some bugs in the ASTImporter that this exposed:
- When importing functions, the body (if any) was
previously ignored. This patch ensures that the
body is imported also.
- When a function-local Decl is imported, the first
thing the ASTImporter does is import its context
(via ImportDeclParts()). This can trigger
importing the Decl again as part of the body of
the function (but only once, since the function's
Decl has been added to ImportedDecls). This patch
fixes that problem by extending ImportDeclParts()
to return the imported Decl if it was imported as
part of importing its context, and the patch adds
ASTImporter::GetAlreadyImportedOrNull() to support
this query. All callers of ImportDeclParts return
the imported version of the Decl if ImportDeclParts()
returns it.
- When creating functions, InnerLocStart of the source
function was re-used without importing. This is a
straight up bug, and this patch makes ASTImporter
import the InnerLocStart and use the imported version.
- When importing FileIDs, the ASTImporter previously
always tried to re-load the file for the corresponding
CacheEntry from disk. This doesn't work if the
CacheEntry corresponds to a named memory buffer. This
patch changes the code so that if the UniqueID for the
cache entry is invalid (i.e., it is not a disk file)
the whole entry is treated as if it were invalid, which
forces an in-memory copy of the buffer.
Also added test cases, using the new support committed in
236011.
llvm-svn: 236012
When creating a global variable with a type of a struct with bitfields, we must
forcibly set the alignment of the global from the RecordDecl. We must do this so
that the proper bitfield alignment makes its way down to LLVM, since clang will
mangle the bitfields into one large type.
llvm-svn: 235976
the active module macros at the point of definition, rather than reconstructing
it from the macro history. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 235941
Previously we'd try to perform checks on the captures from the middle of
parsing the lambda's body, at the point where we detected that a variable
needed to be captured. This was wrong in a number of subtle ways. In
PR23334, we couldn't correctly handle the list of potential odr-uses
resulting from the capture, and our attempt to recover from that resulted
in a use-after-free.
We now defer building the initialization expression until we leave the lambda
body and return to the enclosing context, where the initialization does the
right thing. This patch only covers lambda-expressions, but we should apply
the same change to blocks and captured statements too.
llvm-svn: 235921
During device-side CUDA compilation clang currently complains about
all TLS variables, regardless of whether they are __host__ or
__device__.
This patch suppresses "TLS unsupported" errors for host variables
during device compilation and for device variables during host
compilation.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9269
llvm-svn: 235907
NMake is a Make-like builder that comes with Microsoft Visual Studio.
Jom (https://wiki.qt.io/Jom) is an NMake-compatible build tool.
Dependency files for NMake/Jom need to use double-quotes to wrap
filespecs containing special characters, instead of the backslash
escapes that GNU Make wants.
Adds the -MV option, which specifies to use double-quotes as needed
instead of backslash escapes when writing the dependency file.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9260
llvm-svn: 235903
Previously we'd defer this determination until writing the AST, which doesn't
allow us to use this information when building other submodules of the same
module. This change also allows us to use a uniform mechanism for writing
module macro records, independent of whether they are local or imported.
llvm-svn: 235614
This graph will be used to determine the current set of active macros. This is
foundation work for getting macro visibility correct across submodules of the
current module. No functionality change for now.
llvm-svn: 235461
- Changed CUDALaunchBounds arguments from integers to Expr* so they can
be saved in AST for instantiation.
- Added support for template instantiation of launch_bounds attrubute.
- Moved evaluation of launch_bounds arguments to NVPTXTargetCodeGenInfo::
SetTargetAttributes() where it can be done after template instantiation.
- Added a warning on negative launch_bounds arguments.
- Amended test cases.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8985
llvm-svn: 235452
This is substantially simpler, provides better space usage accounting in bcanalyzer,
and gives a more compact representation. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 235420
The GCC construct __attribute__((aligned)) is defined to set alignment
to "the default alignment for the target architecture" according to
the GCC documentation:
The default alignment is sufficient for all scalar types, but may not be
enough for all vector types on a target that supports vector operations.
The default alignment is fixed for a particular target ABI.
clang currently hard-coded an alignment of 16 bytes for that construct,
which is correct on some platforms (including X86), but wrong on others
(including SystemZ). Since this value is ABI-relevant, it is important
to get correct for compatibility purposes.
This patch adds a new TargetInfo member "DefaultAlignForAttributeAligned"
that targets can set to the appropriate default __attribute__((aligned))
value.
