Implement P2036R3.
Captured variables by copy (explicitely or not), are deduced
correctly at the point we know whether the lambda is mutable,
and ill-formed before that.
Up until now, the entire lambda declaration up to the start of the body would be parsed in the parent scope, such that capture would not be available to look up.
The scoping is changed to have an outer lambda scope, followed by the lambda prototype and body.
The lambda scope is necessary because there may be a template scope between the start of the lambda (to which we want to attach the captured variable) and the prototype scope.
We also need to introduce a declaration context to attach the captured variable to (and several parts of clang assume captures are handled from the call operator context), before we know the type of the call operator.
The order of operations is as follow:
* Parse the init capture in the lambda's parent scope
* Introduce a lambda scope
* Create the lambda class and call operator
* Add the init captures to the call operator context and the lambda scope. But the variables are not capured yet (because we don't know their type).
Instead, explicit captures are stored in a temporary map that conserves the order of capture (for the purpose of having a stable order in the ast dumps).
* A flag is set on LambdaScopeInfo to indicate that we have not yet injected the captures.
* The parameters are parsed (in the parent context, as lambda mangling recurses in the parent context, we couldn't mangle a lambda that is attached to the context of a lambda whose type is not yet known).
* The lambda qualifiers are parsed, at this point We can switch (for the second time) inside the lambda context, unset the flag indicating that we have not parsed the lambda qualifiers,
record the lambda is mutable and capture the explicit variables.
* We can parse the rest of the lambda type, transform the lambda and call operator's types and also transform the call operator to a template function decl where necessary.
At this point, both captures and parameters can be injected in the body's scope. When trying to capture an implicit variable, if we are before the qualifiers of a lambda, we need to remember that the variables are still in the parent's context (rather than in the call operator's).
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, #clang-language-wg, ChuanqiXu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119136
We did not implement C99 6.7.5.3p15 fully in that we missed the rule
for compatible function types where a prior declaration has a prototype
and a subsequent definition (not just declaration) has an empty
identifier list or an identifier list with a mismatch in parameter
arity. This addresses that situation by issuing an error on code like:
void f(int);
void f() {} // type conflicts with previous declaration
(Note: we already diagnose the other type conflict situations
appropriately, this was the only situation we hadn't covered that I
could find.)
According to CWG 1394 and C++20 [dcl.fct.def.general]p2,
Clang should not diagnose incomplete types if function body is "= delete;".
For example:
```
struct Incomplete;
Incomplete f(Incomplete) = delete; // well-formed
```
Also close https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/52802
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122981
The Randstruct feature is a compile-time hardening technique that
randomizes the field layout for designated structures of a code base.
Admittedly, this is mostly useful for closed-source releases of code,
since the randomization seed would need to be available for public and
open source applications.
Why implement it? This patch set enhances Clang’s feature parity with
that of GCC which already has the Randstruct feature. It's used by the
Linux kernel in certain structures to help thwart attacks that depend on
structure layouts in memory.
This patch set is a from-scratch reimplementation of the Randstruct
feature that was originally ported to GCC. The patches for the GCC
implementation can be found here:
https://www.openwall.com/lists/kernel-hardening/2017/04/06/14
Link: https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-March/061607.html
Co-authored-by: Cole Nixon <nixontcole@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Connor Kuehl <cipkuehl@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: James Foster <jafosterja@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jeff Takahashi <jeffrey.takahashi@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jordan Cantrell <jordan.cantrell@mail.com>
Co-authored-by: Nikk Forbus <nicholas.forbus@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Tim Pugh <nwtpugh@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Bill Wendling <isanbard@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Bill Wendling <isanbard@gmail.com>
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121556
(With C++ exceptions, `clang++ --target=mips64{,el}-linux-gnu -fpie -pie
-fuse-ld=lld` has link errors (lld does not implement some strange R_MIPS_64
.eh_frame handling in GNU ld). However, sanitizer-x86_64-linux-qemu used this to
build ScudoUnitTests. Pined ScudoUnitTests to -no-pie.)
Default the option introduced in D113372 to ON to match all(?) major Linux
distros. This matches GCC and improves consistency with Android and linux-musl
which always default to PIE.
Note: CLANG_DEFAULT_PIE_ON_LINUX may be removed in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120305
This reverts commit 3f0587d0c6.
Not all tests pass after a few rounds of fixes.
I spot one failure that std::shuffle (potentially different results with
different STL implementations) was misused and replaced it with llvm::shuffle,
but there appears to be another failure in a Windows build.
The latest failure is reported on https://reviews.llvm.org/D121556#3440383
Functions without prototypes in C (also known as K&R C functions) were
introduced into C89 as a deprecated feature and C2x is now reclaiming
that syntax space with different semantics. However, Clang's
-Wstrict-prototypes diagnostic is off-by-default (even in pedantic
mode) and does not suffice to warn users about issues in their code.
This patch changes the behavior of -Wstrict-prototypes to only diagnose
declarations and definitions which are not going to change behavior in
C2x mode, and enables the diagnostic in -pedantic mode. The diagnostic
is now specifically about the fact that the feature is deprecated.
It also adds -Wdeprecated-non-prototype, which is grouped under
-Wstrict-prototypes and diagnoses declarations or definitions which
will change behavior in C2x mode. This diagnostic is enabled by default
because the risk is higher for the user to continue to use the
deprecated feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122895
The Randstruct feature is a compile-time hardening technique that
randomizes the field layout for designated structures of a code base.
