| /* Handle initialization things in C++. |
| Copyright (C) 1987-2021 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 3, 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 COPYING3. If not see |
| <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ |
| |
| /* High-level class interface. */ |
| |
| #include "config.h" |
| #include "system.h" |
| #include "coretypes.h" |
| #include "target.h" |
| #include "cp-tree.h" |
| #include "stringpool.h" |
| #include "varasm.h" |
| #include "gimplify.h" |
| #include "c-family/c-ubsan.h" |
| #include "intl.h" |
| #include "stringpool.h" |
| #include "attribs.h" |
| #include "asan.h" |
| #include "stor-layout.h" |
| #include "pointer-query.h" |
| |
| static bool begin_init_stmts (tree *, tree *); |
| static tree finish_init_stmts (bool, tree, tree); |
| static void construct_virtual_base (tree, tree); |
| static bool expand_aggr_init_1 (tree, tree, tree, tree, int, tsubst_flags_t); |
| static bool expand_default_init (tree, tree, tree, tree, int, tsubst_flags_t); |
| static void perform_member_init (tree, tree); |
| static int member_init_ok_or_else (tree, tree, tree); |
| static void expand_virtual_init (tree, tree); |
| static tree sort_mem_initializers (tree, tree); |
| static tree initializing_context (tree); |
| static void expand_cleanup_for_base (tree, tree); |
| static tree dfs_initialize_vtbl_ptrs (tree, void *); |
| static tree build_field_list (tree, tree, int *); |
| static int diagnose_uninitialized_cst_or_ref_member_1 (tree, tree, bool, bool); |
| |
| static GTY(()) tree fn; |
| |
| /* We are about to generate some complex initialization code. |
| Conceptually, it is all a single expression. However, we may want |
| to include conditionals, loops, and other such statement-level |
| constructs. Therefore, we build the initialization code inside a |
| statement-expression. This function starts such an expression. |
| STMT_EXPR_P and COMPOUND_STMT_P are filled in by this function; |
| pass them back to finish_init_stmts when the expression is |
| complete. */ |
| |
| static bool |
| begin_init_stmts (tree *stmt_expr_p, tree *compound_stmt_p) |
| { |
| bool is_global = !building_stmt_list_p (); |
| |
| *stmt_expr_p = begin_stmt_expr (); |
| *compound_stmt_p = begin_compound_stmt (BCS_NO_SCOPE); |
| |
| return is_global; |
| } |
| |
| /* Finish out the statement-expression begun by the previous call to |
| begin_init_stmts. Returns the statement-expression itself. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| finish_init_stmts (bool is_global, tree stmt_expr, tree compound_stmt) |
| { |
| finish_compound_stmt (compound_stmt); |
| |
| stmt_expr = finish_stmt_expr (stmt_expr, true); |
| |
| gcc_assert (!building_stmt_list_p () == is_global); |
| |
| return stmt_expr; |
| } |
| |
| /* Constructors */ |
| |
| /* Called from initialize_vtbl_ptrs via dfs_walk. BINFO is the base |
| which we want to initialize the vtable pointer for, DATA is |
| TREE_LIST whose TREE_VALUE is the this ptr expression. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| dfs_initialize_vtbl_ptrs (tree binfo, void *data) |
| { |
| if (!TYPE_CONTAINS_VPTR_P (BINFO_TYPE (binfo))) |
| return dfs_skip_bases; |
| |
| if (!BINFO_PRIMARY_P (binfo) || BINFO_VIRTUAL_P (binfo)) |
| { |
| tree base_ptr = TREE_VALUE ((tree) data); |
| |
| base_ptr = build_base_path (PLUS_EXPR, base_ptr, binfo, /*nonnull=*/1, |
| tf_warning_or_error); |
| |
| expand_virtual_init (binfo, base_ptr); |
| } |
| |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* Initialize all the vtable pointers in the object pointed to by |
| ADDR. */ |
| |
| void |
| initialize_vtbl_ptrs (tree addr) |
| { |
| tree list; |
| tree type; |
| |
| type = TREE_TYPE (TREE_TYPE (addr)); |
| list = build_tree_list (type, addr); |
| |
| /* Walk through the hierarchy, initializing the vptr in each base |
| class. We do these in pre-order because we can't find the virtual |
| bases for a class until we've initialized the vtbl for that |
| class. */ |
| dfs_walk_once (TYPE_BINFO (type), dfs_initialize_vtbl_ptrs, NULL, list); |
| } |
| |
| /* Return an expression for the zero-initialization of an object with |
| type T. This expression will either be a constant (in the case |
| that T is a scalar), or a CONSTRUCTOR (in the case that T is an |
| aggregate), or NULL (in the case that T does not require |
| initialization). In either case, the value can be used as |
| DECL_INITIAL for a decl of the indicated TYPE; it is a valid static |
| initializer. If NELTS is non-NULL, and TYPE is an ARRAY_TYPE, NELTS |
| is the number of elements in the array. If STATIC_STORAGE_P is |
| TRUE, initializers are only generated for entities for which |
| zero-initialization does not simply mean filling the storage with |
| zero bytes. FIELD_SIZE, if non-NULL, is the bit size of the field, |
| subfields with bit positions at or above that bit size shouldn't |
| be added. Note that this only works when the result is assigned |
| to a base COMPONENT_REF; if we only have a pointer to the base subobject, |
| expand_assignment will end up clearing the full size of TYPE. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| build_zero_init_1 (tree type, tree nelts, bool static_storage_p, |
| tree field_size) |
| { |
| tree init = NULL_TREE; |
| |
| /* [dcl.init] |
| |
| To zero-initialize an object of type T means: |
| |
| -- if T is a scalar type, the storage is set to the value of zero |
| converted to T. |
| |
| -- if T is a non-union class type, the storage for each non-static |
| data member and each base-class subobject is zero-initialized. |
| |
| -- if T is a union type, the storage for its first data member is |
| zero-initialized. |
| |
| -- if T is an array type, the storage for each element is |
| zero-initialized. |
| |
| -- if T is a reference type, no initialization is performed. */ |
| |
| gcc_assert (nelts == NULL_TREE || TREE_CODE (nelts) == INTEGER_CST); |
| |
| if (type == error_mark_node) |
| ; |
| else if (static_storage_p && zero_init_p (type)) |
| /* In order to save space, we do not explicitly build initializers |
| for items that do not need them. GCC's semantics are that |
| items with static storage duration that are not otherwise |
| initialized are initialized to zero. */ |
| ; |
| else if (TYPE_PTR_OR_PTRMEM_P (type)) |
| init = fold (convert (type, nullptr_node)); |
| else if (NULLPTR_TYPE_P (type)) |
| init = build_int_cst (type, 0); |
| else if (SCALAR_TYPE_P (type)) |
| init = build_zero_cst (type); |
| else if (RECORD_OR_UNION_CODE_P (TREE_CODE (type))) |
| { |
| tree field; |
| vec<constructor_elt, va_gc> *v = NULL; |
| |
| /* Iterate over the fields, building initializations. */ |
| for (field = TYPE_FIELDS (type); field; field = DECL_CHAIN (field)) |
| { |
| if (TREE_CODE (field) != FIELD_DECL) |
| continue; |
| |
| if (TREE_TYPE (field) == error_mark_node) |
| continue; |
| |
| /* Don't add virtual bases for base classes if they are beyond |
| the size of the current field, that means it is present |
| somewhere else in the object. */ |
| if (field_size) |
| { |
| tree bitpos = bit_position (field); |
| if (TREE_CODE (bitpos) == INTEGER_CST |
| && !tree_int_cst_lt (bitpos, field_size)) |
| continue; |
| } |
| |
| /* Note that for class types there will be FIELD_DECLs |
| corresponding to base classes as well. Thus, iterating |
| over TYPE_FIELDs will result in correct initialization of |
| all of the subobjects. */ |
| if (!static_storage_p || !zero_init_p (TREE_TYPE (field))) |
| { |
| tree new_field_size |
| = (DECL_FIELD_IS_BASE (field) |
| && DECL_SIZE (field) |
| && TREE_CODE (DECL_SIZE (field)) == INTEGER_CST) |
| ? DECL_SIZE (field) : NULL_TREE; |
| tree value = build_zero_init_1 (TREE_TYPE (field), |
| /*nelts=*/NULL_TREE, |
| static_storage_p, |
| new_field_size); |
| if (value) |
| CONSTRUCTOR_APPEND_ELT(v, field, value); |
| } |
| |
| /* For unions, only the first field is initialized. */ |
| if (TREE_CODE (type) == UNION_TYPE) |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| /* Build a constructor to contain the initializations. */ |
| init = build_constructor (type, v); |
| } |
| else if (TREE_CODE (type) == ARRAY_TYPE) |
| { |
| tree max_index; |
| vec<constructor_elt, va_gc> *v = NULL; |
| |
| /* Iterate over the array elements, building initializations. */ |
| if (nelts) |
| max_index = fold_build2_loc (input_location, MINUS_EXPR, |
| TREE_TYPE (nelts), nelts, |
| build_one_cst (TREE_TYPE (nelts))); |
| /* Treat flexible array members like [0] arrays. */ |
| else if (TYPE_DOMAIN (type) == NULL_TREE) |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| else |
| max_index = array_type_nelts (type); |
| |
| /* If we have an error_mark here, we should just return error mark |
| as we don't know the size of the array yet. */ |
| if (max_index == error_mark_node) |
| return error_mark_node; |
| gcc_assert (TREE_CODE (max_index) == INTEGER_CST); |
| |
| /* A zero-sized array, which is accepted as an extension, will |
| have an upper bound of -1. */ |
| if (!integer_minus_onep (max_index)) |
| { |
| constructor_elt ce; |
| |
| /* If this is a one element array, we just use a regular init. */ |
| if (integer_zerop (max_index)) |
| ce.index = size_zero_node; |
| else |
| ce.index = build2 (RANGE_EXPR, sizetype, size_zero_node, |
| max_index); |
| |
| ce.value = build_zero_init_1 (TREE_TYPE (type), /*nelts=*/NULL_TREE, |
| static_storage_p, NULL_TREE); |
| if (ce.value) |
| { |
| vec_alloc (v, 1); |
| v->quick_push (ce); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Build a constructor to contain the initializations. */ |
| init = build_constructor (type, v); |
| } |
| else if (VECTOR_TYPE_P (type)) |
| init = build_zero_cst (type); |
| else |
| gcc_assert (TYPE_REF_P (type)); |
| |
| /* In all cases, the initializer is a constant. */ |
| if (init) |
| TREE_CONSTANT (init) = 1; |
| |
| return init; |
| } |
| |
| /* Return an expression for the zero-initialization of an object with |
| type T. This expression will either be a constant (in the case |
| that T is a scalar), or a CONSTRUCTOR (in the case that T is an |
| aggregate), or NULL (in the case that T does not require |
| initialization). In either case, the value can be used as |
| DECL_INITIAL for a decl of the indicated TYPE; it is a valid static |
| initializer. If NELTS is non-NULL, and TYPE is an ARRAY_TYPE, NELTS |
| is the number of elements in the array. If STATIC_STORAGE_P is |
| TRUE, initializers are only generated for entities for which |
| zero-initialization does not simply mean filling the storage with |
| zero bytes. */ |
| |
| tree |
| build_zero_init (tree type, tree nelts, bool static_storage_p) |
| { |
| return build_zero_init_1 (type, nelts, static_storage_p, NULL_TREE); |
| } |
| |
| /* Return a suitable initializer for value-initializing an object of type |
| TYPE, as described in [dcl.init]. */ |
| |
| tree |
| build_value_init (tree type, tsubst_flags_t complain) |
| { |
| /* [dcl.init] |
| |
| To value-initialize an object of type T means: |
| |
| - if T is a class type (clause 9) with either no default constructor |
| (12.1) or a default constructor that is user-provided or deleted, |
| then the object is default-initialized; |
| |
| - if T is a (possibly cv-qualified) class type without a user-provided |
| or deleted default constructor, then the object is zero-initialized |
| and the semantic constraints for default-initialization are checked, |
| and if T has a non-trivial default constructor, the object is |
| default-initialized; |
| |
| - if T is an array type, then each element is value-initialized; |
| |
| - otherwise, the object is zero-initialized. |
| |
| A program that calls for default-initialization or |
| value-initialization of an entity of reference type is ill-formed. */ |
| |
| /* The AGGR_INIT_EXPR tweaking below breaks in templates. */ |
| gcc_assert (!processing_template_decl |
| || (SCALAR_TYPE_P (type) || TREE_CODE (type) == ARRAY_TYPE)); |
| |
| if (CLASS_TYPE_P (type) && type_build_ctor_call (type)) |
| { |
| tree ctor |
| = build_special_member_call (NULL_TREE, complete_ctor_identifier, |
| NULL, type, LOOKUP_NORMAL, complain); |
| if (ctor == error_mark_node || TREE_CONSTANT (ctor)) |
| return ctor; |
| tree fn = NULL_TREE; |
| if (TREE_CODE (ctor) == CALL_EXPR) |
| fn = get_callee_fndecl (ctor); |
| ctor = build_aggr_init_expr (type, ctor); |
| if (fn && user_provided_p (fn)) |
| return ctor; |
| else if (TYPE_HAS_COMPLEX_DFLT (type)) |
| { |
| /* This is a class that needs constructing, but doesn't have |
| a user-provided constructor. So we need to zero-initialize |
| the object and then call the implicitly defined ctor. |
| This will be handled in simplify_aggr_init_expr. */ |
| AGGR_INIT_ZERO_FIRST (ctor) = 1; |
| return ctor; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Discard any access checking during subobject initialization; |
| the checks are implied by the call to the ctor which we have |
| verified is OK (cpp0x/defaulted46.C). */ |
| push_deferring_access_checks (dk_deferred); |
| tree r = build_value_init_noctor (type, complain); |
| pop_deferring_access_checks (); |
| return r; |
| } |
| |
| /* Like build_value_init, but don't call the constructor for TYPE. Used |
| for base initializers. */ |
| |
| tree |
| build_value_init_noctor (tree type, tsubst_flags_t complain) |
| { |
| if (!COMPLETE_TYPE_P (type)) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| error ("value-initialization of incomplete type %qT", type); |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| /* FIXME the class and array cases should just use digest_init once it is |
| SFINAE-enabled. */ |
| if (CLASS_TYPE_P (type)) |
| { |
| gcc_assert (!TYPE_HAS_COMPLEX_DFLT (type) |
| || errorcount != 0); |
| |
| if (TREE_CODE (type) != UNION_TYPE) |
| { |
| tree field; |
| vec<constructor_elt, va_gc> *v = NULL; |
| |
