This is originally r261551, reverted because of windows bots failing on
unittests. Change the current behavior to do not handle path traversals
on windows.
Handle ".", ".." and "./" with trailing slashes while collecting files
to be dumped into the vfs overlay directory.
Include the support for symlinks into components. Given the path:
/install-dir/bin/../lib/clang/3.8.0/include/altivec.h, if "bin"
component is a symlink, it's not safe to use `path::remove_dots` here,
and `realpath` is used to get the right answer. Since `realpath`
is expensive, we only do it at collecting time (which only happens
during the crash reproducer) and cache the base directory for fast lookups.
Overall, this makes the input to the VFS YAML file to be canonicalized
to never contain traversal components.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17104
rdar://problem/24499339
llvm-svn: 263617
It is faster to directly call the ObjC runtime for methods such as retain/release instead of sending a message to those functions.
This patch adds support for converting messages to retain/release/alloc/autorelease to their equivalent runtime calls.
Tests included for the positive case of applying this transformation, negative tests that we ensure we only convert "alloc" to objc_alloc, not "alloc2", and also a driver test to ensure we enable this only for supported runtime versions.
Reviewed by John McCall.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14737
llvm-svn: 263607
Currently when an AST plugin is loaded it must then be enabled by passing
-plugin pluginname or -add-plugin pluginname to the -cc1 command line. This
patch adds a method to PluginASTAction which allows it to declare that the
action happens before, instead of, or after the main AST action, plus the
relevant changes to make the plugin action happen at that time automatically.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17959
llvm-svn: 263546
This is the companion to an LLVM patch that renamed the function index
data structures and files to use the more general module summary index.
(Recommit after fixing LLVM side to add back missed file)
llvm-svn: 263514
This is the companion to an LLVM patch that renamed the function index
data structures and files to use the more general module summary index.
llvm-svn: 263491
Summary:
The current offloading implementation is using -omptargets and -omp-host-ir-file-path options in the frontend. This causes the user a lot of trouble due to to the conflicts with the -o option. E.g. if the user misspells omptargets he will end up with a file with a weird name.
This patches replaces these two options with -fomptargets and -fomp-host-ir-file-path to avoid these issues, and it is also more consistent with the other options like -fopenmp.
Reviewers: hfinkel, carlo.bertolli, arpith-jacob, kkwli0, ABataev
Subscribers: cfe-commits, caomhin, fraggamuffin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18112
llvm-svn: 263442
ASan also relies on names on allocas and will emit unhelpful output if
they're not present. Just force-enable value names for now. Should
unbreak release builds of asan.
llvm-svn: 263429
trying to track origins in the memory sanitizer since the backend
instrumentation pass currently takes names from the Instruction.
Fixes all of the origin tracking tests in compiler-rt after the
-discard-value-name option was added.
llvm-svn: 263412
Summary:
This flag is enabled by default in the driver when NDEBUG is set. It
is forwarded on the LLVMContext to discard all value names (but
GlobalValue) for performance purpose.
This an improved version of D18024
Reviewers: echristo, chandlerc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18127
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 263394
To make this work, delay printing of ExtraDeps in HeaderIncludesCallback a bit,
so that it happens after CompilerInstance::InitializeSourceManager() has run.
General /FI arguments are still missing from /showIncludes output, this still
needs to be fixed.
llvm-svn: 263352
Use it to calculate UserLabelPrefix, instead of specifying it (often
incorrectly).
Note that the *actual* user label prefix has always come from the
DataLayout, and is handled within LLVM. The main thing clang's
TargetInfo::UserLabelPrefix did was to set the #define value. Having
these be different from each-other is just silly.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17183
llvm-svn: 262737
This patch changes cc1 option for PGO profile use from
-fprofile-instr-use=<path> to -fprofile-instrument-use-path=<path>.
-fprofile-instr-use=<path> is now a driver only option.
In addition to decouple the cc1 option from the driver level option, this patch
also enables IR level profile use. cc1 option handling now reads the profile
header and sets CodeGenOpt ProfileUse (valid values are {None, Clang, LLVM}
-- this is a common enum for -fprofile-instrument={}, for the profile
instrumentation), and invoke the pipeline to enable the respective PGO use pass.
Reviewers: silvas, davidxl
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17737
llvm-svn: 262515
This is like r262493, but for pragma detect_mismatch instead of pragma comment.
The two pragmas have similar behavior, so use the same approach for both.
llvm-svn: 262506
`#pragma comment` was handled by Sema calling a function on ASTConsumer, and
CodeGen then implementing this function and writing things to its output.
Instead, introduce a PragmaCommentDecl AST node and hang one off the
TranslationUnitDecl for every `#pragma comment` line, and then use the regular
serialization machinery. (Since PragmaCommentDecl has codegen relevance, it's
eagerly deserialized.)
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17799
llvm-svn: 262493
In the gcc precompiled header model, one explicitly runs clang with `-x
c++-header` on a .h file to produce a gch file, and then includes the header
with `-include foo.h` and if a .gch file exists for that header it gets used.
This is documented at
http://clang.llvm.org/docs/UsersManual.html#precompiled-headers
cl.exe's model is fairly different, and controlled by the two flags /Yc and
/Yu. A pch file is generated as a side effect of a regular compilation when
/Ycheader.h is passed. While the compilation is running, the compiler keeps
track of #include lines in the main translation unit and writes everything up
to an `#include "header.h"` line into a pch file. Conversely, /Yuheader.h tells
the compiler to skip all code in the main TU up to and including `#include
"header.h"` and instead load header.pch. (It's also possible to use /Yc and /Yu
without an argument, in that case a `#pragma hrdstop` takes the role of
controlling the point where pch ends and real code begins.)
This patch implements limited support for this in that it requires the pch
header to be passed as a /FI force include flag – with this restriction,
it can be implemented almost completely in the driver with fairly small amounts
of code. For /Yu, this is trivial, and for /Yc a separate pch action is added
that runs before the actual compilation. After r261774, the first failing
command makes a compilation stop – this means if the pch fails to build the
main compilation won't run, which is what we want. However, in /fallback builds
we need to run the main compilation even if the pch build fails so that the
main compilation's fallback can run. To achieve this, add a ForceSuccessCommand
that pretends that the pch build always succeeded in /fallback builds (the main
compilation will then fail to open the pch and run the fallback cl.exe
invocation).
If /Yc /Yu are used in a setup that clang-cl doesn't implement yet, clang-cl
will now emit a "not implemented yet; flag ignored" warning that can be
disabled using -Wno-clang-cl-pch.
Since clang-cl doesn't yet serialize some important things (most notably
`pragma comment(lib, ...)`, this feature is disabled by default and only
enabled by an internal driver flag. Once it's more stable, this internal flag
will disappear.
(The default stdafx.h setup passes stdafx.h as explicit argument to /Yc but not
as /FI – instead every single TU has to `#include <stdafx.h>` as first thing it
does. Implementing support for this should be possible with the approach in
this patch with minimal frontend changes by passing a --stop-at / --start-at
flag from the driver to the frontend. This is left for a follow-up. I don't
think we ever want to support `#pragma hdrstop`, and supporting it with this
approach isn't easy: This approach relies on the driver knowing the pch
filename in advance, and `#pragma hdrstop(out.pch)` can set the output
filename, so the driver can't know about it in advance.)
clang-cl now also honors /Fp and puts pch files in the same spot that cl.exe
would put them, but the pch file format is of course incompatible. This has
ramifications on /fallback, so /Yc /Yu aren't passed through to cl.exe in
/fallback builds.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17695
llvm-svn: 262420
This patch expands cc1 option -fprofile-instrument= with a new value: -fprofile-instrument=llvm
which enables IR level PGO instrumentation.
Reviewers: davidxl, silvas
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17622
llvm-svn: 262239
This patch introduces the -fwhole-program-vtables flag, which enables the
whole-program vtable optimization feature (D16795) in Clang.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16821
llvm-svn: 261767
Also introduce inputs() that reutnrs an llvm::iterator_range.
Iterating over A->inputs() is much less mysterious than
iterating over *A. No intended behavior change.
llvm-svn: 261674
The VFS overlay mapping between virtual paths and real paths is done through
the 'external-contents' entries in YAML files, which contains hardcoded paths
to the real files.
When a module compilation crashes, headers are dumped into <name>.cache/vfs
directory and are mapped via the <name>.cache/vfs/vfs.yaml. The script
generated for reproduction uses -ivfsoverlay pointing to file to gather the
mapping between virtual paths and files inside <name>.cache/vfs. Currently, we
are only capable of reproducing such crashes in the same machine as they
happen, because of the hardcoded paths in 'external-contents'.
To be able to reproduce a crash in another machine, this patch introduces a new
option in the VFS yaml file called 'overlay-relative'. When it's equal to
'true' it means that the provided path to the YAML file through the
-ivfsoverlay option should also be used to prefix the final path for every
'external-contents'.
Example, given the invocation snippet "... -ivfsoverlay
<name>.cache/vfs/vfs.yaml" and the following entry in the yaml file:
"overlay-relative": "true",
"roots": [
...
"type": "directory",
"name": "/usr/include",
"contents": [
{
"type": "file",
"name": "stdio.h",
"external-contents": "/usr/include/stdio.h"
},
...
Here, a file manager request for virtual "/usr/include/stdio.h", that will map
into real path "/<absolute_path_to>/<name>.cache/vfs/usr/include/stdio.h.
This is a useful feature for debugging module crashes in machines other than
the one where the error happened.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17457
rdar://problem/24499339
llvm-svn: 261552
Handle ".", ".." and "./" with trailing slashes while collecting files
to be dumped into the vfs overlay directory.
Include the support for symlinks into components. Given the path:
/install-dir/bin/../lib/clang/3.8.0/include/altivec.h, if "bin"
component is a symlink, it's not safe to use `path::remove_dots` here,
and `realpath` is used to get the right answer. Since `realpath`
is expensive, we only do it at collecting time (which only happens
during the crash reproducer) and cache the base directory for fast lookups.
Overall, this makes the input to the VFS YAML file to be canonicalized
to never contain traversal components.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17104
rdar://problem/24499339
llvm-svn: 261551
option. Previously these options could both be used to specify that you were
compiling the implementation file of a module, with a different set of minor
bugs in each case.
This change removes -fmodule-implementation-of, and instead tracks a flag to
determine whether we're currently building a module. -fmodule-name now behaves
the same way that -fmodule-implementation-of previously did.
llvm-svn: 261372
We prematurely ended the line at the null byte which caused us to crash
down stream because we tried to reason about columns beyond the end of
the line.
llvm-svn: 261171
The current macho linker just copies symbols in section datacoal_nt to
section data, so it doesn't really matter whether or not section
"datacoal_nt" is attached to the global variable.
This is a follow-up to r250370, which made changes in llvm to stop
putting functions and data in the *coal* sections.
rdar://problem/24528611
llvm-svn: 260496
While this won't help fix things like the bug that r260219 addressed, it
seems like good tidy up to have anyway.
