-fno-semantic-interposition is currently the CC1 default. (The opposite
disables some interprocedural optimizations.) However, it does not infer
dso_local: on most targets accesses to ExternalLinkage functions/variables
defined in the current module still need PLT/GOT.
This patch makes explicit -fno-semantic-interposition infer dso_local,
so that PLT/GOT can be eliminated if targets implement local aliases
for AsmPrinter::getSymbolPreferLocal (currently only x86).
Currently we check whether the module flag "SemanticInterposition" is 0.
If yes, infer dso_local. In the future, we can infer dso_local unless
"SemanticInterposition" is 1: frontends other than clang will also
benefit from the optimization if they don't bother setting the flag.
(There will be risks if they do want ELF interposition: they need to set
"SemanticInterposition" to 1.)
Summary:
Created AIXABIInfo and AIXTargetCodeGenInfo for AIX ABI.
Reviewed By: Xiangling_L, ZarkoCA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79035
rL82131 changed -O from -O1 to -O2, because -O1 was not different from
-O2 at that time.
GCC treats -O as -O1 and there is now work to make -O1 meaningful.
We can change -O back to -O1 again.
Reviewed By: echristo, dexonsmith, arphaman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79916
Debug entry values functionality provides debug information about
call sites and function parameters values at the call entry spot.
Condition for generating this type of information is
compiling with -g option and optimization level higher
than zero(-O0).
In ISEL phase, while lowering call instructions, collect info
about registers that forward arguments into following
function frame. We store such info into MachineFunction of
the caller function. This is used very late, when dumping DWARF
info about call site parameters.
The call site info is visible at MIR level, as callSites attribute
of MachineFunction. Also, when using unmodified parameter value
inside callee it could be described as DW_OP_entry_value expression.
To deal with callSites attribute, we should pass
-emit-call-site-info option to llc.
This patch enables functionality in clang frontend and adds
call site info generation support for MIPS targets
(mips, mipsel, mips64, mips64el).
Patch by Nikola Tesic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78105
Commit 73152a2ec2 fixed type checking for
blocks with qualified id parameters. But there are existing APIs in
Apple SDKs relying on the old type checking behavior. Specifically,
these are APIs using NSItemProviderCompletionHandler in
Foundation/NSItemProvider.h. To keep existing code working and to allow
developers to use affected APIs introduce a compatibility mode that
enables the previous and the fixed type checking. This mode is enabled
only on Darwin platforms.
Reviewed By: jyknight, ahatanak
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79511
gcov 4.8 (r189778) moved the exit block from the last to the second.
The .gcda format is compatible with 4.7 but
* decoding libgcov 4.7 produced .gcda with gcov [4.7,8) can mistake the
exit block, emit bogus `%s:'%s' has arcs from exit block\n` warnings,
and print wrong `" returned %s` for branch statistics (-b).
* decoding libgcov 4.8 produced .gcda with gcov 4.7 has similar issues.
Also, rename "return block" to "exit block" because the latter is the
appropriate term.
SLH doesn't support asm goto and is unlikely to ever support it. Users of asm
goto need a way to choose whether to use asm goto or fallback to an SLH
compatible code path when SLH is enabled. This feature flag will give users
this ability.
Tested via unit test
Reviewed By: mattdr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79733
This bug was observed by Apple since their compiler processes LangOpts and CGOpts in a different order.
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79735
This patch adds a matrix type to Clang as described in the draft
specification in clang/docs/MatrixSupport.rst. It introduces a new option
-fenable-matrix, which can be used to enable the matrix support.
The patch adds new MatrixType and DependentSizedMatrixType types along
with the plumbing required. Loads of and stores to pointers to matrix
values are lowered to memory operations on 1-D IR arrays. After loading,
the loaded values are cast to a vector. This ensures matrix values use
the alignment of the element type, instead of LLVM's large vector
alignment.
The operators and builtins described in the draft spec will will be added in
follow-up patches.
Reviewers: martong, rsmith, Bigcheese, anemet, dexonsmith, rjmccall, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72281
RecoveryExprs are modeled as dependent type to prevent bogus diagnostics
and crashes in clang.
This patch allows to preseve the type for broken calls when the
RecoveryEprs have a known type, e.g. a broken non-overloaded call, a
overloaded call when the all candidates have the same return type, so
that more features (code completion still work on "take2args(x).^") still
work.
However, adding the type is risky, which may result in more clang code being
affected leading to new crashes and hurt diagnostic, and it requires large
effort to minimize the affect (update all sites in clang to handle errorDepend
case), so we add a new flag (off by default) to allow us to develop/test
them incrementally.
This patch also has some trivial fixes to suppress diagnostics (to prevent regressions).
Tested:
all existing tests are passed (when both "-frecovery-ast", "-frecovery-ast-type" flags are flipped on);
Reviewed By: sammccall
Subscribers: rsmith, arphaman, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79160
Defaulting to -Xclang -coverage-version='407*' makes .gcno/.gcda
compatible with gcov [4.7,8)
In addition, delete clang::CodeGenOptionsBase::CoverageExtraChecksum and GCOVOptions::UseCfgChecksum.
We can infer the information from the version.
With this change, .gcda files produced by `clang --coverage a.o` linked executable can be read by gcov 4.7~7.
We don't need other -Xclang -coverage* options.
There may be a mismatching version warning, though.
(Note, GCC r173147 "split checksum into cfg checksum and line checksum"
made gcov 4.7 incompatible with previous versions.)
rL144865 incorrectly wrote function names for GCOV_TAG_FUNCTION
(this might be part of the reasons the header says
"We emit files in a corrupt version of GCOV's "gcda" file format").
rL176173 and rL177475 realized the problem and introduced -coverage-no-function-names-in-data
to work around the issue. (However, the description is wrong.
libgcov never writes function names, even before GCC 4.2).
In reality, the linker command line has to look like:
clang --coverage -Xclang -coverage-version='407*' -Xclang -coverage-cfg-checksum -Xclang -coverage-no-function-names-in-data
Failing to pass -coverage-no-function-names-in-data can make gcov 4.7~7
either produce wrong results (for one gcov-4.9 program, I see "No executable lines")
or segfault (gcov-7).
(gcov-8 uses an incompatible format.)
This patch deletes -coverage-no-function-names-in-data and the related
function names support from libclang_rt.profile
This is a standalone patch and this would help Propeller do a better job of code
layout as it can accurately attribute the profiles to the right internal linkage
function.
This also helps SampledFDO/AutoFDO correctly associate sampled profiles to the
right internal function. Currently, if there is more than one internal symbol
foo, their profiles are aggregated by SampledFDO.
This patch adds a new clang option, -funique-internal-funcnames, to generate
unique names for functions with internal linkage. This patch appends the md5
hash of the module name to the function symbol as a best effort to generate a
unique name for symbols with internal linkage.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73307
test cases
Add support for #pragma float_control
Reviewers: rjmccall, erichkeane, sepavloff
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72841
This reverts commit 85dc033cac, and makes
corrections to the test cases that failed on buildbots.
Summary:
Add an option to enable on-demand parsing of needed ASTs during CTU analysis.
Two options are introduced. CTUOnDemandParsing enables the feature, and
CTUOnDemandParsingDatabase specifies the path to a compilation database, which
has all the necessary information to generate the ASTs.
Reviewers: martong, balazske, Szelethus, xazax.hun
Subscribers: ormris, mgorny, whisperity, xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, rnkovacs, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, Charusso, steakhal, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75665
Summary:
Change the default ABI to be compatible with GCC. For 32-bit ELF
targets other than Linux, Clang now returns small structs in registers
r3/r4. This affects FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD. There is no change for
32-bit Linux, where Clang continues to return all structs in memory.
Add clang options -maix-struct-return (to return structs in memory) and
-msvr4-struct-return (to return structs in registers) to be compatible
with gcc. These options are only for PPC32; reject them on PPC64 and
other targets. The options are like -fpcc-struct-return and
-freg-struct-return for X86_32, and use similar code.
To actually return a struct in registers, coerce it to an integer of the
same size. LLVM may optimize the code to remove unnecessary accesses to
memory, and will return i32 in r3 or i64 in r3:r4.
Fixes PR#40736
Patch by George Koehler!
Reviewed By: jhibbits, nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73290
Summary:
This commit adds two command-line options to clang.
These options let the user decide which functions will receive SanitizerCoverage instrumentation.
This is most useful in the libFuzzer use case, where it enables targeted coverage-guided fuzzing.
Patch by Yannis Juglaret of DGA-MI, Rennes, France
libFuzzer tests its target against an evolving corpus, and relies on SanitizerCoverage instrumentation to collect the code coverage information that drives corpus evolution. Currently, libFuzzer collects such information for all functions of the target under test, and adds to the corpus every mutated sample that finds a new code coverage path in any function of the target. We propose instead to let the user specify which functions' code coverage information is relevant for building the upcoming fuzzing campaign's corpus. To this end, we add two new command line options for clang, enabling targeted coverage-guided fuzzing with libFuzzer. We see targeted coverage guided fuzzing as a simple way to leverage libFuzzer for big targets with thousands of functions or multiple dependencies. We publish this patch as work from DGA-MI of Rennes, France, with proper authorization from the hierarchy.
