This change adds hierarchical "time trace" profiling blocks that can be visualized in Chrome, in a "flame chart" style. Each profiling block can have a "detail" string that for example indicates the file being processed, template name being instantiated, function being optimized etc.
This is taken from GitHub PR: https://github.com/aras-p/llvm-project-20170507/pull/2
Patch by Aras Pranckevičius.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58675
llvm-svn: 357340
In gcc, -gsplit-dwarf is handled in gcc/gcc.c as a spec
(ASM_FINAL_SPEC): objcopy --extract-dwo + objcopy --strip-dwo. In
gcc/opts.c, -gsplit_dwarf has the same semantic of a -g. Except for the
availability of the external command 'objcopy', nothing precludes the
feature working on other ELF OSes. llvm doesn't use objcopy, so it doesn't
have to exclude other OSes.
llvm-svn: 357150
The RISC-V assembler needs the target ABI because it defines a flag of the ELF
file, as described in [1].
Make clang (the driver) to pass the target ABI to -cc1as in exactly the same
way it does for -cc1.
Currently -cc1as knows about -target-abi but is not handling it. Handle it and
pass it to the MC layer via MCTargetOptions.
[1] https://github.com/riscv/riscv-elf-psabi-doc/blob/master/riscv-elf.md#file-header
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59298
llvm-svn: 356981
-malign-double is currently only implemented in the -cc1 interface. But its declared in Options.td so it is a driver option too. But you try to use it with the driver you'll get a message about the option being unused.
This patch teaches the driver to pass the option through to cc1 so it won't be unused. The Options.td says the option is x86 only but I didn't see any x86 specific code in its impementation in cc1 so not sure if the documentation is wrong or if I should only pass this option through the driver on x86 targets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59624
llvm-svn: 356706
Currently we have -Rpass for filtering the remarks that are displayed as
diagnostics, but when using -fsave-optimization-record, there is no way
to filter the remarks while generating them.
This adds support for filtering remarks by passes using a regex.
Ex: `clang -fsave-optimization-record -foptimization-record-passes=inline`
will only emit the remarks coming from the pass `inline`.
This adds:
* `-fsave-optimization-record` to the driver
* `-opt-record-passes` to cc1
* `-lto-pass-remarks-filter` to the LTOCodeGenerator
* `--opt-remarks-passes` to lld
* `-pass-remarks-filter` to llc, opt, llvm-lto, llvm-lto2
* `-opt-remarks-passes` to gold-plugin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59268
Original llvm-svn: 355964
llvm-svn: 355984
Currently we have -Rpass for filtering the remarks that are displayed as
diagnostics, but when using -fsave-optimization-record, there is no way
to filter the remarks while generating them.
This adds support for filtering remarks by passes using a regex.
Ex: `clang -fsave-optimization-record -foptimization-record-passes=inline`
will only emit the remarks coming from the pass `inline`.
This adds:
* `-fsave-optimization-record` to the driver
* `-opt-record-passes` to cc1
* `-lto-pass-remarks-filter` to the LTOCodeGenerator
* `--opt-remarks-passes` to lld
* `-pass-remarks-filter` to llc, opt, llvm-lto, llvm-lto2
* `-opt-remarks-passes` to gold-plugin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59268
llvm-svn: 355964
When -forder-file-instrumentation is on, we pass llvm flag to enable the order file instrumentation pass.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D58751
llvm-svn: 355333
Part 1 of CSPGO change in Clang. This includes changes in clang options
and calls to llvm PassManager. Tests will be committed in part2.
This change needs the PassManager change in llvm.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54176
llvm-svn: 355331
Summary:
In the clang UI, replaces -mthread-model posix with -matomics as the
source of truth on threading. In the backend, replaces
-thread-model=posix with the atomics target feature, which is now
collected on the WebAssemblyTargetMachine along with all other used
features. These collected features will also be used to emit the
target features section in the future.
The default configuration for the backend is thread-model=posix and no
atomics, which was previously an invalid configuration. This change
makes the default valid because the thread model is ignored.
A side effect of this change is that objects are never emitted with
passive segments. It will instead be up to the linker to decide
whether sections should be active or passive based on whether atomics
are used in the final link.
Reviewers: aheejin, sbc100, dschuff
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, sunfish, steven_wu, dexonsmith, rupprecht, jfb, jdoerfert, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58742
llvm-svn: 355112
A faster way to reduce the values in teams reductions was found, the
codegen is updated to use this faster algorithm and new runtime functions.
llvm-svn: 354479
This adds ACLE-defined macros to test for code being compiled in the ROPI and
RWPI position-independence modes.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23610
llvm-svn: 354265
Summary:
There have been three options related to threads and users had to set
all three of them separately to get the correct compilation results.
This makes sure the relationship between the options makes sense and
sets necessary options for users if only part of the necessary options
are specified. This does:
- Remove `-matomics`; this option alone does not enable anything, so
removed it to not confuse users.
- `-mthread-model posix` sets `-target-feature +atomics`
- `-pthread` sets both `-target-feature +atomics` and
`-mthread-model posix`
Also errors out when explicitly given options don't match, such as
`-pthread` is given with `-mthread-model single`.
Reviewers: dschuff, sbc100, tlively, sunfish
Subscribers: jgravelle-google, jfb, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57874
llvm-svn: 353761
This is suggested by 3.3.9 of MSP430 EABI document.
We do allow user to manually enable frame pointer. GCC toolchain uses the same behavior.
Patch by Dmitry Mikushev!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56925
llvm-svn: 353212
Summary:
This adds support for new-PM plugin loading to clang. The option
`-fpass-plugin=` may be used to specify a dynamic shared object file
that adheres to the PassPlugin API.
Tested: created simple plugin that registers an EP callback; with optimization level > 0, the pass is run as expected.
Committed on behalf of Marco Elver
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56935
llvm-svn: 352972
..and use it to control that parts of CUDA compilation
that depend on the specific version of CUDA SDK.
This patch has a placeholder for a 'new launch API' support
which is in a separate patch. The list will be further
extended in the upcoming patch to support CUDA-10.1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57487
llvm-svn: 352798
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
These two options enable/disable emission of R_{MICRO}MIPS_JALR fixups along
with PIC calls. The linker may then try to turn PIC calls into direct jumps.
By default, these fixups do get emitted by the backend, use
'-mno-relax-pic-calls' to omit them.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56878
llvm-svn: 351579
This is an initial implementation for msp430 toolchain including
-mmcu option support
-mhwmult options support
-integrated-as by default
The toolchain uses msp430-elf-as as a linker and supports msp430-gcc toolchain tree.
Patch by Kristina Bessonova!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56658
llvm-svn: 351228
Summary:
Adds a new -f[no]split-lto-unit flag that is disabled by default to
control module splitting during ThinLTO. It is automatically enabled
for -fsanitize=cfi and -fwhole-program-vtables.
The new EnableSplitLTOUnit codegen flag is passed down to llvm
via a new module flag of the same name.
Depends on D53890.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: ormris, mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53891
llvm-svn: 350949
Summary: Introduce a compiler flag for cases when the user knows that the collapsed loop counter can be safely represented using at most 32 bits. This will prevent the emission of expensive mathematical operations (such as the div operation) on the iteration variable using 64 bits where 32 bit operations are sufficient.
Reviewers: ABataev, caomhin
Reviewed By: ABataev
Subscribers: hfinkel, kkwli0, guansong, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55928
llvm-svn: 350758
Gentoo supports combining clang toolchain with GNU binutils, and many
users actually do that. As -faddrsig is not supported by GNU strip,
this results in a lot of warnings. Disable it by default and let users
enable it explicitly if they want it; with the intent of reevaluating
when the underlying feature becomes standarized.
See also: https://bugs.gentoo.org/667854
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56047
llvm-svn: 350028
If an -analyzer-config is passed through -Xanalyzer, it is not found while
looking for -Xclang.
Additionally, don't emit -analyzer-config-compatibility-mode for *every*
-analyzer-config flag we encounter; one is enough.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D55823
rdar://problem/46504165
llvm-svn: 349866
Since r348038 we emit an error every time an -analyzer-config option is not
found. The driver, however, suppresses this error with another flag,
-analyzer-config-compatibility-mode, so backwards compatibility is maintained,
while analyzer developers still enjoy the new typo-free experience.
The backwards compatibility turns out to be still broken when the -analyze
action is not specified; it is still possible to specify -analyzer-config
in that case. This should be fixed now.
Patch by Kristóf Umann!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55823
rdar://problem/46504165
llvm-svn: 349824
Replace multiple comparisons of getOS() value with FreeBSD, NetBSD,
OpenBSD and DragonFly with matching isOS*BSD() methods. This should
improve the consistency of coding style without changing the behavior.
Direct getOS() comparisons were left whenever used in switch or switch-
like context.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55916
llvm-svn: 349752
Avoid passing -faddrsig by default on NetBSD. This platform is still
using old GNU binutils that crashes on executables containing those
sections.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55828
llvm-svn: 349647
NFC for targets other than PS4.
Respect -nostdlib and -nodefaultlibs when enabling asan or ubsan.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55712
llvm-svn: 349508
Summary:
Add an option to initialize automatic variables with either a pattern or with
zeroes. The default is still that automatic variables are uninitialized. Also
add attributes to request uninitialized on a per-variable basis, mainly to disable
initialization of large stack arrays when deemed too expensive.
This isn't meant to change the semantics of C and C++. Rather, it's meant to be
a last-resort when programmers inadvertently have some undefined behavior in
their code. This patch aims to make undefined behavior hurt less, which
security-minded people will be very happy about. Notably, this means that
there's no inadvertent information leak when:
- The compiler re-uses stack slots, and a value is used uninitialized.
- The compiler re-uses a register, and a value is used uninitialized.
- Stack structs / arrays / unions with padding are copied.
This patch only addresses stack and register information leaks. There's many
more infoleaks that we could address, and much more undefined behavior that
could be tamed. Let's keep this patch focused, and I'm happy to address related
issues elsewhere.
To keep the patch simple, only some `undef` is removed for now, see
`replaceUndef`. The padding-related infoleaks are therefore not all gone yet.
