[1/1] c++/106423: Fix pragma suppression of -Wc++20-compat diagnostics.

Message ID 20220724043902.1777378-2-tom@honermann.net
State New
Headers
Series c++/106423: Fix pragma suppression of -Wc++20-compat diagnostics |

Commit Message

Tom Honermann July 24, 2022, 4:39 a.m. UTC
  Gcc's '#pragma GCC diagnostic' directives are processed in "early mode"
(see handle_pragma_diagnostic_early) for the C++ frontend and, as such,
require that the target diagnostic option be enabled for the preprocessor
(see c_option_is_from_cpp_diagnostics).  This change modifies the
-Wc++20-compat option definition to register it as a preprocessor option
so that its associated diagnostics can be suppressed.  The changes also
implicitly disable the option in C++20 and later modes.  These changes
are consistent with the definition of the -Wc++11-compat option.

This support is motivated by the need to suppress the following diagnostic
otherwise issued in C++17 and earlier modes due to the char8_t typedef
present in the uchar.h header file in glibc 2.36.
  warning: identifier ‘char8_t’ is a keyword in C++20 [-Wc++20-compat]

Tests are added to validate suppression of both -Wc++11-compat and
-Wc++20-compat related diagnostics (fixes were only needed for the C++20
case).

Fixes https://gcc.gnu.org/PR106423.

gcc/c-family/ChangeLog:
	* c-opts.cc (c_common_post_options): Disable -Wc++20-compat diagnostics
	in C++20 and later.
	* c.opt (Wc++20-compat): Enable hooks for the preprocessor.

gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
	* g++.dg/cpp0x/keywords2.C: New test.
	* g++.dg/cpp2a/keywords2.C: New test.

libcpp/ChangeLog:
	* include/cpplib.h (cpp_warning_reason): Add CPP_W_CXX20_COMPAT.
	* init.cc (cpp_create_reader): Add cpp_warn_cxx20_compat.
---
 gcc/c-family/c-opts.cc                 |  7 +++++++
 gcc/c-family/c.opt                     |  2 +-
 gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/cpp0x/keywords2.C | 16 ++++++++++++++++
 gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/cpp2a/keywords2.C | 13 +++++++++++++
 libcpp/include/cpplib.h                |  4 ++++
 libcpp/init.cc                         |  1 +
 6 files changed, 42 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
 create mode 100644 gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/cpp0x/keywords2.C
 create mode 100644 gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/cpp2a/keywords2.C
  

Comments

Joseph Myers July 27, 2022, 11:09 p.m. UTC | #1
On Sun, 24 Jul 2022, Tom Honermann via Gcc-patches wrote:

> Gcc's '#pragma GCC diagnostic' directives are processed in "early mode"
> (see handle_pragma_diagnostic_early) for the C++ frontend and, as such,
> require that the target diagnostic option be enabled for the preprocessor
> (see c_option_is_from_cpp_diagnostics).  This change modifies the
> -Wc++20-compat option definition to register it as a preprocessor option
> so that its associated diagnostics can be suppressed.  The changes also

There are lots of C++ warning options, all of which should support pragma 
suppression regardless of whether they are relevant to the preprocessor or 
not.  Do they all need this kind of handling, or is it only -Wc++20-compat 
that has some kind of problem?
  
Tom Honermann July 30, 2022, 11:05 p.m. UTC | #2
On 7/27/22 7:09 PM, Joseph Myers wrote:
> On Sun, 24 Jul 2022, Tom Honermann via Gcc-patches wrote:
>
>> Gcc's '#pragma GCC diagnostic' directives are processed in "early mode"
>> (see handle_pragma_diagnostic_early) for the C++ frontend and, as such,
>> require that the target diagnostic option be enabled for the preprocessor
>> (see c_option_is_from_cpp_diagnostics).  This change modifies the
>> -Wc++20-compat option definition to register it as a preprocessor option
>> so that its associated diagnostics can be suppressed.  The changes also
> There are lots of C++ warning options, all of which should support pragma
> suppression regardless of whether they are relevant to the preprocessor or
> not.  Do they all need this kind of handling, or is it only -Wc++20-compat
> that has some kind of problem?