| /* Iterate over the fields, building initializations. */ |
| for (field = TYPE_FIELDS (type); field; field = DECL_CHAIN (field)) |
| { |
| tree ftype, value; |
| |
| if (TREE_CODE (field) != FIELD_DECL) |
| continue; |
| |
| ftype = TREE_TYPE (field); |
| |
| if (ftype == error_mark_node) |
| continue; |
| |
| /* Ignore flexible array members for value initialization. */ |
| if (TREE_CODE (ftype) == ARRAY_TYPE |
| && !COMPLETE_TYPE_P (ftype) |
| && !TYPE_DOMAIN (ftype) |
| && COMPLETE_TYPE_P (TREE_TYPE (ftype)) |
| && (next_initializable_field (DECL_CHAIN (field)) |
| == NULL_TREE)) |
| continue; |
| |
| /* Ignore unnamed zero-width bitfields. */ |
| if (DECL_UNNAMED_BIT_FIELD (field) |
| && integer_zerop (DECL_SIZE (field))) |
| continue; |
| |
| /* We could skip vfields and fields of types with |
| user-defined constructors, but I think that won't improve |
| performance at all; it should be simpler in general just |
| to zero out the entire object than try to only zero the |
| bits that actually need it. */ |
| |
| /* Note that for class types there will be FIELD_DECLs |
| corresponding to base classes as well. Thus, iterating |
| over TYPE_FIELDs will result in correct initialization of |
| all of the subobjects. */ |
| value = build_value_init (ftype, complain); |
| value = maybe_constant_init (value); |
| |
| if (value == error_mark_node) |
| return error_mark_node; |
| |
| CONSTRUCTOR_APPEND_ELT(v, field, value); |
| |
| /* We shouldn't have gotten here for anything that would need |
| non-trivial initialization, and gimplify_init_ctor_preeval |
| would need to be fixed to allow it. */ |
| gcc_assert (TREE_CODE (value) != TARGET_EXPR |
| && TREE_CODE (value) != AGGR_INIT_EXPR); |
| } |
| |
| /* Build a constructor to contain the zero- initializations. */ |
| return build_constructor (type, v); |
| } |
| } |
| else if (TREE_CODE (type) == ARRAY_TYPE) |
| { |
| vec<constructor_elt, va_gc> *v = NULL; |
| |
| /* Iterate over the array elements, building initializations. */ |
| tree max_index = array_type_nelts (type); |
| |
| /* If we have an error_mark here, we should just return error mark |
| as we don't know the size of the array yet. */ |
| if (max_index == error_mark_node) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| error ("cannot value-initialize array of unknown bound %qT", |
| type); |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| gcc_assert (TREE_CODE (max_index) == INTEGER_CST); |
| |
| /* A zero-sized array, which is accepted as an extension, will |
| have an upper bound of -1. */ |
| if (!tree_int_cst_equal (max_index, integer_minus_one_node)) |
| { |
| constructor_elt ce; |
| |
| /* If this is a one element array, we just use a regular init. */ |
| if (tree_int_cst_equal (size_zero_node, max_index)) |
| ce.index = size_zero_node; |
| else |
| ce.index = build2 (RANGE_EXPR, sizetype, size_zero_node, max_index); |
| |
| ce.value = build_value_init (TREE_TYPE (type), complain); |
| ce.value = maybe_constant_init (ce.value); |
| if (ce.value == error_mark_node) |
| return error_mark_node; |
| |
| vec_alloc (v, 1); |
| v->quick_push (ce); |
| |
| /* We shouldn't have gotten here for anything that would need |
| non-trivial initialization, and gimplify_init_ctor_preeval |
| would need to be fixed to allow it. */ |
| gcc_assert (TREE_CODE (ce.value) != TARGET_EXPR |
| && TREE_CODE (ce.value) != AGGR_INIT_EXPR); |
| } |
| |
| /* Build a constructor to contain the initializations. */ |
| return build_constructor (type, v); |
| } |
| else if (TREE_CODE (type) == FUNCTION_TYPE) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| error ("value-initialization of function type %qT", type); |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| else if (TYPE_REF_P (type)) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| error ("value-initialization of reference type %qT", type); |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| |
| return build_zero_init (type, NULL_TREE, /*static_storage_p=*/false); |
| } |
| |
| /* Initialize current class with INIT, a TREE_LIST of |
| arguments for a target constructor. If TREE_LIST is void_type_node, |
| an empty initializer list was given. */ |
| |
| static void |
| perform_target_ctor (tree init) |
| { |
| tree decl = current_class_ref; |
| tree type = current_class_type; |
| |
| finish_expr_stmt (build_aggr_init (decl, init, |
| LOOKUP_NORMAL|LOOKUP_DELEGATING_CONS, |
| tf_warning_or_error)); |
| if (type_build_dtor_call (type)) |
| { |
| tree expr = build_delete (input_location, |
| type, decl, sfk_complete_destructor, |
| LOOKUP_NORMAL |
| |LOOKUP_NONVIRTUAL |
| |LOOKUP_DESTRUCTOR, |
| 0, tf_warning_or_error); |
| if (expr != error_mark_node |
| && TYPE_HAS_NONTRIVIAL_DESTRUCTOR (type)) |
| finish_eh_cleanup (expr); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Return the non-static data initializer for FIELD_DECL MEMBER. */ |
| |
| static GTY((cache)) decl_tree_cache_map *nsdmi_inst; |
| |
| tree |
| get_nsdmi (tree member, bool in_ctor, tsubst_flags_t complain) |
| { |
| tree init; |
| tree save_ccp = current_class_ptr; |
| tree save_ccr = current_class_ref; |
| |
| if (DECL_LANG_SPECIFIC (member) && DECL_TEMPLATE_INFO (member)) |
| { |
| init = DECL_INITIAL (DECL_TI_TEMPLATE (member)); |
| location_t expr_loc |
| = cp_expr_loc_or_loc (init, DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (member)); |
| if (TREE_CODE (init) == DEFERRED_PARSE) |
| /* Unparsed. */; |
| else if (tree *slot = hash_map_safe_get (nsdmi_inst, member)) |
| init = *slot; |
| /* Check recursive instantiation. */ |
| else if (DECL_INSTANTIATING_NSDMI_P (member)) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| error_at (expr_loc, "recursive instantiation of default member " |
| "initializer for %qD", member); |
| init = error_mark_node; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| cp_evaluated ev; |
| |
| location_t sloc = input_location; |
| input_location = expr_loc; |
| |
| DECL_INSTANTIATING_NSDMI_P (member) = 1; |
| |
| bool pushed = false; |
| tree ctx = DECL_CONTEXT (member); |
| |
| processing_template_decl_sentinel ptds (/*reset*/false); |
| if (!currently_open_class (ctx)) |
| { |
| if (!LOCAL_CLASS_P (ctx)) |
| push_to_top_level (); |
| else |
| /* push_to_top_level would lose the necessary function context, |
| just reset processing_template_decl. */ |
| processing_template_decl = 0; |
| push_nested_class (ctx); |
| push_deferring_access_checks (dk_no_deferred); |
| pushed = true; |
| } |
| |
| inject_this_parameter (ctx, TYPE_UNQUALIFIED); |
| |
| start_lambda_scope (member); |
| |
| /* Do deferred instantiation of the NSDMI. */ |
| init = (tsubst_copy_and_build |
| (init, DECL_TI_ARGS (member), |
| complain, member, /*function_p=*/false, |
| /*integral_constant_expression_p=*/false)); |
| init = digest_nsdmi_init (member, init, complain); |
| |
| finish_lambda_scope (); |
| |
| DECL_INSTANTIATING_NSDMI_P (member) = 0; |
| |
| if (init != error_mark_node) |
| hash_map_safe_put<hm_ggc> (nsdmi_inst, member, init); |
| |
| if (pushed) |
| { |
| pop_deferring_access_checks (); |
| pop_nested_class (); |
| if (!LOCAL_CLASS_P (ctx)) |
| pop_from_top_level (); |
| } |
| |
| input_location = sloc; |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| init = DECL_INITIAL (member); |
| |
| if (init && TREE_CODE (init) == DEFERRED_PARSE) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| { |
| error ("default member initializer for %qD required before the end " |
| "of its enclosing class", member); |
| inform (location_of (init), "defined here"); |
| DECL_INITIAL (member) = error_mark_node; |
| } |
| init = error_mark_node; |
| } |
| |
| if (in_ctor) |
| { |
| current_class_ptr = save_ccp; |
| current_class_ref = save_ccr; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* Use a PLACEHOLDER_EXPR when we don't have a 'this' parameter to |
| refer to; constexpr evaluation knows what to do with it. */ |
| current_class_ref = build0 (PLACEHOLDER_EXPR, DECL_CONTEXT (member)); |
| current_class_ptr = build_address (current_class_ref); |
| } |
| |
| /* Strip redundant TARGET_EXPR so we don't need to remap it, and |
| so the aggregate init code below will see a CONSTRUCTOR. */ |
| bool simple_target = (init && SIMPLE_TARGET_EXPR_P (init)); |
| if (simple_target) |
| init = TARGET_EXPR_INITIAL (init); |
| init = break_out_target_exprs (init, /*loc*/true); |
| if (in_ctor && init && TREE_CODE (init) == TARGET_EXPR) |
| /* This expresses the full initialization, prevent perform_member_init from |
| calling another constructor (58162). */ |
| TARGET_EXPR_DIRECT_INIT_P (init) = true; |
| if (simple_target && TREE_CODE (init) != CONSTRUCTOR) |
| /* Now put it back so C++17 copy elision works. */ |
| init = get_target_expr (init); |
| |
| current_class_ptr = save_ccp; |
| current_class_ref = save_ccr; |
| return init; |
| } |
| |
| /* Diagnose the flexible array MEMBER if its INITializer is non-null |
| and return true if so. Otherwise return false. */ |
| |
| bool |
| maybe_reject_flexarray_init (tree member, tree init) |
| { |
| tree type = TREE_TYPE (member); |
| |
| if (!init |
| || TREE_CODE (type) != ARRAY_TYPE |
| || TYPE_DOMAIN (type)) |
| return false; |
| |
| /* Point at the flexible array member declaration if it's initialized |
| in-class, and at the ctor if it's initialized in a ctor member |
| initializer list. */ |
| location_t loc; |
| if (DECL_INITIAL (member) == init |
| || !current_function_decl |
| || DECL_DEFAULTED_FN (current_function_decl)) |
| loc = DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (member); |
| else |
| loc = DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (current_function_decl); |
| |
| error_at (loc, "initializer for flexible array member %q#D", member); |
| return true; |
| } |
| |
| /* If INIT's value can come from a call to std::initializer_list<T>::begin, |
| return that function. Otherwise, NULL_TREE. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| find_list_begin (tree init) |
| { |
| STRIP_NOPS (init); |
| while (TREE_CODE (init) == COMPOUND_EXPR) |
| init = TREE_OPERAND (init, 1); |
| STRIP_NOPS (init); |
| if (TREE_CODE (init) == COND_EXPR) |
| { |
| tree left = TREE_OPERAND (init, 1); |
| if (!left) |
| left = TREE_OPERAND (init, 0); |
| left = find_list_begin (left); |
| if (left) |
| return left; |
| return find_list_begin (TREE_OPERAND (init, 2)); |
| } |
| if (TREE_CODE (init) == CALL_EXPR) |
| if (tree fn = get_callee_fndecl (init)) |
| if (id_equal (DECL_NAME (fn), "begin") |
| && is_std_init_list (DECL_CONTEXT (fn))) |
| return fn; |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* If INIT initializing MEMBER is copying the address of the underlying array |
| of an initializer_list, warn. */ |
| |
| static void |
| maybe_warn_list_ctor (tree member, tree init) |
| { |
| tree memtype = TREE_TYPE (member); |
| if (!init || !TYPE_PTR_P (memtype) |
| || !is_list_ctor (current_function_decl)) |
| return; |
| |
| tree parm = FUNCTION_FIRST_USER_PARMTYPE (current_function_decl); |
| parm = TREE_VALUE (parm); |
| tree initlist = non_reference (parm); |
| |
| /* Do not warn if the parameter is an lvalue reference to non-const. */ |
| if (TYPE_REF_P (parm) && !TYPE_REF_IS_RVALUE (parm) |
| && !CP_TYPE_CONST_P (initlist)) |
| return; |
| |
| tree targs = CLASSTYPE_TI_ARGS (initlist); |
| tree elttype = TREE_VEC_ELT (targs, 0); |
| |
| if (!same_type_ignoring_top_level_qualifiers_p |
| (TREE_TYPE (memtype), elttype)) |
| return; |
| |
| tree begin = find_list_begin (init); |
| if (!begin) |
| return; |
| |
| location_t loc = cp_expr_loc_or_input_loc (init); |
| warning_at (loc, OPT_Winit_list_lifetime, |
| "initializing %qD from %qE does not extend the lifetime " |
| "of the underlying array", member, begin); |
| } |
| |
| /* Initialize MEMBER, a FIELD_DECL, with INIT, a TREE_LIST of |
| arguments. If TREE_LIST is void_type_node, an empty initializer |
| list was given; if NULL_TREE no initializer was given. */ |
| |
| static void |
| perform_member_init (tree member, tree init) |
| { |
| tree decl; |
| tree type = TREE_TYPE (member); |
| |
| /* Use the non-static data member initializer if there was no |
| mem-initializer for this field. */ |
| if (init == NULL_TREE) |
| init = get_nsdmi (member, /*ctor*/true, tf_warning_or_error); |
| |
| if (init == error_mark_node) |
| return; |
| |
| /* Effective C++ rule 12 requires that all data members be |
| initialized. */ |
| if (warn_ecpp && init == NULL_TREE && TREE_CODE (type) != ARRAY_TYPE) |
| warning_at (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (current_function_decl), OPT_Weffc__, |
| "%qD should be initialized in the member initialization list", |
| member); |
| |
| /* Get an lvalue for the data member. */ |
| decl = build_class_member_access_expr (current_class_ref, member, |
| /*access_path=*/NULL_TREE, |
| /*preserve_reference=*/true, |
| tf_warning_or_error); |
| if (decl == error_mark_node) |
| return; |
| |
| if (warn_init_self && init && TREE_CODE (init) == TREE_LIST |
| && TREE_CHAIN (init) == NULL_TREE) |
| { |
| tree val = TREE_VALUE (init); |
| /* Handle references. */ |
| if (REFERENCE_REF_P (val)) |
| val = TREE_OPERAND (val, 0); |
| if (TREE_CODE (val) == COMPONENT_REF && TREE_OPERAND (val, 1) == member |
| && TREE_OPERAND (val, 0) == current_class_ref) |
| warning_at (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (current_function_decl), |
| OPT_Winit_self, "%qD is initialized with itself", |
| member); |
| } |
| |
| if (array_of_unknown_bound_p (type)) |
| { |
| maybe_reject_flexarray_init (member, init); |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| if (init && TREE_CODE (init) == TREE_LIST) |
| { |
| /* A(): a{e} */ |
| if (DIRECT_LIST_INIT_P (TREE_VALUE (init))) |
| init = build_x_compound_expr_from_list (init, ELK_MEM_INIT, |
| tf_warning_or_error); |
| /* We are trying to initialize an array from a ()-list. If we |
