Adjustments should be considered properly; we should copy the unadjusted object
over the whole temporary base region. If the unadjusted object is no longer
available in the Environment, invalidate the temporary base region, and then
copy the adjusted object into the adjusted sub-region of the temporary region.
This fixes a regression introduced by r288263, that caused various
false positives, due to copying only adjusted object into the adjusted region;
the rest of the base region therefore remained undefined.
Before r288263, the adjusted value was copied over the unadjusted region,
which is incorrect, but accidentally worked better due to how region store
disregards compound value bindings to non-base regions.
An additional test machinery is introduced to make sure that despite making
two binds, we only notify checkers once for both of them, without exposing
the partially copied objects.
This fix is a hack over a hack. The proper fix would be to model C++ temporaries
in the CFG, and after that dealing with adjustments would no longer be
necessary, and the values we need would no longer disappear from the
Environment.
rdar://problem/30658168
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30534
llvm-svn: 298924
Summary: ... which applies a set of `AtomicChange`s on code.
Reviewers: klimek, djasper
Reviewed By: djasper
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30777
llvm-svn: 298913
Summary:
If promise_type has get_return_object_on_allocation_failure defined,
check if an allocation function returns nullptr, and if so,
return the result of get_return_object_on_allocation_failure().
Reviewers: rsmith, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31399
llvm-svn: 298891
Summary:
This patch implements parsing of [[clang::suppress(rule, ...)]]
and [[gsl::suppress(rule, ...)]] attributes.
C++ Core Guidelines depend heavily on tool support for
rule enforcement. They also propose a way to suppress
warnings [1] which is by annotating any ancestor in AST
with the C++11 attribute [[gsl::suppress(rule1,...)]].
To have a mechanism to suppress non-C++ Core
Guidelines specific, an additional spelling of [[clang::suppress]]
is defined.
For example, to suppress the warning cppcoreguidelines-slicing,
one could do
```
[[clang::suppress("cppcoreguidelines-slicing")]]
void f() { ... code that does slicing ... }
```
or
```
void g() {
Derived b;
[[clang::suppress("cppcoreguidelines-slicing")]]
Base a{b};
[[clang::suppress("cppcoreguidelines-slicing")]] {
doSomething();
Base a2{b};
}
}
```
This parsing can then be used by clang-tidy, which includes multiple
C++ Core Guidelines rules, to suppress warnings (see
https://reviews.llvm.org/D24888).
For the exact naming of the rule in the attribute, there
are different possibilities, which will be defined in the
corresponding clang-tidy patch.
Currently, clang-tidy supports suppressing of warnings through "//
NOLINT" comments. There are some advantages that the attribute has:
- Suppressing specific warnings instead of all warnings
- Suppressing warnings in a block (namespace, function, compound
statement)
- Code formatting may split a statement into multiple lines,
thus a "// NOLINT" comment may be on the wrong line
I'm looking forward to your comments!
[1] https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#inforce-enforcement
Reviewers: alexfh, aaron.ballman, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24886
llvm-svn: 298880
Sema holds the current FPOptions which is adjusted by 'pragma STDC
FP_CONTRACT'. This then gets propagated into expression nodes as they are
built.
This encapsulates FPOptions so that this propagation happens opaquely rather
than directly with the fp_contractable on/off bit. This allows controlled
transitioning of fp_contractable to a ternary value (off, on, fast). It will
also allow adding more fast-math flags later.
This is toward moving fp-contraction=fast from an LLVM TargetOption to a
FastMathFlag in order to fix PR25721.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31166
llvm-svn: 298877
The checker currently warns on copying, moving, or calling methods on an object
that was recently std::move'd from. It understands a set of "state reset"
methods that bring a moved-from object back to a well-specified state.
Patch by Peter Szecsi!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24246
llvm-svn: 298698
attributes.
These patches don't work because we can't currently access the parameter
information in a reliable way when building attributes. I thought this
would be relatively straightforward to fix, but it seems not to be the
case. Fixing this will requrie a substantial re-plumbing of machinery to
allow attributes to be handled in this location, and several other fixes
to the attribute machinery should probably be made at the same time. All
of this will make the patch .... substantially more complicated.
Reverting for now as there are active miscompiles caused by the current
version.
llvm-svn: 298695
This change fixes a crash on initialization of a reference from ({}) during
template instantiation and incidentally improves diagnostics.
This reverts a prior attempt to handle this in r286721. Instead, we teach the
initialization code that initialization cannot be performed if a source type
is required and the initializer is an initializer list (which is not an
expression and does not have a type), and likewise for function-style cast
expressions.
llvm-svn: 298676
Summary:
Clang companion patch to LLVM patch D31027, which adds support
for emitting minimized bitcode file for use in the thin link step.
Add a cc1 option -fthin-link-bitcode=<file> to trigger this behavior.
Depends on D31027.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini, pcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits, Prazek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31050
llvm-svn: 298639
Correct class-template deprecation behavior
Based on the comment in the test, and my reading of the standard, a deprecated warning should be issued in the following case:
template<typename T> [[deprecated]] class Foo{}; Foo<int> f;
This was not the case, because the ClassTemplateSpecializationDecl creation did not also copy the deprecated attribute.
Note: I did NOT audit the complete set of attributes to see WHICH ones should be copied, so instead I simply copy ONLY the deprecated attribute.
Previous DiffRev: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27486, was reverted.
This patch fixes the issues brought up here by the reverter: https://reviews.llvm.org/rL298410
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31245
llvm-svn: 298634
Summary:
This patch adopts the recent changes that renamed `set_exception(exception_pointer)` to `unhandled_exception()`.
Additionally `unhandled_exception()` is now required, and so an error is emitted when exceptions are enabled but the promise type does not provide the member.
When exceptions are disabled a warning is emitted instead of an error, The warning notes that the `unhandled_exception()` function is required when exceptions are enabled.
Reviewers: rsmith, GorNishanov, aaron.ballman, majnemer
Reviewed By: GorNishanov
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30859
llvm-svn: 298565
It seems MS headers have started using __readgsqword, and since it's
used in a header that doesn't include intrin.h, we can't implement it as
an inline function anymore.
That was already the case for __readfsdword, which Saleem added support
for in r220859. This patch reuses that codegen to implement all of
__read[fg]s{byte,word,dword,qword}.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31248
llvm-svn: 298538
declarations and calls instead of just definitions, and then teach it to
*not* attach such attributes even if the source code contains them.
This follows the design direction discussed on cfe-dev here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2017-January/052066.html
The idea is that for C standard library builtins, even if the library
vendor chooses to annotate their routines with __attribute__((nonnull)),
we will ignore those attributes which pertain to pointer arguments that
have an associated size. This allows the widespread (and seemingly
reasonable) pattern of calling these routines with a null pointer and
a zero size. I have only done this for the library builtins currently
recognized by Clang, but we can now trivially add to this set. This will
be controllable with -fno-builtin if anyone should care to do so.
Note that this does *not* change the AST. As a consequence, warnings,
static analysis, and source code rewriting are not impacted.
This isn't even a regression on any platform as neither Clang nor LLVM
have ever put 'nonnull' onto these arguments for declarations. All this
patch does is enable it on other declarations while preventing us from
ever accidentally enabling it on these libc functions due to a library
vendor.
It will also allow any other libraries using this annotation to gain
optimizations based on the annotation even when only a declaration is
visible.
llvm-svn: 298491
and into TargetInfo::adjust so that it gets called in more places
throughout the compiler (AST serialization in particular).
Should fix PPC modules after removing of faltivec.
llvm-svn: 298487
The alias was only ever used on darwin and had some issues there,
and isn't used in practice much. Also fixes a problem with -mno-altivec
not turning off -maltivec.
Also add a diagnostic for faltivec/fno-altivec that directs users to use
maltivec options and include the altivec.h file explicitly.
llvm-svn: 298449
Summary: We need to be able to disable samplepgo for specific files by supporting -fno-auto-profile and -fno-profile-sample-use
Reviewers: davidxl, dnovillo, echristo
Reviewed By: echristo
Subscribers: echristo, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31213
llvm-svn: 298446
Based on the comment in the test, and my reading of the standard, a deprecated warning should be issued in the following case:
template<typename T> [[deprecated]] class Foo{}; Foo<int> f;
This was not the case, because the ClassTemplateSpecializationDecl creation did not also copy the deprecated attribute.
Note: I did NOT audit the complete set of attributes to see WHICH ones should be copied, so instead I simply copy ONLY the deprecated attribute.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27486
llvm-svn: 298410
In such a case, as when using the NS_ENUM macro, for indexing purposes treat the typedef as 'transparent',
meaning we treat its references as symbols of the underlying tag symbol.
Also provide a libclang API to check for such typedefs.
llvm-svn: 298392
Summary: I added a new rank to ImplicitConversionRank enum to resolve the function overload ambiguity with vector types. Rank of scalar types conversion is lower than vector splat. So, we can choose which function should we call. See test for more details.
Reviewers: Anastasia, cfe-commits
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Subscribers: bader, yaxunl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30816
llvm-svn: 298366
This commit adds support for a new attribute that will be used to
distinguish between extensible and inextensible enums. There are three
main purposes of this attribute:
1. Give better control over when enum-related warnings are issued.
For example, in the code below, clang will not issue a -Wassign-enum
warning if the enum is marked "open":
enum __attribute__((enum_extensibility(closed))) EnumClosed {
B0 = 1, B1 = 10
};
enum __attribute__((enum_extensibility(open))) EnumOpen {
C0 = 1, C1 = 10
};
enum EnumClosed ec = 100; // warning issued
enum EnumOpen eo = 100; // no warning
2. Enable code-completion and debugging tools to offer better
suggestions.
3. Make it easier for swift's clang importer to determine which swift
type an enum should be mapped to.
For more details, see the discussion I started on cfe-dev:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2017-February/052748.html
rdar://problem/12764379
rdar://problem/23145650
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30766
llvm-svn: 298332
This reverts commit r298185, effectively reapplying r298165, after fixing the
new unit tests (PR32338). The memory buffer generator doesn't null-terminate
the MemoryBuffer it creates; this version of the commit informs getMemBuffer
about that to avoid the assert.
Original commit message follows:
----
Clang's internal build system for implicit modules uses lock files to
ensure that after a process writes a PCM it will read the same one back
in (without contention from other -cc1 commands). Since PCMs are read
from disk repeatedly while invalidating, building, and importing, the
lock is not released quickly. Furthermore, the LockFileManager is not
robust in every environment. Other -cc1 commands can stall until
timeout (after about eight minutes).
This commit changes the lock file from being necessary for correctness
to a (possibly dubious) performance hack. The remaining benefit is to
reduce duplicate work in competing -cc1 commands which depend on the
same module. Follow-up commits will change the internal build system to
continue after a timeout, and reduce the timeout. Perhaps we should
reconsider blocking at all.
This also fixes a use-after-free, when one part of a compilation
validates a PCM and starts using it, and another tries to swap out the
PCM for something new.
The PCMCache is a new type called MemoryBufferCache, which saves memory
buffers based on their filename. Its ownership is shared by the
CompilerInstance and ModuleManager.
- The ModuleManager stores PCMs there that it loads from disk, never
touching the disk if the cache is hot.
- When modules fail to validate, they're removed from the cache.
- When a CompilerInstance is spawned to build a new module, each
already-loaded PCM is assumed to be valid, and is frozen to avoid
the use-after-free.
- Any newly-built module is written directly to the cache to avoid the
round-trip to the filesystem, making lock files unnecessary for
correctness.
Original patch by Manman Ren; most testcases by Adrian Prantl!
llvm-svn: 298278
The comment about there being three different forms that Ptr represents was stale. Also, the opaque value does not need to be exposed (these functions are unused).
llvm-svn: 298215
Duncan's r298165 introduced the PCMCache mechanism, which guarantees
that locks aren't necessary anymore for correctness but only for
performance, by avoiding building it twice when possible.
Change the logic to avoid an error but actually build the module in case
the timeout happens. Instead of an error, still emit a remark for
debugging purposes.
rdar://problem/30297862
llvm-svn: 298175
Clang's internal build system for implicit modules uses lock files to
ensure that after a process writes a PCM it will read the same one back
in (without contention from other -cc1 commands). Since PCMs are read
from disk repeatedly while invalidating, building, and importing, the
lock is not released quickly. Furthermore, the LockFileManager is not
robust in every environment. Other -cc1 commands can stall until
timeout (after about eight minutes).
This commit changes the lock file from being necessary for correctness
to a (possibly dubious) performance hack. The remaining benefit is to
reduce duplicate work in competing -cc1 commands which depend on the
same module. Follow-up commits will change the internal build system to
continue after a timeout, and reduce the timeout. Perhaps we should
reconsider blocking at all.
This also fixes a use-after-free, when one part of a compilation
validates a PCM and starts using it, and another tries to swap out the
PCM for something new.
The PCMCache is a new type called MemoryBufferCache, which saves memory
buffers based on their filename. Its ownership is shared by the
CompilerInstance and ModuleManager.
- The ModuleManager stores PCMs there that it loads from disk, never
touching the disk if the cache is hot.
- When modules fail to validate, they're removed from the cache.
- When a CompilerInstance is spawned to build a new module, each
already-loaded PCM is assumed to be valid, and is frozen to avoid
the use-after-free.
- Any newly-built module is written directly to the cache to avoid the
round-trip to the filesystem, making lock files unnecessary for
correctness.
Original patch by Manman Ren; most testcases by Adrian Prantl!
llvm-svn: 298165
Summary:
3.4.6 [basic.lookup.udir] paragraph 1:
In a using-directive or namespace-alias-definition, during the lookup for a namespace-name or for a name in a nested-name-specifier, only namespace names are considered.
Reviewers: rsmith, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30848
llvm-svn: 298126
clang-cl works best when the user runs vcvarsall to set up
an environment before running, but even this is not enough
on VC 2017 when cross compiling (e.g. using an x64 toolchain
to target x86, or vice versa).