I had only checked -Wc++20-compat when working on the patch.

I did some spot checking now and confirmed that suppression works as 
expected for C++ for at least the following warnings:
   -Wuninitialized
   -Warray-compare
   -Wbool-compare
   -Wtautological-compare
   -Wterminate

I don't know the diagnostic framework well. As best I can tell, this 
issue is specific to the -Wc++20-compat option and when the particular 
diagnostic is issued (e.g., during lexing as opposed to during parsing). 
The following call chains appear to be relevant.
   cp_lexer_new_main -> cp_lexer_handle_early_pragma -> 
c_invoke_early_pragma_handler
   cp_parser_* -> cp_parser_pragma -> c_invoke_pragma_handler
   (where * might be "declaration", "toplevel_declaration", 
"class_head", "objc_interstitial_code", ...)

The -Wc++20-compat enabled warning regarding new keywords in C++20 is 
issued from cp_lexer_get_preprocessor_token.

Tom.
  
Lewis Hyatt July 31, 2022, 3:05 p.m. UTC | #3
On Sat, Jul 30, 2022 at 7:06 PM Tom Honermann via Gcc-patches
<gcc-patches@gcc.gnu.org> wrote:
>
> On 7/27/22 7:09 PM, Joseph Myers wrote:
> > On Sun, 24 Jul 2022, Tom Honermann via Gcc-patches wrote:
> >
> >> Gcc's '#pragma GCC diagnostic' directives are processed in "early mode"
> >> (see handle_pragma_diagnostic_early) for the C++ frontend and, as such,
> >> require that the target diagnostic option be enabled for the preprocessor
> >> (see c_option_is_from_cpp_diagnostics).  This change modifies the
> >> -Wc++20-compat option definition to register it as a preprocessor option
> >> so that its associated diagnostics can be suppressed.  The changes also
> > There are lots of C++ warning options, all of which should support pragma
> > suppression regardless of whether they are relevant to the preprocessor or
> > not.  Do they all need this kind of handling, or is it only -Wc++20-compat
> > that has some kind of problem?
>
> I had only checked -Wc++20-compat when working on the patch.
>
> I did some spot checking now and confirmed that suppression works as
> expected for C++ for at least the following warnings:
>    -Wuninitialized
>    -Warray-compare
>    -Wbool-compare
>    -Wtautological-compare
>    -Wterminate
>
> I don't know the diagnostic framework well. As best I can tell, this
> issue is specific to the -Wc++20-compat option and when the particular
> diagnostic is issued (e.g., during lexing as opposed to during parsing).
> The following call chains appear to be relevant.
>    cp_lexer_new_main -> cp_lexer_handle_early_pragma ->
> c_invoke_early_pragma_handler
>    cp_parser_* -> cp_parser_pragma -> c_invoke_pragma_handler
>    (where * might be "declaration", "toplevel_declaration",
> "class_head", "objc_interstitial_code", ...)
>
> The -Wc++20-compat enabled warning regarding new keywords in C++20 is
> issued from cp_lexer_get_preprocessor_token.
>
> Tom.
>

I have been working on improving the handling of "#pragma GCC
diagnostic" lately. The behavior for C++ changed since r13-1544
(https://gcc.gnu.org/git/?p=gcc.git;a=commit;h=e46f4d7430c5210465791603735ab219ef263c51).
I have some more comments about the patch's approach on the PR
(https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=53431#c44).

"#pragma GCC diagnostic" formerly did not work in C++ at all, for
diagnostics generated by libcpp, because C++ obtains all the tokens
from libcpp first (including deferred pragmas), and then processes
them afterward, too late to take effect for diagnostics that libcpp
has already emitted. r13-1544 fixed this up by adding an early pragma
handler, which runs as soon as a deferred pragma token is seen and
handles diagnostic pragmas if they pertain to libcpp-controlled
diagnostics. Non-libcpp diagnostics still need to be handled later,
during parsing, or else they get processed too early and it leads to
other problems. Basically, now each diagnostic pragma is handled as
close in time as possible to the time the associated diagnostics might
be generated.

