BindingDecls have null type until their initializer is processed, so we can't
assume that a correction candidate has non-null type.
rdar://41559582
llvm-svn: 336634
Previous, if no Decl's were checked, visibility was set to false. Switch it
so that in cases of no Decl's, return true. These are the Decl's after being
filtered. Also remove an unreachable return statement since it is directly
after another return statement.
llvm-svn: 334160
This is similar to the LLVM change https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290.
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\@brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\@brief //g' $i & done
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46320
llvm-svn: 331834
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before
sorting. This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined
sorting order of objects having the same key.
To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of
std::sort.
llvm-svn: 328636
This relands r326965.
There was a null dereference in typo correction that was triggered in
Sema/diagnose_if.c. We are not always in a function scope when doing
typo correction. The fix is to add a null check.
LLVM's optimizer made it hard to find this bug. I wrote it up in a
not-very-well-editted blog post here:
http://qinsb.blogspot.com/2018/03/ub-will-delete-your-null-checks.html
llvm-svn: 327334
Summary:
This would allow code completion clients to know which context is visited during Sema code completion.
Also some changes:
* add `EnteredContext` callback in VisibleDeclConsumer.
* add a simple unittest for sema code completion (only for visited contexts at the moment).
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov
Reviewed By: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: mgorny, bkramer, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42071
llvm-svn: 322661
Summary:
noload_lookups() was too lazy: in addition to avoiding external decls, it
avoided populating the lazy lookup structure for internal decls.
This is the right behavior for the existing callsite in ASTDumper, but I think
it's not a very useful default, so we populate it by default.
While here:
- remove an unused test file accidentally added in r322371.
- remove lookups_begin()/lookups_end() in favor of lookups().begin(), which is
more common and more efficient.
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: cfe-commits, rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42077
llvm-svn: 322548
Summary:
Enumerating the contents of a namespace or global scope will omit any
decls that aren't already loaded, instead of deserializing them from the
PCH.
This allows a fast hybrid code completion where symbols from headers are
provided by an external index. (Sema already exposes the information
needed to do a reasonabl job of filtering them).
Clangd plans to implement this hybrid.
This option is just a hint - callers still need to postfilter results if
they want to *avoid* completing decls outside the main file.
Reviewers: bkramer, ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41989
llvm-svn: 322371
redecl chain for an imported declaration, make sure to check the IDNS of prior
imported decls.
Otherwise we can end up finding an invisible friend declaration and incorrectly
believing that it should be visible.
llvm-svn: 321916
They might have different visibility, and thus discarding all but one of them
can result in rejecting valid code. Also fix name lookup to cope with multiple
using-directives being found that denote the same namespace, where some are not
visible -- don't cache an "already visited" state for a using-directive that we
didn't visit because it was hidden.
llvm-svn: 316965
It's possible for the code completion consumer to add new decls to the
current scope while lookup happens on it. Avoid this by making a copy
first.
Sadly I wasn't able to get a self-contained test case for this as it
requires code completion + precompiled preamble + the stars aligning to
deserialize at exactly the right time.
llvm-svn: 315772
When declaring an entity in the "purview" of a module, it's never a
redeclaration of an entity in the purview of a default module or in no module
("in the global module"). Don't consider those other declarations as possible
redeclaration targets if they're not visible, and reject any cases where we
pick a prior visible declaration that violates this rule.
This reinstates r315251 and r315256, reverted in r315309 and r315308
respectively, tweaked to avoid triggering a linkage calculation when declaring
implicit special members (this exposed our pre-existing issue with typedef
names for linkage changing the linkage of types whose linkage has already been
computed and cached in more cases). A testcase for that regression has been
added in r315366.
llvm-svn: 315379
When declaring an entity in the "purview" of a module, it's never a
redeclaration of an entity in the purview of a default module or in no module
("in the global module"). Don't consider those other declarations as possible
redeclaration targets if they're not visible, and reject any cases where we
pick a prior visible declaration that violates this rule.
llvm-svn: 315251
C++14 added user-defined literal support for complex numbers so that you
can write something like "complex<double> val = 2i". However, there is
an existing GNU extension supporting this syntax and interpreting the
result as a _Complex type.
This changes parsing so that such literals are interpreted in terms of
C++14's operators if an overload is present but otherwise falls back to
the original GNU extension.
