| /* Breadth-first and depth-first routines for |
| searching multiple-inheritance lattice for GNU C++. |
| Copyright (C) 1987, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, |
| 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| Contributed by Michael Tiemann (tiemann@cygnus.com) |
| |
| This file is part of GCC. |
| |
| GCC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
| it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by |
| the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) |
| any later version. |
| |
| GCC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
| but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
| MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
| GNU General Public License for more details. |
| |
| You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
| along with GCC; see the file COPYING. If not, write to |
| the Free Software Foundation, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, |
| Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ |
| |
| /* High-level class interface. */ |
| |
| #include "config.h" |
| #include "system.h" |
| #include "coretypes.h" |
| #include "tm.h" |
| #include "tree.h" |
| #include "cp-tree.h" |
| #include "obstack.h" |
| #include "flags.h" |
| #include "rtl.h" |
| #include "output.h" |
| #include "toplev.h" |
| #include "stack.h" |
| |
| /* Obstack used for remembering decision points of breadth-first. */ |
| |
| static struct obstack search_obstack; |
| |
| /* Methods for pushing and popping objects to and from obstacks. */ |
| |
| struct stack_level * |
| push_stack_level (struct obstack *obstack, char *tp,/* Sony NewsOS 5.0 compiler doesn't like void * here. */ |
| int size) |
| { |
| struct stack_level *stack; |
| obstack_grow (obstack, tp, size); |
| stack = (struct stack_level *) ((char*)obstack_next_free (obstack) - size); |
| obstack_finish (obstack); |
| stack->obstack = obstack; |
| stack->first = (tree *) obstack_base (obstack); |
| stack->limit = obstack_room (obstack) / sizeof (tree *); |
| return stack; |
| } |
| |
| struct stack_level * |
| pop_stack_level (struct stack_level *stack) |
| { |
| struct stack_level *tem = stack; |
| struct obstack *obstack = tem->obstack; |
| stack = tem->prev; |
| obstack_free (obstack, tem); |
| return stack; |
| } |
| |
| #define search_level stack_level |
| static struct search_level *search_stack; |
| |
| struct vbase_info |
| { |
| /* The class dominating the hierarchy. */ |
| tree type; |
| /* A pointer to a complete object of the indicated TYPE. */ |
| tree decl_ptr; |
| tree inits; |
| }; |
| |
| static int is_subobject_of_p (tree, tree); |
| static tree dfs_check_overlap (tree, void *); |
| static tree dfs_no_overlap_yet (tree, int, void *); |
| static base_kind lookup_base_r (tree, tree, base_access, bool, tree *); |
| static int dynamic_cast_base_recurse (tree, tree, bool, tree *); |
| static tree marked_pushdecls_p (tree, int, void *); |
| static tree unmarked_pushdecls_p (tree, int, void *); |
| static tree dfs_debug_unmarkedp (tree, int, void *); |
| static tree dfs_debug_mark (tree, void *); |
| static tree dfs_push_type_decls (tree, void *); |
| static tree dfs_push_decls (tree, void *); |
| static tree dfs_unuse_fields (tree, void *); |
| static tree add_conversions (tree, void *); |
| static int look_for_overrides_r (tree, tree); |
| static struct search_level *push_search_level (struct stack_level *, |
| struct obstack *); |
| static struct search_level *pop_search_level (struct stack_level *); |
| static tree bfs_walk (tree, tree (*) (tree, void *), |
| tree (*) (tree, int, void *), void *); |
| static tree lookup_field_queue_p (tree, int, void *); |
| static tree lookup_field_r (tree, void *); |
| static tree dfs_accessible_queue_p (tree, int, void *); |
| static tree dfs_accessible_p (tree, void *); |
| static tree dfs_access_in_type (tree, void *); |
| static access_kind access_in_type (tree, tree); |
| static int protected_accessible_p (tree, tree, tree); |
| static int friend_accessible_p (tree, tree, tree); |
| static void setup_class_bindings (tree, int); |
| static int template_self_reference_p (tree, tree); |
| static tree dfs_get_pure_virtuals (tree, void *); |
| |
| /* Allocate a level of searching. */ |
| |
| static struct search_level * |
| push_search_level (struct stack_level *stack, struct obstack *obstack) |
| { |
| struct search_level tem; |
| |
| tem.prev = stack; |
| return push_stack_level (obstack, (char *)&tem, sizeof (tem)); |
| } |
| |
| /* Discard a level of search allocation. */ |
| |
| static struct search_level * |
| pop_search_level (struct stack_level *obstack) |
| { |
| struct search_level *stack = pop_stack_level (obstack); |
| |
| return stack; |
| } |
| |
| /* Variables for gathering statistics. */ |
| #ifdef GATHER_STATISTICS |
| static int n_fields_searched; |
| static int n_calls_lookup_field, n_calls_lookup_field_1; |
| static int n_calls_lookup_fnfields, n_calls_lookup_fnfields_1; |
| static int n_calls_get_base_type; |
| static int n_outer_fields_searched; |
| static int n_contexts_saved; |
| #endif /* GATHER_STATISTICS */ |
| |
| |
| /* Worker for lookup_base. BINFO is the binfo we are searching at, |
| BASE is the RECORD_TYPE we are searching for. ACCESS is the |
| required access checks. IS_VIRTUAL indicates if BINFO is morally |
| virtual. |
| |
| If BINFO is of the required type, then *BINFO_PTR is examined to |
| compare with any other instance of BASE we might have already |
| discovered. *BINFO_PTR is initialized and a base_kind return value |
| indicates what kind of base was located. |
| |
| Otherwise BINFO's bases are searched. */ |
| |
| static base_kind |
| lookup_base_r (tree binfo, tree base, base_access access, |
| bool is_virtual, /* inside a virtual part */ |
| tree *binfo_ptr) |
| { |
| int i; |
| tree bases, accesses; |
| base_kind found = bk_not_base; |
| |
| if (same_type_p (BINFO_TYPE (binfo), base)) |
| { |
| /* We have found a base. Check against what we have found |
| already. */ |
| found = bk_same_type; |
| if (is_virtual) |
| found = bk_via_virtual; |
| |
| if (!*binfo_ptr) |
| *binfo_ptr = binfo; |
| else if (binfo != *binfo_ptr) |
| { |
| if (access != ba_any) |
| *binfo_ptr = NULL; |
| else if (!is_virtual) |
| /* Prefer a non-virtual base. */ |
| *binfo_ptr = binfo; |
| found = bk_ambig; |
| } |
| |
| return found; |
| } |
| |
| bases = BINFO_BASETYPES (binfo); |
| accesses = BINFO_BASEACCESSES (binfo); |
| if (!bases) |
| return bk_not_base; |
| |
| for (i = TREE_VEC_LENGTH (bases); i--;) |
| { |
| tree base_binfo = TREE_VEC_ELT (bases, i); |
| base_kind bk; |
| |
| bk = lookup_base_r (base_binfo, base, |
| access, |
| is_virtual || TREE_VIA_VIRTUAL (base_binfo), |
| binfo_ptr); |
| |
| switch (bk) |
| { |
| case bk_ambig: |
| if (access != ba_any) |
| return bk; |
| found = bk; |
| break; |
| |
| case bk_same_type: |
| bk = bk_proper_base; |
| /* FALLTHROUGH */ |
| case bk_proper_base: |
| my_friendly_assert (found == bk_not_base, 20010723); |
| found = bk; |
| break; |
| |
| case bk_via_virtual: |
| if (found != bk_ambig) |
| found = bk; |
| break; |
| |
| case bk_not_base: |
| break; |
| |
| default: |
| abort (); |
| } |
| } |
| return found; |
| } |
| |
| /* Returns true if type BASE is accessible in T. (BASE is known to be |
| a (possibly non-proper) base class of T.) */ |
| |
| bool |
| accessible_base_p (tree t, tree base) |
| { |
| tree decl; |
| |
| /* [class.access.base] |
| |
| A base class is said to be accessible if an invented public |
| member of the base class is accessible. |
| |
| If BASE is a non-proper base, this condition is trivially |
| true. */ |
| if (same_type_p (t, base)) |
| return true; |
| /* Rather than inventing a public member, we use the implicit |
| public typedef created in the scope of every class. */ |
| decl = TYPE_FIELDS (base); |
| while (!DECL_SELF_REFERENCE_P (decl)) |
| decl = TREE_CHAIN (decl); |
| while (ANON_AGGR_TYPE_P (t)) |
| t = TYPE_CONTEXT (t); |
| return accessible_p (t, decl); |
| } |
| |
| /* Lookup BASE in the hierarchy dominated by T. Do access checking as |
| ACCESS specifies. Return the binfo we discover. If KIND_PTR is |
| non-NULL, fill with information about what kind of base we |
| discovered. |
| |
| If the base is inaccessible, or ambiguous, and the ba_quiet bit is |
| not set in ACCESS, then an error is issued and error_mark_node is |
| returned. If the ba_quiet bit is set, then no error is issued and |
| NULL_TREE is returned. */ |
| |
| tree |
| lookup_base (tree t, tree base, base_access access, base_kind *kind_ptr) |
| { |
| tree binfo = NULL; /* The binfo we've found so far. */ |
| tree t_binfo = NULL; |
| base_kind bk; |
| |
| if (t == error_mark_node || base == error_mark_node) |
| { |
| if (kind_ptr) |
| *kind_ptr = bk_not_base; |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| my_friendly_assert (TYPE_P (base), 20011127); |
| |
| if (!TYPE_P (t)) |
| { |
| t_binfo = t; |
| t = BINFO_TYPE (t); |
| } |
| else |
| t_binfo = TYPE_BINFO (t); |
| |
| /* Ensure that the types are instantiated. */ |
| t = complete_type (TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (t)); |
| base = complete_type (TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (base)); |
| |
| bk = lookup_base_r (t_binfo, base, access, 0, &binfo); |
| |
| /* Check that the base is unambiguous and accessible. */ |
| if (access != ba_any) |
| switch (bk) |
| { |
| case bk_not_base: |
| break; |
| |
| case bk_ambig: |
| binfo = NULL_TREE; |
| if (!(access & ba_quiet)) |
| { |
| error ("`%T' is an ambiguous base of `%T'", base, t); |
| binfo = error_mark_node; |
| } |
| break; |
| |
| default: |
| if ((access & ~ba_quiet) != ba_ignore |
| /* If BASE is incomplete, then BASE and TYPE are probably |
| the same, in which case BASE is accessible. If they |
| are not the same, then TYPE is invalid. In that case, |
| there's no need to issue another error here, and |
| there's no implicit typedef to use in the code that |
| follows, so we skip the check. */ |
| && COMPLETE_TYPE_P (base) |
| && !accessible_base_p (t, base)) |
| { |
| if (!(access & ba_quiet)) |
| { |
| error ("`%T' is an inaccessible base of `%T'", base, t); |
| binfo = error_mark_node; |
| } |
