Fix bogus diagnostics that would get confused and think a "no viable
fuctions" case was an "undeclared identifiers" case, resulting in an
incorrect diagnostic preceding the correct one. Use overload resolution
to determine which function we should select when we can find call
candidates from a dependent base class. Make the diagnostics for a call
that could call a function from a dependent base class more specific,
and use a different diagnostic message for the case where the call
target is instead declared later in the same class. Plus some minor
diagnostic wording improvements.
This patch implements correct hostness based overloading resolution
in isBetterOverloadCandidate.
Based on hostness, if one candidate is emittable whereas the other
candidate is not emittable, the emittable candidate is better.
If both candidates are emittable, or neither is emittable based on hostness, then
other rules should be used to determine which is better. This is because
hostness based overloading resolution is mostly for determining
viability of a function. If two functions are both viable, other factors
should take precedence in preference.
If other rules cannot determine which is better, CUDA preference will be
used again to determine which is better.
However, correct hostness based overloading resolution
requires overloading resolution diagnostics to be deferred,
which is not on by default. The rationale is that deferring
overloading resolution diagnostics may hide overloading reslolutions
issues in header files.
An option -fgpu-exclude-wrong-side-overloads is added, which is off by
default.
When -fgpu-exclude-wrong-side-overloads is off, keep the original behavior,
that is, exclude wrong side overloads only if there are same side overloads.
This may result in incorrect overloading resolution when there are no
same side candates, but is sufficient for most CUDA/HIP applications.
When -fgpu-exclude-wrong-side-overloads is on, enable deferring
overloading resolution diagnostics and enable correct hostness
based overloading resolution, i.e., always exclude wrong side overloads.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80450
This patch diagnoses invalid references of global host variables in device,
global, or host device functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91281
In C++ when a reference variable is captured by copy, the lambda
is supposed to make a copy of the referenced variable in the captures
and refer to the copy in the lambda. Therefore, it is valid to capture
a reference to a host global variable in a device lambda since the
device lambda will refer to the copy of the host global variable instead
of access the host global variable directly.
However, clang tries to avoid capturing of reference to a host global variable
if it determines the use of the reference variable in the lambda function is
not odr-use. Clang also tries to emit load of the reference to a global variable
as load of the global variable if it determines that the reference variable is
a compile-time constant.
For a device lambda to capture a reference variable to host global variable
and use the captured value, clang needs to be taught that in such cases the use of the reference
variable is odr-use and the reference variable is not compile-time constant.
This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91088
caller.
This function did not satisfy its documented contract: it only
considered the first lookup result on each base path, not all lookup
results. It also performed unnecessary memory allocations.
This change results in a minor change to our representation: we now
include overridden methods that are found by any derived-to-base path
(not involving another override) in the list of overridden methods for a
function, rather than filtering out functions from bases that are both
direct virtual bases and indirect virtual bases for which the indirect
virtual base path contains another override for the function. (That
filtering rule is part of the class-scope name lookup rules, and doesn't
really have much to do with enumerating overridden methods.) The users
of the list of overridden methods do not appear to rely on this
filtering having happened, and it's simpler to not do it.
The restriction on pointer-to-pointer kernel arguments has been
relaxed in OpenCL 2.0. Apply the same address space restrictions for
pointer argument types to the inner pointer types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92091
Similar to Windows Itanium, PS4 is also an Itanium C++ ABI variant
which shares the goal of semantic compatibility with Microsoft C++
code that uses dllimport/export.
This change introduces a new function to determine from the triple
if an environment aims for compatibility with MS C++ code w.r.t to
these attributes and guards the relevant code paths using that
function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90299
Given the following case:
```
auto k() {
return undef();
return 1;
}
```
Prior to the patch, clang emits an `cannot initialize return object of type
'auto' with an rvalue of type 'int'` diagnostic on the second return
(because the return type of the function cannot be deduced from the first contain-errors return).
This patch suppresses this error.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92211
class to the declaring class in a class member access.
This check does not appear to be backed by any rule in the standard (the
rule in question was likely removed over the years), and only ever
produces duplicate diagnostics. (It's also not meaningful because there
isn't a unique declaring class after the resolution of core issue 39.)
same type in multiple base classes.
Not even if the type is introduced by distinct declarations (for
example, two typedef declarations, or a typedef and a class definition).
This is partly in preparation for an upcoming change that can change the
order in which DeclContext lookup results are presented.
In passing, fix some obvious errors where name lookup's notion of a
"static member function" missed static member function templates, and
where its notion of "same set of declarations" was confused by the same
declarations appearing in a different order.
Recently HIP toolchain made a change to use clang instead of opt/llc to do compilation
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D81861). The intention is to make HIP toolchain canonical like
other toolchains.
However, this change introduced an unintentional change regarding backend fp fuse
option, which caused regressions in some HIP applications.
Basically before the change, HIP toolchain used clang to generate bitcode, then use
opt/llc to optimize bitcode and generate ISA. As such, the amdgpu backend takes
the default fp fuse mode which is 'Standard'. This mode respect contract flag of
fmul/fadd instructions and do not fuse fmul/fadd instructions without contract flag.
However, after the change, HIP toolchain now use clang to generate IR, do optimization,
and generate ISA as one process. Now amdgpu backend fp fuse option is determined
by -ffp-contract option, which is 'fast' by default. And this -ffp-contract=fast language option
is translated to 'Fast' fp fuse option in backend. Suddenly backend starts to fuse fmul/fadd
instructions without contract flag.
This causes wrong result for some device library functions, e.g. tan(-1e20), which should
return 0.8446, now returns -0.933. What is worse is that since backend with 'Fast' fp fuse
option does not respect contract flag, there is no way to use #pragma clang fp contract
directive to enforce fp contract requirements.
This patch fixes the regression by introducing a new value 'fast-honor-pragmas' for -ffp-contract
and use it for HIP by default. 'fast-honor-pragmas' is equivalent to 'fast' in frontend but
let the backend to use 'Standard' fp fuse option. 'fast-honor-pragmas' is useful since 'Fast'
fp fuse option in backend does not honor contract flag, it is of little use to HIP
applications since all code with #pragma STDC FP_CONTRACT or any IR from a
source compiled with -ffp-contract=on is broken.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90174
Technically 'noexcept' isn't a qualifier, so this should be a separate conversion.
Also make the test a pure frontend test.
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67112
Reviewed by aaron.ballman, rsmith, wchilders
Highlights of review:
- avoid specifying an underlying type (unless such an enum is stored (or part of an abi?))
- avoid using enums as bit-fields, preferring unsigned bit-fields that we static_cast enumerators to. (MS's abi laysout enum bit-fields differently).
- clang-format, clang-format, clang-format.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D91035
Thank you!
