Reduces numbers of files built for clang-format from 575 to 449.
Requires two small changes:
1. Don't use llvm::ExceptionHandling in LangOptions. This isn't
even quite the right type since we don't use all of its values.
Tweaks the changes made in:
- https://reviews.llvm.org/D93215
- https://reviews.llvm.org/D93216
2. Move section name validation code added (long ago) in commit 30ba67439 out
of libBasic into Sema and base the check on the triple. This is a bit less
OOP-y, but completely in line with what we do in many other places in Sema.
No behavior change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101463
Reverts parts of https://reviews.llvm.org/D17183, but keeps the
resetDataLayout() API and adds an assert that checks that datalayout string and
user label prefix are in sync.
Approach 1 in https://reviews.llvm.org/D17183#2653279
Reduces number of TUs build for 'clang-format' from 689 to 575.
I also implemented approach 2 in D100764. If someone feels motivated
to make us use DataLayout more, it's easy to revert this change here
and go with D100764 instead. I don't plan on doing more work in this
area though, so I prefer going with the smaller, more self-consistent change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100776
This is the first patch supporting M68k in Clang
- Register M68k as a target
- Target specific CodeGen support
- Target specific attribute support
Authors: myhsu, m4yers, glaubitz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88393
This patch responds to a comment from @vitalybuka in D96203: suggestion to
do the change incrementally, and start by modifying this file name. I modified
the file name and made the other changes that follow from that rename.
Reviewers: vitalybuka, echristo, MaskRay, jansvoboda11, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96974
This change implements support for applying profile instrumentation
only to selected files or functions. The implementation uses the
sanitizer special case list format to select which files and functions
to instrument, and relies on the new noprofile IR attribute to exclude
functions from instrumentation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94820
This change implements support for applying profile instrumentation
only to selected files or functions. The implementation uses the
sanitizer special case list format to select which files and functions
to instrument, and relies on the new noprofile IR attribute to exclude
functions from instrumentation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94820
Currently, there is some refactoring needed in existing interface of OpenCL option
settings to support OpenCL C 3.0. The problem is that OpenCL extensions and features
are not only determined by the target platform but also by the OpenCL version.
Also, there are core extensions/features which are supported unconditionally in
specific OpenCL C version. In fact, these rules are not being followed for all targets.
For example, there are some targets (as nvptx and r600) which don't support
OpenCL C 2.0 core features (nvptx.languageOptsOpenCL.cl, r600.languageOptsOpenCL.cl).
After the change there will be explicit differentiation between optional core and core
OpenCL features which allows giving diagnostics if target doesn't support any of
necessary core features for specific OpenCL version.
This patch also eliminates `OpenCLOptions` instance duplication from `TargetOptions`.
`OpenCLOptions` instance should take place in `Sema` as it's going to be modified
during parsing. Removing this duplication will also allow to generally simplify
`OpenCLOptions` class for parsing purposes.
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92277
It's only used by Version.cpp, so limit the definition to just that one
file instead of making all of Clang recompile if you change CLANG_VENDOR.
Reviewed By: phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90516
This preprocessor define was meant to be used to conditionally include VCSVersion.inc. However, the define was always set, and it was the content of the header that was conditionally generated. Therefore HAVE_VCS_VERSION_INC should be cleaned up.
Reviewed By: gribozavr2, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84623
Split `FileEntry` and `FileEntryRef` out into a new file
`clang/Basic/FileEntry.h`. This allows current users of a
forward-declared `FileEntry` to transition to `FileEntryRef` without
adding more includers of `FileManager.h`.
Also split `UniqueID` out to llvm/Support/FileSystem/UniqueID.h, so
`FileEntry.h` doesn't need to include all of `FileSystem.h` for just
that type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89761
This patch moves FixedPointSemantics and APFixedPoint
from Clang to LLVM ADT.
This will make it easier to use the fixed-point
classes in LLVM for constructing an IR builder for
fixed-point and for reusing the APFixedPoint class
for constant evaluation purposes.
RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-August/144025.html
Reviewed By: leonardchan, rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85312
Summary:
As discussed previously when landing patch for OpenMP in Flang, the idea is
to share common part of the OpenMP declaration between the different Frontend.
While doing this it was thought that moving to tablegen instead of Macros will also
give a cleaner and more powerful way of generating these declaration.
