This avoids an unnecessary copy required by 'return OS.str()', allowing
instead for NRVO or implicit move. The .str() call (which flushes the
stream) is no longer required since 65b13610a5,
which made raw_string_ostream unbuffered by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115374
The default for min is changed to 1. The behaviour of -mvscale-{min,max}
in Clang is also changed such that 16 is the max vscale when targeting
SVE and no max is specified.
Reviewed By: sdesmalen, paulwalker-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113294
Currently, BeforeExecute is called before BeginSourceFile which does not allow
using PP in the callbacks. Change the ordering to ensure it is possible.
This is a prerequisite for D114370.
Originated from a discussion with @kadircet.
Reviewed By: sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114525
Add an AtomicScopeModel for HIP and support for OpenCL builtins
that are missing in HIP.
Patch by: Michael Liao
Revised by: Anshil Ghandi
Reviewed by: Yaxun Liu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113925
This removes the ability to disable roundtripping in assert builds.
(Roundtripping happens by default in assert builds both before and after
this patch.)
The CLANG_ROUND_TRIP_CC1_ARGS was added as an escape hatch 9 months ago
in https://reviews.llvm.org/D97462, with a FIXME to remove it eventually.
It's probably time to remove it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114120
With this,
void f() { __asm__("mov eax, ebx"); }
now compiles with clang with -masm=intel.
This matches gcc.
The flag is not accepted in clang-cl mode. It has no effect on
MSVC-style `__asm {}` blocks, which are unconditionally in intel
mode both before and after this change.
One difference to gcc is that in clang, inline asm strings are
"local" while they're "global" in gcc. Building the following with
-masm=intel works with clang, but not with gcc where the ".att_syntax"
from the 2nd __asm__() is in effect until file end (or until a
".intel_syntax" somewhere later in the file):
__asm__("mov eax, ebx");
__asm__(".att_syntax\nmovl %ebx, %eax");
__asm__("mov eax, ebx");
This also updates clang's intrinsic headers to work both in
-masm=att (the default) and -masm=intel modes.
The official solution for this according to "Multiple assembler dialects in asm
templates" in gcc docs->Extensions->Inline Assembly->Extended Asm
is to write every inline asm snippet twice:
bt{l %[Offset],%[Base] | %[Base],%[Offset]}
This works in LLVM after D113932 and D113894, so use that.
(Just putting `.att_syntax` at the start of the snippet works in some but not
all cases: When LLVM interpolates in parameters like `%0`, it uses at&t or
intel syntax according to the inline asm snippet's flavor, so the `.att_syntax`
within the snippet happens to late: The interpolated-in parameter is already
in intel style, and then won't parse in the switched `.att_syntax`.)
It might be nice to invent a `#pragma clang asm_dialect push "att"` /
`#pragma clang asm_dialect pop` to be able to force asm style per snippet,
so that the inline asm string doesn't contain the same code in two variants,
but let's leave that for a follow-up.
Fixes PR21401 and PR20241.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113707
Change the error message to use ignorelist, and changed some variable and function
names in related code and test.
Reviewed By: thakis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113189
Add new triple and target info for ‘spirv32’ and ‘spirv64’ and,
thus, enabling clang (LLVM IR) code emission to SPIR-V target.
The target for SPIR-V is mostly reused from SPIR by derivation
from a common base class since IR output for SPIR-V is mostly
the same as SPIR. Some refactoring are made accordingly.
Added and updated tests for parts that are different between
SPIR and SPIR-V.
Patch by linjamaki (Henry Linjamäki)!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109144
The PragmaAssumeNonNullHandler (and maybe others) passes an invalid
SourceLocation to its callback, hence PrintPreprocessedOutput does not
know how many lines to insert between the previous token and the
pragma and does nothing.
With this patch we instead assume that the unknown token is on the same
line as the previous such that we can call the procedure that also emits
semantically significant whitespace.
Fixes bug reported here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104601#3105044
This is reported by msvc as
warning C6287: redundant code: the left and right subexpressions are identical
EmittedDirectiveOnThisLine implies EmittedTokensOnThisLine
making this an NFC change. To be on the safe side and because both of
them are checked at other places as well, we continue to check both.