Admittedly, this is mostly useful for closed-source releases of code,
since the randomization seed would need to be available for public and
open source applications.
Why implement it? This patch set enhances Clang’s feature parity with
that of GCC which already has the Randstruct feature. It's used by the
Linux kernel in certain structures to help thwart attacks that depend on
structure layouts in memory.
This patch set is a from-scratch reimplementation of the Randstruct
feature that was originally ported to GCC. The patches for the GCC
implementation can be found here:
https://www.openwall.com/lists/kernel-hardening/2017/04/06/14
Link: https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-March/061607.html
Co-authored-by: Cole Nixon <nixontcole@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Connor Kuehl <cipkuehl@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: James Foster <jafosterja@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jeff Takahashi <jeffrey.takahashi@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jordan Cantrell <jordan.cantrell@mail.com>
Co-authored-by: Nikk Forbus <nicholas.forbus@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Tim Pugh <nwtpugh@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Bill Wendling <isanbard@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Bill Wendling <isanbard@gmail.com>
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121556
(The upgrade of the ppc64le bot and D121257 have fixed compiler-rt failures. Tested by nemanjai.)
Default the option introduced in D113372 to ON to match all(?) major Linux
distros. This matches GCC and improves consistency with Android and linux-musl
which always default to PIE.
Note: CLANG_DEFAULT_PIE_ON_LINUX may be removed in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120305
Note that the mangling has changed and the demangler's learnt a new
trick. Obviously dependent upon the mangler and demangler patches.
Reviewed By: bruno
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123141
As statement expression makes no sense in the default argument,
this patch tries to disable it in the all cases.
Please note that the statement expression is a GNU extension, which
means that Clang should be consistent with GCC. However, there's no
response from GCC devs since we have raised the issue for several weeks.
In this case, I think we can disallow statement expressions as a default
parameter in general for now, and relax the restriction if GCC folks
decide to retain the feature for functions but not lambdas in the
future.
Related discussion: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=104765
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/53488
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119609
Reimplements MisExpect diagnostics from D66324 to reconstruct its
original checking methodology only using MD_prof branch_weights
metadata.
New checks rely on 2 invariants:
1) For frontend instrumentation, MD_prof branch_weights will always be
populated before llvm.expect intrinsics are lowered.
2) for IR and sample profiling, llvm.expect intrinsics will always be
lowered before branch_weights are populated from the IR profiles.
These invariants allow the checking to assume how the existing branch
weights are populated depending on the profiling method used, and emit
the correct diagnostics. If these invariants are ever invalidated, the
MisExpect related checks would need to be updated, potentially by
re-introducing MD_misexpect metadata, and ensuring it always will be
transformed the same way as branch_weights in other optimization passes.
Frontend based profiling is now enabled without using LLVM Args, by
introducing a new CodeGen option, and checking if the -Wmisexpect flag
has been passed on the command line.
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115907
Beautify dump format, add indent for nested struct and struct members, also fix test cases in dump-struct-builtin.c
for example:
struct:
```
struct A {
int a;
struct B {
int b;
struct C {
struct D {
int d;
union E {
int x;
int y;
} e;
} d;
int c;
} c;
} b;
};
```
Before:
```
struct A {
int a = 0
struct B {
int b = 0
struct C {
struct D {
int d = 0
union E {
int x = 0
int y = 0
}
}
int c = 0
}
}
}
```
After:
```
struct A {
int a = 0
struct B {
int b = 0
struct C {
struct D {
int d = 0
union E {
int x = 0
int y = 0
}
}
int c = 0
}
}
}
```
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122704
Remove anonymous tag locations, powered by 'PrintingPolicy',
@aaron.ballman once suggested removing this extra information in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D122248
struct:
struct S {
int a;
struct /* Anonymous*/ {
int x;
} b;
int c;
};
Before:
struct S {
int a = 0
struct S::(unnamed at ./builtin_dump_struct.c:20:3) {
int x = 0
}
int c = 0
}
After:
struct S {
int a = 0
struct S::(unnamed) {
int x = 0
}
int c = 0
}
Differntial Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122670
Member access for an atomic structure or union is unconditional
undefined behavior (C11 6.5.2.3p5). However, we would issue a confusing
error message about the base expression not being a structure or union
type.
GCC issues a warning for this case. Clang now warns as well, but the
warning is defaulted to an error because the actual access is still
unsafe.
This fixes Issue 54563.
Reimplements MisExpect diagnostics from D66324 to reconstruct its
original checking methodology only using MD_prof branch_weights
metadata.
New checks rely on 2 invariants:
1) For frontend instrumentation, MD_prof branch_weights will always be
populated before llvm.expect intrinsics are lowered.
2) for IR and sample profiling, llvm.expect intrinsics will always be
lowered before branch_weights are populated from the IR profiles.
These invariants allow the checking to assume how the existing branch
weights are populated depending on the profiling method used, and emit
the correct diagnostics. If these invariants are ever invalidated, the
MisExpect related checks would need to be updated, potentially by
re-introducing MD_misexpect metadata, and ensuring it always will be
transformed the same way as branch_weights in other optimization passes.
Frontend based profiling is now enabled without using LLVM Args, by
introducing a new CodeGen option, and checking if the -Wmisexpect flag
has been passed on the command line.
