664 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Vlad Serebrennikov
a8ead56068
[clang][NFC] Rename ArgPassingKind to RecordArgPassingKind (#70955)
During the recent refactoring (b120fe8d3288c4dca1b5427ca34839ce8833f71c) this enum was moved out of `RecordDecl`. During post-commit review it was found out that its association with `RecordDecl` should be expressed in the name.
2023-11-01 20:38:28 +04:00
Vlad Serebrennikov
65761200ce [clang][NFC] Refactor LinkageSpecDecl::LanguageIDs
This patch converts `LinkageSpecDecl::LanguageIDs` into scoped enum, and moves it to namespace scope, so that it can be forward-declared where required.
2023-11-01 16:44:34 +03:00
Vlad Serebrennikov
b120fe8d32 [clang][NFC] Refactor ArgPassingKind
This patch moves `RecordDecl::ArgPassingKind` to DeclBase.h to namespace scope, so that it's complete at the time bit-field is declared.
2023-11-01 11:49:59 +03:00
Amirreza Ashouri
4313351c13
[clang] __is_trivially_equality_comparable for types containing lambdas (#68506)
Lambdas (closure types) are trivially equality-comparable iff they are
non-capturing, because non-capturing lambdas are convertible to function
pointers: if (lam1 == lam2) compiles, then lam1 and lam2 must have
the same type, and be always-equal, and be empty.
2023-10-11 17:12:15 +02:00
Vlad Serebrennikov
99e6ef3e7c
[clang][NFC] Add missing placement-new after Allocate() calls (#68382)
While working on #68377 inspecting `Allocate()` calls, I found out that
there are couple of places where we forget to use placement-new to
create objects in the allocated memory.
2023-10-06 07:50:07 -04:00
Corentin Jabot
af4751738d [C++] Implement "Deducing this" (P0847R7)
This patch implements P0847R7 (partially),
CWG2561 and CWG2653.

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, #clang-language-wg

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140828
2023-10-02 14:33:02 +02:00
Chris Bieneman
400d3261a0 [HLSL] Cleanup support for this as an l-value
The goal of this change is to clean up some of the code surrounding
HLSL using CXXThisExpr as a non-pointer l-value. This change cleans up
a bunch of assumptions and inconsistencies around how the type of
`this` is handled through the AST and code generation.

This change is be mostly NFC for HLSL, and completely NFC for other
language modes.

This change introduces a new member to query for the this object's type
and seeks to clarify the normal usages of the this type.

With the introudction of HLSL to clang, CXXThisExpr may now be an
l-value and behave like a reference type rather than C++'s normal
method of it being an r-value of pointer type.

With this change there are now three ways in which a caller might need
to query the type of `this`:

* The type of the `CXXThisExpr`
* The type of the object `this` referrs to
* The type of the implicit (or explicit) `this` argument

This change codifies those three ways you may need to query
respectively as:

* CXXMethodDecl::getThisType()
* CXXMethodDecl::getThisObjectType()
* CXXMethodDecl::getThisArgType()

This change then revisits all uses of `getThisType()`, and in cases
where the only use was to resolve the pointee type, it replaces the
call with `getThisObjectType()`. In other cases it evaluates whether
the desired returned type is the type of the `this` expr, or the type
of the `this` function argument. The `this` expr type is used for
creating additional expr AST nodes and for member lookup, while the
argument type is used mostly for code generation.

Additionally some cases that used `getThisType` in simple queries could
be substituted for `getThisObjectType`. Since `getThisType` is
implemented in terms of `getThisObjectType` calling the later should be
more efficient if the former isn't needed.

