There is no need to check for enabled pragma for core or optional core features,
thus this check is removed
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97058
In case a char-literal of type int (C/ObjectiveC) corresponds to a
format specifier with the %hh length modifier, don't treat the literal
as of type char for issuing diagnostics, as otherwise this results in:
printf("%hhd", 'e');
warning: format specifies type 'char' but the argument has type 'char'.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97951
See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42154.
GCC's __attribute__((align)) can reduce the alignment of a type when applied to
a typedef. However, functions which take a pointer or reference to the
original type are compiled assuming the original alignment. Therefore when any
such function is passed an object of the new, less-aligned type, an alignment
fault can occur. In particular, this applies to the constructor, which is
defined for the original type and called for the less-aligned object.
This change adds a warning whenever an pointer or reference to an object is
passed to a function that was defined for a more-aligned type.
The calls to ASTContext::getTypeAlignInChars seem change the order in which
record layouts are evaluated, which caused changes to the output of
-fdump-record-layouts. As such some tests needed to be updated:
* Use CHECK-LABEL rather than counting the number of "Dumping AST Record
Layout" headers.
* Check for end of line in labels, so that struct B1 doesn't match struct B
etc.
* Add --strict-whitespace, since the whitespace shows meaningful structure.
* The order in which record layouts are printed has changed in some cases.
* clang-format for regions changed
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97187
... unless it's a literal
D94640 was a bit too aggressive in its analysis, considering integers
representing valid addresses as invalid. This change rolls back some of
the check, so that only the most obvious case is still flagged.
Before:
```cpp
free((void*)1000); // literal converted to `void*`: warning good
free((void*)an_int); // `int` object converted to `void*`: warning might
// be a false positive
```
After
```cpp
free((void*)1000); // literal converted to `void*`: warning good
free((void*)an_int); // doesn't warn
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97512
Use that to print the diagnostic in SemaChecking instead of
listing all of the builtins in a switch.
With the required features, IR generation will also be able
to error on this. Checking this here allows us to have a RISCV
focused error message.
Reviewed By: HsiangKai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97826
There may be other BUILTINs for other extensions. Use RISCVV_BUILTIN for
vector builtin checking.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97825
Lorenz Bauer reported that the following code will have
compilation error for bpf target:
enum e { TWO };
bpf_core_enum_value_exists(enum e, TWO);
The clang emitted the following error message:
__builtin_preserve_enum_value argument 1 invalid
In SemaChecking, an expression like "*(enum NAME)1" will have
cast kind CK_IntegralToPointer, but "*(enum NAME)0" will have
cast kind CK_NullToPointer. Current implementation only permits
CK_IntegralToPointer, missing enum value 0 case.
This patch permits CK_NullToPointer cast kind and
the above test case can pass now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97659
This commit adds checks for the following:
* labels
* block expressions
* random integers cast to `void*`
* function pointers cast to `void*`
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94640
Demonstrate how to add RISC-V V builtins and lower them to IR intrinsics for V extension.
Authored-by: Roger Ferrer Ibanez <rofirrim@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-by: Hsiangkai Wang <kai.wang@sifive.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93446
This commit prevents warnings from -Wconversion when a clang vector type
is implicitly converted to a sizeless builtin type -- for example, when
implicitly converting a fixed-predicate to a scalable predicate.
The code below:
1 #include <arm_sve.h>
2
3 #define N __ARM_FEATURE_SVE_BITS
4 #define FIXED_ATTR __attribute__((arm_sve_vector_bits (N)))
5 typedef svbool_t fixed_svbool_t FIXED_ATTR;
6
7 inline fixed_svbool_t foo(fixed_svbool_t p) {
8 return svnot_z(svptrue_b64(), p);
9 }
would previously raise this warning:
warning: implicit conversion turns vector to scalar: \
'fixed_svbool_t' (vector of 8 'unsigned char' values) to 'svbool_t' \
(aka '__SVBool_t') [-Wconversion]
Note that many cases of these implicit conversions were already
permitted because many functions inside arm_sve.h are spawned via
preprocessor macros, and the call to isInSystemMacro would cover us in
this case. This commit fixes the remaining cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97053
Introduce a function attribute 'enforce_tcb' that prevents the function
from calling other functions without the same attribute. This allows
isolating code that's considered to be somehow privileged so that it could not
use its privileges to exhibit arbitrary behavior.
