Commit Graph

5385 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Martin Storsjö fbfe1db4a9 [clang] Explicitly set the EmulatedTLS codegen option. NFC.
Set the EmulatedTLS option based on `Triple::hasDefaultEmulatedTLS()`
if the user didn't specify it; set `ExplicitEmulatedTLS` to true
in `llvm::TargetOptions` and set `EmulatedTLS` to Clang's
opinion of what the default or preference is.

This avoids any risk of deviance between the two.

This affects one check of `getCodeGenOpts().EmulatedTLS` in
`shouldAssumeDSOLocal` in CodeGenModule, but as that check only
is done for `TT.isWindowsGNUEnvironment()`, and
`hasDefaultEmulatedTLS()` returns false for such environments
it doesn't make any current testable difference - thus NFC.

Some mingw distributions carry a downstream patch, that enables
emulated TLS by default for mingw targets in `hasDefaultEmulatedTLS()`
- and for such cases, this patch does make a difference and fixes the
detection of emulated TLS, if it is implicitly enabled.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132916
2022-09-13 10:40:54 +03:00
Steven Wu 493766e068 Frontend: Respect -working-directory when checking if output files can be written
Call `FixupRelativePath` when opening output files to ensure that
`-working-directory` is used when checking up front for write failures,
not just when finalizing the files at the end. This also moves the
temporary file into the same directory as the output file.

Reviewed By: benlangmuir

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95497
2022-09-09 08:57:12 -07:00
Joe Loser 1b3a78d1d5 [clang] Use std::size instead of llvm::array_lengthof
LLVM contains a helpful function for getting the size of a C-style
array: `llvm::array_lengthof`. This is useful prior to C++17, but not as
helpful for C++17 or later: `std::size` already has support for C-style
arrays.

Change call sites to use `std::size` instead. Leave the few call sites that
use a locally defined `array_lengthof` that are meant to test previous bugs
with NTTPs in clang analyzer and SemaTemplate.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133520
2022-09-08 17:20:25 -06:00
Kazu Hirata b7a7aeee90 [clang] Qualify auto in range-based for loops (NFC) 2022-09-03 23:27:27 -07:00
Chris Bieneman 5b5329bd41 [NFC] Make MultiplexExternalSemaSource own sources
This change refactors the MuiltiplexExternalSemaSource to take ownership
of the underlying sources. As a result it makes a larger cleanup of
external source ownership in Sema and the ChainedIncludesSource.

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, aprantl

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133158
2022-09-02 13:57:39 -05:00
Chris Bieneman 10194a51a9 [HLSL] Restrict to supported targets
Someday we would like to support HLSL on a wider range of targets, but
today targeting anything other than `dxil` is likly to cause lots of
headaches. This adds an error and tests to validate that the expected
target is `dxil-?-shadermodel`.

We will continue to do a best effort to ensure the code we write makes
it easy to support other targets (like SPIR-V), but this error will
prevent users from hitting frustrating errors for unsupported cases.

Reviewed By: jcranmer-intel, Anastasia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132056
2022-09-02 13:36:23 -05:00
Kazu Hirata 33b9304435 Use llvm::is_contained (NFC) 2022-08-27 21:21:00 -07:00
Nico Weber e877b42e2c [clang] Better warning-fix follow-up to D131632
Not all host compilers understand gnu:: attributes. Just remove the
variable until it's used.
2022-08-26 18:29:20 -04:00
Abraham Corea Diaz 0e5813b88e [clang][NFC] silences warnings
* removes unused data member `OS` from `SARIFDiagnostic`
* flags `Filename` variable as currently unused

This is a follow-up to D131632.
2022-08-26 21:09:39 +00:00
Sterling Augustine 5eab94f7eb Eliminate unused-variable warning. 2022-08-26 12:40:55 -07:00
Abraham Corea Diaz 82e893c47c [clang] Enable output of SARIF diagnostics
Enables Clang to emit diagnostics in SARIF format when
`-fdiagnostics-format=sarif`. Adds a new DiagnosticConsumer named
SARIFDiagnosticPrinter and a new DiagnosticRenderer named SARIFDiagnostic
to constuct and emit a SARIF object containing the run's basic diagnostic info.