(it might be nice if "makeArrayRef" always produced a MutableArrayRef &
let it decay to an ArrayRef when needed - then I'd use that for the
MutableArrayRefs in this patch)
If we had std::dynarray I'd use that instead of unique_ptr+size_t,
ideally (but then it'd have to be threaded down through the Preprocessor
all the way - no idea how painful that would be)
llvm-svn: 260246
Summary:
Different devices may in some cases require different code generation schemes in order to implement OpenMP. This is required not only for performance reasons, but also because it may not be possible to have the current (default) implementation working for these devices. E.g. GPU's cannot implement the same scheme a target such as powerpc or x86b would use, in the sense that it does not have the ability to fork threads, instead all the threads are always executing and need to be managed by the implementation.
This patch proposes a reorganization of the code in the OpenMP code generation to pave the way to have specialized implementation of OpenMP support. More than a "real" patch this is more a request for comments in order to understand if what is proposed is acceptable or if there are better/easier ways to do it.
In this patch part of the common OpenMP codegen infrastructure is moved to a new file under a new namespace (CGOpenMPCommon) so it can be shared between the default implementation and the specialized one. When CGOpenMPRuntime is created, an attempt to select a specialized implementation is done.
In the patch a specialization for nvptx targets is done which currently checks if the target is an OpenMP device and trap if it is not.
Let me know comments suggestions you may have.
Reviewers: hfinkel, carlo.bertolli, arpith-jacob, kkwli0, ABataev
Subscribers: Hahnfeld, cfe-commits, fraggamuffin, caomhin, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16784
llvm-svn: 259977
This patch changes cc1 option -fprofile-instr-generate to an enum option
-fprofile-instrument={clang|none}. It also changes cc1 options
-fprofile-instr-generate= to -fprofile-instrument-path=.
The driver level option -fprofile-instr-generate and -fprofile-instr-generate=
remain intact. This change will pave the way to integrate new PGO
instrumentation in IR level.
Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16730
llvm-svn: 259811
Summary:
This patch is provided in preparation for removing autoconf on 1/26. The proposal to remove autoconf on 1/26 was discussed on the llvm-dev thread here: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-January/093875.html
"This is the way [autoconf] ends
Not with a bang but a whimper."
-T.S. Eliot
Reviewers: chandlerc, grosbach, bob.wilson, echristo
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16472
llvm-svn: 258862
Member pointers in the MS ABI are tricky for a variety of reasons.
The size of a member pointer is indeterminate until the program reaches
a point where the representation is required to be known. However,
*pointers* to member pointers may exist without knowing the pointee
type's representation. In these cases, we synthesize an opaque LLVM
type for the pointee type.
However, we can be in a situation where the underlying member pointer's
representation became known mid-way through the program. To account for
this, we attempted to manicure CodeGen's type-cache so that we can
replace the opaque member pointer type with the real deal while leaving
the pointer types unperturbed. This, unfortunately, is a problematic
approach to take as we will violate CodeGen's invariants.
These violations are mostly harmless but let's do the right thing
instead: invalidate the type-cache if a member pointer's LLVM
representation changes.
This fixes PR26313.
llvm-svn: 258839
All current properties are instance properties.
This is the second patch in a series of patches to support class properties
in addition to instance properties in objective-c.
rdar://23891898
llvm-svn: 258824
Summary:
Turns out the variadic function checking added in r258643 was too strict
for some existing users; give them an escape valve. When
-fcuda-allow-variadic-functions is passed, the front-end makes no
attempt to disallow C-style variadic functions. Calls to va_arg are
still not allowed.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: cfe-commits, jhen, echristo, bkramer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16559
llvm-svn: 258822
Move the function to get a macro name from DiagnosticRenderer.cpp to Lexer.cpp
so that other files can use it. Lexer now has two functions to get the
immediate macro name, the newly added one is better for diagnostic purposes.
Make -Wnull-conversion use this function for better NULL macro detection.
llvm-svn: 258778
This is part of a new statistics gathering feature for the sanitizers.
See clang/docs/SanitizerStats.rst for further info and docs.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16175
llvm-svn: 257971
of the file name. This is consistent with how other HeaderSearchOptions
are handled.
Due to the other inputs of the module hash (revision number) this is not
really testable in a meaningful way.
llvm-svn: 257520
building a module. Prior to this change, the private header's content would
only be included if the header were included by another header in the same
module. If not (if the private header is only used by the .cc files of the
module, or is included from outside the module via -Wno-private-header),
a #include of that file would be silently ignored.
llvm-svn: 257222
By storing the instantiated expression back in the ParmVarDecl,
we remove the last need for separately storing the sub-expression
of a CXXDefaultArgExpr. This makes PCH/Modules merging quite
simple: CXXDefaultArgExpr records are serialized as references
to the ParmVarDecl, and we ignore redundant attempts to overwrite
the instantiated expression.
This has some extremely marginal impact on user-facing semantics.
However, the major effect is that it avoids IRGen errors about
conflicting definitions due to lambdas in the argument being
instantiated multiple times while sharing the same mangling.
It should also slightly improve memory usage and module file size.
rdar://23810407
llvm-svn: 256983
This patch attempts to fix the regressions identified when the patch was committed initially.
Thanks to Michael Liao for identifying the fix in the offloading metadata generation
related with side effects in evaluation of function arguments.
llvm-svn: 256933
Summary:
In order to offloading work properly two things need to be in place:
- a descriptor with all the offloading information (device entry functions, and global variable) has to be created by the host and registered in the OpenMP offloading runtime library.
- all the device functions need to be emitted for the device and a convention has to be in place so that the runtime library can easily map the host ID of an entry point with the actual function in the device.
This patch adds support for these two things. However, only entry functions are being registered given that 'declare target' directive is not yet implemented.
About offloading descriptor:
The details of the descriptor are explained with more detail in http://goo.gl/L1rnKJ. Basically the descriptor will have fields that specify the number of devices, the pointers to where the device images begin and end (that will be defined by the linker), and also pointers to a the begin and end of table whose entries contain information about a specific entry point. Each entry has the type:
```
struct __tgt_offload_entry{
void *addr;
char *name;
int64_t size;
};
```
and will be implemented in a pre determined (ELF) section `.omp_offloading.entries` with 1-byte alignment, so that when all the objects are linked, the table is in that section with no padding in between entries (will be like a C array). The code generation ensures that all `__tgt_offload_entry` entries are emitted in the same order for both host and device so that the runtime can have the corresponding entries in both host and device in same index of the table, and efficiently implement the mapping.
The resulting descriptor is registered/unregistered with the runtime library using the calls `__tgt_register_lib` and `__tgt_unregister_lib`. The registration is implemented in a high priority global initializer so that the registration happens always before any initializer (that can potentially include target regions) is run.
The driver flag -omptargets= was created to specify a comma separated list of devices the user wants to support so that the new functionality can be exercised. Each device is specified with its triple.
About target codegen:
The target codegen is pretty much straightforward as it reuses completely the logic of the host version for the same target region. The tricky part is to identify the meaningful target regions in the device side. Unlike other programming models, like CUDA, there are no already outlined functions with attributes that mark what should be emitted or not. So, the information on what to emit is passed in the form of metadata in host bc file. This requires a new option to pass the host bc to the device frontend. Then everything is similar to what happens in CUDA: the global declarations emission is intercepted to check to see if it is an "interesting" declaration. The difference is that instead of checking an attribute, the metadata information in checked. Right now, there is only a form of metadata to pass information about the device entry points (target regions). A class `OffloadEntriesInfoManagerTy` was created to manage all the information and queries related with the metadata. The metadata looks like this:
```
!omp_offload.info = !{!0, !1, !2, !3, !4, !5, !6}
!0 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_ZN2S12r1Ei", i32 479, i32 13, i32 4}
!1 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_ZL7fstatici", i32 461, i32 11, i32 5}
!2 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_Z9ftemplateIiET_i", i32 444, i32 11, i32 6}
!3 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_Z3fooi", i32 99, i32 11, i32 0}
!4 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_Z3fooi", i32 272, i32 11, i32 3}
!5 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_Z3fooi", i32 127, i32 11, i32 1}
!6 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_Z3fooi", i32 159, i32 11, i32 2}
```
The fields in each metadata entry are (in sequence):
Entry 1) an ID of the type of metadata - right now only zero is used meaning "OpenMP target region".
Entry 2) a unique ID of the device where the input source file that contain the target region lives.
Entry 3) a unique ID of the file where the input source file that contain the target region lives.
Entry 4) a mangled name of the function that encloses the target region.
Entries 5) and 6) line and column number where the target region was found.
Entry 7) is the order the entry was emitted.
Entry 2) and 3) are required to distinguish files that have the same function name.
Entry 4) is required to distinguish different instances of the same declaration (usually templated ones)
Entries 5) and 6) are required to distinguish the particular target region in body of the function (it is possible that a given target region is not an entry point - if clause can evaluate always to zero - and therefore we need to identify the "interesting" target regions. )
This patch replaces http://reviews.llvm.org/D12306.
Reviewers: ABataev, hfinkel, tra, rjmccall, sfantao
Subscribers: FBrygidyn, piotr.rak, Hahnfeld, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12614
llvm-svn: 256842
for types which are used as pointees in PointerUnions, PointerIntPairs,
and DenseMap pointer keys.
This is part of a series of patches to allow LLVM to check for complete
pointee types when computing its pointer traits. This is absolutely
necessary to get correct (or reproducible) results for things like how
many low bits are guaranteed to be zero.
I think this is the last patch for getting Clang clean here!!!
llvm-svn: 256615
Summary:
[ Copied from https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25597 ]
Clang support for DragonFly BSD is lagging a bit, resulting in poor
support for c++.
DragonFlyBSD is unique in that it has two base compilers. At the time
of the last Clang update for DragonFly, these compilers were GCC 4.4 and
GCC 4.7 (default).
With DragonFly Release 4.2, GCC 4.4 was replaced with GCC 5.0, partially
because the C++11 support of GCC 4.7 was incomplete. The DragonFly
project will Release version 4.4 soon.
This patch updates the Clang driver to use libstdc++ from GCC 5.2 The
support for falling back to the alternate compiler was removed for two
reasons:
1) The last release to use GCC 4.7 is DF 4.0 which has already reached EOL
2) GCC 4.7 libstdc++ is insufficient for many "ports"
Therefore, I think it is reasonable that the development version of
clang expects GCC 5.2 to be in place and not try to fall back to another
compiler.
The attached patch will do this. The Tools.cpp file was signficantly
modified to fix the linking which had been changed somewhere along the
line. The rest of the changes should be self-explanatory.
Reviewers: joerg, rsmith, davide
Subscribers: jrmarino, davide, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15166
llvm-svn: 256467
The /Brepro flag controls whether or not the compiler should embed
timestamps into the object file. Object files which do not embed
timestamps are not suitable for incremental linking but are suitable for
hermetic build systems and staged self-hosts of clang.
A normal clang spelling of this flag has been added,
-mincremental-linker-compatible.
llvm-svn: 256204
Reapplies r256063, except instead of frugally re-using an LLVM enum,
we define a Clang enum, to avoid exposing too much LLVM interface.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15650
llvm-svn: 256078
Clang-side cross-DSO CFI.
* Adds a command line flag -f[no-]sanitize-cfi-cross-dso.
* Links a runtime library when enabled.
* Emits __cfi_slowpath calls is bitset test fails.
* Emits extra hash-based bitsets for external CFI checks.
* Sets a module flag to enable __cfi_check generation during LTO.
