The assignment to NextIsDereference is either followed by (1) another,
unrelated assignment to NextIsDereference or by (2) an early loop exit.
Found by clang's static analyzer: http://llvm.org/reports/scan-build
(While we're at it fix a typo.)
llvm-svn: 285879
the body of a function for the purposes of computing its storage
duration and deciding whether its initializer must be constant.
There are a number of problems in our current treatment of compound
literals. C specifies that a compound literal yields an l-value
referring to an object with either static or automatic storage
duration, depending on where it was written; in the latter case,
the literal object has a lifetime tied to the enclosing scope (much
like an ObjC block), not the enclosing full-expression. To get these
semantics fully correct in our current design, we would need to
collect compound literals on the ExprWithCleanups, just like we do
with ObjC blocks; we would probably also want to identify literals
like we do with materialized temporaries. But it gets stranger;
GCC adds compound literals to C++ as an extension, but makes them
r-values, which are generally assumed to have temporary storage
duration. Ignoring destructor ordering, the difference only matters
if the object's address escapes the full-expression, which for an
r-value can only happen with reference binding (which extends
temporaries) or array-to-pointer decay (which does not). GCC then
attempts to lock down on array-to-pointer decay in ad hoc ways.
Arguably a far superior language solution for C++ (and perhaps even
array r-values in C, which can occur in other ways) would be to
propagate lifetime extension through array-to-pointer decay, so
that initializing a pointer object to a decayed r-value array
extends the lifetime of the complete object containing the array.
But this would be a major change in semantics which arguably ought
to be blessed by the committee(s).
Anyway, I'm not fixing any of that in this patch; I did try, but
it got out of hand.
Fixes rdar://28949016.
llvm-svn: 285643
This is a misspelling of the intended !(x & A) negated bit test that happens in
practice every now and then.
I ran this on Chromium and all its dependencies, and it fired 0 times -- no
false or true positives, but it would've caught a bug in an in-progress change
that had to be caught by a Visual Studio warning instead.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D26035
llvm-svn: 285310
The problem with the original commit was that some of Apple's headers depended
on an incorrect behaviour, this commit adds a temporary workaround until those
headers are fixed.
llvm-svn: 285098
by blocks.
Add a new warning "-Wblock-capture-autoreleasing". The warning warns
about implicitly autoreleasing out-parameters captured by blocks which
can introduce use-after-free bugs that are hard to debug.
rdar://problem/15377548
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25844
llvm-svn: 285031
This has two significant effects:
1) Direct relational comparisons between null pointer constants (0 and nullopt)
and pointers are now ill-formed. This was always the case for C, and it
appears that C++ only ever permitted by accident. For instance, cases like
nullptr < &a
are now rejected.
2) Comparisons and conditional operators between differently-cv-qualified
pointer types now work, and produce a composite type that both source
pointer types can convert to (when possible). For instance, comparison
between 'int **' and 'const int **' is now valid, and uses an intermediate
type of 'const int *const *'.
Clang previously supported #2 as an extension.
We do not accept the cases in #1 as an extension. I've tested a fair amount of
code to check that this doesn't break it, but if it turns out that someone is
relying on this, we can easily add it back as an extension.
This is a re-commit of r284800.
llvm-svn: 284890
This has two significant effects:
1) Direct relational comparisons between null pointer constants (0 and nullopt)
and pointers are now ill-formed. This was always the case for C, and it
appears that C++ only ever permitted by accident. For instance, cases like
nullptr < &a
are now rejected.
2) Comparisons and conditional operators between differently-cv-qualified
pointer types now work, and produce a composite type that both source
pointer types can convert to (when possible). For instance, comparison
between 'int **' and 'const int **' is now valid, and uses an intermediate
type of 'const int *const *'.
Clang previously supported #2 as an extension.
We do not accept the cases in #1 as an extension. I've tested a fair amount of
code to check that this doesn't break it, but if it turns out that someone is
relying on this, we can easily add it back as an extension.
llvm-svn: 284800
Gcc prints error if elements of left and right parts of a shift have different
sizes. This patch is provided the GCC compatibility.
Patch by Vladimir Yakovlev.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24669
llvm-svn: 284579
not instantiate exception specifications of functions if they were only used in
unevaluated contexts (other than 'noexcept' expressions).