Targeted coverage-guided fuzzing can accelerate bug finding for two reasons. First, the compiler will avoid costly instrumentation for non-relevant functions, accelerating fuzzer execution for each call to any of these functions. Second, the built fuzzer will produce and use a more accurate corpus, because it will not keep the samples that find new coverage paths in non-relevant functions.
The two new command line options are `-fsanitize-coverage-whitelist` and `-fsanitize-coverage-blacklist`. They accept files in the same format as the existing `-fsanitize-blacklist` option <https://clang.llvm.org/docs/SanitizerSpecialCaseList.html#format>. The new options influence SanitizerCoverage so that it will only instrument a subset of the functions in the target. We explain these options in detail in `clang/docs/SanitizerCoverage.rst`.
Consider now the woff2 fuzzing example from the libFuzzer tutorial <https://github.com/google/fuzzer-test-suite/blob/master/tutorial/libFuzzerTutorial.md>. We are aware that we cannot conclude much from this example because mutating compressed data is generally a bad idea, but let us use it anyway as an illustration for its simplicity. Let us use an empty blacklist together with one of the three following whitelists:
```
# (a)
src:*
fun:*
# (b)
src:SRC/*
fun:*
# (c)
src:SRC/src/woff2_dec.cc
fun:*
```
Running the built fuzzers shows how many instrumentation points the compiler adds, the fuzzer will output //XXX PCs//. Whitelist (a) is the instrument-everything whitelist, it produces 11912 instrumentation points. Whitelist (b) focuses coverage to instrument woff2 source code only, ignoring the dependency code for brotli (de)compression; it produces 3984 instrumented instrumentation points. Whitelist (c) focuses coverage to only instrument functions in the main file that deals with WOFF2 to TTF conversion, resulting in 1056 instrumentation points.
For experimentation purposes, we ran each fuzzer approximately 100 times, single process, with the initial corpus provided in the tutorial. We let the fuzzer run until it either found the heap buffer overflow or went out of memory. On this simple example, whitelists (b) and (c) found the heap buffer overflow more reliably and 5x faster than whitelist (a). The average execution times when finding the heap buffer overflow were as follows: (a) 904 s, (b) 156 s, and (c) 176 s.
We explain these results by the fact that WOFF2 to TTF conversion calls the brotli decompression algorithm's functions, which are mostly irrelevant for finding bugs in WOFF2 font reconstruction but nevertheless instrumented and used by whitelist (a) to guide fuzzing. This results in longer execution time for these functions and a partially irrelevant corpus. Contrary to whitelist (a), whitelists (b) and (c) will execute brotli-related functions without instrumentation overhead, and ignore new code paths found in them. This results in faster bug finding for WOFF2 font reconstruction.
The results for whitelist (b) are similar to the ones for whitelist (c). Indeed, WOFF2 to TTF conversion calls functions that are mostly located in SRC/src/woff2_dec.cc. The 2892 extra instrumentation points allowed by whitelist (b) do not tamper with bug finding, even though they are mostly irrelevant, simply because most of these functions do not get called. We get a slightly faster average time for bug finding with whitelist (b), which might indicate that some of the extra instrumentation points are actually relevant, or might just be random noise.
Reviewers: kcc, morehouse, vitalybuka
Reviewed By: morehouse, vitalybuka
Subscribers: pratyai, vitalybuka, eternalsakura, xwlin222, dende, srhines, kubamracek, #sanitizers, lebedev.ri, hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #sanitizers, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63616
Now compiler defines 5 sets of constants to represent rounding mode.
These are:
1. `llvm::APFloatBase::roundingMode`. It specifies all 5 rounding modes
defined by IEEE-754 and is used in `APFloat` implementation.
2. `clang::LangOptions::FPRoundingModeKind`. It specifies 4 of 5 IEEE-754
rounding modes and a special value for dynamic rounding mode. It is used
in clang frontend.
3. `llvm::fp::RoundingMode`. Defines the same values as
`clang::LangOptions::FPRoundingModeKind` but in different order. It is
used to specify rounding mode in in IR and functions that operate IR.
4. Rounding mode representation used by `FLT_ROUNDS` (C11, 5.2.4.2.2p7).
Besides constants for rounding mode it also uses a special value to
indicate error. It is convenient to use in intrinsic functions, as it
represents platform-independent representation for rounding mode. In this
role it is used in some pending patches.
5. Values like `FE_DOWNWARD` and other, which specify rounding mode in
library calls `fesetround` and `fegetround`. Often they represent bits
of some control register, so they are target-dependent. The same names
(not values) and a special name `FE_DYNAMIC` are used in
`#pragma STDC FENV_ROUND`.
The first 4 sets of constants are target independent and could have the
same numerical representation. It would simplify conversion between the
representations. Also now `clang::LangOptions::FPRoundingModeKind` and
`llvm::fp::RoundingMode` do not contain the value for IEEE-754 rounding
direction `roundTiesToAway`, although it is supported natively on
some targets.
This change defines all the rounding mode type via one `llvm::RoundingMode`,
which also contains rounding mode for IEEE rounding direction `roundTiesToAway`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77379
Prior to this change the clang interface stubs format resembled
something ending with a symbol list like this:
Symbols:
a: { Type: Func }
This was problematic because we didn't actually want a map format and
also because we didn't like that an empty symbol list required
"Symbols: {}". That is to say without the empty {} llvm-ifs would crash
on an empty list.
With this new format it is much more clear which field is the symbol
name, and instead the [] that is used to express an empty symbol vector
is optional, ie:
Symbols:
- { Name: a, Type: Func }
or
Symbols: []
or
Symbols:
This further diverges the format from existing llvm-elftapi. This is a
good thing because although the format originally came from the same
place, they are not the same in any way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76979
The driver enables -fdiagnostics-show-option by default, so flip the CC1
default to reduce the lengths of common CC1 command lines.
This change also makes ParseDiagnosticArgs() consistently enable
-fdiagnostics-show-option by default.
Summary:
CGProfilePass is run by default in certain new pass manager optimization pipeline. Assemblers other than llvm as (such as gnu as) cannot recognize the .cgprofile entries generated and emitted from this pass, causing build time error.
This patch adds new options in clang CodeGenOpts and PassBuilder options so that we can turn cgprofile off when not using integrated assembler.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, xur, george.burgess.iv, chandlerc, manojgupta
Reviewed By: manojgupta
Subscribers: manojgupta, void, hiraditya, dexonsmith, llvm-commits, tcwang, llozano
Tags: #llvm, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62627
This reverts commit 0788acbccb.
This reverts commit c2d7a1f79cedfc9fcb518596aa839da4de0adb69: Revert "[clangd] Add test for FindTarget+RecoveryExpr (which already works). NFC"
It causes a crash on invalid code:
class X {
decltype(unresolved()) foo;
};
constexpr int s = sizeof(X);
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
Passing small data limit to RISCVELFTargetObjectFile by module flag,
So the backend can set small data section threshold by the value.
The data will be put into the small data section if the data smaller than
the threshold.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57497
This flag is used by avr-gcc (starting with v10) to set the width of the
double type. The double type is by default interpreted as a 32-bit
floating point number in avr-gcc instead of a 64-bit floating point
number as is common on other architectures. Starting with GCC 10, a new
option has been added to control this behavior:
https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/avr-gcc#Deviations_from_the_Standard
This commit keeps the default double at 32 bits but adds support for the
-mdouble flag (-mdouble=32 and -mdouble=64) to control this behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76181
After a first attempt to fix the test-suite failures, my first recommit
caused the same failures again. I had updated CMakeList.txt files of
tests that needed -fcommon, but it turns out that there are also
Makefiles which are used by some bots, so I've updated these Makefiles
now too.
See the original commit message for more details on this change:
0a9fc9233e
This includes fixes for:
- test-suite: some benchmarks need to be compiled with -fcommon, see D75557.
- compiler-rt: one test needed -fcommon, and another a change, see D75520.
Summary:
User can select the version of SYCL the compiler will
use via the flag -sycl-std, similar to -cl-std.
The flag defines the LangOpts.SYCLVersion option to the
version of SYCL. The default value is undefined.
If driver is building SYCL code, flag is set to the default SYCL
version (1.2.1)
The preprocessor uses this variable to define CL_SYCL_LANGUAGE_VERSION macro,
which should be defined according to SYCL 1.2.1 standard.
Only valid value at this point for the flag is 1.2.1.
Co-Authored-By: David Wood <Q0KPU0H1YOEPHRY1R2SN5B5RL@david.davidtw.co>
Signed-off-by: Ruyman Reyes <ruyman@codeplay.com>
Subscribers: ebevhan, Anastasia, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72857
The -fsystem-module flag is used when explicitly building a module. It
forces the module to be treated as a system module. This is used when
converting an implicit build to an explicit build to match the
systemness the implicit build would have had for a given module.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75395
This reverts commit 0a9fc9233e.
Going to look at the asan failures.
I find the failures in the test suite weird, because they look
like compile time test and I don't understand how that can be
failing, but will have a brief look at that too.
This makes -fno-common the default for all targets because this has performance
and code-size benefits and is more language conforming for C code.
Additionally, GCC10 also defaults to -fno-common and so we get consistent
behaviour with GCC.
