Jordan Rose [Fri, 25 Oct 2013 16:52:00 +0000 (16:52 +0000)]
Add -Wstring-plus-char, which warns when adding char literals to C strings.
Specifically, this warns when a character literal is added (using '+') to a
variable with type 'char *' (or any other pointer to character type). Like
-Wstring-plus-int, there is a fix-it to change "foo + 'a'" to "&foo['a']"
iff the character literal is on the right side of the string.
Richard Trieu [Fri, 25 Oct 2013 00:56:00 +0000 (00:56 +0000)]
Simplify and refactor the uninitialized field warning.
Change the uninitialized field warnings so that field initializers are checked
inside the constructor. Previously, in class initializers were checked
separately. Running one set of checks also simplifies the logic for preventing
duplicate warnings. Added new checks to warn when an uninitialized field is
used in base class initialization. Also fixed misspelling of uninitialized
and moved all code for this warning together.
Because of the #if-#else structure, the code is formatted and annotated
twice and becauce of the nested block, the annotated lines form a
hierarchical structure. This structure was not properly reset between
runs.
Chandler Carruth [Thu, 24 Oct 2013 09:21:37 +0000 (09:21 +0000)]
Teach Clang to accept and ignore -f[no-]implicit-templates.
This GCC flag is useful when you want to control whether implicit
template instantiation occurs at the commandline level. Clang doesn't
currently support such controls, but technically *always* implicitly
instantiating (what Clang does, and what every other compiler still in
use does by default) is valid behavior even under
-fno-implicit-templates, it just may be slow and very wasteful. If
people really want this, we can try to implement it, but I don't have an
actual use.
This should help fix the build of libstdc++ with Clang, its build system
uses this flag.
Chandler Carruth [Thu, 24 Oct 2013 09:17:35 +0000 (09:17 +0000)]
Teach Clang to recognize and ignore GCC's -fdiagnostics-show-location
flag. We should probably wire at least some variants of this up to our
actual diagnostics engine, but I'm leaving that for someone else. This
fixes the builds of packages which hard code something here, at least
including libstdc++ itself.
Manuel Klimek [Thu, 24 Oct 2013 07:51:24 +0000 (07:51 +0000)]
Use the same SourceManager for ModuleMaps and compilations.
This allows using virtual file mappings on the original SourceManager to
map in virtual module.map files. Without this patch, the ModuleMap
search will find a module.map file (as the FileEntry exists in the
FileManager), but will be unable to get the content from the
SourceManager (as ModuleMap previously created its own SourceManager).
Two problems needed to be fixed which this patch exposed:
1. Storing the inferred module map
When writing out a module, the ASTWriter stores the names of the files
in the main source manager; when loading the AST again, the ASTReader
errs out if such a file is found missing, unless it is overridden.
Previously CompilerInstance's compileModule method would store the
inferred module map to a temporary file; the problem with this approach
is that now that the module map is handled by the main source manager,
the ASTWriter stores the name of the temporary module map as source to
the compilation; later, when the module is loaded, the temporary file
has already been deleted, which leads to a compilation error. This patch
changes the inferred module map to instead inject a virtual file into
the source manager. This both saves some disk IO, and works with how the
ASTWriter/ASTReader handle overridden source files.
2. Changing test input in test/Modules/Inputs/*
Now that the module map file is handled by the main source manager, the
VerifyDiagnosticConsumer will not ignore diagnostics created while
parsing the module map file. The module test test/Modules/renamed.m uses
-I test/Modules/Inputs and triggers recursive loading of all module maps
in test/Modules/Inputs, some of which had conflicting names, thus
leading errors while parsing the module maps. Those diagnostics already
occur on trunk, but before this patch they would not break the test, as
they were ignored by the VerifyDiagnosticConsumer. This patch thus
changes the module maps that have been recently introduced which broke
the invariant of compatible modules maps in test/Modules/Inputs.