Note that I'm deliberately *not* using the existing "SuitableAlign"
value, which is used to set the pre-defined macro __BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT__,
since those two values may not be the same on all platforms. In fact,
on X86, __attribute__((aligned)) always uses 16-byte alignment, while
__BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT__ may be larger if AVX-2 or AVX-512 are supported.
(This is actually not yet correctly implemented in clang either.)
The patch provides a value for DefaultAlignForAttributeAligned only for
SystemZ, and leaves the default for all other targets at 16, which means
no visible change in behavior on all other targets. (The value is still
wrong for some other targets, but I'd prefer to leave it to the target
maintainers for those platforms to fix.)
llvm-svn: 235397
in the context of the container itself.
Otherwise we will emit 'unavailable' errors when referencing an unavailable super class
even though the subclass is also marked 'unavailable'.
rdar://20598702
llvm-svn: 235276
__declspec(align(...)) is unlike all other attributes in that it is not
applied to a variable if it appears before the class-key. If the
tag in question isn't part of a variable declaration, it is not ignored.
Instead, the alignment attribute is applied to the tag.
This fixes PR18024.
llvm-svn: 235272
r235046 turned "extern __declspec(selectany) int a;" from a declaration into
a definition to fix PR23242 (required for compatibility with mc.exe output).
However, this broke parsing Windows headers: A d3d11 headers contain something
like
struct SomeStruct {};
extern const __declspec(selectany) SomeStruct some_struct;
This is now a definition, and const objects either need an explicit default
ctor or an initializer so this errors out with
d3d11.h(1065,48) :
error: default initialization of an object of const type
'const CD3D11_DEFAULT' without a user-provided default constructor
(cl.exe just doesn't implement this rule, independent of selectany.)
To work around this, weaken this error into a warning for selectany decls
in microsoft mode, and recover with zero-initialization.
Doing this is a bit hairy since it adds a fixit on an error emitted
by InitializationSequence – this means it needs to build a correct AST, which
in turn means InitializationSequence::Failed() cannot return true when this
fixit is applied. As a workaround, the patch adds a fixit member to
InitializationSequence, and InitializationSequence::Perform() prints the
diagnostic if the fixit member is set right after its call to Diagnose.
That function is usually called when InitializationSequences are used –
InitListChecker::PerformEmptyInit() doesn't call it, but the InitListChecker
case never performs default-initialization, so this is technically OK.
This is the alternative, original fix for PR20208 that got reviewed in the
thread "[patch] Improve diagnostic on default-initializing const variables
(PR20208)". This change basically reverts r213725, adds the original fix for
PR20208, and makes the error a warning in Microsoft mode.
llvm-svn: 235166
This allows callers to pass a char ** (such as the one coming from the
standard decreed main declaration - even though everyone usually puts
const on that themselves).
llvm-svn: 235150
attribute to be placed on Objective-C pointer typedef
to make them strong enough so on their "new" method
family no attempt is made to override these
types. rdar://20255473
llvm-svn: 235128
Emits the following code for the clause at the beginning of the outlined function for implicit threads:
if (<not a master thread>) {
...
<thread local copy of var> = <master thread local copy of var>;
...
}
<sync point>;
Checking for a non-master thread is performed by comparing of the address of the thread local variable with the address of the master's variable. Master thread always uses original variables, so you always know the address of the variable in the master thread.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9026
llvm-svn: 235075
#pragma omp for lastprivate(<var>)
for (i = a; i < b; ++b)
<BODY>;
This construct is translated into something like:
<last_iter> = alloca i32
<lastprivate_var> = alloca <type>
<last_iter> = 0
; No initializer for simple variables or a default constructor is called for objects.
; For arrays perform element by element initialization by the call of the default constructor.
...
OMP_FOR_START(...,<last_iter>, ..); sets <last_iter> to 1 if this is the last iteration.
<BODY>
...
OMP_FOR_END
if (<last_iter> != 0) {
<var> = <lastprivate_var> ; Update original variable with the lastprivate value.
}
call __kmpc_cancel_barrier() ; an implicit barrier to avoid possible data race.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8658
llvm-svn: 235074
For CUDA source, Sema checks that the targets of call expressions make sense
(e.g. a host function can't call a device function).