This first part of a future series of patches is setting up the base .td file for
DirectiveLanguage as well as the OpenMP version of it. The base file is meant to
be used by other directive language such as OpenACC.
In this first patch, the Directive and Clause enums are generated with tablegen
instead of the macros on OMPConstants.h. The next pacth will extend this
to other enum and move the Flang frontend to use it.
Reviewers: jdoerfert, DavidTruby, fghanim, ABataev, jdenny, hfinkel, jhuber6, kiranchandramohan, kiranktp
Reviewed By: jdoerfert, jdenny
Subscribers: arphaman, martong, cfe-commits, mgorny, yaxunl, hiraditya, guansong, jfb, sstefan1, aaron.ballman, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #openmp, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81736
...enumerations from TokenKinds.def and use the new macros from TokenKinds.def
to remove the hard-coded lists of traits.
All the information needed to generate these enumerations is already present
in TokenKinds.def. The motivation here is to be able to dump the trait spelling
without hard-coding the list in yet another place.
Note that this change the order of the enumerators in the enumerations (except
that in the TypeTrait enumeration all unary type traits are before all binary
type traits, and all binary type traits are before all n-ary type traits).
Apart from the aforementioned ordering which is relied upon, after this patch
no code in clang or in the various clang tools depend on the specific ordering
of the enumerators.
No functional changes intended.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81455
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
When LLVM_APPEND_VC_REV=OFF is set, the current git hash is no
longer embedded into binaries (mostly for --version output).
Without it, most binaries need to relink after every single
commit, even if they didn't change otherwise (due to, say,
a documentation-only commit).
LLVM_APPEND_VC_REV is ON by default, so this doesn't change the
default behavior of anything.
With this, all clients of GenerateVersionFromVCS.cmake honor
LLVM_APPEND_VC_REV.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72855
getLastArgIntValue is a useful utility function to get command line argument as an integer.
Currently it is in Frontend so that it can only be used by clang -cc1. Move it to basic so
that it can also be used by clang driver.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71080
Summary:
Clang performs various recursive operations (such as template instantiation),
and may use non-trivial amounts of stack space in each recursive step (for
instance, due to recursive AST walks). While we try to keep the stack space
used by such steps to a minimum and we have explicit limits on the number of
such steps we perform, it's impractical to guarantee that we won't blow out the
stack on deeply recursive template instantiations on complex ASTs, even with
only a moderately high instantiation depth limit.
The user experience in these cases is generally terrible: we crash with
no hint of what went wrong. Under this patch, we attempt to do better:
* Detect when the stack is nearly exhausted, and produce a warning with a
nice template instantiation backtrace, telling the user that we might
run slowly or crash.
* For cases where we're forced to trigger recursive template
instantiation in arbitrarily-deeply-nested contexts, check whether
we're nearly out of stack space and allocate a new stack (by spawning
a new thread) after producing the warning.
Reviewers: rnk, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66361
llvm-svn: 369940
This patch is a prerequisite for using LangStandard from Driver in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D64793.
It moves LangStandard* and InputKind::Language to Basic. It is mostly
mechanical, with only a few changes of note:
- enum Language has been changed into enum class Language : uint8_t to
avoid a clash between OpenCL in enum Language and OpenCL in enum
LangFeatures and not to increase the size of class InputKind.
- Now that getLangStandardForName, which is currently unused, also checks
both canonical and alias names, I've introduced a helper getLangKind
which factors out a code pattern already used 3 times.
The patch has been tested on x86_64-pc-solaris2.11, sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11,
and x86_64-pc-linux-gnu.
There's a companion patch for lldb which uses LangStandard.h
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D65717).
While polly includes isl which in turn uses InputKind::C, that part of the
code isn't even built inside the llvm tree. I've posted a patch to allow
for both InputKind::C and Language::C upstream
(https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/isl-development/6oEvNWOSQFE).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65562
llvm-svn: 367864
Change MemoryBufferCache to InMemoryModuleCache, moving it from Basic to
Serialization. Another patch will start using it to manage module build
more explicitly, but this is split out because it's mostly mechanical.
