An error in the tablegen description affects the declarations
provided by `-fdeclare-opencl-builtins` for `atomic_fetch_add` and
`atomic_fetch_sub`.
The atomic argument should be an atomic_half, not an atomic_float.
The "-fzero-call-used-regs" option tells the compiler to zero out
certain registers before the function returns. It's also available as a
function attribute: zero_call_used_regs.
The two upper categories are:
- "used": Zero out used registers.
- "all": Zero out all registers, whether used or not.
The individual options are:
- "skip": Don't zero out any registers. This is the default.
- "used": Zero out all used registers.
- "used-arg": Zero out used registers that are used for arguments.
- "used-gpr": Zero out used registers that are GPRs.
- "used-gpr-arg": Zero out used GPRs that are used as arguments.
- "all": Zero out all registers.
- "all-arg": Zero out all registers used for arguments.
- "all-gpr": Zero out all GPRs.
- "all-gpr-arg": Zero out all GPRs used for arguments.
This is used to help mitigate Return-Oriented Programming exploits.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110869
The above change assumed that malloc (and friends) would always
allocate memory to getNewAlign(), even for allocations which have a
smaller size. This is not actually required by spec (a 1-byte
allocation may validly have 1-byte alignment).
Some real-world malloc implementations do not provide this guarantee,
and thus this optimization is breaking programs.
Fixes#53540
This reverts commit c2297544c0.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118804
These changes make the Clang parser recognize expression parameter pack
expansion and initializer lists in attribute arguments. Because
expression parameter pack expansion requires additional handling while
creating and instantiating templates, the support for them must be
explicitly supported through the AcceptsExprPack flag.
Handling expression pack expansions may require a delay to when the
arguments of an attribute are correctly populated. To this end,
attributes that are set to accept these - through setting the
AcceptsExprPack flag - will automatically have an additional variadic
expression argument member named DelayedArgs. This member is not
exposed the same way other arguments are but is set through the new
CreateWithDelayedArgs creator function generated for applicable
attributes.
To illustrate how to implement support for expression pack expansion
support, clang::annotate is made to support pack expansions. This is
done by making handleAnnotationAttr delay setting the actual attribute
arguments until after template instantiation if it was unable to
populate the arguments due to dependencies in the parsed expressions.
Implement P2128R6 in C++23 mode.
Unlike GCC's implementation, this doesn't try to recover when a user
meant to use a comma expression.
Because the syntax changes meaning in C++23, the patch is *NOT*
implemented as an extension. Instead, declaring an array with not
exactly 1 parameter is an error in older languages modes. There is an
off-by-default extension warning in C++23 mode.
Unlike the standard, we supports default arguments;
Ie, we assume, based on conversations in WG21, that the proposed
resolution to CWG2507 will be accepted.
We allow arrays OpenMP sections and C++23 multidimensional array to
coexist:
[a , b] multi dimensional array
[a : b] open mp section
[a, b: c] // error
The rest of the patch is relatively straight forward: we take care to
support an arbitrary number of arguments everywhere.
Done in manner similar to mutexinoutset
(see https://reviews.llvm.org/D57576)
Runtime support already exists in LLVM OpenMP runtime (see
https://reviews.llvm.org/D97085).
The value used to identify an inoutset dependency type in the LLVM
OpenMP runtime is 8.
Some tests updated due to change in dependency type error messages that
now include new dependency type. Also updated
test/OpenMP/task_codegen.cpp to verify we emit the right code.
This patch implements `__builtin_elementwise_add_sat` and `__builtin_elementwise_sub_sat` builtins.
These map to the add/sub saturated math intrinsics described here:
https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#saturation-arithmetic-intrinsics
With this in place we should then be able to replace the x86 SSE adds/subs intrinsics with these generic variants - it looks like other targets should be able to use these as well (arm/aarch64/webassembly all have similar examples in cgbuiltin).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117898
Since the serialization code would recognize modules by names and the
name of all global module fragment is <global>, so that the
serialization code would complain for the same module.
This patch fixes this by using a unique global module fragment in Sema.
Before this patch, the compiler would fail on an assertion complaining
the duplicated modules.
Reviewed By: urnathan, rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115610
See the discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D100282. The coroutine
marked always inline might not be inlined properly in current compiler
support. Since the coroutine would be splitted into pieces. And the call
to resume() and destroy() functions might be indirect call. Also the
ramp function wouldn't get inlined under O0 due to pipeline ordering
problems. It might be different to what users expects to. Emit a warning
to tell it.
