diff options
author | Marek Polacek <polacek@redhat.com> | 2020-06-26 12:40:59 -0400 |
---|---|---|
committer | Marek Polacek <polacek@redhat.com> | 2020-06-29 11:01:58 -0400 |
commit | 54980635c537f3130481da2d8b1109c775db8bb0 (patch) | |
tree | fa66658f274fc2274a323c83c1fc709fc3232a62 /gcc/simplify-rtx.c | |
parent | b1005f553d3543bb56dc6b9b34ee35455d697ca4 (diff) | |
download | gcc-54980635c537f3130481da2d8b1109c775db8bb0.zip gcc-54980635c537f3130481da2d8b1109c775db8bb0.tar.gz gcc-54980635c537f3130481da2d8b1109c775db8bb0.tar.bz2 |
c++: Check uniqueness of concepts/variable templates [PR94553]
This patch wraps up PR94553. Variable template names have no C
compatibility implications so they should be unique in their
declarative region. It occurred to me that this applies to concepts
as well. This is not specified in [basic.scope.declarative]/4.2
but that seems like a bug in the standard.
I couldn't use variable_template_p because that uses PRIMARY_TEMPLATE_P
which uses DECL_PRIMARY_TEMPLATE and that might not have been set up yet
(push_template_decl hasn't yet been called). PRIMARY_TEMPLATE_P is
important to distinguish between a variable template and a variable in a
function template. But I think we don't have to worry about that in
duplicate_decls: a template declaration cannot appear at block scope,
and additional checks in duplicate_decls suggest that it won't ever
see a TEMPLATE_DECL for a variable in a function template. So
checking that the DECL_TEMPLATE_RESULT is a VAR_DECL seems to be fine.
I could have added a default argument to variable_template_p too to
avoid checking PRIMARY_TEMPLATE_P but it didn't seem worth the effort.
gcc/cp/ChangeLog:
PR c++/94553
* decl.c (duplicate_decls): Make sure a concept or a variable
template is unique in its declarative region.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
PR c++/94553
* g++.dg/cpp1y/pr68578.C: Adjust dg-error.
* g++.dg/cpp1y/var-templ66.C: New test.
* g++.dg/cpp2a/concepts-redecl1.C: New test.
Diffstat (limited to 'gcc/simplify-rtx.c')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions