particular don't assume that two declarations of the same kind in the same
context are declaring the same entity. That's not true when the same name is
declared multiple times as internal-linkage symbols within a module.
(getCanonicalDecl is cheap now, so we can just use it here.)
llvm-svn: 251898
A 'readonly' Objective-C property declared in the primary class can
effectively be shadowed by a 'readwrite' property declared within an
extension of that class, so long as the types and attributes of the
two property declarations are compatible.
Previously, this functionality was implemented by back-patching the
original 'readonly' property to make it 'readwrite', destroying source
information and causing some hideously redundant, incorrect
code. Simplify the implementation to express how this should actually
be modeled: as a separate property declaration in the extension that
shadows (via the name lookup rules) the declaration in the primary
class. While here, correct some broken Fix-Its, eliminate a pile of
redundant code, clean up the ARC migrator's handling of properties
declared in extensions, and fix debug info's naming of methods that
come from categories.
A wonderous side effect of doing this write is that it eliminates the
"AddedObjCPropertyInClassExtension" method from the AST mutation
listener, which in turn eliminates the last place where we rewrite
entire declarations in a chained PCH file or a module file. This
change (which fixes rdar://problem/18475765) will allow us to
eliminate the rewritten-decls logic from the serialization library,
and fixes a crash (rdar://problem/23247794) illustrated by the
test/PCH/chain-categories.m example.
llvm-svn: 251874
This came up in a boost build, which apparently uses PTH. This was
broken in r187619 when we migrated it to uses llvm::fs instead of raw
stat calls.
Constructing a test case with a hash table collision in-tree is tough.
Instead, I have a pending change to OnDiskChainedHashTable that asserts
that the reported length of the data agrees with the data actually
written. All of the existing in-tree tests find the bug with this
assert.
llvm-svn: 251828
unaffected lines with incorrect initial indent.
Starting from:
namespace {
int i; // There shouldn't be indentation here.
int j; // <- call clang-format on this line.
}
Before:
namespace {
int i;
int j;
}
After:
namespace {
int i;
int j;
}
llvm-svn: 251824
This patch implements two things in front-end for MCU psABI support:
1) "long double type is the same as double."
2) "New predefined C/C++ pre-processor symbols: iamcu and iamcu__.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14205
llvm-svn: 251786
Certain CXXConstructExpr nodes require zero-initialization before a
constructor is called. We had a bug in the case where the constructor
is called on a virtual base: we zero-initialized the base's vbptr field.
A complementary bug is present in MSVC where no zero-initialization
occurs for the subobject at all.
This fixes PR25370.
llvm-svn: 251783
Summary:
With this change, clang-format stops formatting when either it leaves
the current scope or when it comes back to the initial scope after
going into a nested one.
Reviewers: klimek
Subscribers: cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14213
llvm-svn: 251760
We permit implicit conversion from pointer-to-function to
pointer-to-object when -fms-extensions is specified. This is rather
unfortunate, move this into -fms-compatibility and only permit it within
system headers unless -Wno-error=microsoft-cast is specified.
llvm-svn: 251738
attributes to internal functions.
This patch fixes CodeGenModule::CreateGlobalInitOrDestructFunction to
use SetInternalFunctionAttributes instead of SetLLVMFunctionAttributes
to attach function attributes to internal functions.
Also, make sure the correct CGFunctionInfo is passed instead of always
passing what arrangeNullaryFunction returns.
rdar://problem/20828324
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13610
llvm-svn: 251734
Handle blocks in the tree transform for the typo correction as otherwise, the
capture may miss. This would trigger an assertion. Thanks to Doug Gregor for
the help with this!
Fixes PR25001.
llvm-svn: 251729
This sets the mostly expected Darwin default ABI options for these two
platforms. Active changes from these defaults for watchOS are in a later patch.
llvm-svn: 251708
This patch should add support for almost all command-line options and
driver tinkering necessary to produce a correct "clang -cc1"
invocation for watchOS and tvOS.
llvm-svn: 251706
This reverts commit r251695. Debug is meant to be done off tree, not use the buildbots
experiments. I'll help investigate this problem off trunk.
llvm-svn: 251696
This should be a NFC for every toolchain other than mips-mti-linux (where we
print the list of directories searched for crt files). It will soon be
reverted once we hit the clang-cmake-armv7-a15-selfhost-neon buildbot.
llvm-svn: 251695
Correct handling for C++17 inline namespaces. We would previously fail to
identify the inline namespaces as a namespace name since multiple ones may be
concatenated now with C++17.
llvm-svn: 251690
The original commit in r249137 added the mips-mti-linux toolchain. However,
the newly added tests of that commit failed in few buildbots. This commit
re-applies the original changes but XFAILs the test file which caused
the buildbot failures. This will allow us to examine what's going wrong
without having to commit/revert large changes.
llvm-svn: 251633
Summary:
Dear All,
We have been looking at the following problem, where any code after the constant bound loop is not analyzed because of the limit on how many times the same block is visited, as described in bugzillas #7638 and #23438. This problem is of interest to us because we have identified significant bugs that the checkers are not locating. We have been discussing a solution involving ranges as a longer term project, but I would like to propose a patch to improve the current implementation.
Example issue:
```
for (int i = 0; i < 1000; ++i) {...something...}
int *p = 0;
*p = 0xDEADBEEF;
```
The proposal is to go through the first and last iterations of the loop. The patch creates an exploded node for the approximate last iteration of constant bound loops, before the max loop limit / block visit limit is reached. It does this by identifying the variable in the loop condition and finding the value which is “one away” from the loop being false. For example, if the condition is (x < 10), then an exploded node is created where the value of x is 9. Evaluating the loop body with x = 9 will then result in the analysis continuing after the loop, providing x is incremented.
The patch passes all the tests, with some modifications to coverage.c, in order to make the ‘function_which_gives_up’ continue to give up, since the changes allowed the analysis to progress past the loop.
This patch does introduce possible false positives, as a result of not knowing the state of variables which might be modified in the loop. I believe that, as a user, I would rather have false positives after loops than do no analysis at all. I understand this may not be the common opinion and am interested in hearing your views. There are also issues regarding break statements, which are not considered. A more advanced implementation of this approach might be able to consider other conditions in the loop, which would allow paths leading to breaks to be analyzed.
Lastly, I have performed a study on large code bases and I think there is little benefit in having “max-loop” default to 4 with the patch. For variable bound loops this tends to result in duplicated analysis after the loop, and it makes little difference to any constant bound loop which will do more than a few iterations. It might be beneficial to lower the default to 2, especially for the shallow analysis setting.
Please let me know your opinions on this approach to processing constant bound loops and the patch itself.
Regards,
Sean Eveson
SN Systems - Sony Computer Entertainment Group
Reviewers: jordan_rose, krememek, xazax.hun, zaks.anna, dcoughlin
Subscribers: krememek, xazax.hun, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12358
llvm-svn: 251621
Indicate support for ASAN on the CrossWindows toolchain. Although this is
insufficient, this at least permits the handling of the driver flag.
llvm-svn: 251598
GCC has a warning called -Wdouble-promotion, which warns you when
an implicit conversion increases the width of a floating point type.