(We now have more robust diagnostics for implicit conversions so the
libc++ test that caused the original revert still passes).
llvm-svn: 310478
Summary:
Previously Clang was not considering operator declarations that occur at function scope. This is incorrect according to [over.match.oper]p3
> The set of non-member candidates is the result of the unqualified lookup of operator@ in the context of the expression according to the usual rules for name lookup in unqualified function calls.
This patch changes operator name lookup to consider block scope declarations.
This patch fixes PR27027.
Reviewers: rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35297
llvm-svn: 309530
These cases occur frequently for declarations in the global module (above the
module-declaration) in a Modules TS module interface. When we merge a
definition from another module into such a module-private definition, ensure
that we transitively make everything lexically within that definition visible
to that translation unit.
llvm-svn: 307129
declarations that are owned but unconditionally visible.
This allows us to set declarations as visible even if they have a local owning
module, without losing information. In turn, that means that our Objective-C
support can keep on incorrectly assuming the "hidden" bit on the declaration is
the whole story with regard to name visibility. This will also be useful once
we support the C++ Modules TS export semantics.
Objective-C name visibility is still incorrect in any case where the "hidden"
bit is not the complete story: for instance, in Objective-C++ the set of
visible categories will be wrong during template instantiation, and with local
submodule visibility enabled it will be wrong when building modules. Fixing that
will require a major overhaul of how visibility is handled for Objective-C (and
particularly for categories).
llvm-svn: 306075
As the bug report says,
struct A
{
template<typename T> operator T();
};
void foo()
{
A().operator auto();
}
causes: "undeduced type in IR-generation
UNREACHABLE executed at llvm/tools/clang/lib/CodeGen/CodeGenFunction.cpp:208!"
The problem is that in this case, "T" is being deduced as "auto",
which I believe is incorrect.
The 'operator auto' implementation in Clang is standards compliant, however
there is a defect report against core (1670).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34370
llvm-svn: 305812
replaced by visible decls.
Make sure that all paths through checkCorrectionVisibility set the
RequiresImport flag appropriately, so we don't end up using a stale value.
Patch by Jorge Gorbe!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30963
llvm-svn: 304745
We currenltly assert when want to diagnose a missing import and the decl
in question is already visible. It turns out that the decl in question
might be visible because another decl from the same module actually made
the module visible in a previous error diagnostic.
Remove the assertion and avoid re-exporting the module if it's already
visible.
rdar://problem/27975402
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32828
llvm-svn: 303705
C++14 added user-defined literal support for complex numbers so that you can
write something like "complex<double> val = 2i". However, there is an existing
GNU extension supporting this syntax and interpreting the result as a _Complex
type.
This changes parsing so that such literals are interpreted in terms of C++14's
operators if an overload is present but otherwise falls back to the original
GNU extension.
llvm-svn: 303694
remove the mechanism for doing so.
This mechanism was incorrect in the presence of preprocessed modules (and
#pragma clang module begin/end).
llvm-svn: 303469
inferring based on the current module at the point of creation.
This should result in no functional change except when building a preprocessed
module (or more generally when using #pragma clang module begin/end to switch
module in the middle of a file), in which case it allows us to correctly track
the owning module for declarations. We can't map from FileID to module in the
preprocessed module case, since all modules would have the same FileID.
There are still a couple of remaining places that try to infer a module from a
source location; I'll clean those up in follow-up changes.
llvm-svn: 303322
rather than waiting until it's queried.
Currently this is only applied to local submodule visibility mode, as we don't
yet allocate storage for the owning module in non-local-visibility modules
compilations.
This reinstates r302965, reverted in r303037, with a fix for the reported
crash, which occurred when reparenting a local declaration to be a child of
a hidden imported declaration (specifically during template instantiation).
llvm-svn: 303224
module immediately
Also revert dependent r302969. This is leading to crashes.
Will provide more details reproduction instructions to Richard.
llvm-svn: 303037
rather than waiting until it's queried.
Currently this is only applied to local submodule visibility mode, as we don't
yet allocate storage for the owning module in non-local-visibility modules
compilations.
llvm-svn: 302965
When we parse a redefinition of an entity for which we have a hidden existing
declaration, make it visible in the current module instead of mapping the
current source location to its containing module.
llvm-svn: 302842
type is a TemplateSpecializationType or InjectedClassNameType
Fixes PR30847. Partially fixes PR20973 (first position only).
PR17614 is still not working, its expression has the dependent
builtin type. We'll have to teach the completion engine how to "resolve"
dependent expressions to fix it.
rdar://29818301
llvm-svn: 302797
When looking for the template instantiation pattern of a templated entity,
consistently select the definition of the pattern if there is one. This means
we'll pick the same owning module when we start instantiating a template that
we'll later pick when determining which modules are visible during that
instantiation.
