(Reapply after revert in e9ce1a5880 due to
Fuchsia test failures. Removed changes in lib/ExecutionEngine/ other
than error categories, to be checked in more detail and reapplied
separately.)
Bulk remove many of the more trivial uses of ManagedStatic in the llvm
directory, either by defining a new getter function or, in many cases,
moving the static variable directly into the only function that uses it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129120
Bulk remove many of the more trivial uses of ManagedStatic in the llvm
directory, either by defining a new getter function or, in many cases,
moving the static variable directly into the only function that uses it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129120
* Remove crc32 from zlib compression namespace, people should use the `llvm::crc32` instead.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, leonardchan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128754
* Refactor compression namespaces across the project, making way for a possible
introduction of alternatives to zlib compression.
Changes are as follows:
* Relocate the `llvm::zlib` namespace to `llvm::compression::zlib`.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, leonardchan, phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128953
This patch adds support for Arm's Cortex-M85 CPU. The Cortex-M85 CPU is
an Arm v8.1m Mainline CPU, with optional support for MVE and PACBTI,
both of which are enabled by default.
Parts have been coauthored by by Mark Murray, Alexandros Lamprineas and
David Green.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128415
`commonAlignment` is a shortcut to pick the smallest of two `Align`
objects. As-is it doesn't bring much value compared to `std::min`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128345
Implements [[ https://wg21.link/p2071r1 | P2071 Named Universal Character Escapes ]] - as an extension in all language mode, the patch not warn in c++23 mode will be done later once this paper is plenary approved (in July).
We add
* A code generator that transforms `UnicodeData.txt` and `NameAliases.txt` to a space efficient data structure that can be queried in `O(NameLength)`
* A set of functions in `Unicode.h` to query that data, including
* A function to find an exact match of a given Unicode character name
* A function to perform a loose (ignoring case, space, underscore, medial hyphen) matching
* A function returning the best matching codepoint for a given string per edit distance
* Support of `\N{}` escape sequences in String and character Literals, with loose and typos diagnostics/fixits
* Support of `\N{}` as UCN with loose matching diagnostics/fixits.
Loose matching is considered an error to match closely the semantics of P2071.
The generated data contributes to 280kB of data to the binaries.
`UnicodeData.txt` and `NameAliases.txt` are not committed to the repository in this patch, and regenerating the data is a manual process.
Reviewed By: tahonermann
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123064
An upcoming patch to LLDB will require the ability to decode base64. This patch adds support for decoding base64 and adds tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126254
This patch implements symlinks for the in-memory VFS. Original author: @erik.pilkington.
Depends on D117648 & D117649.
Reviewed By: sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117650
`llvm::max(Align, MaybeAlign)` and `llvm::max(MaybeAlign, Align)` are
not used often enough to be required. They also make the code more opaque.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128121
Patch created by running:
rg -l parallelForEachN | xargs sed -i '' -c 's/parallelForEachN/parallelFor/'
No behavior change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128140
Root cause for the failure is that the visibility of symbols
is different on z/OS. To fix the failure, the symbols need to
be exported.
Reviewed By: abhina.sreeskantharajan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127416
This reverts commit 0809f63826. The patch appears not to have included corresponding isa<Ty> support.
This was revealed when reintroducing the required isa<Ty> asserts in cast<Ty>. See https://discourse.llvm.org/t/cast-x-is-broken-implications-and-proposal-to-address/63033 for context.
