This patch avoid minimizing input files that contributed to a PCH or its modules. This prevents the implicit modular build to fail on unexpected file size. Depends on D106146.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104536
This patch normalizes filenames in `DependencyScanningWorkerFilesystem` so that lookup of ignored files works correctly on Windows (where `/` and `\` are equivalent).
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106064
The dependency scanning worker uses `std::move` to "reset" `DependencyOutputOptions` in the `CompilerInstance` that performs the implicit build. It's probably preferable to replace the object with value-initialized instance, rather than depending on the behavior of a moved-from object.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104106
There's no need to pass `DependencyOutputOptions` to each call of `handleFileDependency`, since the options don't ever change.
This patch adds new `handleDependencyOutputOpts` method to the `DependencyConsumer` interface and the dependency scanner uses it to report the options only once.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104104
One of the goals of the dependency scanner is to generate command-lines that can be used to explicitly build modular dependencies of a translation unit. The only modifications to these command-lines should be for the purposes of explicit modular build.
However, the current version of dependency scanner leaks its implementation details into the command-lines.
The first problem is that the `clang-scan-deps` tool adjusts the original textual command-line (adding `-Eonly -M -MT <target> -sys-header-deps -Wno-error -o /dev/null `, removing `--serialize-diagnostics`) in order to set up the `DependencyScanning` library. This has been addressed in D103461, D104012, D104030, D104031, D104033. With these patches, the `DependencyScanning` library receives the unmodified `CompilerInvocation`, sets it up and uses it for the implicit modular build.
Finally, to prevent leaking the implementation details to the resulting command-lines, this patch generates them from the **original** unmodified `CompilerInvocation` rather than from the one that drives the implicit build.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104036
This patch moves enabling system header deps from `clang-scan-deps` into the `DependencyScanning` library. This will make it easier to preserve semantics of the original TU command-line for modular dependencies (see D104036).
Reviewed By: arphaman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104033
This moves another piece of logic specific to `clang-scan-deps` into the `DependencyScanning` library. This makes it easier to check how the original command-line looked like in the library and will enable the library to stop inventing `-Wno-error` for modular dependencies (see D104036).
Reviewed By: arphaman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104031
The `clang-scan-deps` tool has some logic that parses and modifies the original Clang command-line. The goal is to setup `DependencyOutputOptions` by injecting `-M -MT <target>` and prevent the creation of output files.
This patch moves the logic into the `DependencyScanning` library, and uses the parsed `CompilerInvocation` instead of the raw command-line. The code simpler and can be used from the C++ API as well.
The `-o /dev/null` arguments are not necessary, since the `DependencyScanning` library only runs a preprocessing action, so there's no way it'll produce an actual object file.
Related: The `-M` argument implies `-w`, which would appear on the command-line of modular dependencies even though it was not on the original TU command line (see D104036).
Some related tests were updated.
Reviewed By: arphaman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104030
To prevent the creation of diagnostics file, `clang-scan-deps` strips the corresponding command-line argument. This behavior is useful even when using the C++ `DependencyScanner` library.
This patch transforms stripping of command-line in `clang-scan-deps` into stripping of `CompilerInvocation` in `DependencyScanning`.
AFAIK, the `clang-cl` driver doesn't even accept `--serialize-diagnostics`, so I've removed the test. (It would fail with an unknown command-line argument otherwise.)
Note: Since we're generating command-lines for modular dependencies from `CompilerInvocation`, the `--serialize-diagnostics` will be dropped. This was already happening in `clang-scan-deps` before this patch, but it will now happen also when using `DependencyScanning` library directly. This is resolved in D104036.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith, arphaman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104012
When a translation unit uses a PCH and imports the same modules as the PCH, we'd prefer to resolve to those modules instead of inventing new modules and reporting them as modular dependencies. Since the PCH modules have already been built nudge the compiler to reuse them when deciding whether to build a new module and don't report them as regular modular dependencies.
Depends on D103524 & D103802.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103526
The `PreprocessOnlyAction` doesn't support loading the AST file of a precompiled header. This is problematic for dependency scanning, since the `#include` manufactured for the PCH is treated as textual. This means the PCH contents get scanned with each TU, which is redundant. Moreover, dependencies of the PCH end up being considered dependency of the TU.
To handle AST file of PCH properly, this patch creates new `FrontendAction` that behaves the same way `PreprocessorOnlyAction` does, but treats the manufactured PCH `#include` as a normal compilation would (by not claiming it only uses a preprocessor and creating the default AST consumer).
The AST file is now reported as a file dependency of the TU.
Depends on D103519.
Reviewed By: Bigcheese
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103524
When a project uses PCH with explicit modules, the build will look like this:
1. scan PCH dependencies
2. explicitly build PCH
3. scan TU dependencies
4. explicitly build TU
Step 2 produces an object file for the PCH, which the dependency scanner needs to read in step 3. This patch adds support for this.
The `clang-scan-deps` invocation in the attached test would fail without this change.
Depends on D103516.
