Error out if the user tries to use float-abi="hard" since it isn't
supported on darwin platforms. Previously clang issued no warnings or
erros and just passed the option to the backend, which had no effect on
code generation for targets using apcs.
rdar://problem/22257950
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12155
llvm-svn: 245866
For some reason, clang had been treating a command like:
clang -static -fPIC foo.c
as if it should be compiled without the PIC relocation model.
This was incorrect: -static should be affecting only the linking
model, and -fPIC only the compilation.
This new behavior also matches GCC.
This is a follow-up from a review comment on r245447.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12208
llvm-svn: 245667
doing assembly-only, and unify the Driver's PIC argument parsing.
On a few architectures, parsing of assembly files annoyingly depends
on whether PIC is enabled or not. This was handled for external 'as'
already (passing -KPIC), but was missed for calls to the standalone
internal assembler.
The integrated-as.s test needed to be modified to not expect
-fsanitize=address to be unused, as now fsanitize *IS* used for
assembly, since -fsanitize=memory can sometimes imply -fPIE, which the
assembler needs to know (gack!!).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11845
llvm-svn: 245447
"generic" cpu was wrongly handled as exact real CPU name of ARMv8.1A architecture.
This has been fixed, now it is abstract name, suitable for any arch.
Reviewers: rengolin
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11640
llvm-svn: 245445
Adds libomp.lib for -fopenmp=libomp and libiomp5md.lib for -fopenmp=libiomp5 on Windows
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11932
llvm-svn: 245414
-mkernel enables -fno-builtin and -fno-common by default, but allows -fbuiltin
and -fcommon to override that. However "-fbuiltin -fno-builtin" is treated the
same as "-fbuiltin" which is wrong, so fix that. Also fixes similar behaviour
when -fno-common is default.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11459
llvm-svn: 244437
Implemented in MinGW::Linker::AddLibGCC since AddLibgcc is a logic puzzle even
before adding one more boolean. A first step towards simplification of AddLibgcc
would be to factor out the Android AddLibgcc code into its own routine.
llvm-svn: 244407
This patch adds flags -fno-profile-instr-generate and
-fno-profile-instr-use, and the GCC aliases -fno-profile-generate and
-fno-profile-use.
These flags are used in situations where users need to disable profile
generation or use for specific files in a build, without affecting other
files.
llvm-svn: 244153
Summary:
By default, 'clang' emits dwarf and 'clang-cl' emits codeview. You can
force emission of one or both by passing -gcodeview and -gdwarf to
either driver.
Reviewers: dblaikie, hans
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11742
llvm-svn: 244097
This seems preferable to printing two warnings per unsupported option-
one warning about not supporting it, and one about not using it.
It also makes the '-Wno-' option do what you mean.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11766
llvm-svn: 244079
It doesn't make any sense to enable -gmlt with -gsplit-dwarf, since
-gmlt is designed for on-line symbolication (and -gsplit-dwarf normally
emits all the -gmlt data into the .o anyway - so there's nothing to
split out except redundant/duplicate info).
With this change they override each other, -gmlt -gsplit-dwarf is the
same as -gsplit-dwarf and -gsplit-dwarf -gmlt is the same as -gmlt.
llvm-svn: 243694
Copying the already existing code for x86 to ARM to set the correct CPU
features when using -mcpu=native. We can already detect the CPU name
but we were not setting the correct feature bits.
Moving fpu/hwdiv down to make sure they override whatever we set the
default to be.
No tests because this is native detection, and not all ARM-enabled builds
will hapen at a specific CPU, or even ARM. I have tested locally and it
works as expected.
Fixes PR12794.
llvm-svn: 243656
The z13 vector facility has an associated language extension,
closely modeled on AltiVec/VSX. The main differences are:
- vector long, vector float and vector pixel are not supported
- vector long long and vector double are supported (like VSX)
- comparison operators return a vector rather than a scalar integer
- shift operators behave like the OpenCL shift operators
- vector bool is only supported as argument to certain operators;
some operators allow mixing a bool with a non-bool vector
This patch adds clang support for the extension. It is closely modelled
on the AltiVec support. Similarly to the -faltivec option, there's a
new -fzvector option to enable the extensions (as well as an -mzvector
alias for compatibility with GCC). There's also a separate LangOpt.
The extension as implemented here is intended to be compatible with
the -mzvector extension recently implemented by GCC.
Based on a patch by Richard Sandiford.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11001
llvm-svn: 243642
This commit changes the driver to save subtarget feature "+strict-align"
to the IR instead of using backend option "aarch64-strict-align". This is
needed for LTO.
rdar://problem/21529937
llvm-svn: 243518
This commit changes the driver to save subtarget feature "+strict-align" to the
IR instead of using backend option "arm-strict-align". This is needed for LTO.
Also, move the logic in ARM backend that was deciding whether strict alignment
should be forced to the front-end.
rdar://problem/21529937
http://reviews.llvm.org/D11472
llvm-svn: 243489
This will be used for old targets like Android that do not
support ELF TLS models.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10524
llvm-svn: 243441
This patch allows Clang to pass on -Wa,-mfpu, -Wa,-mhwdiv and
-Wa,-mcpu to the integrated assembler (via target-features), but
-march is still not being passed, but validated.
In case the command line has both -mxxx and -Wa,-mxxx, we warn
that the naked one will not be used in assembler mode.
llvm-svn: 243353
To be able to handle -Wa, options in the assembler (ClangAs), we need to
make the handling of options based on the value of the options, not direct
Arguments from the list, since the list is immutable.
No functional change in this patch, but this allows validating of -Wa,-mfpu
and friends in the same way we validate -mfpu and friends, *just* for the
assembler.
llvm-svn: 243352
Also rename XCore (the toolchain) to XCoreToolChain since XCore is
also a namespace for its tools.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10609
llvm-svn: 243279
Currently trigger to select hard-float linker is only based of -gnueabihf
appearing in target triplet, but we should also select it when hardfloat
is requested via cmdline.
Patch by Khem Raj.
llvm-svn: 243262
We had multiple bugs here:
- We didn't support multiple optimization options in one argument.
e.g. -O2y-
- We didn't correctly expand -O[12dx] to their respective options.
- We treated -O1 as clang -O1 instead of clang -Os.
- We treated -Ox as clang -O3 instead of clang -O2. In fact, cl's -Ox
option is *less* powerful than cl's -O2 option despite -Ox described
as "Full Optimization".
This fixes PR24003.
llvm-svn: 243261
option "-aarch64-reserve-x18".
This change is needed since backend options do not make it to the backend
when doing LTO and are not capable of changing the behavior of code-gen
passes on a per-function basis.
rdar://problem/21529937
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11462
llvm-svn: 243185
The flag allows users to specify that they do not want the object file
to have any implicit /defaultlib directives.
This fixes PR24236.
llvm-svn: 243097
Currently, for --rtlib=compiler-rt on GNU systems, we're assuming
that one has libgcc_s and libgcc_eh as low-level libraries, which
when used in conjunction with -lunwind or -lc++abi, breaks that
assumption.
My original fix was wrong, and this patch reverts it to prepare for
a new flag to choose the unwinder/C++ libraries. For the time being,
people can use "-lgcc_s -lgcc_eh" or "-lunwind -lc++abi" or any
combination they need explicitly.
llvm-svn: 243025
Now clang should be able to use compiler-rt and libc++ on mingw.
Based on a patch by Martell Malone.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11237
llvm-svn: 242905
option "-arm-reserve-r9".
This recommits r242736, which had to be reverted because the llvm-side
change that was committed in r242737 caused the number of subtarget
features to go over the limit of 64.
This change is needed since backend options do not make it to the backend
when doing LTO and are not capable of changing the behavior of code-gen
passes on a per-function basis.
rdar://problem/21529937
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11319
llvm-svn: 242755
r242737 caused builds to fail with the following error message, so I'm
reverting the clang side change too:
error:Too many subtarget features! Bump MAX_SUBTARGET_FEATURES.
llvm-svn: 242741
option "-arm-reserve-r9".
This change is needed since backend options do not make it to the backend
when doing LTO and are not capable of changing the behavior of code-gen
passes on a per-function basis.
rdar://problem/21529937
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11319
llvm-svn: 242736
GCC allows case-insensitive values for -mcpu, -march and -mtune options.
This patch implements the same behaviour for the -mtune option for the AArch64 target.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10563
llvm-svn: 242663
Summary:
This is a minimal toolchain, which sets the integrated assembler as default,
and uses lld for linking.
Reviewers: arsenm, mcrosier
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10700
llvm-svn: 242601
Currently, -save-temp will cause ObjCARC optimization to be dropped,
sanitizer pass to run early in the pipeline, and profiling
instrumentation to run twice.
Fix the issue by properly disable all passes in the optimization
pipeline when generating bitcode output and parse some of the Language
Options even when the input is bitcode so the passes can be setup
correctly.
llvm-svn: 242565
Guessing which file name to replace based on the -main-file-name
argument to -cc1 is flawed. Instead, keep track of which arguments are
inputs to each command.
llvm-svn: 242504
"-arm-use-movt=0".
This change is needed since backend options do not make it to the backend
when doing LTO and are not capable of changing the behavior of code-gen
passes on a per-function basis.
rdar://problem/21529937
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11025
llvm-svn: 242368
Rather than making -fexceptions a core option that enables C++ EH in
clang-cl, users can use the '-Xclang -fexceptions -Xclang
-fcxx-exceptions' flag set. We weren't going to expose -fexceptions in
clang-cl in the long run, so this way we don't add and then remove a
flag.
llvm-svn: 242176
We will still default to ld until such a time lld become a
stable release. lld supports arm NT under the machine name "thumb2pe".
http://reviews.llvm.org/D11088
Patch by Martell Malone
Reviewed by Reid Kleckner
llvm-svn: 242121
NOTE: reverts r242077 to reinstate r242058, r242065, 242067
and includes fix for OS X test failures.
- Changed driver pipeline to compile host and device side of CUDA
files and incorporate results of device-side compilation into host
object file.
- Added a test for cuda pipeline creation in clang driver.
New clang options:
--cuda-host-only - Do host-side compilation only.
--cuda-device-only - Do device-side compilation only.
--cuda-gpu-arch=<ARCH> - specify GPU architecture for device-side
compilation. E.g. sm_35, sm_30. Default is sm_20. May be used more
than once in which case one device-compilation will be done per
unique specified GPU architecture.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9509
llvm-svn: 242085
The tests were failing on OS X.
Revert "[cuda] Driver changes to compile and stitch together host and device-side CUDA code."
Revert "Fixed regex to properly match '64' in the test case."
Revert "clang/test/Driver/cuda-options.cu REQUIRES clang-driver, at least."
llvm-svn: 242077
- Changed driver pipeline to compile host and device side of CUDA
files and incorporate results of device-side compilation into host
object file.
- Added a test for cuda pipeline creation in clang driver.
New clang options:
--cuda-host-only - Do host-side compilation only.
--cuda-device-only - Do device-side compilation only.
--cuda-gpu-arch=<ARCH> - specify GPU architecture for device-side
compilation. E.g. sm_35, sm_30. Default is sm_20. May be used more
than once in which case one device-compilation will be done per
unique specified GPU architecture.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9509
llvm-svn: 242058
We don't need any more bug reports from users telling us that MSVC-style
C++ exceptions are broken. Developers and adventurous users can still
test the existing functionality by passing along -fexceptions to either
clang or clang-cl.
llvm-svn: 241952
All of the ABIs we support are altivec style anyhow and so the option
doesn't make much sense with the modern ABIs. We could make this a more
noisy ignore, but it would break builds for projects that just pass
it along by default because of historical reasons.
llvm-svn: 241925
The function is massively large and GCC is emitting stack overflow
errors when building it (stack, as counted by the compiler, grows to
more than 16Kb).
The new flag processing logic added in r241825 took it over the limit.
llvm-svn: 241918
This patch adds support for specifying where the profile is emitted in a
way similar to GCC. These flags are used to specify directories instead
of filenames. When -fprofile-generate=DIR is used, the compiler will
generate code to write to <DIR>/default.profraw.
The patch also adds a couple of extensions: LLVM_PROFILE_FILE can still be
used to override the directory and file name to use and -fprofile-use
accepts both directories and filenames.
To simplify the set of flags used in the backend, all the flags get
canonicalized to -fprofile-instr-{generate,use} when passed to the
backend. The decision to use a default name for the profile is done
in the driver.
llvm-svn: 241825
For Mips direct-to-nacl, the goal is to be close to le32 front-end and
use Mips32EL backend. This patch defines new NaClMips32ELTargetInfo and
modifies it slightly to be close to le32. It also adds necessary parts,
inline with ARM and X86.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10739
llvm-svn: 241678
"-arm-long-calls".
This change allows using -mlong-calls/-mno-long-calls for LTO and enabling or
disabling long call on a per-function basis.
rdar://problem/21529937
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9414
llvm-svn: 241565
The patch is the same except for the addition of a new test for the
issue that required reverting the dependent llvm commit.
--Original Commit Message--
Pass down the -flto option to the -cc1 job, and from there into the
CodeGenOptions and onto the PassManagerBuilder. This enables gating
the new EliminateAvailableExternally module pass on whether we are
preparing for LTO.
If we are preparing for LTO (e.g. a -flto -c compile), the new pass is not
included as we want to preserve available externally functions for possible
link time inlining.
llvm-svn: 241467
No more hardcoded paths: clang will use -sysroot as gcc root location if
provided. Otherwise, it will search for gcc on the path. If not found it
will use the driver installed location.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D5268
Patch by Ruben Van Boxem, Martell Malone, Yaron Keren.
Reviewed by Reid Kleckner.
llvm-svn: 241241
On Windows the user may invoke the linker directly, so we might not have an
opportunity to add runtime library flags to the linker command line. Instead,
instruct the code generator to embed linker directive in the object file
that cause the required runtime libraries to be linked.
We might also want to do something similar for ASan, but it seems to have
its own special complexities which may make this infeasible.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10862
llvm-svn: 241225
The main effect of this change is that /arch:IA32 will use i386 as the
CPU, while clang-cl will continue to default to pentium4 (aka SSE2 plus
the usual other features).
/arch:AVX and /arch:AVX2 will also now enable the other features
available in sandybridge and haswell respectively, which is consistent
with MSDN.
llvm-svn: 241077
- Hexagon options were physically next to to ones that had a
preceding comment saying "Double dash options", which they aren't.
- The 'ld' tool classes are named Linker, not Link.
llvm-svn: 240980
Nothing was hand edited afterward except a few literal strings
and comments that were poorly broken.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10689
llvm-svn: 240791
Classes in Tools.h inherit ultimately from Tool, which is a noun,
but subclasses of Tool were named for their operation, such as "Compile",
wherein the constructor call "Compile(args...)" could be misconstrued
as actually causing a compile to happen.
Likewise various other methods were not harmonious with their effect,
in that "BuildLinker()" returned a "new namespace::Link(...)"
instead of a "new namespace::Linker(...)" which it now does.
Exceptions: Clang and ClangAs are un-renamed. Those are their rightful names.
And there is no particulary great way to name the "Lipo-er" and a few others.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10595
llvm-svn: 240455
The patch is generated using this command:
$ tools/extra/clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py -fix \
-checks=-*,llvm-namespace-comment -header-filter='llvm/.*|clang/.*' \
work/llvm/tools/clang
To reduce churn, not touching namespaces spanning less than 10 lines.
llvm-svn: 240270
Summary:
This is unfortunate, but would let us land http://reviews.llvm.org/D10467,
that makes ToolChains responsible for computing the set of sanitizers
they support.
Unfortunately, Darwin ToolChains doesn't know about actual OS they
target until ToolChain::TranslateArgs() is called. In particular, it
means we won't be able to construct SanitizerArgs for these ToolChains
before that.
This change removes SanitizerArgs::needsLTO() method, so that now
ToolChain::IsUsingLTO(), which is called very early, doesn't need
SanitizerArgs to implement this method.
Docs and test cases are updated accordingly. See
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23539, which describes why we
start all these.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10560
llvm-svn: 240170
This change passes through C and assembler jobs to Movidius tools by
constructing commands which are the same as ones produces by the examples
in the SDK. But rather than reference MV_TOOLS_DIR to find tools,
we will assume that binaries are installed wherever the Driver would
find its native tools. Similarly, this change assumes that -I options
will "just work" based on where SDK headers get installed, rather than
baking into the Driver some magic paths.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10440
llvm-svn: 240134
GCC allows case-insensitive values for -mcpu, -march and -mtune options.
This patch implements the same behaviour for the -march option for the AArch64 target.
llvm-svn: 240019
Summary:
If the driver is only given -msoft-float/-mfloat-abi=soft or -msingle-float,
we should refrain from propagating -mfpxx, unless it was explicitly given on the
command line.
Reviewers: atanasyan, dsanders
Reviewed By: atanasyan, dsanders
Subscribers: cfe-commits, mpf
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10387
llvm-svn: 239818
We used to have a flag to enable module maps, and two more flags to enable
implicit module maps. This is all redundant; we don't need any flag for
enabling module maps in the abstract, and we don't usually have -fno- flags for
-cc1. We now have just a single flag, -fimplicit-module-maps, that enables
implicitly searching the file system for module map files and loading them.
The driver interface is unchanged for now. We should probably rename
-fmodule-maps to -fimplicit-module-maps at some point.
llvm-svn: 239789
This patch adds the -fsanitize=safe-stack command line argument for clang,
which enables the Safe Stack protection (see http://reviews.llvm.org/D6094
for the detailed description of the Safe Stack).
This patch is our implementation of the safe stack on top of Clang. The
patches make the following changes:
- Add -fsanitize=safe-stack and -fno-sanitize=safe-stack options to clang
to control safe stack usage (the safe stack is disabled by default).
- Add __attribute__((no_sanitize("safe-stack"))) attribute to clang that can be
used to disable the safe stack for individual functions even when enabled
globally.
Original patch by Volodymyr Kuznetsov and others at the Dependable Systems
Lab at EPFL; updates and upstreaming by myself.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6095
llvm-svn: 239762
LLVM does not and has not ever supported a soft-float ABI mode on
Sparc, so don't pretend that it does.
Also switch the default from "soft-float" -- which was actually
hard-float because soft-float is unimplemented -- to hard-float.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10457
llvm-svn: 239755
GCC allows case-insensitive values for -mcpu, -march and -mtune options.
This patch implements the same behaviour for the -mcpu option for the AArch64 target.
llvm-svn: 239619
GCC allows case-insensitive values for -mcpu, -march and -mtune options.
This patch implements the same behaviour for the -march option for ARM.
llvm-svn: 239527
Summary: We already pass these to the IAS, but not to GAS.
Reviewers: dsanders, atanasyan
Reviewed By: atanasyan
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10358
llvm-svn: 239525
CodeGenOptions and onto the PassManagerBuilder. This enables gating
the new EliminateAvailableExternally module pass on whether we are
preparing for LTO.
If we are preparing for LTO (e.g. a -flto -c compile), the new pass is not
included as we want to preserve available externally functions for possible
link time inlining.
llvm-svn: 239481
Encoding the version into the triple will allow us to communicate to
LLVM what functions it can expect to depend upon in the implementation.
llvm-svn: 239273
The main effect of this is to fix anomalies where certain -mfpu options didn't
disable everything that they should causing strange behaviour when combined
with -mcpu or -march values that themselves enabled fpu subtarget features,
e.g. -mfpu=fpv5-dp-d16 with -march=armv7em previously behaved the same as
-mfpu=fpv5-sp-d16 due to fp-only-sp not being disabled.
Invalid -mfpu options now also give an error, which is consistent with the
handling of the .fpu directive.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10239
llvm-svn: 239152
GCC allows case-insensitive values for -mcpu, -march and -mtune options.
This patch implements the same behaviour for the -mcpu option.
llvm-svn: 239059
If the type isn't trivially moveable emplace can skip a potentially
expensive move. It also saves a couple of characters.
Call sites were found with the ASTMatcher + some semi-automated cleanup.
memberCallExpr(
argumentCountIs(1), callee(methodDecl(hasName("push_back"))),
on(hasType(recordDecl(has(namedDecl(hasName("emplace_back")))))),
hasArgument(0, bindTemporaryExpr(
hasType(recordDecl(hasNonTrivialDestructor())),
has(constructExpr()))),
unless(isInTemplateInstantiation()))
No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 238601
getCanonicalArchName can return an empty string for an architecture
that is well-formed but meaningless. Use parseArch to determine if
it's actually valid or not.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10120
llvm-svn: 238553
This isn't an actual revert of r237769, it just restores the behavior of
the Clang driver prior to it while completely re-implementing how that
behavior works.
This also re-does the work of making the default OpenMP runtime
selectable at CMake (or configure) time to work in the way all of our
other such hooks do (config.h, configure and cmake hooks, etc.).
I've re-implemented how we manage the '-fopenmp' flagset in an important
way. Now, the "default" hook just makes '-fopenmp' equivalent to
'-fopenmp=<default>' rather than a separate special beast. Also, there
is an '-fno-openmp' flag which does the obvious thing. Also, the code is
shared between all the places to select a known OpenMP runtime and act
on it.
Finally, and most significantly, I've taught the driver to inspect the
selected runtime when choosing whether to propagate the '-fopenmp' flag
to the frontend in the CC1 commandline. Without this, it isn't possible
to use Clang with libgomp, even if you were happy with the serial,
boring way in which it worked previously (ignoring all #pragmas but
linking in the library to satisfy direct calls into the runtime).
While I'm here, I've gone ahead and sketched out a path for the future
name of LLVM's OpenMP runtime (libomp) and the legacy support for its
current name (libiomp5) in what seems a more reasonable way.
To re-enable LLVM's OpenMP runtime (which I think should wait until the
normal getting started instructions are a reasonable way for falks to
check out, build, and install Clang with the runtime) all that needs to
change is the default string in the CMakeLists.txt and configure.ac
file. No code changes necessary.
I also added a test for the driver's behavior around OpenMP since it was
*completely missing* previously. Makes it unsurprising that we got it
wrong.
llvm-svn: 238389
Using the target cpu to determine some behaviour is sprinkled in
several places in the driver, but in almost all the information that
is needed can be found in the triple. Restructure things so that the
triple is used, and the cpu is only used if the exact cpu name is
needed.
Also add a check that the -mcpu argument is valid, and correct the
-march argument checking so that it handles -march=native correctly. I
would have liked to move these checks into the computation of the
triple, but the triple is calculated several times in several places
and that would lead to multiple error messages for the same thing.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9879
llvm-svn: 237894
-fopenmp turns on OpenMP support and links libiomp5 as OpenMP library. Also there is -fopenmp={libiomp5|libgomp} option that allows to override effect of -fopenmp and link libgomp library (if -fopenmp=libgomp is specified).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9736
llvm-svn: 237769
sys/time.h on Solaris (and possibly other systems) defines "SEC" as "1"
using a cpp macro. The result is that this fails to compile.
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR23482
llvm-svn: 237113
Compiler-rt's Profiling library isn't part of the stdlib, so -nostdlib
shouldn't prevent it from being linked. This makes Darwin behave like
other toolchains, and link in the profile runtime irrespective of
-nostdlib, since the resulting program can't be run unless you link
this.
I've also added a test to show that other toolchains already behave
like this.
llvm-svn: 237074
This is a starting point for using the TargetParser in Clang, in a simple
enough part of the code that can be used without disrupting the crazy
platform support that we need to be compatible with other toolchains.
Also adding a few FIXME on obvious places that need replacing, but those
cases will indeed break a few of the platform assumptions, as arch/cpu names
change multiple times in the driver.
Finally, I'm changing the "neon-vfpv3" behaviour to match standard NEON, since
-mfpu=neon implies vfpv3 by default in both Clang and LLVM. That option
string is still supported as an alias to "neon".
llvm-svn: 236901
GCC allows case-insensitive values for -mcpu, -march and -mtune options.
This patch implements the same behaviour for the -mcpu option.
Patch by Gabor Ballabas.
llvm-svn: 236859
llvm::Triple::getARMCPUForArch now returns nullptr for invalid -march
values, instead of silently translating it to arm7tdmi. Use this to
give an error message, which is consistent with how gcc behaves.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9602
llvm-svn: 236846
This patch adds support for the z13 architecture type. For compatibility
with GCC, a pair of options -mvx / -mno-vx can be used to selectively
enable/disable use of the vector facility.
When the vector facility is present, we default to the new vector ABI.
This is characterized by two major differences:
- Vector types are passed/returned in vector registers
(except for unnamed arguments of a variable-argument list function).
- Vector types are at most 8-byte aligned.
The reason for the choice of 8-byte vector alignment is that the hardware
is able to efficiently load vectors at 8-byte alignment, and the ABI only
guarantees 8-byte alignment of the stack pointer, so requiring any higher
alignment for vectors would require dynamic stack re-alignment code.
