The dependent mechanism for C error-recovery is mostly finished,
this is the only place we have missed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89045
Fix premature decision in the presence of type-dependent expression
operands on whether AltiVec vector initializations from single
expressions are "splat" operations.
Verify that the instantiation is able to determine the correct cast
semantics for both the scalar type and the vector type case.
Note that, because the change only affects the single-expression
case (and the target type is an AltiVec-style vector type), the
replacement of a parenthesized list with a parenthesized expression
does not change the semantics of the program in a program-observable
manner.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88526
The current half vector was enforcing an assert expecting
"(LHS is half vector) == (RHS is half vector)"
for comma.
Reviewed By: ahatanak, fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88265
We leave a dangling TypoExpr when typo-correction is performed
successfully in `checkArgsForPlaceholders`, which leads a crash in the
later TypoCorrection.
This code was added in 1586782767,
and it didn't seem to have enough test coverage.
The fix is to remove this part, and no failuer tests.
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87815
Instead of relying on whether a certain identifier is a builtin, introduce BuiltinAttr to specify a declaration as having builtin semantics.
This fixes incompatible redeclarations of builtins, as reverting the identifier as being builtin due to one incompatible redeclaration would have broken rest of the builtin calls.
Mostly-compatible redeclarations of builtins also no longer have builtin semantics. They don't call the builtin nor inherit their attributes.
A long-standing FIXME regarding builtins inside a namespace enclosed in extern "C" not being recognized is also addressed.
Due to the more correct handling attributes for builtin functions are added in more places, resulting in more useful warnings.
Tests are updated to reflect that.
Intrinsics without an inline definition in intrin.h had `inline` and `static` removed as they had no effect and caused them to no longer be recognized as builtins otherwise.
A pthread_create() related test is XFAIL-ed, as it relied on it being recognized as a builtin based on its name.
The builtin declaration syntax is too restrictive and doesn't allow custom structs, function pointers, etc.
It seems to be the only case and fixing this would require reworking the current builtin syntax, so this seems acceptable.
Fixes PR45410.
Reviewed By: rsmith, yutsumi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77491
Don't forget to define them if they're constexpr and used inside a
template; we might try to evaluate a call to them before the template is
instantiated.
This is recommit of 6c8041aa0f, reverted in de044f7562 because of some
fails. Original commit message is below.
This change allow a CastExpr to have optional FPOptionsOverride object,
stored in trailing storage. Of all cast nodes only ImplicitCastExpr,
CStyleCastExpr, CXXFunctionalCastExpr and CXXStaticCastExpr are allowed
to have FPOptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85960
This change allow a CastExpr to have optional FPOptionsOverride object,
stored in trailing storage. Of all cast nodes only ImplicitCastExpr,
CStyleCastExpr, CXXFunctionalCastExpr and CXXStaticCastExpr are allowed
to have FPOptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85960
This change groups
* Rename: `ignoreParenBaseCasts` -> `IgnoreParenBaseCasts` for uniformity
* Rename: `IgnoreConversionOperator` -> `IgnoreConversionOperatorSingleStep` for uniformity
* Inline `IgnoreNoopCastsSingleStep` into a lambda inside `IgnoreNoopCasts`
* Refactor `IgnoreUnlessSpelledInSource` to make adequate use of `IgnoreExprNodes`
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86880
Previously, this code discarded the result of CheckPlaceholderExpr for
non-matrix subexpressions. Not only is this wasteful, but it was creating a
Warc-repeated-use-of-weak false-positive on the attached testcase, since the
discarded expression was still registered as a use of the weak property.
rdar://66162246
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87102
This patch implements the semantics for the 'arm_sve_vector_bits' type
attribute, defined by the Arm C Language Extensions (ACLE) for SVE [1].
The purpose of this attribute is to define vector-length-specific (VLS)
versions of existing vector-length-agnostic (VLA) types.
The semantics were already implemented by D83551, although the
implementation approach has since changed to represent VLSTs as
VectorType in the AST and fixed-length vectors in the IR everywhere
except in function args/returns. This is described in the prototype
patch D85128 demonstrating the new approach.
The semantic changes added in D83551 are changed since the
AttributedType is replaced by VectorType in the AST. Minimal changes
were necessary in the previous patch as the canonical type for both VLA
and VLS was the same (i.e. sizeless), except in constructs such as
globals and structs where sizeless types are unsupported. This patch
reverts the changes that permitted VLS types that were represented as
sizeless types in such circumstances, and adds support for implicit
casting between VLA <-> VLS types as described in section 3.7.3.2 of the
ACLE.
Since the SVE builtin types for bool and uint8 are both represented as
BuiltinType::UChar in VLSTs, two new vector kinds are implemented to
distinguish predicate and data vectors.
[1] https://developer.arm.com/documentation/100987/latest
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85736
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
- Fixed point to floating point conversion is unimplemented.
- If one of the operands has a floating type and the other operand has a fixed-point type, the function
handleFloatConversion() is called because one of the operands has a floating type, but we do not handle fixed
point type in this function (Implementation of fixed point to floating point conversion is missing), due to this
compiler crashes. In order to avoid compiler crash, when one of the operands has a floating type and the other
operand has a fixed-point type, return NULL.
- FIXME: Implementation of fixed point to floating point conversion.
- I am going to resolve FIXME in followup patches.
- Add the test case.