| should attempt to do so, conjure up a CONSTRUCTOR. */ |
| else if (TREE_CODE (type) == ARRAY_TYPE |
| /* P0960 is a C++20 feature. */ |
| && cxx_dialect >= cxx20) |
| init = do_aggregate_paren_init (init, type); |
| else if (!CLASS_TYPE_P (type)) |
| init = build_x_compound_expr_from_list (init, ELK_MEM_INIT, |
| tf_warning_or_error); |
| /* If we're initializing a class from a ()-list, leave the TREE_LIST |
| alone: we might call an appropriate constructor, or (in C++20) |
| do aggregate-initialization. */ |
| } |
| |
| if (init == void_type_node) |
| { |
| /* mem() means value-initialization. */ |
| if (TREE_CODE (type) == ARRAY_TYPE) |
| { |
| init = build_vec_init_expr (type, init, tf_warning_or_error); |
| init = build2 (INIT_EXPR, type, decl, init); |
| finish_expr_stmt (init); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| tree value = build_value_init (type, tf_warning_or_error); |
| if (value == error_mark_node) |
| return; |
| init = build2 (INIT_EXPR, type, decl, value); |
| finish_expr_stmt (init); |
| } |
| } |
| /* Deal with this here, as we will get confused if we try to call the |
| assignment op for an anonymous union. This can happen in a |
| synthesized copy constructor. */ |
| else if (ANON_AGGR_TYPE_P (type)) |
| { |
| if (init) |
| { |
| init = build2 (INIT_EXPR, type, decl, TREE_VALUE (init)); |
| finish_expr_stmt (init); |
| } |
| } |
| else if (init |
| && (TYPE_REF_P (type) |
| || (TREE_CODE (init) == CONSTRUCTOR |
| && (CP_AGGREGATE_TYPE_P (type) |
| || is_std_init_list (type))))) |
| { |
| /* With references and list-initialization, we need to deal with |
| extending temporary lifetimes. 12.2p5: "A temporary bound to a |
| reference member in a constructor’s ctor-initializer (12.6.2) |
| persists until the constructor exits." */ |
| unsigned i; tree t; |
| releasing_vec cleanups; |
| if (!same_type_ignoring_top_level_qualifiers_p (TREE_TYPE (init), type)) |
| { |
| if (BRACE_ENCLOSED_INITIALIZER_P (init) |
| && CP_AGGREGATE_TYPE_P (type)) |
| init = reshape_init (type, init, tf_warning_or_error); |
| init = digest_init (type, init, tf_warning_or_error); |
| } |
| if (init == error_mark_node) |
| return; |
| if (is_empty_field (member) |
| && !TREE_SIDE_EFFECTS (init)) |
| /* Don't add trivial initialization of an empty base/field, as they |
| might not be ordered the way the back-end expects. */ |
| return; |
| /* A FIELD_DECL doesn't really have a suitable lifetime, but |
| make_temporary_var_for_ref_to_temp will treat it as automatic and |
| set_up_extended_ref_temp wants to use the decl in a warning. */ |
| init = extend_ref_init_temps (member, init, &cleanups); |
| if (TREE_CODE (type) == ARRAY_TYPE |
| && TYPE_HAS_NONTRIVIAL_DESTRUCTOR (TREE_TYPE (type))) |
| init = build_vec_init_expr (type, init, tf_warning_or_error); |
| init = build2 (INIT_EXPR, type, decl, init); |
| finish_expr_stmt (init); |
| FOR_EACH_VEC_ELT (*cleanups, i, t) |
| push_cleanup (decl, t, false); |
| } |
| else if (type_build_ctor_call (type) |
| || (init && CLASS_TYPE_P (strip_array_types (type)))) |
| { |
| if (TREE_CODE (type) == ARRAY_TYPE) |
| { |
| if (init == NULL_TREE |
| || same_type_ignoring_top_level_qualifiers_p (type, |
| TREE_TYPE (init))) |
| { |
| if (TYPE_DOMAIN (type) && TYPE_MAX_VALUE (TYPE_DOMAIN (type))) |
| { |
| /* Initialize the array only if it's not a flexible |
| array member (i.e., if it has an upper bound). */ |
| init = build_vec_init_expr (type, init, tf_warning_or_error); |
| init = build2 (INIT_EXPR, type, decl, init); |
| finish_expr_stmt (init); |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| error ("invalid initializer for array member %q#D", member); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| int flags = LOOKUP_NORMAL; |
| if (DECL_DEFAULTED_FN (current_function_decl)) |
| flags |= LOOKUP_DEFAULTED; |
| if (CP_TYPE_CONST_P (type) |
| && init == NULL_TREE |
| && default_init_uninitialized_part (type)) |
| { |
| /* TYPE_NEEDS_CONSTRUCTING can be set just because we have a |
| vtable; still give this diagnostic. */ |
| auto_diagnostic_group d; |
| if (permerror (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (current_function_decl), |
| "uninitialized const member in %q#T", type)) |
| inform (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (member), |
| "%q#D should be initialized", member ); |
| } |
| finish_expr_stmt (build_aggr_init (decl, init, flags, |
| tf_warning_or_error)); |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| if (init == NULL_TREE) |
| { |
| tree core_type; |
| /* member traversal: note it leaves init NULL */ |
| if (TYPE_REF_P (type)) |
| { |
| auto_diagnostic_group d; |
| if (permerror (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (current_function_decl), |
| "uninitialized reference member in %q#T", type)) |
| inform (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (member), |
| "%q#D should be initialized", member); |
| } |
| else if (CP_TYPE_CONST_P (type)) |
| { |
| auto_diagnostic_group d; |
| if (permerror (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (current_function_decl), |
| "uninitialized const member in %q#T", type)) |
| inform (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (member), |
| "%q#D should be initialized", member ); |
| } |
| |
| core_type = strip_array_types (type); |
| |
| if (CLASS_TYPE_P (core_type) |
| && (CLASSTYPE_READONLY_FIELDS_NEED_INIT (core_type) |
| || CLASSTYPE_REF_FIELDS_NEED_INIT (core_type))) |
| diagnose_uninitialized_cst_or_ref_member (core_type, |
| /*using_new=*/false, |
| /*complain=*/true); |
| } |
| |
| maybe_warn_list_ctor (member, init); |
| |
| if (init) |
| finish_expr_stmt (cp_build_modify_expr (input_location, decl, |
| INIT_EXPR, init, |
| tf_warning_or_error)); |
| } |
| |
| if (type_build_dtor_call (type)) |
| { |
| tree expr; |
| |
| expr = build_class_member_access_expr (current_class_ref, member, |
| /*access_path=*/NULL_TREE, |
| /*preserve_reference=*/false, |
| tf_warning_or_error); |
| expr = build_delete (input_location, |
| type, expr, sfk_complete_destructor, |
| LOOKUP_NONVIRTUAL|LOOKUP_DESTRUCTOR, 0, |
| tf_warning_or_error); |
| |
| if (expr != error_mark_node |
| && TYPE_HAS_NONTRIVIAL_DESTRUCTOR (type)) |
| finish_eh_cleanup (expr); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Returns a TREE_LIST containing (as the TREE_PURPOSE of each node) all |
| the FIELD_DECLs on the TYPE_FIELDS list for T, in reverse order. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| build_field_list (tree t, tree list, int *uses_unions_or_anon_p) |
| { |
| tree fields; |
| |
| /* Note whether or not T is a union. */ |
| if (TREE_CODE (t) == UNION_TYPE) |
| *uses_unions_or_anon_p = 1; |
| |
| for (fields = TYPE_FIELDS (t); fields; fields = DECL_CHAIN (fields)) |
| { |
| tree fieldtype; |
| |
| /* Skip CONST_DECLs for enumeration constants and so forth. */ |
| if (TREE_CODE (fields) != FIELD_DECL || DECL_ARTIFICIAL (fields)) |
| continue; |
| |
| fieldtype = TREE_TYPE (fields); |
| |
| /* For an anonymous struct or union, we must recursively |
| consider the fields of the anonymous type. They can be |
| directly initialized from the constructor. */ |
| if (ANON_AGGR_TYPE_P (fieldtype)) |
| { |
| /* Add this field itself. Synthesized copy constructors |
| initialize the entire aggregate. */ |
| list = tree_cons (fields, NULL_TREE, list); |
| /* And now add the fields in the anonymous aggregate. */ |
| list = build_field_list (fieldtype, list, uses_unions_or_anon_p); |
| *uses_unions_or_anon_p = 1; |
| } |
| /* Add this field. */ |
| else if (DECL_NAME (fields)) |
| list = tree_cons (fields, NULL_TREE, list); |
| } |
| |
| return list; |
| } |
| |
| /* Return the innermost aggregate scope for FIELD, whether that is |
| the enclosing class or an anonymous aggregate within it. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| innermost_aggr_scope (tree field) |
| { |
| if (ANON_AGGR_TYPE_P (TREE_TYPE (field))) |
| return TREE_TYPE (field); |
| else |
| return DECL_CONTEXT (field); |
| } |
| |
| /* The MEM_INITS are a TREE_LIST. The TREE_PURPOSE of each list gives |
| a FIELD_DECL or BINFO in T that needs initialization. The |
| TREE_VALUE gives the initializer, or list of initializer arguments. |
| |
| Return a TREE_LIST containing all of the initializations required |
| for T, in the order in which they should be performed. The output |
| list has the same format as the input. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| sort_mem_initializers (tree t, tree mem_inits) |
| { |
| tree init; |
| tree base, binfo, base_binfo; |
| tree sorted_inits; |
| tree next_subobject; |
| vec<tree, va_gc> *vbases; |
| int i; |
| int uses_unions_or_anon_p = 0; |
| |
| /* Build up a list of initializations. The TREE_PURPOSE of entry |
| will be the subobject (a FIELD_DECL or BINFO) to initialize. The |
| TREE_VALUE will be the constructor arguments, or NULL if no |
| explicit initialization was provided. */ |
| sorted_inits = NULL_TREE; |
| |
| /* Process the virtual bases. */ |
| for (vbases = CLASSTYPE_VBASECLASSES (t), i = 0; |
| vec_safe_iterate (vbases, i, &base); i++) |
| sorted_inits = tree_cons (base, NULL_TREE, sorted_inits); |
| |
| /* Process the direct bases. */ |
| for (binfo = TYPE_BINFO (t), i = 0; |
| BINFO_BASE_ITERATE (binfo, i, base_binfo); ++i) |
| if (!BINFO_VIRTUAL_P (base_binfo)) |
| sorted_inits = tree_cons (base_binfo, NULL_TREE, sorted_inits); |
| |
| /* Process the non-static data members. */ |
| sorted_inits = build_field_list (t, sorted_inits, &uses_unions_or_anon_p); |
| /* Reverse the entire list of initializations, so that they are in |
| the order that they will actually be performed. */ |
| sorted_inits = nreverse (sorted_inits); |
| |
| /* If the user presented the initializers in an order different from |
| that in which they will actually occur, we issue a warning. Keep |
| track of the next subobject which can be explicitly initialized |
| without issuing a warning. */ |
| next_subobject = sorted_inits; |
| |
| /* Go through the explicit initializers, filling in TREE_PURPOSE in |
| the SORTED_INITS. */ |
| for (init = mem_inits; init; init = TREE_CHAIN (init)) |
| { |
| tree subobject; |
| tree subobject_init; |
| |
| subobject = TREE_PURPOSE (init); |
| |
| /* If the explicit initializers are in sorted order, then |
| SUBOBJECT will be NEXT_SUBOBJECT, or something following |
| it. */ |
| for (subobject_init = next_subobject; |
| subobject_init; |
| subobject_init = TREE_CHAIN (subobject_init)) |
| if (TREE_PURPOSE (subobject_init) == subobject) |
| break; |
| |
| /* Issue a warning if the explicit initializer order does not |
| match that which will actually occur. |
| ??? Are all these on the correct lines? */ |
| if (warn_reorder && !subobject_init) |
| { |
| if (TREE_CODE (TREE_PURPOSE (next_subobject)) == FIELD_DECL) |
| warning_at (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (TREE_PURPOSE (next_subobject)), |
| OPT_Wreorder, "%qD will be initialized after", |
| TREE_PURPOSE (next_subobject)); |
| else |
| warning (OPT_Wreorder, "base %qT will be initialized after", |
| TREE_PURPOSE (next_subobject)); |
| if (TREE_CODE (subobject) == FIELD_DECL) |
| warning_at (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (subobject), |
| OPT_Wreorder, " %q#D", subobject); |
| else |
| warning (OPT_Wreorder, " base %qT", subobject); |
| warning_at (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (current_function_decl), |
| OPT_Wreorder, " when initialized here"); |
| } |
| |
| /* Look again, from the beginning of the list. */ |
| if (!subobject_init) |
| { |
| subobject_init = sorted_inits; |
| while (TREE_PURPOSE (subobject_init) != subobject) |
| subobject_init = TREE_CHAIN (subobject_init); |
| } |
| |
| /* It is invalid to initialize the same subobject more than |
| once. */ |
| if (TREE_VALUE (subobject_init)) |
| { |
| if (TREE_CODE (subobject) == FIELD_DECL) |
| error_at (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (current_function_decl), |
| "multiple initializations given for %qD", |
| subobject); |
| else |
| error_at (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (current_function_decl), |
| "multiple initializations given for base %qT", |
| subobject); |
| } |
| |
| /* Record the initialization. */ |
| TREE_VALUE (subobject_init) = TREE_VALUE (init); |
| /* Carry over the dummy TREE_TYPE node containing the source location. */ |
| TREE_TYPE (subobject_init) = TREE_TYPE (init); |
| next_subobject = subobject_init; |
| } |
| |
| /* [class.base.init] |
| |
| If a ctor-initializer specifies more than one mem-initializer for |
| multiple members of the same union (including members of |
| anonymous unions), the ctor-initializer is ill-formed. |
| |
| Here we also splice out uninitialized union members. */ |
| if (uses_unions_or_anon_p) |
| { |
| tree *last_p = NULL; |
| tree *p; |
| for (p = &sorted_inits; *p; ) |
| { |
| tree field; |
| tree ctx; |
| |
| init = *p; |
| |
| field = TREE_PURPOSE (init); |
| |
| /* Skip base classes. */ |
| if (TREE_CODE (field) != FIELD_DECL) |
| goto next; |
| |
| /* If this is an anonymous aggregate with no explicit initializer, |
| splice it out. */ |
| if (!TREE_VALUE (init) && ANON_AGGR_TYPE_P (TREE_TYPE (field))) |
| goto splice; |
| |
| /* See if this field is a member of a union, or a member of a |
| structure contained in a union, etc. */ |
| ctx = innermost_aggr_scope (field); |
| |
| /* If this field is not a member of a union, skip it. */ |
| if (TREE_CODE (ctx) != UNION_TYPE |
| && !ANON_AGGR_TYPE_P (ctx)) |
| goto next; |
| |
| /* If this union member has no explicit initializer and no NSDMI, |
| splice it out. */ |
| if (TREE_VALUE (init) || DECL_INITIAL (field)) |
| /* OK. */; |
| else |
| goto splice; |
| |
| /* It's only an error if we have two initializers for the same |
| union type. */ |
| if (!last_p) |
| { |
| last_p = p; |
| goto next; |
| } |
| |
