Summary: Mention that no_sanitize attribute can be used with globals.
Reviewers: alekseyshl
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48390
llvm-svn: 335193
Introduce -Wquoted-include-in-framework-header, which should fire a warning
whenever a quote include appears in a framework header and suggest a fix-it.
For instance, for header A.h added in the tests, this is how the warning looks
like:
./A.framework/Headers/A.h:2:10: warning: double-quoted include "A0.h" in framework header, expected angle-bracketed instead [-Wquoted-include-in-framework-header]
#include "A0.h"
^~~~~~
<A/A0.h>
./A.framework/Headers/A.h:3:10: warning: double-quoted include "B.h" in framework header, expected angle-bracketed instead [-Wquoted-include-in-framework-header]
#include "B.h"
^~~~~
<B.h>
This helps users to prevent frameworks from using local headers when in fact
they should be targetting system level ones.
The warning is off by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47157
rdar://problem/37077034
llvm-svn: 335184
Diagnose the name of the class being shadowed by using declarations, and
improve the diagnostics for the case where the name of the class is
shadowed by a non-static data member in a class with constructors. In
the latter case, we now always give the "member with the same name as
its class" diagnostic regardless of the relative order of the member and
the constructor, rather than giving an inscrutible diagnostic if the
constructor appears second.
llvm-svn: 335182
They were hot even hooked into CGBuiltin's machinery. Even if they were,
CUDA does not support AS-specific pointers, so there would be no legal way
no way to call these builtins.
This came up in D47154.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47845
llvm-svn: 335168
This diff includes the logic for setting the precision bits for each primary fixed point type in the target info and logic for initializing a fixed point literal.
Fixed point literals are declared using the suffixes
```
hr: short _Fract
uhr: unsigned short _Fract
r: _Fract
ur: unsigned _Fract
lr: long _Fract
ulr: unsigned long _Fract
hk: short _Accum
uhk: unsigned short _Accum
k: _Accum
uk: unsigned _Accum
```
Errors are also thrown for illegal literal values
```
unsigned short _Accum u_short_accum = 256.0uhk; // expected-error{{the integral part of this literal is too large for this unsigned _Accum type}}
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46915
llvm-svn: 335148
Summary:
The comment with the OpenCL clause about this clearly
says: "No type shall be qualified by qualifiers for
two or more different address spaces."
This must mean that two or more qualifiers for the
_same_ address space is allowed. However, it is
likely unintended by the programmer, so emit a
warning.
For dependent address space types, reject them like
before since we cannot know what the address space
will be.
Patch by Bevin Hansson (ebevhan).
Reviewers: Anastasia
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Subscribers: bader, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47630
llvm-svn: 335103
... instead of prepending it at the beginning (the original behavior
since implemented in r122535 2010-12-23). This builds up an
AttributeList in the the order in which the attributes appear in the
source.
The reverse order caused nodes for attributes in the AST (e.g. LoopHint)
to be in the reverse, and therefore printed in the wrong order by
-ast-dump. Some TODO comments mention this. The order was explicitly
reversed for enable_if attribute overload resolution and name mangling,
which is not necessary anymore with this patch.
The change unfortunately has some secondary effects, especially for
diagnostic output. In the simplest cases, the CHECK lines or expected
diagnostic were changed to the the new output. If the kind of
error/warning changed, the attribute's order was changed instead.
It also causes some 'previous occurrence here' hints to be textually
after the main marker. This typically happens when attributes are
merged, but are incompatible. Interchanging the role of the the main
and note SourceLocation will also cause the case where two different
declaration's attributes (in contrast to multiple attributes of the
same declaration) are merged to be reversed. There is no easy fix
because sometimes previous attributes are merged into a new
declaration's attribute list, sometimes new attributes are added to a
previous declaration's attribute list. Since 'previous occurrence here'
pointing to locations after the main marker is not rare, I left the
markers as-is; it is only relevant when the attributes are declared in
the same declaration anyway, which often is on the same line.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48100
llvm-svn: 335084
The recommit ensures that the tests that failed on bots don't trigger the warning.
Xcode 10 removes support for libstdc++, but the users just get a confusing
include not file warning when including an STL header (when building for iOS6
which uses libstdc++ by default for example).
This patch adds a new warning that lets the user know that the libstdc++ include
path was not found to ensure that the user is more aware of why the error occurs.
rdar://40830462
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48297
llvm-svn: 335081
Xcode 10 removes support for libstdc++, but the users just get a confusing
include not file warning when including an STL header (when building for iOS6
which uses libstdc++ by default for example).
This patch adds a new warning that lets the user know that the libstdc++ include
path was not found to ensure that the user is more aware of why the error occurs.
rdar://40830462
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48297
llvm-svn: 335063
Summary:
This is the second attempt of r333500 (Update NRVO logic to support early return).
The previous one was reverted for a miscompilation for an incorrect NRVO set up on templates such as:
```
struct Foo {};
template <typename T>
T bar() {
T t;
if (false)
return T();
return t;
}
```
Where, `t` is marked as non-NRVO variable before its instantiation. However, while its instantiation, it's left an NRVO candidate, turned into an NRVO variable later.
Reviewers: rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47586
llvm-svn: 335019
This checker analyzes C++ constructor calls, and reports uninitialized fields.
Due to the nature of this problem (uninitialized fields after an object
construction), this checker doesn't search for bugs, but rather is a tool to
enforce a specific programming model where every field needs to be initialized.
This checker lands in alpha for now, and a number of followup patches will be
made to reduce false negatives and to make it easier for the user to understand
what rules the checker relies on, eg. whether a derived class' constructor is
responsible for initializing inherited data members or whether it should be
handled in the base class' constructor.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45532
llvm-svn: 334935
This allows matchers like:
friendDecl(hasType(cxxRecordDecl(...)))
friendDecl(hasType(asString(...)))
It seems that hasType is probably the most reasonable narrowing matcher to
overload, since it is already used to narrow to other declaration kinds.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48242
Reviewers: klimek, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
llvm-svn: 334930
The specifiesTypeLoc() matcher narrows a nestedNameSpecifier matcher based on a
typeloc within the NNS. However, the matcher does not guard against NNS which
are a namespace, and cause getTypeLoc to assert-fail.
llvm-svn: 334929
Summary:
New method dump the SMT formula and the Z3 implementation.
There is no test because I only used it for debugging.
However, if requested, I can add an option to the static analyzer to dump the formula (whole program? per path?), maybe something like the trimmed graph but for SMT formulas.
Reviewers: NoQ, george.karpenkov, ddcc
Reviewed By: george.karpenkov
Subscribers: xazax.hun, szepet, a.sidorin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48221
llvm-svn: 334891
ASTImporter tests may produce source file related warnings, the diagnostic
client should be in correct state to handle it. Added 'beginSourceFile' to set
the client state.
Patch by: Balázs Kéri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47445
llvm-svn: 334804
The previous names took the shift amount in bits to match gcc and required a multiply by 8 in the header. This creates a misleading error message when we check the range of the immediate to the builtin since the allowed range also got multiplied by 8.
This commit changes the builtins to use a byte shift amount to match the underlying instruction and the Intel intrinsic.
Fixes the remaining issue from PR37795.
llvm-svn: 334773
This diff includes changes for the remaining _Fract and _Sat fixed point types.
```
signed short _Fract s_short_fract;
signed _Fract s_fract;
signed long _Fract s_long_fract;
unsigned short _Fract u_short_fract;
unsigned _Fract u_fract;
unsigned long _Fract u_long_fract;
// Aliased fixed point types
short _Accum short_accum;
_Accum accum;
long _Accum long_accum;
short _Fract short_fract;
_Fract fract;
long _Fract long_fract;
// Saturated fixed point types
_Sat signed short _Accum sat_s_short_accum;
_Sat signed _Accum sat_s_accum;
_Sat signed long _Accum sat_s_long_accum;
_Sat unsigned short _Accum sat_u_short_accum;
_Sat unsigned _Accum sat_u_accum;
_Sat unsigned long _Accum sat_u_long_accum;
_Sat signed short _Fract sat_s_short_fract;
_Sat signed _Fract sat_s_fract;
_Sat signed long _Fract sat_s_long_fract;
_Sat unsigned short _Fract sat_u_short_fract;
_Sat unsigned _Fract sat_u_fract;
_Sat unsigned long _Fract sat_u_long_fract;
// Aliased saturated fixed point types
_Sat short _Accum sat_short_accum;
_Sat _Accum sat_accum;
_Sat long _Accum sat_long_accum;
_Sat short _Fract sat_short_fract;
_Sat _Fract sat_fract;
_Sat long _Fract sat_long_fract;
```
This diff only allows for declaration of these fixed point types. Assignment and other operations done on fixed point types according to http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n1169.pdf will be added in future patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46911
llvm-svn: 334718
Summary:
It seems that the changes done to `ClangFormatStyleOptions.rst` @334408 are causing the generation of the documentation to fail, with the following error:
Warning, treated as error:
/llvm/tools/clang/docs/ClangFormatStyleOptions.rst:1060: WARNING: Definition list ends without a blank line; unexpected unindent.
