We aren't able to parse __has_attribute (vendor::attr) (and __has_c_attribute
and __has_cpp_attribute) in strict C < C23 modes. While in -std=gnu* modes
or in -std=c23 there is CPP_SCOPE token, in -std=c* (except for -std=c23)
there are is just a pair of CPP_COLON tokens.
The c-lex.cc hunk adds support for that, but always returns 0 in that case
unlike the GCC 14+ version.
2024-02-22 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR c/114007
gcc/c-family/
* c-lex.c (c_common_has_attribute): Parse 2 CPP_COLONs with
the first one with COLON_SCOPE flag the same as CPP_SCOPE but
ensure 0 is returned then.
gcc/testsuite/
* gcc.dg/c23-attr-syntax-8.c: New test.
libcpp/
* include/cpplib.h (COLON_SCOPE): Define to PURE_ZERO.
* lex.c (_cpp_lex_direct): When lexing CPP_COLON with another
colon after it, if !CPP_OPTION (pfile, scope) set COLON_SCOPE
flag on the first CPP_COLON token.
(cherry picked from commit 37127ed975)
The handling of #pragma GCC diagnostic uses input_location, which is not always
as precise as needed; in particular the relative location of some tokens and a
_Pragma directive will crucially determine whether a given diagnostic is enabled
or suppressed in the desired way. PR97498 shows how the C frontend ends up with
input_location pointing to the beginning of the line containing a _Pragma()
directive, resulting in the wrong behavior if the diagnostic to be modified
pertains to some tokens found earlier on the same line. This patch fixes that by
addressing two issues:
a) libcpp was not assigning a valid location to the CPP_PRAGMA token
generated by the _Pragma directive.
b) C frontend was not setting input_location to something reasonable.
With this change, the C frontend is able to change input_location to point to
the _Pragma token as needed.
This is just a two-line fix (one for each of a) and b)), the testsuite changes
were needed only because the location on the tested warnings has been somewhat
improved, so the tests need to look for the new locations.
gcc/c/ChangeLog:
PR preprocessor/97498
* c-parser.c (c_parser_pragma): Set input_location to the
location of the pragma, rather than the start of the line.
libcpp/ChangeLog:
PR preprocessor/97498
* directives.c (destringize_and_run): Override the location of
the CPP_PRAGMA token from a _Pragma directive to the location of
the expansion point, as is done for the tokens lexed from it.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
PR preprocessor/97498
* c-c++-common/pr97498.c: New test.
* gcc.dg/pragma-message.c: Adapt for improved warning locations.
(cherry picked from commit 0587cef3d7)
The first part of the following testcase (m1-m3 macros and its use)
regressed with my PR89971 fix, but as the m1,m4-m5 and its use part shows,
the problem isn't new, we can emit a CPP_PADDING token to avoid it from
being adjacent to whatever comes after the __VA_OPT__ (in this case there
is nothing afterwards, true).
In most cases these CPP_PADDING tokens don't matter, all other
callers of cpp_get_token_with_location either ignore CPP_PADDING tokens
completely (e.g. c_lex_with_flags) or they just remember them and
take them into account when printing stuff whether there should be
added whitespace or not (scan_translation_unit + token_streamer::stream).
So, I think we should just ignore CPP_PADDING tokens the same way in
_cpp_parse_expr.
2022-05-27 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR preprocessor/105732
* expr.c (_cpp_parse_expr): Handle CPP_PADDING by just another
token.
* c-c++-common/cpp/va-opt-10.c: New test.
(cherry picked from commit 58a40e76eb)
As mentioned in the PR, in some cases we preprocess incorrectly when we
encounter an identifier which is defined as function-like macro, followed
by at least 2 CPP_PADDING tokens and then some other identifier.
