1032 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Douglas Gregor
d9034f0b89 In C++, warn when something previously declared as a "struct" is later
declared as a "class", or vice-versa. This warning is under the
control of -Wmismatched-tags, which is off by default.

llvm-svn: 71773
2009-05-14 16:41:31 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
2ec748cd5a Implement explicit instantiations of member classes of class templates, e.g.,
template<typename T>
  struct X {
    struct Inner;
  };

  template struct X<int>::Inner;

This change is larger than it looks because it also fixes some
a problem with nested-name-specifiers and tags. We weren't requiring
the DeclContext associated with the scope specifier of a tag to be
complete. Therefore, when looking for something like "struct
X<int>::Inner", we weren't instantiating X<int>. 

This, naturally, uncovered a problem with member pointers, where we
were requiring the left-hand side of a member pointer access
expression (e.g., x->*) to be a complete type. However, this is wrong:
the semantics of this expression does not require a complete type (EDG
agrees).

Stuart vouched for me. Blame him.

llvm-svn: 71756
2009-05-14 00:28:11 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
bbbb02d463 Explicit instantiations of templates now instantiate the definitions
of class members (recursively). Only member classes are actually
instantiated; the instantiation logic for member functions and
variables are just stubs.

llvm-svn: 71713
2009-05-13 20:28:22 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
f61eca93c0 Improve the semantic checking for explicit instantiations of
templates. In particular:
  - An explicit instantiation can follow an implicit instantiation (we
  were improperly diagnosing this as an error, previously).
  - In C++0x, an explicit instantiation that follows an explicit
  specialization of the same template specialization is ignored. In
  C++98, we just emit an extension warning.
  - In C++0x, an explicit instantiation must be in a namespace
  enclosing the original template. C++98 has no such requirement.

Also, fixed a longstanding FIXME regarding the integral type that is
used for the size of a constant array type when it is being instantiated.

llvm-svn: 71689
2009-05-13 18:28:20 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
a1f4997368 Semantic analysis for explicit instantiation of class templates. We
still aren't instantiating the definitions of class template members,
and core issues 275 and 259 will both affect the checking that we do
for explicit instantiations (but are not yet implemented).

llvm-svn: 71613
2009-05-13 00:25:59 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
d002c7bc58 Encapsulate template arguments lists in a new class,
TemplateArgumentList. This avoids the need to pass around
pointer/length pairs of template arguments lists, and will eventually
make it easier to introduce member templates and variadic templates.

llvm-svn: 71517
2009-05-11 23:53:27 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
c9f9b86732 Implement the notions of the "current instantiation" and "unknown
specialization" within a C++ template, and permit name lookup into the
current instantiation. For example, given:

  template<typename T, typename U>
  struct X {
    typedef T type;

    X* x1;  // current instantiation
    X<T, U> *x2; // current instantiation
    X<U, T> *x3; // not current instantiation
    ::X<type, U> *x4; // current instantiation
    X<typename X<type, U>::type, U>: *x5; // current instantiation
  };

llvm-svn: 71471
2009-05-11 19:58:34 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
862d28e59c With the introduction of nullptr, a template argument that refers to a declaration can now be NULL. Use cast_or_null appropriately
llvm-svn: 71412
2009-05-10 23:27:08 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
e362cea568 Implement the semantics of the injected-class-name within a class
template. The injected-class-name is either a type or a template,
depending on whether a '<' follows it. As a type, the
injected-class-name's template argument list contains its template
parameters in declaration order.

As part of this, add logic for canonicalizing declarations, and be
sure to canonicalize declarations used in template names and template
arguments. 

A TagType is dependent if the declaration it references is dependent.

I'm not happy about the rather complicated protocol needed to use
ASTContext::getTemplateSpecializationType.

llvm-svn: 71408
2009-05-10 22:57:19 +00:00
Sebastian Redl
576fd424df Implement C++0x nullptr.
llvm-svn: 71405
2009-05-10 18:38:11 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
ae1e53c87b Compute the canonical template name when building a template
specialization type for a dependent template name.

llvm-svn: 71153
2009-05-07 06:49:52 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
6bc50585e3 Start canonicalizing template names. This is not yet complete, but it
improves type identity with dependent types.

llvm-svn: 71152
2009-05-07 06:41:52 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
f9aa5260a9 One can use "class" and "struct" interchangeably to refer to a class
in C++. Fixes <rdar://problem/6815995>.