This is due to missing indent in some code block, and fixed by this patch.
Reviewers: krasimir, djasper, klimek
Reviewed By: krasimir
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48161
llvm-svn: 334709
WebKit C++ style for object initialization is as follows:
Foo foo { bar };
Yet using clang-format -style=webkit changes this to:
Foo foo{ bar };
As there is no existing combination of rules that will ensure a space
before a braced list in this fashion, this patch adds a new
SpaceBeforeCpp11BracedList rule.
Patch by Ross Kirsling!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46024
llvm-svn: 334692
The reasoning behind this change is similar to the previous commit, r334681.
Because members are already in scope when construction occurs, we are not
suffering from liveness problems, but we still want to figure out if the object
was constructed with construction context, because in this case we'll be able
to avoid trivial copy, which we don't always model perfectly. It'd also have
more importance when copy elision is implemented.
This also gets rid of the old CFG look-behind mechanism.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47350
llvm-svn: 334682
When analyzing C++ code, a common operation in the analyzer is to discover
target region for object construction by looking at CFG metadata ("construction
contexts"), and then track the region path-sensitively until object construction
is resolved, where the amount of information, again, depends on construction
context.
Scan construction context only once for both purposes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47304
llvm-svn: 334678
Summary: These intrinsics result in hint instructions. They are provided here for MSVC ARM64 compatibility.
Reviewers: mstorsjo, compnerd, javed.absar
Reviewed By: mstorsjo
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, chrib, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48132
llvm-svn: 334639
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37778
...shows a miscompile resulting from marking nan builtins as 'const'.
The nan libcalls/builtins take a pointer argument:
http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/cmath/nan-function/
...and the chars dereferenced by that arg are used to fill in the NaN constant payload bits.
"const" means that the pointer argument isn't dereferenced. That's translated to "readnone" in LLVM.
"pure" means that the pointer argument may be dereferenced. That's translated to "readonly" in LLVM.
This change prevents the IR optimizer from killing the lead-up to the nan call here:
double a() {
char buf[4];
buf[0] = buf[1] = buf[2] = '9';
buf[3] = '\0';
return __builtin_nan(buf);
}
...the optimizer isn't currently able to simplify this to a constant as we might hope,
but this patch should solve the miscompile.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48134
llvm-svn: 334628
Summary:
In many cases we can't devirtualize
because definition of vtable is not present. Most of the
time it is caused by inline virtual function not beeing
emitted. Forcing emitting of vtable adds a reference of these
inline virtual functions.
Note that GCC was always doing it.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, amharc, kuhar
Subscribers: llvm-commits, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47108
Co-authored-by: Krzysztof Pszeniczny <krzysztof.pszeniczny@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 334600
There are HIP applications e.g. Tensorflow 1.3 using amdgpu kernel attributes, however
currently they are only allowed on OpenCL kernel functions.
This patch will allow amdgpu kernel attributes to be applied to CUDA/HIP __global__
functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47958
llvm-svn: 334561
removeInvalidation is a very problematic API, as it makes suppression
order-dependent.
Moreover, it was used only once, and could be rewritten in a much
cleaner way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48045
llvm-svn: 334542
BugReporter.cpp is already severely overloaded, and those dump methods
are on PathDiagnostics and should belong in the corresponding
implementation file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48035
llvm-svn: 334541
getEndPath is a problematic API, because it's not clear when it's called
(hint: not always at the end of the path), it crashes at runtime with
more than one non-nullptr returning implementation, and diagnostics
internal depend on it being called at some exact place.
However, most visitors don't actually need that: all they want is a
function consistently called after all nodes are traversed, to perform
finalization and to decide whether invalidation is needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48042
llvm-svn: 334540
Register x20 is a callee-saved register which may be used for other
purposes in certain contexts, for example to hold special variables
within the kernel. This change adds support for reserving this register
both to frontend and backend to make this register usable for these
purposes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46552
llvm-svn: 334531
Rename AlternateExtensive to Extensive.
In 2013, five years ago, we have switched to AlternateExtensive
diagnostics by default, and Extensive was available under unused,
undocumented flag.
This change remove the flag, renames the Alternate
diagnostic to Extensive (as it's no longer Alternate), and ports the
test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47670
llvm-svn: 334524
Summary:
This fixes the ranges for the vcvth family of FP16 intrinsics in the clang front end. Previously it was accepting incorrect ranges
-Changed builtin range checking in SemaChecking
-added tests SemaCheck changes - included in their own file since no similar one exists
-modified existing tests to reflect new ranges
Reviewers: SjoerdMeijer, javed.absar
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47592
llvm-svn: 334489
Summary:
rL334399 put VersionTuple in the llvm namespace, but this header still assumes it's in the clang namespace.
This leads to compilation failures with enabled modules when building Clang.
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48062
llvm-svn: 334471
This patch adds aliases for -Qn (-fno-ident) and -Qy (-fident) which
look less cryptic than -Qn/-Qy. The aliases are compatible with GCC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48021
llvm-svn: 334414
Summary:
This option replaces the BreakBeforeInheritanceComma option with an
enum, thus introducing a mode where the colon stays on the same line as
constructor declaration:
// When it fits on line:
class A : public B, public C {
...
};
// When it does not fit:
class A :
public B,
public C {
...
};
This matches the behavior of the `BreakConstructorInitializers` option,
introduced in https://reviews.llvm.org/D32479.
Reviewers: djasper, klimek
Reviewed By: djasper
Subscribers: mzeren-vmw, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43015
llvm-svn: 334408
Summary:
This kind of functionality is useful to other project apart from clang.
LLDB works with version numbers a lot, but it does not have a convenient
abstraction for this. Moving this class to a lower level library allows
it to be freely used within LLDB.
Since this class is used in a lot of places in clang, and it used to be
in the clang namespace, it seemed appropriate to add it to the list of
adopted classes in LLVM.h to avoid prefixing all uses with "llvm::".
Also, I didn't find any tests specific for this class, so I wrote a
couple of quick ones for the more interesting bits of functionality.
Reviewers: zturner, erik.pilkington
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47887
llvm-svn: 334399
We currently support them only in AArch64. The NEON Reference,
however, says they are 'ARMv7, ARMv8' intrinsics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47446
llvm-svn: 334362
This check will mark raw pointers to C++ standard library container internal
buffers 'released' when the objects themselves are destroyed. Such information
can be used by MallocChecker to warn about use-after-free problems.
In this first version, 'std::basic_string's are supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47135
llvm-svn: 334348
There are many masked intrinsics that just wrap a select around a legacy intrinsic from a pre-avx512 instruciton set. If that intrinsic is implemented as a macro, nothing prevents it from being used when only the older feature was enabled. This likely generates very poor code since we don't have a good way to convert from the scalar masked type used by the intrinsic into a vector control for a legacy blend instruction. If we even have a blend instruction to use.
By adding a feature to the select builtins we can prevent and diagnose misuse of these intrinsics.
llvm-svn: 334334
I'd like to make the select builtins require an avx512f, avx512bw, or avx512vl fature to match what is normally required to get masking. Truncate is special in that there are instructions with a 128/256-bit masked result even without avx512vl.
By using special buitlins we can emit a select without using the 128/256-bit select builtins.
llvm-svn: 334331
I'm looking into making the select builtins require avx512f, avx512bw, or avx512vl since masking operations generally require those features.
The extract builtins are funny because the 512-bit versions return a 128 or 256 bit vector with masking even when avx512vl is not supported.
llvm-svn: 334330
These builtins are all handled by CGBuiltin.cpp so it doesn't much matter what the immediate type is, but int matches the intrinsic spec.
llvm-svn: 334310
Test changes are due to differences in how we generate undef elements now. We also changed the types used for extractf128_si256/insertf128_si256 to match the signature of the builtin that previously existed which this patch resurrects. This also matches gcc.
llvm-svn: 334261
This reapplies r334224 and adds explicit triples to some tests to fix
them on Windows (where otherwise they would have run with the default
windows-msvc triple, which I'm changing the behavior for).
Original commit message:
The body of a `@finally` needs to be executed on both exceptional and
non-exceptional paths. On landingpad platforms, this is straightforward:
the `@finally` body is emitted as a normal (non-exceptional) cleanup,
and then a catch-all is emitted which branches to that cleanup (the
cleanup has code to conditionally re-throw based on a flag which is set
by the catch-all).
Unfortunately, we can't use the same approach for MSVC exceptions, where
the catch-all will be emitted as a catchpad. We can't just branch to the
cleanup from within the catchpad, since we can only exit it via a
catchret, at which point the exception is destroyed and we can't
rethrow. We could potentially emit the finally body inside the catchpad
and have the normal cleanup path somehow branch into it, but that would
require some new IR construct that could branch into a catchpad.