Richard Smith [Thu, 24 Oct 2013 01:07:54 +0000 (01:07 +0000)]
PR17666: Instead of allowing an initial identifier argument in any attribute
which we don't think can't have one, only allow it in the tiny number of
attributes which opts into this weird parse rule.
I've manually checked that the handlers for all these attributes can in fact
cope with an identifier as the argument. This is still somewhat terrible; we
should move more fully towards picking the parsing rules based on the
attribute, and make the Parse -> Sema interface more type-safe.
Faisal Vali [Thu, 24 Oct 2013 01:05:22 +0000 (01:05 +0000)]
Fix an instantiation bug with nested generic lambdas and conversion to fptrs.
This patch fixes the typelocs of the conversion-operator and the conversion-operator-name and adds the parameters of the call operator to the FunctionProtoTypeLoc of the respective entities. Thus, when the template declarations (conversion operators) undergo deduction and instantiation/transformation/substitution - they add themselves to the local instantiation scope if needed.
This patch supports the following:
auto L = [](auto b) {
return [](auto a) ->decltype(a) { return a; };
};
int (*fp)(int) = L(8);
Richard LGTM'd this patch: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1831
Warren Hunt [Wed, 23 Oct 2013 23:53:07 +0000 (23:53 +0000)]
Implements 64 bit microsoft record layout and adds lit tests to cover
it. Also removes all of the microsoft C++ ABI related code from the
itanium layout builder.
David Majnemer [Wed, 23 Oct 2013 21:31:20 +0000 (21:31 +0000)]
Parse: Disable delayed template parsing for constexpr functions
Commit r191484 treated constexpr function templates as normal function
templates with respect to delaying their parsing. However, this is
unnecessarily restrictive because there is no compatibility concern with
constexpr, MSVC doesn't support it.
Instead, simply disable delayed template parsing for constexpr function
templates. This largely reverts the changes made in r191484 but keeps
it's unit test.
David Majnemer [Wed, 23 Oct 2013 20:52:43 +0000 (20:52 +0000)]
AST: Mangle fields in anonymous structs/unions
The Itanium mangler couldn't cope with mangling an IndirectFieldDecl.
Instead, mangle the field the IndirectFieldDecl refers to.
Further, give IndirectFieldDecl no linkage just like FieldDecl.
N.B. Decl.cpp:getLVForNamespaceScopeDecl tried to calculate linkage for
data members of anonymous structs/unions. However, this seems
impossible so turn it into an assertion.
Jordan Rose [Wed, 23 Oct 2013 20:08:55 +0000 (20:08 +0000)]
[analyzer] Generate a LazyCompoundVal when loading from a union-typed region.
This ensures that variables accessible through a union are invalidated when
the union value is passed to a function. We still don't fully handle union
values, but this should at least quiet some false positives.
Faisal Vali [Wed, 23 Oct 2013 16:10:50 +0000 (16:10 +0000)]
Refactor out the circular reference to LambdaExpr in CXXRecordDecl.
A prior commit of this patch was reverted because it was within the blamelist's purview of a failing test. The failure of that test has been addressed here: http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20131021/091546.html. Therefore I am recommitting this patch (all tests pass on windows, except for the usual modules & index suspects that never pass on my box).
Some background: Both Doug and Richard had asked me in Chicago to remove the circular reference in CXXRecordDecl to LambdaExpr by factoring out and storing the needed information from LambdaExpr directly into CXXRecordDecl.
In addition, I have added an IsGenericLambda flag - this makes life a little easier when we implement capturing, and are Sema-analyzing the body of a lambda (and the calloperator hasn't been wired to the closure class yet). Any inner lambdas can have potential captures that could require walking up the scope chain and checking if any generic lambdas are capture-ready. This 'bit' makes some of that checking easier.
No change in functionality.