This is useful when writing code for architectures that can perform
hardware FP ops on floats, but must fall back to software emulation for
larger types (i.e. double, long double).
This fixes PR15109 <https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=15109>.
Thanks to Carl Norum for the patch!
llvm-svn: 251588
This works around PR25162. The MSVC tables make it very difficult to
correctly inline a C++ destructor that contains try / catch. We've
attempted to address PR25162 in LLVM's backend, but it feels pretty
infeasible. MSVC and ICC both appear to avoid inlining such complex
destructors.
Long term, we want to fix this by making the inliner smart enough to
know when it is inlining into a cleanup, so it can inline simple
destructors (~unique_ptr and ~vector) while avoiding destructors
containing try / catch.
llvm-svn: 251576
GCC uses the x87DoubleExtended model for long doubles, and passes them
indirectly by address through function calls.
Also replace the existing mingw-long-double assembly emitting test with
an IR-level test.
llvm-svn: 251567
Use the *current* state of "is-moduleness" rather than the state at
serialization time so that if we read a builtin identifier from a module
that wasn't "interesting" to that module, we will still write it out to
a PCH that imports that module.
Otherwise, we would get mysterious "unknown builtin" errors when using
PCH+modules.
rdar://problem/23287656
llvm-svn: 251565
that has a thumb only CPU by default (cortex-m3), and when using the assembler,
the default thumb state of the CPU does not get passed via the triple to LLVM:
$ clang -target thumbv7m-none-eabi -c -v test.s
clang -cc1as ... -triple armv7m-none--eabi ... test.s
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14121
llvm-svn: 251507
functions.
This commit fixes a bug in CGOpenMPRuntime.cpp and CGObjC.cpp where
some of the function attributes are not attached to newly created
functions.
rdar://problem/20828324
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13928
llvm-svn: 251476
Summary: This is especially important so that if a change is solely inserting a block around a few statements, clang-format-diff.py will still clean up and add indentation to the inner parts.
Reviewers: klimek
Subscribers: cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14105
llvm-svn: 251474
Fake arguments are automatically handled for serialization, cloning,
and other representational tasks, but aren't included in pretty-printing
or parsing (should we eventually ever automate that).
This is chiefly useful for attributes that can be written by the
user, but which are also frequently synthesized by the compiler,
and which we'd like to remember details of the synthesis for.
As a simple example, use this to narrow the cases in which we were
generating a specialized note for implicitly unavailable declarations.
llvm-svn: 251469
With more complex structures in C++ Lambdas and JavaScript function
literals, the old value was simply to small. However, this is a
temporary solution, I need to look at this more closely a) to find a
fundamentally better approach and b) to look at whether the more recent
usage of NoLineBreak makes us visit stuff in an unfortunate order
where clang-format waste many states in dead ends.
llvm-svn: 251463
The analyzer assumes that system functions will not free memory or modify the
arguments in other ways, so we assume that arguments do not escape when
those are called. However, this may lead to false positive leak errors. For
example, in code like this where the pointers added to the rb_tree are freed
later on:
struct alarm_event *e = calloc(1, sizeof(*e));
<snip>
rb_tree_insert_node(&alarm_tree, e);
Add a heuristic to assume that calls to system functions taking void*
arguments allow for pointer escape.
llvm-svn: 251449
1. Make the warning more strict in C mode. r172696 added code to suppress
warnings from macro expansions in system headers, which checks
`SourceMgr.isMacroBodyExpansion(E->IgnoreParens()->getExprLoc())`. Consider
this snippet:
#define FOO(x) (x)
void f(int a) {
FOO(a);
}
In C, the line `FOO(a)` is an `ImplicitCastExpr(ParenExpr(DeclRefExpr))`,
while it's just a `ParenExpr(DeclRefExpr)` in C++. So in C++,
`E->IgnoreParens()` returns the `DeclRefExpr` and the check tests the
SourceLoc of `a`. In C, the `ImplicitCastExpr` has the effect of checking the
SourceLoc of `FOO`, which is a macro body expansion, which causes the
diagnostic to be skipped. It looks unintentional that clang does different
things for C and C++ here, so use `IgnoreParenImpCasts` instead of
`IgnoreParens` here. This has the effect of the warning firing more often
than previously in C code – it now fires as often as it fires in C++ code.
2. Suppress the warning if it would warn on `UNREFERENCED_PARAMETER`.
`UNREFERENCED_PARAMETER` is a commonly used macro on Windows and it happens
to uselessly trigger -Wunused-value. As discussed in the thread
"rfc: winnt.h's UNREFERENCED_PARAMETER() vs clang's -Wunused-value" on
cfe-dev, fix this by special-casing this specific macro. (This costs a string
comparison and some fast-path lexing per warning, but the warning is emitted
rarely. It fires once in Windows.h itself, so this code runs at least once
per TU including Windows.h, but it doesn't run hundreds of times.)
http://reviews.llvm.org/D13969
llvm-svn: 251441
Summary: This is a follow on to post review comments on revision r248276.
Patch by Scott Egerton.
Reviewers: vkalintiris, dsanders
Subscribers: joerg, rengolin, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13100
llvm-svn: 251430
Linking options for particular file depend on the option that specifies the file.
Currently there are two:
* -mlink-bitcode-file links in complete content of the specified file.
* -mlink-cuda-bitcode links in only the symbols needed by current TU.
Linked symbols are internalized. This bitcode linking mode is used to
link device-specific bitcode provided by CUDA.
Files are linked in order they are specified on command line.
-mlink-cuda-bitcode replaces -fcuda-uses-libdevice flag.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13913
llvm-svn: 251427
Specifically, don't wrap between the {} of an empty constructor if the
"}" falls on column 81 and ConstructorInitializerAllOnOneLineOrOnePerLine
is set.
llvm-svn: 251406
Summary:
If this option is set, clang-format will always insert a line wrap, e.g.
before the first parameter of a function call unless all parameters fit
on the same line. This obviates the need to make a decision on the
alignment itself.
Use this style for Google's JavaScript style and add some minor tweaks
to correctly handle nested blocks etc. with it. Don't use this option
for for/while loops.
Reviewers: klimek
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14104
llvm-svn: 251405
only one of a group of possibilities.
This changes the syntax in the builtin files to represent:
, as the and operator
| as the or operator
The former syntax matches how the backend tablegen files represent
multiple subtarget features being required.
Updated the builtin and intrinsic headers accordingly for the new
syntax.
llvm-svn: 251388
Create undef reference to profile hook symbol when
PGO instrumentation is turned on. This allows
LLVM to omit emission of hook variable use method
for every single module instrumented.
llvm-svn: 251385
allow them to be written in certain kinds of user declaration and
diagnose on the use-site instead.
Also, improve and fix some diagnostics relating to __weak and
properties.
rdar://23228631
llvm-svn: 251384
Summary:
In `MismatchingNewDeleteDetector::analyzeInClassInitializer`, if
`Field`'s initializer expression is null, lookup the field in
implicit instantiation, and use found field's the initializer.