This patch allows C-style casting between fixed-size and scalable
vectors. This kind of cast was previously blocked by the compiler, but
it should be allowed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91262
If the variable is implicitly firstprivatized in the inner task-based
region, it also must be firstprivatized in outer task-based regions.
Previously firstprivates were captured in tasks but later it was
optimized to reduce the memory usage. But still need to mark such
variables as implicit firstprivate in outer tasks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91627
Lax vector conversions was behaving incorrectly for implicit casts
between scalable and fixed-length vector types. For example, this:
#include <arm_sve.h>
#define N __ARM_FEATURE_SVE_BITS
#define FIXED_ATTR __attribute__((arm_sve_vector_bits(N)))
typedef svfloat32_t fixed_float32_t FIXED_ATTR;
void allowed_depending() {
fixed_float32_t fs32;
svfloat64_t s64;
fs32 = s64;
}
... would fail because the vectors have differing lane sizes. This patch
implements the correct behaviour for
-flax-vector-conversions={none,all,integer}. Specifically:
- -flax-vector-conversions=none prevents all lax vector conversions
between scalable and fixed-sized vectors.
- -flax-vector-conversions=integer allows lax vector conversions between
scalable and fixed-size vectors whose element types are integers.
- -flax-vector-conversions=all allows all lax vector conversions between
scalable and fixed-size vectors (including those with floating point
element types).
The implicit conversions are implemented as bitcasts.
Reviewed By: fpetrogalli
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91067
In the wake of https://reviews.llvm.org/D89559, we discovered that a
couple of tests (the ones modified below to have additional triple
versions) would fail on Win32, for 1 of two reasons. We seem to not
have a win32 buildbot anymore, so the triple is to make sure this
doesn't get broken in the future.
First, two of the three 'note-candidate' functions weren't appropriately
skipping the remaining conversion functions.
Second, in 1 situation (note surrogate candidates) we actually print the
type of the conversion operator. The two tests that ran into that
needed updating to make sure it printed the proper one in the win32
case.
Reviewed here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91409 by Aaron.
Highlights of the review:
- avoid an underlying type for enums
- avoid enum bit fields (MSVC packing anomalies) and favor static_casts to unsigned bit-fields
Patch by Thorsten Schuett <schuett@gmail.com> w some minor fixes in SemaType.cpp where a couple asserts had to be repaired to deal with lack of implicit coversion to int.
Thanks Thorsten!
When an overloaded member function has a ref-qualifier, like:
class X {
void f() &&;
void f(int) &;
};
we would print strange notes when the ref-qualifier doesn't fit the value
category:
X x;
x.f();
X().f(0);
would both print a note "no known conversion from 'X' to 'X' for object
argument" on their relevant overload instead of pointing out the
mismatch in value category.
At first I thought the solution is easy: just use the FailureKind member
of the BadConversionSequence struct. But it turns out that we weren't
properly setting this for function arguments. So I went through
TryReferenceInit to make sure we're doing that right, and found a number
of notes in the existing tests that improved as well.
Fixes PR47791.
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90123
`TD->getTemplatedDecl()` might not be a DeclContext variant, which can
trigger an assertion inside `isa<>`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91380
For dllexported default constructors with default arguments, we export
default constructor closures which pass in the default args. (See D8331
for a good explanation.)
For templates, that means those default args must be instantiated even
if the function isn't called. That is done by the
InstantiateDefaultCtorDefaultArgs() function, but it wasn't done for
explicit specializations, causing asserts (see bug).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91089
Since these are scoped enumerators, they have to be prefixed by DeclaratorContext, so lets remove Context from the name, and return some characters to the multiverse.
Patch was reviewed here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91011
Thank you to aaron, bruno, wyatt and barry for indulging me.
The original bug was discovered in T75057860. Clang front-end emits an AST that looks like this for an co_await expression:
|- ExprWithCleanups
|- -CoawaitExpr
|- -MaterializeTemporaryExpr ... Awaiter
...
|- -CXXMemberCallExpr ... .await_ready
...
|- -CallExpr ... __builtin_coro_resume
...
|- -CXXMemberCallExpr ... .await_resume
...
ExprWithCleanups is responsible for cleaning up (including calling dtors) for the temporaries generated in the wrapping expression).
In the above structure, the __builtin_coro_resume part (which corresponds to the code for the suspend case in the co_await with symmetric transfer), the pseudocode looks like this:
__builtin_coro_resume(
awaiter.await_suspend(
from_address(
__builtin_coro_frame())).address());
One of the temporaries that's generated as part of this code is the coroutine handle returned from awaiter.await_suspend() call. The call returns a handle which is a prvalue (since it's a returned value on the fly). In order to call the address() method on it, it needs to be converted into an xvalue. Hence a materialized temp is created to hold it. This temp will need to be cleaned up eventually. Now, since all cleanups happen at the end of the entire co_await expression, which is after the <coro.suspend> suspension point, the compiler will think that such a temp needs to live across suspensions, and need to be put on the coroutine frame, even though it's only used temporarily just to call address() method.
Such a phenomena not only unnecessarily increases the frame size, but can lead to ASAN failures, if the coroutine was already destroyed as part of the await_suspend() call. This is because if the coroutine was already destroyed, the frame no longer exists, and one can not store anything into it. But if the temporary object is considered to need to live on the frame, it will be stored into the frame after await_suspend() returns.
A fix attempt was done in https://reviews.llvm.org/D87470. Unfortunately it is incorrect. The reason is that cleanups in Clang works more like linearly than nested. There is one current state indicating whether it needs cleanup, and an ExprWithCleanups resets that state. This means that an ExprWithCleanups must be capable of cleaning up all temporaries created in the wrapping expression, otherwise there will be dangling temporaries cleaned up at the wrong place.
I eventually found a walk-around (https://reviews.llvm.org/D89066) that doesn't break any existing tests while fixing the issue. But it targets the final co_await only. If we ever have a co_await that's not on the final awaiter and the frame gets destroyed after suspend, we are in trouble. Hence we need a proper fix.
This patch is the proper fix. It does the folllowing things to fully resolve the issue:
1. The AST has to be generated in the order according to their nesting relationship. We should not generate AST out of order because then the code generator would incorrectly track the state of temporaries and when a cleanup is needed. So the code in buildCoawaitCalls is reorganized so that we will be generating the AST for each coawait member call in order along with their child AST.
2. await_ready() call is wrapped with an ExprWithCleanups so that temporaries in it gets cleaned up as early as possible to avoid living across suspension.
3. await_suspend() call is wrapped with an ExprWithCleanups if it's not a symmetric transfer. In the case of a symmetric transfer, in order to maintain the musttail call contract, the ExprWithCleanups is wraaped before the resume call.
4. In the end, we mark again that it needs a cleanup, so that the entire CoawaitExpr will be wrapped with a ExprWithCleanups which will clean up the Awaiter object associated with the await expression.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90990
In C++11 standard, to become implicitly movable, the expression in return
statement should be a non-volatile automatic object. CWG1579 changed the rule
to require that the expression only needs to be an automatic object. C++14
standard and C++17 standard kept this rule unchanged. C++20 standard changed
the rule back to require the expression be a non-volatile automatic object.
This should be a typo in standards, and VD should be non-volatile.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88295
In order not to modify the `tgt_target_data_update` information but still be
able to pass the extra information for non-contiguous map item (offset,
count, and stride for each dimension), this patch overload `arg` when
the maptype is set as `OMP_MAP_DESCRIPTOR`. The origin `arg` is for
passing the pointer information, however, the overloaded `arg` is an
array of descriptor_dim:
struct descriptor_dim {
int64_t offset;
int64_t count;
int64_t stride
};
and the array size is the same as dimension size. In addition, since we
have count and stride information in descriptor_dim, we can replace/overload the
`arg_size` parameter by using dimension size.
For supporting `stride` in array section, we use a dummy dimension in
descriptor to store the unit size. The formula for counting the stride
in dimension D_n: `unit size * (D_0 * D_1 ... * D_n-1) * D_n.stride`.
Demonstrate how it works:
```
double arr[3][4][5];
D0: { offset = 0, count = 1, stride = 8 } // offset, count, dimension size always be 0, 1, 1 for this extra dimension, stride is the unit size
D1: { offset = 0, count = 2, stride = 8 * 1 * 2 = 16 } // stride = unit size * (product of dimension size of D0) * D1.stride = 4 * 1 * 2 = 8
D2: { offset = 2, count = 2, stride = 8 * (1 * 5) * 1 = 40 } // stride = unit size * (product of dimension size of D0, D1) * D2.stride = 4 * 5 * 1 = 20
D3: { offset = 0, count = 2, stride = 8 * (1 * 5 * 4) * 2 = 320 } // stride = unit size * (product of dimension size of D0, D1, D2) * D3.stride = 4 * 25 * 2 = 200
// X here means we need to offload this data, therefore, runtime will transfer
// data from offset 80, 96, 120, 136, 400, 416, 440, 456
// Runtime patch: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82245
// OOOOO OOOOO OOOOO
// OOOOO OOOOO OOOOO
// XOXOO OOOOO XOXOO
// XOXOO OOOOO XOXOO
```
Reviewed By: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84192
The strictfp metadata was added to the casting AST nodes in D85960, but
we aren't using that metadata yet. This patch adds that support.
In order to avoid lots of ad-hoc passing around of the strictfp bits I
updated the IRBuilder when moving from a function that has the Expr* to a
function that lacks it. I believe we should switch to this pattern to keep
the strictfp support from being overly invasive.
For the purpose of testing that we're picking up the right metadata, I
also made my tests use a pragma to make the AST's strictfp metadata not
match the global strictfp metadata. This exposes issues that we need to
deal with in subsequent patches, and I believe this is the right method
for most all of our clang strictfp tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88913
As described here:
https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20150220-00/?p=44623
In order to allow Lambdas to be used with traditional Win32 APIs, they
emit a conversion function for (what Raymond Chen claims is all) a
number of the calling conventions. Through experimentation, we
discovered that the list isn't quite 'all'.
This patch implements this by taking the list of conversions that MSVC
emits (across 'all' architectures, I don't see any CCs on ARM), then
emits them if they are supported by the current target.
However, we also add 3 other options (which may be duplicates):
free-function, member-function, and operator() calling conventions. We
do this because we have an extension where we generate both free and
member for these cases so th at people specifying a calling convention
on the lambda will have the expected behavior when specifying one of
those two.
MSVC doesn't seem to permit specifying calling-convention on lambdas,
but we do, so we need to make sure those are emitted as well. We do this
so that clang-only conventions are supported if the user specifies them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90634
The use of the new types introduced for PowerPC MMA instructions needs to be restricted.
We add a PowerPC function checking that the given type is valid in a context in which we don't allow MMA types.
This function is called from various places in Sema where we want to prevent the use of these types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82035
Add MMA builtin decoding. These builtins use the new PowerPC-specific types __vector_pair and __vector_quad.
So to avoid pervasive changes, we use custom type descriptors and custom decoding for these builtins.
We also use custom code generation to expand builtin calls with pointers to simpler intrinsic calls with non-pointer types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81748
Change `Module::ASTFile` and `ModuleFile::File` to use
`Optional<FileEntryRef>` instead of `const FileEntry *`. One of many
steps toward removing `FileEntry::getName`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89836
Adds a diagnostic when the user annotates an `if constexpr` with a
likelihood attribute. The `if constexpr` statement is evaluated at compile
time so the attribute has no effect. Annotating the accompanied `else`
with a likelihood attribute has the same effect as annotating a generic
statement. Since the attribute there is most likely not intended, a
diagnostic will be issued. Since the attributes can't conflict, the
"conflict" won't be diagnosed for an `if constexpr`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90336
Pragma 'clang fp' is extended to support a new option, 'exceptions'. It
allows to specify floating point exception behavior more flexibly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89849
friends.
When determining whether a function has a template instantiation
pattern, look for other declarations of that function that were
instantiated from a friend function definition, rather than assuming
that checking for member specialization information on whichever
declaration name lookup found will be sufficient.
This patch adds tests and support for operations on SVE vectors created
by the 'arm_sve_vector_bits' attribute, described by the Arm C Language
Extensions (ACLE, version 00bet6, section 3.7.3.3) for SVE [1].
This covers the following:
* VLSTs support the same forms of element-wise initialization as GNU
vectors.
* VLSTs support the same built-in C and C++ operators as GNU vectors.
* Conditional and binary expressions containing GNU and SVE vectors
(fixed or sizeless) are invalid since the ambiguity around the result
type affects the ABI.
No functional changes were required to support vector initialization and
operators. The functional changes are to address unsupported conditional and
binary expressions.
[1] https://developer.arm.com/documentation/100987/latest
Reviewed By: fpetrogalli
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88233
As mentioned in the defect, the lambda static invoker does not follow
the calling convention of the lambda itself, which seems wrong. This
patch ensures that the calling convention of operator() is passed onto
the invoker and conversion-operator type.
This is accomplished by extracting the calling-convention determination
code out into a separate function in order to better reflect the 'thiscall'
work, as well as somewhat better support the future implementation of
https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20150220-00/?p=44623
For any target (basically just win32) that has a different free and
static function calling convention, this generates BOTH alternatives.
This required some work to get the Windows mangler to work correctly for
this, as well as some tie-breaking for the unary operators.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89559
Checks to make sure that stdlib's (std::)free is being appropriately
used. Presently checks for the following misuses:
- free(&stack_object)
- free(stack_array)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89988
We collect the source location of a trailing return type in the parser,
improving the location for regular functions and providing a location
for lambdas, where previously there was none.
Fixes PR47732.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90129
classes into the enclosing block scope.
We weren't properly detecting whether the name would be injected into a
block scope in the case where it was lexically declared in a local
class.
Define the __vector_pair and __vector_quad types that are used to manipulate
the new accumulator registers introduced by MMA on PowerPC. Because these two
types are specific to PowerPC, they are defined in a separate new file so it
will be easier to add other PowerPC specific types if we need to in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81508
Because of typo-correction, the AST can be transformed, and the transformed
AST is marginally useful for diagnostics purpose, the following
diagnostics usually do harm than good (easily cause confusions).
Given the following code:
```
void abcc();
void test() {
if (abc());
// diagnostic 1 (for the typo-correction): the typo is correct to `abcc()`, so the code is treate as `if (abcc())` in AST perspective;
// diagnostic 2 (for mismatch type): we perform an type-analysis on `if`, discover the type is not match
}
```
The secondary diagnostic "convertable to bool" is likely bogus to users.
The idea is to use RecoveryExpr (clang's dependent mechanism) to preserve the
recovery behavior but suppress all follow-up diagnostics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89946
This allows using annotation in a much more contexts than it currently has.
especially when annotation with template or constexpr.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88645
lambda-expression's captures.
The built-in structured binding rules for classes require that all
fields can be accessed by name, and the fields introduced for lambda
captures are unnamed, so decomposing a capturing lambda is ill-formed.
This requires that we track enough information to determine the original
type of the parameter in a substituted non-type template parameter, to
distinguish the reference-to-class case from the class case.
non-type template parameters.
Create a unique TemplateParamObjectDecl instance for each such value,
representing the globally unique template parameter object to which the
template parameter refers.
No IR generation support yet; that will follow in a separate patch.
when instantiating the enclosing class.
We'll build new lambda closure types if and when we instantiate the
default member initializer, and instantiating the closure type by itself
can go wrong in cases where we fully-instantiate nested classes (in
explicit instantiations of the enclosing class and when the enclosing
class is a local class) -- we will instantiate the 'operator()' as a
regular function rather than as a lambda call operator, so it doesn't
get to use its captures, has the wrong 'this' type, etc.
Permitting non-standards-driven "do the best you can" constant-folding
of array bounds is permitted solely as a GNU compatibility feature. We
should not be doing it in any language mode that is attempting to be
conforming.
From https://reviews.llvm.org/D20090 it appears the intent here was to
permit `__constant int` globals to be used in array bounds, but the
change in that patch only added half of the functionality necessary to
support that in the constant evaluator. This patch adds the other half
of the functionality and turns off constant folding for array bounds in
OpenCL.
I couldn't find any spec justification for accepting the kinds of cases
that D20090 accepts, so a reference to where in the OpenCL specification
this is permitted would be useful.
Note that this change also affects the code generation in one test:
because after 'const int n = 0' we now treat 'n' as a constant
expression with value 0, it's now a null pointer, so '(local int *)n'
forms a null pointer rather than a zero pointer.
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89520
Instead of framing the interface around whether the variable is an ICE
(which is only interesting in C++98), primarily track whether the
initializer is a constant initializer (which is interesting in all C++
language modes).
No functionality change intended.
for which it matters.
This is a step towards separating checking for a constant initializer
(in which std::is_constant_evaluated returns true) and any other
evaluation of a variable initializer (in which it returns false).
The semantics associated with `__vector [un]signed long` are neither
consistently specified nor consistently implemented.
The IBM XL compilers on AIX traditionally treated these as deprecated
aliases for the corresponding `__vector int` type in both 32-bit and
64-bit modes. The newer, Clang-based, IBM XL compilers on AIX make usage
of the previously deprecated types an error. This is also consistent
with IBM XL C/C++ for Linux on Power (on little endian distributions).
In line with the above, this patch upgrades (on AIX) the deprecation of
`__vector long` to become removal.
Reviewed By: ZarkoCA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89443
Old GCC used to aggressively fold VLAs to constant-bound arrays at block
scope in GNU mode. That's non-conforming, and more modern versions of
GCC only do this at file scope. Update Clang to do the same.
Also promote the warning for this from off-by-default to on-by-default
in all cases; more recent versions of GCC likewise warn on this by
default.
This is still slightly more permissive than GCC, as pointed out in
PR44406, as we still fold VLAs to constant arrays in structs, but that
seems justifiable given that we don't support VLA-in-struct (and don't
intend to ever support it), but GCC does.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89523
folding to not constant folding.
Constant folding of ICEs is done as a GCC compatibility measure, but new
code was picking it up, presumably by accident, due to the bad default.
While here, also switch the flag from a bool to an enum to make it more
obvious what it means at call sites. This highlighted a couple of places
where our behavior is different between C++11 and C++14 due to switching
from checking for an ICE to checking for a converted constant
expression (where there is no 'fold' codepath).
Previously we failed to convert 'p' from array/function to pointer type,
and to represent the load of 'p' in the AST. The latter causes problems
for constant evaluation.
chain for ObjCInterfaceDecls.
Only one such declaration can actually have attributes (the definition,
if any), but generally we assume that we can look for InheritedAttrs on
the most recent declaration.
They can get stale at use time because of updates from other recursive
specializations. Instead, rely on the existence of previous declarations to add
the specialization.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87853
See PR47804:
TreeTransform uses TransformedLocalDecls as a map of declarations that
have been transformed already. When doing a "TransformDecl", which
happens in the cases of updating a DeclRefExpr's target, the default
implementation simply returns the already transformed declaration.
However, this was not including ParmVarDecls. SO, any use of
TreeTransform that didn't re-implement TransformDecl would NOT properly
update the target of a DeclRefExpr, resulting in odd behavior.
In the case of Typo-recovery, the result was that a lambda that used its
own parameter would cause an error, since it thought that the
ParmVarDecl referenced was a different lambda. Additionally, this caused
a problem in the AST (a declrefexpr into another scope) such that a
future instantiation would cause an assertion.
This patch ensures that the ParmVarDecl transforming process records
into TransformedLocalDecls so that the DeclRefExpr is ALSO updated.
In https://reviews.llvm.org/D87470 I added the change to tighten the lifetime of the expression awaiter.await_suspend().address.
Howver it was incorrect. ExprWithCleanups will call the dtor and end the lifetime for all the temps created in the current full expr.
When this is called on a normal await call, we don't want to do that.
We only want to do this for the call on the final_awaiter, to avoid writing into the frame after the frame is destroyed.
This change fixes it, by checking IsImplicit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89066
The dependent mechanism for C error-recovery is mostly finished,
this is the only place we have missed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89045
types.
Previously, a type-dependent cast to a deduced class template
specialization type would end up with a non-dependent class template
specialization type, leading to confusion downstream.
Patch VisitCXXDeleteExpr() in clang::UsedDeclVisitor to avoid it crashing
when the expression's destroyed type is null. According to the comments
in CXXDeleteExpr::getDestroyedType(), this can happen when the type to
delete is a dependent type.
Patch by Geoff Levner.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88949
This reapplies D88384 with the minor modification that an assertion was
changed to a regular conditional and graceful exit from
ASTContext::mergeTypes.
The function `TryListConversion` didn't properly validate the following
part of the standard:
Otherwise, if the parameter type is a character array [... ]
and the initializer list has a single element that is an
appropriately-typed string literal (8.5.2 [dcl.init.string]), the
implicit conversion sequence is the identity conversion.
This caused the following call to `f()` to be ambiguous.
void f(int(&&)[1]);
void f(unsigned(&&)[1]);
void g(unsigned i) {
f({i});
}
This issue only occurs when the initializer list had one element.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87561
We now recognize this function as a builtin despite it having an
unexpected number of parameters; make sure we don't enforce that it has
only 1 argument for its 2 parameters.
Summary:
Motivated by the new objc_direct attribute, this change adds a new
attribute that remotes metadata from Protocols that the programmer knows
isn't going to be used at runtime. We simply have the frontend skip
generating any protocol metadata entries (e.g. OBJC_CLASS_NAME,
_OBJC_$_PROTOCOL_INSTANCE_METHDOS, _OBJC_PROTOCOL, etc) for a protocol
marked with `__attribute__((objc_non_runtime_protocol))`.
There are a few APIs used to retrieve a protocol at runtime.
`@protocol(SomeProtocol)` will now error out of the requested protocol
is marked with attribute. `objc_getProtocol` will return `NULL` which
is consistent with the behavior of a non-existing protocol.
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75574
Fix premature decision in the presence of type-dependent expression
operands on whether AltiVec vector initializations from single
expressions are "splat" operations.
Verify that the instantiation is able to determine the correct cast
semantics for both the scalar type and the vector type case.
Note that, because the change only affects the single-expression
case (and the target type is an AltiVec-style vector type), the
replacement of a parenthesized list with a parenthesized expression
does not change the semantics of the program in a program-observable
manner.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88526
We previously took a shortcut and said that weak variables never have
constant initializers (because those initializers are never correct to
use outside the variable). We now say that weak variables can have
constant initializers, but are never usable in constant expressions.
The current half vector was enforcing an assert expecting
"(LHS is half vector) == (RHS is half vector)"
for comma.
Reviewed By: ahatanak, fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88265
This happens in glibc's headers. It's important that we recognize these
functions so that we can mark them as returns_twice.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88518
The current C++ grammar allows an anonymous bit-field with an attribute,
but this is ambiguous (the attribute in that case could appertain to the
type instead of the bit-field). The current thinking in the Core Working
Group is that it's better to disallow attributes in that position at the
grammar level so that the ambiguity resolves in favor of applying to the
type.
During discussions about the behavior of the attribute, the Core Working
Group also felt it was better to disallow anonymous bit-fields from
specifying a default member initializer.
This implements both sets of related grammar changes.
This changes some diagnostics to use terminology from the standard
rather than invented terminology, which improves consistency with other
diagnostics as well. There are no functional changes intended other
than wording and naming.
Check applied to unbounded (incomplete) arrays and pointers to spot
cases where the computed address is beyond the largest possible
addressable extent of the array, based on the address space in which the
array is delcared, or which the pointer refers to.
Check helps to avoid cases of nonsense pointer math and array indexing
which could lead to linker failures or runtime exceptions. Of
particular interest when building for embedded systems with small
address spaces.
This is version 2 of this patch -- version 1 had some testing issues
due to a sign error in existing code. That error is corrected and
lit test for this chagne is extended to verify the fix.
Originally reviewed/accepted by: aaron.ballman
Original revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86796
Reviewed By: ebevhan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88174
Especially for templates we need to check at some point if the base
function matches the specialization we might call instead. Before this
lead to the replacement of `std::sqrt(int(2))` calls with one that
converts the argument to a `std::complex<int>`, clearly not the desired
behavior.
Reported as PR47655
Reviewed By: JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88384
The change implements evaluation of constant floating point expressions
under non-default rounding modes. The main objective was to support
evaluation of global variable initializers, where constant rounding mode
may be specified by `#pragma STDC FENV_ROUND`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87822
This attribute allows declarations to be restricted to the framework
itself, enabling Swift to remove the declarations when importing
libraries. This is useful in the case that the functions can be
implemented in a more natural way for Swift.
This is based on the work of the original changes in
8afaf3aad2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87720
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman
This code never actually did anything in the implementation.
`mergeDeclAttribute` is declared as `static`, and referenced exactly
once in the file: from `Sema::mergeDeclAttributes`.
`Sema::mergeDeclAttributes` sets `LocalAMK` to `AMK_None`. If the
attribute is `DeprecatedAttr`, `UnavailableAttr`, or `AvailabilityAttr`
then the `LocalAMK` is updated. However, because we are dealing with a
`SwiftNameDeclAttr` here, `LocalAMK` remains `AMK_None`. This is then
passed to the function which will as a result pass the value of
`AMK_None == AMK_Override` aka `false`. Simply propagate the value
through and erase the dead codepath.
Thanks to Aaron Ballman for flagging the use of the availability merge
kind here leading to this simplification!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88263
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman
Need to fix a check for the variable if it is declared in the inner
OpenMP region to be able to firstprivatize it.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88240
Need to fix a check for the variable if it is declared in the inner
OpenMP region to be able to firstprivatize it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88240
No need to make final copy from the firsptrivate/lastprivate copy to the original item if the item is a data memeber.
Firstprivate copy creates a copy by reference and the original item gets
updated correctly when updating the lastprivate shared variable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88179
Add the `swift_newtype` attribute which allows a type definition to be
imported into Swift as a new type. The imported type must be either an
enumerated type (enum) or an object type (struct).
This is based on the work of the original changes in
8afaf3aad2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87652
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman
Sema::DiagnoseSwiftName uses the constant 12 instead of the
corresponding enumerator ExpectedFunctionWithProtoType. This is
fragile and will fail if a new value gets added in the middle of the
enum.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88164
This patch implements custom codegen for the vec_replace_elt and
vec_replace_unaligned builtins.
These builtins map to the @llvm.ppc.altivec.vinsw and @llvm.ppc.altivec.vinsd
intrinsics depending on the arguments. The main motivation for doing custom
codegen for these intrinsics is because there are float and double versions of
the builtin. Normally, the converting the float to an integer would be done via
fptoui in the IR. This is incorrect as fptoui truncates the value and we must
ensure the value is not truncated. Therefore, we provide custom codegen to utilize
bitcast instead as bitcasts do not truncate.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83500
We leave a dangling TypoExpr when typo-correction is performed
successfully in `checkArgsForPlaceholders`, which leads a crash in the
later TypoCorrection.
This code was added in 1586782767,
and it didn't seem to have enough test coverage.