llvm-svn: 70784
2009-05-03 17:18:57 +00:00
Anders Carlsson
b781bcdc30 Replace more release+static_cast with takeAs.
llvm-svn: 70567
2009-05-01 19:49:17 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
bcced4ec31 Propagate the ASTContext to various AST traversal and lookup functions.
No functionality change (really).

llvm-svn: 68726
2009-04-09 21:40:53 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
170512fa78 Add some more code modification hints
llvm-svn: 68261
2009-04-01 23:51:29 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
fe3d7d0880 Make parsing a semantic analysis a little more robust following Sema
failures that involve malformed types, e.g., "typename X::foo" where
"foo" isn't a type, or "std::vector<void>" that doens't instantiate
properly.

Similarly, be a bit smarter in our handling of ambiguities that occur
in Sema::getTypeName, to eliminate duplicate error messages about
ambiguous name lookup.

This eliminates two XFAILs in test/SemaCXX, one of which was crying
out to us, trying to tell us that we were producing repeated error
messages.

llvm-svn: 68251
2009-04-01 21:51:26 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
dce2b62b70 Parsing, semantic analysis, and template instantiation for typename
specifiers that terminate in a simple-template-id, e.g.,

  typename MetaFun::template apply<T1, T2>

Also, implement template instantiation for dependent
nested-name-specifiers that involve unresolved identifiers, e.g.,

  typename T::type::type

llvm-svn: 68166
2009-04-01 00:28:59 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
b67535d1b6 Parsing and AST representation for dependent template names that occur
within nested-name-specifiers, e.g., for the "apply" in

  typename MetaFun::template apply<T1, T2>::type

At present, we can't instantiate these nested-name-specifiers, so our
testing is sketchy.

llvm-svn: 68081
2009-03-31 00:43:58 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
dc572a3266 Improve the representation of template names in the AST. This
representation handles the various ways in which one can name a
template, including unqualified references ("vector"), qualified
references ("std::vector"), and dependent template names
("MetaFun::template apply").

One immediate effect of this change is that the representation of
nested-name-specifiers in type names for class template
specializations (e.g., std::vector<int>) is more accurate. Rather than
representing std::vector<int> as

  std::(vector<int>)

we represent it as

  (std::vector)<int>

which more closely follows the C++ grammar. 

Additionally, templates are no longer represented as declarations
(DeclPtrTy) in Parse-Sema interactions. Instead, I've introduced a new
OpaquePtr type (TemplateTy) that holds the representation of a
TemplateName. This will simplify the handling of dependent
template-names, once we get there.

llvm-svn: 68074
2009-03-30 22:58:21 +00:00
Chris Lattner
83f095cc7e Introduce a new OpaquePtr<N> struct type, which is a simple POD wrapper for a
pointer.  Its purpose in life is to be a glorified void*, but which does not
implicitly convert to void* or other OpaquePtr's with a different UID.

Introduce Action::DeclPtrTy which is a typedef for OpaquePtr<0>.  Change the 
entire parser/sema interface to use DeclPtrTy instead of DeclTy*.  This
makes the C++ compiler enforce that these aren't convertible to other opaque
types.

We should also convert ExprTy, StmtTy, TypeTy, AttrTy, BaseTy, etc,
but I don't plan to do that in the short term.

The one outstanding known problem with this patch is that we lose the 
bitmangling optimization where ActionResult<DeclPtrTy> doesn't know how to
bitmangle the success bit into the low bit of DeclPtrTy.  I will rectify
this with a subsequent patch.

llvm-svn: 67952
2009-03-28 19:18:32 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
333489bba3 Initial implementation of parsing, semantic analysis, and template
instantiation for C++ typename-specifiers such as

  typename T::type

The parsing of typename-specifiers is relatively easy thanks to
annotation tokens. When we see the "typename", we parse the
typename-specifier and produce a typename annotation token. There are
only a few places where we need to handle this. We currently parse the
typename-specifier form that terminates in an identifier, but not the
simple-template-id form, e.g.,

  typename T::template apply<U, V>

Parsing of nested-name-specifiers has a similar problem, since at this
point we don't have any representation of a class template
specialization whose template-name is unknown.