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115907
This builtin returns the address of a global instance of the
`std::source_location::__impl` type, which must be defined (with an
appropriate shape) before calling the builtin.
It will be used to implement std::source_location in libc++ in a
future change. The builtin is compatible with GCC's implementation,
and libstdc++'s usage. An intentional divergence is that GCC declares
the builtin's return type to be `const void*` (for
ease-of-implementation reasons), while Clang uses the actual type,
`const std::source_location::__impl*`.
In order to support this new functionality, I've also added a new
'UnnamedGlobalConstantDecl'. This artificial Decl is modeled after
MSGuidDecl, and is used to represent a generic concept of an lvalue
constant with global scope, deduplicated by its value. It's possible
that MSGuidDecl itself, or some of the other similar sorts of things
in Clang might be able to be refactored onto this more-generic
concept, but there's enough special-case weirdness in MSGuidDecl that
I gave up attempting to share code there, at least for now.
Finally, for compatibility with libstdc++'s <source_location> header,
I've added a second exception to the "cannot cast from void* to T* in
constant evaluation" rule. This seems a bit distasteful, but feels
like the best available option.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, erichkeane
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120159
Previously, we would instantiate the UDL by marking the function as
referenced and potentially binding to a temporary; this skipped
transforming the call when the UDL was dependent on a template
parameter.
Now, we defer all the work to instantiating the call expression for the
UDL. This ensures that constant evaluation occurs at compile time
rather than deferring until runtime.
Fixes Issue 54578.
In C, assignment expressions result in an rvalue whose type is the type
of the lhs of the assignment after it undergoes lvalue to rvalue
conversion. lvalue to rvalue conversion in C strips all qualifiers
including _Atomic.
We used getUnqualifiedType() which does not strip the _Atomic qualifier
when we should have used getAtomicUnqualifiedType(). This corrects the
usage and adds some comments to getUnqualifiedType() to make it more
clear that it does not strip _Atomic and that's on purpose (see C11
6.2.5p27).
This addresses Issue 48742.
Update `WeakUndeclaredIdentifiers` to hold a collection of weak
aliases per identifier instead of only one.
This also allows the "used" state to be removed from `WeakInfo`
because it is really only there as an alternative to removing
processed map entries, and we can represent that using an empty set
now. The serialization code is updated for the removal of the field.
Additionally, a PCH test is added for the new functionality.
The records are grouped by the "target" identifier, which was already
being used as a key for lookup purposes. We also store only one record
per alias name; combined, this means that diagnostics are grouped by
the "target" and limited to one per alias (which should be acceptable).
Fixes PR28611.
Fixesllvm/llvm-project#28985.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, cebowleratibm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121927
Co-authored-by: Rachel Craik <rcraik@ca.ibm.com>
Co-authored-by: Jamie Schmeiser <schmeise@ca.ibm.com>
Fix clang crash and add bitfield support in __builtin_dump_struct.
In clang13.0.x, a struct with three or more members and a bitfield at
the same time will cause a crash. In clang15.x, as long as the struct
has one bitfield, it will cause a crash in clang.
Open issue: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/54462
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122248
Currently, Clang handles some qualifiers correctly for __auto_type, but
it does not handle the restrict or _Atomic qualifiers in the same way
that GCC does. This patch handles those qualifiers so that they attach
to the deduced type the same as const and volatile already do.
This fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/53652
This reverts commit edb7ba714a.
This changes BLR_BTI to take variable_ops meaning that we can accept
a register or a label. The pattern still expects one argument so we'll
never get more than one. Then later we can check the type of the operand
to choose BL or BLR to emit.
(this is what BLR_RVMARKER does but I missed this detail of it first time around)
Also require NoSLSBLRMitigation which I missed in the first version.
Some implementations of setjmp will end with a br instead of a ret.
This means that the next instruction after a call to setjmp must be
a "bti j" (j for jump) to make this work when branch target identification
is enabled.
The BTI extension was added in armv8.5-a but the bti instruction is in the
hint space. This means we can emit it for any architecture version as long
as branch target enforcement flags are passed.
The starting point for the hint number is 32 then call adds 2, jump adds 4.
Hence "hint #36" for a "bti j" (and "hint #34" for the "bti c" you see
at the start of functions).
The existing Arm command line option -mno-bti-at-return-twice has been
applied to AArch64 as well.
Support is added to SelectionDAG Isel and GlobalIsel. FastIsel will
defer to SelectionDAG.
Based on the change done for M profile Arm in https://reviews.llvm.org/D112427Fixes#48888
Reviewed By: danielkiss
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121707
Allow goto, labelled statements as well as `static`, `thread_local`, and
non-literal variables in `constexpr` functions.
As specified. for all of the above (except labelled statements) constant
evaluation of the construct still fails.
For `constexpr` bodies, the proposal is implemented with diagnostics as
a language extension in older language modes. For determination of
whether a lambda body satisfies the requirements for a constexpr
function, the proposal is implemented only in C++2b mode to retain the
semantics of older modes for programs conforming to them.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, hubert.reinterpretcast, erichkeane
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111400
These diagnostics were added to a diagnostic group, but that diagnostic
group was not under -Wgnu. I've now split them into their own
diagnostic group that is added both to the original group (so user's
currently opting in or out of these should not see a change) and under
the -Wgnu group so that -Wno-gnu can be used to disable all GNU
extension diagnostics. This fixes Issue 54444.
