to a header file.
This is in preparation for using the visitor classes to warn about
memcpy'ing non-trivial C structs.
See the discussion here:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D45310
rdar://problem/36124208
llvm-svn: 330201
register destructor functions annotated with __attribute__((destructor))
using __cxa_atexit or atexit.
Register destructor functions annotated with __attribute__((destructor))
calling __cxa_atexit in a synthesized constructor function instead of
emitting references to the functions in a special section.
The primary reason for adding this option is that we are planning to
deprecate the __mod_term_funcs section on Darwin in the future. This
feature is enabled by default only on Darwin. Users who do not want this
can use command line option 'fno_register_global_dtors_with_atexit' to
disable it.
rdar://problem/33887655
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45578
llvm-svn: 330199
Summary:
The clang driver option -save-temps was not passed to the LTO config,
so when invoking the ThinLTO backends via clang during distributed
builds there was no way to get LTO to save temp files.
Getting this to work with ThinLTO distributed builds also required
changing the driver to avoid a separate compile step to emit unoptimized
bitcode when the input was already bitcode under -save-temps. Not only is
this unnecessary in general, it is problematic for ThinLTO backends since
the temporary bitcode file to the backend would not match the module path
in the combined index, leading to incorrect ThinLTO backend index-based
optimizations.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45217
llvm-svn: 330194
Summary:
There are some functions/methods that run when the application launches
or the library loads. Those functions will run reguardless the OS
version as long as it satifies the minimum deployment target. Annotate
them with availability attributes doesn't really make sense because they
are essentially available on all targets since minimum deployment
target.
rdar://problem/36093384
Reviewers: arphaman, erik.pilkington
Reviewed By: erik.pilkington
Subscribers: erik.pilkington, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45699
llvm-svn: 330166
As reported here: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37033
Any usage of a builtin function that uses a va_list by reference
will cause an assertion when redeclaring it.
After discussion in the review, it was concluded that the correct
way of accomplishing this fix is to make attempts to redeclare certain
builtins an error. Unfortunately, doing this limitation for all builtins
is likely a breaking change, so this commit simply limits it to
types with custom type checking and those that take a reference.
Two tests needed to be updated to make this work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45383
llvm-svn: 330160
This fixes issues with "class" being reported as an identifier in "enum class" because the construct is not present when using default language options.
Patch by Johann Klähn.
llvm-svn: 330159
framework module SomeKitCore {
...
export_as SomeKit
}
Given the module above, while generting autolink information during
codegen, clang should to emit '-framework SomeKitCore' only if SomeKit
was not imported in the relevant TU, otherwise it should use '-framework
SomeKit' instead.
rdar://problem/38269782
llvm-svn: 330152
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
It means the same thing as -mllvm; there isn't any reason to have two
options which do the same thing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45109
llvm-svn: 329965
A previously missing intrinsic for an old instruction.
Reviewers: craig.topper, echristo
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45311
llvm-svn: 329937
Summary:
This patch adds two new diagnostics, which are off by default:
**-Wreturn-std-move**
This diagnostic is enabled by `-Wreturn-std-move`, `-Wmove`, or `-Wall`.
Diagnose cases of `return x` or `throw x`, where `x` is the name of a local variable or parameter, in which a copy operation is performed when a move operation would have been available. The user probably expected a move, but they're not getting a move, perhaps because the type of "x" is different from the return type of the function.
A place where this comes up in the wild is `stdext::inplace_function<Sig, N>` which implements conversion via a conversion operator rather than a converting constructor; see https://github.com/WG21-SG14/SG14/issues/125#issue-297201412
Another place where this has come up in the wild, but where the fix ended up being different, was
try { ... } catch (ExceptionType ex) {
throw ex;
}
where the appropriate fix in that case was to replace `throw ex;` with `throw;`, and incidentally to catch by reference instead of by value. (But one could contrive a scenario where the slicing was intentional, in which case throw-by-move would have been the appropriate fix after all.)
Another example (intentional slicing to a base class) is dissected in https://github.com/accuBayArea/Slides/blob/master/slides/2018-03-07.pdf
**-Wreturn-std-move-in-c++11**
This diagnostic is enabled only by the exact spelling `-Wreturn-std-move-in-c++11`.
Diagnose cases of "return x;" or "throw x;" which in this version of Clang *do* produce moves, but which prior to Clang 3.9 / GCC 5.1 produced copies instead. This is useful in codebases which care about portability to those older compilers.
The name "-in-c++11" is not technically correct; what caused the version-to-version change in behavior here was actually CWG 1579, not C++14. I think it's likely that codebases that need portability to GCC 4.9-and-earlier may understand "C++11" as a colloquialism for "older compilers." The wording of this diagnostic is based on feedback from @rsmith.
**Discussion**
Notice that this patch is kind of a negative-space version of Richard Trieu's `-Wpessimizing-move`. That diagnostic warns about cases of `return std::move(x)` that should be `return x` for speed. These diagnostics warn about cases of `return x` that should be `return std::move(x)` for speed. (The two diagnostics' bailiwicks do not overlap: we don't have to worry about a `return` statement flipping between the two states indefinitely.)
I propose to write a paper for San Diego that would relax the implicit-move rules so that in C++2a the user //would// see the moves they expect, and the diagnostic could be re-worded in a later version of Clang to suggest explicit `std::move` only "in C++17 and earlier." But in the meantime (and/or forever if that proposal is not well received), this diagnostic will be useful to detect accidental copy operations.
Reviewers: rtrieu, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: lebedev.ri, Rakete1111, rsmith, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43322
Patch by Arthur O'Dwyer.
llvm-svn: 329914
The order of argument construction is reversed on MS ABI on Windows.
When `macros` was invoked, the `end` call is made prior to `begin`. In
such a case, the DenseMap (`ModuleMap`) is populated after the `end`
iterator is constructed. This reversal results in the invalidation of
the end iterator, resulting in a failure at runtime (assertion failure
in `DenseMap<T>::operator!=` that "handles are not in sync!"). Ensure
that the end iterator is constructed after the begin iterator. This
fixes the use of `macros(bool)`, which symptomized as an assertion
failure in the swift compiler in the clang importer.
llvm-svn: 329866
The WBNOINVD instruction writes back all modified
cache lines in the processor’s internal cache to main memory
but does not invalidate (flush) the internal caches.
Reviewers: craig.topper, zvi, ashlykov
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43817
llvm-svn: 329848
When NVPTX TARGET_BUILTIN specifies sm_XX or ptxYY as required feature,
consider those features available if we're compiling for GPU >= sm_XX or have
enabled PTX version >= ptxYY.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45061
llvm-svn: 329829
Sometimes when people compile bpf programs with
"clang ... -target bpf ...", the kernel header
files may contain host arch inline assembly codes
as in the patch https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10119683/
by Arnaldo Carvaldo de Melo.
The current workaround in the above patch
is to guard the inline assembly with "#ifndef __BPF__"
marco. So when __BPF__ is defined, these macros will
have no use.
Such a method is not extensible. As a matter of fact,
most of these inline assembly codes will be thrown away
at the end of clang compilation.
So for bpf target, this patch accepts all asm register
names in clang AST stage. The name will be checked
again during llc code generation if the inline assembly
code is indeed for bpf programs.
With this patch, the above "#ifndef __BPF__" is not needed
any more in https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/10119683/.
Signed-off-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
llvm-svn: 329823
Avoid storing duplicated "std::string"s.
clangd's global-symbol-builder takes 20+GB memory running across LLVM
repository. With this patch, the used memory is ~10GB (running on 48
threads, most of meory are AST-related).
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45479
llvm-svn: 329784
Since the range-based constraint manager (default) is weak in handling comparisons where symbols are on both sides it is wise to rearrange them to have symbols only on the left side. Thus e.g. A + n >= B + m becomes A - B >= m - n which enables the constraint manager to store a range m - n .. MAX_VALUE for the symbolic expression A - B. This can be used later to check whether e.g. A + k == B + l can be true, which is also rearranged to A - B == l - k so the constraint manager can check whether l - k is in the range (thus greater than or equal to m - n).
The restriction in this version is the the rearrangement happens only if both the symbols and the concrete integers are within the range [min/4 .. max/4] where min and max are the minimal and maximal values of their type.
The rearrangement is not enabled by default. It has to be enabled by using -analyzer-config aggressive-relational-comparison-simplification=true.
Co-author of this patch is Artem Dergachev (NoQ).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41938
llvm-svn: 329780
Summary:
This patch implements the `-fxray-modes=` flag which allows users
building with XRay instrumentation to decide which modes to pre-package
into the binary being linked. The default is the status quo, which will
link all the available modes.
For this to work we're also breaking apart the mode implementations
(xray-fdr and xray-basic) from the main xray runtime. This gives more
granular control of which modes are pre-packaged, and picked from
clang's invocation.
This fixes llvm.org/PR37066.
Note that in the future, we may change the default for clang to only
contain the profiling implementation under development in D44620, when
that implementation is ready.
Reviewers: echristo, eizan, chandlerc
Reviewed By: echristo
Subscribers: mgorny, mgrang, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45474
llvm-svn: 329772
Currently we always include PTX into the fatbin along
with the GPU code.It about doubles the size of the GPU binary
we need to carry in the executable. These options allow control
inclusion of PTX into GPU binary.
This patch does not change the defaults, though we may consider
making no-PTX the default in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45495
llvm-svn: 329737
The current support of the feature produces only 2 lines in report:
-Some general Code Generation Time;
-Total time of Backend Consumer actions.
This patch extends Clang time report with new lines related to Preprocessor, Include Filea Search, Parsing, etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43578
llvm-svn: 329684
an APValue and retrieve it from map Temporaries.
The version number is needed when a single AST node is visited multiple
times and is used to create APValues that are required to be distinct
from each other (for example, MaterializeTemporaryExprs in default
arguments and VarDecls in loops).
rdar://problem/36505742
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42776
llvm-svn: 329671
GCC 4.8.4 on a bot was warning about `ArgPassingKind` not fitting in
`ArgPassingRestrictions`, which appears to be incorrect, since
`ArgPassingKind` only has three potential values:
"warning: 'clang::RecordDecl::ArgPassingRestrictions' is too small to
hold all values of 'enum clang::RecordDecl::ArgPassingKind'"
Additionally, I remember hearing (though my knowledge may be outdated)
that MSVC won't merge adjacent bitfields if their types are different.
Try to fix both issues by turning these into `uint8_t`s.
llvm-svn: 329652
registers.
This patch fixes a bug in r328731 that caused structs transitively
containing __weak fields to be passed in registers. The patch replaces
the flag RecordDecl::CanPassInRegisters with a 2-bit enum that indicates
whether the struct or structs containing the struct are forced to be
passed indirectly.
This reapplies r329617. r329617 didn't specify the underlying type for
enum ArgPassingKind, which caused regression tests to fail on a windows
bot.
rdar://problem/39194693
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45384
llvm-svn: 329635
registers.
This patch fixes a bug in r328731 that caused structs transitively
containing __weak fields to be passed in registers. The patch replaces
the flag RecordDecl::CanPassInRegisters with a 2-bit enum that indicates
whether the struct or structs containing the struct are forced to be
passed indirectly.
rdar://problem/39194693
llvm-svn: 329617
Summary:
The wrapper finds the closest matching compile command using filename heuristics
and makes minimal tweaks so it can be used with the header.
Subscribers: klimek, mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45006
llvm-svn: 329580
Summary:
The FileID/Offset conversion is lossy. The code takes the fileLoc, which loses
e.g. the spelling location in some macro cases.
Instead, pass the original SourceLocation which preserves all information, and
update consumers to match current behavior.
This allows us to fix two bugs in clangd that need the spelling location.
Reviewers: akyrtzi, arphaman
Subscribers: ilya-biryukov, ioeric, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45014
llvm-svn: 329570
Summary:
This change consolidates the always/never lists that may be provided to
clang to externally control which functions should be XRay instrumented
by imbuing attributes. The files follow the same format as defined in
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/SanitizerSpecialCaseList.html for the
sanitizer blacklist.
We also deprecate the existing `-fxray-instrument-always=` and
`-fxray-instrument-never=` flags, in favour of `-fxray-attr-list=`.
This fixes http://llvm.org/PR34721.
Reviewers: echristo, vlad.tsyrklevich, eugenis
Reviewed By: vlad.tsyrklevich
Subscribers: llvm-commits, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45357
llvm-svn: 329543
Summary:
clang_getFileName() may return a path relative to WorkingDir.
On Arch Linux, during clang_indexTranslationUnit(), clang_getFileName() on
CXIdxIncludedIncludedFileInfo::file may return
"/../lib64/gcc/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu/7.3.0/../../../../include/c++/7.3.0/string",
for `#include <string>`.
I presume WorkingDir is somehow changed to /usr/lib or /usr/include and
clang_getFileName() returns a path relative to WorkingDir.
clang_File_tryGetRealPathName() returns "/usr/include/c++/7.3.0/string"
which is more useful for the indexer in this case.
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42893
llvm-svn: 329515
-cc1gen-reproducer driver option
The recommit fixes:
- An MSAN failure (CCPrintOptions wasn't initialized in the Driver)
- Ensures that the strings in the libclang invocation files are escaped
Original message:
This commit is a follow up to the previous work that recorded Libclang invocations
into temporary files: r319702.
It adds a new -cc1 mode to clang: -cc1gen-reproducer. The goal of this mode is to generate
Clang reproducer files for Libclang tool invocation. The JSON format in the invocation
files is not really intended to be stable, so Libclang and Clang should be of the same version
when generating reproducers.
The new mode emits the information about the temporary files and Libclang-specific information
to stdout using JSON.
rdar://35322614
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40983
llvm-svn: 329465
driver option
This commit is a follow up to the previous work that recorded Libclang invocations
into temporary files: r319702.
It adds a new -cc1 mode to clang: -cc1gen-reproducer. The goal of this mode is to generate
Clang reproducer files for Libclang tool invocation. The JSON format in the invocation
files is not really intended to be stable, so Libclang and Clang should be of the same version
when generating reproducers.
The new mode emits the information about the temporary files and Libclang-specific information
to stdout using JSON.
rdar://35322614
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40983
llvm-svn: 329442
Found via codespell -q 3 -I ../clang-whitelist.txt
Where whitelist consists of:
archtype
cas
classs
checkk
compres
definit
frome
iff
inteval
ith
lod
methode
nd
optin
ot
pres
statics
te
thru
Patch by luzpaz! (This is a subset of D44188 that applies cleanly with a few
files that have dubious fixes reverted.)
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44188
llvm-svn: 329399
Summary:
`ASTPrinter` allows setting the ouput to any O-Stream, but that printer creates source-code-like syntax (and is also marked with a `FIXME`). The nice, colourful, mostly human-readable `ASTDumper` only works on the standard output, which is not feasible in case a user wants to see the AST of a file through a code navigation/comprehension tool.
This small addition of an overload solves generating a nice colourful AST block for the users of a tool I'm working on, [[ http://github.com/Ericsson/CodeCompass | CodeCompass ]], as opposed to having to duplicate the behaviour of definitions that only exist in the anonymous namespace of implementation TUs related to this module.
Reviewers: alexfh, klimek, rsmith
Reviewed By: alexfh
Subscribers: rnkovacs, dkrupp, gsd, xazax.hun, cfe-commits, #clang
Tags: #clang
Patch by Whisperity!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45096
llvm-svn: 329391
Summary:
This change introduces `-fxray-link-deps` and `-fnoxray-link-deps`. The
`-fnoxray-link-deps` allows for directly controlling which specific XRay
runtime to link. The default is for clang to link the XRay runtime that
is shipped with the compiler (if there are any), but users may want to
explicitly add the XRay dependencies from other locations or other
means.
Reviewers: eizan, echristo, chandlerc
Reviewed By: eizan
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45354
llvm-svn: 329376
Summary:
This change fixes http://llvm.org/PR36985 to define a single place in
CommonArgs.{h,cpp} where XRay runtime flags and link-time dependencies
are processed for all toolchains that support XRay instrumentation. This
is a refactoring of the same functionality spread across multiple
toolchain definitions.
Reviewers: echristo, devnexen, eizan
Reviewed By: eizan
Subscribers: emaste, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45243
llvm-svn: 329372
This CMake flag allows setting the default value for the
-f[no]-experimental-new-pass-manager flag.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44330
llvm-svn: 329366
layout" rules.
The new rules say that a standard-layout struct has its first non-static
data member and all base classes at offset 0, and consider a class to
not be standard-layout if that would result in multiple subobjects of a
single type having the same address.
We track "is C++11 standard-layout class" separately from "is
standard-layout class" so that the ABIs that need this information can
still use it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45176
llvm-svn: 329332
Summary:
"-fmerge-all-constants" is a non-conforming optimization and should not
be the default. It is also causing miscompiles when building Linux
Kernel (https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/3/20/872).
Fixes PR18538.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, chandlerc
Reviewed By: rsmith, chandlerc
Subscribers: srhines, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45289
llvm-svn: 329300
structs.
r326307 and r327870 made changes that allowed using non-trivial C
structs with fields qualified with __strong or __weak. This commit makes
the following C++ triviality type traits available to non-trivial C
structs:
__has_trivial_assign
__has_trivial_move_assign
__has_trivial_copy
__has_trivial_move_constructor
__has_trivial_constructor
__has_trivial_destructor
This reapplies r328680. This commit fixes a bug where the copy/move
__has_trivial_* traits would return false when a volatile type was being
passed. Thanks to Richard Smith for pointing out the mistake.
rdar://problem/33599681
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44913
llvm-svn: 329289
It unintentionally caused the values of the __has_* type traits to change in
C++ for trivially-copyable classes with volatile members.
llvm-svn: 329247
We were already performing checks on non-template variables,
but the checks on templated ones were missing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45231
llvm-svn: 329127
Summary:
Add support for the -fsanitize=shadow-call-stack flag which causes clang
to add ShadowCallStack attribute to functions compiled with that flag
enabled.
Reviewers: pcc, kcc
Reviewed By: pcc, kcc
Subscribers: cryptoad, cfe-commits, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44801
llvm-svn: 329122
This reverts r328795 which introduced an issue with referencing __global__
function templates. More details in the original review D44747.
llvm-svn: 329099
This re-lands r328845 with fixes for crbug.com/827810.
The initial motiviation was to hoist MethodVFTableLocation to global
scope so it could be forward declared.
In this patch, I noticed that MicrosoftVTableContext uses some risky
patterns. It has methods that return references to data stored in
DenseMaps. I've made some of them return by value for trivial structs
and I've moved some things into separate allocations.
llvm-svn: 329007
A recent addition to Coroutines TS (https://wg21.link/p0913) adds a pre-defined
coroutine noop_coroutine that does nothing. To implement this feature, we implemented
an llvm.coro.noop intrinsic that returns a coroutine handle to a coroutine that
does nothing when resumed or destroyed.
This patch adds a builtin __builtin_coro_noop() that maps to llvm.coro.noop intrinsic.
Related llvm change: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45114
llvm-svn: 328993
Summary:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL325291 implemented Coroutines TS N4723
section [dcl.fct.def.coroutine]/7, but it performed lookup of allocator
functions within both the global and class scope, whereas the specified
behavior is to perform lookup for custom allocators within just the
class scope.
To fix, add parameters to the `Sema::FindAllocationFunctions` function
such that it can be used to lookup allocators in global scope,
class scope, or both (instead of just being able to look up in just global
scope or in both global and class scope). Then, use those parameters
from within the coroutine Sema.
This incorrect behavior had the unfortunate side-effect of causing the
bug https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36578 (or at least the reports
of that bug in C++ programs). That bug would occur for any C++ user with
a coroutine frame that took a single pointer argument, since it would
then find the global placement form `operator new`, described in the
C++ standard 18.6.1.3.1. This patch prevents Clang from generating code
that triggers the LLVM assert described in that bug report.
Test Plan: `check-clang`
Reviewers: GorNishanov, eric_niebler, lewissbaker
Reviewed By: GorNishanov
Subscribers: EricWF, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44552
llvm-svn: 328949
Achieves almost a 200% speedup on the example where the performance of
visitors was problematic.
Performance on sqlite3 is unaffected.
rdar://38818362
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45113
llvm-svn: 328911
C++ structured bindings for non-tuple-types are defined in a peculiar
way, where the resulting declaration is not a VarDecl, but a
BindingDecl.
That means a lot of existing machinery stops working.
rdar://36912381
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44956
llvm-svn: 328910
Sometimes template instantiation causes CXXBindTemporaryExpr to be missing in
its usual spot. In CFG, temporary destructors work by relying on
CXXBindTemporaryExprs, so they won't work in this case.
Avoid the crash and notify the clients that we've encountered an unsupported AST
by failing to provide the ill-formed construction context for the temporary.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44955
llvm-svn: 328895
This allows forward declaring it so that we can add it to
MicrosoftMangleContext::mangleVirtualMemPtrThunk without including
VTableBuilder.h. That saves a hashtable lookup when emitting virtual
member pointer functions.