This will be addressed in a follow-up, mainly because addressing padding-related
leaks should be a stand-alone option which is implied by variable
initialization.
There are three options when it comes to automatic variable initialization:
0. Uninitialized
This is C and C++'s default. It's not changing. Depending on code
generation, a programmer who runs into undefined behavior by using an
uninialized automatic variable may observe any previous value (including
program secrets), or any value which the compiler saw fit to materialize on
the stack or in a register (this could be to synthesize an immediate, to
refer to code or data locations, to generate cookies, etc).
1. Pattern initialization
This is the recommended initialization approach. Pattern initialization's
goal is to initialize automatic variables with values which will likely
transform logic bugs into crashes down the line, are easily recognizable in
a crash dump, without being values which programmers can rely on for useful
program semantics. At the same time, pattern initialization tries to
generate code which will optimize well. You'll find the following details in
`patternFor`:
- Integers are initialized with repeated 0xAA bytes (infinite scream).
- Vectors of integers are also initialized with infinite scream.
- Pointers are initialized with infinite scream on 64-bit platforms because
it's an unmappable pointer value on architectures I'm aware of. Pointers
are initialize to 0x000000AA (small scream) on 32-bit platforms because
32-bit platforms don't consistently offer unmappable pages. When they do
it's usually the zero page. As people try this out, I expect that we'll
want to allow different platforms to customize this, let's do so later.
- Vectors of pointers are initialized the same way pointers are.
- Floating point values and vectors are initialized with a negative quiet
NaN with repeated 0xFF payload (e.g. 0xffffffff and 0xffffffffffffffff).
NaNs are nice (here, anways) because they propagate on arithmetic, making
it more likely that entire computations become NaN when a single
uninitialized value sneaks in.
- Arrays are initialized to their homogeneous elements' initialization
value, repeated. Stack-based Variable-Length Arrays (VLAs) are
runtime-initialized to the allocated size (no effort is made for negative
size, but zero-sized VLAs are untouched even if technically undefined).
- Structs are initialized to their heterogeneous element's initialization
values. Zero-size structs are initialized as 0xAA since they're allocated
a single byte.
- Unions are initialized using the initialization for the largest member of
the union.
Expect the values used for pattern initialization to change over time, as we
refine heuristics (both for performance and security). The goal is truly to
avoid injecting semantics into undefined behavior, and we should be
comfortable changing these values when there's a worthwhile point in doing
so.
Why so much infinite scream? Repeated byte patterns tend to be easy to
synthesize on most architectures, and otherwise memset is usually very
efficient. For values which aren't entirely repeated byte patterns, LLVM
will often generate code which does memset + a few stores.
2. Zero initialization
Zero initialize all values. This has the unfortunate side-effect of
providing semantics to otherwise undefined behavior, programs therefore
might start to rely on this behavior, and that's sad. However, some
programmers believe that pattern initialization is too expensive for them,
and data might show that they're right. The only way to make these
programmers wrong is to offer zero-initialization as an option, figure out
where they are right, and optimize the compiler into submission. Until the
compiler provides acceptable performance for all security-minded code, zero
initialization is a useful (if blunt) tool.
I've been asked for a fourth initialization option: user-provided byte value.
This might be useful, and can easily be added later.
Why is an out-of band initialization mecanism desired? We could instead use
-Wuninitialized! Indeed we could, but then we're forcing the programmer to
provide semantics for something which doesn't actually have any (it's
uninitialized!). It's then unclear whether `int derp = 0;` lends meaning to `0`,
or whether it's just there to shut that warning up. It's also way easier to use
a compiler flag than it is to manually and intelligently initialize all values
in a program.
Why not just rely on static analysis? Because it cannot reason about all dynamic
code paths effectively, and it has false positives. It's a great tool, could get
even better, but it's simply incapable of catching all uses of uninitialized
values.
Why not just rely on memory sanitizer? Because it's not universally available,
has a 3x performance cost, and shouldn't be deployed in production. Again, it's
a great tool, it'll find the dynamic uses of uninitialized variables that your
test coverage hits, but it won't find the ones that you encounter in production.
What's the performance like? Not too bad! Previous publications [0] have cited
2.7 to 4.5% averages. We've commmitted a few patches over the last few months to
address specific regressions, both in code size and performance. In all cases,
the optimizations are generally useful, but variable initialization benefits
from them a lot more than regular code does. We've got a handful of other
optimizations in mind, but the code is in good enough shape and has found enough
latent issues that it's a good time to get the change reviewed, checked in, and
have others kick the tires. We'll continue reducing overheads as we try this out
on diverse codebases.
Is it a good idea? Security-minded folks think so, and apparently so does the
Microsoft Visual Studio team [1] who say "Between 2017 and mid 2018, this
feature would have killed 49 MSRC cases that involved uninitialized struct data
leaking across a trust boundary. It would have also mitigated a number of bugs
involving uninitialized struct data being used directly.". They seem to use pure
zero initialization, and claim to have taken the overheads down to within noise.
Don't just trust Microsoft though, here's another relevant person asking for
this [2]. It's been proposed for GCC [3] and LLVM [4] before.
What are the caveats? A few!
- Variables declared in unreachable code, and used later, aren't initialized.
This goto, Duff's device, other objectionable uses of switch. This should
instead be a hard-error in any serious codebase.
- Volatile stack variables are still weird. That's pre-existing, it's really
the language's fault and this patch keeps it weird. We should deprecate
volatile [5].
- As noted above, padding isn't fully handled yet.
I don't think these caveats make the patch untenable because they can be
addressed separately.
Should this be on by default? Maybe, in some circumstances. It's a conversation
we can have when we've tried it out sufficiently, and we're confident that we've
eliminated enough of the overheads that most codebases would want to opt-in.
Let's keep our precious undefined behavior until that point in time.
How do I use it:
1. On the command-line:
-ftrivial-auto-var-init=uninitialized (the default)
-ftrivial-auto-var-init=pattern
-ftrivial-auto-var-init=zero -enable-trivial-auto-var-init-zero-knowing-it-will-be-removed-from-clang
2. Using an attribute:
int dont_initialize_me __attribute((uninitialized));
[0]: https://users.elis.ugent.be/~jsartor/researchDocs/OOPSLA2011Zero-submit.pdf
[1]: https://twitter.com/JosephBialek/status/1062774315098112001
[2]: https://outflux.net/slides/2018/lss/danger.pdf
[3]: https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2014-06/msg00615.html
[4]: 776a0955ef
[5]: http://wg21.link/p1152
I've also posted an RFC to cfe-dev: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2018-November/060172.html
<rdar://problem/39131435>
Reviewers: pcc, kcc, rsmith
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, jkorous, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54604
llvm-svn: 349442
is not specified
The -target option allows the user to specify the build target using LLVM
triple. The triple includes the arch, and so the -arch option is redundant.
This should work just as well without the -arch. However, the driver has a bug
in which it doesn't target the "Cyclone" CPU for darwin if -target is used
without -arch. This commit fixes this issue.
rdar://46743182
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55731
llvm-svn: 349382
Implement options in clang to enable recording the driver command-line
in an ELF section.
Implement a new special named metadata, llvm.commandline, to support
frontends embedding their command-line options in IR/ASM/ELF.
This differs from the GCC implementation in some key ways:
* In GCC there is only one command-line possible per compilation-unit,
in LLVM it mirrors llvm.ident and multiple are allowed.
* In GCC individual options are separated by NULL bytes, in LLVM entire
command-lines are separated by NULL bytes. The advantage of the GCC
approach is to clearly delineate options in the face of embedded
spaces. The advantage of the LLVM approach is to support merging
multiple command-lines unambiguously, while handling embedded spaces
with escaping.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54487
Clang Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54489
llvm-svn: 349155
Summary:
Added support for the -gline-directives-only option + fixed logic of the
debug info for CUDA devices. If optimization level is O0, then options
--[no-]cuda-noopt-device-debug do not affect the debug info level. If
the optimization level is >O0, debug info options are used +
--no-cuda-noopt-device-debug is used or no --cuda-noopt-device-debug is
used, the optimization level for the device code is kept and the
emission of the debug directives is used.
If the opt level is > O0, debug info is requested +
--cuda-noopt-device-debug option is used, the optimization is disabled
for the device code + required debug info is emitted.
Reviewers: tra, echristo
Subscribers: aprantl, guansong, JDevlieghere, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51554
llvm-svn: 348930
It is faster to directly call the ObjC runtime for methods such as alloc/allocWithZone instead of sending a message to those functions.
This patch adds support for converting messages to alloc/allocWithZone 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: rjmccall
https://reviews.llvm.org/D55349
llvm-svn: 348687
The flag -fdebug-compilation-dir is useful to make generated .o files
independent of the path of the build directory, without making the compile
command-line dependent on the path of the build directory, like
-fdebug-prefix-map requires. This change makes it so that the driver can
forward the flag to -cc1as, like it already can for -cc1. We might want to
consider making -fdebug-compilation-dir a driver flag in a follow-up.
(Since -fdebug-compilation-dir defaults to PWD, it's already possible to get
this effect by setting PWD, but explicit compiler flags are better than env
vars, because e.g. ninja tracks command lines and reruns commands that change.)
Somewhat related to PR14625.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55377
llvm-svn: 348515
This is an updated version of the D54576, which was reverted.
Problem was that SplitDebugName calls the InputInfo::getFilename
which asserts if InputInfo given is not of type Filename:
const char *getFilename() const {
assert(isFilename() && "Invalid accessor.");
return Data.Filename;
}
At the same time at that point, it can be of type Nothing and
we need to use getBaseInput(), like original code did.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55006
llvm-svn: 348352
When debugging a boost build with a modified
version of Clang, I discovered that the PTH implementation
stores TokenKind in 8 bits. However, we currently have 368
TokenKinds.
The result is that the value gets truncated and the wrong token
gets picked up when including PTH files. It seems that this will
go wrong every time someone uses a token that uses the 9th bit.
