81 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sam McCall
880fa7faa9 Revert "[clang][SemaCXX] Diagnose tautological uses of consteval if and is_constant_evaluated"
This reverts commit 491b2810fb7fe5f080fa9c4f5945ed0a6909dc92.

This change broke valid code and generated incorrect diagnostics, see
https://reviews.llvm.org/D155064
2023-09-27 18:58:01 +02:00
Takuya Shimizu
491b2810fb [clang][SemaCXX] Diagnose tautological uses of consteval if and is_constant_evaluated
This patch makes clang diagnose extensive cases of consteval if and is_constant_evaluated usage that are tautologically true or false.
This introduces a new IsRuntimeEvaluated boolean flag to Sema::ExpressionEvaluationContextRecord that means the immediate appearance of if consteval or is_constant_evaluated are tautologically false(e.g. inside if !consteval {} block or non-constexpr-qualified function definition body)
This patch also pushes new expression evaluation context when parsing the condition of if constexpr and initializer of constexpr variables so that Sema can be aware that the use of consteval if and is_consteval are tautologically true in if constexpr condition and constexpr variable initializers.
BEFORE this patch, the warning for is_constant_evaluated was emitted from constant evaluator. This patch moves the warning logic to Sema in order to diagnose tautological use of is_constant_evaluated in the same way as consteval if.

This patch separates initializer evaluation context from InitializerScopeRAII.
This fixes a bug that was happening when user takes address of function address in initializers of non-local variables.

Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/43760
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/51567

Reviewed By: cor3ntin, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D155064
2023-09-27 09:26:06 +09:00
Fangrui Song
0874110104 [Driver] Change some Separate CC1 options to use the Joined = form 2023-06-06 15:12:45 -07:00
Shafik Yaghmour
67ee18cc7a [Clang] Add machinery to catch overflow in unary minus outside of a constant expression context
We provide several diagnostics for various undefined behaviors due to signed
integer overflow outside of a constant expression context. We were missing the
machinery to catch overflows due to unary minus.

Fixes: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/31643

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D142867
2023-01-31 09:35:12 -08:00
Shafik Yaghmour
a0138390dd [Clang] Diagnose undefined behavior in a constant expression while evaluating a compound assignment with remainder as operand
Currently we don't diagnose overflow in a constant expression for the case of
compound assignment with remainder as a operand.

In handleIntIntBinOp the arguments LHS and Result can be the same source but in
the check for remainder in this function we assigned to Result before checking
for overflow. In all the other operations the check is done before Result is
assigned to.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140455
2023-01-12 08:04:04 -08:00
Richard Smith
5982b0b0b8 Add missing check for constant evaluation of a comparison of a pointer
to member naming a weak member to nullptr.

This fixes a miscompile where constant evaluation would incorrectly
determine that a weak member function pointer is never null.

In passing, also improve the diagnostics for constant evaluation of some
nearby cases.
2022-12-12 17:09:26 -08:00
Matheus Izvekov
15f3cd6bfc
[clang] Implement ElaboratedType sugaring for types written bare
Without this patch, clang will not wrap in an ElaboratedType node types written
without a keyword and nested name qualifier, which goes against the intent that
we should produce an AST which retains enough details to recover how things are
written.

The lack of this sugar is incompatible with the intent of the type printer
default policy, which is to print types as written, but to fall back and print
them fully qualified when they are desugared.

An ElaboratedTypeLoc without keyword / NNS uses no storage by itself, but still
requires pointer alignment due to pre-existing bug in the TypeLoc buffer
handling.