Reviewed By: ebevhan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81904
In the handleIntToFloatConversion() function, 6th parameter is ConvertFloat, 7th parameter is ConvertInt.
Reviewed By: njames93, xbolva00
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85568
Vectors of bfloat are a storage format only; you're supposed to
explicitly convert them to a wider type to do arithmetic on them.
But currently, if you write something like
bfloat16x4_t test(bfloat16x4_t a, bfloat16x4_t b) { return a + b; }
then the clang frontend accepts it without error, and (ARM or AArch64)
isel fails to generate code for it.
Added a rule in Sema that forbids the attempt from even being made,
and tests that check it. In particular, we also outlaw arithmetic
between vectors of bfloat and any other vector type.
Patch by Luke Cheeseman.
Reviewed By: LukeGeeson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85009
Summary:
Introduced OMPChildren class to handle all associated clauses, statement
and child expressions/statements. It allows to represent some directives
more correctly (like flush, depobj etc. with pseudo clauses, ordered
depend directives, which are standalone, and target data directives).
Also, it will make easier to avoid using of CapturedStmt in directives,
if required (atomic, tile etc. directives).
Also, it simplifies serialization/deserialization of the
executable/declarative directives.
Reduces number of allocation operations for mapper declarations.
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Subscribers: yaxunl, guansong, jfb, cfe-commits, sstefan1, aaron.ballman, caomhin
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83261
nvcc supports accessing file-scope static device variables in host code by host APIs
like cudaMemcpyToSymbol etc.
CUDA/HIP let users access device variables in host code by shadow variables. In host compilation,
clang emits a shadow variable for each device variable, and calls __*RegisterVariable to
register it in init function. The address of the shadow variable and the device side mangled
name of the device variable is passed to __*RegisterVariable. Runtime looks up the symbol
by name in the device binary to find the address of the device variable.
The problem with static device variables is that they have internal linkage, therefore their
name may be changed by the linker if there are multiple symbols with the same name. Also
they end up as local symbols in the elf file, whereas the runtime only looks up the global symbols.
Another reason for making the static device variables external linkage is that they may be
initialized externally by host code and their final value may be accessed by host code
after kernel execution, therefore they actually have external linkage. Giving them internal
linkage will cause incorrect optimizations on them.
To support accessing static device var in host code for -fno-gpu-rdc mode, change the intnernal
linkage to external linkage. The name does not need change since there is only one TU for
-fno-gpu-rdc mode. Also the externalization is done only if the device static var is referenced
by host code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80858
types.
We previously did not treat a function type as dependent if it had a
parameter pack with a non-dependent type -- such a function type depends
on the arity of the pack so is dependent even though none of the
parameter types is dependent. In order to properly handle this, we now
treat pack expansion types as always being dependent types (depending on
at least the pack arity), and always canonically being pack expansion
types, even in the unusual case when the pattern is not a dependent
type. This does mean that we can have canonical types that are pack
expansions that contain no unexpanded packs, which is unfortunate but
not inaccurate.
We also previously did not treat a typedef type as
instantiation-dependent if its canonical type was not
instantiation-dependent. That's wrong because instantiation-dependence
is a property of the type sugar, not of the type; an
instantiation-dependent type can have a non-instantiation-dependent
canonical type.
Background:
-----------
There are two related argument types which can be sent into a diagnostic to
display the name of an entity: DeclarationName (ak_declarationname) or
NamedDecl* (ak_nameddecl) (there is also ak_identifierinfo for
IdentifierInfo*, but we are not concerned with it here).
A DeclarationName in a diagnostic will just be streamed to the output,
which will directly result in a call to DeclarationName::print.
A NamedDecl* in a diagnostic will also ultimately result in a call to
DeclarationName::print, but with two customisation points along the way:
The first customisation point is NamedDecl::getNameForDiagnostic which is
overloaded by FunctionDecl, ClassTemplateSpecializationDecl and
VarTemplateSpecializationDecl to print the template arguments, if any.
The second customisation point is NamedDecl::printName. By default it just
streams the stored DeclarationName into the output but it can be customised
to provide a user-friendly name for an entity. It is currently overloaded by
DecompositionDecl and MSGuidDecl.
What this patch does:
---------------------
For many diagnostics a DeclarationName is used instead of the NamedDecl*.
This bypasses the two customisation points mentioned above. This patches fix
this for diagnostics in Sema.cpp, SemaCast.cpp, SemaChecking.cpp, SemaDecl.cpp,
SemaDeclAttr.cpp, SemaDecl.cpp, SemaOverload.cpp and SemaStmt.cpp.
I have only modified diagnostics where I could construct a test-case which
demonstrates that the change is appropriate (either with this patch or the next
one).
Reviewed By: erichkeane, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84656
This change allow a CallExpr to have optional FPOptionsOverride object,
stored in trailing storage. The implementaion is made similar to the way
used in BinaryOperator.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84343
Reapply 49e5f603d4
which had been reverted in c94332919b.
Originally reverted because I hadn't updated it in quite a while when I
got around to committing it, so there were a bunch of missing changes to
new code since I'd written the patch.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76646
As reported in PR46774, an invalid arithemetic conversion used in a C
ternary operator resulted in an assertion. This patch replaces that
assertion with a diagnostic stating that the conversion failed.
At the moment, I believe the only case of this happening is _ExtInt
types.
The expr dependent-bits described that the expression somehow
depends on a template paramter.