On the following testcase, the problem is in the 3rd funlike_invocation_p,
the tokens are CPP_NAME Y, CPP_PADDING (the pfile->avoid_paste shared token),
CPP_PADDING (one created with padding_token, val.source is non-NULL and
val.source->flags & PREV_WHITE is non-zero) and then another CPP_NAME.
funlike_invocation_p remembers there was a padding token, but remembers the
first one because of its condition, then the next token is the CPP_NAME,
which is not CPP_OPEN_PAREN, so the CPP_NAME token is backed up, but as we
can't easily backup more tokens, it pushes into a new context the padding
token (the pfile->avoid_paste one). The net effect is that when Y is not
defined as fun-like macro, we read Y, avoid_paste, padding_token, Y,
while if Y is fun-like macro, we read Y, avoid_paste, avoid_paste, Y
(the second avoid_paste is because that is how we handle end of a context).
Now, for stringify_arg that is unfortunately a significant difference,
which handles CPP_PADDING tokens with:
if (token->type == CPP_PADDING)
{
if (source == NULL
|| (!(source->flags & PREV_WHITE)
&& token->val.source == NULL))
source = token->val.source;
continue;
}
and later on
/* Leading white space? */
if (dest - 1 != BUFF_FRONT (pfile->u_buff))
{
if (source == NULL)
source = token;
if (source->flags & PREV_WHITE)
*dest++ = ' ';
}
source = NULL;
(and c-ppoutput.cc has similar code).
So, when Y is not fun-like macro, ' ' is added because padding_token's
val.source->flags & PREV_WHITE is non-zero, while when it is fun-like
macro, we don't add ' ' in between, because source is NULL and so
used from the next token (CPP_NAME Y), which doesn't have PREV_WHITE set.
Now, the funlike_invocation_p condition
if (padding == NULL
|| (!(padding->flags & PREV_WHITE) && token->val.source == NULL))
padding = token;
looks very similar to that in stringify_arg/c-ppoutput.cc, so I assume
the intent was to prefer do the same thing and pick the right padding.
But there are significant differences. Both stringify_arg and c-ppoutput.cc
don't remember the CPP_PADDING token, but its val.source instead, while
in funlike_invocation_p we want to remember the padding token that has the
significant information for stringify_arg/c-ppoutput.cc.
So, IMHO we want to overwrite padding if:
1) padding == NULL (remember that there was any padding at all)
2) padding->val.source == NULL (this matches the source == NULL
case in stringify_arg)
3) !(padding->val.source->flags & PREV_WHITE) && token->val.source == NULL
(this matches the !(source->flags & PREV_WHITE) && token->val.source == NULL
case in stringify_arg)
2022-02-01 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR preprocessor/104147
* macro.c (funlike_invocation_p): For padding prefer a token
with val.source non-NULL especially if it has PREV_WHITE set
on val.source->flags. Add gcc_assert that CPP_PADDING tokens
don't have PREV_WHITE set in flags.
* c-c++-common/cpp/pr104147.c: New test.
(cherry picked from commit 95ac563540)
The funlike_invocation_p macro never triggered, the other
asserts did on some tests, see below for a full list.
This seems to be caused by #pragma/_Pragma handling.
do_pragma does:
pfile->directive_result.src_loc = pragma_token_virt_loc;
pfile->directive_result.type = CPP_PRAGMA;
pfile->directive_result.flags = pragma_token->flags;
pfile->directive_result.val.pragma = p->u.ident;
when it sees a pragma, while start_directive does:
pfile->directive_result.type = CPP_PADDING;
and so does _cpp_do__Pragma.
Now, for #pragma lex.cc will just ignore directive_result if
it has CPP_PADDING type:
if (_cpp_handle_directive (pfile, result->flags & PREV_WHITE))
{
if (pfile->directive_result.type == CPP_PADDING)
continue;
result = &pfile->directive_result;
}
but destringize_and_run does not:
if (pfile->directive_result.type == CPP_PRAGMA)
{
...
}
else
{
count = 1;
toks = XNEW (cpp_token);
toks[0] = pfile->directive_result;
and from there it will copy type member of CPP_PADDING, but all the
other members from the last CPP_PRAGMA before it.