Reviewed By: cjdb, denik, aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131632
2022-08-26 18:49:29 +00:00
Roy Jacobson b1c960fc6d [Clang] Implement P0848 (Conditionally Trivial Special Member Functions)
This patch implements P0848 in Clang.

During the instantiation of a C++ class, in `Sema::ActOnFields`, we evaluate constraints for all the SMFs and compare the constraints to compute the eligibility. We defer the computation of the type's [copy-]trivial bits from addedMember to the eligibility computation, like we did for destructors in D126194. `canPassInRegisters` is modified as well to better respect the ineligibility of functions.

Note: Because of the non-implementation of DR1734 and DR1496, I treat deleted member functions as 'eligible' for the purpose of [copy-]triviallity. This is unfortunate, but I couldn't think of a way to make this make sense otherwise.

Reviewed By: #clang-language-wg, cor3ntin, aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128619
2022-08-26 00:52:52 +03:00
Roy Jacobson 70770a16bc Revert "[Clang] Implement P0848 (Conditionally Trivial Special Member Functions)"
See bug report here: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/57351
This reverts commit 7171615099.
2022-08-25 09:11:06 +03:00
Jan Svoboda 94e64df576 [clang][modules] Consider M affecting after mapping M.Private to M_Private
When Clang encounters `@import M.Private` during implicit build, it precompiles module `M` and looks through its submodules. If the `Private` submodule is not found, Clang assumes `@import M_Private`. In the dependency scanner, we don't capture the dependency on `M`, since it's not imported. It's an affecting module, though: compilation of the import statement will fail when implicit modules are disabled and `M` is not precompiled and explicitly provided. This patch fixes that.

Depends on D132430.

Reviewed By: benlangmuir

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132502
2022-08-24 14:36:06 -07:00
Jan Svoboda 002bfdd6b1 [clang][modules] Track affecting modules
When compiling a module, its semantics and Clang's behavior are affected by other modules. These modules are typically the **imported** ones. However, during implicit build, some modules end up being compiled and read without being actually imported. This patch starts tracking such modules and serializing them into `.pcm` files. This enables the dependency scanner to construct explicit compilations that mimic implicit build.

Reviewed By: benlangmuir

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132430
2022-08-24 11:09:50 -07:00
Chris Bieneman 887bafb503 [HLSL] Infer language from file extension
This allows the language mode for HLSL to be inferred from the file
extension.
2022-08-23 20:52:29 -05:00
Roy Jacobson 7171615099 [Clang] Implement P0848 (Conditionally Trivial Special Member Functions)
This patch implements P0848 in Clang.

During the instantiation of a C++ class, in `Sema::ActOnFields`, we evaluate constraints for all the SMFs and compare the constraints to compute the eligibility. We defer the computation of the type's [copy-]trivial bits from addedMember to the eligibility computation, like we did for destructors in D126194. `canPassInRegisters` is modified as well to better respect the ineligibility of functions.

Note: Because of the non-implementation of DR1734 and DR1496, I treat deleted member functions as 'eligible' for the purpose of [copy-]triviallity. This is unfortunate, but I couldn't think of a way to make this make sense otherwise.

Reviewed By: #clang-language-wg, cor3ntin, aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128619
2022-08-23 21:48:42 +03:00
Yuanfang Chen 088ba8efeb [Clang] follow-up D128745, use ClangABICompat15 instead of ClangABICompat14
Since the patch missed release 15.x and will be included in release 16.x. Also, simplify related tests.

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132414
2022-08-23 10:45:35 -07:00
Balazs Benics 6ca17b58f5 [analyzer] Drop deprecated flags
As proposed in D126215 (ffe7950ebc),
I'm dropping the `-analyzer-store` and
`-analyzer-opt-analyze-nested-blocks` clang frontend flags.
I'm also dropping the corresponding commandline handlers of `scanbuild`.

This behavior is planned to be part of `clang-16`.

Reviewed By: xazax.hun

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132289
2022-08-23 18:39:21 +02:00
Ben Langmuir 3708a14842 [clang] Pull some utility functions into CompilerInvocation NFC
Move copying compiler arguments to a vector<string> and modifying
common module-related options into CompilerInvocation in preparation for
using some of them in more places and to avoid duplicating this code
accidentally in the future.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132419
2022-08-23 08:18:14 -07:00
Kazu Hirata 8b1b0d1d81 Revert "Use std::is_same_v instead of std::is_same (NFC)"
This reverts commit c5da37e42d.