The fix is to remove this part, and no failuer tests.
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87815
This introduces the new `swift_name` attribute that allows annotating
APIs with an alternate spelling for Swift. This is used as part of the
importing mechanism to allow interfaces to be imported with a new name
into Swift. It takes a parameter which is the Swift function name.
This parameter is validated to check if it matches the possible
transformed signature in Swift.
This is based on the work of the original changes in
8afaf3aad2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87534
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman, Dmitri Gribenko
In case further such cases appear in the future we've got a generic function to add them to.
Additionally changed the ObjC special case to check the language and the identifier builtin ID instead of the name.
Addresses the cleanup suggestion from D87917.
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87983
template parameters.
No support for the new kinds of non-type template argument yet.
This is not entirely NFC for prior language modes: we have historically
incorrectly accepted rvalue references as the types of non-type template
parameters. Such invalid code is now rejected.
objc_super is special and needs LookupPredefedObjCSuperType() called before performing builtin type comparisons.
This fixes an error when compiling macOS headers. A test is added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87917
Instead of relying on whether a certain identifier is a builtin, introduce BuiltinAttr to specify a declaration as having builtin semantics.
This fixes incompatible redeclarations of builtins, as reverting the identifier as being builtin due to one incompatible redeclaration would have broken rest of the builtin calls.
Mostly-compatible redeclarations of builtins also no longer have builtin semantics. They don't call the builtin nor inherit their attributes.
A long-standing FIXME regarding builtins inside a namespace enclosed in extern "C" not being recognized is also addressed.
Due to the more correct handling attributes for builtin functions are added in more places, resulting in more useful warnings.
Tests are updated to reflect that.
Intrinsics without an inline definition in intrin.h had `inline` and `static` removed as they had no effect and caused them to no longer be recognized as builtins otherwise.
A pthread_create() related test is XFAIL-ed, as it relied on it being recognized as a builtin based on its name.
The builtin declaration syntax is too restrictive and doesn't allow custom structs, function pointers, etc.
It seems to be the only case and fixing this would require reworking the current builtin syntax, so this seems acceptable.
Fixes PR45410.
Reviewed By: rsmith, yutsumi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77491
In CUDA/HIP a function may become implicit host device function by
pragma or constexpr. A host device function is checked in both
host and device compilation. However it may be emitted only
on host or device side, therefore the diagnostics should be
deferred until it is known to be emitted.
Currently clang is only able to defer certain diagnostics. This causes
false alarms and limits the usefulness of host device functions.
This patch lets clang defer all overloading resolution diagnostics for host device functions.
An option -fgpu-defer-diag is added to control this behavior. By default
it is off.
It is NFC for other languages.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84364
Don't forget to define them if they're constexpr and used inside a
template; we might try to evaluate a call to them before the template is
instantiated.
Aligned allocation is not supported on z/OS. This patch sets -faligned-alloc-unavailable as default in z/OS toolchain.
Reviewed By: abhina.sreeskantharajan, hubert.reinterpretcast
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87611
With this extension the effects of `omp begin declare variant` will be
applied to template function declarations. The behavior is opt-in and
controlled by the `extension(allow_templates)` trait. While generally
useful, this will enable us to implement complex math function calls by
overloading the templates of the standard library with the ones in
libc++.
Reviewed By: JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85735
This extension allows to declare variants in between `omp begin/end
declare variant` that do not match the type of the existing function
with that name. Without this extension we would not find a base function
(with a compatible type), therefore create a new one, which would
cause conflicting declarations. With this extension we will not create
"missing" base functions, which basically renders these specializations
harmless. They will be generated but never called.
Reviewed By: JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85878
Due to `omp begin/end declare variant`, OpenMP context selectors can be
nested. This patch adds initial support for this so we can use it for
target math variants. We should improve the detection of "equivalent"
scores and user conditions, we should also revisit the data structures
of the OMPTraitInfo object, however, both are not pressing issues right
now.
Reviewed By: JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85877
This extends semantic analysis of attributes for Swift interoperability
by introducing the `swift_bridge` attribute. This attribute enables
bridging Objective-C types to Swift specific types.
This is based on the work of the original changes in
8afaf3aad2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87532
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman
Fix link error for MSVC entry points when calling conventions
are specified. MSVC entry points should have default calling
convention.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87701
The base must be shared between the threads, threadprivates are not
allowed to be bases for array-like reductions.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85762
Extend the semantic attributes that clang processes for Swift to include
`swift_bridged_typedef`. This attribute enables typedefs to be bridged
into Swift with a bridged name.
This is based on the work of the original changes in
8afaf3aad2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87396
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman
Check applied to unbounded (incomplete) arrays and pointers
to spot cases where the computed address is beyond the
largest possible addressable extent of the array, based
on the address space in which the array is delcared, or
which the pointer refers to.
Check helps to avoid cases of nonsense pointer math and
array indexing which could lead to linker failures or
runtime exceptions. Of particular interest when building
for embedded systems with small address spaces.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86796
This adds the `__swift_objc_members__` attribute to the semantic
analysis. It allows for annotating ObjC interfaces to provide Swift
semantics indicating that the types derived from this interface will be
back-bridged to Objective-C to allow interoperability with Objective-C
and Swift.
This is based on the work of the original changes in
8afaf3aad2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87395
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman, Dmitri Gribenko
This is recommit of 6c8041aa0f, reverted in de044f7562 because of some
fails. Original commit message is below.
This change allow a CastExpr to have optional FPOptionsOverride object,
stored in trailing storage. Of all cast nodes only ImplicitCastExpr,
CStyleCastExpr, CXXFunctionalCastExpr and CXXStaticCastExpr are allowed
to have FPOptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85960
This change allow a CastExpr to have optional FPOptionsOverride object,
stored in trailing storage. Of all cast nodes only ImplicitCastExpr,
CStyleCastExpr, CXXFunctionalCastExpr and CXXStaticCastExpr are allowed
to have FPOptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85960
Introduce a new attribute that is used to indicate the error handling
convention used by a function. This is used to translate the error
semantics from the decorated interface to a compatible Swift interface.
The supported error convention is one of:
- none: no error handling
- nonnull_error: a non-null error parameter indicates an error signifier
- null_result: a return value of NULL is an error signifier
- zero_result: a return value of 0 is an error signifier
- nonzero_result: a non-zero return value is an error signifier
Since this is the first of the attributes needed to support the semantic
annotation for Swift, this change also includes the necessary supporting
infrastructure for a new category of attributes (Swift).
This is based on the work of the original changes in
8afaf3aad2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87331
Reviewed By: John McCall, Aaron Ballman, Dmitri Gribenko
In generating the code for symmetric transfer, a temporary object is created to store the returned handle from await_suspend() call of the awaiter. Previously this temp won't be cleaned up until very later, which ends up causing this temp to be spilled to the heap. However, we know that this temp will no longer be needed after the coro_resume call. We can clean it up right after.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87470
This is the initial part of the implementation of the C++20 likelihood
attributes. It handles the attributes in an if statement.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85091
Extract a simple check to check if a `RecordDecl` is a `CFError` Decl.