Small testcase for it with no option (at least no -fopenmp or -fopenmp-simd).
#pragma GCC push_options
#pragma GCC ignored "-Wformat"
#pragma GCC pop_options
void
foo ()
{
_Pragma ("omp simd")
for (int i = 0; i < 64; i++)
;
}
Here is a patch that replaces those
toks = XNEW (cpp_token);
toks[0] = pfile->directive_result;
lines with
toks = &pfile->avoid_paste;
2022-02-01 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
* directives.c (destringize_and_run): Push &pfile->avoid_paste
instead of a copy of pfile->directive_result for the CPP_PADDING
case.
(cherry picked from commit efc46b550f)
In the following testcase we incorrectly error about pasting / token
with padding token (which is a result of __VA_OPT__); instead we should
like e.g. for ##arg where arg is empty macro argument clear PASTE_LEFT
flag of the previous token if __VA_OPT__ doesn't add any real tokens
(which can happen either because the macro doesn't have any tokens
passed to ... (i.e. __VA_ARGS__ expands to empty) or when __VA_OPT__
doesn't have any tokens in between ()s).
2021-12-30 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR preprocessor/89971
libcpp/
* macro.c (replace_args): For ##__VA_OPT__, if __VA_OPT__ expands
to no tokens at all, drop PASTE_LEFT flag from the previous token.
gcc/testsuite/
* c-c++-common/cpp/va-opt-9.c: New test.
(cherry picked from commit 5545d1edcb)
The https://gcc.gnu.org/pipermail/gcc-patches/2020-November/557903.html
change broke the following testcases. The problem is when a pragma
namespace allows expansion (i.e. p->is_nspace && p->allow_expansion),
e.g. the omp or acc namespaces do, then when parsing the second pragma
token we do it with pfile->state.in_directive set,
pfile->state.prevent_expansion clear and pfile->state.in_deferred_pragma
clear (the last one because we don't know yet if it will be a deferred
pragma or not). If the pragma line only contains a single name
and newline after it, and there exists a function-like macro with the
same name, the preprocessor needs to peek in funlike_invocation_p
the next token whether it isn't ( but in this case it will see a newline.
As pfile->state.in_directive is set, we don't read anything after the
newline, pfile->buffer->need_line is set and CPP_EOF is lexed, which
funlike_invocation_p doesn't push back. Because name is a function-like
macro and on the pragma line there is no ( after the name, it isn't
expanded, and control flow returns to do_pragma. If name is valid
deferred pragma, we set pfile->state.in_deferred_pragma (and really
need it set so that e.g. end_directive later on doesn't eat all the
tokens from the pragma line).
Before Nathan's change (which unfortunately didn't contain rationale
on why it is better to do it like that), this wasn't a problem,
next _cpp_lex_direct called when we want next token would return
CPP_PRAGMA_EOF when it saw buffer->need_line, which would turn off
pfile->state.in_deferred_pragma and following get token would already
read the next line. But Nathan's patch replaced it with an assertion
failure that now triggers and CPP_PRAGMA_EOL is done only when lexing
the '\n'. Except for this special case that works fine, but in
this case it doesn't because when peeking the token we still didn't know
that it will be a deferred pragma.
I've tried to fix that up in do_pragma by detecting this and pushing
CPP_PRAGMA_EOL as lookahead, but that doesn't work because end_directive
still needs to see pfile->state.in_deferred_pragma set.
So, this patch affectively reverts part of Nathan's change, CPP_PRAGMA_EOL
addition isn't done only when parsing the '\n', but is now done in both
places, in the first one instead of the assertion failure.
2021-12-04 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR preprocessor/102432
* lex.c (_cpp_lex_direct): If buffer->need_line while
pfile->state.in_deferred_pragma, return CPP_PRAGMA_EOL token instead
of assertion failure.
* c-c++-common/gomp/pr102432.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/goacc/pr102432.c: New test.