With RecoveryExpr, we have generalized it to "the expression depends on
a template parameter, or an error". This patch updates/cleanups all related
comments of dependence-bits.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83213
Summary:
We would like to use NumericLiteralParser in the implementation of the
syntax tree builder, and plumbing a preprocessor there seems
inconvenient and superfluous.
Reviewers: eduucaldas
Reviewed By: eduucaldas
Subscribers: gribozavr2, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83480
This reverts commit defd43a5b3.
with correction to solve msan report
To solve https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46166 where the
floating point settings in PCH files aren't compatible, rewrite
FPFeatures to use a delta in the settings rather than absolute settings.
With this patch, these floating point options can be benign.
Reviewers: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81869
This reverts commit b55d723ed6.
Reapply Modify FPFeatures to use delta not absolute settings
To solve https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46166 where the
floating point settings in PCH files aren't compatible, rewrite
FPFeatures to use a delta in the settings rather than absolute settings.
With this patch, these floating point options can be benign.
Reviewers: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81869
Call maybeExtendBlockObject in DefaultVariadicArgumentPromotion so that
the block is copied to the heap when it is passed as a variadic argument
to any calls, not only to C function calls.
rdar://problem/64201532
Clang is missing one of the conditions for C99 6.5.9p2, where comparison
between pointers must either both point to incomplete types or both
point to complete types. This patch adds an extra check to the clause
where two pointers are of compatible types.
This only applies to C89/C99; the relevant part of the standard was
rewritten for C11.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79945
not be a pack expansion type.
Using a pack expansion type for a pack declaration makes sense, but
general expressions should never have pack expansion types. If we have a
pack `T *...V`, then the type of `V` is the type `T *`, which contains
an unexpanded pack, and is a pointer type.
This allows us to better diagnose issues where a template is invalid due
to some non-dependent portion of a dependent type of a non-type template
parameter pack.
This patch add __builtin_matrix_column_major_load to Clang,
as described in clang/docs/MatrixTypes.rst. In the initial version,
the stride is not optional yet.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, jfb, Bigcheese
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72781
Summary:
SYCL and OpenMP prohibits thread local storage in device code,
so this commit ensures that error is emitted for device code and not
emitted for host code when host target supports it.
Reviewers: jdoerfert, erichkeane, bader
Reviewed By: jdoerfert, erichkeane
Subscribers: guansong, riccibruno, ABataev, yaxunl, ebevhan, Anastasia, sstefan1, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81641
Prevent IR-gen from emitting consteval declarations
Summary: with this patch instead of emitting calls to consteval function. the IR-gen will emit a store of the already computed result.
Summary: with this patch instead of emitting calls to consteval function. the IR-gen will emit a store of the already computed result.
Reviewers: rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76420
We were using llvm::SmallPtrSet for our ODR-use set which was also used
for instantiating the implicit lambda captures. The order in which the
captures are added depends on this, so the lambda's layout ended up
changing. The test just uses floats, but this was noticed with other
types as well.
This test replaces the short-lived SmallPtrSet (it lasts only for an
expression, which, though is a long time for lambdas, is at least not
forever) with a SmallSetVector.
Res is already a ExprResult, so if we call .get(), we will convert an
ExprError() result into an unset result. I discovered this in our downstream
CHERI target where this resulted in a crash due to a NULL-dereference.
It appears that this was introduced in SVN revision 201788 (8690a6860a)
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81608
...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
This patch implements the * binary operator for values of
MatrixType. It adds support for matrix * matrix, scalar * matrix and
matrix * scalar.
For the matrix, matrix case, the number of columns of the first operand
must match the number of rows of the second. For the scalar,matrix variants,
the element type of the matrix must match the scalar type.
Reviewers: rjmccall, anemet, Bigcheese, rsmith, martong
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76794
Summary:
This patch upstreams support for a new storage only bfloat16 C type.
This type is used to implement primitive support for bfloat16 data, in
line with the Bfloat16 extension of the Armv8.6-a architecture, as
detailed here:
https://community.arm.com/developer/ip-products/processors/b/processors-ip-blog/posts/arm-architecture-developments-armv8-6-a
The bfloat type, and its properties are specified in the Arm Architecture
Reference Manual:
https://developer.arm.com/docs/ddi0487/latest/arm-architecture-reference-manual-armv8-for-armv8-a-architecture-profile
In detail this patch:
- introduces an opaque, storage-only C-type __bf16, which introduces a new bfloat IR type.
This is part of a patch series, starting with command-line and Bfloat16
assembly support. The subsequent patches will upstream intrinsics
support for BFloat16, followed by Matrix Multiplication and the
remaining Virtualization features of the armv8.6-a architecture.
The following people contributed to this patch:
- Luke Cheeseman
- Momchil Velikov
- Alexandros Lamprineas
- Luke Geeson
- Simon Tatham
- Ties Stuij
Reviewers: SjoerdMeijer, rjmccall, rsmith, liutianle, RKSimon, craig.topper, jfb, LukeGeeson, fpetrogalli
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer
Subscribers: labrinea, majnemer, asmith, dexonsmith, kristof.beyls, arphaman, danielkiss, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76077
parameters with default arguments.
Directly follow the wording by relaxing the AST invariant that all
parameters after one with a default arguemnt also have default
arguments, and removing the diagnostic on missing default arguments
on a pack-expanded parameter following a parameter with a default
argument.