| /* See if LAST_FIELD and the field initialized by INIT are |
| members of the same union (or the union itself). If so, there's |
| a problem, unless they're actually members of the same structure |
| which is itself a member of a union. For example, given: |
| |
| union { struct { int i; int j; }; }; |
| |
| initializing both `i' and `j' makes sense. */ |
| ctx = common_enclosing_class |
| (innermost_aggr_scope (field), |
| innermost_aggr_scope (TREE_PURPOSE (*last_p))); |
| |
| if (ctx && (TREE_CODE (ctx) == UNION_TYPE |
| || ctx == TREE_TYPE (TREE_PURPOSE (*last_p)))) |
| { |
| /* A mem-initializer hides an NSDMI. */ |
| if (TREE_VALUE (init) && !TREE_VALUE (*last_p)) |
| *last_p = TREE_CHAIN (*last_p); |
| else if (TREE_VALUE (*last_p) && !TREE_VALUE (init)) |
| goto splice; |
| else |
| { |
| error_at (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (current_function_decl), |
| "initializations for multiple members of %qT", |
| ctx); |
| goto splice; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| last_p = p; |
| |
| next: |
| p = &TREE_CHAIN (*p); |
| continue; |
| splice: |
| *p = TREE_CHAIN (*p); |
| continue; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return sorted_inits; |
| } |
| |
| /* Callback for cp_walk_tree to mark all PARM_DECLs in a tree as read. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| mark_exp_read_r (tree *tp, int *, void *) |
| { |
| tree t = *tp; |
| if (TREE_CODE (t) == PARM_DECL) |
| mark_exp_read (t); |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* Initialize all bases and members of CURRENT_CLASS_TYPE. MEM_INITS |
| is a TREE_LIST giving the explicit mem-initializer-list for the |
| constructor. The TREE_PURPOSE of each entry is a subobject (a |
| FIELD_DECL or a BINFO) of the CURRENT_CLASS_TYPE. The TREE_VALUE |
| is a TREE_LIST giving the arguments to the constructor or |
| void_type_node for an empty list of arguments. */ |
| |
| void |
| emit_mem_initializers (tree mem_inits) |
| { |
| int flags = LOOKUP_NORMAL; |
| |
| /* We will already have issued an error message about the fact that |
| the type is incomplete. */ |
| if (!COMPLETE_TYPE_P (current_class_type)) |
| return; |
| |
| if (mem_inits |
| && TYPE_P (TREE_PURPOSE (mem_inits)) |
| && same_type_p (TREE_PURPOSE (mem_inits), current_class_type)) |
| { |
| /* Delegating constructor. */ |
| gcc_assert (TREE_CHAIN (mem_inits) == NULL_TREE); |
| perform_target_ctor (TREE_VALUE (mem_inits)); |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| if (DECL_DEFAULTED_FN (current_function_decl) |
| && ! DECL_INHERITED_CTOR (current_function_decl)) |
| flags |= LOOKUP_DEFAULTED; |
| |
| /* Sort the mem-initializers into the order in which the |
| initializations should be performed. */ |
| mem_inits = sort_mem_initializers (current_class_type, mem_inits); |
| |
| in_base_initializer = 1; |
| |
| /* Initialize base classes. */ |
| for (; (mem_inits |
| && TREE_CODE (TREE_PURPOSE (mem_inits)) != FIELD_DECL); |
| mem_inits = TREE_CHAIN (mem_inits)) |
| { |
| tree subobject = TREE_PURPOSE (mem_inits); |
| tree arguments = TREE_VALUE (mem_inits); |
| |
| /* We already have issued an error message. */ |
| if (arguments == error_mark_node) |
| continue; |
| |
| /* Suppress access control when calling the inherited ctor. */ |
| bool inherited_base = (DECL_INHERITED_CTOR (current_function_decl) |
| && flag_new_inheriting_ctors |
| && arguments); |
| if (inherited_base) |
| push_deferring_access_checks (dk_deferred); |
| |
| if (arguments == NULL_TREE) |
| { |
| /* If these initializations are taking place in a copy constructor, |
| the base class should probably be explicitly initialized if there |
| is a user-defined constructor in the base class (other than the |
| default constructor, which will be called anyway). */ |
| if (extra_warnings |
| && DECL_COPY_CONSTRUCTOR_P (current_function_decl) |
| && type_has_user_nondefault_constructor (BINFO_TYPE (subobject))) |
| warning_at (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (current_function_decl), |
| OPT_Wextra, "base class %q#T should be explicitly " |
| "initialized in the copy constructor", |
| BINFO_TYPE (subobject)); |
| } |
| |
| /* Initialize the base. */ |
| if (!BINFO_VIRTUAL_P (subobject)) |
| { |
| tree base_addr; |
| |
| base_addr = build_base_path (PLUS_EXPR, current_class_ptr, |
| subobject, 1, tf_warning_or_error); |
| expand_aggr_init_1 (subobject, NULL_TREE, |
| cp_build_fold_indirect_ref (base_addr), |
| arguments, |
| flags, |
| tf_warning_or_error); |
| expand_cleanup_for_base (subobject, NULL_TREE); |
| } |
| else if (!ABSTRACT_CLASS_TYPE_P (current_class_type)) |
| /* C++14 DR1658 Means we do not have to construct vbases of |
| abstract classes. */ |
| construct_virtual_base (subobject, arguments); |
| else |
| /* When not constructing vbases of abstract classes, at least mark |
| the arguments expressions as read to avoid |
| -Wunused-but-set-parameter false positives. */ |
| cp_walk_tree (&arguments, mark_exp_read_r, NULL, NULL); |
| |
| if (inherited_base) |
| pop_deferring_access_checks (); |
| } |
| in_base_initializer = 0; |
| |
| /* Initialize the vptrs. */ |
| initialize_vtbl_ptrs (current_class_ptr); |
| |
| /* Initialize the data members. */ |
| while (mem_inits) |
| { |
| /* If this initializer was explicitly provided, then the dummy TREE_TYPE |
| node contains the source location. */ |
| iloc_sentinel ils (EXPR_LOCATION (TREE_TYPE (mem_inits))); |
| |
| perform_member_init (TREE_PURPOSE (mem_inits), |
| TREE_VALUE (mem_inits)); |
| mem_inits = TREE_CHAIN (mem_inits); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Returns the address of the vtable (i.e., the value that should be |
| assigned to the vptr) for BINFO. */ |
| |
| tree |
| build_vtbl_address (tree binfo) |
| { |
| tree binfo_for = binfo; |
| tree vtbl; |
| |
| if (BINFO_VPTR_INDEX (binfo) && BINFO_VIRTUAL_P (binfo)) |
| /* If this is a virtual primary base, then the vtable we want to store |
| is that for the base this is being used as the primary base of. We |
| can't simply skip the initialization, because we may be expanding the |
| inits of a subobject constructor where the virtual base layout |
| can be different. */ |
| while (BINFO_PRIMARY_P (binfo_for)) |
| binfo_for = BINFO_INHERITANCE_CHAIN (binfo_for); |
| |
| /* Figure out what vtable BINFO's vtable is based on, and mark it as |
| used. */ |
| vtbl = get_vtbl_decl_for_binfo (binfo_for); |
| TREE_USED (vtbl) = true; |
| |
| /* Now compute the address to use when initializing the vptr. */ |
| vtbl = unshare_expr (BINFO_VTABLE (binfo_for)); |
| if (VAR_P (vtbl)) |
| vtbl = build1 (ADDR_EXPR, build_pointer_type (TREE_TYPE (vtbl)), vtbl); |
| |
| return vtbl; |
| } |
| |
| /* This code sets up the virtual function tables appropriate for |
| the pointer DECL. It is a one-ply initialization. |
| |
| BINFO is the exact type that DECL is supposed to be. In |
| multiple inheritance, this might mean "C's A" if C : A, B. */ |
| |
| static void |
| expand_virtual_init (tree binfo, tree decl) |
| { |
| tree vtbl, vtbl_ptr; |
| tree vtt_index; |
| |
| /* Compute the initializer for vptr. */ |
| vtbl = build_vtbl_address (binfo); |
| |
| /* We may get this vptr from a VTT, if this is a subobject |
| constructor or subobject destructor. */ |
| vtt_index = BINFO_VPTR_INDEX (binfo); |
| if (vtt_index) |
| { |
| tree vtbl2; |
| tree vtt_parm; |
| |
| /* Compute the value to use, when there's a VTT. */ |
| vtt_parm = current_vtt_parm; |
| vtbl2 = fold_build_pointer_plus (vtt_parm, vtt_index); |
| vtbl2 = cp_build_fold_indirect_ref (vtbl2); |
| vtbl2 = convert (TREE_TYPE (vtbl), vtbl2); |
| |
| /* The actual initializer is the VTT value only in the subobject |
| constructor. In maybe_clone_body we'll substitute NULL for |
| the vtt_parm in the case of the non-subobject constructor. */ |
| vtbl = build_if_in_charge (vtbl, vtbl2); |
| } |
| |
| /* Compute the location of the vtpr. */ |
| vtbl_ptr = build_vfield_ref (cp_build_fold_indirect_ref (decl), |
| TREE_TYPE (binfo)); |
| gcc_assert (vtbl_ptr != error_mark_node); |
| |
| /* Assign the vtable to the vptr. */ |
| vtbl = convert_force (TREE_TYPE (vtbl_ptr), vtbl, 0, tf_warning_or_error); |
| finish_expr_stmt (cp_build_modify_expr (input_location, vtbl_ptr, NOP_EXPR, |
| vtbl, tf_warning_or_error)); |
| } |
| |
| /* If an exception is thrown in a constructor, those base classes already |
| constructed must be destroyed. This function creates the cleanup |
| for BINFO, which has just been constructed. If FLAG is non-NULL, |
| it is a DECL which is nonzero when this base needs to be |
| destroyed. */ |
| |
| static void |
| expand_cleanup_for_base (tree binfo, tree flag) |
| { |
| tree expr; |
| |
| if (!type_build_dtor_call (BINFO_TYPE (binfo))) |
| return; |
| |
| /* Call the destructor. */ |
| expr = build_special_member_call (current_class_ref, |
| base_dtor_identifier, |
| NULL, |
| binfo, |
| LOOKUP_NORMAL | LOOKUP_NONVIRTUAL, |
| tf_warning_or_error); |
| |
| if (TYPE_HAS_TRIVIAL_DESTRUCTOR (BINFO_TYPE (binfo))) |
| return; |
| |
| if (flag) |
| expr = fold_build3_loc (input_location, |
| COND_EXPR, void_type_node, |
| c_common_truthvalue_conversion (input_location, flag), |
| expr, integer_zero_node); |
| |
| finish_eh_cleanup (expr); |
| } |
| |
| /* Construct the virtual base-class VBASE passing the ARGUMENTS to its |
| constructor. */ |
| |
| static void |
| construct_virtual_base (tree vbase, tree arguments) |
| { |
| tree inner_if_stmt; |
| tree exp; |
| tree flag; |
| |
| /* If there are virtual base classes with destructors, we need to |
| emit cleanups to destroy them if an exception is thrown during |
| the construction process. These exception regions (i.e., the |
| period during which the cleanups must occur) begin from the time |
| the construction is complete to the end of the function. If we |
| create a conditional block in which to initialize the |
| base-classes, then the cleanup region for the virtual base begins |
| inside a block, and ends outside of that block. This situation |
| confuses the sjlj exception-handling code. Therefore, we do not |
| create a single conditional block, but one for each |
| initialization. (That way the cleanup regions always begin |
| in the outer block.) We trust the back end to figure out |
| that the FLAG will not change across initializations, and |
| avoid doing multiple tests. */ |
| flag = DECL_CHAIN (DECL_ARGUMENTS (current_function_decl)); |
| inner_if_stmt = begin_if_stmt (); |
| finish_if_stmt_cond (flag, inner_if_stmt); |
| |
| /* Compute the location of the virtual base. If we're |
| constructing virtual bases, then we must be the most derived |
| class. Therefore, we don't have to look up the virtual base; |
| we already know where it is. */ |
| exp = convert_to_base_statically (current_class_ref, vbase); |
| |
| expand_aggr_init_1 (vbase, current_class_ref, exp, arguments, |
| 0, tf_warning_or_error); |
| finish_then_clause (inner_if_stmt); |
| finish_if_stmt (inner_if_stmt); |
| |
| expand_cleanup_for_base (vbase, flag); |
| } |
| |
| /* Find the context in which this FIELD can be initialized. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| initializing_context (tree field) |
| { |
| tree t = DECL_CONTEXT (field); |
| |
| /* Anonymous union members can be initialized in the first enclosing |
| non-anonymous union context. */ |
| while (t && ANON_AGGR_TYPE_P (t)) |
| t = TYPE_CONTEXT (t); |
| return t; |
| } |
| |
| /* Function to give error message if member initialization specification |
| is erroneous. FIELD is the member we decided to initialize. |
| TYPE is the type for which the initialization is being performed. |
| FIELD must be a member of TYPE. |
| |
| MEMBER_NAME is the name of the member. */ |
| |
| static int |
| member_init_ok_or_else (tree field, tree type, tree member_name) |
| { |
| if (field == error_mark_node) |
| return 0; |
| if (!field) |
| { |
| error ("class %qT does not have any field named %qD", type, |
| member_name); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| if (VAR_P (field)) |
| { |
| error ("%q#D is a static data member; it can only be " |
| "initialized at its definition", |
| field); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| if (TREE_CODE (field) != FIELD_DECL) |
| { |
| error ("%q#D is not a non-static data member of %qT", |
| field, type); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| if (initializing_context (field) != type) |
| { |
| error ("class %qT does not have any field named %qD", type, |
| member_name); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| /* NAME is a FIELD_DECL, an IDENTIFIER_NODE which names a field, or it |
| is a _TYPE node or TYPE_DECL which names a base for that type. |
| Check the validity of NAME, and return either the base _TYPE, base |
| binfo, or the FIELD_DECL of the member. If NAME is invalid, return |
| NULL_TREE and issue a diagnostic. |
| |
| An old style unnamed direct single base construction is permitted, |
| where NAME is NULL. */ |
| |
| tree |
| expand_member_init (tree name) |
| { |
| tree basetype; |
| tree field; |
| |
| if (!current_class_ref) |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| |
| if (!name) |
| { |
| /* This is an obsolete unnamed base class initializer. The |
| parser will already have warned about its use. */ |
| switch (BINFO_N_BASE_BINFOS (TYPE_BINFO (current_class_type))) |
| { |
| case 0: |
| error ("unnamed initializer for %qT, which has no base classes", |
| current_class_type); |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| case 1: |
| basetype = BINFO_TYPE |
| (BINFO_BASE_BINFO (TYPE_BINFO (current_class_type), 0)); |
| break; |
| default: |
| error ("unnamed initializer for %qT, which uses multiple inheritance", |
| current_class_type); |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| } |
| else if (TYPE_P (name)) |
| { |
| basetype = TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (name); |