This patch seems to break builds with some versions of MSVC.
2022-08-20 23:00:39 -07:00
Kazu Hirata c5da37e42d Use std::is_same_v instead of std::is_same (NFC) 2022-08-20 22:36:26 -07:00
Kazu Hirata 258531b7ac Remove redundant initialization of Optional (NFC) 2022-08-20 21:18:28 -07:00
Paul Kirth 656c5d652c [clang][llvm][NFC] Change misexpect's tolerance option to be 32-bit
In D131869 we noticed that we jump through some hoops because we parse the
tolerance option used in MisExpect.cpp into a 64-bit integer. This is
unnecessary, since the value can only be in the range [0, 100).

This patch changes the underlying type to be 32-bit from where it is
parsed in Clang through to it's use in LLVM.

Reviewed By: jloser

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131935
2022-08-17 14:38:53 +00:00
Kazu Hirata f5a68feab3 Use llvm::none_of (NFC) 2022-08-14 16:25:39 -07:00
Martin Storsjö c843c921a1 [clang] Require strict matches for defines for PCH in GCC style directories
When clang includes a PCH, it tolerates some amount of differences
between the defines used when creating and when including the PCH
- this seems to be intentionally allowed in
c379c07240 (and later extended in
b636875196).

When using a PCH (or when picking a PCH out of a directory containing
multiple candidates) Clang used to accept the header if there were
defines on the command line when creating the PCH that are missing
when using the PCH, or vice versa, defines only set when using the
PCH.

The only cases where Clang explicitly rejected the use of a PCH
is if there was an explicit conflict between the options, e.g.
-DFOO=1 vs -DFOO=2, or -DFOO vs -UFOO.

The latter commit added a FIXME that we really should check whether
mismatched defines actually were used somewhere in the PCH, so that
the define would affect the outcome. This FIXME has stood unaddressed
since 2012.

This differs from GCC, which rejects PCH files if the defines differ
at all.

When explicitly including a single PCH file, the relaxed policy
of allowing minor differences is harmless for correct use cases
(but may fail to diagnose mismtaches), and potentially allow using
PCHs in wider cases (where the user intentionally know that the
differences in defines are harmless for the PCH).

However, for GCC style PCH directories, with a directory containing
multiple PCH variants and the compiler should pick the correct match
out of them, Clang's relaxed logic was problematic. The directory
could contain two otherwise identical PCHs, but one built with -DFOO
and one without. When attempting to include a PCH and iterating over
the candidates in the directory, Clang would essentially pick the
first one out of the two, even if there existed a better, exact
match in the directory.

Keep the relaxed checking when specificlly including one named
PCH file, but require strict matches when trying to pick the right
candidate out of a GCC style directory with alternatives.

This fixes https://github.com/lhmouse/mcfgthread/issues/63.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126676
2022-08-10 22:47:27 +03:00
Fangrui Song 3f18f7c007 [clang] LLVM_FALLTHROUGH => [[fallthrough]]. NFC
With C++17 there is no Clang pedantic warning or MSVC C5051.

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131346
2022-08-08 09:12:46 -07:00
Argyrios Kyrtzidis 6635f48e4a [Serialization] Remove `ORIGINAL_PCH_DIR` record
Use of `ORIGINAL_PCH_DIR` record has been superseeded by making PCH/PCM files with relocatable paths at write time.
Removing this record is useful for producing an output-path-independent PCH file and enable sharing of the same PCH file even
when it was intended for a different output path.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131124
2022-08-05 15:40:33 -07:00
Ben Langmuir fb89cc0ddb [clang][modules] Don't depend on sharing FileManager during module build
Sharing the FileManager between the importer and the module build should
only be an optimization. Add a cc1 option -fno-modules-share-filemanager
to allow us to test this. Fix the path to modulemap files, which
previously depended on the shared FileManager when using path mapped to
an external file in a VFS.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131076
2022-08-05 12:24:40 -07:00
Xiang Li 8a27a2f89f [HLSL] Support -E option for HLSL.
-E option will set entry function for hlsl.
The format is -E entry_name.