This adds support for multiple attributes in `#pragma clang attribute push`, for example:
```
```
or
```
```
Related attributes can now be applied with a single pragma, which makes it harder for developers to make an accidental error later when editing the code.
rdar://78269653
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121283
Reimplements MisExpect diagnostics from D66324 to reconstruct its
original checking methodology only using MD_prof branch_weights
metadata.
New checks rely on 2 invariants:
1) For frontend instrumentation, MD_prof branch_weights will always be
populated before llvm.expect intrinsics are lowered.
2) for IR and sample profiling, llvm.expect intrinsics will always be
lowered before branch_weights are populated from the IR profiles.
These invariants allow the checking to assume how the existing branch
weights are populated depending on the profiling method used, and emit
the correct diagnostics. If these invariants are ever invalidated, the
MisExpect related checks would need to be updated, potentially by
re-introducing MD_misexpect metadata, and ensuring it always will be
transformed the same way as branch_weights in other optimization passes.
Frontend based profiling is now enabled without using LLVM Args, by
introducing a new CodeGen option, and checking if the -Wmisexpect flag
has been passed on the command line.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115907
If we are equality comparing an FP literal with a value cast from a type
where the literal can't be represented, that's known true or false and
probably a programmer error.
Fixes issue #54222.
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/54222
Note - I added the optimizer change with:
9397bdc67e
...and as discussed in the post-commit comments, that transform might be
too dangerous without this warning in place, so it was reverted to allow
this change first.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121306
GCC supports:
- `namespace <gnu attributes> identifier`
- `namespace identifier <gnu attributes>`
But clang supports only `namespace identifier <gnu attributes>` and diagnostics for `namespace <gnu attributes> identifier` case looks unclear:
Code:
```
namespace __attribute__((visibility("hidden"))) A
{
}
```
Diags:
```
test.cpp:1:49: error: expected identifier or '{'
namespace __attribute__((visibility("hidden"))) A
^
test.cpp:1:49: error: C++ requires a type specifier for all declarations
test.cpp:3:2: error: expected ';' after top level declarator
}
```
This patch adds support for `namespace <gnu attributes> identifier` and also forbids gnu attributes for nested namespaces (this already done for C++ attributes).
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121245
WG14 adopted N2775 (http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2775.pdf)
at our Feb 2022 meeting. This paper adds a literal suffix for
bit-precise types that automatically sizes the bit-precise type to be
the smallest possible legal _BitInt type that can represent the literal
value. The suffix chosen is wb (for a signed bit-precise type) which
can be combined with the u suffix (for an unsigned bit-precise type).
The preprocessor continues to operate as-if all integer types were
intmax_t/uintmax_t, including bit-precise integer types. It is a
constraint violation if the bit-precise literal is too large to fit
within that type in the context of the preprocessor (when still using
a pp-number preprocessing token), but it is not a constraint violation
in other circumstances. This allows you to make bit-precise integer
literals that are wider than what the preprocessor currently supports
in order to initialize variables, etc.
We were not creating an evaluation context for the TU scope, so we
never popped an evaluation context for it. Popping the evaluation
context triggers a number of diagnostics, including warnings about
immediate invocations that we were previously missing.
Note: I think we have an additional issue that we should solve, but not
as part of this patch. I don't think Clang is properly modeling static
initialization as happening before constant expression evaluation. I
think structure members members are zero initialized per
http://eel.is/c++draft/basic.start.static#1,
https://eel.is/c++draft/basic.start.static#2.sentence-2, and
http://eel.is/c++draft/dcl.init#general-6.2 and the new test case
actually should be accepted. However, it's also worth noting that other
compilers behave the way this patch makes Clang behave:
https://godbolt.org/z/T7noqhdPr
See post-commit discussion on https://reviews.llvm.org/D120305.
This change breaks the clang-ppc64le-rhel buildbot, though
there is suspicion that it's an issue with the bot. The change
also had a larger than expected impact on compile-time and
code-size.
This reverts commit 3c4ed02698
and some followup changes.
Default the option introduced in D113372 to ON to match all(?) major Linux
distros. This matches GCC and improves consistency with Android and linux-musl
which always default to PIE.
Note: CLANG_DEFAULT_PIE_ON_LINUX will be removed in the future.
Reviewed By: thesamesam
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120305
Otherwise callers of these functions have to check both the return value
for and the contents of the returned llvm::Optional.
Fixes#53742
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119525
Adds a new option InsertBraces to insert the optional braces after
if, else, for, while, and do in C++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120217
This adds support for http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2764.pdf,
which was adopted at the Feb 2022 WG14 meeting. That paper adds
[[noreturn]] and [[_Noreturn]] to the list of supported attributes in
C2x. These attributes have the same semantics as the [[noreturn]]
attribute in C++.
The [[_Noreturn]] attribute was added as a deprecated feature so that
translation units which include <stdnoreturn.h> do not get an error on
use of [[noreturn]] because the macro expands to _Noreturn. Users can
use -Wno-deprecated-attributes to silence the diagnostic.
Use of <stdnotreturn.h> or the noreturn macro were both deprecated.
Users can define the _CLANG_DISABLE_CRT_DEPRECATION_WARNINGS macro to
suppress the deprecation diagnostics coming from the header file.