Testing also revealed that we need to special-case explicit
specializations of templates with a pack following a parameter with a
default argument, as such explicit specializations are otherwise
impossible to write. The standard wording doesn't address this case; a
issue has been filed.
This exposed a bug where we would briefly consider a parameter to have
no default argument while we parse a delay-parsed default argument for
that parameter, which is also fixed.
Partially incorporates a patch by Raul Tambre.
Extension vectors now can be used in element-wise conditional selector.
For example:
```
R[i] = C[i]? A[i] : B[i]
```
This feature was previously only enabled in OpenCL C. Now it's also
available in C. Not that it has different behaviors than GNU vectors
(i.e. __vector_size__). Extension vectors selects on signdness of the
vector. GNU vectors on the other hand do normal bool conversions. Also,
this feature is not available in C++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80574
This patch implements matrix index expressions
(matrix[RowIdx][ColumnIdx]).
It does so by introducing a new MatrixSubscriptExpr(Base, RowIdx, ColumnIdx).
MatrixSubscriptExprs are built in 2 steps in ActOnMatrixSubscriptExpr. First,
if the base of a subscript is of matrix type, we create a incomplete
MatrixSubscriptExpr(base, idx, nullptr). Second, if the base is an incomplete
MatrixSubscriptExpr, we create a complete
MatrixSubscriptExpr(base->getBase(), base->getRowIdx(), idx)
Similar to vector elements, it is not possible to take the address of
a MatrixSubscriptExpr.
For CodeGen, a new MatrixElt type is added to LValue, which is very
similar to VectorElt. The only difference is that we may need to cast
the type of the base from an array to a vector type when accessing it.
Reviewers: rjmccall, anemet, Bigcheese, rsmith, martong
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76791
This patch implements the + and - binary operators for values of
MatrixType. It adds support for matrix +/- matrix, scalar +/- matrix and
matrix +/- scalar.
For the matrix, matrix case, the types must initially be structurally
equivalent. For the scalar,matrix variants, the element type of the
matrix must match the scalar type.
Reviewers: rjmccall, anemet, Bigcheese, rsmith, martong
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76793
Summary:
Diagnostic is emitted if some declaration of unsupported type
declaration is used inside device code.
Memcpy operations for structs containing member with unsupported type
are allowed. Fixed crash on attempt to emit diagnostic outside of the
functions.
The approach is generalized between SYCL and OpenMP.
CUDA/OMP deferred diagnostic interface is going to be used for SYCL device.
Reviewers: rsmith, rjmccall, ABataev, erichkeane, bader, jdoerfert, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Subscribers: guansong, sstefan1, yaxunl, mgorny, bader, ebevhan, Anastasia, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74387
We didn't properly build default argument expressions previously -- we
failed to build the wrapper CXXDefaultArgExpr node, which meant that
std::source_location misbehaved, and we didn't perform default argument
instantiation when necessary, which meant that dependent default
arguments in function templates didn't work at all.
the expression that is passed to it if it has a function type or array
type
lvalue-to-rvalue conversion should only be applied to non-function,
non-array types, but clang was applying the conversion to discarded
value expressions of array types.
rdar://problem/61203170
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78134
constraint expressions.
We create overloaded `&&` and `||` operators to hold the possible
unqualified lookup results (if any) when the operands are dependent. We
could avoid building these in some cases (we will never use the stored
lookup results, and it would be better to not store them or perform the
lookups), but in the general case we will probably still need to handle
overloaded operators even with that optimization.
This patch adds a matrix type to Clang as described in the draft
specification in clang/docs/MatrixSupport.rst. It introduces a new option
-fenable-matrix, which can be used to enable the matrix support.
The patch adds new MatrixType and DependentSizedMatrixType types along
with the plumbing required. Loads of and stores to pointers to matrix
values are lowered to memory operations on 1-D IR arrays. After loading,
the loaded values are cast to a vector. This ensures matrix values use
the alignment of the element type, instead of LLVM's large vector
alignment.
The operators and builtins described in the draft spec will will be added in
follow-up patches.
Reviewers: martong, rsmith, Bigcheese, anemet, dexonsmith, rjmccall, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72281
RecoveryExprs are modeled as dependent type to prevent bogus diagnostics
and crashes in clang.
This patch allows to preseve the type for broken calls when the
RecoveryEprs have a known type, e.g. a broken non-overloaded call, a
overloaded call when the all candidates have the same return type, so
that more features (code completion still work on "take2args(x).^") still
work.
However, adding the type is risky, which may result in more clang code being
affected leading to new crashes and hurt diagnostic, and it requires large
effort to minimize the affect (update all sites in clang to handle errorDepend
case), so we add a new flag (off by default) to allow us to develop/test
them incrementally.
This patch also has some trivial fixes to suppress diagnostics (to prevent regressions).
Tested:
all existing tests are passed (when both "-frecovery-ast", "-frecovery-ast-type" flags are flipped on);
Reviewed By: sammccall
Subscribers: rsmith, arphaman, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79160
There are some lookup oddities with these as reported in PR45780, and
GCC doesn't support these behaviors at all. To be more consistent with
GCC and prevent the crashes caused by our lookup issues, nip the problem
in the bud and prohibit enums here.
test cases
Add support for #pragma float_control
Reviewers: rjmccall, erichkeane, sepavloff
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72841
This reverts commit 85dc033cac, and makes
corrections to the test cases that failed on buildbots.