To avoid conflict with existing option with name 'E', add an extra prefix '--'.

A new field HLSLEntry is added to TargetOption.
To share code with HLSLShaderAttr, entry function will be add HLSLShaderAttr attribute too.

Reviewed By: beanz

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124751
2022-08-04 16:54:19 -07:00
Gabriel Ravier 5674a3c880 Fixed a number of typos
I went over the output of the following mess of a command:

(ulimit -m 2000000; ulimit -v 2000000; git ls-files -z |
 parallel --xargs -0 cat | aspell list --mode=none --ignore-case |
 grep -E '^[A-Za-z][a-z]*$' | sort | uniq -c | sort -n |
 grep -vE '.{25}' | aspell pipe -W3 | grep : | cut -d' ' -f2 | less)

and proceeded to spend a few days looking at it to find probable typos
and fixed a few hundred of them in all of the llvm project (note, the
ones I found are not anywhere near all of them, but it seems like a
good start).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130827
2022-08-01 13:13:18 -04:00
Aiden Grossman afb4efd3bc Fix lack of cc1 flag in llvmcmd sections when assertions are enabled
Currently when assertions are enabled, the cc1 flag is not
inserted into the llvmcmd section of object files with embedded
bitcode. This deviates from the normal behavior where this is
the first flag that is inserted. This error stems from incorrect
use of the function generateCC1CommandLine() which requires
manually adding in the -cc1 flag which is currently not done.

Reviewed By: jansvoboda11

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130620
2022-07-29 18:51:48 -07:00
Argyrios Kyrtzidis 944a86de7c [ASTWriter] Provide capability to output a PCM/PCH file that does not write out information about its output path
This is useful to enable sharing of the same PCH file even when it's intended for a different output path.

The only information this option disables writing is for `ORIGINAL_PCH_DIR` record which is treated as optional and (when present) used as fallback for resolving input file paths relative to it.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130710
2022-07-29 15:21:54 -07:00
Matheus Izvekov 15f3cd6bfc
[clang] Implement ElaboratedType sugaring for types written bare
Without this patch, clang will not wrap in an ElaboratedType node types written
without a keyword and nested name qualifier, which goes against the intent that
we should produce an AST which retains enough details to recover how things are
written.

The lack of this sugar is incompatible with the intent of the type printer
default policy, which is to print types as written, but to fall back and print
them fully qualified when they are desugared.

An ElaboratedTypeLoc without keyword / NNS uses no storage by itself, but still
requires pointer alignment due to pre-existing bug in the TypeLoc buffer
handling.

---

Troubleshooting list to deal with any breakage seen with this patch:

1) The most likely effect one would see by this patch is a change in how
   a type is printed. The type printer will, by design and default,
   print types as written. There are customization options there, but
   not that many, and they mainly apply to how to print a type that we
   somehow failed to track how it was written. This patch fixes a
   problem where we failed to distinguish between a type
   that was written without any elaborated-type qualifiers,
   such as a 'struct'/'class' tags and name spacifiers such as 'std::',
   and one that has been stripped of any 'metadata' that identifies such,
   the so called canonical types.
   Example:
   ```
   namespace foo {
     struct A {};
     A a;
   };
   ```
   If one were to print the type of `foo::a`, prior to this patch, this
   would result in `foo::A`. This is how the type printer would have,
   by default, printed the canonical type of A as well.
   As soon as you add any name qualifiers to A, the type printer would
   suddenly start accurately printing the type as written. This patch
   will make it print it accurately even when written without
   qualifiers, so we will just print `A` for the initial example, as
   the user did not really write that `foo::` namespace qualifier.

2) This patch could expose a bug in some AST matcher. Matching types
   is harder to get right when there is sugar involved. For example,
   if you want to match a type against being a pointer to some type A,
   then you have to account for getting a type that is sugar for a
   pointer to A, or being a pointer to sugar to A, or both! Usually
   you would get the second part wrong, and this would work for a
   very simple test where you don't use any name qualifiers, but
   you would discover is broken when you do. The usual fix is to
   either use the matcher which strips sugar, which is annoying
   to use as for example if you match an N level pointer, you have
   to put N+1 such matchers in there, beginning to end and between
   all those levels. But in a lot of cases, if the property you want
   to match is present in the canonical type, it's easier and faster
   to just match on that... This goes with what is said in 1), if
   you want to match against the name of a type, and you want
   the name string to be something stable, perhaps matching on
   the name of the canonical type is the better choice.

