Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Martin Boehme 8c7b64b5ae [clang] Reject non-declaration C++11 attributes on declarations
For backwards compatiblity, we emit only a warning instead of an error if the
attribute is one of the existing type attributes that we have historically
allowed to "slide" to the `DeclSpec` just as if it had been specified in GNU
syntax. (We will call these "legacy type attributes" below.)

The high-level changes that achieve this are:

- We introduce a new field `Declarator::DeclarationAttrs` (with appropriate
  accessors) to store C++11 attributes occurring in the attribute-specifier-seq
  at the beginning of a simple-declaration (and other similar declarations).
  Previously, these attributes were placed on the `DeclSpec`, which made it
  impossible to reconstruct later on whether the attributes had in fact been
  placed on the decl-specifier-seq or ahead of the declaration.

- In the parser, we propgate declaration attributes and decl-specifier-seq
  attributes separately until we can place them in
  `Declarator::DeclarationAttrs` or `DeclSpec::Attrs`, respectively.

- In `ProcessDeclAttributes()`, in addition to processing declarator attributes,
  we now also process the attributes from `Declarator::DeclarationAttrs` (except
  if they are legacy type attributes).

- In `ConvertDeclSpecToType()`, in addition to processing `DeclSpec` attributes,
  we also process any legacy type attributes that occur in
  `Declarator::DeclarationAttrs` (and emit a warning).

- We make `ProcessDeclAttribute` emit an error if it sees any non-declaration
  attributes in C++11 syntax, except in the following cases:
  - If it is being called for attributes on a `DeclSpec` or `DeclaratorChunk`
  - If the attribute is a legacy type attribute (in which case we only emit
    a warning)

The standard justifies treating attributes at the beginning of a
simple-declaration and attributes after a declarator-id the same. Here are some
relevant parts of the standard:

- The attribute-specifier-seq at the beginning of a simple-declaration
  "appertains to each of the entities declared by the declarators of the
  init-declarator-list" (https://eel.is/c++draft/dcl.dcl#dcl.pre-3)

- "In the declaration for an entity, attributes appertaining to that entity can
  appear at the start of the declaration and after the declarator-id for that
  declaration." (https://eel.is/c++draft/dcl.dcl#dcl.pre-note-2)

- "The optional attribute-specifier-seq following a declarator-id appertains to
  the entity that is declared."
  (https://eel.is/c++draft/dcl.dcl#dcl.meaning.general-1)

The standard contains similar wording to that for a simple-declaration in other
similar types of declarations, for example:

- "The optional attribute-specifier-seq in a parameter-declaration appertains to
  the parameter." (https://eel.is/c++draft/dcl.fct#3)

- "The optional attribute-specifier-seq in an exception-declaration appertains
  to the parameter of the catch clause" (https://eel.is/c++draft/except.pre#1)

The new behavior is tested both on the newly added type attribute
`annotate_type`, for which we emit errors, and for the legacy type attribute
`address_space` (chosen somewhat randomly from the various legacy type
attributes), for which we emit warnings.

Depends On D111548

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, rsmith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126061
2022-06-15 11:58:26 +02:00
Alexey Bader 8d27be8dba [OpenCL] Add global_device and global_host address spaces
This patch introduces 2 new address spaces in OpenCL: global_device and global_host
which are a subset of a global address space, so the address space scheme will be
looking like:

```
generic->global->host
                          ->device
             ->private
             ->local
constant
```

Justification: USM allocations may be associated with both host and device memory. We
want to give users a way to tell the compiler the allocation type of a USM pointer for
optimization purposes. (Link to the Unified Shared Memory extension:
https://github.com/intel/llvm/blob/sycl/sycl/doc/extensions/USM/cl_intel_unified_shared_memory.asciidoc)

Before this patch USM pointer could be only in opencl_global
address space, hence a device backend can't tell if a particular pointer
points to host or device memory. On FPGAs at least we can generate more
efficient hardware code if the user tells us where the pointer can point -
being able to distinguish between these types of pointers at compile time
allows us to instantiate simpler load-store units to perform memory
transactions.

Patch by Dmitry Sidorov.

Reviewed By: Anastasia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82174
2020-07-29 17:24:53 +03:00
Bruno Ricci cddc9993ea
[clang][test][NFC] Also test for serialization in AST dump tests, part 3/n.
The outputs between the direct ast-dump test and the ast-dump test after
deserialization should match modulo a few differences.

For hand-written tests, strip the "<undeserialized declarations>"s and
the "imported"s with sed.

For tests generated with "make-ast-dump-check.sh", regenerate the output.

Part 3/n.
2020-06-21 13:59:11 +01:00
Anastasia Stulova 869d17d851 [OpenCL] Pretty print __private addr space
Add printing of __private address space to TypePrinter to allow
it appears in diagnostics and AST dumps as all other language
addr spaces.

Tags: #clang

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71272
2019-12-27 13:42:07 +00:00
Victor Lomuller 11a9bae8f6 [AST] Enable expression of OpenCL language address spaces an attribute
Summary:
Enable a way to set OpenCL language address space using attributes
in addition to existing keywords.

Signed-off-by: Victor Lomuller victor@codeplay.com

Reviewers: aaron.ballman, Anastasia

Subscribers: yaxunl, ebevhan, cfe-commits, Naghasan

Tags: #clang

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71005

Signed-off-by: Alexey Bader <alexey.bader@intel.com>
2019-12-05 12:24:06 +03:00