Reviewers: rsmith, rtrieu
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9898
llvm-svn: 251335
The MCU psABI calling convention is somewhat, but not quite, like -mregparm 3.
In particular, the rules involving structs are different.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13978
llvm-svn: 251224
This relands r250831 after some fixes to shrink the ParentMap overall
with one addtional tweak: nodes with pointer identity (e.g. Decl* and
friends) can be store more efficiently so I put them in a separate map.
All other nodes (so far only TypeLoc and NNSLoc) go in a different map
keyed on DynTypedNode. This further uglifies the code but significantly
reduces memory overhead.
Overall this change still make ParentMap significantly larger but it's
nowhere as bad as before. I see about 25 MB over baseline (pre-r251008)
on X86ISelLowering.cpp. If this becomes an issue we could consider
splitting the maps further as DynTypedNode is still larger (32 bytes)
than a single TypeLoc (16 bytes) but I didn't want to introduce even
more complexity now.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14011
llvm-svn: 251101
Previously, __weak was silently accepted and ignored in MRC mode.
That makes this a potentially source-breaking change that we have to
roll out cautiously. Accordingly, for the time being, actual support
for __weak references in MRC is experimental, and the compiler will
reject attempts to actually form such references. The intent is to
eventually enable the feature by default in all non-GC modes.
(It is, of course, incompatible with ObjC GC's interpretation of
__weak.)
If you like, you can enable this feature with
-Xclang -fobjc-weak
but like any -Xclang option, this option may be removed at any point,
e.g. if/when it is eventually enabled by default.
This patch also enables the use of the ARC __unsafe_unretained qualifier
in MRC. Unlike __weak, this is being enabled immediately. Since
variables are essentially __unsafe_unretained by default in MRC,
the only practical uses are (1) communication and (2) changing the
default behavior of by-value block capture.
As an implementation matter, this means that the ObjC ownership
qualifiers may appear in any ObjC language mode, and so this patch
removes a number of checks for getLangOpts().ObjCAutoRefCount
that were guarding the processing of these qualifiers. I don't
expect this to be a significant drain on performance; it may even
be faster to just check for these qualifiers directly on a type
(since it's probably in a register anyway) than to do N dependent
loads to grab the LangOptions.
rdar://9674298
llvm-svn: 251041
We got this right for Itanium but not MSVC because CGRecordLayoutBuilder
was checking if the base's size was zero when it should have been
checking the non-virtual size.
This fixes PR21040.
llvm-svn: 251036
One problem in clang-tidy and other clang tools face is that there is no
way to lookup an arbitrary name in the AST, that's buried deep inside Sema
and might not even be what the user wants as the new name may be freshly
inserted and not available in the AST.
A common use case for lookups is replacing one nested name with another
while minimizing namespace qualifications, so replacing 'ns::foo' with
'ns::bar' will use just 'bar' if we happen to be inside the namespace 'ns'.
This adds a little helper utility for exactly that use case.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13931
llvm-svn: 251022
This patch adds hashes to the plist and html output to be able to identfy bugs
for suppressing false positives or diff results against a baseline. This hash
aims to be resilient for code evolution and is usable to identify bugs in two
different snapshots of the same software. One missing piece however is a
permanent unique identifier of the checker that produces the warning. Once that
issue is resolved, the hashes generated are going to change. Until that point
this feature is marked experimental, but it is suitable for early adoption.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10305
Original patch by: Bence Babati!
llvm-svn: 251011
These are by far the most common types to be parents in the AST so it makes
sense to optimize for them. Put them directly into the value of the map.
This currently saves 32 bytes per parent in the map and a pointer
indirection at the cost of some additional complexity in the code.
Sadly this means we cannot return an ArrayRef from getParents anymore, add
a proxy class that can own a single DynTypedNode and otherwise behaves
exactly the same as ArrayRef.
For example on a random large file (X86ISelLowering.cpp) this reduces the
size of the parent map by 24 MB.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13976
llvm-svn: 251008
We believed that internal linkage variables at global scope which are
not variable template specializations did not have to be mangled.
However, static anonymous unions have no identifier and therefore must
be mangled.
This fixes PR18204.
llvm-svn: 250997
In this patch, the file static method addProfileRT is
moved to be a virtual member function of base ToolChain class.
This allows derived toolchain to override the default behavior
easily and make it consistent with Darwin toolchain (a TODO was
added for this refactoring - now removed). A new helper method
is also introduced to test if instrumentation profile option
is turned on or not.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13326
llvm-svn: 250994
The pointer was being implicitly converted to a StringRef and the size was being passed into the bool. Since the bool has a default value normally, no one noticed that the wrong number of arguments was given.
llvm-svn: 250977
When removing out-of-date modules we might have left behind a VisitOrder
that contains pointers to freed ModuleFiles. This was very rarely seen,
because it only happens when modules go out of date and the VisitOrder
happens to have the right size to not be recomputed.
Thanks ASan!
rdar://23181512
llvm-svn: 250963
This is almost entirely a matter of just flipping a switch. 99% of
the runtime support is available all the way back to when it was
implemented in the non-fragile runtime, i.e. in Lion. However,
fragile runtimes do not recognize ARC-style ivar layout strings,
which means that accessing __strong or __weak ivars reflectively
(e.g. via object_setIvar) will end up accessing the ivar as if it
were __unsafe_unretained. Therefore, when using reflective
technologies like KVC, be sure that your paths always refer to a
property.
rdar://23209307
llvm-svn: 250955
The ELF symbol visibilities are:
- internal: Not visibile across DSOs, cannot pass address across DSOs
- hidden: Not visibile across DSOs, can be called indirectly
- default: Usually visible across DSOs, possibly interposable
- protected: Visible across DSOs, not interposable
LLVM only supports the latter 3 visibilities. Internal visibility is in
theory useful, as it allows you to assume that the caller is maintaining
a PIC register for you in %ebx, or in some other pre-arranged location.
As far as LLVM is concerned, this isn't worth the trouble. Using hidden
visibility is always correct, so we can just do that.
Resolves PR9183.
llvm-svn: 250954
Since r249754 MemorySanitizer should work equally well for PIE and
non-PIE executables on Linux/x86_64.
Beware, with this change -fsanitize=memory no longer adds implicit
-fPIE -pie compiler/linker flags on Linux/x86_64.
This is a re-land of r250941, limited to Linux/x86_64 + a very minor
refactoring in SanitizerArgs.
llvm-svn: 250949
Since r249754 MemorySanitizer should work equally well for PIE and
non-PIE executables.
Beware, with this change -fsanitize=memory no longer adds implicit
-fPIE -pie compiler/linker flags, unless the target defaults to PIE.
llvm-svn: 250941
Specifically, handle under-aligned object references (by explicitly
ignoring them, because this just isn't representable in the format;
yes, this means that GC silently ignores such references), descend
into anonymous structs and unions, stop classifying fields of
pointer-to-strong/weak type as strong/weak in ARC mode, and emit
skips to cover the entirety of block layouts in GC mode. As a
cleanup, extract this code into a helper class, avoid a number of
unnecessary copies and layout queries, generate skips implicitly
instead of explicitly tracking them, and clarify the bitmap-creation
logic.
llvm-svn: 250919
clang accepts both #include and #import for includes (the latter having an
implicit header guard). Let clang-format interleave both types if
--sort-includes is passed. #import is used frequently in Objective-C code.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D13853
llvm-svn: 250909
Putting DynTypedNode in the ParentMap bloats its memory foot print.