3) This patch could expose a bug in how you get the source range of some
   TypeLoc. For some reason, a lot of code is using getLocalSourceRange(),
   which only looks at the given TypeLoc node. This patch introduces a new,
   and more common TypeLoc node which contains no source locations on itself.
   This is not an inovation here, and some other, more rare TypeLoc nodes could
   also have this property, but if you use getLocalSourceRange on them, it's not
   going to return any valid locations, because it doesn't have any. The right fix
   here is to always use getSourceRange() or getBeginLoc/getEndLoc which will dive
   into the inner TypeLoc to get the source range if it doesn't find it on the
   top level one. You can use getLocalSourceRange if you are really into
   micro-optimizations and you have some outside knowledge that the TypeLocs you are
   dealing with will always include some source location.

4) Exposed a bug somewhere in the use of the normal clang type class API, where you
   have some type, you want to see if that type is some particular kind, you try a
   `dyn_cast` such as `dyn_cast<TypedefType>` and that fails because now you have an
   ElaboratedType which has a TypeDefType inside of it, which is what you wanted to match.
   Again, like 2), this would usually have been tested poorly with some simple tests with
   no qualifications, and would have been broken had there been any other kind of type sugar,
   be it an ElaboratedType or a TemplateSpecializationType or a SubstTemplateParmType.
   The usual fix here is to use `getAs` instead of `dyn_cast`, which will look deeper
   into the type. Or use `getAsAdjusted` when dealing with TypeLocs.
   For some reason the API is inconsistent there and on TypeLocs getAs behaves like a dyn_cast.

5) It could be a bug in this patch perhaps.

Let me know if you need any help!

Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112374
2022-07-27 11:10:54 +02:00
Kai Luo 1cbaf681b0 [clang][AIX] Add option to control quadword lock free atomics ABI on AIX
We are supporting quadword lock free atomics on AIX. For the situation that users on AIX are using a libatomic that is lock-based for quadword types, we can't enable quadword lock free atomics by default on AIX in case user's new code and existing code accessing the same shared atomic quadword variable, we can't guarentee atomicity. So we need an option to enable quadword lock free atomics on AIX, thus we can build a quadword lock-free libatomic(also for advanced users considering atomic performance critical) for users to make the transition smooth.

Reviewed By: shchenz

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127189
2022-07-27 01:56:25 +00:00
Dmitri Gribenko cd9a5cfd2e Use the range-based overload of llvm::sort where possible
Reviewed By: MaskRay

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130403
2022-07-23 15:13:25 +02:00
Ryan Prichard 02a25279ae [Frontend] Correct values of ATOMIC_*_LOCK_FREE to match builtin
Correct the logic used to set `ATOMIC_*_LOCK_FREE` preprocessor macros not
to rely on the ABI alignment of types. Instead, just assume all those
types are aligned correctly by default since clang uses safe alignment
for `_Atomic` types even if the underlying types are aligned to a lower
boundary by default.

For example, the `long long` and `double` types on x86 are aligned to
32-bit boundary by default. However, `_Atomic long long` and `_Atomic
double` are aligned to 64-bit boundary, therefore satisfying
the requirements of lock-free atomic operations.

This fixes PR #19355 by correcting the value of
`__GCC_ATOMIC_LLONG_LOCK_FREE` on x86, and therefore also fixing
the assumption made in libc++ tests. This also fixes PR #30581 by
applying a consistent logic between the functions used to implement
both interfaces.

Reviewed By: hfinkel, efriedma

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28213
2022-07-21 17:23:29 -07:00
Abraham Corea Diaz 119d22310b [clang] Add -fdiagnostics-format=sarif option for future SARIF output
Adds `sarif` option to the existing `-fdiagnostics-format` flag
for intended future work with SARIF diagnostics. Currently issues a warning
against the use of diagnostics in SARIF mode, then defaults to clang style for
diagnostics.