This reinstates r300650, reverted in r300659, with a fix for a regression
reported by Chandler after commit.
llvm-svn: 300938
modules but exposes much more widespread issues. Example and more
information is on the review thread for r300650.
Original commit summary:
[modules] Properly look up the owning module for an instantiation of a merged template.
llvm-svn: 300659
When looking for the template instantiation pattern of a templated entity,
consistently select the definition of the pattern if there is one. This means
we'll pick the same owning module when we start instantiating a template that
we'll later pick when determining which modules are visible during that
instantiation.
llvm-svn: 300650
such guides below explicit ones, and ensure that references to the class's
template parameters are not treated as forwarding references.
We make a few tweaks to the wording in the current standard:
1) The constructor parameter list is copied faithfully to the deduction guide,
without losing default arguments or a varargs ellipsis (which the standard
wording loses by omission).
2) If the class template declares no constructors, we add a T() -> T<...> guide
(which will only ever work if T has default arguments for all non-pack
template parameters).
3) If the class template declares nothing that looks like a copy or move
constructor, we add a T(T<...>) -> T<...> guide.
#2 and #3 follow from the "pretend we had a class type with these constructors"
philosophy for deduction guides.
llvm-svn: 295007
This patch changes how we handle argument-dependent `diagnose_if`
attributes. In particular, we now check them in the same place that we
check for things like passing NULL to Nonnull args, etc. This is
basically better in every way than how we were handling them before. :)
This fixes PR31638, PR31639, and PR31640.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28889
llvm-svn: 293360
This change adds a new type node, DeducedTemplateSpecializationType, to
represent a type template name that has been used as a type. This is modeled
around AutoType, and shares a common base class for representing a deduced
placeholder type.
We allow deduced class template types in a few more places than the standard
does: in conditions and for-range-declarators, and in new-type-ids. This is
consistent with GCC and with discussion on the core reflector. This patch
does not yet support deduced class template types being named in typename
specifiers.
llvm-svn: 293207
`diagnose_if` can be used to have clang emit either warnings or errors
for function calls that meet user-specified conditions. For example:
```
constexpr int foo(int a)
__attribute__((diagnose_if(a > 10, "configurations with a > 10 are "
"expensive.", "warning")));
int f1 = foo(9);
int f2 = foo(10); // warning: configuration with a > 10 are expensive.
int f3 = foo(f2);
```
It currently only emits diagnostics in cases where the condition is
guaranteed to always be true. So, the following code will emit no
warnings:
```
constexpr int bar(int a) {
foo(a);
return 0;
}
constexpr int i = bar(10);
```
We hope to support optionally emitting diagnostics for cases like that
(and emitting runtime checks) in the future.
Release notes will appear shortly. :)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27424
llvm-svn: 291418
This can be used to append alternative typo corrections to an existing diag.
include-fixer can use it to suggest includes to be added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26745
llvm-svn: 287128
The exact same test guards entry into the loop in which this test
occurs, and there is nothing inside the loop that assigns to the
variable, so it has already been checked for null.
This was flagged by PVS-Studio as well, but the report is actually wrong
-- this is not a case where we dereference a variable prior to testing
it for null, this is a case where we have a redundant test for null
after we already performed the exact same test.
llvm-svn: 285983
In C mode, if we have a visible declaration but not a visible definition, a tag
defined in the declaration should be have a visible definition. In C++ we rely
on the ODR merging, whereas in C we cannot because each declaration of a
function gets its own set of declarations in its prototype scope.
Patch developed in collaboration with Richard Smith!
llvm-svn: 280984
we first touch any part of that module. Instead, defer them until the first
time that module is (transitively) imported. The initializer step for a module
then recursively initializes modules that its own headers imported.
For example, this avoids running the <iostream> global initializer in programs
that don't actually use iostreams, but do use other parts of the standard
library.
llvm-svn: 276159
This patch adds a __nth_element builtin that allows fetching the n-th type of a
parameter pack with very little compile-time overhead. The patch was inspired by
r252036 and r252115 by David Majnemer, which add a similar __make_integer_seq
builtin for efficiently creating a std::integer_sequence.
Reviewed as D15421. http://reviews.llvm.org/D15421
llvm-svn: 274316
Replace inheriting constructors implementation with new approach, voted into
C++ last year as a DR against C++11.