In C++17 onwards, this becomes essential since the exception specification is
now part of the function's type.
Note that this means that constructs like the following no longer work:
struct A {
static T f() noexcept(...);
decltype(f()) *p;
};
... because the decltype expression now needs the exception specification of
'f', which has not yet been parsed.
llvm-svn: 284549
This commit combines a couple of redundant functions that do availability
attribute context checking into a more correct/simpler one.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25283
llvm-svn: 284265
Summary:
Move CheckCUDACall from ActOnCallExpr and BuildDeclRefExpr to
DiagnoseUseOfDecl. This lets us catch some edge cases we were missing,
specifically around class operators.
This necessitates a few other changes:
- Avoid emitting duplicate deferred diags in CheckCUDACall.
Previously we'd carefully placed our call to CheckCUDACall such that
it would only ever run once for a particular callsite. But now this
isn't the case.
- Emit deferred diagnostics from a template
specialization/instantiation's primary template, in addition to from
the specialization/instantiation itself. DiagnoseUseOfDecl ends up
putting the deferred diagnostics on the template, rather than the
specialization, so we need to check both.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits, tra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24573
llvm-svn: 283637
CheckSingleAssignmentConstraints. These no longer produce ExprError() when they
have not emitted an error, and reliably inform the caller when they *have*
emitted an error.
This fixes some serious issues where we would fail to emit any diagnostic for
invalid code and then attempt to emit code for an invalid AST, and conversely
some issues where we would emit two diagnostics for the same problem.
llvm-svn: 283508
Looks like the smart quote was copy/pasted from the C++ standard.
The smart quote was not encoded as valid UTF-8 (?), even though vim was
detecting the file as UTF-8. This broke the clang-format Python script,
which tried to read the file using the same encoding as vim detected.
llvm-svn: 283487
Treating large 0x*LL literals as signed instead of unsigned is not a
conforming language extension, so move it out of -fms-extensions.
Came up in PR30605
llvm-svn: 283227
Support lax convertions on compound assignment expressions like:
typedef __attribute__((vector_size(8))) double float64x1_t;
typedef __attribute__((vector_size(16))) double float64x2_t;
float64x1_t vget_low_f64(float64x2_t __p0);
double c = 3.0;
float64x2_t v = {0.0, 1.0};
c += vget_low_f64(v);
This restores one more valid behavior pre r266366, and is a incremental
follow up from work committed in r274646.
While here, make the check more strict, add FIXMEs, clean up variable
names to match what they can actually be and update testcases to reflect
that. We now reject:
typedef float float2 __attribute__ ((vector_size (8)));
double d;
f2 += d;
which doesn't fit as a direct bitcast anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24472
rdar://problem/28033929
llvm-svn: 282968
Summary:
This lets people link against LLVM and their own version of the UTF
library.
I determined this only affects llvm, clang, lld, and lldb by running
$ git grep -wl 'UTF[0-9]\+\|\bConvertUTF\bisLegalUTF\|getNumBytesFor' | cut -f 1 -d '/' | sort | uniq
clang
lld
lldb
llvm
Tested with
ninja lldb
ninja check-clang check-llvm check-lld
(ninja check-lldb doesn't complete for me with or without this patch.)
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: klimek, beanz, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24996
llvm-svn: 282822
r278501 inadvertently introduced a bug in which it disallowed shifting
scalar operands by vector operands when not compiling for OpenCL. This
commit fixes it.
Patch by Vladimir Yakovlev.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24467
llvm-svn: 281669
We also need to add ObjCTypeParamTypeLoc. ObjCTypeParamType supports the
representation of "T <protocol>" where T is a type parameter. Before this,
we use TypedefType to represent the type parameter for ObjC.
ObjCTypeParamType has "ObjCTypeParamDecl *OTPDecl" and it extends from
ObjCProtocolQualifiers. It is a non-canonical type and is canonicalized
to the underlying type with the protocol qualifiers.
rdar://24619481
rdar://25060179
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23079
llvm-svn: 281355
within the instantiation of that same specialization. This could previously
happen for eagerly-instantiated function templates, variable templates,
exception specifications, default arguments, and a handful of other cases.