Semantic analysis is only partially complete, with some support for
template instantiation that works for simple examples. 

llvm-svn: 67875
2009-03-27 23:10:48 +00:00
Anders Carlsson
137108da15 Set the access specifier for templates inside classes.
llvm-svn: 67726
2009-03-26 01:24:28 +00:00
Anders Carlsson
dfbbdf6fd5 Handle parsing of templates in member declarations. Pass the AccessSpecifier all the way down to ActOnClassTemplate.
Doug, Sebastian: Plz review! :)

llvm-svn: 67723
2009-03-26 00:52:18 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
97f1f1c46e The injected-class-name of class templates and class template
specializations can be treated as a template. Finally, we can parse
and process the first implementation of Fibonacci I wrote!

Note that this code does not handle all of the cases where
injected-class-names can be treated as templates. In particular,
there's an ambiguity case that we should be able to handle (but
can't), e.g.,

  template <class T> struct Base { }; 
  template <class T> struct Derived : Base<int>, Base<char> {
    typename Derived::Base b;       // error: ambiguous
    typename Derived::Base<double> d;  // OK 
  };

llvm-svn: 67720
2009-03-26 00:10:35 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
c08f489d38 In Parser::ParseClassSpecifier, don't conflate a NULL declaration with
failure to perform a declaration. Instead, explicitly note semantic
failures that occur during template parsing with a DeclResult. Fixes
PR3872.

llvm-svn: 67659
2009-03-25 00:13:59 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
64259f5143 Type::isObjectType now implements the (more sensible) C++ definition
of "object type" rather than the C definition of "object type". The
difference is that C's "object type" excludes incomplete types such as

  struct X;

However, C's definition also makes it far too easy to use isObjectType
as a means to detect incomplete types when in fact we should use other
means (e.g., Sema::RequireCompleteType) that cope with C++ semantics,
including template instantiation.

I've already audited every use of isObjectType and isIncompleteType to
ensure that they are doing the right thing for both C and C++, so this
is patch does not change any functionality.

llvm-svn: 67648
2009-03-24 20:32:41 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
c9a1a3b9d9 Fix a few isObjectTypes that really need to be isIncompleteOrObject
types; add another use of RequireCompleteType.

llvm-svn: 67644
2009-03-24 20:13:58 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
90a1a65194 Introduce a new expression type, UnresolvedDeclRefExpr, that describes
dependent qualified-ids such as

  Fibonacci<N - 1>::value

where N is a template parameter. These references are "unresolved"
because the name is dependent and, therefore, cannot be resolved to a
declaration node (as we would do for a DeclRefExpr or
QualifiedDeclRefExpr). UnresolvedDeclRefExprs instantiate to
DeclRefExprs, QualifiedDeclRefExprs, etc.

Also, be a bit more careful about keeping only a single set of
specializations for a class template, and instantiating from the
definition of that template rather than a previous declaration. In
general, we need a better solution for this for all TagDecls, because
it's too easy to accidentally look at a declaration that isn't the
definition.

We can now process a simple Fibonacci computation described as a
template metaprogram.

llvm-svn: 67308
2009-03-19 17:26:29 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
e177b7254d Extend the use of QualifiedNameType to the creation of class template
specialization names. This way, we keep track of sugared types like

  std::vector<Real>

I believe we are now using QualifiedNameTypes everywhere we can. Next
step: QualifiedDeclRefExprs.

llvm-svn: 67268
2009-03-19 00:39:20 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
5253768ada Introduce a representation for types that we referred to via a
qualified name, e.g., 

  foo::x

so that we retain the nested-name-specifier as written in the source
code and can reproduce that qualified name when printing the types
back (e.g., in diagnostics). This is PR3493, which won't be complete
until finished the other tasks mentioned near the end of this commit.

The parser's representation of nested-name-specifiers, CXXScopeSpec,
is now a bit fatter, because it needs to contain the scopes that
precede each '::' and keep track of whether the global scoping
operator '::' was at the beginning. For example, we need to keep track
of the leading '::', 'foo', and 'bar' in
 
  ::foo::bar::x

The Action's CXXScopeTy * is no longer a DeclContext *. It's now the
opaque version of the new NestedNameSpecifier, which contains a single
component of a nested-name-specifier (either a DeclContext * or a Type
*, bitmangled). 

The new sugar type QualifiedNameType composes a sequence of
NestedNameSpecifiers with a representation of the type we're actually
referring to. At present, we only build QualifiedNameType nodes within
Sema::getTypeName. This will be extended to other type-constructing
actions (e.g., ActOnClassTemplateId).