Before the void* key had 8 bytes, now we're at 40 bytes per key which
can mean multiple gigabytes increase for large ASTs and this count
doesn't even include all the added TypeLoc nodes. Revert until I come
up with a better data structure.
This reverts commit r250831.
llvm-svn: 250889
The logic for parsing FP capabilities to set __ARM_FP was mistakenly removing
the Half-Precision capability when handling fp-only-sp resulting in a value
of 0x4. Section 6.5.1 of ACLE states that for such FP architectures the value
should be 0x6
llvm-svn: 250888
headers. If those headers end up being textually included twice into the same
module, we get ambiguity errors.
Work around this by downgrading the ambiguity error to a warning if multiple
identical internal-linkage functions appear in an overload set, and just pick
one of those functions as the lookup result.
llvm-svn: 250884
This time, I went with the first approach from
http://reviews.llvm.org/D6700, where clang actually attempts to form an
implicit member reference from an UnresolvedLookupExpr. We know that
there are only two possible outcomes at this point, a DeclRefExpr of the
FieldDecl or an error, but its safer to reuse the existing machinery for
this.
llvm-svn: 250856
Microsoft's ATL headers make use of this MSVC extension, add support for
it and issue a diagnostic under -Wmicrosoft-exception-spec.
This fixes PR25265.
llvm-svn: 250854
Clang will now accept this valid C++11 code:
struct A { int field; };
struct B : A {
using A::field;
enum { TheSize = sizeof(field) };
};
Previously we would classify the 'field' reference as something other
than a field, and then forget to apply the C++11 rule to allow
non-static data member references in unevaluated contexts.
This usually arises in class templates that want to reference fields of
a dependent base in an unevaluated context outside of an instance
method. Such contexts do not allow references to 'this', so the only way
to access the field is with a using decl and an implicit member
reference.
llvm-svn: 250839
Firstly this changes the type of parent map to be keyed on DynTypedNode to
simplify the following changes. This comes with a DenseMapInfo for
DynTypedNode, which is a bit incomplete still and will probably only work
for parentmap right now.
Then the RecursiveASTVisitor in ASTContext is updated and finally
ASTMatchers hasParent and hasAncestor learn about the new functionality.
Now ParentMap is only missing TemplateArgumentLocs and CXXCtorInitializers.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13897
llvm-svn: 250831
Summary: It breaks the build for the ASTMatchers
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13893
llvm-svn: 250827
According to the Intel documentation, the mask operand of a maskload and
maskstore intrinsics is always a vector of packed integer/long integer values.
This patch introduces the following two changes:
1. It fixes the avx maskload/store intrinsic definitions in avxintrin.h.
2. It changes BuiltinsX86.def to match the correct gcc definitions for avx
maskload/store (see D13861 for more details).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13861
llvm-svn: 250816
Currently debug info for types used in explicit cast only is not emitted. It happened after a patch for better alignment handling. This patch fixes this bug.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13582
llvm-svn: 250795
This reverts commit r250592.
It has issues around unevaluated contexts, like this:
template <class T> struct A { T i; };
template <class T>
struct B : A<T> {
using A<T>::i;
typedef decltype(i) U;
};
template struct B<int>;
llvm-svn: 250774
Out-of-line definitions of static data members which have an inline
initializer must get GVA_DiscardableODR linkage instead of
GVA_StrongExternal linkage.
MSVC 2013's behavior is different with respect to this and would cause
link errors if one TU provided a definition while another did not.
MSVC 2015 fixed this bug, making this OK. Note that the 2015 behavior
is always compatible with 2013: it never produces a strong definition.
This essentially reverts r237787.
llvm-svn: 250757
The Intel MCU psABI requires floating-point values to be passed in-reg.
This makes the x86-32 ABI code respect "-mfloat-abi soft" and generate float inreg arguments.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13554
llvm-svn: 250689
Summary:
Similar to rL248426 (which was a followup to rL248379 and rL248424), add the
required libraries for OpenMP on the linker command line, and update the test
case.
Reviewers: emaste, theraven, joerg
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13822
llvm-svn: 250657
If a RegExp contains a character group with a quote (/["]/), the
trailing end of it is first tokenized as a string literal, which leads
to the merging code seeing an unbalanced bracket.
This change parses regex literals from the left hand side. That
simplifies the parsing code and also allows correctly handling escapes
and character classes, hopefully correctly parsing all regex literals.
Patch by Martin Probst, thank you.
Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13765
llvm-svn: 250648
During the initial template parse for this code, 'member' is unresolved
and we don't know anything about it:
struct A { int member };
template <typename T>
struct B : public T {
using T::member;
static void f() {
(void)member; // Could be static or non-static.
}
};
template class B<A>;
The pattern declaration contains an UnresolvedLookupExpr rather than an
UnresolvedMemberExpr because `f` is static, and `member` should never be
a field. However, if the code is invalid, it may become a field, in
which case we should diagnose it.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6700
llvm-svn: 250592
via -fmodule-file= to be turned off; in that case, just include the relevant
files textually. This allows module files to be unconditionally passed to all
compile actions via CXXFLAGS, and to be ignored for rules that specify custom
incompatible flags.
llvm-svn: 250577
If you increase the number of diags of a particular type by one more than the
number available you get the nice assert message. If you do it by two more
than available you get the old non-helpful message. Combining the two makes
sense I think.
llvm-svn: 250546
r246877 made __builtin_object_size substantially more aggressive with
unknown bases if Type=1 or Type=3, which causes issues when we encounter
code like this:
struct Foo {
int a;
char str[1];
};
const char str[] = "Hello, World!";
struct Foo *f = (struct Foo *)malloc(sizeof(*f) + strlen(str));
strcpy(&f->str, str);
__builtin_object_size(&f->str, 1) would hand back 1, which is
technically correct given the type of Foo, but the type of Foo lies to
us about how many bytes are available in this case.
This patch adds support for this "writing off the end" idiom -- we now
answer conservatively when we're given the address of the very last
member in a struct.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12169
llvm-svn: 250488
Previously, our logic when taking the address of an overloaded function
would not consider enable_if attributes, so long as all of the enable_if
conditions on a given candidate were true. So, two functions with
identical signatures (one with enable_if attributes, the other without),
would be considered equally good overloads. If we were calling the
function instead of taking its address, then the function with enable_if
attributes would be preferred.
This patch makes us prefer the candidate with enable_if regardless of if
we're calling or taking the address of an overloaded function.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13795
llvm-svn: 250486
match the feature set of the function that they're being called from.
This ensures that we can effectively diagnose some[1] code that would
instead ICE in the backend with a failure to select message.