Here's the template instantiation error:
In file included from /home/preames/llvm-repo/llvm-project/llvm/unittests/Support/Casting.cpp:9:
/home/preames/llvm-repo/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/Casting.h: In instantiation of ‘static bool llvm::isa_impl<To, From, Enabler>::doit(const From&) [with To = llvm::bar*; From = llvm::bar; Enabler = void]’:
/home/preames/llvm-repo/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/Casting.h:110:36: required from ‘static bool llvm::isa_impl_cl<To, const From*>::doit(const From*) [with To = llvm::bar*; From = llvm::bar]’
/home/preames/llvm-repo/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/Casting.h:137:41: required from ‘static bool llvm::isa_impl_wrap<To, FromTy, FromTy>::doit(const FromTy&) [with To = llvm::bar*; FromTy = const llvm::bar*]’
/home/preames/llvm-repo/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/Casting.h:129:13: required from ‘static bool llvm::isa_impl_wrap<To, From, SimpleFrom>::doit(const From&) [with To = llvm::bar*; From = const llvm::bar* const; SimpleFrom = const llvm::bar*]’
/home/preames/llvm-repo/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/Casting.h:263:62: required from ‘static bool llvm::CastIsPossible<To, From, Enable>::isPossible(const From&) [with To = llvm::bar*; From = const llvm::bar*; Enable = void]’
/home/preames/llvm-repo/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/Casting.h:517:38: required from ‘static bool llvm::CastInfo<To, From, typename std::enable_if<(! llvm::is_simple_type<From>::value), void>::type>::isPossible(From&) [with To = llvm::bar*; From = llvm::bar* const]’
/home/preames/llvm-repo/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/Casting.h:556:46: required from ‘bool llvm::isa(const From&) [with To = llvm::bar*; From = llvm::bar*]’
/home/preames/llvm-repo/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/Casting.h:585:3: required from ‘decltype(auto) llvm::cast(From*) [with To = llvm::bar*; From = llvm::bar]’
/home/preames/llvm-repo/llvm-project/llvm/unittests/Support/Casting.cpp:181:27: required from here
/home/preames/llvm-repo/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/Casting.h:64:64: error: ‘classof’ is not a member of ‘llvm::bar*’
64 | static inline bool doit(const From &Val) { return To::classof(&Val); }
The function promises to canonicalize the path, but neglected to do so
for the root component.
For example, calling remove_dots("/tmp/foo.c", Style::windows_backslash)
resulted in "/tmp\foo.c". Now it produces "\tmp\foo.c".
Also fix FIXME in the corresponding test.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126412
This would be ambigious with itself when C++20 tries to lookup the
reversed form. I didn't find a use in LLVM, but MLIR does a lot of
comparisons of ranges of different types.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D109347 added support for UINT64 json numeric
types. However, it seems that it didn't properly test uint64_t numbers
larger than the int64_t because the number parsing logic doesn't
have any special handling for these large numbers.
This diffs adds a handler for large numbers, and besides that, fixes the
parsing of signed types by checking for errno ERANGE, which is the
recommended way to check if parsing fails because of out of bounds
errors. Before this diff, strtoll was always returning a number within
the bounds of an int64_t and the bounds check it was doing was completely
superfluous.
As an interesting fact about the old implementation, when calling strtoll
with "18446744073709551615", the largest uint64_t, End was S.end(), even
though it didn't use all digits. Which means that this check can only be
used to identify if the numeric string is malformed or not.
This patch also adds additional tests for extreme cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125322
Checking whether two KnownBits are the same is somewhat common,
mainly in test code.
I don't think there is a lot of room for confusion with "determine
what the KnownBits for an icmp eq would be", as that has a
different result type (this is what the eq() method implements,
which returns Optional<bool>).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125692
Casting from a type to itself should always be possible. Make this simple for all users, and add tests to ensure we keep being able to do this. Ref: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125543
Reviewed By: rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125590
C-style casting can create a temporary when compiled by a C++ compiler, which was emitting a warning casting a reference to another reference. We can't use C++-style casting directly because it doesn't always work with incomplete types. In order to support the current use-cases, for references we switch to pointer space to perform the cast.
Reviewed By: qiongsiwu1
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125482
This patch expands the expressive capability of the casting utilities in LLVM by introducing several levels of configurability. By creating modular CastInfo classes we can enable projects like MLIR that need more fine-grained control over how a cast is actually performed to retain that control, while making it easy to express the easy cases (like a checked pointer to pointer cast).