The early pragma handler determines that an option comes from libcpp,
and so should be subject to early processing, if it was marked as such
in the options definition file. Tom's patch points out that
-Wc++20-compat needs to be handled early, and so marking it as a
libcpp diagnostic in c-family/c.opt arranges for that to work as
intended. Now one potential objection here is that -Wc++20-compat
warnings are not technically generated by libcpp. They are generated
by the C++ frontend immediately after lexing an identifier token from
libcpp (cp_lexer_get_preprocessor_token()). But the distinction
between these two steps is rather blurry and it seems logical to me,
to denote this as a libcpp-related option. Also, the same is already
done for -Wc++11-compat. Otherwise, we would need to add some new
option property to indicate which ones need to be handled for pragmas
at lexing time rather than parsing time.

At the moment I don't see any other diagnostics issued from
cp_lexer_get_preprocessor_token() that would need similar adjustments.
Assuming the approach is OK, it might be nice to add a comment to that
function, indicating that any diagnostics emitted there should be
annotated as libcpp options in the .opt file?

-Lewis
  
Tom Honermann July 31, 2022, 9:41 p.m. UTC | #4
On 7/31/22 11:05 AM, Lewis Hyatt wrote:
> On Sat, Jul 30, 2022 at 7:06 PM Tom Honermann via Gcc-patches
> <gcc-patches@gcc.gnu.org>  wrote:
>> On 7/27/22 7:09 PM, Joseph Myers wrote:
>>> On Sun, 24 Jul 2022, Tom Honermann via Gcc-patches wrote:
>>>
>>>> Gcc's '#pragma GCC diagnostic' directives are processed in "early mode"
>>>> (see handle_pragma_diagnostic_early) for the C++ frontend and, as such,
>>>> require that the target diagnostic option be enabled for the preprocessor
>>>> (see c_option_is_from_cpp_diagnostics).  This change modifies the
>>>> -Wc++20-compat option definition to register it as a preprocessor option
>>>> so that its associated diagnostics can be suppressed.  The changes also
>>> There are lots of C++ warning options, all of which should support pragma
>>> suppression regardless of whether they are relevant to the preprocessor or
>>> not.  Do they all need this kind of handling, or is it only -Wc++20-compat
>>> that has some kind of problem?
>> I had only checked -Wc++20-compat when working on the patch.
>>
>> I did some spot checking now and confirmed that suppression works as
>> expected for C++ for at least the following warnings:
>>     -Wuninitialized
>>     -Warray-compare
>>     -Wbool-compare
>>     -Wtautological-compare
>>     -Wterminate
>>
>> I don't know the diagnostic framework well. As best I can tell, this
>> issue is specific to the -Wc++20-compat option and when the particular
>> diagnostic is issued (e.g., during lexing as opposed to during parsing).
>> The following call chains appear to be relevant.
>>     cp_lexer_new_main -> cp_lexer_handle_early_pragma ->
>> c_invoke_early_pragma_handler
>>     cp_parser_* -> cp_parser_pragma -> c_invoke_pragma_handler
>>     (where * might be "declaration", "toplevel_declaration",
>> "class_head", "objc_interstitial_code", ...)
>>
>> The -Wc++20-compat enabled warning regarding new keywords in C++20 is
>> issued from cp_lexer_get_preprocessor_token.
>>
>> Tom.
>>
> I have been working on improving the handling of "#pragma GCC
> diagnostic" lately. The behavior for C++ changed since r13-1544
> (https://gcc.gnu.org/git/?p=gcc.git;a=commit;h=e46f4d7430c5210465791603735ab219ef263c51).
> I have some more comments about the patch's approach on the PR
> (https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=53431#c44).
>
> "#pragma GCC diagnostic" formerly did not work in C++ at all, for
> diagnostics generated by libcpp, because C++ obtains all the tokens
> from libcpp first (including deferred pragmas), and then processes
> them afterward, too late to take effect for diagnostics that libcpp
> has already emitted. r13-1544 fixed this up by adding an early pragma
> handler, which runs as soon as a deferred pragma token is seen and
> handles diagnostic pragmas if they pertain to libcpp-controlled
> diagnostics. Non-libcpp diagnostics still need to be handled later,
> during parsing, or else they get processed too early and it leads to
> other problems. Basically, now each diagnostic pragma is handled as
> close in time as possible to the time the associated diagnostics might
> be generated.
>
> The early pragma handler determines that an option comes from libcpp,
> and so should be subject to early processing, if it was marked as such
> in the options definition file. Tom's patch points out that
> -Wc++20-compat needs to be handled early, and so marking it as a
> libcpp diagnostic in c-family/c.opt arranges for that to work as
> intended. Now one potential objection here is that -Wc++20-compat
> warnings are not technically generated by libcpp. They are generated
> by the C++ frontend immediately after lexing an identifier token from
> libcpp (cp_lexer_get_preprocessor_token()). But the distinction
> between these two steps is rather blurry and it seems logical to me,
> to denote this as a libcpp-related option. Also, the same is already
> done for -Wc++11-compat. Otherwise, we would need to add some new
> option property to indicate which ones need to be handled for pragmas
> at lexing time rather than parsing time.
>
> At the moment I don't see any other diagnostics issued from
> cp_lexer_get_preprocessor_token() that would need similar adjustments.
> Assuming the approach is OK, it might be nice to add a comment to that
> function, indicating that any diagnostics emitted there should be
> annotated as libcpp options in the .opt file?