| name = TYPE_NAME (name); |
| } |
| else if (TREE_CODE (name) == TYPE_DECL) |
| basetype = TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (TREE_TYPE (name)); |
| else |
| basetype = NULL_TREE; |
| |
| if (basetype) |
| { |
| tree class_binfo; |
| tree direct_binfo; |
| tree virtual_binfo; |
| int i; |
| |
| if (current_template_parms |
| || same_type_p (basetype, current_class_type)) |
| return basetype; |
| |
| class_binfo = TYPE_BINFO (current_class_type); |
| direct_binfo = NULL_TREE; |
| virtual_binfo = NULL_TREE; |
| |
| /* Look for a direct base. */ |
| for (i = 0; BINFO_BASE_ITERATE (class_binfo, i, direct_binfo); ++i) |
| if (SAME_BINFO_TYPE_P (BINFO_TYPE (direct_binfo), basetype)) |
| break; |
| |
| /* Look for a virtual base -- unless the direct base is itself |
| virtual. */ |
| if (!direct_binfo || !BINFO_VIRTUAL_P (direct_binfo)) |
| virtual_binfo = binfo_for_vbase (basetype, current_class_type); |
| |
| /* [class.base.init] |
| |
| If a mem-initializer-id is ambiguous because it designates |
| both a direct non-virtual base class and an inherited virtual |
| base class, the mem-initializer is ill-formed. */ |
| if (direct_binfo && virtual_binfo) |
| { |
| error ("%qD is both a direct base and an indirect virtual base", |
| basetype); |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| if (!direct_binfo && !virtual_binfo) |
| { |
| if (CLASSTYPE_VBASECLASSES (current_class_type)) |
| error ("type %qT is not a direct or virtual base of %qT", |
| basetype, current_class_type); |
| else |
| error ("type %qT is not a direct base of %qT", |
| basetype, current_class_type); |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| return direct_binfo ? direct_binfo : virtual_binfo; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| if (identifier_p (name)) |
| field = lookup_field (current_class_type, name, 1, false); |
| else |
| field = name; |
| |
| if (member_init_ok_or_else (field, current_class_type, name)) |
| return field; |
| } |
| |
| return NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* This is like `expand_member_init', only it stores one aggregate |
| value into another. |
| |
| INIT comes in two flavors: it is either a value which |
| is to be stored in EXP, or it is a parameter list |
| to go to a constructor, which will operate on EXP. |
| If INIT is not a parameter list for a constructor, then set |
| LOOKUP_ONLYCONVERTING. |
| If FLAGS is LOOKUP_ONLYCONVERTING then it is the = init form of |
| the initializer, if FLAGS is 0, then it is the (init) form. |
| If `init' is a CONSTRUCTOR, then we emit a warning message, |
| explaining that such initializations are invalid. |
| |
| If INIT resolves to a CALL_EXPR which happens to return |
| something of the type we are looking for, then we know |
| that we can safely use that call to perform the |
| initialization. |
| |
| The virtual function table pointer cannot be set up here, because |
| we do not really know its type. |
| |
| This never calls operator=(). |
| |
| When initializing, nothing is CONST. |
| |
| A default copy constructor may have to be used to perform the |
| initialization. |
| |
| A constructor or a conversion operator may have to be used to |
| perform the initialization, but not both, as it would be ambiguous. */ |
| |
| tree |
| build_aggr_init (tree exp, tree init, int flags, tsubst_flags_t complain) |
| { |
| tree stmt_expr; |
| tree compound_stmt; |
| int destroy_temps; |
| tree type = TREE_TYPE (exp); |
| int was_const = TREE_READONLY (exp); |
| int was_volatile = TREE_THIS_VOLATILE (exp); |
| int is_global; |
| |
| if (init == error_mark_node) |
| return error_mark_node; |
| |
| location_t init_loc = (init |
| ? cp_expr_loc_or_input_loc (init) |
| : location_of (exp)); |
| |
| TREE_READONLY (exp) = 0; |
| TREE_THIS_VOLATILE (exp) = 0; |
| |
| if (TREE_CODE (type) == ARRAY_TYPE) |
| { |
| tree itype = init ? TREE_TYPE (init) : NULL_TREE; |
| int from_array = 0; |
| |
| if (VAR_P (exp) && DECL_DECOMPOSITION_P (exp)) |
| { |
| from_array = 1; |
| init = mark_rvalue_use (init); |
| if (init |
| && DECL_P (tree_strip_any_location_wrapper (init)) |
| && !(flags & LOOKUP_ONLYCONVERTING)) |
| { |
| /* Wrap the initializer in a CONSTRUCTOR so that build_vec_init |
| recognizes it as direct-initialization. */ |
| init = build_constructor_single (init_list_type_node, |
| NULL_TREE, init); |
| CONSTRUCTOR_IS_DIRECT_INIT (init) = true; |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* Must arrange to initialize each element of EXP |
| from elements of INIT. */ |
| if (cv_qualified_p (type)) |
| TREE_TYPE (exp) = cv_unqualified (type); |
| if (itype && cv_qualified_p (itype)) |
| TREE_TYPE (init) = cv_unqualified (itype); |
| from_array = (itype && same_type_p (TREE_TYPE (init), |
| TREE_TYPE (exp))); |
| |
| if (init && !BRACE_ENCLOSED_INITIALIZER_P (init) |
| && (!from_array |
| || (TREE_CODE (init) != CONSTRUCTOR |
| /* Can happen, eg, handling the compound-literals |
| extension (ext/complit12.C). */ |
| && TREE_CODE (init) != TARGET_EXPR))) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| error_at (init_loc, "array must be initialized " |
| "with a brace-enclosed initializer"); |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| stmt_expr = build_vec_init (exp, NULL_TREE, init, |
| /*explicit_value_init_p=*/false, |
| from_array, |
| complain); |
| TREE_READONLY (exp) = was_const; |
| TREE_THIS_VOLATILE (exp) = was_volatile; |
| TREE_TYPE (exp) = type; |
| /* Restore the type of init unless it was used directly. */ |
| if (init && TREE_CODE (stmt_expr) != INIT_EXPR) |
| TREE_TYPE (init) = itype; |
| return stmt_expr; |
| } |
| |
| if (init && init != void_type_node |
| && TREE_CODE (init) != TREE_LIST |
| && !(TREE_CODE (init) == TARGET_EXPR |
| && TARGET_EXPR_DIRECT_INIT_P (init)) |
| && !DIRECT_LIST_INIT_P (init)) |
| flags |= LOOKUP_ONLYCONVERTING; |
| |
| is_global = begin_init_stmts (&stmt_expr, &compound_stmt); |
| destroy_temps = stmts_are_full_exprs_p (); |
| current_stmt_tree ()->stmts_are_full_exprs_p = 0; |
| bool ok = expand_aggr_init_1 (TYPE_BINFO (type), exp, exp, |
| init, LOOKUP_NORMAL|flags, complain); |
| stmt_expr = finish_init_stmts (is_global, stmt_expr, compound_stmt); |
| current_stmt_tree ()->stmts_are_full_exprs_p = destroy_temps; |
| TREE_READONLY (exp) = was_const; |
| TREE_THIS_VOLATILE (exp) = was_volatile; |
| if (!ok) |
| return error_mark_node; |
| |
| if ((VAR_P (exp) || TREE_CODE (exp) == PARM_DECL) |
| && TREE_SIDE_EFFECTS (stmt_expr) |
| && !lookup_attribute ("warn_unused", TYPE_ATTRIBUTES (type))) |
| /* Just know that we've seen something for this node. */ |
| TREE_USED (exp) = 1; |
| |
| return stmt_expr; |
| } |
| |
| static bool |
| expand_default_init (tree binfo, tree true_exp, tree exp, tree init, int flags, |
| tsubst_flags_t complain) |
| { |
| tree type = TREE_TYPE (exp); |
| |
| /* It fails because there may not be a constructor which takes |
| its own type as the first (or only parameter), but which does |
| take other types via a conversion. So, if the thing initializing |
| the expression is a unit element of type X, first try X(X&), |
| followed by initialization by X. If neither of these work |
| out, then look hard. */ |
| tree rval; |
| vec<tree, va_gc> *parms; |
| |
| /* If we have direct-initialization from an initializer list, pull |
| it out of the TREE_LIST so the code below can see it. */ |
| if (init && TREE_CODE (init) == TREE_LIST |
| && DIRECT_LIST_INIT_P (TREE_VALUE (init))) |
| { |
| gcc_checking_assert ((flags & LOOKUP_ONLYCONVERTING) == 0 |
| && TREE_CHAIN (init) == NULL_TREE); |
| init = TREE_VALUE (init); |
| /* Only call reshape_init if it has not been called earlier |
| by the callers. */ |
| if (BRACE_ENCLOSED_INITIALIZER_P (init) && CP_AGGREGATE_TYPE_P (type)) |
| init = reshape_init (type, init, complain); |
| } |
| |
| if (init && BRACE_ENCLOSED_INITIALIZER_P (init) |
| && CP_AGGREGATE_TYPE_P (type)) |
| /* A brace-enclosed initializer for an aggregate. In C++0x this can |
| happen for direct-initialization, too. */ |
| init = digest_init (type, init, complain); |
| |
| if (init == error_mark_node) |
| return false; |
| |
| /* A CONSTRUCTOR of the target's type is a previously digested |
| initializer, whether that happened just above or in |
| cp_parser_late_parsing_nsdmi. |
| |
| A TARGET_EXPR with TARGET_EXPR_DIRECT_INIT_P or TARGET_EXPR_LIST_INIT_P |
| set represents the whole initialization, so we shouldn't build up |
| another ctor call. */ |
| if (init |
| && (TREE_CODE (init) == CONSTRUCTOR |
| || (TREE_CODE (init) == TARGET_EXPR |
| && (TARGET_EXPR_DIRECT_INIT_P (init) |
| || TARGET_EXPR_LIST_INIT_P (init)))) |
| && same_type_ignoring_top_level_qualifiers_p (TREE_TYPE (init), type)) |
| { |
| /* Early initialization via a TARGET_EXPR only works for |
| complete objects. */ |
| gcc_assert (TREE_CODE (init) == CONSTRUCTOR || true_exp == exp); |
| |
| init = build2 (INIT_EXPR, TREE_TYPE (exp), exp, init); |
| TREE_SIDE_EFFECTS (init) = 1; |
| finish_expr_stmt (init); |
| return true; |
| } |
| |
| if (init && TREE_CODE (init) != TREE_LIST |
| && (flags & LOOKUP_ONLYCONVERTING) |
| && !unsafe_return_slot_p (exp)) |
| { |
| /* Base subobjects should only get direct-initialization. */ |
| gcc_assert (true_exp == exp); |
| |
| if (flags & DIRECT_BIND) |
| /* Do nothing. We hit this in two cases: Reference initialization, |
| where we aren't initializing a real variable, so we don't want |
| to run a new constructor; and catching an exception, where we |
| have already built up the constructor call so we could wrap it |
| in an exception region. */; |
| else |
| { |
| init = ocp_convert (type, init, CONV_IMPLICIT|CONV_FORCE_TEMP, |
| flags, complain | tf_no_cleanup); |
| if (init == error_mark_node) |
| return false; |
| } |
| |
| if (TREE_CODE (init) == MUST_NOT_THROW_EXPR) |
| /* We need to protect the initialization of a catch parm with a |
| call to terminate(), which shows up as a MUST_NOT_THROW_EXPR |
| around the TARGET_EXPR for the copy constructor. See |
| initialize_handler_parm. */ |
| { |
| TREE_OPERAND (init, 0) = build2 (INIT_EXPR, TREE_TYPE (exp), exp, |
| TREE_OPERAND (init, 0)); |
| TREE_TYPE (init) = void_type_node; |
| } |
| else |
| init = build2 (INIT_EXPR, TREE_TYPE (exp), exp, init); |
| TREE_SIDE_EFFECTS (init) = 1; |
| finish_expr_stmt (init); |
| return true; |
| } |
| |
| if (init == NULL_TREE) |
| parms = NULL; |
| else if (TREE_CODE (init) == TREE_LIST && !TREE_TYPE (init)) |
| { |
| parms = make_tree_vector (); |
| for (; init != NULL_TREE; init = TREE_CHAIN (init)) |
| vec_safe_push (parms, TREE_VALUE (init)); |
| } |
| else |
| parms = make_tree_vector_single (init); |
| |
| if (exp == current_class_ref && current_function_decl |
| && DECL_HAS_IN_CHARGE_PARM_P (current_function_decl)) |
| { |
| /* Delegating constructor. */ |
| tree complete; |
| tree base; |
| tree elt; unsigned i; |
| |
| /* Unshare the arguments for the second call. */ |
| releasing_vec parms2; |
| FOR_EACH_VEC_SAFE_ELT (parms, i, elt) |
| { |
| elt = break_out_target_exprs (elt); |
| vec_safe_push (parms2, elt); |
| } |
| complete = build_special_member_call (exp, complete_ctor_identifier, |
| &parms2, binfo, flags, |
| complain); |
| complete = fold_build_cleanup_point_expr (void_type_node, complete); |
| |
| base = build_special_member_call (exp, base_ctor_identifier, |
| &parms, binfo, flags, |
| complain); |
| base = fold_build_cleanup_point_expr (void_type_node, base); |
| if (complete == error_mark_node || base == error_mark_node) |
| return false; |
| rval = build_if_in_charge (complete, base); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| tree ctor_name = (true_exp == exp |
| ? complete_ctor_identifier : base_ctor_identifier); |
| |
| rval = build_special_member_call (exp, ctor_name, &parms, binfo, flags, |
| complain); |
| if (rval == error_mark_node) |
| return false; |
| } |
| |
| if (parms != NULL) |
| release_tree_vector (parms); |
| |
| if (exp == true_exp && TREE_CODE (rval) == CALL_EXPR) |
| { |
| tree fn = get_callee_fndecl (rval); |
| if (fn && DECL_DECLARED_CONSTEXPR_P (fn)) |
| { |
| tree e = maybe_constant_init (rval, exp); |
| if (TREE_CONSTANT (e)) |
| rval = build2 (INIT_EXPR, type, exp, e); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* FIXME put back convert_to_void? */ |
| if (TREE_SIDE_EFFECTS (rval)) |
| finish_expr_stmt (rval); |
| |
| return true; |
| } |
| |
| /* This function is responsible for initializing EXP with INIT |
| (if any). Returns true on success, false on failure. |
| |
| BINFO is the binfo of the type for who we are performing the |
| initialization. For example, if W is a virtual base class of A and B, |
| and C : A, B. |
| If we are initializing B, then W must contain B's W vtable, whereas |
| were we initializing C, W must contain C's W vtable. |
| |
| TRUE_EXP is nonzero if it is the true expression being initialized. |
| In this case, it may be EXP, or may just contain EXP. The reason we |
| need this is because if EXP is a base element of TRUE_EXP, we |
| don't necessarily know by looking at EXP where its virtual |
| baseclass fields should really be pointing. But we do know |
| from TRUE_EXP. In constructors, we don't know anything about |
| the value being initialized. |
| |
| FLAGS is just passed to `build_new_method_call'. See that function |
| for its description. */ |
| |
| static bool |
| expand_aggr_init_1 (tree binfo, tree true_exp, tree exp, tree init, int flags, |
| tsubst_flags_t complain) |
| { |
| tree type = TREE_TYPE (exp); |
| |
| gcc_assert (init != error_mark_node && type != error_mark_node); |
| gcc_assert (building_stmt_list_p ()); |
| |
| /* Use a function returning the desired type to initialize EXP for us. |
| If the function is a constructor, and its first argument is |
| NULL_TREE, know that it was meant for us--just slide exp on |
