On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 05:28:47PM -0600, Martin Sebor wrote:
> On 5/28/19 3:30 PM, Sean Gillespie wrote:
> > This adds a new warning, -Wglobal-constructors, that warns whenever a
> > decl requires a global constructor or destructor. This new warning fires
> > whenever a thread_local or global variable is declared whose type has a
> > non-trivial constructor or destructor. When faced with both a constructor
> > and a destructor, the error message mentions the destructor and is only
> > fired once.
> > 
> > This warning mirrors the Clang option -Wglobal-constructors, which warns
> > on the same thing. -Wglobal-constructors was present in Apple's GCC and
> > later made its way into Clang.
> > 
> > Bootstrapped and regression-tested on x86-64 linux, new tests passing.
> 
> I can't tell from the Clang online manual:
> 
> Is the warning meant to trigger just for globals, or for all
> objects with static storage duration regardless of scope (i.e.,
> including namespace-scope objects and static locals and static
> class members)?
> 
> "Requires a constructor to initialize" doesn't seem very clear
> to me.  Is the warning intended to trigger for objects that
> require dynamic initialization?  If so, then what about dynamic
> intialization of objects of trivial types, such as this:
> 
>   static int i = std::string ("foo").length ();
> 
> or even
> 
>   static int j = strlen (getenv ("TMP"));

The warning is not meant to diagnose these.  But I do agree that the
documentation for the new warning should be improved.

> If these aren't meant to be diagnosed then the description should
> make it clear (the first one involves a ctor, the second one does
> not).  But I would think that if the goal is to find sources of
> dynamic initialization then diagnosing the above would be useful.
> If so, the description should make it clear and tests verifying
> that it works should be added.
> 
> Martin
> 
> PS Dynamic initialization can be optimized into static
> initialization, even when it involves a user-defined constructor.
> If the purpose of the warning is to find objects that are
> dynamically initialized in the sense of the C++ language then
> implementing it in the front-end is sufficient.  But if the goal

My sense is that this is what we're doing here.  So the patch seems reasonable
to me.  I suspect we'll have to tweak the warning a little bit, but overall it
looks fine to me.  As always, there's room to expand and improve, but the
warning looks useful to me as-is.

Marek

Reply via email to