However, for compatibility with old code that may use vector types, when
*not* using the vector facility, the old alignment rules (vector types
are naturally aligned) remain in use.
These alignment rules are not only implemented at the C language level,
but also at the LLVM IR level. This is done by selecting a different
DataLayout string depending on whether the vector ABI is in effect or not.
Based on a patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 236531
This change is the third of 3 patches to add support for specifying
the profile output from the command line via -fprofile-instr-generate=<path>,
where the specified output path/file will be overridden by the
LLVM_PROFILE_FILE environment variable.
This patch adds the necessary support to the clang frontend, and adds a
new test.
The compiler-rt and llvm parts are r236055 and r236288, respectively.
Patch by Teresa Johnson. Thanks!
llvm-svn: 236289
For now tsan_cxx and msan_cxx contain only operator new/delete
replacements. In the future, when we add support for running UBSan+TSan
and UBSan+MSan, they will also contain bits ubsan_cxx runtime.
llvm-svn: 235924
NMake is a Make-like builder that comes with Microsoft Visual Studio.
Jom (https://wiki.qt.io/Jom) is an NMake-compatible build tool.
Dependency files for NMake/Jom need to use double-quotes to wrap
filespecs containing special characters, instead of the backslash
escapes that GNU Make wants.
Adds the -MV option, which specifies to use double-quotes as needed
instead of backslash escapes when writing the dependency file.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9260
llvm-svn: 235903
Stop relying on `cl::opt` to pass along the driver's decision to
preserve use-lists. Create a new `-cc1` option called
`-emit-llvm-uselists` that does the right thing (when -emit-llvm-bc).
Note that despite its generic name, it *doesn't* do the right thing when
-emit-llvm (LLVM assembly) yet. I'll hook that up soon.
This doesn't really change the behaviour of the driver. The default is
still to preserve use-lists for `clang -emit-llvm` and `clang
-save-temps`, and nothing else. But it stops relying on global state
(and also is a nicer interface for hackers using `clang -cc1`).
llvm-svn: 234962
Change `clang` to set `-preserve-bc-uselistorder` for the driver options
`-emit-llvm` and `-save-temps`. The former is useful for reproducing
results from `clang` in `opt` or `llc`, while the latter prevents
`-save-temps` from affecting the output. This is part of PR5680.
`-preserve-bc-uselistorder=true` is currently on by default, but a
follow-up commit in LLVM will reverse it.
llvm-svn: 234920
This patch generates a warning for invalid combination of '-mnan' and
'-march' options, it properly sets NaN encoding for a given '-march',
and it passes a proper NaN encoding to the assembler.
Patch by Vladimir Radosavljevic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8170
llvm-svn: 234882
Follow-up to r234666. With this, the -m[no-]global-merge options
have the expected behavior. Previously, -mglobal-merge was ignored,
and there was no way of enabling the optimization.
llvm-svn: 234668
Summary:
tools::arm::getARMFloatABI() was falling back to guessing soft-float because
it wasn't seeing the GNUEABIHF environment from ComputeEffectivClangTriple
when it was called from gnutools::Assemble::ConstructJob.
Fix by using the effective clang triple in gnutools::Assemble, which now
matches the -triple flag used by cc1 and ClangAs jobs.
Reviewers: jvoung
Subscribers: rengolin, jfb, aemerson, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8902
llvm-svn: 234661
The driver currently accepts but ignores the -freciprocal-math flag.
This patch passes the flag through and enables 'arcp' fast-math-flag
generation in IR.
Note that this change does not actually enable the optimization for
any target. The reassociation optimization that this flag specifies
was implemented by http://reviews.llvm.org/D6334 :
http://llvm.org/viewvc/llvm-project?view=revision&revision=222510
Because the optimization is done in the backend rather than IR,
the backend must be modified to understand instruction-level
fast-math-flags or a new function-level attribute must be created.
Also note that -freciprocal-math is independent of any target-specific
usage of reciprocal estimate hardware instructions. That requires
its own flag ('-mrecip').
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20912
llvm-svn: 234493
Adds ARM Cortex-R4 and R4F support and tests in Clang. Though Cortex-R4
support was present, the support for hwdiv in thumb-mode was not defined
or tested properly. This has also been added.
llvm-svn: 234488
Original message:
Don't use unique section names by default if using the integrated as.
This saves some IO and ccache space by not creating long section names. It
should work with every ELF linker.
llvm-svn: 234143
This reverts commit r233398, bringing back 233393 now that LLVM is fixed.
Original message:
Don't use unique section names by default if using the integrated as.
This saves some IO and ccache space by not creating long section names. It
should work with every ELF linker.
llvm-svn: 234101
Summary:
Change the way we use ASan and UBSan together. Instead of keeping two
separate runtimes (libclang_rt.asan and libclang_rt.ubsan), embed UBSan
into ASan and get rid of libclang_rt.ubsan. If UBSan is not supported on
a platform, all UBSan sources are just compiled into dummy empty object
files. UBSan initialization code (e.g. flag parsing) is directly called
from ASan initialization, so we are able to enforce correct
initialization order.
This mirrors the approach we already use for ASan+LSan. This change doesn't
modify the way we use standalone UBSan.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: kubabrecka, zaks.anna, kcc, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8645
llvm-svn: 233860
The zEC12 provides the transactional-execution facility. This is exposed
to users via a set of builtin routines on other compilers. This patch
adds clang support to enable those builtins. In partciular, the patch:
- enables the transactional-execution feature by default on zEC12
- allows to override presence of that feature via the -mhtm/-mno-htm options
- adds a predefined macro __HTM__ if the feature is enabled
- adds support for the transactional-execution GCC builtins
- adds Sema checking to verify the __builtin_tabort abort code
- adds the s390intrin.h header file (for GCC compatibility)
- adds s390 sections to the htmintrin.h and htmxlintrin.h header files
Since this is first use of target-specific intrinsics on the platform,
the patch creates the include/clang/Basic/BuiltinsSystemZ.def file and
hooks it up in TargetBuiltins.h and lib/Basic/Targets.cpp.
An associated LLVM patch adds the required LLVM IR intrinsics.
For reference, the transactional-execution instructions are documented
in the z/Architecture Principles of Operation for the zEC12:
http://publibfp.boulder.ibm.com/cgi-bin/bookmgr/download/DZ9ZR009.pdf
The associated builtins are documented in the GCC manual:
http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/S_002f390-System-z-Built-in-Functions.html
The htmxlintrin.h intrinsics provided for compatibility with the IBM XL
compiler are documented in the "z/OS XL C/C++ Programming Guide".
llvm-svn: 233804
This is necessary because not aall Sandybridge, Ivybrige, Haswell, and Broadwell CPUs support AVX. Currently we modify the CPU name back to Nehalem for this case, but that turns off additional features for these CPUs.
llvm-svn: 233672
Add Tool and ToolChain support for clang to target the NaCl OS using the NaCl
SDK for x86-32, x86-64 and ARM.
Includes nacltools::Assemble and Link which are derived from gnutools. They
are similar to Linux but different enought that they warrant their own class.
Also includes a NaCl_TC in ToolChains derived from Generic_ELF with library
and include paths suitable for an SDK and independent of the system tools.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8590
llvm-svn: 233594
Unlike most of the other platforms supported by Clang, CloudABI only
supports static linkage, for the reason that global filesystem access is
prohibited. Functions provided by dlfcn.h are not present. As we know
that applications will not try to do any symbol lookups at run-time, we
can garbage collect unused code quite aggressively. Because of this, it
makes sense to enable -ffunction-sections and -fdata-sections by
default.
Object files will be a bit larger than usual, but the resulting binary
will not be affected, as the sections are merged again. However, when
--gc-sections is used, the linker is able to remove unused code far more
more aggressively. It also has the advantage that transitive library
dependencies only need to be provided to the linker in case that
functionality is actually used.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8635
Reviewed by: echristo
llvm-svn: 233299
Now that CloudABI's target information and header search logic for Clang
has been submitted, the only thing that remains to be done is adding
support for CloudABI's linker.
CloudABI uses Binutils ld, although there is some work to use lld
instead. This means that this code is largely based on what we use on
FreeBSD. There are some exceptions, however:
- Only static linking is performed. CloudABI does not support any
dynamically linked executables.