When passing a value of a struct/union type from secure to non-secure
state (that is returning from a CMSE entry function or passing an
argument to CMSE-non-secure call), there is a potential sensitive
information leak via the padding bits in the structure. It is not
possible in the general case to ensure those bits are cleared by using
Standard C/C++.
This patch makes the compiler emit code to clear such padding
bits. Since type information is lost in LLVM IR, the code generation
is done by Clang.
For each interesting record type, we build a bitmask, in which all the
bits, corresponding to user declared members, are set. Values of
record types are returned by coercing them to an integer. After the
coercion, the coerced value is masked (with bitwise AND) and then
returned by the function. In a similar manner, values of record types
are passed as arguments by coercing them to an array of integers, and
the coerced values themselves are masked.
For union types, we effectively clear only bits, which aren't part of
any member, since we don't know which is the currently active one.
The compiler will issue a warning, whenever a union is passed to
non-secure state.
Values of half-precision floating-point types are passed in the least
significant bits of a 32-bit register (GPR or FPR) with the most
significant bits unspecified. Since this is also a potential leak of
sensitive information, this patch also clears those unspecified bits.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76369
This fixes a common mistake (the 3 should be @3): NSNumber *n = 3. This extends
an existing check for NSString. Also, this only errs if the initializer isn't a
null pointer constant, so NSNumber *n = 0; continues to work. rdar://47029572
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78066
This reverts commit 61ba1481e2.
I'm reverting this because it breaks the lldb build with
incomplete switch coverage warnings. I would fix it forward,
but am not familiar enough with lldb to determine the correct
fix.
lldb/source/Plugins/TypeSystem/Clang/TypeSystemClang.cpp:3958:11: error: enumeration values 'DependentExtInt' and 'ExtInt' not handled in switch [-Werror,-Wswitch]
switch (qual_type->getTypeClass()) {
^
lldb/source/Plugins/TypeSystem/Clang/TypeSystemClang.cpp:4633:11: error: enumeration values 'DependentExtInt' and 'ExtInt' not handled in switch [-Werror,-Wswitch]
switch (qual_type->getTypeClass()) {
^
lldb/source/Plugins/TypeSystem/Clang/TypeSystemClang.cpp:4889:11: error: enumeration values 'DependentExtInt' and 'ExtInt' not handled in switch [-Werror,-Wswitch]
switch (qual_type->getTypeClass()) {
Introduction/Motivation:
LLVM-IR supports integers of non-power-of-2 bitwidth, in the iN syntax.
Integers of non-power-of-two aren't particularly interesting or useful
on most hardware, so much so that no language in Clang has been
motivated to expose it before.
However, in the case of FPGA hardware normal integer types where the
full bitwidth isn't used, is extremely wasteful and has severe
performance/space concerns. Because of this, Intel has introduced this
functionality in the High Level Synthesis compiler[0]
under the name "Arbitrary Precision Integer" (ap_int for short). This
has been extremely useful and effective for our users, permitting them
to optimize their storage and operation space on an architecture where
both can be extremely expensive.
We are proposing upstreaming a more palatable version of this to the
community, in the form of this proposal and accompanying patch. We are
proposing the syntax _ExtInt(N). We intend to propose this to the WG14
committee[1], and the underscore-capital seems like the active direction
for a WG14 paper's acceptance. An alternative that Richard Smith
suggested on the initial review was __int(N), however we believe that
is much less acceptable by WG14. We considered _Int, however _Int is
used as an identifier in libstdc++ and there is no good way to fall
back to an identifier (since _Int(5) is indistinguishable from an
unnamed initializer of a template type named _Int).
[0]https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/software/programmable/quartus-prime/hls-compiler.html)
[1]http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2472.pdf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73967
Summary:
We can simplify the LHSTy correction for
fixed-point compassign by moving it below
the point where we know we have a compound
assignment.
Also, we shouldn't look at the LHS and RHS
separately; look at the computation result
type instead.
Looking at the LHS and RHS is also wrong
for compassigns with fixed and floating
point (though this does not work upstream
yet).
Reviewers: leonardchan
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78294
Summary:
Previously, we treated CXXUuidofExpr as quite a special case: it was the
only kind of expression that could be a canonical template argument, it
could be a constant lvalue base object, and so on. In addition, we
represented the UUID value as a string, whose source form we did not
preserve faithfully, and that we partially parsed in multiple different
places.
With this patch, we create an MSGuidDecl object to represent the
implicit object of type 'struct _GUID' created by a UuidAttr. Each
UuidAttr holds a pointer to its 'struct _GUID' and its original
(as-written) UUID string. A non-value-dependent CXXUuidofExpr behaves
like a DeclRefExpr denoting that MSGuidDecl object. We cache an APValue
representation of the GUID on the MSGuidDecl and use it from constant
evaluation where needed.
This allows removing a lot of the special-case logic to handle these
expressions. Unfortunately, many parts of Clang assume there are only
a couple of interesting kinds of ValueDecl, so the total amount of
special-case logic is not really reduced very much.
This fixes a few bugs and issues:
* PR38490: we now support reading from GUID objects returned from
__uuidof during constant evaluation.
* Our Itanium mangling for a non-instantiation-dependent template
argument involving __uuidof no longer depends on which CXXUuidofExpr
template argument we happened to see first.