| else |
| binfo = NULL_TREE; |
| bk = bk_inaccessible; |
| } |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| if (kind_ptr) |
| *kind_ptr = bk; |
| |
| return binfo; |
| } |
| |
| /* Worker function for get_dynamic_cast_base_type. */ |
| |
| static int |
| dynamic_cast_base_recurse (tree subtype, tree binfo, bool is_via_virtual, |
| tree *offset_ptr) |
| { |
| tree binfos, accesses; |
| int i, n_baselinks; |
| int worst = -2; |
| |
| if (BINFO_TYPE (binfo) == subtype) |
| { |
| if (is_via_virtual) |
| return -1; |
| else |
| { |
| *offset_ptr = BINFO_OFFSET (binfo); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| binfos = BINFO_BASETYPES (binfo); |
| accesses = BINFO_BASEACCESSES (binfo); |
| n_baselinks = binfos ? TREE_VEC_LENGTH (binfos) : 0; |
| for (i = 0; i < n_baselinks; i++) |
| { |
| tree base_binfo = TREE_VEC_ELT (binfos, i); |
| tree base_access = TREE_VEC_ELT (accesses, i); |
| int rval; |
| |
| if (base_access != access_public_node) |
| continue; |
| rval = dynamic_cast_base_recurse |
| (subtype, base_binfo, |
| is_via_virtual || TREE_VIA_VIRTUAL (base_binfo), offset_ptr); |
| if (worst == -2) |
| worst = rval; |
| else if (rval >= 0) |
| worst = worst >= 0 ? -3 : worst; |
| else if (rval == -1) |
| worst = -1; |
| else if (rval == -3 && worst != -1) |
| worst = -3; |
| } |
| return worst; |
| } |
| |
| /* The dynamic cast runtime needs a hint about how the static SUBTYPE type |
| started from is related to the required TARGET type, in order to optimize |
| the inheritance graph search. This information is independent of the |
| current context, and ignores private paths, hence get_base_distance is |
| inappropriate. Return a TREE specifying the base offset, BOFF. |
| BOFF >= 0, there is only one public non-virtual SUBTYPE base at offset BOFF, |
| and there are no public virtual SUBTYPE bases. |
| BOFF == -1, SUBTYPE occurs as multiple public virtual or non-virtual bases. |
| BOFF == -2, SUBTYPE is not a public base. |
| BOFF == -3, SUBTYPE occurs as multiple public non-virtual bases. */ |
| |
| tree |
| get_dynamic_cast_base_type (tree subtype, tree target) |
| { |
| tree offset = NULL_TREE; |
| int boff = dynamic_cast_base_recurse (subtype, TYPE_BINFO (target), |
| false, &offset); |
| |
| if (!boff) |
| return offset; |
| offset = build_int_2 (boff, -1); |
| TREE_TYPE (offset) = ssizetype; |
| return offset; |
| } |
| |
| /* Search for a member with name NAME in a multiple inheritance |
| lattice specified by TYPE. If it does not exist, return NULL_TREE. |
| If the member is ambiguously referenced, return `error_mark_node'. |
| Otherwise, return a DECL with the indicated name. If WANT_TYPE is |
| true, type declarations are preferred. */ |
| |
| /* Do a 1-level search for NAME as a member of TYPE. The caller must |
| figure out whether it can access this field. (Since it is only one |
| level, this is reasonable.) */ |
| |
| tree |
| lookup_field_1 (tree type, tree name, bool want_type) |
| { |
| tree field; |
| |
| if (TREE_CODE (type) == TEMPLATE_TYPE_PARM |
| || TREE_CODE (type) == BOUND_TEMPLATE_TEMPLATE_PARM |
| || TREE_CODE (type) == TYPENAME_TYPE) |
| /* The TYPE_FIELDS of a TEMPLATE_TYPE_PARM and |
| BOUND_TEMPLATE_TEMPLATE_PARM are not fields at all; |
| instead TYPE_FIELDS is the TEMPLATE_PARM_INDEX. (Miraculously, |
| the code often worked even when we treated the index as a list |
| of fields!) |
| The TYPE_FIELDS of TYPENAME_TYPE is its TYPENAME_TYPE_FULLNAME. */ |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| |
| if (TYPE_NAME (type) |
| && DECL_LANG_SPECIFIC (TYPE_NAME (type)) |
| && DECL_SORTED_FIELDS (TYPE_NAME (type))) |
| { |
| tree *fields = &DECL_SORTED_FIELDS (TYPE_NAME (type))->elts[0]; |
| int lo = 0, hi = DECL_SORTED_FIELDS (TYPE_NAME (type))->len; |
| int i; |
| |
| while (lo < hi) |
| { |
| i = (lo + hi) / 2; |
| |
| #ifdef GATHER_STATISTICS |
| n_fields_searched++; |
| #endif /* GATHER_STATISTICS */ |
| |
| if (DECL_NAME (fields[i]) > name) |
| hi = i; |
| else if (DECL_NAME (fields[i]) < name) |
| lo = i + 1; |
| else |
| { |
| field = NULL_TREE; |
| |
| /* We might have a nested class and a field with the |
| same name; we sorted them appropriately via |
| field_decl_cmp, so just look for the first or last |
| field with this name. */ |
| if (want_type) |
| { |
| do |
| field = fields[i--]; |
| while (i >= lo && DECL_NAME (fields[i]) == name); |
| if (TREE_CODE (field) != TYPE_DECL |
| && !DECL_CLASS_TEMPLATE_P (field)) |
| field = NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| do |
| field = fields[i++]; |
| while (i < hi && DECL_NAME (fields[i]) == name); |
| } |
| return field; |
| } |
| } |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| field = TYPE_FIELDS (type); |
| |
| #ifdef GATHER_STATISTICS |
| n_calls_lookup_field_1++; |
| #endif /* GATHER_STATISTICS */ |
| for (field = TYPE_FIELDS (type); field; field = TREE_CHAIN (field)) |
| { |
| #ifdef GATHER_STATISTICS |
| n_fields_searched++; |
| #endif /* GATHER_STATISTICS */ |
| my_friendly_assert (DECL_P (field), 0); |
| if (DECL_NAME (field) == NULL_TREE |
| && ANON_AGGR_TYPE_P (TREE_TYPE (field))) |
| { |
| tree temp = lookup_field_1 (TREE_TYPE (field), name, want_type); |
| if (temp) |
| return temp; |
| } |
| if (TREE_CODE (field) == USING_DECL) |
| /* For now, we're just treating member using declarations as |
| old ARM-style access declarations. Thus, there's no reason |
| to return a USING_DECL, and the rest of the compiler can't |
| handle it. Once the class is defined, these are purged |
| from TYPE_FIELDS anyhow; see handle_using_decl. */ |
| continue; |
| |
| if (DECL_NAME (field) == name |
| && (!want_type |
| || TREE_CODE (field) == TYPE_DECL |
| || DECL_CLASS_TEMPLATE_P (field))) |
| return field; |
| } |
| /* Not found. */ |
| if (name == vptr_identifier) |
| { |
| /* Give the user what s/he thinks s/he wants. */ |
| if (TYPE_POLYMORPHIC_P (type)) |
| return TYPE_VFIELD (type); |
| } |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* There are a number of cases we need to be aware of here: |
| current_class_type current_function_decl |
| global NULL NULL |
| fn-local NULL SET |
| class-local SET NULL |
| class->fn SET SET |
| fn->class SET SET |
| |
| Those last two make life interesting. If we're in a function which is |
| itself inside a class, we need decls to go into the fn's decls (our |
| second case below). But if we're in a class and the class itself is |
| inside a function, we need decls to go into the decls for the class. To |
| achieve this last goal, we must see if, when both current_class_ptr and |
| current_function_decl are set, the class was declared inside that |
| function. If so, we know to put the decls into the class's scope. */ |
| |
| tree |
| current_scope (void) |
| { |
| if (current_function_decl == NULL_TREE) |
| return current_class_type; |
| if (current_class_type == NULL_TREE) |
| return current_function_decl; |
| if ((DECL_FUNCTION_MEMBER_P (current_function_decl) |
| && same_type_p (DECL_CONTEXT (current_function_decl), |
| current_class_type)) |
| || (DECL_FRIEND_CONTEXT (current_function_decl) |
| && same_type_p (DECL_FRIEND_CONTEXT (current_function_decl), |
| current_class_type))) |
| return current_function_decl; |
| |
| return current_class_type; |
| } |
| |
| /* Returns nonzero if we are currently in a function scope. Note |
| that this function returns zero if we are within a local class, but |
| not within a member function body of the local class. */ |
| |
| int |
| at_function_scope_p (void) |
| { |
| tree cs = current_scope (); |
| return cs && TREE_CODE (cs) == FUNCTION_DECL; |
| } |
| |
| /* Returns true if the innermost active scope is a class scope. */ |
| |
| bool |
| at_class_scope_p (void) |
| { |
| tree cs = current_scope (); |
| return cs && TYPE_P (cs); |
| } |
| |
| /* Returns true if the innermost active scope is a namespace scope. */ |
| |
| bool |
| at_namespace_scope_p (void) |
| { |
| /* We are in a namespace scope if we are not it a class scope or a |
| function scope. */ |
| return !current_scope(); |
| } |
| |
| /* Return the scope of DECL, as appropriate when doing name-lookup. */ |
| |
| tree |
| context_for_name_lookup (tree decl) |
| { |
| /* [class.union] |
| |
| For the purposes of name lookup, after the anonymous union |
| definition, the members of the anonymous union are considered to |
| have been defined in the scope in which the anonymous union is |
| declared. */ |
| tree context = DECL_CONTEXT (decl); |
| |
| while (context && TYPE_P (context) && ANON_AGGR_TYPE_P (context)) |
| context = TYPE_CONTEXT (context); |
| if (!context) |
| context = global_namespace; |
| |
| return context; |
| } |
| |
| /* The accessibility routines use BINFO_ACCESS for scratch space |
| during the computation of the accessibility of some declaration. */ |
| |
| #define BINFO_ACCESS(NODE) \ |
| ((access_kind) ((TREE_PUBLIC (NODE) << 1) | TREE_PRIVATE (NODE))) |
| |
| /* Set the access associated with NODE to ACCESS. */ |
| |
| #define SET_BINFO_ACCESS(NODE, ACCESS) \ |
| ((TREE_PUBLIC (NODE) = ((ACCESS) & 2) != 0), \ |
| (TREE_PRIVATE (NODE) = ((ACCESS) & 1) != 0)) |
| |
| /* Called from access_in_type via dfs_walk. Calculate the access to |
| DATA (which is really a DECL) in BINFO. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| dfs_access_in_type (tree binfo, void *data) |
| { |
| tree decl = (tree) data; |
| tree type = BINFO_TYPE (binfo); |
| access_kind access = ak_none; |
| |
| if (context_for_name_lookup (decl) == type) |
| { |
| /* If we have descended to the scope of DECL, just note the |
| appropriate access. */ |
| if (TREE_PRIVATE (decl)) |
| access = ak_private; |
| else if (TREE_PROTECTED (decl)) |
| access = ak_protected; |
| else |
| access = ak_public; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* First, check for an access-declaration that gives us more |
| access to the DECL. The CONST_DECL for an enumeration |
| constant will not have DECL_LANG_SPECIFIC, and thus no |
| DECL_ACCESS. */ |
| if (DECL_LANG_SPECIFIC (decl) && !DECL_DISCRIMINATOR_P (decl)) |
| { |
| tree decl_access = purpose_member (type, DECL_ACCESS (decl)); |
| |
| if (decl_access) |
| { |
| decl_access = TREE_VALUE (decl_access); |
| |