It also shortens a really long type name. This struct has "VFtable" in
the name, so it seems pretty unlikely that someone will assume it is
generally useful for non-MS C++ ABI stuff.
llvm-svn: 328845
Deprecation replacement can be any text but if it looks like a name of
ObjC method and has the same number of arguments as original method,
replace all slot names so after applying a fix-it you have valid code.
rdar://problem/36660853
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, erik.pilkington, rsmith
Reviewed By: erik.pilkington
Subscribers: cfe-commits, jkorous-apple
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44589
llvm-svn: 328807
This patch sets target specific calling convention for CUDA kernels in IR.
Patch by Greg Rodgers.
Revised and lit test added by Yaxun Liu.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44747
llvm-svn: 328795
The conversion of operatios to bitcode helps to eliminate an additional
store in certain cases. We used to lower these load intrinsics in DAG to
DAG conversion by which time, the "Dead Store Elimination" pass is
already run. There is an associated LLVM patch.
Patch by Sumanth Gundapaneni.
llvm-svn: 328776
The AST for the fragment
```
@interface I
@end
template <typename>
void decode(I *p) {
for (I *k in p) {}
}
void decode(I *p) {
decode<int>(p);
}
```
differs heavily when templatized and non-templatized:
```
|-FunctionTemplateDecl 0x7fbfe0863940 <line:4:1, line:7:1> line:5:6 decode
| |-TemplateTypeParmDecl 0x7fbfe0863690 <line:4:11> col:11 typename depth 0 index 0
| |-FunctionDecl 0x7fbfe08638a0 <line:5:1, line:7:1> line:5:6 decode 'void (I *__strong)'
| | |-ParmVarDecl 0x7fbfe08637a0 <col:13, col:16> col:16 referenced p 'I *__strong'
| | `-CompoundStmt 0x7fbfe0863b88 <col:19, line:7:1>
| | `-ObjCForCollectionStmt 0x7fbfe0863b50 <line:6:3, col:20>
| | |-DeclStmt 0x7fbfe0863a50 <col:8, col:13>
| | | `-VarDecl 0x7fbfe08639f0 <col:8, col:11> col:11 k 'I *const __strong'
| | |-ImplicitCastExpr 0x7fbfe0863a90 <col:16> 'I *' <LValueToRValue>
| | | `-DeclRefExpr 0x7fbfe0863a68 <col:16> 'I *__strong' lvalue ParmVar 0x7fbfe08637a0 'p' 'I *__strong'
| | `-CompoundStmt 0x7fbfe0863b78 <col:19, col:20>
| `-FunctionDecl 0x7fbfe0863f80 <line:5:1, line:7:1> line:5:6 used decode 'void (I *__strong)'
| |-TemplateArgument type 'int'
| |-ParmVarDecl 0x7fbfe0863ef8 <col:13, col:16> col:16 used p 'I *__strong'
| `-CompoundStmt 0x7fbfe0890cf0 <col:19, line:7:1>
| `-ObjCForCollectionStmt 0x7fbfe0890cc8 <line:6:3, col:20>
| |-DeclStmt 0x7fbfe0890c70 <col:8, col:13>
| | `-VarDecl 0x7fbfe0890c00 <col:8, col:11> col:11 k 'I *__strong' callinit
| | `-ImplicitValueInitExpr 0x7fbfe0890c60 <<invalid sloc>> 'I *__strong'
| |-ImplicitCastExpr 0x7fbfe0890cb0 <col:16> 'I *' <LValueToRValue>
| | `-DeclRefExpr 0x7fbfe0890c88 <col:16> 'I *__strong' lvalue ParmVar 0x7fbfe0863ef8 'p' 'I *__strong'
| `-CompoundStmt 0x7fbfe0863b78 <col:19, col:20>
```
Note how in the instantiated version ImplicitValueInitExpr unexpectedly appears.
While objects are auto-initialized under ARC, it does not make sense to
have an initializer for a for-loop variable, and it makes even less
sense to have such a different AST for instantiated and non-instantiated
version.
Digging deeper, I have found that there are two separate Sema* files for
dealing with templates and for dealing with non-templatized code.
In a non-templatized version, an initialization was performed only for
variables which are not loop variables for an Objective-C loop and not
variables for a C++ for-in loop:
```
if (FRI && (Tok.is(tok::colon) || isTokIdentifier_in())) {
bool IsForRangeLoop = false;
if (TryConsumeToken(tok::colon, FRI->ColonLoc)) {
IsForRangeLoop = true;
if (Tok.is(tok::l_brace))
FRI->RangeExpr = ParseBraceInitializer();
else
FRI->RangeExpr = ParseExpression();
}
Decl *ThisDecl = Actions.ActOnDeclarator(getCurScope(), D);
if (IsForRangeLoop)
Actions.ActOnCXXForRangeDecl(ThisDecl);
Actions.FinalizeDeclaration(ThisDecl);
D.complete(ThisDecl);
return Actions.FinalizeDeclaratorGroup(getCurScope(), DS, ThisDecl);
}
SmallVector<Decl *, 8> DeclsInGroup;
Decl *FirstDecl = ParseDeclarationAfterDeclaratorAndAttributes(
D, ParsedTemplateInfo(), FRI);
```
However the code in SemaTemplateInstantiateDecl was inconsistent,
guarding only against C++ for-in loops.
rdar://38391075
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44989
llvm-svn: 328749
ObjC and ObjC++ pass non-trivial structs in a way that is incompatible
with each other. For example:
typedef struct {
id f0;
__weak id f1;
} S;
// this code is compiled in c++.
extern "C" {
void foo(S s);
}
void caller() {
// the caller passes the parameter indirectly and destructs it.
foo(S());
}
// this function is compiled in c.
// 'a' is passed directly and is destructed in the callee.
void foo(S a) {
}
This patch fixes the incompatibility by passing and returning structs
with __strong or weak fields using the C ABI in C++ mode. __strong and
__weak fields in a struct do not cause the struct to be destructed in
the caller and __strong fields do not cause the struct to be passed
indirectly.
Also, this patch fixes the microsoft ABI bug mentioned here:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D41039?id=128767#inline-364710
rdar://problem/38887866
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44908
llvm-svn: 328731
These instructions have been around for a long time, but we
haven't supported intrinsics for them. The "new" vesrions use
the CSx register for the start of the buffer instead of the K
field in the Mx register.
There is a related llvm patch.
Patch by Brendon Cahoon.
llvm-svn: 328725
When the declare target variables are emitted for the device,
constructors|destructors for these variables must emitted and registered
by the runtime in the offloading sections.
llvm-svn: 328705
The diagnostic system for Clang can already handle many AST nodes. Instead
of converting them to strings first, just hand the AST node directly to
the diagnostic system and let it handle the output. Minor changes in some
diagnostic output.
llvm-svn: 328688
structs.
r326307 and r327870 made changes that allowed using non-trivial C
structs with fields qualified with __strong or __weak. This commit makes
the following C++ triviality type traits available to non-trivial C
structs:
__has_trivial_assign
__has_trivial_move_assign
__has_trivial_copy
__has_trivial_move_constructor
__has_trivial_constructor
__has_trivial_destructor
rdar://problem/33599681
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44913
llvm-svn: 328680
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before
sorting. This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined
sorting order of objects having the same key.
To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of
std::sort.
llvm-svn: 328636
Adding a matcher for BinaryOperator and cxxOperatorCallExpr to be able to
decide whether it is any kind of assignment operator or not. This would be
useful since allows us to easily detect assignments via matchers for static
analysis (Tidy, SA) purposes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44893
llvm-svn: 328618
Summary:
This fixes PR33561 and PR34185.
Don't store pending template instantiations for late-parsed templates in
the normal PendingInstantiations queue. Instead, use a separate list
that will only be parsed and instantiated at end of TU when late
template parsing actually works and doesn't infinite loop.
Reviewers: rsmith, thakis, hans
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44846
llvm-svn: 328567
This make -ivfsoverlay behave more like other fatal errors (e.g. missing
-include file) by skipping the missing file instead of bailing out of
the whole compilation. This makes it possible for libclang to still
provide some functionallity as well as to correctly produce the fatal
error diagnostic (previously we lost the diagnostic in libclang since
there was no TU to tie it to).
rdar://33385423
llvm-svn: 328337
Changes the analyzer to believe that methods annotated with _Nonnull
from system frameworks indeed return non null objects.
Local methods with such annotation are still distrusted.
rdar://24291919
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44341
llvm-svn: 328282
Putting back the code in commit r327189 that was reverted in r322737. The code is being committed in three stages and this one is the last stage: 1) r327455 fp16 feature flags, 2) r327836 pass half type or i16 based on FullFP16, and 3) the code here which the front-end fp16 vector intrinsic for ARM.
Differential revision https://reviews.llvm.org/D43650
llvm-svn: 328277
CXXCtorInitializer-based constructors are also affected by the C++17 mandatory
copy elision, like variable constructors and return value constructors.
Extend r328248 to support those.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44763
llvm-svn: 328255
In C++17 copy elision is mandatory for variable and return value constructors
(as long as it doesn't involve type conversion) which results in AST that does
not contain elidable constructors in their usual places. In order to provide
construction contexts in this scenario we need to cover more AST patterns.
This patch makes the CFG prepared for these scenarios by:
- Fork VariableConstructionContext and ReturnedValueConstructionContext into
two different sub-classes (each) one of which indicates the C++17 case and
contains a reference to an extra CXXBindTemporaryExpr.
- Allow CFGCXXRecordTypedCall element to accept VariableConstructionContext and
ReturnedValueConstructionContext as its context.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44597
llvm-svn: 328248
If a memory region (or an SVal that represents a pointer to that memory region)
is a (direct or indirect, not necessarily proper) sub-region of a SymbolicRegion
then it is said to have a symbolic base.
For now SVal::symbol_iterator explores the symbol within a symbolic region
only when the SVal represents a pointer to the symbolic region itself,
not to any of its sub-regions.
This behavior is not indended by any user of symbol_iterator; all users who
cared about such behavior were expecting the iterator to descend into the
symbolic base of an arbitrary region, find the parent symbol of the symbolic
base region, and iterate over that symbol. Lack of such behavior resulted in
bugs demonstarted by the test cases.
Hence the decision to change the API to behave more intuitively.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44347
llvm-svn: 328247
This fixes host-side LTO during CUDA compilation. Before, LTO
pipeline construction was clashing with CUDA pipeline construction.
At the moment there's no point doing LTO on device side as each
device-side TU is a complete program. We will need to figure out
compilation pipeline construction for the device-side LTO when we
have working support for multi-TU device-side CUDA compilation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44691
llvm-svn: 328161
Summary:
Libc++'s default allocator uses `__builtin_operator_new` and `__builtin_operator_delete` in order to allow the calls to new/delete to be ellided. However, libc++ now needs to support over-aligned types in the default allocator. In order to support this without disabling the existing optimization Clang needs to support calling the aligned new overloads from the builtins.
See llvm.org/PR22634 for more information about the libc++ bug.
This patch changes `__builtin_operator_new`/`__builtin_operator_delete` to call any usual `operator new`/`operator delete` function. It does this by performing overload resolution with the arguments passed to the builtin to determine which allocation function to call. If the selected function is not a usual allocation function a diagnostic is issued.
One open issue is if the `align_val_t` overloads should be considered "usual" when `LangOpts::AlignedAllocation` is disabled.
In order to allow libc++ to detect this new behavior the value for `__has_builtin(__builtin_operator_new)` has been updated to `201802`.
Reviewers: rsmith, majnemer, aaron.ballman, erik.pilkington, bogner, ahatanak
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43047
llvm-svn: 328134
When skipping building the module for a private framework module,
LangOpts.CurrentModule isn't enough for implict modules builds; for
instance, in case a private module is built while building a public one,
LangOpts.CurrentModule doesn't reflect the -fmodule-name being passed
down, but instead the module name which triggered the build.
Store the actual -fmodule-name in LangOpts.ModuleName and actually
check a name was provided during compiler invocation in order to
skip building the private module.
rdar://problem/38434694
llvm-svn: 328053
If the generic codegen is enabled and private copy of the original
variable escapes the declaration context, this private copy should be
globalized just like it was the original variable.
llvm-svn: 327985
This allows users to turn off warnings about this pragma specifically,
while still receiving warnings about other ignored pragmas.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44630
llvm-svn: 327959
source expressions when iterating over a PseudoObjectExpr's semantic
subexpression list.
Previously the loop in emitPseudoObjectExpr would emit the IR for each
OpaqueValueExpr that was in a PseudoObjectExpr's semantic-form
expression list and use the result when the OpaqueValueExpr later
appeared in other expressions. This caused an assertion failure when
AggExprEmitter tried to copy the result of an OpaqueValueExpr and the
copied type didn't have trivial copy/move constructors or assignment
operators.
This patch adds flag IsUnique to OpaqueValueExpr which indicates it is a
unique reference to its source expression (it is not used in multiple
places). The loop in emitPseudoObjectExpr ignores OpaqueValueExprs that
are unique and CodeGen visitors simply traverse the source expressions
of such OpaqueValueExprs.
rdar://problem/34363596
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39562
llvm-svn: 327939
This patch uses the infrastructure added in r326307 for enabling
non-trivial fields to be declared in C structs to allow __weak fields in
C structs in ARC.
This recommits r327206, which was reverted because it caused
module-enabled builders to fail. I discovered that the
CXXRecordDecl::CanPassInRegisters flag wasn't being set correctly in
some cases after I moved it to RecordDecl.
Thanks to Eric Liu for helping me investigate the bug.
rdar://problem/33599681
https://reviews.llvm.org/D44095
llvm-svn: 327870
For generating NEON intrinsics, this determines the NEON data type, and whether
it should be a half type or an i16 type. I.e., we always pass a half type for
AArch64, this hasn't changed, but now also for ARM but only when FullFP16 is
enabled, and i16 otherwise.
This is intended to be non-functional change, but together with the backend
work in D44538 which adds support for f16 vectors, this enables adding the
AArch32 FP16 (vector) intrinsics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44561
llvm-svn: 327836
The patch adds nocf_check target independent attribute for disabling checks that were enabled by cf-protection flag.
The attribute can be appertained to functions and function pointers.
Attribute name follows GCC's similar attribute name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41880
llvm-svn: 327768
More generally, this permits a template to be specialized in any scope in which
it could be defined, so this also supersedes DR44 and DR374 (the latter of
which we previously only implemented in C++11 mode onwards due to unclarity as
to whether it was a DR).
llvm-svn: 327705
Use an enum parameter instead of a bool for more control on how the copy elision
functions work. Extract the move initialization code from the move or copy
initialization block.
Patch by: Arthur O'Dwyer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43898
llvm-svn: 327598
Summary:
Let's suppose the `-Weverything` is passed.
Given code like
```
void F() {}
;
```
If the code is compiled with `-std=c++03`, it would diagnose that extra sema:
```
<source>:2:1: warning: extra ';' outside of a function is a C++11 extension [-Wc++11-extra-semi]
;
^~
```
If the code is compiled with `-std=c++11`, it also would diagnose that extra sema:
```
<source>:2:1: warning: extra ';' outside of a function is incompatible with C++98 [-Wc++98-compat-pedantic]
;
^~
```
But, let's suppose the C++11 or higher is used, and the used does not care
about `-Wc++98-compat-pedantic`, so he disables that diagnostic.
And that silences the complaint about extra `;` too.
And there is no way to re-enable that particular diagnostic, passing `-Wextra-semi` does nothing...
Now, there is also a related `no newline at end of file` diagnostic, which is also emitted by `-Wc++98-compat-pedantic`
```
<source>:2:2: warning: C++98 requires newline at end of file [-Wc++98-compat-pedantic]
;
^
```
But unlike the previous case, if `-Wno-c++98-compat-pedantic` is passed, that diagnostic stays displayed:
```
<source>:2:2: warning: no newline at end of file [-Wnewline-eof]
;
^
```
This diff refactors the code so `-Wc++98-compat-extra-semi` can be re-enabled, after the `-Wc++98-compat-pedantic` was disabled.
This seems ugly, but there does not seem to be any saner way.
Testing: `$ ninja check-clang`
Reviewers: rsmith, rtrieu, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: jordan_rose, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43162
llvm-svn: 327558
Summary: This patch adds an additional flag to the OpenMP device offloading toolchain to link in the runtime library bitcode.
Reviewers: Hahnfeld, ABataev, carlo.bertolli, caomhin, grokos, hfinkel
Reviewed By: ABataev, grokos
Subscribers: jholewinski, guansong, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43197
llvm-svn: 327460
Summary: This patch adds an additional flag to the OpenMP device offloading toolchain to link in the runtime library bitcode.
Reviewers: Hahnfeld, ABataev, carlo.bertolli, caomhin, grokos, hfinkel
Reviewed By: ABataev, grokos
Subscribers: jholewinski, guansong, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43197
llvm-svn: 327438
Call expressions that return objects by an lvalue reference or an rvalue
reference have a value type in the AST but wear an auxiliary flag of being an
lvalue or an xvalue respectively.
Use the helper method for obtaining the actual return type of the function.
Fixes a crash.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44273
llvm-svn: 327352
This patch adds a new CFGStmt sub-class, CFGCXXRecordTypedCall, which replaces
the regular CFGStmt for the respective CallExpr whenever the CFG has additional
information to provide regarding the lifetime of the returned value.
This additional call site information is represented by a ConstructionContext
(which was previously used for CFGConstructor elements) that provides references
to CXXBindTemporaryExpr and MaterializeTemporaryExpr that surround the call.
This corresponds to the common C++ calling convention solution of providing
the target address for constructing the return value as an auxiliary implicit
argument during function call.
One of the use cases for such extra context at the call site would be to perform
any sort of inter-procedural analysis over the CFG that involves functions
returning objects by value. In this case the elidable constructor at the return
site would construct the object explained by the context at the call site, and
its lifetime would also be managed by the caller, not the callee.
The extra context would also be useful for properly handling the return-value
temporary at the call site, even if the callee is not being analyzed
inter-procedurally.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44120
llvm-svn: 327343
This relands r326965.
There was a null dereference in typo correction that was triggered in
Sema/diagnose_if.c. We are not always in a function scope when doing
typo correction. The fix is to add a null check.
LLVM's optimizer made it hard to find this bug. I wrote it up in a
not-very-well-editted blog post here:
http://qinsb.blogspot.com/2018/03/ub-will-delete-your-null-checks.html
llvm-svn: 327334
This patch adds two new CFG elements CFGScopeBegin and CFGScopeEnd that indicate
when a local scope begins and ends respectively. We use first VarDecl declared
in a scope to uniquely identify it and add CFGScopeBegin and CFGScopeEnd elements
into corresponding basic blocks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D16403
llvm-svn: 327258
This patch uses the infrastructure added in r326307 for enabling
non-trivial fields to be declared in C structs to allow __weak fields in
C structs in ARC.
rdar://problem/33599681
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44095
llvm-svn: 327206
This reverts r326965. It seems to have caused repeating test failures in
clang/test/Sema/diagnose_if.c on some buildbots.
I cannot reproduce the problem, and it's not immediately obvious what
the problem is, so let's revert to green.
llvm-svn: 326974
template parameter that is an expanded parameter pack, only substitute into the
current slice, not the entire pack.
This reduces the checking of N template template arguments for an expanded
parameter pack containing N parameters from quadratic time to linear time in
the length of the pack. This is important because one (and possibly the only?)
general technique for splitting a template parameter pack in linear time
depends on doing this.
llvm-svn: 326973
Summary:
Before this patch, Sema pre-allocated a FunctionScopeInfo and kept it in
the first, always present element of the FunctionScopes stack. This
meant that Sema::getCurFunction would return a pointer to this
pre-allocated object when parsing code outside a function body. This is
pretty much always a bug, so this patch moves the pre-allocated object
into a separate unique_ptr. This should make bugs like PR36536 a lot
more obvious.
As you can see from this patch, there were a number of places that
unconditionally assumed they were always called inside a function.
However, there are also many places that null checked the result of
getCurFunction(), so I think this is a reasonable direction.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44039
llvm-svn: 326965
Summary:
This provides no measurable build speedup, but it reinstates an
optimization from r112038 that was lost in r179618. It requires moving
CapturedScopeInfo::Capture out to clang::sema, which might be too
general since we have plenty of other Capture records in BlockDecl and
other AST nodes.
Reviewers: rjmccall
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44221
llvm-svn: 326957
Currently hasArgument works with both ObjC messages and function calls,
but not hasAnyArgument.
This patch fixes that discrepancy, as it's often more convenient to use
hasAnyArgument.
On a more general note, it would be great to have a common superclass
for objc-call and function call, and a matcher matching that, but that's
probably a job for another commit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44169
llvm-svn: 326865
Provide two new CMake cache variables -- CLANG_DEFAULT_STD_C
and CLANG_DEFAULT_STD_CXX -- that can be used to override the default
C/ObjC and C++/ObjC++ standards appropriately. They can be set to one of
the identifiers from LangStandards.def, or left unset (the default) to
respect the current platform default.