Reviewed By: Bigcheese
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103519
Allow a `std::unique_ptr` to be moved into the an `IntrusiveRefCntPtr`,
and remove a couple of now-unnecessary `release()` calls.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92888
This is how it should've been and brings it more in line with
std::string_view. There should be no functional change here.
This is mostly mechanical from a custom clang-tidy check, with a lot of
manual fixups. It uncovers a lot of minor inefficiencies.
This doesn't actually modify StringRef yet, I'll do that in a follow-up.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70268
This is a recommit of f978ea4983 with a fix for the PowerPC failure.
The issue was that:
* `CompilerInstance::ExecuteAction` calls
`getTarget().adjust(getLangOpts());`.
* `PPCTargetInfo::adjust` changes `LangOptions::HasAltivec`.
* This happens after the first few calls to `getModuleHash`.
There’s even a FIXME saying:
```
// FIXME: We shouldn't need to do this, the target should be immutable once
// created. This complexity should be lifted elsewhere.
```
This only showed up on PowerPC because it's one of the few targets that
almost always changes a hashed langopt.
I looked into addressing the fixme, but that would be a much larger
change, and it's not the only thing that happens in `ExecuteAction` that
can change the module context hash. Instead I changed the code to not
call `getModuleHash` until after it has been modified in `ExecuteAction`.
This is a recommit of d8a4ef0e68 with the nondeterminism fixed.
This adds experimental support for extracting a Clang module dependency graph
from a compilation database. The output format is experimental and will change.
It is currently a concatenation of JSON outputs for each compilation. Future
patches will change this to deduplicate modules between compilations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69420
This adds experimental support for extracting a Clang module dependency graph
from a compilation database. The output format is experimental and will change.
It is currently a concatenation of JSON outputs for each compilation. Future
patches will change this to deduplicate modules between compilations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69420
This test is failing on Windows bots, revert for now (will check the right fix and retry the patch).
Summary: This reverts commit 962ca076e5.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jkorous, arphaman
Subscribers: dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69079
llvm-svn: 375079
Summary:
Clang's -M mode includes these extra dependencies in its output and clang-scan-deps
should have equivalent behavior, so adding these extradeps to output just like
how its being done for ".d" file generation mode.
Reviewers: arphaman, dexonsmith, Bigcheese, jkorous
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69017
llvm-svn: 375074
This resolves differences observed on LLVM + Clang when running the comparison between canonical
dependencies (full preprocessing, no file manager reused), and dependencies obtained
when the file manager was reused between the full preprocessing invocations.
llvm-svn: 371751
This commit adds an optimization to clang-scan-deps and clang's preprocessor that skips excluded preprocessor
blocks by bumping the lexer pointer, and not lexing the tokens until reaching appropriate #else/#endif directive.
The skip positions and lexer offsets are computed when the file is minimized, directly from the minimized tokens.
On an 18-core iMacPro with macOS Catalina Beta I got 10-15% speed-up from this optimization when running clang-scan-deps on
the compilation database for a recent LLVM and Clang (3511 files).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67127
llvm-svn: 371656
There's no need to purge symlinked entries in the FileManager,
as the new FileEntryRef API allows us to compute dependencies more
accurately when the FileManager is reused.
llvm-svn: 370493
to report the dependencies to the client
This will allow the scanner to report modular dependencies to the consumer.
This will also allow the scanner to accept regular cc1 clang invocations, e.g.
in an implementation of a libclang C API for clang-scan-deps, that I will add
follow-up patches for in the future.
llvm-svn: 370425
the dependency scanner on a single worker thread
This behavior can be controlled using the new `-reuse-filemanager` clang-scan-deps
option. By default the file manager is reused.
The added test/ClangScanDeps/symlink.cpp is able to pass with
the reused filemanager after the related FileEntryRef changes
landed earlier. The test test/ClangScanDeps/subframework_header_dir_symlink.m
still fails when the file manager is reused (I run the FileCheck with not to
make it PASS). I will address this in a follow-up patch that improves
the DirectoryEntry name modelling in the FileManager.
llvm-svn: 370420
Now that we've moved to C++14, we no longer need the llvm::make_unique
implementation from STLExtras.h. This patch is a mechanical replacement
of (hopefully) all the llvm::make_unique instances across the monorepo.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66259
llvm-svn: 368942
This commit implements the fast dependency scanning mode in clang-scan-deps: the
preprocessing is done on files that are minimized using the dependency directives source minimizer.
A shared file system cache is used to ensure that the file system requests and source minimization
is performed only once. The cache assumes that the underlying filesystem won't change during the course
of the scan (or if it will, it will not affect the output), and it can't be evicted. This means that the
service and workers can be used for a single run of a dependency scanner, and can't be reused across multiple,
incremental runs. This is something that we'll most likely support in the future though.
Note that the driver still utilizes the underlying real filesystem.
This commit is also still missing the fast skipped PP block skipping optimization that I mentioned at EuroLLVM talk.
Additionally, the file manager is still not reused by the threads as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63907
llvm-svn: 368086
thread worker code and better error handling
This commit extracts out the code that will powers the fast scanning
worker into a new file in a new DependencyScanning library. The error
and output handling is improved so that the clients can gather
errors/results from the worker directly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63681
llvm-svn: 364474