| if (decl_access == access_public_node) |
| access = ak_public; |
| else if (decl_access == access_protected_node) |
| access = ak_protected; |
| else if (decl_access == access_private_node) |
| access = ak_private; |
| else |
| my_friendly_assert (false, 20030217); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if (!access) |
| { |
| int i; |
| int n_baselinks; |
| tree binfos, accesses; |
| |
| /* Otherwise, scan our baseclasses, and pick the most favorable |
| access. */ |
| binfos = BINFO_BASETYPES (binfo); |
| accesses = BINFO_BASEACCESSES (binfo); |
| n_baselinks = binfos ? TREE_VEC_LENGTH (binfos) : 0; |
| for (i = 0; i < n_baselinks; ++i) |
| { |
| tree base_binfo = TREE_VEC_ELT (binfos, i); |
| tree base_access = TREE_VEC_ELT (accesses, i); |
| access_kind base_access_now = BINFO_ACCESS (base_binfo); |
| |
| if (base_access_now == ak_none || base_access_now == ak_private) |
| /* If it was not accessible in the base, or only |
| accessible as a private member, we can't access it |
| all. */ |
| base_access_now = ak_none; |
| else if (base_access == access_protected_node) |
| /* Public and protected members in the base become |
| protected here. */ |
| base_access_now = ak_protected; |
| else if (base_access == access_private_node) |
| /* Public and protected members in the base become |
| private here. */ |
| base_access_now = ak_private; |
| |
| /* See if the new access, via this base, gives more |
| access than our previous best access. */ |
| if (base_access_now != ak_none |
| && (access == ak_none || base_access_now < access)) |
| { |
| access = base_access_now; |
| |
| /* If the new access is public, we can't do better. */ |
| if (access == ak_public) |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Note the access to DECL in TYPE. */ |
| SET_BINFO_ACCESS (binfo, access); |
| |
| /* Mark TYPE as visited so that if we reach it again we do not |
| duplicate our efforts here. */ |
| BINFO_MARKED (binfo) = 1; |
| |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* Return the access to DECL in TYPE. */ |
| |
| static access_kind |
| access_in_type (tree type, tree decl) |
| { |
| tree binfo = TYPE_BINFO (type); |
| |
| /* We must take into account |
| |
| [class.paths] |
| |
| If a name can be reached by several paths through a multiple |
| inheritance graph, the access is that of the path that gives |
| most access. |
| |
| The algorithm we use is to make a post-order depth-first traversal |
| of the base-class hierarchy. As we come up the tree, we annotate |
| each node with the most lenient access. */ |
| dfs_walk_real (binfo, 0, dfs_access_in_type, unmarkedp, decl); |
| dfs_walk (binfo, dfs_unmark, markedp, 0); |
| |
| return BINFO_ACCESS (binfo); |
| } |
| |
| /* Called from accessible_p via dfs_walk. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| dfs_accessible_queue_p (tree derived, int ix, void *data ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED) |
| { |
| tree binfo = BINFO_BASETYPE (derived, ix); |
| |
| if (BINFO_MARKED (binfo)) |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| |
| /* If this class is inherited via private or protected inheritance, |
| then we can't see it, unless we are a friend of the derived class. */ |
| if (BINFO_BASEACCESS (derived, ix) != access_public_node |
| && !is_friend (BINFO_TYPE (derived), current_scope ())) |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| |
| return binfo; |
| } |
| |
| /* Called from accessible_p via dfs_walk. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| dfs_accessible_p (tree binfo, void *data ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED) |
| { |
| access_kind access; |
| |
| BINFO_MARKED (binfo) = 1; |
| access = BINFO_ACCESS (binfo); |
| if (access != ak_none |
| && is_friend (BINFO_TYPE (binfo), current_scope ())) |
| return binfo; |
| |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* Returns nonzero if it is OK to access DECL through an object |
| indicated by BINFO in the context of DERIVED. */ |
| |
| static int |
| protected_accessible_p (tree decl, tree derived, tree binfo) |
| { |
| access_kind access; |
| |
| /* We're checking this clause from [class.access.base] |
| |
| m as a member of N is protected, and the reference occurs in a |
| member or friend of class N, or in a member or friend of a |
| class P derived from N, where m as a member of P is private or |
| protected. |
| |
| Here DERIVED is a possible P and DECL is m. accessible_p will |
| iterate over various values of N, but the access to m in DERIVED |
| does not change. |
| |
| Note that I believe that the passage above is wrong, and should read |
| "...is private or protected or public"; otherwise you get bizarre results |
| whereby a public using-decl can prevent you from accessing a protected |
| member of a base. (jason 2000/02/28) */ |
| |
| /* If DERIVED isn't derived from m's class, then it can't be a P. */ |
| if (!DERIVED_FROM_P (context_for_name_lookup (decl), derived)) |
| return 0; |
| |
| access = access_in_type (derived, decl); |
| |
| /* If m is inaccessible in DERIVED, then it's not a P. */ |
| if (access == ak_none) |
| return 0; |
| |
| /* [class.protected] |
| |
| When a friend or a member function of a derived class references |
| a protected nonstatic member of a base class, an access check |
| applies in addition to those described earlier in clause |
| _class.access_) Except when forming a pointer to member |
| (_expr.unary.op_), the access must be through a pointer to, |
| reference to, or object of the derived class itself (or any class |
| derived from that class) (_expr.ref_). If the access is to form |
| a pointer to member, the nested-name-specifier shall name the |
| derived class (or any class derived from that class). */ |
| if (DECL_NONSTATIC_MEMBER_P (decl)) |
| { |
| /* We can tell through what the reference is occurring by |
| chasing BINFO up to the root. */ |
| tree t = binfo; |
| while (BINFO_INHERITANCE_CHAIN (t)) |
| t = BINFO_INHERITANCE_CHAIN (t); |
| |
| if (!DERIVED_FROM_P (derived, BINFO_TYPE (t))) |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| /* Returns nonzero if SCOPE is a friend of a type which would be able |
| to access DECL through the object indicated by BINFO. */ |
| |
| static int |
| friend_accessible_p (tree scope, tree decl, tree binfo) |
| { |
| tree befriending_classes; |
| tree t; |
| |
| if (!scope) |
| return 0; |
| |
| if (TREE_CODE (scope) == FUNCTION_DECL |
| || DECL_FUNCTION_TEMPLATE_P (scope)) |
| befriending_classes = DECL_BEFRIENDING_CLASSES (scope); |
| else if (TYPE_P (scope)) |
| befriending_classes = CLASSTYPE_BEFRIENDING_CLASSES (scope); |
| else |
| return 0; |
| |
| for (t = befriending_classes; t; t = TREE_CHAIN (t)) |
| if (protected_accessible_p (decl, TREE_VALUE (t), binfo)) |
| return 1; |
| |
| /* Nested classes are implicitly friends of their enclosing types, as |
| per core issue 45 (this is a change from the standard). */ |
| if (TYPE_P (scope)) |
| for (t = TYPE_CONTEXT (scope); t && TYPE_P (t); t = TYPE_CONTEXT (t)) |
| if (protected_accessible_p (decl, t, binfo)) |
| return 1; |
| |
| if (TREE_CODE (scope) == FUNCTION_DECL |
| || DECL_FUNCTION_TEMPLATE_P (scope)) |
| { |
| /* Perhaps this SCOPE is a member of a class which is a |
| friend. */ |
| if (DECL_CLASS_SCOPE_P (decl) |
| && friend_accessible_p (DECL_CONTEXT (scope), decl, binfo)) |
| return 1; |
| |
| /* Or an instantiation of something which is a friend. */ |
| if (DECL_TEMPLATE_INFO (scope)) |
| { |
| int ret; |
| /* Increment processing_template_decl to make sure that |
| dependent_type_p works correctly. */ |
| ++processing_template_decl; |
| ret = friend_accessible_p (DECL_TI_TEMPLATE (scope), decl, binfo); |
| --processing_template_decl; |
| return ret; |
| } |
| } |
| else if (CLASSTYPE_TEMPLATE_INFO (scope)) |
| { |
| int ret; |
| /* Increment processing_template_decl to make sure that |
| dependent_type_p works correctly. */ |
| ++processing_template_decl; |
| ret = friend_accessible_p (CLASSTYPE_TI_TEMPLATE (scope), decl, binfo); |
| --processing_template_decl; |
| return ret; |
| } |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* DECL is a declaration from a base class of TYPE, which was the |
| class used to name DECL. Return nonzero if, in the current |
| context, DECL is accessible. If TYPE is actually a BINFO node, |
| then we can tell in what context the access is occurring by looking |
| at the most derived class along the path indicated by BINFO. */ |
| |
| int |
| accessible_p (tree type, tree decl) |
| { |
| tree binfo; |
| tree t; |
| tree scope; |
| access_kind access; |
| |
| /* Nonzero if it's OK to access DECL if it has protected |
| accessibility in TYPE. */ |
| int protected_ok = 0; |
| |
| /* If this declaration is in a block or namespace scope, there's no |
| access control. */ |
| if (!TYPE_P (context_for_name_lookup (decl))) |
| return 1; |
| |
| /* There is no need to perform access checks inside a thunk. */ |
| scope = current_scope (); |
| if (scope && DECL_THUNK_P (scope)) |
| return 1; |
| |
| /* In a template declaration, we cannot be sure whether the |
| particular specialization that is instantiated will be a friend |
| or not. Therefore, all access checks are deferred until |
| instantiation. */ |
| if (processing_template_decl) |
| return 1; |
| |
| if (!TYPE_P (type)) |
| { |
| binfo = type; |
| type = BINFO_TYPE (type); |
| } |
| else |
| binfo = TYPE_BINFO (type); |
| |
| /* [class.access.base] |
| |
| A member m is accessible when named in class N if |
| |
| --m as a member of N is public, or |
| |
| --m as a member of N is private, and the reference occurs in a |
| member or friend of class N, or |
| |
| --m as a member of N is protected, and the reference occurs in a |
| member or friend of class N, or in a member or friend of a |
| class P derived from N, where m as a member of P is private or |
| protected, or |
| |
| --there exists a base class B of N that is accessible at the point |
| of reference, and m is accessible when named in class B. |
| |
| We walk the base class hierarchy, checking these conditions. */ |
| |
| /* Figure out where the reference is occurring. Check to see if |
| DECL is private or protected in this scope, since that will |