Adding a flag that lets us skip this check. Motivation: for source-to-source
translation tools that have to accept code that's not strictly kosher CUDA but
is still accepted by nvcc. The source-to-source translation tool can then fix
the code and leave calls that are semantically valid for the actual compilation
stage.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9036
llvm-svn: 235049
"multiple methods named '<selector>' found" warning by noting
the method that is actualy used. It also cleans up and refactors
code in this area and selects a method that matches actual arguments
in case of receiver being a forward class object.
rdar://19265430
llvm-svn: 235023
Stop relying on `cl::opt` to pass along the driver's decision to
preserve use-lists. Create a new `-cc1` option called
`-emit-llvm-uselists` that does the right thing (when -emit-llvm-bc).
Note that despite its generic name, it *doesn't* do the right thing when
-emit-llvm (LLVM assembly) yet. I'll hook that up soon.
This doesn't really change the behaviour of the driver. The default is
still to preserve use-lists for `clang -emit-llvm` and `clang
-save-temps`, and nothing else. But it stops relying on global state
(and also is a nicer interface for hackers using `clang -cc1`).
llvm-svn: 234962
This patch generates a warning for invalid combination of '-mnan' and
'-march' options, it properly sets NaN encoding for a given '-march',
and it passes a proper NaN encoding to the assembler.
Patch by Vladimir Radosavljevic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8170
llvm-svn: 234882
-Wrange-loop-analysis is a subgroup of -Wloop-analysis and will warn when
a range-based for-loop makes copies of the elements in the range. If possible,
suggest the proper type to prevent copies, or the non-reference to help
distinguish copy versus non-copy forms. Existing warnings in -Wloop-analysis
are moved to -Wfor-loop-analysis, also a subgroup of -Wloop-analysis.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4169
llvm-svn: 234804
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8930
This just adds a front end option to let the back end know the target has PPC
direct move instructions.
llvm-svn: 234683
Previously, many error messages would simply be "read-only variable is not
assignable" This change provides more information about why the variable is
not assignable, as well as note to where the const is located.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4479
llvm-svn: 234677
Follow-up to r234666. With this, the -m[no-]global-merge options
have the expected behavior. Previously, -mglobal-merge was ignored,
and there was no way of enabling the optimization.
llvm-svn: 234668
Even though these symbols are in a comdat group, the Microsoft linker
really wants them to have internal linkage.
I'm planning to tweak the mangling in a follow-up change. This is a
straight revert with a 1-line fix.
llvm-svn: 234613
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8398
It adds some builtin functions to access the extended divide and bit permute instructions.
llvm-svn: 234547
WinEHPrepare was going to have to pattern match the control flow merge
and split that the old lowering used, and that wasn't really feasible.
Now we can teach WinEHPrepare to pattern match this, which is much
simpler:
%fp = call i8* @llvm.frameaddress(i32 0)
call void @func(iN [01], i8* %fp)
This prototype happens to match the prototype used by the Win64 SEH
personality function, so this is really simple.
llvm-svn: 234532
The previous implementation would copy the attribute from the class to
functions that have the class as their return type when the functions
are first declared. This proved to have two flaws:
1) if the class is forward-declared without the attribute and a
function or method with the class as a its return type is declared,
and afterward the class is defined with warn_unused_result, the
function or method would never inherit the attribute, and
2) the check simply failed for functions and methods that are part of
a template instantiation, regardless of whether the class with
warn_unused_result is part of a specific instantiation or part of
the template itself (presumably because those function/method
declaration does not hit the same code path as a non-template one
and so never inherits the attribute).
The new approach is to instead modify the two places where a function or
method call is checked for the warn_unused_result attribute on the decl
by extending the checks to also look for the attribute on the decl's
return type.
Additionally, the check for return types that have the warn_unused_result
now excludes pointers and references to such types, as such return types do
not necessarily imply a transfer of ownership for the underlying object
being referred to by the return value. This does not change the behavior
of functions that are directly given the warn_unused_result attribute.
llvm-svn: 234526
The driver currently accepts but ignores the -freciprocal-math flag.
This patch passes the flag through and enables 'arcp' fast-math-flag
generation in IR.
Note that this change does not actually enable the optimization for
any target. The reassociation optimization that this flag specifies
was implemented by http://reviews.llvm.org/D6334 :
http://llvm.org/viewvc/llvm-project?view=revision&revision=222510
Because the optimization is done in the backend rather than IR,
the backend must be modified to understand instruction-level
fast-math-flags or a new function-level attribute must be created.