Instead, after discussing it with Reid Kleckner, we decided that
frontend outlining was the best approach, similar to how SEH `__finally`
works today. We decided to use CapturedStmt (which was also suggested by
Reid) rather than CaptureFinder (which is what `__finally` uses) since
the latter doesn't handle a lot of cases we care about, e.g. self
accesses, property accesses, block captures, etc. Extending
CaptureFinder to handle those additional cases proved unwieldy, whereas
CapturedStmt already took care of all of those. In theory `__finally`
could also be moved over to CapturedStmt, which would remove some
existing limitations (e.g. the inability to capture this), although
CaptureFinder would still be needed for SEH filters.
The one case supported by `@finally` but not CapturedStmt (or
CaptureFinder for that matter) is arbitrary control flow out of the
`@finally`, e.g. having a return statement inside a `@finally`. We can
add that support as a follow-up, but in practice we've found it to be
used very rarely anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47564
llvm-svn: 334251
The windows-msvc target is used for MSVC ABI compatibility, including
the exceptions model. It doesn't make sense to pair a windows-msvc
target with a non-MSVC exception model. This would previously cause an
assertion failure; explicitly error out for it in the frontend instead.
This also allows us to reduce the matrix of target/exception models a
bit (see the modified tests), and we can possibly simplify some of the
personality code in a follow-up.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47853
llvm-svn: 334243
This reverts commit r334224.
This is causing buildbot failures on Windows, presumably because some
tests don't specify a triple. I'll test this on Windows locally and
recommit with the tests fixed.
llvm-svn: 334240
Adds support for these intrinsics, which are ARM and ARM64 only:
_interlockedbittestandreset_acq
_interlockedbittestandreset_rel
_interlockedbittestandreset_nf
_interlockedbittestandset_acq
_interlockedbittestandset_rel
_interlockedbittestandset_nf
Refactor the bittest intrinsic handling to decompose each intrinsic into
its action, its width, and its atomicity.
llvm-svn: 334239
We still emit shufflevector instructions we just do it from CGBuiltin.cpp now. This ensures the intrinsics that use this are only available on CPUs that support the feature.
I also added range checking to the immediate, but only checked it is 8 bits or smaller. We should maybe be stricter since we never use all 8 bits, but gcc doesn't seem to do that.
llvm-svn: 334237
The body of a `@finally` needs to be executed on both exceptional and
non-exceptional paths. On landingpad platforms, this is straightforward:
the `@finally` body is emitted as a normal (non-exceptional) cleanup,
and then a catch-all is emitted which branches to that cleanup (the
cleanup has code to conditionally re-throw based on a flag which is set
by the catch-all).
Unfortunately, we can't use the same approach for MSVC exceptions, where
the catch-all will be emitted as a catchpad. We can't just branch to the
cleanup from within the catchpad, since we can only exit it via a
catchret, at which point the exception is destroyed and we can't
rethrow. We could potentially emit the finally body inside the catchpad
and have the normal cleanup path somehow branch into it, but that would
require some new IR construct that could branch into a catchpad.
Instead, after discussing it with Reid Kleckner, we decided that
frontend outlining was the best approach, similar to how SEH `__finally`
works today. We decided to use CapturedStmt (which was also suggested by
Reid) rather than CaptureFinder (which is what `__finally` uses) since
the latter doesn't handle a lot of cases we care about, e.g. self
accesses, property accesses, block captures, etc. Extending
CaptureFinder to handle those additional cases proved unwieldy, whereas
CapturedStmt already took care of all of those. In theory `__finally`
could also be moved over to CapturedStmt, which would remove some
existing limitations (e.g. the inability to capture this), although
CaptureFinder would still be needed for SEH filters.
The one case supported by `@finally` but not CapturedStmt (or
CaptureFinder for that matter) is arbitrary control flow out of the
`@finally`, e.g. having a return statement inside a `@finally`. We can
add that support as a follow-up, but in practice we've found it to be
used very rarely anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47564
llvm-svn: 334224
We still lower them to native shuffle IR, but we do it in CGBuiltin.cpp now. This allows us to check the target feature and ensure the immediate fits in 8 bits.
This also improves our -O0 codegen slightly because we're able to see the zeroinitializer in the shuffle. It looks like it got lost behind a store+load previously.
llvm-svn: 334208
Summary:
We recently switch to using a selects in the intrinsics header files for FMA instructions. But the 512-bit versions support flavors with rounding mode which must be an Integer Constant Expression. This has forced those intrinsics to be implemented as macros. As it stands now the mask and mask3 intrinsics evaluate one of their macro arguments twice. If that argument itself is another intrinsic macro, we can end up over expanding macros. Or if its something we can CSE later it would show up multiple times when it shouldn't.
I tried adding __extension__ around the macro and making it an expression statement and declaring a local variable. But whatever name you choose for the local variable can never be used as the name of an input to the macro in user code. If that happens you would end up with the same name on the LHS and RHS of an assignment after expansion. We might be safe if we use __ in front of the variable names because those names are reserved and user code shouldn't use that, but I wasn't sure I wanted to make that claim.
The other option which I've chosen here, is to add back _mask, _maskz, and _mask3 flavors of the builtin which we will expand in CGBuiltin.cpp to replicate the argument as needed and insert any fneg needed on the third operand to make a subtract. The _maskz isn't truly necessary if we have an unmasked version or if we use the masked version with a -1 mask and wrap a select around it. But I've chosen to make things more uniform.
I separated out the scalar builtin handling to avoid too many things going on in EmitX86FMAExpr. It was different enough due to the extract and insert that the minor duplication of the CreateCall was probably worth it.
Reviewers: tkrupa, RKSimon, spatel, GBuella
Reviewed By: tkrupa
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47724
llvm-svn: 334159
An attempt to use dynamic_cast while rtti is disabled, used to emit the error:
cannot use dynamic_cast with -fno-rtti
and a similar one for typeid.
This patch changes that to:
use of dynamic_cast requires -frtti
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47291
llvm-svn: 334153
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: 334143
Do not memory map the main file if the flag UserFilesAreVolatile is set to true
in ASTUnit when calling FileSystem::getBufferForFile.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47460
llvm-svn: 334070
Previously we were just using extended vector operations in the header file.
This unfortunately allowed non-constant indices to be used with the intrinsics. This is incompatible with gcc, icc, and MSVC. It also introduces a different performance characteristic because non-constant index gets lowered to a vector store and an element sized load.
By adding the builtins we can check for the index to be a constant and ensure its in range of the vector element count.
User code still has the option to use extended vector operations themselves if they need non-constant indexing.
llvm-svn: 334057
Previously we only checked the sse feature, but this means that if you passed -mno-mmx, the builtins/intrinsics wouldn't be disabled in the frontend and would instead fail backend isel.
llvm-svn: 333980
We need to implement _interlockedbittestandset as a builtin for
windows.h, so we might as well do the whole family. It reduces code
duplication anyway.
Fixes PR33188, a long standing bug in our bittest implementation
encountered by Chakra.
llvm-svn: 333978
Temporary object constructor inlining was disabled in r326240 for code like
const int &x = A().x;
because automatic destructor for the lifetime-extended object A() was not
working correctly in CFG.
CFG was fixed in r333941, so inlining can be re-enabled. CFG for lifetime
extension through aggregates still needs to be fixed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44239
llvm-svn: 333946
// Primary fixed point types
signed short _Accum s_short_accum;
signed _Accum s_accum;
signed long _Accum s_long_accum;
unsigned short _Accum u_short_accum;
unsigned _Accum u_accum;
unsigned long _Accum u_long_accum;
// Aliased fixed point types
short _Accum short_accum;
_Accum accum;
long _Accum long_accum;
This diff only allows for declaration of the fixed point types. Assignment and other operations done on fixed point types according to http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n1169.pdf will be added in future patches. The saturated versions of these types and the equivalent _Fract types will also be added in future patches.
The tests included are for asserting that we can declare these types.
Fixed the test that was failing by not checking for dso_local on some
targets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46084
llvm-svn: 333923
Summary: This is a prototype of a bug reporter visitor that invalidates bug reports by re-checking constraints of certain states on the bug path using the Z3 constraint manager backend. The functionality is available under the `crosscheck-with-z3` analyzer config flag.
Reviewers: george.karpenkov, NoQ, dcoughlin, rnkovacs
Reviewed By: george.karpenkov
Subscribers: rnkovacs, NoQ, george.karpenkov, dcoughlin, xbolva00, ddcc, mikhail.ramalho, MTC, fhahn, whisperity, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin, gsd, dkrupp, xazax.hun, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45517
llvm-svn: 333903
Summary:
This patch implements a simple SMTConstraintManager API, and requires the implementation of two methods for now: `addRangeConstraints` and `isModelFeasible`.