When forming the function type from a declarator, we look for an
overloadable attribute before issuing a diagnostic in C about a
function signature containing only .... When the attribute is present,
we allow such a declaration for compatibility with the overloading
rules in C++. However, we were not looking for the attribute in all of
the places it is legal to write it on a declarator and so we only
accepted the signature in some forms and incorrectly rejected the
signature in others.
We now check for the attribute preceding the declarator instead of only
being applied to the declarator directly.
The introduction and some examples are on this page:
https://devblogs.microsoft.com/cppblog/announcing-jmc-stepping-in-visual-studio/
The `/JMC` flag enables these instrumentations:
- Insert at the beginning of every function immediately after the prologue with
a call to `void __fastcall __CheckForDebuggerJustMyCode(unsigned char *JMC_flag)`.
The argument for `__CheckForDebuggerJustMyCode` is the address of a boolean
global variable (the global variable is initialized to 1) with the name
convention `__<hash>_<filename>`. All such global variables are placed in
the `.msvcjmc` section.
- The `<hash>` part of `__<hash>_<filename>` has a one-to-one mapping
with a directory path. MSVC uses some unknown hashing function. Here I
used DJB.
- Add a dummy/empty COMDAT function `__JustMyCode_Default`.
- Add `/alternatename:__CheckForDebuggerJustMyCode=__JustMyCode_Default` link
option via ".drectve" section. This is to prevent failure in
case `__CheckForDebuggerJustMyCode` is not provided during linking.
Implementation:
All the instrumentations are implemented in an IR codegen pass. The pass is placed immediately before CodeGenPrepare pass. This is to not interfere with mid-end optimizations and make the instrumentation target-independent (I'm still working on an ELF port in a separate patch).
Reviewed By: hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118428
These changes make the Clang parser recognize expression parameter pack
expansion and initializer lists in attribute arguments. Because
expression parameter pack expansion requires additional handling while
creating and instantiating templates, the support for them must be
explicitly supported through the AcceptsExprPack flag.
Handling expression pack expansions may require a delay to when the
arguments of an attribute are correctly populated. To this end,
attributes that are set to accept these - through setting the
AcceptsExprPack flag - will automatically have an additional variadic
expression argument member named DelayedArgs. This member is not
exposed the same way other arguments are but is set through the new
CreateWithDelayedArgs creator function generated for applicable
attributes.
To illustrate how to implement support for expression pack expansion
support, clang::annotate is made to support pack expansions. This is
done by making handleAnnotationAttr delay setting the actual attribute
arguments until after template instantiation if it was unable to
populate the arguments due to dependencies in the parsed expressions.
Implement P2128R6 in C++23 mode.
Unlike GCC's implementation, this doesn't try to recover when a user
meant to use a comma expression.
Because the syntax changes meaning in C++23, the patch is *NOT*
implemented as an extension. Instead, declaring an array with not
exactly 1 parameter is an error in older languages modes. There is an
off-by-default extension warning in C++23 mode.
Unlike the standard, we supports default arguments;
Ie, we assume, based on conversations in WG21, that the proposed
resolution to CWG2507 will be accepted.
We allow arrays OpenMP sections and C++23 multidimensional array to
coexist:
[a , b] multi dimensional array
[a : b] open mp section
[a, b: c] // error
The rest of the patch is relatively straight forward: we take care to
support an arbitrary number of arguments everywhere.
This patch adds more documentation for the OpenMP offloading driver.
This includes a new file that describes the overall pipeline becuase
that was not previously explained in full elsewhere.
Reviewed By: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118815
This updates all the non-runtime project release notes to use the
version number from CMake instead of the hard-coded version numbers
in conf.py.
It also hides warnings about pre-releases when the git suffix
is dropped from the LLVM version in CMake.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112181
This patch introduces a linker wrapper tool that allows us to preprocess
files before they are sent to the linker. This adds a dummy action and
job to the driver stage that builds the linker command as usual and then
replaces the command line with the wrapper tool.
Depends on D116543
Reviewed By: JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116544
to give users a final warning that they need to migrate away. They could still
use -flegacy-pass-manager for Clang 14.0.0, but the functionality may not work
for 15.0.0.
-fexperimental-new-pass-manager is a no-op for default builds, so not urgent to
be removed for 14.0.0.
clang/test/Frontend/optimization-remark-with-hotness.c is removed because its
new PM replacement optimization-remark-with-hotness-new-pm.c exists.
Reviewed By: aeubanks, nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118313
Part of the _BitInt feature in C2x
(http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2763.pdf) is a new
macro in limits.h named BITINT_MAXWIDTH that can be used to determine
the maximum width of a bit-precise integer type. This macro must expand
to a value that is at least as large as ULLONG_WIDTH.
This adds an implementation-defined macro named __BITINT_MAXWIDTH__ to
specify that value, which is used by limits.h for the standard macro.
This also limits the maximum bit width to 128 bits because backends do
not currently support all mathematical operations (such as division) on
wider types yet. This maximum is expected to be increased in the future.
This matches GCC: https://godbolt.org/z/sM5q95PGY
I realize this is an API break for clang+clang - so I'm totally open to
discussing how we should deal with that. If Apple wants to keep the
Clang layout indefinitely, if we want to put a flag on this so non-Apple
folks can opt out of this fix/new behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117616
With 118f966b46, Clang matches GCC's behaviour and allows enabling
-Wdeclaration-after-statement with C99 and later.
However, the check for mixing declarations and code is not a constant time
algorithm, and therefore should be guarded with Diags.isIgnored().