Reviewed By: cjdb, denik, aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129886
2022-07-21 16:51:15 +00:00
Kazu Hirata 3b0dce5b8b Use value_or (NFC) 2022-07-15 19:46:29 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere 888673b6e3
Revert "[clang] Implement ElaboratedType sugaring for types written bare"
This reverts commit 7c51f02eff because it
stills breaks the LLDB tests. This was  re-landed without addressing the
issue or even agreement on how to address the issue. More details and
discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D112374.
2022-07-14 21:17:48 -07:00
Matheus Izvekov 7c51f02eff
[clang] Implement ElaboratedType sugaring for types written bare
Without this patch, clang will not wrap in an ElaboratedType node types written
without a keyword and nested name qualifier, which goes against the intent that
we should produce an AST which retains enough details to recover how things are
written.

The lack of this sugar is incompatible with the intent of the type printer
default policy, which is to print types as written, but to fall back and print
them fully qualified when they are desugared.

An ElaboratedTypeLoc without keyword / NNS uses no storage by itself, but still
requires pointer alignment due to pre-existing bug in the TypeLoc buffer
handling.

---

Troubleshooting list to deal with any breakage seen with this patch:

1) The most likely effect one would see by this patch is a change in how
   a type is printed. The type printer will, by design and default,
   print types as written. There are customization options there, but
   not that many, and they mainly apply to how to print a type that we
   somehow failed to track how it was written. This patch fixes a
   problem where we failed to distinguish between a type
   that was written without any elaborated-type qualifiers,
   such as a 'struct'/'class' tags and name spacifiers such as 'std::',
   and one that has been stripped of any 'metadata' that identifies such,
   the so called canonical types.
   Example:
   ```
   namespace foo {
     struct A {};
     A a;
   };
   ```
   If one were to print the type of `foo::a`, prior to this patch, this
   would result in `foo::A`. This is how the type printer would have,
   by default, printed the canonical type of A as well.
   As soon as you add any name qualifiers to A, the type printer would
   suddenly start accurately printing the type as written. This patch
   will make it print it accurately even when written without
   qualifiers, so we will just print `A` for the initial example, as
   the user did not really write that `foo::` namespace qualifier.

2) This patch could expose a bug in some AST matcher. Matching types
   is harder to get right when there is sugar involved. For example,
   if you want to match a type against being a pointer to some type A,
   then you have to account for getting a type that is sugar for a
   pointer to A, or being a pointer to sugar to A, or both! Usually
   you would get the second part wrong, and this would work for a
   very simple test where you don't use any name qualifiers, but
   you would discover is broken when you do. The usual fix is to
   either use the matcher which strips sugar, which is annoying
   to use as for example if you match an N level pointer, you have
   to put N+1 such matchers in there, beginning to end and between
   all those levels. But in a lot of cases, if the property you want
   to match is present in the canonical type, it's easier and faster
   to just match on that... This goes with what is said in 1), if
   you want to match against the name of a type, and you want
   the name string to be something stable, perhaps matching on
   the name of the canonical type is the better choice.

3) This patch could exposed a bug in how you get the source range of some
   TypeLoc. For some reason, a lot of code is using getLocalSourceRange(),
   which only looks at the given TypeLoc node. This patch introduces a new,
   and more common TypeLoc node which contains no source locations on itself.
   This is not an inovation here, and some other, more rare TypeLoc nodes could
   also have this property, but if you use getLocalSourceRange on them, it's not
   going to return any valid locations, because it doesn't have any. The right fix
   here is to always use getSourceRange() or getBeginLoc/getEndLoc which will dive
   into the inner TypeLoc to get the source range if it doesn't find it on the
   top level one. You can use getLocalSourceRange if you are really into
   micro-optimizations and you have some outside knowledge that the TypeLocs you are
   dealing with will always include some source location.

4) Exposed a bug somewhere in the use of the normal clang type class API, where you
   have some type, you want to see if that type is some particular kind, you try a
   `dyn_cast` such as `dyn_cast<TypedefType>` and that fails because now you have an
   ElaboratedType which has a TypeDefType inside of it, which is what you wanted to match.
   Again, like 2), this would usually have been tested poorly with some simple tests with
   no qualifications, and would have been broken had there been any other kind of type sugar,
   be it an ElaboratedType or a TemplateSpecializationType or a SubstTemplateParmType.
   The usual fix here is to use `getAs` instead of `dyn_cast`, which will look deeper
   into the type. Or use `getAsAdjusted` when dealing with TypeLocs.
   For some reason the API is inconsistent there and on TypeLocs getAs behaves like a dyn_cast.