Update Z3ConstraintManager to inherit it and implement required methods.
I also moved the method to dump the SMT formula from D45517 to this patch.
This patch was created based on the reviews from D47640.
Reviewers: george.karpenkov, NoQ, ddcc, dcoughlin
Reviewed By: george.karpenkov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47689
llvm-svn: 333899
Summary:
Moved `RangedConstraintManager` header from `lib/StaticAnalyzer/Core/` to `clang/StaticAnalyzer/Core/PathSensitive/`. No changes to the code.
Reviewers: NoQ, george.karpenkov, dcoughlin
Reviewed By: george.karpenkov
Subscribers: NoQ, george.karpenkov, dcoughlin, ddcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47640
llvm-svn: 333862
We currently support them only in AArch64. The NEON Reference,
however, says they are 'ARMv7, ARMv8' intrinsics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47121
llvm-svn: 333829
```
// Primary fixed point types
signed short _Accum s_short_accum;
signed _Accum s_accum;
signed long _Accum s_long_accum;
unsigned short _Accum u_short_accum;
unsigned _Accum u_accum;
unsigned long _Accum u_long_accum;
// Aliased fixed point types
short _Accum short_accum;
_Accum accum;
long _Accum long_accum;
```
This diff only allows for declaration of the fixed point types. Assignment and other operations done on fixed point types according to http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n1169.pdf will be added in future patches. The saturated versions of these types and the equivalent `_Fract` types will also be added in future patches.
The tests included are for asserting that we can declare these types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46084
llvm-svn: 333814
-no-canonical-prefixes is a weird flag: In gcc, it controls whether realpath()
is called on the path of the driver binary. It's needed to support some
usecases where gcc is symlinked to, see
https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2011-01/msg00429.html for some background.
In clang, the resource dir is found relative to the compiler binary, and
without -no-canonical-prefixes that's an absolute path. For clang, the main use
case for -no-canonical-prefixes is to make the -resource-dir path added by the
driver relative instead of absolute. Making it relative seems like the better
default, but since neither clang not gcc have -canonical-prefixes without no-
which makes changing the default tricky, and since some symlink behaviors do
depend on the realpath() call at least for gcc, just expose
-no-canonical-prefixes in clang-cl mode.
Alternatively we could default to no-canonical-prefix-mode for clang-cl since
it's less likely to be used in symlinked scenarios, but since you already need
to about -no-canonical-prefixes for the non-clang-cl bits of your build, not
hooking this of driver mode seems better to me.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D47480
llvm-svn: 333761
Compiler crashes when omp simd is used in an OpenCL file:
clang -c -fopenmp omp_simd.cl
__kernel void test(global int *data, int size) {
#pragma omp simd
for (int i = 0; i < size; ++i) {
}
}
The problem seems to be the check added to verify block pointers have
initializers. An OMPCapturedExprDecl is created to capture ‘size’ but there is
no TypeSourceInfo.
The change just uses getType() directly.
Patch-By: mikerice
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46667
llvm-svn: 333746
ExprEngine already maintains three internal program state traits to track
path-sensitive information related to object construction: pointer returned by
operator new, and pointer to temporary object for two different purposes - for
destruction and for lifetime extension. We'll need to add 2-3 more in a few
follow-up commits.
Merge these traits into one because they all essentially serve one purpose and
work similarly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47303
llvm-svn: 333719
When a module declaration for a framework lacks the 'framework'
qualifier, the listed headers aren't found (because there's no
trigger for the special framework style path lookup) and the module
is silently not built. This leads to frameworks not being modularized
by accident, which is pretty bad.
Add a warning and suggest the user to add the 'framework' qualifier
when we can prove that it's the case.
rdar://problem/39193062
llvm-svn: 333718
The WebAssembly committee has decided on the names `memory.size` and
`memory.grow` for the memory intrinsics, so update the clang builtin
functions to follow those names, keeping both sets of old names in place
for compatibility.
llvm-svn: 333712
Ensure latest MPT decl has a MSInheritanceAttr when instantiating
templates, to avoid null MSInheritanceAttr deref in
CXXRecordDecl::getMSInheritanceModel().
See PR#37399 for repo / details.
Patch by Andrew Rogers!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46664
llvm-svn: 333680
Because our program states are immutable, methods like "add<>", "set<>", "bind"
create a copy of the program state instead of mutating the existing state.
If the updated state is discarded, it clearly indicates a bug.
Such bugs are introduced frequently, hence the warn_unused_result annotation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47499
llvm-svn: 333679
When neither LHS nor RHS of a binary operator expression can be simplified,
return the original expression instead of re-evaluating the binary operator.
Such re-evaluation was causing recusrive re-simplification which caused
the algorithmic complexity to explode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47155
llvm-svn: 333670
Add the ability to dump compiler option-related information to a JSON file via the -compiler-options-dump option. Specifically, it dumps the features/extensions lists -- however, this output could be extended to other information should it be useful. In order to support features and extensions, I moved them into a .def file so that we could build the various lists we care about from them without a significant increase in maintenance burden.
llvm-svn: 333653
Summary:
In rL327851 the createUniqueFile() and createTemporaryFile()
variants that do not return the file descriptors were changed to
create empty files, rather than only check if the paths are free.
This change was done in order to make the functions race-free.
That change led to clang-tidy (and possibly other tools) leaving
behind temporary assembly files, of the form placeholder-*, when
using a target that does not support the internal assembler.
The temporary files are created when building the Compilation
object in stripPositionalArgs(), as a part of creating the
compilation database for the arguments after the double-dash. The
files are created by Driver::GetNamedOutputPath().
Fix this issue by cleaning out temporary files at the deletion of
Compilation objects.
This fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37091.
Reviewers: klimek, sepavloff, arphaman, aaron.ballman, john.brawn, mehdi_amini, sammccall, bkramer, alexfh, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: erichkeane, lebedev.ri, Ka-Ka, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45686
llvm-svn: 333637
This patch replaces all packed (and scalar without rounding
mode) fused intrinsics with fmadd/fmaddsub variations.
Then fmadd/fmaddsub are lowered to native IR.
Patch by tkrupa
Reviewers: craig.topper, sroland, spatel, RKSimon
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47444
llvm-svn: 333555
These intrinsics are used by MSVC's header files on AArch64 Windows as
well as AArch32, so we should support them for both targets. I've
factored them out of CodeGenFunction::EmitARMBuiltinExpr into separate
functions that EmitAArch64BuiltinExpr can call as well.
Reviewers: javed.absar, mstorsjo
Reviewed By: mstorsjo
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47476
llvm-svn: 333513
Summary:
The previous implementation misses an opportunity to apply NRVO (Named Return Value
Optimization) below. That discourages user to write early return code.
```
struct Foo {};
Foo f(bool b) {
if (b)
return Foo();
Foo oo;
return oo;
}
```
That is, we can/should apply RVO for a local variable if:
* It's directly returned by at least one return statement.
* And, all reachable return statements in its scope returns the variable directly.
While, the previous implementation disables the RVO in a scope if there are multiple return
statements that refers different variables.
On the new algorithm, local variables are in NRVO_Candidate state at first, and a return
statement changes it to NRVO_Disabled for all visible variables but the return statement refers.
Then, at the end of the function AST traversal, NRVO is enabled for variables in NRVO_Candidate
state and refers from at least one return statement.
Reviewers: rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: xbolva00, Quuxplusone, arthur.j.odwyer, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47067
llvm-svn: 333500
Codebases that need to be compatible with the Microsoft ABI can pass
this flag to avoid issues caused by the lack of a fixed ABI for
incomplete member pointers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47503
llvm-svn: 333498
This helps especially when the collision is for a template specialization,
where the template arguments are not available from anywhere else in the
diagnostic, and are likely relevant to the problem.
llvm-svn: 333489
Summary:
This patch adds the newly added `%sub` diagnostic modifier to cleanup repetition in the overload candidate diagnostics.
I think this should be good to go.
@rsmith: Some of the notes now emit `function template` where they only said `function` previously. It seems OK to me, but I would like your sign off on it.
Reviewers: rsmith, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits, rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47101
llvm-svn: 333485
This patch adds HIP toolchain to support HIP language mode. It includes:
Create specific compiler jobs for HIP.
Choose specific libraries for HIP.
With contribution from Greg Rodgers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45212
llvm-svn: 333484
While this value is initialized with the DefaultTargetTriple, it
can be later overriden using the -target flag so TargetTriple is
a more accurate name. This change also provides an accessor which
could be accessed from ToolChain implementations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47357
llvm-svn: 333468
These functions are obsolete. The analyzer would advice to replace them with
memcmp(), memcpy() or memmove(), or memset().
Patch by Tom Rix!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41881
llvm-svn: 333326
Currently getting such completions requires source correction, reparsing
and calling completion again. And if it shows no results and rollback is
required then it costs one more reparse.
With this change it's possible to get all results which can be later
filtered to split changes which require correction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41537
llvm-svn: 333272
An intrinsic for an old instruction, as described in the Intel SDM.
Reviewers: craig.topper, rnk
Reviewed By: craig.topper, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47142
llvm-svn: 333256
Unless the user uses -Wno-module-file-config-mismatch (or -Wno-error=...),
allow the AST reader to produce errors describing the nature of the config
mismatch.
llvm-svn: 333220
to checking for attributes on the call site - and fix up builtin
functions that we were testing for but not ensuring wouldn't be
optimized by the backend.
Leave one set of asm tests to make sure that we're also communicating
builtin-ness to TLI.
llvm-svn: 333154
Summary:
This includes initial support for the (hopefully final) updated Objective-C ABI, developed here:
https://github.com/davidchisnall/clang-gnustep-abi-2
It also includes some cleanups and refactoring from older GNU ABIs.
The current version is ELF only, other formats to follow.
Reviewers: rjmccall, DHowett-MSFT
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Subscribers: smeenai, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46052
llvm-svn: 332950
Summary: We use uint8_t in this header, so we need to include cstdint.
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47164
llvm-svn: 332913
I believe this is safe assuming default default FP environment. The conversion might be inexact, but it can never overflow the FP type so this shouldn't be undefined behavior for the uitofp/sitofp instructions.
We already do something similar for scalar conversions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46863
llvm-svn: 332882
1. added restrictions to memory scope, order and volatile parameters
2. added custom processing for these builtins - currently is not used code,
needed to switch off GCCBuiltin link to the builtins (ongoing change to llvm
tree)
3. builtins renamed as requested
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43281
llvm-svn: 332848
If a variable has an initializer, codegen tries to build its value. If
the variable is large in size, building its value requires substantial
resources. It causes strange behavior from user viewpoint: compilation
of huge zero initialized arrays like:
char data_1[2147483648u] = { 0 };
consumes enormous amount of time and memory.
With this change codegen tries to determine if variable initializer is
equivalent to zero initializer. In this case variable value is not
constructed.
This change fixes PR18978.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46241
llvm-svn: 332847
Summary:
There are cases where the same string or select is repeated verbatim in a lot of diagnostics. This can be a pain to maintain and update. Tablegen provides no way stash the common text somewhere and reuse it in the diagnostics, until now!
This patch allows diagnostic texts to contain `%sub{<definition-name>}`, where `<definition-name>` names a Tablegen record of type `TextSubstitution`. These substitutions are done early, before the diagnostic string is otherwise processed. All `%sub` modifiers will be replaced before the diagnostic definitions are emitted.
The substitution must specify all arguments used by the substitution, and modifier indexes in the substitution are re-numbered accordingly. For example:
```
def select_ovl_candidate : TextSubstitution<"%select{function|constructor}0%select{| template| %2}1">;
```
when used as
```
"candidate `%sub{select_ovl_candidate}3,2,1 not viable"
```
will act as if we wrote:
```
"candidate %select{function|constructor}3%select{| template| %1}2 not viable"
```
Reviewers: rsmith, rjmccall, aaron.ballman, a.sidorin
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46740
llvm-svn: 332799
NFC for targets other than PS4.
This patch is a change in behavior for PS4, in that PS4 will no longer enable
RTTI when -fexceptions is specified (RTTI and Exceptions are disabled by default
on PS4). RTTI will remain disabled except for types being thrown or caught.
Also, '-fexceptions -fno-rtti' (previously prohibited on PS4) is now accepted,
as it is for other targets.
This patch removes some PS4 specific code, making the code cleaner.
Also, in the test file rtti-options.cpp, PS4 tests where the behavior is the
same as the generic x86_64-linux are removed, making the test cleaner.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46982
llvm-svn: 332784
To support linking device code in different source files, it is necessary to
embed fat binary at host linking stage.
This patch emits an external symbol for fat binary in host codegen, then
embed the fat binary by lld through a linker script.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46472
llvm-svn: 332724
Summary:
clangToolingCore is linked into almost everything (incl. clang), but
not few tools need #include manipulation at this point. So pull this into a
separate library in Tooling.
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: klimek, mgorny, cfe-commits, thakis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47068
llvm-svn: 332720
in gcc by https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-cvs/2018-04/msg00534.html.
The -mibt feature flag is being removed, and the -fcf-protection
option now also defines a CET macro and causes errors when used
on non-X86 targets, while X86 targets no longer check for -mibt
and -mshstk to determine if -fcf-protection is supported. -mshstk
is now used only to determine availability of shadow stack intrinsics.
Comes with an LLVM patch (D46882).
Patch by mike.dvoretsky
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46881
llvm-svn: 332704
Summary:
Previously this triggered a -Wundefined-internal warning. But it's not
an undefined variable -- any variable of this form is a pointer to the
base of GPU core's shared memory.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: sanjoy, rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46782
llvm-svn: 332621
E. g. use "10.11" instead of "10_11".
We are maintaining backward compatibility by parsing underscore-delimited version tuples but no longer keep track of the separator and using dot format for output.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46747
rdar://problem/39845032
llvm-svn: 332598
Second attempt. Fix line endings and warning.
As an addition to CXTranslationUnit_SkipFunctionBodies, provide the
new option CXTranslationUnit_LimitSkipFunctionBodiesToPreamble,
which constraints the skipping of functions bodies to the preamble
only. Function bodies in the main file are not affected if this
option is set.
Skipping function bodies only in the preamble is what clangd already
does and the introduced flag implements it for libclang clients.
Patch by Nikolai Kosjar.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45815
llvm-svn: 332587
As an addition to CXTranslationUnit_SkipFunctionBodies, provide the
new option CXTranslationUnit_LimitSkipFunctionBodiesToPreamble,
which constraints the skipping of functions bodies to the preamble
only. Function bodies in the main file are not affected if this
option is set.
Skipping function bodies only in the preamble is what clangd already
does and the introduced flag implements it for libclang clients.
Patch by Nikolai Kosjar.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45815
llvm-svn: 332578
Add support for __declspec(code_seg("segname"))
This patch is built on the existing support for #pragma code_seg. The code_seg
declspec is allowed on functions and classes. The attribute enables the
placement of code into separate named segments, including compiler-generated
members and template instantiations.
For more information, please see the following:
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn636922.aspx
A new CodeSeg attribute is used instead of adding a new spelling to the existing
Section attribute since they don’t apply to the same Subjects. Section
attributes are also added for the code_seg declspec since they are used for
#pragma code_seg. No CodeSeg attributes are added to the AST.
The patch is written to match with the Microsoft compiler’s behavior even where
that behavior is a little complicated (see https://reviews.llvm.org/D22931, the
Microsoft feedback page is no longer available since MS has removed the page).
That code is in getImplicitSectionAttrFromClass routine.
Diagnostics messages are added to match with the Microsoft compiler for code-seg
attribute mismatches on base and derived classes and virtual overrides.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43352
llvm-svn: 332470
Summary:
The helper is used in clangd for documentation shown in code completion
and storing the docs in the symbols. See D45999.
This patch reuses the code of the Doxygen comment lexer, disabling the
bits that do command and html tag parsing.
The new helper works on all comments, including non-doxygen comments.
However, it does not understand or transform any doxygen directives,
i.e. cannot extract brief text, etc.
Reviewers: sammccall, hokein, ioeric
Reviewed By: ioeric
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46000
llvm-svn: 332458
Summary:
Introduce `PenaltyBreakTemplateDeclaration` to control the penalty,
and change `AlwaysBreakTemplateDeclarations` to an enum with 3 modes:
* `No` for regular, penalty based, wrapping of template declaration
* `MultiLine` for always wrapping before multi-line declarations (e.g.
same as legacy behavior when `AlwaysBreakTemplateDeclarations=false`)
* `Yes` for always wrapping (e.g. same as legacy behavior when
`AlwaysBreakTemplateDeclarations=true`)
Reviewers: krasimir, djasper, klimek
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42684
llvm-svn: 332436
The fixit is actively harmful, as it encourages developers to ignore the
warning and to write unsafe code.
It is almost impossible to write safe code while capturing autoreleasing
variables in the block, as in order to check that the block is never
called in the autoreleasing pool the developer has to check the
transitive closure of all potential callers of the block.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46778
llvm-svn: 332288
Summary: This will be shared by include insertion/deletion library.
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov
Reviewed By: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: mgorny, klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46758
llvm-svn: 332284
For example, given:
void fn() {
struct T *p0;
struct T { int i; } *p1;
}
-ast-print produced:
void fn() {
struct T { int i; } *p0;
struct T { int i; } *p1;
}
Compiling that fails with a redefinition error.
Given:
void fn() {
struct T *p0;
struct __attribute__((deprecated)) T *p1;
}
-ast-print dropped the attribute.