- CloudABI uses compiler-rt, libc++ and libc++abi unconditionally. Link
in these libraries instead of using libgcc_s, libstdc++, etc.
- We must ensure that the .eh_frame_hdr is present to make C++
exceptions work properly.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8250
llvm-svn: 233269
Get rid of "libclang_rt.san" library that used to contain
sanitizer_common pieces required by UBSan if it's used in a standalone
mode. Instead, build two variants of UBSan runtime: "ubsan" and
"ubsan_standalone" (same for "ubsan_cxx" and "ubsan_standalone_cxx").
Later "ubsan" and "ubsan_cxx" libraries will go away, as they will
embedded it into corresponding ASan runtimes.
llvm-svn: 233010
Decide whether or not to use thread-safe statics depending on whether or
not we have an explicit request from the driver. If we don't have an
explicit request, infer which behavior to use depending on the
compatibility version we are targeting.
N.B. CodeGen support is still ongoing.
llvm-svn: 232906
There are no widely deployed standard libraries providing sized
deallocation functions, so we have to punt and ask the user if they want
us to use sized deallocation. In the future, when such libraries are
deployed, we can teach the driver to detect them and enable this
feature.
N3536 claimed that a weak thunk from sized to unsized deallocation could
be emitted to avoid breaking backwards compatibility with standard
libraries not providing sized deallocation. However, this approach and
other variations don't work in practice.
With the weak function approach, the thunk has to have default
visibility in order to ensure that it is overridden by other DSOs
providing sized deallocation. Weak, default visibility symbols are
particularly expensive on MachO, so John McCall was considering
disabling this feature by default on Darwin. It also changes behavior
ELF linking behavior, causing certain otherwise unreferenced object
files from an archive to be pulled into the link.
Our second approach was to use an extern_weak function declaration and
do an inline conditional branch at the deletion call site. This doesn't
work because extern_weak only works on MachO if you have some archive
providing the default value of the extern_weak symbol. Arranging to
provide such an archive has the same challenges as providing the symbol
in the standard library. Not to mention that extern_weak doesn't really
work on COFF.
Reviewers: rsmith, rjmccall
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8467
llvm-svn: 232788
Now that SmallString is a first-class citizen, most SmallString::str()
calls are not required. This patch removes a whole bunch of them, yet
there are lots more.
There are two use cases where str() is really needed:
1) To use one of StringRef member functions which is not available in
SmallString.
2) To convert to std::string, as StringRef implicitly converts while
SmallString do not. We may wish to change this, but it may introduce
ambiguity.
llvm-svn: 232622
Summary: As discussed in D8097, we should provide corresponding linking flags when 'fveclib' is specified.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8362
llvm-svn: 232556
ARMv6K is another layer between ARMV6 and ARMV6T2. This is the Clang
side of the changes.
ARMV6 family LLVM implementation.
+-------------------------------------+
| ARMV6 |
+----------------+--------------------+
| ARMV6M (thumb) | ARMV6K (arm,thumb) | <- From ARMV6K and ARMV6M processors
+----------------+--------------------+ have support for hint instructions
| ARMV6T2 (arm,thumb,thumb2) | (SEV/WFE/WFI/NOP/YIELD). They can
+-------------------------------------+ be either real or default to NOP.
| ARMV7 (arm,thumb,thumb2) | The two processors also use
+-------------------------------------+ different encoding for them.
Patch by Vinicius Tinti.
llvm-svn: 232469
Support for the QPX vector instruction set, used on the IBM BG/Q supercomputer,
has recently been added to the LLVM PowerPC backend. This vector instruction
set requires some ABI modifications because the ABI on the BG/Q expects
<4 x double> vectors to be provided with 32-byte stack alignment, and to be
handled as native vector types (similar to how Altivec vectors are handled on
mainline PPC systems). I've named this ABI variant elfv1-qpx, have made this
the default ABI when QPX is supported, and have updated the ABI handling code
to provide QPX vectors with the correct stack alignment and associated
register-assignment logic.
llvm-svn: 231960
simplicity in build systems, silence '-stdlib=libc++' when linking. Even
if we're not linking C++ code per-se, we may be passing this flag so
that when we are linking C++ code we pick up the desired standard
library. While most build systems already provide separate C and C++
compile flags, many conflate link flags. Sadly, CMake is among them
causing this warning in a libc++ selfhost.
llvm-svn: 231559
Summary:
There is no -no-pie flag that can override this, so making it default
to being on for Android means it is no longer possible to create
non-PIE executables on Android. While current versions of Android
support (and the most recent requires) PIE, ICS and earlier versions
of Android cannot run PIE executables, so this needs to be optional.
Reviewers: srhines
Reviewed By: srhines
Subscribers: thakis, volkalexey, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8015
llvm-svn: 231091
As Chandler responded on the initial commit, just directly setting the
triple through -Xclang option to the driver creates havoc on other
platforms. The driver test should specifically go into test/Driver and
test the cc1 commandline itself.
llvm-svn: 231063
This adds the -fapplication-extension option, along with the
ios_app_extension and macosx_app_extension availability attributes.
Patch by Ted Kremenek
llvm-svn: 230989
Currently -fms-extensions controls this behavior, which doesn't make
much sense. It means we can't identify what is and isn't a system header
when compiling our own preprocessed output, because #line doesn't
represent this information.
If someone is feeding Clang's preprocessed output to another compiler,
they can use this flag.
Fixes PR20553.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5217
llvm-svn: 230587
VS 2013 is the minimum supported version, so it's reasonable for Clang
to simulate this by default. This also simplifies the clang-cl
self-host, since we have the 18.00 version check.
llvm-svn: 230243
The patch teaches the clang's driver to understand new MIPS ISA names,
pass appropriate options to the assembler, defines corresponding macros etc
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7737
llvm-svn: 230092
This patch introduces the -fsanitize=cfi-vptr flag, which enables a control
flow integrity scheme that checks that virtual calls take place using a vptr of
the correct dynamic type. More details in the new docs/ControlFlowIntegrity.rst
file.
It also introduces the -fsanitize=cfi flag, which is currently a synonym for
-fsanitize=cfi-vptr, but will eventually cover all CFI checks implemented
in Clang.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7424
llvm-svn: 230055
For now -funique-section-names is the default, so no change in default behavior.
The total .o size in a build of llvm and clang goes from 241687775 to 230649031
bytes if -fno-unique-section-names is used.
llvm-svn: 230031
If this flag is set, we error out when a module build is required. This is
useful in environments where all required modules are passed via -fmodule-file.
llvm-svn: 230006
This patch removes the huge blob of code that is dealing with
rtti/exceptions/sanitizers and replaces it with:
A ToolChain function which, for a given set of Args, figures out if rtti
should be:
- enabled
- disabled implicitly
- disabled explicitly
A change in the way SanitizerArgs figures out what sanitizers to enable
(or if it should error out, or warn);
And a check for exceptions/rtti interaction inside addExceptionArgs.
The RTTIMode algorithm is:
- If -mkernel, -fapple-kext, or -fno-rtti are passed, rtti was disabled explicitly;
- If -frtti was passed or we're not targetting the PS4, rtti is enabled;
- If -fexceptions or -fcxx-exceptions was passed and we're targetting
the PS4, rtti was enabled implicitly;
- If we're targetting the PS4, rtti is disabled implicitly;
- Otherwise, rtti is enabled;
Since the only flag needed to pass to -cc1 is -fno-rtti if we want to
disable it, there's no problem in saying rtti is enabled if we're
compiling C code, so we don't look at the input file type.
addExceptionArgs now looks at the RTTIMode and warns that rtti is being
enabled implicitly if targetting the PS4 and exceptions are on. It also
errors out if, targetting the PS4, -fno-rtti was passed, and exceptions
were turned on.
SanitizerArgs now errors out if rtti was disabled explicitly and the vptr
sanitizer was enabled implicitly, but just turns off vptr if rtti is
disabled but -fsanitize=undefined was passed.
Also fixed tests, removed duplicate name from addExceptionArgs comment,
and added one or two surrounding lines when running clang-format.
This changes test/Driver/fsanitize.c to make it not expect a warning when
passed -fsanitize=undefined -fno-rtti, but expect vptr to not be on.
Removed all users and definition of SanitizerArgs::sanitizesVptr().