This option is mostly intended for compiler vendors that may wish
to adjust the defaults their compilers are using. For example, Gentoo
planned to use it to set clang and gcc to matching standards, so that
we could maintain as much compatibility between different compilers
as possible.
The code relies on explicit identifiers rather than the string aliases
for simplicity. This saves us from the necessity of parsing aliases at
build-time or adding additional processing at runtime. For the latter
case, it also adds trivial value check -- if incorrect value is passed,
the code simply fails to compile through referencing an undefined
constant.
If the variable is used to redefine the default standard, the explicit
value overrides the special case for PS4. It is done this way mostly
following other kinds of variables where 'platform defaults' are
redefined.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34365
llvm-svn: 326836
Patch contributed by @EricMarti!
Summary: I noticed that the example for SpaceAfterCStyleCast does not match its description. I fixed the example after testing it out.
Reviewers: rsmith, krasimir
Reviewed By: krasimir
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43731
llvm-svn: 326781
Summary:
There is a problem with analyzer that a wrong value is given when modeling the increment operator of the operand with type bool. After `rL307604` is applied, a unsigned overflow may occur.
Example:
```
void func() {
bool b = true;
// unsigned overflow occur, 2 -> 0 U1b
b++;
}
```
The use of an operand of type bool with the ++ operators is deprecated but valid untill C++17. And if the operand of the increment operator is of type bool, it is set to true.
This patch includes two parts:
- If the operand of the increment operator is of type bool or type _Bool, set to true.
- Modify `BasicValueFactory::getTruthValue()`, use `getIntWidth()` instead `getTypeSize()` and use `unsigned` instead `signed`.
Reviewers: alexshap, NoQ, dcoughlin, george.karpenkov
Reviewed By: NoQ
Subscribers: xazax.hun, szepet, a.sidorin, cfe-commits, MTC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43741
llvm-svn: 326776
rdar://37312818
NB: The checker does not care about the ordering of callbacks, see the
relevant FIXME in tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44059
llvm-svn: 326746
Previously, we passed "#" to --autocomplete to indicate to enable cc1
flags. For example, when -cc1 or -Xclang was passed to bash, bash
executed `clang --autocomplete=#-<flag they want to complete>`.
However, this was not a good implementation because it depends -Xclang
and -cc1 parsing to shell. So I changed this to pass all flags shell
has, so that Clang can handle them internally.
I had to change many testcases because API spec changed quite a lot.
Reviewers: teemperor, v.g.vassilev
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39342
llvm-svn: 326684
I discovered that '-i' is a command line option for the driver,
however it actually does not do anything and is not supported by any
other compiler. In fact, it is completely undocumented for Clang.
I found a couple of instances of people confusing it with one of
the variety of other command line options that control the driver.
Because of this, we should delete this option so that it is clear
that it isn't valid.
HOWEVER, I found that GCC DOES support -imultilib, which the -i
was hiding our lack of support for. We currently only use imultilib
for the purpose of forwarding to gfortran (in a specific test written
by chandlerc for this purpose).
imultilib is a rarely used (if ever?) feature that I could find no
references to on the internet, and in fact, my company's massive test
suite has zero references to it ever being used.
SO, this patch removes the -i option so that we will now give an error
on its usage (so that it won't be confused with -I), and replaces it with
-imultilib, which is now specified as a gfortran_group option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44032
llvm-svn: 326623
We don't have special checks for BI_va_start in
Sema::CheckBuiltinFunctionCall, so setting the 't' flag for va_start in
Builtins.def disables semantic checking for it. That's not desired, and
IRGen crashes when it tries to generate a call to va_start that doesn't
have at least one argument.
Follow-up to r322573
Fixes PR36565
llvm-svn: 326622
There's not a particularly good way to test this with the AST matchers unit tests because the only way to get an invalid type (that I can devise) involves creating parse errors, which the test harness always treats as a failure. Instead, a clang-tidy test case will be added in a follow-up commit based on the original bug report.
llvm-svn: 326604
The patch fixes a number of bugs related to parameter indexing in
attributes:
* Parameter indices in some attributes (argument_with_type_tag,
pointer_with_type_tag, nonnull, ownership_takes, ownership_holds,
and ownership_returns) are specified in source as one-origin
including any C++ implicit this parameter, were stored as
zero-origin excluding any this parameter, and were erroneously
printing (-ast-print) and confusingly dumping (-ast-dump) as the
stored values.
* For alloc_size, the C++ implicit this parameter was not subtracted
correctly in Sema, leading to assert failures or to silent failures
of __builtin_object_size to compute a value.
* For argument_with_type_tag, pointer_with_type_tag, and
ownership_returns, the C++ implicit this parameter was not added
back to parameter indices in some diagnostics.
This patch fixes the above bugs and aims to prevent similar bugs in
the future by introducing careful mechanisms for handling parameter
indices in attributes. ParamIdx stores a parameter index and is
designed to hide the stored encoding while providing accessors that
require each use (such as printing) to make explicit the encoding that
is needed. Attribute declarations declare parameter index arguments
as [Variadic]ParamIdxArgument, which are exposed as ParamIdx[*]. This
patch rewrites all attribute arguments that are processed by
checkFunctionOrMethodParameterIndex in SemaDeclAttr.cpp to be declared
as [Variadic]ParamIdxArgument. The only exception is xray_log_args's
argument, which is encoded as a count not an index.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43248
llvm-svn: 326602
In CUDA mode all local variables are actually thread
local|threadprivate, not private, and, thus, they cannot be shared
between threads|lanes.
llvm-svn: 326590
This makes it easier to debug crashes and hangs in block functions since
users can easily find out where the block is called from. The option
doesn't disable tail-calls from non-escaping blocks since non-escaping
blocks are not as hard to debug as escaping blocks.
rdar://problem/35758207
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43841
llvm-svn: 326530
When parsing comments, for example, for -Wdocumentation, slightly different
behaviour occurs when -fparse-all-comments is specified. However, these
differences are subtle:
1. All comments are saved during parsing, regardless of whether they are doc
comments or not.
2. "Maybe-doc" comments, like <, !, etc, are saved as such, instead of marking
them as ordinary comments. The maybe-doc type of comment is never saved
otherwise. (Warning on these is the impetus of -Wdocumentation.)
3. All comments are treated as doc comments in ASTContext, even if they are ordinary.
This change moves the logic for checking CommentOptions.ParseAllComments closer
to where it has an effect. The overall logic is unchanged, but checks of the
ParseAllComments flag are now done where the effect will be clearer.
Subscribers: cfe-commits
llvm-svn: 326512
Original change:
[NFC] Move CommentOpts checks to the call sites that depend on it.
When parsing comments, for example, for -Wdocumentation, slightly different
behaviour occurs when -fparse-all-comments is specified. However, these
differences are subtle:
1. All comments are saved during parsing, regardless of whether they are doc comments or not.
2. "Maybe-doc" comments, like //<, //!, etc, are saved as such, instead of marking them as ordinary comments. The maybe-doc type of comment is never saved otherwise. (Warning on these is the impetus of -Wdocumentation.)
3. All comments are treated as doc comments in ASTContext, even if they are ordinary.
This change moves the logic for checking CommentOptions.ParseAllComments closer
to where it has an effect. The overall logic is unchanged, but checks of the
ParseAllComments flag are now done where the effect will be clearer.
llvm-svn: 326508
When parsing comments, for example, for -Wdocumentation, slightly different
behaviour occurs when -fparse-all-comments is specified. However, these
differences are subtle:
1. All comments are saved during parsing, regardless of whether they are doc
comments or not.
2. "Maybe-doc" comments, like //<, //!, etc, are saved as such, instead of
marking them as ordinary comments. The maybe-doc type of comment is never
saved otherwise. (Warning on these is the impetus of -Wdocumentation.)
3. All comments are treated as doc comments in ASTContext, even if they are
ordinary.
This change moves the logic for checking CommentOptions.ParseAllComments closer
to where it has an effect. The overall logic is unchanged, but checks of the
ParseAllComments flag are now done where the effect will be clearer.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43663
llvm-svn: 326501
Since LLVM r326341, default EmulatedTLS mode is decided in backend
according to target triple. Any front-end should pass -f[no]-emulated-tls
to backend and set up ExplicitEmulatedTLS only when the flags are used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43965
llvm-svn: 326499
Make types with sizes that aren't a power of two an error (that can
be disabled) in structs with ms_struct layout, except on mingw where
the situation is quite likely to occur and GCC handles it silently.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43908
llvm-svn: 326476
This is needed for building with the GNU driver (`clang++`) when
targeting Windows and using msvcprt. This flag is the equivalent of
`/GR-`.
llvm-svn: 326469
Originally submitted as r326323 and r326324.
Reverted in r326432.
Reverting the commit was a mistake.
The breakage was due to invalid build files in our internal buildsystem,
CMakeLists did not have any cyclic dependencies.
llvm-svn: 326439
Also revert "[analyzer] Fix a compiler warning"
This reverts commits r326323 and r326324.
Reason: the commits introduced a cyclic dependency in the build graph.
This happens to work with cmake, but breaks out internal integrate.
llvm-svn: 326432
Summary:
When disabled, this option allows removing the space before colon,
making it act more like the semi-colon. When enabled (default), the
current behavior is not affected.
This mostly affects C++11 loop, initializer list, inheritance list and
container literals:
class Foo: Bar {}
Foo::Foo(): a(a) {}
for (auto i: myList) {}
f({a: 1, b: 2, c: 3});
Reviewers: krasimir, djasper
Reviewed By: djasper
Subscribers: xvallspl, teemperor, karies, cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32525
llvm-svn: 326426
Current implementation of `FunctionDecl::isDefined` does not take into
account redeclarations that do not have bodies, but the bodies can be
instantiated from corresponding templated definition. This behavior does
not allow to detect function redefinition in the cases where friend
functions is defined in class templates. For instance, the code:
```
template<typename T> struct X { friend void f() {} };
X<int> xi;
void f() {}
```
compiles successfully but must fail due to redefinition of `f`. The
declaration of the friend `f` is created when the containing template
`X` is instantiated, but it does not have a body as per 14.5.4p4
because `f` is not odr-used.
With this change the function `Sema::CheckForFunctionRedefinition`
considers functions with uninstantiated bodies as definitions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30170
llvm-svn: 326419
So I wrote a clang-tidy check to lint out redundant `isa`, `cast`, and
`dyn_cast`s for fun. This is a portion of what it found for clang; I
plan to do similar cleanups in LLVM and other subprojects when I find
time.
Because of the volume of changes, I explicitly avoided making any change
that wasn't highly local and obviously correct to me (e.g. we still have
a number of foo(cast<Bar>(baz)) that I didn't touch, since overloading
is a thing and the cast<Bar> did actually change the type -- just up the
class hierarchy).
I also tried to leave the types we were cast<>ing to somewhere nearby,
in cases where it wasn't locally obvious what we were dealing with
before.
llvm-svn: 326416
This is a security check that warns when both PROT_WRITE and PROT_EXEC are
set during mmap(). If mmap()ed memory is both writable and executable, it makes
it easier for the attacker to execute arbitrary code when contents of this
memory are compromised. Some applications require such mmap()s though, such as
different sorts of JIT.
Re-applied after a revert in r324167.
Temporarily stays in the alpha package because it needs a better way of
determining macro values that are not immediately available in the AST.
Patch by David Carlier!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42645
llvm-svn: 326405
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43852
This patch extends the SPMD implementation to all target constructs and guards this implementation under a new flag.
llvm-svn: 326368
/X makes cl stop looking in %INCLUDE%. Implement this for clang-cl.
As it turns out, the return in ToolChains/MSVC.cpp, AddClangSystemIncludeArgs()
for -nostdlibinc is already in the right place (but -nostdlibinc isn't exposed
by clang-cl), so just alias /X to that.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D43888
llvm-svn: 326357
Binaries for multiple architectures are combined by fatbinary,
so the current code was effectively not needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43461
llvm-svn: 326342
The aim of this patch is to be minimal to enable incremental development of
the feature on the top of the tree. This patch should be an NFC when the
feature is turned off. It is turned off by default and still considered as
experimental.
Technical details are available in the EuroLLVM Talk:
http://llvm.org/devmtg/2017-03//2017/02/20/accepted-sessions.html#7
Note that the initial prototype was done by A. Sidorin et al.: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2015-October/045730.html
Contributions to the measurements and the new version of the code: Peter Szecsi, Zoltan Gera, Daniel Krupp, Kareem Khazem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30691
llvm-svn: 326323
ARC mode.
Declaring __strong pointer fields in structs was not allowed in
Objective-C ARC until now because that would make the struct non-trivial
to default-initialize, copy/move, and destroy, which is not something C
was designed to do. This patch lifts that restriction.
Special functions for non-trivial C structs are synthesized that are
needed to default-initialize, copy/move, and destroy the structs and
manage the ownership of the objects the __strong pointer fields point
to. Non-trivial structs passed to functions are destructed in the callee
function.
rdar://problem/33599681
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41228
llvm-svn: 326307
Specifically, we would not properly parse these types within template arguments
(for non-type template parameters), and in tentative parses. Fixing both of
these essentially requires that we parse deduced template specialization types
as types in all contexts, even in template argument lists -- in particular,
tentative parsing may look ahead and annotate a deduced template specialization
type before we figure out that we're actually supposed to treat the tokens as a
template-name. We deal with this by simply permitting deduced template
specialization types when parsing template arguments, and converting them to
template template arguments.
llvm-svn: 326299
Sometimes it is not known at compile time which temporary objects will be
constructed, eg. 'x ? A() : B()' or 'C() || D()'. In this case we track which
temporary was constructed to know how to properly call the destructor.
Once the construction context for temporaries was introduced, we moved the
tracking code to the code that investigates the construction context.
Bring back the old mechanism because construction contexts are not always
available yet - eg. in the case where a temporary is constructed without a
constructor expression, eg. returned from a function by value. The mechanism
should still go away eventually.
Additionally, fix a bug in the temporary cleanup code for the case when
construction contexts are not available, which could lead to temporaries
staying in the program state and increasing memory consumption.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43666
llvm-svn: 326246
Automatic destructors are missing in the CFG in situations like
const int &x = C().x;
For now it's better to disable construction inlining, because inlining
constructors while doing nothing on destructors is very bad.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43689
llvm-svn: 326240
ConstructionContext is moved into a separate translation unit and is separated
into multiple classes. The "old" "raw" ConstructionContext is renamed into
ConstructionContextLayer - which corresponds to the idea of building the context
gradually layer-by-layer, but it isn't easy to use in the clients. Once
CXXConstructExpr is reached, layers that we've gathered so far are transformed
into the actual, "new-style" "flat" ConstructionContext, which is put into the
CFGConstructor element and has no layers whatsoever (until it actually needs
them, eg. aggregate initialization). The new-style ConstructionContext is
instead presented as a variety of sub-classes that enumerate different ways of
constructing an object in C++. There are 5 of these supported for now,
which is around a half of what needs to be supported.
The layer-by-layer buildup process is still a little bit weird, but it hides
all the weirdness in one place, that sounds like a good thing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43533
llvm-svn: 326238
This patch uses the reference to MaterializeTemporaryExpr stored in the
construction context since r326014 in order to model that expression correctly.
When modeling MaterializeTemporaryExpr, instead of copying the raw memory
contents from the sub-expression's rvalue to a completely new temporary region,
that we conjure up for the lack of better options, we now have the better
option to recall the region into which the object was originally constructed
and declare that region to be the value of the expression, which is semantically
correct.
This only works when the construction context is available, which is worked on
independently.
The temporary region's liveness (in the sense of removeDeadBindings) is extended
until the MaterializeTemporaryExpr is resolved, in order to keep the store
bindings around, because it wouldn't be referenced from anywhere else in the
program state.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43497
llvm-svn: 326236
If several member expressions are mapped and they reference the same
address as a base, but access different members, this must be allowed.
llvm-svn: 326212
Summary:
Noticed during review of D41102.
I'm not sure whether there are any principal reasons why it returns raw owning pointer,
or it is just a old code that was not updated post-C++11.
I'm not too sure what testing i should do, because `check-all` is not error clean here for some reason,
but it does not //appear// asif those failures are related to these changes.
This is clang part.
Clang-tools-extra part is D43780.
Reviewers: klimek, bkramer, alexfh, pcc
Reviewed By: alexfh
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43779
llvm-svn: 326201
ObjC defines `@autoreleasepool` and `@synchronized` control blocks. These
used to be formatted according to the `AfterObjCDeclaration` brace-
wrapping flag, which is not very consistent.
This patch changes the behavior to use the `AfterControlStatement` flag
instead. This should not affect the behavior unless a custom brace
wrapping mode is used.
Reviewers: krasimir, djasper, klimek, benhamilton
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43232
llvm-svn: 326192
Update min deployment target in some tests so that they don't try
to link against libarclite and don't fail when it's not available.
rdar://problem/29253617
Reviewers: vsk, kubamracek
Reviewed By: vsk
Subscribers: jkorous-apple, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43787
llvm-svn: 326145
See D42775 for discussion. Turns out, just exploring nodes which
weren't explored first is not quite enough, as e.g. the first quick
traversal resulting in a report can mark everything as "visited", and
then subsequent traversals of the same region will get all the pitfalls
of DFS.
Priority queue-based approach in comparison shows much greater
increase in coverage and even performance, without sacrificing memory.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43354
llvm-svn: 326136
In DWARF v5 the Line Number Program Header is extensible, allowing values with
new content types. This vendor extension to DWARF v5 allows source text to be
embedded directly in the line tables of the debug line section.
Add new flag (-g[no-]embed-source) to Driver and CC1 which indicates
that source should be passed through to LLVM during CodeGen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42766
llvm-svn: 326102
The Clang<> spelling helper generates a spelling for C++11, GNU, and C2x attribute spellings. Previously, users had to manually opt in to the C2x spelling while we cautiously added attributes to that spelling. Now that majority of attributes are exposed in C2x, we can switch the default.
llvm-svn: 326055
The TypeTagForDatatype attribute had custom parsing rules that previously prevented it from being supported with square bracket notation. The ArgumentWithTypeTag attribute previously had unnecessary custom parsing that could be handled declaratively.
llvm-svn: 326052
Summary:
If the flag -fforce-enable-int128 is passed, it will enable support for __int128_t and __uint128_t types.
This flag can then be used to build compiler-rt for RISCV32.
Reviewers: asb, kito-cheng, apazos, efriedma
Reviewed By: asb, efriedma
Subscribers: shiva0217, efriedma, jfb, dschuff, sdardis, sbc100, jgravelle-google, aheejin, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, jordy.potman.lists, sabuasal, niosHD, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43105
llvm-svn: 326045
This attribute has custom parsing rules that previously prevented it from being supported with square bracket notation. Rework the clang attribute argument parsing to be more easily extended for other custom-parsed attributes.
llvm-svn: 326036
When constructing a temporary that is going to be lifetime-extended through a
MaterializeTemporaryExpr later, CFG elements for the respective constructor
can now be queried to obtain the reference to that MaterializeTemporaryExpr
and therefore gain information about lifetime extension.
This may produce multi-layered construction contexts when information about
both temporary destruction and lifetime extension is available.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43477
llvm-svn: 326014
ConstructionContexts introduced in D42672 are an additional piece of information
included with CFGConstructor elements that help the client of the CFG (such as
the Static Analyzer) understand where the newly constructed object is stored.
The patch refactors the ConstructionContext class to prepare for including
multi-layered contexts that are being constructed gradually, layer-by-layer,
as the AST is traversed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43428
llvm-svn: 325966
* Add HelpText for -fopenmp so that it appears in clang --help.
* Hide -fno-openmp-simd, only list the positive option.
* Hide -fopenmp-relocatable-target and -fopenmp-use-tls from
clang --help and from ClangCommandLineReference.
* Improve MetaVarName for -Xopenmp-target=<...>.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42841
llvm-svn: 325806
Summary:
OpenCL 2.0 specification defines '-cl-uniform-work-group-size' option,
which requires that the global work-size be a multiple of the work-group
size specified to clEnqueueNDRangeKernel and allows optimizations that
are made possible by this restriction.
The patch introduces the support of this option.
To keep information about whether an OpenCL kernel has uniform work
group size or not, clang generates 'uniform-work-group-size' function
attribute for every kernel:
- "uniform-work-group-size"="true" for OpenCL 1.2 and lower,
- "uniform-work-group-size"="true" for OpenCL 2.0 and higher if
'-cl-uniform-work-group-size' option was specified,
- "uniform-work-group-size"="false" for OpenCL 2.0 and higher if no
'-cl-uniform-work-group-size' options was specified.
If the function is not an OpenCL kernel, 'uniform-work-group-size'
attribute isn't generated.
Patch by: krisb
Reviewers: yaxunl, Anastasia, b-sumner
Reviewed By: yaxunl, Anastasia
Subscribers: nhaehnle, yaxunl, Anastasia, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43570
llvm-svn: 325771
Build the index off of DeclarationName instead of Decl pointers. When finding
an UnresolvedLookupExprClass, hash it as if it were a DeclRefExpr. This will
allow methods to be hashed.
llvm-svn: 325741
Summary:
For clients which don't have a filesystem, calling getStyle() doesn't
make much sense (there's no .clang-format files to search for).