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, bogner

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D159247
2023-09-05 19:38:50 -05:00
Corentin Jabot
47ccfd7a89 [Clang] Implement P2741R3 - user-generated static_assert messages
Reviewed By: #clang-language-wg, aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D154290
2023-07-20 08:33:19 +02:00
Yuanfang Chen
632dd6a4ca [Clang] Implements CTAD for aggregates P1816R0 and P2082R1
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139837
2023-06-29 14:22:24 -07:00
Kazu Hirata
9932eb083a [AST] Use DenseMapBase::lookup (NFC) 2023-06-18 11:52:59 -07:00
Richard Smith
bc73ef0031 PR60985: Fix merging of lambda closure types across modules.
Previously, distinct lambdas would get merged, and multiple definitions
of the same lambda would not get merged, because we attempted to
identify lambdas by their ordinal position within their lexical
DeclContext. This failed for lambdas within namespace-scope variables
and within variable templates, where the lexical position in the context
containing the variable didn't uniquely identify the lambda.

In this patch, we instead identify lambda closure types by index within
their context declaration, which does uniquely identify them in a way
that's consistent across modules.

This change causes a deserialization cycle between the type of a
variable with deduced type and a lambda appearing as the initializer of
the variable -- reading the variable's type requires reading and merging
the lambda, and reading the lambda requires reading and merging the
variable. This is addressed by deferring loading the deduced type of a
variable until after we finish recursive deserialization.

This also exposes a pre-existing subtle issue where loading a
variable declaration would trigger immediate loading of its initializer,
which could recursively refer back to properties of the variable. This
particularly causes problems if the initializer contains a
lambda-expression, but can be problematic in general. That is addressed
by switching to lazily loading the initializers of variables rather than
always loading them with the variable declaration. As well as fixing a
deserialization cycle, that should improve laziness of deserialization
in general.

LambdaDefinitionData had 63 spare bits in it, presumably caused by an
off-by-one-error in some previous change. This change claims 32 of those bits
as a counter for the lambda within its context. We could probably move the
numbering to separate storage, like we do for the device-side mangling number,
to optimize the likely-common case where all three numbers (host-side mangling
number, device-side mangling number, and index within the context declaration)
are zero, but that's not done in this change.

Fixes #60985.

Reviewed By: #clang-language-wg, aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D145737
2023-03-30 14:22:40 -07:00
Corentin Jabot
e1111e2056 [Clang] Correctly capture bindings in dependent lambdas.
Structured bindings were not properly marked odr-used
and therefore captured in generic lambddas.

Fixes #57826

It is unclear to me if further simplification can be gained
through the allowance described in
https://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2017/p0588r1.html.

Either way, I think this makes support for P0588 completes,
but we probably want to add test for that in a separate PR.
(and I lack confidence I understand P0588 sufficiently to assert
the completeness of our cnformance).

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, #clang-language-wg

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D137244
2023-01-09 21:20:57 +01:00
serge-sans-paille
a3c248db87
Move from llvm::makeArrayRef to ArrayRef deduction guides - clang/ part
This is a follow-up to https://reviews.llvm.org/D140896, split into
several parts as it touches a lot of files.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141139
2023-01-09 12:15:24 +01:00
Kazu Hirata
f7dffc28b3 Don't include None.h (NFC)
I've converted all known uses of None to std::nullopt, so we no longer
need to include None.h.

This is part of an effort to migrate from llvm::Optional to
std::optional:

https://discourse.llvm.org/t/deprecating-llvm-optional-x-hasvalue-getvalue-getvalueor/63716
2022-12-10 11:24:26 -08:00
Richard Smith
4a1ccfe8a3 When merging lambdas, keep track of the capture lists from each version.
Different versions of a lambda will in general refer to different
enclosing variable declarations, because we do not merge most
block-scope declarations, such as local variables. Keep track of all the
declarations that correspond to a lambda's capture fields so that we can
rewrite the name of any of those variables to the lambda capture,
regardless of which copy of the body of `operator()` we look at.
2022-12-08 11:37:00 -08:00
Roy Jacobson
7d58c95635 [Clang] Don't consider default constructors ineligible if the more constrained constructor is a template
Partially solves https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/59206:

We now mark trivial constructors as eligible even if there's a more constrained templated default constructor. Although technically non-conformant, this solves problems with pretty reasonable uses cases like
```
template<int n>
struct Foo {
	constexpr Foo() = default;

	template<class... Ts>
	Foo(Ts... vals) requires(sizeof...(Ts) == n) {}
};
```
where we currently consider the default constructor to be ineligible and therefor inheriting/containing classes have non trivial constructors. This is aligned with GCC: https://gcc.gnu.org/git/?p=gcc.git;a=commit;h=c75ebe76ae12ac4020f20a24f34606a594a40d15

This doesn't change `__is_trivial`. Although we're technically standard conformant in this regard, GCC/MSVC exhibit different behaviors that seem to make more sense. An issue has been filed to CWG and we await their response.

Reviewed By: erichkeane, #clang-language-wg

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139038
2022-12-05 23:02:37 +02:00
Kazu Hirata
e31564afc3 [AST] Use std::nullopt instead of None (NFC)
This patch mechanically replaces None with std::nullopt where the
compiler would warn if None were deprecated.  The intent is to reduce
the amount of manual work required in migrating from Optional to
std::optional.

This is part of an effort to migrate from llvm::Optional to
std::optional:

https://discourse.llvm.org/t/deprecating-llvm-optional-x-hasvalue-getvalue-getvalueor/63716
2022-12-03 11:13:41 -08:00
Nathan James
15e76eed0c
[clang] Add [is|set]Nested methods to NamespaceDecl
Adds support for NamespaceDecl to inform if its part of a nested namespace.
This flag only corresponds to the inner namespaces in a nested namespace declaration.
In this example:
namespace <X>::<Y>::<Z> {}
Only <Y> and <Z> will be classified as nested.

This flag isn't meant for assisting in building the AST, more for static analysis and refactorings.

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90568
2022-11-24 12:44:35 +00:00
David Blaikie
7846d59003 Extend the C++03 definition of POD to include defaulted functions
The AST/conditionally-trivial-smfs tests look a bit questionable, but
are consistent with GCC's POD-ness, at least as far as packing is
concerned: https://godbolt.org/z/36nqPMbKM
(questionable because it looks like the type would be non-copyable, so
how could it be pod? But the calling convention/pass by value seems to
work correctly (local testing verifies that this behavior is preserved
even with this patch: https://godbolt.org/z/3Pa89zsv6 ))

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119051
2022-10-26 22:00:49 +00:00
Aaron Ballman
19e984ef8f Properly print unnamed TagDecl objects in diagnostics
The diagnostics engine is very smart about being passed a NamedDecl to
print as part of a diagnostic; it gets the "right" form of the name,
quotes it properly, etc. However, the result of using an unnamed tag
declaration was to print '' instead of anything useful.

This patch causes us to print the same information we'd have gotten if
we had printed the type of the declaration rather than the name of it,
as that's the most relevant information we can display.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134813
2022-10-14 08:18:28 -04:00
Sam McCall
2eaf6f973c [AST] Preserve more structure in UsingEnumDecl node.
- store NestedNameSpecifier & Loc for the qualifiers
  This information was entirely missing from the AST.
- expose the location information for qualifier/identifier/typedefs as typeloc
  This allows many traversals/astmatchers etc to handle these generically along
  with other references. The decl vs type split can help preserve typedef
  sugar when https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/57659 is resolved.
- fix the SourceRange of UsingEnumDecl to include 'using'.

Fixes https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/1283

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134303
2022-10-12 19:54:51 +02:00
Roy Jacobson
b1c960fc6d [Clang] Implement P0848 (Conditionally Trivial Special Member Functions)
This patch implements P0848 in Clang.

During the instantiation of a C++ class, in `Sema::ActOnFields`, we evaluate constraints for all the SMFs and compare the constraints to compute the eligibility. We defer the computation of the type's [copy-]trivial bits from addedMember to the eligibility computation, like we did for destructors in D126194. `canPassInRegisters` is modified as well to better respect the ineligibility of functions.

Note: Because of the non-implementation of DR1734 and DR1496, I treat deleted member functions as 'eligible' for the purpose of [copy-]triviallity. This is unfortunate, but I couldn't think of a way to make this make sense otherwise.