Reviewers: samsonov
Subscribers: llvm-commits, samsonov, rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7525
llvm-svn: 229801
Add some of the missing M and R class Cortex CPUs, namely:
Cortex-M0+ (called Cortex-M0plus for GCC compatibility)
Cortex-M1
SC000
SC300
Cortex-R5
llvm-svn: 229661
The /volatile:ms semantics turn volatile loads and stores into atomic
acquire and release operations. This distinction is important because
volatile memory operations do not form a happens-before relationship
with non-atomic memory. This means that a volatile store is not
sufficient for implementing a mutex unlock routine.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7580
llvm-svn: 229082
Summary:
-iframework option is used to specified System framework path so the
path specified should be passed to linker as -F option
rdar://problem/18234544
Reviewers: bob.wilson
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7106
llvm-svn: 228413
After r228258, Clang started emitting C++ EH IR that LLVM wasn't ready
to deal with, even when exceptions were disabled with /EHs-. This time,
make /EHs- turn off -fexceptions while still emitting exceptional
constructs in functions using __try. Since Sema rejects C++ exception
handling constructs before CodeGen, landingpads should only appear in
such functions as the result of a __try.
llvm-svn: 228329
In r227480, Ulrich Weigand introduced a workaround for a linker
optimization bug that can create mis-optimized code for accesses to
general-dynamic or local-dynamic TLS variables. The linker
optimization bug only occurred for Clang/LLVM because of some
inefficient code being generated for these TLS accesses. I have
recently corrected LLVM to produce the efficient code sequence
expected by the linkers, so this workaround is no longer needed.
Therefore this patch reverts r227480.
I've tested that the previous bootstrap failure no longer occurs with
the workaround reverted.
llvm-svn: 228253
Previously, we would use a frame pointer by default on non-Linux OSs. On
Linux, any optimization flags imply -fomit-frame-pointer. XCore always
defaulted to -fomit-frame-pointer.
Now x86 Windows matches our behavior on Linux. All other ISAs supported
by Windows (ARM, x64) use xdata information, and frame pointers aren't
useful. Frame pointers are now off by default for such targets, but can
be forced via -fno-omit-frame-pointer and code using alloca().
In fact, on Win64 our frame-pointer prologue is not describable with
UNWIND_INFO. This change is a workaround to avoid using the broken FP
using prologue for most functions. This is PR22467.
llvm-svn: 228236
Appends the username to the first component (after the temp dir) of the
module cache path. If the username contains a character that shouldn't
go into a path (for now conservatively allow [a-zA-Z0-9_]), we fallback
to the user id.
llvm-svn: 228013
-save-temps=cwd is equivalent to -save-temps
-save-temps=obj saves temporary file in the same directory as output
This helps to avoid clobbering of temp files in case of parallel
compilation with -save-temps of the files that have the same name
but located in different directories.
Patch by Artem Belevich
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7304
llvm-svn: 227886
Summary:
The PS4 defaults to -fno-rtti, and has to have rtti enabled when enabling
exceptions.
This commit makes clang add the -fno-rtti by default on the PS4, unless
-frtti was passed in.
It also diagnoses misuses for the PS4:
- Exceptions need rtti. Warn and enable rtti if no rtti flag was passed,
error if -fno-rtti was passed.
I also added a more general warning for when -fno-rtti is the default
(currently it's only on the PS4) and the vptr sanitizer is on.
Fixed a few tests, due to different flag order when passing cc1 arguments.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7250
llvm-svn: 227518
Work around a bug in GNU ld (and gold) linker versions up to 2.25
that may mis-optimize code generated by this version of clang/LLVM
to access general-dynamic or local-dynamic TLS variables.
Bug is fixed here:
https://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2015-01/msg00318.html
llvm-svn: 227480
Those used the old Big Endian support on ARM and don't need flags.
Refactor the logic in a separate common function, which also looks at
-march. Add corresponding logic for the Linux toolchain.
llvm-svn: 227393
Summary:
This was already done for the sanitizers, but it needs to be done for
the profile and builtin libs as well.
Reviewers: srhines, timmurray, eugenis, samsonov
Reviewed By: samsonov
Subscribers: compnerd, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7187
llvm-svn: 227392
This patch allows clang to have llvm reserve the x18
platform register on AArch64. FreeBSD will use this in the kernel for
per-cpu data but has no need to reserve this register in userland so
will need this flag to reserve it.
This uses llvm r226664 to allow this register to be reserved.
Patch by Andrew Turner.
llvm-svn: 227062
Summary:
This patch add a new option to dis-allow all inline asm.
Any GCC style inline asm will be reported as an error.
Reviewers: rnk, echristo
Reviewed By: rnk, echristo
Subscribers: bob.wilson, rnk, echristo, rsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6870
llvm-svn: 226340
A pass that adds random noops to X86 binaries to introduce diversity with the goal of increasing security against most return-oriented programming attacks.
Command line options:
-noop-insertion // Enable noop insertion.
-noop-insertion-percentage=X // X% of assembly instructions will have a noop prepended (default: 50%, requires -noop-insertion)
-max-noops-per-instruction=X // Randomly generate X noops per instruction. ie. roll the dice X times with probability set above (default: 1). This doesn't guarantee X noop instructions.
In addition, the following 'quick switch' in clang enables basic diversity using default settings (currently: noop insertion and schedule randomization; it is intended to be extended in the future).
-fdiversify
This is the clang part of the patch.
llvm part: D3392
http://reviews.llvm.org/D3393
Patch by Stephen Crane (@rinon)
llvm-svn: 225910
Allow blessed access to the symbol rewriter from the driver. Although the
symbol rewriter could be invoked through tools like opt and llc, it would not
accessible from the frontend. This allows us to read the rewrite map files in
the frontend rather than the backend and enable symbol rewriting for actually
performing the symbol interpositioning.
llvm-svn: 225504
It is somewhat common for CFLAGS to be used with .s files. We were
already ignoring -flto. This patch just does the same for -fno-lto.
llvm-svn: 225093
Unfortunately, MSVC does not indicate to the driver what target is being used.
This means that we cannot correctly select the target architecture for the
clang_rt component. This breaks down when targeting windows with the clang
driver as opposed to the clang-cl driver. This should fix the native ARM
buildbot tests.
llvm-svn: 225089
The logic for addSanitizerRTWindows was performing the same logical operation as
getCompilerRT, which was previously fully generalised for Linux and Windows.
This avoids having a duplication of the logic for building up the name of a
clang_rt component. This change does move the current limitation for Windows
into getArchNameForCompilerRTLib, where it is assumed that the architecture for
Windows is always i386.
llvm-svn: 225087
Unify the component handling for compiler-rt. The components are regularly
named, built up from:
${LIBRARY_PREFIX}clang_rt.${component}-${arch}[-${environment}]${LIBRARY_SUFFIX}
Unify the handling for all the various components, into a single path to link
against the various components in a number of places. This reduces duplication
of the clang_rt library name construction logic.
llvm-svn: 225013
Unlike Unices, Windows does not use a library prefix. Use the traditional
naming scheme even for Windows itanium environments. This makes the builtins
behave more like the sanitisers as well.
llvm-svn: 224996
-trigraphs is now an alias for -ftrigraphs. -fno-trigraphs makes it possible
to explicitly disable trigraphs, which couldn't be done before.
clang -std=c++11 -fno-trigraphs
now builds without GNU extensions, but with trigraphs disabled. Previously,
trigraphs were only disabled in GNU modes or with -std=c++1z.
Make the new -f flags the cc1 interface too. This requires changing -trigraphs
to -ftrigraphs in a few cc1 tests.
Related to PR21974.
llvm-svn: 224790
This reapplies r224503 along with a fix for compiling Fortran by having the
clang driver invoke gcc (see r224546, where it was reverted). I have added
a testcase for that as well.
Original commit message:
It is often convenient to use -save-temps to collect the intermediate
results of a compilation, e.g., when triaging a bug report. Besides the
temporary files for preprocessed source and assembly code, this adds the
unoptimized bitcode files as well.
This adds a new BackendJobAction, which is mostly mechanical, to run after
the CompileJobAction. When not using -save-temps, the BackendJobAction is
combined into one job with the CompileJobAction, similar to the way the
integrated assembler is handled. I've implemented this entirely as a
driver change, so under the hood, it is just using -disable-llvm-optzns
to get the unoptimized bitcode.
Based in part on a patch by Steven Wu.
rdar://problem/18909437
llvm-svn: 224688
This reverts commit r224503.