The reason is that although clang-cl itself will have a
valid environment, it will shell out to other tools (such
as link.exe) which may not. Generally we solve this through
adding the appropriate linker flags, but this is not enough
in VC 2017.
The cross-linker and the regular linker both link against
some common DLLs, but these DLLs live in the binary directory
of the native linker. When setting up a cross-compilation
environment through vcvarsall, it will add *both* directories
to %PATH%, so that when cl shells out to any of the associated
tools, those tools will be able to find all of the dependencies
that it links against. If you don't do this, link.exe will
fail to run because the loader won't be able to find all of
the required DLLs that it links against.
To solve this we teach the driver how to spawn a process with
an explicitly specified environment. Then we modify the
PATH before shelling out to subtools and run with the modified
PATH.
Patch by Hamza Sood
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30991
llvm-svn: 298098
This enhances the AST to keep track of locations of the names in those ObjC property attributes, and reports them for indexing.
Patch by Nathan Hawes!
https://reviews.llvm.org/D30907
llvm-svn: 297972
-m(i|tv|watch)os-simulator-version-min is on the command line.
Previously the driver would treat -m(i|tv|watch)os-simulator-version-min
as an alias of -m(i|tv|watch)os-version-min. This no longer works since
we now need to distinguish between the two options (the latter is used
for iOS running in a VM, for example).
This commit stops making the simulator options the aliases of the OS
options and defines a macro to differentiate between the two groups of
options.
rdar://problem/28872911
llvm-svn: 297866
When this test runs on bots that are configured to default
to MSVC, but MSVC isn't actually installed, we can emit a
warning that MSVC is not found. Since MSVC isn't actually
needed for this test to succeed, just disable this warning.
llvm-svn: 297858
2017 changes the way you find an installed copy of
Visual Studio as well as its internal directory layout.
As a result, clang-cl was unable to find VS2017 even
when you had run vcvarsall to set up a toolchain
environment. This patch updates everything for 2017
and cleans up the way we handle a tiered search a la
environment -> installation -> PATH for which copy
of Visual Studio to bind to.
Patch originally by Hamza Sood, with some fixups for landing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30758
llvm-svn: 297851
This adds -Wbitfield-enum-conversion, which warns on implicit
conversions that happen on bitfield assignment that change the value of
some enumerators.
Values of enum type typically take on a very small range of values, so
they are frequently stored in bitfields. Unfortunately, there is no
convenient way to calculate the minimum number of bits necessary to
store all possible values at compile time, so users usually hard code a
bitwidth that works today and widen it as necessary to pass basic
testing and validation. This is very error-prone, and leads to stale
widths as enums grow. This warning aims to catch such bugs.
This would have found two real bugs in clang and two instances of
questionable code. See r297680 and r297654 for the full description of
the issues.
This warning is currently disabled by default while we investigate its
usefulness outside of LLVM.
The major cause of false positives with this warning is this kind of
enum:
enum E { W, X, Y, Z, SENTINEL_LAST };
The last enumerator is an invalid value used to validate inputs or size
an array. Depending on the prevalance of this style of enum across a
codebase, this warning may be more or less feasible to deploy. It also
has trouble on sentinel values such as ~0U.
Reviewers: rsmith, rtrieu, thakis
Reviewed By: thakis
Subscribers: hfinkel, voskresensky.vladimir, sashab, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30923
llvm-svn: 297761
Summary:
This patch adds -f[no-]rtlib-add-rpath, which if enabled, embeds the
arch-specific subdirectory in resource directory using -rpath (instead
of doing so only during native compilation).
This patch also re-enables test arch-specific-libdir.c which was
silently unsupported because of the REQUIRES tag 'linux'.
Reviewers: bkramer, rnk, mgorny
Subscribers: srhines, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30700
llvm-svn: 297751
Teach UBSan to detect when a value with the _Nonnull type annotation
assumes a null value. Call expressions, initializers, assignments, and
return statements are all checked.
Because _Nonnull does not affect IRGen, the new checks are disabled by
default. The new driver flags are:
-fsanitize=nullability-arg (_Nonnull violation in call)
-fsanitize=nullability-assign (_Nonnull violation in assignment)
-fsanitize=nullability-return (_Nonnull violation in return stmt)
-fsanitize=nullability (all of the above)
This patch builds on top of UBSan's existing support for detecting
violations of the nonnull attributes ('nonnull' and 'returns_nonnull'),
and relies on the compiler-rt support for those checks. Eventually we
will need to update the diagnostic messages in compiler-rt (there are
FIXME's for this, which will be addressed in a follow-up).
One point of note is that the nullability-return check is only allowed
to kick in if all arguments to the function satisfy their nullability
preconditions. This makes it necessary to emit some null checks in the
function body itself.
Testing: check-clang and check-ubsan. I also built some Apple ObjC
frameworks with an asserts-enabled compiler, and verified that we get
valid reports.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30762
llvm-svn: 297700
Modified the tests to accept any iteration order, to run only on Unix, and added
additional error reporting to investigate SystemZ bot issue.
The VFS directory iterator and recursive directory iterator behave differently
from the LLVM counterparts. Once the VFS iterators hit a broken symlink they
immediately abort. The LLVM counterparts don't stat entries unless they have to
descend into the next directory, which allows to recover from this issue by
clearing the error code and skipping to the next entry.
This change adds similar behavior to the VFS iterators. There should be no
change in current behavior in the current CLANG source base, because all
clients have loop exit conditions that also check the error code.
This fixes rdar://problem/30934619.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30768
llvm-svn: 297693
All of these were found by a new warning that I am prototyping,
-Wbitfield-enum-conversion.
Stmt::ExprBits::ObjectKind - This was not wide enough to represent
OK_ObjSubscript, so this was a real, true positive bug.
ObjCDeclSpec::objCDeclQualifier - On Windows, setting DQ_CSNullability
would cause the bitfield to become negative because enum types are
always implicitly 'int' there. This would probably never be noticed
because this is a flag-style enum, so we only ever test one bit at a
time. Switching to 'unsigned' also makes this type pack smaller on
Windows.
FunctionDecl::SClass - Technically, we only need two bits for all valid
function storage classes. Functions can never have automatic or register
storage class. This seems a bit too clever, and we have a bit to spare,
so widening the bitfield seems like the best way to pacify the warning.
You could classify this as a false positive, but widening the bitfield
defends us from invalid ASTs.
llvm-svn: 297680
Change ASTFileSignature from a random 32-bit number to the hash of the
PCM content.
- Move definition ASTFileSignature to Basic/Module.h so Module and
ASTSourceDescriptor can use it.
- Change the signature from uint64_t to std::array<uint32_t,5>.
- Stop using (saving/reading) the size and modification time of PCM
files when there is a valid SIGNATURE.
- Add UNHASHED_CONTROL_BLOCK, and use it to store the SIGNATURE record
and other records that shouldn't affect the hash. Because implicit
modules reuses the same file for multiple levels of -Werror, this
includes DIAGNOSTIC_OPTIONS and DIAG_PRAGMA_MAPPINGS.
This helps to solve a PCH + implicit Modules dependency issue: PCH files
are handled by the external build system, whereas implicit modules are
handled by internal compiler build system. This prevents invalidating a
PCH when the compiler overwrites a PCM file with the same content
(modulo the diagnostic differences).
Design and original patch by Manman Ren!
llvm-svn: 297655
The only valid values for scale immediate of scatter/gather builtins are 1, 2, 4, or 8. This patch enforces this in the frontend otherwise we generate invalid instruction encodings in the backend.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30875
llvm-svn: 297642
This commit adds support for a new -iframeworkwithsysroot compiler option which
allows the user to specify a framework path that can be prefixed with the
sysroot. This option is similar to the -iwithsysroot option that exists to
supplement -isystem.
rdar://21316352
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30183
llvm-svn: 297614
Summary:
Some coroutine diagnostics need to point to the location of the first coroutine keyword in the function, like when diagnosing a `return` inside a coroutine. Previously we did this by storing each *valid* coroutine statement in a list and select the first one to use in diagnostics. However if every coroutine statement is invalid we would have no location to point to.
This patch fixes the storage of the first coroutine statement location, ensuring that it gets stored even when the resulting AST node would be invalid.
This patch also removes the `CoroutineStmts` list in `FunctionScopeInfo` because it was unused.
Reviewers: rsmith, GorNishanov, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: GorNishanov
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30776
llvm-svn: 297547
Summary:
Create only one OpaqueValue for await_ready/await_suspend/await_resume.
Store OpaqueValue used in the CoroutineSuspendExpr node, so that CodeGen does not have to hunt looking for it.
Reviewers: rsmith, EricWF, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30775
llvm-svn: 297541
Modified the tests to accept any iteration order.
The VFS directory iterator and recursive directory iterator behave differently
from the LLVM counterparts. Once the VFS iterators hit a broken symlink they
immediately abort. The LLVM counterparts allow to recover from this issue by
clearing the error code and skipping to the next entry.
This change adds the same functionality to the VFS iterators. There should be
no change in current behavior in the current CLANG source base, because all
clients have loop exit conditions that also check the error code.
This fixes rdar://problem/30934619.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30768
llvm-svn: 297528
The VFS directory iterator and recursive directory iterator behave differently
from the LLVM counterparts. Once the VFS iterators hit a broken symlink they
immediately abort. The LLVM counterparts allow to recover from this issue by
clearing the error code and skipping to the next entry.
This change adds the same functionality to the VFS iterators. There should be
no change in current behavior in the current CLANG source base, because all
clients have loop exit conditions that also check the error code.
This fixes rdar://problem/30934619.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30768
llvm-svn: 297510
Summary:
A `co_await arg` expression has a dependent type whenever the promise type is still dependent, even if the argument to co_await is not. This is because we cannot attempt the `await_transform(<arg>)` until after we know the promise type.
This patch fixes an assertion in the constructor of `DependentCoawaitExpr` that asserted that `arg` must also be dependent.
Reviewers: rsmith, GorNishanov, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: GorNishanov
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30772
llvm-svn: 297358
Summary:
This patch adds passing a coroutine_handle object to await_suspend calls.
It builds the coroutine_handle using coroutine_handle<PromiseType>::from_address(__builtin_coro_frame()).
(a revision of https://reviews.llvm.org/D26316 that for some reason refuses to apply via arc patch)
Reviewers: GorNishanov
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, cfe-commits, EricWF
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30769
llvm-svn: 297356
Summary:
This is a revised version of D28796. Included test is changed to
resolve the target compatibility issue reported (rL293032).
Reviewers: inglorion, dblaikie, echristo, aprantl, probinson
Reviewed By: inglorion
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30663
llvm-svn: 297194
This patch makes the valist check more robust to the different AST variants on
different platforms and also fixes a FIXME.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30157
llvm-svn: 297153
Summary:
The changes contained in this patch are:
1. Defines a new AST node `CoawaitDependentExpr` for representing co_await expressions while the promise type is still dependent.
2. Correctly detect and transform the 'co_await' operand to `p.await_transform(<expr>)` when possible.
3. Change the initial/final suspend points to build during the initial parse, so they have the correct operator co_await lookup results.
4. Fix transformation of the CoroutineBodyStmt so that it doesn't re-build the final/initial suspends.
@rsmith: This change is a little big, but it's not trivial for me to split it up. Please let me know if you would prefer this submitted as multiple patches.
Reviewers: rsmith, GorNishanov
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: ABataev, rsmith, mehdi_amini, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26057
llvm-svn: 297093
Previously when a coroutine was building the implicit setup/destroy
constructs it would emit diagostics about failures on the first co_await/co_return/co_yield
it encountered. This was confusing because that construct may not itself be ill-formed.
This patch moves the diagnostics to the function start instead.
llvm-svn: 297089
GNUMode shouldn't be a benign language option because it influences the
resulting AST when checking for the existence of GNUMode-specific macro
"linux" (e.g. by having code inside #ifdef linux). This patch marks it as a
normal language option so it gets correctly passed to the compiler invocation
for the used modules.
The added test case illustrated this because it compiles without modules, but
fails when using modules.
Patch by Raphael Isemann (D30496)!
llvm-svn: 297030
that return record or vector types
The performSelector family of methods from Foundation use objc_msgSend to
dispatch the selector invocations to objects. However, method calls to methods
that return record types might have to use the objc_msgSend_stret as the return
value won't find into the register. This is also supported by this sentence from
performSelector documentation: "The method should not have a significant return
value and should take a single argument of type id, or no arguments". This
commit adds a new warning that warns when a selector which corresponds to a
method that returns a record type is passed into performSelector.
rdar://12056271
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30174
llvm-svn: 297019
Summary:
Functions with the "xray_log_args" attribute will tell LLVM to emit a special
XRay sled for compiler-rt to copy any call arguments to your logging handler.
Reviewers: dberris
Reviewed By: dberris
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29704
llvm-svn: 296999
easily extend the aggregate-builder API. Stupid missing language
features.
Also add APIs for constructing a relative reference and computing
the offset of a position from the start of the initializer.
llvm-svn: 296979
Now print diagnostics for static, virtual, inline, volatile, and const
differences in methods. Also use DeclarationName instead of IdentifierInfo
for additional robustness in diagnostic printing.
llvm-svn: 296932
Summary:
This change adds an arch-specific subdirectory in <ResourceDir>/lib/<OS>
to the linker search path. This path also gets added as '-rpath' for
native compilation if a runtime is linked in as a shared object. This
allows arch-specific libraries to be installed alongside clang.
Reviewers: danalbert, cbergstrom, javed.absar
Subscribers: srhines
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30015
llvm-svn: 296927
and the nature of a declaration
This commit adds an external_source_symbol attribute to Clang. This attribute
specifies that a declaration originates from an external source and describes
the nature of that source. This attribute will be used to improve IDE features
like 'jump-to-definition' for mixed-language projects or project that use
auto-generated code.
rdar://30423368
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29819
llvm-svn: 296649
Summary:
This patch enables namespace end comments under a new flag FixNamespaceComments,
which is enabled for the LLVM and Google styles.