Instead of synthesizing a set of derived class constructors for each inherited
base class constructor, we make the constructors of the base class visible to
constructor lookup in the derived class, using the normal rules for
using-declarations.
For constructors, UsingShadowDecl now has a ConstructorUsingShadowDecl derived
class that tracks the requisite additional information. We create shadow
constructors (not found by name lookup) in the derived class to model the
actual initialization, and have a new expression node,
CXXInheritedCtorInitExpr, to model the initialization of a base class from such
a constructor. (This initialization is special because it performs real perfect
forwarding of arguments.)
In cases where argument forwarding is not possible (for inalloca calls,
variadic calls, and calls with callee parameter cleanup), the shadow inheriting
constructor is not emitted and instead we directly emit the initialization code
into the caller of the inherited constructor.
Note that this new model is not perfectly compatible with the old model in some
corner cases. In particular:
* if B inherits a private constructor from A, and C uses that constructor to
construct a B, then we previously required that A befriends B and B
befriends C, but the new rules require A to befriend C directly, and
* if a derived class has its own constructors (and so its implicit default
constructor is suppressed), it may still inherit a default constructor from
a base class
llvm-svn: 274049
This code should be an error:
void foo(int);
void f3() {
int foo(float);
{
float foo(int); // expected-error {{functions that differ only in their return type cannot be overloaded}}
}
}
the foo(float) function declared at function scope should not hide the float(int)
while trying to redeclare functions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19763
llvm-svn: 272961
This is in preparation for C++ P0136R1, which switches the model for inheriting
constructors over from synthesizing a constructor to finding base class
constructors (via using shadow decls) when looking for derived class
constructors.
llvm-svn: 269231
This patch corresponds to reviews:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D15120http://reviews.llvm.org/D19125
It adds support for the __float128 keyword, literals and target feature to
enable it. Based on the latter of the two aforementioned reviews, this feature
is enabled on Linux on i386/X86 as well as SystemZ.
This is also the second attempt in commiting this feature. The first attempt
did not enable it on required platforms which caused failures when compiling
type_traits with -std=gnu++11.
If you see failures with compiling this header on your platform after this
commit, it is likely that your platform needs to have this feature enabled.
llvm-svn: 268898
declared before it is used. Because we don't use normal name lookup to find
these, the normal code to filter out non-visible names from name lookup results
does not apply.
llvm-svn: 268585
Since this patch provided support for the __float128 type but disabled it
on all platforms by default, some platforms can't compile type_traits with
-std=gnu++11 since there is a specialization with __float128.
This reverts the patch until D19125 is approved (i.e. we know which platforms
need this support enabled).
llvm-svn: 266460
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D15120
It adds support for the __float128 keyword, literals and a target feature to
enable it. This support is disabled by default on all targets and any target
that has support for this type is free to add it.
Based on feedback that I've received from target maintainers, this appears to
be the right thing for most targets. I have not heard from the maintainers of
X86 which I believe supports this type. I will subsequently investigate the
impact of enabling this on X86.
llvm-svn: 266186
Add parsing, sema analysis and serialization/deserialization for 'declare reduction' construct.
User-defined reductions are defined as
#pragma omp declare reduction( reduction-identifier : typename-list : combiner ) [initializer ( initializer-expr )]
These custom reductions may be used in 'reduction' clauses of OpenMP constructs. The combiner specifies how partial results can be combined into a single value. The
combiner can use the special variable identifiers omp_in and omp_out that are of the type of the variables being reduced with this reduction-identifier. Each of them will
denote one of the values to be combined before executing the combiner. It is assumed that the special omp_out identifier will refer to the storage that holds the resulting
combined value after executing the combiner.
As the initializer-expr value of a user-defined reduction is not known a priori the initializer-clause can be used to specify one. Then the contents of the initializer-clause
will be used as the initializer for private copies of reduction list items where the omp_priv identifier will refer to the storage to be initialized. The special identifier
omp_orig can also appear in the initializer-clause and it will refer to the storage of the original variable to be reduced.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11182
llvm-svn: 262582
If we import a module that has a complete array type and one that has an
incomplete array type, the declaration found by name lookup might be the one with
the incomplete type, possibly resulting in rejects-valid.
Now, the name lookup prefers decls with a complete array types. Also,
diagnose cases when the redecl chain has array bound, different from the merge
candidate.