The current implementation of Casting.h doesn't make it clear where the entry points for customizing the cast behavior are, so part of the motivation for this patch is adding that documentation. Another part of the motivation is to support using LLVM RTTI with a wider set of use cases, such as nullable value to value casts, or pointer to value casts (as in MLIR).
Reviewed By: lattner, rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123901
The initial support for the Ampere1 mistakenly signalled support for
the MTE feature. However, the core does not include the optional MTE
functionality.
Update the target parser to not include MTE for Ampere1.
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125191
While I think this is a performance improvement over the original, this actually fixes a correctness issue: For an appendable underlying stream, padToAlignment would fail if the additional padding would have caused the stream to grow since it was doing its own check on bounds. By deferring to the regular writeArray method this takes the same path as everything else, which does the correct bounds check in WritableBinaryStreamRef::checkOffsetForWrite (i.e. skips the extension check if BSF_Append is set). I had started to fix the existing bounds check in BinaryStreamWriter but deferred to this because it layered better and is more efficient/consistent.
It didn't look like this method was tested at all, so I added a unit test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124746
BumpPtrAllocator::Allocate() is marked __attribute__((returns_nonnull)) when the
compiler supports it, which makes it UB to return null.
When there have been no allocations yet, the current slab is [nullptr, nullptr).
A zero-sized allocation fits in this range, and so Allocate(0, 1) returns null.
There's no explicit docs whether Allocate(0) is valid. I think we have to assume
that it is:
- the implementation tries to support it (e.g. >= tests instead of >)
- malloc(0) is allowed
- requiring each callsite to do a check is bug-prone
- I found real LLVM code that makes zero-sized allocations
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125040
This is needed for parallelizing of loading modules symbols in LLDB
(D122975). Currently LLDB can parallelize indexing symbols
when loading a module, but modules are loaded sequentially. If LLDB
index cache is enabled, this means that the cache loading is not
parallelized, even though it could. However doing that creates
a threadpool-within-threadpool situation, so the number of threads
would not be properly limited.
This change adds ThreadPoolTaskGroup as a simple type that can be
used with ThreadPool calls to put tasks into groups that can be
independently waited for (even recursively from within a task)
but still run in the same thread pool.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123225
Add support for the Ampere Computing Ampere1 core.
Ampere1 implements the AArch64 state and is compatible with ARMv8.6-A.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117112
Bugzilla #47579: if you invoke clang on Windows via a pathname in
which a quoted section closes just after a backslash, e.g.
"C:\Program Files\Whatever\"clang.exe
then cmd.exe and CreateProcess will correctly find the binary, because
when they parse the program name at the start of the command line,
they don't regard the \ before the " as having any kind of escaping
effect. This is different from the behaviour of the Windows standard C
library when it parses the rest of the command line, which would
consider that \" not to close the quoted string.
But this confuses windows::GetCommandLineArguments, because the
Windows API function GetCommandLineW() will return a command line
containing that \" sequence, and cl::TokenizeWindowsCommandLine will
tokenize the whole string according to the C library's rules. So it
will misidentify where the program name stops and the arguments start.
To fix this, I've introduced a new variant function
cl::TokenizeWindowsCommandLineFull(), intended to be applied to the
string returned from GetCommandLineW(). It parses the first word of
the command line according to CreateProcess's rules, considering \ to
never be an escaping character; thereafter, it switches over to the C
library rules for the rest of the command line.
Reviewed By: hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122914
When cl::TokenizeWindowsCommandLine received a command line with an
unterminated double-quoted string at the end, it would discard the
text within that string. That doesn't match the behavior of the
standard Windows C library, which will return the text in the unclosed
quoted string as an argv word.
Fixed, and added extra unit tests in that area.
In some cases (specifically the one in Bugzilla #47579) this could
cause TokenizeWindowsCommandLine to return a zero-length list of
arguments, leading to an array overrun at the call site in
windows::GetCommandLineArguments. Added a check there, for extra
safety: now windows::GetCommandLineArguments will return an error code
instead of failing an assertion.