| determine whether protected access is allowed. */ |
| if (current_class_type) |
| protected_ok = protected_accessible_p (decl, current_class_type, binfo); |
| |
| /* Now, loop through the classes of which we are a friend. */ |
| if (!protected_ok) |
| protected_ok = friend_accessible_p (scope, decl, binfo); |
| |
| /* Standardize the binfo that access_in_type will use. We don't |
| need to know what path was chosen from this point onwards. */ |
| binfo = TYPE_BINFO (type); |
| |
| /* Compute the accessibility of DECL in the class hierarchy |
| dominated by type. */ |
| access = access_in_type (type, decl); |
| if (access == ak_public |
| || (access == ak_protected && protected_ok)) |
| return 1; |
| else |
| { |
| /* Walk the hierarchy again, looking for a base class that allows |
| access. */ |
| t = dfs_walk (binfo, dfs_accessible_p, dfs_accessible_queue_p, 0); |
| /* Clear any mark bits. Note that we have to walk the whole tree |
| here, since we have aborted the previous walk from some point |
| deep in the tree. */ |
| dfs_walk (binfo, dfs_unmark, 0, 0); |
| |
| return t != NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| struct lookup_field_info { |
| /* The type in which we're looking. */ |
| tree type; |
| /* The name of the field for which we're looking. */ |
| tree name; |
| /* If non-NULL, the current result of the lookup. */ |
| tree rval; |
| /* The path to RVAL. */ |
| tree rval_binfo; |
| /* If non-NULL, the lookup was ambiguous, and this is a list of the |
| candidates. */ |
| tree ambiguous; |
| /* If nonzero, we are looking for types, not data members. */ |
| int want_type; |
| /* If something went wrong, a message indicating what. */ |
| const char *errstr; |
| }; |
| |
| /* Returns nonzero if BINFO is not hidden by the value found by the |
| lookup so far. If BINFO is hidden, then there's no need to look in |
| it. DATA is really a struct lookup_field_info. Called from |
| lookup_field via breadth_first_search. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| lookup_field_queue_p (tree derived, int ix, void *data) |
| { |
| tree binfo = BINFO_BASETYPE (derived, ix); |
| struct lookup_field_info *lfi = (struct lookup_field_info *) data; |
| |
| /* Don't look for constructors or destructors in base classes. */ |
| if (IDENTIFIER_CTOR_OR_DTOR_P (lfi->name)) |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| |
| /* If this base class is hidden by the best-known value so far, we |
| don't need to look. */ |
| if (lfi->rval_binfo && original_binfo (binfo, lfi->rval_binfo)) |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| |
| /* If this is a dependent base, don't look in it. */ |
| if (BINFO_DEPENDENT_BASE_P (binfo)) |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| |
| return binfo; |
| } |
| |
| /* Within the scope of a template class, you can refer to the to the |
| current specialization with the name of the template itself. For |
| example: |
| |
| template <typename T> struct S { S* sp; } |
| |
| Returns nonzero if DECL is such a declaration in a class TYPE. */ |
| |
| static int |
| template_self_reference_p (tree type, tree decl) |
| { |
| return (CLASSTYPE_USE_TEMPLATE (type) |
| && PRIMARY_TEMPLATE_P (CLASSTYPE_TI_TEMPLATE (type)) |
| && TREE_CODE (decl) == TYPE_DECL |
| && DECL_ARTIFICIAL (decl) |
| && DECL_NAME (decl) == constructor_name (type)); |
| } |
| |
| /* Nonzero for a class member means that it is shared between all objects |
| of that class. |
| |
| [class.member.lookup]:If the resulting set of declarations are not all |
| from sub-objects of the same type, or the set has a nonstatic member |
| and includes members from distinct sub-objects, there is an ambiguity |
| and the program is ill-formed. |
| |
| This function checks that T contains no nonstatic members. */ |
| |
| int |
| shared_member_p (tree t) |
| { |
| if (TREE_CODE (t) == VAR_DECL || TREE_CODE (t) == TYPE_DECL \ |
| || TREE_CODE (t) == CONST_DECL) |
| return 1; |
| if (is_overloaded_fn (t)) |
| { |
| for (; t; t = OVL_NEXT (t)) |
| { |
| tree fn = OVL_CURRENT (t); |
| if (DECL_NONSTATIC_MEMBER_FUNCTION_P (fn)) |
| return 0; |
| } |
| return 1; |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* Routine to see if the sub-object denoted by the binfo PARENT can be |
| found as a base class and sub-object of the object denoted by |
| BINFO. */ |
| |
| static int |
| is_subobject_of_p (tree parent, tree binfo) |
| { |
| tree probe; |
| |
| for (probe = parent; probe; probe = BINFO_INHERITANCE_CHAIN (probe)) |
| { |
| if (probe == binfo) |
| return 1; |
| if (TREE_VIA_VIRTUAL (probe)) |
| return (purpose_member (BINFO_TYPE (probe), |
| CLASSTYPE_VBASECLASSES (BINFO_TYPE (binfo))) |
| != NULL_TREE); |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* DATA is really a struct lookup_field_info. Look for a field with |
| the name indicated there in BINFO. If this function returns a |
| non-NULL value it is the result of the lookup. Called from |
| lookup_field via breadth_first_search. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| lookup_field_r (tree binfo, void *data) |
| { |
| struct lookup_field_info *lfi = (struct lookup_field_info *) data; |
| tree type = BINFO_TYPE (binfo); |
| tree nval = NULL_TREE; |
| |
| /* First, look for a function. There can't be a function and a data |
| member with the same name, and if there's a function and a type |
| with the same name, the type is hidden by the function. */ |
| if (!lfi->want_type) |
| { |
| int idx = lookup_fnfields_1 (type, lfi->name); |
| if (idx >= 0) |
| nval = TREE_VEC_ELT (CLASSTYPE_METHOD_VEC (type), idx); |
| } |
| |
| if (!nval) |
| /* Look for a data member or type. */ |
| nval = lookup_field_1 (type, lfi->name, lfi->want_type); |
| |
| /* If there is no declaration with the indicated name in this type, |
| then there's nothing to do. */ |
| if (!nval) |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| |
| /* If we're looking up a type (as with an elaborated type specifier) |
| we ignore all non-types we find. */ |
| if (lfi->want_type && TREE_CODE (nval) != TYPE_DECL |
| && !DECL_CLASS_TEMPLATE_P (nval)) |
| { |
| if (lfi->name == TYPE_IDENTIFIER (type)) |
| { |
| /* If the aggregate has no user defined constructors, we allow |
| it to have fields with the same name as the enclosing type. |
| If we are looking for that name, find the corresponding |
| TYPE_DECL. */ |
| for (nval = TREE_CHAIN (nval); nval; nval = TREE_CHAIN (nval)) |
| if (DECL_NAME (nval) == lfi->name |
| && TREE_CODE (nval) == TYPE_DECL) |
| break; |
| } |
| else |
| nval = NULL_TREE; |
| if (!nval && CLASSTYPE_NESTED_UTDS (type) != NULL) |
| { |
| binding_entry e = binding_table_find (CLASSTYPE_NESTED_UTDS (type), |
| lfi->name); |
| if (e != NULL) |
| nval = TYPE_MAIN_DECL (e->type); |
| else |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* You must name a template base class with a template-id. */ |
| if (!same_type_p (type, lfi->type) |
| && template_self_reference_p (type, nval)) |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| |
| /* If the lookup already found a match, and the new value doesn't |
| hide the old one, we might have an ambiguity. */ |
| if (lfi->rval_binfo |
| && !is_subobject_of_p (lfi->rval_binfo, binfo)) |
| |
| { |
| if (nval == lfi->rval && shared_member_p (nval)) |
| /* The two things are really the same. */ |
| ; |
| else if (is_subobject_of_p (binfo, lfi->rval_binfo)) |
| /* The previous value hides the new one. */ |
| ; |
| else |
| { |
| /* We have a real ambiguity. We keep a chain of all the |
| candidates. */ |
| if (!lfi->ambiguous && lfi->rval) |
| { |
| /* This is the first time we noticed an ambiguity. Add |
| what we previously thought was a reasonable candidate |
| to the list. */ |
| lfi->ambiguous = tree_cons (NULL_TREE, lfi->rval, NULL_TREE); |
| TREE_TYPE (lfi->ambiguous) = error_mark_node; |
| } |
| |
| /* Add the new value. */ |
| lfi->ambiguous = tree_cons (NULL_TREE, nval, lfi->ambiguous); |
| TREE_TYPE (lfi->ambiguous) = error_mark_node; |
| lfi->errstr = "request for member `%D' is ambiguous"; |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| lfi->rval = nval; |
| lfi->rval_binfo = binfo; |
| } |
| |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* Return a "baselink" which BASELINK_BINFO, BASELINK_ACCESS_BINFO, |
| BASELINK_FUNCTIONS, and BASELINK_OPTYPE set to BINFO, ACCESS_BINFO, |
| FUNCTIONS, and OPTYPE respectively. */ |
| |
| tree |
| build_baselink (tree binfo, tree access_binfo, tree functions, tree optype) |
| { |
| tree baselink; |
| |
| my_friendly_assert (TREE_CODE (functions) == FUNCTION_DECL |
| || TREE_CODE (functions) == TEMPLATE_DECL |
| || TREE_CODE (functions) == TEMPLATE_ID_EXPR |
| || TREE_CODE (functions) == OVERLOAD, |
| 20020730); |
| my_friendly_assert (!optype || TYPE_P (optype), 20020730); |
| my_friendly_assert (TREE_TYPE (functions), 20020805); |
| |
| baselink = make_node (BASELINK); |
| TREE_TYPE (baselink) = TREE_TYPE (functions); |
| BASELINK_BINFO (baselink) = binfo; |
| BASELINK_ACCESS_BINFO (baselink) = access_binfo; |
| BASELINK_FUNCTIONS (baselink) = functions; |
| BASELINK_OPTYPE (baselink) = optype; |
| |
| return baselink; |
| } |
| |
| /* Look for a member named NAME in an inheritance lattice dominated by |
| XBASETYPE. If PROTECT is 0 or two, we do not check access. If it |
| is 1, we enforce accessibility. If PROTECT is zero, then, for an |
| ambiguous lookup, we return NULL. If PROTECT is 1, we issue error |
| messages about inaccessible or ambiguous lookup. If PROTECT is 2, |
| we return a TREE_LIST whose TREE_TYPE is error_mark_node and whose |
| TREE_VALUEs are the list of ambiguous candidates. |
| |
| WANT_TYPE is 1 when we should only return TYPE_DECLs. |
| |
| If nothing can be found return NULL_TREE and do not issue an error. */ |
| |
| tree |
| lookup_member (tree xbasetype, tree name, int protect, bool want_type) |
| { |
| tree rval, rval_binfo = NULL_TREE; |
| tree type = NULL_TREE, basetype_path = NULL_TREE; |
| struct lookup_field_info lfi; |
| |
| /* rval_binfo is the binfo associated with the found member, note, |
| this can be set with useful information, even when rval is not |
| set, because it must deal with ALL members, not just non-function |