5) It could be a bug in this patch perhaps.

Let me know if you need any help!

Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112374
2022-07-15 04:16:55 +02:00
Kazu Hirata cb2c8f694d [clang] Use value instead of getValue (NFC) 2022-07-13 23:39:33 -07:00
Dave Lee b5ccfeb6bf [lldb] Add image dump pcm-info command
Add `pcm-info` to the `target module dump` subcommands.

This dump command shows information about clang .pcm files. This command
effectively runs `clang -module-file-info` and produces identical output.

The .pcm file format is tightly coupled to the clang version. The clang
embedded in lldb is not guaranteed to match the version of the clang executable
available on the local system.

There have been times when I've needed to view the details about a .pcm file
produced by lldb's embedded clang, but because the clang executable was a
slightly different version, the `-module-file-info` invocation failed. With
this command, users can inspect .pcm files generated by lldb too.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129456
2022-07-13 16:56:53 -07:00
Jonas Devlieghere 3968936b92
Revert "[clang] Implement ElaboratedType sugaring for types written bare"
This reverts commit bdc6974f92 because it
breaks all the LLDB tests that import the std module.

  import-std-module/array.TestArrayFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/deque-basic.TestDequeFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/deque-dbg-info-content.TestDbgInfoContentDequeFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/forward_list.TestForwardListFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/forward_list-dbg-info-content.TestDbgInfoContentForwardListFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/list.TestListFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/list-dbg-info-content.TestDbgInfoContentListFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/queue.TestQueueFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/stack.TestStackFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/vector.TestVectorFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/vector-bool.TestVectorBoolFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/vector-dbg-info-content.TestDbgInfoContentVectorFromStdModule.py
  import-std-module/vector-of-vectors.TestVectorOfVectorsFromStdModule.py

https://green.lab.llvm.org/green/view/LLDB/job/lldb-cmake/45301/
2022-07-13 09:20:30 -07:00
Matheus Izvekov bdc6974f92
[clang] Implement ElaboratedType sugaring for types written bare
Without this patch, clang will not wrap in an ElaboratedType node types written
without a keyword and nested name qualifier, which goes against the intent that
we should produce an AST which retains enough details to recover how things are
written.

The lack of this sugar is incompatible with the intent of the type printer
default policy, which is to print types as written, but to fall back and print
them fully qualified when they are desugared.

An ElaboratedTypeLoc without keyword / NNS uses no storage by itself, but still
requires pointer alignment due to pre-existing bug in the TypeLoc buffer
handling.

Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112374
2022-07-13 02:10:09 +02:00
Nick Desaulniers 2240d72f15 [X86] initial -mfunction-return=thunk-extern support
Adds support for:
* `-mfunction-return=<value>` command line flag, and
* `__attribute__((function_return("<value>")))` function attribute

Where the supported <value>s are:
* keep (disable)
* thunk-extern (enable)

thunk-extern enables clang to change ret instructions into jmps to an
external symbol named __x86_return_thunk, implemented as a new
MachineFunctionPass named "x86-return-thunks", keyed off the new IR
attribute fn_ret_thunk_extern.

The symbol __x86_return_thunk is expected to be provided by the runtime
the compiled code is linked against and is not defined by the compiler.
Enabling this option alone doesn't provide mitigations without
corresponding definitions of __x86_return_thunk!

This new MachineFunctionPass is very similar to "x86-lvi-ret".

The <value>s "thunk" and "thunk-inline" are currently unsupported. It's
not clear yet that they are necessary: whether the thunk pattern they
would emit is beneficial or used anywhere.

Should the <value>s "thunk" and "thunk-inline" become necessary,
x86-return-thunks could probably be merged into x86-retpoline-thunks
which has pre-existing machinery for emitting thunks (which could be
used to implement the <value> "thunk").