---

Troubleshooting list to deal with any breakage seen with this patch:

1) The most likely effect one would see by this patch is a change in how
   a type is printed. The type printer will, by design and default,
   print types as written. There are customization options there, but
   not that many, and they mainly apply to how to print a type that we
   somehow failed to track how it was written. This patch fixes a
   problem where we failed to distinguish between a type
   that was written without any elaborated-type qualifiers,
   such as a 'struct'/'class' tags and name spacifiers such as 'std::',
   and one that has been stripped of any 'metadata' that identifies such,
   the so called canonical types.
   Example:
   ```
   namespace foo {
     struct A {};
     A a;
   };
   ```
   If one were to print the type of `foo::a`, prior to this patch, this
   would result in `foo::A`. This is how the type printer would have,
   by default, printed the canonical type of A as well.
   As soon as you add any name qualifiers to A, the type printer would
   suddenly start accurately printing the type as written. This patch
   will make it print it accurately even when written without
   qualifiers, so we will just print `A` for the initial example, as
   the user did not really write that `foo::` namespace qualifier.

2) This patch could expose a bug in some AST matcher. Matching types
   is harder to get right when there is sugar involved. For example,
   if you want to match a type against being a pointer to some type A,
   then you have to account for getting a type that is sugar for a
   pointer to A, or being a pointer to sugar to A, or both! Usually
   you would get the second part wrong, and this would work for a
   very simple test where you don't use any name qualifiers, but
   you would discover is broken when you do. The usual fix is to
   either use the matcher which strips sugar, which is annoying
   to use as for example if you match an N level pointer, you have
   to put N+1 such matchers in there, beginning to end and between
   all those levels. But in a lot of cases, if the property you want
   to match is present in the canonical type, it's easier and faster
   to just match on that... This goes with what is said in 1), if
   you want to match against the name of a type, and you want
   the name string to be something stable, perhaps matching on
   the name of the canonical type is the better choice.

3) This patch could expose a bug in how you get the source range of some
   TypeLoc. For some reason, a lot of code is using getLocalSourceRange(),
   which only looks at the given TypeLoc node. This patch introduces a new,
   and more common TypeLoc node which contains no source locations on itself.
   This is not an inovation here, and some other, more rare TypeLoc nodes could
   also have this property, but if you use getLocalSourceRange on them, it's not
   going to return any valid locations, because it doesn't have any. The right fix
   here is to always use getSourceRange() or getBeginLoc/getEndLoc which will dive
   into the inner TypeLoc to get the source range if it doesn't find it on the
   top level one. You can use getLocalSourceRange if you are really into
   micro-optimizations and you have some outside knowledge that the TypeLocs you are
   dealing with will always include some source location.

4) Exposed a bug somewhere in the use of the normal clang type class API, where you
   have some type, you want to see if that type is some particular kind, you try a
   `dyn_cast` such as `dyn_cast<TypedefType>` and that fails because now you have an
   ElaboratedType which has a TypeDefType inside of it, which is what you wanted to match.
   Again, like 2), this would usually have been tested poorly with some simple tests with
   no qualifications, and would have been broken had there been any other kind of type sugar,
   be it an ElaboratedType or a TemplateSpecializationType or a SubstTemplateParmType.
   The usual fix here is to use `getAs` instead of `dyn_cast`, which will look deeper
   into the type. Or use `getAsAdjusted` when dealing with TypeLocs.
   For some reason the API is inconsistent there and on TypeLocs getAs behaves like a dyn_cast.

5) It could be a bug in this patch perhaps.

Let me know if you need any help!

Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112374
2022-07-27 11:10:54 +02:00
Jonas Devlieghere
888673b6e3
Revert "[clang] Implement ElaboratedType sugaring for types written bare"
This reverts commit 7c51f02effdbd0d5e12bfd26f9c3b2ab5687c93f because it
stills breaks the LLDB tests. This was  re-landed without addressing the
issue or even agreement on how to address the issue. More details and
discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D112374.
2022-07-14 21:17:48 -07:00
Matheus Izvekov
7c51f02eff
[clang] Implement ElaboratedType sugaring for types written bare
Without this patch, clang will not wrap in an ElaboratedType node types written
without a keyword and nested name qualifier, which goes against the intent that
we should produce an AST which retains enough details to recover how things are
written.

The lack of this sugar is incompatible with the intent of the type printer
default policy, which is to print types as written, but to fall back and print
them fully qualified when they are desugared.