Reviewed by Richard Smith.
llvm-svn: 262189
thousands of modules, each of which declares the same namespace, linearly
scanning the redecl chain looking for a visible declaration (once for each leaf
module, for each use) performs very poorly. Namespace visibility can only
decrease when we leave a module during a module build step, and we never care
*which* visible declaration of a namespace we find, so we can cache this very
effectively.
This results in a 35x speedup on one of our internal build steps (2m -> 3.5s),
but is hard to unit test because it requires a very large number of modules.
Ideas for a test appreciated! No functionality change intended other than the
speedup.
llvm-svn: 261161
OpenCL builtin functions are usually declared in header files.
Currently clang emits warning for OpenCL builtin functions
which have the same name as standard C library functions.
This commit eliminates such warnings by not adding the C standard
includes following the restriction from OpenCL v1.2 s6.9.f.
Patch by Liu Yaxun (Sam)!
Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16692
llvm-svn: 259491
Add "enum ObjCPropertyQueryKind" to a few APIs that used to only take the name
of the property: ObjCPropertyDecl::findPropertyDecl,
ObjCContainerDecl::FindPropertyDeclaration,
ObjCInterfaceDecl::FindPropertyVisibleInPrimaryClass,
ObjCImplDecl::FindPropertyImplDecl, and Sema::ActOnPropertyImplDecl.
ObjCPropertyQueryKind currently has 3 values:
OBJC_PR_query_unknown, OBJC_PR_query_instance, OBJC_PR_query_class
This extra parameter specifies that we are looking for an instance property with
the given name, or a class property with the given name, or any property with
the given name (if both exist, the instance property will be returned).
rdar://23891898
llvm-svn: 259070
1) When dumping a declaration that declares a name for a type, also dump the named type.
2) Add a #pragma clang __debug dump X, that dumps the lookup results for X in
the current context.
llvm-svn: 257529
Summary:
Support for OpenCL 2.0 pipe type.
This is a bug-fix version for bader's patch reviews.llvm.org/D14441
Reviewers: pekka.jaaskelainen, Anastasia
Subscribers: bader, Anastasia, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15603
llvm-svn: 257254
underlying decls. Preserve the found declaration throughout, and only map to
the underlying declaration when we want to check whether it's the right kind.
This allows us to provide the right source location for the found declaration,
and prepares for the possibility of underlying decls with a different name
from the found decl.
llvm-svn: 256575
is complete (with an error produced if not) and a function that merely queries
whether the type is complete. Either way we'll trigger instantiation if
necessary, but only the former will diagnose and recover from missing module
imports.
The intent of this change is to prevent a class of bugs where code would call
RequireCompleteType(..., 0) and then ignore the result. With modules, we must
check the return value and use it to determine whether the definition of the
type is visible.
This also fixes a debug info quality issue: calls to isCompleteType do not
trigger the emission of debug information for a type in limited-debug-info
mode. This allows us to avoid emitting debug information for type definitions
in more cases where we believe it is safe to do so.
llvm-svn: 256049
We created a malformed TemplateSpecializationType: it was dependent but
had a RecordType as it's canonical type. This would lead getAs to
crash. r249090 worked around this but we should fix this for real by
providing a more appropriate template specialization type as the
canonical type.
This fixes PR24246.
llvm-svn: 253495
unsafe, since many operations on the types can trigger lazy deserialization of
more types and invalidate the iterators. This fixes a crasher, but I've not
been able to reduce it to a reasonable testcase yet.
llvm-svn: 253420
DR407, the C++ standard doesn't really say how this should work. Here's what we
do (which is consistent with DR407 as far as I can tell):
* When performing name lookup for an elaborated-type-specifier, a tag
declaration hides a typedef declaration that names the same type.
* When performing any other kind of lookup, a typedef declaration hides
a tag declaration that names the same type.
In any other case where lookup finds both a typedef and a tag (that is, when
they name different types), the lookup will be ambiguous. If lookup finds a
tag and a typedef that name the same type, and finds anything else, the lookup
will always be ambiguous (even if the other entity would hide the tag, it does
not also hide the typedef).
llvm-svn: 252959
internal linkage entities in different modules from r250884 to apply to all
names, not just function names.
This is really awkward: we don't want to merge internal-linkage symbols from
separate modules, because they might not actually be defining the same entity.
But we don't want to reject programs that use such an ambiguous symbol if those
internal-linkage symbols are in fact equivalent. For now, we're resolving the
ambiguity by picking one of the equivalent definitions as an extension.
llvm-svn: 252063