Upon asking on IRC, it was brought up that this was a highly
experimental features that was considered a failure. I discovered
via googling that BoostBuild (mostly Boost.Math) is the only user of
this
feature, using the CC1 flag directly. I believe that this can be
transferred over to normal PCH with minimal effort:
https://github.com/boostorg/build/issues/367
Based on advice on IRC and research showing that this is a nearly
completely unused feature, this patch removes it entirely.
Note: I considered leaving the build-flags in place and making them
emit an error/warning, however since I've basically identified and
warned the only user, it seemed better to just remove them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54547
Change-Id: If32744275ef1f585357bd6c1c813d96973c4d8d9
llvm-svn: 348266
When the global new and delete operators aren't declared, Clang
provides and implicit declaration, but this declaration currently
always uses the default visibility. This is a problem when the
C++ library itself is being built with non-default visibility because
the implicit declaration will force the new and delete operators to
have the default visibility unlike the rest of the library.
The existing workaround is to use assembly to enforce the visiblity:
https://fuchsia.googlesource.com/zircon/+/master/system/ulib/zxcpp/new.cpp#108
but that solution is not always available, e.g. in the case of of
libFuzzer which is using an internal version of libc++ that's also built
with -fvisibility=hidden where the existing behavior is causing issues.
This change introduces a new option -fvisibility-global-new-delete-hidden
which makes the implicit declaration of the global new and delete
operators hidden.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53787
llvm-svn: 348234
This adds Hurd toolchain support to Clang's driver in addition
to handling translating the triple from Hurd-compatible form to
the actual triple registered in LLVM.
(Phabricator was stripping the empty files from the patch so I
manually created them)
Patch by sthibaul (Samuel Thibault)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54379
llvm-svn: 347833
This reverts commit r347035 as it introduced assertion failures under
certain conditions. More information can be found here:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL347035
llvm-svn: 347676
Summary:
-mno-speculative-load-hardening isn't a cc1 option, therefore,
before this change:
clang -mno-speculative-load-hardening hello.cpp
would have the following error:
error: unknown argument: '-mno-speculative-load-hardening'
This change will only ever forward -mspeculative-load-hardening
which is a CC1 option based on which flag was passed to clang.
Also added a test that uses this option that fails if an error like the
above is ever thrown.
Thank you ericwf for help debugging and fixing this error.
Reviewers: chandlerc, EricWF
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54763
llvm-svn: 347582
Summary:
the previous patch (https://reviews.llvm.org/rC346642) has been reverted because of test failure under windows.
So this patch fix the test cfe/trunk/test/CodeGen/code-coverage-filter.c.
Reviewers: marco-c
Reviewed By: marco-c
Subscribers: cfe-commits, sylvestre.ledru
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54600
llvm-svn: 347144
Summary:
Experience has shown that the functionality is useful. It makes linking
optimized clang with debug info for me a lot faster, 20s to 13s. The
type merging phase of PDB writing goes from 10s to 3s.
This removes the LLVM cl::opt and replaces it with a metadata flag.
After this change, users can do the following to use ghash:
- add -gcodeview-ghash to compiler flags
- replace /DEBUG with /DEBUG:GHASH in linker flags
Reviewers: zturner, hans, thakis, takuto.ikuta
Subscribers: aprantl, hiraditya, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54370
llvm-svn: 347072
This should be NFC change.
SplitDebugName recently started to accept the `Output` that
can be used to simplify the logic a bit, also it
seems that code in SplitDebugName that uses
OPT_fdebug_compilation_dir is simply dead.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54576
llvm-svn: 347035
-frewrite-imports already implies -frewrite-includes (it piggy-backs
on/extends the implementation) so there's no need to conditionally pass
-frewrite-includes when already using -frewrite-imports (& especially I
don't think these would want to be different between crash reporting and
not crash reporting)
llvm-svn: 346927
Summary:
If you're using the Microsoft ABI, chances are that you want PDBs and
codeview debug info. Currently, everyone has to remember to specific
-gcodeview by default, when it would be nice if the standard -g option
did the right thing by default.
Also, do some related cleanup of -cc1 options. When targetting the MS
C++ ABI, we probably shouldn't pass -debugger-tuning=gdb. We were also
passing -gcodeview twice, which is silly.
Reviewers: smeenai, zturner
Subscribers: aprantl, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54499
llvm-svn: 346907
This unfortunately results in a substantial breaking change when
switching to C++20, but it's not yet clear what / how much we should
do about that. We may want to add a compatibility conversion from
u8 string literals to const char*, similar to how C++98 provided a
compatibility conversion from string literals to non-const char*,
but that's not handled by this patch.
The feature can be disabled in C++20 mode with -fno-char8_t.
llvm-svn: 346892
The DWARF5 specification says(Appendix F.1):
"The sections that do not require relocation, however, can be
written to the relocatable object (.o) file but ignored by the
linker or they can be written to a separate DWARF object (.dwo)
file that need not be accessed by the linker."
The first part describes a single file split DWARF feature and there
is no way to trigger this behavior atm.
Fortunately, no many changes are required to keep *.dwo sections
in a .o, the patch does that.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52296
llvm-svn: 346837
Summary:
This saves a lot of relocations in optimized object files (at the cost
of some cost/increase in linked executable bytes), but gold's 32 bit
gdb-index support has a bug (
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=21894 ) so we can't
switch to this unconditionally. (& even if it weren't for that bug, one
might argue that some users would want to optimize in one direction or
the other - prioritizing object size or linked executable size)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54243
llvm-svn: 346789
Summary: /Zc:dllexportInlines with /fallback may cause unexpected linker error. It is better to disallow compile rather than warn for this combination.
Reviewers: hans, thakis
Reviewed By: hans
Subscribers: cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54426
llvm-svn: 346733
Summary:
These options are taking regex separated by colons to filter files.
- if both are empty then all files are instrumented
- if -fprofile-filter-files is empty then all the filenames matching any of the regex from exclude are not instrumented
- if -fprofile-exclude-files is empty then all the filenames matching any of the regex from filter are instrumented
- if both aren't empty then all the filenames which match any of the regex in filter and which don't match all the regex in filter are instrumented
- this patch is a follow-up of https://reviews.llvm.org/D52033
Reviewers: marco-c, vsk
Reviewed By: marco-c, vsk
Subscribers: cfe-commits, sylvestre.ledru
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52034
llvm-svn: 346642
This reverts commit r345963. We have a path forward now.
Original commit message:
The driver accidentally stopped passing the input filenames on to -cc1
in this mode due to confusion over what action was being requested.
This change also fixes a couple of crashes I encountered when passing
multiple files to such a -cc1 invocation.
llvm-svn: 346130
Summary:
This CL adds /Zc:DllexportInlines flag to clang-cl.
When Zc:DllexportInlines- is specified, inline class member function is not exported if the function does not have local static variables.
By not exporting inline function, code for those functions are not generated and that reduces both compile time and obj size. Also this flag does not import inline functions from dllimported class if the function does not have local static variables.
On my 24C48T windows10 machine, build performance of chrome target in chromium repository is like below.
These stats are come with 'target_cpu="x86" enable_nacl = false is_component_build=true dcheck_always_on=true` build config and applied
* https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromium/src/+/1212379
* https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/v8/v8/+/1186017
Below stats were taken with this patch applied on a05115cd4c
| config | build time | speedup | build dir size |
| with patch, PCH on, debug | 1h10m0s | x1.13 | 35.6GB |
| without patch, PCH on, debug | 1h19m17s | | 49.0GB |
| with patch, PCH off, debug | 1h15m45s | x1.16 | 33.7GB |
| without patch, PCH off, debug | 1h28m10s | | 52.3GB |
| with patch, PCH on, release | 1h13m13s | x1.22 | 26.2GB |
| without patch, PCH on, release | 1h29m57s | | 37.5GB |
| with patch, PCH off, release | 1h23m38s | x1.32 | 23.7GB |
| without patch, PCH off, release | 1h50m50s | | 38.7GB |
This patch reduced obj size and the number of exported symbols largely, that improved link time too.
e.g. link time stats of blink_core.dll become like below
| | cold disk cache | warm disk cache |
| with patch, PCH on, debug | 71s | 30s |
| without patch, PCH on, debug | 111s | 48s |
This patch's implementation is based on Nico Weber's patch. I modified to support static local variable, added tests and took stats.
Bug: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33628
Reviewers: hans, thakis, rnk, javed.absar
Reviewed By: hans
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, smeenai, dschuff, probinson, cfe-commits, eraman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51340
llvm-svn: 346069
target/teams/distribute regions.
Target/teams/distribute regions exist for all the time the kernel is
executed. Thus, if the variable is declared in their context and then
escape it, we can allocate global memory statically instead of
allocating it dynamically.
Patch captures all the globalized variables in target/teams/distribute
contexts, merges them into the records, one per each target region.
Those records are then joined into the union, one per compilation unit
(to save the global memory). Those units are organized into
2 x dimensional arrays, where the first dimension is
the number of blocks per SM and the second one is the number of SMs.
Runtime functions manage this global memory space between the executing
teams.
llvm-svn: 345978
This reverts commit r345803 and r345915 (a follow-up fix to r345803).
Reason: r345803 blocks our internal integrate because of the new
warnings showing up in too many places. The fix is actually correct,
we will reland it after figuring out how to integrate properly.
llvm-svn: 345963
-fsyntax-only.
The driver accidentally stopped passing the input filenames on to -cc1
in this mode due to confusion over what action was being requested.
This change also fixes a couple of crashes I encountered when passing
multiple files to such a -cc1 invocation.
llvm-svn: 345803
This reverts commit r345370, as it uncovered even more issues in
tests with partial/inconsistent path normalization:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/llvm-clang-x86_64-expensive-checks-win/builds/13562http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x64-windows-msvc/builds/886http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/llvm-clang-lld-x86_64-scei-ps4-windows10pro-fast/builds/20994
In particular, these tests seem to have failed:
Clang :: CodeGen/thinlto-diagnostic-handler-remarks-with-hotness.ll
Clang :: CodeGen/thinlto-multi-module.ll
Clang :: Driver/cuda-external-tools.cu
Clang :: Driver/cuda-options.cu
Clang :: Driver/hip-toolchain-no-rdc.hip
Clang :: Driver/hip-toolchain-rdc.hip
Clang :: Driver/openmp-offload-gpu.c
At least the Driver tests could potentially be fixed by extending
the path normalization to even more places, but the issues with the
CodeGen tests are still unknown.