Introduce an on-by-default warning '-Wtcb-enforcement' that warns
about violations of the above rule.
Introduce a function attribute 'enforce_tcb_leaf' that suppresses
the new warning within the function it is attached to. Such leaf functions
may implement common functionality between the trusted and the untrusted code
but they require extra careful audit with respect to their capabilities.
Fixes after a revert in 419ef38a50293c58078f830517f5e305068dbee6:
Fix a test.
Add workaround for GCC bug (https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=67274).
Attribute the patch appropriately!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91898
Introduce a function attribute 'enforce_tcb' that prevents the function
from calling other functions without the same attribute. This allows
isolating code that's considered to be somehow privileged so that it could not
use its privileges to exhibit arbitrary behavior.
Introduce an on-by-default warning '-Wtcb-enforcement' that warns
about violations of the above rule.
Introduce a function attribute 'enforce_tcb_leaf' that suppresses
the new warning within the function it is attached to. Such leaf functions
may implement common functionality between the trusted and the untrusted code
but they require extra careful audit with respect to their capabilities.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91898
Add powerpcle support to clang.
For FreeBSD, assume a freestanding environment for now, as we only need it in the first place to build loader, which runs in the OpenFirmware environment instead of the FreeBSD environment.
For Linux, recognize glibc and musl environments to match current usage in Void Linux PPC.
Adjust driver to match current binutils behavior regarding machine naming.
Adjust and expand tests.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93919
On PPC, the vector pair instructions are independent from MMA.
This patch renames the vector pair LLVM intrinsics and Clang builtins to replace the _mma_ prefix by _vsx_ in their names.
We also move the vector pair type/intrinsic/builtin tests to their own files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91974
This patch enables the Clang type __vector_pair and its associated LLVM
intrinsics even when MMA is disabled. With this patch, the type is now controlled
by the PPC paired-vector-memops option. The builtins and intrinsics will be
renamed to drop the mma prefix in another patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91819
The use of the new types introduced for PowerPC MMA instructions needs to be restricted.
We add a PowerPC function checking that the given type is valid in a context in which we don't allow MMA types.
This function is called from various places in Sema where we want to prevent the use of these types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82035
Add MMA builtin decoding. These builtins use the new PowerPC-specific types __vector_pair and __vector_quad.
So to avoid pervasive changes, we use custom type descriptors and custom decoding for these builtins.
We also use custom code generation to expand builtin calls with pointers to simpler intrinsic calls with non-pointer types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81748
Checks to make sure that stdlib's (std::)free is being appropriately
used. Presently checks for the following misuses:
- free(&stack_object)
- free(stack_array)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89988
We now recognize this function as a builtin despite it having an
unexpected number of parameters; make sure we don't enforce that it has
only 1 argument for its 2 parameters.
Check applied to unbounded (incomplete) arrays and pointers to spot
cases where the computed address is beyond the largest possible
addressable extent of the array, based on the address space in which the
array is delcared, or which the pointer refers to.
Check helps to avoid cases of nonsense pointer math and array indexing
which could lead to linker failures or runtime exceptions. Of
particular interest when building for embedded systems with small
address spaces.
This is version 2 of this patch -- version 1 had some testing issues
due to a sign error in existing code. That error is corrected and
lit test for this chagne is extended to verify the fix.
Originally reviewed/accepted by: aaron.ballman
Original revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86796
Reviewed By: ebevhan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88174
This patch implements custom codegen for the vec_replace_elt and
vec_replace_unaligned builtins.
