--- /dev/null
+// RUN: clang-cc -verify %s
+
+// If the object being deleted has incomplete class type at the point of
+// deletion and the complete class has a non-trivial destructor or a
+// deallocation function, the behavior is undefined.
+
+// The trivial case.
+class T0; // expected-note {{forward declaration}}
+void f0(T0 *a) { delete a; } // expected-warning {{deleting pointer to incomplete type}}
+class T0 { ~T0(); };
+
+// The trivial case, inside a template instantiation.
+template<typename T>
+class T1_A { T *x; ~T1_A() { delete x; } }; // expected-warning {{deleting pointer to incomplete type}}
+class T1_B; // expected-note {{forward declaration}}
+void f0() { T1_A<T1_B> x; } // expected-note {{in instantiation of member function}}
+
+// This case depends on when we check T2_C::f0.
+class T2_A;
+template<typename T>
+struct T2_B { void f0(T *a) { delete a; } };
+struct T2_C { T2_B<T2_A> x; void f0(T2_A *a) { x.f0(a); } };
+void f0(T2_A *a) { T2_C x; x.f0(a); }
+class T2_A { };
+
+// An alternate version of the same.
+//
+// FIXME: Revisit this case when we have access control.
+class T3_A;
+template<typename T>
+struct T3_B { void f0(T *a) { delete a; } };
+struct T3_C { T3_B<T3_A> x; void f0(T3_A *a) { x.f0(a); } };
+void f0(T3_A *a) { T3_C x; x.f0(a); }
+class T3_A { private: ~T3_A(); };