In addition, a number of other tests seem to have been broken in
other clang dependent tools such as clang-tidy and clangd.
llvm-svn: 345372
libtool inspects the output of $CC -v to detect what object files and
libraries are linked in by default. When clang is built as a native
windows executable, all paths are formatted with backslashes, and
the backslashes cause each argument to be enclosed in quotes. The
backslashes and quotes break further processing within libtool (which
is implemented in shell script, running in e.g. msys) pretty badly.
Between unix style pathes (that only work in tools that are linked
to the msys runtime, essentially the same as cygwin) and proper windows
style paths (with backslashes, that can easily break shell scripts
and msys environments), the best compromise is to use windows style
paths (starting with e.g. c:) but with forward slashes, which both
msys based tools, shell scripts and native windows executables can
cope with. This incidentally turns out to be the form of paths that
GCC prints out when run with -v on windows as well.
This change potentially makes the output from clang -v a bit more
inconsistent, but it is isn't necessarily very consistent to begin with.
Compared to the previous attempt in SVN r345004, this now does
the same transformation on more paths, hopefully on the right set
of paths so that all tests pass (previously some tests failed, where
path fragments that were required to be identical turned out to
use different path separators in different places). This now also
is done only for non-windows, or cygwin/mingw targets, to preserve
all backslashes for MSVC cases (where the paths can end up e.g. embedded
into PDB files. (The transformation function itself,
llvm::sys::path::convert_to_slash only has an effect when run on windows.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53066
llvm-svn: 345370
Add a new driver level flag `-fcf-runtime-abi=` that allows one to specify the
runtime ABI for CoreFoundation. This controls the language interoperability.
In particular, this is relevant for generating the CFConstantString classes
(primarily through the `__builtin___CFStringMakeConstantString` builtin) which
construct a reference to the "CFObject"'s `isa` field. This type differs
between swift 4.1 and 4.2+.
Valid values for the new option include:
- objc [default behaviour] - enable ObjectiveC interoperability
- swift-4.1 - enable interoperability with swift 4.1
- swift-4.2 - enable interoperability with swift 4.2
- swift-5.0 - enable interoperability with swift 5.0
- swift [alias] - target the latest swift ABI
Furthermore, swift 4.2+ changed the layout for the CFString when building
CoreFoundation *without* ObjectiveC interoperability. In such a case, a field
was added to the CFObject base type changing it from: <{ const int*, int }> to
<{ uintptr_t, uintptr_t, uint64_t }>.
In swift 5.0, the CFString type will be further adjusted to change the length
from a uint32_t on everything but BE LP64 targets to uint64_t.
Note that the default behaviour for clang remains unchanged and the new layout
must be explicitly opted into via `-fcf-runtime-abi=swift*`.
llvm-svn: 345222
This patch exposes functionality added in rL344723 to the Clang driver/frontend
as a flag and adds appropriate metadata.
Driver tests pass:
```
ninja check-clang-driver
-snip-
Expected Passes : 472
Expected Failures : 3
Unsupported Tests : 65
```
Odd failure in CodeGen tests but unrelated to this:
```
ninja check-clang-codegen
-snip-
/SourceCache/llvm-trunk-8.0/tools/clang/test/CodeGen/builtins-wasm.c:87:10:
error: cannot compile this builtin function yet
-snip-
Failing Tests (1):
Clang :: CodeGen/builtins-wasm.c
Expected Passes : 1250
Expected Failures : 2
Unsupported Tests : 120
Unexpected Failures: 1
```
Original commit:
[X86] Support for the mno-tls-direct-seg-refs flag
Allows to disable direct TLS segment access (%fs or %gs). GCC supports a
similar flag, it can be useful in some circumstances, e.g. when a thread
context block needs to be updated directly from user space. More info and
specific use cases: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=16145
Patch by nruslan (Ruslan Nikolaev).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53102
llvm-svn: 344739
This enables the driver support for direct split DWARF emission for
Fuchsia in addition to Linux.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53248
llvm-svn: 344556
The test was failing on e.g. PPC which can't target Windows. Fix by
requiring X86 target in the test. Also, make sure the output goes to a
temporary directory, since CWD may not be writable.
llvm-svn: 344462
Add a /showFilenames option for users who want clang to echo the
currently compiled filename. MSVC does this echoing by default, and it's
useful for showing progress in build systems that doesn't otherwise
provide any progress report, such as MSBuild.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52773
llvm-svn: 344234
This can be used to preserve profiling information across codebase
changes that have widespread impact on mangled names, but across which
most profiling data should still be usable. For example, when switching
from libstdc++ to libc++, or from the old libstdc++ ABI to the new ABI,
or even from a 32-bit to a 64-bit build.
The user can provide a remapping file specifying parts of mangled names
that should be treated as equivalent (eg, std::__1 should be treated as
equivalent to std::__cxx11), and profile data will be treated as
applying to a particular function if its name is equivalent to the name
of a function in the profile data under the provided equivalences. See
the documentation change for a description of how this is configured.
Remapping is supported for both sample-based profiling and instruction
profiling. We do not support remapping indirect branch target
information, but all other profile data should be remapped
appropriately.
Support is only added for the new pass manager. If someone wants to also
add support for this for the old pass manager, doing so should be
straightforward.
llvm-svn: 344199
This patch renames -f{no-}cuda-rdc to -f{no-}gpu-rdc and keeps the original
options as aliases. When -fgpu-rdc is off,
clang will assume the device code in each translation unit does not call
external functions except those in the device library, therefore it is possible
to compile the device code in each translation unit to self-contained kernels
and embed them in the host object, so that the host object behaves like
usual host object which can be linked by lld.
The benefits of this feature is: 1. allow users to create static libraries which
can be linked by host linker; 2. amortized device code linking time.
This patch modifies HIP action builder to insert actions for linking device
code and generating HIP fatbin, and pass HIP fatbin to host backend action.
It extracts code for constructing command for generating HIP fatbin as
a function so that it can be reused by early finalization. It also modifies
codegen of HIP host constructor functions to embed the device fatbin
when it is available.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52377
llvm-svn: 343611
When embedding bitcode, only a subset of the arguments should be recorded into
the bitcode compilation commandline. The frontend job is split into two jobs,
one which will generate the bitcode. Ensure that the arguments for the
compilation to bitcode is properly stripped so that the embedded arguments are
the permitted subset.
llvm-svn: 342929
Move the floating point argument handling into the RenderFloatingPointOptions
helper. This relocation just puts the floating point related options into a
single location.
llvm-svn: 342512
Summary:
As part of r342165, I rewrote the logic to check whether
-fno-omit-frame-pointer was passed after a -fomit-frame-pointer
argument. This CL switches that logic to use the consolidated
shouldUseFramePointer() function. This fixes a potential issue where -pg
gets used with -fomit-frame-pointer on a platform that must always retain
frame pointers.
Reviewers: dblaikie
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52191
llvm-svn: 342501
Summary:
Previously, any instance of -fomit-frame-pointer would make it such that
-pg was an invalid flag combination. If -fno-omit-frame-pointer is
passed later on the command line (such that it actually takes effect),
-pg should be allowed.
Reviewers: nickdesaulniers
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Subscribers: manojgupta, nickdesaulniers, cfe-commits, kongyi, chh, pirama
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51713
llvm-svn: 342165
With clang-cl, when the user specifies /Yc or /Yu without a filename
the compiler uses a #pragma hdrstop in the main source file to
determine the end of the PCH. If a header is specified with /Yc or
/Yu #pragma hdrstop has no effect.
The optional #pragma hdrstop filename argument is not yet supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51391
llvm-svn: 341963
This recommits r341472, which was reverted due to test failures on macos bots.
The issue was that a macos target implies -glldb which, together with
this patch added a -gpubnames switch where there previously wasn't one.
The intentions of those checks was to check that -gpubnames is not
emitted by default so I add an explicit -ggdb arg to those command lines
to get same behavior on all platforms (the fact that -glldb *does* set
-gpubnames is tested by a separate test).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51576
llvm-svn: 341564
Summary:
DWARF v5 accelerator tables provide a considerable performance
improvement for lldb and will make the default -glldb behavior same on
all targets (right now we emit apple tables on apple targets, but these
are not controlled by -gpubnames, only by -glldb).
Reviewers: dblaikie
Subscribers: probinson, clayborg, JDevlieghere, aprantl, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51576
llvm-svn: 341472
Load Hardening.
Wires up the existing pass to work with a proper IR attribute rather
than just a hidden/internal flag. The internal flag continues to work
for now, but I'll likely remove it soon.
Most of the churn here is adding the IR attribute. I talked about this
Kristof Beyls and he seemed at least initially OK with this direction.
The idea of using a full attribute here is that we *do* expect at least
some forms of this for other architectures. There isn't anything
*inherently* x86-specific about this technique, just that we only have
an implementation for x86 at the moment.
While we could potentially expose this as a Clang-level attribute as
well, that seems like a good question to defer for the moment as it
isn't 100% clear whether that or some other programmer interface (or
both?) would be best. We'll defer the programmer interface side of this
for now, but at least get to the point where the feature can be enabled
without relying on implementation details.
This also allows us to do something that was really hard before: we can
enable *just* the indirect call retpolines when using SLH. For x86, we
don't have any other way to mitigate indirect calls. Other architectures
may take a different approach of course, and none of this is surfaced to
user-level flags.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51157
llvm-svn: 341363
This reverts commit b4547c9cadd2f8adfe3f3182e4c56e466c5256cb.
Apparently git llvm push from the monorepo does not respect branches and
pushes the current branch to master.
llvm-svn: 341352
The code remains so that we can potentially reenable it in a point
release, but the driver will reject it. Several issues were raised
during testing that made it clear that this was not quite ready for
general consumption.