It broke compilation of fortran through the Clang driver. Previously
`clang -c t.f` would invoke `gcc t.f` and `clang -cc1as`, but now it
tries to call `clang -cc1 t.f` which fails for obvious reasons.
llvm-svn: 224546
It is often convenient to use -save-temps to collect the intermediate
results of a compilation, e.g., when triaging a bug report. Besides the
temporary files for preprocessed source and assembly code, this adds the
unoptimized bitcode files as well.
This adds a new BackendJobAction, which is mostly mechanical, to run after
the CompileJobAction. When not using -save-temps, the BackendJobAction is
combined into one job with the CompileJobAction, similar to the way the
integrated assembler is handled. I've implemented this entirely as a
driver change, so under the hood, it is just using -disable-llvm-optzns
to get the unoptimized bitcode.
Based in part on a patch by Steven Wu.
rdar://problem/18909437
llvm-svn: 224503
Remove Sema::UnqualifiedTyposCorrected, a cache of corrected typos. It would only cache typo corrections that didn't provide ValidateCandidate of which there were few left, and it had a bug when we had the same identifier spelled wrong twice. See the last two tests in typo-correction.cpp for cases this fires.
llvm-svn: 224375
can change the backend to be the same default. Leave the
modified/new testcases with the exception of the default behavior
since it increases our testing footprint.
llvm-svn: 223976
This reverts commit r223455. It's been succesfully argued that
-fexceptions (at the driver level) is a misnomer and has little to do
with -fobjc-exceptions.
llvm-svn: 223723
Clang attempted to replicate a GCC bug: -fobjc-exceptions forces
-fexceptions to be enabled. However, this has unintended effects and
other awkard side effects that Clang doesn't "correctly" ape (e.g. it's
impossible to turn off C++ exceptions in ObjC++ mode).
Instead, -f[no]objc-exceptions and -f[no]cxx-exceptions now have an
identical relationship with -f[no]exceptions.
llvm-svn: 223455
No functionality change is intended, just a cleanup of the logic clang
uses to determine what -fexceptions/-fno-exceptions ends up doing.
llvm-svn: 223453
I added this check a while back but then made a note to myself that it
should be completely unnecessary since iOS always uses PIC code-gen for
aarch64. Since I could never come up with any reason why it would be
necessary, I'm just going to remove it and we'll see if anything breaks.
rdar://problem/13627985
llvm-svn: 223097
Using lld on Windows requires calling link-lld.exe instead of
lld.exe. This patch puts this knowledge into clang so that when
using the GCC style clang driver, it can properly delegate to
lld.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6428
Reviewed by: Reid Kleckner, Rui Ueyama
llvm-svn: 223086
Add neon-vfpv3 to allow specifying both at the same time. This is not an
option that GCC supports, but follows the same track and should be
non-controversial.
Change-Id: Id9ec157c835937d7d11ad0f49dbe5171fac17658
llvm-svn: 222933
In particular, make SanitizerArgs responsible for parsing
and passing down to frontend -fsanitize-recover and
-fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error flags.
Simplify parsing -f(no-)sanitize= flags parsing: get rid of
too complex filterUnsupportedKinds function.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 222105
This option was misleading because it looked like it enabled the
language feature of SEH (__try / __except), when this option was really
controlling which EH personality function to use. Mingw only supports
SEH and SjLj EH on x86_64, so we can simply do away with this flag.
llvm-svn: 221963
This change removes libclang_rt.profile-pic-<arch>.a version of
profile runtime. Instead, it's sufficient to always build
libclang_rt.profile-<arch>.a with -fPIC, as it can be linked into
both executables and shared objects.
llvm-svn: 221952
Darwin's "-arch arm64" option implies full Cyclone CPU, for both architectural
and tuning purposes. So if neither of the explicit options have been given,
forward that on to the proper invocation.
rdar://problem/18906227
llvm-svn: 221631
If clang was configured with a custom gcc toolchain (either by using GCC_INSTALL_PREFIX in cmake or the equivalent configure command), the path to the custom gcc toolchain path takes precedence to the one specified by -ccc-install-dir. This causes several regression tests to fail as they will be using an unexpected path. Adding the switch --gcc-toolchain="" in each test command is not enough as the hexagon toolchain implementation in the driver is not evaluating this argument. This commit modifies the hexagon toolchain to take the --gcc-toolchain="" argument into account when deciding the toolchain path, similarly to what is already done for other targets toolchains. Additionally, the faulty regression tests are modified in order to --gcc-toolchain="" be passed to the commands.
llvm-svn: 221535
This CPU definition is redundant. The Cortex-A9 is defined as
supporting multiprocessing extensions. Remove references to this CPU.
This CPU was recently removed from LLVM. See http://reviews.llvm.org/D6057
Change-Id: I62ae7cc656fcae54fbaefc4b6976e77e694a8678
llvm-svn: 221458
The command line options are specified in a space-separated list that is an
argument to -dwarf-debug-flags, so that breaks if there are spaces in the
options. This feature came from Apple's internal version of GCC, so I went back
to check how llvm-gcc handled this and matched that behavior.
rdar://problem/18775420
llvm-svn: 221309
'char' is unsigned on all ARM and Thumb architectures. Clang gets this
right for ARM, and for thumb when using and arm triple and the -mthumb
option, but gets it wrong for thumb triples. This fixes that.
llvm-svn: 220555
This is a very basic toolchain. It supports cross-compiling Windows (primarily
inspired by the WoA target). It is meant to use clang with the LLVM IAS and a
binutils ld-compatible interface for the linker (eventually to be lld). It does
not perform any "standard" GCC lookup, nor does it perform any special
adjustments given that it is expected to be used in an environment where the
user is using MSVCRT (and as such Visual Studio headers) and the Windows SDK.
The primary runtime library is expected to be compiler-rt and the C++
implementation to be libc++.
It also expects that a sysroot has been setup given the usual Unix semantics
(standard C headers in /usr/include, all the import libraries available in
/usr/lib). It also expects that an entry point stub is present in /usr/lib
(crtbegin.obj for executables, crtbeginS.obj for shared libraries).
The entry point stub is responsible for running any GNU constructors.
llvm-svn: 220546
This is a sad thing to do, but all the alternatives look ugly.
Looks like there are legitimate cases when users may want to link
with sanitizer runtimes *and* -nodefaultlibs (and ensure they provide
replacements for system libraries). For example, this happens in libc++
test suite.
"-nodefaultlibs" is told to link only the libraries explicitly provided
by the user, and providing "-fsanitize=address" is a clear indication of
intention to link with ASan runtime.
We can't easily introduce analogue of "-print-libgcc-name": linking with
sanitizers runtimes is not trivial: some runtimes are split into several
archive libraries, which are required to be wrapped in
-whole-archive/-no-whole-archive.
If "-fsanitize=whatever" and "-nodefaultlibs" are provided, system library
dependencies of sanitizer runtimes (-lc/-ldl/-lpthread/-lrt) will *not* be
linked, and user would have to link them in manually. Note that this can
cause problems, as failing to provide "-lrt" might lead to crashes in runtime
during ASan initialization. But looks like we should bite this bullet.
See r218541 review thread for the discussion.
llvm-svn: 220455
When a user has not configured a standard Visual Studio environment
by running vcvarsall, clang tries its best to find Visual Studio
include files and executables anyway. This patch makes clang also
try to find system and Windows SDK libraries for linking against,
as well.
Reviewed by: Hans Wennborg
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5873
llvm-svn: 220425
This resubmits change r220226. That change broke the chromium
build bots because chromium it ships an hermetic MSVC toolchain
that it expects clang to fallback to by finding it on the path.
This patch fixes the issue by bumping up the prioritization of PATH
when looking for MSVC binaries.
Reviewed by: Hans Wennborg, Reid Kleckner
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5892
llvm-svn: 220424
Implicit module builds are not well-suited to a lot of build systems. In
particular, they fare badly in distributed build systems, and they lead to
build artifacts that are not tracked as part of the usual dependency management
process. This change allows explicitly-built module files (which are already
supported through the -emit-module flag) to be explicitly loaded into a build,
allowing build systems to opt to manage module builds and dependencies
themselves.
This is only the first step in supporting such configurations, and it should
be considered experimental and subject to change or removal for now.
llvm-svn: 220359
-g1 on gcc (and also IBM's xlc) are documented to be very similar to
-gline-tables-only. Our -gline-tables-only might still be more verbose than -g1
on other compilers, but currently we treat -g1 as -g, and so we're producing
much more debug info at -g1 than everybody else. Treating -g1 as
-gline-tables-only brings us much closer to what everyone else is doing.
