On Thu, 5 Jan 2023, Patrick Palka wrote:
> When tentatively parsing what is really an elaborated-type-specifier
> first as a class-specifier, we may form a CPP_TEMPLATE_ID token that
> later gets reused in the fallback parse if the tentative parse fails.
> These special tokens also capture the access checks that have been
> deferred while parsing the template-id. But here, we form such a token
> when the access check state is dk_no_check, and so the token captures
> no access checks. This effectively bypasses access checking for the
> template-id during the subsequent parse as an elaborated-type-specifier.
>
> This patch fixes this by using dk_deferred instead of dk_no_check when
> parsing the class name.
Looks like this issue isn't specific to the CPP_TEMPLATE_ID mechanism --
using dk_no_check also means we bypass access checking during satisfaction too:
template
requires T::value
struct A { };
struct B {
private:
static constexpr bool value = true;
};
struct A a; // incorrectly accepted
>
> Bootstrapped and regtested on x86_64-pc-linux-gnu, does this look OK for
> trunk?
>
> PR c++/108275
>
> gcc/cp/ChangeLog:
>
> * parser.cc (cp_parser_class_head): Use dk_deferred instead of
> dk_no_check when parsing the class name.
>
> gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
>
> * g++.dg/parse/access14.C: New test.
> ---
> gcc/cp/parser.cc | 23 +--
> gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/parse/access14.C | 18 ++
> 2 files changed, 35 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)
> create mode 100644 gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/parse/access14.C
>
> diff --git a/gcc/cp/parser.cc b/gcc/cp/parser.cc
> index bfd8aeae39f..8b1658decba 100644
> --- a/gcc/cp/parser.cc
> +++ b/gcc/cp/parser.cc
> @@ -26559,7 +26559,23 @@ cp_parser_class_head (cp_parser* parser,
>if (cp_parser_global_scope_opt (parser, /*current_scope_valid_p=*/false))
> qualified_p = true;
>
> - push_deferring_access_checks (dk_no_check);
> + /* It is OK to define an inaccessible class; for example:
> +
> + class A { class B; };
> + class A::B {};
> +
> + So we want to ignore access when parsing the class name.
> + However, we might be tentatively parsing what is really an
> + elaborated-type-specifier naming a template-id, e.g.
> +
> + struct C<::m> c;
> +
> + In this case the tentative parse as a class-head will fail, but not
> + before cp_parser_template_id splices in a CPP_TEMPLATE_ID token.
> + Since dk_no_check is sticky, we must instead use dk_deferred so that
> + any such CPP_TEMPLATE_ID token created during this tentative parse
> + will correctly capture the access checks imposed by the template-id . */
> + push_deferring_access_checks (dk_deferred);
>
>/* Determine the name of the class. Begin by looking for an
> optional nested-name-specifier. */
> @@ -26586,11 +26602,6 @@ cp_parser_class_head (cp_parser* parser,
>The proposed resolution for Core Issue 180 says that wherever
>you see `class T::X' you should treat `X' as a type-name.
>
> - It is OK to define an inaccessible class; for example:
> -
> -class A { class B; };
> -class A::B {};
> -
>We do not know if we will see a class-name, or a
>template-name. We look for a class-name first, in case the
>class-name is a template-id; if we looked for the
> diff --git a/gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/parse/access14.C
> b/gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/parse/access14.C
> new file mode 100644
> index 000..bdbc7f6ee2b
> --- /dev/null
> +++ b/gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/parse/access14.C
> @@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
> +// PR c++/108275
> +
> +struct A {
> + int i;
> +private:
> + int j;
> +};
> +
> +template
> +struct B {
> + struct C { };
> +private:
> + template struct D { };
> +};
> +
> +struct B<::j> b; // { dg-error "private" }
> +struct B<::j>::C c;// { dg-error "private" }
> +struct B<::i>::D<0> d; // { dg-error "private" }
> --
> 2.39.0.189.g4dbebc36b0
>
>