There is no syntax like {@code ...} in Doxygen, @code is a block command
that ends with @endcode, and generally these are not enclosed in braces.
The correct syntax for inline code snippets is @c <code>.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98665
The tile directive is in OpenMP's Technical Report 8 and foreseeably will be part of the upcoming OpenMP 5.1 standard.
This implementation is based on an AST transformation providing a de-sugared loop nest. This makes it simple to forward the de-sugared transformation to loop associated directives taking the tiled loops. In contrast to other loop associated directives, the OMPTileDirective does not use CapturedStmts. Letting loop associated directives consume loops from different capture context would be difficult.
A significant amount of code generation logic is taking place in the Sema class. Eventually, I would prefer if these would move into the CodeGen component such that we could make use of the OpenMPIRBuilder, together with flang. Only expressions converting between the language's iteration variable and the logical iteration space need to take place in the semantic analyzer: Getting the of iterations (e.g. the overload resolution of `std::distance`) and converting the logical iteration number to the iteration variable (e.g. overload resolution of `iteration + .omp.iv`). In clang, only CXXForRangeStmt is also represented by its de-sugared components. However, OpenMP loop are not defined as syntatic sugar. Starting with an AST-based approach allows us to gradually move generated AST statements into CodeGen, instead all at once.
I would also like to refactor `checkOpenMPLoop` into its functionalities in a follow-up. In this patch it is used twice. Once for checking proper nesting and emitting diagnostics, and additionally for deriving the logical iteration space per-loop (instead of for the loop nest).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76342
This is being recommitted to try and address the MSVC complaint.
This patch implements a DDG printer pass that generates a graph in
the DOT description language, providing a more visually appealing
representation of the DDG. Similar to the CFG DOT printer, this
functionality is provided under an option called -dot-ddg and can
be generated in a less verbose mode under -dot-ddg-only option.
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90159
This patch implements a DDG printer pass that generates a graph in
the DOT description language, providing a more visually appealing
representation of the DDG. Similar to the CFG DOT printer, this
functionality is provided under an option called -dot-ddg and can
be generated in a less verbose mode under -dot-ddg-only option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90159
Based on the discussion in D82598#2171312. Thanks @NoQ!
D82598 is titled "Get rid of statement liveness, because such a thing doesn't
exist", and indeed, expressions express a value, non-expression statements
don't.
if (a && get() || []{ return true; }())
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ has a value
~ has a value
~~~~~~~~~~ has a value
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ has a value
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ doesn't have a value
That is simple enough, so it would only make sense if we only assigned symbolic
values to expressions in the static analyzer. Yet the interface checkers can
access presents, among other strange things, the following two methods:
ProgramState::BindExpr(const Stmt *S, const LocationContext *LCtx, SVal V,
bool Invalidate=true)
ProgramState::getSVal(const Stmt *S, const LocationContext *LCtx)
So, what gives? Turns out, we make an exception for ReturnStmt (which we'll
leave for another time) and ObjCForCollectionStmt. For any other loops, in order
to know whether we should analyze another iteration, among other things, we
evaluate it's condition. Which is a problem for ObjCForCollectionStmt, because
it simply doesn't have one (CXXForRangeStmt has an implicit one!). In its
absence, we assigned the actual statement with a concrete 1 or 0 to indicate
whether there are any more iterations left. However, this is wildly incorrect,
its just simply not true that the for statement has a value of 1 or 0, we can't
calculate its liveness because that doesn't make any sense either, so this patch
turns it into a GDM trait.
Fixing this allows us to reinstate the assert removed in
https://reviews.llvm.org/rG032b78a0762bee129f33e4255ada6d374aa70c71.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86736
This fix unifies all of the different ways we handled pointer to
members into one. The crash was caused by the fact that the type
of pointer-to-member values was `void *`, and while this works
for the vast majority of cases it breaks when we actually need
to explain the path for the report.
rdar://problem/64202361
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85817
`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).
Idiomatic objc using ARC will generate this expression regularly due to
NSError out-param passing. Providing an implementation for this
expression allows the analyzer to explore many more codepaths in ARC
projects.
The current implementation is not perfect but the differences are hopefully
subtle enough to not cause much problems.
rdar://63918914
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81071
This patch implements matrix index expressions
(matrix[RowIdx][ColumnIdx]).
It does so by introducing a new MatrixSubscriptExpr(Base, RowIdx, ColumnIdx).
MatrixSubscriptExprs are built in 2 steps in ActOnMatrixSubscriptExpr. First,
if the base of a subscript is of matrix type, we create a incomplete
MatrixSubscriptExpr(base, idx, nullptr). Second, if the base is an incomplete
MatrixSubscriptExpr, we create a complete
MatrixSubscriptExpr(base->getBase(), base->getRowIdx(), idx)
Similar to vector elements, it is not possible to take the address of
a MatrixSubscriptExpr.
For CodeGen, a new MatrixElt type is added to LValue, which is very
similar to VectorElt. The only difference is that we may need to cast
the type of the base from an array to a vector type when accessing it.
Reviewers: rjmccall, anemet, Bigcheese, rsmith, martong
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76791
The `SubEngine` interface is an interface with only one implementation
`EpxrEngine`. Adding other implementations are difficult and very
unlikely in the near future. Currently, if anything from `ExprEngine` is
to be exposed to other classes it is moved to `SubEngine` which
restricts the alternative implementations. The virtual methods are have
a slight perofrmance impact. Furthermore, instead of the `LLVM`-style
inheritance a native inheritance is used here, which renders `LLVM`
functions like e.g. `cast<T>()` unusable here. This patch removes this
interface and allows usage of `ExprEngine` directly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80548
One of the pain points in simplifying MallocCheckers interface by gradually
changing to CallEvent is that a variety of C++ allocation and deallocation
functionalities are modeled through preStmt<...> where CallEvent is unavailable,
and a single one of these callbacks can prevent a mass parameter change.