This patch was approved by Doug with minor modifications (comments were cleaned up, and all data members were converted from bool/enum to unsigned, as requested):
http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1856
Daniel Sanders [Wed, 23 Oct 2013 10:12:44 +0000 (10:12 +0000)]
[mips][msa] Add intrinsics that map to pseudo-instructions.
Unlike the previously added intrinsics, these do not map to a single instruction
on MIPS32. They are provided for regularity (to round out the .[bhw] variants
of the same operation) and compatibility with GCC.
Faisal Vali [Wed, 23 Oct 2013 06:44:28 +0000 (06:44 +0000)]
And Again: Teach TreeTransform how to transform nested generic lambdas.
A previous attempt http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20130930/090049.html resulted in PR 17476, and was reverted,
The original TransformLambdaExpr (pre generic-lambdas) transformed the TypeSourceInfo of the Call operator in its own instantiation scope via TransformType. This resulted in the parameters of the call operator being mapped to their transformed counterparts in an instantiation scope that would get popped off.
Then a call to TransformFunctionParameters would add the parameters and their transformed mappings (but newly created ones!) to the current instantiation scope. This would result in a disconnect between the new call operator's TSI parameters and those used to construct the call operator declaration. This was ok in the non-generic lambda world - but would cause issues with nested transformations (when non-generic and generics were interleaved) in the generic lambda world - that I somewhat kludged around initially - but this resulted in PR17476.
The new approach seems cleaner. We only do the transformation of the TypeSourceInfo - but we make sure to do it in the current instantiation scope so we don't lose the untransformed to transformed mappings of the ParmVarDecls when they get created.
Another attempt caused a test to fail (http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20131021/091533.html) and also had to be reverted - my apologies - in my haste, i did not run all the tests - argh!
Now all the tests seem to pass - but a Fixme has been added - since I suspect Richard will find the fix a little inelegant ;) I shall try and work on a more elegant fix once I have had a chance to discuss with Richard or Doug at a later date.
Hopefully the third time;s a charm *fingers crossed*
This does not yet include capturing.
Please see test file for examples.
This patch was LGTM'd by Doug:
http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1784
Faisal Vali [Wed, 23 Oct 2013 02:59:27 +0000 (02:59 +0000)]
Remove the circular reference to LambdaExpr in CXXRecordDecl.
Both Doug and Richard had asked me to remove the circular reference in CXXRecordDecl to LambdaExpr by factoring out and storing the needed information from LambdaExpr directly into CXXRecordDecl.
No change in functionality.
In addition, I have added an IsGenericLambda flag - this makes life a little easier when we implement capturing, and are Sema-analyzing the body of a lambda (and the calloperator hasn't been wired to the closure class yet). Any inner lambdas can have potential captures that could require walking up the scope chain and checking if any generic lambdas are capture-ready. This 'bit' makes some of that checking easier.
This patch was approved by Doug with minor modifications (comments were cleaned up, and all data members were converted from bool/enum to unsigned, as requested):
http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1856
Richard Smith [Wed, 23 Oct 2013 02:17:46 +0000 (02:17 +0000)]
Make UsingShadowDecls redeclarable. This fixes some visibility problems with
modules.
With this fixed, I no longer see any test regressions in the libc++ test suite
when enabling a single-module module.map for libc++ (other than issues with my
system headers).
Faisal Vali [Wed, 23 Oct 2013 00:51:58 +0000 (00:51 +0000)]
Again: Teach TreeTransform and family how to transform generic
lambdas nested within templates and themselves.
A previous attempt http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20130930/090049.html resulted in PR 17476, and was reverted,
The original TransformLambdaExpr (pre generic-lambdas) transformed the TypeSourceInfo of the Call operator in its own instantiation scope via TransformType. This resulted in the parameters of the call operator being mapped to their transformed counterparts in an instantiation scope that would get popped off.