| members. It is used for ambiguity checking and the hidden |
| checks. Whereas rval is only set if a proper (not hidden) |
| non-function member is found. */ |
| |
| const char *errstr = 0; |
| |
| my_friendly_assert (TREE_CODE (name) == IDENTIFIER_NODE, 20030624); |
| |
| if (TREE_CODE (xbasetype) == TREE_VEC) |
| { |
| type = BINFO_TYPE (xbasetype); |
| basetype_path = xbasetype; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| my_friendly_assert (IS_AGGR_TYPE_CODE (TREE_CODE (xbasetype)), 20030624); |
| type = xbasetype; |
| basetype_path = TYPE_BINFO (type); |
| my_friendly_assert (!BINFO_INHERITANCE_CHAIN (basetype_path), 980827); |
| } |
| |
| if (type == current_class_type && TYPE_BEING_DEFINED (type) |
| && IDENTIFIER_CLASS_VALUE (name)) |
| { |
| tree field = IDENTIFIER_CLASS_VALUE (name); |
| if (! is_overloaded_fn (field) |
| && ! (want_type && TREE_CODE (field) != TYPE_DECL)) |
| /* We're in the scope of this class, and the value has already |
| been looked up. Just return the cached value. */ |
| return field; |
| } |
| |
| complete_type (type); |
| |
| #ifdef GATHER_STATISTICS |
| n_calls_lookup_field++; |
| #endif /* GATHER_STATISTICS */ |
| |
| memset (&lfi, 0, sizeof (lfi)); |
| lfi.type = type; |
| lfi.name = name; |
| lfi.want_type = want_type; |
| bfs_walk (basetype_path, &lookup_field_r, &lookup_field_queue_p, &lfi); |
| rval = lfi.rval; |
| rval_binfo = lfi.rval_binfo; |
| if (rval_binfo) |
| type = BINFO_TYPE (rval_binfo); |
| errstr = lfi.errstr; |
| |
| /* If we are not interested in ambiguities, don't report them; |
| just return NULL_TREE. */ |
| if (!protect && lfi.ambiguous) |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| |
| if (protect == 2) |
| { |
| if (lfi.ambiguous) |
| return lfi.ambiguous; |
| else |
| protect = 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* [class.access] |
| |
| In the case of overloaded function names, access control is |
| applied to the function selected by overloaded resolution. */ |
| if (rval && protect && !is_overloaded_fn (rval)) |
| perform_or_defer_access_check (basetype_path, rval); |
| |
| if (errstr && protect) |
| { |
| error (errstr, name, type); |
| if (lfi.ambiguous) |
| print_candidates (lfi.ambiguous); |
| rval = error_mark_node; |
| } |
| |
| if (rval && is_overloaded_fn (rval)) |
| rval = build_baselink (rval_binfo, basetype_path, rval, |
| (IDENTIFIER_TYPENAME_P (name) |
| ? TREE_TYPE (name): NULL_TREE)); |
| return rval; |
| } |
| |
| /* Like lookup_member, except that if we find a function member we |
| return NULL_TREE. */ |
| |
| tree |
| lookup_field (tree xbasetype, tree name, int protect, bool want_type) |
| { |
| tree rval = lookup_member (xbasetype, name, protect, want_type); |
| |
| /* Ignore functions. */ |
| if (rval && BASELINK_P (rval)) |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| |
| return rval; |
| } |
| |
| /* Like lookup_member, except that if we find a non-function member we |
| return NULL_TREE. */ |
| |
| tree |
| lookup_fnfields (tree xbasetype, tree name, int protect) |
| { |
| tree rval = lookup_member (xbasetype, name, protect, /*want_type=*/false); |
| |
| /* Ignore non-functions. */ |
| if (rval && !BASELINK_P (rval)) |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| |
| return rval; |
| } |
| |
| /* Return the index in the CLASSTYPE_METHOD_VEC for CLASS_TYPE |
| corresponding to "operator TYPE ()", or -1 if there is no such |
| operator. Only CLASS_TYPE itself is searched; this routine does |
| not scan the base classes of CLASS_TYPE. */ |
| |
| static int |
| lookup_conversion_operator (tree class_type, tree type) |
| { |
| int pass; |
| int i; |
| |
| tree methods = CLASSTYPE_METHOD_VEC (class_type); |
| |
| for (pass = 0; pass < 2; ++pass) |
| for (i = CLASSTYPE_FIRST_CONVERSION_SLOT; |
| i < TREE_VEC_LENGTH (methods); |
| ++i) |
| { |
| tree fn = TREE_VEC_ELT (methods, i); |
| /* The size of the vector may have some unused slots at the |
| end. */ |
| if (!fn) |
| break; |
| |
| /* All the conversion operators come near the beginning of the |
| class. Therefore, if FN is not a conversion operator, there |
| is no matching conversion operator in CLASS_TYPE. */ |
| fn = OVL_CURRENT (fn); |
| if (!DECL_CONV_FN_P (fn)) |
| break; |
| |
| if (pass == 0) |
| { |
| /* On the first pass we only consider exact matches. If |
| the types match, this slot is the one where the right |
| conversion operators can be found. */ |
| if (TREE_CODE (fn) != TEMPLATE_DECL |
| && same_type_p (DECL_CONV_FN_TYPE (fn), type)) |
| return i; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* On the second pass we look for template conversion |
| operators. It may be possible to instantiate the |
| template to get the type desired. All of the template |
| conversion operators share a slot. By looking for |
| templates second we ensure that specializations are |
| preferred over templates. */ |
| if (TREE_CODE (fn) == TEMPLATE_DECL) |
| return i; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return -1; |
| } |
| |
| /* TYPE is a class type. Return the index of the fields within |
| the method vector with name NAME, or -1 is no such field exists. */ |
| |
| int |
| lookup_fnfields_1 (tree type, tree name) |
| { |
| tree method_vec; |
| tree *methods; |
| tree tmp; |
| int i; |
| int len; |
| |
| if (!CLASS_TYPE_P (type)) |
| return -1; |
| |
| method_vec = CLASSTYPE_METHOD_VEC (type); |
| |
| if (!method_vec) |
| return -1; |
| |
| methods = &TREE_VEC_ELT (method_vec, 0); |
| len = TREE_VEC_LENGTH (method_vec); |
| |
| #ifdef GATHER_STATISTICS |
| n_calls_lookup_fnfields_1++; |
| #endif /* GATHER_STATISTICS */ |
| |
| /* Constructors are first... */ |
| if (name == ctor_identifier) |
| return (methods[CLASSTYPE_CONSTRUCTOR_SLOT] |
| ? CLASSTYPE_CONSTRUCTOR_SLOT : -1); |
| /* and destructors are second. */ |
| if (name == dtor_identifier) |
| return (methods[CLASSTYPE_DESTRUCTOR_SLOT] |
| ? CLASSTYPE_DESTRUCTOR_SLOT : -1); |
| if (IDENTIFIER_TYPENAME_P (name)) |
| return lookup_conversion_operator (type, TREE_TYPE (name)); |
| |
| /* Skip the conversion operators. */ |
| i = CLASSTYPE_FIRST_CONVERSION_SLOT; |
| while (i < len && methods[i] && DECL_CONV_FN_P (OVL_CURRENT (methods[i]))) |
| i++; |
| |
| /* If the type is complete, use binary search. */ |
| if (COMPLETE_TYPE_P (type)) |
| { |
| int lo = i; |
| int hi = len; |
| |
| while (lo < hi) |
| { |
| i = (lo + hi) / 2; |
| |
| #ifdef GATHER_STATISTICS |
| n_outer_fields_searched++; |
| #endif /* GATHER_STATISTICS */ |
| |
| tmp = methods[i]; |
| /* This slot may be empty; we allocate more slots than we |
| need. In that case, the entry we're looking for is |
| closer to the beginning of the list. */ |
| if (tmp) |
| tmp = DECL_NAME (OVL_CURRENT (tmp)); |
| if (!tmp || tmp > name) |
| hi = i; |
| else if (tmp < name) |
| lo = i + 1; |
| else |
| return i; |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| for (; i < len && methods[i]; ++i) |
| { |
| #ifdef GATHER_STATISTICS |
| n_outer_fields_searched++; |
| #endif /* GATHER_STATISTICS */ |
| |
| tmp = OVL_CURRENT (methods[i]); |
| if (DECL_NAME (tmp) == name) |
| return i; |
| } |
| |
| return -1; |
| } |
| |
| /* DECL is the result of a qualified name lookup. QUALIFYING_SCOPE is |
| the class or namespace used to qualify the name. CONTEXT_CLASS is |
| the class corresponding to the object in which DECL will be used. |
| Return a possibly modified version of DECL that takes into account |
| the CONTEXT_CLASS. |
| |
| In particular, consider an expression like `B::m' in the context of |
| a derived class `D'. If `B::m' has been resolved to a BASELINK, |
| then the most derived class indicated by the BASELINK_BINFO will be |
| `B', not `D'. This function makes that adjustment. */ |
| |
| tree |
| adjust_result_of_qualified_name_lookup (tree decl, |
| tree qualifying_scope, |
| tree context_class) |
| { |
| if (context_class && CLASS_TYPE_P (qualifying_scope) |
| && DERIVED_FROM_P (qualifying_scope, context_class) |
| && BASELINK_P (decl)) |
| { |
| tree base; |
| |
| my_friendly_assert (CLASS_TYPE_P (context_class), 20020808); |
| |
| /* Look for the QUALIFYING_SCOPE as a base of the CONTEXT_CLASS. |
| Because we do not yet know which function will be chosen by |
| overload resolution, we cannot yet check either accessibility |
| or ambiguity -- in either case, the choice of a static member |
| function might make the usage valid. */ |
| base = lookup_base (context_class, qualifying_scope, |
| ba_ignore | ba_quiet, NULL); |
| if (base) |
| { |
| BASELINK_ACCESS_BINFO (decl) = base; |
| BASELINK_BINFO (decl) |
| = lookup_base (base, BINFO_TYPE (BASELINK_BINFO (decl)), |
| ba_ignore | ba_quiet, |
| NULL); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return decl; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Walk the class hierarchy dominated by TYPE. FN is called for each |
| type in the hierarchy, in a breadth-first preorder traversal. |
| If it ever returns a non-NULL value, that value is immediately |
| returned and the walk is terminated. At each node, FN is passed a |
| BINFO indicating the path from the currently visited base-class to |
| TYPE. Before each base-class is walked QFN is called. If the |
| value returned is nonzero, the base-class is walked; otherwise it |
| is not. If QFN is NULL, it is treated as a function which always |
| returns 1. Both FN and QFN are passed the DATA whenever they are |
| called. |
| |
| Implementation notes: Uses a circular queue, which starts off on |
| the stack but gets moved to the malloc arena if it needs to be |
| enlarged. The underflow and overflow conditions are |
| indistinguishable except by context: if head == tail and we just |
| moved the head pointer, the queue is empty, but if we just moved |
| the tail pointer, the queue is full. |
| Start with enough room for ten concurrent base classes. That |
| will be enough for most hierarchies. */ |
| #define BFS_WALK_INITIAL_QUEUE_SIZE 10 |
| |
| static tree |
| bfs_walk (tree binfo, |
| tree (*fn) (tree, void *), |
| tree (*qfn) (tree, int, void *), |
| void *data) |
| { |
| tree rval = NULL_TREE; |
| |
| tree bases_initial[BFS_WALK_INITIAL_QUEUE_SIZE]; |
| /* A circular queue of the base classes of BINFO. These will be |