Reviewers: djasper
Reviewed By: djasper
Subscribers: cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30405
llvm-svn: 296632
Summary:
An AtomicChange is used to create and group a set of source edits, e.g.
replacements or header insertions. Edits in an AtomicChange should be related,
e.g. replacements for the same type reference and the corresponding header
insertion/deletion.
An AtomicChange is uniquely identified by a key position and will either be
fully applied or not applied at all. The key position should be the location
of the key syntactical element that is being changed, e.g. the call to a
refactored method.
Next step: add a tool that applies AtomicChange.
Reviewers: klimek, djasper
Reviewed By: klimek
Subscribers: alexshap, cfe-commits, djasper, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27054
llvm-svn: 296616
Summary:
Don't warn about unused lambda captures that involve copying a
value of a type that cannot be trivially copied and destroyed.
Fixes PR31977
Reviewers: rsmith, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30327
llvm-svn: 296602
potential capture list.
Fix Sema::getCurLambda() to return the innermost lambda scope when there
is a block enclosed in the lambda. Previously, the method would return a
nullptr in such cases, which would prevent a variable captured by the
enclosed block to be added to the lambda scope's potential capture list.
rdar://problem/28412462
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25556
llvm-svn: 296584
The exisiting warning for inconsistent overrides does not include the destructor
as it was noted in review that it was too noisy. Instead, add to a separate
warning group that is off by default for users who want consistent warnings
between methods and destructors.
llvm-svn: 296572
Summary: This enables LTO to be used with the clang-cl frontend.
Reviewers: rnk, hans
Reviewed By: hans
Subscribers: pcc, cfe-commits, mehdi_amini, Prazek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30239
llvm-svn: 296373
Summary:
This patch adds a NamespaceEndCommentsFixer TokenAnalyzer for clang-format,
which fixes end namespace comments.
It currently supports inserting and updating existing wrong comments.
Example source:
```
namespace A {
int i;
}
namespace B {
int j;
} // namespace A
```
after formatting:
```
namespace A {
int i;
} // namespace A
namespace B {
int j;
} // namespace B
```
Reviewers: klimek, djasper
Reviewed By: djasper
Subscribers: klimek, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30269
llvm-svn: 296341
Parameters have a 'child' relation to their function/method.
Also add an option '-include-locals' to 'c-index-test core' to enable indexing of function-local symbols.
Original patch from Nathan Hawes with some changes by me.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D30304
llvm-svn: 296282
Essentially, as a base class constructor does not construct virtual bases, such
a constructor for an abstract class does not need the corresponding base class
construction to be valid, and likewise for destructors.
This creates an awkward situation: clang will sometimes generate references to
the complete object and deleting destructors for an abstract class (it puts
them in the construction vtable for a derived class). But we can't generate a
"correct" version of these because we can't generate references to base class
constructors any more (if they're template specializations, say, we might not
have instantiated them and can't assume any other TU will emit a copy).
Fortunately, we don't need to, since no correct program can ever invoke them,
so instead emit symbols that just trap.
We should stop emitting references to these symbols, but still need to emit
definitions for compatibility.
llvm-svn: 296275
Summary: SimpleConstraintManager is difficult to use, and makes assumptions about capabilities of the constraint manager. This patch refactors out those portions into a new RangedConstraintManager, and also fixes some issues with camel case, formatting, and confusing naming.
Reviewers: zaks.anna, dcoughlin
Subscribers: mgorny, xazax.hun, NoQ, rgov, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26061
llvm-svn: 296242
r289428 added a separate language kind for Objective-C, but kept many
"Language == LK_Cpp" checks untouched. This introduced a "IsCpp()"
method that returns true for both C++ and Objective-C++, and replaces
all comparisons of Language with LK_Cpp with calls to this new method.
Also add a lot more test coverge for formatting things in LK_ObjC mode,
by having FormatTest's verifyFormat() test for LK_ObjC everything that's
being tested for LK_Cpp at the moment.
Fixes PR32060 and many other things.
llvm-svn: 296160
in macro argument pre-expansion mode when skipping a function body
This commit fixes a token caching problem that currently occurs when clang is
skipping a function body (e.g. when looking for a code completion token) and at
the same time caching the tokens for _Pragma when lexing it in macro argument
pre-expansion mode.
When _Pragma is being lexed in macro argument pre-expansion mode, it caches the
tokens so that it can avoid interpreting the pragma immediately (as the macro
argument may not be used in the macro body), and then either backtracks over or
commits these tokens. The problem is that, when we're backtracking/committing in
such a scenario, there's already a previous backtracking position stored in
BacktrackPositions (as we're skipping the function body), and this leads to a
situation where the cached tokens from the pragma (like '(' 'string_literal'
and ')') will remain in the cached tokens array incorrectly even after they're
consumed (in the case of backtracking) or just ignored (in the case when they're
committed). Furthermore, what makes it even worse, is that because of a previous
backtracking position, the logic that deals with when should we call
ExitCachingLexMode in CachingLex no longer works for us in this situation, and
more tokens in the macro argument get cached, to the point where the EOF token
that corresponds to the macro argument EOF is cached. This problem leads to all
sorts of issues in code completion mode, where incorrect errors get presented
and code completion completely fails to produce completion results.
rdar://28523863
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28772
llvm-svn: 296140
The goal of this is to fix a bug in modules where we'd merge
FunctionDecls that differed in their pass_object_size attributes. Since
we can overload on the presence of pass_object_size attributes, this
behavior is incorrect.
We don't represent `N` in `pass_object_size(N)` as part of
ExtParameterInfo, since it's an error to overload solely on the value of
N. This means that we have a bug if we have two modules that declare
functions that differ only in their pass_object_size attrs, like so:
// In module A, from a.h
void foo(char *__attribute__((pass_object_size(0))));
// In module B, from b.h
void foo(char *__attribute__((pass_object_size(1))));
// In module C, in main.c
#include "a.h"
#include "b.h"
At the moment, we'll merge the foo decls, when we should instead emit a
diagnostic about an invalid overload. We seem to have similar (silent)
behavior if we overload only on the return type of `foo` instead; I'll
try to find a good place to put a FIXME (or I'll just file a bug) soon.
This patch also fixes a bug where we'd not output the proper extended
parameter info for declarations with pass_object_size attrs.
llvm-svn: 296076
Rather than attempting to compare whether the previous and current top of
context stack are "equal" (which fails for a number of reasons, such as the
context stack entries containing pointers to objects on the stack, or reaching
the same "top of stack" entry through two different paths), track the depth of
context stack at which we last emitted a note and invalidate it when we pop the
context stack to less than that depth.
This causes us to emit some missing "in instantiation of" notes and to stop
emitting redundant "in instantiation of" stacks matching the previous stack in
rare cases.
llvm-svn: 295921
IdentifierInfo is hashed based on the stored string. FieldDecl versus other
Decl is now detected, as well as differently named fields.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 295911
Add support for static_cast in classes. Add pointer-independent profiling for
Stmt's, sharing most of the logic with Stmt::Profile. This is the first of the
deep sub-Decl diffing for error messages.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 295890
Add the basics for the ODRHash class, which will only process Decl's from
a whitelist, which currently only has AccessSpecDecl. Different access
specifiers in merged classes can now be detected.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 295800
Summary:
POSIX requires lgamma writes to an external global variable, signgam.
This prevents annotating lgamma with readnone, which is incorrect on
targets that write to signgam.
Reviewers: efriedma, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29778
llvm-svn: 295781
template deduction guides for class template argument deduction.
Ensure that we have a local instantiation scope for tracking the instantiated
parameters. Additionally, unusually, we're substituting at depth 1 and leaving
depth 0 alone; make sure that we don't reduce template parameter depth by 2 for
inner parameters in the process. (This is probably also broken for alias
templates in the case where they're expanded within a dependent context, but
this patch doesn't fix that.)
llvm-svn: 295696
instantiation.
In preparation for converting the template stack to a more general context
stack (so we can include context notes for other kinds of context).
llvm-svn: 295686
Reserve a spot for ODR hash in CXXRecordDecl and in its modules storage.
Default the hash value to 0 for all classes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 295533
If we never need to map any ID within the module to its global ID, we don't
need the module offset map. If a compilation transitively depends on lots of
unused module files, this can result in a modest performance improvement.
llvm-svn: 295517
https://reviews.llvm.org/D29922
This patch adds two fields for use in the implementation of 'distribute parallel for':
The increment expression for the distribute loop. As the chunk assigned to a team is executed by multiple threads within the 'parallel for' region, the increment expression has to correspond to the value returned by the related runtime call (for_static_init).
The upper bound of the innermost loop ('for' in 'distribute parallel for') is not the globalUB expression normally used for pragma 'for' when found in isolation. It is instead the upper bound of the chunk assigned to the team ('distribute' loop). In this way, we prevent teams from executing chunks assigned to other teams.
The use of these two fields can be see in a related explanatory patch:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D29508
llvm-svn: 295497
A slightly weaker form of ODR checking than previous attempts, but hopefully
won't break the modules build bot. Future work will be needed to catch all
cases.
When objects are imported for modules, there is a chance that a name collision
will cause an ODR violation. Previously, only a small number of such
violations were detected. This patch provides a stronger check based on
AST nodes.
The information needed to uniquely identify an object is taken from the AST and
put into a one-dimensional byte stream. This stream is then hashed to give
a value to represent the object, which is stored with the other object data
in the module.
When modules are loaded, and Decl's are merged, the hash values of the two
Decl's are compared. Only Decl's with matched hash values will be merged.
Mismatch hashes will generate a module error, and if possible, point to the
first difference between the two objects.
The transform from AST to byte stream is a modified depth first algorithm.
Due to references between some AST nodes, a pure depth first algorithm could
generate loops. For Stmt nodes, a straight depth first processing occurs.
For Type and Decl nodes, they are replaced with an index number and only on
first visit will these nodes be processed. As an optimization, boolean
values are saved and stored together in reverse order at the end of the
byte stream to lower the ammount of data that needs to be hashed.
Compile time impact was measured at 1.5-2.0% during module building, and
negligible during builds without module building.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 295421
Removed ndrange_t as Clang builtin type and added
as a struct type in the OpenCL header.
Use type name to do the Sema checking in enqueue_kernel
and modify IR generation accordingly.
Review: D28058
Patch by Dmitry Borisenkov!
llvm-svn: 295311
Recommit r293585 that was reverted in r293611 with new fixes. The previous
issue was determined to be an overly aggressive AST visitor from forward
declared objects. The visitor will now only deeply visit certain Decl's and
only do a shallow information extraction from all other Decl's.
When objects are imported for modules, there is a chance that a name collision
will cause an ODR violation. Previously, only a small number of such
violations were detected. This patch provides a stronger check based on
AST nodes.
The information needed to uniquely identify an object is taken from the AST and
put into a one-dimensional byte stream. This stream is then hashed to give
a value to represent the object, which is stored with the other object data
in the module.
When modules are loaded, and Decl's are merged, the hash values of the two
Decl's are compared. Only Decl's with matched hash values will be merged.
Mismatch hashes will generate a module error, and if possible, point to the
first difference between the two objects.
The transform from AST to byte stream is a modified depth first algorithm.
Due to references between some AST nodes, a pure depth first algorithm could
generate loops. For Stmt nodes, a straight depth first processing occurs.
For Type and Decl nodes, they are replaced with an index number and only on
first visit will these nodes be processed. As an optimization, boolean
values are saved and stored together in reverse order at the end of the
byte stream to lower the ammount of data that needs to be hashed.
Compile time impact was measured at 1.5-2.0% during module building, and
negligible during builds without module building.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 295284
This appears to be the only template argument deduction context where we were
missing this check. Surprisingly, other implementations also appear to miss
the check in this case; it may turn out that important code is relying on
the widespread non-conformance here, in which case we'll need to reconsider.
llvm-svn: 295277
During the review of D29567 it turned out the caching in CallDescription is not implemented properly. In case an identifier does not exist in a translation unit, repeated identifier lookups will be done which might have bad impact on the performance. This patch guarantees that the lookup is only executed once. Moreover this patch fixes a corner case when the identifier of CallDescription does not exist in the translation unit and the called function does not have an identifier (e.g.: overloaded operator in C++).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29884
llvm-svn: 295186
In case user did not provide valid standard name for -std option, available
values (with short description) will be reported.
Patch by Paweł Żukowski!
llvm-svn: 295113
It looks like the only use of AddDeallocation is to indirectly call the
destructors of objects. In one case I found
(TypeAliasTemplateDecl::Common), the destructor is a nop, so registering
it to run later seems pointless.
All of the other *::Common types have non-trivial dtors, so deleting the
useless AddDeallocation felt somewhat fragile. Happy to kill it + turn
the is_trivial_dtor check into a static_assert if people think that'd be
better.
llvm-svn: 295029
such guides below explicit ones, and ensure that references to the class's
template parameters are not treated as forwarding references.
We make a few tweaks to the wording in the current standard:
1) The constructor parameter list is copied faithfully to the deduction guide,
without losing default arguments or a varargs ellipsis (which the standard
wording loses by omission).
2) If the class template declares no constructors, we add a T() -> T<...> guide
(which will only ever work if T has default arguments for all non-pack
template parameters).
3) If the class template declares nothing that looks like a copy or move
constructor, we add a T(T<...>) -> T<...> guide.
#2 and #3 follow from the "pretend we had a class type with these constructors"
philosophy for deduction guides.
llvm-svn: 295007
This commit adds context sensitive code completion support for the C++11
keywords that currently don't have completion results.