In this diff, I hoist out the language-guessing logic from getStyle()
and move it into a new API guessLanguage().
I also added support for guessing the language of files which have no
extension (they could be C++ or ObjC).
Test Plan: New tests added. Ran tests with:
% make -j12 FormatTests && ./tools/clang/unittests/Format/FormatTests
Reviewers: jolesiak, krasimir
Reviewed By: jolesiak, krasimir
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits, sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43522
llvm-svn: 325691
If the value returned by `malloc`, `calloc` or `realloc` is not checked
for null pointer, this change replaces them for `safe_malloc`,
`safe_calloc` or `safe_realloc`, which are defined in the namespace `llvm`.
These function report fatal error on out of memory.
In the plain C files, assertion statements are added to ensure that memory
is successfully allocated.
The aim of this change is to get better diagnostics of OOM on Windows.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43017
llvm-svn: 325661
This patch provides mitigation for CVE-2017-5715, Spectre variant two,
which affects the P5600 and P6600. It provides the option
-mindirect-jump=hazard, which instructs the LLVM backend to replace
indirect branches with their hazard barrier variants.
This option is accepted when targeting MIPS revision two or later.
The migitation strategy suggested by MIPS for these processors is to
use two hazard barrier instructions. 'jalr.hb' and 'jr.hb' are hazard
barrier variants of the 'jalr' and 'jr' instructions respectively.
These instructions impede the execution of instruction stream until
architecturally defined hazards (changes to the instruction stream,
privileged registers which may affect execution) are cleared. These
instructions in MIPS' designs are not speculated past.
These instructions are used with the option -mindirect-jump=hazard
when branching indirectly and for indirect function calls.
These instructions are defined by the MIPS32R2 ISA, so this mitigation
method is not compatible with processors which implement an earlier
revision of the MIPS ISA.
Implementation note: I've opted to provide this as an
-mindirect-jump={hazard,...} style option in case alternative
mitigation methods are required for other implementations of the MIPS
ISA in future, e.g. retpoline style solutions.
Reviewers: atanasyan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43487
llvm-svn: 325651
CodeCompletionContext had declarations of field and enum inside, both named 'Kind'.
It caused gcc 4.8 to give an incorrent warning when refering to enum as
`enum CodeCompletionContext::Kind`.
Avoid that warning by renaming the private field to CCKind.
llvm-svn: 325496
Summary: Will be used in clangd. See D43377.
Reviewers: sammccall
Reviewed By: sammccall
Subscribers: ioeric, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43379
llvm-svn: 325490
Summary:
Make clang accept `-msahf` (and `-mno-sahf`) flags to activate the
`+sahf` feature for the backend, for bug 36028 (Incorrect use of
pushf/popf enables/disables interrupts on amd64 kernels). This was
originally submitted in bug 36037 by Jonathan Looney
<jonlooney@gmail.com>.
As described there, GCC also uses `-msahf` for this feature, and the
backend already recognizes the `+sahf` feature. All that is needed is to
teach clang to pass this on to the backend.
The mapping of feature support onto CPUs may not be complete; rather, it
was chosen to match LLVM's idea of which CPUs support this feature (see
lib/Target/X86/X86.td).
I also updated the affected test case (CodeGen/attr-target-x86.c) to
match the emitted output.
Reviewers: craig.topper, coby, efriedma, rsmith
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Subscribers: emaste, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43394
llvm-svn: 325446
Summary:
ThinLTO compilation may decide not to split module and keep at as regular LTO.
In this can this module already processed during indexing and already a part of
merged object file. So here we can just skip it.
Reviewers: pcc, tejohnson
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42680
llvm-svn: 325410
There were a few issues previously with the target
attribute diagnostics implementation that lead to the
attribute being added to the AST despite having an error
in it.
This patch changes that, and adds a test to ensure it
does not get added to the AST.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43359
llvm-svn: 325364
Summary:
Many methods in Sema take a `bool Diagnose` parameter. Examples of such
methods include `Sema::FindDeallocationFunction` and
`Sema::SpecialMemberIsTrivial`. Calling these methods with
`Diagnose = false` allows callers to, for instance, check for the
existence of a deallocation function, without that check resulting in
error diagnostics being emitted if no matching deallocation function exists.
Add a similar `bool Diagnose` to the `Sema::FindAllocationFunctions`
method, so that checks for the existence of allocation functions can be
made without triggering error diagnostics.
This allows `SemaCoroutine.cpp`, in its implementation of the
Coroutines TS, to check for the existence of a particular `operator new`
overload, but then without error fall back to a default `operator new`
if no matching overload exists.
Test Plan: `check-clang`
Reviewers: rsmith, GorNishanov, eric_niebler
Reviewed By: GorNishanov
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42605
llvm-svn: 325288
Inline them if possible - a separate flag is added to control this.
The whole thing is under the cfg-temporary-dtors flag, off by default so far.
Temporary destructors are called at the end of full-expression. If the
temporary is lifetime-extended, automatic destructors kick in instead,
which are not addressed in this patch, and normally already work well
modulo the overally broken support for lifetime extension.
The patch operates by attaching the this-region to the CXXBindTemporaryExpr in
the program state, and then recalling it during destruction that was triggered
by that CXXBindTemporaryExpr. It has become possible because
CXXBindTemporaryExpr is part of the construction context since r325210.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43104
llvm-svn: 325282
Don't look at the parent statement to figure out if the cxx-allocator-inlining
flag should kick in and prevent us from inlining the constructor within
a new-expression. We now have construction contexts for that purpose.
llvm-svn: 325278
EvalCallOptions were introduced in r324018 for allowing various parts of
ExprEngine to notify the inlining mechanism, while preparing for evaluating a
function call, of possible difficulties with evaluating the call that they
foresee. Then mayInlineCall() would still be a single place for making the
decision.
Use that mechanism for destructors as well - pass the necessary flags from the
CFG-element-specific destructor handlers.
Part of this patch accidentally leaked into r324018, which led into a change in
tests; this change is reverted now, because even though the change looked
correct, the underlying behavior wasn't. Both of these commits were not intended
to introduce any function changes otherwise.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42991
llvm-svn: 325209
This only affects the cfg-temporary-dtors mode - in this mode we begin inlining
constructors that are constructing function return values. These constructors
have a correct construction context since r324952.
Because temporary destructors are not only never inlined, but also don't have
the correct target region yet, this change is not entirely safe. But this
will be fixed in the subsequent commits, while this stays off behind the
cfg-temporary-dtors flag.
Lifetime extension for return values is still not modeled correctly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42875
llvm-svn: 325202
This patch is related to https://reviews.llvm.org/rC325081
The patch improves documentation for the attribute and removes reference to GCC
documentation.
Patch By: Elizabeth Andrews (eandrews)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43321
llvm-svn: 325186
Summary:
-ast-print prints omp pragmas with a trailing space. While this
behavior is likely of little concern to most users, surely it's
unintentional, and it's annoying for some source-level work I'm
pursuing. This patch focuses on omp pragmas, but it also fixes
init_seg and loop hint pragmas because they share implementation.
The testing strategy here is to add usually just one '{{$}}' per
relevant -ast-print test file. This seems to achieve good code
coverage. However, this strategy is probably easy to forget as the
tests evolve. That's probably fine as this fix is far from critical.
The main goal of the testing is to aid the initial review.
This patch also adds a fixme for "#pragma unroll", which prints as
"#pragma unroll (enable)", which is invalid syntax.
Reviewers: ABataev
Reviewed By: ABataev
Subscribers: guansong, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43204
llvm-svn: 325145
Added support in clang for GCC function attribute 'artificial'. This attribute
is used to control stepping behavior of debugger with respect to inline
functions.
Patch By: Elizabeth Andrews (eandrews)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43259
llvm-svn: 325081
See reviews.llvm.org/M1 for evaluation, and
lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2018-January/056718.html for
discussion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42775
llvm-svn: 324956
Summary:
CXIdxEntityRefInfo contains the member `CXIdxEntityRefKind kind;` to
differentiate implicit and direct calls. However, there are more roles
defined in SymbolRole. Among them, `Read/Write` are probably the most
useful ones as they can be used to differentiate Read/Write occurrences
of a symbol for document highlight in a text document.
See `export namespace DocumentHighlightKind`
on https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42895
llvm-svn: 324914
Summary:
This fixes a flaw in our AST: PR27098
MSVC always gives plain enums the underlying type 'int'. Clang does this
as well, but we claim the enum is "fixed", as if the user actually wrote
': int'. It means we end up emitting spurious -Wsign-compare warnings on
code like this:
enum Vals { E1, E2, E3 };
bool f(unsigned v1, Vals v2) {
return v1 == v2;
}
We think 'v2' can take on negative values because we think 'Vals' is
fixed. This fixes that.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43110
llvm-svn: 324913
Summary:
Right now clang is skipping array cookie poisoning for any operator
new[] which is not part of the set of replaceable global allocation
functions.
This commit adds a flag to tell clang to poison all operator new[]
cookies.
A previous review was poisoning all array cookies unconditionally, but
there is an edge case which would stop working under ASan (a custom
operator new[] saves whatever pointer it returned, and then accesses
it).
This newer revision adds a command line argument to toggle this feature.
Original revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41301
Compiler-rt test revision with an explanation of the edge case: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41664
Reviewers: rjmccall, kcc, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43013
llvm-svn: 324884
As a first step, pass '-c/--compile-only' to ptxas so that it
doesn't complain about references to external function. This
will successfully generate object files, but they won't work
at runtime because the registration routines need to adapted.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42921
llvm-svn: 324878
This patch adds a base-class called TemplateInstantiationObserver which gets
notified whenever a template instantiation is entered or exited during
semantic analysis. This is a base class used to implement the template
profiling and debugging tool called
Templight (https://github.com/mikael-s-persson/templight).
The patch also makes a few more changes:
* ActiveTemplateInstantiation class is moved out of the Sema class (so it can be used with inclusion of Sema.h).
* CreateFrontendAction function in front-end utilities is given external linkage (not longer a hidden static function).
* TemplateInstObserverChain data member added to Sema class to hold the list of template-inst observers.
* Notifications to the template-inst observer are added at the key places where templates are instantiated.
Patch by: Abel Sinkovics!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D5767
llvm-svn: 324808
The analyzer was relying on peeking the next CFG element during analysis
whenever it was trying to figure out what object is being constructed
by a given constructor. This information is now available in the current CFG
element in all cases that were previously supported by the analyzer,
so no complicated lookahead is necessary anymore.
No functional change intended - the context in the CFG should for now be
available if and only if it was previously discoverable via CFG lookahead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42721
llvm-svn: 324800
CFG elements for constructors of fields and base classes that are being
initialized before the body of the whole-class constructor starts can now be
queried to discover that they're indeed participating in initialization of their
respective fields or bases before the whole-class constructor kicks in.
CFG construction contexts are now capable of representing CXXCtorInitializer
triggers, which aren't considered to be statements in the Clang AST.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42700
llvm-svn: 324796
The code for going up the macro arg expansion is duplicated in many
places (and we need it for the analyzer as well, so I did not want to
duplicate it two more times).
This patch is an NFC, so the semantics should remain the same.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42458
llvm-svn: 324780
LLDB creates Clang modules and had an incomplete copy of the clang
Driver code that compute the -fmodule-cache-path. This patch makes the
clang driver code accessible to LLDB.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43128
llvm-svn: 324761
diagnostic settings using _Pragma within a macro.
The AST writer had previously been assuming that all diagnostic state
transitions would occur within a FileID corresponding to a file. When a
diagnostic state change occured within a macro, it was unable to form a
location for that state change and would instead corrupt the diagnostic state
of the "root" node (and thus that of the main compilation).
Also introduce a "#pragma clang __debug diag_mapping" debugging utility
that I added to track this issue down.
llvm-svn: 324695
When rejecting a march= or target-cpu command line parameter,
the message is quite lacking. This patch adds a note that prints
all possible values for the current target, if the target supports it.
This adds support for the ARM/AArch64 targets (more to come!).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42978
llvm-svn: 324673
This patch adds a new CFGStmt sub-class, CFGConstructor, which replaces
the regular CFGStmt with CXXConstructExpr in it whenever the CFG has additional
information to provide regarding what sort of object is being constructed.
It is useful for figuring out what memory is initialized in client of the
CFG such as the Static Analyzer, which do not operate by recursive AST
traversal, but instead rely on the CFG to provide all the information when they
need it. Otherwise, the statement that triggers the construction and defines
what memory is being initialized would normally occur after the
construct-expression, and the client would need to peek to the next CFG element
or use statement parent map to understand the necessary facts about
the construct-expression.
As a proof of concept, CFGConstructors are added for new-expressions
and the respective test cases are provided to demonstrate how it works.
For now, the only additional data contained in the CFGConstructor element is
the "trigger statement", such as new-expression, which is the parent of the
constructor. It will be significantly expanded in later commits. The additional
data is organized as an auxiliary structure - the "construction context",
which is allocated separately from the CFGElement.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42672
llvm-svn: 324668
It makes it easier to discriminate between values of similar expressions
in different stack frames.
It also makes the separate backtrace section in ExplodedGraph dumps redundant.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42552
llvm-svn: 324660
Summary:
Currently, assertion-disabled Clang builds emit value names when generating LLVM IR. This is controlled by the `NDEBUG` macro, and is not easily overridable. In order to get IR output containing names from a release build of Clang, the user must manually construct the CC1 invocation w/o the `-discard-value-names` option. This is less than ideal.
For example, Godbolt uses a release build of Clang, and so when asked to emit LLVM IR the result lacks names, making it harder to read. Manually invoking CC1 on Compiler Explorer is not feasible.
This patch adds the driver options `-fdiscard-value-names` and `-fno-discard-value-names` which allow the user to override the default behavior. If neither is specified, the old behavior remains.
Reviewers: erichkeane, aaron.ballman, lebedev.ri
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: bogner, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42887
llvm-svn: 324498
Summary:
This patch (on top of https://reviews.llvm.org/D35755) provides the clang side necessary
to enable the Solaris port of the sanitizers implemented by https://reviews.llvm.org/D40898,
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40899, and https://reviews.llvm.org/D40900).
A few features of note:
* While compiler-rt cmake/base-config-ix.cmake (COMPILER_RT_OS_DIR) places
the runtime libs in a tolower(CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME) directory, clang defaults to
the OS part of the target triplet (solaris2.11 in the case at hand). The patch makes
them agree on compiler-rt's idea.
* While Solaris ld accepts a considerable number of GNU ld options for compatibility,
it only does so for the double-dash forms. clang unfortunately is inconsistent here
and sometimes uses the double-dash form, sometimes the single-dash one that
confuses the hell out of Solaris ld. I've changed the affected places to use the double-dash
form that should always work.
* As described in https://reviews.llvm.org/D40899, Solaris ld doesn't create the
__start___sancov_guards/__stop___sancov_guards labels gld/gold/lld do, so I'm
including additional runtime libs into the link that provide them.
* One test uses -fstack-protector, but unlike other systems libssp hasn't been folded
into Solaris libc, but needs to be linked with separately.
* For now, only 32-bit x86 asan is enabled on Solaris. 64-bit x86 should follow, but
sparc (which requires additional compiler-rt changes not yet submitted) fails miserably
due to a llvmsparc backend limitation:
fatal error: error in backend: Function "_ZN7testing8internal16BoolFromGTestEnvEPKcb": over-aligned dynamic alloca not supported.
However, inside the gcc tree, Solaris/sparc asan works almost as well as x86.
Reviewers: rsmith, alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: jyknight, fedor.sergeev, cfe-commits
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40903
llvm-svn: 324296
The 'trivial_abi' attribute can be applied to a C++ class, struct, or
union. It makes special functions of the annotated class (the destructor
and copy/move constructors) to be trivial for the purpose of calls and,
as a result, enables the annotated class or containing classes to be
passed or returned using the C ABI for the underlying type.
When a type that is considered trivial for the purpose of calls despite
having a non-trivial destructor (which happens only when the class type
or one of its subobjects is a 'trivial_abi' class) is passed to a
function, the callee is responsible for destroying the object.
For more background, see the discussions that took place on the mailing
list:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2017-November/055955.htmlhttp://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20180101/thread.html#214043
rdar://problem/35204524
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41039
llvm-svn: 324269
Due to Buildbot failures - most likely that's because target triples were not
specified in the tests, even though the checker behaves differently with
different target triples.
llvm-svn: 324167
This is a security check which is disabled by default but will be enabled
whenever the user consciously enables the security package. If mmap()ed memory
is both writable and executable, it makes it easier for the attacker to execute
arbitrary code when contents of this memory are compromised. Some applications
require such mmap()s though, such as different sorts of JIT.
Patch by David Carlier!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42645
llvm-svn: 324166
We could in principle support such pack expansion, using techniques similar to
what we do for pack expansion of lambdas, but it's not clear it's worthwhile.
For now at least, cleanly reject these cases rather than crashing.
llvm-svn: 324160
Summary:
This is an alternative approach to D42014 after some
investigation by stephanemoore@ and myself.
Previously, the format parameter `BinPackParameters` controlled both
C function parameter list bin-packing and Objective-C protocol conformance
list bin-packing.
We found in the Google style, some teams were changing
`BinPackParameters` from its default (`true`) to `false` so they could
lay out Objective-C protocol conformance list items one-per-line
instead of bin-packing them into as few lines as possible.
To allow teams to use one-per-line Objective-C protocol lists without
changing bin-packing for other areas like C function parameter lists,
this diff introduces a new LibFormat parameter
`ObjCBinPackProtocolList` to control the behavior just for ObjC
protocol conformance lists.
The new parameter is an enum which defaults to `Auto` to keep the
previous behavior (delegating to `BinPackParameters`).
Depends On D42649
Test Plan: New tests added. make -j12 FormatTests && ./tools/clang/unittests/Format/FormatTests
Reviewers: jolesiak, stephanemoore, djasper
Reviewed By: stephanemoore
Subscribers: Wizard, hokein, cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42650
llvm-svn: 324131
If the return statement is stored, we might as well allow querying
against it.
Also fix the bug where the return statement is not stored
if there is no return value.
This change un-merges two ExplodedNodes during call exit when the state
is otherwise identical - the CallExitBegin node itself and the "Bind
Return Value"-tagged node.
And expose the return statement through
getStatement helper function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42130
llvm-svn: 324052
We use CXXTempObjectRegion exclusively as a bailout value for construction
targets when we are unable to find the correct construction region.
Sometimes it works correctly, but rather accidentally than intentionally.
Now that we want to increase the amount of situations where it works correctly,
the first step is to introduce a different way of communicating our failure
to find the correct construction region. EvalCallOptions are introduced
for this purpose.
For now EvalCallOptions are communicating two kinds of problems:
- We have been completely unable to find the correct construction site.
- We have found the construction site correctly, and there's more than one of
them (i.e. array construction which we currently don't support).
Accidentally find and fix a test in which the new approach to communicating
failures produces better results.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42457
llvm-svn: 324018
If the CUDA toolkit is not installed to its default locations
in /usr/local/cuda, the user is forced to specify --cuda-path.
This is tedious and the driver can be smarter if well-known tools
(like ptxas) can already be found in the PATH environment variable.
Add option --cuda-path-ignore-env if the user wants to ignore
set environment variables. Also use it in the tests to make sure
the driver always finds the same CUDA installation, regardless
of the user's environment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42642
llvm-svn: 323848
Clang can use CUDA-9.1 now, though new APIs (are not implemented yet.
The major change is that headers in CUDA-9.1 went through substantial
changes that started in CUDA-9.0 which required substantial changes
in the cuda compatibility headers provided by clang.
There are two major issues:
* CUDA SDK no longer provides declarations for libdevice functions.
* A lot of device-side functions have become nvcc's builtins and
CUDA headers no longer contain their implementations.
This patch changes the way CUDA headers are handled if we compile
with CUDA 9.x. Both 9.0 and 9.1 are affected.
* Clang provides its own declarations of libdevice functions.
* For CUDA-9.x clang now provides implementation of device-side
'standard library' functions using libdevice.
This patch should not affect compilation with CUDA-8. There may be
some observable differences for CUDA-9.0, though they are not expected
to affect functionality.
Tested: CUDA test-suite tests for all supported combinations of:
CUDA: 7.0,7.5,8.0,9.0,9.1
GPU: sm_20, sm_35, sm_60, sm_70
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42513
llvm-svn: 323713
We can stash the cached transparent tag bit in existing pointer padding.
Everything coming out of ASTContext is always aligned to a multiple of
8, so we have 8 spare bits.
llvm-svn: 323528
Summary:
For OpenCL 1.1 embedded profile 64 bit integers i.e. long,
ulong including the appropriate vector data types and operations
on 64-bit integers are optional. The "cles_khr_int64" extension
string will be reported if the embedded profile implementation
supports 64-bit integers.