An ElaboratedTypeLoc without keyword / NNS uses no storage by itself, but still
requires pointer alignment due to pre-existing bug in the TypeLoc buffer
handling.

---

Troubleshooting list to deal with any breakage seen with this patch:

1) The most likely effect one would see by this patch is a change in how
   a type is printed. The type printer will, by design and default,
   print types as written. There are customization options there, but
   not that many, and they mainly apply to how to print a type that we
   somehow failed to track how it was written. This patch fixes a
   problem where we failed to distinguish between a type
   that was written without any elaborated-type qualifiers,
   such as a 'struct'/'class' tags and name spacifiers such as 'std::',
   and one that has been stripped of any 'metadata' that identifies such,
   the so called canonical types.
   Example:
   ```
   namespace foo {
     struct A {};
     A a;
   };
   ```
   If one were to print the type of `foo::a`, prior to this patch, this
   would result in `foo::A`. This is how the type printer would have,
   by default, printed the canonical type of A as well.
   As soon as you add any name qualifiers to A, the type printer would
   suddenly start accurately printing the type as written. This patch
   will make it print it accurately even when written without
   qualifiers, so we will just print `A` for the initial example, as
   the user did not really write that `foo::` namespace qualifier.

2) This patch could expose a bug in some AST matcher. Matching types
   is harder to get right when there is sugar involved. For example,
   if you want to match a type against being a pointer to some type A,
   then you have to account for getting a type that is sugar for a
   pointer to A, or being a pointer to sugar to A, or both! Usually
   you would get the second part wrong, and this would work for a
   very simple test where you don't use any name qualifiers, but
   you would discover is broken when you do. The usual fix is to
   either use the matcher which strips sugar, which is annoying
   to use as for example if you match an N level pointer, you have
   to put N+1 such matchers in there, beginning to end and between
   all those levels. But in a lot of cases, if the property you want
   to match is present in the canonical type, it's easier and faster
   to just match on that... This goes with what is said in 1), if
   you want to match against the name of a type, and you want
   the name string to be something stable, perhaps matching on
   the name of the canonical type is the better choice.

3) This patch could exposed a bug in how you get the source range of some
   TypeLoc. For some reason, a lot of code is using getLocalSourceRange(),
   which only looks at the given TypeLoc node. This patch introduces a new,
   and more common TypeLoc node which contains no source locations on itself.
   This is not an inovation here, and some other, more rare TypeLoc nodes could
   also have this property, but if you use getLocalSourceRange on them, it's not
   going to return any valid locations, because it doesn't have any. The right fix
   here is to always use getSourceRange() or getBeginLoc/getEndLoc which will dive
   into the inner TypeLoc to get the source range if it doesn't find it on the
   top level one. You can use getLocalSourceRange if you are really into
   micro-optimizations and you have some outside knowledge that the TypeLocs you are
   dealing with will always include some source location.

4) Exposed a bug somewhere in the use of the normal clang type class API, where you
   have some type, you want to see if that type is some particular kind, you try a
   `dyn_cast` such as `dyn_cast<TypedefType>` and that fails because now you have an
   ElaboratedType which has a TypeDefType inside of it, which is what you wanted to match.
   Again, like 2), this would usually have been tested poorly with some simple tests with
   no qualifications, and would have been broken had there been any other kind of type sugar,
   be it an ElaboratedType or a TemplateSpecializationType or a SubstTemplateParmType.
   The usual fix here is to use `getAs` instead of `dyn_cast`, which will look deeper
   into the type. Or use `getAsAdjusted` when dealing with TypeLocs.
   For some reason the API is inconsistent there and on TypeLocs getAs behaves like a dyn_cast.

5) It could be a bug in this patch perhaps.

Let me know if you need any help!

Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112374
2022-07-15 04:16:55 +02:00
Jonas Devlieghere
3968936b92
Revert "[clang] Implement ElaboratedType sugaring for types written bare"
This reverts commit bdc6974f92304f4ed542241b9b89ba58ba6b20aa because it
breaks all the LLDB tests that import the std module.

  import-std-module/array.TestArrayFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/deque-basic.TestDequeFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/deque-dbg-info-content.TestDbgInfoContentDequeFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/forward_list.TestForwardListFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/forward_list-dbg-info-content.TestDbgInfoContentForwardListFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/list.TestListFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/list-dbg-info-content.TestDbgInfoContentListFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/queue.TestQueueFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/stack.TestStackFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/vector.TestVectorFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/vector-bool.TestVectorBoolFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/vector-dbg-info-content.TestDbgInfoContentVectorFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/vector-of-vectors.TestVectorOfVectorsFromStdModule.py

https://green.lab.llvm.org/green/view/LLDB/job/lldb-cmake/45301/
2022-07-13 09:20:30 -07:00
Matheus Izvekov
bdc6974f92
[clang] Implement ElaboratedType sugaring for types written bare
Without this patch, clang will not wrap in an ElaboratedType node types written
without a keyword and nested name qualifier, which goes against the intent that
we should produce an AST which retains enough details to recover how things are
written.

The lack of this sugar is incompatible with the intent of the type printer
default policy, which is to print types as written, but to fall back and print
them fully qualified when they are desugared.

An ElaboratedTypeLoc without keyword / NNS uses no storage by itself, but still
requires pointer alignment due to pre-existing bug in the TypeLoc buffer
handling.

Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112374
2022-07-13 02:10:09 +02:00
Shivam Gupta
48e1829874 [Diagnostics] Fix inconsistent shift-overflow warnings in C++20
This fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/52873.
Don't warn in C++2A mode (and newer), as signed left shifts
always wrap and never overflow. Ref. -
https://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2018/p1236r1.html.
2022-06-14 20:19:46 +05:30
Matheus Izvekov
ad14b5b008 [clang] Stop providing builtin overload candidate for relational function pointer comparisons
Word on the grapevine was that the committee had some discussion that
ended with unanimous agreement on eliminating relational function pointer comparisons.

We wanted to be bold and just ban all of them cold turkey.
But then we chickened out at the last second and are going for
eliminating just the spaceship overload candidate instead, for now.

See D104680 for reference.

This should be fine and "safe", because the only possible semantic change this
would cause is that overload resolution could possibly be ambiguous if
there was another viable candidate equally as good.

But to save face a little we are going to:
* Issue an "error" for three-way comparisons on function pointers.
  But all this is doing really is changing one vague error message,
  from an "invalid operands to binary expression" into an
  "ordered comparison of function pointers", which sounds more like we mean business.
* Otherwise "warn" that comparing function pointers like that is totally
  not cool (unless we are told to keep quiet about this).

Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>

Reviewed By: rsmith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104892
2021-06-26 00:08:02 +02:00
Melanie Blower
2e204e2391 [clang] Enable support for #pragma STDC FENV_ACCESS
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, sepavloff

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87528
2020-10-25 06:46:25 -07:00
Richard Smith
f7f2e4261a PR47805: Use a single object for a function parameter in the caller and
callee in constant evaluation.

We previously made a deep copy of function parameters of class type when
passing them, resulting in the destructor for the parameter applying to
the original argument value, ignoring any modifications made in the
function body. This also meant that the 'this' pointer of the function
parameter could be observed changing between the caller and the callee.

This change completely reimplements how we model function parameters
during constant evaluation. We now model them roughly as if they were
variables living in the caller, albeit with an artificially reduced
scope that covers only the duration of the function call, instead of
modeling them as temporaries in the caller that we partially "reparent"
into the callee at the point of the call. This brings some minor
diagnostic improvements, as well as significantly reduced stack usage
during constant evaluation.
2020-10-14 17:43:51 -07:00
Richard Smith
69f7c006ff Revert "PR47805: Use a single object for a function parameter in the caller and"
Breaks a clangd unit test.