Also note that -freciprocal-math is independent of any target-specific
usage of reciprocal estimate hardware instructions. That requires
its own flag ('-mrecip').
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20912
llvm-svn: 234493
This hooks up the /fp options as aliases for -f[no-]fast-math and
-f[no]-trapping-math. It probably doesn't match cl.exe's behaviour
completely (e.g. LLVM is currently never as precise as /fp:precise),
but it's close enough.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8909
llvm-svn: 234449
A dependent alignment attribute (like __attribute__((aligned(...))) or
__declspec(align(...))) on a non-dependent typedef or using declaration
poses a considerable challenge: the type is _not_ dependent, the size
_may_ be dependent if the type is used as an array type, the alignment
_is_ dependent.
It is reasonable for a compiler to be able to query the size and
alignment of a complete type. Let's help that become an invariant.
This fixes PR22042.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8693
llvm-svn: 234280
It was documented as 8 and operator new[] defaults to 8, but the normal
operator new was never updated and happily wasted bytes on every other
allocation.
We still have to allocate all Types with 16 byte alignment, update the
allocation calls for Types that were missing explicit alignment.
llvm-svn: 233922
MSVC 2013 can't even parse __declspec(align(sizeof(foo))). We'll have to
wait until MSVC 2015 for this.
This partially reverts commit r233911.
llvm-svn: 233912
This isn't perfect as it still assumes sizeof(void*) == alignof(void*),
but we can fix that when compiler support gets better.
Shrinks some Stmts that happen to inherit from Stmt and have a
SourceLocation as the first member (64 bit archs only).
llvm-svn: 233911
This uses the same class metadata currently used for virtual call and
cast checks.
The new flag is -fsanitize=cfi-nvcall. For consistency, the -fsanitize=cfi-vptr
flag has been renamed -fsanitize=cfi-vcall.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8756
llvm-svn: 233874
The zEC12 provides the transactional-execution facility. This is exposed
to users via a set of builtin routines on other compilers. This patch
adds clang support to enable those builtins. In partciular, the patch:
- enables the transactional-execution feature by default on zEC12
- allows to override presence of that feature via the -mhtm/-mno-htm options
- adds a predefined macro __HTM__ if the feature is enabled
- adds support for the transactional-execution GCC builtins
- adds Sema checking to verify the __builtin_tabort abort code
- adds the s390intrin.h header file (for GCC compatibility)
- adds s390 sections to the htmintrin.h and htmxlintrin.h header files
Since this is first use of target-specific intrinsics on the platform,
the patch creates the include/clang/Basic/BuiltinsSystemZ.def file and
hooks it up in TargetBuiltins.h and lib/Basic/Targets.cpp.
An associated LLVM patch adds the required LLVM IR intrinsics.
For reference, the transactional-execution instructions are documented
in the z/Architecture Principles of Operation for the zEC12:
http://publibfp.boulder.ibm.com/cgi-bin/bookmgr/download/DZ9ZR009.pdf
The associated builtins are documented in the GCC manual:
http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/S_002f390-System-z-Built-in-Functions.html
The htmxlintrin.h intrinsics provided for compatibility with the IBM XL
compiler are documented in the "z/OS XL C/C++ Programming Guide".
llvm-svn: 233804
Added sema checks for forms of expressions/statements allowed under control of 'atomic capture' directive + generation of helper objects for future codegen.
llvm-svn: 233785
The argument range checks for the HTM and Crypto builtins were implemented in
CGBuiltin.cpp, not in Sema. This change moves them to the appropriate location
in SemaChecking.cpp. It requires the creation of a new method in the Sema class
to do checks for PPC-specific builtins.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8672
llvm-svn: 233586
Adds atomic update codegen for the following forms of expressions:
x binop= expr;
x++;
++x;
x--;
--x;
x = x binop expr;
x = expr binop x;
If x and expr are integer and binop is associative or x is a LHS in a RHS of the assignment expression, and atomics are allowed for type of x on the target platform atomicrmw instruction is emitted.
Otherwise compare-and-swap sequence is emitted:
bb:
...
atomic load <x>
cont:
<expected> = phi [ <x>, label %bb ], [ <new_failed>, %cont ]
<desired> = <expected> binop <expr>
<res> = cmpxchg atomic &<x>, desired, expected
<new_failed> = <res>.field1;
br <res>field2, label %exit, label %cont
exit:
...