Example:
__m128d foo(__m128d a, __m128d b) {
return __builtin_ia32_addsubps(b, a);
}
compiled for normal x86_64 via:
clang -target x86_64-linux-gnu -c
would fail to compile in the back end because the normal subtarget
features for x86_64 only include sse2 and the builtin requires sse3.
[1] We're still not erroring on:
__m128i bar(__m128i const *p) { return _mm_lddqu_si128(p); }
where we should fail and error on an always_inline function being
inlined into a function that doesn't support the subtarget features
required.
llvm-svn: 250473
This recommits r250398 with fixes to the tests for bot failures.
Add "-target x86_64-unknown-linux" to the clang invocations that
check for the gold plugin.
llvm-svn: 250455
Rolling this back for now since there are a couple of bot failures on
the new tests I added, and I won't have a chance to look at them in detail
until later this afternoon. I think the new tests need some restrictions on
having the gold plugin available.
This reverts commit r250398.
llvm-svn: 250402
Summary:
Add clang support for -flto=thin option, which is used to set the
EmitFunctionSummary code gen option on compiles.
Add -flto=full as an alias to the existing -flto.
Add tests to check for proper overriding of -flto variants on the
command line, and convert grep tests to FileCheck.
Reviewers: dexonsmith, joker.eph
Subscribers: davidxl, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11908
llvm-svn: 250398
There was a minor problem with a test. Sorry for the noise yesterday.
This patch adds missing pieces to clang, including the PS4 toolchain
definition, added warnings, PS4 defaults, and Driver changes needed for
our compiler.
A patch by Filipe Cabecinhas, Pierre Gousseau and Katya Romanova!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13482
llvm-svn: 250293
Resubmitting the patch.
This patch adds missing pieces to clang, including the PS4 toolchain
definition, added warnings, PS4 defaults, and Driver changes needed for
our compiler.
A patch by Filipe Cabecinhas, Pierre Gousseau and Katya Romanova!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13482
llvm-svn: 250262
definition, added warnings, PS4 defaults, and Driver changes needed for
our compiler.
A patch by Filipe Cabecinhas, Pierre Gousseau and Katya Romanova!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13482
llvm-svn: 250252
Prevent invalidation of `this' when a method is const; fixing PR 21606.
A patch by Sean Eveson!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13099
llvm-svn: 250237
This is what most people want anyways. Clang -cc1's main() will override
this but for other tools this is the most sensible default and avoids
some work.
llvm-svn: 250164
context (but otherwise at the top level) to be disabled, to support use of C++
standard library implementations that (legitimately) mark their <blah.h>
headers as being C++ headers from C libraries that wrap things in 'extern "C"'
a bit too enthusiastically.
llvm-svn: 250137
We model predefined declarations as not being from AST files, but in most ways
they act as if they come from some implicit prebuilt module file imported
before all others. Therefore, if we see an update to the predefined 'struct
__va_list_tag' declaration (and we've already loaded any modules), it needs a
corresponding update record, even though it didn't technically come from an AST
file.
llvm-svn: 250134
Add support for the `-fdebug-prefix-map=` option as in GCC. The syntax is
`-fdebug-prefix-map=OLD=NEW`. When compiling files from a path beginning with
OLD, change the debug info to indicate the path as start with NEW. This is
particularly helpful if you are preprocessing in one path and compiling in
another (e.g. for a build cluster with distcc).
Note that the linearity of the implementation is not as terrible as it may seem.
This is normally done once per file with an expectation that the map will be
small (1-2) entries, making this roughly linear in the number of input paths.
Addresses PR24619.
llvm-svn: 250094
This fixes a bug where one can take the address of a conditionally
enabled function to drop its enable_if guards. For example:
int foo(int a) __attribute__((enable_if(a > 0, "")));
int (*p)(int) = &foo;
int result = p(-1); // compilation succeeds; calls foo(-1)
Overloading logic has been updated to reflect this change, as well.
Functions with enable_if attributes that are always true are still
allowed to have their address taken.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13607
llvm-svn: 250090
Fixed a bug where we'd emit multiple diagnostics if there was a problem
taking the address of an overloaded template function.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13664
llvm-svn: 250078
This is a more principled version of what I did earlier. Path
normalization is generally a good thing, but may break users in strange
environments, e. g. using lots of symlinks. Let the user choose and
default it to on.
This also changes adding a duplicated file into returning an error if
the file contents are different instead of an assertion failure.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13658
llvm-svn: 250060
Actually the only special path we have to handle is ./foo, the rest is
tricky to get right so do the same thing as the existing YAML vfs here.
llvm-svn: 250036
This can fail badly if we're overlaying a real file system and there are
symlinks there. Just keep the path as-is for now.
This essentially reverts r249830.
llvm-svn: 250021
Automatically insert line feed after pretty printing of all pragma-like attributes + fix printing of pragma-like pragmas on declarations.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13546
llvm-svn: 250017
Slashes in regular expressions do not need to be escaped and do not
terminate the regular expression even without a preceding backslash.
Patch by Martin Probst. Thank you.
llvm-svn: 250009
C allows for some implicit conversions that C++ does not, e.g. void* ->
char*. This patch teaches clang that these conversions are okay when
dealing with overloads in C.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13604
llvm-svn: 249995
The inference of _Nullable for weak Objective-C properties was broken
in several ways:
* It was back-patching the type information very late in the process
of checking the attributes for an Objective-C property, which is
just wrong.
* It was using ad hoc checks to try to suppress the warning about
missing nullability specifiers (-Wnullability-completeness), which
didn't actual work in all cases (rdar://problem/22985457)
* It was inferring _Nullable even outside of assumes-nonnull regions,
which is wrong.
Putting the inference of _Nullable for weak Objective-C properties in
the same place as all of the other inference logic fixes all of these
ills.
llvm-svn: 249896
Sadly I don't currently have a way to tests this as the driver is always
initialized with the default triple and finding system headers is system
specific.
llvm-svn: 249831
This means file remappings can now be managed by ClangTool (or a
ToolInvocation user) instead of by ToolInvocation itself. The
ToolInvocation remapping is still in place so users can migrate.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13474
llvm-svn: 249815
Summary:
Currently when a function annotated with __attribute__((nonnull)) is called in an unevaluated context with a null argument a -Wnonnull warning is emitted.
This warning seems like a false positive unless the call expression is potentially evaluated. Change this behavior so that the non-null warnings use DiagRuntimeBehavior so they wont emit when they won't be evaluated.
Reviewers: majnemer, rsmith
Subscribers: mclow.lists, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13408
llvm-svn: 249787
CGBlocks.cpp.