The following keywords are supported by this patch:
alignas
constexpr
static_assert
noexcept (as a function/method qualifier)
thread_local
The following special identifiers are also supported:
final (as a method qualifier or class qualifier)
override
rdar://29219185
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28286
llvm-svn: 295001
Summary:
Sema::CheckCompletedCoroutineBody was growing unwieldy with building all of the substatements. Also, constructors for CoroutineBodyStmt had way too many parameters.
Instead, CoroutineBodyStmt now defines CtorArgs structure with all of the required construction parameters.
CheckCompleteCoroutineBody delegates construction of individual substatements to short functions one per each substatement.
Also, added a drive-by fix of initializing CoroutinePromise to nullptr in ScopeInfo.h.
And addressed the FIXME that wanted to tail allocate extra room at the end of the CoroutineBodyStmt to hold parameter move expressions. (The comment was longer that the code that implemented tail allocation).
Reviewers: rsmith, EricWF
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28835
llvm-svn: 294933
...function type with a redeclaration having the same attribute. Fixing this
introduced a secondary problem where we were assuming that K&R functions
could not be attributed types when reporting old-style function definitions
that are not preceded by a prototype."
Also Revert "Hopefully fixes a compile error introduced by r294861."
This reverts commit r294862, r294861, as they bork the ARM builds and
haven't fix it back.
Also, please, short commit titles, long commit decsriptions...
llvm-svn: 294910
It's actually meaningful and useful to allow such variables to have no
initializer, but we are strictly following the standard here until the C++
committee reaches consensus on allowing this.
llvm-svn: 294785
Expose the half type (fp16) through libclang and the python bindings.
It seems CXType_LastBuiltin was not updated in b2ea6d9 ("Enable
support for __float128 in Clang", 2016-04-13), so update it now.
Add an Index test for OpenCL types; in the future we will add other
OpenCL types such as images to this test.
Patch by Sven van Haastregt.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29718
llvm-svn: 294754
Summary:
This adds associated constraints as a property of class templates.
An error is produced if redeclarations are not similarly constrained.
Reviewers: rsmith, faisalv, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits, nwilson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25674
llvm-svn: 294697
__fastfail terminates the process immediately with a special system
call. It does not run any process shutdown code or exception recovery
logic.
Fixes PR31854
llvm-svn: 294606
1. Adds the command line flag for clzero.
2. Includes the clzero flag under znver1.
3. Defines the macro for clzero.
4. Adds a new file which has the intrinsic definition for clzero instruction.
Patch by Ganesh Gopalasubramanian with some additional tests from me.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29386
llvm-svn: 294559
Summary:
This teaches clang how to parse and lower the 'interrupt' and 'naked'
attributes.
This allows interrupt signal handlers to be written.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: malcolm.parsons, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28451
llvm-svn: 294402
Add a warning for shadowed variables across records. Referencing a
shadow'ed variable may not give the desired variable. Add an optional
warning for the shadowing.
Patch by James Sun!
llvm-svn: 294401
We model deduction-guides as functions with a new kind of name that identifies
the template whose deduction they guide; the bulk of this patch is adding the
new name kind. This gives us a clean way to attach an extensible list of guides
to a class template in a way that doesn't require any special handling in AST
files etc (and we're going to need these functions we come to performing
deduction).
llvm-svn: 294266
Summary:
The patch updates the MSVC ToolChain for the changes made in Visual
Studio 2017[1].
Other notable changes:
- Path handling code has been centralised to make potential future
changes less painful.
- A compiler error is emitted if the driver is unable to locate a
usable MSVC toolchain. (Previously it'd fail with a cryptic error
such as "link.exe is not executable")
- Support for the new Setup Config Server API[2] has been added,
albeit block commented out with a preprocessor conditional. This can
probably be re-evaluated when the API is officially released (it's
currently at the RC stage), but it's left in to make it easy for
anyone familiar with the API to give it a go with Clang.
Patch by Hamza Sood.
[1] https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/vcblog/2016/10/07/compiler-tools-layout-in-visual-studio-15/
[2] https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/heaths/2016/09/15/changes-to-visual-studio-15-setup/
Reviewers: ruiu, hans, rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: awson, RKSimon, amccarth, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28365
llvm-svn: 293923
Initialize fields directly in header. Note that the ModuleManager field is an
IntrusiveRefCntPtr, so there's no need for explicit initialization.
llvm-svn: 293863
name. If the dependent name happened to end in a template-id (X<T>::Y<U>), we
would fail to notice that the 'typename' keyword is missing when resolving it
to a type.
It turns out that GCC has a similar bug. If this shows up in much real code, we
can easily downgrade this to an ExtWarn.
llvm-svn: 293815
This commit reverts "r293518 - [ASTMatchers] Sprinkle some constexpr on the
global matcher constructors" because after it a buildbot that builds clang
stage 2 with modules failed to link clang-reorder-fields.
llvm-svn: 293759
We're seeing what we believe are false positives. (It's hard to tell with the
available diagnostics, and I'm not sure how to reduce them yet).
I'll send Richard reproduction details offline.
djasper/chandlerc suggested this should be a warning for now, to make rolling it
out feasible.
llvm-svn: 293611
Don't try to map an APSInt addend to an int64_t in pointer arithmetic before
bounds-checking it. This gives more consistent behavior (outside C++11, we
consistently use 2s complement semantics for both pointer and integer overflow
in constant expressions) and fixes some cases where in C++11 we would fail to
properly check for out-of-bounds pointer arithmetic (if the 2s complement
64-bit overflow landed us back in-bounds).
In passing, also fix some cases where we'd perform possibly-overflowing
arithmetic on CharUnits (which have a signed underlying type) during constant
expression evaluation.
llvm-svn: 293595
When objects are imported for modules, there is a chance that a name collision
will cause an ODR violation. Previously, only a small number of such
violations were detected. This patch provides a stronger check based on
AST nodes.
The information needed to uniquely identify an object is taked from the AST and
put into a one-dimensional byte stream. This stream is then hashed to give
a value to represent the object, which is stored with the other object data
in the module.
When modules are loaded, and Decl's are merged, the hash values of the two
Decl's are compared. Only Decl's with matched hash values will be merged.
Mismatch hashes will generate a module error, and if possible, point to the
first difference between the two objects.
The transform from AST to byte stream is a modified depth first algorithm.
Due to references between some AST nodes, a pure depth first algorithm could
generate loops. For Stmt nodes, a straight depth first processing occurs.
For Type and Decl nodes, they are replaced with an index number and only on
first visit will these nodes be processed. As an optimization, boolean
values are saved and stored together in reverse order at the end of the
byte stream to lower the ammount of data that needs to be hashed.
Compile time impact was measured at 1.5-2.0% during module building, and
negligible during builds without module building.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 293585
Just a small clean up noticed when doing post-commit review of Duncan's
previous change for ModuleFile memory ownership semantics. NFC.
llvm-svn: 293556
First pass at generating weak definitions of inline functions from module files
(& skipping (-O0) or emitting available_externally (optimizations)
definitions where those modules are used).
External functions defined in modules are emitted into the modular
object file as well (this may turn an existing ODR violation (if that
module were imported into multiple translations) into valid/linkable
code).
Internal symbols (static functions, for example) are not correctly
supported yet. The symbol will be produced, internal, in the modular
object - unreferenceable from the users.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28845
llvm-svn: 293456
Zero-initialize ModuleFile members directly in the class definition, and
move the (now uninteresting) constructor into the class definition.
There were a few members that weren't being initialized at all. I
zero-initialized them for consistency, but it's likely that they were
somehow initialized before their first use; i.e., there's likely no
functionality change here.
llvm-svn: 293404
ModuleManager::removeModules always deletes a tail of the
ModuleManager::Chain. Change the API to enforce that so that we can
simplify the code inside.
There's no real functionality change, although there's a slight
performance hack to loop to the First deleted module instead of the
final module in the chain (skipping the about-to-be-deleted tail).
Also document something suspicious: we fail to clean deleted modules out
of ModuleFile::Imports.
llvm-svn: 293398
Hide the pointer indirection in ModuleManager::begin, ModuleManager::end,
ModuleManager::rbegin, and ModuleManager::rend. Besides tidying up the call
sites, this is preparation for making ownership of ModuleFile explicit.
llvm-svn: 293394
This patch changes how we handle argument-dependent `diagnose_if`
attributes. In particular, we now check them in the same place that we
check for things like passing NULL to Nonnull args, etc. This is
basically better in every way than how we were handling them before. :)
This fixes PR31638, PR31639, and PR31640.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28889
llvm-svn: 293360
Both on Mac and Windows, it's common to have a 'Users' directory in the
root of the filesystem, so one might specify a filename as
'/Users/me/myfile.c'. clang-cl (as well as MSVC's cl.exe) will interpret
that as invoking the '/U' option, which is probably not what the user
wanted. Add a warning about this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29198
llvm-svn: 293305
This change adds a new type node, DeducedTemplateSpecializationType, to
represent a type template name that has been used as a type. This is modeled
around AutoType, and shares a common base class for representing a deduced
placeholder type.
We allow deduced class template types in a few more places than the standard
does: in conditions and for-range-declarators, and in new-type-ids. This is
consistent with GCC and with discussion on the core reflector. This patch
does not yet support deduced class template types being named in typename
specifiers.
llvm-svn: 293207
Turning on the warning by default helps the users as it's a common
mistake to capture out-parameters in a block without ensuring the object
assigned doesn't get released.
rdar://problem/30200058
llvm-svn: 293199
Rather than storing a single flat list of SourceLocations where the diagnostic
state changes (in source order), we now store a separate list for each FileID
in which there is a diagnostic state transition. (State for other files is
built and cached lazily, on demand.) This has two consequences:
1) We can now sensibly support modules, and properly track the diagnostic state
for modular headers (this matters when, for instance, triggering instantiation
of a template defined within a module triggers diagnostics).
2) It's much faster than the old approach, since we can now just do a binary
search on the offsets within the FileID rather than needing to call
isBeforeInTranslationUnit to determine source order (which is surprisingly
slow). For some pathological (but real world) files, this reduces total
compilation time by more than 10%.
For now, the diagnostic state points for modules are loaded eagerly. It seems
feasible to defer this until diagnostic state information for one of the
module's files is needed, but that's not part of this patch.
llvm-svn: 293123
Summary:
Now when you ask clang to link in a bitcode module, you can tell it to
set attributes on that module's functions to match what we would have
set if we'd emitted those functions ourselves.
This is particularly important for fast-math attributes in CUDA
compilations.
Each CUDA compilation links in libdevice, a bitcode library provided by
nvidia as part of the CUDA distribution. Without this patch, if we have
a user-function F that is compiled with -ffast-math that calls a
function G from libdevice, F will have the unsafe-fp-math=true (etc.)
attributes, but G will have no attributes.
Since F calls G, the inliner will merge G's attributes into F's. It
considers the lack of an unsafe-fp-math=true attribute on G to be
tantamount to unsafe-fp-math=false, so it "merges" these by setting
unsafe-fp-math=false on F.
This then continues up the call graph, until every function that
(transitively) calls something in libdevice gets unsafe-fp-math=false
set, thus disabling fastmath in almost all CUDA code.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: hfinkel, llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28538
llvm-svn: 293097
Prior to OpenCL 2.0, image3d_t can only be used with the write_only
access qualifier when the cl_khr_3d_image_writes extension is enabled,
see e.g. OpenCL 1.1 s6.8b.
Require the extension for write_only image3d_t types and guard uses of
write_only image3d_t in the OpenCL header.
Patch by Sven van Haastregt!
Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28860
llvm-svn: 293050
The thread_limit-clause on the combined directive applies to the
'teams' region of this construct. We modify the ThreadLimitClause
class to capture the clause expression within the 'target' region.
Reviewers: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29087
llvm-svn: 293049
The num_teams-clause on the combined directive applies to the
'teams' region of this construct. We modify the NumTeamsClause
class to capture the clause expression within the 'target' region.
Reviewers: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29085
llvm-svn: 293048
This reverts commit r293004 because it broke the buildbots with "unknown CPU"
errors. I tried to fix it in r293026, but that broke on Green Dragon with this
kind of error:
error: expected string not found in input
// CHECK: l{{ +}}df{{ +}}*ABS*{{ +}}{{0+}}{{.+}}preprocessed-input.c{{$}}
^
<stdin>:2:1: note: scanning from here
/Users/buildslave/jenkins/sharedspace/incremental@2/clang-build/tools/clang/test/Frontend/Output/preprocessed-input.c.tmp.o: file format Mach-O 64-bit x86-64
^
<stdin>:2:67: note: possible intended match here
/Users/buildslave/jenkins/sharedspace/incremental@2/clang-build/tools/clang/test/Frontend/Output/preprocessed-input.c.tmp.o: file format Mach-O 64-bit x86-64
I suppose this means that llvm-objdump doesn't support Mach-O, so the test
should indeed check for linux (but not for x86). I'll leave it to someone that
knows better.
llvm-svn: 293032
Summary:
Clang appears to always use name as specified on the command
line, whereas gcc uses the name as specified in the linemarker at the
first line when compiling a preprocessed source. This results mismatch
between two compilers in FILE symbol table entry. This patch makes clang
to resemble gcc's behavior in finding the original source file name and
use it as an input file name.
Even with this patch, values of FILE symbol table entry may still be
different because clang uses dirname+basename for the entry whlie gcc
uses basename only. I'll write a patch for that once this patch is
committed.
Reviewers: dblaikie, inglorion
Reviewed By: inglorion
Subscribers: inglorion, aprantl, bruno
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28796
llvm-svn: 293004
The num_threads-clause on the combined directive applies to the
'parallel' region of this construct. We modify the NumThreadsClause
class to capture the clause expression within the 'target' region.
The offload runtime call for 'target parallel' is changed to
__tgt_target_teams() with 1 team and the number of threads set by
this clause or a default if none.