This reverts commit 8f8b9f2cca0b73314342c721186ae9c860ca273c.
2020-10-13 19:32:03 -07:00
Richard Smith
8f8b9f2cca PR47805: Use a single object for a function parameter in the caller and
callee in constant evaluation.

We previously made a deep copy of function parameters of class type when
passing them, resulting in the destructor for the parameter applying to
the original argument value, ignoring any modifications made in the
function body. This also meant that the 'this' pointer of the function
parameter could be observed changing between the caller and the callee.

This change completely reimplements how we model function parameters
during constant evaluation. We now model them roughly as if they were
variables living in the caller, albeit with an artificially reduced
scope that covers only the duration of the function call, instead of
modeling them as temporaries in the caller that we partially "reparent"
into the callee at the point of the call. This brings some minor
diagnostic improvements, as well as significantly reduced stack usage
during constant evaluation.
2020-10-13 18:50:46 -07:00
Richard Smith
ab870f3030 Revert "PR47805: Use a single object for a function parameter in the caller and"
The buildbots are displeased.

This reverts commit 8d03a972ce8e92815ffe3d5d86aa027605ed92e2.
2020-10-13 15:59:00 -07:00
Richard Smith
8d03a972ce PR47805: Use a single object for a function parameter in the caller and
callee in constant evaluation.

We previously made a deep copy of function parameters of class type when
passing them, resulting in the destructor for the parameter applying to
the original argument value, ignoring any modifications made in the
function body. This also meant that the 'this' pointer of the function
parameter could be observed changing between the caller and the callee.

This change completely reimplements how we model function parameters
during constant evaluation. We now model them roughly as if they were
variables living in the caller, albeit with an artificially reduced
scope that covers only the duration of the function call, instead of
modeling them as temporaries in the caller that we partially "reparent"
into the callee at the point of the call. This brings some minor
diagnostic improvements, as well as significantly reduced stack usage
during constant evaluation.
2020-10-13 15:45:04 -07:00
Richard Smith
6f33936719 Explain why the array bound is non-constant in VLA diagnostics.
In passing, also use a more precise diagnostic to explain why an
expression is not an ICE if it's not of integral type.
2020-08-19 15:45:51 -07:00
Richard Smith
00068c452a Improve diagnostics for constant evaluation that fails because a
variable's initializer is not known.

The hope is that a better diagnostic for this case will reduce the rate
at which duplicates of non-bug PR41093 are reported.
2020-07-08 18:14:23 -07:00
Richard Smith
061f3a50dd P0593R6: Pseudo-destructor expressions end object lifetimes.
This only has an observable effect on constant evaluation.
2020-02-18 18:41:03 -08:00
Richard Smith
4e9f1379b9 If constant evaluation fails due to an unspecified pointer comparison,
produce a note saying that rather than the default "evaluation failed"
note.
2019-12-16 17:49:45 -08:00
Richard Smith
61422f9665 For P0784R7: add support for explicit destructor calls and
pseudo-destructor calls in constant evaluation.

llvm-svn: 373122
2019-09-27 20:24:36 +00:00
Richard Smith
da1b4347e4 For P0784R7: Add support for dynamic allocation with new / delete during
constant evaluation.

llvm-svn: 373036
2019-09-27 01:26:47 +00:00
Richard Smith
5030928d60 [c++20] Implement semantic restrictions for C++20 designated
initializers.

This has some interesting interactions with our existing extensions to
support C99 designated initializers as an extension in C++. Those are
resolved as follows:

 * We continue to permit the full breadth of C99 designated initializers
   in C++, with the exception that we disallow a partial overwrite of an
   initializer with a non-trivially-destructible type. (Full overwrite
   is OK, because we won't run the first initializer at all.)

 * The C99 extensions are disallowed in SFINAE contexts and during
   overload resolution, where they could change the meaning of valid
   programs.

 * C++20 disallows reordering of initializers. We only check for that for
   the simple cases that the C++20 rules permit (designators of the form
   '.field_name =' and continue to allow reordering in other cases).
   It would be nice to improve this behavior in future.