This is a simple refactoring to prepare for an upcoming change. NFC.
Patch is extracted from
8afaf3aad2.
This change groups
* Rename: `ignoreParenBaseCasts` -> `IgnoreParenBaseCasts` for uniformity
* Rename: `IgnoreConversionOperator` -> `IgnoreConversionOperatorSingleStep` for uniformity
* Inline `IgnoreNoopCastsSingleStep` into a lambda inside `IgnoreNoopCasts`
* Refactor `IgnoreUnlessSpelledInSource` to make adequate use of `IgnoreExprNodes`
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86880
This change implements pragma STDC FENV_ROUND, which is introduced by
the extension to standard (TS 18661-1). The pragma is implemented only
in frontend, it sets apprpriate state of FPOptions stored in Sema. Use
of these bits in constant evaluation adn/or code generator is not in the
scope of this change.
Parser issues warning on unsuppored pragma when it encounteres pragma
STDC FENV_ROUND, however it makes syntax checks and updates Sema state
as if the pragma were supported.
Primary purpose of the partial implementation is to facilitate
development of non-default floating poin environment. Previously a
developer cannot set non-default rounding mode in sources, this mades
preparing tests for say constant evaluation substantially complicated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86921
Previously we had two overloads where the only real difference beyond
parameter order was whether a reference parameter is const, where one
overload treated the reference parameter as an in-parameter and the
other treated it as an out-parameter!
Previously, this code discarded the result of CheckPlaceholderExpr for
non-matrix subexpressions. Not only is this wasteful, but it was creating a
Warc-repeated-use-of-weak false-positive on the attached testcase, since the
discarded expression was still registered as a use of the weak property.
rdar://66162246
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87102
Other warning messages for negative capabilities also mention their
kind, and the double space was ugly.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84603
Function Sema::isOpenMPGlobalCapturedDecl() has a parameter `unsigned Level`,
but use `Level >= 0` as the condition of `while`, thus cause an infinite loop.
Fix by changing the loop condition to `Level > 0`.
Reviewed By: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86858
Continue to heuristically pick the wider of the two operands for
narrowing conversion warnings so that some_char + 1 isn't treated as
being wider than a char, but use the more accurate computation for
tautological comparison warnings.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85778
Instead of writing to a flag and then returning based on that flag we
can also return directly. The flag name also doesn't provide additional
information, it just reflects the name of the function (isReferenced).
This patch implements the semantics for the 'arm_sve_vector_bits' type
attribute, defined by the Arm C Language Extensions (ACLE) for SVE [1].
The purpose of this attribute is to define vector-length-specific (VLS)
versions of existing vector-length-agnostic (VLA) types.
The semantics were already implemented by D83551, although the
implementation approach has since changed to represent VLSTs as
VectorType in the AST and fixed-length vectors in the IR everywhere
except in function args/returns. This is described in the prototype
patch D85128 demonstrating the new approach.
The semantic changes added in D83551 are changed since the
AttributedType is replaced by VectorType in the AST. Minimal changes
were necessary in the previous patch as the canonical type for both VLA
and VLS was the same (i.e. sizeless), except in constructs such as
globals and structs where sizeless types are unsupported. This patch
reverts the changes that permitted VLS types that were represented as
sizeless types in such circumstances, and adds support for implicit
casting between VLA <-> VLS types as described in section 3.7.3.2 of the
ACLE.
Since the SVE builtin types for bool and uint8 are both represented as
BuiltinType::UChar in VLSTs, two new vector kinds are implemented to
distinguish predicate and data vectors.
[1] https://developer.arm.com/documentation/100987/latest
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85736
OpenMP 5.0 supports nested declare target regions. So, in general,it is
allow to mark a declarationas declare target with different device_type
or link type. Patch adds support for such kind of nesting.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86239
explicit keyword is declared outside of class is invalid, invalid explicit declaration is handled inside DiagnoseFunctionSpecifiers() function. To avoid compiler crash in case of invalid explicit declaration, remove assertion.
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83929
This patch moves FixedPointSemantics and APFixedPoint
from Clang to LLVM ADT.
This will make it easier to use the fixed-point
classes in LLVM for constructing an IR builder for
fixed-point and for reusing the APFixedPoint class
for constant evaluation purposes.
RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-August/144025.html
Reviewed By: leonardchan, rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85312
This adds parsing and codegen support for tune in target attribute.
I've implemented this so that arch in the target attribute implicitly disables tune from the command line. I'm not sure what gcc does here. But since -march implies -mtune. I assume 'arch' in the target attribute implies tune in the target attribute.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86187
for array bounds, not "integer constant" rules.
For an array bound of class type, this causes us to perform an implicit
conversion to size_t, instead of looking for a unique conversion to
integral or unscoped enumeration type. This affects which cases are
valid when a class has multiple implicit conversion functions to
different types.
If the function is not marked exlicitly as declare target and it calls
function(s), marked as declare target device_type(host), these host-only
functions should not be dignosed as used in device mode, if the caller
function is not used in device mode too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86164
[Clang] Fix BZ47169, loader_uninitialized on incomplete types
Reported by @erichkeane. Fix proposed by @erichkeane works, tests included.
Bug introduced in D74361. Crash was on querying a CXXRecordDecl for
hasTrivialDefaultConstructor on an incomplete type. Fixed by calling
RequireCompleteType in the right place.
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85990
SemaBuiltinConstantArg has an early exit for that case that doesn't
produce an error and doesn't update the APInt. We need to detect that
case and not use the APInt value.
While there delete the signature of CheckX86BuiltinTileArgumentsRange
that takes a single Argument index to check. There's another version
that takes an ArrayRef and single value is convertible to an ArrayRef.
We're (temporarily) disabling ExtInt for the '__atomic' builtins so we can better design their behavior later. The idea is until we do an audit/design for the way atomic builtins are supposed to work with _ExtInt, we should leave them restricted so they don't limit our future options, such as by binding us to a sub-optimal implementation via ABI.
Example after this change:
$ cat test.c
void f(_ExtInt(64) *ptr) {
__atomic_fetch_add(ptr, 1, 0);
}
$ clang -c test.c
test.c:2:22: error: argument to atomic builtin of type '_ExtInt' is not supported
__atomic_fetch_add(ptr, 1, 0);
^
1 error generated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84049
If the declaration is used in the reduction clause, it is captured by
reference by default. But if the declaration is a pointer and it is a
base for array-like reduction, this declaration can be captured by
value, since the pointee is reduced but not the original declaration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85321
When casting an enumerate with a fixed bool type the casting should use
an IntegralToBoolean instead of an IntegralCast as is required per Core
Issue 2338.