| built up in breadth-first order, except where QFN prunes the |
| search. */ |
| size_t head, tail; |
| size_t base_buffer_size = BFS_WALK_INITIAL_QUEUE_SIZE; |
| tree *base_buffer = bases_initial; |
| |
| head = tail = 0; |
| base_buffer[tail++] = binfo; |
| |
| while (head != tail) |
| { |
| int n_bases, ix; |
| tree binfo = base_buffer[head++]; |
| if (head == base_buffer_size) |
| head = 0; |
| |
| /* Is this the one we're looking for? If so, we're done. */ |
| rval = fn (binfo, data); |
| if (rval) |
| goto done; |
| |
| n_bases = BINFO_N_BASETYPES (binfo); |
| for (ix = 0; ix != n_bases; ix++) |
| { |
| tree base_binfo; |
| |
| if (qfn) |
| base_binfo = (*qfn) (binfo, ix, data); |
| else |
| base_binfo = BINFO_BASETYPE (binfo, ix); |
| |
| if (base_binfo) |
| { |
| base_buffer[tail++] = base_binfo; |
| if (tail == base_buffer_size) |
| tail = 0; |
| if (tail == head) |
| { |
| tree *new_buffer = xmalloc (2 * base_buffer_size |
| * sizeof (tree)); |
| memcpy (&new_buffer[0], &base_buffer[0], |
| tail * sizeof (tree)); |
| memcpy (&new_buffer[head + base_buffer_size], |
| &base_buffer[head], |
| (base_buffer_size - head) * sizeof (tree)); |
| if (base_buffer_size != BFS_WALK_INITIAL_QUEUE_SIZE) |
| free (base_buffer); |
| base_buffer = new_buffer; |
| head += base_buffer_size; |
| base_buffer_size *= 2; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| done: |
| if (base_buffer_size != BFS_WALK_INITIAL_QUEUE_SIZE) |
| free (base_buffer); |
| return rval; |
| } |
| |
| /* Exactly like bfs_walk, except that a depth-first traversal is |
| performed, and PREFN is called in preorder, while POSTFN is called |
| in postorder. */ |
| |
| tree |
| dfs_walk_real (tree binfo, |
| tree (*prefn) (tree, void *), |
| tree (*postfn) (tree, void *), |
| tree (*qfn) (tree, int, void *), |
| void *data) |
| { |
| tree rval = NULL_TREE; |
| |
| /* Call the pre-order walking function. */ |
| if (prefn) |
| { |
| rval = (*prefn) (binfo, data); |
| if (rval) |
| return rval; |
| } |
| |
| /* Process the basetypes. */ |
| if (BINFO_BASETYPES (binfo)) |
| { |
| int i, n = TREE_VEC_LENGTH (BINFO_BASETYPES (binfo)); |
| for (i = 0; i != n; i++) |
| { |
| tree base_binfo; |
| |
| if (qfn) |
| base_binfo = (*qfn) (binfo, i, data); |
| else |
| base_binfo = BINFO_BASETYPE (binfo, i); |
| |
| if (base_binfo) |
| { |
| rval = dfs_walk_real (base_binfo, prefn, postfn, qfn, data); |
| if (rval) |
| return rval; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Call the post-order walking function. */ |
| if (postfn) |
| rval = (*postfn) (binfo, data); |
| |
| return rval; |
| } |
| |
| /* Exactly like bfs_walk, except that a depth-first post-order traversal is |
| performed. */ |
| |
| tree |
| dfs_walk (tree binfo, |
| tree (*fn) (tree, void *), |
| tree (*qfn) (tree, int, void *), |
| void *data) |
| { |
| return dfs_walk_real (binfo, 0, fn, qfn, data); |
| } |
| |
| /* Check that virtual overrider OVERRIDER is acceptable for base function |
| BASEFN. Issue diagnostic, and return zero, if unacceptable. */ |
| |
| int |
| check_final_overrider (tree overrider, tree basefn) |
| { |
| tree over_type = TREE_TYPE (overrider); |
| tree base_type = TREE_TYPE (basefn); |
| tree over_return = TREE_TYPE (over_type); |
| tree base_return = TREE_TYPE (base_type); |
| tree over_throw = TYPE_RAISES_EXCEPTIONS (over_type); |
| tree base_throw = TYPE_RAISES_EXCEPTIONS (base_type); |
| int fail = 0; |
| |
| if (same_type_p (base_return, over_return)) |
| /* OK */; |
| else if ((CLASS_TYPE_P (over_return) && CLASS_TYPE_P (base_return)) |
| || (TREE_CODE (base_return) == TREE_CODE (over_return) |
| && POINTER_TYPE_P (base_return))) |
| { |
| /* Potentially covariant. */ |
| unsigned base_quals, over_quals; |
| |
| fail = !POINTER_TYPE_P (base_return); |
| if (!fail) |
| { |
| fail = cp_type_quals (base_return) != cp_type_quals (over_return); |
| |
| base_return = TREE_TYPE (base_return); |
| over_return = TREE_TYPE (over_return); |
| } |
| base_quals = cp_type_quals (base_return); |
| over_quals = cp_type_quals (over_return); |
| |
| if ((base_quals & over_quals) != over_quals) |
| fail = 1; |
| |
| if (CLASS_TYPE_P (base_return) && CLASS_TYPE_P (over_return)) |
| { |
| tree binfo = lookup_base (over_return, base_return, |
| ba_check | ba_quiet, NULL); |
| |
| if (!binfo) |
| fail = 1; |
| } |
| else if (!pedantic |
| && can_convert (TREE_TYPE (base_type), TREE_TYPE (over_type))) |
| /* GNU extension, allow trivial pointer conversions such as |
| converting to void *, or qualification conversion. */ |
| { |
| /* can_convert will permit user defined conversion from a |
| (reference to) class type. We must reject them. */ |
| over_return = non_reference (TREE_TYPE (over_type)); |
| if (CLASS_TYPE_P (over_return)) |
| fail = 2; |
| } |
| else |
| fail = 2; |
| } |
| else |
| fail = 2; |
| if (!fail) |
| /* OK */; |
| else if (IDENTIFIER_ERROR_LOCUS (DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME (overrider))) |
| return 0; |
| else |
| { |
| if (fail == 1) |
| { |
| cp_error_at ("invalid covariant return type for `%#D'", overrider); |
| cp_error_at (" overriding `%#D'", basefn); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| cp_error_at ("conflicting return type specified for `%#D'", |
| overrider); |
| cp_error_at (" overriding `%#D'", basefn); |
| } |
| SET_IDENTIFIER_ERROR_LOCUS (DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME (overrider), |
| DECL_CONTEXT (overrider)); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* Check throw specifier is at least as strict. */ |
| if (!comp_except_specs (base_throw, over_throw, 0)) |
| { |
| if (!IDENTIFIER_ERROR_LOCUS (DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME (overrider))) |
| { |
| cp_error_at ("looser throw specifier for `%#F'", overrider); |
| cp_error_at (" overriding `%#F'", basefn); |
| SET_IDENTIFIER_ERROR_LOCUS (DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME (overrider), |
| DECL_CONTEXT (overrider)); |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| /* Given a class TYPE, and a function decl FNDECL, look for |
| virtual functions in TYPE's hierarchy which FNDECL overrides. |
| We do not look in TYPE itself, only its bases. |
| |
| Returns nonzero, if we find any. Set FNDECL's DECL_VIRTUAL_P, if we |
| find that it overrides anything. |
| |
| We check that every function which is overridden, is correctly |
| overridden. */ |
| |
| int |
| look_for_overrides (tree type, tree fndecl) |
| { |
| tree binfo = TYPE_BINFO (type); |
| tree basebinfos = BINFO_BASETYPES (binfo); |
| int nbasebinfos = basebinfos ? TREE_VEC_LENGTH (basebinfos) : 0; |
| int ix; |
| int found = 0; |
| |
| for (ix = 0; ix != nbasebinfos; ix++) |
| { |
| tree basetype = BINFO_TYPE (TREE_VEC_ELT (basebinfos, ix)); |
| |
| if (TYPE_POLYMORPHIC_P (basetype)) |
| found += look_for_overrides_r (basetype, fndecl); |
| } |
| return found; |
| } |
| |
| /* Look in TYPE for virtual functions with the same signature as |
| FNDECL. */ |
| |
| tree |
| look_for_overrides_here (tree type, tree fndecl) |
| { |
| int ix; |
| |
| if (DECL_MAYBE_IN_CHARGE_DESTRUCTOR_P (fndecl)) |
| ix = CLASSTYPE_DESTRUCTOR_SLOT; |
| else |
| ix = lookup_fnfields_1 (type, DECL_NAME (fndecl)); |
| if (ix >= 0) |
| { |
| tree fns = TREE_VEC_ELT (CLASSTYPE_METHOD_VEC (type), ix); |
| |
| for (; fns; fns = OVL_NEXT (fns)) |
| { |
| tree fn = OVL_CURRENT (fns); |
| |
| if (!DECL_VIRTUAL_P (fn)) |
| /* Not a virtual. */; |
| else if (DECL_CONTEXT (fn) != type) |
| /* Introduced with a using declaration. */; |
| else if (DECL_STATIC_FUNCTION_P (fndecl)) |
| { |
| tree btypes = TYPE_ARG_TYPES (TREE_TYPE (fn)); |
| tree dtypes = TYPE_ARG_TYPES (TREE_TYPE (fndecl)); |
| if (compparms (TREE_CHAIN (btypes), dtypes)) |
| return fn; |
| } |
| else if (same_signature_p (fndecl, fn)) |
| return fn; |
| } |
| } |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* Look in TYPE for virtual functions overridden by FNDECL. Check both |
| TYPE itself and its bases. */ |
| |
| static int |
| look_for_overrides_r (tree type, tree fndecl) |
| { |
| tree fn = look_for_overrides_here (type, fndecl); |
| if (fn) |
| { |
| if (DECL_STATIC_FUNCTION_P (fndecl)) |
| { |
| /* A static member function cannot match an inherited |
| virtual member function. */ |
| cp_error_at ("`%#D' cannot be declared", fndecl); |
| cp_error_at (" since `%#D' declared in base class", fn); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* It's definitely virtual, even if not explicitly set. */ |
| DECL_VIRTUAL_P (fndecl) = 1; |
| check_final_overrider (fndecl, fn); |
| } |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| /* We failed to find one declared in this class. Look in its bases. */ |
| return look_for_overrides (type, fndecl); |
| } |
| |
| /* Called via dfs_walk from dfs_get_pure_virtuals. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| dfs_get_pure_virtuals (tree binfo, void *data) |
| { |
| tree type = (tree) data; |
| |
| /* We're not interested in primary base classes; the derived class |
| of which they are a primary base will contain the information we |
| need. */ |
| if (!BINFO_PRIMARY_P (binfo)) |
| { |
| tree virtuals; |
| |
| for (virtuals = BINFO_VIRTUALS (binfo); |
| virtuals; |
| virtuals = TREE_CHAIN (virtuals)) |
| if (DECL_PURE_VIRTUAL_P (BV_FN (virtuals))) |
| CLASSTYPE_PURE_VIRTUALS (type) |
| = tree_cons (NULL_TREE, BV_FN (virtuals), |
| CLASSTYPE_PURE_VIRTUALS (type)); |
| } |
| |
| BINFO_MARKED (binfo) = 1; |
| |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* Set CLASSTYPE_PURE_VIRTUALS for TYPE. */ |
| |
| void |
| get_pure_virtuals (tree type) |
| { |
| tree vbases; |
| |
| /* Clear the CLASSTYPE_PURE_VIRTUALS list; whatever is already there |
| is going to be overridden. */ |
| CLASSTYPE_PURE_VIRTUALS (type) = NULL_TREE; |
| /* Now, run through all the bases which are not primary bases, and |
| collect the pure virtual functions. We look at the vtable in |
| each class to determine what pure virtual functions are present. |
| (A primary base is not interesting because the derived class of |
| which it is a primary base will contain vtable entries for the |
| pure virtuals in the base class. */ |
| dfs_walk (TYPE_BINFO (type), dfs_get_pure_virtuals, unmarkedp, type); |