With this change, C code that uses tentative definitions as definitions of a
variable in multiple translation units will trigger multiple-definition linker
errors. Generally, this occurs when the use of the extern keyword is neglected
in the declaration of a variable in a header file. In some cases, no specific
translation unit provides a definition of the variable. The previous behavior
can be restored by specifying -fcommon.
As GCC has switched already, we benefit from applications already being ported
and existing documentation how to do this. For example:
- https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-10/porting_to.html
- https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Gcc_10_porting_notes/fno_common
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75056
Summary:
User can select the version of SYCL the compiler will
use via the flag -sycl-std, similar to -cl-std.
The flag defines the LangOpts.SYCLVersion option to the
version of SYCL. The default value is undefined.
If driver is building SYCL code, flag is set to the default SYCL
version (1.2.1)
The preprocessor uses this variable to define CL_SYCL_LANGUAGE_VERSION macro,
which should be defined according to SYCL 1.2.1 standard.
Only valid value at this point for the flag is 1.2.1.
Co-Authored-By: David Wood <Q0KPU0H1YOEPHRY1R2SN5B5RL@david.davidtw.co>
Signed-off-by: Ruyman Reyes <ruyman@codeplay.com>
Subscribers: ebevhan, Anastasia, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72857
Signed-off-by: Alexey Bader <alexey.bader@intel.com>
This patch enables the debug entry values feature.
- Remove the (CC1) experimental -femit-debug-entry-values option
- Enable it for x86, arm and aarch64 targets
- Resolve the test failures
- Leave the llc experimental option for targets that do not
support the CallSiteInfo yet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73534
Summary:
This is trying to implement the functionality proposed in:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2017-April/053417.html
An exception can throw, but no cleanup is going to happen.
A module compiled with exceptions on, can catch the exception throws
from module compiled with -fignore-exceptions.
The use cases for enabling this option are:
1. Performance analysis of EH instrumentation overhead
2. The ability to QA non EH functionality when EH functionality is not available.
3. User of EH enabled headers knows the calls won't throw in their program and
wants the performance gain from ignoring EH construct.
The implementation tried to accomplish that by removing any landing pad code
that might get generated.
Reviewed by: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72644
This patch enables the debug entry values feature.
- Remove the (CC1) experimental -femit-debug-entry-values option
- Enable it for x86, arm and aarch64 targets
- Resolve the test failures
- Leave the llc experimental option for targets that do not
support the CallSiteInfo yet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73534
The function attributes xray-skip-entry, xray-skip-exit, and
xray-ignore-loops were only being applied if a function had an
xray-instrument attribute, but they should apply if xray is enabled
globally too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73842
Implement protection against the stack clash attack [0] through inline stack
probing.
Probe stack allocation every PAGE_SIZE during frame lowering or dynamic
allocation to make sure the page guard, if any, is touched when touching the
stack, in a similar manner to GCC[1].
This extends the existing `probe-stack' mechanism with a special value `inline-asm'.
Technically the former uses function call before stack allocation while this
patch provides inlined stack probes and chunk allocation.
Only implemented for x86.
[0] https://www.qualys.com/2017/06/19/stack-clash/stack-clash.txt
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2017-07/msg00556.html
This a recommit of 39f50da2a3 with proper LiveIn
declaration, better option handling and more portable testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
Implement protection against the stack clash attack [0] through inline stack
probing.
Probe stack allocation every PAGE_SIZE during frame lowering or dynamic
allocation to make sure the page guard, if any, is touched when touching the
stack, in a similar manner to GCC[1].
This extends the existing `probe-stack' mechanism with a special value `inline-asm'.
Technically the former uses function call before stack allocation while this
patch provides inlined stack probes and chunk allocation.
Only implemented for x86.
[0] https://www.qualys.com/2017/06/19/stack-clash/stack-clash.txt
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2017-07/msg00556.html
This a recommit of 39f50da2a3 with proper LiveIn
declaration, better option handling and more portable testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
Implement protection against the stack clash attack [0] through inline stack
probing.
Probe stack allocation every PAGE_SIZE during frame lowering or dynamic
allocation to make sure the page guard, if any, is touched when touching the
stack, in a similar manner to GCC[1].
This extends the existing `probe-stack' mechanism with a special value `inline-asm'.
Technically the former uses function call before stack allocation while this
patch provides inlined stack probes and chunk allocation.
Only implemented for x86.
[0] https://www.qualys.com/2017/06/19/stack-clash/stack-clash.txt
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2017-07/msg00556.html
This a recommit of 39f50da2a3 with better option
handling and more portable testing
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
Implement protection against the stack clash attack [0] through inline stack
probing.
Probe stack allocation every PAGE_SIZE during frame lowering or dynamic
allocation to make sure the page guard, if any, is touched when touching the
stack, in a similar manner to GCC[1].
This extends the existing `probe-stack' mechanism with a special value `inline-asm'.
Technically the former uses function call before stack allocation while this
patch provides inlined stack probes and chunk allocation.
Only implemented for x86.
[0] https://www.qualys.com/2017/06/19/stack-clash/stack-clash.txt
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2017-07/msg00556.html
This a recommit of 39f50da2a3 with correct option
flags set.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
This reverts commit 39f50da2a3.
The -fstack-clash-protection is being passed to the linker too, which
is not intended.
Reverting and fixing that in a later commit.
Summary:
Following the AAPCS, every store to a volatile bit-field requires to generate one load of that field, even if all the bits are going to be replaced.
This patch allows the user to opt-in in following such rule, whenever the a.
AAPCS Release 2019Q1.1 (https://static.docs.arm.com/ihi0042/g/aapcs32.pdf)
section 8.1 Data Types, page 35, paragraph: Volatile bit-fields – preserving number and width of container accesses
```
When a volatile bit-field is written, and its container does not overlap with any non-bit-field member, its
container must be read exactly once and written exactly once using the access width appropriate to the
type of the container. The two accesses are not atomic.
```
Reviewers: lebedev.ri, ostannard, jfb, eli.friedman
Reviewed By: jfb
Subscribers: rsmith, rjmccall, dexonsmith, kristof.beyls, jfb, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67399
Implement protection against the stack clash attack [0] through inline stack
probing.
Probe stack allocation every PAGE_SIZE during frame lowering or dynamic
allocation to make sure the page guard, if any, is touched when touching the
stack, in a similar manner to GCC[1].
This extends the existing `probe-stack' mechanism with a special value `inline-asm'.
Technically the former uses function call before stack allocation while this
patch provides inlined stack probes and chunk allocation.
Only implemented for x86.
[0] https://www.qualys.com/2017/06/19/stack-clash/stack-clash.txt
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2017-07/msg00556.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
This reverts commits f41ec709d9 and 5fedc2b410. On some buildbots, Clang :: Driver/crash-report.c is broken with:
```
Command Output (stderr):
--
/home/buildslave/ps4-buildslave1/clang-with-thin-lto-ubuntu/llvm-project/clang/test/Driver/crash-report.c:48:11: error: CHECK: expected string not found in input
// CHECK: Preprocessed source(s) and associated run script(s) are located at:
^
<stdin>:1:1: note: scanning from here
/home/buildslave/ps4-buildslave1/clang-with-thin-lto-ubuntu/llvm-project/clang/test/Driver/crash-report.c:50:1: error: unknown type name 'BAZ'
```
Example: http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-with-thin-lto-ubuntu/builds/21321/steps/test-stage1-compiler/logs/stdio
Previously, when the above '#pragma clang __debug' were used, Driver::generateCompilationDiagnostics() wouldn't work as expected.
The 'clang -E' process created for diagnostics would crash, because it would reach again the intended crash in Pragma.cpp, PragmaDebugHandler::HandlePragma() while preprocessing.
When generating crash diagnostics, we now disable the intended crashing behavior with a new cc1 flag -disable-pragma-debug-crash.
Notes:
- #pragma clang __debug llvm_report_fatal isn't currently tested by crash-report.c, because it needs exit() to be handled differently in -fintegrated-cc1 mode. See https://reviews.llvm.org/D73742 for an upcoming fix.
- This is also needed to further validate that -MF is removed from the 'clang -E ' crash diagnostic cmd-line (currently not the case). See https://reviews.llvm.org/D74076 for an upcoming fix.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74070
Summary:
- The device compilation needs to have a consistent source code compared
to the corresponding host compilation. If macros based on the
host-specific target processor is not properly populated, the device
compilation may fail due to the inconsistent source after the
preprocessor. So far, only the host triple is used to build the
macros. If a detailed host CPU target or certain features are
specified, macros derived from them won't be populated properly, e.g.
`__SSE3__` won't be added unless `+sse3` feature is present. On
Windows compilation compatible with MSVC, that missing macros result
in that intrinsics are not included and cause device compilation
failure on the host-side source.
- This patch addresses this issue by introducing two `cc1` options,
i.e., `-aux-target-cpu` and `-aux-target-feature`. If a specific host
CPU target or certain features are specified, the compiler driver will
append them during the construction of the offline compilation
actions. Then, the toolchain in `cc1` phase will populate macros
accordingly.
- An internal option `--gpu-use-aux-triple-only` is added to fall back
the original behavior to help diagnosing potential issues from the new
behavior.