Also on the way: QualifiedDeclRefExprs will also store a sequence of
NestedNameSpecifiers, so that we can print out the property
nested-name-specifier. I expect to also use this for handling
dependent names like Fibonacci<I - 1>::value.

llvm-svn: 67265
2009-03-19 00:18:19 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
6bfde496ee The scope representation can now be either a DeclContext pointer or a
Type pointer. This allows our nested-name-specifiers to retain more
information about the actual spelling (e.g., which typedef did the
user name, or what exact template arguments were used in the
template-id?). It will also allow us to have dependent
nested-name-specifiers that don't map to any DeclContext.

llvm-svn: 67140
2009-03-18 00:36:05 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
52aba87df7 Check for overflow and signedness problems with template
arguments. Eliminates a FIXME.

llvm-svn: 66993
2009-03-14 00:20:21 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
69bd16d814 Make sure that the canonical representation of integral template arguments uses the bitwidth and signedness of the template parameter
llvm-svn: 66990
2009-03-14 00:03:48 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
0950e41b73 Implement template instantiation for several more kinds of expressions:
- C++ function casts, e.g., T(foo)
  - sizeof(), alignof()

More importantly, this allows us to verify that we're performing
overload resolution during template instantiation, with
argument-dependent lookup and the "cached" results of name lookup from
the template definition.

llvm-svn: 66947
2009-03-13 21:01:28 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
b970d0ca9d Store the type of the integral value within a TemplateArgument, so that we can more efficiently reconstruct an IntegerLiteral from it during template instantiation
llvm-svn: 66833
2009-03-12 22:20:26 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
79cf603428 Extend the notion of active template instantiations to include the
context of a template-id for which we need to instantiate default
template arguments.

In the TextDiagnosticPrinter, don't suppress the caret diagnostic if
we are producing a non-note diagnostic that follows a note diagnostic
with the same location, because notes are (conceptually) a part of the
warning or error that comes before them.

llvm-svn: 66572
2009-03-10 20:44:00 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
65b2c4c381 Add pretty-printing for class template specializations, e.g.,
'struct A<double, int>'

In the "template instantiation depth exceeded" message, print
"-ftemplate-depth-N" rather than "-ftemplate-depth=N".

An unnamed tag type that is declared with a typedef, e.g., 

  typedef struct { int x, y; } Point;

can be used as a template argument. Allow this, and check that we get
sensible pretty-printing for such things.

llvm-svn: 66560
2009-03-10 18:33:27 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
c40290e452 Implement template instantiation for ClassTemplateSpecializationTypes,
such as replacing 'T' in vector<T>. There are a few aspects to this:

  - Extend TemplateArgument to allow arbitrary expressions (an
    Expr*), and switch ClassTemplateSpecializationType to store
    TemplateArguments rather than it's own type-or-expression
    representation.

  - ClassTemplateSpecializationType can now store dependent types. In
    that case, the canonical type is another
    ClassTemplateSpecializationType (with default template arguments
    expanded) rather than a declaration (we don't build Decls for
    dependent types).

  - Split ActOnClassTemplateId into ActOnClassTemplateId (called from
    the parser) and CheckClassTemplateId (called from
    ActOnClassTemplateId and InstantiateType). They're smart enough to
    handle dependent types, now.

llvm-svn: 66509
2009-03-09 23:48:35 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
ce0fc86f07 Mark a non-type template parameter invalid if there was a problem with its type
llvm-svn: 66422
2009-03-09 16:46:39 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
463421deb1 Implement the basics of implicit instantiation of class templates, in
response to attempts to diagnose an "incomplete" type. This will force
us to use DiagnoseIncompleteType more regularly (rather than looking at
isIncompleteType), but that's also a good thing.

Implicit instantiation is still very simplistic, and will create a new
definition for the class template specialization (as it should) but it
only actually instantiates the base classes and attaches
those. Actually instantiating class members will follow. 

Also, instantiate the types of non-type template parameters before
checking them,  allowing, e.g., 

  template<typename T, T Value> struct Constant; 
 
to work properly.

llvm-svn: 65924
2009-03-03 04:44:36 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
17c0d7bacf Implement template instantiation for pointer, reference, and (some)
array types. Semantic checking for the construction of these types has
been factored out of GetTypeForDeclarator and into separate
subroutines (BuildPointerType, BuildReferenceType,
BuildArrayType). We'll be doing the same thing for all other types
(and declarations and expressions).