* We now predeclare ::_GUID, and permit use of __uuidof without
any header inclusion, better matching MSVC's behavior. We do not
predefine ::__s_GUID, though; that seems like a step too far.
* Our IR representation for GUID constants now uses the correct IR type
wherever possible. We will still fall back to using the
{i32, i16, i16, [8 x i8]}
layout if a definition of struct _GUID is not available. This is not
ideal: in principle the two layouts could have different padding.
Reviewers: rnk, jdoerfert
Subscribers: arphaman, cfe-commits, aeubanks
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78171
In the MS C++ ABI, the complete destructor variant for a class with
virtual bases is emitted whereever it is needed, instead of directly
alongside the base destructor variant. The complete destructor calls the
base destructor of the current class and the base destructors of each
virtual base. In order for this to work reliably, translation units that
use the destructor of a class also need to mark destructors of virtual
bases of that class used.
Fixes PR38521
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77081
Now compiler defines 5 sets of constants to represent rounding mode.
These are:
1. `llvm::APFloatBase::roundingMode`. It specifies all 5 rounding modes
defined by IEEE-754 and is used in `APFloat` implementation.
2. `clang::LangOptions::FPRoundingModeKind`. It specifies 4 of 5 IEEE-754
rounding modes and a special value for dynamic rounding mode. It is used
in clang frontend.
3. `llvm::fp::RoundingMode`. Defines the same values as
`clang::LangOptions::FPRoundingModeKind` but in different order. It is
used to specify rounding mode in in IR and functions that operate IR.
4. Rounding mode representation used by `FLT_ROUNDS` (C11, 5.2.4.2.2p7).
Besides constants for rounding mode it also uses a special value to
indicate error. It is convenient to use in intrinsic functions, as it
represents platform-independent representation for rounding mode. In this
role it is used in some pending patches.
5. Values like `FE_DOWNWARD` and other, which specify rounding mode in
library calls `fesetround` and `fegetround`. Often they represent bits
of some control register, so they are target-dependent. The same names
(not values) and a special name `FE_DYNAMIC` are used in
`#pragma STDC FENV_ROUND`.
The first 4 sets of constants are target independent and could have the
same numerical representation. It would simplify conversion between the
representations. Also now `clang::LangOptions::FPRoundingModeKind` and
`llvm::fp::RoundingMode` do not contain the value for IEEE-754 rounding
direction `roundTiesToAway`, although it is supported natively on
some targets.
This change defines all the rounding mode type via one `llvm::RoundingMode`,
which also contains rounding mode for IEEE rounding direction `roundTiesToAway`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77379
Implemented codegen for the iterator expression in the depend clauses.
Iterator construct is emitted the following way:
iterator(cnt1, cnt2, ...), in : <dep>
<TotalNumDeps> = <cnt1_size> * <cnt2_size> * ...;
kmp_depend_t deps[<TotalNumDeps>];
deps_counter = 0;
for (cnt1) {
for (cnt2) {
...
deps[deps_counter].base_addr = &<dep>;
deps[deps_counter].size = sizeof(<dep>);
deps[deps_counter].flags = in;
deps_counter += 1;
...
}
}
For depobj construct the codegen is very similar, but the memory is
allocated dynamically and added extra first item reserved for internal use.
WG14 has adopted N2480 (http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2480.pdf)
into C2x at the meetings last week, allowing parameter names of a function
definition to be elided. This patch relaxes the error so that C++ and C2x do not
diagnose this situation, and modes before C2x will allow it as an extension.
This also adds the same feature to ObjC blocks under the assumption that ObjC
wishes to follow the C standard in this regard.
constructor with default arguments.
We used to try to rebuild the call as a call to the faked-up inherited
constructor, which is only a placeholder and lacks (for example) default
arguments. Instead, build the call by reference to the original
constructor.
In passing, add a note to say where a call that recursively uses a
default argument from within itself occurs. This is usually pretty
obvious, but still at least somewhat useful, and would have saved
significant debugging time for this particular bug.
Summary:
Added basic representation and parsing/sema handling of array-shaping
operations. Array shaping expression is an expression of form ([s0]..[sn])base,
where s0, ..., sn must be a positive integer, base - a pointer. This
expression is a kind of cast operation that converts pointer expression
into an array-like kind of expression.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, jdoerfert
Subscribers: guansong, arphaman, cfe-commits, caomhin, kkwli0
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74144
This is the second part loosely extracted from D71179 and cleaned up.
This patch provides semantic analysis support for `omp begin/end declare
variant`, mostly as defined in OpenMP technical report 8 (TR8) [0].
The sema handling makes code generation obsolete as we generate "the
right" calls that can just be handled as usual. This handling also
applies to the existing, albeit problematic, `omp declare variant
support`. As a consequence a lot of unneeded code generation and
complexity is removed.
A major purpose of this patch is to provide proper `math.h`/`cmath`
support for OpenMP target offloading. See PR42061, PR42798, PR42799. The
current code was developed with this feature in mind, see [1].
The logic is as follows:
If we have seen a `#pragma omp begin declare variant match(<SELECTOR>)`
but not the corresponding `end declare variant`, and we find a function
definition we will:
1) Create a function declaration for the definition we were about to generate.
2) Create a function definition but with a mangled name (according to
`<SELECTOR>`).