Details:
For a tag specifier (that is, struct/union/class/enum used as a type
specifier in a declaration) that was also a tag declaration (that is,
first occurrence of the tag) or tag redeclaration (that is, later
occurrence that specifies attributes or a member list), clang printed
the tag specifier as either (1) the full tag definition if one
existed, or (2) the first tag declaration otherwise. Redefinition
errors were sometimes introduced, as in the first example above. Even
when that was impossible because no member list was ever specified,
attributes were sometimes lost, thus changing semantics and
diagnostics, as in the second example above.
This patch fixes a major culprit for these problems. It does so by
creating an ElaboratedType with a new OwnedDecl member wherever an
occurrence of a tag type is a (re)declaration of that tag type.
PrintingPolicy's IncludeTagDefinition used to trigger printing of the
member list, attributes, etc. for a tag specifier by using a tag
(re)declaration selected as described above. Now, it triggers the
same thing except it uses the tag (re)declaration stored in the
OwnedDecl. Of course, other tooling can now make use of the new
OwnedDecl as well.
Also, to be more faithful to the original source, this patch
suppresses printing of attributes inherited from previous
declarations.
Reviewed by: rsmith, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45463
llvm-svn: 332281
For example, given:
#define bool _Bool
_Bool i;
void fn() { 1; }
-ast-print produced:
tmp.c:3:13: warning: expression result unused
void fn() { 1; }
^
bool i;
void fn() {
1;
}
That fails to compile because bool is undefined.
Details:
Diagnostics print _Bool as bool when the latter is defined as the
former. However, diagnostics were altering the printing policy for
-ast-print as well. The printed source was then invalid because the
preprocessor eats the bool definition.
Problematic diagnostics included suppressed warnings (e.g., add
-Wno-unused-value to the above example), including those that are
suppressed by default.
This patch fixes this bug and cleans up some related comments.
Reviewed by: aaron.ballman, rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45093
llvm-svn: 332275
As long as the destination type is a 256 or 128 bit vector with the same number of elements we can use __builtin_convertvector to directly generate trunc IR instruction which will be handled natively by the backend.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46742
llvm-svn: 332266
We can use direct C code for these that will use uitofp and insertelement instructions.
For the versions that take an explicit rounding mode we can't do this.
llvm-svn: 332203
These intrinsics work exactly as all other atomic_fetch_* intrinsics and allow to create *atomicrmw* with ordering.
Updated the clang-extensions document.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46386
llvm-svn: 332193
The PS4 requires clang ABI version 6 for compatibility reasons. This change forces this and if the user specifies a different version when the PS4 target is specified, the compiler emits a warning that the specified version is being ignored.
Reviewers: probinson
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46767
llvm-svn: 332160
For 'x::template y', consistently give a "no member named 'y' in 'x'"
diagnostic if there is no such member, and give a 'template keyword not
followed by a template' name error if there is such a member but it's not a
template. In the latter case, add a note pointing at the non-template.
Don't suggest inserting a 'template' keyword in 'X::Y<' if X is dependent
if the lookup of X::Y was actually not a dependent lookup and found only
non-templates.
llvm-svn: 332076
This commit relands r331904.
Adding a SrcMgr::CharacteristicKind parameter to the InclusionDirective
in PPCallbacks, and updating calls to that function. This will be useful
in https://reviews.llvm.org/D43778 to determine which includes are
system
headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46614
llvm-svn: 332021
This is unnecessary for AVX512VL supporting CPUs like SKX. We can just emit a 128-bit masked load/store here no matter what. The backend will widen it to 512-bits on KNL CPUs.
Fixes the frontend portion of PR37386. Need to fix the backend to optimize the new sequences well.
llvm-svn: 331958
The option enables use of 32-bit pointers for accessing
const/local/shared memory. The feature is disabled by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46148
llvm-svn: 331938
Summary:
This attribute tells clang to skip this function from stack protector
when -stack-protector option is passed.
GCC option for this is:
__attribute__((__optimize__("no-stack-protector"))) and the
equivalent clang syntax would be: __attribute__((no_stack_protector))
This is used in Linux kernel to selectively disable stack protector
in certain functions.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, rsmith, rnk, probinson
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: probinson, srhines, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46300
llvm-svn: 331925
Summary: This can be used to create a virtual environment (incl. VFS, source manager) for code snippets.
Reviewers: sammccall, klimek
Reviewed By: sammccall
Subscribers: klimek, mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46176
llvm-svn: 331923
Adding a SrcMgr::CharacteristicKind parameter to the InclusionDirective
in PPCallbacks, and updating calls to that function. This will be useful
in https://reviews.llvm.org/D43778 to determine which includes are system
headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46614
llvm-svn: 331904
Added string literal helper function to obtain the type
attributed by a constant address space.
Also fixed predefind __func__ expr to use the helper
to constract the string literal correctly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46049
llvm-svn: 331877
Restrict the following keywords in the OpenCL C++ language mode,
according to Sections 2.2 & 2.9 of the OpenCL C++ 1.0 Specification.
- dynamic_cast
- typeid
- register (already restricted in OpenCL C, update the diagnostic)
- thread_local
- exceptions (try/catch/throw)
- access qualifiers read_only, write_only, read_write
Support the `__global`, `__local`, `__constant`, `__private`, and
`__generic` keywords in OpenCL C++. Leave the unprefixed address
space qualifiers such as global available, i.e., do not mark them as
reserved keywords in OpenCL C++. libclcxx provides explicit address
space pointer classes such as `global_ptr` and `global<T>` that are
implemented using the `__`-prefixed qualifiers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46022
llvm-svn: 331874
Move all of the MIPS-only options into a new m_mips_Features_Group.
Nearly all other targets have most target-specific options grouped,
but MIPS does not.
The primary benefits are that the options will be listed together (and
thus identifiable as MIPS-specific even if they have no help string) in
the ClangCommandLineReference, and that Options.td is a bit more organized.
A secondary benefit is that a custom version of clang can more easily
hide/disable groups of options for unsupported targets.
Patch by Vince Del Vecchio
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46450
llvm-svn: 331856
This is similar to the LLVM change https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290.
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\@brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\@brief //g' $i & done
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46320
llvm-svn: 331834
I attempted to go through all the builtins and marked them const if they didn't touch memory or other hidden state.
I don't know how to test this or if it really matters.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46349
llvm-svn: 331814
As Eli brought up here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46535
I'd previously messed up this fix by missing conversions
that are just slightly outside the range. This patch fixes
this by no longer ignoring the return value of
convertToInteger. Additionally, one of the error messages
wasn't very sensical (mentioning out of range value, when it
really was not), so it was cleaned up as well.
llvm-svn: 331812
There are quite differences in HIP action builder and action job creation,
which justifies to define a separate offload kind.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46471
llvm-svn: 331811
Since we're working on turning the MachineOutliner by default under -Oz for
AArch64, it makes sense to have an -mno-outline flag available. This currently
doesn't do much (it basically just undoes -moutline).
When the MachineOutliner is on by default under AArch64, this flag should
set -mllvm -enable-machine-outliner=never.
llvm-svn: 331810
Nitpicky, but the MachineOutliner is a machine-level pass, and so we should
reflect that by using "m" instead of "n".
Figured we should get this in before people get used to the letter f. :)
llvm-svn: 331806
Generate a printable OpenCL language version number in a single place
and select between the OpenCL C or OpenCL C++ version accordingly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46382
llvm-svn: 331766
This patch addresses some mostly trivial post-commit review comments received
on r331677.
Additionally, this patch fixes an assertion in `getNarrowingKind` caused by
the use of an uninitialized value from `checkThreeWayNarrowingConversion`.
llvm-svn: 331707
In response to dblaikie's suggestion on r331536, replace the two enum
typed variable initializers in the constructor with member initializers.
llvm-svn: 331688
Summary:
This patch tackles long hanging fruit for the builtin operator<=> expressions. It is currently needs some cleanup before landing, but I want to get some initial feedback.
The main changes are:
* Lookup, build, and store the required standard library types and expressions in `ASTContext`. By storing them in ASTContext we don't need to store (and duplicate) the required expressions in the BinaryOperator AST nodes.
* Implement [expr.spaceship] checking, including diagnosing narrowing conversions.
* Implement `ExprConstant` for builtin spaceship operators.
* Implement builitin operator<=> support in `CodeGenAgg`. Initially I emitted the required comparisons using `ScalarExprEmitter::VisitBinaryOperator`, but this caused the operand expressions to be emitted once for every required cmp.
* Implement [builtin.over] with modifications to support the intent of P0946R0. See the note on `BuiltinOperatorOverloadBuilder::addThreeWayArithmeticOverloads` for more information about the workaround.
Reviewers: rsmith, aaron.ballman, majnemer, rnk, compnerd, rjmccall
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Subscribers: rjmccall, rsmith, aaron.ballman, junbuml, mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45476
llvm-svn: 331677
As identified and briefly discussed here:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37305
Converting a floating point number to an integer type when
the integral part is out of the range of the integer type is
undefined behavior in C. Additionally, CodeGen emits an undef
in this situation.