| dfs_walk (TYPE_BINFO (type), dfs_unmark, markedp, type); |
| |
| /* Put the pure virtuals in dfs order. */ |
| CLASSTYPE_PURE_VIRTUALS (type) = nreverse (CLASSTYPE_PURE_VIRTUALS (type)); |
| |
| for (vbases = CLASSTYPE_VBASECLASSES (type); |
| vbases; |
| vbases = TREE_CHAIN (vbases)) |
| { |
| tree virtuals; |
| |
| for (virtuals = BINFO_VIRTUALS (TREE_VALUE (vbases)); |
| virtuals; |
| virtuals = TREE_CHAIN (virtuals)) |
| { |
| tree base_fndecl = BV_FN (virtuals); |
| if (DECL_NEEDS_FINAL_OVERRIDER_P (base_fndecl)) |
| error ("`%#D' needs a final overrider", base_fndecl); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* DEPTH-FIRST SEARCH ROUTINES. */ |
| |
| tree |
| markedp (tree derived, int ix, void *data ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED) |
| { |
| tree binfo = BINFO_BASETYPE (derived, ix); |
| |
| return BINFO_MARKED (binfo) ? binfo : NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| tree |
| unmarkedp (tree derived, int ix, void *data ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED) |
| { |
| tree binfo = BINFO_BASETYPE (derived, ix); |
| |
| return !BINFO_MARKED (binfo) ? binfo : NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| static tree |
| marked_pushdecls_p (tree derived, int ix, void *data ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED) |
| { |
| tree binfo = BINFO_BASETYPE (derived, ix); |
| |
| return (!BINFO_DEPENDENT_BASE_P (binfo) |
| && BINFO_PUSHDECLS_MARKED (binfo)) ? binfo : NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| static tree |
| unmarked_pushdecls_p (tree derived, int ix, void *data ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED) |
| { |
| tree binfo = BINFO_BASETYPE (derived, ix); |
| |
| return (!BINFO_DEPENDENT_BASE_P (binfo) |
| && !BINFO_PUSHDECLS_MARKED (binfo)) ? binfo : NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* The worker functions for `dfs_walk'. These do not need to |
| test anything (vis a vis marking) if they are paired with |
| a predicate function (above). */ |
| |
| tree |
| dfs_unmark (tree binfo, void *data ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED) |
| { |
| BINFO_MARKED (binfo) = 0; |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Debug info for C++ classes can get very large; try to avoid |
| emitting it everywhere. |
| |
| Note that this optimization wins even when the target supports |
| BINCL (if only slightly), and reduces the amount of work for the |
| linker. */ |
| |
| void |
| maybe_suppress_debug_info (tree t) |
| { |
| /* We can't do the usual TYPE_DECL_SUPPRESS_DEBUG thing with DWARF, which |
| does not support name references between translation units. It supports |
| symbolic references between translation units, but only within a single |
| executable or shared library. |
| |
| For DWARF 2, we handle TYPE_DECL_SUPPRESS_DEBUG by pretending |
| that the type was never defined, so we only get the members we |
| actually define. */ |
| if (write_symbols == DWARF_DEBUG || write_symbols == NO_DEBUG) |
| return; |
| |
| /* We might have set this earlier in cp_finish_decl. */ |
| TYPE_DECL_SUPPRESS_DEBUG (TYPE_MAIN_DECL (t)) = 0; |
| |
| /* If we already know how we're handling this class, handle debug info |
| the same way. */ |
| if (CLASSTYPE_INTERFACE_KNOWN (t)) |
| { |
| if (CLASSTYPE_INTERFACE_ONLY (t)) |
| TYPE_DECL_SUPPRESS_DEBUG (TYPE_MAIN_DECL (t)) = 1; |
| /* else don't set it. */ |
| } |
| /* If the class has a vtable, write out the debug info along with |
| the vtable. */ |
| else if (TYPE_CONTAINS_VPTR_P (t)) |
| TYPE_DECL_SUPPRESS_DEBUG (TYPE_MAIN_DECL (t)) = 1; |
| |
| /* Otherwise, just emit the debug info normally. */ |
| } |
| |
| /* Note that we want debugging information for a base class of a class |
| whose vtable is being emitted. Normally, this would happen because |
| calling the constructor for a derived class implies calling the |
| constructors for all bases, which involve initializing the |
| appropriate vptr with the vtable for the base class; but in the |
| presence of optimization, this initialization may be optimized |
| away, so we tell finish_vtable_vardecl that we want the debugging |
| information anyway. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| dfs_debug_mark (tree binfo, void *data ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED) |
| { |
| tree t = BINFO_TYPE (binfo); |
| |
| CLASSTYPE_DEBUG_REQUESTED (t) = 1; |
| |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* Returns BINFO if we haven't already noted that we want debugging |
| info for this base class. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| dfs_debug_unmarkedp (tree derived, int ix, void *data ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED) |
| { |
| tree binfo = BINFO_BASETYPE (derived, ix); |
| |
| return (!CLASSTYPE_DEBUG_REQUESTED (BINFO_TYPE (binfo)) |
| ? binfo : NULL_TREE); |
| } |
| |
| /* Write out the debugging information for TYPE, whose vtable is being |
| emitted. Also walk through our bases and note that we want to |
| write out information for them. This avoids the problem of not |
| writing any debug info for intermediate basetypes whose |
| constructors, and thus the references to their vtables, and thus |
| the vtables themselves, were optimized away. */ |
| |
| void |
| note_debug_info_needed (tree type) |
| { |
| if (TYPE_DECL_SUPPRESS_DEBUG (TYPE_NAME (type))) |
| { |
| TYPE_DECL_SUPPRESS_DEBUG (TYPE_NAME (type)) = 0; |
| rest_of_type_compilation (type, toplevel_bindings_p ()); |
| } |
| |
| dfs_walk (TYPE_BINFO (type), dfs_debug_mark, dfs_debug_unmarkedp, 0); |
| } |
| |
| /* Subroutines of push_class_decls (). */ |
| |
| static void |
| setup_class_bindings (tree name, int type_binding_p) |
| { |
| tree type_binding = NULL_TREE; |
| tree value_binding; |
| |
| /* If we've already done the lookup for this declaration, we're |
| done. */ |
| if (IDENTIFIER_CLASS_VALUE (name)) |
| return; |
| |
| /* First, deal with the type binding. */ |
| if (type_binding_p) |
| { |
| type_binding = lookup_member (current_class_type, name, |
| /*protect=*/2, /*want_type=*/true); |
| if (TREE_CODE (type_binding) == TREE_LIST |
| && TREE_TYPE (type_binding) == error_mark_node) |
| /* NAME is ambiguous. */ |
| push_class_level_binding (name, type_binding); |
| else |
| pushdecl_class_level (type_binding); |
| } |
| |
| /* Now, do the value binding. */ |
| value_binding = lookup_member (current_class_type, name, |
| /*protect=*/2, /*want_type=*/false); |
| |
| if (type_binding_p |
| && (TREE_CODE (value_binding) == TYPE_DECL |
| || DECL_CLASS_TEMPLATE_P (value_binding) |
| || (TREE_CODE (value_binding) == TREE_LIST |
| && TREE_TYPE (value_binding) == error_mark_node |
| && (TREE_CODE (TREE_VALUE (value_binding)) |
| == TYPE_DECL)))) |
| /* We found a type-binding, even when looking for a non-type |
| binding. This means that we already processed this binding |
| above. */; |
| else if (value_binding) |
| { |
| if (TREE_CODE (value_binding) == TREE_LIST |
| && TREE_TYPE (value_binding) == error_mark_node) |
| /* NAME is ambiguous. */ |
| push_class_level_binding (name, value_binding); |
| else |
| { |
| if (BASELINK_P (value_binding)) |
| /* NAME is some overloaded functions. */ |
| value_binding = BASELINK_FUNCTIONS (value_binding); |
| /* Two conversion operators that convert to the same type |
| may have different names. (See |
| mangle_conv_op_name_for_type.) To avoid recording the |
| same conversion operator declaration more than once we |
| must check to see that the same operator was not already |
| found under another name. */ |
| if (IDENTIFIER_TYPENAME_P (name) |
| && is_overloaded_fn (value_binding)) |
| { |
| tree fns; |
| for (fns = value_binding; fns; fns = OVL_NEXT (fns)) |
| if (IDENTIFIER_CLASS_VALUE (DECL_NAME (OVL_CURRENT (fns)))) |
| return; |
| } |
| pushdecl_class_level (value_binding); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Push class-level declarations for any names appearing in BINFO that |
| are TYPE_DECLS. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| dfs_push_type_decls (tree binfo, void *data ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED) |
| { |
| tree type; |
| tree fields; |
| |
| type = BINFO_TYPE (binfo); |
| for (fields = TYPE_FIELDS (type); fields; fields = TREE_CHAIN (fields)) |
| if (DECL_NAME (fields) && TREE_CODE (fields) == TYPE_DECL |
| && !(!same_type_p (type, current_class_type) |
| && template_self_reference_p (type, fields))) |
| setup_class_bindings (DECL_NAME (fields), /*type_binding_p=*/1); |
| |
| /* We can't just use BINFO_MARKED because envelope_add_decl uses |
| DERIVED_FROM_P, which calls get_base_distance. */ |
| BINFO_PUSHDECLS_MARKED (binfo) = 1; |
| |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* Push class-level declarations for any names appearing in BINFO that |
| are not TYPE_DECLS. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| dfs_push_decls (tree binfo, void *data) |
| { |
| tree type = BINFO_TYPE (binfo); |
| tree method_vec; |
| tree fields; |
| |
| for (fields = TYPE_FIELDS (type); fields; fields = TREE_CHAIN (fields)) |
| if (DECL_NAME (fields) |
| && TREE_CODE (fields) != TYPE_DECL |
| && TREE_CODE (fields) != USING_DECL |
| && !DECL_ARTIFICIAL (fields)) |
| setup_class_bindings (DECL_NAME (fields), /*type_binding_p=*/0); |
| else if (TREE_CODE (fields) == FIELD_DECL |
| && ANON_AGGR_TYPE_P (TREE_TYPE (fields))) |
| dfs_push_decls (TYPE_BINFO (TREE_TYPE (fields)), data); |
| |
| method_vec = (CLASS_TYPE_P (type) |
| ? CLASSTYPE_METHOD_VEC (type) : NULL_TREE); |
| |
| if (method_vec && TREE_VEC_LENGTH (method_vec) >= 3) |
| { |
| tree *methods; |
| tree *end; |
| |
| /* Farm out constructors and destructors. */ |
| end = TREE_VEC_END (method_vec); |
| |
| for (methods = &TREE_VEC_ELT (method_vec, 2); |
| methods < end && *methods; |
| methods++) |
| setup_class_bindings (DECL_NAME (OVL_CURRENT (*methods)), |
| /*type_binding_p=*/0); |
| } |
| |
| BINFO_PUSHDECLS_MARKED (binfo) = 0; |
| |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* When entering the scope of a class, we cache all of the |
| fields that that class provides within its inheritance |
| lattice. Where ambiguities result, we mark them |