Reviewers: tra, yaxunl
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73942
AMDGPU and x86 at least both have separate controls for whether
denormal results are flushed on output, and for whether denormals are
implicitly treated as 0 as an input. The current DAGCombiner use only
really cares about the input treatment of denormals.
Driver errors if -fomit-frame-pointer is used together with -pg.
useFramePointerForTargetByDefault() returns true if -pg is specified.
=>
(!OmitFP && useFramePointerForTargetByDefault(Args, Triple)) is true
=>
We cannot get FramePointerKind::None
First attempt at implementing -fsemantic-interposition.
Rely on GlobalValue::isInterposable that already captures most of the expected
behavior.
Rely on a ModuleFlag to state whether we should respect SemanticInterposition or
not. The default remains no.
So this should be a no-op if -fsemantic-interposition isn't used, and if it is,
isInterposable being already used in most optimisation, they should honor it
properly.
Note that it only impacts architecture compiled with -fPIC and no pie.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72829
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.
With LLVM_APPEND_VC_REV=NO, Modules/merge-lifetime-extended-temporary.cpp
would fail if it ran before a0f50d7316 (which changed
the serialization format) and then after, for these reasons:
1. With LLVM_APPEND_VC_REV=NO, the module hash before and after the
change was the same.
2. Modules/merge-lifetime-extended-temporary.cpp is the only test
we have that uses -fmodule-cache-path=%t that
a) actually writes to the cache path
b) doesn't do `rm -rf %t` at the top of the test
So the old run would write a module file, and then the new run would
try to load it, but the serialized format changed.
Do several things to fix this:
1. Include clang::serialization::VERSION_MAJOR/VERSION_MINOR in
the module hash, so that when the AST format changes (...and
we remember to bump these), we use a different module cache dir.
2. Bump VERSION_MAJOR, since a0f50d7316 changed the
on-disk format in a way that a gch file written before that change
can't be read after that change.
3. Add `rm -rf %t` to all tests that pass -fmodule-cache-path=%t.
This is unnecessary from a correctness PoV after 1 and 2,
but makes it so that we don't amass many cache dirs over time.
(Arguably, it also makes it so that the test suite doesn't catch
when we change the serialization format but don't bump
clang::serialization::VERSION_MAJOR/VERSION_MINOR; oh well.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73202
See
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1xMkTZMKx9llnMPgso0jrx3ankI4cv60xeZ0y4ksf4wc/preview
for background discussion.
This adds a warning, flags and pragmas to limit the number of
pre-processor tokens either at a certain point in a translation unit, or
overall.
The idea is that this would allow projects to limit the size of certain
widely included headers, or for translation units overall, as a way to
insert backstops for header bloat and prevent compile-time regressions.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72703
Now with concepts support merged and mostly complete, we do not need -fconcepts-ts
(which was also misleading as we were not implementing the TS) and can enable
concepts features under C++2a. A warning will be generated if users still attempt
to use -fconcepts-ts.
Add a simple cache for constraint satisfaction results. Whether or not this simple caching
would be permitted in final C++2a is currently being discussed but it is required for
acceptable performance so we use it in the meantime, with the possibility of adding some
cache invalidation mechanisms later.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72552
Currently there are 4 different mechanisms for controlling denormal
flushing behavior, and about as many equivalent frontend controls.
- AMDGPU uses the fp32-denormals and fp64-f16-denormals subtarget features
- NVPTX uses the nvptx-f32ftz attribute
- ARM directly uses the denormal-fp-math attribute
- Other targets indirectly use denormal-fp-math in one DAGCombine
- cl-denorms-are-zero has a corresponding denorms-are-zero attribute
AMDGPU wants a distinct control for f32 flushing from f16/f64, and as
far as I can tell the same is true for NVPTX (based on the attribute
name).
Work on consolidating these into the denormal-fp-math attribute, and a
new type specific denormal-fp-math-f32 variant. Only ARM seems to
support the two different flush modes, so this is overkill for the
other use cases. Ideally we would error on the unsupported
positive-zero mode on other targets from somewhere.
Move the logic for selecting the flush mode into the compiler driver,
instead of handling it in cc1. denormal-fp-math/denormal-fp-math-f32
are now both cc1 flags, but denormal-fp-math-f32 is not yet exposed as
a user flag.
-cl-denorms-are-zero, -fcuda-flush-denormals-to-zero and
-fno-cuda-flush-denormals-to-zero will be mapped to
-fp-denormal-math-f32=ieee or preserve-sign rather than the old
attributes.
Stop emitting the denorms-are-zero attribute for the OpenCL flag. It
has no in-tree users. The meaning would also be target dependent, such
as the AMDGPU choice to treat this as only meaning allow flushing of
f32 and not f16 or f64. The naming is also potentially confusing,
since DAZ in other contexts refers to instructions implicitly treating
input denormals as zero, not necessarily flushing output denormals to
zero.
This also does not attempt to change the behavior for the current
attribute. The LangRef now states that the default is ieee behavior,
but this is inaccurate for the current implementation. The clang
handling is slightly hacky to avoid touching the existing
denormal-fp-math uses. Fixing this will be left for a future patch.
AMDGPU is still using the subtarget feature to control the denormal
mode, but the new attribute are now emitted. A future change will
switch this and remove the subtarget features.
XRay allows tuning by minimum function size, but also always instruments
functions with loops in them. If the minimum function size is set to a
large value the loop instrumention ends up causing most functions to be
instrumented anyway. This adds a new flag, -fxray-ignore-loops, to disable
the loop detection logic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72873
The option will limit debug info by only emitting complete class
type information when its constructor is emitted.
This patch changes comparisons with LimitedDebugInfo to use the new
level instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72427
which is the default TLS model for non-PIC objects. This allows large/
many thread local variables or a compact/fast code in an executable.
Specification is same as that of GCC. For example, the code model
option precedes the TLS size option.
TLS access models other than local-exec are not changed. It means
supoort of the large code model is only in the local exec TLS model.
Patch By KAWASHIMA Takahiro (kawashima-fj <t-kawashima@fujitsu.com>)
Reviewers: dmgreen, mstorsjo, t.p.northover, peter.smith, ostannard
Reviewd By: peter.smith
Committed by: peter.smith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71688
In the backend, this feature is implemented with the function attribute
"patchable-function-entry". Both the attribute and XRay use
TargetOpcode::PATCHABLE_FUNCTION_ENTER, so the two features are
incompatible.
Reviewed By: ostannard, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72222
getLastArgIntValue is a useful utility function to get command line argument as an integer.
Currently it is in Frontend so that it can only be used by clang -cc1. Move it to basic so
that it can also be used by clang driver.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71080
Recognize -mrecord-mcount from the command line and add a function attribute
"mrecord-mcount" when passed.
Only valid on SystemZ (when used with -mfentry).
Review: Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D71627
Our build system does not handle randomly named files created during
the build well. We'd prefer to write compilation output directly
without creating a temporary file. Function parameters already
existed to control this behavior but were not exposed all the way out
to the command line.
Patch by Zachary Henkel!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70615
Recognize -mpacked-stack from the command line and add a function attribute
"mpacked-stack" when passed. This is needed for building the Linux kernel.
If this option is passed for any other target than SystemZ, an error is
generated.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D71441
Very few ELF platforms still use .ctors/.dtors now. Linux (glibc: 1999-07),
DragonFlyBSD, FreeBSD (2012-03) and Solaris have supported .init_array
for many years. Some architectures like AArch64/RISC-V default to
.init_array . GNU ld and gold can even convert .ctors to .init_array .
It makes more sense to flip the CC1 default, and only uses
-fno-use-init-array on platforms that don't support .init_array .
For example, OpenBSD did not support DT_INIT_ARRAY before Aug 2016
(86fa57a279)
I may miss some ELF platforms that still use .ctors, but their
maintainers can easily diagnose such problems.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71393
This is a follow up patch to use the OpenMP-IR-Builder, as discussed on
the mailing list ([1] and later) and at the US Dev Meeting'19.
[1] http://lists.flang-compiler.org/pipermail/flang-dev_lists.flang-compiler.org/2019-May/000197.html
Reviewers: kiranchandramohan, ABataev, RaviNarayanaswamy, gtbercea, grokos, sdmitriev, JonChesterfield, hfinkel, fghanim
Subscribers: ppenzin, penzn, llvm-commits, cfe-commits, jfb, guansong, bollu, hiraditya, mgorny
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69922
Summary:
D30644 added OpenMP offloading to AArch64 targets, then D32035 changed the
frontend to throw an error when offloading is requested for an unsupported
target architecture. However the latter did not include AArch64 in the list
of supported architectures, causing the following unit tests to fail:
libomptarget :: api/omp_get_num_devices.c
libomptarget :: mapping/pr38704.c
libomptarget :: offloading/offloading_success.c
libomptarget :: offloading/offloading_success.cpp
Reviewers: pawosm01, gtbercea, jdoerfert, ABataev
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, guansong, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70804
Patch was reverted because https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44048
The original patch is modified to set the strictfp IR attribute
explicitly in CodeGen instead of as a side effect of IRBuilder.
In the 2nd attempt to reapply there was a windows lit test fail, the
tests were fixed to use wildcard matching.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62731
Summary:
Removed the ```-fforce-experimental-new-constant-interpreter flag```, leaving
only the ```-fexperimental-new-constant-interpreter``` one. The interpreter
now always emits an error on an unsupported feature.