These builtins map to the @llvm.ppc.altivec.vinsw and @llvm.ppc.altivec.vinsd
intrinsics depending on the arguments. The main motivation for doing custom
codegen for these intrinsics is because there are float and double versions of
the builtin. Normally, the converting the float to an integer would be done via
fptoui in the IR. This is incorrect as fptoui truncates the value and we must
ensure the value is not truncated. Therefore, we provide custom codegen to utilize
bitcast instead as bitcasts do not truncate.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83500
Check applied to unbounded (incomplete) arrays and pointers
to spot cases where the computed address is beyond the
largest possible addressable extent of the array, based
on the address space in which the array is delcared, or
which the pointer refers to.
Check helps to avoid cases of nonsense pointer math and
array indexing which could lead to linker failures or
runtime exceptions. Of particular interest when building
for embedded systems with small address spaces.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86796
Continue to heuristically pick the wider of the two operands for
narrowing conversion warnings so that some_char + 1 isn't treated as
being wider than a char, but use the more accurate computation for
tautological comparison warnings.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85778
This patch moves FixedPointSemantics and APFixedPoint
from Clang to LLVM ADT.
This will make it easier to use the fixed-point
classes in LLVM for constructing an IR builder for
fixed-point and for reusing the APFixedPoint class
for constant evaluation purposes.
RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-August/144025.html
Reviewed By: leonardchan, rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85312
SemaBuiltinConstantArg has an early exit for that case that doesn't
produce an error and doesn't update the APInt. We need to detect that
case and not use the APInt value.
While there delete the signature of CheckX86BuiltinTileArgumentsRange
that takes a single Argument index to check. There's another version
that takes an ArrayRef and single value is convertible to an ArrayRef.
We're (temporarily) disabling ExtInt for the '__atomic' builtins so we can better design their behavior later. The idea is until we do an audit/design for the way atomic builtins are supposed to work with _ExtInt, we should leave them restricted so they don't limit our future options, such as by binding us to a sub-optimal implementation via ABI.
Example after this change:
$ cat test.c
void f(_ExtInt(64) *ptr) {
__atomic_fetch_add(ptr, 1, 0);
}
$ clang -c test.c
test.c:2:22: error: argument to atomic builtin of type '_ExtInt' is not supported
__atomic_fetch_add(ptr, 1, 0);
^
1 error generated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84049
When a conditional expression has a throw expression it called
GetExprRange with a void expression, which caused an assertion failure.
This approach was suggested by Richard Smith.
Fixes PR46484: Clang crash in clang/lib/Sema/SemaChecking.cpp:10028
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85601
This warning diagnoses cases where an expression is compared to a
constant, and the comparison is tautological due to the form of the
expression (but not merely due to its type). This applies in cases such
as comparisons of bit-fields and the result of bit-masks.
The new warning is added to the Clang diagnostic group
-Wtautological-constant-in-range-compare but not to the
formerly-equivalent GCC-compatibility diagnostic group -Wtype-limits,
which retains its old meaning of diagnosing only tautological
comparisons to extremal values of a type (eg, int > INT_MAX).
Reviewed By: rtrieu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85256
`OS << ND->getDeclName();` is equivalent to `OS << ND->getNameAsString();`
without the extra temporary string.
This is not quite a NFC since two uses of `getNameAsString` in a
diagnostic are replaced, which results in the named entity being
quoted with additional "'"s (ie: 'var' instead of var).
This patch added the following additional compile-once
run-everywhere (CO-RE) relocations:
- existence/size of typedef, struct/union or enum type
- enum value and enum value existence
These additional relocations will make CO-RE bpf programs more
adaptive for potential kernel internal data structure changes.
For existence/size relocations, the following two code patterns
are supported:
1. uint32_t __builtin_preserve_type_info(*(<type> *)0, flag);
2. <type> var;
uint32_t __builtin_preserve_field_info(var, flag);
flag = 0 for existence relocation and flag = 1 for size relocation.