Furthermore, improve test coverage with: non-pedantic C89 with the
warning; C11 with the warning; and when using -Wall.
Finally, mention the changed behaviour in ReleaseNotes.rst.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117232
This patch adds support for the MSVC /HOTPATCH flag: https://docs.microsoft.com/sv-se/cpp/build/reference/hotpatch-create-hotpatchable-image?view=msvc-170&viewFallbackFrom=vs-2019
The flag is translated to a new -fms-hotpatch flag, which in turn adds a 'patchable-function' attribute for each function in the TU. This is then picked up by the PatchableFunction pass which would generate a TargetOpcode::PATCHABLE_OP of minsize = 2 (which means the target instruction must resolve to at least two bytes). TargetOpcode::PATCHABLE_OP is only implemented for x86/x64. When targetting ARM/ARM64, /HOTPATCH isn't required (instructions are always 2/4 bytes and suitable for hotpatching).
Additionally, when using /Z7, we generate a 'hot patchable' flag in the CodeView debug stream, in the S_COMPILE3 record. This flag is then picked up by LLD (or link.exe) and is used in conjunction with the linker /FUNCTIONPADMIN flag to generate extra space before each function, to accommodate for live patching long jumps. Please see: d703b92296/lld/COFF/Writer.cpp (L1298)
The outcome is that we can finally use Live++ or Recode along with clang-cl.
NOTE: It seems that MSVC cl.exe always enables /HOTPATCH on x64 by default, although if we did the same I thought we might generate sub-optimal code (if this flag was active by default). Additionally, MSVC always generates a .debug$S section and a S_COMPILE3 record, which Clang doesn't do without /Z7. Therefore, the following MSVC command-line "cl /c file.cpp" would have to be written with Clang such as "clang-cl /c file.cpp /HOTPATCH /Z7" in order to obtain the same result.
Depends on D43002, D80833 and D81301 for the full feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116511
C17 deprecated ATOMIC_VAR_INIT with the resolution of DR 485. C++
followed suit when adopting P0883R2 for C++20, but additionally chose
to deprecate ATOMIC_FLAG_INIT at the same time despite the macro still
being required in C. This patch marks both macros as deprecated when
appropriate to do so.
This style is similar to AlwaysBreak, but places closing brackets on new lines.
For example, if you have a multiline parameter list, clang-format currently only supports breaking per-parameter, but places the closing bracket on the line of the last parameter.
Function(
param1,
param2,
param3);
A style supported by other code styling tools (e.g. rustfmt) is to allow the closing brackets to be placed on their own line, aiding the user in being able to quickly infer the bounds of the block of code.
Function(
param1,
param2,
param3
);
For prior work on a similar feature, see: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33029.
Note: This currently only supports block indentation for closing parentheses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109557
This completes the implementation of
WG14 N2412 (http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2412.pdf),
which standardizes C on a twos complement representation for integer
types. The only work that remained there was to define the correct
macros in the standard headers, which this patch does.
I noticed that the following case would compile in Clang but not GCC:
void *x(void) {
void *p = &&foo;
asm goto ("# %0\n\t# %l1":"+r"(p):::foo);
foo:;
return p;
}
Changing the output template above from %l2 would compile in GCC but not
Clang.
This demonstrates that when using tied outputs (say via the "+r" output
constraint), the hidden inputs occur or are numbered BEFORE the labels,
at least with GCC.
In fact, GCC does denote this in its documentation:
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-11.2.0/gcc/Extended-Asm.html#Goto-Labels
> Output operand with constraint modifier ‘+’ is counted as two operands
> because it is considered as one output and one input operand.
For the sake of compatibility, I think it's worthwhile to just make this
change.
It's better to use symbolic names for compatibility (especially now
between released version of Clang that support asm goto with outputs).
ie. %l1 from the above would be %l[foo]. The GCC docs also make this
recommendation.
Also, I cleaned up some cruft in GCCAsmStmt::getNamedOperand. AFAICT,
NumPlusOperands was no longer used, though I couldn't find which commit
didn't clean that up correctly.
Link: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=98096
Link: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=103640
Link: https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-11.2.0/gcc/Extended-Asm.html#Goto-Labels
Reviewed By: void
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115471
Previously this was documented as having the behavior of the
"target's native float-to-int conversion". After D115804, clang
uses saturating FP cast intrinsics which have the same behavior
on all targets.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116856
This change adds an option AfterOverloadedOperator in SpaceBeforeParensOptions to add a space between overloaded operator and opening parentheses in clang-format.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116283
This commit resolves GitHub issue #45895 (Bugzilla #46550), to
add or remove empty line between definition blocks including
namespaces, classes, structs, enums and functions.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116314
This diff extends the -style=file option to allow a config file to be specified explicitly. This is useful (for instance) when adding IDE commands to reformat code to a personal style.
Usage: `clang-format -style=file:<path/to/config/file> ...`
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius, MyDeveloperDay, zwliew
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72326
Extends response file expansion to recognize `<CFGDIR>` and expand to the
current file's directory. This makes it much easier to author clang config
files rooted in portable, potentially not-installed SDK directories.
A typical use case may be something like the following:
```
# sample_sdk.cfg
--target=sample
-isystem <CFGDIR>/include
-L <CFGDIR>/lib
-T <CFGDIR>/ldscripts/link.ld
```
Reviewed By: sepavloff
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115604
This reverts commit cc56c66f27.