Allowing the interpreter to bail out would require a mapping from APValue to
interpreter memory, which will not be necessary in the final version. It is
more sensible to always emit an error if the interpreter fails.
Reviewers: jfb, Bigcheese, rsmith, dexonsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70071
GCC 8 implements -fmacro-prefix-map. Like -fdebug-prefix-map, it replaces a string prefix for the __FILE__ macro.
-ffile-prefix-map is the union of -fdebug-prefix-map and -fmacro-prefix-map
Reviewed By: rnk, Lekensteyn, maskray
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49466
The CUDA builtin library is apparently compiled in C++ mode, so the
assumption of convergent needs to be made in a typically non-SPMD
language. The functions in the library should still be assumed
convergent. Currently they are not, which is potentially incorrect and
this happens to work after the library is linked.
Cleanup handling of the denormal-fp-math attribute. Consolidate places
checking the allowed names in one place.
This is in preparation for introducing FP type specific variants of
the denormal-fp-mode attribute. AMDGPU will switch to using this in
place of the current hacky use of subtarget features for the denormal
mode.
Introduce a new header for dealing with FP modes. The constrained
intrinsic classes define related enums that should also be moved into
this header for uses in other contexts.
The verifier could use a check to make sure the denorm-fp-mode
attribute is sane, but there currently isn't one.
Currently, DAGCombiner incorrectly asssumes non-IEEE behavior by
default in the one current user. Clang must be taught to start
emitting this attribute by default to avoid regressions when this is
switched to assume ieee behavior if the attribute isn't present.
and a follow-up NFC rearrangement as it's causing a crash on valid. Testcase is on the original review thread.
This reverts commits af57dbf12e and e6584b2b7b
Previously these were reported from the driver which blocked clang-scan-deps from getting the full set of dependencies from cc1 commands.
Also the default sanitizer blacklist that is added in driver was never reported as a dependency. I introduced -fsanitize-system-blacklist cc1 option to keep track of which blacklists were user-specified and which were added by driver and clang -MD now also reports system blacklists as dependencies.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69290
Add options to control floating point behavior: trapping and
exception behavior, rounding, and control of optimizations that affect
floating point calculations. More details in UsersManual.rst.
Reviewers: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62731
Recognize -mnop-mcount from the command line and add a function attribute
"mnop-mcount"="true" when passed.
When this option is used, a nop is added instead of a call to fentry. This
is used when building the Linux Kernel.
If this option is passed for any other target than SystemZ, an error is
generated.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D67763
This reverts commit 004ed2b0d1.
Original commit hash 6d03890384
Summary:
This adds a clang option to disable inline line tables. When it is used,
the inliner uses the call site as the location of the inlined function instead of
marking it as an inline location with the function location.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D67723
This adds a flag to LLVM and clang to always generate a .debug_frame
section, even if other debug information is not being generated. In
situations where .eh_frame would normally be emitted, both .debug_frame
and .eh_frame will be used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67216
Summary:
This adds a clang option to disable inline line tables. When it is used,
the inliner uses the call site as the location of the inlined function instead of
marking it as an inline location with the function location.
See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42344
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67723
Summary:
A new function pass (Transforms/CFGuard/CFGuard.cpp) inserts CFGuard checks on
indirect function calls, using either the check mechanism (X86, ARM, AArch64) or
or the dispatch mechanism (X86-64). The check mechanism requires a new calling
convention for the supported targets. The dispatch mechanism adds the target as
an operand bundle, which is processed by SelectionDAG. Another pass
(CodeGen/CFGuardLongjmp.cpp) identifies and emits valid longjmp targets, as
required by /guard:cf. This feature is enabled using the `cfguard` CC1 option.
Reviewers: thakis, rnk, theraven, pcc
Subscribers: ychen, hans, metalcanine, dmajor, tomrittervg, alex, mehdi_amini, mgorny, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65761
Add this option to allow device side class type global variables
with non-trivial ctor/dtor. device side init/fini functions will
be emitted, which will be executed by HIP runtime when
the fat binary is loaded/unloaded.
This feature is to facilitate implementation of device side
sanitizer which requires global vars with non-trival ctors.
By default this option is disabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69268
Remove dead virtual functions from vtables with
replaceNonMetadataUsesWith, so that CGProfile metadata gets cleaned up
correctly.
Original commit message:
Currently, it is hard for the compiler to remove unused C++ virtual
functions, because they are all referenced from vtables, which are referenced
by constructors. This means that if the constructor is called from any live
code, then we keep every virtual function in the final link, even if there
are no call sites which can use it.
This patch allows unused virtual functions to be removed during LTO (and
regular compilation in limited circumstances) by using type metadata to match
virtual function call sites to the vtable slots they might load from. This
information can then be used in the global dead code elimination pass instead
of the references from vtables to virtual functions, to more accurately
determine which functions are reachable.
To make this transformation safe, I have changed clang's code-generation to
always load virtual function pointers using the llvm.type.checked.load
intrinsic, instead of regular load instructions. I originally tried writing
this using clang's existing code-generation, which uses the llvm.type.test
and llvm.assume intrinsics after doing a normal load. However, it is possible
for optimisations to obscure the relationship between the GEP, load and
llvm.type.test, causing GlobalDCE to fail to find virtual function call
sites.
The existing linkage and visibility types don't accurately describe the scope
in which a virtual call could be made which uses a given vtable. This is
wider than the visibility of the type itself, because a virtual function call
could be made using a more-visible base class. I've added a new
!vcall_visibility metadata type to represent this, described in
TypeMetadata.rst. The internalization pass and libLTO have been updated to
change this metadata when linking is performed.
This doesn't currently work with ThinLTO, because it needs to see every call
to llvm.type.checked.load in the linkage unit. It might be possible to
extend this optimisation to be able to use the ThinLTO summary, as was done
for devirtualization, but until then that combination is rejected in the
clang driver.
To test this, I've written a fuzzer which generates random C++ programs with
complex class inheritance graphs, and virtual functions called through object
and function pointers of different types. The programs are spread across
multiple translation units and DSOs to test the different visibility
restrictions.
I've also tried doing bootstrap builds of LLVM to test this. This isn't
ideal, because only classes in anonymous namespaces can be optimised with
-fvisibility=default, and some parts of LLVM (plugins and bugpoint) do not
work correctly with -fvisibility=hidden. However, there are only 12 test
failures when building with -fvisibility=hidden (and an unmodified compiler),
and this change does not cause any new failures for either value of
-fvisibility.
On the 7 C++ sub-benchmarks of SPEC2006, this gives a geomean code-size
reduction of ~6%, over a baseline compiled with "-O2 -flto
-fvisibility=hidden -fwhole-program-vtables". The best cases are reductions
of ~14% in 450.soplex and 483.xalancbmk, and there are no code size
increases.
I've also run this on a set of 8 mbed-os examples compiled for Armv7M, which
show a geomean size reduction of ~3%, again with no size increases.
I had hoped that this would have no effect on performance, which would allow
it to awlays be enabled (when using -fwhole-program-vtables). However, the
changes in clang to use the llvm.type.checked.load intrinsic are causing ~1%
performance regression in the C++ parts of SPEC2006. It should be possible to
recover some of this perf loss by teaching optimisations about the
llvm.type.checked.load intrinsic, which would make it worth turning this on
by default (though it's still dependent on -fwhole-program-vtables).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63932
llvm-svn: 375094
Summary:
When files often get touched during builds, the mtime based validation
leads to different problems in implicit modules builds, even when the
content doesn't actually change:
- Modules only: module invalidation due to out of date files. Usually causing rebuild traffic.
- Modules + PCH: build failures because clang cannot rebuild a module if it comes from building a PCH.
- PCH: build failures because clang cannot rebuild a PCH in case one of the input headers has different mtime.
This patch proposes hashing the content of input files (headers and
module maps), which is performed during serialization time. When looking
at input files for validation, clang only computes the hash in case
there's a mtime mismatch.
I've tested a couple of different hash algorithms availble in LLVM in
face of building modules+pch for `#import <Cocoa/Cocoa.h>`:
- `hash_code`: performace diff within the noise, total module cache increased by 0.07%.
- `SHA1`: 5% slowdown. Haven't done real size measurements, but it'd be BLOCK_ID+20 bytes per input file, instead of BLOCK_ID+8 bytes from `hash_code`.
- `MD5`: 3% slowdown. Like above, but BLOCK_ID+16 bytes per input file.
Given the numbers above, the patch uses `hash_code`. The patch also
improves invalidation error msgs to point out which type of problem the
user is facing: "mtime", "size" or "content".
rdar://problem/29320105
Reviewers: dexonsmith, arphaman, rsmith, aprantl
Subscribers: jkorous, cfe-commits, ributzka
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67249
> llvm-svn: 374841
llvm-svn: 374895
Summary:
When files often get touched during builds, the mtime based validation
leads to different problems in implicit modules builds, even when the
content doesn't actually change:
- Modules only: module invalidation due to out of date files. Usually causing rebuild traffic.
- Modules + PCH: build failures because clang cannot rebuild a module if it comes from building a PCH.
- PCH: build failures because clang cannot rebuild a PCH in case one of the input headers has different mtime.