| with `error_mark_node' so that if they are encountered |
| without explicit qualification, we can emit an error |
| message. */ |
| |
| void |
| push_class_decls (tree type) |
| { |
| search_stack = push_search_level (search_stack, &search_obstack); |
| |
| /* Enter type declarations and mark. */ |
| dfs_walk (TYPE_BINFO (type), dfs_push_type_decls, unmarked_pushdecls_p, 0); |
| |
| /* Enter non-type declarations and unmark. */ |
| dfs_walk (TYPE_BINFO (type), dfs_push_decls, marked_pushdecls_p, 0); |
| } |
| |
| /* Here's a subroutine we need because C lacks lambdas. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| dfs_unuse_fields (tree binfo, void *data ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED) |
| { |
| tree type = TREE_TYPE (binfo); |
| tree fields; |
| |
| for (fields = TYPE_FIELDS (type); fields; fields = TREE_CHAIN (fields)) |
| { |
| if (TREE_CODE (fields) != FIELD_DECL || DECL_ARTIFICIAL (fields)) |
| continue; |
| |
| TREE_USED (fields) = 0; |
| if (DECL_NAME (fields) == NULL_TREE |
| && ANON_AGGR_TYPE_P (TREE_TYPE (fields))) |
| unuse_fields (TREE_TYPE (fields)); |
| } |
| |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| void |
| unuse_fields (tree type) |
| { |
| dfs_walk (TYPE_BINFO (type), dfs_unuse_fields, unmarkedp, 0); |
| } |
| |
| void |
| pop_class_decls (void) |
| { |
| /* We haven't pushed a search level when dealing with cached classes, |
| so we'd better not try to pop it. */ |
| if (search_stack) |
| search_stack = pop_search_level (search_stack); |
| } |
| |
| void |
| print_search_statistics (void) |
| { |
| #ifdef GATHER_STATISTICS |
| fprintf (stderr, "%d fields searched in %d[%d] calls to lookup_field[_1]\n", |
| n_fields_searched, n_calls_lookup_field, n_calls_lookup_field_1); |
| fprintf (stderr, "%d fnfields searched in %d calls to lookup_fnfields\n", |
| n_outer_fields_searched, n_calls_lookup_fnfields); |
| fprintf (stderr, "%d calls to get_base_type\n", n_calls_get_base_type); |
| #else /* GATHER_STATISTICS */ |
| fprintf (stderr, "no search statistics\n"); |
| #endif /* GATHER_STATISTICS */ |
| } |
| |
| void |
| init_search_processing (void) |
| { |
| gcc_obstack_init (&search_obstack); |
| } |
| |
| void |
| reinit_search_statistics (void) |
| { |
| #ifdef GATHER_STATISTICS |
| n_fields_searched = 0; |
| n_calls_lookup_field = 0, n_calls_lookup_field_1 = 0; |
| n_calls_lookup_fnfields = 0, n_calls_lookup_fnfields_1 = 0; |
| n_calls_get_base_type = 0; |
| n_outer_fields_searched = 0; |
| n_contexts_saved = 0; |
| #endif /* GATHER_STATISTICS */ |
| } |
| |
| static tree |
| add_conversions (tree binfo, void *data) |
| { |
| int i; |
| tree method_vec = CLASSTYPE_METHOD_VEC (BINFO_TYPE (binfo)); |
| tree *conversions = (tree *) data; |
| |
| /* Some builtin types have no method vector, not even an empty one. */ |
| if (!method_vec) |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| |
| for (i = 2; i < TREE_VEC_LENGTH (method_vec); ++i) |
| { |
| tree tmp = TREE_VEC_ELT (method_vec, i); |
| tree name; |
| |
| if (!tmp || ! DECL_CONV_FN_P (OVL_CURRENT (tmp))) |
| break; |
| |
| name = DECL_NAME (OVL_CURRENT (tmp)); |
| |
| /* Make sure we don't already have this conversion. */ |
| if (! IDENTIFIER_MARKED (name)) |
| { |
| tree t; |
| |
| /* Make sure that we do not already have a conversion |
| operator for this type. Merely checking the NAME is not |
| enough because two conversion operators to the same type |
| may not have the same NAME. */ |
| for (t = *conversions; t; t = TREE_CHAIN (t)) |
| { |
| tree fn; |
| for (fn = TREE_VALUE (t); fn; fn = OVL_NEXT (fn)) |
| if (same_type_p (TREE_TYPE (name), |
| DECL_CONV_FN_TYPE (OVL_CURRENT (fn)))) |
| break; |
| if (fn) |
| break; |
| } |
| if (!t) |
| { |
| *conversions = tree_cons (binfo, tmp, *conversions); |
| IDENTIFIER_MARKED (name) = 1; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* Return a TREE_LIST containing all the non-hidden user-defined |
| conversion functions for TYPE (and its base-classes). The |
| TREE_VALUE of each node is a FUNCTION_DECL or an OVERLOAD |
| containing the conversion functions. The TREE_PURPOSE is the BINFO |
| from which the conversion functions in this node were selected. */ |
| |
| tree |
| lookup_conversions (tree type) |
| { |
| tree t; |
| tree conversions = NULL_TREE; |
| |
| complete_type (type); |
| bfs_walk (TYPE_BINFO (type), add_conversions, 0, &conversions); |
| |
| for (t = conversions; t; t = TREE_CHAIN (t)) |
| IDENTIFIER_MARKED (DECL_NAME (OVL_CURRENT (TREE_VALUE (t)))) = 0; |
| |
| return conversions; |
| } |
| |
| struct overlap_info |
| { |
| tree compare_type; |
| int found_overlap; |
| }; |
| |
| /* Check whether the empty class indicated by EMPTY_BINFO is also present |
| at offset 0 in COMPARE_TYPE, and set found_overlap if so. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| dfs_check_overlap (tree empty_binfo, void *data) |
| { |
| struct overlap_info *oi = (struct overlap_info *) data; |
| tree binfo; |
| for (binfo = TYPE_BINFO (oi->compare_type); |
| ; |
| binfo = BINFO_BASETYPE (binfo, 0)) |
| { |
| if (BINFO_TYPE (binfo) == BINFO_TYPE (empty_binfo)) |
| { |
| oi->found_overlap = 1; |
| break; |
| } |
| else if (BINFO_BASETYPES (binfo) == NULL_TREE) |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* Trivial function to stop base traversal when we find something. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| dfs_no_overlap_yet (tree derived, int ix, void *data) |
| { |
| tree binfo = BINFO_BASETYPE (derived, ix); |
| struct overlap_info *oi = (struct overlap_info *) data; |
| |
| return !oi->found_overlap ? binfo : NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* Returns nonzero if EMPTY_TYPE or any of its bases can also be found at |
| offset 0 in NEXT_TYPE. Used in laying out empty base class subobjects. */ |
| |
| int |
| types_overlap_p (tree empty_type, tree next_type) |
| { |
| struct overlap_info oi; |
| |
| if (! IS_AGGR_TYPE (next_type)) |
| return 0; |
| oi.compare_type = next_type; |
| oi.found_overlap = 0; |
| dfs_walk (TYPE_BINFO (empty_type), dfs_check_overlap, |
| dfs_no_overlap_yet, &oi); |
| return oi.found_overlap; |
| } |
| |
| /* Given a vtable VAR, determine which of the inherited classes the vtable |
| inherits (in a loose sense) functions from. |
| |
| FIXME: This does not work with the new ABI. */ |
| |
| tree |
| binfo_for_vtable (tree var) |
| { |
| tree main_binfo = TYPE_BINFO (DECL_CONTEXT (var)); |
| tree binfos = TYPE_BINFO_BASETYPES (BINFO_TYPE (main_binfo)); |
| int n_baseclasses = CLASSTYPE_N_BASECLASSES (BINFO_TYPE (main_binfo)); |
| int i; |
| |
| for (i = 0; i < n_baseclasses; i++) |
| { |
| tree base_binfo = TREE_VEC_ELT (binfos, i); |
| if (base_binfo != NULL_TREE && BINFO_VTABLE (base_binfo) == var) |
| return base_binfo; |
| } |
| |
| /* If no secondary base classes matched, return the primary base, if |
| there is one. */ |
| if (CLASSTYPE_HAS_PRIMARY_BASE_P (BINFO_TYPE (main_binfo))) |
| return get_primary_binfo (main_binfo); |
| |
| return main_binfo; |
| } |
| |
| /* Returns the binfo of the first direct or indirect virtual base derived |
| from BINFO, or NULL if binfo is not via virtual. */ |
| |
| tree |
| binfo_from_vbase (tree binfo) |
| { |
| for (; binfo; binfo = BINFO_INHERITANCE_CHAIN (binfo)) |
| { |
| if (TREE_VIA_VIRTUAL (binfo)) |
| return binfo; |
| } |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* Returns the binfo of the first direct or indirect virtual base derived |
| from BINFO up to the TREE_TYPE, LIMIT, or NULL if binfo is not |
| via virtual. */ |
| |
| tree |
| binfo_via_virtual (tree binfo, tree limit) |
| { |
| for (; binfo && (!limit || !same_type_p (BINFO_TYPE (binfo), limit)); |
| binfo = BINFO_INHERITANCE_CHAIN (binfo)) |
| { |
| if (TREE_VIA_VIRTUAL (binfo)) |
| return binfo; |
| } |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* BINFO is a base binfo in the complete type BINFO_TYPE (HERE). |
| Find the equivalent binfo within whatever graph HERE is located. |
| This is the inverse of original_binfo. */ |
| |
| tree |
| copied_binfo (tree binfo, tree here) |
| { |
| tree result = NULL_TREE; |
| |
| if (TREE_VIA_VIRTUAL (binfo)) |
| { |
| tree t; |
| |
| for (t = here; BINFO_INHERITANCE_CHAIN (t); |
| t = BINFO_INHERITANCE_CHAIN (t)) |
| continue; |
| |
| result = purpose_member (BINFO_TYPE (binfo), |
| CLASSTYPE_VBASECLASSES (BINFO_TYPE (t))); |
| result = TREE_VALUE (result); |
| } |
| else if (BINFO_INHERITANCE_CHAIN (binfo)) |
| { |
| tree base_binfos; |
| int ix, n; |
| |
| base_binfos = copied_binfo (BINFO_INHERITANCE_CHAIN (binfo), here); |
| base_binfos = BINFO_BASETYPES (base_binfos); |
| n = TREE_VEC_LENGTH (base_binfos); |
| for (ix = 0; ix != n; ix++) |
| { |
| tree base = TREE_VEC_ELT (base_binfos, ix); |
| |
| if (BINFO_TYPE (base) == BINFO_TYPE (binfo)) |
| { |
| result = base; |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| my_friendly_assert (BINFO_TYPE (here) == BINFO_TYPE (binfo), 20030202); |
| result = here; |
| } |
| |
| my_friendly_assert (result, 20030202); |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /* BINFO is some base binfo of HERE, within some other |
| hierarchy. Return the equivalent binfo, but in the hierarchy |
| dominated by HERE. This is the inverse of copied_binfo. If BINFO |
| is not a base binfo of HERE, returns NULL_TREE. */ |
| |
| tree |
| original_binfo (tree binfo, tree here) |
| { |
| tree result = NULL; |
| |
| if (BINFO_TYPE (binfo) == BINFO_TYPE (here)) |
| result = here; |
| else if (TREE_VIA_VIRTUAL (binfo)) |
| { |
| result = purpose_member (BINFO_TYPE (binfo), |
| CLASSTYPE_VBASECLASSES (BINFO_TYPE (here))); |
| if (result) |
| result = TREE_VALUE (result); |
| } |
| else if (BINFO_INHERITANCE_CHAIN (binfo)) |
| { |
| tree base_binfos; |
| |
| base_binfos = original_binfo (BINFO_INHERITANCE_CHAIN (binfo), here); |
| if (base_binfos) |
| { |
| int ix, n; |
| |
| base_binfos = BINFO_BASETYPES (base_binfos); |
| n = TREE_VEC_LENGTH (base_binfos); |
| for (ix = 0; ix != n; ix++) |
| { |
| tree base = TREE_VEC_ELT (base_binfos, ix); |
| |
| if (BINFO_TYPE (base) == BINFO_TYPE (binfo)) |
| { |
| result = base; |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return result; |
| } |
| |