Reviewers: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29082
llvm-svn: 292997
Summary: These accessors maps directly to the command line option.
Reviewers: steven_wu
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29065
llvm-svn: 292960
Summary:
This patch changes TableGen-generated code in AttrPCHRead to call functions on
ASTRecordReader, instead of passing separate parameters to ASTReader. This is a
follow-up to r290217.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28007
llvm-svn: 292868
Summary: With the introduction of LK_ObjC, the comment line for LK_Cpp became obsolete.
Reviewers: djasper
Reviewed By: djasper
Subscribers: cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29033
llvm-svn: 292796
* Support template partial specialization
* Avoid infinite recursion in IsStructurallyEquivalent for TemplateArgument with implementing IsStructurallyEquivalent for TemplateName
llvm-svn: 292776
Summary:
Specifically, we upgrade llvm.nvvm.:
* brev{32,64}
* clz.{i,ll}
* popc.{i,ll}
* abs.{i,ll}
* {min,max}.{i,ll,u,ull}
* h2f
These either map directly to an existing LLVM target-generic
intrinsic or map to a simple LLVM target-generic idiom.
In all cases, we check that the code we generate is lowered to PTX as we
expect.
These builtins don't need to be backfilled in clang: They're not
accessible to user code from nvcc.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: majnemer, cfe-commits, llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28793
llvm-svn: 292694
by providing a memchr builtin that returns char* instead of void*.
Also add a __has_feature flag to indicate the presence of constexpr forms of
the relevant <string> functions.
llvm-svn: 292555
Under this defect resolution, the injected-class-name of a class or class
template cannot be used except in very limited circumstances (when declaring a
constructor, in a nested-name-specifier, in a base-specifier, or in an
elaborated-type-specifier). This is apparently done to make parsing easier, but
it's a pain for us since we don't know whether a template-id using the
injected-class-name is valid at the point when we annotate it (we don't yet
know whether the template-id will become part of an elaborated-type-specifier).
As a tentative resolution to a perceived language defect, mem-initializer-ids
are added to the list of exceptions here (they generally follow the same rules
as base-specifiers).
When the reference to the injected-class-name uses the 'typename' or 'template'
keywords, we permit it to be used to name a type or template as an extension;
other compilers also accept some cases in this area. There are also a couple of
corner cases with dependent template names that we do not yet diagnose, but
which will also get this treatment.
llvm-svn: 292518
Summary:
The warning doesn't know why the variable was looked up but not
odr-used, so reword it to not claim that it was used in an unevaluated
context.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28902
llvm-svn: 292498
Summary:
SamplePGO uses profile with debug info to collect profile. Unlike the traditional debugging purpose, sample pgo needs more accurate debug info to represent the profile. We add -femit-accurate-debug-info for this purpose. It can be combined with all debugging modes (-g, -gmlt, etc). It makes sure that the following pieces of info is always emitted:
* start line of all subprograms
* linkage name of all subprograms
* standalone subprograms (functions that has neither inlined nor been inlined)
The impact on speccpu2006 binary size (size increase comparing with -g0 binary, also includes data for -g binary, which does not change with this patch):
-gmlt(orig) -gmlt(patched) -g
433.milc 4.68% 5.40% 19.73%
444.namd 8.45% 8.93% 45.99%
447.dealII 97.43% 115.21% 374.89%
450.soplex 27.75% 31.88% 126.04%
453.povray 21.81% 26.16% 92.03%
470.lbm 0.60% 0.67% 1.96%
482.sphinx3 5.77% 6.47% 26.17%
400.perlbench 17.81% 19.43% 73.08%
401.bzip2 3.73% 3.92% 12.18%
403.gcc 31.75% 34.48% 122.75%
429.mcf 0.78% 0.88% 3.89%
445.gobmk 6.08% 7.92% 42.27%
456.hmmer 10.36% 11.25% 35.23%
458.sjeng 5.08% 5.42% 14.36%
462.libquantum 1.71% 1.96% 6.36%
464.h264ref 15.61% 16.56% 43.92%
471.omnetpp 11.93% 15.84% 60.09%
473.astar 3.11% 3.69% 14.18%
483.xalancbmk 56.29% 81.63% 353.22%
geomean 15.60% 18.30% 57.81%
Debug info size change for -gmlt binary with this patch:
433.milc 13.46%
444.namd 5.35%
447.dealII 18.21%
450.soplex 14.68%
453.povray 19.65%
470.lbm 6.03%
482.sphinx3 11.21%
400.perlbench 8.91%
401.bzip2 4.41%
403.gcc 8.56%
429.mcf 8.24%
445.gobmk 29.47%
456.hmmer 8.19%
458.sjeng 6.05%
462.libquantum 11.23%
464.h264ref 5.93%
471.omnetpp 31.89%
473.astar 16.20%
483.xalancbmk 44.62%
geomean 16.83%
Reviewers: davidxl, andreadb, rob.lougher, dblaikie, echristo
Reviewed By: dblaikie, echristo
Subscribers: hfinkel, rob.lougher, andreadb, gbedwell, cfe-commits, probinson, llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25435
llvm-svn: 292458
In ThinLTO mode, type metadata will require the module to be written as a
multi-module bitcode file, which is currently incompatible with the Darwin
linker. It is also useful to be able to enable or disable multi-module bitcode
for testing purposes. This introduces a cc1-level flag, -f{,no-}lto-unit,
which is used by the driver to enable multi-module bitcode on all but
Darwin+ThinLTO, and can also be used to enable/disable the feature manually.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28877
llvm-svn: 292448
The if-clause on the combined directive potentially applies to both the
'target' and the 'parallel' regions. Codegen'ing the if-clause on the
combined directive requires additional support because the expression in
the clause must be captured by the 'target' capture statement but not
the 'parallel' capture statement. Note that this situation arises for
other clauses such as num_threads.
The OMPIfClause class inherits OMPClauseWithPreInit to support capturing
of expressions in the clause. A member CaptureRegion is added to
OMPClauseWithPreInit to indicate which captured statement (in this case
'target' but not 'parallel') captures these expressions.
To ensure correct codegen of captured expressions in the presence of
combined 'target' directives, OMPParallelScope was added to 'parallel'
codegen.
Reviewers: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28781
llvm-svn: 292437
Summary:
Add a callback from ASTReader to DeserializationListener when the former
reads an IMPORTED_MODULES block. This supports Swift in using PCH for
bridging headers.
Reviewers: doug.gregor, manmanren, bruno
Reviewed By: manmanren
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28779
llvm-svn: 292436
This rule permits the injected-class-name of a class template to be used as
both a template type argument and a template template argument, with no extra
syntax required to disambiguate.
llvm-svn: 292426
This patch adds support for codegen of 'target parallel' on the host.
It is also the first combined directive that requires two or more
captured statements. Support for this functionality is included in
the patch.
A combined directive such as 'target parallel' has two captured
statements, one for the 'target' and the other for the 'parallel'
region. Two captured statements are required because each has
different implicit parameters (see SemaOpenMP.cpp). For example,
the 'parallel' has 'global_tid' and 'bound_tid' while the 'target'
does not. The patch adds support for handling multiple captured
statements based on the combined directive.
When codegen'ing the 'target parallel' directive, the 'target'
outlined function is created using the outer captured statement
and the 'parallel' outlined function is created using the inner
captured statement.
Reviewers: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28753
llvm-svn: 292419
This is just wasted space, we don't support state points from multiple
source managers. Validate that there's no state when resetting the
source manager and use the 'global' reference to the sourcemanager
instead of the ones in the diag state.
llvm-svn: 292402
The idea for this originated from a really tricky bug: ISRs on ARM don't
automatically save off the VFP regs, so if say, memcpy gets interrupted and the
ISR itself calls memcpy, the regs are left clobbered when the ISR is done.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D28820
llvm-svn: 292375
This patch adds support for codegen of 'target parallel' on the host.
It is also the first combined directive that requires two or more
captured statements. Support for this functionality is included in
the patch.
A combined directive such as 'target parallel' has two captured
statements, one for the 'target' and the other for the 'parallel'
region. Two captured statements are required because each has
different implicit parameters (see SemaOpenMP.cpp). For example,
the 'parallel' has 'global_tid' and 'bound_tid' while the 'target'
does not. The patch adds support for handling multiple captured
statements based on the combined directive.
When codegen'ing the 'target parallel' directive, the 'target'
outlined function is created using the outer captured statement
and the 'parallel' outlined function is created using the inner
captured statement.
Reviewers: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28753
llvm-svn: 292374
Using the canonical type instead of the equivalent type can result in
insufficient template instantiations.
This fixes PR31656.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28788
llvm-svn: 292194
Change the contract of GetStyle so that it returns an error when an error occurs
(i.e. when it writes to stderr), and only returns the fallback style when it
can't find a configuration file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28081
llvm-svn: 292174
Summary: In order for libc++ to meaningfully use `diagnose_if` warnings they need to be emitted from system headers by default. This patch changes the `diagnose_if` warning diagnostic to be shown in system headers.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv, rsmith, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28703
llvm-svn: 291963
Summary:
Warn when a lambda explicitly captures something that is not used in its body.
The warning is part of -Wunused and can be enabled with -Wunused-lambda-capture.
Reviewers: rsmith, arphaman, jbcoe, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: Quuxplusone, arphaman, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28467
llvm-svn: 291905
Diasllow a declaration using the 'auto' type specifier from using two different
meanings of it at once, or from declaring multiple functions with deduced
return types or introducing multiple trailing return types.
The standard does not technically disallow the multiple trailing return types
case if all the declarators declare variables (such as function pointers with
trailing return types), but we disallow that too, following the clear intent.
llvm-svn: 291880
This patch adds LocationContext to checkRegionChanges and removes
wantsRegionChangeUpdate as it was unused.
A patch by Krzysztof Wiśniewski!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27090
llvm-svn: 291869
This time, make ignored options, such as /utf-8, show up as well if they
have help text.
Also, since we're now exposing -fdelayed-template-parsing, add help text
to the -fno version so that shows up as well.
llvm-svn: 291798
Summary:
We do not currently track the source locations for exception specifications such
that their source range can be queried through the AST. This leads to trying to
write more complex code to determine the source range for uses like FixItHints
(see D18575 for an example). In addition to use within tools like clang-tidy, I
think this information may become more important to track as exception
specifications become more integrated into the type system.
Patch by Don Hinton.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: malcolm.parsons, sbarzowski, alexfh, hintonda, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20428
llvm-svn: 291771
Fixes a crash in modules where the template class decl becomes the most recent
decl in the redeclaration chain and forcing the template instantiator try to
instantiate the friend declaration, rather than the template definition.
In practice, A::list<int> produces a TemplateSpecializationType
A::__1::list<int, allocator<type-parameter-0-0> >' failing to replace to
subsitute the default argument to allocator<int>.
Kudos Richard Smith (D28399).
llvm-svn: 291753
This flag serves no purpose other than to prevent us walking through a type to
check whether it contains an 'auto' specifier; this duplication of information
is error-prone, does not appear to provide any performance benefit, and will
become less practical once we support C++1z deduced class template types and
eventually constrained types from the Concepts TS.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 291737
filter out the implicilty imported modules at CodeGen instead of removing the
implicit ImportDecl when an implementation TU of a module imports a header of
that same module.
llvm-svn: 291688
Textual headers and builtins that are #import'd from different
modules should get re-entered when these modules are independent
from each other.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26267
rdar://problem/25881934
llvm-svn: 291644
This patch is to implement sema and parsing for 'target teams distribute simd’ pragma.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28252
llvm-svn: 291579
This commit ensures that clang avoids the redundant -Wshadow warning for
variables that already get a "redefinition of " error.
rdar://29067894
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28350
llvm-svn: 291564
This patch is to add support of the 'is_device_ptr' clause with the 'target parallel for' pragma.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28255
llvm-svn: 291540
This patch is to add support of the 'is_device_ptr' clause with the 'target parallel for simd' pragma.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28402
llvm-svn: 291537
In r276159, we started to say that a module X is defined in a pch if we specify
-fmodule-name when building the pch. This caused a regression that reports
module X is defined in both pch and pcm if we generate the pch with
-fmodule-name=X and then in a separate clang invocation, we include the pch and
also import X.pcm.
This patch adds an option CompilingPCH similar to CompilingModule. When we use
-fmodule-name=X while building a pch, modular headers in X will be textually
included and the compiler knows that we are not building module X, so we don't
put module X in SUBMODULE_DEFINITION of the pch.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D28415
llvm-svn: 291465
Check for implicit conversion sequences for non-dependent function
template parameters between deduction and substitution. The idea is to accept
as many cases as possible, on the basis that substitution failure outside the
immediate context is much more common during substitution than during implicit
conversion sequence formation.
This re-commits r290808, reverted in r290811 and r291412, with a couple of
fixes for handling of explicitly-specified non-trailing template argument
packs.
llvm-svn: 291427
`diagnose_if` can be used to have clang emit either warnings or errors
for function calls that meet user-specified conditions. For example:
```
constexpr int foo(int a)
__attribute__((diagnose_if(a > 10, "configurations with a > 10 are "
"expensive.", "warning")));
int f1 = foo(9);
int f2 = foo(10); // warning: configuration with a > 10 are expensive.
int f3 = foo(f2);
```
It currently only emits diagnostics in cases where the condition is
guaranteed to always be true. So, the following code will emit no
warnings:
```
constexpr int bar(int a) {
foo(a);
return 0;
}
constexpr int i = bar(10);
```
We hope to support optionally emitting diagnostics for cases like that
(and emitting runtime checks) in the future.
Release notes will appear shortly. :)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27424
llvm-svn: 291418
Check for implicit conversion sequences for non-dependent function
template parameters between deduction and substitution. The idea is to accept
as many cases as possible, on the basis that substitution failure outside the
immediate context is much more common during substitution than during implicit
conversion sequence formation.
