single attribute ("system") that allows us to mark a module as being a
"system" module. Each of the headers that makes up a system module is
considered to be a system header, so that we (for example) suppress
warnings there.
If a module is being inferred for a framework, and that framework
directory is within a system frameworks directory, infer it as a
system framework.
llvm-svn: 149143
in the module map. This provides a bit more predictability for the
user, as well as eliminating the need to sort the submodules when
serializing them.
llvm-svn: 147564
features needed for a particular module to be available. This allows
mixed-language modules, where certain headers only work under some
language variants (e.g., in C++, std.tuple might only be available in
C++11 mode).
llvm-svn: 147387
hitting a submodule that was never actually created, e.g., because
that header wasn't parsed. In such cases, complain (because the
module's umbrella headers don't cover everything) and fall back to
including the header.
Later, we'll add a warning at module-build time to catch all such
cases. However, this fallback is important to eliminate assertions in
the ASTWriter when this happens.
llvm-svn: 146933
-Allow it to be used with multiple BeginSourceFile/EndSourceFile calls; for this introduce
a "finish" callback method in the DiagnosticConsumer. SDiagsWriter finishes up the serialization
file inside this method.
-Make it independent of any particular DiagnosticsEngine; make it use the SourceManager of the
Diagnostic object.
-Ignore null source ranges.
llvm-svn: 146020
(sub)module, all of the names may be hidden, just the macro names may
be exposed (for example, after the preprocessor has seen the import of
the module but the parser has not), or all of the names may be
exposed. Importing a module makes its names, and the names in any of
its non-explicit submodules, visible to name lookup (transitively).
This commit only introduces the notion of name visible and marks
modules and submodules as visible when they are imported. The actual
name-hiding logic in the AST reader will follow (along with test cases).
llvm-svn: 145586
library, since modules cut across all of the libraries. Rename
serialization::Module to serialization::ModuleFile to side-step the
annoying naming conflict. Prune a bunch of ModuleMap.h includes that
are no longer needed (most files only needed the Module type).
llvm-svn: 145538
submodules. This information will eventually be used for name hiding
when dealing with submodules. For now, we only use it to ensure that
the module "key" returned when loading a module will always be a
module (rather than occasionally being a FileEntry).
llvm-svn: 145497
check whether the named submodules themselves are actually
valid, and drill down to the named submodule (although we don't do
anything with it yet). Perform typo correction on the submodule names
when possible.
llvm-svn: 145477
return the module itself (in the module map) rather than returning the
umbrella header used to build the module. While doing this, make sure
that we're inferring modules for frameworks to build that module.
llvm-svn: 145310
a bug where the reference count is copied in the copy constructor, which means that there were cases when the CompilerInvocation
objects created by ASTUnit were actually leaked. When I fixed that bug locally, it showed that a whole bunch of code assumed
that the LangOptions object that was part of CompilerInvocation was still alive. By making it heap-allocated and reference counted,
we can keep it around after the CompilerInvocation object goes away.
As part of this change, change CompilerInvocation:getLangOptions() to return a pointer, acting as another clue that this
object may outlive the CompilerInvocation object.
This commit doesn't fix the CompilerInvocation leak itself. That will come when I commit the fix to llvm::RefCountedBase<T> to
mainline LLVM.
llvm-svn: 144930
The motivation for this new DiagnosticConsumer is to provide a way for tools invoking the compiler
to get its diagnostics via a libclang interface, rather than textually parsing the compiler output.
This gives us flexibility to change the compiler's textual output, but have a structured data format
for clients to use to get the diagnostics via a stable API.
I have no tests for this, but llvm-bcanalyzer so far shows that the emitted file is well-formed.
More work to follow.
llvm-svn: 143259
creation, so that only a single Clang instance will rebuild a given
module at once (and the others will wait).
We still don't clean up the lock files when we crash, which is a
rather unfortunate problem. I'll handle that next, and there is
certainly a *lot* of room for further improvements.
llvm-svn: 141179
we have the ability to create a new, distict diagnostic consumer when
we go off and build a module. This avoids the currently horribleness
where the same diagnostic consumer sees diagnostics for multiple
translation units (and multiple SourceManagers!) causing all sorts of havok.
llvm-svn: 140743
check whether the requested location points inside the precompiled preamble,
in which case the returned source location will be a "loaded" one.
llvm-svn: 140060