This is what GCC does too: https://godbolt.org/z/7eajb1Gf8
Reviewed By: Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115867
This reverts commit 852afed5e0.
Changes since D114732:
On PS4, we reverse the expectation that classes whose constructor is deleted are not trivially relocatable. Because, at the moment, only classes which are passed in registers are trivially relocatable, and PS4 allows passing in registers if the copy constructor is deleted, the original assertions were broken on PS4.
(This is kinda similar to DR1734.)
Reviewed By: gribozavr2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119017
OpenMP Spec 5.0 [2.12.5, Restrictions]: If a device clause in which the
ancestor device-modifier appears is present on the target construct,
then a requires directive with the reverse_offload clause must be
specified.
Reviewed By: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118887
This will simplify future conditionalization for OpenCL 3.0
optionality of atomic features.
The only set of atomic functions not using the multiclass is
atomic_compare_exchange_strong/weak, as these don't fit the common
pattern due to having 2 MemoryOrder arguments.
This change enables library code to skip paired move-construction and destruction for `trivial_abi` types, as if they were trivially-movable and trivially-destructible. This offers an extension to the performance fix offered by `trivial_abi`: rather than only offering trivial-type-like performance for pass-by-value, it also offers it for library code that moves values but not as arguments.
For example, if we use `memcpy` for trivially relocatable types inside of vector reallocation, and mark `unique_ptr` as `trivial_abi` (via `_LIBCPP_ABI_ENABLE_UNIQUE_PTR_TRIVIAL_ABI` / `_LIBCPP_ABI_UNSTABLE` / etc.), this would speed up `vector<unique_ptr>::push_back` by 40% on my benchmarks. (Though note that in this case, the compiler could have done this anyway, but happens not to due to the inlining horizon.)
If accepted, I intend to follow up with exactly such changes to library code, including and especially `std::vector`, making them use a trivial relocation operation on trivially relocatable types.
**D50119 and P1144:**
This change is very similar to D50119, which was rejected from Clang. (That change was an implementation of P1144, which is not yet part of the C++ standard.)
The intent of this change, rather than trying to pick a winning proposal for trivial relocation operations, is to extend the behavior of `trivial_abi` in a way that could be made compatible with any such proposal. If P1144 or any similar proposal were accepted, then `trivial_abi`, `__is_trivially_relocatable`, and everything else in this change would be redefined in terms of that.
**Safety:**
It's worth pointing out, specifically, that `trivial_abi` already implies trivial relocatability in a narrow sense: a `trivial_abi` type, when passed by value, has its constructor run in one location, and its destructor run in another, after the type has been trivially relocated (through registers).
Trivial relocatability optimizations could change the number of paired constructor/destructor calls, but this seems unlikely to matter for `trivial_abi` types.
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114732
If this is a SFINAE context, then continuing to look up names
(in particular, to treat a non-function as a function, and then
do ADL) might too-eagerly complete a type that it's not safe to
complete right now. We should just say "okay, that's a substitution
failure" and not do any more work than absolutely required.
Fixes#52970.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117603
Bug #52905 was originally papered over in a different way, but
I believe this is the actually proper fix, or at least closer to
it. We need to detect placeholder types as close to the front-end
as possible, and cause them to fail constraints, rather than letting
them persist into later stages.
Fixes#52905.
Fixes#52909.
Fixes#53075.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118552
Some functions can end up non-externally visible despite not being
declared "static" or in an unnamed namespace in C++ - such as by having
parameters that are of non-external types.
Such functions aren't mistakenly intended to be defining some function
that needs a declaration. They could be maybe more legible (except for
the `operator new` example) with an explicit static, but that's a
stylistic thing outside what should be addressed by a warning.
When the stepsize does not evenly divide the range's end, round-up to ensure that that last multiple of the stepsize before the reaching the upper boud is reached. For instance, the trip count of
for (int i = 0; i < 7; i+=5)
is two (i=0 and i=5), not (7-0)/5 == 1.
Reviewed By: peixin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118542
Currently, -fdeclare-opencl-builtins always adds the generic address
space overloads of e.g. the vload builtin functions in OpenCL 3.0
mode, even when the generic address space feature is disabled.