 * All C99 designated initializer extensions produce a warning by
   default in C++20 mode. People are going to learn the C++ rules based
   on what Clang diagnoses, so it's important we diagnose these properly
   by default.

 * In C++ <= 17, we apply the C++20 rules rather than the C99 rules, and
   so still diagnose C99 extensions as described above. We continue to
   accept designated C++20-compatible initializers in C++ <= 17 silently
   by default (but naturally still reject under -pedantic-errors).

This is not a complete implementation of P0329R4. In particular, that
paper introduces new non-C99-compatible syntax { .field { init } }, and
we do not support that yet.

This is based on a previous patch by Don Hinton, though I've made
substantial changes when addressing the above interactions.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59754

llvm-svn: 370544
2019-08-30 22:52:55 +00:00
Richard Smith
9e52c43090 Treat the range of representable values of floating-point types as [-inf, +inf] not as [-max, +max].
Summary:
Prior to r329065, we used [-max, max] as the range of representable
values because LLVM's `fptrunc` did not guarantee defined behavior when
truncating from a larger floating-point type to a smaller one. Now that
has been fixed, we can make clang follow normal IEEE 754 semantics in this
regard and take the larger range [-inf, +inf] as the range of representable
values.

In practice, this affects two parts of the frontend:
 * the constant evaluator no longer treats floating-point evaluations
   that result in +-inf as being undefined (because they no longer leave
   the range of representable values of the type)
 * UBSan no longer treats conversions to floating-point type that are
   outside the [-max, +max] range as being undefined

In passing, also remove the float-divide-by-zero sanitizer from
-fsanitize=undefined, on the basis that while it's undefined per C++
rules (and we disallow it in constant expressions for that reason), it
is defined by Clang / LLVM / IEEE 754.

Reviewers: rnk, BillyONeal

Subscribers: cfe-commits

Tags: #clang

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63793

llvm-svn: 365272
2019-07-06 21:05:52 +00:00
Richard Smith
debad6460b Reject attempts to call non-static member functions on objects outside
their lifetime in constant expressions.

This is undefined behavior per [class.cdtor]p2.

We continue to allow this for objects whose values are not visible
within the constant evaluation, because there's no way we can tell
whether the access is defined or not, existing code relies on the
ability to make such calls, and every other compiler allows such
calls.

This reinstates r360499, reverted in r360531.

llvm-svn: 360538
2019-05-12 09:39:08 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim
73e8b67438 Revert rL360499 and rL360464 from cfe/trunk:
Reject attempts to call non-static member functions on objects outside
their lifetime in constant expressions.

This is undefined behavior per [class.cdtor]p2.

We continue to allow this for objects whose values are not visible
within the constant evaluation, because there's no way we can tell
whether the access is defined or not, existing code relies on the
ability to make such calls, and every other compiler allows such
calls.
........
Fix handling of objects under construction during constant expression
evaluation.

It's not enough to just track the LValueBase that we're evaluating, we
need to also track the path to the objects whose constructors are
running.
........
Fixes windows buildbots

llvm-svn: 360531
2019-05-11 20:21:59 +00:00
Richard Smith
d05df0ef43 Reject attempts to call non-static member functions on objects outside
their lifetime in constant expressions.

This is undefined behavior per [class.cdtor]p2.

We continue to allow this for objects whose values are not visible
within the constant evaluation, because there's no way we can tell
whether the access is defined or not, existing code relies on the
ability to make such calls, and every other compiler allows such
calls.

llvm-svn: 360499
2019-05-11 02:00:06 +00:00
Richard Smith
263a0a33cc Don't warn about runtime behavior problems in variable initializers that we
know are going to be constant-evaluated.

