This could maybe be simplified to just fill on levels with braces, but I want to consider that after implementing designated initializers for structs and unions.
The idea (not yet implemented) is to use this to support out-of-order initialization. For automatic variables, we can just initialize the subobjects in the order that initializers appear. For static variables, we will eventually need to reorder the initializers in order, but this can be done based on their recorded displacements.
The part of the declaration within the header could be ignored on subsequent compilations using the .sym file, which could lead to errors or misbehavior.
(This also applies to headers that end in the middle of a _Static_assert(...) or segment directive.)
This is preparatory to supporting designated initializers.
Any struct/union type with an anonymous member now forces .sym file generation to end, since we do not have a scheme for serializing this information in a .sym file. It would be possible to do so, but for now we just avoid this situation for simplicity.
This is a minimal implementation that does not actually inline anything, but it is intended to implement the semantics defined by the C99 and later standards.
One complication is that a declaration that appears somewhere after the function body may create an external definition for a function that appeared to be an inline definition when it was defined. To support this while preserving ORCA/C's general one-pass compilation strategy, we generate code even for inline definitions, but treat them as private and add the prefix "~inline~" to the name. If they are "un-inlined" based on a later declaration, we generate a stub with external linkage that just jumps to the apparently-inline function.
This detects errors in the following cases that were previously missed:
* A function declaration and definition being part of the same overall declaration, e.g.:
void f(void), g(void) {}
* A function declaration (not definition) with no declaration specifiers, e.g.:
f(void);
(Function definitions with no declaration specifiers continue to be accepted by default, consistent with C90 rules.)
A function declared "inline" with an explicit "extern" storage class has the same semantics as if "inline" was omitted. (It is not an inline definition as defined in the C standards.) The "inline" specifier suggests that the function should be inlined, but it is legal to just ignore it, as we already do for "static inline" functions.
Also add a test for the inline function specifier.
The scanner has been updated so that ... should always get recognized as a single token, so this is no longer necessary as a workaround. Any code that actually uses separate . . . is non-standard and will need to be changed.
This does not really do anything, because ORCA/C does not support multithreading, but the C11 and later standards indicate it should be allowed anyway.
If a struct contained a function pointer with a prototyped parameter list, processing the parameters could reset the declaredTagOrEnumConst flag, potentially leading to a spurious error, as in this example:
struct S {
int (*f)(int);
};
This also gives a better error for structs declared as containing functions.
Note that this implementation allows anonymous structures and unions to participate in initialization. That is, you can have a braced initializer list corresponding to an anonymous structure or union. Also, anonymous structures within unions follow the initialization rules for structures (and vice versa).
I think the better interpretation of the standard text is that anonymous structures and unions cannot participate in initialization as such, and instead their members are treated as members of the containing structure or union for purposes of initialization. However, all other compilers I am aware of allow anonymous structures and unions to participate in initialization, so I have implemented it that way too.
C90 had constraints requiring # and ## tokens to only appear in preprocessing directives, but C99 and later removed those constraints, so this code is no longer necessary when targeting current languages versions. (It would be necessary in a "strict C90" mode, if that was ever implemented.)
The main practical effect of this is that # and ## tokens can be passed as parameters to macros, provided the macro either ignores or stringizes that parameter. # and ## tokens still have no role in the grammar of the C language after preprocessing, so they will be an unexpected token and produce some kind of error if they appear anywhere.
This also contains a change to ensure that a line containing one or more illegal characters (e.g. $) and then a # is not treated as a preprocessing directive.
This accords with its definition in the C standards. For the time being, the old form of three separate tokens is still accepted too, because the ... token may not be scanned correctly in the obscure case where there is a line continuation between the second and third dots.
One observable effect of this is that there are no longer spaces between the dots in #pragma expand output.
This enforces the constraint from C17 section 6.7 p2 that declarations "shall declare at least a declarator (other than the parameters of a function or the members of a structure or union), a tag, or the members of an enumeration."
Somewhat relaxed rules are used for enums in the default loose type checking mode, similar to what GCC and Clang do.
A declaration of this exact form always declares the tag T within the current scope, and as such makes this "struct T" a distinct type from any other "struct T" type in an outer scope. (Similarly for unions.)
See C17 section 6.7.2.3 p7 (and corresponding places in all other C standards).
Here is an example of a program affected by this:
struct S {char a;};
int main(void) {
struct S;
struct S *sp;
struct S {long b;} s;
sp = &s;
sp->b = sizeof(*sp);
return s.b;
}
They are now represented in local structures instead. This keeps the representation of declaration specifiers together and eliminates the need for awkward and error-prone code to save and restore the global variables.
This differs from the usual ORCA/C behavior of treating all floating-point parameters as extended. With the option enabled, they will still be passed in the extended format, but will be converted to their declared type at the start of the function. This is needed for strict standards conformance, because you should be able to take the address of a parameter and get a usable pointer to its declared type. The difference in types can also affect the behavior of _Generic expressions.
The implementation of this is based on ORCA/Pascal, which already did the same thing (unconditionally) with real/double/comp parameters.
If strict type checking is enabled, this will prohibit redefinition of enums, like:
enum E {a,b,c};
enum E {x,y,z};
It also prohibits use of an "enum E" type specifier if the enum has not been previously declared (with its constants).
These things were historically supported by ORCA/C, but they are prohibited by constraints in section 6.7.2.3 of C99 and later. (The C90 wording was different and less clear, but I think they were not intended to be valid there either.)
This affects code like the following:
enum E {a,b,c};
int main(void) {
enum E e;
struct E {int x;}; /* or: enum E {x,y,z}; */
}
The line "enum E e;" should refer to the enum type declared in the outer scope, but not redeclare it in the inner scope. Therefore, a subsequent struct, union, or enum declaration using the same tag in the same scope is acceptable.
This avoids strangeness where an enum tag declared within a typedef declaration would act like a typedef. For example, the following would compile without error:
typedef enum E {a,b,c} T;
E e;
The basic approach is to generate a single expression tree containing the code for the initialization plus the reference to the compound literal (or its address). The various subexpressions are joined together with pc_bno pcodes, similar to the code generated for the comma operator. The initializer expressions are placed in a balanced binary tree, so that it is not excessively deep.
Note: Common subexpression elimination has poor performance for very large trees. This is not specific to compound literals, but compound literals for relatively large arrays can run into this issue. It will eventually complete and generate a correct program, but it may be quite slow. To avoid this, turn off CSE.
Initialized variables have always been one of the things that stops PCH generation, but previously this was only detected when trying to write out the symbol records at the point of a later #include. On a subsequent compile using the sym file, nothing would recognize that PCH generation had stopped for this reason, so the PCH code would recognize the later #include as a potential opportunity to extend the sym file, and therefore would delete it to force regeneration next time. This led to the sym file being deleted and regenerated on alternate compiles, so its full benefit was not realized.
There is code in Header.pas to abort PCH generation if an initialized symbol is found. That is probably superfluous after this change, but it has been left in place for now.
There were various places where the flag for macro expansions was saved, set to false, and then later restored. If #pragma expand was used within those areas, it would not be properly applied. Here is an example showing that problem:
void f(void
#pragma expand 1
) {}
This could also affect some uses of #pragma expand within precompiled headers, e.g.:
#pragma expand 1
#include "a.h"
#undef foobar
#include "b.h"
...
Also, add a note saying that code in precompiled headers will not be expanded. (This has always been the case, but was not clearly documented.)