Fixes PR47055: Incorrect codegen for enum with bool underlying type
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85612
When a conditional expression has a throw expression it called
GetExprRange with a void expression, which caused an assertion failure.
This approach was suggested by Richard Smith.
Fixes PR46484: Clang crash in clang/lib/Sema/SemaChecking.cpp:10028
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85601
ns_error_domain can be used by, e.g. NS_ERROR_ENUM, in order to
identify a global declaration representing the domain constant.
Introduces the attribute, Sema handling, diagnostics, and test case.
This is cherry-picked from a14779f504
and adapted to updated Clang APIs.
Reviewed By: gribozavr2, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84005
- Prevent nullptr-deference at try to emit warning for invalid `expr`
- Simplify `InitListChecker::UpdateStructuredListElement()` usages. We do not need to check `expr` and increment `StructuredIndex` (for invalid `expr`) before the call anymore.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85193
- Fixed point to floating point conversion is unimplemented.
- If one of the operands has a floating type and the other operand has a fixed-point type, the function
handleFloatConversion() is called because one of the operands has a floating type, but we do not handle fixed
point type in this function (Implementation of fixed point to floating point conversion is missing), due to this
compiler crashes. In order to avoid compiler crash, when one of the operands has a floating type and the other
operand has a fixed-point type, return NULL.
- FIXME: Implementation of fixed point to floating point conversion.
- I am going to resolve FIXME in followup patches.
- Add the test case.
Reviewed By: ebevhan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81904
`addDecl` is making the ivar visible in its primary context. The primary context
of the ivar here is in a 'fragile' ABI the ObjCInterfaceDecl and in a
'non-fragile' ABI the current ObjCImplementationDecl. The additional call to
`makeDeclVisibleInContext` to make the ivar visible in the ObjCInterfaceDecl is
only necessary in the 'non-fragile' case (as in the 'fragile' case the Decl
becomes automatically visible in the ObjCInterfaceDecl with the `addDecl` call
as thats its primary context). See `Sema::ActOnIvar` for where the ivar is put
into a different context depending on the ABI.
To put this into an example:
```
lang=c++
@implementation SomeClass
{
id ivar1;
}
@end
fragile case:
implicit ObjCInterfaceDecl 'SomeClass'
`- ivar1 (in primary context and will be automatically made visible)
ObjCImplementationDecl 'SomeClass'
non-fragile case:
implicit ObjCInterfaceDecl 'SomeClass'
`-<<<ivar1 not visible here and needs to be manually marked as visible.>>>
ObjCImplementationDecl 'SomeClass'
`- ivar1 (in its primary context and will be automatically made visible here)
```
Making a Decl visible multiple times in the same context is inefficient and
potentially can lead to crashes. See D84827 for more info and what this is
breaking.
Reviewed By: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84829
`addDecl` is making the Decl visible, so there is no need to make it explicitly
visible again. Making it visible twice will also make the lookup storage less
efficient and potentially lead to crashes, see D84827 for that.
Reviewed By: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84828
If a functionDecl is invalid (e.g. return type cannot be formed), int is
use as he fallback type, which may lead to some bogus diagnostics.
Reviewed By: sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85714
arguments.
Don't build a variable template specialization declaration until its
scope and template arguments are non-dependent.
No functionality change intended, but the AST representation is now more
consistent with how we model other templates.
In the handleIntToFloatConversion() function, 6th parameter is ConvertFloat, 7th parameter is ConvertInt.
Reviewed By: njames93, xbolva00
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85568
This change squelches the warning for a cast from fixed to fixed point
conversions when -Wbad-function-cast is enabled.
Fixes:
cast from function call of type '_Fract' to non-matching type '_Fract'
[-Wbad-function-cast]
Reviewed By: bjope
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85157
Vectors of bfloat are a storage format only; you're supposed to
explicitly convert them to a wider type to do arithmetic on them.
But currently, if you write something like
bfloat16x4_t test(bfloat16x4_t a, bfloat16x4_t b) { return a + b; }
then the clang frontend accepts it without error, and (ARM or AArch64)
isel fails to generate code for it.
Added a rule in Sema that forbids the attempt from even being made,
and tests that check it. In particular, we also outlaw arithmetic
between vectors of bfloat and any other vector type.
Patch by Luke Cheeseman.
Reviewed By: LukeGeeson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85009
This warning diagnoses cases where an expression is compared to a
constant, and the comparison is tautological due to the form of the
expression (but not merely due to its type). This applies in cases such
as comparisons of bit-fields and the result of bit-masks.
The new warning is added to the Clang diagnostic group
-Wtautological-constant-in-range-compare but not to the
formerly-equivalent GCC-compatibility diagnostic group -Wtype-limits,
which retains its old meaning of diagnosing only tautological
comparisons to extremal values of a type (eg, int > INT_MAX).
Reviewed By: rtrieu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85256
Summary:
Introduced OMPChildren class to handle all associated clauses, statement
and child expressions/statements. It allows to represent some directives
more correctly (like flush, depobj etc. with pseudo clauses, ordered
depend directives, which are standalone, and target data directives).
Also, it will make easier to avoid using of CapturedStmt in directives,
if required (atomic, tile etc. directives).
Also, it simplifies serialization/deserialization of the
executable/declarative directives.
Reduces number of allocation operations for mapper declarations.
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Subscribers: yaxunl, guansong, jfb, cfe-commits, sstefan1, aaron.ballman, caomhin
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83261
`OS << ND->getDeclName();` is equivalent to `OS << ND->getNameAsString();`
without the extra temporary string.
This is not quite a NFC since two uses of `getNameAsString` in a
diagnostic are replaced, which results in the named entity being
quoted with additional "'"s (ie: 'var' instead of var).
nvcc supports accessing file-scope static device variables in host code by host APIs
like cudaMemcpyToSymbol etc.
CUDA/HIP let users access device variables in host code by shadow variables. In host compilation,
clang emits a shadow variable for each device variable, and calls __*RegisterVariable to
register it in init function. The address of the shadow variable and the device side mangled
name of the device variable is passed to __*RegisterVariable. Runtime looks up the symbol
by name in the device binary to find the address of the device variable.
The problem with static device variables is that they have internal linkage, therefore their
name may be changed by the linker if there are multiple symbols with the same name. Also
they end up as local symbols in the elf file, whereas the runtime only looks up the global symbols.
Another reason for making the static device variables external linkage is that they may be
initialized externally by host code and their final value may be accessed by host code
after kernel execution, therefore they actually have external linkage. Giving them internal
linkage will cause incorrect optimizations on them.
To support accessing static device var in host code for -fno-gpu-rdc mode, change the intnernal
linkage to external linkage. The name does not need change since there is only one TU for
-fno-gpu-rdc mode. Also the externalization is done only if the device static var is referenced
by host code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80858