Any relevant diagnostics should be produced by constant expression evaluation.

llvm-svn: 314067
2017-09-23 18:27:11 +00:00
Richard Smith
4baaa5ab52 DR616, and part of P0135R1: member access (or pointer-to-member access) on a
temporary produces an xvalue, not a prvalue. Support this by materializing the
temporary prior to performing the member access.

llvm-svn: 288563
2016-12-03 01:14:32 +00:00
Richard Smith
5e9746f520 DR583, DR1512: Implement a rewrite to C++'s 'composite pointer type' rules.
This has two significant effects:

1) Direct relational comparisons between null pointer constants (0 and nullopt)
   and pointers are now ill-formed. This was always the case for C, and it
   appears that C++ only ever permitted by accident. For instance, cases like
     nullptr < &a
   are now rejected.

2) Comparisons and conditional operators between differently-cv-qualified
   pointer types now work, and produce a composite type that both source
   pointer types can convert to (when possible). For instance, comparison
   between 'int **' and 'const int **' is now valid, and uses an intermediate
   type of 'const int *const *'.

Clang previously supported #2 as an extension.

We do not accept the cases in #1 as an extension. I've tested a fair amount of
code to check that this doesn't break it, but if it turns out that someone is
relying on this, we can easily add it back as an extension.

This is a re-commit of r284800.

llvm-svn: 284890
2016-10-21 22:00:42 +00:00
Renato Golin
41189656ed Revert "DR583, DR1512: Implement a rewrite to C++'s 'composite pointer type' rules."
This reverts commit r284800, as it failed all ARM/AArch64 bots.

llvm-svn: 284811
2016-10-21 08:03:49 +00:00
Richard Smith
0c1c53e3fa DR583, DR1512: Implement a rewrite to C++'s 'composite pointer type' rules.
This has two significant effects:

1) Direct relational comparisons between null pointer constants (0 and nullopt)
   and pointers are now ill-formed. This was always the case for C, and it
   appears that C++ only ever permitted by accident. For instance, cases like
     nullptr < &a
   are now rejected.

2) Comparisons and conditional operators between differently-cv-qualified
   pointer types now work, and produce a composite type that both source
   pointer types can convert to (when possible). For instance, comparison
   between 'int **' and 'const int **' is now valid, and uses an intermediate
   type of 'const int *const *'.

Clang previously supported #2 as an extension.

We do not accept the cases in #1 as an extension. I've tested a fair amount of
code to check that this doesn't break it, but if it turns out that someone is
relying on this, we can easily add it back as an extension.

llvm-svn: 284800
2016-10-21 02:36:37 +00:00
Richard Trieu
dcb5557f2d Improve -Wconstant-conversion
Switch the evaluation from isIntegerConstantExpr to EvaluateAsInt.
EvaluateAsInt will evaluate more types of expressions than
isIntegerConstantExpr.

Move one case from -Wsign-conversion to -Wconstant-conversion.  The case is:
1) Source and target types are signed
2) Source type is wider than the target type
3) The source constant value is positive
4) The conversion will store the value as negative in the target.

llvm-svn: 259271
2016-01-29 23:51:16 +00:00
Richard Smith
0c6124ba82 PR17381: Treat undefined behavior during expression evaluation as an unmodeled
side-effect, so that we don't allow speculative evaluation of such expressions
during code generation.

This caused a diagnostic quality regression, so fix constant expression
diagnostics to prefer either the first "can't be constant folded" diagnostic or
the first "not a constant expression" diagnostic depending on the kind of
evaluation we're doing. This was always the intent, but didn't quite work
correctly before.

This results in certain initializers that used to be constant initializers to
no longer be; in particular, things like:

  float f = 1e100;

are no longer accepted in C. This seems appropriate, as such constructs would
lead to code being executed if sanitizers are enabled.

llvm-svn: 254574
2015-12-03 01:36:22 +00:00
Davide Italiano
bf0f7757e2 [Sema] Warn when shifting a negative value.
Example:
 % ./clang -Wshift-negative-value emit.c
emit.c:3:14: warning: shifting a negative signed value is undefined [-Wshift-negative-value]
  int a = -1 << 3;
          ~~ ^
1 warning generated.