Reviewers: Anastasia, bader
Reviewed By: Anastasia, bader
Subscribers: bader, yaxunl, Anastasia, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42532
llvm-svn: 323522
Summary:
Use corutine function arguments to initialize a promise type, but only
if the promise type defines a constructor that takes those arguments.
Otherwise, fall back to the default constructor.
Test Plan: check-clang
Reviewers: rsmith, GorNishanov, eric_niebler
Reviewed By: GorNishanov
Subscribers: toby-allsopp, lewissbaker, EricWF, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41820
llvm-svn: 323381
Analyzing problems which appear in scan-build results can be very
difficult, as after the launch no exact invocation is stored, and it's
super-hard to launch the debugger.
With this patch, the exact analyzer invocation appears in the footer,
and can be copied to debug/check reproducibility/etc.
rdar://35980230
llvm-svn: 323245
Summary:
The parameter overrides the underlying vfs used by ClangTool for
filesystem operations.
Patch by Vladimir Plyashkun.
Reviewers: alexfh, ilya-biryukov
Reviewed By: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41947
llvm-svn: 323195
Pass and return _Float16 as if it were an int or float for ARM, but with the
top 16 bits unspecified, similarly like we already do for __fp16.
We will implement proper half-precision function argument lowering in the ARM
backend soon, but want to use this workaround in the mean time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42318
llvm-svn: 323185
Summary:
First, we need to explain the core of the vulnerability. Note that this
is a very incomplete description, please see the Project Zero blog post
for details:
https://googleprojectzero.blogspot.com/2018/01/reading-privileged-memory-with-side.html
The basis for branch target injection is to direct speculative execution
of the processor to some "gadget" of executable code by poisoning the
prediction of indirect branches with the address of that gadget. The
gadget in turn contains an operation that provides a side channel for
reading data. Most commonly, this will look like a load of secret data
followed by a branch on the loaded value and then a load of some
predictable cache line. The attacker then uses timing of the processors
cache to determine which direction the branch took *in the speculative
execution*, and in turn what one bit of the loaded value was. Due to the
nature of these timing side channels and the branch predictor on Intel
processors, this allows an attacker to leak data only accessible to
a privileged domain (like the kernel) back into an unprivileged domain.
The goal is simple: avoid generating code which contains an indirect
branch that could have its prediction poisoned by an attacker. In many
cases, the compiler can simply use directed conditional branches and
a small search tree. LLVM already has support for lowering switches in
this way and the first step of this patch is to disable jump-table
lowering of switches and introduce a pass to rewrite explicit indirectbr
sequences into a switch over integers.
However, there is no fully general alternative to indirect calls. We
introduce a new construct we call a "retpoline" to implement indirect
calls in a non-speculatable way. It can be thought of loosely as
a trampoline for indirect calls which uses the RET instruction on x86.
Further, we arrange for a specific call->ret sequence which ensures the
processor predicts the return to go to a controlled, known location. The
retpoline then "smashes" the return address pushed onto the stack by the
call with the desired target of the original indirect call. The result
is a predicted return to the next instruction after a call (which can be
used to trap speculative execution within an infinite loop) and an
actual indirect branch to an arbitrary address.
On 64-bit x86 ABIs, this is especially easily done in the compiler by
using a guaranteed scratch register to pass the target into this device.
For 32-bit ABIs there isn't a guaranteed scratch register and so several
different retpoline variants are introduced to use a scratch register if
one is available in the calling convention and to otherwise use direct
stack push/pop sequences to pass the target address.
This "retpoline" mitigation is fully described in the following blog
post: https://support.google.com/faqs/answer/7625886
We also support a target feature that disables emission of the retpoline
thunk by the compiler to allow for custom thunks if users want them.
These are particularly useful in environments like kernels that
routinely do hot-patching on boot and want to hot-patch their thunk to
different code sequences. They can write this custom thunk and use
`-mretpoline-external-thunk` *in addition* to `-mretpoline`. In this
case, on x86-64 thu thunk names must be:
```
__llvm_external_retpoline_r11
```
or on 32-bit:
```
__llvm_external_retpoline_eax
__llvm_external_retpoline_ecx
__llvm_external_retpoline_edx
__llvm_external_retpoline_push
```
And the target of the retpoline is passed in the named register, or in
the case of the `push` suffix on the top of the stack via a `pushl`
instruction.
There is one other important source of indirect branches in x86 ELF
binaries: the PLT. These patches also include support for LLD to
generate PLT entries that perform a retpoline-style indirection.
The only other indirect branches remaining that we are aware of are from
precompiled runtimes (such as crt0.o and similar). The ones we have
found are not really attackable, and so we have not focused on them
here, but eventually these runtimes should also be replicated for
retpoline-ed configurations for completeness.
For kernels or other freestanding or fully static executables, the
compiler switch `-mretpoline` is sufficient to fully mitigate this
particular attack. For dynamic executables, you must compile *all*
libraries with `-mretpoline` and additionally link the dynamic
executable and all shared libraries with LLD and pass `-z retpolineplt`
(or use similar functionality from some other linker). We strongly
recommend also using `-z now` as non-lazy binding allows the
retpoline-mitigated PLT to be substantially smaller.
When manually apply similar transformations to `-mretpoline` to the
Linux kernel we observed very small performance hits to applications
running typical workloads, and relatively minor hits (approximately 2%)
even for extremely syscall-heavy applications. This is largely due to
the small number of indirect branches that occur in performance
sensitive paths of the kernel.
When using these patches on statically linked applications, especially
C++ applications, you should expect to see a much more dramatic
performance hit. For microbenchmarks that are switch, indirect-, or
virtual-call heavy we have seen overheads ranging from 10% to 50%.
However, real-world workloads exhibit substantially lower performance
impact. Notably, techniques such as PGO and ThinLTO dramatically reduce
the impact of hot indirect calls (by speculatively promoting them to
direct calls) and allow optimized search trees to be used to lower
switches. If you need to deploy these techniques in C++ applications, we
*strongly* recommend that you ensure all hot call targets are statically
linked (avoiding PLT indirection) and use both PGO and ThinLTO. Well
tuned servers using all of these techniques saw 5% - 10% overhead from
the use of retpoline.
We will add detailed documentation covering these components in
subsequent patches, but wanted to make the core functionality available
as soon as possible. Happy for more code review, but we'd really like to
get these patches landed and backported ASAP for obvious reasons. We're
planning to backport this to both 6.0 and 5.0 release streams and get
a 5.0 release with just this cherry picked ASAP for distros and vendors.
This patch is the work of a number of people over the past month: Eric, Reid,
Rui, and myself. I'm mailing it out as a single commit due to the time
sensitive nature of landing this and the need to backport it. Huge thanks to
everyone who helped out here, and everyone at Intel who helped out in
discussions about how to craft this. Also, credit goes to Paul Turner (at
Google, but not an LLVM contributor) for much of the underlying retpoline
design.
Reviewers: echristo, rnk, ruiu, craig.topper, DavidKreitzer
Subscribers: sanjoy, emaste, mcrosier, mgorny, mehdi_amini, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41723
llvm-svn: 323155
Summary:
The MultiplexExternalSemaSource doesn't correctly overload the `getModule` function,
causing the multiplexer to not forward this call as intended.
Reviewers: v.g.vassilev
Reviewed By: v.g.vassilev
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39416
llvm-svn: 323122
Summary:
This patch adds canonical delimiter support to the raw string formatting.
This allows matching delimiters to be updated to the canonical one.
Reviewers: bkramer
Reviewed By: bkramer
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42187
llvm-svn: 322956
This removes the following (already default-off) warnings from -Wextra:
-Wtautological-type-limit-compare,
-Wtautological-unsigned-zero-compare
-Wtautological-unsigned-enum-zero-compare
On the thread "[cfe-dev] -Wtautological-constant-compare issues", clang
code owners Richard Smith, John McCall, and Reid Kleckner as well as
libc++ code owner Marshall Clow stated that these new warnings are not
yet ready for prime time and shouldn't be part of -Wextra.
Furthermore, Vedant Kumar (Apple), Peter Hosek (Fuchsia), and me (Chromium)
expressed the same concerns (Vedant on that thread, Peter on
https://reviews.llvm.org/D39462, me on https://reviews.llvm.org/D41512).
So remove them from -Wextra, and remove TautologicalInRangeCompare from
TautologicalCompare too until they're usable with real-world code.
llvm-svn: 322901
Summary:
The new method 'OverridePreamble' allows to override the preamble of
any source file without checking if preamble bounds or dependencies
were changed.
This is used for completion in clangd.
Reviewers: bkramer, sammccall
Reviewed By: sammccall
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41990
llvm-svn: 322853
Add PostAllocatorCall program point to represent the moment in the analysis
between the operator new() call and the constructor call. Pointer cast from
"void *" to the correct object pointer type has already happened by this point.
The new program point, unlike the previously used PostImplicitCall, contains a
reference to the new-expression, which allows adding path diagnostics over it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41800
rdar://problem/12180598
llvm-svn: 322796
The callback runs after operator new() and before the construction and allows
the checker to access the casted return value of operator new() (in the
sense of r322780) which is not available in the PostCall callback for the
allocator call.
Update MallocChecker to use the new callback instead of PostStmt<CXXNewExpr>,
which gets called after the constructor.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41406
rdar://problem/12180598
llvm-svn: 322787
Represent the symbolic value for results of pointer arithmetic on void pointers
in a different way: instead of making void-typed element regions, make
char-typed element regions.
Add an assertion that ensures that no void-typed regions are ever constructed.
This is a refactoring of internals that should not immediately affect
the analyzer's (default) behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40939
llvm-svn: 322775
The -analyzer-config c++-allocator-inlining experimental option allows the
analyzer to reason about C++ operator new() similarly to how it reasons about
regular functions. In this mode, operator new() is correctly called before the
construction of an object, with the help of a special CFG element.
However, the subsequent construction of the object was still not performed into
the region of memory returned by operator new(). The patch fixes it.
Passing the value from operator new() to the constructor and then to the
new-expression itself was tricky because operator new() has no call site of its
own in the AST. The new expression itself is not a good call site because it
has an incorrect type (operator new() returns 'void *', while the new expression
is a pointer to the allocated object type). Additionally, lifetime of the new
expression in the environment makes it unsuitable for passing the value.
For that reason, an additional program state trait is introduced to keep track
of the return value.
Finally this patch relaxes restrictions on the memory region class that are
required for inlining the constructor. This change affects the old mode as well
(c++-allocator-inlining=false) and seems safe because these restrictions were
an overkill compared to the actual problems observed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40560
rdar://problem/12180598
llvm-svn: 322774
In most cases using
`N->getState()->getSVal(E, N->getLocationContext())`
is ugly, verbose, and also opens up more surface area for bugs if an
inconsistent location context is used.
This patch introduces a helper on an exploded node, and ensures
consistent usage of either `ExplodedNode::getSVal` or
`CheckContext::getSVal` across the codebase.
As a result, a large number of redundant lines is removed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42155
llvm-svn: 322753
All usages of isSubRegionOf separately check for reflexive case, and in
any case, set theory tells us that each set is a subset of itself.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42140
llvm-svn: 322752
When parsing C++ type construction expressions with list initialization,
forward the locations of the braces to Sema.
Without these locations, the code coverage pass crashes on the given test
case, because the pass relies on getLocEnd() returning a valid location.
Here is what this patch does in more detail:
- Forwards init-list brace locations to Sema (ParseExprCXX),
- Builds an InitializationKind with these locations (SemaExprCXX), and
- Uses these locations for constructor initialization (SemaInit).
The remaining changes fall out of introducing a new overload for
creating direct-list InitializationKinds.
Testing: check-clang, and a stage2 coverage-enabled build of clang with
asserts enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41921
llvm-svn: 322729
Summary:
As result deduplication or reduction is not supported in the framework,
we should leave the deplication to tools (if needed) until the framework supports it.
Reviewers: bkramer
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42111
llvm-svn: 322691
Summary:
This would allow code completion clients to know which context is visited during Sema code completion.
Also some changes:
* add `EnteredContext` callback in VisibleDeclConsumer.
* add a simple unittest for sema code completion (only for visited contexts at the moment).
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov
Reviewed By: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: mgorny, bkramer, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42071
llvm-svn: 322661
Summary:
This patch changes the structure for raw string formatting options by making it
language based (enumerate delimiters per language) as opposed to delimiter-based
(specify the language for a delimiter). The raw string formatting now uses an
appropriate style from the .clang-format file, if exists.
Reviewers: bkramer
Reviewed By: bkramer
Subscribers: cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42098
llvm-svn: 322634
HTML diagnostics can be an overwhelming blob of pages of code.
This patch adds a checkbox which filters this list down to only the
lines *relevant* to the counterexample by e.g. skipping branches which
analyzer has assumed to be infeasible at a time.
The resulting amount of output is much smaller, and often fits on one
screen, and also provides a much more readable diagnostics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41378
llvm-svn: 322612
Summary:
noload_lookups() was too lazy: in addition to avoiding external decls, it
avoided populating the lazy lookup structure for internal decls.
This is the right behavior for the existing callsite in ASTDumper, but I think
it's not a very useful default, so we populate it by default.
While here:
- remove an unused test file accidentally added in r322371.
- remove lookups_begin()/lookups_end() in favor of lookups().begin(), which is
more common and more efficient.
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: cfe-commits, rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42077
llvm-svn: 322548
Summary:
Introduce clang_getCursorPrettyPrinted() for pretty printing
declarations. Expose also PrintingPolicy, so the user gets more
fine-grained control of the entities being printed.
The already existing clang_getCursorDisplayName() is pretty limited -
for example, it does not handle return types, parameter names or default
arguments for function declarations. Addressing these issues in
clang_getCursorDisplayName() would mean to duplicate existing code
(e.g. clang::DeclPrinter), so rather expose new API to access the
existing functionality.
Reviewed By: jbcoe
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Patch by nik (Nikolai Kosjar)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39903
llvm-svn: 322540
The skipped preprocessor ranges are now serialized in the AST PCH file. This fixes, for example, libclang's clang_getSkippedRanges() returning zero ranges after reparsing a translation unit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20124
llvm-svn: 322503
Summary:
This patch adds a FormatStyleSet for storing per-language FormatStyles for the
purposes of formatting code blocks inside the main code.
Reviewers: bkramer
Reviewed By: bkramer
Subscribers: klimek, djasper, bkramer, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41487
llvm-svn: 322479
While here, fix up the myriad other ways in which Sema's two "can this handler
catch that exception?" implementations get things wrong and unify them.
llvm-svn: 322431
As @rjmccall suggested in D40023, we can get rid of
ABIInfo::shouldSignExtUnsignedType (used to handle cases like the Mips calling
convention where 32-bit integers are always sign extended regardless of the
sign of the type) by adding a SignExt field to ABIArgInfo. In the common case,
this new field is set automatically by ABIArgInfo::getExtend based on the sign
of the type. For targets that want greater control, they can use
ABIArgInfo::getSignExtend or ABIArgInfo::getZeroExtend when necessary. This
change also cleans up logic in CGCall.cpp.
There is no functional change intended in this patch, and all tests pass
unchanged. As noted in D40023, Mips might want to sign-extend unsigned 32-bit
integer return types. A future patch might modify
MipsABIInfo::classifyReturnType to use MipsABIInfo::extendType.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41999
llvm-svn: 322396
getAssociatedStmt() returns the outermost captured statement for the
OpenMP directive. It may return incorrect region in case of combined
constructs. Reworked the code to reduce the number of calls of
getAssociatedStmt() and used getInnermostCapturedStmt() and
getCapturedStmt() functions instead.
In case of firstprivate variables it may lead to an extra allocas
generation for private copies even if the variable is passed by value
into outlined function and could be used directly as private copy.
llvm-svn: 322393
Summary:
Enumerating the contents of a namespace or global scope will omit any
decls that aren't already loaded, instead of deserializing them from the
PCH.
This allows a fast hybrid code completion where symbols from headers are
provided by an external index. (Sema already exposes the information
needed to do a reasonabl job of filtering them).
Clangd plans to implement this hybrid.
This option is just a hint - callers still need to postfilter results if
they want to *avoid* completing decls outside the main file.
Reviewers: bkramer, ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41989
llvm-svn: 322371
Summary:
The STL types `std::pair` and `std::tuple` can both store reference types. However their constructors cannot adequately check if the initialization of reference types is safe. For example:
```
std::tuple<std::tuple<int> const&> t = 42;
// The stored reference is already dangling.
```
Libc++ has a best effort attempts in tuple to diagnose this, but they're not able to handle all valid cases (If I'm not mistaken). For example initialization of a reference from the result of a class's conversion operator. Libc++ would benefit from having a builtin traits which can provide a much better implementation.
This patch introduce the `__reference_binds_to_temporary(T, U)` trait that determines whether a reference of type `T` bound to an expression of type `U` would bind to a materialized temporary object.
Note that the trait simply returns false if `T` is not a reference type instead of reporting it as an error.
```
static_assert(__is_constructible(int const&, long));
static_assert(__reference_binds_to_temporary(int const&, long));
```
Reviewers: majnemer, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: compnerd, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29930
llvm-svn: 322334
Summary:
Enable the compile-time flag -fsanitize-memory-use-after-dtor by
default. Note that the run-time option MSAN_OPTIONS=poison_in_dtor=1
still needs to be enabled for destructors to be poisoned.
Reviewers: eugenis, vitalybuka, kcc
Reviewed By: eugenis, vitalybuka
Subscribers: cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37860
llvm-svn: 322221
Adds option /guard:cf to clang-cl and -cfguard to cc1 to emit function IDs
of functions that have their address taken into a section named .gfids$y for
compatibility with Microsoft's Control Flow Guard feature.
The original patch didn't have the lit.local.cfg file that restricts the new
test to x86, thus the new test was failing on the non-x86 bots.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40531
The reverts r322008, which was a revert of r322005.
This reverts commit a05b89f9aca70597dc79fe97bc49b50b51f525ba.
llvm-svn: 322136
Summary:
First, this patch fixes an assert failure when, for example, "omp for"
has num_teams.
Second, this patch prevents duplicate diagnostics when, for example,
"omp for" has uniform.
This patch makes the general assumption (even where it doesn't
necessarily fix an existing bug) that it is worthless to perform sema
for a clause that appears on a directive on which OpenMP does not
permit that clause. However, due to this assumption, this patch
suppresses some diagnostics that were expected in the test suite. I
assert that those diagnostics were likely just distracting to the
user.
Reviewers: ABataev
Reviewed By: ABataev
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41841
llvm-svn: 322107
Cf-protection is a target independent flag that instructs the back-end to instrument control flow mechanisms like: Branch, Return, etc.
For example in X86 this flag will be used to instrument Indirect Branch Tracking instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40478
Change-Id: I5126e766c0e6b84118cae0ee8a20fe78cc373dea
llvm-svn: 322063
Add attribute target multiversioning to the release notes.
Additionally adds multiversioning support to the attribute
documentation for 'target'.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41837
llvm-svn: 322043
GCC's attribute 'target', in addition to being an optimization hint,
also allows function multiversioning. We currently have the former
implemented, this is the latter's implementation.
This works by enabling functions with the same name/signature to coexist,
so that they can all be emitted. Multiversion state is stored in the
FunctionDecl itself, and SemaDecl manages the definitions.
Note that it ends up having to permit redefinition of functions so
that they can all be emitted. Additionally, all versions of the function
must be emitted, so this also manages that.
Note that this includes some additional rules that GCC does not, since
defining something as a MultiVersion function after a usage has been made illegal.
The only 'history rewriting' that happens is if a function is emitted before
it has been converted to a multiversion'ed function, at which point its name
needs to be changed.
Function templates and virtual functions are NOT yet supported (not supported
in GCC either).
Additionally, constructors/destructors are disallowed, but the former is
planned.
llvm-svn: 322028
This is not quite NFC: we don't perform the usual arithmetic conversions unless
we have an operand of arithmetic or enumeration type any more. This matches the
standard rule, but actually has no effect other than to marginally improve our
diagnostics for the non-arithmetic, non-enumeration cases (by not performing
integral promotions on one operand if the other is a pointer).
llvm-svn: 322024
The new test fails on the Hexagon bot. Reverting while I investigate.
This reverts https://reviews.llvm.org/rL322005
This reverts commit b7e0026b4385180c378edc658ec91a39566f2942.
llvm-svn: 322008
Adds option /guard:cf to clang-cl and -cfguard to cc1 to emit function IDs
of functions that have their address taken into a section named .gfids$y for
compatibility with Microsoft's Control Flow Guard feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40531
llvm-svn: 322005
Adds the -fstack-size-section flag to enable the .stack_sizes section. The flag defaults to on for the PS4 triple.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40712
llvm-svn: 321992
These just overloads for _Float128. They're supported by GCC 7 and used
by glibc. APFloat support is already there so just add the overloads.
__builtin_copysignf128
__builtin_fabsf128
__builtin_huge_valf128
__builtin_inff128
__builtin_nanf128
__builtin_nansf128
This is the same support that GCC has, according to the documentation,
but limited to _Float128.
llvm-svn: 321948
Attempting to recompute it are doomed to fail because the IDNS of a declaration
is not necessarily preserved across serialization and deserialization (in turn
because whether a friend declaration is visible depends on whether some prior
non-friend declaration exists).
llvm-svn: 321921
Summary:
Depends on https://reviews.llvm.org/D41732.