Fixed a bad assertion, the target of a UsingShadowDecl must not have
*local* qualifiers, but it can be a typedef whose underlying type is qualified.
Currently there's no way to find the UsingDecl that a typeloc found its
underlying type through. Compare to DeclRefExpr::getFoundDecl().
Design decisions:
- a sugar type, as there are many contexts this type of use may appear in
- UsingType is a leaf like TypedefType, the underlying type has no TypeLoc
- not unified with UnresolvedUsingType: a single name is appealing,
but being sometimes-sugar is often fiddly.
- not unified with TypedefType: the UsingShadowDecl is not a TypedefNameDecl or
even a TypeDecl, and users think of these differently.
- does not cover other rarer aliases like objc @compatibility_alias,
in order to be have a concrete API that's easy to understand.
- implicitly desugared by the hasDeclaration ASTMatcher, to avoid
breaking existing patterns and following the precedent of ElaboratedType.
Scope:
- This does not cover types associated with template names introduced by
using declarations. A future patch should introduce a sugar TemplateName
variant for this. (CTAD deduced types fall under this)
- There are enough AST matchers to fix the in-tree clang-tidy tests and
probably any other matchers, though more may be useful later.
Caveats:
- This changes a fairly common pattern in the AST people may depend on matching.
Previously, typeLoc(loc(recordType())) matched whether a struct was
referred to by its original scope or introduced via using-decl.
Now, the using-decl case is not matched, and needs a separate matcher.
This is similar to the case of typedefs but nevertheless both adds
complexity and breaks existing code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114251
In 2015-05, GCC added the configure option `--enable-default-pie`. When enabled,
* in the absence of -fno-pic/-fpie/-fpic (and their upper-case variants), -fPIE is the default.
* in the absence of -no-pie/-pie/-shared/-static/-static-pie, -pie is the default.
This has been adopted by all(?) major distros.
I think default PIE is the majority in the Linux world, but
--disable-default-pie users is not that uncommon because GCC upstream hasn't
switched the default yet (https://gcc.gnu.org/PR103398).
This patch add CLANG_DEFAULT_PIE_ON_LINUX which allows distros to use default PIE.
The option is justified as its adoption can be very high among Linux distros
to make Clang default match GCC, and is likely a future-new-default, at which
point we will remove CLANG_DEFAULT_PIE_ON_LINUX.
The lit feature `default-pie-on-linux` can be handy to exclude default PIE sensitive tests.
Reviewed By: foutrelis, sylvestre.ledru, thesamesam
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113372
Some users have a need to control attribute extension diagnostics
independent of other extension diagnostics. Consider something like use
of [[nodiscard]] within C++11:
```
[[nodiscard]]
int f();
```
If compiled with -Wc++17-extensions enabled, this will produce warning:
use of the 'nodiscard' attribute is a C++17 extension. This diagnostic
is correct -- using [[nodiscard]] in C++11 mode is a C++17 extension.
And the behavior of __has_cpp_attribute(nodiscard) is also correct --
we support [[nodiscard]] in C++11 mode as a conforming extension. But
this makes use of -Werror or -pedantic-errors` builds more onerous.
This patch adds diagnostic groups for attribute extensions so that
users can selectively disable attribute extension diagnostics. I
believe this is preferable to requiring users to specify additional
flags because it means -Wc++17-extensions continues to be the way we
enable all C++17-related extension diagnostics. It would be quite easy
for someone to use that flag thinking they're protected from some
portability issues without realizing it skipped attribute extensions if
we went the other way.
This addresses PR33518.
WG14 adopted the _ExtInt feature from Clang for C23, but renamed the
type to be _BitInt. This patch does the vast majority of the work to
rename _ExtInt to _BitInt, which accounts for most of its size. The new
type is exposed in older C modes and all C++ modes as a conforming
extension. However, there are functional changes worth calling out:
* Deprecates _ExtInt with a fix-it to help users migrate to _BitInt.
* Updates the mangling for the type.
* Updates the documentation and adds a release note to warn users what
is going on.
* Adds new diagnostics for use of _BitInt to call out when it's used as
a Clang extension or as a pre-C23 compatibility concern.
* Adds new tests for the new diagnostic behaviors.
I want to call out the ABI break specifically. We do not believe that
this break will cause a significant imposition for early adopters of
the feature, and so this is being done as a full break. If it turns out
there are critical uses where recompilation is not an option for some
reason, we can consider using ABI tags to ease the transition.
Responding to a Discord call to help {D113977} and heavily inspired by the unlanded {D34225} add some support to help coroutinues from not being formatted from
```for co_await(auto elt : seq)```
to
```
for
co_await(auto elt : seq)
```
Because of the dominance of clang-format in the C++ community, I don't think we should make it the blocker that prevents users from embracing the newer parts of the standard because we butcher the layout of some of the new constucts.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, Quuxplusone, ChuanqiXu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114859
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=52517
clang-format is butchering modules, this could easily become a barrier to entry for modules given clang-formats wide spread use.
Prevent the following from adding spaces around the `:` (cf was considering the ':' as an InheritanceColon)
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, owenpan, ChuanqiXu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114151
From GCC's manpage:
-fplugin-arg-name-key=value
Define an argument called key with a value of value for the
plugin called name.
Since we don't have a key-value pair similar to gcc's plugin_argument
struct, simply accept key=value here anyway and pass it along as-is to
plugins.