This commit fixes a bug in clang's code-gen where it creates the
following functions but doesn't attach function attributes to them:
__copy_helper_block_
__destroy_helper_block_
__Block_byref_object_copy_
__Block_byref_object_dispose_
rdar://problem/20828324
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13525
llvm-svn: 249735
Rationale :
// sse3
__m128d test_mm_addsub_pd(__m128d A, __m128d B) {
return _mm_addsub_pd(A, B);
}
// mmx
void shift(__m64 a, __m64 b, int c) {
_mm_slli_pi16(a, c);
_mm_slli_pi32(a, c);
_mm_slli_si64(a, c);
_mm_srli_pi16(a, c);
_mm_srli_pi32(a, c);
_mm_srli_si64(a, c);
_mm_srai_pi16(a, c);
_mm_srai_pi32(a, c);
}
clang -msse3 -mno-mmx file.c -c
For this code we should be able to explicitly turn off MMX
without affecting the compilation of the SSE3 function and then
diagnose and error on compiling the MMX function.
This is a preparatory patch to the actual diagnosis code which is
coming in a future patch. This sets us up to have the correct information
where we need it and verifies that it's being emitted for the backend
to handle.
llvm-svn: 249733
that we can build up an accurate set of features rather than relying on
TargetInfo initialization via handleTargetFeatures to munge the list
of features.
llvm-svn: 249732
early.
This is needed in a patch I plan to commit later, in which a null Decl
pointer is passed to SetLLVMFunctionAttributesForDefinition.
Relevant discussion is in http://reviews.llvm.org/D13525.
llvm-svn: 249722
C++ exceptions are still off by default, which is similar to how C++
cleanups are off by default in MSVC.
If you use clang instead of clang-cl, exceptions are also still off by
default. In the future, when C++ EH is proven to be stable, we may flip
the default for that driver to be consistent with other platforms.
llvm-svn: 249704
Simplifying the convoluted CPU handling in ARMTargetInfo.
The default base CPU on ARM is ARM7TDMI, arch ARMv4T, and
ARMTargetInfo had a different one. This wasn't visible from
Clang because the driver selects the defaults and sets the
Arch/CPU features directly, but the constructor depended
on the CPU, which was never used.
This patch corrects the mistake and greatly simplifies
how CPU is dealt with (essentially by removing the duplicated
DefaultCPU field).
Tests updated.
llvm-svn: 249699
consider the following:
enum E *p;
enum E { e };
The above snippet is not ANSI C because 'enum E' has not bee defined
when we are processing the declaration of 'p'; however, it is a popular
extension to make the above work. This would fail using the Microsoft
enum semantics because the definition of 'E' would implicitly have a
fixed underlying type of 'int' which would trigger diagnostic messages
about a mismatch between the declaration and the definition.
Instead, treat fixed underlying types as not fixed for the purposes of
the diagnostic.
llvm-svn: 249674
Enums without an explicit, fixed, underlying type are implicitly given a
fixed 'int' type for ABI compatibility with MSVC. However, we can
enforce the standard-mandated rules on these types as-if we didn't know
this fact if the tag is not part of a definition.
llvm-svn: 249667
No ABI for C++ currently makes it possible to implement the standard
100% perfectly. We wrongly hid some of our compatible behavior behind
-fms-compatibility instead of tying it to the compiler ABI.
llvm-svn: 249656
With this change, most 'g' options are rejected by CompilerInvocation.
They remain only as Driver options. The new way to request debug info
from cc1 is with "-debug-info-kind={line-tables-only|limited|standalone}"
and "-dwarf-version={2|3|4}". In the absence of a command-line option
to specify Dwarf version, the Toolchain decides it, rather than placing
Toolchain-specific logic in CompilerInvocation.
Also fix a bug in the Windows compatibility argument parsing
in which the "rightmost argument wins" principle failed.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13221
llvm-svn: 249655
the "" and the suffix; that breaks names such as 'operator""if'. For symmetry,
also remove the space between the 'operator' and the '""'.
llvm-svn: 249641
The backend restores the stack pointer after recovering from an
exception. This is similar to r245879, but it doesn't try to use the
normal cleanup mechanism, so hopefully it won't cause the same breakage.
llvm-svn: 249640
We don't have a good place to put them. Our previous spot was causing us
to optimize loads from the exception object to undef, because it was
after the catchpad instruction that models the write to the catch
object.
llvm-svn: 249616
AllCallbacks is currently only used to call onStartOfTranslationUnit and
onEndOfTranslationUnit on them. In this (and any other scenario I can
come up with), it is important (or at least better) not to have
duplicates in this container. E.g. currently onEndOfTranslationUnit is
called repeatedly on the same callback for every matcher that is
registered with it.
llvm-svn: 249598
Fixes this bug: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24504
TokenAnnotator::spaceRequiredBetween was handling TT_ForEachMacro but
not TT_ObjCForIn, so lines that look like:
for (id nextObject in (NSArray *)myArray)
would incorrectly turn into:
for (id nextObject in(NSArray *)myArray)
Patch by Kent Sutherland, thank you.
llvm-svn: 249553
aligning assignments.
This was done correctly when aligning the declarations, but not when
aligning assignments.
FIXME: The code between assignments and declarations alignment is
roughly duplicated and
would benefit from factorization.
Bug 25090: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25090
Patch by Beren Minor. Thank you.
llvm-svn: 249552
Currently codegen crashes trying to emit casting to bool &. It happens because bool type is converted to i1 and later then lvalue for reference is converted to i1*. But when codegen tries to load this lvalue it crashes trying to load value from this i1*.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13325
llvm-svn: 249534
- Rename it to RedirectingFileSystem. This is what it does, YAML is just a
serialization format for it.
- Consistently use unique_ptr for memory management.
No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 249532
ASTUnit was creating multiple FileManagers and throwing them away. Reuse
the one from Tooling. No functionality change now but necessary for
VFSifying tooling.
llvm-svn: 249410
It took me some time to figure out why this is not working as expected:
std:error_code converts to true if there is an error. This means we never
ever took the generated absolute path, which happens to be the right thing
anyways as it properly works with virtual files. Just remove the whole
thing, relative paths are covered by existing tooling tests.
llvm-svn: 249408
This was made much easier by introducing an IncludeCategory struct to
replace the previously used std::pair.
Also, cleaned up documentation and added examples.
llvm-svn: 249392
Adds `addTargetAndModeForProgramName`, a utility function that will add
appropriate `-target foo` and `--driver-mode=g++` tokens to a command
line for driver invocations of the form `a/b/foo-g++`. It is intended to
support tooling: for example, should a compilation database record some
invocation of `foo-g++` without these implicit flags, a Clang tool may
use this function to add them back.
Patch by Luke Zarko.
llvm-svn: 249391
Apart from being cleaner this also means that clang-format no longer has
access to the host file system. This isn't necessary because clang-format
never reads includes :)
Includes minor tweaks and bugfixes found in the VFS implementation while
running clang-format tests.
llvm-svn: 249385
that change turns out to not be reasonable: mutating the AST of a parsed
template during instantiation is not a sound thing to do, does not work across
chained PCH / modules builds, and is in any case a special-case workaround to a
more general problem that should be solved centrally.
llvm-svn: 249342
include/clang/CodeGenABITypes.h is in meant to be included by external
users, but using a unique_ptr on the private CodeGenModule introduces a
dependency on the type definition that prevents such a use.
