operators in C++. Overloaded operators can be called directly via
their operator-function-ids, e.g., "operator+(foo, bar)", but we don't
yet implement the semantics of operator overloading to handle, e.g.,
"foo + bar".
llvm-svn: 58817
Implicit declaration of destructors (when necessary).
Extended Declarator to store information about parsed constructors
and destructors; this will be extended to deal with declarators that
name overloaded operators (e.g., "operator +") and user-defined
conversion operators (e.g., "operator int").
llvm-svn: 58767
duplication in the handling of copy-initialization by constructor,
which occurs both for initialization of a declaration and for
overloading. The initialization code is due for some refactoring.
llvm-svn: 58756
Notes:
- Constructors are never found by name lookup, so they'll never get
pushed into any scope. Instead, they are stored as an
OverloadedFunctionDecl in CXXRecordDecl for easy overloading.
- There's a new action isCurrentClassName that determines whether an
identifier is the name of the innermost class currently being defined;
we use this to identify the declarator-id grammar rule that refers to
a type-name.
- MinimalAction does *not* support parsing constructors.
- We now handle virtual and explicit function specifiers.
llvm-svn: 58499
- Allows definitions of overloaded functions :)
- Eliminates extraneous error messages when we have a definition of a
function that isn't an overload but doesn't have exactly the same type
as the original.
llvm-svn: 58382
of copy initialization. Other pieces of the puzzle:
- Try/Perform-ImplicitConversion now handles implicit conversions
that don't involve references.
- Try/Perform-CopyInitialization uses
CheckSingleAssignmentConstraints for C. PerformCopyInitialization
is now used for all argument passing and returning values from a
function.
- Diagnose errors with declaring references and const values without
an initializer. (Uses a new Action callback, ActOnUninitializedDecl).
We do not yet have implicit conversion sequences for reference
binding, which means that we don't have any overloading support for
reference parameters yet.
llvm-svn: 58353
- Do not allow expressions to ever have reference type
- Extend Expr::isLvalue to handle more cases where having written a
reference into the source implies that the expression is an lvalue
(e.g., function calls, C++ casts).
- Make GRExprEngine::VisitCall treat the call arguments as lvalues when
they are being bound to a reference parameter.
llvm-svn: 58306
- CastExpr is the root of all casts
- ImplicitCastExpr is (still) used for all explicit casts
- ExplicitCastExpr is now the root of all *explicit* casts
- ExplicitCCastExpr (new name needed!?) is a C-style cast in C or C++
- CXXFunctionalCastExpr inherits from ExplicitCastExpr
- CXXNamedCastExpr inherits from ExplicitCastExpr and is the root of all
of the C++ named cast expression types (static_cast, dynamic_cast, etc.)
- Added classes CXXStaticCastExpr, CXXDynamicCastExpr,
CXXReinterpretCastExpr, and CXXConstCastExpr to
Also, fixed returned-stack-addr.cpp, which broke once when we fixed
reinterpret_cast to diagnose double->int* conversions and again when
we eliminated implicit conversions to reference types. The fix is in
both testcase and SemaChecking.cpp.
Most of this patch is simply support for the renaming. There's very
little actual change in semantics.
llvm-svn: 58264
is to encode the state of the #pragma pack stack as an attribute when
the structure is declared.
- Extend PackedAttr to take an alignment (in bits), and reuse for
both __attribute__((packed)) (which takes no argument, instead
packing tightly (to "minimize the memory required") and for #pragma
pack (which allows specification of the maximum alignment in
bytes). __attribute__((packed)) is just encoded as Alignment=1.
This conflates two related but different mechanisms, but it didn't
seem worth another attribute.
- I have attempted to follow the MSVC semantics as opposed to the gcc
ones, since if I understand correctly #pragma pack originated with
MSVC. The semantics are generally equivalent except when the stack
is altered during the definition of a structure; its not clear if
anyone does this in practice. See testcase if curious.
llvm-svn: 57623
- Follows the MSVC (original) implementation, including support of
pack(show) (useful for testing).
- Implements support for named pack records which gcc seems to
ignore (or implements incorrectly).
- Not currently wired to anything, only functionality change is the
type checking of the pragma.
llvm-svn: 57476
condition as a constant even if the unevaluated side is a not a constant.