This mode does not yet support diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 255694
Summary:
The current default is to create the preamble on the first reparse, aka
second parse. This is useful for clients that do not want to block when
opening a file because serializing the preamble takes a bit of time.
However, this makes the reparse much more expensive and that may be on the
critical path as it's the first interaction a user has with the source code.
YouCompleteMe currently optimizes for the first code interaction by parsing
the file twice when loaded. That's just unnecessarily slow and this flag
helps to avoid that.
Reviewers: doug.gregor, klimek
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15490
llvm-svn: 255635
For PS4, generate explicit import for anonymous namespaces and mark it by DW_AT_artificial attribute.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12624
llvm-svn: 255281
When attempting to map a source into a given level of macro expansion,
this code was ignoring the possibility that the start and end of the
range might take wildly different paths through the tree of macro
expansions. It was assuming that the begin spelling location would
always precede the end spelling location, which is false. A macro can
easily transpose its arguments.
This also fixes a related issue where there are extra macro arguments
between the begin location and the end location. In this situation, we
now highlight the entire macro invocation.
Pair programmed with Richard Smith.
Fixes PR12818.
llvm-svn: 254981
Summary:
Adds new option -fthinlto-index=<file> to invoke the LTO pipeline
along with function importing via clang using the supplied function
summary index file. This supports invoking the parallel ThinLTO
backend processes in a distributed build environment via clang.
Additionally, this causes the module linker to be invoked on the bitcode
file being compiled to perform any necessary promotion and renaming of
locals that are exported via the function summary index file.
Add a couple tests that confirm we get expected errors when we try to
use the new option on a file that isn't bitcode, or specify an invalid
index file. The tests also confirm that we trigger the expected function
import pass.
Depends on D15024
Reviewers: joker.eph, dexonsmith
Subscribers: joker.eph, davidxl, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15025
llvm-svn: 254927
than reusing the "overridden buffer" mechanism. This will allow us to make
embedded files and overridden files behave differently in future.
llvm-svn: 254121
This flag causes all files that were read by the compilation to be embedded
into a produced module file. This is useful for distributed build systems that
use an include scanning system to determine which files are "needed" by a
compilation, and only provide those files to remote compilation workers. Since
using a module can require any file that is part of that module (or anything it
transitively includes), files that are not found by an include scanner can be
required in a regular build using explicit modules. With this flag, only files
that are actually referenced by transitively-#included files are required to be
present on the build machine.
llvm-svn: 253950
(Re-apply patch after bug fixing)
This diff makes sure that the driver does not pass
-fomit-frame-pointer or -momit-leaf-frame-pointer to
the frontend when -pg is used. Currently, clang gives
an error if -fomit-frame-pointer is used in combination
with -pg, but -momit-leaf-frame-pointer was forgotten.
Also, disable frame pointer elimination in the frontend
when -pg is set.
Patch by Stefan Kempf.
llvm-svn: 253886
This diff makes sure that the driver does not pass
-fomit-frame-pointer or -momit-leaf-frame-pointer to
the frontend when -pg is used. Currently, clang gives
an error if -fomit-frame-pointer is used in combination
with -pg, but -momit-leaf-frame-pointer was forgotten.
Also, disable frame pointer elimination in the frontend
when -pg is set.
Patch by Stefan Kempf.
llvm-svn: 253846
This provides both a more uniform interface and makes libclang behave like
clang tooling wrt relative paths against argv[0]. This is necessary for
finding paths to a c++ standard library relative to a clang binary given
in a compilation database. It can also be used to find paths relative to
libclang.so if the full path to it is passed in.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14695
llvm-svn: 253466
Currently clang requires several additional command
line options in order to enable new features needed
during CUDA compilation. This patch makes these
options default.
* Automatically include cuda_runtime.h if we've found
a valid CUDA installation.
* Disable automatic CUDA header inclusion during unit tests.
* Added test case for command line construction.
* Enabled target overloads and relaxed call checks that are
needed in order to include CUDA headers.
* Added CUDA-7.5 installation path to the CUDA installation search list.
* Define __CUDA__ macro to indicate CUDA compilation.
llvm-svn: 253389
This reverts commit r253269.
This leads to assert / segfault triggering on the following reduced example:
float foo(float U, float base, float cell) { return (U = 2 * base) - cell; }
llvm-svn: 253337
This failed to solve the problem it was aimed at, and introduced just as many
issues as it resolved. Realistically, we need to deal with the possibility that
multiple modules might define different internal linkage symbols with the same
name, and this isn't a problem unless two such symbols are simultaneously
visible.
The case where two modules define equivalent internal linkage symbols is
handled by r252063: if lookup finds multiple sufficiently-similar entities from
different modules, we just pick one of them as an extension (but we keep them
separate).
llvm-svn: 252957
The -meabi flag to control LLVM EABI version.
Without '-meabi' or with '-meabi default' imply LLVM triple default.
With '-meabi gnu' sets EABI GNU.
With '-meabi 4' or '-meabi 5' set EABI version 4 and 5 respectively.
A similar patch was introduced in LLVM.
Patch by Vinicius Tinti.
llvm-svn: 252463
we can't load that file due to a configuration mismatch, and implicit module
building is disabled, and the user turns off the error-by-default warning for
that situation, then fall back to textual inclusion for the module rather than
giving an error if any of its headers are included.
llvm-svn: 252114
Introduce the notion of a module file extension, which introduces
additional information into a module file at the time it is built that
can then be queried when the module file is read. Module file
extensions are identified by a block name (which must be unique to the
extension) and can write any bitstream records into their own
extension block within the module file. When a module file is loaded,
any extension blocks are matched up with module file extension
readers, that are per-module-file and are given access to the input
bitstream.
Note that module file extensions can only be introduced by
programmatic clients that have access to the CompilerInvocation. There
is only one such extension at the moment, which is used for testing
the module file extension harness. As a future direction, one could
imagine allowing the plugin mechanism to introduce new module file
extensions.
llvm-svn: 251955
A 'readonly' Objective-C property declared in the primary class can
effectively be shadowed by a 'readwrite' property declared within an
extension of that class, so long as the types and attributes of the
two property declarations are compatible.
Previously, this functionality was implemented by back-patching the
original 'readonly' property to make it 'readwrite', destroying source
information and causing some hideously redundant, incorrect
code. Simplify the implementation to express how this should actually
be modeled: as a separate property declaration in the extension that
shadows (via the name lookup rules) the declaration in the primary
class. While here, correct some broken Fix-Its, eliminate a pile of
redundant code, clean up the ARC migrator's handling of properties
declared in extensions, and fix debug info's naming of methods that
come from categories.
A wonderous side effect of doing this write is that it eliminates the
"AddedObjCPropertyInClassExtension" method from the AST mutation
listener, which in turn eliminates the last place where we rewrite
entire declarations in a chained PCH file or a module file. This
change (which fixes rdar://problem/18475765) will allow us to
eliminate the rewritten-decls logic from the serialization library,
and fixes a crash (rdar://problem/23247794) illustrated by the
test/PCH/chain-categories.m example.
llvm-svn: 251874
This came up in a boost build, which apparently uses PTH. This was
broken in r187619 when we migrated it to uses llvm::fs instead of raw
stat calls.
Constructing a test case with a hash table collision in-tree is tough.
Instead, I have a pending change to OnDiskChainedHashTable that asserts
that the reported length of the data agrees with the data actually
written. All of the existing in-tree tests find the bug with this
assert.
llvm-svn: 251828
Linking options for particular file depend on the option that specifies the file.
Currently there are two:
* -mlink-bitcode-file links in complete content of the specified file.
* -mlink-cuda-bitcode links in only the symbols needed by current TU.
Linked symbols are internalized. This bitcode linking mode is used to
link device-specific bitcode provided by CUDA.
Files are linked in order they are specified on command line.
-mlink-cuda-bitcode replaces -fcuda-uses-libdevice flag.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13913
llvm-svn: 251427
Previously, __weak was silently accepted and ignored in MRC mode.
That makes this a potentially source-breaking change that we have to
roll out cautiously. Accordingly, for the time being, actual support
for __weak references in MRC is experimental, and the compiler will
reject attempts to actually form such references. The intent is to
eventually enable the feature by default in all non-GC modes.
(It is, of course, incompatible with ObjC GC's interpretation of
__weak.)
If you like, you can enable this feature with
-Xclang -fobjc-weak
but like any -Xclang option, this option may be removed at any point,
e.g. if/when it is eventually enabled by default.
This patch also enables the use of the ARC __unsafe_unretained qualifier
in MRC. Unlike __weak, this is being enabled immediately. Since
variables are essentially __unsafe_unretained by default in MRC,
the only practical uses are (1) communication and (2) changing the
default behavior of by-value block capture.
As an implementation matter, this means that the ObjC ownership
qualifiers may appear in any ObjC language mode, and so this patch
removes a number of checks for getLangOpts().ObjCAutoRefCount
that were guarding the processing of these qualifiers. I don't
expect this to be a significant drain on performance; it may even
be faster to just check for these qualifiers directly on a type
(since it's probably in a register anyway) than to do N dependent
loads to grab the LangOptions.
rdar://9674298
llvm-svn: 251041
The pointer was being implicitly converted to a StringRef and the size was being passed into the bool. Since the bool has a default value normally, no one noticed that the wrong number of arguments was given.
llvm-svn: 250977
The ELF symbol visibilities are:
- internal: Not visibile across DSOs, cannot pass address across DSOs
- hidden: Not visibile across DSOs, can be called indirectly
- default: Usually visible across DSOs, possibly interposable
- protected: Visible across DSOs, not interposable
LLVM only supports the latter 3 visibilities. Internal visibility is in
theory useful, as it allows you to assume that the caller is maintaining
a PIC register for you in %ebx, or in some other pre-arranged location.
As far as LLVM is concerned, this isn't worth the trouble. Using hidden
visibility is always correct, so we can just do that.
Resolves PR9183.
llvm-svn: 250954
Summary: It breaks the build for the ASTMatchers
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13893
llvm-svn: 250827
via -fmodule-file= to be turned off; in that case, just include the relevant
files textually. This allows module files to be unconditionally passed to all
compile actions via CXXFLAGS, and to be ignored for rules that specify custom
incompatible flags.
llvm-svn: 250577
This recommits r250398 with fixes to the tests for bot failures.
Add "-target x86_64-unknown-linux" to the clang invocations that
check for the gold plugin.
llvm-svn: 250455
Rolling this back for now since there are a couple of bot failures on
the new tests I added, and I won't have a chance to look at them in detail
until later this afternoon. I think the new tests need some restrictions on
having the gold plugin available.
This reverts commit r250398.
llvm-svn: 250402
Summary:
Add clang support for -flto=thin option, which is used to set the
EmitFunctionSummary code gen option on compiles.
Add -flto=full as an alias to the existing -flto.
Add tests to check for proper overriding of -flto variants on the
command line, and convert grep tests to FileCheck.
Reviewers: dexonsmith, joker.eph
Subscribers: davidxl, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11908
llvm-svn: 250398
There was a minor problem with a test. Sorry for the noise yesterday.
This patch adds missing pieces to clang, including the PS4 toolchain
definition, added warnings, PS4 defaults, and Driver changes needed for
our compiler.
A patch by Filipe Cabecinhas, Pierre Gousseau and Katya Romanova!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13482
llvm-svn: 250293
Resubmitting the patch.