We still have an issue here for default template arguments that recursively
make use of themselves and likewise for substitution into the type of a
non-type template parameter, but in those cases we're producing a different
entity each time, so they should instead be caught by the instantiation depth
limit. However, currently we will typically run out of stack before we reach
it. :(
llvm-svn: 280190
This commit adds a traversal of the AST after Sema of a function that diagnoses
unguarded references to declarations that are partially available (based on
availability attributes). This traversal is only done when we would otherwise
emit -Wpartial-availability.
This commit is part of a feature I proposed here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2016-July/049851.html
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23003
llvm-svn: 278826
Summary:
Some function calls in CUDA are allowed to appear in
semantically-correct programs but are an error if they're ever
codegen'ed. Specifically, a host+device function may call a host
function, but it's an error if such a function is ever codegen'ed in
device mode (and vice versa).
Previously, clang made no attempt to catch these errors. For the most
part, they would be caught by ptxas, and reported as "call to unknown
function 'foo'".
Now we catch these errors and report them the same as we report other
illegal calls (e.g. a call from a host function to a device function).
This has a small change in error-message behavior for calls that were
previously disallowed (e.g. calls from a host to a device function).
Previously, we'd catch disallowed calls fairly early, before doing
additional semantic checking e.g. of the call's arguments. Now we catch
these illegal calls at the very end of our semantic checks, so we'll
only emit a "illegal CUDA call" error if the call is otherwise
well-formed.
Reviewers: tra, rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23242
llvm-svn: 278759
This fixes an error in type checking of shift of vector values.
Patch by Vladimir Yakovlev.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21678
llvm-svn: 278501
Taking the address of a packed member is dangerous since the reduced
alignment of the pointee is lost. This can lead to memory alignment
faults in some architectures if the pointer value is dereferenced.
This change adds a new warning to clang emitted when taking the address
of a packed member. A packed member is either a field/data member
declared as attribute((packed)) or belonging to a struct/class
declared as such. The associated flag is -Waddress-of-packed-member.
Conversions (either implicit or via a valid casting) to pointer types
with lower or equal alignment requirements (e.g. void* or char*)
will silence the warning.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20561
llvm-svn: 278483
Summary:
I want to reuse "CheckCUDAFoo" in a later patch. Also, I think
IsAllowedCUDACall gets the point across more clearly.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23238
llvm-svn: 278193
This means that a function marked with an availability attribute can safely
refer to a declaration that is greater than the deployment target, but less then
or equal to the context availability without -Wpartial-availability firing.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22697
llvm-svn: 277058
Currently Clang use int32 to represent sampler_t, which have been a source of issue for some backends, because in some backends sampler_t cannot be represented by int32. They have to depend on kernel argument metadata and use IPA to find the sampler arguments and global variables and transform them to target specific sampler type.
This patch uses opaque pointer type opencl.sampler_t* for sampler_t. For each use of file-scope sampler variable, it generates a function call of __translate_sampler_initializer. For each initialization of function-scope sampler variable, it generates a function call of __translate_sampler_initializer.
Each builtin library can implement its own __translate_sampler_initializer(). Since the real sampler type tends to be architecture dependent, allowing it to be initialized by a library function simplifies backend design. A typical implementation of __translate_sampler_initializer could be a table lookup of real sampler literal values. Since its argument is always a literal, the returned pointer is known at compile time and easily optimized to finally become some literal values directly put into image read instructions.
This patch is partially based on Alexey Sotkin's work in Khronos Clang (3d4eec6162).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21567
llvm-svn: 277024
on the nullabilities of its operands.
This commit is a follow-up to r276076 and enables
computeConditionalNullability to compute the merged nullability when
the operands are objective-c pointers.
rdar://problem/22074116
llvm-svn: 276696
decomposition declarations.
There are a couple of things in the wording that seem strange here:
decomposition declarations are permitted at namespace scope (which we partially
support here) and they are permitted as the declaration in a template (which we
reject).
llvm-svn: 276492
rewriteBuiltinFunctionDecl can encounter errors when performing
DefaultFunctionArrayLvalueConversion. These errors were not handled
which led to a null pointer dereference.
This fixes PR28651.
llvm-svn: 276352
OpenMP 4.5 removed the restriction that array section lower bound must be non negative.
This change is to allow negative values for array section based on pointers.
For array section based on array type there is still a restriction: "The array section must be a subset of the original array."
Patch by David S.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22481
llvm-svn: 276177
nullabilities of its operands.