As part of this, moved the type-instantiation functions into a class
in an anonymous namespace. 

llvm-svn: 65663
2009-02-28 00:25:32 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
fe1e11092e Implement the basic approach for instantiating types, with a lot of FIXME'd
stubs for those types we don't yet know how to instantiate (everything
that isn't a template parameter!).

We now instantiate default arguments for template type parameters when
needed. This will be our testbed while I fill out the remaining
type-instantiation logic.

llvm-svn: 65649
2009-02-27 19:31:52 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
96977da72c Clean up and document code modification hints.
llvm-svn: 65641
2009-02-27 17:53:17 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
d56a91e8f6 Make the type associated with a ClassTemplateSpecializationDecl be a
nicely sugared type that shows how the user wrote the actual
specialization. This sugared type won't actually show up until we
start doing instantiations.

llvm-svn: 65577
2009-02-26 22:19:44 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
87f95b0a6a Introduce code modification hints into the diagnostics system. When we
know how to recover from an error, we can attach a hint to the
diagnostic that states how to modify the code, which can be one of:

  - Insert some new code (a text string) at a particular source
    location
  - Remove the code within a given range
  - Replace the code within a given range with some new code (a text
    string)

Right now, we use these hints to annotate diagnostic information. For
example, if one uses the '>>' in a template argument in C++98, as in
this code:

  template<int I> class B { };
  B<1000 >> 2> *b1;

we'll warn that the behavior will change in C++0x. The fix is to
insert parenthese, so we use code insertion annotations to illustrate
where the parentheses go:

test.cpp:10:10: warning: use of right-shift operator ('>>') in template
argument will require parentheses in C++0x
  B<1000 >> 2> *b1;
         ^
    (        )


Use of these annotations is partially implemented for HTML
diagnostics, but it's not (yet) producing valid HTML, which may be
related to PR2386, so it has been #if 0'd out.

In this future, we could consider hooking this mechanism up to the
rewriter to actually try to fix these problems during compilation (or,
after a compilation whose only errors have fixes). For now, however, I
suggest that we use these code modification hints whenever we can, so
that we get better diagnostics now and will have better coverage when
we find better ways to use this information.

This also fixes PR3410 by placing the complaint about missing tokens
just after the previous token (rather than at the location of the next
token).

llvm-svn: 65570
2009-02-26 21:00:50 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
1e249f8641 Improve location information on "reused" class template specialization
decls. Test and document the semantic location of class template
specialization definitions that occur within a scope enclosing the
scope of the class template.

llvm-svn: 65478
2009-02-25 22:18:32 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
f47b911f6e Perform additional semantic checking of class template
specializations. In particular:

  - Make sure class template specializations have a "template<>"
    header, and complain if they don't.
  - Make sure class template specializations are declared/defined
    within a valid context. (e.g., you can't declare a specialization
    std::vector<MyType> in the global namespace).

llvm-svn: 65476
2009-02-25 22:02:03 +00:00
Douglas Gregor
7f74112756 Implement parsing of nested-name-specifiers that involve template-ids, e.g.,
std::vector<int>::allocator_type

When we parse a template-id that names a type, it will become either a
template-id annotation (which is a parsed representation of a
template-id that has not yet been through semantic analysis) or a
typename annotation (where semantic analysis has resolved the
template-id to an actual type), depending on the context. We only
produce a type in contexts where we know that we only need type
information, e.g., in a type specifier. Otherwise, we create a
template-id annotation that can later be "upgraded" by transforming it
into a typename annotation when the parser needs a type. This occurs,
for example, when we've parsed "std::vector<int>" above and then see
the '::' after it. However, it means that when writing something like
this:

  template<> class Outer::Inner<int> { ... };

We have two tokens to represent Outer::Inner<int>: one token for the
nested name specifier Outer::, and one template-id annotation token
for Inner<int>, which will be passed to semantic analysis to define
the class template specialization.

Most of the churn in the template tests in this patch come from an
improvement in our error recovery from ill-formed template-ids.

llvm-svn: 65467
2009-02-25 19:37:18 +00:00
Chris Lattner
696197cd30 silence some warnings in no asserts mode.
llvm-svn: 65169
2009-02-20 21:37:53 +00:00