(This change was written as part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D122914,
but split into a separate commit at the last minute at the code
reviewer's suggestion, because it's fixing an unrelated bug in the
same area. The rest of D122914 will follow in the next commit.)
llvm-gsymutil has an implementation of AddressRange and AddressRanges
classes. That implementation might be reused in other parts of llvm.
This patch moves AddressRange and AddressRanges classes into llvm/ADT.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124350
The recently announced IBM z16 processor implements the architecture
already supported as "arch14" in LLVM. This patch adds support for
"z16" as an alternate architecture name for arch14.
This helps lit unit test performance by a lot, especially on windows. The performance gain comes from launching one gtest executable for many subtests instead of one (this is the current situation).
The shards are executed by the test runner and the results are stored in the
json format supported by the GoogleTest. Later in the test reporting stage,
all test results in the json file are retrieved to continue the test results
summary etc.
On my Win10 desktop, before this patch: `check-clang-unit`: 177s, `check-llvm-unit`: 38s; after this patch: `check-clang-unit`: 37s, `check-llvm-unit`: 11s.
On my Linux machine, before this patch: `check-clang-unit`: 46s, `check-llvm-unit`: 8s; after this patch: `check-clang-unit`: 7s, `check-llvm-unit`: 4s.
Reviewed By: yln, rnk, abrachet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122251
If the `ExternalFS` has already remapped to an external path then
`RedirectingFileSystem` should not change it to the originally provided
path. This fixes the original path always being used if multiple VFS
overlays were provided and the path wasn't found in the highest (ie.
first in the chain).
For now this is accomplished through the use of a new
`ExposesExternalVFSPath` field on `vfs::Status`. This flag is true when
the `Status` has an external path that's different from its virtual
path, ie. the contained path is the external path. See the plan in
`FileManager::getFileRef` for where this is going - eventually we won't
need `IsVFSMapped` any more and all returned paths should be virtual.
Resolves rdar://90578880 and llvm-project#53306.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123398
This takes the AARCH64_ARCH_EXT_NAME in AArch64TargetParser.def and uses
it to generate all the "if bit is set add this feature name" code.
Which gives us a bunch that we were missing. I've updated testing
to include those and reordered them to match the order in the .def.
The final part of the test will catch any missing extensions if
we somehow manage to not generate an if block for them.
This has changed the order of cc1's "-target-feature" output so I've
updated some tests in clang to reflect that.
Reviewed By: tmatheson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123296
Simply returning will report the test as PASSED when it didn't
really do anything. SKIPPED is the correct result for these.
Found by the Rotten Green Tests project.
Returning `std::array<uint8_t, N>` is better ergonomics for the hashing functions usage, instead of a `StringRef`:
* When returning `StringRef`, client code is "jumping through hoops" to do string manipulations instead of dealing with fixed array of bytes directly, which is more natural
* Returning `std::array<uint8_t, N>` avoids the need for the hasher classes to keep a field just for the purpose of wrapping it and returning it as a `StringRef`
As part of this patch also:
* Introduce `TruncatedBLAKE3` which is useful for using BLAKE3 as the hasher type for `HashBuilder` with non-default hash sizes.
* Make `MD5Result` inherit from `std::array<uint8_t, 16>` which improves & simplifies its API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123100
Add CSKY target toolchains to support csky in linux and elf environment.
It can leverage the basic universal Linux toolchain for linux environment, and only add some compile or link parameters.
For elf environment, add a CSKYToolChain to support compile and link.
Also add some parameters into basic codebase of clang driver.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121445
by invoking `SupportTests --gtest_shuffle=1`.
`HideUnrelatedOptions`/`HideUnrelatedOptionsMulti` failed due to other
tests calling `cl::ResetCommandLineParser()` which causes default
options to be removed.