Approved by: Hans Wennborg
llvm-svn: 341350
Summary:
Added option -gline-directives-only to support emission of the debug directives
only. It behaves very similar to -gline-tables-only, except that it sets
llvm debug info emission kind to
llvm::DICompileUnit::DebugDirectivesOnly.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: aprantl, fedor.sergeev, JDevlieghere, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51177
llvm-svn: 341212
constants by default when there is no optimization.
GCC's option -fno-keep-static-consts can be used to not emit
unused static constants.
In Clang, since default behavior does not keep unused static constants,
-fkeep-static-consts can be used to emit these if required. This could be
useful for producing identification strings like SVN identifiers
inside the object file even though the string isn't used by the program.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40925
llvm-svn: 340439
This commit adds the flag -fno-c++-static-destructors and the attributes
[[clang::no_destroy]] and [[clang::always_destroy]]. no_destroy specifies that a
specific static or thread duration variable shouldn't have it's destructor
registered, and is the default in -fno-c++-static-destructors mode.
always_destroy is the opposite, and is the default in -fc++-static-destructors
mode.
A variable whose destructor is disabled (either because of
-fno-c++-static-destructors or [[clang::no_destroy]]) doesn't count as a use of
the destructor, so we don't do any access checking or mark it referenced. We
also don't emit -Wexit-time-destructors for these variables.
rdar://21734598
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50994
llvm-svn: 340306
This changes the current default behavior (from emitting pubnames by
default, to not emitting them by default) & moves to matching GCC's
behavior* with one significant difference: -gno(-gnu)-pubnames disables
pubnames even in the presence of -gsplit-dwarf (though -gsplit-dwarf
still by default enables -ggnu-pubnames). This allows users to disable
pubnames (& the new DWARF5 accelerated access tables) when they might
not be worth the size overhead.
* GCC's behavior is that -ggnu-pubnames and -gpubnames override each
other, and that -gno-gnu-pubnames and -gno-pubnames act as synonyms and
disable either kind of pubnames if they come last. (eg: -gpubnames
-gno-gnu-pubnames causes no pubnames (neither gnu or standard) to be
emitted)
llvm-svn: 340206
- Add a command line options -msign-return-address to enable return address
signing
- Armv8.3a added instructions to sign the return address to help mitigate
against ROP attacks
- This patch adds command line options to generate function attributes that
signal to the back whether return address signing instructions should be
added
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49793
llvm-svn: 340019
"-fno-use-cxa-atexit" was a default provided by the initial
commit offering hexagon support. This is no longer required.
Reviewers: bcahoon, sidneym
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50816
llvm-svn: 339979
Summary:
Introduces funclet-based unwinding for Objective-C and fixes an issue
where global blocks can't have their isa pointers initialised on
Windows.
After discussion with Dustin, this changes the name mangling of
Objective-C types to prevent a C++ catch statement of type struct X*
from catching an Objective-C object of type X*.
Reviewers: rjmccall, DHowett-MSFT
Reviewed By: rjmccall, DHowett-MSFT
Subscribers: mgrang, mstorsjo, smeenai, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50144
llvm-svn: 339428
This extension emits the guard cf table without inserting the
instrumentation. Currently that's what clang-cl does with /guard:cf
anyway, but this allows a user to request that explicitly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50513
llvm-svn: 339420
Summary:
Some targets support only default set of the debug options and do not
support additional debug options, like NVPTX target. Patch introduced
virtual function supportsDebugInfoOptions() that can be overloaded
by the toolchain, checks if the target supports some debug
options and emits warning when an unsupported debug option is
found.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: aprantl, JDevlieghere, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49148
llvm-svn: 338155
Currently, support for debug_types is only present for ELF and trying to
pass -fdebug-types-section for other targets results in a crash in the
backend. Until this is fixed, we should emit a diagnostic in the front
end when the option is passed for non-linux targets.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49594
llvm-svn: 337717
Summary:
Support for this option is needed for building Linux kernel.
This is a very frequently requested feature by kernel developers.
More details : https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/4/4/601
GCC option description for -fdelete-null-pointer-checks:
This Assume that programs cannot safely dereference null pointers,
and that no code or data element resides at address zero.
-fno-delete-null-pointer-checks is the inverse of this implying that
null pointer dereferencing is not undefined.
This feature is implemented in as the function attribute
"null-pointer-is-valid"="true".
This CL only adds the attribute on the function.
It also strips "nonnull" attributes from function arguments but
keeps the related warnings unchanged.
Corresponding LLVM change rL336613 already updated the
optimizations to not treat null pointer dereferencing
as undefined if the attribute is present.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, efriedma, jyknight, chandlerc, rnk, srhines, void, george.burgess.iv
Reviewed By: jyknight
Subscribers: drinkcat, xbolva00, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47894
llvm-svn: 337433
which was reverted in r337336.
The problem that required a revert was fixed in r337338.
Also added a missing "REQUIRES: x86-registered-target" to one of
the tests.
Original commit message:
> Teach Clang to emit address-significance tables.
>
> By default, we emit an address-significance table on all ELF
> targets when the integrated assembler is enabled. The emission of an
> address-significance table can be controlled with the -faddrsig and
> -fno-addrsig flags.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48155
llvm-svn: 337339
Causing multiple failures on sanitizer bots due to TLS symbol errors,
e.g.
/usr/bin/ld: __msan_origin_tls: TLS definition in /home/buildbots/ppc64be-clang-test/clang-ppc64be/stage1/lib/clang/7.0.0/lib/linux/libclang_rt.msan-powerpc64.a(msan.cc.o) section .tbss.__msan_origin_tls mismatches non-TLS reference in /tmp/lit_tmp_0a71tA/mallinfo-3ca75e.o
llvm-svn: 337336
By default, we emit an address-significance table on all ELF
targets when the integrated assembler is enabled. The emission of an
address-significance table can be controlled with the -faddrsig and
-fno-addrsig flags.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48155
llvm-svn: 337333
Summary: Add a flag `-fno-digraphs` to disable digraphs in the lexer, similar to `-fno-operator-names` which disables alternative names for C++ operators.
Reviewers: rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: rsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48266
llvm-svn: 337232
is useful to omit the debug compilation dir when compiling assembly
files with -g. Part of PR38050.
Patch by Siddhartha Bagaria!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48989
llvm-svn: 336685
This moves the LTO-specific code for outlining from ToolChains/Clang.cpp to
ToolChains/Darwin.cpp. Passing -mllvm flags isn't sufficient for making sure
that the specified pass will actually run in LTO. This makes sure that when
-moutline is passed, the MachineOutliner will actually be added to the LTO
pass pipeline as expected.
llvm-svn: 336471
Implement support for MS-style PCH through headers.
This enables support for /Yc and /Yu where the through header is either
on the command line or included in the source. It replaces the current
support the requires the header also be specified with /FI.
This change adds a -cc1 option -pch-through-header that is used to either
start or stop compilation during PCH create or use.
When creating a PCH, the compilation ends after compilation of the through
header.
When using a PCH, tokens are skipped until after the through header is seen.
Patch By: mikerice
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46652
llvm-svn: 336379
This updates -mno-outline so that it passes -enable-machine-outliner=never
instead of nothing. This puts it in sync with the behaviour in llc and
other tools.
llvm-svn: 336001
- Rename the `-fsame-fbits` flag to `-fpadding-on-unsigned-fixed-point`
- Move the flag from a driver option to a cc1 option
- Rename the `SameFBits` member in TargetInfo to `PaddingOnUnsignedFixedPoint`
- Updated descriptions
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48727
llvm-svn: 335993
Instead of just saying "flag unused", we should tell the user that the
outliner isn't (at least officially) supported for some given architecture.
This adds a warning that will state something like
The 'blah' architecture does not support -moutline; flag ignored
when we call -moutline with the 'blah' architecture.
Since the outliner is still mostly an AArch64 thing, any architecture
other than AArch64 will emit this warning.
llvm-svn: 335672
Pass -enable-linkonceodr-outlining by default when LTO is enabled.
The outliner shouldn't compete with any sort of linker deduplication
on linkonceodr functions when LTO is enabled. Therefore, this behaviour
should be the default.
llvm-svn: 335504
The expected behaviour of command-line flags to clang is to have
the last of -m(whatever) and -mno-(whatever) win. The outliner
didn't do that. This fixes that and updates the test.
llvm-svn: 335503
With MSVC, PCH files are created along with an object file that needs to
be linked into the final library or executable. That object file
contains the code generated when building the headers. In particular, it
will include definitions of inline dllexport functions, and because they
are emitted in this object file, other files using the PCH do not need
to emit them. See the bug for an example.
This patch makes clang-cl match MSVC's behaviour in this regard, causing
significant compile-time savings when building dlls using precompiled
headers.
For example, in a 64-bit optimized shared library build of Chromium with
PCH, it reduces the binary size and compile time of
stroke_opacity_custom.obj from 9315564 bytes to 3659629 bytes and 14.6
to 6.63 s. The wall-clock time of building blink_core.dll goes from
38m41s to 22m33s. ("user" time goes from 1979m to 1142m).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48426
llvm-svn: 335466
This diff includes the logic for setting the precision bits for each primary fixed point type in the target info and logic for initializing a fixed point literal.
Fixed point literals are declared using the suffixes
```
hr: short _Fract
uhr: unsigned short _Fract
r: _Fract
ur: unsigned _Fract
lr: long _Fract
ulr: unsigned long _Fract
hk: short _Accum
uhk: unsigned short _Accum
k: _Accum
uk: unsigned _Accum
```
Errors are also thrown for illegal literal values
```
unsigned short _Accum u_short_accum = 256.0uhk; // expected-error{{the integral part of this literal is too large for this unsigned _Accum type}}
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46915
llvm-svn: 335148
Summary:
In many cases we can't devirtualize
because definition of vtable is not present. Most of the
time it is caused by inline virtual function not beeing
emitted. Forcing emitting of vtable adds a reference of these
inline virtual functions.
Note that GCC was always doing it.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, amharc, kuhar
Subscribers: llvm-commits, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47108
Co-authored-by: Krzysztof Pszeniczny <krzysztof.pszeniczny@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 334600
NFC for targets other than PS4.