This patch defines a function to compute the nullability of conditional
expressions, which enables Sema to precisely detect implicit conversions
of nullable conditional expressions to nonnull pointers.
rdar://problem/25166556
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22392
llvm-svn: 276076
Give incompatible function pointer warning its own diagnostic group
but still leave it as a subgroup of incompatible-pointer-types. This is in
preparation to promote -Wincompatible-function-pointer-types to error on
darwin.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22248
rdar://problem/12907612
llvm-svn: 275907
This patch adds a new AST node: ObjCAvailabilityCheckExpr, and teaches the
Parser and Sema to generate it. This node represents an availability check of
the form:
@available(macos 10.10, *);
Which will eventually compile to a runtime check of the host's OS version. This
is the first patch of the feature I proposed here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2016-July/049851.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22171
llvm-svn: 275654
This patch implements PR#22821.
Taking the address of a packed member is dangerous since the reduced
alignment of the pointee is lost. This can lead to memory alignment
faults in some architectures if the pointer value is dereferenced.
This change adds a new warning to clang emitted when taking the address
of a packed member. A packed member is either a field/data member
declared as attribute((packed)) or belonging to a struct/class
declared as such. The associated flag is -Waddress-of-packed-member.
Conversions (either implicit or via a valid casting) to pointer types
with lower or equal alignment requirements (e.g. void* or char*)
silence the warning.
This change also adds a new error diagnostic when the user attempts to
bind a reference to a packed member, regardless of the alignment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20561
llvm-svn: 275417
- Changes diagnostics for Blocks to be implicitly
const qualified OpenCL v2.0 s6.12.5.
- Added and unified diagnostics of some OpenCL special types:
blocks, images, samplers, pipes. These types are intended for use
with the OpenCL builtin functions only and, therefore, most regular
uses are not allowed including assignments, arithmetic operations,
pointer dereferencing, etc.
Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21989
llvm-svn: 275061
Before r266366, clang used to support constructs like:
typedef __attribute__((vector_size(8))) double float64x1_t;
typedef __attribute__((vector_size(16))) double float64x2_t;
float64x1_t vget_low_f64(float64x2_t __p0);
double y = 3.0 + vget_low_f64(v);
But it would reject:
double y = vget_low_f64(v) + 3.0;
It also always rejected assignments:
double y = vget_low_f64(v);
This patch: (a) revivies the behavior of `3.0 + vget_low_f64(v)` prior to
r266366, (b) add support for `vget_low_f64(v) + 3.0` and (c) add support for
assignments.
These vector semantics have never really been tied up but it seems
odd that we used to support some binop froms but do not support
assignment. If we did support scalar for the purposes of arithmetic, we
should probably be able to reinterpret as scalar for the purposes of
assignment too.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21700
rdar://problem/26093791
llvm-svn: 274646
When we have template arguments, we have a function and a pattern, the variable
in init-capture belongs to the pattern decl when checking if the lhs of
"max = current" is modifiable:
auto find = [max = init](auto current) {
max = current;
};
In function isReferenceToNonConstCapture, we handle the case where the decl
context for the variable is not part of the current context.
Instead of crashing, we emit an error message:
cannot assign to a variable captured by copy in a non-mutable lambda
rdar://26997922
llvm-svn: 274392
constructor would be; this is effectively required by P0136R1. This has the
effect of exposing the validity of the base class initialization steps to
SFINAE checks.
llvm-svn: 274088
Replace inheriting constructors implementation with new approach, voted into
C++ last year as a DR against C++11.
Instead of synthesizing a set of derived class constructors for each inherited
base class constructor, we make the constructors of the base class visible to
constructor lookup in the derived class, using the normal rules for
using-declarations.
For constructors, UsingShadowDecl now has a ConstructorUsingShadowDecl derived
class that tracks the requisite additional information. We create shadow
constructors (not found by name lookup) in the derived class to model the
actual initialization, and have a new expression node,
CXXInheritedCtorInitExpr, to model the initialization of a base class from such
a constructor. (This initialization is special because it performs real perfect
forwarding of arguments.)
In cases where argument forwarding is not possible (for inalloca calls,
variadic calls, and calls with callee parameter cleanup), the shadow inheriting
constructor is not emitted and instead we directly emit the initialization code
into the caller of the inherited constructor.