3) Annotate the declaration with the `OMPDeclareVariantAttr`, the same
one used already for `omp declare variant`, using and the mangled
function definition as specialization for the context defined by
`<SELECTOR>`.
When a call is created we inspect it. If the target has an
`OMPDeclareVariantAttr` attribute we try to specialize the call. To this
end, all variants are checked, the best applicable one is picked and a
new call to the specialization is created. The new call is used instead
of the original one to the base function. To keep the AST printing and
tooling possible we utilize the PseudoObjectExpr. The original call is
the syntactic expression, the specialized call is the semantic
expression.
[0] https://www.openmp.org/wp-content/uploads/openmp-TR8.pdf
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/D61399#change-496lQkg0mhRN
Reviewers: kiranchandramohan, ABataev, RaviNarayanaswamy, gtbercea, grokos, sdmitriev, JonChesterfield, hfinkel, fghanim, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: bollu, guansong, openmp-commits, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75779
This reverts commit 0788acbccb.
This reverts commit c2d7a1f79cedfc9fcb518596aa839da4de0adb69: Revert "[clangd] Add test for FindTarget+RecoveryExpr (which already works). NFC"
It causes a crash on invalid code:
class X {
decltype(unresolved()) foo;
};
constexpr int s = sizeof(X);
As reported in PR45298 and PR45299, vector_size type checking would
crash when done in a situation where the scalar is dependent, such as
a member of the current instantiation.
This is because the scalar checking ensures that you can implicitly
convert a value to a vector-type as long as it doesn't require
truncation. It does this by using the constant evaluator to get the
value as a float. Unfortunately, if the scalar is dependent (such as a
member of the current instantiation), we would hit the assert in the
evaluator.
This patch suppresses the truncation- of-value check in the first phase
of translation. All values are properly errored upon instantiation. This
has one minor regression, in that previously in a non-asserts build,
template<typename T>
struct S {
float4 f(float4 f) {
return k + f;
}
static constexpr k = 1.1; // causes a truncation on conversion.
};
would error immediately. Because 'k' is value dependent (as a
member-of-the-current-instantiation), this would still be evaluatable
(despite normally asserting). Due to this patch, this diagnostic is
delayed until instantiation time.
In order to support non-user-named kernels, SYCL needs some way in the
integration headers to name the kernel object themselves. Initially, the
design considered just RTTI naming of the lambdas, this results in a
quite unstable situation in light of some device/host macros.
Additionally, this ends up needing to use RTTI, which is a burden on the
implementation and typically unsupported.
Instead, we've introduced a builtin, __builtin_unique_stable_name, which
takes a type or expression, and results in a constexpr constant
character array that uniquely represents the type (or type of the
expression) being passed to it.
The implementation accomplishes that simply by using a slightly modified
version of the Itanium Mangling. The one exception is when mangling
lambdas, instead of appending the index of the lambda in the function,
it appends the macro-expansion back-trace of the lambda itself in the
form LINE->COL[~LINE->COL...].
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76620
When compiling C, a ?: between two values of the same SVE type
currently gives an error such as:
incompatible operand types ('svint8_t' (aka '__SVInt8_t') and 'svint8_t')
It's supposed to be valid to select between (cv-qualified versions of)
the same SVE type, so this patch adds that case.
These expressions already work for C++ and are tested by
SemaCXX/sizeless-1.cpp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76693
Normally clang avoids creating expressions when it encounters semantic
errors, even if the parser knows which expression to produce.
This works well for the compiler. However, this is not ideal for
source-level tools that have to deal with broken code, e.g. clangd is
not able to provide navigation features even for names that compiler
knows how to resolve.
The new RecoveryExpr aims to capture the minimal set of information
useful for the tools that need to deal with incorrect code:
source range of the expression being dropped,
subexpressions of the expression.
We aim to make constructing RecoveryExprs as simple as possible to
ensure writing code to avoid dropping expressions is easy.
Producing RecoveryExprs can result in new code paths being taken in the
frontend. In particular, clang can produce some new diagnostics now and
we aim to suppress bogus ones based on Expr::containsErrors.
We deliberately produce RecoveryExprs only in the parser for now to
minimize the code affected by this patch. Producing RecoveryExprs in
Sema potentially allows to preserve more information (e.g. type of an
expression), but also results in more code being affected. E.g.
SFINAE checks will have to take presence of RecoveryExprs into account.
Initial implementation only works in C++ mode, as it relies on compiler
postponing diagnostics on dependent expressions. C and ObjC often do not
do this, so they require more work to make sure we do not produce too
many bogus diagnostics on the new expressions.
See documentation of RecoveryExpr for more details.
original patch from Ilya
This change is based on https://reviews.llvm.org/D61722
Reviewers: sammccall, rsmith
Reviewed By: sammccall, rsmith
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69330
Summary:
Changes:
- handle immediate invocations for constructors.
- add tests
after this patch i believe the implementation of consteval is nearly standard compliant, but IR-gen still needs to be taught not to emit consteval declarations.
Reviewers: rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: wchilders
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74007
This patch completes a trio of changes related to arrays of
sizeless types. It rejects various forms of arithmetic on
pointers to sizeless types, in the same way as for other
incomplete types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76086
clang currently accepts:
__SVInt8_t &foo1(__SVInt8_t *x) { return *x; }
__SVInt8_t &foo2(__SVInt8_t *x) { return x[1]; }
The first function is valid ACLE code and generates correct LLVM IR
(and assembly code). But the second function is invalid for the
same reason that arrays of sizeless types are. Trying to code-generate
the function leads to:
llvm/include/llvm/Support/TypeSize.h:126: uint64_t llvm::TypeSize::getFixedSize() const: Assertion `!IsScalable && "Request for a fixed size on a s
calable object"' failed.