NFC
llvm-svn: 249328
For RealFileSystem this is getcwd()/chdir(), the synthetic file systems can
make up one for themselves. OverlayFileSystem now synchronizes the working
directories when a new FS is added to the overlay or the overlay working
directory is set. This allows purely artificial file systems that have zero
ties to the underlying disks.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13430
llvm-svn: 249316
This is a simple file system tree of memory buffers that can be filled by a
client. In conjunction with an OverlayFS it can be used to make virtual
files accessible right next to physical files. This can be used as a
replacement for the virtual file handling in FileManager and which I intend
to remove eventually.
llvm-svn: 249315
OpenCL v1.1 s6.2.2: for the boolean value true, every bit in the result vector should be set.
This change treats the i1 value as signed for the purposes of performing the cast to integer,
and therefore sign extend into the result.
Patch by Neil Hickey!
http://reviews.llvm.org/D13349
llvm-svn: 249301
r249137 added support for the new mips-mti-linux toolchain. However,
the new tests of that commit, broke some buildbots because they didn't use
the correct regular expressions to capture the filename of Clang & LLD.
This commit re-applies the changes of r249137 and fixes the tests in
r249137 in order to match the filenames of the Clang and LLD executable.
llvm-svn: 249294
In versions of clang prior to r238238, __declspec was recognized as a keyword in
all modes. It was then changed to only be enabled when Microsoft or Borland
extensions were enabled (and for CUDA, as a temporary measure). There is a
desire to support __declspec in Playstation code, and possibly other
environments. This commit adds a command-line switch to allow explicit
enabling/disabling of the recognition of __declspec as a keyword. Recognition
is enabled by default in Microsoft, Borland, CUDA, and PS4 environments, and
disabled in all other environments.
Patch by Warren Ristow!
llvm-svn: 249279
Diagnose when a pointer to const T is used as the first argument in at atomic
builtin unless that builtin is a load operation. This is already checked for
C11 atomics builtins but not for __atomic ones.
This patch was given the LGTM by rsmith when it was part
of a larger review. (See http://reviews.llvm.org/D10407)
llvm-svn: 249252
The Windows on ARM ABI recommends that FPO be disabled. This is since the
Windows on ARM ABI uses the FP for fast stack walking. By paying the slight
cost of the loss of registers, a much faster backtrace is possible by using the
frame pointer since the pdata need not be consulted. Furthermore, even if pdata
is not available, you can still more easily reconstruct the stack.
llvm-svn: 249227
I randomly came across this difference between AArch64 and other targets:
on the latter, we don't emit nil checks for known non-nil class method
calls thanks to r247350, but we still do for AArch64 stret calls.
They use different code paths, because those are special, as they go
through the regular msgSend, not the msgSend*_stret variants.
llvm-svn: 249205
Ensure that the vptr store in the most-derived constructor is not behind
an invariant group barrier. Previously, the base-most vptr store would
be the one behind no barrier, and that could result in the creator of
the object thinking it had the base-most vtable.
This bug caused clang call pure virtual functions when called from
constructor body.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D13373
llvm-svn: 249197
All global variables that are not enclosed in a declare target region
must be captured in the target region as local variables do. Currently,
there is no support for declare target, so this patch adds support for
capturing all the global variables used in a the target region.
llvm-svn: 249154
This patch implements the outlining for offloading functions for code
annotated with the OpenMP target directive. It uses a temporary naming
of the outlined functions that will have to be updated later on once
target side codegen and registration of offloading libraries is
implemented - the naming needs to be made unique in the produced
library.
llvm-svn: 249148
Reapply r248935.
Usually, when using LTO with a clang installation newer than the
system's one, there's a libLTO.dylib version mismatch and LTO fails. One
solution to this is to make ld point to the right libLTO.dylib by
changing DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH.
However, ld64 supports specifying the complete path to the desired
libLTO.dylib through the -lto_library option. This commit adds support
for the clang driver to use this option whenever it's capable of finding
a libLTO.dylib in clang's installed library directory. This way, we
don't need to rely on DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH nor get caught by version
mismatches.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13117
rdar://problem/7363476
llvm-svn: 249143
Summary:
This new toolchain uses primarily LLVM-based tools, eg. compiler-rt, lld,
libcxx, etc. Because of this, it doesn't require neither an existing GCC
installation nor a GNU environment. Ideally, in a follow-up patch we
would like to add a new --{llvm|clang}-toolchain option (similar to
--gcc-toolchain) in order to allow the use of this toolchain with
independent Clang builds. For the time being, we use the --sysroot
option just to test the correctness of the paths generated by the
driver.
Reviewers: atanasyan, dsanders, rsmith
Subscribers: jfb, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, dschuff, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13340
llvm-svn: 249137
their associated .cpp file.
Previous refactorings long long ago had split out the above categories
of classes from Stmt.h into their own header files, but failed to also
split the Stmt.cpp implementation file similarly. Do so for
readability's sake.
llvm-svn: 249131
partial specialization can perform conversions on the argument. Be sure we
start again from the original argument when checking each possible template.
llvm-svn: 249114
test that our intrinsics behave the same under -fsigned-char and
-funsigned-char.
This further testing uncovered that AVX-2 has a broken cmpgt for 8-bit
elements, and has for a long time. This is fixed in the same way as
SSE4 handles the case.
The other ISA extensions currently work correctly because they use
specific instruction intrinsics. As soon as they are rewritten in terms
of generic IR, they will need to add these special casts. I've added the
necessary testing to catch this however, so we shouldn't have to chase
it down again.
I considered changing the core typedef to be signed, but that seems like
a bad idea. Notably, it would be an ABI break if anyone is reaching into
the innards of the intrinsic headers and passing __v16qi on an API
boundary. I can't be completely confident that this wouldn't happen due
to a macro expanding in a lambda, etc., so it seems much better to leave
it alone. It also matches GCC's behavior exactly.
A fun side note is that for both GCC and Clang, -funsigned-char really
does change the semantics of __v16qi. To observe this, consider:
% cat x.cc
#include <smmintrin.h>
#include <iostream>
int main() {
__v16qi a = { 1, -1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0};
__v16qi b = _mm_set1_epi8(-1);
std::cout << (int)(a / b)[0] << ", " << (int)(a / b)[1] << '\n';
}
% clang++ -o x x.cc && ./x
-1, 1
% clang++ -funsigned-char -o x x.cc && ./x
0, 1
However, while this may be surprising, both Clang and GCC agree.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13324
llvm-svn: 249097
With -fms-extensions it is possible to have a non-class record that is a
template specialization cause an assertion failure via the call to
Type::getAsCXXRecordDecl. Fixes PR 24246.
llvm-svn: 249090
This was already being done when injecting the VBPtr, but not
when injecting the VFPtr. This fixes a number of tests in LLDB's
test suite.
Reviewed by: David Majnemer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13276
llvm-svn: 249085
Objective-C ARC lifetime qualifiers are dropped when canonicalizing
function types. Perform the same adjustment before comparing the
deduced result types of lambdas. Fixes rdar://problem/22344904.
llvm-svn: 249065
This commit supports Sean Eveson's work on loop widening. It is NFC for now.