(cherry picked from commit 55dfce4d5c)
Normal preprocessing, -fdirectives-only preprocessing before the Nathan's
rewrite, and all other compilers I've tried on godbolt treat even \*/
as end of a block comment, but the new -fdirectives-only handling doesn't.
2021-11-17 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR preprocessor/103130
* lex.c (cpp_directive_only_process): Treat even \*/ as end of block
comment.
* c-c++-common/cpp/dir-only-9.c: New test.
(cherry picked from commit 049f0efeaa)
The following testcase ICEs in cpp_sys_macro_p, because cpp_sys_macro_p
is called for a builtin macro which doesn't use node->value.macro union
member but a different one and so dereferencing it ICEs.
As the testcase is distilled from contemporary glibc headers, it means
basically -Wtraditional now ICEs on almost everything.
The fix can be either the patch below, return true for builtin macros,
or we could instead return false for builtin macros, or the fix could
be also (untested):
--- libcpp/expr.c 2021-05-07 10:34:46.345122608 +0200
+++ libcpp/expr.c 2021-08-12 09:54:01.837556365 +0200
@@ -783,13 +783,13 @@ cpp_classify_number (cpp_reader *pfile,
/* Traditional C only accepted the 'L' suffix.
Suppress warning about 'LL' with -Wno-long-long. */
- if (CPP_WTRADITIONAL (pfile) && ! cpp_sys_macro_p (pfile))
+ if (CPP_WTRADITIONAL (pfile))
{
int u_or_i = (result & (CPP_N_UNSIGNED|CPP_N_IMAGINARY));
int large = (result & CPP_N_WIDTH) == CPP_N_LARGE
&& CPP_OPTION (pfile, cpp_warn_long_long);
- if (u_or_i || large)
+ if ((u_or_i || large) && ! cpp_sys_macro_p (pfile))
cpp_warning_with_line (pfile, large ? CPP_W_LONG_LONG : CPP_W_TRADITIONAL,
virtual_location, 0,
"traditional C rejects the \"%.*s\" suffix",
The builtin macros at least currently don't add any suffixes
or numbers -Wtraditional would like to warn about. For floating
point suffixes, -Wtraditional calls cpp_sys_macro_p only right
away before emitting the warning, but in the above case the ICE
is because cpp_sys_macro_p is called even if the number doesn't
have any suffixes (that is I think always for builtin macros
right now).
2021-08-12 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR preprocessor/101638
* macro.c (cpp_sys_macro_p): Return true instead of
crashing on builtin macros.
* gcc.dg/cpp/pr101638.c: New test.
(cherry picked from commit 408d88af60)
The patch for 96391 changed linemap_compare_locations to give up on
comparing locations from macro expansions if we don't have column
information. But in this testcase, the BOILERPLATE macro is multiple lines
long, so we do want to compare locations within the macro. So this patch
moves the LINE_MAP_MAX_LOCATION_WITH_COLS check inside the block, to use it
for failing gracefully.
PR c++/100796
PR preprocessor/96391
libcpp/ChangeLog:
* line-map.c (linemap_compare_locations): Only use comparison with
LINE_MAP_MAX_LOCATION_WITH_COLS to avoid abort.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* g++.dg/plugin/location-overflow-test-pr100796.c: New test.
* g++.dg/plugin/plugin.exp: Run it.
As can be seen on the testcases, before the -fdirectives-only preprocessing
rewrite the preprocessor would assume // comments are terminated by the
end of file even when newline wasn't there, but now we error out.
The following patch restores the previous behavior.
2021-05-20 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR preprocessor/100646
* lex.c (cpp_directive_only_process): Treat end of file as termination
for !is_block comments.
* gcc.dg/cpp/pr100646-1.c: New test.
* gcc.dg/cpp/pr100646-2.c: New test.
(cherry picked from commit d15a2d261b)
If a header doesn't end with a new-line, with -fdirectives-only we right now
preprocess it as
int i = 1;# 2 "pr100392.c" 2
i.e. the line directive isn't on the next line, which means we fail to parse
it when compiling.
