We have a new policy in place making links to private resources
something we try to avoid in source and test files. Normally, we'd
organically switch to the new policy rather than make a sweeping change
across a project. However, Clang is in a somewhat special circumstance
currently: recently, I've had several new contributors run into rdar
links around test code which their patch was changing the behavior of.
This turns out to be a surprisingly bad experience, especially for
newer folks, for a handful of reasons: not understanding what the link
is and feeling intimidated by it, wondering whether their changes are
actually breaking something important to a downstream in some way,
having to hunt down strangers not involved with the patch to impose on
them for help, accidental pressure from asking for potentially private
IP to be made public, etc. Because folks run into these links entirely
by chance (through fixing bugs or working on new features), there's not
really a set of problematic links to focus on -- all of the links have
basically the same potential for causing these problems. As a result,
this is an omnibus patch to remove all such links.
This was not a mechanical change; it was done by manually searching for
rdar, radar, radr, and other variants to find all the various
problematic links. From there, I tried to retain or reword the
surrounding comments so that we would lose as little context as
possible. However, because most links were just a plain link with no
supporting context, the majority of the changes are simple removals.
Differential Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D158071
Stopping at '@' was originally intended to avoid skipping an '@' at the @interface context
when doing parser recovery, but we should not stop at all '@' tokens because they may be part
of expressions (e.g. in @"string", @selector(), etc.), so in most cases we will want to skip them.
This commit caused 'test/Parser/method-def-in-class.m' to fail for the cases where we tried to
recover from unmatched angle bracket but IMO it is not a big deal to not have good recovery
from such broken code and the way we did recovery would not always work anyway (e.g. if there was '@'
in an expression).
The case that rdar://7029784 is about still passes.
llvm-svn: 146815