It adds a new TK_EntireMemSpace invalidation trait that, when applied to a
MemSpaceRegion, indicates that the entire memory space should be invalidated.
Clients can add this trait before invalidating. For example:
RegionAndSymbolInvalidationTraits ITraits;
ITraits.setTrait(MRMgr.getStackLocalsRegion(STC),
RegionAndSymbolInvalidationTraits::TK_EntireMemSpace);
This commit updates the existing logic invalidating global memspace regions for
calls to additionally handle arbitrary memspaces. When generating initial
clusters during cluster analysis we now add a cluster to the worklist if
the memspace for its base is marked with TK_EntireMemSpace.
This also moves the logic for invalidating globals from ClusterAnalysis to
invalidateRegionsWorker so that it is not shared with removeDeadBindingsWorker.
There are no explicit tests with this patch -- but when applied to Sean's patch
for loop widening in http://reviews.llvm.org/D12358 and after updating his code
to set the trait, the failing tests in that patch now pass.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12993
llvm-svn: 249063
Prior to this patch, -Wtautological-overlap-compare would only warn us
if there was a sketchy logical comparison between variables and
IntegerLiterals. This patch makes -Wtautological-overlap-compare aware
of EnumConstantDecls, so it can apply the same logic to them.
llvm-svn: 249053
Summary:
This patch moves getCompilerRT() from the clang::driver::tools namespace to
the ToolChain class. This is needed for multilib toolchains that need to
place their libraries in Clang's resource directory with a layout that is
different from the default one.
Reviewers: atanasyan, rsmith
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13339
llvm-svn: 249030
We support all __sync_val_compare_and_swap_* builtins (only 64-bit on 64-bit
targets) on all cores, and should define the corresponding
__GCC_HAVE_SYNC_COMPARE_AND_SWAP_* macros, just as GCC does. As it turns out,
this is really important because they're needed to prevent a bad ODR violation
with libstdc++'s std::shared_ptr (this is well explained in PR12730).
We were doing this only for P8, but this is necessary on all PPC systems.
llvm-svn: 249009
This reverts commit r248982 as it was breaking the ARM buildbots and the fix didn't work.
This reverts commit r248984, the fix that didn't work.
llvm-svn: 249005
This allows clang-format to align identifiers in consecutive
declarations. This is useful for increasing the readability of the code
in the same way the alignment of assignations is.
The code is a slightly modified version of the consecutive assignment
alignment code. Currently only the identifiers are aligned, and there is
no support of alignment of the pointer star or reference symbol.
The patch also solve the issue of alignments not being possible due to
the ColumnLimit for both the existing AlignConsecutiveAligments and the
new AlignConsecutiveDeclarations.
Patch by Beren Minor, thank you.
Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12362
llvm-svn: 248999
recently when we started using direct conversion to model sign
extension. The __v16qi type we use for SSE v16i8 vectors is defined in
terms of 'char' which may or may not be signed! This causes us to
generate pmovsx and pmovzx depending on the setting of -funsigned-char.
This patch just forms an explicitly signed type and uses that to
formulate the sign extension. While this gets the correct behavior
(which we now verify with the enhanced test) this is just the tip of the
ice berg. Now that I know what to look for, I have found errors of this
sort *throughout* our vector code. Fortunately, this is the only
specific place where I know of users actively having their code
miscompiled by Clang due to this, so I'm keeping the fix for those users
minimal and targeted.
I'll be sending a proper email for discussion of how to fix these
systematically, what the implications are, and just how widely broken
this is... From what I can tell, we have never shipped a correct set of
builtin headers for x86 when users rely on -funsigned-char. Oops.
llvm-svn: 248980
Make sure the output filepath supplied to createUniqueFile() in HTMLDiagnostics::ReportDiag() is absolute.
Summary: Make sure the output filepath supplied to createUniqueFile() in HTMLDiagnostics::ReportDiag() is absolute.
Reviewers: rsmith, akyrtzi
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12774
llvm-svn: 248977
Unqualified templated constructors cannot be friended and our lack of a
diagnostic led to violated invariants. Instead, raise a diagnostic when
processing the friend declaration.
This fixes PR20251.
llvm-svn: 248953
Summary: __nvvm_atom_cas_* returns the old value instead of whether the swap succeeds.
Reviewers: eliben, tra
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13306
llvm-svn: 248951
When an Objective-C method implements a protocol requirement, do not
inherit any availability information from the protocol
requirement. Rather, check that the implementation is not less
available than the protocol requirement, as we do when overriding a
method that has availability. Fixes rdar://problem/22734745.
llvm-svn: 248949
Usually, when using LTO with a clang installation newer than the
system's one, there's a libLTO.dylib version mismatch and LTO fails. One
solution to this is to make ld point to the right libLTO.dylib by
changing DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH.
However, ld64 supports specifying the complete path to the desired
libLTO.dylib through the -lto_library option. This commit adds support
for the clang driver to use this option whenever it's capable of finding
a libLTO.dylib in clang's installed library directory. This way, we
don't need to rely on DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH nor get caught by version
mismatches.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13117
rdar://problem/7363476
llvm-svn: 248932
We get into this bad state when someone defines a new member function
for a class but forgets to add the declaration to the class body.
Calling the new member function from a member function template of the
class will crash during instantiation.
llvm-svn: 248925
- Remove virtual SC_OpenCLWorkGroupLocal storage type specifier
as it conflicts with static local variables now and prevents
diagnosing static local address space variables correctly.
- Allow static local and global variables (OpenCL2.0 s6.8 and s6.5.1).
- Improve diagnostics of allowed ASes for variables in different scopes:
(i) Global or static local variables have to be in global
or constant ASes (OpenCL1.2 s6.5, OpenCL2.0 s6.5.1);
(ii) Non-kernel function variables can't be declared in local
or constant ASes (OpenCL1.1 s6.5.2 and s6.5.3).
http://reviews.llvm.org/D13105
llvm-svn: 248906
FunctionParmPackExpr actually stores an array of ParmVarDecl* (and
accessors return that). But, the FunctionParmPackExpr::Create()
constructor accepted an array of Decl *s instead.
It was easy for this mismatch to occur without any obvious sign of
something wrong, since both the store and the access used independent
'reinterpet_cast<XX>(this+1)' calls.
llvm-svn: 248905
Applied restrictions from OpenCL v2.0 s6.13.11.8
that mainly disallow operations on atomic types (except for taking their address - &).
The patch is taken from SPIR2.0 provisional branch, contributed by Guy Benyei!
llvm-svn: 248896
This is the clang commit associated with llvm r248887.
This commit changes the interface of the vld[1234], vld[234]lane, and vst[1234],
vst[234]lane ARM neon intrinsics and associates an address space with the
pointer that these intrinsics take. This changes, e.g.,
<2 x i32> @llvm.arm.neon.vld1.v2i32(i8*, i32)
to
<2 x i32> @llvm.arm.neon.vld1.v2i32.p0i8(i8*, i32)
This change ensures that address spaces are fully taken into account in the ARM
target during lowering of interleaved loads and stores.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13127
llvm-svn: 248888