Because of the move to Serialization we can no longer abuse the
Preprocessor to forward it to the ASTReader. Besides the rename and
file move, that means Preprocessor::Preprocessor has one fewer parameter
and ASTReader::ASTReader has one more.
llvm-svn: 355777
Previously, there were two different scripts for generating VCS headers:
one used by LLVM and one used by Clang and lldb. They were both similar,
but different. They were both broken in their own ways, for example the
one used by Clang didn't properly handle monorepo resulting in an
incorrect version information reported by Clang.
This change unifies two the scripts by introducing a new script that's
used from both LLVM, Clang and lldb, ensures that the new script
supports both monorepo and standalone SVN and Git setups, and removes
the old scripts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57063
llvm-svn: 353268
Previously, there were two different scripts for generating VCS headers:
one used by LLVM and one used by Clang. They were both similar, but
different. They were both broken in their own ways, for example the one
used by Clang didn't properly handle monorepo resulting in an incorrect
version information reported by Clang.
This change unifies two the scripts by introducing a new script that's
used from both LLVM and Clang, ensures that the new script supports both
monorepo and standalone SVN and Git setups, and removes the old scripts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57063
llvm-svn: 352729
This patch moves the virtual file system form clang to llvm so it can be
used by more projects.
Concretely the patch:
- Moves VirtualFileSystem.{h|cpp} from clang/Basic to llvm/Support.
- Moves the corresponding unit test from clang to llvm.
- Moves the vfs namespace from clang::vfs to llvm::vfs.
- Formats the lines affected by this change, mostly this is the result of
the added llvm namespace.
RFC on the mailing list:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-October/126657.html
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52783
llvm-svn: 344140
This patch proposes an abstract type that represents fixed point numbers, similar to APInt or APSInt that was discussed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D48456#inline-425585. This type holds a value, scale, and saturation and is meant to perform intermediate calculations on constant fixed point values.
Currently this class is used as a way for handling the conversions between fixed point numbers with different sizes and radixes. For example, if I'm casting from a signed _Accum to a saturated unsigned short _Accum, I will need to check the value of the signed _Accum to see if it fits into the short _Accum which involves getting and comparing against the max/min values of the short _Accum. The FixedPointNumber class currently handles the radix shifting and extension when converting to a signed _Accum.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48661
llvm-svn: 339028
Summary:
This kind of functionality is useful to other project apart from clang.
LLDB works with version numbers a lot, but it does not have a convenient
abstraction for this. Moving this class to a lower level library allows
it to be freely used within LLDB.
Since this class is used in a lot of places in clang, and it used to be
in the clang namespace, it seemed appropriate to add it to the list of
adopted classes in LLVM.h to avoid prefixing all uses with "llvm::".
Also, I didn't find any tests specific for this class, so I wrote a
couple of quick ones for the more interesting bits of functionality.
Reviewers: zturner, erik.pilkington
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47887
llvm-svn: 334399
Summary:
This change addresses http://llvm.org/PR36926 by allowing users to pick
which instrumentation bundles to use, when instrumenting with XRay. In
particular, the flag `-fxray-instrumentation-bundle=` has four valid
values:
- `all`: the default, emits all instrumentation kinds
- `none`: equivalent to -fnoxray-instrument
- `function`: emits the entry/exit instrumentation
- `custom`: emits the custom event instrumentation
These can be combined either as comma-separated values, or as
repeated flag values.
Reviewers: echristo, kpw, eizan, pelikan
Reviewed By: pelikan
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44970
llvm-svn: 329985
As RV64 codegen has not yet been upstreamed into LLVM, we focus on RV32 driver
support (RV64 to follow).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39963
llvm-svn: 322276
Summary:
This is the follow-up patch to D37924.
This change refactors clang to use the the newly added section headers
in SpecialCaseList to specify which sanitizers blacklists entries
should apply to, like so:
[cfi-vcall]
fun:*bad_vcall*
[cfi-derived-cast|cfi-unrelated-cast]
fun:*bad_cast*
The SanitizerSpecialCaseList class has been added to allow querying by
SanitizerMask, and SanitizerBlacklist and its downstream users have been
updated to provide that information. Old blacklists not using sections
will continue to function identically since the blacklist entries will
be placed into a '[*]' section by default matching against all
sanitizers.