`ExitOnError` would hang due to the threading environment. Renaming it
as `*Deathtest` is the recommended practice by GTest docs.
This reverts commit 3fda0edc51, which
breaks crash reproducers in very specific circumstances. Specifically,
since crash reproducers have `UseExternalNames` set to false, the
`File->getFileEntry().getDir()->getName()` call in `DoFrameworkLookup`
would use the *cached* directory name instead of the directory of the
looked-up file.
The plan is to re-commit this patch but to *add*
`ExposesExternalVFSPath` rather than replace `IsVFSMapped`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123103
This helps lit unit test performance by a lot, especially on windows. The performance gain comes from launching one gtest executable for many subtests instead of one (this is the current situation).
The shards are executed by the test runner and the results are stored in the
json format supported by the GoogleTest. Later in the test reporting stage,
all test results in the json file are retrieved to continue the test results
summary etc.
On my Win10 desktop, before this patch: `check-clang-unit`: 177s, `check-llvm-unit`: 38s; after this patch: `check-clang-unit`: 37s, `check-llvm-unit`: 11s.
On my Linux machine, before this patch: `check-clang-unit`: 46s, `check-llvm-unit`: 8s; after this patch: `check-clang-unit`: 7s, `check-llvm-unit`: 4s.
Reviewed By: yln, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122251
Currently, we have two different lists of features each CPU supports...
and those lists aren't consistent. This patch assumes AArch64.td is
right, and tries to fix AArch64TargetParser to match.
It's hard to find documentation for the right features, but reviewers
have confirmed these changes.
Probably we should try to unify the two lists at some point, but
synchronizing them seems like a prerequisite to that anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122274
If the `ExternalFS` has already remapped a path then the
`RedirectingFileSystem` should not change it to the originally provided
path. This fixes the original path always being used if multiple VFS
overlays were provided and the path wasn't found in the highest (ie.
first in the chain).
This also renames `IsVFSMapped` to `ExposesExternalVFSPath` and only
sets it if `UseExternalName` is true. This flag then represents that the
`Status` has an external path that's different from its virtual path.
Right now the contained path is still the external path, but further PRs
will change this to *always* be the virtual path. Clients that need the
external can then request it specifically.
Note that even though `ExposesExternalVFSPath` isn't set for all
VFS-mapped paths, `IsVFSMapped` was only being used by a hack in
`FileManager` that was specific to module searching. In that case
`UseExternalNames` is always `true` and so that hack still applies.
Resolves rdar://90578880 and llvm-project#53306.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122549
BLAKE3 is a cryptographic hash function that is secure and very performant.
The C implementation originates from https://github.com/BLAKE3-team/BLAKE3/tree/1.3.1/c
License is at https://github.com/BLAKE3-team/BLAKE3/blob/1.3.1/LICENSE
This patch adds:
* `llvm/include/llvm-c/blake3.h`: The BLAKE3 C API
* `llvm/include/llvm/Support/BLAKE3.h`: C++ wrapper of the C API
* `llvm/lib/Support/BLAKE3`: Directory containing the BLAKE3 C implementation files, including the `LICENSE` file
* `llvm/unittests/Support/BLAKE3Test.cpp`: unit tests for the BLAKE3 C++ wrapper
This initial patch contains the pristine BLAKE3 sources, a follow-up patch will introduce
LLVM-specific prefixes to avoid conflicts if a client also links with its own BLAKE3 version.
And here's some timings comparing BLAKE3 with LLVM's SHA1/SHA256/MD5.
Timings include `AVX512`, `AVX2`, `neon`, and the generic/portable implementations.
The table shows the speed-up multiplier of BLAKE3 for hashing 100 MBs:
| Processor | SHA1 | SHA256 | MD5 |
|-------------------------|-------|--------|------|
| Intel Xeon W (AVX512) | 10.4x | 27x | 9.4x |
| Intel Xeon W (AVX2) | 6.5x | 17x | 5.9x |
| Intel Xeon W (portable) | 1.3x | 3.3x | 1.1x |
| M1Pro (neon) | 2.1x | 4.7x | 2.8x |
| M1Pro (portable) | 1.1x | 2.4x | 1.5x |
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121510
For now most are implemented by printing out the name of the filesystem,
but this can be expanded in the future. Only `OverlayFileSystem` and
`RedirectingFileSystem` are properly implemented in this patch.