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8536
llvm-svn: 233513
Utilizing IMAGEREL relocations for synthetic IR constructs isn't
valuable, just clutter. While we are here, simplify HandlerType names
by making the numeric value for the 'adjective' part of the mangled name
instead of appending '.const', etc. The old scheme made for very long
global names and leads to wordy things like '.std_bad_alloc'
llvm-svn: 233503
order based on order of insertion.
This should cause both our warnings about these and the modules
serialization to be deterministic as a consequence.
Found by inspection.
llvm-svn: 233343
rewritten decls for Objective-C modules.
Found by inspection and completely obvious, so no test case. Many of the
remaining determinism fixes won't have precise test cases at this point,
but these are the kinds of things we wouldn't ask for a specific test of
during code review but ask authors to fix. The functionality isn't
changing, and should (he he!) already be tested.
llvm-svn: 233333
traversing the identifier table.
No easy test case as this table is somewhere between hard and impossible
to observe as non-deterministically ordered. The table is a hash table
but we hash the string contents and never remove entries from the table
so the growth pattern, etc, is all completely fixed. However, relying on
the hash function being deterministic is specifically against the
long-term direction of LLVM's hashing datastructures, which are intended
to provide *no* ordering guarantees. As such, this defends against these
things by sorting the identifiers. Sorting identifiers right before we
emit them to a serialized form seems a low cost for predictability here.
llvm-svn: 233332
Clang was inserting these into a dense map. While it never iterated the
dense map during normal compilation, it did when emitting a module. Fix
this by using a standard MapVector to preserve the order in which we
encounter the late parsed templates.
I suspect this still isn't ideal, as we don't seem to remove things from
this map even when we mark the templates as no longer late parsed. But
I don't know enough about this particular extension to craft a nice,
subtle test case covering this. I've managed to get the stress test to
at least do some late parsing and demonstrate the core problem here.
This patch fixes the test and provides deterministic behavior which is
a strict improvement over the prior state.
I've cleaned up some of the code here as well to be explicit about
inserting when that is what is actually going on.
llvm-svn: 233264
deterministically.
This fixes a latent issue where even Clang's Sema (and diagnostics) were
non-deterministic in the face of this pragma. The fix is super simple --
just use a MapVector so we track the order in which these are parsed (or
imported). Especially considering how rare they are, this seems like the
perfect tradeoff. I've also simplified the client code with judicious
use of auto and range based for loops.
I've added some pretty hilarious code to my stress test which now
survives the binary diff without issue.
llvm-svn: 233261
updated decl contexts get emitted.
Since this code was added, we have newer vastly simpler code for
handling this. The code I'm removing was very expensive and also
generated unstable order of declarations which made module outputs
non-deterministic.
All of the tests continue to pass for me and I'm able to check the
difference between the .pcm files after merging modules together.
llvm-svn: 233251
non-visible definition, skip the new definition and make the old one visible
instead of trying to parse it again and failing horribly. C++'s ODR allows
us to assume that the two definitions are identical.
llvm-svn: 233250
decl context lookup tables.
The first attepmt at this caused problems. We had significantly more
sources of non-determinism that I realized at first, and my change
essentially turned them from non-deterministic output into
use-after-free. Except that they weren't necessarily caught by tools
because the data wasn't really freed.
The new approach is much simpler. The first big simplification is to
inline the "visit" code and handle this directly. That works much
better, and I'll try to go and clean up the other caller of the visit
logic similarly.
The second key to the entire approach is that we need to *only* collect
names into a stable order at first. We then need to issue all of the
actual 'lookup()' calls in the stable order of the names so that we load
external results in a stable order. Once we have loaded all the results,
the table of results will stop being invalidated and we can walk all of
the names again and use the cheap 'noload_lookup()' method to quickly
get the results and serialize them.
To handle constructors and conversion functions (whose names can't be
stably ordered) in this approach, what we do is record only the visible
constructor and conversion function names at first. Then, if we have
any, we walk the decls of the class and add those names in the order
they occur in the AST. The rest falls out naturally.
This actually ends up simpler than the previous approach and seems much
more robust.
It uncovered a latent issue where we were building on-disk hash tables
for lookup results when the context was a linkage spec! This happened to
dodge all of the assert by some miracle. Instead, add a proper predicate
to the DeclContext class and use that which tests both for function
contexts and linkage specs.
It also uncovered PR23030 where we are forming somewhat bizarre negative
lookup results. I've just worked around this with a FIXME in place
because fixing this particular Clang bug seems quite hard.