Then a call to TransformFunctionParameters would add the parameters and their transformed mappings (but newly created ones!) to the current instantiation scope. This would result in a disconnect between the new call operator's TSI parameters and those used to construct the call operator declaration. This was ok in the non-generic lambda world - but would cause issues with nested transformations (when non-generic and generics were interleaved) in the generic lambda world - that I somewhat kludged around initially - but this resulted in PR17476.
The new approach seems cleaner. We only do the transformation of the TypeSourceInfo - but we make sure to do it in the current instantiation scope so we don't lose the untransformed to transformed mappings of the ParmVarDecls when they get created.
This does not yet include capturing.
Please see test file for examples.
This patch was LGTM'd by Doug:
http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1784
Alp Toker [Tue, 22 Oct 2013 22:53:01 +0000 (22:53 +0000)]
Retain previous language linkage of friend function declarations
With this extension, friend function declarations will retain the language
linkage specified for previous declarations instead of emitting an error
diagnostic.
The feature is known to be compatible with GCC and MSVC and permits a
language to be specified indirectly where it cannot otherwise be written
directly in class scope.
Work is ongoing to improve linkage spec diagnostics.
Richard Smith [Tue, 22 Oct 2013 22:51:04 +0000 (22:51 +0000)]
Split -fsanitize=bounds to -fsanitize=array-bounds (for the frontend-inserted
check using the ubsan runtime) and -fsanitize=local-bounds (for the middle-end
check which inserts traps).
Remove -fsanitize=local-bounds from -fsanitize=undefined. It does not produce
useful diagnostics and has false positives (PR17635), and is not a good
compromise position between UBSan's checks and ASan's checks.
Map -fbounds-checking to -fsanitize=local-bounds to restore Clang's historical
behavior for that flag.
David Majnemer [Tue, 22 Oct 2013 21:56:38 +0000 (21:56 +0000)]
Sema: Allow IndirectFieldDecl to appear in a non-type template argument
We would not identify pointer-to-member construction in a non-type
template argument if it was either a FieldDecl or a CXXMethodDecl.
However, this would incorrectly reject declarations that were injected
via an IndirectFieldDecl (e.g. a field inside of an anonymous union).
Rafael Espindola [Tue, 22 Oct 2013 21:56:29 +0000 (21:56 +0000)]
Consider hidden decls for isUsed checks.
This fixes pr17624.
A FIXME from Richard Smith:
It seems to me that the root cause is that a per-Decl 'used' flag doesn't
really make much sense in the way we use it now. I think we should either track
whether that particular declaration is used (with isUsed scanning the entire
redecl chain), or we should only have one flag for the entire redeclaration
chain (perhaps by always looking at the flag on either the most recent decl or
the canonical decl). Modeling it as "is this declaration or any previous
declaration used" is weird, and requires contortions like the loop at the end
of Sema::MarkFunctionReferenced.
it is not enough to delay aliases to the end of the TU, we have to do two
passes over them to find if they are defined or not.
This can be implemented by producing alias as we go and just doing the second
pass at the end. This has the advantage that other parts of clang that were
expecting alias to be processed in order don't have to be changed.
Jordan Rose [Tue, 22 Oct 2013 18:55:18 +0000 (18:55 +0000)]
[analyzer] scan-build: Handle -m* option wildcard after compiler/linker flags.
Some of the shared compiler/linker flags start with -m, so they've been
getting passed to the compiler only since r180073. Now, the -m* wildcard
is processed after the shared flags and the ignored flags.
Chandler Carruth [Tue, 22 Oct 2013 18:07:04 +0000 (18:07 +0000)]
Revert r193073 and the attempt to fix it in r193170.
This patch wasn't reviewed, and isn't correctly preserving the behaviors
relied upon by QT. I don't have a direct example of fallout, but it
should go through the standard code review process. For example, it
should never have removed the QT test case that was added when fixing
those users.