Compiler warning reported here:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D104601#2957333
Now in libcxx and clang, all the coroutine components are defined in
std::experimental namespace.
And now the coroutine TS is merged into C++20. So in the working draft
like N4892, we could find the coroutine components is defined in std
namespace instead of std::experimental namespace.
And the coroutine support in clang seems to be relatively stable. So I
think it may be suitable to move the coroutine component into the
experiment namespace now.
This patch would make clang lookup coroutine_traits in std namespace
first. For the compatibility consideration, clang would lookup in
std::experimental namespace if it can't find definitions in std
namespace. So the existing codes wouldn't be break after update
compiler.
And in case the compiler found std::coroutine_traits and
std::experimental::coroutine_traits at the same time, it would emit an
error for it.
The support for looking up std::experimental::coroutine_traits would be
removed in Clang16.
Reviewed By: lxfind, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108696
Downstream users may have Clang plugins. By default these plugins run
after the main action if they are specified on the command line.
Since these plugins are ASTConsumers, presumably they inspect the AST.
So we shouldn't clear it if any plugins run after the main action.
Reviewed By: dblaikie, hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112190
Currently we have a way to run a plugin if specified on the command line
after the main action, and ways to unconditionally run the plugin before
or after the main action, but no way to run a plugin if specified on the
command line before the main action.
This introduces the missing option.
This is helpful because -clear-ast-before-backend clears the AST before
codegen, while some plugins may want access to the AST.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112096
When using explicit Clang modules, some declarations might unexpectedly become invisible.
This is caused by the mechanism that loads PCM files passed via `-fmodule-file=<path>` and creates an `IdentifierInfo` for the module name. The `IdentifierInfo` creation takes place when the `ASTReader` is in a weird state, with modules that are loaded but not yet set up properly. This patch delays the creation of `IdentifierInfo` until the `ASTReader` is done with reading the PCM.
Note that the `-fmodule-file=<name>=<path>` form of the argument doesn't suffer from this issue, since it doesn't create `IdentifierInfo` for the module name.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111543
Previously, we reported the same value as for C17, now we report 202000L, which
is the same value currently used by GCC.
Once C23 ships, this value will be bumped to the correct date.
During explicit modular build, PCM files are typically specified via the `-fmodule-file=<path>` command-line option. Early during the compilation, Clang uses the `ASTReader` to read their contents and caches the result so that the module isn't loaded implicitly later on. A listener is attached to the `ASTReader` to collect names of the modules read from the PCM files. However, if the PCM has already been loaded previously via PCH:
1. the `ASTReader` doesn't do anything for the second time,
2. the listener is not invoked at all,
3. the module load result is not cached,
4. the compilation fails when attempting to load the module implicitly later on.
This patch solves this problem by attaching the listener to the `ASTReader` for PCH reading as well.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111560
For dependency scanning, it would be useful to collect header search paths (provided on command-line via `-I` and friends) that were actually used during preprocessing. This patch adds that feature to `HeaderSearch` along with a new remark that reports such paths as they get used.
Previous version of this patch tried to use the existing `LookupFileCache` to report used paths via `HitIdx`. That doesn't work for `ComputeUserEntryUsage` (which is intended to be called *after* preprocessing), because it indexes used search paths by the file name. This means the values get overwritten when the code contains `#include_next`.
Note that `HeaderSearch` doesn't use `HeaderSearchOptions::UserEntries` directly. Instead, `InitHeaderSearch` pre-processes them (adds platform-specific paths, removes duplicates, removes paths that don't exist) and creates `DirectoryLookup` instances. This means we need a mechanism for translating between those two. It's not possible to go from `DirectoryLookup` back to the original `HeaderSearch`, so `InitHeaderSearch` now tracks the relationships explicitly.