This patch proposes hashing the content of input files (headers and
module maps), which is performed during serialization time. When looking
at input files for validation, clang only computes the hash in case
there's a mtime mismatch.
I've tested a couple of different hash algorithms availble in LLVM in
face of building modules+pch for `#import <Cocoa/Cocoa.h>`:
- `hash_code`: performace diff within the noise, total module cache increased by 0.07%.
- `SHA1`: 5% slowdown. Haven't done real size measurements, but it'd be BLOCK_ID+20 bytes per input file, instead of BLOCK_ID+8 bytes from `hash_code`.
- `MD5`: 3% slowdown. Like above, but BLOCK_ID+16 bytes per input file.
Given the numbers above, the patch uses `hash_code`. The patch also
improves invalidation error msgs to point out which type of problem the
user is facing: "mtime", "size" or "content".
rdar://problem/29320105
Reviewers: dexonsmith, arphaman, rsmith, aprantl
Subscribers: jkorous, cfe-commits, ributzka
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67249
llvm-svn: 374841
The goal is to have 100% fidelity in clang-scan-deps behavior when
--analyze is present in compilation command.
At the same time I don't want to break clang-tidy which expects
__static_analyzer__ macro defined as built-in.
I introduce new cc1 options (-setup-static-analyzer) that controls
the macro definition and is conditionally set in driver.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68093
llvm-svn: 374815
Currently, it is hard for the compiler to remove unused C++ virtual
functions, because they are all referenced from vtables, which are referenced
by constructors. This means that if the constructor is called from any live
code, then we keep every virtual function in the final link, even if there
are no call sites which can use it.
This patch allows unused virtual functions to be removed during LTO (and
regular compilation in limited circumstances) by using type metadata to match
virtual function call sites to the vtable slots they might load from. This
information can then be used in the global dead code elimination pass instead
of the references from vtables to virtual functions, to more accurately
determine which functions are reachable.
To make this transformation safe, I have changed clang's code-generation to
always load virtual function pointers using the llvm.type.checked.load
intrinsic, instead of regular load instructions. I originally tried writing
this using clang's existing code-generation, which uses the llvm.type.test
and llvm.assume intrinsics after doing a normal load. However, it is possible
for optimisations to obscure the relationship between the GEP, load and
llvm.type.test, causing GlobalDCE to fail to find virtual function call
sites.
The existing linkage and visibility types don't accurately describe the scope
in which a virtual call could be made which uses a given vtable. This is
wider than the visibility of the type itself, because a virtual function call
could be made using a more-visible base class. I've added a new
!vcall_visibility metadata type to represent this, described in
TypeMetadata.rst. The internalization pass and libLTO have been updated to
change this metadata when linking is performed.
This doesn't currently work with ThinLTO, because it needs to see every call
to llvm.type.checked.load in the linkage unit. It might be possible to
extend this optimisation to be able to use the ThinLTO summary, as was done
for devirtualization, but until then that combination is rejected in the
clang driver.
To test this, I've written a fuzzer which generates random C++ programs with
complex class inheritance graphs, and virtual functions called through object
and function pointers of different types. The programs are spread across
multiple translation units and DSOs to test the different visibility
restrictions.
I've also tried doing bootstrap builds of LLVM to test this. This isn't
ideal, because only classes in anonymous namespaces can be optimised with
-fvisibility=default, and some parts of LLVM (plugins and bugpoint) do not
work correctly with -fvisibility=hidden. However, there are only 12 test
failures when building with -fvisibility=hidden (and an unmodified compiler),
and this change does not cause any new failures for either value of
-fvisibility.
On the 7 C++ sub-benchmarks of SPEC2006, this gives a geomean code-size
reduction of ~6%, over a baseline compiled with "-O2 -flto
-fvisibility=hidden -fwhole-program-vtables". The best cases are reductions
of ~14% in 450.soplex and 483.xalancbmk, and there are no code size
increases.
I've also run this on a set of 8 mbed-os examples compiled for Armv7M, which
show a geomean size reduction of ~3%, again with no size increases.
I had hoped that this would have no effect on performance, which would allow
it to awlays be enabled (when using -fwhole-program-vtables). However, the
changes in clang to use the llvm.type.checked.load intrinsic are causing ~1%
performance regression in the C++ parts of SPEC2006. It should be possible to
recover some of this perf loss by teaching optimisations about the
llvm.type.checked.load intrinsic, which would make it worth turning this on
by default (though it's still dependent on -fwhole-program-vtables).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63932
llvm-svn: 374539
I noticed that compiling on Windows with -fno-ms-compatibility had the
side effect of defining __GNUC__, along with __GNUG__, __GXX_RTTI__, and
a number of other macros for GCC compatibility. This is undesirable and
causes Chromium to do things like mix __attribute__ and __declspec,
which doesn't work. We should have a positive language option to enable
GCC compatibility features so that we can experiment with
-fno-ms-compatibility on Windows. This change adds -fgnuc-version= to be
that option.
My issue aside, users have, for a long time, reported that __GNUC__
doesn't match their expectations in one way or another. We have
encouraged users to migrate code away from this macro, but new code
continues to be written assuming a GCC-only environment. There's really
nothing we can do to stop that. By adding this flag, we can allow them
to choose their own adventure with __GNUC__.
This overlaps a bit with the "GNUMode" language option from -std=gnu*.
The gnu language mode tends to enable non-conforming behaviors that we'd
rather not enable by default, but the we want to set things like
__GXX_RTTI__ by default, so I've kept these separate.
Helps address PR42817
Reviewed By: hans, nickdesaulniers, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68055
llvm-svn: 374449
ARM and AArch64 SelectionDAG support for tacking parameter forwarding
register is implemented so we can allow clang invocations for those two
targets.
Beside that restrict debug entry value support to be emitted for
LimitedDebugInfo info and FullDebugInfo. Other types of debug info do
not have functions nor variables debug info.
Reviewers: aprantl, probinson, dstenb, vsk
Reviewed By: vsk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67004
llvm-svn: 374153
Second Landing Attempt:
This patch enables end to end support for generating ELF interface stubs
directly from clang. Now the following:
clang -emit-interface-stubs -o libfoo.so a.cpp b.cpp c.cpp
will product an ELF binary with visible symbols populated. Visibility attributes
and -fvisibility can be used to control what gets populated.
* Adding ToolChain support for clang Driver IFS Merge Phase
* Implementing a default InterfaceStubs Merge clang Tool, used by ToolChain
* Adds support for the clang Driver to involve llvm-ifs on ifs files.
* Adds -emit-merged-ifs flag, to tell llvm-ifs to emit a merged ifs text file
instead of the final object format (normally ELF)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63978
llvm-svn: 374061
This patch enables end to end support for generating ELF interface stubs
directly from clang. Now the following:
clang -emit-interface-stubs -o libfoo.so a.cpp b.cpp c.cpp
will product an ELF binary with visible symbols populated. Visibility attributes
and -fvisibility can be used to control what gets populated.
* Adding ToolChain support for clang Driver IFS Merge Phase
* Implementing a default InterfaceStubs Merge clang Tool, used by ToolChain
* Adds support for the clang Driver to involve llvm-ifs on ifs files.
* Adds -emit-merged-ifs flag, to tell llvm-ifs to emit a merged ifs text file
instead of the final object format (normally ELF)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63978
llvm-svn: 373538
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 371834
levels:
-- none: no lax vector conversions [new GCC default]
-- integer: only conversions between integer vectors [old GCC default]
-- all: all conversions between same-size vectors [Clang default]
For now, Clang still defaults to "all" mode, but per my proposal on
cfe-dev (2019-04-10) the default will be changed to "integer" as soon as
that doesn't break lots of testcases. (Eventually I'd like to change the
default to "none" to match GCC and general sanity.)
Following GCC's behavior, the driver flag -flax-vector-conversions is
translated to -flax-vector-conversions=integer.
This reinstates r371805, reverted in r371813, with an additional fix for
lldb.
llvm-svn: 371817
levels:
-- none: no lax vector conversions [new GCC default]
-- integer: only conversions between integer vectors [old GCC default]
-- all: all conversions between same-size vectors [Clang default]
For now, Clang still defaults to "all" mode, but per my proposal on
cfe-dev (2019-04-10) the default will be changed to "integer" as soon as
that doesn't break lots of testcases. (Eventually I'd like to change the
default to "none" to match GCC and general sanity.)
Following GCC's behavior, the driver flag -flax-vector-conversions is
translated to -flax-vector-conversions=integer.
llvm-svn: 371805
Traditionally, clang-tidy uses the term check, and the analyzer uses checker,
but in the very early years, this wasn't the case, and code originating from the
early 2010's still incorrectly refer to checkers as checks.
This patch attempts to hunt down most of these, aiming to refer to checkers as
checkers, but preserve references to callback functions (like checkPreCall) as
checks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67140
llvm-svn: 371760
Summary:
This adds `-fwasm-exceptions` (in similar fashion with
`-fdwarf-exceptions` or `-fsjlj-exceptions`) that turns on everything
with wasm exception handling from the frontend to the backend.
We currently have `-mexception-handling` in clang frontend, but this is
only about the architecture capability and does not turn on other
necessary options such as the exception model in the backend. (This can
be turned on with `llc -exception-model=wasm`, but llc is not invoked
separately as a command line tool, so this option has to be transferred
from clang.)