Note that this new model is not perfectly compatible with the old model in some
corner cases. In particular:
* if B inherits a private constructor from A, and C uses that constructor to
construct a B, then we previously required that A befriends B and B
befriends C, but the new rules require A to befriend C directly, and
* if a derived class has its own constructors (and so its implicit default
constructor is suppressed), it may still inherit a default constructor from
a base class
llvm-svn: 274049
-Wfor-loop-analysis warnings for a for-loop with a condition variable. In such
a case, the loop condition variable is modified on each iteration of the loop
by definition.
Original commit message:
Rearrange condition handling so that semantic checks on a condition variable
are performed before the other substatements of the construct are parsed,
rather than deferring them until the end. This allows better error recovery
from semantic errors in the condition, improves diagnostic order, and is a
prerequisite for C++17 constexpr if.
llvm-svn: 273600
are performed before the other substatements of the construct are parsed,
rather than deferring them until the end. This allows better error recovery
from semantic errors in the condition, improves diagnostic order, and is a
prerequisite for C++17 constexpr if.
llvm-svn: 273548
classes.
MSVC actively uses unqualified lookup in dependent bases, lookup at the
instantiation point (non-dependent names may be resolved on things
declared later) etc. and all this stuff is the main cause of
incompatibility between clang and MSVC.
Clang tries to emulate MSVC behavior but it may fail in many cases.
clang could store lexed tokens for member functions definitions within
ClassTemplateDecl for later parsing during template instantiation.
It will allow resolving many possible issues with lookup in dependent
base classes and removing many already existing MSVC-specific
hacks/workarounds from the clang code.
llvm-svn: 272774
If definition of default function argument uses itself, clang crashed,
because corresponding function parameter is not associated with the default
argument yet. With this fix clang emits appropriate error message.
This change fixes PR28105.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21301
llvm-svn: 272623
This patch implements PR#22821.
Taking the address of a packed member is dangerous since the reduced
alignment of the pointee is lost. This can lead to memory alignment
faults in some architectures if the pointer value is dereferenced.
This change adds a new warning to clang emitted when taking the address
of a packed member. A packed member is either a field/data member
declared as attribute((packed)) or belonging to a struct/class
declared as such. The associated flag is -Waddress-of-packed-member
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20561
llvm-svn: 272552
These ExprWithCleanups are added for holding a RunCleanupsScope not
for destructor calls; rather, they are for lifetime marks. This requires
ExprWithCleanups to keep a bit to indicate whether it have cleanups with
side effects (e.g. dtor calls).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20498
llvm-svn: 272296
Given the following C++:
```
void foo();
void foo() __attribute__((enable_if(false, "")));
bool bar() {
auto P = foo;
return P == foo;
}
```
We'll currently happily (and correctly) resolve `foo` to the `foo`
overload without `enable_if` when assigning to `P`. However, we'll
complain about an ambiguous overload on the `P == foo` line, because
`Sema::CheckPlaceholderExpr` doesn't recognize that there's only one
`foo` that could possibly work here.
This patch teaches `Sema::CheckPlaceholderExpr` how to properly deal
with such cases.
Grepping for other callers of things like
`Sema::ResolveAndFixSingleFunctionTemplateSpecialization`, it *looks*
like this is the last place that needed to be fixed up. If I'm wrong,
I'll see if there's something we can do that beats what amounts to
whack-a-mole with bugs.
llvm-svn: 272080
For better performance and to unify code with offloading part we pass
scalar firstprivate values by value, instead of by reference. It will
remove some extra copying operations.
llvm-svn: 269751
This patch implements __unaligned (MS extension) as a proper type qualifier
(before that, it was implemented as an ignored attribute).
It also fixes PR27367 and PR27666.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20103
llvm-svn: 269220
This patch corresponds to reviews:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D15120http://reviews.llvm.org/D19125
It adds support for the __float128 keyword, literals and target feature to
enable it. Based on the latter of the two aforementioned reviews, this feature
is enabled on Linux on i386/X86 as well as SystemZ.
This is also the second attempt in commiting this feature. The first attempt
did not enable it on required platforms which caused failures when compiling
type_traits with -std=gnu++11.
If you see failures with compiling this header on your platform after this
commit, it is likely that your platform needs to have this feature enabled.
llvm-svn: 268898
If the address of a field is taken as a pointer to member, we should
not warn that the field is not used.