Depends on D111557.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102923
This patch propagates the import `SourceLocation` into `HeaderSearch::lookupModule`. This enables remarks on search path usage (implemented in D102923) to point to the source code that initiated header search.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111557
Without this, the combination of `-ast-dump=json` and `-ast-dump-filter FILTER` produces invalid JSON: the first line is a string that says `Dumping $SOME_DECL_NAME: `.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108441
This patch adds two flags to be supported for the new runtime. The flags
are `-fopenmp-assume-threads-oversubscription` and
-fopenmp-assume-teams-oversubscription`. These add global values that
can be checked by the work sharing runtime functions to make better
judgements about how to distribute work between the threads.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111348
Modify the IfStmt node to suppoort constant evaluated expressions.
Add a new ExpressionEvaluationContext::ImmediateFunctionContext to
keep track of immediate function contexts.
This proved easier/better/probably more efficient than walking the AST
backward as it allows diagnosing nested if consteval statements.
A followup to D110201.
For example, we'd set OptimizationRemarkMissed's Regex to '.*' when
encountering -Rpass. Normally this doesn't actually affect remarks we
emit because in clang::ProcessWarningOptions() we'll separately look at
all -R arguments and turn on/off corresponding diagnostic groups.
However, this is reproducible with -round-trip-args.
Reviewed By: JamesNagurne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110673
Based on feedback from Paul Robinson on 38c09ea that the 'mangled' mode
is only useful as an LLVM-developer-internal tool in combination with
llvm-dwarfdump --verify, so demote that to a frontend-only (not driver)
option. The driver support is simply -g{no-,}simple-template-names to
switch on simple template names, without the option to use the mangled
template name scheme there.
This is to build the foundation of a new debug info feature to use only
the base name of template as its debug info name (eg: "t1" instead of
the full "t1<int>"). The intent being that a consumer can still retrieve
all that information from the DW_TAG_template_*_parameters.
So gno-simple-template-names is business as usual/previously ("t1<int>")
=simple is the simplified name ("t1")
=mangled is a special mode to communicate the full information, but
also indicate that the name should be able to be simplified. The data
is encoded as "_STNt1|<int>" which will be matched with an
llvm-dwarfdump --verify feature to deconstruct this name, rebuild the
original name, and then try to rebuild the simple name via the DWARF
tags - then compare the latter and the former to ensure that all the
data necessary to fully rebuild the name is present.
Previously with -Rpass (and friends) we'd have remarks "enabled", but
without an actual regex.
As seen in the test change to line numbers, this can give us better
diagnostics by properly enabling NeedLocTracking with -Rpass.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110201
Rename methods to clearly signal when they only deal with ASCII,
simplify the parsing of identifier, and use start/continue instead of
head/body for consistency with Unicode terminology.
This patch introduces the flags `-fopenmp-target-debug` and
`-fopenmp-target-debug=` to set the value of a global in the device.
This will be used to enable or disable debugging features statically in
the device runtime library.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109544
module lookup by name alone
This removes the need to create a fake source file that imports a
module.
rdar://64538073
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109485
- Make flto an alias of flto=full.
- Make foffload-lto an alias of foffload-lto=full.
- Make flto_EQ_jobserver, flto_EQ_auto aliases of flto=full,
since they are being treated as full lto right now.
- Clean up the code for parseLTOMode and setLTOMode.
- Replace uses of OPT_flto with OPT_flto_EQ since they alias now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108881
Change-Id: I5d867db83a680434fba5c8d85c9a83135d3b81ee
- Make flto an alias of flto=full.
- Make foffload-lto an alias of foffload-lto=full.
- Make flto_EQ_jobserver, flto_EQ_auto aliases of flto=full,
since they are being treated as full lto right now.
- Clean up the code for parseLTOMode and setLTOMode.
- Replace uses of OPT_flto with OPT_flto_EQ since they alias now.
Change-Id: Iea5338c20cb800b43529b20745e92600e2cfd2b1
Per the comments, `hash_code` values "are not stable to save or
persist", so are unsuitable for the module hash, which must persist
across compilations for the implicit module hashes to match. Note that
in practice, today, `hash_code` are stable. But this is an
implementation detail, with a clear `FIXME` indicating we should switch
to a per-execution seed.
The stability of `MD5` also allows modules cross-compilation use-cases.
The `size_t` underlying storage for `hash_code` varying across platforms
could cause mismatching hashes when cross-compiling from a 64bit
target to a 32bit target.