Thank you for those details; I wasn't aware of that history.

If I'm interpreting your response correctly, it sounds like you agree 
with the direction of the patch.

If you like, I can add a comment as you suggested and re-post the patch. 
Perhaps:

diff --git a/gcc/cp/parser.cc b/gcc/cp/parser.cc
index 4f67441eeb1..c3584446827 100644
--- a/gcc/cp/parser.cc
+++ b/gcc/cp/parser.cc
@@ -924,7 +924,10 @@cp_lexer_saving_tokens (const cp_lexer* lexer)
/* Store the next token from the preprocessor in *TOKEN.  Return true
    if we reach EOF.  If LEXER is NULL, assume we are handling an
    initial #pragma pch_preprocess, and thus want the lexer to return
-   processed strings.  */
+   processed strings.
+
+   Diagnostics issued from this function must have their controlling 
option (if
+   any) in c.opt annotated as a libcpp option via the CppReason 
property.  */

static void
cp_lexer_get_preprocessor_token (unsigned flags, cp_token *token)

Tom.

> -Lewis
  

Patch

diff --git a/gcc/c-family/c-opts.cc b/gcc/c-family/c-opts.cc
index b9f01a65ed7..1ea37ba9742 100644
--- a/gcc/c-family/c-opts.cc
+++ b/gcc/c-family/c-opts.cc
@@ -1046,6 +1046,13 @@  c_common_post_options (const char **pfilename)
   else if (warn_narrowing == -1)
     warn_narrowing = 0;
 
+  if (cxx_dialect >= cxx20)
+    {
+      /* Don't warn about C++20 compatibility changes in C++20 or later.  */
+      warn_cxx20_compat = 0;
+      cpp_opts->cpp_warn_cxx20_compat = 0;
+    }
+
   /* C++17 has stricter evaluation order requirements; let's use some of them
      for earlier C++ as well, so chaining works as expected.  */
   if (c_dialect_cxx ()
diff --git a/gcc/c-family/c.opt b/gcc/c-family/c.opt
index 44e1a60ce24..dfdebd596ef 100644
--- a/gcc/c-family/c.opt
+++ b/gcc/c-family/c.opt
@@ -455,7 +455,7 @@  Wc++2a-compat
 C++ ObjC++ Warning Alias(Wc++20-compat) Undocumented
 