| in and expand the constructor. Constructors now come |
| as TARGET_EXPRs. */ |
| |
| if (init && VAR_P (exp) |
| && COMPOUND_LITERAL_P (init)) |
| { |
| vec<tree, va_gc> *cleanups = NULL; |
| /* If store_init_value returns NULL_TREE, the INIT has been |
| recorded as the DECL_INITIAL for EXP. That means there's |
| nothing more we have to do. */ |
| init = store_init_value (exp, init, &cleanups, flags); |
| if (init) |
| finish_expr_stmt (init); |
| gcc_assert (!cleanups); |
| return true; |
| } |
| |
| /* List-initialization from {} becomes value-initialization for non-aggregate |
| classes with default constructors. Handle this here when we're |
| initializing a base, so protected access works. */ |
| if (exp != true_exp && init && TREE_CODE (init) == TREE_LIST) |
| { |
| tree elt = TREE_VALUE (init); |
| if (DIRECT_LIST_INIT_P (elt) |
| && CONSTRUCTOR_ELTS (elt) == 0 |
| && CLASSTYPE_NON_AGGREGATE (type) |
| && TYPE_HAS_DEFAULT_CONSTRUCTOR (type)) |
| init = void_type_node; |
| } |
| |
| /* If an explicit -- but empty -- initializer list was present, |
| that's value-initialization. */ |
| if (init == void_type_node) |
| { |
| /* If the type has data but no user-provided default ctor, we need to zero |
| out the object. */ |
| if (type_has_non_user_provided_default_constructor (type) |
| && !is_really_empty_class (type, /*ignore_vptr*/true)) |
| { |
| tree field_size = NULL_TREE; |
| if (exp != true_exp && CLASSTYPE_AS_BASE (type) != type) |
| /* Don't clobber already initialized virtual bases. */ |
| field_size = TYPE_SIZE (CLASSTYPE_AS_BASE (type)); |
| init = build_zero_init_1 (type, NULL_TREE, /*static_storage_p=*/false, |
| field_size); |
| init = build2 (INIT_EXPR, type, exp, init); |
| finish_expr_stmt (init); |
| } |
| |
| /* If we don't need to mess with the constructor at all, |
| then we're done. */ |
| if (! type_build_ctor_call (type)) |
| return true; |
| |
| /* Otherwise fall through and call the constructor. */ |
| init = NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| /* We know that expand_default_init can handle everything we want |
| at this point. */ |
| return expand_default_init (binfo, true_exp, exp, init, flags, complain); |
| } |
| |
| /* Report an error if TYPE is not a user-defined, class type. If |
| OR_ELSE is nonzero, give an error message. */ |
| |
| int |
| is_class_type (tree type, int or_else) |
| { |
| if (type == error_mark_node) |
| return 0; |
| |
| if (! CLASS_TYPE_P (type)) |
| { |
| if (or_else) |
| error ("%qT is not a class type", type); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| /* Build a reference to a member of an aggregate. This is not a C++ |
| `&', but really something which can have its address taken, and |
| then act as a pointer to member, for example TYPE :: FIELD can have |
| its address taken by saying & TYPE :: FIELD. ADDRESS_P is true if |
| this expression is the operand of "&". |
| |
| @@ Prints out lousy diagnostics for operator <typename> |
| @@ fields. |
| |
| @@ This function should be rewritten and placed in search.c. */ |
| |
| tree |
| build_offset_ref (tree type, tree member, bool address_p, |
| tsubst_flags_t complain) |
| { |
| tree decl; |
| tree basebinfo = NULL_TREE; |
| |
| /* class templates can come in as TEMPLATE_DECLs here. */ |
| if (TREE_CODE (member) == TEMPLATE_DECL) |
| return member; |
| |
| if (dependent_scope_p (type) || type_dependent_expression_p (member)) |
| return build_qualified_name (NULL_TREE, type, member, |
| /*template_p=*/false); |
| |
| gcc_assert (TYPE_P (type)); |
| if (! is_class_type (type, 1)) |
| return error_mark_node; |
| |
| gcc_assert (DECL_P (member) || BASELINK_P (member)); |
| /* Callers should call mark_used before this point. */ |
| gcc_assert (!DECL_P (member) || TREE_USED (member)); |
| |
| type = TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT (type); |
| if (!COMPLETE_OR_OPEN_TYPE_P (complete_type (type))) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| error ("incomplete type %qT does not have member %qD", type, member); |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| |
| /* Entities other than non-static members need no further |
| processing. */ |
| if (TREE_CODE (member) == TYPE_DECL) |
| return member; |
| if (VAR_P (member) || TREE_CODE (member) == CONST_DECL) |
| return convert_from_reference (member); |
| |
| if (TREE_CODE (member) == FIELD_DECL && DECL_C_BIT_FIELD (member)) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| error ("invalid pointer to bit-field %qD", member); |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| |
| /* Set up BASEBINFO for member lookup. */ |
| decl = maybe_dummy_object (type, &basebinfo); |
| |
| /* A lot of this logic is now handled in lookup_member. */ |
| if (BASELINK_P (member)) |
| { |
| /* Go from the TREE_BASELINK to the member function info. */ |
| tree t = BASELINK_FUNCTIONS (member); |
| |
| if (TREE_CODE (t) != TEMPLATE_ID_EXPR && !really_overloaded_fn (t)) |
| { |
| /* Get rid of a potential OVERLOAD around it. */ |
| t = OVL_FIRST (t); |
| |
| /* Unique functions are handled easily. */ |
| |
| /* For non-static member of base class, we need a special rule |
| for access checking [class.protected]: |
| |
| 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). */ |
| bool ok; |
| if (address_p && DECL_P (t) |
| && DECL_NONSTATIC_MEMBER_P (t)) |
| ok = perform_or_defer_access_check (TYPE_BINFO (type), t, t, |
| complain); |
| else |
| ok = perform_or_defer_access_check (basebinfo, t, t, |
| complain); |
| if (!ok) |
| return error_mark_node; |
| if (DECL_STATIC_FUNCTION_P (t)) |
| return member; |
| member = t; |
| } |
| else |
| TREE_TYPE (member) = unknown_type_node; |
| } |
| else if (address_p && TREE_CODE (member) == FIELD_DECL) |
| { |
| /* We need additional test besides the one in |
| check_accessibility_of_qualified_id in case it is |
| a pointer to non-static member. */ |
| if (!perform_or_defer_access_check (TYPE_BINFO (type), member, member, |
| complain)) |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| |
| if (!address_p) |
| { |
| /* If MEMBER is non-static, then the program has fallen afoul of |
| [expr.prim]: |
| |
| An id-expression that denotes a non-static data member or |
| non-static member function of a class can only be used: |
| |
| -- as part of a class member access (_expr.ref_) in which the |
| object-expression refers to the member's class or a class |
| derived from that class, or |
| |
| -- to form a pointer to member (_expr.unary.op_), or |
| |
| -- in the body of a non-static member function of that class or |
| of a class derived from that class (_class.mfct.non-static_), or |
| |
| -- in a mem-initializer for a constructor for that class or for |
| a class derived from that class (_class.base.init_). */ |
| if (DECL_NONSTATIC_MEMBER_FUNCTION_P (member)) |
| { |
| /* Build a representation of the qualified name suitable |
| for use as the operand to "&" -- even though the "&" is |
| not actually present. */ |
| member = build2 (OFFSET_REF, TREE_TYPE (member), decl, member); |
| /* In Microsoft mode, treat a non-static member function as if |
| it were a pointer-to-member. */ |
| if (flag_ms_extensions) |
| { |
| PTRMEM_OK_P (member) = 1; |
| return cp_build_addr_expr (member, complain); |
| } |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| error ("invalid use of non-static member function %qD", |
| TREE_OPERAND (member, 1)); |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| else if (TREE_CODE (member) == FIELD_DECL) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| error ("invalid use of non-static data member %qD", member); |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| return member; |
| } |
| |
| member = build2 (OFFSET_REF, TREE_TYPE (member), decl, member); |
| PTRMEM_OK_P (member) = 1; |
| return member; |
| } |
| |
| /* If DECL is a scalar enumeration constant or variable with a |
| constant initializer, return the initializer (or, its initializers, |
| recursively); otherwise, return DECL. If STRICT_P, the |
| initializer is only returned if DECL is a |
| constant-expression. If RETURN_AGGREGATE_CST_OK_P, it is ok to |
| return an aggregate constant. If UNSHARE_P, return an unshared |
| copy of the initializer. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| constant_value_1 (tree decl, bool strict_p, bool return_aggregate_cst_ok_p, |
| bool unshare_p) |
| { |
| while (TREE_CODE (decl) == CONST_DECL |
| || decl_constant_var_p (decl) |
| || (!strict_p && VAR_P (decl) |
| && CP_TYPE_CONST_NON_VOLATILE_P (TREE_TYPE (decl)))) |
| { |
| tree init; |
| /* If DECL is a static data member in a template |
| specialization, we must instantiate it here. The |
| initializer for the static data member is not processed |
| until needed; we need it now. */ |
| mark_used (decl, tf_none); |
| init = DECL_INITIAL (decl); |
| if (init == error_mark_node) |
| { |
| if (TREE_CODE (decl) == CONST_DECL |
| || DECL_INITIALIZED_BY_CONSTANT_EXPRESSION_P (decl)) |
| /* Treat the error as a constant to avoid cascading errors on |
| excessively recursive template instantiation (c++/9335). */ |
| return init; |
| else |
| return decl; |
| } |
| /* Initializers in templates are generally expanded during |
| instantiation, so before that for const int i(2) |
| INIT is a TREE_LIST with the actual initializer as |
| TREE_VALUE. */ |
| if (processing_template_decl |
| && init |
| && TREE_CODE (init) == TREE_LIST |
| && TREE_CHAIN (init) == NULL_TREE) |
| init = TREE_VALUE (init); |
| /* Instantiate a non-dependent initializer for user variables. We |
| mustn't do this for the temporary for an array compound literal; |
| trying to instatiate the initializer will keep creating new |
| temporaries until we crash. Probably it's not useful to do it for |
| other artificial variables, either. */ |
| if (!DECL_ARTIFICIAL (decl)) |
| init = instantiate_non_dependent_or_null (init); |
| if (!init |
| || !TREE_TYPE (init) |
| || !TREE_CONSTANT (init) |
| || (!return_aggregate_cst_ok_p |
| /* Unless RETURN_AGGREGATE_CST_OK_P is true, do not |
| return an aggregate constant (of which string |
| literals are a special case), as we do not want |
| to make inadvertent copies of such entities, and |
| we must be sure that their addresses are the |
| same everywhere. */ |
| && (TREE_CODE (init) == CONSTRUCTOR |
| || TREE_CODE (init) == STRING_CST))) |
| break; |
| /* Don't return a CONSTRUCTOR for a variable with partial run-time |
| initialization, since it doesn't represent the entire value. |
| Similarly for VECTOR_CSTs created by cp_folding those |
| CONSTRUCTORs. */ |
| if ((TREE_CODE (init) == CONSTRUCTOR |
| || TREE_CODE (init) == VECTOR_CST) |
| && !DECL_INITIALIZED_BY_CONSTANT_EXPRESSION_P (decl)) |
| break; |
| /* If the variable has a dynamic initializer, don't use its |
| DECL_INITIAL which doesn't reflect the real value. */ |
| if (VAR_P (decl) |
| && TREE_STATIC (decl) |
| && !DECL_INITIALIZED_BY_CONSTANT_EXPRESSION_P (decl) |
| && DECL_NONTRIVIALLY_INITIALIZED_P (decl)) |
| break; |
| decl = init; |
| } |
| return unshare_p ? unshare_expr (decl) : decl; |
| } |
| |
| /* If DECL is a CONST_DECL, or a constant VAR_DECL initialized by constant |
| of integral or enumeration type, or a constexpr variable of scalar type, |
| then return that value. These are those variables permitted in constant |
| expressions by [5.19/1]. */ |
| |
| tree |
| scalar_constant_value (tree decl) |
| { |
| return constant_value_1 (decl, /*strict_p=*/true, |
| /*return_aggregate_cst_ok_p=*/false, |
| /*unshare_p=*/true); |
| } |
| |
| /* Like scalar_constant_value, but can also return aggregate initializers. |
| If UNSHARE_P, return an unshared copy of the initializer. */ |
| |
| tree |
| decl_really_constant_value (tree decl, bool unshare_p /*= true*/) |
| { |
| return constant_value_1 (decl, /*strict_p=*/true, |
| /*return_aggregate_cst_ok_p=*/true, |
| /*unshare_p=*/unshare_p); |
| } |
| |
| /* A more relaxed version of decl_really_constant_value, used by the |
| common C/C++ code. */ |
| |
| tree |
| decl_constant_value (tree decl, bool unshare_p) |
| { |
| return constant_value_1 (decl, /*strict_p=*/processing_template_decl, |
| /*return_aggregate_cst_ok_p=*/true, |
| /*unshare_p=*/unshare_p); |
| } |
| |
| tree |
| decl_constant_value (tree decl) |
| { |
| return decl_constant_value (decl, /*unshare_p=*/true); |
| } |
| |
| /* Common subroutines of build_new and build_vec_delete. */ |
| |
| /* Build and return a NEW_EXPR. If NELTS is non-NULL, TYPE[NELTS] is |
| the type of the object being allocated; otherwise, it's just TYPE. |
| INIT is the initializer, if any. USE_GLOBAL_NEW is true if the |
| user explicitly wrote "::operator new". PLACEMENT, if non-NULL, is |
| a vector of arguments to be provided as arguments to a placement |
| new operator. This routine performs no semantic checks; it just |
| creates and returns a NEW_EXPR. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| build_raw_new_expr (location_t loc, vec<tree, va_gc> *placement, tree type, |
| tree nelts, vec<tree, va_gc> *init, int use_global_new) |
| { |
| tree init_list; |
| tree new_expr; |
| |
| /* If INIT is NULL, the we want to store NULL_TREE in the NEW_EXPR. |
| If INIT is not NULL, then we want to store VOID_ZERO_NODE. This |
| permits us to distinguish the case of a missing initializer "new |
| int" from an empty initializer "new int()". */ |
| if (init == NULL) |
| init_list = NULL_TREE; |
| else if (init->is_empty ()) |
| init_list = void_node; |
| else |
| init_list = build_tree_list_vec (init); |
| |
| new_expr = build4_loc (loc, NEW_EXPR, build_pointer_type (type), |
| build_tree_list_vec (placement), type, nelts, |
| init_list); |
| NEW_EXPR_USE_GLOBAL (new_expr) = use_global_new; |
| TREE_SIDE_EFFECTS (new_expr) = 1; |
| |
| return new_expr; |
| } |
| |
| /* Diagnose uninitialized const members or reference members of type |