Has been found to build+boot with corresponding Linux
kernel patches. This helps the Linux kernel mitigate RETBLEED.
* CVE-2022-23816
* CVE-2022-28693
* CVE-2022-29901

See also:
* "RETBLEED: Arbitrary Speculative Code Execution with Return
Instructions."
* AMD SECURITY NOTICE AMD-SN-1037: AMD CPU Branch Type Confusion
* TECHNICAL GUIDANCE FOR MITIGATING BRANCH TYPE CONFUSION REVISION 1.0
  2022-07-12
* Return Stack Buffer Underflow / Return Stack Buffer Underflow /
  CVE-2022-29901, CVE-2022-28693 / INTEL-SA-00702

SystemZ may eventually want to support "thunk-extern" and "thunk"; both
options are used by the Linux kernel's CONFIG_EXPOLINE.

This functionality has been available in GCC since the 8.1 release, and
was backported to the 7.3 release.

Many thanks for folks that provided discrete review off list due to the
embargoed nature of this hardware vulnerability. Many Bothans died to
bring us this information.

Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IF6HbCKQHK8
Link: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/54404
Link: https://gcc.gnu.org/legacy-ml/gcc-patches/2018-01/msg01197.html
Link: https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/developer/articles/technical/software-security-guidance/advisory-guidance/return-stack-buffer-underflow.html
Link: https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2022/07/intel-and-amd-cpus-vulnerable-to-a-new-speculative-execution-attack/?comments=1
Link: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=ce114c866860aa9eae3f50974efc68241186ba60
Link: https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/security-center/advisory/intel-sa-00702.html
Link: https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/security-center/advisory/intel-sa-00707.html

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, craig.topper

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129572
2022-07-12 09:17:54 -07:00
Ben Langmuir 67a84ec810 [clang] Cleanup ASTContext before output files in crash recovery for modules
When we recover from a crash in a module compilation thread, we need to
ensure any output streams owned by the ASTConsumer (e.g. in
RawPCHContainerGenerator) are deleted before we call clearOutputFiles().
This has the same theoretical issues with proxy streams that Duncan
discusses in the commit 2d13386783. In practice, this was observed
as a use-after-free crash on a downstream branch that uses such a proxy
stream in this code path. Add an assertion so it won't regress.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129220

rdar://96525032
2022-07-07 10:23:57 -07:00
Chris Bieneman b8dbc6ffea [HLSL] Add ExternalSemaSource & vector alias
HLSL vector types are ext_vector types, but they are also exposed via a
template syntax `vector<T, #>`. This is morally equavalent to the code:

```c++
template <typename T, int Size>
using vector = T __attribute__((ext_vector_type(Size)))
```

The problem is that templates aren't supported before HLSL 2021, and
type aliases still aren't supported in HLSL.

To resolve this (and other issues where HLSL can't represent its own
types), we rely on an external AST & Sema source being registered for
HLSL code.

This patch adds the HLSLExternalSemaSource and registers the vector
type alias.

Depends on D127802

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128012
2022-07-05 11:30:29 -05:00
Argyrios Kyrtzidis 0d3a2b4c66 [Lex] Introduce `PPCallbacks::LexedFileChanged()` preprocessor callback
This is a preprocessor callback focused on the lexed file changing, without conflating effects of line number directives and other pragmas.
A client that only cares about what files the lexer processes, like dependency generation, can use this more straightforward
callback instead of `PPCallbacks::FileChanged()`. Clients that want the pragma directive effects as well can keep using `FileChanged()`.

A use case where `PPCallbacks::LexedFileChanged()` is particularly simpler to use than `FileChanged()` is in a situation
where a client wants to keep track of lexed file changes that include changes from/to the predefines buffer, where it becomes
unnecessary complicated trying to use `FileChanged()` while filtering out the pragma directives effects callbacks.

Also take the opportunity to provide information about the prior `FileID` the `Lexer` moved from, even when entering a new file.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128947
2022-07-01 14:22:31 -07:00
Corentin Jabot a9a60f20e6 [Clang] Rename StringLiteral::isAscii() => isOrdinary() [NFC]
"Ascii" StringLiteral instances are actually narrow strings
that are UTF-8 encoded and do not have an encoding prefix.
(UTF8 StringLiteral are also UTF-8 encoded strings, but with
the u8 prefix.

To avoid possible confusion both with actuall ASCII strings,
and with future works extending the set of literal encodings
supported by clang, this rename StringLiteral::isAscii() to
isOrdinary(), matching C++ standard terminology.

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128762
2022-06-29 18:28:51 +02:00