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//===------ CXXInheritance.h - C++ Inheritance ------------------*- C++ -*-===// // // The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure // // This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source // License. See LICENSE.TXT for details. // //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// // // This file provides routines that help analyzing C++ inheritance hierarchies. // //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// #ifndef LLVM_CLANG_AST_CXXINHERITANCE_H #define LLVM_CLANG_AST_CXXINHERITANCE_H #include "clang/AST/DeclarationName.h" #include "clang/AST/DeclBase.h" #include "clang/AST/DeclCXX.h" #include "clang/AST/Type.h" #include "clang/AST/TypeOrdering.h" #include "llvm/ADT/DenseMap.h" #include "llvm/ADT/SmallSet.h" #include "llvm/ADT/SmallVector.h" #include <list> #include <map> #include <cassert> namespace clang { class CXXBaseSpecifier; class CXXMethodDecl; class CXXRecordDecl; class NamedDecl; /// \brief Represents an element in a path from a derived class to a /// base class. /// /// Each step in the path references the link from a /// derived class to one of its direct base classes, along with a /// base "number" that identifies which base subobject of the /// original derived class we are referencing. struct CXXBasePathElement { /// \brief The base specifier that states the link from a derived /// class to a base class, which will be followed by this base /// path element. const CXXBaseSpecifier *Base; /// \brief The record decl of the class that the base is a base of. const CXXRecordDecl *Class; /// \brief Identifies which base class subobject (of type /// \c Base->getType()) this base path element refers to. /// /// This value is only valid if \c !Base->isVirtual(), because there /// is no base numbering for the zero or one virtual bases of a /// given type. int SubobjectNumber; }; /// \brief Represents a path from a specific derived class /// (which is not represented as part of the path) to a particular /// (direct or indirect) base class subobject. /// /// Individual elements in the path are described by the \c CXXBasePathElement /// structure, which captures both the link from a derived class to one of its /// direct bases and identification describing which base class /// subobject is being used. class CXXBasePath : public SmallVector<CXXBasePathElement, 4> { public: CXXBasePath() : Access(AS_public) {} /// \brief The access along this inheritance path. This is only /// calculated when recording paths. AS_none is a special value /// used to indicate a path which permits no legal access. AccessSpecifier Access; /// \brief The set of declarations found inside this base class /// subobject. DeclContext::lookup_result Decls; void clear() { SmallVectorImpl<CXXBasePathElement>::clear(); Access = AS_public; } }; /// BasePaths - Represents the set of paths from a derived class to /// one of its (direct or indirect) bases. For example, given the /// following class hierarchy: /// /// @code /// class A { }; /// class B : public A { }; /// class C : public A { }; /// class D : public B, public C{ }; /// @endcode /// /// There are two potential BasePaths to represent paths from D to a /// base subobject of type A. One path is (D,0) -> (B,0) -> (A,0) /// and another is (D,0)->(C,0)->(A,1). These two paths actually /// refer to two different base class subobjects of the same type, /// so the BasePaths object refers to an ambiguous path. On the /// other hand, consider the following class hierarchy: /// /// @code /// class A { }; /// class B : public virtual A { }; /// class C : public virtual A { }; /// class D : public B, public C{ }; /// @endcode /// /// Here, there are two potential BasePaths again, (D, 0) -> (B, 0) /// -> (A,v) and (D, 0) -> (C, 0) -> (A, v), but since both of them /// refer to the same base class subobject of type A (the virtual /// one), there is no ambiguity. class CXXBasePaths { /// \brief The type from which this search originated. CXXRecordDecl *Origin; /// Paths - The actual set of paths that can be taken from the /// derived class to the same base class. std::list<CXXBasePath> Paths; /// ClassSubobjects - Records the class subobjects for each class /// type that we've seen. The first element in the pair says /// whether we found a path to a virtual base for that class type, /// while the element contains the number of non-virtual base /// class subobjects for that class type. The key of the map is /// the