| TYPE. USING_NEW is used to disambiguate the diagnostic between a |
| new expression without a new-initializer and a declaration. Returns |
| the error count. */ |
| |
| static int |
| diagnose_uninitialized_cst_or_ref_member_1 (tree type, tree origin, |
| bool using_new, bool complain) |
| { |
| tree field; |
| int error_count = 0; |
| |
| if (type_has_user_provided_constructor (type)) |
| return 0; |
| |
| for (field = TYPE_FIELDS (type); field; field = DECL_CHAIN (field)) |
| { |
| tree field_type; |
| |
| if (TREE_CODE (field) != FIELD_DECL) |
| continue; |
| |
| field_type = strip_array_types (TREE_TYPE (field)); |
| |
| if (type_has_user_provided_constructor (field_type)) |
| continue; |
| |
| if (TYPE_REF_P (field_type)) |
| { |
| ++ error_count; |
| if (complain) |
| { |
| if (DECL_CONTEXT (field) == origin) |
| { |
| if (using_new) |
| error ("uninitialized reference member in %q#T " |
| "using %<new%> without new-initializer", origin); |
| else |
| error ("uninitialized reference member in %q#T", origin); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| if (using_new) |
| error ("uninitialized reference member in base %q#T " |
| "of %q#T using %<new%> without new-initializer", |
| DECL_CONTEXT (field), origin); |
| else |
| error ("uninitialized reference member in base %q#T " |
| "of %q#T", DECL_CONTEXT (field), origin); |
| } |
| inform (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (field), |
| "%q#D should be initialized", field); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if (CP_TYPE_CONST_P (field_type)) |
| { |
| ++ error_count; |
| if (complain) |
| { |
| if (DECL_CONTEXT (field) == origin) |
| { |
| if (using_new) |
| error ("uninitialized const member in %q#T " |
| "using %<new%> without new-initializer", origin); |
| else |
| error ("uninitialized const member in %q#T", origin); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| if (using_new) |
| error ("uninitialized const member in base %q#T " |
| "of %q#T using %<new%> without new-initializer", |
| DECL_CONTEXT (field), origin); |
| else |
| error ("uninitialized const member in base %q#T " |
| "of %q#T", DECL_CONTEXT (field), origin); |
| } |
| inform (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (field), |
| "%q#D should be initialized", field); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if (CLASS_TYPE_P (field_type)) |
| error_count |
| += diagnose_uninitialized_cst_or_ref_member_1 (field_type, origin, |
| using_new, complain); |
| } |
| return error_count; |
| } |
| |
| int |
| diagnose_uninitialized_cst_or_ref_member (tree type, bool using_new, bool complain) |
| { |
| return diagnose_uninitialized_cst_or_ref_member_1 (type, type, using_new, complain); |
| } |
| |
| /* Call __cxa_bad_array_new_length to indicate that the size calculation |
| overflowed. Pretend it returns sizetype so that it plays nicely in the |
| COND_EXPR. */ |
| |
| tree |
| throw_bad_array_new_length (void) |
| { |
| if (!fn) |
| { |
| tree name = get_identifier ("__cxa_throw_bad_array_new_length"); |
| |
| fn = get_global_binding (name); |
| if (!fn) |
| fn = push_throw_library_fn |
| (name, build_function_type_list (sizetype, NULL_TREE)); |
| } |
| |
| return build_cxx_call (fn, 0, NULL, tf_warning_or_error); |
| } |
| |
| /* Attempt to verify that the argument, OPER, of a placement new expression |
| refers to an object sufficiently large for an object of TYPE or an array |
| of NELTS of such objects when NELTS is non-null, and issue a warning when |
| it does not. SIZE specifies the size needed to construct the object or |
| array and captures the result of NELTS * sizeof (TYPE). (SIZE could be |
| greater when the array under construction requires a cookie to store |
| NELTS. GCC's placement new expression stores the cookie when invoking |
| a user-defined placement new operator function but not the default one. |
| Placement new expressions with user-defined placement new operator are |
| not diagnosed since we don't know how they use the buffer (this could |
| be a future extension). */ |
| static void |
| warn_placement_new_too_small (tree type, tree nelts, tree size, tree oper) |
| { |
| location_t loc = cp_expr_loc_or_input_loc (oper); |
| |
| STRIP_NOPS (oper); |
| |
| /* Using a function argument or a (non-array) variable as an argument |
| to placement new is not checked since it's unknown what it might |
| point to. */ |
| if (TREE_CODE (oper) == PARM_DECL |
| || VAR_P (oper) |
| || TREE_CODE (oper) == COMPONENT_REF) |
| return; |
| |
| /* Evaluate any constant expressions. */ |
| size = fold_non_dependent_expr (size); |
| |
| access_ref ref; |
| ref.eval = [](tree x){ return fold_non_dependent_expr (x); }; |
| ref.trail1special = warn_placement_new < 2; |
| tree objsize = compute_objsize (oper, 1, &ref); |
| if (!objsize) |
| return; |
| |
| offset_int bytes_avail = wi::to_offset (objsize); |
| offset_int bytes_need; |
| |
| if (CONSTANT_CLASS_P (size)) |
| bytes_need = wi::to_offset (size); |
| else if (nelts && CONSTANT_CLASS_P (nelts)) |
| bytes_need = (wi::to_offset (nelts) |
| * wi::to_offset (TYPE_SIZE_UNIT (type))); |
| else if (tree_fits_uhwi_p (TYPE_SIZE_UNIT (type))) |
| bytes_need = wi::to_offset (TYPE_SIZE_UNIT (type)); |
| else |
| { |
| /* The type is a VLA. */ |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| if (bytes_avail >= bytes_need) |
| return; |
| |
| /* True when the size to mention in the warning is exact as opposed |
| to "at least N". */ |
| const bool exact_size = (ref.offrng[0] == ref.offrng[1] |
| || ref.sizrng[1] - ref.offrng[0] == 0); |
| |
| tree opertype = ref.ref ? TREE_TYPE (ref.ref) : TREE_TYPE (oper); |
| bool warned = false; |
| if (nelts) |
| nelts = fold_for_warn (nelts); |
| if (nelts) |
| if (CONSTANT_CLASS_P (nelts)) |
| warned = warning_at (loc, OPT_Wplacement_new_, |
| (exact_size |
| ? G_("placement new constructing an object " |
| "of type %<%T [%wu]%> and size %qwu " |
| "in a region of type %qT and size %qwi") |
| : G_("placement new constructing an object " |
| "of type %<%T [%wu]%> and size %qwu " |
| "in a region of type %qT and size " |
| "at most %qwu")), |
| type, tree_to_uhwi (nelts), |
| bytes_need.to_uhwi (), |
| opertype, bytes_avail.to_uhwi ()); |
| else |
| warned = warning_at (loc, OPT_Wplacement_new_, |
| (exact_size |
| ? G_("placement new constructing an array " |
| "of objects of type %qT and size %qwu " |
| "in a region of type %qT and size %qwi") |
| : G_("placement new constructing an array " |
| "of objects of type %qT and size %qwu " |
| "in a region of type %qT and size " |
| "at most %qwu")), |
| type, bytes_need.to_uhwi (), opertype, |
| bytes_avail.to_uhwi ()); |
| else |
| warned = warning_at (loc, OPT_Wplacement_new_, |
| (exact_size |
| ? G_("placement new constructing an object " |
| "of type %qT and size %qwu in a region " |
| "of type %qT and size %qwi") |
| : G_("placement new constructing an object " |
| "of type %qT " |
| "and size %qwu in a region of type %qT " |
| "and size at most %qwu")), |
| type, bytes_need.to_uhwi (), opertype, |
| bytes_avail.to_uhwi ()); |
| |
| if (!warned || !ref.ref) |
| return; |
| |
| if (ref.offrng[0] == 0 || !ref.offset_bounded ()) |
| /* Avoid mentioning the offset when its lower bound is zero |
| or when it's impossibly large. */ |
| inform (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (ref.ref), |
| "%qD declared here", ref.ref); |
| else if (ref.offrng[0] == ref.offrng[1]) |
| inform (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (ref.ref), |
| "at offset %wi from %qD declared here", |
| ref.offrng[0].to_shwi (), ref.ref); |
| else |
| inform (DECL_SOURCE_LOCATION (ref.ref), |
| "at offset [%wi, %wi] from %qD declared here", |
| ref.offrng[0].to_shwi (), ref.offrng[1].to_shwi (), ref.ref); |
| } |
| |
| /* True if alignof(T) > __STDCPP_DEFAULT_NEW_ALIGNMENT__. */ |
| |
| bool |
| type_has_new_extended_alignment (tree t) |
| { |
| return (aligned_new_threshold |
| && TYPE_ALIGN_UNIT (t) > (unsigned)aligned_new_threshold); |
| } |
| |
| /* Return the alignment we expect malloc to guarantee. This should just be |
| MALLOC_ABI_ALIGNMENT, but that macro defaults to only BITS_PER_WORD for some |
| reason, so don't let the threshold be smaller than max_align_t_align. */ |
| |
| unsigned |
| malloc_alignment () |
| { |
| return MAX (max_align_t_align(), MALLOC_ABI_ALIGNMENT); |
| } |
| |
| /* Determine whether an allocation function is a namespace-scope |
| non-replaceable placement new function. See DR 1748. */ |
| static bool |
| std_placement_new_fn_p (tree alloc_fn) |
| { |
| if (DECL_NAMESPACE_SCOPE_P (alloc_fn)) |
| { |
| tree first_arg = TREE_CHAIN (TYPE_ARG_TYPES (TREE_TYPE (alloc_fn))); |
| if ((TREE_VALUE (first_arg) == ptr_type_node) |
| && TREE_CHAIN (first_arg) == void_list_node) |
| return true; |
| } |
| return false; |
| } |
| |
| /* For element type ELT_TYPE, return the appropriate type of the heap object |
| containing such element(s). COOKIE_SIZE is NULL or the size of cookie |
| in bytes. FULL_SIZE is NULL if it is unknown how big the heap allocation |
| will be, otherwise size of the heap object. If COOKIE_SIZE is NULL, |
| return array type ELT_TYPE[FULL_SIZE / sizeof(ELT_TYPE)], otherwise return |
| struct { size_t[COOKIE_SIZE/sizeof(size_t)]; ELT_TYPE[N]; } |
| where N is nothing (flexible array member) if FULL_SIZE is NULL, otherwise |
| it is computed such that the size of the struct fits into FULL_SIZE. */ |
| |
| tree |
| build_new_constexpr_heap_type (tree elt_type, tree cookie_size, tree full_size) |
| { |
| gcc_assert (cookie_size == NULL_TREE || tree_fits_uhwi_p (cookie_size)); |
| gcc_assert (full_size == NULL_TREE || tree_fits_uhwi_p (full_size)); |
| unsigned HOST_WIDE_INT csz = cookie_size ? tree_to_uhwi (cookie_size) : 0; |
| tree itype2 = NULL_TREE; |
| if (full_size) |
| { |
| unsigned HOST_WIDE_INT fsz = tree_to_uhwi (full_size); |
| gcc_assert (fsz >= csz); |
| fsz -= csz; |
| fsz /= int_size_in_bytes (elt_type); |
| itype2 = build_index_type (size_int (fsz - 1)); |
| if (!cookie_size) |
| return build_cplus_array_type (elt_type, itype2); |
| } |
| else |
| gcc_assert (cookie_size); |
| csz /= int_size_in_bytes (sizetype); |
| tree itype1 = build_index_type (size_int (csz - 1)); |
| tree atype1 = build_cplus_array_type (sizetype, itype1); |
| tree atype2 = build_cplus_array_type (elt_type, itype2); |
| tree rtype = cxx_make_type (RECORD_TYPE); |
| TYPE_NAME (rtype) = heap_identifier; |
| tree fld1 = build_decl (UNKNOWN_LOCATION, FIELD_DECL, NULL_TREE, atype1); |
| tree fld2 = build_decl (UNKNOWN_LOCATION, FIELD_DECL, NULL_TREE, atype2); |
| DECL_FIELD_CONTEXT (fld1) = rtype; |
| DECL_FIELD_CONTEXT (fld2) = rtype; |
| DECL_ARTIFICIAL (fld1) = true; |
| DECL_ARTIFICIAL (fld2) = true; |
| TYPE_FIELDS (rtype) = fld1; |
| DECL_CHAIN (fld1) = fld2; |
| layout_type (rtype); |
| return rtype; |
| } |
| |
| /* Help the constexpr code to find the right type for the heap variable |
| by adding a NOP_EXPR around ALLOC_CALL if needed for cookie_size. |
| Return ALLOC_CALL or ALLOC_CALL cast to a pointer to |
| struct { size_t[cookie_size/sizeof(size_t)]; elt_type[]; }. */ |
| |
| static tree |
| maybe_wrap_new_for_constexpr (tree alloc_call, tree elt_type, tree cookie_size) |
| { |
| if (cxx_dialect < cxx20) |
| return alloc_call; |
| |
| if (current_function_decl != NULL_TREE |
| && !DECL_DECLARED_CONSTEXPR_P (current_function_decl)) |
| return alloc_call; |
| |
| tree call_expr = extract_call_expr (alloc_call); |
| if (call_expr == error_mark_node) |
| return alloc_call; |
| |
| tree alloc_call_fndecl = cp_get_callee_fndecl_nofold (call_expr); |
| if (alloc_call_fndecl == NULL_TREE |
| || !IDENTIFIER_NEW_OP_P (DECL_NAME (alloc_call_fndecl)) |
| || CP_DECL_CONTEXT (alloc_call_fndecl) != global_namespace) |
| return alloc_call; |
| |
| tree rtype = build_new_constexpr_heap_type (elt_type, cookie_size, |
| NULL_TREE); |
| return build_nop (build_pointer_type (rtype), alloc_call); |
| } |
| |
| /* Generate code for a new-expression, including calling the "operator |
| new" function, initializing the object, and, if an exception occurs |
| during construction, cleaning up. The arguments are as for |
| build_raw_new_expr. This may change PLACEMENT and INIT. |
| TYPE is the type of the object being constructed, possibly an array |
| of NELTS elements when NELTS is non-null (in "new T[NELTS]", T may |
| be an array of the form U[inner], with the whole expression being |
| "new U[NELTS][inner]"). */ |
| |
| static tree |
| build_new_1 (vec<tree, va_gc> **placement, tree type, tree nelts, |
| vec<tree, va_gc> **init, bool globally_qualified_p, |
| tsubst_flags_t complain) |
| { |
| tree size, rval; |
| /* True iff this is a call to "operator new[]" instead of just |
| "operator new". */ |
| bool array_p = false; |
| /* If ARRAY_P is true, the element type of the array. This is never |
| an ARRAY_TYPE; for something like "new int[3][4]", the |
| ELT_TYPE is "int". If ARRAY_P is false, this is the same type as |
| TYPE. */ |
| tree elt_type; |
| /* The type of the new-expression. (This type is always a pointer |
| type.) */ |
| tree pointer_type; |
| tree non_const_pointer_type; |
| /* The most significant array bound in int[OUTER_NELTS][inner]. */ |
| tree outer_nelts = NULL_TREE; |
| /* For arrays with a non-constant number of elements, a bounds checks |
| on the NELTS parameter to avoid integer overflow at runtime. */ |
| tree outer_nelts_check = NULL_TREE; |
| bool outer_nelts_from_type = false; |
| /* Number of the "inner" elements in "new T[OUTER_NELTS][inner]". */ |
| offset_int inner_nelts_count = 1; |
| tree alloc_call, alloc_expr; |
| /* Size of the inner array elements (those with constant dimensions). */ |
| offset_int inner_size; |
| /* The address returned by the call to "operator new". This node is |
| a VAR_DECL and is therefore reusable. */ |
| tree alloc_node; |
| tree alloc_fn; |