Note that native endianness is still used for the hash computation. So hashes
will differ between platforms of different endianness.
Reviewed By: jansvoboda11
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102943
The way we parse `DiagnosticOptions` is a bit involved.
`DiagnosticOptions` are parsed as part of the cc1-parsing function `CompilerInvocation::CreateFromArgs` which takes `DiagnosticsEngine` as an argument to be able to report errors in command-line arguments. But to create `DiagnosticsEngine`, `DiagnosticOptions` are needed. This is solved by exposing the `ParseDiagnosticArgs` to clients and making its `DiagnosticsEngine` argument optional, essentially breaking the dependency cycle.
The `ParseDiagnosticArgs` function takes `llvm::opt::ArgList &`, which each client needs to create from the command-line (typically represented as `std::vector<const char *>`). Creating this data structure in this context is somewhat particular. This code pattern is copy-pasted in some places across the upstream code base and also in downstream repos. To make things a bit more uniform, this patch extracts the code into a new reusable function: `CreateAndPopulateDiagOpts`.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108918
The intent of this patch is to add support of -fp-model=[source|double|extended] to allow
the compiler to use a wider type for intermediate floating point calculations. As a side
effect to that, the value of FLT_EVAL_METHOD is changed according to the pragma
float_control.
Unfortunately some issue was uncovered with this change in preprocessing. See details in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D93769 . We are therefore reverting this patch until we find a way
to reconcile the value of FLT_EVAL_METHOD, the pragma and the -E flow.
This reverts commit 66ddac22e2.
This change defines a helper function getOpenCLCompatibleVersion()
inside LangOptions class. The function contains mapping between
C++ for OpenCL versions and their corresponding compatible OpenCL
versions. This mapping function should be updated each time a new
C++ for OpenCL language version is introduced. The helper function
is expected to simplify conditions on OpenCL C and C++ for OpenCL
versions inside compiler code.
Code refactoring performed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108693
In -P mode, PrintPPOutputPPCallbacks::MoveToLine started at least one
newline if current and target line number mismatched. The method is also
called when entering a new file, be it the main file or an include file.
In this situation line numbers always almost mismatch, resulting in a
newline for each occurance even if no tokens have been printed
in-between.
Empty lines at the beginning of the output must be trimmed because it
may be parsed by scripts expecting the result to appear on the first
output line, as done by LibreOffice's configure script.
Fix by only emitting a newline if tokens have been printed so far using
the EmittedTokensOnThisLine flag. Also adding a test case of FileChanged
callbacks occuring with empty include files.
This fixes llvm.org/PR51616
Some Clang diagnostics could only report OpenCL C version. Because
C++ for OpenCL can be used as an alternative to OpenCL C, the text
for diagnostics should reflect that.
Desrciptions modified for these diagnostics:
`err_opencl_unknown_type_specifier`
`warn_option_invalid_ocl_version`
`err_attribute_requires_opencl_version`
`warn_opencl_attr_deprecated_ignored`
`ext_opencl_ext_vector_type_rgba_selector`
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107648
Add -cc1 flags `-fmodules-uses-lock` and `-fno-modules-uses-lock` to
allow the lock manager to be turned off when building implicit modules.
Add `-Rmodule-lock` so that we can see when it's being used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95583
This happens in createInvocationWithCommandLine but only clangd currently passes
ShouldRecoverOnErorrs (sic).
One cause of this (with correct command) is several -arch arguments for mac
multi-arch support.
Fixes https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/827
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107632
This renames `compileModuleAndReadAST`, adding a `BehindLock` suffix,
and refactors it to significantly reduce nesting.
- Split out helpers `compileModuleAndReadASTImpl` and
`readASTAfterCompileModule` which have straight-line code that doesn't
worry about locks.
- Use `break` in the interesting cases of `switch` statements to reduce
nesting.
- Use early `return`s to reduce nesting.
Detangling the compile-and-read logic from the check-for-locks logic
should be a net win for readability, although I also have a side
motivation of making the locks optional in a follow-up.
No functionality change here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95581
Only the bare name is completed, with no args.