I've flipped the first part of the test case I added for stability back
on in this commit. I'm taking it gradually to try and make sure the
build bots are happy this time.
llvm-svn: 233249
More than 2x speedup on modules builds with large redecl chains.
Roughly 15-20% speedup on non-modules builds for very large TUs.
Between 2-3% cost in memory on large TUs.
llvm-svn: 233228
they enable/disable.
This fixes two things:
a) sse4 isn't actually a target feature, don't treat it as one.
b) we weren't correctly disabling sse4.1 when we'd pass -mno-sse4
after enabling it, thus passing preprocessor directives and
(soon) passing the function attribute as well when we shouldn't.
llvm-svn: 233223
This patch adds Hardware Transaction Memory (HTM) support supported by ISA 2.07
(POWER8). The intrinsic support is based on GCC one [1], with both 'PowerPC HTM
Low Level Built-in Functions' and 'PowerPC HTM High Level Inline Functions'
implemented.
Along with builtins a new driver switch is added to enable/disable HTM
instruction support (-mhtm) and a header with common definitions (mostly to
parse the TFHAR register value). The HTM switch also sets a preprocessor builtin
HTM.
The HTM usage requires a recently newer kernel with PPC HTM enabled. Tested on
powerpc64 and powerpc64le.
This is send along a llvm patch to enabled the builtins and option switch.
[1]
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/PowerPC-Hardware-Transactional-Memory-Built-in-Functions.html
Phabricator Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8248
llvm-svn: 233205
This fixes my stress tests non-determinism so far. However, I've not
started playing with templates, friends, or terrible macros. I've found
at least two more seeming instabilities and am just waiting for a test
case to actually trigger them.
llvm-svn: 233162
There are two aspects of non-determinism fixed here, which was the
minimum required to cause at least an empty module to be deterministic.
First, the random number signature is only inserted into the module when
we are building modules implicitly. The use case for these random
signatures is to work around the very fact that modules are not
deterministic in their output when working with the implicitly built and
populated module cache. Eventually this should go away entirely when
we're confident that Clang is producing deterministic output.
Second, the on-disk hash table is populated based on the order of
iteration over a DenseMap. Instead, use a MapVector so that we can walk
it in insertion order.
I've added a test that an empty module, when built twice, produces the
same binary PCM file.
llvm-svn: 233115
Previously we'd deserialize the list of mem-initializers for a constructor when
we deserialized the declaration of the constructor. That could trigger a
significant amount of unnecessary work (pulling in all base classes
recursively, for a start) and was causing problems for the modules buildbot due
to cyclic deserializations. We now deserialize these on demand.
This creates a certain amount of duplication with the handling of
CXXBaseSpecifiers; I'll look into reducing that next.
llvm-svn: 233052
* Strength reduce a std::function to a function pointer,
* Factor out checking the AST file magic number,
* Add a brief doc comment to readAStFileSignature
Thanks to Chandler for spotting these oddities.
llvm-svn: 233050
rather than just the primary context. This is technically correct but results
in no functionality change (in Clang nor LLDB) because all users of this
functionality only use it on single-context DCs.
llvm-svn: 233045
All ParseCXXInlineMethodDef does with it is assign it on the ParsingDeclarator.
Since that is passed in as well, the (single) caller may as well set the
DefinitionKind, thus simplifying the code.
No change in functionality.
llvm-svn: 233043
PS4 target recognizes the #pragma comment() syntax as in -fms-extensions, but
only handles the case of #pragma comment(lib). This patch adds a warning if any
other arguments are encountered.
This patch also refactors the code in ParsePragma.cpp a little bit to make it
more obvious that some codes are being shared between -fms-extensions and PS4.
llvm-svn: 233015
If there is at least one 'copyprivate' clause is associated with the single directive, the following code is generated:
```
i32 did_it = 0; \\ for 'copyprivate' clause
if(__kmpc_single(ident_t *, gtid)) {
SingleOpGen();
__kmpc_end_single(ident_t *, gtid);
did_it = 1; \\ for 'copyprivate' clause
}
<copyprivate_list>[0] = &var0;
...