Reviewed By: #clang-language-wg, cor3ntin, aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128619
2022-08-26 00:52:52 +03:00
Roy Jacobson
70770a16bc Revert "[Clang] Implement P0848 (Conditionally Trivial Special Member Functions)"
See bug report here: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/57351
This reverts commit 7171615099142ed49042c0f27af437b05150dd9b.
2022-08-25 09:11:06 +03:00
Roy Jacobson
7171615099 [Clang] Implement P0848 (Conditionally Trivial Special Member Functions)
This patch implements P0848 in Clang.

During the instantiation of a C++ class, in `Sema::ActOnFields`, we evaluate constraints for all the SMFs and compare the constraints to compute the eligibility. We defer the computation of the type's [copy-]trivial bits from addedMember to the eligibility computation, like we did for destructors in D126194. `canPassInRegisters` is modified as well to better respect the ineligibility of functions.

Note: Because of the non-implementation of DR1734 and DR1496, I treat deleted member functions as 'eligible' for the purpose of [copy-]triviallity. This is unfortunate, but I couldn't think of a way to make this make sense otherwise.

Reviewed By: #clang-language-wg, cor3ntin, aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128619
2022-08-23 21:48:42 +03:00
Corentin Jabot
127bf44385 [Clang][C++20] Support capturing structured bindings in lambdas
This completes the implementation of P1091R3 and P1381R1.

This patch allow the capture of structured bindings
both for C++20+ and C++17, with extension/compat warning.

In addition, capturing an anonymous union member,
a bitfield, or a structured binding thereof now has a
better diagnostic.

We only support structured bindings - as opposed to other kinds
of structured statements/blocks. We still emit an error for those.

In addition, support for structured bindings capture is entirely disabled in
OpenMP mode as this needs more investigation - a specific diagnostic indicate the feature is not yet supported there.

Note that the rest of P1091R3 (static/thread_local structured bindings) was already implemented.

at the request of @shafik, i can confirm the correct behavior of lldb wit this change.

Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/54300
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/54300
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/52720

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122768
2022-08-04 10:12:53 +02:00
Corentin Jabot
a274219600 Revert "[Clang][C++20] Support capturing structured bindings in lambdas"
This reverts commit 44f2baa3804a62ca793f0ff3e43aa71cea91a795.

Breaks self builds and seems to have conformance issues.
2022-08-03 21:00:29 +02:00
Corentin Jabot
44f2baa380 [Clang][C++20] Support capturing structured bindings in lambdas
This completes the implementation of P1091R3 and P1381R1.

This patch allow the capture of structured bindings
both for C++20+ and C++17, with extension/compat warning.

In addition, capturing an anonymous union member,
a bitfield, or a structured binding thereof now has a
better diagnostic.

We only support structured bindings - as opposed to other kinds
of structured statements/blocks. We still emit an error for those.

In addition, support for structured bindings capture is entirely disabled in
OpenMP mode as this needs more investigation - a specific diagnostic indicate the feature is not yet supported there.

Note that the rest of P1091R3 (static/thread_local structured bindings) was already implemented.

at the request of @shafik, i can confirm the correct behavior of lldb wit this change.

Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/54300
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/54300
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/52720

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122768
2022-08-03 20:00:01 +02:00
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
Shafik Yaghmour
80dec2ecff [Clang] Modify CXXMethodDecl::isMoveAssignmentOperator() to look through type sugar
AcceptedPublic

Currently CXXMethodDecl::isMoveAssignmentOperator() does not look though type
sugar and so if the parameter is a type alias it will not be able to detect
that the method is a move assignment operator. This PR fixes that and adds a set
of tests that covers that we correctly detect special member functions when
defaulting or deleting them.