Utilities such as `opt`, when invoked with arguments that are very
nearly spelled correctly, suggest the correctly spelled options:
```
bin/opt -hel
opt: Unknown command line argument '-hel'. Try: 'bin/opt -help'
opt: Did you mean '-help'?
```
Clang, on the other hand, prior to this commit, does not:
```
bin/clang -hel
clang-6.0: error: unknown argument: '-hel'
```
This commit makes use of the new libLLVMOption API from
https://reviews.llvm.org/D41732 in order to provide correct suggestions:
```
bin/clang -hel
clang-6.0: error: unknown argument: '-hel', did you mean '-help'?
```
Test Plan: `check-clang`
Reviewers: yamaguchi, v.g.vassilev, teemperor, ruiu, bruno
Reviewed By: bruno
Subscribers: bruno, jroelofs, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41733
llvm-svn: 321917
Summary:
#pragma STDC FP_CONTRACT handler is only registered in parser so we
should keep the unknown STDC pragma through preprocessor and we also
should not emit warning for unknown STDC pragma during preprocessor.
rdar://problem/35724351
Reviewers: efriedma, rsmith, arphaman
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41780
llvm-svn: 321909
This is a follow up to r321855, closing the gap between our internal shadow
modules implementation and upstream. It has been tested for longer and
provides a better approach for tracking shadow modules. Mostly NFCI.
rdar://problem/23612102
llvm-svn: 321906
Summary: Tool results are deduplicated by the result key.
Reviewers: hokein
Subscribers: klimek, mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41729
llvm-svn: 321864
As discussed in the mail thread <https://groups.google.com/a/isocpp.org/forum/
#!topic/std-discussion/T64_dW3WKUk> "Calling noexcept function throug non-
noexcept pointer is undefined behavior?", such a call should not be UB.
However, Clang currently warns about it.
This change removes exception specifications from the function types recorded
for -fsanitize=function, both in the functions themselves and at the call sites.
That means that calling a non-noexcept function through a noexcept pointer will
also not be flagged as UB. In the review of this change, that was deemed
acceptable, at least for now. (See the "TODO" in compiler-rt
test/ubsan/TestCases/TypeCheck/Function/function.cpp.)
To remove exception specifications from types, the existing internal
ASTContext::getFunctionTypeWithExceptionSpec was made public, and some places
otherwise unrelated to this change have been adapted to call it, too.
This is the cfe part of a patch covering both cfe and compiler-rt.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40720
llvm-svn: 321859
When modules come from module map files explicitly specified by
-fmodule-map-file= arguments, allow those to override/shadow modules
with the same name that are found implicitly by header search. If such a
module is looked up by name (e.g. @import), we will always find the one
from -fmodule-map-file. If we try to use a shadowed module by including
one of its headers report an error.
This enables developers to force use of a specific copy of their module
to be used if there are multiple copies that would otherwise be visible,
for example if they develop modules that are installed in the default
search paths.
Patch originally by Ben Langmuir,
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20151116/143425.html
Based on cfe-dev discussion:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2015-November/046164.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31269
rdar://problem/23612102
llvm-svn: 321855
each kind.
Attribute instantiation would previously default to instantiating each kind of
attribute only once. This was overridden by a flag whose intended purpose was
to permit attributes from a prior declaration to be inherited onto a new
declaration even if that new declaration had its own copy of the attribute.
This is the wrong behavior: when instantiating attributes from a template, we
should always instantiate all the attributes that were written on that
template.
This patch renames the flag in the Attr class (and TableGen sources) to more
clearly identify what it's actually for, and removes the usage of the flag from
template instantiation. I also removed the flag from AlignedAttr, which was
only added to work around the incorrect suppression of duplicate attribute
instantiation.
llvm-svn: 321834
This is useful for e.g. highlighting purposes in an IDE.
Note: First version of this patch was reverted due to failing tests in
opencl-types.cl with -target ppc64le-unknown-linux. These tests are
adapted now.
Patch by Nikolai Kosjar.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40072
llvm-svn: 321794
When modules come from module map files explicitly specified by
-fmodule-map-file= arguments, allow those to override/shadow modules
with the same name that are found implicitly by header search. If such a
module is looked up by name (e.g. @import), we will always find the one
from -fmodule-map-file. If we try to use a shadowed module by including
one of its headers report an error.
This enables developers to force use of a specific copy of their module
to be used if there are multiple copies that would otherwise be visible,
for example if they develop modules that are installed in the default
search paths.
Patch originally by Ben Langmuir,
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20151116/143425.html
Based on cfe-dev discussion:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2015-November/046164.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31269
rdar://problem/23612102
llvm-svn: 321781
a warning
This commit separates out the warn_nsconsumed_attribute_mismatch and
warn_nsreturns_retained_attribute_mismatch diagnostic into a warning and error.
This is needed to avoid a module import regression introduced by r313717 that
turned these errors into warnings and started promoting them only when needed,
which caused an error when importing a module as it had different warning
settings.
rdar://36265651
llvm-svn: 321775
This patch adds support to the attribute tablegen for specifying a [[]] attribute is allowed in C mode. This patch also adds the annotate attribute to the list of double square bracket attributes we support in C mode.
Eventually, I anticipate that this logic will be reversed (you have to opt out of allowing an attribute in C rather than opting in), but I want to see how the design plays out as more attributes are considered.
llvm-svn: 321763
This broke test/Index/opencl-types.cl on several buildbots:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-cmake-aarch64-lld/builds/3294http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-ppc64be-linux-multistage/builds/6498http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-ppc64le-linux-multistage/builds/5239
> [libclang] Support querying whether a declaration is invalid
>
> This is useful for e.g. highlighting purposes in an IDE.
>
> Patch by Nikolai Kosjar.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40072
Also reverting follow-ups that otherwise caused conflicts for the
revert:
r321700 "Fix line endings."
r321701 "Fix more line endings."
r321698 "[libclang] Fix cursors for functions with trailing return type"
> For the function declaration
>
> auto foo5(Foo) -> Foo;
> the parameter tokens were mapped to cursors representing the
> FunctionDecl:
>
> Keyword: "auto" [1:1 - 1:5] FunctionDecl=test5:1:6
> Identifier: "test5" [1:6 - 1:11] FunctionDecl=test5:1:6
> Punctuation: "(" [1:11 - 1:12] FunctionDecl=test5:1:6
> Identifier: "X" [1:12 - 1:13] FunctionDecl=test5:1:6 // Ops, not a TypeRef
> Punctuation: ")" [1:13 - 1:14] FunctionDecl=test5:1:6
> Punctuation: "->" [1:15 - 1:17] FunctionDecl=test5:1:6
> Identifier: "X" [1:18 - 1:19] TypeRef=struct X:7:8
> Punctuation: ";" [1:19 - 1:20]
>
> Fix this by ensuring that the trailing return type is not visited as
> first.
>
> Patch by Nikolai Kosjar.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40561
llvm-svn: 321708
This is useful for e.g. highlighting purposes in an IDE.
Patch by Nikolai Kosjar.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40072
llvm-svn: 321697
Summary:
The diagnostic was mostly introduced in D38101 by me, as a reaction to wasting a lot of time, see [[ https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20171009/206427.html | mail ]].
However, the diagnostic is pretty dumb. While it works with no false-positives,
there are some questionable cases that are diagnosed when one would argue that they should not be.
The common complaint is that it diagnoses the comparisons between an `int` and
`long` when compiling for a 32-bit target as tautological, but not when
compiling for 64-bit targets. The underlying problem is obvious: data model.
In most cases, 64-bit target is `LP64` (`int` is 32-bit, `long` and pointer are
64-bit), and the 32-bit target is `ILP32` (`int`, `long`, and pointer are 32-bit).
I.e. the common pattern is: (pseudocode)
```
#include <limits>
#include <cstdint>
int main() {
using T1 = long;
using T2 = int;
T1 r;
if (r < std::numeric_limits<T2>::min()) {}
if (r > std::numeric_limits<T2>::max()) {}
}
```
As an example, D39149 was trying to fix this diagnostic in libc++, and it was not well-received.
This *could* be "fixed", by changing the diagnostics logic to something like
`if the types of the values being compared are different, but are of the same size, then do diagnose`,
and i even attempted to do so in D39462, but as @rjmccall rightfully commented,
that implementation is incomplete to say the least.
So to stop causing trouble, and avoid contaminating upcoming release, lets do this workaround:
* move these three diags (`warn_unsigned_always_true_comparison`, `warn_unsigned_enum_always_true_comparison`, `warn_tautological_constant_compare`) into it's own `-Wtautological-constant-in-range-compare`
* Disable them by default
* Make them part of `-Wextra`
* Additionally, give `warn_tautological_constant_compare` it's own flag `-Wtautological-type-limit-compare`.
I'm not happy about that name, but i can't come up with anything better.
This way all three of them can be enabled/disabled either altogether, or one-by-one.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, rsmith, smeenai, rjmccall, rnk, mclow.lists, dim
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, rsmith, dim
Subscribers: thakis, compnerd, mehdi_amini, dim, hans, cfe-commits, rjmccall
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41512
llvm-svn: 321691
Previously, we would:
* compute the type of the conversion function and static invoker as a
side-effect of template argument deduction for a conversion
* re-compute the type as part of deduced return type deduction when building
the conversion function itself
Neither of these turns out to be quite correct. There are other ways to reach a
declaration of the conversion function than in a conversion (such as an
explicit call or friend declaration), and performing auto deduction causes the
function type to be rebuilt in the context of the lambda closure type (which is
different from the context in which it originally appeared, resulting in
spurious substitution failures for constructs that are valid in one context but
not the other, such as the use of an enclosing class's "this" pointer).
This patch switches us to use a different strategy: as before, we use the
declared type of the operator() to form the type of the conversion function and
invoker, but we now populate that type as part of return type deduction for the
conversion function. And the invoker is now treated as simply being an
implementation detail of building the conversion function, and isn't given
special treatment by template argument deduction for the conversion function
any more.
llvm-svn: 321683
- reverts r321622, r321625, and r321626.
- the use of bit-fields is still resulting in warnings - even though we can use static-asserts to harden the code and ensure the bit-fields are wide enough. The bots still complain of warnings being seen.
- to silence the warnings requires specifying the bit-fields with the underlying enum type (as opposed to the enum type itself), which then requires lots of unnecessary static casts of each enumerator within DeclSpec to the underlying-type, which even though could be seen as implementation details, it does hamper readability - and given the additional litterings, makes me question the value of the change.
So in short - I give up (for now at least).
Sorry about the noise.
llvm-svn: 321628
- bots were complaining that the bit-field width was less than the width of the underlying type (note, underlying types of enums can not be bit-fields)
- add static_asserts for TSS and TSW to ensure that the bit-fields can hold all the enumerators - and add comments next to the last enumerator warning not to reorder.
See https://reviews.llvm.org/rC321622 for the patch that introduced the warnings.
llvm-svn: 321625
- Since these enums are used as bit-fields - for the bit-fields to be interpreted as unsigned, the underlying type must be specified as unsigned.
Previous failed attempt - wherein I did not specify an underlying type - was the sum of:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rC321614https://reviews.llvm.org/rC321615
llvm-svn: 321622
Clang is inherently a cross compiler and can generate code for any target
enabled during build. It however requires to specify many parameters in the
invocation, which could be hardcoded during configuration process in the
case of single-target compiler. The purpose of configuration files is to
make specifying clang arguments easier.
A configuration file is a collection of driver options, which are inserted
into command line before other options specified in the clang invocation.
It groups related options together and allows specifying them in simpler,
more flexible and less error prone way than just listing the options
somewhere in build scripts. Configuration file may be thought as a "macro"
that names an option set and is expanded when the driver is called.
Use of configuration files is described in `UserManual.rst`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24933
llvm-svn: 321621
- the enum changes to TypeSpecifierType are breaking some tests - and will require a more careful integration.
Sorry about rushing these changes - thought I could sneak them in prior to heading out for new years ;)
llvm-svn: 321616
(Re-submission of D39937 with fixed tests.)
Adjust wording for const-qualification mismatch to be a little more clear.
Also add another diagnostic for a ref qualifier mismatch, which previously produced a useless error (this error path is simply very old; see rL119336):
Before:
error: cannot initialize object parameter of type 'X0' with an expression of type 'X0'
After:
error: 'this' argument to member function 'rvalue' is an lvalue, but function has rvalue ref-qualifier
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: lebedev.ri, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41646
llvm-svn: 321609
Summary:
Adjust wording for const-qualification mismatch to be a little more clear.
Also add another diagnostic for a ref qualifier mismatch, which previously produced a useless error (this error path is simply very old; see rL119336):
Before:
error: cannot initialize object parameter of type 'X0' with an expression of type 'X0'
After:
error: 'this' argument to member function 'rvalue' is an lvalue, but function has rvalue ref-qualifier
Reviewers: rsmith, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: lebedev.ri, aaron.ballman, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39937
llvm-svn: 321592
Clang is inherently a cross compiler and can generate code for any target
enabled during build. It however requires to specify many parameters in the
invocation, which could be hardcoded during configuration process in the
case of single-target compiler. The purpose of configuration files is to
make specifying clang arguments easier.
A configuration file is a collection of driver options, which are inserted
into command line before other options specified in the clang invocation.
It groups related options together and allows specifying them in simpler,
more flexible and less error prone way than just listing the options
somewhere in build scripts. Configuration file may be thought as a "macro"
that names an option set and is expanded when the driver is called.
Use of configuration files is described in `UserManual.rst`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24933
llvm-svn: 321587
only.
Added support for -fopenmp-simd option that allows compilation of
simd-based constructs without emission of OpenMP runtime calls.
llvm-svn: 321560
added vbmi2 feature recognition
added intrinsics support for vbmi2 instructions
_mm[128,256,512]_mask[z]_compress_epi[16,32]
_mm[128,256,512]_mask_compressstoreu_epi[16,32]
_mm[128,256,512]_mask[z]_expand_epi[16,32]
_mm[128,256,512]_mask[z]_expandloadu_epi[16,32]
_mm[128,256,512]_mask[z]_sh[l,r]di_epi[16,32,64]
_mm[128,256,512]_mask_sh[l,r]dv_epi[16,32,64]
matching a similar work on the backend (D40206)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41557
llvm-svn: 321487
added vpclmulqdq feature recognition
added intrinsics support for vpclmulqdq instructions
_mm256_clmulepi64_epi128
_mm512_clmulepi64_epi128
matching a similar work on the backend (D40101)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41573
llvm-svn: 321480
added vaes feature recognition
added intrinsics support for vaes instructions, matching a similar work on the backend (D40078)
_mm256_aesenc_epi128
_mm512_aesenc_epi128
_mm256_aesenclast_epi128
_mm512_aesenclast_epi128
_mm256_aesdec_epi128
_mm512_aesdec_epi128
_mm256_aesdeclast_epi128
_mm512_aesdeclast_epi128
llvm-svn: 321474
Suggest moving the following erroneous attrib list (based on location)
[[]] struct X;
to
struct [[]] X;
Additionally, added a fixme for the current implementation that diagnoses misplaced attributes to consider using the newly introduced diagnostic (that I think is more user-friendly).
llvm-svn: 321449
Summary:
This is currently 16 bytes, the patch reduces it to 4.
(Building with clang on linux x84, I guess others are similar)
The only subfield that might need a bigger type is SymbolPropertySet,
I've moved it to the end of the struct so if it grows, SymbolInfo will
only be 8 bytes.
With a full index of namespace-scope symbols from the LLVM project (200k)
loaded into clangd, this saves ~2MB of RAM.
Reviewers: akyrtzi
Subscribers: ilya-biryukov, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41514
llvm-svn: 321411
This patch addresses a FIXME and has the template-parameter processing functions return a more derived common type NamedDecl (as opposed to a type needlessly higher up in the inheritance hierarchy : Decl).
llvm-svn: 321409
Extend the hashing to functions, which allows detection of function definition
mismatches across modules. This is a re-commit of r320230.
llvm-svn: 321395
In case `@import Foo.Private` fails because the submodule doesn't exist,
look for `Foo_Private` (if available) and build/load that module
instead. In that process emit a warning and tell the user about the
assumption.
The intention here is to assist all existing private modules owners
(in ObjC and Swift) to migrate to the new `Foo_Private` syntax.
rdar://problem/36023940
llvm-svn: 321342
The standard correctly forbids various decl-specifiers that dont make sense on non-type template parameters - such as the extern in:
template<extern int> struct X;
This patch implements those restrictions (in a fashion similar to the corresponding checks on function parameters within ActOnParamDeclarator).
Credit goes to miyuki (Mikhail Maltsev) for drawing attention to this issue, authoring the initial versions of this patch, and supporting the effort to re-engineer it slightly. Thank you!
For details of how this patch evolved please see: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40705
llvm-svn: 321339
We used to advertise private modules to be declared as submodules
(Foo.Private). This has proven to not scale well since private headers
might carry several dependencies, introducing unwanted content into the
main module and often causing dep cycles.
Change the canonical way to name it to Foo_Private, forcing private
modules as top level ones, and provide warnings under -Wprivate-module
to suggest fixes for other private naming. Update documentation to
reflect that.
rdar://problem/31173501
llvm-svn: 321337
This allows you to dump C++ code that spells bool instead of _Bool, leaves off the elaborated type specifiers when printing struct or class names, and other C-isms.
Fixes the -Wreorder issue and fixes the ast-dump-color.cpp test.
llvm-svn: 321310
This allows you to dump C++ code that spells bool instead of _Bool, leaves off the elaborated type specifiers when printing struct or class names, and other C-isms.
llvm-svn: 321223
Looking through the code, I saw a FIXME on IFunc to switch it
to a target specific attribute. In looking through it, i saw that
the no-longer-appropriately-named TargetArch didn't support ObjectFormat
checking.
This patch changes the name of TargetArch to TargetSpecific
(since it checks much more than just Arch), makes "Arch" optional, adds
support for ObjectFormat, better documents the TargetSpecific type, and
changes IFunc over to a TargetSpecificAttr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41303
llvm-svn: 321201
The size of the result vector is currently around 4600 with
Flavor::WarningOrError, which makes std::vector a better candidate than
llvm::SmallVector.
Patch by: Andras Leitereg!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39372
llvm-svn: 321190
Summary: Adds BeforeExecute method to PrecompiledPreamble to be called
before Execute(). This method can be overriden.
Patch by William Enright.
Reviewers: malaperle, ilya-biryukov
Reviewed By: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: arphaman, cfe-commits, ilya-biryukov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41365
llvm-svn: 321189
The bugreporter::trackNullOrUndefValue() mechanism contains a system of bug
reporter visitors that recursively call each other in order to track where a
null or undefined value came from, where each visitor represents a particular
tracking mechanism (track how the value was stored, track how the value was
returned from a function, track how the value was constrained to null, etc.).
Each visitor is only added once per value it needs to track. Almost. One
exception from this rule would be FindLastStoreBRVisitor that has two operation
modes: it contains a flag that indicates whether null stored values should be
suppressed. Two instances of FindLastStoreBRVisitor with different values of
this flag are considered to be different visitors, so they can be added twice
and produce the same diagnostic twice. This was indeed the case in the affected
test.
With the current logic of this whole machinery, such duplication seems
unavoidable. We should be able to safely add visitors with different flag
values without constructing duplicate diagnostic pieces. Hence the effort
in this commit to de-duplicate diagnostics regardless of what visitors
have produced them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41258
llvm-svn: 321135
There are 2 parts to getting the -fassociative-math command-line flag translated to LLVM FMF:
1. In the driver/frontend, we accept the flag and its 'no' inverse and deal with the
interactions with other flags like -ffast-math -fno-signed-zeros -fno-trapping-math.
This was mostly already done - we just need to translate the flag as a codegen option.
The test file is complicated because there are many potential combinations of flags here.
Note that we are matching gcc's behavior that requires 'nsz' and no-trapping-math.
2. In codegen, we map the codegen option to FMF in the IR builder. This is simple code and
corresponding test.
For the motivating example from PR27372:
float foo(float a, float x) { return ((a + x) - x); }
$ ./clang -O2 27372.c -S -o - -ffast-math -fno-associative-math -emit-llvm | egrep 'fadd|fsub'
%add = fadd nnan ninf nsz arcp contract float %0, %1
%sub = fsub nnan ninf nsz arcp contract float %add, %2
So 'reassoc' is off as expected (and so is the new 'afn' but that's a different patch).