This patch adds missing pieces to clang, including the PS4 toolchain
definition, added warnings, PS4 defaults, and Driver changes needed for
our compiler.
A patch by Filipe Cabecinhas, Pierre Gousseau and Katya Romanova!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13482
llvm-svn: 250262
definition, added warnings, PS4 defaults, and Driver changes needed for
our compiler.
A patch by Filipe Cabecinhas, Pierre Gousseau and Katya Romanova!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13482
llvm-svn: 250252
Add support for the `-fdebug-prefix-map=` option as in GCC. The syntax is
`-fdebug-prefix-map=OLD=NEW`. When compiling files from a path beginning with
OLD, change the debug info to indicate the path as start with NEW. This is
particularly helpful if you are preprocessing in one path and compiling in
another (e.g. for a build cluster with distcc).
Note that the linearity of the implementation is not as terrible as it may seem.
This is normally done once per file with an expectation that the map will be
small (1-2) entries, making this roughly linear in the number of input paths.
Addresses PR24619.
llvm-svn: 250094
With this change, most 'g' options are rejected by CompilerInvocation.
They remain only as Driver options. The new way to request debug info
from cc1 is with "-debug-info-kind={line-tables-only|limited|standalone}"
and "-dwarf-version={2|3|4}". In the absence of a command-line option
to specify Dwarf version, the Toolchain decides it, rather than placing
Toolchain-specific logic in CompilerInvocation.
Also fix a bug in the Windows compatibility argument parsing
in which the "rightmost argument wins" principle failed.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13221
llvm-svn: 249655
ASTUnit was creating multiple FileManagers and throwing them away. Reuse
the one from Tooling. No functionality change now but necessary for
VFSifying tooling.
llvm-svn: 249410
In versions of clang prior to r238238, __declspec was recognized as a keyword in
all modes. It was then changed to only be enabled when Microsoft or Borland
extensions were enabled (and for CUDA, as a temporary measure). There is a
desire to support __declspec in Playstation code, and possibly other
environments. This commit adds a command-line switch to allow explicit
enabling/disabling of the recognition of __declspec as a keyword. Recognition
is enabled by default in Microsoft, Borland, CUDA, and PS4 environments, and
disabled in all other environments.
Patch by Warren Ristow!
llvm-svn: 249279
definition, added warnings, PS4 defaults, and Driver changes needed for
our compiler.
A patch by Filipe Cabecinhas, Pierre Gousseau and Katya Romanova!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11279
llvm-svn: 248546
Trace the ranges through the macro backtrace better. This allows better
range highlighting through all levels of the macro bracktrace. Also some
improvements to backtrace printer for omitting different backtraces.
Patch by Zhengkai Wu.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12379
llvm-svn: 248454
* adds -aux-triple option to specify target triple
* propagates aux target info to AST context and Preprocessor
* pulls in target specific preprocessor macros.
* pulls in target-specific builtins from aux target.
* sets appropriate host or device attribute on builtins.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12917
llvm-svn: 248299
The patch makes it possible to parse CUDA files that contain host/device
functions with identical signatures, but different attributes without
having to physically split source into host-only and device-only parts.
This change is needed in order to parse CUDA header files that have
a lot of name clashes with standard include files.
Gory details are in design doc here: https://goo.gl/EXnymm
Feel free to leave comments there or in this review thread.
This feature is controlled with CC1 option -fcuda-target-overloads
and is disabled by default.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12453
llvm-svn: 248295
This reapply a variant commit r247179 after post-commit review from
D.Blaikie.
Hopefully I got it right this time: lifetime of initializer list ends
as with any expression, which make invalid the pattern:
ArrayRef<int> Arr = { 1, 2, 3, 4};
Just like StringRef, ArrayRef shouldn't be used to initialize local
variable but only as function argument.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 247233
Seems it broke the Polly build.
From http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/perf-x86_64-penryn-O3-polly-fast/builds/11687/steps/compile/logs/stdio:
In file included from /home/grosser/buildslave/perf-x86_64-penryn-O3-polly-fast/llvm.src/lib/TableGen/Record.cpp:14:0:
/home/grosser/buildslave/perf-x86_64-penryn-O3-polly-fast/llvm.src/include/llvm/TableGen/Record.h:369:3: error: looser throw specifier for 'virtual llvm::TypedInit::~TypedInit()'
/home/grosser/buildslave/perf-x86_64-penryn-O3-polly-fast/llvm.src/include/llvm/TableGen/Record.h:270:11: error: overriding 'virtual llvm::Init::~Init() noexcept (true)'
llvm-svn: 247222
Summary:
Do not include default sanitizer blacklists into -M/-MM/-MD/-MMD output.
Introduce a frontend option -fdepfile-entry, and only insert them
for the user-defined sanitizer blacklists. In frontend, grab ExtraDeps
from -fdepfile-entry, instead of -fsanitize-blacklist.
Reviewers: rsmith, pcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12544
llvm-svn: 246700
Sometimes, a macro that expands to another macro name will not be printed in
the macro backtrace. This patch finds the missed macro expansions and prints
them. Fixes PR16799
llvm-svn: 246237
to enable the use of external type references in the debug info
(a.k.a. module debugging).
The driver expands -gmodules to "-g -fmodule-format=obj -dwarf-ext-refs"
and passes that to cc1. All this does at the moment is set a flag
codegenopts.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D11958
llvm-svn: 246192
file in the .pcm files. This allows a smaller set of files to be sent to a
remote build worker when building with explicit modules (for instance, module
map files need not be sent along with the corresponding precompiled modules).
This doesn't actually make the embedded files visible to header search, so
it's not useful as a packaging format for public header files.
llvm-svn: 245028
files: include the .pcm file itself in the .d output, rather than including its
own input files. Other forms of module file continue to be transparent for .d
output.
Arguably, the input files for the .pcm file are still inputs to the
compilation, but that's unnecessary for make-like build systems (where the
mtime of the .pcm file is sufficient) and harmful for smarter build systems
that know about module files and want to track only the local dependencies.
llvm-svn: 244923
Summary:
Clang sanitizers, such as AddressSanitizer, ThreadSanitizer, MemorySanitizer,
Control Flow Integrity and others, use blacklists to specify which types / functions
should not be instrumented to avoid false positives or suppress known failures.
This change adds the blacklist filenames to the list of dependencies of the rules,
generated with -M/-MM/-MD/-MMD. This lets CMake/Ninja recognize that certain
C/C++/ObjC files need to be recompiled (if a blacklist is updated).
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: rsmith, honggyu.kim, pcc, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11968
llvm-svn: 244867
When displaying the macro backtrace, ignore some of the backtraces that do not
provide extra information to the diagnostic. Typically, if the problem is
entirely contained within a macro argument, the macro expansion is often not
needed. Also take into account SourceRange's attached to the diagnostic when
selecting which backtraces to ignore. Two previous test cases have also been
updated.
Patch by Zhengkai Wu, with minor formatting fixes.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11778
llvm-svn: 244788
build process when we implicitly build a module. Previously, we'd create the
specified .d file once for each implicitly-built module and then finally
overwrite it with the correct contents after the requested build completes.
(This fails if you use stdout as a dependency file, which is what the provided
testcase does, and is how I discovered this brokenness.)
llvm-svn: 244412
created, rather than creating and attaching a new listener each time we load a
module file (yes, the old ones were kept around too!). No functionality change
intended, but a bit more sanity.
llvm-svn: 244411
useless return value. Switch to using it directly when completing the
redeclaration chain for an anonymous declaration, and reduce the set of
declarations that we load in the process to just those of the right kind.
llvm-svn: 244161
Summary:
By default, 'clang' emits dwarf and 'clang-cl' emits codeview. You can
force emission of one or both by passing -gcodeview and -gdwarf to
either driver.
Reviewers: dblaikie, hans
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11742
llvm-svn: 244097
The new EH instructions make it possible for LLVM to generate .xdata
tables that the MSVC personality routines will be happy about. Because
this is experimental, hide it behind a -cc1 flag (-fnew-ms-eh).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11405
llvm-svn: 243767
The z13 vector facility has an associated language extension,
closely modeled on AltiVec/VSX. The main differences are:
- vector long, vector float and vector pixel are not supported
- vector long long and vector double are supported (like VSX)
- comparison operators return a vector rather than a scalar integer
- shift operators behave like the OpenCL shift operators
- vector bool is only supported as argument to certain operators;
some operators allow mixing a bool with a non-bool vector
This patch adds clang support for the extension. It is closely modelled
on the AltiVec support. Similarly to the -faltivec option, there's a
new -fzvector option to enable the extensions (as well as an -mzvector
alias for compatibility with GCC). There's also a separate LangOpt.
The extension as implemented here is intended to be compatible with
the -mzvector extension recently implemented by GCC.
Based on a patch by Richard Sandiford.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11001
llvm-svn: 243642
Store the locations for a macro expansion in a vector, then iterate over them
instead of using recursion. This simplifies the logic around the backtrace
limit and gives easier access to the source locations. No functionality change.
Patch by Zhengkai Wu.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11542
llvm-svn: 243477
This will be used for old targets like Android that do not
support ELF TLS models.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10524
llvm-svn: 243441
Currently, -save-temp will cause ObjCARC optimization to be dropped,
sanitizer pass to run early in the pipeline, and profiling
instrumentation to run twice.
Fix the issue by properly disable all passes in the optimization
pipeline when generating bitcode output and parse some of the Language
Options even when the input is bitcode so the passes can be setup
correctly.
llvm-svn: 242565
- introduces a new cc1 option -fmodule-format=[raw,obj]
with 'raw' being the default
- supports arbitrary module container formats that libclang is agnostic to
- adds the format to the module hash to avoid collisions
- splits the old PCHContainerOperations into PCHContainerWriter and
a PCHContainerReader.
Thanks to Richard Smith for reviewing this patch!
llvm-svn: 242499
NOTE: reverts r242077 to reinstate r242058, r242065, 242067
and includes fix for OS X test failures.
- Changed driver pipeline to compile host and device side of CUDA
files and incorporate results of device-side compilation into host
object file.
- Added a test for cuda pipeline creation in clang driver.
New clang options:
--cuda-host-only - Do host-side compilation only.
--cuda-device-only - Do device-side compilation only.
--cuda-gpu-arch=<ARCH> - specify GPU architecture for device-side
compilation. E.g. sm_35, sm_30. Default is sm_20. May be used more
than once in which case one device-compilation will be done per
unique specified GPU architecture.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9509
llvm-svn: 242085
The tests were failing on OS X.
Revert "[cuda] Driver changes to compile and stitch together host and device-side CUDA code."
Revert "Fixed regex to properly match '64' in the test case."
Revert "clang/test/Driver/cuda-options.cu REQUIRES clang-driver, at least."
llvm-svn: 242077
- Changed driver pipeline to compile host and device side of CUDA
files and incorporate results of device-side compilation into host
object file.
- Added a test for cuda pipeline creation in clang driver.
New clang options:
--cuda-host-only - Do host-side compilation only.
--cuda-device-only - Do device-side compilation only.