PR:		24026
Differential Revision:	 http://reviews.llvm.org/D10938
Reviewed by:	rsmith

llvm-svn: 241478
2015-07-06 18:02:09 +00:00
Richard Smith
410cc89374 [c++1z] Most of N4268 (allow constant evaluation for non-type template arguments).
We don't yet support pointer-to-member template arguments that have undergone
pointer-to-member conversions, mostly because we don't have a mangling for them yet.

llvm-svn: 222807
2014-11-26 03:26:53 +00:00
Richard Smith
640775b428 PR21180: Lambda closure types are neither aggregates nor literal types.
llvm-svn: 219222
2014-10-07 18:01:33 +00:00
Richard Smith
6c6bbfab19 PR19346: Adding 0 to a null pointer has defined behavior in C++. Allow it in constant expressions.
llvm-svn: 205757
2014-04-08 12:19:28 +00:00
Yunzhong Gao
fcdc45ff2d Creating a printing policy for "half":
Since "half" is an OpenCL keyword and clang accepts __fp16 as an extension for
other languages, error messages and metadata (and hence debug info) should refer
to the half-precision floating point as "__fp16" instead of "half" when
compiling for non-OpenCL languages. This patch creates a new printing policy for
half in a similar manner to what is done for bool and wchar_t.

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2952

llvm-svn: 204164
2014-03-18 17:55:18 +00:00
David Majnemer
9adc361008 Sema: Do not allow lambda expressions to appear inside of constant expressions
We would previously not diagnose this which would lead to crashes (on
very strange code).

This fixes PR17675.

llvm-svn: 193397
2013-10-25 09:12:52 +00:00
Richard Smith
82c9b5183f Fix handling of const_cast from prvalue to rvalue reference: such a cast is
only permitted if the source object is of class type, and should materialize a
temporary for the reference to bind to.

llvm-svn: 184017
2013-06-14 22:27:52 +00:00
Richard Smith
844010455d Refactor constant expression evaluation to associate the complete object of a
materialized temporary with the corresponding MaterializeTemporaryExpr. This is
groundwork for providing C++11's guaranteed static initialization for global
references bound to lifetime-extended temporaries (if the initialization is a
constant expression).

In passing, fix a couple of bugs where some evaluation failures didn't trigger
diagnostics, and a rejects-valid where potential constant expression testing
would assume that it knew the dynamic type of *this and would reject programs
which relied on it being some derived type.

llvm-svn: 183093
2013-06-03 05:03:02 +00:00
Richard Smith
034185c2f9 The 'constexpr implies const' rule for non-static member functions is gone in
C++1y, so stop adding the 'const' there. Provide a compatibility warning for
code relying on this in C++11, with a fix-it hint. Update our lazily-written
tests to add the const, except for those ones which were testing our
implementation of this rule.

llvm-svn: 179969
2013-04-21 01:08:50 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
0b7bc7f996 Don't crash while printing APValues that are lvalues casted to a
decidedly non-reference, non-pointer type. Fixes <rdar://problem/13090123>.

llvm-svn: 173747
2013-01-29 01:26:43 +00:00
Eli Friedman
4eafb6b77b Don't treat overflow in floating-point conversions as a hard error in constant evaluation. <rdar://problem/11874571>.
llvm-svn: 160394
2012-07-17 21:03:05 +00:00
Richard Smith
35ecb36fcd Ensure that we instantiate static reference data members of class templates
early, since their values can be used in constant expressions in C++11. For
odr-use checking, the opposite change is required, since references are
odr-used whether or not they satisfy the requirements for appearing in a
constant expression.

llvm-svn: 151881
2012-03-02 04:14:40 +00:00
Richard Smith
b228a86fcf Implement DR1454. This allows all intermediate results in constant expressions
to be core constant expressions (including pointers and references to
temporaries), and makes constexpr calculations Turing-complete. A Turing machine
simulator is included as a testcase.

This opens up the possibilty of removing CCValue entirely, and removing some
copies from the constant evaluator in the process, but that cleanup is not part
of this change.

llvm-svn: 150557
2012-02-15 02:18:13 +00:00