This fixes: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/56456

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129591
2022-07-14 16:09:52 -07:00
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
Kazu Hirata
97c87c6f7c [AST] Fix an unused variable warning
This paptch fixes:

  warning: unused variable ‘DD’ [-Wunused-variable]
2022-06-19 00:20:58 -07:00
Roy Jacobson
21eb1af469 [Concepts] Implement overload resolution for destructors (P0848)
This patch implements a necessary part of P0848, the overload resolution for destructors.
It is now possible to overload destructors based on constraints, and the eligible destructor
will be selected at the end of the class.

The approach this patch takes is to perform the overload resolution in Sema::ActOnFields
and to mark the selected destructor using a new property in FunctionDeclBitfields.

CXXRecordDecl::getDestructor is then modified to use this property to return the correct
destructor.

This closes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/45614.

Reviewed By: #clang-language-wg, erichkeane

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126194
2022-06-19 00:30:37 +03:00
Haojian Wu
acc80ea71b [AST] Cleanup on getting the underlying decl of using-shdow decl.
This should be a NFC cleanup. It removes a unnecessary loop to get the underlying
decl, and add an assertion.

The underlying decl of a using-shadow decl is always the original declaration
has been brought into the scope, clang never builds a nested using-shadow
decl (see Sema::BuildUsingShadowDecl).

Reviewed By: sammccall

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123422
2022-05-16 13:58:08 +02:00
James Y Knight
8f66f13719 Fix memory leak in [Clang] Implement __builtin_source_location.
Fixes: d61487490022
2022-03-29 17:32:59 -04:00
James Y Knight
d614874900 [Clang] Implement __builtin_source_location.
This builtin returns the address of a global instance of the
`std::source_location::__impl` type, which must be defined (with an
appropriate shape) before calling the builtin.

It will be used to implement std::source_location in libc++ in a
future change. The builtin is compatible with GCC's implementation,
and libstdc++'s usage. An intentional divergence is that GCC declares
the builtin's return type to be `const void*` (for
ease-of-implementation reasons), while Clang uses the actual type,
`const std::source_location::__impl*`.

In order to support this new functionality, I've also added a new
'UnnamedGlobalConstantDecl'. This artificial Decl is modeled after
MSGuidDecl, and is used to represent a generic concept of an lvalue
constant with global scope, deduplicated by its value. It's possible
that MSGuidDecl itself, or some of the other similar sorts of things
in Clang might be able to be refactored onto this more-generic
concept, but there's enough special-case weirdness in MSGuidDecl that
I gave up attempting to share code there, at least for now.

Finally, for compatibility with libstdc++'s <source_location> header,
I've added a second exception to the "cannot cast from void* to T* in
constant evaluation" rule. This seems a bit distasteful, but feels
like the best available option.

Reviewers: aaron.ballman, erichkeane

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120159
2022-03-28 18:29:02 -04:00
Corentin Jabot
3784e8ccfb [Clang] Fix Unevaluated Lambdas
Unlike other types, when lambdas are instanciated,
they are recreated from scratch.
When an unevaluated lambdas appear in the type of a function,
parameter it is instanciated in the wrong declaration context,
as parameters are transformed before the function.

To support lambda in function parameters, we try to
compute whether they are dependant without looking at the
declaration context.

This is a short term stopgap solution to avoid clang
iceing. A better fix might be to inject some kind of
transparent declaration with correctly computed dependency
for function parameters, variable templates, etc.

Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/50376
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/51414
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/51416
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/51641
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/54296

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121532
2022-03-25 19:16:45 +01:00
Jordan Rupprecht
493509a40a [NFC] DeclCXX: Fix -Wreorder-ctor
From 8ba9c794feb30cd969b9776c39873def10c51bff
2022-01-25 14:29:35 -08:00
Zahira Ammarguellat
8ba9c794fe Add support for sycl_special_class attribute.
Special classes such as accessor, sampler, and stream need additional
implementation when they are passed from host to device.