--cuda-gpu-arch=<ARCH> - specify GPU architecture for device-side
compilation. E.g. sm_35, sm_30. Default is sm_20. May be used more
than once in which case one device-compilation will be done per
unique specified GPU architecture.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9509
llvm-svn: 242058
This patch adds ObjectFilePCHContainerOperations uses the LLVM backend
to put the contents of a PCH into a __clangast section inside a COFF, ELF,
or Mach-O object file container.
This is done to facilitate module debugging by makeing it possible to
store the debug info for the types defined by a module alongside the AST.
rdar://problem/20091852
llvm-svn: 241620
The patch is the same except for the addition of a new test for the
issue that required reverting the dependent llvm commit.
--Original Commit Message--
Pass down the -flto option to the -cc1 job, and from there into the
CodeGenOptions and onto the PassManagerBuilder. This enables gating
the new EliminateAvailableExternally module pass on whether we are
preparing for LTO.
If we are preparing for LTO (e.g. a -flto -c compile), the new pass is not
included as we want to preserve available externally functions for possible
link time inlining.
llvm-svn: 241467
No more hardcoded paths: clang will use -sysroot as gcc root location if
provided. Otherwise, it will search for gcc on the path. If not found it
will use the driver installed location.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D5268
Patch by Ruben Van Boxem, Martell Malone, Yaron Keren.
Reviewed by Reid Kleckner.
llvm-svn: 241241
The map of FileChange structs here was storing two disjoint types of
information:
1. A pointer to the Module that an #include directive implicitly
imported
2. A FileID and FileType for an included file. These would be left
uninitialized in the Module case.
This change splits these two kinds of information into their own maps,
which both simplifies how we access either and avoids the undefined
behaviour we were hitting due to the uninitialized fields in the
included file case.
Mostly NFC, but fixes some errors found by self-host with ubsan.
llvm-svn: 241140
Any extra features from -fmodule-feature are part of the module hash and
need to get validated on load. Also print them with -module-file-info.
llvm-svn: 240433
Such conflicts are an accident waiting to happen, and this feature conflicts
with the desire to include existing headers into multiple modules and merge the
results. (In an ideal world, it should not be possible to export internal
linkage symbols from a module, but sadly the glibc and libstdc++ headers
provide 'static inline' functions in a few cases.)
llvm-svn: 240335
The patch is generated using this command:
$ tools/extra/clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py -fix \
-checks=-*,llvm-namespace-comment -header-filter='llvm/.*|clang/.*' \
work/llvm/tools/clang
To reduce churn, not touching namespaces spanning less than 10 lines.
llvm-svn: 240270
A PCHContainerOperations abstract interface provides operations for
creating and unwrapping containers for serialized ASTs (precompiled
headers and clang modules). The default implementation is
RawPCHContainerOperations, which uses a flat file for the output.
The main application for this interface will be an
ObjectFilePCHContainerOperations implementation that uses LLVM to
wrap the module in an ELF/Mach-O/COFF container to store debug info
alongside the AST.
rdar://problem/20091852
llvm-svn: 240225
This flag controls whether a given sanitizer traps upon detecting
an error. It currently only supports UBSan. The existing flag
-fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error has been made an alias of
-fsanitize-trap=undefined.
This change also cleans up some awkward behavior around the combination
of -fsanitize-trap=undefined and -fsanitize=undefined. Previously we
would reject command lines containing the combination of these two flags,
as -fsanitize=vptr is not compatible with trapping. This required the
creation of -fsanitize=undefined-trap, which excluded -fsanitize=vptr
(and -fsanitize=function, but this seems like an oversight).
Now, -fsanitize=undefined is an alias for -fsanitize=undefined-trap,
and if -fsanitize-trap=undefined is specified, we treat -fsanitize=vptr
as an "unsupported" flag, which means that we error out if the flag is
specified explicitly, but implicitly disable it if the flag was implied
by -fsanitize=undefined.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10464
llvm-svn: 240105
We used to have a flag to enable module maps, and two more flags to enable
implicit module maps. This is all redundant; we don't need any flag for
enabling module maps in the abstract, and we don't usually have -fno- flags for
-cc1. We now have just a single flag, -fimplicit-module-maps, that enables
implicitly searching the file system for module map files and loading them.
The driver interface is unchanged for now. We should probably rename
-fmodule-maps to -fimplicit-module-maps at some point.
llvm-svn: 239789
Summary:
The goal of this patch is to make `-verify` easier to use when testing libc++. The `notes` attached to compile error diagnostics are numerous and relatively unstable when they reference libc++ header internals. This patch allows libc++ to write stable compilation failure tests by allowing unexpected diagnostic messages to be ignored where they are not relevant.
This patch adds a new CC1 flag called `-verify-ignore-unexpected`. `-verify-ignore-unexpected` tells `VerifyDiagnosticsConsumer` to ignore *all* unexpected diagnostic messages. `-verify-ignore-unexpected=<LevelList>` can be used to only ignore certain diagnostic levels. `<LevelList>` is a comma separated list of diagnostic levels to ignore. The supported levels are `note`, `remark`, `warning` and `error`.
Reviewers: bogner, grosser, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10138
llvm-svn: 239665
CodeGenOptions and onto the PassManagerBuilder. This enables gating
the new EliminateAvailableExternally module pass on whether we are
preparing for LTO.
If we are preparing for LTO (e.g. a -flto -c compile), the new pass is not
included as we want to preserve available externally functions for possible
link time inlining.
llvm-svn: 239481
If the type isn't trivially moveable emplace can skip a potentially
expensive move. It also saves a couple of characters.
Call sites were found with the ASTMatcher + some semi-automated cleanup.
memberCallExpr(
argumentCountIs(1), callee(methodDecl(hasName("push_back"))),
on(hasType(recordDecl(has(namedDecl(hasName("emplace_back")))))),
hasArgument(0, bindTemporaryExpr(
hasType(recordDecl(hasNonTrivialDestructor())),
has(constructExpr()))),
unless(isInTemplateInstantiation()))
No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 238601
in-progress implementation of the Concepts TS. The recommended feature
test macro __cpp_experimental_concepts is set to 1 (as opposed to
201501) to indicate that the feature is enabled, but the
implementation is incomplete.
The link to the Concepts TS in cxx_status is updated to refer to the
PDTS (N4377). Additional changes related to __has_feature and
__has_extension are to follow in a later change.
Relevant tests include:
test/Lexer/cxx-features.cpp
The test file is updated with testing of the C++14 + Concepts TS mode.
The expected behaviour is the same as that of the C++14 modes except
for the case of __cpp_experimental_concepts."
- Hubert Tong.
Being committed for Hubert (as per his understanding with Richard Smith) as we start work on the concepts-ts following our preliminary strategy session earlier today.
The patch is tiny and seems quite standard.
Thanks Hubert!
llvm-svn: 237982
-fopenmp turns on OpenMP support and links libiomp5 as OpenMP library. Also there is -fopenmp={libiomp5|libgomp} option that allows to override effect of -fopenmp and link libgomp library (if -fopenmp=libgomp is specified).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9736
llvm-svn: 237769
With this change, enabling -fmodules-local-submodule-visibility results in name
visibility rules being applied to submodules of the current module in addition
to imported modules (that is, names no longer "leak" between submodules of the
same top-level module). This also makes it much safer to textually include a
non-modular library into a module: each submodule that textually includes that
library will get its own "copy" of that library, and so the library becomes
visible no matter which including submodule you import.
llvm-svn: 237473
Summary:
r235215 enables support in LLVM for legalizing f16 type in the IR. AArch64
already had support for this. r235215 and some backend patches brought support
for ARM, X86, X86-64, Mips and Mips64.
This change exposes the LangOption 'NativeHalfType' in the command line, so the
backend legalization can be used if desired. NativeHalfType is enabled for
OpenCL (current behavior) or if '-fnative-half-type' is set.
Reviewers: olista01, steven_wu, ab
Subscribers: cfe-commits, srhines, aemerson
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9781
llvm-svn: 237406
Backslash followed by # in a filename should have both characters
escaped, if you do it the way GNU Make wants. GCC doesn't, so we do
it the way GCC does rather than the way GNU Make wants.
llvm-svn: 237304
Previously we were setting LangOptions::GNUInline (which controls whether we
use traditional GNU inline semantics) if the language did not have the C99
feature flag set. The trouble with this is that C++ family languages also
do not have that flag set, so we ended up setting this flag in C++ modes
(and working around it in a few places downstream by also checking CPlusPlus).
The fix is to check whether the C89 flag is set for the target language,
rather than whether the C99 flag is cleared. This also lets us remove most
CPlusPlus checks. We continue to test CPlusPlus when deciding whether to
pre-define the __GNUC_GNU_INLINE__ macro for consistency with GCC.
There is a change in semantics in two other places
where we weren't checking both CPlusPlus and GNUInline
(FunctionDecl::doesDeclarationForceExternallyVisibleDefinition and
FunctionDecl::isInlineDefinitionExternallyVisible), but this change seems to
put us back into line with GCC's semantics (test case: test/CodeGen/inline.c).
While at it, forbid -fgnu89-inline in C++ modes, as GCC doesn't support it,
it didn't have any effect before, and supporting it just makes things more
complicated.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9333
llvm-svn: 237299
When writing a dependency (.d) file, if space or # is immediately
preceded by one or more backslashes, escape the backslashes as well as
the space or # character. Otherwise leave backslash alone.
This straddles the fence between BSD Make (which does no escaping at
all, and does not support space or # in filespecs) and GNU Make (which
does support escaping, but will fall back to the filespec as-written
if the escaping doesn't match an existing file).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9208
llvm-svn: 237296
- added -fcuda-include-gpubinary option to incorporate results of
device-side compilation into host-side one.
- generate code to register GPU binaries and associated kernels
with CUDA runtime and clean-up on exit.
- added test case for init/deinit code generation.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9507
llvm-svn: 236765
Summary:
The next step is to add user-friendly control over these options
to driver via -fsanitize-coverage= option.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: kcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9545
llvm-svn: 236756
This reverts commit r236422, effectively reapplying r236419. ASan
helped me diagnose the problem: the non-leaking logic would free the
ASTConsumer before freeing Sema whenever `isCurrentASTFile()`, causing a
use-after-free in `Sema::~Sema()`.
This version unconditionally frees Sema and the ASTContext before
freeing the ASTConsumer. Without the fix, these were either being freed
before the ASTConsumer was freed or leaked after, but they were always
spiritually released so this isn't really a functionality change.
I ran all of check-clang with ASan locally this time, so I'm hoping
there aren't any more problems lurking.
Original commit message:
Try again to plug a leak that's been around since at least r128011
after coming across the FIXME. Nico Weber tried something similar
in r207065 but had to revert in r207070 due to a bot failure.
The build failure isn't visible anymore so I'm not sure what went
wrong. I'm doing this slightly differently -- when not
-disable-free I'm still resetting the members (just not leaking
them) -- so maybe it will work out this time? Tests pass locally,
anyway.
llvm-svn: 236424
Try again to plug a leak that's been around since at least r128011 after
coming across the FIXME. Nico Weber tried something similar in r207065
but had to revert in r207070 due to a bot failure.
The build failure isn't visible anymore so I'm not sure what went wrong.