This re-commits r290808, reverted in r290811, with a fix for handling of
explicitly-specified template argument packs.
llvm-svn: 291410
The rule we use is that a construction of a class type T from an argument of
type U cannot use an inherited constructor if U is the same as T or is derived
from T (or if the initialization would first convert it to such a type). This
(approximately) matches the rule in use by GCC, and matches the current proposed
DR resolution.
llvm-svn: 291403
This implements something like the current direction of DR1581: we use a narrow
syntactic check to determine the set of places where a constant expression
could be evaluated, and only instantiate a constexpr function or variable if
it's referenced in one of those contexts, or is odr-used.
It's not yet clear whether this is the right set of syntactic locations; we
currently consider all contexts within templates that would result in odr-uses
after instantiation, and contexts within list-initialization (narrowing
conversions take another victim...), as requiring instantiation. We could in
principle restrict the former cases more (only const integral / reference
variable initializers, and contexts in which a constant expression is required,
perhaps). However, this is sufficient to allow us to accept libstdc++ code,
which relies on GCC's behavior (which appears to be somewhat similar to this
approach).
llvm-svn: 291318
dependent context and can't be used in a constant expression.
Per C++ [temp.inst]p2, "the instantiation of a static data member does not
occur unless the static data member is used in a way that requires the
definition to exist".
This doesn't /quite/ match that, as we still instantiate static data members
that are usable in constant expressions even if the use doesn't require a
definition. A followup patch will fix that for both variables and functions.
llvm-svn: 291295
Aleksey Shlypanikov pointed out my mistake in migrating an explicit
unique_ptr to auto - I was expecting the function returned a unique_ptr,
but instead it returned a raw pointer - introducing a leak.
Thanks Aleksey!
This reapplies r291184, reverted in r291249.
llvm-svn: 291270
Add builtins for the functions and custom codegen mapping the builtins to their
corresponding intrinsics and handling the endian related swapping.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D26546
llvm-svn: 291179
Summary: CUDA attributes are spelled __declspec(__foo__) on Windows.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: cfe-commits, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28321
llvm-svn: 291134
Summary:
For the most part this is straightforward: Just add a CudaInstallation
object to the MSVC and MinGW toolchains.
CudaToolChain has to override computeMSVCVersion so that
Clang::constructJob passes the right version flag to cc1. We have to
modify IsWindowsMSVC and friends in Clang::constructJob to be true when
compiling CUDA device code on Windows for the same reason.
Depends on: D28319
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28320
llvm-svn: 291131
inline assembly may use the `.include` directive to include other
content into the file. Without the integrated assembler, the `-I` group
gets passed to the assembler. Emulate this by collecting the header
search paths and passing them to the IAS.
Resolves PR24811!
llvm-svn: 291123
Looks like these functions exist just to prevent bad implicit
conversions. Rather than waiting for the linker to complain about
undefined references to them, we can mark them as deleted.
llvm-svn: 291058
The one use of CheckerManager (AnalysisConsumer, calling
createCheckerManager) keeps a strong reference to the AnalysisOptions
anyway, so this ownership wasn't necessary.
(I'm not even sure AnalysisOptions needs ref counting at all - but
that's more involved)
llvm-svn: 291017
Previously, if an overloaded function in a braced-init-list was encountered in
template argument deduction, and the overload set couldn't be resolved to a
particular function, we'd immediately produce a deduction failure. That's not
correct; this situation is supposed to result in that particular P/A pair being
treated as a non-deduced context, and deduction can still succeed if the type
can be deduced from elsewhere.
llvm-svn: 291014
Summary:
This change adds support for the -fno-delayed-template-parsing option in
clang-cl.exe. This allows developers using clang-cl.exe to opt out of
emulation of MSVC's non-conformant template instantiation implementation
while continuing to use clang-cl.exe for its emulation of cl.exe
command-line options. The default behavior of clang-cl.exe
(-fdelayed-template-parsing) is unchanged.
The MSVC Standard Library implementation uses clang-cl.exe with this
switch in its tests to ensure that the library headers work on compilers
with the conformant two-phase-lookup behavior.
Reviewers: majnemer, cfe-commits, DaveBartolomeo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22275
llvm-svn: 290990
in non-void functions that fall off at the end without returning a value when
compiling C++.
Clang uses the new compiler flag to determine when it should treat control flow
paths that fall off the end of a non-void function as unreachable. If
-fno-strict-return is on, the code generator emits the ureachable and trap
IR only when the function returns either a record type with a non-trivial
destructor or another non-trivially copyable type.
The primary goal of this flag is to avoid treating falling off the end of a
non-void function as undefined behaviour. The burden of undefined behaviour
is placed on the caller instead: if the caller ignores the returned value then
the undefined behaviour is avoided. This kind of behaviour is useful in
several cases, e.g. when compiling C code in C++ mode.
rdar://13102603
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27163
llvm-svn: 290960
When a parameter pack has multiple corresponding arguments, and some subset of
them are overloaded functions, it's possible that some subset of the parameters
are non-deduced contexts. In such a case, keep deducing from the remainder of
the arguments, and resolve the incomplete pack against whatever other
deductions we've performed for the pack.
GCC, MSVC, and ICC give three different bad behaviors for this case; what we do
now (and what we did before) don't exactly match any of them, sadly :( I'm
getting a core issue opened to specify more precisely how this should be
handled.
llvm-svn: 290923
Add a field indicating the associated check for every replacement to the YAML
report generated with the '-export-fixes' option. Update
clang-apply-replacements to handle the new format.
Patch by Alpha Abdoulaye!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26137
llvm-svn: 290892
This patch is to implement sema and parsing for 'target teams distribute parallel for simd’ pragma.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28202
llvm-svn: 290862
This reverts commit r290808, as it broken all ARM and AArch64 test-suite
test: MultiSource/UnitTests/C++11/frame_layout
Also, please, next time, try to write a commit message in according to
our guidelines:
http://llvm.org/docs/DeveloperPolicy.html#commit-messages
llvm-svn: 290811
template parameters between deduction and substitution. The idea is to accept
as many cases as possible, on the basis that substitution failure outside
the immediate context is much more common during substitution than during
implicit conversion sequence formation.
This does not implement the partial ordering portion of DR1391, which so
far appears to be misguided.
llvm-svn: 290808
to be specified for a template template parameter whenever the parameter is at
least as specialized as the argument (when there's an obvious and correct
mapping from uses of the parameter to uses of the argument). For example, a
template with more parameters can be passed to a template template parameter
with fewer, if those trailing parameters have default arguments.
This is disabled by default, despite being a DR resolution, as it's fairly
broken in its current state: there are no partial ordering rules to cope with
template template parameters that have different parameter lists, meaning that
code that attempts to decompose template-ids based on arity can hit unavoidable
ambiguity issues.
The diagnostics produced on a non-matching argument are also pretty bad right
now, but I aim to improve them in a subsequent commit.
llvm-svn: 290792
This patch is to implement sema and parsing for 'target teams distribute parallel for’ pragma.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28160
llvm-svn: 290725
Summary:
This class is unnecessary.
Its comment indicated that it was a compile error to allocate an
instance of a class that inherits from RefCountedBaseVPTR on the stack.
This may have been true at one point, but it's not today.
Moreover you really do not want to allocate *any* refcounted object on
the stack, vptrs or not, so if we did have a way to prevent these
objects from being stack-allocated, we'd want to apply it to regular
RefCountedBase too, obviating the need for a separate RefCountedBaseVPTR
class.
It seems that the main way RefCountedBaseVPTR provides safety is by
making its subclass's destructor virtual. This may have been helpful at
one point, but these days clang will emit an error if you define a class
with virtual functions that inherits from RefCountedBase but doesn't
have a virtual destructor.
Reviewers: compnerd, dblaikie
Subscribers: cfe-commits, klimek, llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28162
llvm-svn: 290717
to make reference to template parameters. This is only a partial
implementation; we retain the restriction that the argument must not be
type-dependent, since it's unclear how that would work given the existence of
other language rules requiring an exact type match in this context, even for
type-dependent cases (a question has been raised on the core reflector).
llvm-svn: 290647
specialized than the primary template. (Put another way, if we imagine there
were a partial specialization matching the primary template, we should never
select it if some other partial specialization also matches.)
llvm-svn: 290593
According to extended asm syntax, a case where the clobber list includes a variable from the inputs or outputs should be an error - conflict.
for example:
const long double a = 0.0;
int main()
{
char b;
double t1 = a;
__asm__ ("fucompp": "=a" (b) : "u" (t1), "t" (t1) : "cc", "st", "st(1)");
return 0;
}
This should conflict with the output - t1 which is st, and st which is st aswell.
The patch fixes it.
Commit on behald of Ziv Izhar.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D15075
llvm-svn: 290539
non-type template parameters.
During partial ordering, when checking the substituted deduced template
arguments match the original, check the types of non-type template arguments
match even if they're dependent. The only way we get dependent types here is if
they really represent types of the other template (which are supposed to be
modeled as being substituted for unique, non-dependent types).
In order to make this work for auto-typed non-type template arguments, we need
to be able to perform auto deduction even when the initializer and
(potentially) the auto type are dependent, support for which is the bulk of
this patch. (Note that this requires the ability to deduce only a single level
of a multi-level dependent type.)
llvm-svn: 290511
This patch is to implement sema and parsing for 'target teams distribute' pragma.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28015
llvm-svn: 290508
Summary:
I needed to know whether a FieldDecl had an in-class
initializer for D26453. I used a narrowing matcher there, but a
traversal matcher might be generally useful.
Reviewers: sbenza, bkramer, klimek, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: aaron.ballman, Prazek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28034
llvm-svn: 290492
template arguments as written rather than the canonical template arguments,
so we print more user-friendly names for template parameters.
llvm-svn: 290483
manager, and a code path to use it.
The option is actually a top-level option but does contain
'experimental' in the name. This is the compromise suggested by Richard
in discussions. We expect this option will be around long enough and
have enough users towards the end that it merits not being relegated to
CC1, but it still needs to be clear that this option will go away at
some point.
The backend code is a fresh codepath dedicated to handling the flow with
the new pass manager. This was also Richard's suggested code structuring
to essentially leave a clean path for development rather than carrying
complexity or idiosyncracies of how we do things just to share code with
the parts of this in common with the legacy pass manager. And it turns
out, not much is really in common even though we use the legacy pass
manager for codegen at this point.
I've switched a couple of tests to run with the new pass manager, and
they appear to work. There are still plenty of bugs that need squashing
(just with basic experiments I've found two already!) but they aren't in
this code, and the whole point is to expose the necessary hooks to start
experimenting with the pass manager in more realistic scenarios.
That said, I want to *strongly caution* anyone itching to play with
this: it is still *very shaky*. Several large components have not yet
been shaken down. For example I have bugs in both the always inliner and
inliner that I have already spotted and will be fixing independently.
Still, this is a fun milestone. =D
One thing not in this patch (but that might be very reasonable to add)
is some level of support for raw textual pass pipelines such as what
Sean had a patch for some time ago. I'm mostly interested in the more
traditional flow of getting the IR out of Clang and then running it
through opt, but I can see other use cases so someone may want to add
it.
And of course, *many* features are not yet supported!
- O1 is currently more like O2
- None of the sanitizers are wired up
- ObjC ARC optimizer isn't wired up
- ...
So plenty of stuff still lef to do!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28077
llvm-svn: 290450
diagnostics and fix one such diagnostic.
Sadly, this assert doesn't catch this bug because we have no tests that
emit this diagnostic! Doh! I'm following up on the commit that
introduces it to get that fixed. Then this assert will help in a more
direct way.
llvm-svn: 290417
fail the merge if the arguments have different types (except if one of them was
deduced from an array bound, in which case take the type from the other).
This is correct because (except in the array bound case) the type of the
template argument in each deduction must match the type of the parameter, so at
least one of the two deduced arguments must have a mismatched type.
This is necessary because we would otherwise lose the type information for the
discarded template argument in the merge, and fail to diagnose the mismatch.
In order to power this, we now properly retain the type of a deduced non-type
template argument deduced from a declaration, rather than giving it the type of
the template parameter; we'll convert it to the template parameter type when
checking the deduced arguments.
llvm-svn: 290399
-fno-inline-functions, -O0, and optnone.
These were really, really tangled together:
- We used the noinline LLVM attribute for -fno-inline
- But not for -fno-inline-functions (breaking LTO)
- But we did use it for -finline-hint-functions (yay, LTO is happy!)
- But we didn't for -O0 (LTO is sad yet again...)
- We had weird structuring of CodeGenOpts with both an inlining
enumeration and a boolean. They interacted in weird ways and
needlessly.
- A *lot* of set smashing went on with setting these, and then got worse
when we considered optnone and other inlining-effecting attributes.
- A bunch of inline affecting attributes were managed in a completely
different place from -fno-inline.
- Even with -fno-inline we failed to put the LLVM noinline attribute
onto many generated function definitions because they didn't show up
as AST-level functions.
- If you passed -O0 but -finline-functions we would run the normal
inliner pass in LLVM despite it being in the O0 pipeline, which really
doesn't make much sense.
- Lastly, we used things like '-fno-inline' to manipulate the pass
pipeline which forced the pass pipeline to be much more
parameterizable than it really needs to be. Instead we can *just* use
the optimization level to select a pipeline and control the rest via
attributes.
Sadly, this causes a bunch of churn in tests because we don't run the
optimizer in the tests and check the contents of attribute sets. It
would be awesome if attribute sets were a bit more FileCheck friendly,
but oh well.
I think this is a significant improvement and should remove the semantic
need to change what inliner pass we run in order to comply with the
requested inlining semantics by relying completely on attributes. It
also cleans up tho optnone and related handling a bit.