Turning on `-fwasm-exceptions` in clang also turns on
`-mexception-handling` if not specified, and will error out if
`-mno-exception-handling` is specified.
Reviewers: dschuff, tlively, sbc100
Subscribers: aprantl, jgravelle-google, sunfish, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67208
llvm-svn: 371708
This patch contains the basic functionality for reporting potentially
incorrect usage of __builtin_expect() by comparing the developer's
annotation against a collected PGO profile. A more detailed proposal and
discussion appears on the CFE-dev mailing list
(http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-July/062971.html) and a
prototype of the initial frontend changes appear here in D65300
We revised the work in D65300 by moving the misexpect check into the
LLVM backend, and adding support for IR and sampling based profiles, in
addition to frontend instrumentation.
We add new misexpect metadata tags to those instructions directly
influenced by the llvm.expect intrinsic (branch, switch, and select)
when lowering the intrinsics. The misexpect metadata contains
information about the expected target of the intrinsic so that we can
check against the correct PGO counter when emitting diagnostics, and the
compiler's values for the LikelyBranchWeight and UnlikelyBranchWeight.
We use these branch weight values to determine when to emit the
diagnostic to the user.
A future patch should address the comment at the top of
LowerExpectIntrisic.cpp to hoist the LikelyBranchWeight and
UnlikelyBranchWeight values into a shared space that can be accessed
outside of the LowerExpectIntrinsic pass. Once that is done, the
misexpect metadata can be updated to be smaller.
In the long term, it is possible to reconstruct portions of the
misexpect metadata from the existing profile data. However, we have
avoided this to keep the code simple, and because some kind of metadata
tag will be required to identify which branch/switch/select instructions
are influenced by the use of llvm.expect
Patch By: paulkirth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66324
llvm-svn: 371635
This reverts commit r371584. It introduced a dependency from compiler-rt
to llvm/include/ADT, which is problematic for multiple reasons.
One is that it is a novel dependency edge, which needs cross-compliation
machinery for llvm/include/ADT (yes, it is true that right now
compiler-rt included only header-only libraries, however, if we allow
compiler-rt to depend on anything from ADT, other libraries will
eventually get used).
Secondly, depending on ADT from compiler-rt exposes ADT symbols from
compiler-rt, which would cause ODR violations when Clang is built with
the profile library.
llvm-svn: 371598
This patch contains the basic functionality for reporting potentially
incorrect usage of __builtin_expect() by comparing the developer's
annotation against a collected PGO profile. A more detailed proposal and
discussion appears on the CFE-dev mailing list
(http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-July/062971.html) and a
prototype of the initial frontend changes appear here in D65300
We revised the work in D65300 by moving the misexpect check into the
LLVM backend, and adding support for IR and sampling based profiles, in
addition to frontend instrumentation.
We add new misexpect metadata tags to those instructions directly
influenced by the llvm.expect intrinsic (branch, switch, and select)
when lowering the intrinsics. The misexpect metadata contains
information about the expected target of the intrinsic so that we can
check against the correct PGO counter when emitting diagnostics, and the
compiler's values for the LikelyBranchWeight and UnlikelyBranchWeight.
We use these branch weight values to determine when to emit the
diagnostic to the user.
A future patch should address the comment at the top of
LowerExpectIntrisic.cpp to hoist the LikelyBranchWeight and
UnlikelyBranchWeight values into a shared space that can be accessed
outside of the LowerExpectIntrinsic pass. Once that is done, the
misexpect metadata can be updated to be smaller.
In the long term, it is possible to reconstruct portions of the
misexpect metadata from the existing profile data. However, we have
avoided this to keep the code simple, and because some kind of metadata
tag will be required to identify which branch/switch/select instructions
are influenced by the use of llvm.expect
Patch By: paulkirth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66324
llvm-svn: 371584
This patch contains the basic functionality for reporting potentially
incorrect usage of __builtin_expect() by comparing the developer's
annotation against a collected PGO profile. A more detailed proposal and
discussion appears on the CFE-dev mailing list
(http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-July/062971.html) and a
prototype of the initial frontend changes appear here in D65300
We revised the work in D65300 by moving the misexpect check into the
LLVM backend, and adding support for IR and sampling based profiles, in
addition to frontend instrumentation.
We add new misexpect metadata tags to those instructions directly
influenced by the llvm.expect intrinsic (branch, switch, and select)
when lowering the intrinsics. The misexpect metadata contains
information about the expected target of the intrinsic so that we can
check against the correct PGO counter when emitting diagnostics, and the
compiler's values for the LikelyBranchWeight and UnlikelyBranchWeight.
We use these branch weight values to determine when to emit the
diagnostic to the user.
A future patch should address the comment at the top of
LowerExpectIntrisic.cpp to hoist the LikelyBranchWeight and
UnlikelyBranchWeight values into a shared space that can be accessed
outside of the LowerExpectIntrinsic pass. Once that is done, the
misexpect metadata can be updated to be smaller.
In the long term, it is possible to reconstruct portions of the
misexpect metadata from the existing profile data. However, we have
avoided this to keep the code simple, and because some kind of metadata
tag will be required to identify which branch/switch/select instructions
are influenced by the use of llvm.expect
Patch By: paulkirth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66324
llvm-svn: 371484
As far as I can tell, gcc passes 256/512 bit vectors __int128 in memory. And passes a vector of 1 _int128 in an xmm register. The backend considers <X x i128> as an illegal type and will scalarize any arguments with that type. So we need to coerce the argument types in the frontend to match to avoid the illegal type.
I'm restricting this to change to Linux and NetBSD based on the
how similar ABI changes have been handled in the past.
PS4, FreeBSD, and Darwin are unaffected. I've also added a
new -fclang-abi-compat version to restore the old behavior.
This issue was identified in PR42607. Though even with the types changed, we still seem to be doing some unnecessary stack realignment.
llvm-svn: 371169
Summary:
This significantly reduces the time required to run clangd tests, by
~10%.
Should also have an effect on other tests that run command-line parsing
multiple times inside a single invocation.
Reviewers: gribozavr, sammccall
Reviewed By: sammccall
Subscribers: kadircet, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67163
llvm-svn: 370908
Breaks BUILD_SHARED_LIBS build, introduces cycles in library dependency
graphs. (clangInterp depends on clangAST which depends on clangInterp)
This reverts r370839, which is an yet another recommit of D64146.
llvm-svn: 370874
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 370839
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 370636
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 370584
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 370531
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 370476
I've been working on a new tool, llvm-ifs, for merging interface stub files
generated by clang and I've iterated on my derivative format of TBE to a newer
format. llvm-ifs will only support the new format, so I am going to drop the
older experimental interface stubs formats in this commit to make things
simpler.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66573
llvm-svn: 369719
After posting llvm-ifs on phabricator, I made some progress in hardening up how
I think the format for Interface Stubs should look. There are a number of
things I think the TBE format was missing (no endianness, no info about the
Object Format because it assumes ELF), so I have added those and broken off
from being as similar to the TBE schema. In a subsequent commit I can drop the
other formats.
An example of how The format will look is as follows:
--- !experimental-ifs-v1
IfsVersion: 1.0
Triple: x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
ObjectFileFormat: ELF
Symbols:
_Z9nothiddenv: { Type: Func }
_Z10cmdVisiblev: { Type: Func }
...
The format is still marked experimental.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66446
llvm-svn: 369715
Summary:
This patch introduces a new `analyzer-config` configuration:
`-analyzer-config silence-checkers`
which could be used to silence the given checkers.
It accepts a semicolon separated list, packed into quotation marks, e.g:
`-analyzer-config silence-checkers="core.DivideZero;core.NullDereference"`
It could be used to "disable" core checkers, so they model the analysis as
before, just if some of them are too noisy it prevents to emit reports.
This patch also adds support for that new option to the scan-build.
Passing the option `-disable-checker core.DivideZero` to the scan-build
will be transferred to `-analyzer-config silence-checkers=core.DivideZero`.
Reviewed By: NoQ, Szelethus
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66042
llvm-svn: 369078
The default behavior of Clang's indirect function call checker will replace
the address of each CFI-checked function in the output file's symbol table
with the address of a jump table entry which will pass CFI checks. We refer
to this as making the jump table `canonical`. This property allows code that
was not compiled with ``-fsanitize=cfi-icall`` to take a CFI-valid address
of a function, but it comes with a couple of caveats that are especially
relevant for users of cross-DSO CFI:
- There is a performance and code size overhead associated with each
exported function, because each such function must have an associated
jump table entry, which must be emitted even in the common case where the
function is never address-taken anywhere in the program, and must be used
even for direct calls between DSOs, in addition to the PLT overhead.
- There is no good way to take a CFI-valid address of a function written in
assembly or a language not supported by Clang. The reason is that the code
generator would need to insert a jump table in order to form a CFI-valid
address for assembly functions, but there is no way in general for the
code generator to determine the language of the function. This may be
possible with LTO in the intra-DSO case, but in the cross-DSO case the only
information available is the function declaration. One possible solution
is to add a C wrapper for each assembly function, but these wrappers can
present a significant maintenance burden for heavy users of assembly in
addition to adding runtime overhead.