I'm doing this slightly differently -- when not -disable-free I'm still
resetting the members (just not leaking them) -- so maybe it will work
out this time? Tests pass locally, anyway.
llvm-svn: 236419
clang::MacroDefinition now models the currently-defined value of a macro. The
previous MacroDefinition type, which represented a record of a macro definition
directive for a detailed preprocessing record, is now called MacroDefinitionRecord.
llvm-svn: 236400
This flag specifies that the normal visibility rules should be used even for
local submodules (submodules of the currently-being-built module). Thus names
will only be visible if a header / module that declares them has actually been
included / imported, and not merely because a submodule that happened to be
built earlier declared those names. This also removes the need to modularize
bottom-up: textually-included headers will be included into every submodule
that includes them, since their include guards will not leak between modules.
So far, this only governs visibility of macros, not of declarations, so is not
ready for real use yet.
llvm-svn: 236350
It has no place there; it's not a property of the Module, and it makes
restoring the visibility set when we leave a submodule more difficult.
llvm-svn: 236300
This change is the third of 3 patches to add support for specifying
the profile output from the command line via -fprofile-instr-generate=<path>,
where the specified output path/file will be overridden by the
LLVM_PROFILE_FILE environment variable.
This patch adds the necessary support to the clang frontend, and adds a
new test.
The compiler-rt and llvm parts are r236055 and r236288, respectively.
Patch by Teresa Johnson. Thanks!
llvm-svn: 236289
Modules builds fundamentally have a non-linear macro history. In the interest
of better source fidelity, represent the macro definition information
faithfully: we have a linear macro directive history within each module, and at
any point we have a unique "latest" local macro directive and a collection of
visible imported directives. This also removes the attendent complexity of
attempting to create a correct MacroDirective history (which we got wrong
in the general case).
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 236176
ability to generate code that CodeGen likes. Test
cases can use this functionality by calling
// RUN: %clang_cc1 -emit-obj -o /dev/null -ast-merge %t.1.ast -ast-merge %t.2.ast %s
llvm-svn: 236011
NMake is a Make-like builder that comes with Microsoft Visual Studio.
Jom (https://wiki.qt.io/Jom) is an NMake-compatible build tool.
Dependency files for NMake/Jom need to use double-quotes to wrap
filespecs containing special characters, instead of the backslash
escapes that GNU Make wants.
Adds the -MV option, which specifies to use double-quotes as needed
instead of backslash escapes when writing the dependency file.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9260
llvm-svn: 235903
Previously we'd defer this determination until writing the AST, which doesn't
allow us to use this information when building other submodules of the same
module. This change also allows us to use a uniform mechanism for writing
module macro records, independent of whether they are local or imported.
llvm-svn: 235614
For CUDA source, Sema checks that the targets of call expressions make sense
(e.g. a host function can't call a device function).
Adding a flag that lets us skip this check. Motivation: for source-to-source
translation tools that have to accept code that's not strictly kosher CUDA but
is still accepted by nvcc. The source-to-source translation tool can then fix
the code and leave calls that are semantically valid for the actual compilation
stage.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9036
llvm-svn: 235049
Stop relying on `cl::opt` to pass along the driver's decision to
preserve use-lists. Create a new `-cc1` option called
`-emit-llvm-uselists` that does the right thing (when -emit-llvm-bc).
Note that despite its generic name, it *doesn't* do the right thing when
-emit-llvm (LLVM assembly) yet. I'll hook that up soon.
This doesn't really change the behaviour of the driver. The default is
still to preserve use-lists for `clang -emit-llvm` and `clang
-save-temps`, and nothing else. But it stops relying on global state
(and also is a nicer interface for hackers using `clang -cc1`).
llvm-svn: 234962
LLVM can now detect if a fd is seekable on windows.
Original commit message:
Actually check if lseek works instead of using a filename based heuristic.
llvm-svn: 234738
r234620, "Actually check if lseek works instead of using a filename based heuristic."
r234621, "Testcase for the previous commit."
r234718, "Suppress clang/test/PCH/emit-pth.c on win32, for now while investigating."
llvm-svn: 234730
Follow-up to r234666. With this, the -m[no-]global-merge options
have the expected behavior. Previously, -mglobal-merge was ignored,
and there was no way of enabling the optimization.
llvm-svn: 234668
The placement of the 'delete' call that was removed in the unique_ptr
migration in r234597 was not an accident. The raw_ostream has to be
destroyed before you do the rename on Windows, otherwise you get
ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED. We can still use unique_ptr, we just need to do a
manual reset().
Also, range-for-loop-ify this code.
llvm-svn: 234612
The driver currently accepts but ignores the -freciprocal-math flag.
This patch passes the flag through and enables 'arcp' fast-math-flag
generation in IR.
Note that this change does not actually enable the optimization for
any target. The reassociation optimization that this flag specifies
was implemented by http://reviews.llvm.org/D6334 :
http://llvm.org/viewvc/llvm-project?view=revision&revision=222510
Because the optimization is done in the backend rather than IR,
the backend must be modified to understand instruction-level
fast-math-flags or a new function-level attribute must be created.
Also note that -freciprocal-math is independent of any target-specific
usage of reciprocal estimate hardware instructions. That requires
its own flag ('-mrecip').
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20912
llvm-svn: 234493
Add Tool and ToolChain support for clang to target the NaCl OS using the NaCl
SDK for x86-32, x86-64 and ARM.
Includes nacltools::Assemble and Link which are derived from gnutools. They
are similar to Linux but different enought that they warrant their own class.
Also includes a NaCl_TC in ToolChains derived from Generic_ELF with library
and include paths suitable for an SDK and independent of the system tools.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8590
llvm-svn: 233594
Notably, this prevents us from doing *tons* of work to compute the
modules hash, including trying to read a darwin specific plist file off
of the system. There is a lot that needs cleaning up below this layer
too.
llvm-svn: 233462
non-visible definition, skip the new definition and make the old one visible
instead of trying to parse it again and failing horribly. C++'s ODR allows
us to assume that the two definitions are identical.
llvm-svn: 233250
prune it when we have disabled implicit module generation and thus are
not using any cached modules.
Also update a test of explicitly generated modules to pass this CC1 flag
correctly.
This fixes an issue where Clang was dropping files into the source tree
while running its tests.
llvm-svn: 233117
Previously we'd deserialize the list of mem-initializers for a constructor when
we deserialized the declaration of the constructor. That could trigger a
significant amount of unnecessary work (pulling in all base classes
recursively, for a start) and was causing problems for the modules buildbot due
to cyclic deserializations. We now deserialize these on demand.
This creates a certain amount of duplication with the handling of
CXXBaseSpecifiers; I'll look into reducing that next.
llvm-svn: 233052
Decide whether or not to use thread-safe statics depending on whether or
not we have an explicit request from the driver. If we don't have an
explicit request, infer which behavior to use depending on the
compatibility version we are targeting.
N.B. CodeGen support is still ongoing.
llvm-svn: 232906
There are no widely deployed standard libraries providing sized
deallocation functions, so we have to punt and ask the user if they want
us to use sized deallocation. In the future, when such libraries are
deployed, we can teach the driver to detect them and enable this
feature.
N3536 claimed that a weak thunk from sized to unsized deallocation could
be emitted to avoid breaking backwards compatibility with standard
libraries not providing sized deallocation. However, this approach and
other variations don't work in practice.
With the weak function approach, the thunk has to have default
visibility in order to ensure that it is overridden by other DSOs
providing sized deallocation. Weak, default visibility symbols are
particularly expensive on MachO, so John McCall was considering
disabling this feature by default on Darwin. It also changes behavior
ELF linking behavior, causing certain otherwise unreferenced object
files from an archive to be pulled into the link.
Our second approach was to use an extern_weak function declaration and
do an inline conditional branch at the deletion call site. This doesn't
work because extern_weak only works on MachO if you have some archive
providing the default value of the extern_weak symbol. Arranging to
provide such an archive has the same challenges as providing the symbol
in the standard library. Not to mention that extern_weak doesn't really
work on COFF.
Reviewers: rsmith, rjmccall
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8467
llvm-svn: 232788
Now that SmallString is a first-class citizen, most SmallString::str()
calls are not required. This patch removes a whole bunch of them, yet
there are lots more.
There are two use cases where str() is really needed:
1) To use one of StringRef member functions which is not available in
SmallString.
2) To convert to std::string, as StringRef implicitly converts while
SmallString do not. We may wish to change this, but it may introduce
ambiguity.
llvm-svn: 232622
consumers of that module.
Previously, such a file would only be available if the module happened to
actually import something from that module.
llvm-svn: 232583
This exposes the optional exit block placement logic from r232438 as a
clang -cc1 option. There is a test on the llvm side, but there isn't
really a way to inspect the gcov options from clang to test it here as
well.
llvm-svn: 232439
with a subset of the existing target CPU features or mismatched CPU
names.
While we can't check that the CPU name used to build the module will end
up being able to codegen correctly for the translation unit, we actually
check that the imported features are a subset of the existing features.
While here, rewrite the code to use std::set_difference and have it
diagnose all of the differences found.
Test case added which walks the set relationships and ensures we
diagnose all the right cases and accept the others.
No functional change for implicit modules here, just better diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 232248
CloudABI is a pure cross compilation target. This means that we should
not add /usr/include and /usr/local/include. Instead, headers are stored
in $sysroot/$triple/include.
The method of going back to the sysroot (by using "../../..") is also
used in this function for some of the other environments (e.g., MinGW).
llvm-svn: 231913
move the operator delete updating into a separate update record so we can cope
with updating another module's destructor's operator delete.
llvm-svn: 231735
This adds the -fapplication-extension option, along with the
ios_app_extension and macosx_app_extension availability attributes.
Patch by Ted Kremenek
llvm-svn: 230989
Currently -fms-extensions controls this behavior, which doesn't make
much sense. It means we can't identify what is and isn't a system header
when compiling our own preprocessed output, because #line doesn't
represent this information.
If someone is feeding Clang's preprocessed output to another compiler,
they can use this flag.
Fixes PR20553.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5217
llvm-svn: 230587
one can give us more lookup results (due to implicit special members). Be sure
to complete the redecl chain for every kind of DeclContext before performing a
lookup into it, rather than only doing so for NamespaceDecls.
llvm-svn: 230558
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies and testcase requirements. Over the last iteration this
version adds
- missing target requirements for testcases that specify an x86 triple,
- a missing clangCodeGen.a dependency to libClang.a in the make build.
rdar://problem/19104245
llvm-svn: 230423
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
rdar://problem/19104245
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies. Take 3.
llvm-svn: 230305
Before C11 there was only the DECIMAL_DIG definition. As of C11, we now
have one definition per floating point type (e.g. DBL_DECIMAL_DIG).
Change the existing code to define the new versions. To remain backward
compatible, define __DECIMAL_DIG__ as __LDBL_DECIMAL_DIG__.
Also update the tests. It seems that some of the existing test vectors
were incorrect. Change all tests for __DECIMAL_DIG__ to expect
__LDBL_DECIMAL_DIG__. Add tests for *_DECIMAL_DIG for FreeBSD/amd64, as
I happen to have such a system laying around. I've validated that the
values are in sync with <float.h>.
llvm-svn: 230207
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
rdar://problem/19104245
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies. Take 2.
llvm-svn: 230089
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
rdar://problem/19104245
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies.
llvm-svn: 230067
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
rdar://problem/19104245
llvm-svn: 230044
For now -funique-section-names is the default, so no change in default behavior.