This case now works as expected end-to-end although the underlying logic is still wrong:
$ ./clang -O2 27372.c -S -o - -ffast-math -fno-associative-math | grep xmm
addss %xmm1, %xmm0
subss %xmm1, %xmm0
We're not done because the case where 'reassoc' is set is ignored by optimizer passes. Example:
$ ./clang -O2 27372.c -S -o - -fassociative-math -fno-signed-zeros -fno-trapping-math -emit-llvm | grep fadd
%add = fadd reassoc float %0, %1
$ ./clang -O2 27372.c -S -o - -fassociative-math -fno-signed-zeros -fno-trapping-math | grep xmm
addss %xmm1, %xmm0
subss %xmm1, %xmm0
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39812
llvm-svn: 320920
This mimics FileCheck's --check-prefixes option.
The default prefix is "expected". That is, "-verify" is equivalent to
"-verify=expected".
The goal is to permit exercising a single test suite source file with different
compiler options producing different sets of diagnostics. While cpp can be
combined with the existing -verify to accomplish the same goal, source is often
easier to maintain when it's not cluttered with preprocessor directives or
duplicate passages of code. For example, this patch also rewrites some existing
clang tests to demonstrate the benefit of this feature.
Patch by Joel E. Denny, thanks!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39694
llvm-svn: 320908
The frontend currently groups diagnostics from the command line according to
diagnostic level, but that places all notes last. Fix that by emitting such
diagnostics in the order they were generated.
Patch by Joel E. Denny, thanks!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40995
llvm-svn: 320904
Removed the repetative usage of the operator name on the
documentation for FunctionDecl. Also reflowed some of the
comments since this changes the 80 character rule.
llvm-svn: 320829
Summary:
Revision D38639 needs this commit in order to properly make open
definition calls on include statements work.
Patch by William Enright.
Reviewers: malaperle, krasimir, bkramer, ilya-biryukov
Reviewed By: malaperle, ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: cfe-commits, arphaman, ilya-biryukov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39375
llvm-svn: 320804
The initializeLocal function of UnaryTransformTypeLoc missed
the UnderlyingTInfo member. This caused a null-dereference
issue, as reported in PR23421. This patch correctly initializss
the UnderlyingTInfo.
llvm-svn: 320765
Most attributes will now use the Clang<"name"> construct to provide both __attribute__((name)) and [[clang::name]] syntaxes for the attribute. Attributes deviating from this should be marked with a comment explaining why they are not supported under both spellings. Common reasons are: the attribute is provided by some other specification that controls the syntax or the attribute cannot be exposed under a particular spelling for some given reason.
Because this is a mechanical change that only introduces new spellings, there are no test cases for the commit.
llvm-svn: 320752
This patch allows checking whether a C++ record declaration is abstract through
libclang and clang.cindex (Python).
Patch by Johann Klähn!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36952
llvm-svn: 320748
builtin macros
This patch implements the __is_target_arch, __is_target_vendor, __is_target_os,
and __is_target_environment Clang preprocessor extensions that were proposed by
@compnerd in Bob's cfe-dev post:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2017-November/056166.html.
These macros can be used to examine the components of the target triple at
compile time. A has_builtin(is_target_???) preprocessor check can be used to
check for their availability.
__is_target_arch allows you to check if an arch is specified without worring
about a specific subarch, e.g.
__is_target_arch(arm) returns 1 for the target arch "armv7"
__is_target_arch(armv7) returns 1 for the target arch "armv7"
__is_target_arch(armv6) returns 0 for the target arch "armv7"
__is_target_vendor and __is_target_environment match the specific vendor
or environment. __is_target_os matches the specific OS, but
__is_target_os(darwin) will match any Darwin-based OS. "Unknown" can be used
to test if the triple's component is specified.
rdar://35753116
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41087
llvm-svn: 320734
Summary:
InterlockedCompareExchange128 is a bit more complicated than the other
InterlockedCompareExchange functions, so it requires a bit more work. It
doesn't directly refer to 128bit ints, instead it takes pointers to
64bit ints for Destination and ComparandResult, and exchange is taken as
two 64bit ints (high & low). The previous value is written to
ComparandResult, and success is returned. This implementation does the
following in order to produce a cmpxchg instruction:
1. Cast everything to 128bit ints or int pointers, and glues together
the Exchange values
2. Reads from CompareandResult to get the comparand
3. Calls cmpxchg volatile (on X86 this will produce a lock cmpxchg16b
instruction)
1. Result 0 (previous value) is written back to ComparandResult
2. Result 1 (success bool) is zext'ed to a uchar and returned
Resolves bug https://llvm.org/PR35251
Patch by Colden Cullen!
Reviewers: rnk, agutowski
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: majnemer, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41032
llvm-svn: 320730
Adding the new enumerator forced a bunch more changes into this patch than I
would have liked. The -Wtautological-compare warning was extended to properly
check the new comparison operator, clang-format needed updating because it uses
precedence levels as weights for determining where to break lines (and several
operators increased their precedence levels with this change), thread-safety
analysis needed changes to build its own IL properly for the new operator.
All "real" semantic checking for this operator has been deferred to a future
patch. For now, we use the relational comparison rules and arbitrarily give
the builtin form of the operator a return type of 'void'.
llvm-svn: 320707
Specifically, warn if:
* we find a character that the language standard says we must treat as an
identifier, and
* that character is not reasonably an identifier character (it's a punctuation
character or similar), and
* it renders identically to a valid non-identifier character in common
fixed-width fonts.
Some tools "helpfully" substitute the surprising characters for the expected
characters, and replacing semicolons with Greek question marks is a common
"prank".
llvm-svn: 320697
Summary:
This fixes an invalid warning about missing definition of a function when
parsing with SkipFunctionBodies=true
Reviewers: bkramer, sepavloff
Reviewed By: sepavloff
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41189
llvm-svn: 320696
This patch is to add diagnose when a function name is
specified on the link clause. According to the OpenMP
spec, only the list items that exclude the function
name are allowed on the link clause.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40968
llvm-svn: 320521
The new check introduced in r318705 is useful, but suffers from a particular
class of false positives, namely, it does not account for
dispatch_barrier_sync() API which allows one to ensure that the asyncronously
executed block that captures a pointer to a local variable does not actually
outlive that variable.
The new check is split into a separate checker, under the name of
alpha.core.StackAddressAsyncEscape, which is likely to get enabled by default
again once these positives are fixed. The rest of the StackAddressEscapeChecker
is still enabled by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41042
llvm-svn: 320455
This is a follow-up from r314910. When a checker developer attempts to
dereference a location in memory through ProgramState::getSVal(Loc) or
ProgramState::getSVal(const MemRegion *), without specifying the second
optional QualType parameter for the type of the value he tries to find at this
location, the type is auto-detected from location type. If the location
represents a value beyond a void pointer, we thought that auto-detecting the
type as 'char' is a good idea. However, in most practical cases, the correct
behavior would be to specify the type explicitly, as it is available from other
sources, and the few cases where we actually need to take a 'char' are
workarounds rather than an intended behavior. Therefore, try to fail with an
easy-to-understand assertion when asked to read from a void pointer location.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38801
llvm-svn: 320451
This adds a new command line option -mprefer-vector-width to specify a preferred vector width for the vectorizers. Valid values are 'none' and unsigned integers. The driver will check that it meets those constraints. Specific supported integers will be managed by the targets in the backend.
Clang will take the value and add it as a new function attribute during CodeGen.
This represents the alternate direction proposed by Sanjay in this RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-November/118734.html
The syntax here matches gcc, though gcc treats it as an x86 specific command line argument. gcc only allows values of 128, 256, and 512. I'm not having clang check any values.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40230
llvm-svn: 320419
Summary:
This is a side-effect brought in by p0620r0, which allows other placeholder types (derived from `auto` and `decltype(auto)`) to be usable in a `new` expression with a single-clause //braced-init-list// as its initializer (8.3.4 [expr.new]/2). N3922 defined its semantics.
References:
http://wg21.link/p0620r0http://wg21.link/n3922
Reviewers: rsmith, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39451
llvm-svn: 320401
Summary:
Clang was crashing when diagnosing an unused-lambda-capture for a VLA because
From.getVariable() is null for the capture of a VLA bound.
Warning about the VLA bound capture is not helpful, so only warn for the VLA
itself.
Fixes: PR35555
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, dim, rsmith
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, dim
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41016
llvm-svn: 320396
As reported in llvm bugzilla 32377.
Here’s a patch to add preinclude of stdc-predef.h.
The gcc documentation says “On GNU/Linux, <stdc-predef.h> is pre-included.” See https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-4.8/porting_to.html;
The preinclude is inhibited with –ffreestanding.
Basically I fixed the failing test cases by adding –ffreestanding which inhibits this behavior.
I fixed all the failing tests, including some in extra/test, there's a separate patch for that which is linked here
Note: this is a recommit after a test failure took down the original (r318669)
Patch By: mibintc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34158
llvm-svn: 320391
microMIPS64R6 is removed from backend, and therefore frontend
will show an error when target is microMIPS64R6.
This is Clang part of patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35624
llvm-svn: 320351
This commit fixes a bug in IRGen where it generates completely broken
code for __fp16 vectors on X86. For example when the following code is
compiled:
half4 hv0, hv1, hv2; // these are vectors of __fp16.
void foo221() {
hv0 = hv1 + hv2;
}
clang generates the following IR, in which two i16 vectors are added:
@hv1 = common global <4 x i16> zeroinitializer, align 8
@hv2 = common global <4 x i16> zeroinitializer, align 8
@hv0 = common global <4 x i16> zeroinitializer, align 8
define void @foo221() {
%0 = load <4 x i16>, <4 x i16>* @hv1, align 8
%1 = load <4 x i16>, <4 x i16>* @hv2, align 8
%add = add <4 x i16> %0, %1
store <4 x i16> %add, <4 x i16>* @hv0, align 8
ret void
}
To fix the bug, this commit uses the code committed in r314056, which
modified clang to promote and truncate __fp16 vectors to and from float
vectors in the AST. It also fixes another IRGen bug where a short value
is assigned to an __fp16 variable without any integer-to-floating-point
conversion, as shown in the following example:
__fp16 a;
short b;
void foo1() {
a = b;
}
@b = common global i16 0, align 2
@a = common global i16 0, align 2
define void @foo1() #0 {
%0 = load i16, i16* @b, align 2
store i16 %0, i16* @a, align 2
ret void
}
rdar://problem/20625184
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40112
llvm-svn: 320215
This adds -std=c17, -std=gnu17, and -std=iso9899:2017 as language mode flags for C17 and updates the value of __STDC_VERSION__ to the value based on the C17 FDIS. Given that this ballot cannot succeed until 2018, it is expected that we (and GCC) will add c18 flags as aliases once the ballot passes.
llvm-svn: 320089
This behaves similar to the __has_cpp_attribute builtin macro in that it allows users to detect whether an attribute is supported with the [[]] spelling syntax, which can be enabled in C with -fdouble-square-bracket-attributes.
llvm-svn: 320088
Summary:
This enables us to use information in Preprocessor when handling symbol
occurrences.
Reviewers: arphaman, hokein
Reviewed By: hokein
Subscribers: malaperle, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40884
llvm-svn: 320030
This is a follow up of r302131, in which we forgot to add SemaChecking
tests. Adding these tests revealed two problems which have been fixed:
- added missing intrinsic __qdbl,
- properly range checking ssat16 and usat16.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40888
llvm-svn: 320019
Summary:
This feature was discussed but not yet proposed. It allows a structured binding to appear as a //condition//
if (auto [ok, val] = f(...))
So the user can save an extra //condition// if the statement can test the value to-be-decomposed instead. Formally, it makes the value of the underlying object of the structured binding declaration also the value of a //condition// that is an initialized declaration.
Considering its logicality which is entirely evident from its trivial implementation, I think it might be acceptable to land it as an extension for now before I write the paper.
Reviewers: rsmith, faisalv, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: aaron.ballman, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39284
llvm-svn: 320011
Summary:
This is so we can implement concepts per P0734R0. Relevant failing test
cases are disabled.
Reviewers: hubert.reinterpretcast, rsmith, saar.raz, nwilson
Reviewed By: saar.raz
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40380
Patch by Changyu Li!
llvm-svn: 319992
codepath plus the new "minimum / maximum value of type" diagnostic to get the
same effect.
Move the warning for an in-range but tautological comparison of a constant (0
or 1) against a bool out of -Wtautological-constant-out-of-range-compare into
the more-appropriate -Wtautological-constant-compare.
llvm-svn: 319942
Summary: This patch implements 4.3 of http://open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2014/n4220.pdf. If a raw string contains a newline character, replace each newline character with the \n escape code. Without this patch, included test case (macro_raw_string.cpp) results compilation failure.
Reviewers: rsmith, doug.gregor, jkorous-apple
Reviewed By: jkorous-apple
Subscribers: jkorous-apple, vsapsai, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39279
llvm-svn: 319904
Commit 7ac28eb0a5 / r310911 ("[OpenCL] Allow targets to select address
space per type", 2017-08-15) made Basic depend on AST, introducing a
circular dependency. Break this dependency by adding the
OpenCLTypeKind enum in Basic and map from AST types to this enum in
ASTContext.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40838
llvm-svn: 319883
This can be used by clients in conjunction with an offset returned by
e.g. clang_getFileLocation. Now those clients do not need to also
open/read the file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40643
llvm-svn: 319881
Array subscript is almost always an lvalue, except for a few cases where
it is not, such as a subscript into an Objective-C property, or a
return from the function.
This commit prevents crashing in such cases.
Fixes rdar://34829842
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40584
llvm-svn: 319834
Fedora27 is using a new version of glibc that refers to the _Float128 type. This
patch adds that name as an alias to float128. I also added some predefined macro
values for the digits, mantissa, epilon, etc (FloatMacros). For the test case, I
copied an existing float128 test. This functionality needs work long term, but
it should be sufficient to tread water for a while. At Intel we have test
servers running our LLVM compiler with various open source workloads, the server
has been upgraded to Fedora27 so many workloads are failing due to _Float128.
Patch-By: mibintc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40673
llvm-svn: 319703
by client
This patch extends libclang by allowing it to record parsing operations to a
temporary JSON file. The file is deleted after parsing succeeds. When a crash
happens during parsing, the file is preserved and the client will be able to use
it to generate a reproducer for the crash.
These files are not emitted by default, and the client has to specify the
invocation emission path first.
rdar://35322543
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40527
llvm-svn: 319702
whether they have an initializer.
We cannot distinguish between a declaration of a variable template
specialization and a definition of one that lacks an initializer without this,
and would previously mistake the latter for the former.
llvm-svn: 319605
As rsmith pointed out, the original implementation of this intrinsic
missed a number of important situations. This patch fixe a bunch of
shortcomings and implementation details to make it work correctly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39347
llvm-svn: 319446
Sometimes we check the validity of some construct between producing a
diagnostic and producing its notes. Ideally, we wouldn't do that, but in
practice running code that "cannot possibly produce a diagnostic" in such a
situation should be safe, and reasonable factoring of some code requires it
with our current diagnostics infrastruture. If this does happen, a diagnostic
that's suppressed due to SFINAE should not cause notes connected to the prior
diagnostic to be suppressed.
llvm-svn: 319408
Summary:
The -fxray-always-emit-customevents flag instructs clang to always emit
the LLVM IR for calls to the `__xray_customevent(...)` built-in
function. The default behaviour currently respects whether the function
has an `[[clang::xray_never_instrument]]` attribute, and thus not lower
the appropriate IR code for the custom event built-in.
This change allows users calling through to the
`__xray_customevent(...)` built-in to always see those calls lowered to
the corresponding LLVM IR to lay down instrumentation points for these
custom event calls.
Using this flag enables us to emit even just the user-provided custom
events even while never instrumenting the start/end of the function
where they appear. This is useful in cases where "phase markers" using
__xray_customevent(...) can have very few instructions, must never be
instrumented when entered/exited.
Reviewers: rnk, dblaikie, kpw
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40601
llvm-svn: 319388
directives.
According to the OpenMP standard, only loop control variables can be
used in linear clauses of distribute-based simd directives.
llvm-svn: 319362
This warning is known to be noisy and projects frequently disable it. In
particular, this should make building isl as bundled in polly with
clang-cl a lot quieter.
llvm-svn: 319336
This is a re-apply of r319294.
adds -fseh-exceptions and -fdwarf-exceptions flags
clang will check if the user has specified an exception model flag,
in the absense of specifying the exception model clang will then check
the driver default and append the model flag for that target to cc1
-fno-exceptions has a higher priority then specifying the model
move __SEH__ macro definitions out of Targets into InitPreprocessor
behind the -fseh-exceptions flag
move __ARM_DWARF_EH__ macrodefinitions out of verious targets and into
InitPreprocessor behind the -fdwarf-exceptions flag and arm|thumb check
remove unused USESEHExceptions from the MinGW Driver
fold USESjLjExceptions into a new GetExceptionModel function that
gives the toolchain classes more flexibility with eh models
Reviewers: rnk, mstorsjo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39673
llvm-svn: 319297
adds -fseh-exceptions and -fdwarf-exceptions flags
clang will check if the user has specified an exception model flag,
in the absense of specifying the exception model clang will then check
the driver default and append the model flag for that target to cc1
clang cc1 assumes dwarf is the default if none is passed
and -fno-exceptions has a higher priority then specifying the model
move __SEH__ macro definitions out of Targets into InitPreprocessor
behind the -fseh-exceptions flag
move __ARM_DWARF_EH__ macrodefinitions out of verious targets and into
InitPreprocessor behind the -fdwarf-exceptions flag and arm|thumb check
remove unused USESEHExceptions from the MinGW Driver
fold USESjLjExceptions into a new GetExceptionModel function that
gives the toolchain classes more flexibility with eh models
Reviewers: rnk, mstorsjo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39673
llvm-svn: 319294
These functions were defined as static members of TemplateSpecializationType.
Now they are moved to namespace level. Previously there were different
implementations for lists containing TemplateArgument and TemplateArgumentLoc,
now these implementations share the same code.
This change is a result of refactoring patch D40508. NFC.
llvm-svn: 319178
Summary:
This patch allows grouping multiple #include blocks together and sort all includes as one big block.
Additionally, sorted includes can be regrouped after sorting based on configured categories.
Contributed by @KrzysztofKapusta!
Reviewers: krasimir
Reviewed By: krasimir
Subscribers: cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40288
llvm-svn: 319024
This also clarifies some terminology used by the diagnostic (methods -> Objective-C methods, fields -> non-static data members, etc).
Many of the tests needed to be updated in multiple places for the diagnostic wording tweaks. The first instance of the diagnostic for that attribute is fully specified and subsequent instances cut off the complete list (to make it easier if additional subjects are added in the future for the attribute).
llvm-svn: 319002
Shadow stack solution introduces a new stack for return addresses only.
The stack has a Shadow Stack Pointer (SSP) that points to the last address to which we expect to return.
If we return to a different address an exception is triggered.
This patch includes shadow stack intrinsics as well as the corresponding CET header.
It includes CET clang flags for shadow stack and Indirect Branch Tracking.
For more information, please see the following:
https://software.intel.com/sites/default/files/managed/4d/2a/control-flow-enforcement-technology-preview.pdf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40224
Change-Id: I79ad0925a028bbc94c8ecad75f6daa2f214171f1
llvm-svn: 318995
fma4 instructions zero the upper bits of the xmm register. fma3 instructions leave the bits unmodified. This requires separate builtins for the different semantics.
While we're cleaning up the scalar builtins this also removes the fma3 fmsub/fnmadd/fnmsub builtins by using negates in the header file.
llvm-svn: 318985
Summary: Preambles are large and we should avoid copying them.
Reviewers: bkramer, klimek
Reviewed By: bkramer
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40302
llvm-svn: 318945
Summary: Provide default implementations so that only getCompileCommands() is mandatory.
Reviewers: ioeric
Subscribers: cfe-commits, bkramer, klimek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40409
llvm-svn: 318943
Two new matchers for `CXXNewExpr` are added which may be useful e.g. in
`clang-tidy` checkers. One of them is `isArray` which matches `new[]` but not
plain `new`. The other one, `hasArraySize` matches `new[]` for a given size.
llvm-svn: 318909
When requesting a tooltip for a function call in an IDE, the fully
qualified name helps to remove ambiguity in the function signature.
Patch by Nikolai Kosjar!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40013
llvm-svn: 318896
The support for relax relocations is dependent on the linker and
different toolchains within the same compiler can be using different
linkers some of which may or may not support relax relocations.
Give toolchains the option to control whether they want to use relax
relocations in addition to the existing (global) build system option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39831
llvm-svn: 318816
This is an instrumentation flag that's similar to
-finstrument-functions, but it only inserts calls on function entry, the
calls are inserted post-inlining, and they don't take any arugments.
This is intended for users who want to instrument function entry with
minimal overhead.
(-pg would be another alternative, but forces frame pointer emission and
affects link flags, so is probably best left alone to be used for
generating gcov data.)
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40276
llvm-svn: 318785
OpenMP 5.0 introduces asynchronous data update/dependecies clauses on
target data directives. Patch adds initial support for outer task
regions to use task-based codegen for future async target data
directives.
llvm-svn: 318781
This was previously done in some places, but for example not for
bundling so that single object compilation with -c failed. In
addition cubin was used for all file types during unbundling which
is incorrect for assembly files that are passed to ptxas.