cv-unqualified canonical type of the base class subobject. std::map<QualType, std::pair<bool, unsigned>, QualTypeOrdering> ClassSubobjects; /// FindAmbiguities - Whether Sema::IsDerivedFrom should try find /// ambiguous paths while it is looking for a path from a derived /// type to a base type. bool FindAmbiguities; /// RecordPaths - Whether Sema::IsDerivedFrom should record paths /// while it is determining whether there are paths from a derived /// type to a base type. bool RecordPaths; /// DetectVirtual - Whether Sema::IsDerivedFrom should abort the search /// if it finds a path that goes across a virtual base. The virtual class /// is also recorded. bool DetectVirtual; /// ScratchPath - A BasePath that is used by Sema::lookupInBases /// to help build the set of paths. CXXBasePath ScratchPath; /// DetectedVirtual - The base class that is virtual. const RecordType *DetectedVirtual; /// \brief Array of the declarations that have been found. This /// array is constructed only if needed, e.g., to iterate over the /// results within LookupResult. NamedDecl **DeclsFound; unsigned NumDeclsFound; friend class CXXRecordDecl; void ComputeDeclsFound(); bool lookupInBases(ASTContext &Context, const CXXRecordDecl *Record, CXXRecordDecl::BaseMatchesCallback *BaseMatches, void *UserData); public: typedef std::list<CXXBasePath>::iterator paths_iterator; typedef std::list<CXXBasePath>::const_iterator const_paths_iterator; typedef NamedDecl **decl_iterator; /// BasePaths - Construct a new BasePaths structure to record the /// paths for a derived-to-base search. explicit CXXBasePaths(bool FindAmbiguities = true, bool RecordPaths = true, bool DetectVirtual = true) : FindAmbiguities(FindAmbiguities), RecordPaths(RecordPaths), DetectVirtual(DetectVirtual), DetectedVirtual(0), DeclsFound(0), NumDeclsFound(0) { } ~CXXBasePaths() { delete [] DeclsFound; } paths_iterator begin() { return Paths.begin(); } paths_iterator end() { return Paths.end(); } const_paths_iterator begin() const { return Paths.begin(); } const_paths_iterator end() const { return Paths.end(); } CXXBasePath& front() { return Paths.front(); } const CXXBasePath& front() const { return Paths.front(); } decl_iterator found_decls_begin(); decl_iterator found_decls_end(); /// \brief Determine whether the path from the most-derived type to the /// given base type is ambiguous (i.e., it refers to multiple subobjects of /// the same base type). bool isAmbiguous(CanQualType BaseType); /// \brief Whether we are finding multiple paths to detect ambiguities. bool isFindingAmbiguities() const { return FindAmbiguities; } /// \brief Whether we are recording paths. bool isRecordingPaths() const { return RecordPaths; } /// \brief Specify whether we should be recording paths or not. void setRecordingPaths(bool RP) { RecordPaths = RP; } /// \brief Whether we are detecting virtual bases. bool isDetectingVirtual() const { return DetectVirtual; } /// \brief The virtual base discovered on the path (if we are merely /// detecting virtuals). const RecordType* getDetectedVirtual() const { return DetectedVirtual; } /// \brief Retrieve the type from which this base-paths search /// began CXXRecordDecl *getOrigin() const { return Origin; } void setOrigin(CXXRecordDecl *Rec) { Origin = Rec; } /// \brief Clear the base-paths results. void clear(); /// \brief Swap this data structure's contents with another CXXBasePaths /// object. void swap(CXXBasePaths &Other); }; /// \brief Uniquely identifies a virtual method within a class /// hierarchy by the method itself and a class subobject number. struct UniqueVirtualMethod { UniqueVirtualMethod() : Method(0), Subobject(0), InVirtualSubobject(0) { } UniqueVirtualMethod(CXXMethodDecl *Method, unsigned Subobject, const CXXRecordDecl *InVirtualSubobject) : Method(Method), Subobject(Subobject), InVirtualSubobject(InVirtualSubobject) { } /// \brief The overriding virtual method. CXXMethodDecl *Method; /// \brief The subobject in which the overriding virtual method /// resides. unsigned Subobject; /// \brief The virtual base class subobject of which this overridden /// virtual method is a part. Note that this records the closest /// derived virtual base class subobject. const CXXRecordDecl *InVirtualSubobject; friend bool operator==(const UniqueVirtualMethod &X, const UniqueVirtualMethod &Y) { return X.Method == Y.Method && X.Subobject == Y.Subobject && X.InVirtualSubobject == Y.InVirtualSubobject; } friend bool operator!=(const UniqueVirtualMethod &X, const UniqueVirtualMethod &Y) { return !(X == Y); } }; /// \brief The set of methods that override a given virtual method in /// each subobject where it occurs. /// /// The first part of the pair is the subobject in which the /// overridden virtual function occurs, while the second part of the /// pair is the virtual method that overrides it (including the /// subobject in which that virtual function occurs). class OverridingMethods { llvm::DenseMap<unsigned, SmallVector<UniqueVirtualMethod, 4> > Overrides; public: // Iterate over the set of subobjects that have overriding methods. typedef llvm::DenseMap<unsigned, SmallVector<UniqueVirtualMethod, 4> > ::iterator iterator; typedef llvm::DenseMap<unsigned, SmallVector<UniqueVirtualMethod, 4> > ::const_iterator const_iterator; iterator begin() { return Overrides.begin(); } const_iterator begin() const { return Overrides.begin(); } iterator end() { return Overrides.end(); } const_iterator end() const { return Overrides.end(); } unsigned size() const { return Overrides.size(); } // Iterate over the set of overriding virtual methods in a given // subobject. typedef SmallVector<UniqueVirtualMethod, 4>::iterator overriding_iterator; typedef SmallVector<UniqueVirtualMethod, 4>::const_iterator overriding_const_iterator; // Add a new overriding method for a particular subobject. void add(unsigned OverriddenSubobject, UniqueVirtualMethod Overriding); // Add all of the overriding methods from "other" into overrides for // this method. Used when merging the overrides from multiple base // class subobjects. void add(const OverridingMethods &Other); // Replace all overriding virtual methods in all subobjects with the // given virtual method. void replaceAll(UniqueVirtualMethod Overriding); }; /// \brief A mapping from each virtual member function to its set of /// final overriders. /// /// Within a class hierarchy for a given derived class, each virtual /// member function in that hierarchy has one or more "final /// overriders" (C++ [class.virtual]p2). A final overrider for a /// virtual function "f" is the virtual function that will actually be /// invoked when dispatching a call to "f" through the /// vtable. Well-formed classes have a single final overrider for each /// virtual function; in abstract classes, the final overrider for at /// least one virtual function is a pure virtual function. Due to /// multiple, virtual inheritance, it is possible for a class to have /// more than one final overrider. Athough this is an error (per C++ /// [class.virtual]p2), it is not considered an error here: the final /// overrider map can represent multiple final overriders for a /// method, and it is up to the client to determine whether they are /// problem. For example, the following class \c D has two final /// overriders for the virtual function \c A::f(), one in \c C and one /// in \c D: /// /// \code /// struct A { virtual void f(); }; /// struct B : virtual A { virtual void f(); }; /// struct C : virtual A { virtual void f(); }; /// struct D : B, C { }; /// \endcode /// /// This data structure contaings a mapping from every virtual /// function *that does not override an existing virtual function* and /// in every subobject where that virtual function occurs to the set /// of virtual functions that override it. Thus, the same virtual /// function \c A::f can actually occur in multiple subobjects of type /// \c A due to multiple inheritance, and may be overriden by /// different virtual functions in each, as in the following example: /// /// \code /// struct A { virtual void f(); }; /// struct B : A { virtual void f(); }; /// struct C : A { virtual void f(); }; /// struct D : B, C { }; /// \endcode /// /// Unlike in the previous example, where the virtual functions \c /// B::f and \c C::f both overrode \c A::f in the same subobject of /// type \c A, in this example the two virtual functions both override /// \c A::f but in *different* subobjects of type A. This is /// represented by numbering the subobjects in which the overridden /// and the overriding virtual member functions are located. Subobject /// 0 represents the virtua base class subobject of that type, while /// subobject numbers greater than 0 refer to non-virtual base class /// subobjects of that type. class CXXFinalOverriderMap : public llvm::DenseMap<const CXXMethodDecl *, OverridingMethods> { }; /// \brief A set of all the primary bases for a class. class CXXIndirectPrimaryBaseSet : public llvm::SmallSet<const CXXRecordDecl*, 32> { }; } // end namespace clang #endif