<copyprivate_list>[n] = &varn;
call __kmpc_copyprivate(ident_t *, gtid, <copyprivate_list_size>,
<copyprivate_list>, <copy_func>, did_it);
...
void<copy_func>(void *LHSArg, void *RHSArg) {
Dst = (void * [n])(LHSArg);
Src = (void * [n])(RHSArg);
Dst[0] = Src[0];
... Dst[n] = Src[n];
}
```
All list items from all 'copyprivate' clauses are gathered into single <copyprivate list> (<copyprivate_list_size> is a size in bytes of this list) and <copy_func> is used to propagate values of private or threadprivate variables from the 'single' region to other implicit threads from outer 'parallel' region.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8410
llvm-svn: 232932
for a DeclContext, and fix propagation of exception specifications along
redeclaration chains.
This reverts r232905, r232907, and r232907, which reverted r232793, r232853,
and r232853.
One additional change is present here to resolve issues with LLDB: distinguish
between whether lexical decls missing from the lookup table are local or are
provided by the external AST source, and still look in the external source if
that's where they came from.
llvm-svn: 232928
The deduplication here is negligible, but it allows the compiler to
skip emission of many templated base class destructors. Shrinks
clang-query by 53k. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 232924
This allows dumping to any given output stream but without requiring a SourceManager, similar to the interface provided by Decl.
It's useful when writing certain generic debug functions, external to the clang code base (for e.g.).
llvm-svn: 232912
Decide whether or not to use thread-safe statics depending on whether or
not we have an explicit request from the driver. If we don't have an
explicit request, infer which behavior to use depending on the
compatibility version we are targeting.
N.B. CodeGen support is still ongoing.
llvm-svn: 232906
The linear variable is privatized (similar to 'private') and its
value on current iteration is calculated, similar to the loop
counter variables.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8375
llvm-svn: 232890
give an exception specification to a declaration that didn't have an exception
specification in any of our imported modules, emit an update record ourselves.
Without this, code importing the current module would not see an exception
specification that we could see and might have relied on.
llvm-svn: 232870
We are not able to make a reliable solution for using UBSan together
with other sanitizers with runtime support (and sanitizer_common).
Instead, we want to follow the path used for LSan: have a "standalone"
UBSan tool, and plug-in UBSan that would be explicitly embedded into
specific sanitizers (in short term, it will be only ASan).
llvm-svn: 232829
MS compiler emits no errors in case of explicit specializations outside declaration enclosing namespaces, even when language extensions are disabled.
The patch is to suppress errors and emit extension warnings if explicit specializations are not declared in the corresponding namespaces.
This fixes PR13738.
Patch by Alexey Frolov.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8283
llvm-svn: 232800
When we need to build the lookup table for a DeclContext, we used to pull in
all lexical declarations for the context; instead, just build a lookup table
for the local lexical declarations. We previously didn't guarantee that the
imported declarations would be in the returned map, but in some cases we'd
happen to put them all in there regardless. Now we're even lazier about this.
This unnecessary work was papering over some other bugs:
- LookupVisibleDecls would use the DC for name lookups in the TU in C, and
this was not guaranteed to find all imported names (generally, the DC for
the TU in C is not a reliable place to perform lookups). We now use an
identifier-based lookup mechanism for this.
- We didn't actually load in the list of eagerly-deserialized declarations
when importing a module (so external definitions in a module wouldn't be
emitted by users of those modules unless they happened to be deserialized
by the user of the module).
llvm-svn: 232793
There are no widely deployed standard libraries providing sized
deallocation functions, so we have to punt and ask the user if they want
us to use sized deallocation. In the future, when such libraries are
deployed, we can teach the driver to detect them and enable this
feature.
N3536 claimed that a weak thunk from sized to unsized deallocation could
be emitted to avoid breaking backwards compatibility with standard
libraries not providing sized deallocation. However, this approach and
other variations don't work in practice.
With the weak function approach, the thunk has to have default
visibility in order to ensure that it is overridden by other DSOs
providing sized deallocation. Weak, default visibility symbols are
particularly expensive on MachO, so John McCall was considering
disabling this feature by default on Darwin. It also changes behavior
ELF linking behavior, causing certain otherwise unreferenced object
files from an archive to be pulled into the link.
Our second approach was to use an extern_weak function declaration and
do an inline conditional branch at the deletion call site. This doesn't
work because extern_weak only works on MachO if you have some archive
providing the default value of the extern_weak symbol. Arranging to
provide such an archive has the same challenges as providing the symbol
in the standard library. Not to mention that extern_weak doesn't really
work on COFF.
Reviewers: rsmith, rjmccall
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8467
llvm-svn: 232788