Reviewers: pcc, kcc, eugenis, vsk
Reviewed By: eugenis
Subscribers: dberris, cfe-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37925
llvm-svn: 314171
Summary:
The find_first_existing_file and find_first_existing_vc_file macros in
lib/Basic/CMakeLists.txt are removed. The macros are also defined in
{LLVM}/cmake/modules/AddLLVM.cmake for the same purpose. This change
serves the following 2 objectives:
1. To remove the redundant code in clang to use the same
macros in llvm,
2. The macros in AddLLVM.cmake can also handle repo for
displaying correct version information.
Reviewers: jordan_rose, cfe-commits, modocache, hintonda
Reviewed By: hintonda
Subscribers: mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35533
llvm-svn: 312865
Targets.cpp is getting unwieldy, and even minor changes cause the entire thing
to cause recompilation for everyone. This patch bites the bullet and breaks
it up into a number of files.
I tended to keep function definitions in the class declaration unless it
caused additional includes to be necessary. In those cases, I pulled it
over into the .cpp file. Content is copy/paste for the most part,
besides includes/format/etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35701
llvm-svn: 308791
Summary:
When searching for Git version control information, libBasic's CMake
checks for the path '.git/logs/HEAD'. However, when LLVM is included as
a Git submodule, this path does not exist. Instead, it contains a '.git'
file with the following:
```
gitdir: ../../.git/modules/external/llvm
```
Where '../..' is the relative path to the root repository that contains
the LLVM Git submodule.
Because of this discrepancy, `clang --version` does not output source
control information if built from a Git submodule.
To fix, check whether '.git' is a directory or a file. If it's a
directory, simply use the '.git/logs/HEAD' path. If it's a file, read it
and check for the tell-tale sign of a Git submodule: the text "gitdir:".
If it exists, follow that path and use the 'logs/HEAD' at that location
instead. This allows not only the correct revision information to be
retrieved, but also uses a file that will change with each source
control revision.
Test Plan:
1. Before applying this change, build Clang as a Git submodule in a repository
that places it in external/clang, and confirm no revision information
is output when `clang --version` is invoked (just "clang 5.0.0" is
output, no Git hashes).
2. Apply these changes and build Clang as a Git repository nested under
llvm/tools/clang, and confirm that `clang --version` displays correct
version information.
3. Apply these changes and build Clang as a Git submodule using the
structure described in (1), and confirm version control information
is output as in (2).
Reviewers: jordan_rose, beanz, probinson
Reviewed By: jordan_rose
Subscribers: chapuni, mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34955
llvm-svn: 308205
Summary:
The -fxray-always-instrument= and -fxray-never-instrument= flags take
filenames that are used to imbue the XRay instrumentation attributes
using a whitelist mechanism (similar to the sanitizer special cases
list). We use the same syntax and semantics as the sanitizer blacklists
files in the implementation.
As implemented, we respect the attributes that are already defined in
the source file (i.e. those that have the
[[clang::xray_{always,never}_instrument]] attributes) before applying
the always/never instrument lists.
Reviewers: rsmith, chandlerc
Subscribers: jfb, mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30388
llvm-svn: 299041
This reverts commit r298185, effectively reapplying r298165, after fixing the
new unit tests (PR32338). The memory buffer generator doesn't null-terminate
the MemoryBuffer it creates; this version of the commit informs getMemBuffer
about that to avoid the assert.
Original commit message follows:
----
Clang's internal build system for implicit modules uses lock files to
ensure that after a process writes a PCM it will read the same one back
in (without contention from other -cc1 commands). Since PCMs are read
from disk repeatedly while invalidating, building, and importing, the
lock is not released quickly. Furthermore, the LockFileManager is not
robust in every environment. Other -cc1 commands can stall until
timeout (after about eight minutes).
This commit changes the lock file from being necessary for correctness
to a (possibly dubious) performance hack. The remaining benefit is to
reduce duplicate work in competing -cc1 commands which depend on the
same module. Follow-up commits will change the internal build system to
continue after a timeout, and reduce the timeout. Perhaps we should
reconsider blocking at all.
This also fixes a use-after-free, when one part of a compilation
validates a PCM and starts using it, and another tries to swap out the
PCM for something new.
The PCMCache is a new type called MemoryBufferCache, which saves memory
buffers based on their filename. Its ownership is shared by the
CompilerInstance and ModuleManager.
- The ModuleManager stores PCMs there that it loads from disk, never
touching the disk if the cache is hot.
