using new/delete and OwningPtrs. After memory profiling Clang, I witnessed periodic leaks of these
objects; digging deeper into the code, it was clear that our management of these objects was a mess. The ownership rules were murky at best, and not always followed. Worse, there are plenty of error paths where we could screw up.
This patch introduces AttributeList::Factory, which is a factory class that creates AttributeList
objects and then blows them away all at once. While conceptually simple, most of the changes in
this patch just have to do with migrating over to the new interface. Most of the changes have resulted in some nice simplifications.
This new strategy currently holds on to all AttributeList objects during the lifetime of the Parser
object. This is easily tunable. If we desire to have more bound the lifetime of AttributeList
objects more precisely, we can have the AttributeList::Factory object (in Parser) push/pop its
underlying allocator as we enter/leave key methods in the Parser. This means that we get
simple memory management while still having the ability to finely control memory use if necessary.
Note that because AttributeList objects are now BumpPtrAllocated, we may reduce malloc() traffic
in many large files with attributes.
This fixes the leak reported in: <rdar://problem/8650003>
llvm-svn: 118675
missing the opening bracket '[', e.g.,
NSArray <CC>
at function scope. Previously, we would only give trivial completions
(const, volatile, etc.), because we're in a "declaration name"
scope. Now, we also provide completions for class methods of NSArray,
e.g.,
alloc
Note that we already had support for this after the first argument,
e.g.,
NSArray method:x <CC>
would get code completion for class methods of NSArray whose selector
starts with "method:". This was already present because we recover
as if NSArray method:x were a class message send missing the opening
bracket (which was committed in r114057).
llvm-svn: 114078
sends. These are far trickier than instance messages, because we
typically have something like
NSArray alloc]
where it appears to be a declaration of a variable named "alloc" up
until we see the ']' (or a ':'), and at that point we can't backtrace.
So, we use a combination of syntactic and semantic disambiguation to
treat this as a message send only when the type is an Objective-C type
and it has the syntax of a class message send (which would otherwise
be ill-formed).
llvm-svn: 114057
used in the default function argument as "used". Instead, when we
actually use the default argument, make another pass over the
expression to mark any used declarations as "used" at that point. This
addresses two kinds of related problems:
1) We were marking some declarations "used" that shouldn't be,
because we were marking them too eagerly.
2) We were failing to mark some declarations as "used" when we
should, if the first time it was instantiated happened to be an
unevaluated context, we wouldn't mark them again at a later point.
I've also added a potentially-handy visitor class template
EvaluatedExprVisitor, which only visits the potentially-evaluated
subexpressions of an expression. I bet this would have been useful for
noexcept...
Fixes PR5810 and PR8127.
llvm-svn: 113700
with comma-separated lists. We never actually used the comma
locations, nor did we store them in the AST, but we did manage to
waste time during template instantiation to produce fake locations.
llvm-svn: 113495
One who seeks the Tao unlearns something new every day.
Less and less remains until you arrive at non-action.
When you arrive at non-action,
nothing will be left undone.
llvm-svn: 112244
declarator. Here, we can only see a few things (e.g., cvr-qualifiers,
nested name specifiers) and we do not want to provide other non-macro
completions. Previously, we would end up in recovery mode and would
provide a large number of non-relevant completions.
llvm-svn: 111818
- move DeclSpec &c into the Sema library
- move ParseAST into the Parse library
Reflect this change in a thousand different includes.
Reflect this change in the link orders.
llvm-svn: 111667
lexed method declarations.
This avoid interference with tokens coming after the point where the default arg tokens were 'injected', e.g. for
typedef struct Inst {
void m(int x=0);
} *InstPtr;
when parsing '0' the next token would be '*' and things would be messed up.
llvm-svn: 110436
a function prototype is followed by a declarator if we
aren't parsing a K&R style identifier list.
Also, avoid skipping randomly after a declaration if a
semicolon is missing. Before we'd get:
t.c:3:1: error: expected function body after function declarator
void bar();
^
Now we get:
t.c:1:11: error: invalid token after top level declarator
void foo()
^
;
llvm-svn: 108105
allows Sema some limited access to the current scope, which we only
use in one way: when Sema is performing some kind of declaration that
is not directly driven by the parser (e.g., due to template
instantiatio or lazy declaration of a member), we can find the Scope
associated with a DeclContext, if that DeclContext is still in the
process of being parsed.
Use this to make the implicit declaration of special member functions
in a C++ class more "scope-less", rather than using the NULL Scope hack.
llvm-svn: 107491
In a line like:
(;
the semicolon leaves Parser:ParenCount unbalanced (it's 1 even though we stopped looking for a right paren).
This may affect later parsing and result in bad recovery for parsing errors.
llvm-svn: 106213
type that we expect to see at a given point in the grammar, e.g., when
initializing a variable, returning a result, or calling a function. We
don't prune the candidate set at all, just adjust priorities to favor
things that should type-check, using an ultra-simplified type system.
llvm-svn: 105128
1) Suppress diagnostics as soon as we form the code-completion
token, so we don't get any error/warning spew from the early
end-of-file.
2) If we consume a code-completion token when we weren't expecting
one, go into a code-completion recovery path that produces the best
results it can based on the context that the parser is in.
llvm-svn: 104585
declarator is incorrect. Not being a typename causes the parser to
dive down into the K&R identifier list handling stuff, which is almost
never the right thing to do.
Before:
r.c:3:17: error: expected ')'
void bar(intptr y);
^
r.c:3:9: note: to match this '('
void bar(intptr y);
^
r.c:3:10: error: a parameter list without types is only allowed in a function definition
void bar(intptr y);
^
After:
r.c:3:10: error: unknown type name 'intptr'; did you mean 'intptr_t'?
void bar(intptr y);
^~~~~~
intptr_t
r.c:1:13: note: 'intptr_t' declared here
typedef int intptr_t;
^
This fixes rdar://7980651 - poor recovery for bad type in the first arg of a C function
llvm-svn: 103783