For args to be useful we need arg names. These *are* in the tablegen but
not currently emitted in usable form, so left this as future work.
C++11, C2x, GNU, declspec, MS syntax is supported, with the appropriate
spellings of attributes suggested.
`#pragma clang attribute` is supported but not terribly useful as we
only reach completion if parens are balanced (i.e. the line is not truncated)
There's no filtering of which attributes might make sense in this
grammatical context (e.g. attached to a function). In code-completion context
this is hard to do, and will only work in few cases :-(
There's also no filtering by langopts: this is because currently the
only way of checking is to try to produce diagnostics, which requires a
valid ParsedAttr which is hard to get.
This should be fairly simple to fix but requires some tablegen changes
to expose the logic without the side-effect.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107696
This matches the behavior of GCC.
Patch does not change remapping logic itself, so adding one simple smoke test should be enough.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107393
For some use-cases, it might be useful to be able to turn off modules for C++ in `-cc1`. (The feature is implied by `-std=C++20`.)
This patch exposes the `-fno-cxx-modules` option in `-cc1`.
Reviewed By: arphaman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106864
The -fms-extensions converts __pragma (and _Pragma) into a #pragma that
has to occur at the beginning of a line and end with a newline. This
patch ensures that the newline after the #pragma is added even if
Token::isAtStartOfLine() indicated that we should not start a newline.
Committing relying post-commit review since the change is small, some
downstream uses might be blocked without this fix, and to make clear the
decision of the new -fminimize-whitespace feature (fix on main, revert
on clang-13.x branch) suggested by @aaron.ballman in D104601.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107183
'pipe' keyword is introduced in OpenCL C 2.0: so do checks for OpenCL C version while
parsing and then later on check for language options to construct actual pipe. This feature
requires support of __opencl_c_generic_address_space, so diagnostics for that is provided as well.
This is the same patch as in D106748 but with a tiny fix in checking of diagnostic messages.
Also added tests when program scope global variables are not supported.
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107154
Renamed language standard from openclcpp to openclcpp10.
Added new std values i.e. '-cl-std=clc++1.0' and
'-cl-std=CLC++1.0'.
Patch by Topotuna (Justas Janickas)!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106266
'pipe' keyword is introduced in OpenCL C 2.0: so do checks for OpenCL C version while
parsing and then later on check for language options to construct actual pipe. This feature
requires support of __opencl_c_generic_address_space, so diagnostics for that is provided as well.
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106748
The implementation of -fminimize-whitespace (D104601) revised the logic
when to emit newlines. There was no case to handle when more than
8 lines were skippped in -P (DisableLineMarkers) mode and instead fell
through the case intended for -fminimize-whitespace, i.e. emit nothing.
This patch will emit one newline in this case.
The newline logic is slightly reorganized. The `-P -fminimize-whitespace`
case is handled explicitly and emitting at least one newline is the new
fallback case. The choice between emitting a line marker or up to
7 empty lines is now a choice only with enabled line markers. The up to
8 newlines likely are fewer characters than a line directive, but
in -P mode this had the paradoxic effect that it would print up to
7 empty lines, but none at all if more than 8 lines had to be skipped.
Now with DisableLineMarkers, we don't consider printing empty lines
(just start a new line) which matches gcc's behavior.
The line-directive-output-mincol.c test is replaced with a more
comprehensive test skip-empty-lines.c also testing the more than
8 skipped lines behaviour with all flag combinations.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106924
The Intel compiler ICC supports the option "-fp-model=(source|double|extended)"
which causes the compiler to use a wider type for intermediate floating point
calculations. Also supported is a way to embed this effect in the source
program with #pragma float_control(source|double|extended).
This patch extends pragma float_control syntax, and also adds support
for a new floating point option "-ffp-eval-method=(source|double|extended)".
source: intermediate results use source precision
double: intermediate results use double precision
extended: intermediate results use extended precision
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93769
This patch replaces the workaround for simpler implicit moves
implemented in D105518.
The Microsoft STL currently has some issues with P2266.
Where before, with -fms-compatibility, we would disable simpler
implicit moves globally, with this change, we disable it only
when the returned expression is in a context contained by
std namespace and is located within a system header.
Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, mibintc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105951
Set default version for OpenCL C to 1.2. This means that the
absence of any standard flag will be equivalent to passing
'-cl-std=CL1.2'.
Note that this patch also fixes incorrect version check for
the pointer to pointer kernel arguments diagnostic and
atomic test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106504
This patch adds the -fminimize-whitespace with the following effects:
* If combined with -E, remove as much non-line-breaking whitespace as
possible.
* If combined with -E -P, removes as much whitespace as possible,
including line-breaks.
The motivation is to reduce the amount of insignificant changes in the
preprocessed output with source files where only whitespace has been
changed (add/remove comments, clang-format, etc.) which is in particular
useful with ccache.
A patch for ccache for using this flag has been proposed to ccache as well:
https://github.com/ccache/ccache/pull/815, which will use
-fnormalize-whitespace when clang-13 has been detected, and additionally
uses -P in "unify_mode". ccache already had a unify_mode in an older
version which was removed because of problems that using the
preprocessor itself does not have (such that the custom tokenizer did
not recognize C++11 raw strings).
This patch slightly reorganizes which part is responsible for adding
newlines that are required for semantics. It is now either
startNewLineIfNeeded() or MoveToLine() but never both; this avoids the
ShouldUpdateCurrentLine workaround and avoids redundant lines being
inserted in some cases. It also fixes a mandatory newline not inserted
after a _Pragma("...") that is expanded into a #pragma.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104601
The Intel compiler ICC supports the option "-fp-model=(source|double|extended)"
which causes the compiler to use a wider type for intermediate floating point
calculations. Also supported is a way to embed this effect in the source
program with #pragma float_control(source|double|extended).
This patch extends pragma float_control syntax, and also adds support
for a new floating point option "-ffp-eval-method=(source|double|extended)".
source: intermediate results use source precision
double: intermediate results use double precision
extended: intermediate results use extended precision
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93769
This diff changes llvm-ifs to use unified IFS file format
and perform other renaming changes in preparation for the
merging between elfabi/ifs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99810
It was possible to re-add a module to a shared in-memory module cache
when search paths are changed. This can eventually cause a crash if the
original module is referenced after this occurs.
1. Module A depends on B
2. B exists in two paths C and D
3. First run only has C on the search path, finds A and B and loads
them
4. Second run adds D to the front of the search path. A is loaded and
contains a reference to the already compiled module from C. But
searching finds the module from D instead, causing a mismatch
5. B and the modules that depend on it are considered out of date and
thus rebuilt
6. The recompiled module A is added to the in-memory cache, freeing
the previously inserted one
This can never occur from a regular clang process, but is very easy to
do through the API - whether through the use of a shared case or just
running multiple compilations from a single `CompilerInstance`. Update
the compilation to return early if a module is already finalized so that
the pre-condition in the in-memory module cache holds.
Resolves rdar://78180255
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105328
Original commit message:
[clang-repl] Implement partial translation units and error recovery.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D96033 contained a discussion regarding efficient
modeling of error recovery. @rjmccall has outlined the key ideas:
Conceptually, we can split the translation unit into a sequence of partial
translation units (PTUs). Every declaration will be associated with a unique PTU
that owns it.
The first key insight here is that the owning PTU isn't always the "active"
(most recent) PTU, and it isn't always the PTU that the declaration
"comes from". A new declaration (that isn't a redeclaration or specialization of
anything) does belong to the active PTU. A template specialization, however,
belongs to the most recent PTU of all the declarations in its signature - mostly
that means that it can be pulled into a more recent PTU by its template
arguments.
The second key insight is that processing a PTU might extend an earlier PTU.
Rolling back the later PTU shouldn't throw that extension away. For example, if
the second PTU defines a template, and the third PTU requires that template to
be instantiated at float, that template specialization is still part of the
second PTU. Similarly, if the fifth PTU uses an inline function belonging to the
fourth, that definition still belongs to the fourth. When we go to emit code in
a new PTU, we map each declaration we have to emit back to its owning PTU and
emit it in a new module for just the extensions to that PTU. We keep track of
all the modules we've emitted for a PTU so that we can unload them all if we
decide to roll it back.