This patch is adding a new attribute “sycl_special_class” used to mark
SYCL classes/struct that need the additional compiler handling.
2022-01-25 14:17:09 -08:00
Kazu Hirata
d677a7cb05 [clang] Remove redundant member initialization (NFC)
Identified with readability-redundant-member-init.
2022-01-02 10:20:23 -08:00
Haojian Wu
603c1a62f8 [clang] Don't crash on an incomplete-type base specifier in template context.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113474
2021-11-09 22:17:47 +01:00
Kazu Hirata
d245f2e859 [clang] Use llvm::erase_if (NFC) 2021-10-17 13:50:29 -07:00
Kazu Hirata
57b40b5f34 [AST, CodeGen, Driver] Use llvm::is_contained (NFC) 2021-10-12 09:19:49 -07:00
Nico Weber
60ab6861ed [clang] Fix a few more comment typos to cycle bots 2021-09-20 20:06:03 -04:00
Melanie Blower
bc5b5ea037 [clang][patch][FPEnv] Make initialization of C++ globals strictfp aware
@kpn pointed out that the global variable initialization functions didn't
have the "strictfp" metadata set correctly, and @rjmccall said that there
was buggy code in SetFPModel and StartFunction, this patch is to solve
those problems. When Sema creates a FunctionDecl, it sets the
FunctionDeclBits.UsesFPIntrin to "true" if the lexical FP settings
(i.e. a combination of command line options and #pragma float_control
settings) correspond to ConstrainedFP mode. That bit is used when CodeGen
starts codegen for a llvm function, and it translates into the
"strictfp" function attribute. See bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44571

Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102343
2021-07-29 12:02:37 -04:00
Markus Böck
7ff3a89a7b [clang][NFC] Add IsAnyDestructorNoReturn field to CXXRecord instead of calculating it on demand
This patch addresses a performance issue I noticed when using clang-12 to compile projects of mine. Even though the files weren't too large (around 1k cpp), the compiler was taking more than a minute to compile the source file, much longer than either GCC or MSVC.

Using a profiler it turned out the issue was the isAnyDestructorNoReturn function in CXXRecordDecl. In particular it being recursive, recalculating the property for every invocation, for every field and base class. This showed up in tracebacks in the profiler.

This patch instead adds IsAnyDestructorNoReturn as a Field to the data inside of CXXRecord and updates when a new base class, destructor, or record field member is added.

After this patch the problematic file of mine went from a compile time of 81s, down to 12s.

The patch itself should not change any functionality, just improve performance.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104182
2021-06-13 14:48:27 +02:00
Matheus Izvekov
aef5d8fdc7 [clang] NFC: Rename rvalue to prvalue
This renames the expression value categories from rvalue to prvalue,
keeping nomenclature consistent with C++11 onwards.

C++ has the most complicated taxonomy here, and every other language
only uses a subset of it, so it's less confusing to use the C++ names
consistently, and mentally remap to the C names when working on that
context (prvalue -> rvalue, no xvalues, etc).

Renames:
* VK_RValue -> VK_PRValue
* Expr::isRValue -> Expr::isPRValue
* SK_QualificationConversionRValue -> SK_QualificationConversionPRValue
* JSON AST Dumper Expression nodes value category: "rvalue" -> "prvalue"

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

Reviewed By: rsmith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103720
2021-06-09 12:27:10 +02:00
Nathan Sidwell
b2d0c16e91 [clang] p1099 using enum part 2
This implements the 'using enum maybe-qualified-enum-tag ;' part of
1099. It introduces a new 'UsingEnumDecl', subclassed from
'BaseUsingDecl'. Much of the diff is the boilerplate needed to get the
new class set up.

There is one case where we accept ill-formed, but I believe this is
merely an extended case of an existing bug, so consider it
orthogonal. AFAICT in class-scope the c++20 rule is that no 2 using
decls can bring in the same target decl ([namespace.udecl]/8). But we
already accept:

struct A { enum { a }; };
struct B : A { using A::a; };
struct C : B { using A::a;
using B::a; }; // same enumerator

this patch permits mixtures of 'using enum Bob;' and 'using Bob::member;' in the same way.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102241
2021-06-08 11:11:46 -07:00