One unfortunate aspect of this is that for generating alwaysinline
routines like those in OpenMP we end up removing noinline and then
adding alwaysinline. I tried a bunch of other approaches, but because we
recompute function attributes from scratch and don't have a declaration
here I couldn't find anything substantially cleaner than this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28053
llvm-svn: 290398
Much to my surprise, '-disable-llvm-optzns' which I thought was the
magical flag I wanted to get at the raw LLVM IR coming out of Clang
deosn't do that. It still runs some passes over the IR. I don't want
that, I really want the *raw* IR coming out of Clang and I strongly
suspect everyone else using it is in the same camp.
There is actually a flag that does what I want that I didn't know about
called '-disable-llvm-passes'. I suspect many others don't know about it
either. It both does what I want and is much simpler.
This removes the confusing version and makes that spelling of the flag
an alias for '-disable-llvm-passes'. I've also moved everything in Clang
to use the 'passes' spelling as it seems both more accurate (*all* LLVM
passes are disabled, not just optimizations) and much easier to remember
and spell correctly.
This is part of simplifying how Clang drives LLVM to make it cleaner to
wire up to the new pass manager.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28047
llvm-svn: 290392
I don't remember why I didn't make alloc_size only applicable to
Functions a year ago, but I can't see any compelling reason not to do
so now.
Fixes PR31453.
llvm-svn: 290353
Merge all VFS mapped files inside -ivfsoverlay inputs into the vfs
overlay provided by the crash reproducer. This is the last missing piece
to allow crash reproducers to fully work with user frameworks; when
combined with headermaps, it allows clang to find additional frameworks.
rdar://problem/27913709
llvm-svn: 290326
Print the fully qualified names for the overload candidates. This makes
it easier to tell what the ambiguity is. Especially if a template
is instantiated after a using namespace, it will not inherit the
namespace where it was declared. The specialization will give a message
about a partial order being ambiguous for the same (unqualified) name,
which does not help identify the failure.
Addresses PR31450!
llvm-svn: 290315
This is a recommit of r290149, which was reverted in r290169 due to msan
failures. msan was failing because we were calling
`isMostDerivedAnUnsizedArray` on an invalid designator, which caused us
to read uninitialized memory. To fix this, the logic of the caller of
said function was simplified, and we now have a `!Invalid` assert in
`isMostDerivedAnUnsizedArray`, so we can catch this particular bug more
easily in the future.
Fingers crossed that this patch sticks this time. :)
Original commit message:
This patch does three things:
- Gives us the alloc_size attribute in clang, which lets us infer the
number of bytes handed back to us by malloc/realloc/calloc/any user
functions that act in a similar manner.
- Teaches our constexpr evaluator that evaluating some `const` variables
is OK sometimes. This is why we have a change in
test/SemaCXX/constant-expression-cxx11.cpp and other seemingly
unrelated tests. Richard Smith okay'ed this idea some time ago in
person.
- Uniques some Blocks in CodeGen, which was reviewed separately at
D26410. Lack of uniquing only really shows up as a problem when
combined with our new eagerness in the face of const.
llvm-svn: 290297
argument even if the expression is value-dependent (we need to suppress the
final portion of the narrowing check, but the rest of the checking can still be
done eagerly).
This affects template template argument validity and partial ordering under
p0522r0.
llvm-svn: 290276
Summary:
This follows up to r290217, and makes functions on ASTRecordReader consistent
and valid style.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28008
llvm-svn: 290236
Summary:
The module system supports accompanying a primary module (say Foo) with
an auxiliary "private" module (defined in an adjacent module.private.modulemap
file) that augments the primary module when associated private headers are
available. The feature is intended to be used to augment the primary
module with a submodule (say Foo.Private), however some users in the wild
are choosing to augment the primary module with an additional top-level module
with a "similar" name (in all cases so far: FooPrivate).
This "works" when a user of the module initially imports a private header,
such as '#import "Foo/something_private.h"' since the Foo import winds up
importing FooPrivate in passing. But if the import is subsequently recorded
in a PCH file, reloading the PCH will fail to validate because of a cross-check
that attempts to find the module.modulemap (or module.private.modulemap) using
HeaderSearch algorithm, applied to the "FooPrivate" name. Since it's stored in
Foo.framework/Modules, not FooPrivate.framework/Modules, the check fails and
the PCH is rejected.
This patch adds a compensatory workaround in the HeaderSearch algorithm
when searching (and failing to find) a module of the form FooPrivate: the
name used to derive filesystem paths is decoupled from the module name
being searched for, and if the initial search fails and the module is
named "FooPrivate", the filesystem search name is altered to remove the
"Private" suffix, and the algorithm is run a second time (still looking for
a module named FooPrivate, but looking in directories derived from Foo).
Accompanying this change is a new warning that triggers when a user loads
a module.private.modulemap that defines a top-level module with a different
name from the top-level module defined in its adjacent module.modulemap.
Reviewers: doug.gregor, manmanren, bruno
Subscribers: bruno, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27852
llvm-svn: 290219
Summary:
For ASTDeclReader and ASTStmtReader, every parameter "unsigned &Idx" ultimately
comes from a variable that is defined on the stack, next to the RecordData. This
change moves that index into the ASTRecordReader.
TypeLocReader cannot be transitioned, due to TableGen-generated code which calls
ASTReader::GetTypeSourceInfo.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27836
llvm-svn: 290217
This change introduces UsingPackDecl as a marker for the set of UsingDecls
produced by pack expansion of a single (unresolved) using declaration. This is
not strictly necessary (we just need to be able to map from the original using
declaration to its expansions somehow), but it's useful to maintain the
invariant that each declaration reference instantiates to refer to one
declaration.
This is a re-commit of r290080 (reverted in r290092) with a fix for a
use-after-lifetime bug.
llvm-svn: 290203
based coverage compilation
Added source location info to captured expression declaration + fixed
source location info for loop based directives.
llvm-svn: 290181
This reverts commit r290171. It triggers a bunch of warnings, because
the new enumerator isn't handled in all switches. We want a warning-free
build.
Replied on the commit with more details.
llvm-svn: 290173
Summary: Enabling the compression of CLK_NULL_QUEUE to variable of type queue_t.
Reviewers: Anastasia
Subscribers: cfe-commits, yaxunl, bader
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27569
llvm-svn: 290171
This commit fails MSan when running test/CodeGen/object-size.c in
a confusing way. After some discussion with George, it isn't really
clear what is going on here. We can make the MSan failure go away by
testing for the invalid bit, but *why* things are invalid isn't clear.
And yet, other code in the surrounding area is doing precisely this and
testing for invalid.
George is going to take a closer look at this to better understand the
nature of the failure and recommit it, for now backing it out to clean
up MSan builds.
llvm-svn: 290169
This patch does three things:
- Gives us the alloc_size attribute in clang, which lets us infer the
number of bytes handed back to us by malloc/realloc/calloc/any user
functions that act in a similar manner.
- Teaches our constexpr evaluator that evaluating some `const` variables
is OK sometimes. This is why we have a change in
test/SemaCXX/constant-expression-cxx11.cpp and other seemingly
unrelated tests. Richard Smith okay'ed this idea some time ago in
person.
- Uniques some Blocks in CodeGen, which was reviewed separately at
D26410. Lack of uniquing only really shows up as a problem when
combined with our new eagerness in the face of const.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D14274
llvm-svn: 290149
* In C++, never create a FunctionNoProtoType for a builtin (fixes C++1z
crasher from r289754).
* Fix type of __sync_synchronize to be a no-parameter function rather than a
varargs function. This matches GCC.
* Fix type of vfprintf to match its actual type. We gave it a wrong type due
to PR4290 (apparently autoconf generates invalid code and expects compilers
to choke it down or it miscompiles the program; the relevant error in clang
was downgraded to a warning in r122744 to fix other occurrences of this
autoconf brokenness, so we don't need this workaround any more).
* Turn off vararg argument checking for __noop, since it's not *really* a
varargs function. Alternatively we could add custom type checking for it
and synthesize parameter types matching the actual arguments in each call,
but that seemed like overkill.
llvm-svn: 290146
gtest is a widely-used unit-testing API. It provides macros for unit test
assertions:
ASSERT_TRUE(p != nullptr);
that expand into an if statement that constructs an object representing
the result of the assertion and returns when the assertion is false:
if (AssertionResult gtest_ar_ = AssertionResult(p == nullptr))
;
else
return ...;
Unfortunately, the analyzer does not model the effect of the constructor
precisely because (1) the copy constructor implementation is missing from the
the header (so it can't be inlined) and (2) the boolean-argument constructor
is constructed into a temporary (so the analyzer decides not to inline it since
it doesn't reliably call temporary destructors right now).
This results in false positives because the analyzer does not realize that the
the assertion must hold along the non-return path.
This commit addresses the false positives by explicitly modeling the effects
of the two un-inlined constructors on the AssertionResult state.
I've added a new package, "apiModeling", for these kinds of checkers that
model APIs but don't emit any diagnostics. I envision all the checkers in
this package always being on by default.
This addresses the false positives reported in PR30936.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27773
rdar://problem/22705813
llvm-svn: 290143
This is especially important for arrays, since no one knows the proper
syntax for putting qualifiers in arrays.
nullability.h:3:26: warning: array parameter is missing a nullability type specifier (_Nonnull, _Nullable, or _Null_unspecified)
void arrayParameter(int x[]);
^
nullability.h:3:26: note: insert '_Nullable' if the array parameter may be null
void arrayParameter(int x[]);
^
_Nullable
nullability.h:3:26: note: insert '_Nonnull' if the array parameter should never be null
void arrayParameter(int x[]);
^
_Nonnull
rdar://problem/29524992
llvm-svn: 290132
This change introduces UsingPackDecl as a marker for the set of UsingDecls
produced by pack expansion of a single (unresolved) using declaration. This is
not strictly necessary (we just need to be able to map from the original using
declaration to its expansions somehow), but it's useful to maintain the
invariant that each declaration reference instantiates to refer to one
declaration.
llvm-svn: 290080
* a dependent non-type using-declaration within a function template can be
valid, as it can refer to an enumerator, so don't reject it in the template
definition
* we can partially substitute into a dependent using-declaration if it appears
within a (local class in a) generic lambda within a function template, which
means an UnresolvedUsing*Decl doesn't necessarily instantiate to a UsingDecl.
llvm-svn: 290071
This patch is to add support of the 'is_device_ptr' clause in the 'target parallel' pragma.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27821
llvm-svn: 289989
Added a map to associate types and declarations with extensions.
Refactored existing diagnostic for disabled types associated with extensions and extended it to declarations for generic situation.
Fixed some bugs for types associated with extensions.
Allow users to use pragma to declare types and functions for supported extensions, e.g.
#pragma OPENCL EXTENSION the_new_extension_name : begin
// declare types and functions associated with the extension here
#pragma OPENCL EXTENSION the_new_extension_name : end
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21698
llvm-svn: 289979
When a macro expending to a literal is used in a comparison, use the macro name
in the diagnostic rather than the literal. This improves readability of path
notes.
Added tests for various macro literals that could occur. Only BOOl, Int, and
NULL tests have changed behavior with this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27726
llvm-svn: 289884
Add a new type of NonLoc SVal for C++ pointer-to-member operations. This SVal
supports both pointers to member functions and pointers to member data.
A patch by Kirill Romanenkov!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25475
llvm-svn: 289873
Summary:
When reading an ASTRecord, each RecordData is logically contained within a
single ModuleFile, and global(er) state is contained by a single ASTReader. This
means that any operations that read from a RecordData and reference an ASTReader
or a ModuleFile, will always reference the same ASTReader or ModuleFile.
ASTRecordReader groups these together so that parameters don't need to be
duplicated ad infinitum. Most uses of the Idx variable seem to be redunant
aliases as well, but I'll leave that for now.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27784
llvm-svn: 289870
Summary:
This lets you build with one CUDA installation but use ptxas from
another install.
This is useful e.g. if you want to avoid bugs in an old ptxas without
actually upgrading wholesale to a newer CUDA version.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27788
llvm-svn: 289847
Summary:
This implements execute-only support for ARM code generation, which
prevents the compiler from generating data accesses to code sections.
The following changes are involved:
* Add the CodeGen option "-arm-execute-only" to the ARM code generator.
* Add the clang flag "-mexecute-only" as well as the GCC-compatible
alias "-mpure-code" to enable this option.
* When enabled, literal pools are replaced with MOVW/MOVT instructions,
with VMOV used in addition for floating-point literals. As the MOVT
instruction is required, execute-only support is only available in
Thumb mode for targets supporting ARMv8-M baseline or Thumb2.
* Jump tables are placed in data sections when in execute-only mode.
* The execute-only text section is assigned section ID 0, and is
marked as unreadable with the SHF_ARM_PURECODE flag with symbol 'y'.
This also overrides selection of ELF sections for globals.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aemerson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27450
llvm-svn: 289786
This change allows setting the default linker used by the Clang
driver when configuring the build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25263
llvm-svn: 289668
At least the plugin used by the LibreOffice build
(<https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/Clang_plugins>) indirectly
uses those members (through inline functions in LLVM/Clang include files in turn
using them), but they are not exported by utils/extract_symbols.py on Windows,
and accessing data across DLL/EXE boundaries on Windows is generally
problematic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26671
llvm-svn: 289647
copy constructors of classes with array members, instead using
ArrayInitLoopExpr to represent the initialization loop.
This exposed a bug in the static analyzer where it was unable to differentiate
between zero-initialized and unknown array values, which has also been fixed
here.
llvm-svn: 289618
In a future change, this representation will allow us to use the new inrange
annotation on getelementptr to allow the optimizer to split vtable groups.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22296
llvm-svn: 289584
Although not specifically mentioned in the documentation, MSVC accepts
__uuidof(…) and declspec(uuid("…")) attributes on enumeration types in
addition to structs/classes. This is meaningful, as such types *do* have
associated UUIDs in ActiveX typelibs, and such attributes are included
by default in the wrappers generated by their #import construct, so they
are not particularly unusual.
clang currently rejects the declspec with a –Wignored-attributes
warning, and errors on __uuidof() with “cannot call operator __uuidof on
a type with no GUID” (because it rejected the uuid attribute, and
therefore finds no value). This is causing problems for us while trying
to use clang-tidy on a codebase that makes heavy use of ActiveX.
