// RUN: %clang_cc1 -fsyntax-only -verify -Wno-non-c-typedef-for-linkage -std=gnu++11 %s // RUN: %clang_cc1 -fsyntax-only -verify -Wno-non-c-typedef-for-linkage -Wno-c++11-extensions -Wno-local-type-template-args %s -std=gnu++98 // RUN: %clang_cc1 -fsyntax-only -verify -Wno-non-c-typedef-for-linkage -Wno-c++11-extensions -Wno-local-type-template-args -fmodules %s namespace test1 { int x; // expected-note {{previous definition is here}} static int y; void f() {} // expected-note {{previous definition is here}} extern "C" { extern int x; // expected-error {{declaration of 'x' has a different language linkage}} extern int y; // OK, has internal linkage, so no language linkage. void f(); // expected-error {{declaration of 'f' has a different language linkage}} } } // This is OK. Both test2_f don't have language linkage since they have // internal linkage. extern "C" { static void test2_f() { } static void test2_f(int x) { } } namespace test3 { extern "C" { namespace { extern int x2; void f2(); } } namespace { int x2; void f2() {} } } namespace test4 { void dummy() { void Bar(); class A { friend void Bar(); }; } } namespace test5 { static void g(); void f() { void g(); } } // pr14898 namespace test6 { template class __attribute__ ((__visibility__("default"))) shared_future; template class future { template friend class shared_future; shared_future<_Rp> share(); }; template future<_Rp> get_future(); template struct shared_future<_Rp&> { shared_future(future<_Rp&>&& __f); }; void f() { typedef int T; get_future(); typedef int& U; shared_future f1 = get_future(); } } // This is OK. The variables have internal linkage and therefore no language // linkage. extern "C" { static int test7_x; } extern "C++" { extern int test7_x; } extern "C++" { static int test7_y; } extern "C" { extern int test7_y; } extern "C" { typedef int test7_F(); static test7_F test7_f; } extern "C++" { extern test7_F test7_f; } // FIXME: This should be invalid. The function has no language linkage, but // the function type has, so this is redeclaring the function with a different // type. extern "C++" { static void test8_f(); } extern "C" { extern void test8_f(); } extern "C" { static void test8_g(); } extern "C++" { extern void test8_g(); } extern "C" { void __attribute__((overloadable)) test9_f(int c); // expected-note {{previous declaration is here}} } extern "C++" { void __attribute__((overloadable)) test9_f(int c); // expected-error {{declaration of 'test9_f' has a different language linkage}} } extern "C" { void __attribute__((overloadable)) test10_f(int); void __attribute__((overloadable)) test10_f(double); } extern "C" { void test11_f() { void __attribute__((overloadable)) test11_g(int); void __attribute__((overloadable)) test11_g(double); } } namespace test12 { const int n = 0; extern const int n; void f() { extern const int n; } } namespace test13 { static void a(void); extern void a(); static void a(void) {} } namespace test14 { // Anonymous namespace implies internal linkage, so 'static' has no effect. namespace { void a(void); static void a(void) {} } } namespace test15 { const int a = 5; // expected-note {{previous definition is here}} static const int a; // expected-error {{redefinition of 'a'}} } namespace test16 { extern "C" { class Foo { int x; friend int bar(Foo *y); }; int bar(Foo *y) { return y->x; } } } namespace test17 { namespace { struct I { }; } template void foo() {} template void bar() {} // expected-note {{candidate function}} inline void *g() { struct L { }; // foo's linkage should be the merge of UniqueExternalLinkage (or // InternalLinkage in c++11) and VisibleNoLinkage. The correct answer is // NoLinkage in both cases. This means that using foo as a template // argument should fail. return reinterpret_cast(bar), foo >); // expected-error {{reinterpret_cast cannot resolve overloaded function 'bar' to type 'void *}} } void h() { g(); } } namespace test18 { template struct foo { template static void f() {} static void *g() { return (void *)f<&x>; } static T x; }; template T foo::x; inline void *f() { struct S { }; return foo::g(); } void *h() { return f(); } } extern "C" void pr16247_foo(int); static void pr16247_foo(double); void pr16247_foo(int) {} void pr16247_foo(double) {} namespace PR16247 { extern "C" void pr16247_bar(int); static void pr16247_bar(double); void pr16247_bar(int) {} void pr16247_bar(double) {} } namespace PR18964 { unsigned &*foo; //expected-error{{'foo' declared as a pointer to a reference of type}} extern struct {} *foo; // don't assert } namespace typedef_name_for_linkage { template struct Use {}; struct A { A(); A(const A&); ~A(); }; typedef struct { A a; } B; struct C { typedef struct { A a; } D; }; typedef struct { void f() { static int n; struct Inner {};} } E; // FIXME: Ideally this would be accepted in all modes. In C++98, we trigger a // linkage calculation to drive the "internal linkage type as template // argument" warning. typedef struct { void f() { struct Inner {}; Use ui; } } F; #if __cplusplus < 201103L // expected-error@-4 {{given name for linkage purposes by typedef declaration after its linkage was computed}} // expected-note@-4 {{due to this member}} // expected-note@-4 {{by this typedef}} #endif }