Guard the generic address space overloads by the
`__opencl_c_generic_address_space` feature instead of by OpenCL
version.
Guard the private, global, and local overloads using the internal
`__opencl_c_named_address_space_builtins` feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107769
Do not warn on reserved identifiers resulting from expansion of system macros.
Also properly test -Wreserved-identifier wrt. system headers.
Should fix#49592
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118532
Currently clang treats host var address as constant in device compilation,
which causes const vars initialized with host var address promoted to
device variables incorrectly and results in undefined symbols.
This patch fixes that.
Reviewed by: Artem Belevich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118153
Fixes: SWDEV-309881
Change-Id: I0a69357063c6f8539ef259c96c250d04615f4473
Part of the _BitInt feature in C2x
(http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2763.pdf) is a new
macro in limits.h named BITINT_MAXWIDTH that can be used to determine
the maximum width of a bit-precise integer type. This macro must expand
to a value that is at least as large as ULLONG_WIDTH.
This adds an implementation-defined macro named __BITINT_MAXWIDTH__ to
specify that value, which is used by limits.h for the standard macro.
This also limits the maximum bit width to 128 bits because backends do
not currently support all mathematical operations (such as division) on
wider types yet. This maximum is expected to be increased in the future.
Branch protection in M-class is supported by
- Armv8.1-M.Main
- Armv8-M.Main
- Armv7-M
Attempting to enable this for other architectures, either by
command-line (e.g -mbranch-protection=bti) or by target attribute
in source code (e.g. __attribute__((target("branch-protection=..."))) )
will generate a warning.
In both cases function attributes related to branch protection will not
be emitted. Regardless of the warning, module level attributes related to
branch protection will be emitted when it is enabled via the command-line.
The following people also contributed to this patch:
- Victor Campos
Reviewed By: chill
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115501
If this is a SFINAE context, then continuing to look up names
(in particular, to treat a non-function as a function, and then
do ADL) might too-eagerly complete a type that it's not safe to
complete right now. We should just say "okay, that's a substitution
failure" and not do any more work than absolutely required.
Fixes#52970.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117603
This commit checks if a function is marked with the naked attribute
and, if it is, will silence the emission of any unused-parameter
warning.
Inside a naked function only the usage of basic ASM instructions is
expected. In this context the parameters can actually be used by
fetching them according to the underlying ABI. Since parameters might
be used through ASM instructions, the linter and the compiler will have
a hard time understanding if one of those is unused or not, therefore
no unused-parameter warning should ever be triggered whenever a
function is marked naked.
This feature requires support of __opencl_c_generic_address_space and
__opencl_c_program_scope_global_variables so diagnostics for that is provided as well.
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115640
This reverts commit ef82063207.
- It conflicts with the existing llvm::size in STLExtras, which will now
never be called.
- Calling it without llvm:: breaks C++17 compat
Underscore-uglified identifiers are used in standard library implementations to
guard against collisions with macros, and they hurt readability considerably.
(Consider `push_back(Tp_ &&__value)` vs `push_back(Tp value)`.
When we're describing an interface, the exact names of parameters are not
critical so we can drop these prefixes.
This patch adds a new PrintingPolicy flag that can applies this stripping
when recursively printing pieces of AST.
We set it in code completion/signature help, and in clangd's hover display.
All three features also do a bit of manual poking at names, so fix up those too.
Fixes https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/736
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116387
Since only the decls inhabit in a namespace scope could be exported, it
is not meaningful to check it in CheckRedeclarationExported, which
implements [module.interface]/p6.
Reviewed By: urnathan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118120
Special classes such as accessor, sampler, and stream need additional
implementation when they are passed from host to device.
This patch is adding a new attribute “sycl_special_class” used to mark
SYCL classes/struct that need the additional compiler handling.
Ensure any use of a `read_write` image is guarded behind the
`__opencl_c_read_write_images` feature macro.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117899
There is a comment contains a FIXME for the Module TS. And now the
Module TS is merged so we should update the comment. I've checked the
implementation.
According to the spec, there are some difference between V and Zve64d. For example, the vmulh integer multiply variants that return the high word of the product (vmulh.vv, vmulh.vx, vmulhu.vv, vmulhu.vx, vmulhsu.vv, vmulhsu.vx) are not included for EEW=64 in Zve64*, but V extension does support these instructions. So we should decouple Zve* extensions and the V extension.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117854