Serge Pavlov [Tue, 22 Oct 2013 17:14:47 +0000 (17:14 +0000)]
Reenable 'break' in 'for' specifier to allow compilation of QT macro 'foreach'
This is a fix to PR17649, caused by fix in r193073. QT uses 'break' statement
to implement their 'foreach' macro. To enable build of QT, this fix reenables
break but only in 'for' statement specifier and only in the third expression.
Rafael Espindola [Tue, 22 Oct 2013 13:51:06 +0000 (13:51 +0000)]
This patch causes clang to reject alias attributes that point to undefined
names. For example, with this patch we now reject
void f1(void) __attribute__((alias("g1")));
This patch is implemented in CodeGen. It is quiet a bit simpler and more
compatible with gcc than implementing it in Sema. The downside is that the
errors only fire during -emit-llvm.
Manuel Klimek [Tue, 22 Oct 2013 08:27:19 +0000 (08:27 +0000)]
Remove incorrect assert.
If we run into the second preprocessor branch chain, the first branch
chain might have already set the maximum branch count on that level to
something > 0.
Daniel Jasper [Tue, 22 Oct 2013 08:09:47 +0000 (08:09 +0000)]
Allow a header to be part of multiple modules.
This patch changes two things:
a) Allow a header to be part of multiple modules. The reasoning is that
in existing codebases that have a module-like build system, the same
headers might be used in several build targets. Simple reasons might be
that they defined different classes that are declared in the same
header. Supporting a header as a part of multiple modules will make the
transistion easier for those cases. A later step in clang can then
determine whether the two modules are actually compatible and can be
merged and error out appropriately. The later check is similar to what
needs to be done for template specializations anyway.
b) Allow modules to be stored in a directory tree separate from the
headers they describe.
Samuel Benzaquen [Mon, 21 Oct 2013 18:40:51 +0000 (18:40 +0000)]
Refactor DynTypedMatcher into a value type class, just like Matcher<T>.
Summary:
Refactor DynTypedMatcher into a value type class, just like Matcher<T>.
This simplifies its usage and removes the virtual hierarchy from Matcher<T>.
It also enables planned changes to replace MatcherInteface<T>.
Too many instantiaions of this class hierarchy has been causing Registry.cpp.o to bloat in size and number of symbols.
Silviu Baranga [Mon, 21 Oct 2013 10:54:53 +0000 (10:54 +0000)]
Add the __ARM_ARCH_EXT_IDIV__ predefine. It is set to 1 if we have hardware divide in the mode that we are compiling in (depending on the target features), not defined if we don't. Should be compatible with the GCC conterpart. Also adding a -hwdiv option to overide the default behavior.
Serge Pavlov [Mon, 21 Oct 2013 09:34:44 +0000 (09:34 +0000)]
Fix to PR8880 (clang dies processing a for loop).
Due to statement expressions supported as GCC extension, it is possible
to put 'break' or 'continue' into a loop/switch statement but outside its
body, for example:
for ( ; ({ if (first) { first = 0; continue; } 0; }); )
Such usage must be diagnosed as an error, GCC rejects it. To recognize
this and similar patterns the flags BreakScope and ContinueScope are
temporarily turned off while parsing condition expression.
Manuel Klimek [Mon, 21 Oct 2013 08:11:15 +0000 (08:11 +0000)]
Fixes PR17617: Crash on joining short if statements.
Now that we iterate on the formatting multiple times when we
have chains of preprocessor branches, we need to correctly reset
the token's previous and next pointer for the first / last token.
Justin Bogner [Mon, 21 Oct 2013 05:02:28 +0000 (05:02 +0000)]
Lex: Don't restrict legal UCNs when preprocessing assembly
The C and C++ standards disallow using universal character names to
refer to some characters, such as basic ascii and control characters,
so we reject these sequences in the lexer. However, when the
preprocessor isn't being used on C or C++, it doesn't make sense to
apply these restrictions.
Notably, accepting these characters avoids issues with unicode escapes
when GHC uses the compiler as a preprocessor on haskell sources.