Most declarations/definitions will only refer to entities from the same or
earlier PTUs. However, it is possible (primarily by defining a
previously-declared entity, but also through templates or ADL) for an entity
that belongs to one PTU to refer to something from a later PTU. We will have to
keep track of this and prevent unwinding to later PTU when we recognize it.
Fortunately, this should be very rare; and crucially, we don't have to do the
bookkeeping for this if we've only got one PTU, e.g. in normal compilation.
Otherwise, PTUs after the first just need to record enough metadata to be able
to revert any changes they've made to declarations belonging to earlier PTUs,
e.g. to redeclaration chains or template specialization lists.
It should even eventually be possible for PTUs to provide their own slab
allocators which can be thrown away as part of rolling back the PTU. We can
maintain a notion of the active allocator and allocate things like Stmt/Expr
nodes in it, temporarily changing it to the appropriate PTU whenever we go to do
something like instantiate a function template. More care will be required when
allocating declarations and types, though.
We would want the PTU to be efficiently recoverable from a Decl; I'm not sure
how best to do that. An easy option that would cover most declarations would be
to make multiple TranslationUnitDecls and parent the declarations appropriately,
but I don't think that's good enough for things like member function templates,
since an instantiation of that would still be parented by its original class.
Maybe we can work this into the DC chain somehow, like how lexical DCs are.
We add a different kind of translation unit `TU_Incremental` which is a
complete translation unit that we might nonetheless incrementally extend later.
Because it is complete (and we might want to generate code for it), we do
perform template instantiation, but because it might be extended later, we don't
warn if it declares or uses undefined internal-linkage symbols.
This patch teaches clang-repl how to recover from errors by disconnecting the
most recent PTU and update the primary PTU lookup tables. For instance:
```./clang-repl
clang-repl> int i = 12; error;
In file included from <<< inputs >>>:1:
input_line_0:1:13: error: C++ requires a type specifier for all declarations
int i = 12; error;
^
error: Parsing failed.
clang-repl> int i = 13; extern "C" int printf(const char*,...);
clang-repl> auto r1 = printf("i=%d\n", i);
i=13
clang-repl> quit
```
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104918
This reverts commit 6775fc6ffa.
It also reverts "[lldb] Fix compilation by adjusting to the new ASTContext signature."
This reverts commit 03a3f86071.
We see some failures on the lldb infrastructure, these changes might play a role
in it. Let's revert it now and see if the bots will become green.
Ref: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104918
https://reviews.llvm.org/D96033 contained a discussion regarding efficient
modeling of error recovery. @rjmccall has outlined the key ideas:
Conceptually, we can split the translation unit into a sequence of partial
translation units (PTUs). Every declaration will be associated with a unique PTU
that owns it.
The first key insight here is that the owning PTU isn't always the "active"
(most recent) PTU, and it isn't always the PTU that the declaration
"comes from". A new declaration (that isn't a redeclaration or specialization of
anything) does belong to the active PTU. A template specialization, however,
belongs to the most recent PTU of all the declarations in its signature - mostly
that means that it can be pulled into a more recent PTU by its template
arguments.
The second key insight is that processing a PTU might extend an earlier PTU.
Rolling back the later PTU shouldn't throw that extension away. For example, if
the second PTU defines a template, and the third PTU requires that template to
be instantiated at float, that template specialization is still part of the
second PTU. Similarly, if the fifth PTU uses an inline function belonging to the
fourth, that definition still belongs to the fourth. When we go to emit code in
a new PTU, we map each declaration we have to emit back to its owning PTU and
emit it in a new module for just the extensions to that PTU. We keep track of
all the modules we've emitted for a PTU so that we can unload them all if we
decide to roll it back.
Most declarations/definitions will only refer to entities from the same or
earlier PTUs. However, it is possible (primarily by defining a
previously-declared entity, but also through templates or ADL) for an entity
that belongs to one PTU to refer to something from a later PTU. We will have to
keep track of this and prevent unwinding to later PTU when we recognize it.