For enum value existence and enum value relocations, the following code
pattern is supported:
uint64_t __builtin_preserve_enum_value(*(<enum_type> *)<enum_value>,
flag);
flag = 0 means existence relocation and flag = 1 for enum value.
relocation. In the above <enum_type> can be an enum type or
a typedef to enum type. The <enum_value> needs to be an enumerator
value from the same enum type. The return type is uint64_t to
permit potential 64bit enumerator values.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83242
Background:
-----------
There are two related argument types which can be sent into a diagnostic to
display the name of an entity: DeclarationName (ak_declarationname) or
NamedDecl* (ak_nameddecl) (there is also ak_identifierinfo for
IdentifierInfo*, but we are not concerned with it here).
A DeclarationName in a diagnostic will just be streamed to the output,
which will directly result in a call to DeclarationName::print.
A NamedDecl* in a diagnostic will also ultimately result in a call to
DeclarationName::print, but with two customisation points along the way:
The first customisation point is NamedDecl::getNameForDiagnostic which is
overloaded by FunctionDecl, ClassTemplateSpecializationDecl and
VarTemplateSpecializationDecl to print the template arguments, if any.
The second customisation point is NamedDecl::printName. By default it just
streams the stored DeclarationName into the output but it can be customised
to provide a user-friendly name for an entity. It is currently overloaded by
DecompositionDecl and MSGuidDecl.
What this patch does:
---------------------
For many diagnostics a DeclarationName is used instead of the NamedDecl*.
This bypasses the two customisation points mentioned above. This patches fix
this for diagnostics in Sema.cpp, SemaCast.cpp, SemaChecking.cpp, SemaDecl.cpp,
SemaDeclAttr.cpp, SemaDecl.cpp, SemaOverload.cpp and SemaStmt.cpp.
I have only modified diagnostics where I could construct a test-case which
demonstrates that the change is appropriate (either with this patch or the next
one).
Reviewed By: erichkeane, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84656
Reapply 49e5f603d4
which had been reverted in c94332919b.
Originally reverted because I hadn't updated it in quite a while when I
got around to committing it, so there were a bunch of missing changes to
new code since I'd written the patch.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76646
The _ExtInt type allows custom width integers, but the atomic memory
access's operand must have a power-of-two size. _ExtInts with
non-power-of-two size should not be allowed for atomic intrinsic.
Before this change:
$ cat test.c
typedef unsigned _ExtInt(42) dtype;
void verify_binary_op_nand(dtype* pval1, dtype val2)
{ __sync_nand_and_fetch(pval1, val2); }
$ clang test.c
clang-11:
/home/ubuntu/llvm_workspace/llvm/clang/lib/CodeGen/CGBuiltin.cpp:117:
llvm::Value*
EmitToInt(clang::CodeGen::CodeGenFunction&, llvm::Value*,
clang::QualType, llvm::IntegerType*): Assertion `V->getType() ==
IntType' failed.
PLEASE submit a bug report to https://bugs.llvm.org/ and include the
crash backtrace, preprocessed source, and associated run script.
After this change:
$ clang test.c
test.c:3:30: error: Atomic memory operand must have a power-of-two size
{ __sync_nand_and_fetch(pval1, val2); }
^
List of the atomic intrinsics that have this
problem:
__sync_fetch_and_add
__sync_fetch_and_sub
__sync_fetch_and_or
__sync_fetch_and_and
__sync_fetch_and_xor
__sync_fetch_and_nand
__sync_nand_and_fetch
__sync_and_and_fetch
__sync_add_and_fetch
__sync_sub_and_fetch
__sync_or_and_fetch
__sync_xor_and_fetch
__sync_fetch_and_min
__sync_fetch_and_max
__sync_fetch_and_umin
__sync_fetch_and_umax
__sync_val_compare_and_swap
__sync_bool_compare_and_swap
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83340