 Wc++20-compat
-C++ ObjC++ Var(warn_cxx20_compat) Warning LangEnabledBy(C++ ObjC++,Wall)
+C++ ObjC++ Var(warn_cxx20_compat) Warning LangEnabledBy(C++ ObjC++,Wall) Init(0) CPP(cpp_warn_cxx20_compat) CppReason(CPP_W_CXX20_COMPAT)
 Warn about C++ constructs whose meaning differs between ISO C++ 2017 and ISO C++ 2020.
 
 Wc++11-extensions
diff --git a/gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/cpp0x/keywords2.C b/gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/cpp0x/keywords2.C
new file mode 100644
index 00000000000..d67d01e31ed
--- /dev/null
+++ b/gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/cpp0x/keywords2.C
@@ -0,0 +1,16 @@ 
+// { dg-do compile { target c++98_only } }
+// { dg-options "-Wc++11-compat" }
+
+// Validate suppression of -Wc++11-compat diagnostics.
+#pragma GCC diagnostic ignored "-Wc++11-compat"
+int alignof;
+int alignas;
+int constexpr;
+int decltype;
+int noexcept;
+int nullptr;
+int static_assert;
+int thread_local;
+int _Alignas;
+int _Alignof;
+int _Thread_local;
diff --git a/gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/cpp2a/keywords2.C b/gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/cpp2a/keywords2.C
new file mode 100644
index 00000000000..8714a7b26b7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/cpp2a/keywords2.C
@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@ 
+// { dg-do compile { target c++17_down } }
+// { dg-options "-Wc++20-compat" }
+
+// Validate suppression of -Wc++20-compat diagnostics.
+#pragma GCC diagnostic ignored "-Wc++20-compat"
+int constinit;
+int consteval;
+int requires;
+int concept;
+int co_await;
+int co_yield;
+int co_return;
+int char8_t;
diff --git a/libcpp/include/cpplib.h b/libcpp/include/cpplib.h
index 3eba6f74b57..9d90c18e4f2 100644
--- a/libcpp/include/cpplib.h
+++ b/libcpp/include/cpplib.h
@@ -547,6 +547,9 @@  struct cpp_options
   /* True if warn about differences between C++98 and C++11.  */
   bool cpp_warn_cxx11_compat;
 
+  /* True if warn about differences between C++17 and C++20.  */
+  bool cpp_warn_cxx20_compat;
+
   /* Nonzero if bidirectional control characters checking is on.  See enum
      cpp_bidirectional_level.  */
   unsigned char cpp_warn_bidirectional;
@@ -655,6 +658,7 @@  enum cpp_warning_reason {
   CPP_W_C90_C99_COMPAT,
   CPP_W_C11_C2X_COMPAT,
   CPP_W_CXX11_COMPAT,
+  CPP_W_CXX20_COMPAT,
   CPP_W_EXPANSION_TO_DEFINED,
   CPP_W_BIDIRECTIONAL
 };
diff --git a/libcpp/init.cc b/libcpp/init.cc
index f4ab83d2145..cca3c1dc1e7 100644
--- a/libcpp/init.cc
+++ b/libcpp/init.cc
@@ -202,6 +202,7 @@  cpp_create_reader (enum c_lang lang, cpp_hash_table *table,
   CPP_OPTION (pfile, cpp_warn_c90_c99_compat) = -1;
   CPP_OPTION (pfile, cpp_warn_c11_c2x_compat) = -1;
   CPP_OPTION (pfile, cpp_warn_cxx11_compat) = 0;
+  CPP_OPTION (pfile, cpp_warn_cxx20_compat) = 0;
   CPP_OPTION (pfile, cpp_warn_deprecated) = 1;
   CPP_OPTION (pfile, cpp_warn_long_long) = 0;
   CPP_OPTION (pfile, dollars_in_ident) = 1;