Fortunately, this should be very rare; and crucially, we don't have to do the
bookkeeping for this if we've only got one PTU, e.g. in normal compilation.
Otherwise, PTUs after the first just need to record enough metadata to be able
to revert any changes they've made to declarations belonging to earlier PTUs,
e.g. to redeclaration chains or template specialization lists.
It should even eventually be possible for PTUs to provide their own slab
allocators which can be thrown away as part of rolling back the PTU. We can
maintain a notion of the active allocator and allocate things like Stmt/Expr
nodes in it, temporarily changing it to the appropriate PTU whenever we go to do
something like instantiate a function template. More care will be required when
allocating declarations and types, though.
We would want the PTU to be efficiently recoverable from a Decl; I'm not sure
how best to do that. An easy option that would cover most declarations would be
to make multiple TranslationUnitDecls and parent the declarations appropriately,
but I don't think that's good enough for things like member function templates,
since an instantiation of that would still be parented by its original class.
Maybe we can work this into the DC chain somehow, like how lexical DCs are.
We add a different kind of translation unit `TU_Incremental` which is a
complete translation unit that we might nonetheless incrementally extend later.
Because it is complete (and we might want to generate code for it), we do
perform template instantiation, but because it might be extended later, we don't
warn if it declares or uses undefined internal-linkage symbols.
This patch teaches clang-repl how to recover from errors by disconnecting the
most recent PTU and update the primary PTU lookup tables. For instance:
```./clang-repl
clang-repl> int i = 12; error;
In file included from <<< inputs >>>:1:
input_line_0:1:13: error: C++ requires a type specifier for all declarations
int i = 12; error;
^
error: Parsing failed.
clang-repl> int i = 13; extern "C" int printf(const char*,...);
clang-repl> auto r1 = printf("i=%d\n", i);
i=13
clang-repl> quit
```
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104918
The Microsoft STL currently has some issues with P2266.
We disable it for now in that mode, but we might come back later with a
more targetted approach.
Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105518
The feature was implemented in D99005, but we forgot to add the test
macro.
Reviewed By: Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104984
This is mostly a mechanical change, but a testcase that contains
parts of the StringRef class (clang/test/Analysis/llvm-conventions.cpp)
isn't touched.
The default Altivec ABI was implemented but the clang error for specifying
its use still remains. Users could get around this but not specifying the
type of Altivec ABI but we need to remove the error.
Reviewed By: jsji
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102094
Summary:
The changes introduced in D97680 turns this command line option into a no-op so
it can be removed entirely.
Reviewed By: tianshilei1992
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102940
When creating a PCH file the use of a temp file will be dictated by the
presence or absence of the -fno-temp-file flag. Creating a module file
will always use a temp file via the new ForceUseTemporary flag.
This fixes bug 50033.
The `PreprocessOnlyAction` doesn't support loading the AST file of a precompiled header. This is problematic for dependency scanning, since the `#include` manufactured for the PCH is treated as textual. This means the PCH contents get scanned with each TU, which is redundant. Moreover, dependencies of the PCH end up being considered dependency of the TU.
To handle AST file of PCH properly, this patch creates new `FrontendAction` that behaves the same way `PreprocessorOnlyAction` does, but treats the manufactured PCH `#include` as a normal compilation would (by not claiming it only uses a preprocessor and creating the default AST consumer).
The AST file is now reported as a file dependency of the TU.
Depends on D103519.
Reviewed By: Bigcheese
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103524
<string> is currently the highest impact header in a clang+llvm build:
https://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/chromium-browser-clang/llvm-include-analysis.html
One of the most common places this is being included is the APInt.h header, which needs it for an old toString() implementation that returns std::string - an inefficient method compared to the SmallString versions that it actually wraps.
This patch replaces these APInt/APSInt methods with a pair of llvm::toString() helpers inside StringExtras.h, adjusts users accordingly and removes the <string> from APInt.h - I was hoping that more of these users could be converted to use the SmallString methods, but it appears that most end up creating a std::string anyhow. I avoided trying to use the raw_ostream << operators as well as I didn't want to lose having the integer radix explicit in the code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103888