For more information, see the discussion on
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-dev/2014-October/039649.html
llvm-svn: 220311
In environments where PATH was set to point to the VS installation, Clang would
override that by looking in the registry and finding the latest VS installation.
If the environment is set up to point to a VS installation, that should take
precedence.
Reverting this until we can fix it.
llvm-svn: 220243
List the module cache we use for crashdumps as a tempfile. This
simplifies how we pick up this directory when generating the actual
crash diagnostic and removes some duplicate logic.
llvm-svn: 220241
Typically clang finds Visual Studio by the user explicitly setting
up a Visual Studio environment via vcvarsall. But we still try to
behave intelligently and fallback to different methods of finding
Visual Studio when this is not done. This patch improves various
fallback codepaths to make Visual Studio locating more robust.
Specifically, this patch:
* Adds support for searching environment variables for VS 12.0
* Correctly locates include folders for Windows SDK 8.x (this was
previously broken, and would cause clang to error)
* Prefers locating link.exe in the same location as cl.exe. This
is helpful in case another link.exe is in the path earlier than
Visual Studio (e.g. GnuWin32)
* Minor cleanup in the registry reading code to make it more
robust in the presence of long pathnames.
llvm-svn: 220226
Some early revisions of the Cortex-A53 have an erratum (835769) whereby it is
possible for a 64-bit multiply-accumulate instruction in AArch64 state to
generate an incorrect result. The details are quite complex and hard to
determine statically, since branches in the code may exist in some
circumstances, but all cases end with a memory (load, store, or prefetch)
instruction followed immediately by the multiply-accumulate operation.
The safest work-around for this issue is to make the compiler avoid emitting
multiply-accumulate instructions immediately after memory instructions and the
simplest way to do this is to insert a NOP.
This patch implements clang options to enable this workaround in the backend.
The work-around code generation is not enabled by default.
llvm-svn: 219604
Looks like llvm::sys::path::filename() was canonicalizing my paths
before emitting them for FileCheck to stumble over.
Fix a style nit with r219460 while I'm at it.
llvm-svn: 219464
When building with coverage, -no-integrated-as, and -c, the driver was
emitting -cc1 -coverage-file pointing at a file in /tmp. Ensure the
coverage file is emitted in the same directory as the output file.
llvm-svn: 219460
Summary: The changes introduced in the above two commits are giving
a rough time to one of the build bots. Reverting the changes for the
moment so that the bot can go green again.
Change-Id: Id19f6cb2a8bc292631fac2262268927563d820c2
llvm-svn: 218970
The Cortex-M7 has 3 options for its FPU: none, FPv5-SP-D16 and
FPv5-DP-D16. FPv5 has the same instructions as FP-ARMv8, so it can be
modeled using the same target feature, and all double-precision
operations are already disabled by the fp-only-sp target features.
llvm-svn: 218748
being on by default. -fno-cxx-modules can still be used to enable C modules but
not C++ modules, but C++ modules is not significantly less stable than C
modules any more.
Also remove some of the scare words from the modules documentation. We're
certainly not going to remove modules support (though we might change the
interface), and it works well enough to bootstrap and build lots of
non-trivial code.
Note that this does not represent a commitment to the current interface nor
implementation, and we still intend to follow whatever direction the C and C++
committees take regarding modules support.
llvm-svn: 218717
It makes no sense to link in sanitizer runtimes in this case: the user
probably doesn't want to see any system/toolchain libs in his link if he
provides these flags, and the link will most likely fail anyway - as sanitizer
runtimes depend on libpthread, libdl, libc etc.
Also, see discussion in https://code.google.com/p/address-sanitizer/issues/detail?id=344
llvm-svn: 218541
Translate -lfoo to -lfoo.lib while making sure that -lfoo.lib stays as
-lfoo.lib. Also, these arguments were being passed twice: once
explicitly via AddAllArgs, and again implicitly as linker inputs. Now
they are passed once.
Fixes PR20868.
llvm-svn: 217895
Change 1: we used to add static sanitizer runtimes at the
very beginning of the linker invocation, even before crtbegin.o, which
is gross and not correct in general. Fix this: now addSanitizerRuntimes()
adds all sanitizer-related link flags to the end of the linker invocation
being constructed. It means, that we should call this function in the
correct place, namely, before AddLinkerInputs() to make sure sanitizer
versions of library functions will be preferred.
Change 2: Put system libraries sanitizer libraries depend on at the
end of the linker invocation, where all the rest system libraries are
located. Respect --nodefaultlibs and --nostdlib flags. This is another way
to fix PR15823. Original fix landed in r215940 put "-lpthread" and friends
immediately after static ASan runtime, before the user linker inputs.
This caused significant slowdown in dynamic linker for large binaries
linked against thousands of shared objects. Instead, to mark system
libraries as DT_NEEDED we prepend them with "--no-as-needed" flag,
discarding the "-Wl,--as-needed" flag that could be provided by the user.
Otherwise, this change is a code cleanup. Instead of having a special method
for each sanitizer, we introduce a function collectSanitizerRuntimes() that
analyzes -fsanitize= flags and returns the set of static and shared
libraries that needs to be linked.
llvm-svn: 217817
Patch by Rafael Auler!
This patch addresses PR15171 and teaches Clang how to call other tools
with response files, when the command line exceeds system limits. This
is a problem for Windows systems, whose maximum command-line length is
32kb.
I introduce the concept of "response file support" for each Tool object.
A given Tool may have full support for response files (e.g. MSVC's
link.exe) or only support file names inside response files, but no flags
(e.g. Apple's ld64, as commented in PR15171), or no support at all (the
default case). Therefore, if you implement a toolchain in the clang
driver and you want clang to be able to use response files in your
tools, you must override a method (getReponseFileSupport()) to tell so.
I designed it to support different kinds of tools and
internationalisation needs:
- VS response files ( UTF-16 )
- GNU tools ( uses system's current code page, windows' legacy intl.
support, with escaped backslashes. On unix, fallback to UTF-8 )
- Clang itself ( UTF-16 on windows, UTF-8 on unix )
- ld64 response files ( only a limited file list, UTF-8 on unix )
With this design, I was able to test input file names with spaces and
international characters for Windows. When the linker input is large
enough, it creates a response file with the correct encoding. On a Mac,
to test ld64, I temporarily changed Clang's behavior to always use
response files regardless of the command size limit (avoiding using huge
command line inputs). I tested clang with the LLVM test suite (compiling
benchmarks) and it did fine.
Test Plan: A LIT test that tests proper response files support. This is
tricky, since, for Unix systems, we need a 2MB response file, otherwise
Clang will simply use regular arguments instead of a response file. To
do this, my LIT test generate the file on the fly by cloning many -DTEST
parameters until we have a 2MB file. I found out that processing 2MB of
arguments is pretty slow, it takes 1 minute using my notebook in a debug
build, or 10s in a Release build. Therefore, I also added "REQUIRES:
long_tests", so it will only run when the user wants to run long tests.
In the full discussion in
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20130408/171463.html,
Rafael Espindola discusses a proper way to test
llvm::sys::argumentsFitWithinSystemLimits(), and, there, Chandler
suggests to use 10 times the current system limit (20MB resp file), so
we guarantee that the system will always use response file, even if a
new linux comes up that can handle a few more bytes of arguments.
However, by testing with a 20MB resp file, the test takes long 8 minutes
just to perform a silly check to see if the driver will use a response
file. I found it to be unreasonable. Thus, I discarded this approach and
uses a 2MB response file, which should be enough.
Reviewers: asl, rafael, silvas
Reviewed By: silvas
Subscribers: silvas, rnk, thakis, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4897
llvm-svn: 217792
This adds a flag called -fseh-exceptions that uses the native Windows
.pdata and .xdata unwind mechanism to throw exceptions. The other EH
possibilities are DWARF and SJLJ exceptions.
Patch by Martell Malone!
Reviewed By: asl, rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3419
llvm-svn: 217790
It turned out that we have to bridge more stuff between the executable
and the ASan RTL DLL than just __asan_option_detect_stack_use_after_return.
See PR20918 for more details.
llvm-svn: 217673
r216662 changed the default ABI for 32-bit ARM targets to be "aapcs"
when no environment is given in the triple, however NetBSD requires it
to be "apcs-gnu".
llvm-svn: 217141