- When modules fail to validate, they're removed from the cache.
- When a CompilerInstance is spawned to build a new module, each
already-loaded PCM is assumed to be valid, and is frozen to avoid
the use-after-free.
- Any newly-built module is written directly to the cache to avoid the
round-trip to the filesystem, making lock files unnecessary for
correctness.
Original patch by Manman Ren; most testcases by Adrian Prantl!
llvm-svn: 298278
Clang's internal build system for implicit modules uses lock files to
ensure that after a process writes a PCM it will read the same one back
in (without contention from other -cc1 commands). Since PCMs are read
from disk repeatedly while invalidating, building, and importing, the
lock is not released quickly. Furthermore, the LockFileManager is not
robust in every environment. Other -cc1 commands can stall until
timeout (after about eight minutes).
This commit changes the lock file from being necessary for correctness
to a (possibly dubious) performance hack. The remaining benefit is to
reduce duplicate work in competing -cc1 commands which depend on the
same module. Follow-up commits will change the internal build system to
continue after a timeout, and reduce the timeout. Perhaps we should
reconsider blocking at all.
This also fixes a use-after-free, when one part of a compilation
validates a PCM and starts using it, and another tries to swap out the
PCM for something new.
The PCMCache is a new type called MemoryBufferCache, which saves memory
buffers based on their filename. Its ownership is shared by the
CompilerInstance and ModuleManager.
- The ModuleManager stores PCMs there that it loads from disk, never
touching the disk if the cache is hot.
- When modules fail to validate, they're removed from the cache.
- When a CompilerInstance is spawned to build a new module, each
already-loaded PCM is assumed to be valid, and is frozen to avoid
the use-after-free.
- Any newly-built module is written directly to the cache to avoid the
round-trip to the filesystem, making lock files unnecessary for
correctness.
Original patch by Manman Ren; most testcases by Adrian Prantl!
llvm-svn: 298165
Use the LLVM_CMAKE_PATH variable to locate the GetSVN.cmake script.
The variable was already available in stand-alone builds, and is also
set by LLVM since r284581.
llvm-svn: 284582
Summary:
Currently our handling of CUDA architectures is scattered all around
clang. This patch centralizes it.
A key advantage of this centralization is that you can now write a C++
switch on e.g. CudaArch and get a compile error if you don't handle one
of the enum values.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21867
llvm-svn: 274681
I added this option in r257827 to try and add compatibility with autoconf. At the time I misunderstood the problem.
Our CMake automatically generates the SVN revision information and generates a build action to update it so builds don't need to be re-configured on SCM update (which is a better solution than we had in autoconf).
The problem I was actually seeing was isolated cases where SVN revision information isn't available because the repository structures have been removed. This happens in some automated testing systems.
This patch allows SVN_REVISION to be overridden if the build configuration could not find the SCM repository structures, and removes the code from my original patch because it is unnecessary.
llvm-svn: 273714
Revert the two changes to thread CodeGenOptions into the TargetInfo allocation
and to fix the layering violation by moving CodeGenOptions into Basic.
Code Generation is arguably not particularly "basic". This addresses Richard's
post-commit review comments. This change purely does the mechanical revert and
will be followed up with an alternate approach to thread the desired information
into TargetInfo.
llvm-svn: 265806
This is a mechanical move of CodeGenOptions from libFrontend to libBasic. This
fixes the layering violation introduced earlier by threading CodeGenOptions into
TargetInfo. It should also fix the modules based self-hosting builds. NFC.
llvm-svn: 265702
Summary:
The goal of this patch is to make `-verify` easier to use when testing libc++. The `notes` attached to compile error diagnostics are numerous and relatively unstable when they reference libc++ header internals. This patch allows libc++ to write stable compilation failure tests by allowing unexpected diagnostic messages to be ignored where they are not relevant.
This patch adds a new CC1 flag called `-verify-ignore-unexpected`. `-verify-ignore-unexpected` tells `VerifyDiagnosticsConsumer` to ignore *all* unexpected diagnostic messages. `-verify-ignore-unexpected=<LevelList>` can be used to only ignore certain diagnostic levels. `<LevelList>` is a comma separated list of diagnostic levels to ignore. The supported levels are `note`, `remark`, `warning` and `error`.
Reviewers: bogner, grosser, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10138
llvm-svn: 239665