- `OverlayFileSystem`: Prints each filesystem in the order that any
operations are actually run on them. Optionally prints recursively.
- `RedirectingFileSystem`: Prints out all mappings, as well as the
`ExternalFS`. Most of this was already implemented other than the
handling for the `DirectoryRemap` case and to actually print out the
mapping.
Each FS should implement `printImpl` rather than `print`, where the
latter just fowards to the former. This is to avoid spreading the
default arguments through to the subclasses (where we may miss updating
in the future).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121421
With a sufficiently large output buffer, the only failure is Z_MEM_ERROR.
Check it and call the noreturn report_bad_alloc_error if applicable.
resize_for_overwrite may call report_bad_alloc_error as well.
Now that there is no other error type, we can replace the return type with void
and simplify call sites.
Reviewed By: ikudrin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121512
For when we want to change a configuration option from an enum into a
struct. The need arose when working on D119599.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120363
Early adoption of new technologies or adjusting certain code generation/IR optimization thresholds
is often available through some cl::opt options (which have unstable surfaces).
Specifying such an option twice will lead to an error.
```
% clang -c a.c -mllvm -disable-binop-extract-shuffle -mllvm -disable-binop-extract-shuffle
clang (LLVM option parsing): for the --disable-binop-extract-shuffle option: may only occur zero or one times!
% clang -c a.c -mllvm -hwasan-instrument-reads=0 -mllvm -hwasan-instrument-reads=0
clang (LLVM option parsing): for the --hwasan-instrument-reads option: may only occur zero or one times!
% clang -c a.c -mllvm --scalar-evolution-max-arith-depth=32 -mllvm --scalar-evolution-max-arith-depth=16
clang (LLVM option parsing): for the --scalar-evolution-max-arith-depth option: may only occur zero or one times!
```
The option is specified twice, because there is sometimes a global setting and
a specific file or project may need to override (or duplicately specify) the
value.
The error is contrary to the common practice of getopt/getopt_long command line
utilities that let the last option win and the `getLastArg` behavior used by
Clang driver options. I have seen such errors for several times. I think the
error just makes users inconvenient, while providing very little value on
discouraging production usage of unstable surfaces (this goal is itself
controversial, because developers might not want to commit to a stable surface
too early, or there is just some subtle codegen toggle which is infeasible to
have a driver option). Therefore, I suggest we drop the diagnostic, at least
before the diagnostic gets sufficiently better support for the overridding needs.
Removing the error is a degraded error checking experience. I think this error
checking behavior, if desirable, should be enabled explicitly by tools. Users
preferring the behavior can figure out a way to do so.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120455
Current declaration of cl::opt is incoherent between class and non-class
specializations of the opt_storage template. There is an inconsistency
in the initialization of the Default field: for inClass instances
the default constructor is used - it sets the Optional Default field to
None; though for non-inClass instances the Default field is set to
the type's default value. For non-inClass instances it is impossible
to know if the option is defined with cl::init() initializer or not:
cl::opt<int> i1("option-i1");
cl::opt<int> i2("option-i2", cl::init(0));
cl::opt<std::string> s1("option-s1");
cl::opt<std::string> s2("option-s2", cl::init(""));
assert(s1.Default.hasValue() != s2.Default.hasValue()); // Ok
assert(i1.Default.hasValue() != i2.Default.hasValue()); // Fails
This patch changes constructor of the non-class specializations to keep
the Default field unset (that is None) rather than initialize it with
DataType().