| tree cookie_expr, init_expr; |
| int nothrow, check_new; |
| /* If non-NULL, the number of extra bytes to allocate at the |
| beginning of the storage allocated for an array-new expression in |
| order to store the number of elements. */ |
| tree cookie_size = NULL_TREE; |
| tree placement_first; |
| tree placement_expr = NULL_TREE; |
| /* True if the function we are calling is a placement allocation |
| function. */ |
| bool placement_allocation_fn_p; |
| /* True if the storage must be initialized, either by a constructor |
| or due to an explicit new-initializer. */ |
| bool is_initialized; |
| /* The address of the thing allocated, not including any cookie. In |
| particular, if an array cookie is in use, DATA_ADDR is the |
| address of the first array element. This node is a VAR_DECL, and |
| is therefore reusable. */ |
| tree data_addr; |
| tree init_preeval_expr = NULL_TREE; |
| tree orig_type = type; |
| |
| if (nelts) |
| { |
| outer_nelts = nelts; |
| array_p = true; |
| } |
| else if (TREE_CODE (type) == ARRAY_TYPE) |
| { |
| /* Transforms new (T[N]) to new T[N]. The former is a GNU |
| extension for variable N. (This also covers new T where T is |
| a VLA typedef.) */ |
| array_p = true; |
| nelts = array_type_nelts_top (type); |
| outer_nelts = nelts; |
| type = TREE_TYPE (type); |
| outer_nelts_from_type = true; |
| } |
| |
| /* Lots of logic below depends on whether we have a constant number of |
| elements, so go ahead and fold it now. */ |
| const_tree cst_outer_nelts = fold_non_dependent_expr (outer_nelts, complain); |
| |
| /* If our base type is an array, then make sure we know how many elements |
| it has. */ |
| for (elt_type = type; |
| TREE_CODE (elt_type) == ARRAY_TYPE; |
| elt_type = TREE_TYPE (elt_type)) |
| { |
| tree inner_nelts = array_type_nelts_top (elt_type); |
| tree inner_nelts_cst = maybe_constant_value (inner_nelts); |
| if (TREE_CODE (inner_nelts_cst) == INTEGER_CST) |
| { |
| wi::overflow_type overflow; |
| offset_int result = wi::mul (wi::to_offset (inner_nelts_cst), |
| inner_nelts_count, SIGNED, &overflow); |
| if (overflow) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| error ("integer overflow in array size"); |
| nelts = error_mark_node; |
| } |
| inner_nelts_count = result; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| { |
| error_at (cp_expr_loc_or_input_loc (inner_nelts), |
| "array size in new-expression must be constant"); |
| cxx_constant_value(inner_nelts); |
| } |
| nelts = error_mark_node; |
| } |
| if (nelts != error_mark_node) |
| nelts = cp_build_binary_op (input_location, |
| MULT_EXPR, nelts, |
| inner_nelts_cst, |
| complain); |
| } |
| |
| if (!verify_type_context (input_location, TCTX_ALLOCATION, elt_type, |
| !(complain & tf_error))) |
| return error_mark_node; |
| |
| if (variably_modified_type_p (elt_type, NULL_TREE) && (complain & tf_error)) |
| { |
| error ("variably modified type not allowed in new-expression"); |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| |
| if (nelts == error_mark_node) |
| return error_mark_node; |
| |
| /* Warn if we performed the (T[N]) to T[N] transformation and N is |
| variable. */ |
| if (outer_nelts_from_type |
| && !TREE_CONSTANT (cst_outer_nelts)) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_warning_or_error) |
| { |
| pedwarn (cp_expr_loc_or_input_loc (outer_nelts), OPT_Wvla, |
| typedef_variant_p (orig_type) |
| ? G_("non-constant array new length must be specified " |
| "directly, not by %<typedef%>") |
| : G_("non-constant array new length must be specified " |
| "without parentheses around the type-id")); |
| } |
| else |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| |
| if (VOID_TYPE_P (elt_type)) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| error ("invalid type %<void%> for %<new%>"); |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| |
| if (is_std_init_list (elt_type) && !cp_unevaluated_operand) |
| warning (OPT_Winit_list_lifetime, |
| "%<new%> of %<initializer_list%> does not " |
| "extend the lifetime of the underlying array"); |
| |
| if (abstract_virtuals_error_sfinae (ACU_NEW, elt_type, complain)) |
| return error_mark_node; |
| |
| is_initialized = (type_build_ctor_call (elt_type) || *init != NULL); |
| |
| if (*init == NULL && cxx_dialect < cxx11) |
| { |
| bool maybe_uninitialized_error = false; |
| /* A program that calls for default-initialization [...] of an |
| entity of reference type is ill-formed. */ |
| if (CLASSTYPE_REF_FIELDS_NEED_INIT (elt_type)) |
| maybe_uninitialized_error = true; |
| |
| /* A new-expression that creates an object of type T initializes |
| that object as follows: |
| - If the new-initializer is omitted: |
| -- If T is a (possibly cv-qualified) non-POD class type |
| (or array thereof), the object is default-initialized (8.5). |
| [...] |
| -- Otherwise, the object created has indeterminate |
| value. If T is a const-qualified type, or a (possibly |
| cv-qualified) POD class type (or array thereof) |
| containing (directly or indirectly) a member of |
| const-qualified type, the program is ill-formed; */ |
| |
| if (CLASSTYPE_READONLY_FIELDS_NEED_INIT (elt_type)) |
| maybe_uninitialized_error = true; |
| |
| if (maybe_uninitialized_error |
| && diagnose_uninitialized_cst_or_ref_member (elt_type, |
| /*using_new=*/true, |
| complain & tf_error)) |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| |
| if (CP_TYPE_CONST_P (elt_type) && *init == NULL |
| && default_init_uninitialized_part (elt_type)) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| error ("uninitialized const in %<new%> of %q#T", elt_type); |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| |
| size = size_in_bytes (elt_type); |
| if (array_p) |
| { |
| /* Maximum available size in bytes. Half of the address space |
| minus the cookie size. */ |
| offset_int max_size |
| = wi::set_bit_in_zero <offset_int> (TYPE_PRECISION (sizetype) - 1); |
| /* Maximum number of outer elements which can be allocated. */ |
| offset_int max_outer_nelts; |
| tree max_outer_nelts_tree; |
| |
| gcc_assert (TREE_CODE (size) == INTEGER_CST); |
| cookie_size = targetm.cxx.get_cookie_size (elt_type); |
| gcc_assert (TREE_CODE (cookie_size) == INTEGER_CST); |
| gcc_checking_assert (wi::ltu_p (wi::to_offset (cookie_size), max_size)); |
| /* Unconditionally subtract the cookie size. This decreases the |
| maximum object size and is safe even if we choose not to use |
| a cookie after all. */ |
| max_size -= wi::to_offset (cookie_size); |
| wi::overflow_type overflow; |
| inner_size = wi::mul (wi::to_offset (size), inner_nelts_count, SIGNED, |
| &overflow); |
| if (overflow || wi::gtu_p (inner_size, max_size)) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| { |
| cst_size_error error; |
| if (overflow) |
| error = cst_size_overflow; |
| else |
| { |
| error = cst_size_too_big; |
| size = size_binop (MULT_EXPR, size, |
| wide_int_to_tree (sizetype, |
| inner_nelts_count)); |
| size = cp_fully_fold (size); |
| } |
| invalid_array_size_error (input_location, error, size, |
| /*name=*/NULL_TREE); |
| } |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| |
| max_outer_nelts = wi::udiv_trunc (max_size, inner_size); |
| max_outer_nelts_tree = wide_int_to_tree (sizetype, max_outer_nelts); |
| |
| size = size_binop (MULT_EXPR, size, fold_convert (sizetype, nelts)); |
| |
| if (TREE_CODE (cst_outer_nelts) == INTEGER_CST) |
| { |
| if (tree_int_cst_lt (max_outer_nelts_tree, cst_outer_nelts)) |
| { |
| /* When the array size is constant, check it at compile time |
| to make sure it doesn't exceed the implementation-defined |
| maximum, as required by C++ 14 (in C++ 11 this requirement |
| isn't explicitly stated but it's enforced anyway -- see |
| grokdeclarator in cp/decl.c). */ |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| { |
| size = cp_fully_fold (size); |
| invalid_array_size_error (input_location, cst_size_too_big, |
| size, NULL_TREE); |
| } |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* When a runtime check is necessary because the array size |
| isn't constant, keep only the top-most seven bits (starting |
| with the most significant non-zero bit) of the maximum size |
| to compare the array size against, to simplify encoding the |
| constant maximum size in the instruction stream. */ |
| |
| unsigned shift = (max_outer_nelts.get_precision ()) - 7 |
| - wi::clz (max_outer_nelts); |
| max_outer_nelts = (max_outer_nelts >> shift) << shift; |
| |
| outer_nelts_check = fold_build2 (LE_EXPR, boolean_type_node, |
| outer_nelts, |
| max_outer_nelts_tree); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| tree align_arg = NULL_TREE; |
| if (type_has_new_extended_alignment (elt_type)) |
| align_arg = build_int_cst (align_type_node, TYPE_ALIGN_UNIT (elt_type)); |
| |
| alloc_fn = NULL_TREE; |
| |
| /* If PLACEMENT is a single simple pointer type not passed by |
| reference, prepare to capture it in a temporary variable. Do |
| this now, since PLACEMENT will change in the calls below. */ |
| placement_first = NULL_TREE; |
| if (vec_safe_length (*placement) == 1 |
| && (TYPE_PTR_P (TREE_TYPE ((**placement)[0])))) |
| placement_first = (**placement)[0]; |
| |
| bool member_new_p = false; |
| |
| /* Allocate the object. */ |
| tree fnname; |
| tree fns; |
| |
| fnname = ovl_op_identifier (false, array_p ? VEC_NEW_EXPR : NEW_EXPR); |
| |
| member_new_p = !globally_qualified_p |
| && CLASS_TYPE_P (elt_type) |
| && (array_p |
| ? TYPE_HAS_ARRAY_NEW_OPERATOR (elt_type) |
| : TYPE_HAS_NEW_OPERATOR (elt_type)); |
| |
| if (member_new_p) |
| { |
| /* Use a class-specific operator new. */ |
| /* If a cookie is required, add some extra space. */ |
| if (array_p && TYPE_VEC_NEW_USES_COOKIE (elt_type)) |
| size = size_binop (PLUS_EXPR, size, cookie_size); |
| else |
| { |
| cookie_size = NULL_TREE; |
| /* No size arithmetic necessary, so the size check is |
| not needed. */ |
| if (outer_nelts_check != NULL && inner_size == 1) |
| outer_nelts_check = NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| /* Perform the overflow check. */ |
| tree errval = TYPE_MAX_VALUE (sizetype); |
| if (cxx_dialect >= cxx11 && flag_exceptions) |
| errval = throw_bad_array_new_length (); |
| if (outer_nelts_check != NULL_TREE) |
| size = fold_build3 (COND_EXPR, sizetype, outer_nelts_check, |
| size, errval); |
| /* Create the argument list. */ |
| vec_safe_insert (*placement, 0, size); |
| /* Do name-lookup to find the appropriate operator. */ |
| fns = lookup_fnfields (elt_type, fnname, /*protect=*/2, complain); |
| if (fns == NULL_TREE) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| error ("no suitable %qD found in class %qT", fnname, elt_type); |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| if (TREE_CODE (fns) == TREE_LIST) |
| { |
| if (complain & tf_error) |
| { |
| error ("request for member %qD is ambiguous", fnname); |
| print_candidates (fns); |
| } |
| return error_mark_node; |
| } |
| tree dummy = build_dummy_object (elt_type); |
| alloc_call = NULL_TREE; |
| if (align_arg) |
| { |
| vec<tree, va_gc> *align_args |
| = vec_copy_and_insert (*placement, align_arg, 1); |
| alloc_call |
| = build_new_method_call (dummy, fns, &align_args, |
| /*conversion_path=*/NULL_TREE, |
| LOOKUP_NORMAL, &alloc_fn, tf_none); |
| /* If no matching function is found and the allocated object type |
| has new-extended alignment, the alignment argument is removed |
| from the argument list, and overload resolution is performed |
| again. */ |
| if (alloc_call == error_mark_node) |
| alloc_call = NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| if (!alloc_call) |
| alloc_call = build_new_method_call (dummy, fns, placement, |
| /*conversion_path=*/NULL_TREE, |
| LOOKUP_NORMAL, |
| &alloc_fn, complain); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* Use a global operator new. */ |
| /* See if a cookie might be required. */ |
| if (!(array_p && TYPE_VEC_NEW_USES_COOKIE (elt_type))) |
| { |
| cookie_size = NULL_TREE; |
| /* No size arithmetic necessary, so the size check is |
| not needed. */ |
| if (outer_nelts_check != NULL && inner_size == 1) |
| outer_nelts_check = NULL_TREE; |
| } |
| |
| alloc_call = build_operator_new_call (fnname, placement, |
| &size, &cookie_size, |
| align_arg, outer_nelts_check, |
| &alloc_fn, complain); |
| } |
| |
| if (alloc_call == error_mark_node) |
| return error_mark_node; |
| |
| gcc_assert (alloc_fn != NULL_TREE); |
| |
| /* Now, check to see if this function is actually a placement |
| allocation function. This can happen even when PLACEMENT is NULL |
| because we might have something like: |
| |
| struct S { void* operator new (size_t, int i = 0); }; |
| |
| A call to `new S' will get this allocation function, even though |
| there is no explicit placement argument. If there is more than |
| one argument, or there are variable arguments, then this is a |
| placement allocation function. */ |
| placement_allocation_fn_p |
| = (type_num_arguments (TREE_TYPE (alloc_fn)) > 1 |
| || varargs_function_p (alloc_fn)); |
| |
| if (warn_aligned_new |
| && !placement_allocation_fn_p |
| && TYPE_ALIGN (elt_type) > malloc_alignment () |
| && (warn_aligned_new > 1 |
| || CP_DECL_CONTEXT (alloc_fn) == global_namespace) |
| && !aligned_allocation_fn_p (alloc_fn)) |
| { |
| auto_diagnostic_group d; |
| if (warning (OPT_Waligned_new_, "%<new%> of type %qT with extended " |
| "alignment %d", elt_type, TYPE_ALIGN_UNIT (elt_type))) |
| { |
| inform (input_location, "uses %qD, which does not have an alignment " |
| "parameter", alloc_fn); |
| if (!aligned_new_threshold) |
| inform (input_location, "use %<-faligned-new%> to enable C++17 " |
| "over-aligned new support"); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* If we found a simple case of PLACEMENT_EXPR above, then copy it |
| into a temporary variable. */ |
| if (!processing_template_decl |
| && TREE_CODE (alloc_call) |