I believe I have found the relevant places to add this functionality,
this patch adds this case to clang’s implementation of these MS
extensions. patch is against r285994 (or actually the git mirror
80464680ce).
Both include an update to test/Parser/MicrosoftExtensions.cpp to
exercise the new functionality.
This is my first time contributing to LLVM, so if I’ve missed anything
else needed to prepare this for review just let me know!
__uuidof: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/zaah6a61.aspx
declspec(uuid("…")): https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/3b6wkewa.aspx
#import: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/8etzzkb6.aspx
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, majnemer, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26846
llvm-svn: 289567
When an Objective-C property has a (copy) attribute, the default setter
for this property performs a -copy on the object assigned.
Calling -copy on a mutable NS object such as NSMutableString etc.
produces an immutable object, NSString in our example.
Hence the getter becomes type-incorrect.
rdar://problem/21022397
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27535
llvm-svn: 289554
Summary:
Remove the CallGraph in addCallee as it is not used in addCallee.
It decouples addCallee from CallGraph, so that we can use CallGraphNode
within our customized CallGraph.
Reviewers: bkramer
Subscribers: cfe-commits, ioeric
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27674
llvm-svn: 289431
While C(++) and ObjC are generally formatted the same way and can be
mixed, people might want to choose different styles based on the
language. This patch recognizes .m and .mm files as ObjC and also
implements a very crude detection of whether or not a .h file contains
ObjC code. This can be improved over time.
Also move most of the ObjC tests into their own test file to keep file
size maintainable.
llvm-svn: 289428
initialization of each array element:
* ArrayInitLoopExpr is a prvalue of array type with two subexpressions:
a common expression (an OpaqueValueExpr) that represents the up-front
computation of the source of the initialization, and a subexpression
representing a per-element initializer
* ArrayInitIndexExpr is a prvalue of type size_t representing the current
position in the loop
This will be used to replace the creation of explicit index variables in lambda
capture of arrays and copy/move construction of classes with array elements,
and also C++17 structured bindings of arrays by value (which inexplicably allow
copying an array by value, unlike all of C++'s other array declarations).
No uses of these nodes are introduced by this change, however.
llvm-svn: 289413
Include headermaps (.hmap files) in the .cache directory and
add VFS entries. All headermaps are known after HeaderSearch
setup, collect them right after.
rdar://problem/27913709
llvm-svn: 289360
This will allow the backend to constant fold these to generic shuffle vectors like 128-bit and 256-bit without having to working about handling masking.
llvm-svn: 289351
This will allow the backend to constant fold these to generic shuffle vectors like 128-bit and 256-bit without having to working about handling masking.
llvm-svn: 289345
The VirtualCallChecker is in alpha because its interprocedural diagnostics
represent the call path textually in the diagnostic message rather than with a
path sensitive diagnostic.
This patch turns off the AST-based interprocedural analysis in the checker so
that no call path is needed and improves with diagnostic text. With these
changes, the checker is ready to be moved into the optin package.
Ultimately the right fix is to rewrite this checker to be path sensitive -- but
there is still value in enabling the checker for intraprocedural analysis only
The interprocedural mode can be re-enabled with an -analyzer-config flag.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26768
llvm-svn: 289309
This allows us to negate preceding --cuda-gpu-arch=X.
This comes handy when user needs to override default
flags set for them by the build system.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27631
llvm-svn: 289287
Summary:
The Swift frontend is acquiring the ability to load non-module PCH files containing
bridging definitions from C/ObjC. As part of this work, it needs to know which submodules
were imported by a PCH in order to wrap them in local Swift modules. This information
is collected by ASTReader::ReadAST in a local vector, but is currently kept private.
The change here is just to make the type of the vector elements public, and provide
an optional out-parameter to the ReadAST method to provide the vector's contents to
a caller after a successful read.
Reviewers: manmanren, rsmith, doug.gregor
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27580
llvm-svn: 289276
The code pattern used to implement the token rewriting hack doesn't
interact well with token caching in the pre-processor. As a result,
clang would crash on 'int f(::(id));' while doing a tenative parse of
the contents of the outer parentheses. The original code from PR11852
still doesn't crash the compiler.
This error recovery also often does the wrong thing with member function
pointers. The test case from the original PR doesn't recover the right
way either:
void S::(*pf)() = S::f; // should be 'void (S::*pf)()'
Instead we were recovering as 'void S::*pf()', which is still wrong.
If we still think that users mistakenly parenthesize identifiers in
nested name specifiers, we should change clang to intentionally parse
that form with an error, rather than doing a token rewrite.
Fixes PR26623, but I think there will be many more bugs like this around
token rewriting in the parser.
Reviewers: rsmith, rtrieu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25882
llvm-svn: 289273
Other compilers accept invalid code here that we reject, and we need a
better error message to try to convince users that the code is really
incorrect. Consider:
class Foo {
typedef MyIterHelper<Foo> iterator;
friend class iterator;
};
Previously our wording was "elaborated type refers to a typedef".
"elaborated type" isn't widely known terminology, so the new diagnostic
says "typedef 'iterator' cannot be referenced with class specifier".
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25216
llvm-svn: 289259
In amdgcn target, null pointers in global, constant, and generic address space take value 0 but null pointers in private and local address space take value -1. Currently LLVM assumes all null pointers take value 0, which results in incorrectly translated IR. To workaround this issue, instead of emit null pointers in local and private address space, a null pointer in generic address space is emitted and casted to local and private address space.
Tentative definition of global variables with non-zero initializer will have weak linkage instead of common linkage since common linkage requires zero initializer and does not have explicit section to hold the non-zero value.
Virtual member functions getNullPointer and performAddrSpaceCast are added to TargetCodeGenInfo which by default returns ConstantPointerNull and emitting addrspacecast instruction. A virtual member function getNullPointerValue is added to TargetInfo which by default returns 0. Each target can override these virtual functions to get target specific null pointer and the null pointer value for specific address space, and perform specific translations for addrspacecast.
Wrapper functions getNullPointer is added to CodegenModule and getTargetNullPointerValue is added to ASTContext to facilitate getting the target specific null pointers and their values.
This change has no effect on other targets except amdgcn target. Other targets can provide support of non-zero null pointer in a similar way.
This change only provides support for non-zero null pointer for C and OpenCL. Supporting for other languages will be added later incrementally.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26196
llvm-svn: 289252
mirror the description in the standard. Per DR1295, this means that binding a
const / rvalue reference to a bit-field no longer "binds directly", and per
P0135R1, this means that we materialize a temporary in reference binding
after adjusting cv-qualifiers and before performing a derived-to-base cast.
In C++11 onwards, this should have fixed the last case where we would
materialize a temporary of the wrong type (with a subobject adjustment inside
the MaterializeTemporaryExpr instead of outside), but we still have to deal
with that possibility in C++98, unless we want to start using xvalues to
represent materialized temporaries there too.
llvm-svn: 289250
PCH files store the macro history for a given macro, and the whole history list
for one identifier is given to the Preprocessor at once via
Preprocessor::setLoadedMacroDirective(). This contained an assert that no macro
history exists yet for that identifier. That's usually true, but it's not true
for builtin macros, which are created in Preprocessor() before flags and pchs
are processed. Luckily, ASTWriter stops writing macro history lists at builtins
(see shouldIgnoreMacro() in ASTWriter.cpp), so the head of the history list was
missing for builtin macros. So make the assert weaker, and splice the history
list to the existing single define for builtins.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D27545
llvm-svn: 289228
This saves two pointers from FunctionDecl that were being used for some
rare and questionable C-only functionality. The DeclsInPrototypeScope
ArrayRef was added in r151712 in order to parse this kind of C code:
enum e {x, y};
int f(enum {y, x} n) {
return x; // should return 1, not 0
}
The challenge is that we parse 'int f(enum {y, x} n)' it its own
function prototype scope that gets popped before we build the
FunctionDecl for 'f'. The original change was doing two questionable
things:
1. Saving all tag decls introduced in prototype scope on a TU-global
Sema variable. This is problematic when you have cases like this, where
'x' and 'y' shouldn't be visible in 'f':
void f(void (*fp)(enum { x, y } e)) { /* no x */ }
This patch fixes that, so now 'f' can't see 'x', which is consistent
with GCC.
2. Storing the decls in FunctionDecl in ActOnFunctionDeclarator so that
they could be used in ActOnStartOfFunctionDef. This is just an
inefficient way to move information around. The AST lives forever, but
the list of non-parameter decls in prototype scope is short lived.
Moving these things to the Declarator solves both of these issues.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: jmolloy, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27279
llvm-svn: 289225
This patch is to implement sema and parsing for 'teams distribute parallel for' pragma.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27345
llvm-svn: 289179
Some functions and templates are treated as __host__ __device__ even
when they don't have explicitly specified target attributes.
What's worse, this treatment may change depending on command line
options (-fno-cuda-host-device-constexpr) or
#pragma clang force_cuda_host_device.
Combined with strict checking for matching function target that comes
with D25809(r288962), it makes it hard to write code which would
explicitly instantiate or specialize some functions regardless of
pragmas or command line options in effect.
This patch changes the way we match target attributes of base template
vs attributes used in explicit instantiation or specialization so that
only explicitly specified attributes are considered. This makes base
template selection behave consistently regardless of pragma of command
line options that may affect CUDA target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25845
llvm-svn: 289091
This commit provides class property code completion results. It supports
explicit and implicit class properties, but the special block completion is done
only for explicit properties right now.
rdar://25636195
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27053
llvm-svn: 289058
We continue to support dynamic exception specifications in C++1z as an
extension, but produce an error-by-default warning when we encounter one. This
allows users to opt back into the feature with a warning flag, and implicitly
opts system headers back into the feature should they happen to use it.
There is one semantic change implied by P0003R5 but not implemented here:
violating a throw() exception specification should now call std::terminate
directly instead of calling std::unexpected(), but since P0003R5 also removes
std::unexpected() and std::set_unexpected, and the default unexpected handler
calls std::terminate(), a conforming C++1z program cannot tell that we are
still calling it. The upside of this strategy is perfect backwards
compatibility; the downside is that we don't get the more efficient 'noexcept'
codegen for 'throw()'.
llvm-svn: 289019
Summary:
The MSVC toolchain and Clang driver combination currently uses a fairly complex
sequence of steps to determine the MS compatibility version to pass to cc1.
There is some oddness in this sequence currently, with some code which inspects
flags in the toolchain, and some code which inspects the triple and local
environment in the driver code.
This change is an attempt to consolidate most of this logic so that
Win32-specific code lives in MSVCToolChain.cpp. I'm not 100% happy with the
split, so any suggestions are welcome.
There are a few things you might want to watch for for specifically:
- On all platforms, if MSVC compatibility flags are provided (and valid), use
those.
- The fallback sequence should be the same as before, but is now consolidated
into MSVCToolChain::getMSVCVersion:
- Otherwise, try to use the Triple.
- Otherwise, on Windows, check the executable.
- Otherwise, on Windows or with --fms-extensions, default to 18.
- Otherwise, we can't determine the version.
- MSVCToolChain::ComputeEffectiveTriple no longer calls the base
ToolChain::ComputeEffectiveClangTriple. The only thing it would change for
Windows the architecture, which we don't care about for the compatibility
version.
- I'm not sure whether this is philosophically correct (but it should
be easy to add back to MSVCToolChain::getMSVCVersionFromTriple if not).
- Previously, Tools.cpp just called getTriple() anyhow, so it doesn't look
like the effective triple was always being used previously anyhow.
Reviewers: hans, compnerd, llvm-commits, rnk
Subscribers: amccarth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27477
llvm-svn: 288998
* __host__ __device__ functions are no longer considered to be
redeclarations of __host__ or __device__ functions. This prevents
unintentional merging of target attributes across them.
* Function target attributes are not considered (and must match) during
explicit instantiation and specialization of function templates.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25809
llvm-svn: 288962
This commit fixes PR20796. It implements the C only -Wstrict-prototypes warning.
Clang now emits a warning for function declarations which have no parameters
specified and for K&R function definitions with more than 0 parameters that are
not preceded by a previous prototype declaration.
The patch was originally submitted by Paul Titei!
rdar://15060615
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D16533
llvm-svn: 288896
As a first step toward removing Objective-C garbage collection from
Clang, remove support from the driver. I'm hoping this will flush out
any expected bots/configurations/whatever that might rely on it.
I've left the options behind temporarily in -cc1 to keep tests passing.
I'll kill them off entirely in a follow up when I've had a chance to
update/delete the rest of Clang.
llvm-svn: 288872
When an object of class type is initialized from a prvalue of the same type
(ignoring cv qualifications), use the prvalue to initialize the object directly
instead of inserting a redundant elidable call to a copy constructor.
llvm-svn: 288866
When integrating compilation database output into existing build
systems, two approaches dominate so far. Ad-hoc implementation of the
JSON output rules or using compiler wrappers. This patch adds a new
option "-MJ foo.json" which gives a slightly cleaned up compilation
record. The output is a fragment, i.e. you still need to add the array
markers, but it allows multiple files to be easy merged.
This way the only change in a build system is adding the option with
potentially a per-target output file and merging the files with
something like
(echo '['; cat *.o.json; echo ']' > compilation_database.json
or some additional filtering to remove the trailing comma for strict
JSON compliance.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27140
llvm-svn: 288821
It should already be handled but a typo in the LANGSTANDARD() definition
was introduced in r147220.
Patch by Alexander Richardson, test case by me.
Differential Revision:https://reviews.llvm.org/D27427
llvm-svn: 288793