Simplify users' workflow when enabling asan or ubsan and calling the linker separately.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47375
llvm-svn: 334096
// Primary fixed point types
signed short _Accum s_short_accum;
signed _Accum s_accum;
signed long _Accum s_long_accum;
unsigned short _Accum u_short_accum;
unsigned _Accum u_accum;
unsigned long _Accum u_long_accum;
// Aliased fixed point types
short _Accum short_accum;
_Accum accum;
long _Accum long_accum;
This diff only allows for declaration of the fixed point types. Assignment and other operations done on fixed point types according to http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n1169.pdf will be added in future patches. The saturated versions of these types and the equivalent _Fract types will also be added in future patches.
The tests included are for asserting that we can declare these types.
Fixed the test that was failing by not checking for dso_local on some
targets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46084
llvm-svn: 333923
```
// Primary fixed point types
signed short _Accum s_short_accum;
signed _Accum s_accum;
signed long _Accum s_long_accum;
unsigned short _Accum u_short_accum;
unsigned _Accum u_accum;
unsigned long _Accum u_long_accum;
// Aliased fixed point types
short _Accum short_accum;
_Accum accum;
long _Accum long_accum;
```
This diff only allows for declaration of the fixed point types. Assignment and other operations done on fixed point types according to http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n1169.pdf will be added in future patches. The saturated versions of these types and the equivalent `_Fract` types will also be added in future patches.
The tests included are for asserting that we can declare these types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46084
llvm-svn: 333814
Codebases that need to be compatible with the Microsoft ABI can pass
this flag to avoid issues caused by the lack of a fixed ABI for
incomplete member pointers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47503
llvm-svn: 333498
Summary:
This includes initial support for the (hopefully final) updated Objective-C ABI, developed here:
https://github.com/davidchisnall/clang-gnustep-abi-2
It also includes some cleanups and refactoring from older GNU ABIs.
The current version is ELF only, other formats to follow.
Reviewers: rjmccall, DHowett-MSFT
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Subscribers: smeenai, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46052
llvm-svn: 332950
if `-fopenmp-simd` is specified alone, `_OPENMP` macro should not be
defined. If `-fopenmp-simd` is specified along with the `-fopenmp`,
`_OPENMP` macro should be defined with the value `201511`.
llvm-svn: 332852
NFC for targets other than PS4.
This patch is a change in behavior for PS4, in that PS4 will no longer enable
RTTI when -fexceptions is specified (RTTI and Exceptions are disabled by default
on PS4). RTTI will remain disabled except for types being thrown or caught.
Also, '-fexceptions -fno-rtti' (previously prohibited on PS4) is now accepted,
as it is for other targets.
This patch removes some PS4 specific code, making the code cleaner.
Also, in the test file rtti-options.cpp, PS4 tests where the behavior is the
same as the generic x86_64-linux are removed, making the test cleaner.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46982
llvm-svn: 332784
When bundle/unbundle intermediate files for HIP, there may be multiple
sub archs, therefore BoundArch needs to be included in the target
and output file names for clang-offload-bundler.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46473
llvm-svn: 332121
The option enables use of 32-bit pointers for accessing
const/local/shared memory. The feature is disabled by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46148
llvm-svn: 331938
This reverts commit SVN r331666.
It was afterwards pointed out in https://reviews.llvm.org/D46520
that #line directives lose information about what parts come from a
system header. That means the result of -E usually won't compile,
since Windows headers are typically full of warnings and
default-error warnings.
llvm-svn: 331858
This is similar to the LLVM change https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290.
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\@brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\@brief //g' $i & done
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46320
llvm-svn: 331834
There are quite differences in HIP action builder and action job creation,
which justifies to define a separate offload kind.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46471
llvm-svn: 331811
Since we're working on turning the MachineOutliner by default under -Oz for
AArch64, it makes sense to have an -mno-outline flag available. This currently
doesn't do much (it basically just undoes -moutline).
When the MachineOutliner is on by default under AArch64, this flag should
set -mllvm -enable-machine-outliner=never.
llvm-svn: 331810
-dwarf-column-info is omitted if -gcodeview is specified for msvc
targets at the moment, but since -gcodeview is an option that can be
specified for any target, there's little reason to restrict this
handling to msvc targets.
This allows getting proper codeview debug info by passing -gcodeview
for e.g. MinGW targets as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46287
llvm-svn: 331807
Nitpicky, but the MachineOutliner is a machine-level pass, and so we should
reflect that by using "m" instead of "n".
Figured we should get this in before people get used to the letter f. :)
llvm-svn: 331806
This replicates 'cl.exe' behavior and allows for both preprocessor output and
dependency information to be extraced with a single compiler invocation.
This is especially useful for compiler caching with tools like Mozilla's sccache.
See: https://github.com/mozilla/sccache/issues/246
Patch By: fxb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46394
llvm-svn: 331533
Since we've been working on productizing the MachineOutliner in AArch64, it
makes sense to provide a more user-friendly way to enable it.
This allows users of AArch64 to enable the outliner using -foutline instead
of -mllvm -enable-machine-outliner. Other, less mature implementations (e.g,
x86-64) can still enable the pass using the -mllvm option.
Also add a test to make sure it works.
llvm-svn: 331370
This is not yet part of any C++ working draft, and so is controlled by the flag
-fchar8_t rather than a -std= flag. (The GCC implementation is controlled by a
flag with the same name.)
This implementation is experimental, and will be removed or revised
substantially to match the proposal as it makes its way through the C++
committee.
llvm-svn: 331244
As suggested in the post-commit thread for rL331056, we should match these
clang options with the established vocabulary of the corresponding sanitizer
option. Also, the use of 'strict' is well-known for these kinds of knobs,
and we can improve the descriptive text in the docs.
So this intends to match the logic of D46135 but only change the words.
Matching LLVM commit to match this spelling of the attribute to follow shortly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46236
llvm-svn: 331209
Found by opening config.h.cmake in vim, finding all defined macros with
/define\(01\)\? \zs[A-Za-z0-9_]*<cr>
:%s//\=setreg('A', submatch(0), 'V')/gn<cr>
:put A<cr>
and then joining them all with |, and passing that to
git grep -E that_pattern 'clang/*.h' 'clang/*.cpp' 'clang/*.c'
and diffing that output with the result of
git grep Config/config.h 'clang/*.h' 'clang/*.cpp' 'clang/*.c'
No intended behavior change.
llvm-svn: 331124
As discussed in the post-commit thread for:
rL330437 ( http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20180423/545906.html )
We need a way to opt-out of a float-to-int-to-float cast optimization because too much
existing code relies on the platform-specific undefined result of those casts when the
float-to-int overflows.
The LLVM changes associated with adding this function attribute are here:
rL330947
rL330950
rL330951
Also as suggested, I changed the LLVM doc to mention the specific sanitizer flag that
catches this problem:
rL330958
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46135
llvm-svn: 331041
Summary:
By default Clang outputs its version (including git commit hash, in
case of trunk builds) into object and assembly files. It might be
useful to have an option to disable this, especially for debugging
purposes.
This patch implements new command line flags -Qn and -Qy (the names
are chosen for compatibility with GCC). -Qn disables output of
the 'llvm.ident' metadata string and the 'producer' debug info. -Qy
(enabled by default) does the opposite.
Reviewers: faisalv, echristo, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: aprantl, cfe-commits, JDevlieghere, rogfer01
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45255
llvm-svn: 330442
This patch updates AddGoldPlugin to pass stats-file to the Gold plugin,
if -save-stats is passed. It also moves the save-stats option handling
to a helper function tools::getStatsFileName.
Reviewers: tejohnson, mehdi_amini, compnerd
Reviewed By: tejohnson, compnerd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45771
llvm-svn: 330422
This implements support for the previously ignored flag
`-falign-functions`. This allows the frontend to request alignment on
function definitions in the translation unit where they are not
explicitly requested in code. This is compatible with the GCC behaviour
and the ICC behaviour.
The scalar value passed to `-falign-functions` aligns functions to a
power-of-two boundary. If flag is used, the functions are aligned to
16-byte boundaries. If the scalar is specified, it must be an integer
less than or equal to 4096. If the value is not a power-of-two, the
driver will round it up to the nearest power of two.
llvm-svn: 330378
After r300027 implicit builds might fail when updating the SDK on
darwin. Make validation of system headers default when implicit modules
is on and allow modules to be rebuild when system headers change.
rdar://problem/19767523
llvm-svn: 330240
register destructor functions annotated with __attribute__((destructor))
using __cxa_atexit or atexit.
Register destructor functions annotated with __attribute__((destructor))
calling __cxa_atexit in a synthesized constructor function instead of
emitting references to the functions in a special section.
The primary reason for adding this option is that we are planning to
deprecate the __mod_term_funcs section on Darwin in the future. This
feature is enabled by default only on Darwin. Users who do not want this
can use command line option 'fno_register_global_dtors_with_atexit' to
disable it.
rdar://problem/33887655
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45578
llvm-svn: 330199
Summary:
The clang driver option -save-temps was not passed to the LTO config,
so when invoking the ThinLTO backends via clang during distributed
builds there was no way to get LTO to save temp files.
Getting this to work with ThinLTO distributed builds also required
changing the driver to avoid a separate compile step to emit unoptimized
bitcode when the input was already bitcode under -save-temps. Not only is
this unnecessary in general, it is problematic for ThinLTO backends since
the temporary bitcode file to the backend would not match the module path
in the combined index, leading to incorrect ThinLTO backend index-based
optimizations.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45217
llvm-svn: 330194
It means the same thing as -mllvm; there isn't any reason to have two
options which do the same thing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45109
llvm-svn: 329965
Summary: The logic was broken for Linux triples as it returns true in the switch for Triple.isOSLinux().
Reviewers: asb, apazos
Reviewed By: asb
Subscribers: kito-cheng, shiva0217, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45237
llvm-svn: 329941
Found via codespell -q 3 -I ../clang-whitelist.txt
Where whitelist consists of:
archtype
cas
classs
checkk
compres
definit
frome
iff
inteval
ith
lod
methode
nd
optin
ot
pres
statics
te
thru
Patch by luzpaz! (This is a subset of D44188 that applies cleanly with a few
files that have dubious fixes reverted.)