For these reasons, we provide the option of making the jump table non-canonical
with the flag ``-fno-sanitize-cfi-canonical-jump-tables``. When the jump
table is made non-canonical, symbol table entries point directly to the
function body. Any instances of a function's address being taken in C will
be replaced with a jump table address.
This scheme does have its own caveats, however. It does end up breaking
function address equality more aggressively than the default behavior,
especially in cross-DSO mode which normally preserves function address
equality entirely.
Furthermore, it is occasionally necessary for code not compiled with
``-fsanitize=cfi-icall`` to take a function address that is valid
for CFI. For example, this is necessary when a function's address
is taken by assembly code and then called by CFI-checking C code. The
``__attribute__((cfi_jump_table_canonical))`` attribute may be used to make
the jump table entry of a specific function canonical so that the external
code will end up taking a address for the function that will pass CFI checks.
Fixes PR41972.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65629
llvm-svn: 368495
This patch is a prerequisite for using LangStandard from Driver in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D64793.
It moves LangStandard* and InputKind::Language to Basic. It is mostly
mechanical, with only a few changes of note:
- enum Language has been changed into enum class Language : uint8_t to
avoid a clash between OpenCL in enum Language and OpenCL in enum
LangFeatures and not to increase the size of class InputKind.
- Now that getLangStandardForName, which is currently unused, also checks
both canonical and alias names, I've introduced a helper getLangKind
which factors out a code pattern already used 3 times.
The patch has been tested on x86_64-pc-solaris2.11, sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11,
and x86_64-pc-linux-gnu.
There's a companion patch for lldb which uses LangStandard.h
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D65717).
While polly includes isl which in turn uses InputKind::C, that part of the
code isn't even built inside the llvm tree. I've posted a patch to allow
for both InputKind::C and Language::C upstream
(https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/isl-development/6oEvNWOSQFE).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65562
llvm-svn: 367864
1. raw_ostream supports ANSI colors so that you can write messages to
the termina with colors. Previously, in order to change and reset
color, you had to call `changeColor` and `resetColor` functions,
respectively.
So, if you print out "error: " in red, for example, you had to do
something like this:
OS.changeColor(raw_ostream::RED);
OS << "error: ";
OS.resetColor();
With this patch, you can write the same code as follows:
OS << raw_ostream::RED << "error: " << raw_ostream::RESET;
2. Add a boolean flag to raw_ostream so that you can disable colored
output. If you disable colors, changeColor, operator<<(Color),
resetColor and other color-related functions have no effect.
Most LLVM tools automatically prints out messages using colors, and
you can disable it by passing a flag such as `--disable-colors`.
This new flag makes it easy to write code that works that way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65564
llvm-svn: 367649
Rename lang mode flag to -cl-std=clc++/-cl-std=CLC++
or -std=clc++/-std=CLC++.
This aligns with OpenCL C conversion and removes ambiguity
with OpenCL C++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65102
llvm-svn: 367008
Summary:
Move `-ftime-trace-granularity` option to frontend options. Without patch
this option is showed up in the help for any tool that links libSupport.
Reviewers: sammccall
Subscribers: hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65202
llvm-svn: 366911
with '-mframe-pointer'
After D56351 and D64294, frame pointer handling is migrated to tri-state
(all, non-leaf, none) in clang driver and on the function attribute.
This patch makes the frame pointer handling cc1 option tri-state.
Reviewers: chandlerc, rnk, t.p.northover, MaskRay
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56353
llvm-svn: 366645
gcc PowerPC supports 3 representations of long double:
* -mlong-double-64
long double has the same representation of double but is mangled as `e`.
In clang, this is the default on AIX, FreeBSD and Linux musl.
* -mlong-double-128
2 possible 128-bit floating point representations:
+ -mabi=ibmlongdouble
IBM extended double format. Mangled as `g`
In clang, this is the default on Linux glibc.
+ -mabi=ieeelongdouble
IEEE 754 quadruple-precision format. Mangled as `u9__ieee128` (`U10__float128` before gcc 8.2)
This is currently unavailable.
This patch adds -mabi=ibmlongdouble and -mabi=ieeelongdouble, and thus
makes the IEEE 754 quadruple-precision long double available for
languages supported by clang.
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64283
llvm-svn: 366044
This patch makes the driver option -mlong-double-128 available for X86
and PowerPC. The CC1 option -mlong-double-128 is available on all targets
for users to test on unsupported targets.
On PowerPC, -mlong-double-128 uses the IBM extended double format
because we don't support -mabi=ieeelongdouble yet (D64283).
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64277
llvm-svn: 365866
-mlong-double-64 is supported on some ports of gcc (i386, x86_64, and ppc{32,64}).
On many other targets, there will be an error:
error: unrecognized command line option '-mlong-double-64'
This patch makes the driver option -mlong-double-64 available for x86
and ppc. The CC1 option -mlong-double-64 is available on all targets for
users to test on unsupported targets.
LongDoubleSize is added as a VALUE_LANGOPT so that the option can be
shared with -mlong-double-128 when we support it in clang.
Also, make powerpc*-linux-musl default to use 64-bit long double. It is
currently the only supported ABI on musl and is also how people
configure powerpc*-linux-musl-gcc.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64067
llvm-svn: 365412
Summary:
The changes in D59673 made the choice redundant, since we can achieve
single-file split DWARF just by not setting an output file name.
Like llc we can also derive whether to enable Split DWARF from whether
-split-dwarf-file is set, so we don't need the flag at all anymore.
The test CodeGen/split-debug-filename.c distinguished between having set
or not set -enable-split-dwarf with -split-dwarf-file, but we can
probably just always emit the metadata into the IR.
The flag -split-dwarf wasn't used at all anymore.
Reviewers: dblaikie, echristo
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63167
llvm-svn: 364479
The option enables debug info about parameter's entry values.
The example of using the option:
clang -g -O2 -Xclang -femit-debug-entry-values test.c
In addition, when the option is set add the flag all_call_sites
in a subprogram in order to support GNU extension as well.
([3/13] Introduce the debug entry values.)
Co-authored-by: Ananth Sowda <asowda@cisco.com>
Co-authored-by: Nikola Prica <nikola.prica@rt-rk.com>
Co-authored-by: Ivan Baev <ibaev@cisco.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58033
llvm-svn: 364399
This change reverts r363649; effectively re-landing r363626. At this point
clang::Index::CodegenNameGeneratorImpl has been refactored into
clang::AST::ASTNameGenerator. This makes it so that the previous circular link
dependency no longer exists, fixing the previous share lib
(-DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON) build issue which was the reason for r363649.
Clang interface stubs (previously referred to as clang-ifsos) is a new frontend
action in clang that allows the generation of stub files that contain mangled
name info that can be used to produce a stub library. These stub libraries can
be useful for breaking up build dependencies and controlling access to a
library's internal symbols. Generation of these stubs can be invoked by:
clang -fvisibility=<visibility> -emit-interface-stubs \
-interface-stub-version=<interface format>
Notice that -fvisibility (along with use of visibility attributes) can be used
to control what symbols get generated. Currently the interface format is
experimental but there are a wide range of possibilities here.
Currently clang-ifs produces .ifs files that can be thought of as analogous to
object (.o) files, but just for the mangled symbol info. In a subsequent patch
I intend to add support for merging the .ifs files into one .ifs/.ifso file
that can be the input to something like llvm-elfabi to produce something like a
.so file or .dll (but without any of the code, just symbols).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60974
llvm-svn: 363948
Using the -fdeclare-opencl-builtins option will require a way to
predefine types and macros such as `int4`, `CLK_GLOBAL_MEM_FENCE`,
etc. Move these out of opencl-c.h into opencl-c-base.h such that the
latter can be shared by -fdeclare-opencl-builtins and
-finclude-default-header.
This changes the behaviour of -finclude-default-header when
-fdeclare-opencl-builtins is specified: instead of including the full
header, it will include the header with only the base definitions.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63256
llvm-svn: 363794
This reverts commit rC363626.
clangIndex depends on clangFrontend. r363626 adds a dependency from
clangFrontend to clangIndex, which creates a circular dependency.
This is disallowed by -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=on builds:
CMake Error: The inter-target dependency graph contains the following strongly connected component (cycle):
"clangFrontend" of type SHARED_LIBRARY
depends on "clangIndex" (weak)
"clangIndex" of type SHARED_LIBRARY
depends on "clangFrontend" (weak)
At least one of these targets is not a STATIC_LIBRARY. Cyclic dependencies are allowed only among static libraries.
Note, the dependency on clangIndex cannot be removed because
libclangFrontend.so is linked with -Wl,-z,defs: a shared object must
have its full direct dependencies specified on the linker command line.
In -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=off builds, this appears to work when linking
`bin/clang-9`. However, it can cause trouble to downstream clang library
users. The llvm build system links libraries this way:
clang main_program_object_file ... lib/libclangIndex.a ... lib/libclangFrontend.a -o exe
libclangIndex.a etc are not wrapped in --start-group.
If the downstream application depends on libclangFrontend.a but not any
other clang libraries that depend on libclangIndex.a, this can cause undefined
reference errors when the linker is ld.bfd or gold.
The proper fix is to not include clangIndex files in clangFrontend.
llvm-svn: 363649