Reviewed By: lattner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114645
opt::setDefaultImpl() is changed to set the option value to the option
type's default if the Default field is not set. This results in option
value reset by Option::reset() or ResetAllOptionOccurrences() even if
the cl::init() is not specified.
Example:
StackOption<std::string> Str("str"); // No cl::init().
Str = "some value";
cl::ResetAllOptionOccurrences();
EXPECT_EQ("", Str); // The Str is reset.
Reviewed By: lattner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115433
The upstream project ships CMake rules for building vanilla gtest/gmock which conflict with the names chosen by LLVM. Since LLVM's build rules here are quite specific to LLVM, prefixing them to avoid collision is the right thing (i.e. there does not appear to be a path to letting someone *replace* LLVM's googletest with one they bring, so co-existence should be the goal).
This allows LLVM to be included with testing enabled within projects that themselves have a dependency on an official gtest release.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120789
Construct LLVM Support module about CSKY target parser and attribute parser.
It refers CSKY ABIv2 and implementation of GNU binutils and GCC.
https://github.com/c-sky/csky-doc/blob/master/C-SKY_V2_CPU_Applications_Binary_Interface_Standards_Manual.pdf
Now we only support CSKY 800 series cpus and newer cpus in the future undering CSKYv2 ABI specification.
There are 11 archs including ck801, ck802, ck803, ck803s, ck804, ck805, ck807, ck810, ck810v, ck860, ck860v.
Every arch has base extensions, the cpus of that arch family have more extended extensions than base extensions.
We need specify extended extensions for every cpu. Every extension has its enum value, name and related llvm feature string with +/-.
Every enum value represents a bit of uint64_t integer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119917
opt::setDefaultImpl() is changed to set the option value to the option
type's default if the Default field is not set. This results in option
value reset by Option::reset() or ResetAllOptionOccurrences() even if
the cl::init() is not specified.
Example:
StackOption<std::string> Str("str"); // No cl::init().
Str = "some value";
cl::ResetAllOptionOccurrences();
EXPECT_EQ("", Str); // The Str is reset.
Reviewed By: lattner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115433
This patch fixes two issues with clearing of the internal storage for cl::bits
1. The internal bits storage for cl::bits is uninitialized. This is a problem if a cl::bits option is not defined with static lifetime.
2. ResetAllOptionOccurrences does not reset cl::bits options.
The latter is also discussed in:
https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-February/148299.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119066
On Windows certain function from `Signals.h` require that `DbgHelp.dll` is loaded. This typically happens when the main program calls `llvm::InitLLVM`, however in some cases main program doesn't do that (e.g. when the application is using LLDB via `liblldb.dll`). This patch adds a safe guard to prevent crashes. More discussion in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D119009.
Reviewed By: aganea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119181
In many cases, calls to isShiftedMask are immediately followed with checks to determine the size and position of the bitmask.
This patch adds variants of APInt::isShiftedMask, isShiftedMask_32 and isShiftedMask_64 that return these values as additional arguments.
I've updated a number of cases that were either performing seperate size/position calculations or had created their own local wrapper versions of these.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119019
Extend "fallthrough" to allow a third option: "fallback". Fallthrough
allows the original path to used if the redirected (or mapped) path
fails. Fallback is the reverse of this, ie. use the original path and
fallback to the mapped path otherwise.
While this result *can* be achieved today using multiple overlays, this
adds a much more intuitive option. As an example, take two directories
"A" and "B". We would like files from "A" to be used, unless they don't
exist, in which case the VFS should fallback to those in "B".
With the current fallthrough option this is possible by adding two
overlays: one mapping from A -> B and another mapping from B -> A. Since
the frontend *nests* the two RedirectingFileSystems, the result will
be that "A" is mapped to "B" and back to "A", unless it isn't in "A" in
which case it fallsthrough to "B" (or fails if it exists in neither).
Using "fallback" semantics allows a single overlay instead: one mapping
from "A" to "B" but only using that mapping if the operation in "A"
fails first.