Another problem is that:
template<typename T>
constexpr __SIZE_TYPE__ f(T *x) { return &x[1] - x; }
typedef int arr1[f((int *)0) - 1];
typedef int arr2[f((__SVInt8_t *)0) - 1];
produces:
a.cpp:2:48: warning: subtraction of pointers to type '__SVInt8_t' of zero size has undefined behavior [-Wpointer-arith]
constexpr __SIZE_TYPE__ f(T *x) { return &x[1] - x; }
~~~~~ ^ ~
a.cpp:4:18: note: in instantiation of function template specialization 'f<__SVInt8_t>' requested here
typedef int arr2[f((__SVInt8_t *)0) - 1];
This patch reports an appropriate diagnostic instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76084
To group the code in one place, simplify it and make it easier to add
the containsErrors bit and find existing bugs.
Reviewers: sammccall
Reviewed By: sammccall
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73638
Avoid copying of the orignal variable if it is going to be marked as
firstprivate in task regions. For taskloops, still need to copy the
non-trvially copyable variables to correctly construct them upon task
creation.
This reapplies the following patch, which was reverted because it caused
neon CodeGen tests to fail:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rGa6150b48cea00ab31e9335cc73770327acc4cb3a
I've added checks to detect half precision neon vectors and avoid
promiting them to vectors of floats.
See the discussion here: https://reviews.llvm.org/rG825235c140e7
Original commit message:
This fixes an assertion in Sema::CreateBuiltinBinOp that fails when one
of the vector operand's element type is a typedef of __fp16.
rdar://problem/55983556
The SVE ACLE doesn't allow arrays of sizeless types. At the moment
clang accepts the TU:
__SVInt8_t x[2];
but trying to code-generate it triggers the LLVM assertion:
llvm/lib/IR/Type.cpp:588: static llvm::ArrayType* llvm::ArrayType::get(llvm::Type*, uint64_t): Assertion `isValidElementType(ElementType) && "Invalid type for array element!"' failed.
This patch reports an appropriate error instead.
The rules are slightly more restrictive than for general incomplete types.
For example:
struct s;
typedef struct s arr[2];
is valid as far as it goes, whereas arrays of sizeless types are
invalid in all contexts. BuildArrayType therefore needs a specific
check for isSizelessType in addition to the usual handling of
incomplete types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76082
Since fields can't have sizeless type, it also doesn't make sense
to capture sizeless types by value in lambda expressions. This patch
makes sure that we diagnose that and that we use "sizeless type" rather
"incomplete type" in the associated message. (Both are correct, but
"sizeless type" is more specific and hopefully more user-friendly.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75738
clang current accepts:
void foo1(__SVInt8_t *x, __SVInt8_t *y) { *x = *y; }
void foo2(__SVInt8_t *x, __SVInt8_t *y) {
memcpy(y, x, sizeof(__SVInt8_t));
}
The first function is valid ACLE code and generates correct LLVM IR.
However, the second function is invalid ACLE code and generates a
zero-length memcpy. The point of this patch is to reject the use
of sizeof in the second case instead.
There's no similar wrong-code bug for alignof. However, the SVE ACLE
conservatively treats alignof in the same way as sizeof, just as the
C++ standard does for incomplete types. The idea is that layout of
sizeless types is an implementation property and isn't defined at
the language level.
Implementation-wise, the patch adds a new CompleteTypeKind enum
that controls whether RequireCompleteType & friends accept sizeless
built-in types. For now the default is to maintain the status quo
and accept sizeless types. However, the end of the series will flip
the default and remove the Default enum value.
The patch also adds new ...CompleteSized... wrappers that callers can
use if they explicitly want to reject sizeless types. The callers then
use diagnostics that have an extra 0/1 parameter to indicats whether
the type is sizeless or not.
The idea is to have three cases:
1. calls that explicitly reject sizeless types, with a tweaked diagnostic
for the sizeless case
2. calls that explicitly allow sizeless types
3. normal/old-style calls that don't make an explicit choice either way
Once the default is flipped, the 3. calls will conservatively reject
sizeless types, using the same diagnostic as for other incomplete types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75572
a dependent context.
This matches the GCC behavior.
We track the enclosing template depth when determining whether a
statement expression is within a dependent context; there doesn't appear
to be any other reliable way to determine this.
We previously assumed they were neither value- nor
instantiation-dependent under any circumstances, which would lead to
crashes and other misbehavior.
Fix a bug in IRGen where it wasn't destructing compound literals in C
that are ObjC pointer arrays or non-trivial structs. Also diagnose jumps
that enter or exit the lifetime of the compound literals.
rdar://problem/51867864
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64464
dependent contexts.
We previously assumed they were neither value- nor
instantiation-dependent under any circumstances, which would lead to
crashes and other misbehavior.
Compute and propagate conversion kind to diagnostics helper in C++
to provide more specific diagnostics about incorrect implicit
conversions in assignments, initializations, params, etc...
Duplicated some diagnostics as errors because C++ is more strict.
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74116