GCC 10 and earlier libcpp/directives-only.c had for this:
if (!pfile->state.skipping && cur != base)
{
/* If the file was not newline terminated, add rlimit, which is
guaranteed to point to a newline, to the end of our range. */
if (cur[-1] != '\n')
{
cur++;
CPP_INCREMENT_LINE (pfile, 0);
lines++;
}
cb->print_lines (lines, base, cur - base);
}
and we have the assertion
/* Files always end in a newline or carriage return. We rely on this for
character peeking safety. */
gcc_assert (buffer->rlimit[0] == '\n' || buffer->rlimit[0] == '\r');
So, this patch just does readd the more less same thing, so that we emit
a newline after the inline even when it wasn't there before.
2021-05-12 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR preprocessor/100392
* lex.c (cpp_directive_only_process): If buffer doesn't end with '\n',
add buffer->rlimit[0] character to the printed range and
CPP_INCREMENT_LINE and increment line_count.
* gcc.dg/cpp/pr100392.c: New test.
* gcc.dg/cpp/pr100392.h: New file.
(cherry picked from commit c6b664e2c4)
Since the r0-85991-ga25a8f3be322fe0f838947b679f73d6efc2a412c
https://gcc.gnu.org/legacy-ml/gcc-patches/2008-02/msg01329.html
changes, so that we handle macros inside of pragmas that should expand
macros, during preprocessing we print those pragmas token by token,
with CPP_PRAGMA printed as
fputs ("#pragma ", print.outf);
if (space)
fprintf (print.outf, "%s %s", space, name);
else
fprintf (print.outf, "%s", name);
where name is some identifier (so e.g. print
#pragma omp parallel
or
#pragma omp for
etc.). Because it ends in an identifier, we need to handle it like
an identifier (i.e. CPP_NAME) for the decision whether a space needs
to be emitted in between that #pragma whatever or #pragma whatever whatever
and following token, otherwise the attached testcase is preprocessed as
#pragma omp forreduction(+:red)
rather than
#pragma omp for reduction(+:red)
The cpp_avoid_paste function is only called for this purpose.
2021-05-07 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR c/100450
* lex.c (cpp_avoid_paste): Handle token1 CPP_PRAGMA like CPP_NAME.
* c-c++-common/gomp/pr100450.c: New test.
(cherry picked from commit 170c850e4b)
This reverts a s/column_offset/column/ change in the fix for PR99446.
2021-04-19 Richard Biener <rguenther@suse.de>
PR preprocessor/100142
libcpp/
* line-map.c (linemap_position_for_loc_and_offset): Revert
unintended s/column_offset/column/ change.
gcc/testsuite/
* gcc.dg/pr100142.c: New testcase.
* g++.dg/diagnostic/pr72803.C: Revert last change.
This ICE was because when adjusting a column offset we could advance
into a linemap for a different file. We only checked the next line
map was not for a line further advanced in any file, forgetting that
it could be for an earlier line in a different file. The testcase
needed adjusting as column 512 was unrepresentable, once that was
taken into consideration.
PR preprocessor/99446
libcpp/
* line-map.c (line-map.c): Do not advance to linemaps for
different files.
gcc/testsuite/
* g++.dg/diagnostic/pr72803.C: Adjust expected column.
The problem is that the new IS_MACRO_LOC macro:
inline bool
IS_MACRO_LOC (location_t loc)
{
return !IS_ORDINARY_LOC (loc) && !IS_ADHOC_LOC (loc);
}
is not fully correct since the position of the macro lines is not fixed:
/* Returns the lowest location [of a token resulting from macro
expansion] encoded in this line table. */
inline location_t
LINEMAPS_MACRO_LOWEST_LOCATION (const line_maps *set)
{
return LINEMAPS_MACRO_USED (set)
? MAP_START_LOCATION (LINEMAPS_LAST_MACRO_MAP (set))
: MAX_LOCATION_T + 1;
}
In Ada, LINEMAPS_MACRO_USED is false so LINEMAPS_MACRO_LOWEST_LOCATION is
MAX_LOCATION_T + 1, but IS_MACRO_LOC nevertheless returns true for anything
in the range [LINE_MAP_MAX_LOCATION; MAX_LOCATION_T], thus yielding an ICE
in linemap_macro_map_lookup for very large files.
libcpp/
* include/line-map.h (IS_MACRO_LOC): Delete.