Normaly, yse of fields are done from MemberExpr, but in case of pointer to
member, it is in a DeclRefExpr
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20054
llvm-svn: 268895
This patch implements __unaligned (MS extension) as a proper type qualifier
(before that, it was implemented as an ignored attribute).
It also fixes PR27367.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19654
llvm-svn: 268727
declared before it is used. Because we don't use normal name lookup to find
these, the normal code to filter out non-visible names from name lookup results
does not apply.
llvm-svn: 268585
Usually these parameters are used solely to initialize the field in the
initializer list, and there is no real shadowing confusion.
There is a new warning under -Wshadow called
-Wshadow-field-in-constructor-modified. It attempts to find
modifications of such constructor parameters that probably intended to
modify the field.
It has some false negatives, though, so there is another warning group,
-Wshadow-field-in-constructor, which always warns on this special case.
For users who just want the old behavior and don't care about these fine
grained groups, we have a new warning group called -Wshadow-all that
activates everything.
Fixes PR16088.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18271
llvm-svn: 267957
The Decl::isUsed has a value for every decl. In non-module builds it is very
difficult (but possible) to break this invariant but when we walk up the redecl
chain we find the neccessary information.
When deserializing the decls from a module it is much more difficult to update
correctly this invariant. The patch centralizes the information whether a decl
is used in the canonical decl marking the entire entity as being used.
Fixes https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27401
Patch by Cristina Cristescu and me.
Thanks to Richard Smith who helped to debug and understand the issue!
Reviewed by Richard Smith.
llvm-svn: 267691
Since this patch provided support for the __float128 type but disabled it
on all platforms by default, some platforms can't compile type_traits with
-std=gnu++11 since there is a specialization with __float128.
This reverts the patch until D19125 is approved (i.e. we know which platforms
need this support enabled).
llvm-svn: 266460
This patch implements __unaligned as a type qualifier; before that, it was
modeled as an attribute. Proper mangling of __unaligned is implemented as well.
Some OpenCL code/tests are tangenially affected, as they relied on existing
number and sizes of type qualifiers.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18596
llvm-svn: 266415
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D15120
It adds support for the __float128 keyword, literals and a target feature to
enable it. This support is disabled by default on all targets and any target
that has support for this type is free to add it.
Based on feedback that I've received from target maintainers, this appears to
be the right thing for most targets. I have not heard from the maintainers of
X86 which I believe supports this type. I will subsequently investigate the
impact of enabling this on X86.
llvm-svn: 266186
Putting OpenCLImageTypes.def to clangAST library violates layering requirement: "It's not OK for a Basic/ header to include an AST/ header".
This fixes the modules build.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18954
Reviewers: Richard Smith, Vassil Vassilev.
llvm-svn: 266180
I. Current implementation of images is not conformant to spec in the following points:
1. It makes no distinction with respect to access qualifiers and therefore allows to use images with different access type interchangeably. The following code would compile just fine:
void write_image(write_only image2d_t img);
kernel void foo(read_only image2d_t img) { write_image(img); } // Accepted code
which is disallowed according to s6.13.14.
2. It discards access qualifier on generated code, which leads to generated code for the above example:
call void @write_image(%opencl.image2d_t* %img);
In OpenCL2.0 however we can have different calls into write_image with read_only and wite_only images.
Also generally following compiler steps have no easy way to take different path depending on the image access: linking to the right implementation of image types, performing IR opts and backend codegen differently.
3. Image types are language keywords and can't be redeclared s6.1.9, which can happen currently as they are just typedef names.
4. Default access qualifier read_only is to be added if not provided explicitly.
II. This patch corrects the above points as follows:
1. All images are encapsulated into a separate .def file that is inserted in different points where image handling is required. This avoid a lot of code repetition as all images are handled the same way in the code with no distinction of their exact type.
2. The Cartesian product of image types and image access qualifiers is added to the builtin types. This simplifies a lot handling of access type mismatch as no operations are allowed by default on distinct Builtin types. Also spec intended access qualifier as special type qualifier that are combined with an image type to form a distinct type (see statement above - images can't be created w/o access qualifiers).
3. Improves testing of images in Clang.
Author: Anastasia Stulova
Reviewers: bader, mgrang.