We don't do this when extensions are off, and we emit a warning when this
happens:
t.c:22:11: warning: expression is not a constant, but is accepted as one by GNU extensions
short t = __builtin_constant_p(5353) ? 42 : somefunc();
^ ~~~~~~~~~~
suggestions for improvement are welcome. This is obviously horrible, but
is required for real-world code.
llvm-svn: 57153
This is a temporary solution to help with the block rewriter (though it certainly has general utility).
Once DeclGroup's are implemented, this SourceLocation should be stored with it (since it applies to all the decls).
llvm-svn: 56985
- Enabled for builtins which are always constant expressions
(__builtin_huge_val*, __builtin_inf*, __builtin_constant_p,
__builtin_classify_type, __builtin___CFStringMakeConstantString).
Added Builtin::Context::isConstantExpr.
- Currently overly simply interface which only works for builtins
whose constantexprness does not depend on their arguments.
CallExpr::isBuiltinConstantExpr now takes an ASTContext argument.
llvm-svn: 56983
- For investigating warnings in system headers / builtins.
- Currently also enables the behavior that allows silent redefinition
of types in system headers. Conceptually these are separate but I
didn't feel it was worth two options (or changing LangOptions).
llvm-svn: 56163
- Replace string comparisons with pre-defined idents.
- Avoid calling isBuiltinObjCType() to avoid two checks.
- Remove isBuiltinObjCType(), since it was only used in Sema::MergeTypeDefDecl().
- Have Sema::MergeTypeDefDecl() set the new type.
This is a moidified version of an patch by David Chisnall.
llvm-svn: 55990
This change effects both RecordDecls and CXXRecordDecls, but does not effect EnumDecls (yet).
The motivation of this patch is as follows:
- Capture more source information, necessary for refactoring/rewriting clients.
- Pave the way to resolve ownership issues with RecordDecls with the forthcoming
addition of DeclGroups.
Current caveats:
- Until DeclGroups are in place, we will leak RecordDecls not explicitly
referenced by the AST. For example:
typedef struct { ... } x;
The RecordDecl for the struct will be leaked because the TypedefDecl doesn't
refer to it. This will be solved with DeclGroups.
- This patch also (temporarily) breaks CodeGen. More below.
High-level changes:
- As before, TagType still refers to a TagDecl, but it doesn't own it. When
a struct/union/class is first referenced, a RecordType and RecordDecl are
created for it, and the RecordType refers to that RecordDecl. Later, if
a new RecordDecl is created, the pointer to a RecordDecl in RecordType is
updated to point to the RecordDecl that defines the struct/union/class.
- TagDecl and RecordDecl now how a method 'getDefinition()' to return the
TagDecl*/RecordDecl* that refers to the TagDecl* that defines a particular
enum/struct/class/union. This is useful from going from a RecordDecl* that
defines a forward declaration to the RecordDecl* that provides the actual
definition. Note that this also works for EnumDecls, except that in this case
there is no distinction between forward declarations and definitions (yet).
- Clients should no longer assume that 'isDefinition()' returns true from a
RecordDecl if the corresponding struct/union/class has been defined.
isDefinition() only returns true if a particular RecordDecl is the defining
Decl. Use 'getDefinition()' instead to determine if a struct has been defined.
- The main changes to Sema happen in ActOnTag. To make the changes more
incremental, I split off the processing of enums and structs et al into two
code paths. Enums use the original code path (which is in ActOnTag) and
structs use the ActOnTagStruct. Eventually the two code paths will be merged,
but the idea was to preserve the original logic both for comparison and not to
change the logic for both enums and structs all at once.
- There is NO CHAINING of RecordDecls for the same RecordType. All RecordDecls
that correspond to the same type simply have a pointer to that type. If we
need to figure out what are all the RecordDecls for a given type we can build
a backmap.
- The diff in CXXRecordDecl.[cpp,h] is actually very small; it just mimics the
changes to RecordDecl. For some reason 'svn' marks the entire file as changed.
Why is CodeGen broken:
- Codegen assumes that there is an equivalence between RecordDecl* and
RecordType*. This was true before because we only created one RecordDecl* for
a given RecordType*, but it is no longer true. I believe this shouldn't be too
hard to change, but the patch was big enough as it is.
I have tested this patch on both the clang test suite, and by running the static analyzer over Postgresql and a large Apple-internal project (mix of Objective-C and C).
llvm-svn: 55839
The motivation behind this change is that chaining the RecordDecls is simply unnecessary. Once we create multiple RecordDecls for the same struct/union/class, clients that care about all the declarations of the same struct can build a back map by seeing which Decls refer to the same RecordType.
llvm-svn: 55821