker=<name> e.g:
Enable checkers from 'cocoa' and 'corefoundation' packages except the self-initialization checker:
-analyzer-checker=cocoa -analyzer-checker=corefoundation -analyzer-disable-checker=cocoa.SelfInit
-Introduces CheckerManager and CheckerProvider. CheckerProviders get the set of checker names to enable/disable and
register them with the CheckerManager which will be the entry point for all checker-related functionality.
Currently only the self-initialization checker takes advantage of the new mechanism.
llvm-svn: 125503
The optimization involves eagerly pruning ExplodedNodes from the ExplodedGraph that contain
practically no difference between the predecessor and successor nodes. For example, if
the state is different between a predecessor and a node, the node is left in. Only for
the 'environment' component of the state do we not care if the ExplodedNodes are different.
This paves the way for future optimizations where we can reclaim the environment objects.
llvm-svn: 125154
overridden via remapping. Thus, when we create a "virtual" file in the
file manager, we still stat() the real file that lives behind it so
that we can provide proper uniquing based on inodes. This helps keep
the file manager much more consistent.
To take advantage of this when reparsing files in libclang, we disable
the use of the stat() cache when reparsing or performing code
completion, since the stat() cache is very likely to be out of date in
this use case.
llvm-svn: 124971
the atomic writes option, since the intent is that this option be set for an
entire build, which may have any number of compiler instances writing to the
same output file.
llvm-svn: 124772
callbacks class.
- Aside from being generally cleaner, this also allows -H to work correctly in
modes other than standard preprocessing (e.g., -c, -MM, etc.)
llvm-svn: 124723
BumpPtrAllocator, rather than manually new/delete'ing them. This
optimization also allows us to avoid allocating memory for and copying
constant strings (e.g., "return", "class").
This also required embedding the priority and availability of results
within the code completion string, to avoid extra memory allocation
within libclang.
llvm-svn: 124673
FileManager.cpp: Allow virtual files in nonexistent directories.
FileManager.cpp: Close FileDescriptor for virtual files that correspond to actual files.
FileManager.cpp: Enable virtual files to be created even for files that were flagged as NON_EXISTENT_FILE, e.g. by a prior (unsuccessful) addFile().
ASTReader.cpp: Read a PCH even if the original source files cannot be found.
Add a test for reading a PCH of a file that has been removed and diagnostics referencing that file.
llvm-svn: 124374
to allow us to explicitly control whether or
not Objective-C properties are default synthesized.
Currently this feature only works when using
the -fobjc-non-fragile-abi2 flag (so there is
no functionality change), but we can now turn
off this feature without turning off all the features
coupled with -fobjc-non-fragile-abi2.
llvm-svn: 122519
This patch refactors the CompilerInvocation code to introduce a
CompilerInvocation::setLangDefaults function, which can set up a
LangOptions with the defaults for a given language and language
standard. This function is useful for non-command line based Clang
clients which need to set up a CompilerInvocation manually for a
specific language.
llvm-svn: 120874
a specific language. We are adding such language info. by
extensing Builtins.def and via a language flag added
to LIBBUILTIN/BUILTIN and check for that when deciding
a name is builtin or not. Implements //rdar://8689273.
llvm-svn: 120429
trap the serialized preprocessing records (macro definitions, macro
instantiations, macro definitions) from the generation of the
precompiled preamble, then replay those when walking the list of
preprocessed entities. This eliminates a bug where clang_getCursor()
wasn't able to find preprocessed-entity cursors in the preamble.
llvm-svn: 120396
precompiled preamble as the "main" source file's file ID within the
source manager. This makes compiling with a precompiled preamble
produce the same source locations as when compiling without the
precompiled preamble; prior to this change, we ended up with different
file IDs for source locations within the precompiled preamble
vs. those after the precompiled preamble, even for entities (e.g.,
preprocessing entities) in the same file.
llvm-svn: 120390
Gentoo systems with multiple versions to pick up the newest one first. This is
especially important with Gentoo because some of the older versions are left on
systems in strange states.
llvm-svn: 120238
of the ASTs. Only available in assertions builds. No stability guarantee.
This is intended solely as a debugging tool. I'm not sure if the goals
are sufficiently aligned with the XML printer to allow a common
implementation.
Currently just falls back on the StmtDumper to display statements,
which means it doesn't produce valid XML in those cases.
llvm-svn: 120088
pointer that is passed down through the APIs, and make
FileSystemStatCache::get be the one that filters out
directory lookups that hit files. This also paves the
way to have stat queries be able to return opened files.
llvm-svn: 120060
two copies, since they are fundamentally different
operations and the StringRef one should go away
(it shouldn't be part of FileManager at least).
Remove some dead arguments.
llvm-svn: 120013