Subscribers: pxli168, pekka.jaaskelainen, yaxunl.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17821
llvm-svn: 265783
Add parsing, sema analysis for 'declare target' construct for OpenMP 4.0
(4.5 support will be added in separate patch).
The declare target directive specifies that variables, functions (C, C++
and Fortran), and subroutines (Fortran) are mapped to a device. The declare
target directive is a declarative directive. In Clang declare target is
implemented as implicit attribute for the declaration.
The syntax of the declare target directive is as follows:
#pragma omp declare target
declarations-definition-seq
#pragma omp end declare target
Based on patch from Michael Wong http://reviews.llvm.org/D15321
llvm-svn: 265530
In some cases, when we encounter a direct function call with an
incorrect number of arguments, we'll emit a diagnostic, and pretend that
the call to the function was valid. For example, in C:
int foo();
int a = foo(1);
Prior to this patch, we'd get an ICE if foo had an enable_if attribute,
because CheckEnableIf assumes that the number of arguments it gets
passed is valid for the function it's passed. Now, we check that the
number of args looks valid prior to checking enable_if conditions.
This fix was not done inside of CheckEnableIf because the problem
presently can only occur in one caller of CheckEnableIf (ActOnCallExpr).
Additionally, checking inside of CheckEnableIf would make us emit
multiple diagnostics for the same error (one "enable_if failed", one
"you gave this function the wrong number of arguments"), which seems
worse than just complaining about the latter.
llvm-svn: 264975
use. In order for this to fire, the function needed to be a templated function
marked 'constexpr' and declared but not defined. This weird pattern appears in
libstdc++'s alloc_traits.h.
llvm-svn: 264471
Implement lambda capture of *this by copy.
For e.g.:
struct A {
int d = 10;
auto foo() { return [*this] (auto a) mutable { d+=a; return d; }; }
};
auto L = A{}.foo(); // A{}'s lifetime is gone.
// Below is still ok, because *this was captured by value.
assert(L(10) == 20);
assert(L(100) == 120);
If the capture was implicit, or [this] (i.e. *this was captured by reference), this code would be otherwise undefined.
Implementation Strategy:
- amend the parser to accept *this in the lambda introducer
- add a new king of capture LCK_StarThis
- teach Sema::CheckCXXThisCapture to handle by copy captures of the
enclosing object (i.e. *this)
- when CheckCXXThisCapture does capture by copy, the corresponding
initializer expression for the closure's data member
direct-initializes it thus making a copy of '*this'.
- in codegen, when assigning to CXXThisValue, if *this was captured by
copy, make sure it points to the corresponding field member, and
not, unlike when captured by reference, what the field member points
to.
- mark feature as implemented in svn
Much gratitude to Richard Smith for his carefully illuminating reviews!
llvm-svn: 263921
Given the following test case:
typedef struct {
const char *name;
id field;
} Test9;
extern void doSomething(Test9 arg);
void test9() {
Test9 foo2 = {0, 0};
doSomething(foo2);
}
With a release compiler, we don't emit any message and silently ignore the
variable "foo2". With an assert compiler, we get an assertion failure.
The root cause —————————————
Back in r140457 we gave InitListChecker a verification-only mode, and will use
CanUseDecl instead of DiagnoseUseOfDecl for verification-only mode.
These two functions handle unavailable issues differently:
In Sema::CanUseDecl, we say the decl is invalid when the Decl is unavailable and
the current context is available.
In Sema::DiagnoseUseOfDecl, we say the decl is usable by ignoring the return
code of DiagnoseAvailabilityOfDecl
So with an assert build, we will hit an assertion in diagnoseListInit
assert(DiagnoseInitList.HadError() &&
"Inconsistent init list check result.");
The fix -------------------
If we follow what is implemented in CanUseDecl and treat Decls with
unavailable issues as invalid, the variable decl of “foo2” will be marked as
invalid. Since unavailable checking is processed in delayed diagnostics
(r197627), we will silently ignore the diagnostics when we find out that
the variable decl is invalid.
We add a flag "TreatUnavailableAsInvalid" for the verification-only mode.
For overload resolution, we want to say decls with unavailable issues are
invalid; but for everything else, we should say they are valid and
emit diagnostics. Depending on the value of the flag, CanUseDecl
can return different values for unavailable issues.
rdar://23557300
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15314
llvm-svn: 263149