The total .o size in a build of llvm and clang goes from 241687775 to 230649031
bytes if -fno-unique-section-names is used.
llvm-svn: 230031
If this flag is set, we error out when a module build is required. This is
useful in environments where all required modules are passed via -fmodule-file.
llvm-svn: 230006
the one in the current compiler invocation. If they differ reject the PCH.
This protects against the badness occurring from getting modules loaded from different module caches (see crashes).
rdar://19889860
llvm-svn: 229909
I didn't realize how easily the hostname could change - for example just
changing wireless networks seems to prompt it in some cases.
Users can always set their own local module cache path to avoid this.
This reverts commits r228592, 228594, 228601 and 228613.
rdar://19287368
llvm-svn: 229815
The /volatile:ms semantics turn volatile loads and stores into atomic
acquire and release operations. This distinction is important because
volatile memory operations do not form a happens-before relationship
with non-atomic memory. This means that a volatile store is not
sufficient for implementing a mutex unlock routine.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7580
llvm-svn: 229082
When mangling the module map path into a .pcm file name, also mangle the
IsSystem bit, which can also depend on the header search paths. For
example, the user may change from -I to -isystem. This can affect
diagnostics in the importing TU.
llvm-svn: 228966
Partially revert r223927 because LLVM gained support for 128-bit integers
in r227089. Modify and keep the tests that verify the definition of the
macro __SIZEOF_INT128__ for MIPS64 BE & LE in the preprocessor.
llvm-svn: 228918
Don't assume it will provide an error or null-terminate the string on
truncation, since POSIX doesn't guarantee either behaviour (although
Linux and Darwin at least will do the 'right thing').
llvm-svn: 228613
If the lock file manager times out, we should give an error rather than
silently trying to load the existing module. And delete the
(presumably) dead lock file, since it will otherwise prevent progress in
future invokations. This is unsound since we have no way to prove that
the lock file we are deleting is the same one we timed out on, but since
the lock is only to avoid excessive rebuilding anyway it should be okay.
Depends on llvm r228603.
llvm-svn: 228604
If gethostname() is not successful, just skip adding the hostname to the
module hash. And don't bother setting hostname[255] = 0, since if
gethostname() is successful, it will be null-terminated already (and if
it's not successful we don't read the string now.
llvm-svn: 228601
For compatibility with GCC (and because it's generally helpful information
otherwise inaccessible to the preprocessor). This appears to be canonically the
alignment of max_align_t (e.g. on i386, __BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT__ is 4 even though
vector types will be given greater alignment).
Patch mostly by Mats Petersson
llvm-svn: 228367
object. In such a case, use the TU's DC for merging global decls rather than
giving up when we find there is no TU scope.
Ultimately, we should probably avoid all loading of decls when preprocessing,
but there are other reasonable use cases for loading an AST file with no Sema
object for which this is the right thing.
llvm-svn: 228234
Summary:
Allow user to provide multiple blacklists by passing several
-fsanitize-blacklist= options. These options now don't override
default blacklist from Clang resource directory, which is always
applied (which fixes PR22431).
-fno-sanitize-blacklist option now disables all blacklists that
were specified earlier in the command line (including the default
one).
This change depends on http://reviews.llvm.org/D7367.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: timurrrr
Subscribers: cfe-commits, kcc, pcc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7368
llvm-svn: 228156
Summary:
This patch add a new option to dis-allow all inline asm.
Any GCC style inline asm will be reported as an error.
Reviewers: rnk, echristo
Reviewed By: rnk, echristo
Subscribers: bob.wilson, rnk, echristo, rsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6870
llvm-svn: 226340
Sema calls HandleVTable() with a bool parameter which is then threaded through
three layers. The only effect of this bool is an early return at the last
layer.
Instead, remove this parameter and call HandleVTable() only if the bool is
true. No intended behavior change.
llvm-svn: 226096
Sorry for the noise, I managed to miss a bunch of recent regressions of
include orderings here. This should actually sort all the includes for
Clang. Again, no functionality changed, this is just a mechanical
cleanup that I try to run periodically to keep the #include lines as
regular as possible across the project.
llvm-svn: 225979
A pass that adds random noops to X86 binaries to introduce diversity with the goal of increasing security against most return-oriented programming attacks.
Command line options:
-noop-insertion // Enable noop insertion.
-noop-insertion-percentage=X // X% of assembly instructions will have a noop prepended (default: 50%, requires -noop-insertion)
-max-noops-per-instruction=X // Randomly generate X noops per instruction. ie. roll the dice X times with probability set above (default: 1). This doesn't guarantee X noop instructions.
In addition, the following 'quick switch' in clang enables basic diversity using default settings (currently: noop insertion and schedule randomization; it is intended to be extended in the future).
-fdiversify
This is the clang part of the patch.
llvm part: D3392
http://reviews.llvm.org/D3393
Patch by Stephen Crane (@rinon)
llvm-svn: 225910
Introduce the following -fsanitize-recover flags:
- -fsanitize-recover=<list>: Enable recovery for selected checks or
group of checks. It is forbidden to explicitly list unrecoverable
sanitizers here (that is, "address", "unreachable", "return").
- -fno-sanitize-recover=<list>: Disable recovery for selected checks or
group of checks.
- -f(no-)?sanitize-recover is now a synonym for
-f(no-)?sanitize-recover=undefined,integer and will soon be deprecated.
These flags are parsed left to right, and mask of "recoverable"
sanitizer is updated accordingly, much like what we do for -fsanitize= flags.
-fsanitize= and -fsanitize-recover= flag families are independent.
CodeGen change: If there is a single UBSan handler function, responsible
for implementing multiple checks, which have different recoverable setting,
then we emit two handler calls instead of one:
the first one for the set of "unrecoverable" checks, another one - for
set of "recoverable" checks. If all checks implemented by a handler have the
same recoverability setting, then the generated code will be the same.
llvm-svn: 225719
Allow blessed access to the symbol rewriter from the driver. Although the
symbol rewriter could be invoked through tools like opt and llc, it would not
accessible from the frontend. This allows us to read the rewrite map files in
the frontend rather than the backend and enable symbol rewriting for actually
performing the symbol interpositioning.
llvm-svn: 225504
If there are some non-ascii character in the input source code, the
column index might be smallar than the byte index. This will result
in two possible assertion failures. This CL fixes the computation of
the column index and byte index.
1. The assertion in startOfNextColumn() and startOfPreviousColumn()
should not be raised when the byte index is greater than the column
index since the non-ascii characters may use more than one bytes to
store a character in a column.
2. The length of the caret line should be equal to the number of columns
of source line, instead of the length of the source line. Otherwise,
the assertion in selectInterestingSourceRegion will be raised because
the removed columns plus the kept columns are not greater than the max
column, which means that we should not remove any column at all.
llvm-svn: 225442
getMainExecutable() returns a std::string, assigning its result
to StringRef immediately creates a dangling pointer. This was
detected by half-broken fast-MSan-bootstrap bot.
llvm-svn: 224956
a CLANG_LIBDIR_SUFFIX down from the build system and using that as part
of the default resource dir computation.
Without this, essentially nothing that uses the clang driver works when
building clang with a libdir suffix. This is probably the single biggest
missing piece of support for multilib as without this people could hack
clang to end up installed in the correct location, but it would then
fail to find its own basic resources. I know of at least one distro that
has some variation on this patch to hack around this; hopefully they'll
be able to use the libdir suffix functionality directly as the rest of
these bits land.
This required fixing a copy of the code to compute Clang's resource
directory that is buried inside of the frontend (!!!). It had bitrotted
significantly relative to the driver code. I've made it essentially
a clone of the driver code in order to keep tests (which use cc1
heavily) passing. This copy should probably just be removed and the
frontend taught to always rely on an explicit resource directory from
the driver, but that is a much more invasive change for another day.
I've also updated one test which actually encoded the resource directory
in its checked output to tolerate multilib suffixes.
Note that this relies on a prior LLVM commit to add a stub to the
autoconf build system for this variable.
llvm-svn: 224924
-trigraphs is now an alias for -ftrigraphs. -fno-trigraphs makes it possible
to explicitly disable trigraphs, which couldn't be done before.
clang -std=c++11 -fno-trigraphs
now builds without GNU extensions, but with trigraphs disabled. Previously,
trigraphs were only disabled in GNU modes or with -std=c++1z.
Make the new -f flags the cc1 interface too. This requires changing -trigraphs
to -ftrigraphs in a few cc1 tests.
Related to PR21974.
llvm-svn: 224790
The default value of Opts.Trigraphs now no longer depends solely on the
language input kind, so move the code out of setLangDefaults(). Also make
sure that Opts.MSVCCompat is set before the Trigraph code runs.
Related to PR21974.
llvm-svn: 224719
Remove Sema::UnqualifiedTyposCorrected, a cache of corrected typos. It would only cache typo corrections that didn't provide ValidateCandidate of which there were few left, and it had a bug when we had the same identifier spelled wrong twice. See the last two tests in typo-correction.cpp for cases this fires.
llvm-svn: 224375
Bitfield RefersToEnclosingLocal of Stmt::DeclRefExprBitfields renamed to RefersToCapturedVariable to reflect latest changes introduced in commit 224323. Also renamed method Expr::refersToEnclosingLocal() to Expr::refersToCapturedVariable() and comments for constant arguments.
No functional changes.
llvm-svn: 224329
Currently, if global variable is marked as a private OpenMP variable, the compiler crashes in debug version or generates incorrect code in release version. It happens because in the OpenMP region the original global variable is used instead of the generated private copy. It happens because currently globals variables are not captured in the OpenMP region.
This patch adds capturing of global variables iff private copy of the global variable must be used in the OpenMP region.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6259
llvm-svn: 224323
Mixed path separators (ie, both / and \\) can mess up the sort order
of the VFS map when dumping module dependencies, as was recently
exposed by r224055 and papered over in r224145. Instead, we should
simply use native paths for consistency.
This also adds a TODO to add handling of .. in paths. There was some
code for this before r224055, but it was untested and probably broken.
llvm-svn: 224164
components. These sometimes get synthetically added, and we don't want -Ifoo
and -I./foo to be treated fundamentally differently here.
llvm-svn: 224055
arithmetic relaxation flags:
-cl-no-signed-zeros
-cl-unsafe-math-optimizations
-cl-finite-math-only
-cl-fast-relaxed-math
Propagate the info to FP instruction flags as well
as function attributes where they are available.
llvm-svn: 223928
This is a temporary workaround while MIPS64 has not yet fully supported
128-bit integers. But declaration of int128 type is necessary even though
`__SIZEOF_INT128__` is undefined because c++ standard header files like
`limits` throw error message if `__int128` is not available.
Patch by Sagar Thakur.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6402
llvm-svn: 223927
Original commit message:
[modules] Add experimental -fmodule-map-file-home-is-cwd flag to -cc1.