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44188
llvm-svn: 329399
Summary:
"-fmerge-all-constants" is a non-conforming optimization and should not
be the default. It is also causing miscompiles when building Linux
Kernel (https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/3/20/872).
Fixes PR18538.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, chandlerc
Reviewed By: rsmith, chandlerc
Subscribers: srhines, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45289
llvm-svn: 329300
This fixes host-side LTO during CUDA compilation. Before, LTO
pipeline construction was clashing with CUDA pipeline construction.
At the moment there's no point doing LTO on device side as each
device-side TU is a complete program. We will need to figure out
compilation pipeline construction for the device-side LTO when we
have working support for multi-TU device-side CUDA compilation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44691
llvm-svn: 328161
This makes it easier to debug crashes and hangs in block functions since
users can easily find out where the block is called from. The option
doesn't disable tail-calls from non-escaping blocks since non-escaping
blocks are not as hard to debug as escaping blocks.
rdar://problem/35758207
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43841
llvm-svn: 326530
Since LLVM r326341, default EmulatedTLS mode is decided in backend
according to target triple. Any front-end should pass -f[no]-emulated-tls
to backend and set up ExplicitEmulatedTLS only when the flags are used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43965
llvm-svn: 326499
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43852
This patch extends the SPMD implementation to all target constructs and guards this implementation under a new flag.
llvm-svn: 326368
Binaries for multiple architectures are combined by fatbinary,
so the current code was effectively not needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43461
llvm-svn: 326342
This reverts commit e17911006548518634fad66bb8648bcad49a1d64.
This is failing on ASAN bots because asan expects column info,
and it's also failing on some linux bots for unknown reasons which
i need to investigate.
llvm-svn: 326116
Windows debuggers don't work properly when column info is emitted
with lines. We handled this by checking if the driver mode was
cl, but it's possible to cause the gcc driver to emit codeview as
well, and in that path we were emitting column info with codeview.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43700
llvm-svn: 326113
In DWARF v5 the Line Number Program Header is extensible, allowing values with
new content types. This vendor extension to DWARF v5 allows source text to be
embedded directly in the line tables of the debug line section.
Add new flag (-g[no-]embed-source) to Driver and CC1 which indicates
that source should be passed through to LLVM during CodeGen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42766
llvm-svn: 326102
Summary:
If the flag -fforce-enable-int128 is passed, it will enable support for __int128_t and __uint128_t types.
This flag can then be used to build compiler-rt for RISCV32.
Reviewers: asb, kito-cheng, apazos, efriedma
Reviewed By: asb, efriedma
Subscribers: shiva0217, efriedma, jfb, dschuff, sdardis, sbc100, jgravelle-google, aheejin, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, jordy.potman.lists, sabuasal, niosHD, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43105
llvm-svn: 326045
Summary:
OpenCL 2.0 specification defines '-cl-uniform-work-group-size' option,
which requires that the global work-size be a multiple of the work-group
size specified to clEnqueueNDRangeKernel and allows optimizations that
are made possible by this restriction.
The patch introduces the support of this option.
To keep information about whether an OpenCL kernel has uniform work
group size or not, clang generates 'uniform-work-group-size' function
attribute for every kernel:
- "uniform-work-group-size"="true" for OpenCL 1.2 and lower,
- "uniform-work-group-size"="true" for OpenCL 2.0 and higher if
'-cl-uniform-work-group-size' option was specified,
- "uniform-work-group-size"="false" for OpenCL 2.0 and higher if no
'-cl-uniform-work-group-size' options was specified.
If the function is not an OpenCL kernel, 'uniform-work-group-size'
attribute isn't generated.
Patch by: krisb
Reviewers: yaxunl, Anastasia, b-sumner
Reviewed By: yaxunl, Anastasia
Subscribers: nhaehnle, yaxunl, Anastasia, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43570
llvm-svn: 325771
As a first step, pass '-c/--compile-only' to ptxas so that it
doesn't complain about references to external function. This
will successfully generate object files, but they won't work
at runtime because the registration routines need to adapted.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42921
llvm-svn: 324878
LLDB creates Clang modules and had an incomplete copy of the clang
Driver code that compute the -fmodule-cache-path. This patch makes the
clang driver code accessible to LLDB.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43128
llvm-svn: 324761
Summary:
Currently, assertion-disabled Clang builds emit value names when generating LLVM IR. This is controlled by the `NDEBUG` macro, and is not easily overridable. In order to get IR output containing names from a release build of Clang, the user must manually construct the CC1 invocation w/o the `-discard-value-names` option. This is less than ideal.
For example, Godbolt uses a release build of Clang, and so when asked to emit LLVM IR the result lacks names, making it harder to read. Manually invoking CC1 on Compiler Explorer is not feasible.
This patch adds the driver options `-fdiscard-value-names` and `-fno-discard-value-names` which allow the user to override the default behavior. If neither is specified, the old behavior remains.
Reviewers: erichkeane, aaron.ballman, lebedev.ri
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: bogner, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42887
llvm-svn: 324498
NVPTX does not have runtime support necessary for profiling to work
and even call arc collection is prohibitively expensive. Furthermore,
there's no easy way to collect the samples. NVPTX also does not
support global constructors that clang generates if sample/arc collection
is enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42452
llvm-svn: 323345
As RV64 codegen has not yet been upstreamed into LLVM, we focus on RV32 driver
support (RV64 to follow).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39963
llvm-svn: 322276
Adds option /guard:cf to clang-cl and -cfguard to cc1 to emit function IDs
of functions that have their address taken into a section named .gfids$y for
compatibility with Microsoft's Control Flow Guard feature.
The original patch didn't have the lit.local.cfg file that restricts the new
test to x86, thus the new test was failing on the non-x86 bots.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40531
The reverts r322008, which was a revert of r322005.
This reverts commit a05b89f9aca70597dc79fe97bc49b50b51f525ba.
llvm-svn: 322136
Cf-protection is a target independent flag that instructs the back-end to instrument control flow mechanisms like: Branch, Return, etc.
For example in X86 this flag will be used to instrument Indirect Branch Tracking instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40478
Change-Id: I5126e766c0e6b84118cae0ee8a20fe78cc373dea
llvm-svn: 322063
The new test fails on the Hexagon bot. Reverting while I investigate.
This reverts https://reviews.llvm.org/rL322005
This reverts commit b7e0026b4385180c378edc658ec91a39566f2942.
llvm-svn: 322008
Adds option /guard:cf to clang-cl and -cfguard to cc1 to emit function IDs
of functions that have their address taken into a section named .gfids$y for
compatibility with Microsoft's Control Flow Guard feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40531
llvm-svn: 322005
Adds the -fstack-size-section flag to enable the .stack_sizes section. The flag defaults to on for the PS4 triple.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40712
llvm-svn: 321992
The Clang option -foptimization-record-file= controls which file an
optimization record is output to. Optimization records are output if you
use the Clang option -fsave-optimization-record. If you specify the
first option without the second, you get a warning that the command line
argument was unused. Passing -foptimization-record-file= should imply
-fsave-optimization-record.
This fixes PR33670
Patch by: Dmitry Venikov <venikov@phystech.edu>
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39834
llvm-svn: 321090
There are 2 parts to getting the -fassociative-math command-line flag translated to LLVM FMF:
1. In the driver/frontend, we accept the flag and its 'no' inverse and deal with the
interactions with other flags like -ffast-math -fno-signed-zeros -fno-trapping-math.
This was mostly already done - we just need to translate the flag as a codegen option.
The test file is complicated because there are many potential combinations of flags here.
Note that we are matching gcc's behavior that requires 'nsz' and no-trapping-math.
2. In codegen, we map the codegen option to FMF in the IR builder. This is simple code and
corresponding test.
For the motivating example from PR27372:
float foo(float a, float x) { return ((a + x) - x); }
$ ./clang -O2 27372.c -S -o - -ffast-math -fno-associative-math -emit-llvm | egrep 'fadd|fsub'
%add = fadd nnan ninf nsz arcp contract float %0, %1
%sub = fsub nnan ninf nsz arcp contract float %add, %2
So 'reassoc' is off as expected (and so is the new 'afn' but that's a different patch).
This case now works as expected end-to-end although the underlying logic is still wrong:
$ ./clang -O2 27372.c -S -o - -ffast-math -fno-associative-math | grep xmm
addss %xmm1, %xmm0
subss %xmm1, %xmm0
We're not done because the case where 'reassoc' is set is ignored by optimizer passes. Example:
$ ./clang -O2 27372.c -S -o - -fassociative-math -fno-signed-zeros -fno-trapping-math -emit-llvm | grep fadd
%add = fadd reassoc float %0, %1
$ ./clang -O2 27372.c -S -o - -fassociative-math -fno-signed-zeros -fno-trapping-math | grep xmm
addss %xmm1, %xmm0
subss %xmm1, %xmm0
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39812
llvm-svn: 320920
This adds a new command line option -mprefer-vector-width to specify a preferred vector width for the vectorizers. Valid values are 'none' and unsigned integers. The driver will check that it meets those constraints. Specific supported integers will be managed by the targets in the backend.
Clang will take the value and add it as a new function attribute during CodeGen.