This patch introduces a new CallEvent, CXXDeallocatorCall, which happens after
preStmt<CXXDeleteExpr>, and can completely replace that callback as
demonstrated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75430
This operator is intended for casting between
pointers to objects in different address spaces
and follows similar logic as const_cast in C++.
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60193
Summary:
Added basic representation and parsing/sema handling of array-shaping
operations. Array shaping expression is an expression of form ([s0]..[sn])base,
where s0, ..., sn must be a positive integer, base - a pointer. This
expression is a kind of cast operation that converts pointer expression
into an array-like kind of expression.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, jdoerfert
Subscribers: guansong, arphaman, cfe-commits, caomhin, kkwli0
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74144
Normally clang avoids creating expressions when it encounters semantic
errors, even if the parser knows which expression to produce.
This works well for the compiler. However, this is not ideal for
source-level tools that have to deal with broken code, e.g. clangd is
not able to provide navigation features even for names that compiler
knows how to resolve.
The new RecoveryExpr aims to capture the minimal set of information
useful for the tools that need to deal with incorrect code:
source range of the expression being dropped,
subexpressions of the expression.
We aim to make constructing RecoveryExprs as simple as possible to
ensure writing code to avoid dropping expressions is easy.
Producing RecoveryExprs can result in new code paths being taken in the
frontend. In particular, clang can produce some new diagnostics now and
we aim to suppress bogus ones based on Expr::containsErrors.
We deliberately produce RecoveryExprs only in the parser for now to
minimize the code affected by this patch. Producing RecoveryExprs in
Sema potentially allows to preserve more information (e.g. type of an
expression), but also results in more code being affected. E.g.
SFINAE checks will have to take presence of RecoveryExprs into account.
Initial implementation only works in C++ mode, as it relies on compiler
postponing diagnostics on dependent expressions. C and ObjC often do not
do this, so they require more work to make sure we do not produce too
many bogus diagnostics on the new expressions.
See documentation of RecoveryExpr for more details.
original patch from Ilya
This change is based on https://reviews.llvm.org/D61722
Reviewers: sammccall, rsmith
Reviewed By: sammccall, rsmith
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69330
So far we've been dropping coverage every time we've encountered
a CXXInheritedCtorInitExpr. This patch attempts to add some
initial support for it.
Constructors for arguments of a CXXInheritedCtorInitExpr are still
not fully supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74735
This is how it should've been and brings it more in line with
std::string_view. There should be no functional change here.
This is mostly mechanical from a custom clang-tidy check, with a lot of
manual fixups. It uncovers a lot of minor inefficiencies.
This doesn't actually modify StringRef yet, I'll do that in a follow-up.
Implement support for C++2a requires-expressions.
Re-commit after compilation failure on some platforms due to alignment issues with PointerIntPair.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50360
Some AST nodes which stands for implicit initialization is shared. The analyzer
will do the same evaluation on the same nodes resulting in the same state. The
analyzer will "cache out", i.e. it thinks that it visited an already existing
node in the exploded graph. This is not true in this case and we lose coverage.
Since these nodes do not really require any processing from the analyzer
we just omit them from the CFG.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71371
This patch introduced additional PointerEscape callbacks after conservative
calls for output parameters. This should not really affect the current
checkers but the upcoming FuchsiaHandleChecker relies on this heavily.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71224
It was a step in the right direction but it is not clear how can this
fit into the checker API at this point. The pre-escape happens in the
analyzer core and the checker has no control over it. If the checker
is not interestd in a pre-escape it would need to do additional work
on each escape to check if the escaped symbol is originated from an
"uninteresting" pre-escaped memory region. In order to keep the
checker API simple we abandoned this solution for now.
We will reland this once we have a better answer for what to do on the
checker side.
This reverts commit f3a28202ef.
We want to escape all symbols that are stored into escaped regions.
The problem is, we did not know which local regions were escaped. Until now.
This should fix some false positives like the one in the tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71152
One of the first attempts to reduce the size of the exploded graph dumps
was to skip the state dump as long as the state is the same as in all of
the predecessor nodes. With all the new facilities in place (node joining,
diff dumps), this feature doesn't do much, and when it does,
it's more harmful than useful. Let's remove it.
llvm-svn: 375280
The joined nodes now actually have the same state. That was intended
from the start but the original implementation turned out to be buggy.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69150
llvm-svn: 375278
ExplodedGraph nodes will now have a numeric identifier stored in them
which will keep track of the order in which the nodes were created
and it will be fully deterministic both accross runs and across machines.
This is extremely useful for debugging as it allows reliably setting
conditional breakpoints by node IDs.
llvm-svn: 375186
Part of C++20 Concepts implementation effort. Added Concept Specialization Expressions that are created when a concept is refe$
D41217 on Phabricator.
(recommit after fixing failing Parser test on windows)
llvm-svn: 374903
Part of C++20 Concepts implementation effort. Added Concept Specialization Expressions that are created when a concept is referenced with arguments, and tests thereof.
llvm-svn: 374882
Added parsing/sema/codegen support for 'parallel master taskloop'
constructs. Some of the clauses, like 'grainsize', 'num_tasks', 'final'
and 'priority' are not supported in full, only constant expressions can
be used currently in these clauses.
llvm-svn: 374791