"redirect-only" is used to represent the current "fallthrough: false"
case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117937
We do support building with a default target unspecified. This fixes
two small build issues that prevented LLVM's unit tests from building
and libSupport from building on Windows.
This reverts commit ef82063207.
- It conflicts with the existing llvm::size in STLExtras, which will now
never be called.
- Calling it without llvm:: breaks C++17 compat
Only using that change in StringRef already decreases the number of
preoprocessed lines from 7837621 to 7776151 for LLVMSupport
Perhaps more interestingly, it shows that many files were relying on the
inclusion of StringRef.h to have the declaration from STLExtras.h. This
patch tries hard to patch relevant part of llvm-project impacted by this
hidden dependency removal.
Potential impact:
- "llvm/ADT/StringRef.h" no longer includes <memory>,
"llvm/ADT/Optional.h" nor "llvm/ADT/STLExtras.h"
Related Discourse thread:
https://llvm.discourse.group/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup/5831
The tryLockFor method from raw_fd_sotreamis the sole user of that
header, and it's not referenced in the mono repo. I still chose to keep
it (may be useful for downstream user) but added a transient type that's
forward declared to hold the duration parameter.
Notable changes:
- "llvm/Support/Duration.h" must be included in order to use tryLockFor.
- "llvm/Support/raw_ostream.h" no longer includes <chrono>
This sole change has an interesting impact on the number of processed
line, as measured by:
clang++ -E -Iinclude -I../llvm/include ../llvm/lib/Support/*.cpp -std=c++14 -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions | wc -l
before: 7917500
after: 7835142
Discourse thread on the topic: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup/5831
The error messages in tests are far better when a test fails if the test
is written using ASSERT_/EXPECT_<operator>(A, B) rather than
ASSERT_/EXPECT_TRUE(A <operator> B).
This commit updates all of llvm/unittests/Support to use these macros
where possible.
This change has not been possible in:
- llvm/unittests/Support/FSUniqueIDTest.cpp - due to not overloading
operators beyond ==, != and <.
- llvm/unittests/Support/BranchProbabilityTest.cpp - where the unchanged
tests are of the operator overloads themselves.
There are other possibilities of this conversion not being valid, which
have not applied in these tests, as they do not use NULL (they use
nullptr), and they do not use const char* (they use std::string or
StringRef).
Reviewed By: mubashar_
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117319
The cleanup was manual, but assisted by "include-what-you-use". It consists in
1. Removing unused forward declaration. No impact expected.
2. Removing unused headers in .cpp files. No impact expected.
3. Removing unused headers in .h files. This removes implicit dependencies and
is generally considered a good thing, but this may break downstream builds.
I've updated llvm, clang, lld, lldb and mlir deps, and included a list of the
modification in the second part of the commit.
4. Replacing header inclusion by forward declaration. This has the same impact
as 3.
Notable changes:
- llvm/Support/TargetParser.h no longer includes llvm/Support/AArch64TargetParser.h nor llvm/Support/ARMTargetParser.h
- llvm/Support/TypeSize.h no longer includes llvm/Support/WithColor.h
- llvm/Support/YAMLTraits.h no longer includes llvm/Support/Regex.h
- llvm/ADT/SmallVector.h no longer includes llvm/Support/MemAlloc.h nor llvm/Support/ErrorHandling.h
You may need to add some of these headers in your compilation units, if needs be.
As an hint to the impact of the cleanup, running
clang++ -E -Iinclude -I../llvm/include ../llvm/lib/Support/*.cpp -std=c++14 -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions | wc -l
before: 8000919 lines
after: 7917500 lines
Reduced dependencies also helps incremental rebuilds and is more ccache
friendly, something not shown by the above metric :-)
Discourse thread on the topic: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup/5831
This diff adds support for relative roots to VFS overlays. The directory root
will be made absolute from the current working directory and will be used to
determine the path style to use. This supports the use of VFS overlays with
remote build systems that might use a different working directory for each
compilation.
Reviewed By: benlangmuir
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116174