Tighten up the tests so that we can't regress in that area.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40250
llvm-svn: 318763
This implements [dcl.modules.export] from the C++ Modules TS, which lets a module re-export another module with the "export import" syntax.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40270
llvm-svn: 318744
As reported in llvm bugzilla 32377.
Here’s a patch to add preinclude of stdc-predef.h.
The gcc documentation says “On GNU/Linux, <stdc-predef.h> is pre-included.”
See https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-4.8/porting_to.html;
The preinclude is inhibited with –ffreestanding.
Basically I fixed the failing test cases by adding –ffreestanding which inhibits
this behavior.
I fixed all the failing tests, including some in extra/test, there's a separate
patch for that which is linked here
Patch By: mibintc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34158
llvm-svn: 318669
This caused warnings also when the if or else comes from macros. There was an
attempt to fix this in r318556, but that introduced new problems and was
reverted. Reverting this too until the whole issue is sorted.
> This looks like it was just an oversight.
>
> Fixes http://llvm.org/pr35319
>
> git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk@318456 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
llvm-svn: 318667
It seems this somehow made -Wempty-body fire in some macro cases where
it didn't before, e.g.
../../third_party/ffmpeg/libavcodec/bitstream.c(169,5): error: if statement has empty body [-Werror,-Wempty-body]
ff_dlog(NULL, "new table index=%d size=%d\n", table_index, table_size);
^
../../third_party/ffmpeg\libavutil/internal.h(276,80): note: expanded from macro 'ff_dlog'
# define ff_dlog(ctx, ...) do { if (0) av_log(ctx, AV_LOG_DEBUG, __VA_ARGS__); } while (0)
^
../../third_party/ffmpeg/libavcodec/bitstream.c(169,5): note: put the
semicolon on a separate line to silence this warning
Reverting until this can be figured out.
> Do not show it when `if` or `else` come from macros.
> E.g.,
>
> #define USED(A) if (A); else
> #define SOME_IF(A) if (A)
>
> void test() {
> // No warnings are shown in those cases now.
> USED(0);
> SOME_IF(0);
> }
>
> Patch by Ilya Biryukov!
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40185
llvm-svn: 318665
set -pie as default for musl linux targets
add detection of alpine linux
append appropriate compile flags for alpine
Reviewers: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39588
llvm-svn: 318608
Some target devices (e.g. Nvidia GPUs) don't support dynamic stack
allocation and hence no VLAs. Print errors with description instead
of failing in the backend or generating code that doesn't work.
This patch handles explicit uses of VLAs (local variable in target
or declare target region) or implicitly generated (private) VLAs
for reductions on VLAs or on array sections with non-constant size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39505
llvm-svn: 318601
Do not show it when `if` or `else` come from macros.
E.g.,
#define USED(A) if (A); else
#define SOME_IF(A) if (A)
void test() {
// No warnings are shown in those cases now.
USED(0);
SOME_IF(0);
}
Patch by Ilya Biryukov!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40185
llvm-svn: 318556
When mixing PCH and Implicit Modules, missing a header search path
can lead to the implicit built PCM to complaint about not finding its
matching module map.
Instead of adding more magic to implicit modules engine, add a note to
help the user add the appropriate path.
rdar://problem/33388847
llvm-svn: 318503
explicitly instantiated, still emit it with each use.
We don't emit a definition of the member with an explicit instantiation
definition (and indeed it appears that we're not allowed to, since an explicit
instantiation definition does not constitute an odr-use and only odr-use
permits definition for defaulted special members). So we still need to emit a
weak definition with each use.
This also makes defaulted-in-class declarations behave more like
implicitly-declared special members, which matches their design intent.
And it matches the way this problem was solved in GCC.
llvm-svn: 318474
Summary:
In https://reviews.llvm.org/D39572 , I added support for specifying
`Type` when invoking `InMemoryFileSystem::addFile()`.
However, I didn't account for the fact that when `Type` is
`directory_file`, we need to construct an `InMemoryDirectory`, not an
`InMemoryFile`, or else clients cannot create files inside that
directory.
This diff fixes the bug and adds a test.
Test Plan: New test added. Ran test with:
% make -j12 check-clang-tools
Reviewers: bkramer, hokein
Reviewed By: bkramer
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40140
llvm-svn: 318445
Summary:
These preambles are built by ASTUnit and clangd. Previously, preambles
were always stored on disk.
In-memory preambles are routed back to the compiler as virtual files in
a custom VFS.
Interface of ASTUnit does not allow to use in-memory preambles, as
ASTUnit::CodeComplete receives FileManager as a parameter, so we can't
change VFS used by the compiler inside the CodeComplete method.
A follow-up commit will update clangd in clang-tools-extra to use
in-memory preambles.
Reviewers: klimek, sammccall, bkramer
Reviewed By: klimek
Subscribers: ioeric, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39842
llvm-svn: 318411
Internal linkage variables ODR referenced from inline functions create
ODR violations (the same inline function ends up having different
definitions in each TU, since it references different variables - rather
than one definition).
This also happens to break modular code generation - so this is the last
fix to allow clang to compile with modular code generation.
llvm-svn: 318304
This updates -mcount to use the new attribute names (LLVM r318195), and
switches over -finstrument-functions to also use these attributes rather
than inserting instrumentation in the frontend.
It also adds a new flag, -finstrument-functions-after-inlining, which
makes the cygprofile instrumentation get inserted after inlining rather
than before.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39331
llvm-svn: 318199
Summary:
Allow the `isDefinition()` matcher to apply to `ObjCMethodDecl` nodes, in
addition to those it already supports. For whatever reason, `ObjCMethodDecl`
does not inherit from `FunctionDecl` and so this is specialization is necessary.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, malcolm.parsons, alexshap
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39948
llvm-svn: 318152
cbrt() is always constant because it can't overflow or underflow. Therefore, it can't set errno.
fma() is not always constant because it can overflow or underflow. Therefore, it can set errno.
But we know that it never sets errno on GNU / MSVC, so make it constant in those environments.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39641
llvm-svn: 318093
Change Header files of the intrinsics for lowering test and testn intrinsics to IR code.
Removed test and testn builtins from clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38737
llvm-svn: 318035
The anonymous union did NOT save us storage, but instead behaved as if we added an additional integer data member to FunctionDecl.
For additional context, the anonymous union renders the bit fields as non-adjacent and prevents them from sharing the same 'memory location' (i.e. bit-storage) by requiring the anonymous union object to be appropriately aligned.
This was confirmed through discussion with Richard Smith in Albuquerque (ISO C++ Meeting)
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL316292
llvm-svn: 317984
llvm-objcopy is getting to where it can be used in non-trivial ways
(such as for dwarf fission in clang). It now supports dwarf fission but
this feature hasn't been thoroughly tested yet. This change allows
people to optionally build clang to use llvm-objcopy rather than GNU
objcopy. By default GNU objcopy is still used so nothing should change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39029
llvm-svn: 317960
Summary:
This change implements the changes required in both clang and
compiler-rt to allow building XRay-instrumented binaries in Darwin. For
now we limit this to x86_64. We also start building the XRay runtime
library in compiler-rt for osx.
A caveat to this is that we don't have the tests set up and running
yet, which we'll do in a set of follow-on changes.
This patch uses the monorepo layout for the coordinated change across
multiple projects.
Reviewers: kubamracek
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39114
llvm-svn: 317875
The backend should be able to combine the negates to create fmsub, fnmadd, and fnmsub. faddsub converting to fsubadd still needs work I think, but should be very doable.
This matches what we already do for the masked builtins.
This only covers the packed builtins. Scalar builtins will be done after FMA4 is fixed.
llvm-svn: 317873
Summary:
This is an alternative to JSONCompilationDatabase for simple projects that
don't use a build system such as CMake.
(You can also drop one in ~, to make your tools use e.g. C++11 by default)
There's no facility for varying flags per-source-file or per-machine.
Possibly this could be accommodated backwards-compatibly using cpp, but even if
not the simplicity seems worthwhile for the cases that are addressed.
Tested with clangd, works great! (requires clangd restart)
Reviewers: klimek
Subscribers: ilya-biryukov, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39799
llvm-svn: 317777
I think we need to use different builtins for the FMA4 instructions since those instructions zero the upper bits and FMA3 instructions pass the bits through.
So this moves the existing builtins to be the FMA3 versions. New versions will be added for FMA4.
llvm-svn: 317766
Summary:
The -coverage option is not a CoreOption, so it is not available to clang-cl.
This patch adds the CoreOption flag to "-coverage" to allow it to be used with clang-cl.
Reviewers: rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38221
llvm-svn: 317709
Summary:
For code reuse in SemaCodeComplete.
Note that the tests for QualTypeNames are still in Tooling as they use
Tooling's common testing code.
Reviewers: rsmith, saugustine, rnk, klimek, bkramer
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39224
llvm-svn: 317676
Summary:
This just seems to have been an oversight. We already supported the f64
atomic add with an explicit scope (e.g. "cta"), but not the scopeless
version.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: jholewinski, sanjoy, cfe-commits, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39638
llvm-svn: 317623
when needed
This commit implements the semicolon insertion logic into the extract
refactoring. The following rules are used:
- extracting expression: add terminating ';' to the extracted function.
- extracting statements that don't require terminating ';' (e.g. switch): add
terminating ';' to the callee.
- extracting statements with ';': move (if possible) the original ';' from the
callee and add terminating ';'.
- otherwise, add ';' to both places.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39441
llvm-svn: 317343
Summary:
This change adds Scudo as a possible Sanitizer option via -fsanitize=.
This allows for easier static & shared linking of the Scudo library, it allows
us to enforce PIE (otherwise the security of the allocator is moot), and check
for incompatible Sanitizers combo.
In its current form, Scudo is not compatible with any other Sanitizer, but the
plan is to make it work in conjunction with UBsan (-fsanitize=scudo,undefined),
which will require additional work outside of the scope of this change.
Reviewers: eugenis, kcc, alekseyshl
Reviewed By: eugenis, alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits, srhines
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39334
llvm-svn: 317337
When a preamble ends in a conditional preprocessor block that is being
skipped, the preprocessor needs to continue skipping that block when
the preamble is used.
This fixes PR34570.
llvm-svn: 317308
Added support for regcall as default calling convention. Also added code to
exclude main when applying default calling conventions.
Patch-By: eandrews
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39210
llvm-svn: 317268
This just makes const-ness of the builtins match const-ness of their lib function siblings.
We're deferring fixing some of these that are obviously wrong to follow-up patches.
Hopefully, the bugs are visible in the new test file (added at rL317220).
As the description in Builtins.def says: "e = const, but only when -fmath-errno=0".
This is step 2 of N to fix builtins and math calls as discussed in D39204.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39481
llvm-svn: 317265
Summary:
This change allows generalizing pointers in type signatures used for
cfi-icall by enabling the -fsanitize-cfi-icall-generalize-pointers flag.
This works by 1) emitting an additional generalized type signature
metadata node for functions and 2) llvm.type.test()ing for the
generalized type for translation units with the flag specified.
This flag is incompatible with -fsanitize-cfi-cross-dso because it would
require emitting twice as many type hashes which would increase artifact
size.
Reviewers: pcc, eugenis
Reviewed By: pcc
Subscribers: kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39358
llvm-svn: 317044
The right shift operator was not seen as a valid operator in a fold expression, which is PR32563.
Patch by Nicolas Lesser ("Blitz Rakete")!
llvm-svn: 317032
Extend ExprInspection checker to make it possible to dump the issue hash of
arbitrary expressions. This change makes it possible to make issue hash related
tests more concise and also makes debugging issue hash related problems easier.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38844
llvm-svn: 316899
Summary:
Clang typically warns that in the following class hierarchy, 'A' is
inaccessible because there is no series of casts that the user can
write to access it unambiguously:
struct A { };
struct B : A { };
struct C : A, B { };
MSVC allows the user to convert from C* to A*, though, and we've
encountered this issue in the latest Windows SDK headers.
This patch allows this conversion when -fms-compatibility is set and
adds a warning for it under -Wmicrosoft-inaccessible-base.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39389
llvm-svn: 316807
Craig noticed that CodeGen wasn't properly ignoring the
values sent to the target attribute. This patch ignores
them.
This patch also sets the 'default' for this checking to
'supported', since only X86 has implemented the support
for checking valid CPU names and Feature Names.
One test was changed to i686, since it uses a lakemont,
which would otherwise be prohibited in x86_64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39357
llvm-svn: 316783
This commit changes the way that the refactoring operation classes are
structured:
- Users have to call `initiate` instead of constructing an instance of the
class. The `initiate` is now supposed to have custom initiation logic, and
you don't need to subclass the builtin requirements.
- A new `describe` function returns a structure with the id, title and the
description of the refactoring operation.
The refactoring action classes are now placed into one common place in
RefactoringActions.cpp instead of being separate.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38985
llvm-svn: 316780
It looks like at one time Options.td was in alphabetical order, but that looks to have long been broken. The result is that it all the no- x86 options got separated from their other friends for no good reason.
This patch puts them all together in one place with the no- paired with its none negated version.
I've kept all the SSE and AVX/AVX512 bits together since they represent a somewhat linear progression of features. The rest I just put in alphabetical order after.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39341
llvm-svn: 316705
Changes all existing attributes that currently use GNU<"attr"> and CXX11<"clang", "attr> spellings to instead use the Clang<"attr"> spelling.
No additional tests are necessary because the existing tests already use both spellings for the attributes converted to the new spelling. No functional changes are expected.
llvm-svn: 316658
Summary:
This defines a `clang::tooling::ToolExecutor` interface that can be extended to support different execution plans including standalone execution on a given set of TUs or parallel execution on all TUs in a codebase.
In order to enable multiprocessing execution, tool actions are expected to output result into a `ToolResults` interface provided by executors. The `ToolResults` interface abstracts how results are stored e.g. in-memory for standalone executions or on-disk for large-scale execution.
New executors can be registered as `ToolExecutorPlugin`s via the `ToolExecutorPluginRegistry`. CLI tools can use `createExecutorFromCommandLineArgs` to create a specific registered executor according to the command-line arguments.
This patch also implements `StandaloneToolExecutor` which has the same behavior as the current `ClangTool` interface, i.e. execute frontend actions on a given set of TUs. At this point, it's simply a wrapper around `ClangTool` at this point.
This is still experimental but expected to replace the existing `ClangTool` interface so that specific tools would not need to worry about execution.
Reviewers: klimek, arphaman, hokein, sammccall
Reviewed By: klimek
Subscribers: cfe-commits, djasper, mgorny, omtcyfz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34272
llvm-svn: 316653
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33904
Happens when static function is accessed via the class variable. That leads to incorrect overloads number because the variable is considered as the first argument.
struct Bar {
static void foo(); static void foo(int);
};
int main() {
Bar b;
b.foo(/*complete here*/); // did not work before
Bar::foo(/*complete here*/); // worked fine
}
Patch by Ivan Donchevskii!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36390
llvm-svn: 316646
Summary:
CUDA 9's minimum sm is sm_30.
Ideally we should also make sm_30 the default when compiling with CUDA
9, but that seems harder than it should be.
Subscribers: sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39109
llvm-svn: 316611
This commit adds an initial, skeleton outline of the "extract function"
refactoring. The extracted function doesn't capture variables / rewrite code
yet, it just basically does a simple copy-paste.
The following initiation rules are specified:
- extraction can only be done for executable code in a function/method/block.
This means that you can't extract a global variable initialize into a function
right now.
- simple literals and references are not extractable.
This commit also adds support for full source ranges to clang-refactor's test
mode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38982
llvm-svn: 316465
With enabled CINDEXTEST_CODE_COMPLETE_PATTERNS env option (which enables
IncludeCodePatterns in completion options) code completion after colon
currently suggests access modifiers with 2 completion chunks which is
incorrect.
Example:
class A : <Cursor>B
{
}
Currently we get 'NotImplemented:{TypedText public}{Colon :} (40)'
but the correct line is just 'NotImplemented:{TypedText public} (40)'
The fix introduces more specific scope that occurs between ':' and '{'
It allows us to determine when we don't need to add ':' as a second
chunk to the public/protected/private access modifiers.
Patch by Ivan Donchevskii!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38618
llvm-svn: 316436
Summary: This returns error instead of exiting the program in case of error.
Reviewers: klimek, hokein
Reviewed By: hokein
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39042
llvm-svn: 316433
Allow Obj-C ivars with incomplete array type but only as the last ivar.
Also add a requirement for ivars that contain a flexible array member to
be at the end of class too. It is possible to add in a subclass another
ivar at the end but we'll emit a warning in this case. Also we'll emit a
warning if a variable sized ivar is declared in class extension or in
implementation because subclasses won't know they should avoid adding
new ivars.
In ARC incomplete array objects are treated as __unsafe_unretained so
require them to be marked as such.
Prohibit synthesizing ivars with flexible array members because order of
synthesized ivars is not obvious and tricky to control. Spelling out
ivar explicitly gives control to developers and helps to avoid surprises
with unexpected ivar ordering.
For C and C++ changed diagnostic to tell explicitly a field is not the
last one and point to the next field. It is not as useful as in Obj-C
but it is an improvement and it is consistent with Obj-C. For C for
unions emit more specific err_flexible_array_union instead of generic
err_field_incomplete.
rdar://problem/21054495
Reviewers: rjmccall, theraven
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38773
llvm-svn: 316381
This is for consistency with lld-link, see https://reviews.llvm.org/D38972
Also give --version a help text so it shows up in --help / /? output (for
both clang-cl and regular clang).
llvm-svn: 316335
In order to identify the copy deduction candidate, I considered two approaches:
- attempt to determine whether an implicit guide is a copy deduction candidate by checking certain properties of its subsituted parameter during overload-resolution.
- using one of the many bits (WillHaveBody) from FunctionDecl (that CXXDeductionGuideDecl inherits from) that are otherwise irrelevant for deduction guides
After some brittle gymnastics w the first strategy, I settled on the second, although to avoid confusion and to give that bit a better name, i turned it into a member of an anonymous union.
Given this identification 'bit', the tweak to overload resolution was a simple reordering of the deduction guide checks (in SemaOverload.cpp::isBetterOverloadCandidate), in-line with Jason Merrill's p0620r0 drafting which made it into the working paper. Concordant with that, I made sure the copy deduction candidate is always added.
References:
See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34970
See http://wg21.link/p0620r0
llvm-svn: 316292
constant expressions.
We permit array-to-pointer decay on such arrays, but disallow pointer
arithmetic (since we do not know whether it will have defined behavior).
This is based on r311970 and r301822 (the former by me and the latter by Robert
Haberlach). Between then and now, two things have changed: we have committee
feedback indicating that this is indeed the right direction, and the code
broken by this change has been fixed.
This is necessary in C++17 to continue accepting certain forms of non-type
template argument involving arrays of unknown bound.
llvm-svn: 316245
GCC tries to shorten system headers in depfiles using its real path
(resolving components like ".." and following symlinks). Mimic this
feature to ensure that the Ninja build tool detects the correct
dependencies when a symlink changes directory levels, see
https://github.com/ninja-build/ninja/issues/1330
An option to disable this feature is added in case "these changed header
paths may conflict with some compilation environments", see
https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2012-09/msg00287.html
Note that the original feature request for GCC
(https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=52974) also included paths
preprocessed output (-E) and diagnostics. That is not implemented now
since I am not sure if it breaks something else.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37954
llvm-svn: 316193
consecutive statements
This commit adds a CodeRangeASTSelection value to the refactoring library. This
value represents a set of selected statements in one body of code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38835
llvm-svn: 316104
This patch has the following changes
A new flag "-mhvx-length={64B|128B}" is introduced to specify the length of the vector.
Previously we have used "-mhvx-double" for 128 Bytes. This adds the target-feature "+hvx-length{64|128}b"
The "-mhvx" flag must be provided on command line to enable HVX for Hexagon. If no -mhvx-length flag
is specified, a default length is picked from the arch mentioned in this priority order from either -mhvx=vxx
or -mcpu. For v60 and v62 the default length is 64 Byte. For unknown versions, the length is 128 Byte. The
-mhvx flag adds the target-feature "+hvxv{hvx_version}"
The 64 Byte mode is soon going to be deprecated. A warning is emitted if 64 Byte is enabled. A warning is
still emitted for the default 64 Byte as well. This warning can be suppressed with a -Wno flag.
The "-mhvx-double" and "-mno-hvx-double" flags are deprecated. A warning is emitted if the driver sees
them on commandline. "-mhvx-double" is an alias to "-mhvx-length=128B"
The compilation will error out if -mhvx-length is specified with out an -mhvx/-mhvx= flag
The macro HVX_LENGTH is defined and is set to the length of the vector.
Eg: #define HVX_LENGTH 64
The macro HVX_ARCH is defined and is set to the version of the HVX.
Eg: #define HVX_ARCH 62
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38852
llvm-svn: 316102
It'd be better that they are #cmakedefine01 rather than #cmakedefine.
(#if FOO rather than #if defined(FOO))
Then we can find missing #include "clang/Config/config.h" in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35541
llvm-svn: 316061