HOWEVER, we've been giving a warning that says that the value is
changed. This patch corrects the warning to list that it is actually
undefined behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46535
llvm-svn: 331673
In order to disable PIC and to match GCC behaviour, -mno-abicalls
option is neccessary. When -fno-[pic/PIC] is used witout -mno-abicalls,
warning is reported. An error is reported when -fno-pic or -fno-PIC is
used in combination with -mabicalls.
In this commit, test case is added.
Depends on D44381.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44684
llvm-svn: 331640
In order to disable PIC and to match GCC behaviour, -mno-abicalls
option is neccessary. When -fno-[pic/PIC] is used witout -mno-abicalls,
warning is reported. An error is reported when -fno-pic or -fno-PIC is
used in combination with -mabicalls.
Depends on D44381.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44684
llvm-svn: 331636
The C standard doesn't allow comparisons like "f1 < f2" (where f1 and f2
are function pointers), but we allow them as an extension. Add a
warning flag to control this warning.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46155
llvm-svn: 331570
The bindDefault() API of the ProgramState allows setting a default value
for reads from memory regions that were not preceded by writes.
It was used for implementing C++ zeroing constructors (i.e. default constructors
that boil down to setting all fields of the object to 0).
Because differences between zeroing consturctors and other forms of default
initialization have been piling up (in particular, zeroing constructors can be
called multiple times over the same object, probably even at the same offset,
requiring a careful and potentially slow cleanup of previous bindings in the
RegionStore), we split the API in two: bindDefaultInitial() for modeling
initial values and bindDefaultZero() for modeling zeroing constructors.
This fixes a few assertion failures from which the investigation originated.
The imperfect protection from both inability of the RegionStore to support
binding extents and lack of information in ASTRecordLayout has been loosened
because it's, well, imperfect, and it is unclear if it fixing more than it
was breaking.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46368
llvm-svn: 331561
This replicates 'cl.exe' behavior and allows for both preprocessor output and
dependency information to be extraced with a single compiler invocation.
This is especially useful for compiler caching with tools like Mozilla's sccache.
See: https://github.com/mozilla/sccache/issues/246
Patch By: fxb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46394
llvm-svn: 331533
These builtins snuck in while I was in the middle of adding nothrow to the other builtins in my local clone and I guess I missed them.
llvm-svn: 331483
Calling convention attributes notionally appertain to the function type -- they modify the mangling of the function, change the behavior of assignment operations, etc. This commit allows the calling convention attributes to be written in the type position as well as the declaration position.
llvm-svn: 331459
FunctionProtoType.
We previously re-evaluated the expression each time we wanted to know whether
the type is noexcept or not. We now evaluate the expression exactly once.
This is not quite "no functional change": it fixes a crasher bug during AST
deserialization where we would try to evaluate the noexcept specification in a
situation where we have not deserialized sufficient portions of the AST to
permit such evaluation.
llvm-svn: 331428
the method declaration is unavailable for an app extension platform
Rationale:
Classes are often shared between an app extension code and
non-app extension code. There's no way to remove the implementation
using preprocessor when building the app extension, so we should not warn here.
rdar://38150617
llvm-svn: 331421
I believe all of the x86 builtins should be considered nothrow.
I've left the incssp builtins alone because I think its current attributes are wrong and I'm following up with the contributor for that.
I plan to start adding const as well, but that requires more careful auditing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46328
llvm-svn: 331399
enabled for the host.
If the compilation for the host enables C++ exceptions, but they are not
supported by the device, we still need to allow the code with the
exception handling constructs outside of the target regions.
llvm-svn: 331372
Since we've been working on productizing the MachineOutliner in AArch64, it
makes sense to provide a more user-friendly way to enable it.
This allows users of AArch64 to enable the outliner using -foutline instead
of -mllvm -enable-machine-outliner. Other, less mature implementations (e.g,
x86-64) can still enable the pass using the -mllvm option.
Also add a test to make sure it works.
llvm-svn: 331370
This is not yet part of any C++ working draft, and so is controlled by the flag
-fchar8_t rather than a -std= flag. (The GCC implementation is controlled by a
flag with the same name.)
This implementation is experimental, and will be removed or revised
substantially to match the proposal as it makes its way through the C++
committee.
llvm-svn: 331244
As suggested in the post-commit thread for rL331056, we should match these
clang options with the established vocabulary of the corresponding sanitizer
option. Also, the use of 'strict' is well-known for these kinds of knobs,
and we can improve the descriptive text in the docs.
So this intends to match the logic of D46135 but only change the words.
Matching LLVM commit to match this spelling of the attribute to follow shortly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46236
llvm-svn: 331209
Summary:
The getConstraintRegister method is used by semantic checking of
inline assembly statements in order to diagnose conflicts between
clobber list and input/output lists. Currently ARM and AArch64 don't
override getConstraintRegister, so conflicts between registers
assigned to variables in asm labels and clobber lists are not
diagnosed. Such conflicts can cause assertion failures in the back end
and even miscompilations.
This patch implements getConstraintRegister for ARM and AArch64
targets. Since these targets don't have single-register constraints,
the implementation is trivial and just returns the register specified
in an asm label (if any).
Reviewers: eli.friedman, javed.absar, thopre
Reviewed By: thopre
Subscribers: rengolin, eraman, rogfer01, myatsina, kristof.beyls, cfe-commits, chrib
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45965
llvm-svn: 331164
When a '>>' token is split into two '>' tokens (in C++11 onwards), or (as an
extension) when we do the same for other tokens starting with a '>', we can't
just use a location pointing to the first '>' as the location of the split
token, because that would result in our miscomputing the length and spelling
for the token. As a consequence, for example, a refactoring replacing 'A<X>'
with something else would sometimes replace one character too many, and
similarly diagnostics highlighting a template-id source range would highlight
one character too many.
Fix this by creating an expansion range covering the first character of the
'>>' token, whose spelling is '>'. For this to work, we generalize the
expansion range of a macro FileID to be either a token range (the common case)
or a character range (used in this new case).
llvm-svn: 331155
As discussed in the post-commit thread for:
rL330437 ( http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20180423/545906.html )
We need a way to opt-out of a float-to-int-to-float cast optimization because too much
existing code relies on the platform-specific undefined result of those casts when the
float-to-int overflows.
The LLVM changes associated with adding this function attribute are here:
rL330947
rL330950
rL330951
Also as suggested, I changed the LLVM doc to mention the specific sanitizer flag that
catches this problem:
rL330958
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46135
llvm-svn: 331041
The ACLE spec which describes these intrinsics hasn't been published yet, but
this is based on the final draft which will be published soon, and these have
already been implemented by GCC.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46109
llvm-svn: 331039
Summary:
This patch moves the MultiplexASTDeserializationListener declaration into a public header.
We're currently using this multiplexer in the cling interpreter to attach another
ASTDeserializationListener during the execution (so, after the MultiplexConsumer is already
attached which prevents us from attaching more). So far we're doing this by patching clang
and making this class public, but it makes things easier if we make this instead just public in
upstream.
Reviewers: thakis, v.g.vassilev, rsmith, bruno
Reviewed By: bruno
Subscribers: llvm-commits, cfe-commits, v.g.vassilev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37475
llvm-svn: 331021
template arguments.
This fixes some cases where we'd incorrectly accept "A::template B" when B is a
kind of template that requires template arguments (in particular, a variable
template or a concept).
llvm-svn: 331013
These builtins can't be handled by the backend on 64-bit targets. So error up front instead of throwing an isel error.
Fixes PR37225
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46132
llvm-svn: 330987
Summary:
We need to know if ASTReader already has a DeserializationListner or
not, and this also helps to create a multiplexing deserialization
listener if there is one already attached.
Reviewers: v.g.vassilev, rsmith, dblaikie, thakis
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45921
llvm-svn: 330946
If 'A' is a C++ aggregate with a reference field of type 'C', in code like
A a = { C() };
C() is lifetime-extended by 'a'. The analyzer wasn't expecting this pattern and
crashing. Additionally, destructors aren't added in the CFG for this case,
so for now we shouldn't be inlining the constructor for C().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46037
llvm-svn: 330882
Supporting additional rules for parsing ISA string.
- RISC-V ISA strings must be lowercase.
E.g.: rv32IMC is not supported, rv32imc is correct.
- Multi-letter extensions are to be separated by a single
underscore '_'. The extension prefix counts as a letter.
This means extensions that start with 's', 'sx' and 'sx'
are all multi-letter.
E.g.:
xasb is a single non-standard extension named 'xasb'
xa_sb are two extensions, the non-standard user level extension
'xa', and the supervisor level extension 'sb'.
- Standard user-level extensions are specified following
a canonical order, according to Table 22.1 in
RISC-V User-Level ISA V2.2.