* line-map.c (linemap_location_from_macro_expansion_p): Test
LINEMAPS_MACRO_LOWEST_LOCATION of the linemap.
gcc/cp/
* module.cc (ordinary_loc_of): Test LINEMAPS_MACRO_LOWEST_LOCATION
of the linemap.
(module_state::write_location): Likewise.
PR c/99323 describes an ICE due to a failed assertion deep inside the
fix-it printing machinery, where the fix-it hints on one line have not
been properly sorted in layout's constructor.
The underlying issue occurs when multiple fix-it hints affect a line
wider that LINE_MAP_MAX_COLUMN_NUMBER, where the location_t values for
characters after that threshold fall back to having column zero.
It's not meaningful to try to handle fix-it hints without column
information, so this patch rejects them as they are added to the
rich_location, falling back to the "no fix-it hints on this diagnostic"
case, fixing the crash.
gcc/ChangeLog:
PR c/99323
* diagnostic-show-locus.c
(selftest::test_one_liner_many_fixits_2): Fix accidental usage of
column 0.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
PR c/99323
* gcc.dg/pr99323-1.c: New test.
* gcc.dg/pr99323-2.c: New test.
libcpp/ChangeLog:
PR c/99323
* line-map.c (rich_location::maybe_add_fixit): Reject fix-it hints
at column 0.
This fixes some issues with macro maps. We were incorrectly
calculating the number of macro expansions in a location span, and I
had a workaround that partially covered that up. Further, while macro
location spans are monotonic, that is not true of ordinary location
spans. Thus we need to insert an indirection array when binary
searching the latter. (We load ordinary locations before loading
imports, but macro locations afterwards. We make sure an import
location is de-macrofied, if needed.)
PR c++/98718
gcc/cp/
* module.cc (ool): New indirection vector.
(loc_spans::maybe_propagate): Location is not optional.
(loc_spans::open): Likewise. Assert monotonically advancing.
(module_for_ordinary_loc): Use ool indirection vector.
(module_state::write_prepare_maps): Do not count empty macro
expansions. Elide empty spans.
(module_state::write_macro_maps): Skip empty expansions.
(ool_cmp): New qsort comparator.
(module_state::write): Create and destroy ool vector.
(name_pending_imports): Fix dump push/pop.
(preprocess_module): Likewise. Add more dumping.
(preprocessed_module): Likewise.
libcpp/
* include/line-map.h
* line-map.c
gcc/testsuite/
* g++.dg/modules/pr98718_a.C: New.
* g++.dg/modules/pr98718_b.C: New.
When we read preprocessed source, we deal with a couple of special
location lines at the start of the file. These provide information
about the original filename of the source and the current directory,
so we can process the source in the same manner. When updating that
code, I had a somewhat philosophical question: Should the line table
contain evidence of the filename the user provided to the compiler? I
figured to leave it there, as it did no harm. But this defect shows
an issue. It's in the line table and our (non optimizing) line table
serializer emits that filename. Which means if one re-preprocesses
the original source to a differently-named intermediate file, the
resultant CMI is different. Boo. That's a difference that doesn't
matter, except the CRC matching then fails. We should elide the
filename, so that one can preprocess to mktemp intermediate filenames
for whatever reason.
This patch takes the approach of expunging it from the line table --
so the line table will end up with exactly the same form. That seems
a better bet than trying to fix up mismatching line tables in CMI
emission.
PR c++/99072
libcpp/
* init.c (read_original_filename): Expunge all evidence of the
original filename.
gcc/testsuite/
* g++.dg/modules/pr99072.H: New.