For files named by -fmodule-map-file=, and files found by 'extern module'
directives, this flag specifies that we should resolve filenames relative to
the current working directory rather than relative to the directory in which
the module map file resides. This is aimed at fixing path handling, in
particular for relative -I paths, when building modules that represent
components of the current project (rather than libraries installed on the
current system, which the current project has as dependencies, where we'd
typically expect the module map files to be looked up implicitly).
llvm-svn: 223913
For files named by -fmodule-map-file=, and files found by 'extern module'
directives, this flag specifies that we should resolve filenames relative to
the current working directory rather than relative to the directory in which
the module map file resides. This is aimed at fixing path handling, in
particular for relative -I paths, when building modules that represent
components of the current project (rather than libraries installed on the
current system, which the current project has as dependencies, where we'd
typically expect the module map files to be looked up implicitly).
llvm-svn: 223753
Summary:
Allow CUDA host device functions with two code paths using __CUDA_ARCH__
to differentiate between code path being compiled.
For example:
__host__ __device__ void host_device_function(void) {
#ifdef __CUDA_ARCH__
device_only_function();
#else
host_only_function();
#endif
}
Patch by Jacques Pienaar.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6457
llvm-svn: 223271
rather than trying to extract this information from the FileEntry after the
fact.
This has a number of beneficial effects. For instance, diagnostic messages for
failed module builds give a path relative to the "module root" rather than an
absolute file path, and the contents of the module includes file is no longer
dependent on what files the including TU happened to inspect prior to
triggering the module build.
llvm-svn: 223095
Summary:
Make DiagnosticsEngine::takeClient return std::unique_ptr<>. Updated
callers to store conditional ownership using a pair of pointer and unique_ptr
instead of a pointer + bool. Updated code that temporarily registers clients to
use the non-owning registration (+ removed extra calls to takeClient).
Reviewers: dblaikie
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6294
llvm-svn: 222193
This option was misleading because it looked like it enabled the
language feature of SEH (__try / __except), when this option was really
controlling which EH personality function to use. Mingw only supports
SEH and SjLj EH on x86_64, so we can simply do away with this flag.
llvm-svn: 221963
This fixes an assertion when running clang-tidy on a file having
--serialize-diagnostics in compiler options. Committing a regression test
for clang-tidy separately.
Patch by Aaron Wishnick!
llvm-svn: 221884
Summary:
This change makes the asan-coverge (formerly -mllvm -asan-coverge)
accessible via a clang flag.
Companion patch to LLVM is http://reviews.llvm.org/D6152
Test Plan: regression tests, chromium
Reviewers: samsonov
Reviewed By: samsonov
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6153
llvm-svn: 221719
For all threadprivate variables which have constructor/destructor emit call to void __kmpc_threadprivate_register(ident_t * <Current Location>, void *<Original Global Addr>, kmpc_ctor <Constructor>, kmpc_cctor NULL, kmpc_dtor <Destructor>);
In expressions all references to such variables are replaced by calls to void *__kmpc_threadprivate_cached(ident_t *<Current Location>, kmp_int32 <Current Thread Id>, void *<Original Global Addr>, size_t <Size of Data>, void ***<Pointer to autogenerated cache – array of private copies of threadprivate variable>);
Test test/OpenMP/threadprivate_codegen.cpp checks that codegen is correct. Also it checks that codegen is correct after serialization/deserialization and one of passes verifies debug info.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4002
llvm-svn: 221663
Get rid of ugly SanitizerOptions class thrust into LangOptions:
* Make SanitizeAddressFieldPadding a regular language option,
and rely on default behavior to initialize/reset it.
* Make SanitizerBlacklistFile a regular member LangOptions.
* Introduce the helper class "SanitizerSet" to represent the
set of enabled sanitizers and make it a member of LangOptions.
It is exactly the entity we want to cache and modify in CodeGenFunction,
for instance. We'd also be able to reuse SanitizerSet in
CodeGenOptions for storing the set of recoverable sanitizers,
and in the Driver to represent the set of sanitizers
turned on/off by the commandline flags.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 221653
Use the bitmask to store the set of enabled sanitizers instead of a
bitfield. On the negative side, it makes syntax for querying the
set of enabled sanitizers a bit more clunky. On the positive side, we
will be able to use SanitizerKind to eventually implement the
new semantics for -fsanitize-recover= flag, that would allow us
to make some sanitizers recoverable, and some non-recoverable.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 221558
Currently, when --serialize-diagnostics is passed this only includes
the diagnostics from clang -cc1, and driver diagnostics are
dropped. This causes issues for tools that use the serialized
diagnostics, since stderr is lost and these diagnostics aren't seen at
all.
We handle this by merging the diagnostics from the CC1 process and the
driver diagnostics into a single file when the driver invokes CC1.
Fixes rdar://problem/10585062
llvm-svn: 220525
Summary:
When using a profile, we used to require the use -gmlt so that we could
get access to the line locations. This is used to match line numbers in
the input profile to the line numbers in the function's IR.
But this is actually not necessary. The driver can provide source
location tracking without the emission of debug information. In these
cases, the annotation 'llvm.dbg.cu' is missing from the IR, but the
actual line location annotations are still present.
This patch tells the driver to only emit source location tracking
when -fprofile-sample-use is present in the command line.
Reviewers: echristo, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5888
llvm-svn: 220383
Implicit module builds are not well-suited to a lot of build systems. In
particular, they fare badly in distributed build systems, and they lead to
build artifacts that are not tracked as part of the usual dependency management
process. This change allows explicitly-built module files (which are already
supported through the -emit-module flag) to be explicitly loaded into a build,
allowing build systems to opt to manage module builds and dependencies
themselves.
This is only the first step in supporting such configurations, and it should
be considered experimental and subject to change or removal for now.
llvm-svn: 220359
This is long-since overdue, and matches GCC 5.0. This should also be
backwards-compatible, because we already supported all of C11 as an extension
in C99 mode.
llvm-svn: 220244
#include_next interacts poorly with modules: it depends on where in the list of
include paths the current file was found. Files covered by module maps are not
found in include search paths when building the module (and are not found in
include search paths when @importing the module either), so this isn't really
meaningful. Instead, we fake up the result that #include_next *should* have
given: find the first path that would have resulted in the given file being
picked, and search from there onwards.
llvm-svn: 220177
After http://reviews.llvm.org/D5687 is submitted, we will need
SanitizerBlacklist before the CodeGen phase, so make it a LangOpt
(as it will actually affect ABI / class layout).
llvm-svn: 219842
The various ways to create an ASTUnit all take a refcounted pointer to
a diagnostics engine as an argument, and if it isn't pointing at
anything they initialize it. This is a pretty confusing API, and it
really makes more sense for the caller to initialize the thing since
they control the lifetime anyway.
This fixes the one caller that didn't bother initializing the pointer
and asserts that the argument is initialized.
llvm-svn: 219752
I'd mispelled "Bitcode/BitCodes.h" before, and tested on a case
insensitive filesystem.
This reverts commit r219649, effectively re-applying r219647 and
r219648.
llvm-svn: 219664
In cases of nested module builds, or when you care how long module builds take,
this information was not previously easily available / obvious.
llvm-svn: 219658
The bots can't seem to find an include file. Reverting for now and
I'll look into it in a bit.
This reverts commits r219647 and r219648.
llvm-svn: 219649
We currently read serialized diagnostics directly in the C API, which
makes it difficult to reuse this logic elsewhere. This extracts the
core of the serialized diagnostic parsing logic into a base class that
can be subclassed using a visitor pattern.
llvm-svn: 219647
Summary:
This change adds an experimental flag -fsanitize-address-field-padding=N (0, 1, 2)
to clang and driver. With this flag ASAN will be able to detect some cases of
intra-object-overflow bugs,
see https://code.google.com/p/address-sanitizer/wiki/IntraObjectOverflow
There is no actual functionality here yet, just the flag parsing.
The functionality is being reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D5687
Test Plan: Build and run SPEC, LLVM Bootstrap, Chrome with this flag.
Reviewers: samsonov
Reviewed By: samsonov
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5676
llvm-svn: 219417
There's probably never a good reason to iterate over unique_ptrs. This
lets us use range-for and say Job.foo instead of (*it)->foo in a few
places.
llvm-svn: 218938
Otherwise we can end up silently skipping an import. If we happen to be
building another module at the time, we may build a mysteriously broken
module and not know why it seems to be missing symbols.
llvm-svn: 218552
This is another case of conditional ownership (in this case a raw
reference, plus a boolean to indicate whether the referenced object
should be deleted). While it's not ideal, I prefer to make the ownership
explicit with a unique_ptr than using a boolean flag (though it does
make the reference and the unique_ptr redundant in the sense that they
both refer to the same memory). At some point we might write a reusable
conditional ownership pointer (a stateful custom deleter for a unique_ptr
may be appropriate).
Based on a patch from a patch by Anton Yartsev.
llvm-svn: 217791
This adds a flag called -fseh-exceptions that uses the native Windows
.pdata and .xdata unwind mechanism to throw exceptions. The other EH
possibilities are DWARF and SJLJ exceptions.
Patch by Martell Malone!
Reviewed By: asl, rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3419
llvm-svn: 217790
1. We were hitting the NextIsPrevious assertion because we were trying
to merge decl chains that were independent of each other because we had
no Sema object to allow them to find existing decls. This is fixed by
delaying loading the "preloaded" decls until Sema is available.
2. We were trying to get identifier info from an annotation token, which
asserts. The fix is to special-case the module annotations in the
preprocessed output printer.
Fixed in a single commit because when you hit 1 you almost invariably
hit 2 as well.
llvm-svn: 217550
It is very common to include headers with DOS-style line endings, such
as windows.h, from source files with Unix-style line endings.
Previously, we would end up with mixed line endings and #endifs that
appeared to be on the same line:
#if 0 /* expanded by -frewrite-includes */
#include <windows.h>^M#endif /* expanded by -frewrite-includes */
Clang treats either of \r or \n as a line ending character, so this is
purely a cosmetic issue.
This has no automated test because most Unix tools on Windows will
implictly convert CRLF to LF when reading files, making it very hard to
detect line ending mismatches. FileCheck doesn't understand {{\r}}
either.
Fixes PR20552.
llvm-svn: 217259
People have been incorrectly using "-analyzer-disable-checker" to
silence analyzer warnings on a file, when analyzing a project. Add
the "-analyzer-disable-all-checks" option, which would allow the
suppression and suggest it as part of the error message for
"-analyzer-disable-checker". The idea here is to compose this with
"--analyze" so that users can selectively opt out specific files from
static analysis.
llvm-svn: 216763
In theory, it'd be nice if we could move to a case where all buried
pointers were buried via unique_ptr to demonstrate that the program had
finished with the value (that we could really have cleanly deallocated
it) but instead chose to bury it.
I think the main reason that's not possible right now is the various
IntrusiveRefCntPtrs in the Frontend, sharing ownership for a variety of
compiler bits (see the various similar
"CompilerInstance::releaseAndLeak*" functions). I have yet to figure out
their correct ownership semantics - but perhaps, even if the
intrusiveness can be removed, the shared ownership may yet remain and
that would lead to a non-unique burying as is there today. (though we
could model that a little better - by passing in a shared_ptr, etc -
rather than needing the two step that's currently used in those other
releaseAndLeak* functions)
This might be a bit more robust if BuryPointer took the boolean:
BuryPointer(bool, unique_ptr<T>)
and the choice to bury was made internally - that way, even when
DisableFree was not set, the unique_ptr would still be null in the
caller and there'd be no chance of accidentally having a different
codepath where the value is used after burial in !DisableFree, but it
becomes null only in DisableFree, etc...
llvm-svn: 216742