- Non-standard user-level 'x' extensions,
standard supervisor-level 's' extensions and
non-standard supervisor-level 'sx' extensions
are also specified following a canonical order according
to Table 22.1 in RISC-V User-Level ISA V2.2:
'x' extensions, follwed by 's' extensions and then 'sx' extensions.
- Extensions might have a version number.
Underscores may be used to separate ISA subset components to
improve readability and to provide disambiguation.
E.g.: rv32i2_m3_a1_f2_d2
- Version numbers are divided into major and minor numbers,
separated by a 'p'. If the minor version is 0, then 'p0' can
be omitted.
- Additional checks for dependent extensions and invalid
extensions combinations.
E.g.:
'e' requires rv32
'e' can't be combined with 'f' nor 'd'
'q' requires rv64
- TODO items have also been marked with comments in the code.
Reviewers: asb, kito-cheng
Reviewed By: asb
Subscribers: edward-jones, mgrang, zzheng, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, jordy.potman.lists, sabuasal, niosHD, shiva0217, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45284
llvm-svn: 330880
Normally the analyzer begins path-sensitive analysis from functions within
the main file, even though the path is allowed to go through any functions
within the translation unit.
When a recent version of WebKit is compiled, the "unified sources" technique
is used, that assumes #including multiple code files into a single main file.
Such file would have no functions defined in it, so the analyzer wouldn't be
able to find any entry points for path-sensitive analysis.
This patch pattern-matches unified file names that are similar to those
used by WebKit and allows the analyzer to find entry points in the included
code files. A more aggressive/generic approach is being planned as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45839
llvm-svn: 330876
If -no-canonical-prefixes isn't used, the clang executable name used
is the one of the actual executable, not the name of the symlink that
the user invoked.
In these cases, the target prefix was overridden based on the clang
executable name. (On the other hand the implicit -target option
that such a symlink adds, is added as an actual command line parameter
in tools/driver/driver.cop, before resolving the symlink and finding
the actual clang executable.
Use the original ClangNameParts (set from argv[0] in
tools/driver/driver.cpp) if it seems to be initialized propery.
All existing tests of this feature used -no-canonical-prefixes
(possibly because it also makes the driver look in the directory
of the symlink instead of the directory of the executable); add
another one that uses --config-user-dir= to specify the directory
instead. (For actual users of such symlinks, outisde of the test
suite, the directory is probably the same for both.)
This makes this feature work more like what the documentation
describes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45964
llvm-svn: 330871
There are only a few cases of importing a frienddecl which is currently supported.
This patch aims to improve the friend import process.
Set FriendObjectKind in case of decls, insert friend into the friend chain
correctly, checks structurally equivalent in a more advanced manner.
Test cases added as well.
llvm-svn: 330847
This patch is a tweak of changyu's patch: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40381. It differs in that the recognition of the 'concept' token is moved into the machinery that recognizes declaration-specifiers - this allows us to leverage the attribute handling machinery more seamlessly.
See the test file to get a sense of the basic parsing that this patch supports.
There is much more work to be done before concepts are usable...
Thanks Changyu!
llvm-svn: 330794
HIP is a language similar to CUDA (https://github.com/ROCm-Developer-Tools/HIP/blob/master/docs/markdown/hip_kernel_language.md ).
The language syntax is very similar, which allows a hip program to be compiled as a CUDA program by Clang. The main difference
is the host API. HIP has a set of vendor neutral host API which can be implemented on different platforms. Currently there is open source
implementation of HIP runtime on amdgpu target (https://github.com/ROCm-Developer-Tools/HIP).
This patch adds support of input kind and language standard hip.
When hip file is compiled, both LangOpts.CUDA and LangOpts.HIP is turned on. This allows compilation of hip program as CUDA
in most cases and only special handling of hip program is needed LangOpts.HIP is checked.
This patch also adds support of kernel launching of HIP program using HIP host API.
When -x hip is not specified, there is no behaviour change for CUDA.
Patch by Greg Rodgers.
Revised and lit test added by Yaxun Liu.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44984
llvm-svn: 330790
This patch introduces the ability to test an arbitrary sequence of imports
between a given set of virtual source files. This should finally allow
us to write simple tests and fix annoying issues inside ASTImporter
that cause failures in CSA CTU. This is done by refactoring
ASTImporterTest functions and introducing `testImportSequence` facility.
As a side effect, `testImport` facility was generalized a bit more. It
should now allow import of non-decl AST nodes; however, there is still no
test using this ability.
As a "test for test", there is also a fix for import anonymous TagDecls
referred by typedef. Before this patch, the setting of typedef for anonymous
structure was delayed; however, this approach misses the corner case if
an enum constant is imported directly. In this patch, typedefs for
anonymous declarations are imported right after the anonymous declaration
is imported, without any delay.
Thanks to Adam Balogh for suggestions included into this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44079
llvm-svn: 330704
Summary:
It seems there isn't much enthusiasm for `-wtest` D45685.
This is more conservative version, which i had in the very first
revision of D44883, but that 'erroneously' got removed because of the review.
**Based on some [irc] discussions, it must really be documented that
we want all the new diagnostics to have their own flags, to ease
rollouts, transitions, etc.**
Please do note that i'm only adding `-Wno-self-assign-overloaded`,
but not `-Wno-self-assign-field-overloaded`, because i'm honestly
not aware of any false-positives from the `-field` variant,
but i can just as easily add it if wanted.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D44883#1068561
Reviewers: dblaikie, aaron.ballman, thakis, rjmccall, rsmith
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: Quuxplusone, chandlerc, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45766
llvm-svn: 330651
Summary: `TaintBugVisitor` is a universal visitor, and many checkers rely on it, such as `ArrayBoundCheckerV2.cpp`, `DivZeroChecker.cpp` and `VLASizeChecker.cpp`. Moving `TaintBugVisitor` to `BugReporterVisitors.h` enables other checker can also track where `tainted` value came from.
Reviewers: NoQ, george.karpenkov, xazax.hun
Reviewed By: george.karpenkov
Subscribers: szepet, rnkovacs, a.sidorin, cfe-commits, MTC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45682
llvm-svn: 330596
If an atomic variable is misaligned (and that suspicion is why Clang emits
libcalls at all) the runtime support library will have to use a lock to safely
access it, with potentially very bad performance consequences. There's a very
good chance this is unintentional so it makes sense to issue a warning.
Also give it a named group so people can promote it to an error, or disable it
if they really don't care.
llvm-svn: 330566
Right now we only use this information in one place, immediately after
we calculate it, but it's still nice information to have. The Swift
project is going to use this to tidy up its "API notes" feature (see
past discussion on cfe-dev that never quite converged).
Reviewed by Bruno Cardoso Lopes.
llvm-svn: 330452
Summary:
By default Clang outputs its version (including git commit hash, in
case of trunk builds) into object and assembly files. It might be
useful to have an option to disable this, especially for debugging
purposes.
This patch implements new command line flags -Qn and -Qy (the names
are chosen for compatibility with GCC). -Qn disables output of
the 'llvm.ident' metadata string and the 'producer' debug info. -Qy
(enabled by default) does the opposite.
Reviewers: faisalv, echristo, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: aprantl, cfe-commits, JDevlieghere, rogfer01
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45255
llvm-svn: 330442
If a pointer cast fails (evaluates to an UnknownVal, i.e. not implemented in the
analyzer) and such cast is in fact the last use of the pointer, the pointer
symbol is no longer referenced by the program state and a leak is
(mis-)diagnosed.
"Escape" the pointer upon a failed cast, i.e. inform the checker that we can no
longer reliably track it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45698
llvm-svn: 330380
This implements support for the previously ignored flag
`-falign-functions`. This allows the frontend to request alignment on
function definitions in the translation unit where they are not
explicitly requested in code. This is compatible with the GCC behaviour
and the ICC behaviour.
The scalar value passed to `-falign-functions` aligns functions to a
power-of-two boundary. If flag is used, the functions are aligned to
16-byte boundaries. If the scalar is specified, it must be an integer
less than or equal to 4096. If the value is not a power-of-two, the
driver will round it up to the nearest power of two.
llvm-svn: 330378
After r300027 implicit builds might fail when updating the SDK on
darwin. Make validation of system headers default when implicit modules
is on and allow modules to be rebuild when system headers change.
rdar://problem/19767523
llvm-svn: 330240
Summary:
A clang builtin for xray typed events. Differs from
__xray_customevent(...) by the presence of a type tag that is vended by
compiler-rt in typical usage. This allows xray handlers to expand logged
events with their type description and plugins to process traced events
based on type.
This change depends on D45633 for the intrinsic definition.
Reviewers: dberris, pelikan, rnk, eizan
Subscribers: cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45716
llvm-svn: 330220
Issue a warning when non-trivial C structs are copied or initialized by
calls to memset, bzero, memcpy, or memmove.
rdar://problem/36124208
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45310
llvm-svn: 330202
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