This represents the alternate direction proposed by Sanjay in this RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-November/118734.html
The syntax here matches gcc, though gcc treats it as an x86 specific command line argument. gcc only allows values of 128, 256, and 512. I'm not having clang check any values.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40230
llvm-svn: 320419
This is a re-apply of r319294.
adds -fseh-exceptions and -fdwarf-exceptions flags
clang will check if the user has specified an exception model flag,
in the absense of specifying the exception model clang will then check
the driver default and append the model flag for that target to cc1
-fno-exceptions has a higher priority then specifying the model
move __SEH__ macro definitions out of Targets into InitPreprocessor
behind the -fseh-exceptions flag
move __ARM_DWARF_EH__ macrodefinitions out of verious targets and into
InitPreprocessor behind the -fdwarf-exceptions flag and arm|thumb check
remove unused USESEHExceptions from the MinGW Driver
fold USESjLjExceptions into a new GetExceptionModel function that
gives the toolchain classes more flexibility with eh models
Reviewers: rnk, mstorsjo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39673
llvm-svn: 319297
adds -fseh-exceptions and -fdwarf-exceptions flags
clang will check if the user has specified an exception model flag,
in the absense of specifying the exception model clang will then check
the driver default and append the model flag for that target to cc1
clang cc1 assumes dwarf is the default if none is passed
and -fno-exceptions has a higher priority then specifying the model
move __SEH__ macro definitions out of Targets into InitPreprocessor
behind the -fseh-exceptions flag
move __ARM_DWARF_EH__ macrodefinitions out of verious targets and into
InitPreprocessor behind the -fdwarf-exceptions flag and arm|thumb check
remove unused USESEHExceptions from the MinGW Driver
fold USESjLjExceptions into a new GetExceptionModel function that
gives the toolchain classes more flexibility with eh models
Reviewers: rnk, mstorsjo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39673
llvm-svn: 319294
The support for relax relocations is dependent on the linker and
different toolchains within the same compiler can be using different
linkers some of which may or may not support relax relocations.
Give toolchains the option to control whether they want to use relax
relocations in addition to the existing (global) build system option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39831
llvm-svn: 318816
This is an instrumentation flag that's similar to
-finstrument-functions, but it only inserts calls on function entry, the
calls are inserted post-inlining, and they don't take any arugments.
This is intended for users who want to instrument function entry with
minimal overhead.
(-pg would be another alternative, but forces frame pointer emission and
affects link flags, so is probably best left alone to be used for
generating gcov data.)
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40276
llvm-svn: 318785
This was previously done in some places, but for example not for
bundling so that single object compilation with -c failed. In
addition cubin was used for all file types during unbundling which
is incorrect for assembly files that are passed to ptxas.
Tighten up the tests so that we can't regress in that area.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40250
llvm-svn: 318763
The Unified Arm Assembler Language is designed so that the majority of
assembler files can be assembled for both Arm and Thumb with the choice
made as a compilation option.
The way this is done in gcc is to pass -mthumb to the assembler with either
-Wa,-mthumb or -Xassembler -mthumb. This change adds support for these
options to clang. There is no assembler equivalent of -mno-thumb, -marm or
-mno-arm so we don't need to recognize these.
Ideally we would do all of the processing in
CollectArgsForIntegratedAssembler(). Unfortunately we need to change the
triple and at that point it is too late. Instead we look for the option
earlier in ComputeLLVMTriple().
Fixes PR34519
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40127
llvm-svn: 318647
This updates -mcount to use the new attribute names (LLVM r318195), and
switches over -finstrument-functions to also use these attributes rather
than inserting instrumentation in the frontend.
It also adds a new flag, -finstrument-functions-after-inlining, which
makes the cygprofile instrumentation get inserted after inlining rather
than before.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39331
llvm-svn: 318199
Added support for regcall as default calling convention. Also added code to
exclude main when applying default calling conventions.
Patch-By: eandrews
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39210
llvm-svn: 317268
AAPCS and AAPCS64 mandate that `wchar_t` with `-fno-short-wchar` is an
`unsigned int` rather than a `signed int`. Ensure that the driver does
not flip the signedness of `wchar_t` for those targets.
Add additional tests to ensure that this does not regress.
llvm-svn: 316858
GCC tries to shorten system headers in depfiles using its real path
(resolving components like ".." and following symlinks). Mimic this
feature to ensure that the Ninja build tool detects the correct
dependencies when a symlink changes directory levels, see
https://github.com/ninja-build/ninja/issues/1330
An option to disable this feature is added in case "these changed header
paths may conflict with some compilation environments", see
https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2012-09/msg00287.html
Note that the original feature request for GCC
(https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=52974) also included paths
preprocessed output (-E) and diagnostics. That is not implemented now
since I am not sure if it breaks something else.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37954
llvm-svn: 316193
This patch has the following changes
A new flag "-mhvx-length={64B|128B}" is introduced to specify the length of the vector.
Previously we have used "-mhvx-double" for 128 Bytes. This adds the target-feature "+hvx-length{64|128}b"
The "-mhvx" flag must be provided on command line to enable HVX for Hexagon. If no -mhvx-length flag
is specified, a default length is picked from the arch mentioned in this priority order from either -mhvx=vxx
or -mcpu. For v60 and v62 the default length is 64 Byte. For unknown versions, the length is 128 Byte. The
-mhvx flag adds the target-feature "+hvxv{hvx_version}"
The 64 Byte mode is soon going to be deprecated. A warning is emitted if 64 Byte is enabled. A warning is
still emitted for the default 64 Byte as well. This warning can be suppressed with a -Wno flag.
The "-mhvx-double" and "-mno-hvx-double" flags are deprecated. A warning is emitted if the driver sees
them on commandline. "-mhvx-double" is an alias to "-mhvx-length=128B"
The compilation will error out if -mhvx-length is specified with out an -mhvx/-mhvx= flag
The macro HVX_LENGTH is defined and is set to the length of the vector.
Eg: #define HVX_LENGTH 64
The macro HVX_ARCH is defined and is set to the version of the HVX.
Eg: #define HVX_ARCH 62
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38852
llvm-svn: 316102
Currently all the consecutive bitfields are wrapped as a large integer unless there is unamed zero sized bitfield in between. The patch provides an alternative manner which makes the bitfield to be accessed as separate memory location if it has legal integer width and is naturally aligned. Such separate bitfield may split the original consecutive bitfields into subgroups of consecutive bitfields, and each subgroup will be wrapped as an integer. Now This is all controlled by an option -ffine-grained-bitfield-accesses. The alternative of bitfield access manner can improve the access efficiency of those bitfields with legal width and being aligned, but may reduce the chance of load/store combining of other bitfields, so it depends on how the bitfields are defined and actually accessed to choose when to use the option. For now the option is off by default.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36562
llvm-svn: 315915
Move the logic for determining the `wchar_t` type information into the
driver. Rather than passing the single bit of information of
`-fshort-wchar` indicate to the frontend the desired type of `wchar_t`
through a new `-cc1` option of `-fwchar-type` and indicate the
signedness through `-f{,no-}signed-wchar`. This replicates the current
logic which was spread throughout Basic into the
`RenderCharacterOptions`.
Most of the changes to the tests are to ensure that the frontend uses
the correct type. Add a new test set under `test/Driver/wchar_t.c` to
ensure that we calculate the proper types for the various cases.
llvm-svn: 315126
to have child entries describing the template parameters. This will
be on by default for SCE tuning.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D14358
llvm-svn: 314444
We make the same decision when compiling the kernel or kexts -- we
should do this in -ffreestanding mode as well to avoid size regressions
in a potentially large set of firmware projects.
It's still possible to get uwtable information in -ffreestanding mode by
compiling with -funwind-tables (I expect this to be a rare case: I
certainly haven't seen any projects like that).
Context: -munwind-tables was enabled by default for some arm targets in
r310006.
Testing: check-clang
rdar://problem/33934446
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37777
llvm-svn: 313087
This primarily impacts the Windows MSVC and Windows itanium
environments. Windows MSVC does not use `__cxa_atexit` and Itanium
follows suit. Simplify the logic for the default value calculation and
blanket the Windows environments to default to off for use of
`__cxa_atexit`.
llvm-svn: 312941
The ToolChain class validates the -mthread-model flag in the constructor which
doesn't work correctly since the thread model methods are virtual methods. The
check is moved into Clang::ConstructJob() when constructing the internal
command line.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D37496
Patch by: Ian Tessier!
llvm-svn: 312748
This code has been `#if 0`'ed out for a very long time. After speaking
with Duncan, opt to remove it even if it is something which should be
fixed. If the underlying issue is still valid, this can be restored
with proper explanation and tests.
llvm-svn: 312618
Extract the target specific option application. This is a huge switch
which was inlined into the `ConstructJob` option which adds a large
amount of code to the already large function. Extract it to simply
reduce the line count. NFC
llvm-svn: 312436
Out-of-line the logic for selecting the debug information handling.
This is still split across the new function and partially inline in the
job construction. This is needed since the split portion attempts to
record the "-cc1" arguments. This needs to be the very last item to
ensure that all the flags are recorded. NFC.
llvm-svn: 312435
Extract the handling of the `-fbuiltin` family of flags to the driver.
This centralises the handling of those options, keeping the long
standing `#if 0`'ed block of code. This requires some additional code
archaeology to determine if we need to enable this functionality.
llvm-svn: 312392
Extract the logic for the floating point handling into its own function.
None of this information is needed for calculating the remainder of the
arguments to the frontend. NFC
llvm-svn: 312385
Extract a function to render the diagnostics options to the clang
frontend. This continues the simplification of the clang cc1 command
line invocation generation. NFC
llvm-svn: 312351
Extract the ObjC option rendering for the frontend. This localises the
option translation. It augments the existing `AddRuntimeObjCOptions`
which handles the runtime/ABI versioning flags only. This new function
handles the non-runtime selecting flags. This logic was previously
inlined into the `ConstructJob` function.
Minor change to the flag ordering to group the blocks related flags
together.
llvm-svn: 312344
Extract a function to render the options related to modules. This
reduces the cyclomatic complexity of the `ConstructJob` function. NFC.
llvm-svn: 312330
Extract the ARC migration tool flag handling into its own function.
This simplifies the flow of the clang frontend command line construction
function. NFC.
llvm-svn: 312244
Extend the -fmodule-file option to support the [<name>=]<file> value format.
If the name is omitted, then the old semantics is preserved (the module file
is loaded whether needed or not). If the name is specified, then the mapping
is treated as just another prebuilt module search mechanism, similar to
-fprebuilt-module-path, and the module file is only loaded if actually used
(e.g., via import). With one exception: this mapping also overrides module
file references embedded in other modules (which can be useful if module files
are moved/renamed as often happens during remote compilation).
This override semantics requires some extra work: we now store the module name
in addition to the file name in the serialized AST representation.
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35020
llvm-svn: 312220
Extract the analyzer flag handling into its own function to reduce the
overall complexity of the construction of the clang compiler arguments.
NFC.
llvm-svn: 312124