This translates to the already existing '-plugin-arg-pluginname arg'
that clang cc1 accepts.
There is an ambiguity here because in clang, both the plugin name
as well as the option name can contain dashes, so when e.g. passing
-fplugin-arg-foo-bar-foo
it is not clear whether the plugin is foo-bar and the option is foo,
or the plugin is foo and the option is bar-foo. GCC solves this by
interpreting all dashes as part of the option name. So dashes can't be
part of the plugin name in this case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113250
Operations are emulated by software emulation and “float” instructions.
This patch is allowing the support of _Float16 type without the use of
-max512fp16 flag. The final goal being, perform _Float16 emulation for
all arithmetic expressions.
The coding style of some projects requires to have more control on space
before opening parentheses.
The goal is to add the support of clang-format to more projects.
For example adding a space only for function definitions or
declarations.
This revision adds SpaceBeforeParensOptions to configure each option
independently from one another.
Differentiel Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110833
This provides better support for `LambdaCapture`s by making them first-
class and allowing them to be bindable. In addition, this implements several
`LambdaCapture`-related matchers. This does not update how lambdas are
traversed. As a result, something like trying to match `lambdaCapture()` by
itself will not work - it must be used as an inner matcher.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112491
This patch ensures that we always tune for a given CPU on AArch64
targets when the user specifies the "-mtune=xyz" flag. In the
AArch64Subtarget if the tune flag is unset we use the CPU value
instead.
I've updated the release notes here:
llvm/docs/ReleaseNotes.rst
and added tests here:
clang/test/Driver/aarch64-mtune.c
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110258
Previously, we reported the same value as for C17, now we report 202000L, which
is the same value currently used by GCC.
Once C23 ships, this value will be bumped to the correct date.
The C and C++ standards require the argument to __has_cpp_attribute and
__has_c_attribute to be expanded ([cpp.cond]p5). It would make little sense
to expand the argument to those operators but not expand the argument to
__has_attribute and __has_declspec, so those were both also changed in this
patch.
Note that it might make sense for the other builtins to also expand their
argument, but it wasn't as clear to me whether the behavior would be correct
there, and so they were left for a future revision.
Developers these days seem to argue over east vs west const like they used to argue over tabs vs whitespace or the various bracing style. These previous arguments were mainly eliminated with tools like `clang-format` that allowed those rules to become part of your style guide. Anyone who has been using clang-format in a large team over the last couple of years knows that we don't have those religious arguments any more, and code reviews are more productive.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fv--IKZFVO8https://mariusbancila.ro/blog/2018/11/23/join-the-east-const-revolution/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6s6bacI424
The purpose of this revision is to try to do the same for the East/West const discussion. Move the debate into the style guide and leave it there!
In addition to the new `ConstStyle: Right` or `ConstStyle: Left` there is an additional command-line argument `--const-style=left/right` which would allow an individual developer to switch the source back and forth to their own style for editing, and back to the committed style before commit. (you could imagine an IDE might offer such a switch)
The revision works by implementing a separate pass of the Annotated lines much like the SortIncludes and then create replacements for constant type declarations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69764
SelectionDAG will promote illegal types up to a power of 2 before
splitting down to a legal type. This will create an IntegerType
with a bit width that must be <= MAX_INT_BITS. This places an
effective upper limit on any type of 2^23 so that we don't try
create a 2^24 type.
I considered putting a fatal error somewhere in the path from
TargetLowering::getTypeConversion down to IntegerType::get, but
limiting the type in IR seemed better.
This breaks backwards compatibility with IR that is using a really
large type. I suspect such IR is going to be very rare due to the
the compile time costs such a type likely incurs.
Prevents the ICE in PR51829.
Reviewed By: efriedma, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109721
Add documentation of clang-nvlink-wrapper tool in clang.
Add it to the release notes of clang. Fix a small MSVC
warning.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109225
This change would treat the token `or` in system headers as an
identifier, and elsewhere as an operator. As reported in
llvm.org/pr42427, many users classify their third party library headers
as "system" headers to suppress warnings. There's no clean way to
separate Windows SDK headers from user headers.
Clang is still able to parse old Windows SDK headers if C++ operator
names are disabled. Traditionally this was controlled by
`-fno-operator-names`, but is now also enabled with `/permissive` since
D103773. This change will prevent `clang-cl` from parsing <query.h> from
the Windows SDK out of the box, but there are multiple ways to work
around that:
- Pass `/clang:-fno-operator-names`
- Pass `/permissive`
- Pass `-DQUERY_H_RESTRICTION_PERMISSIVE`
In all of these modes, the operator names will consistently be available
or not available, instead of depending on whether the code is in a
system header.
I added a release note for this, since it may break straightforward
users of the Windows SDK.
Fixes PR42427
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108720
Add support for the GNU C style __attribute__((error(""))) and
__attribute__((warning(""))). These attributes are meant to be put on
declarations of functions whom should not be called.
They are frequently used to provide compile time diagnostics similar to
_Static_assert, but which may rely on non-ICE conditions (ie. relying on
compiler optimizations). This is also similar to diagnose_if function
attribute, but can diagnose after optimizations have been run.
While users may instead simply call undefined functions in such cases to
get a linkage failure from the linker, these provide a much more
ergonomic and actionable diagnostic to users and do so at compile time
rather than at link time. Users instead may be able use inline asm .err
directives.
These are used throughout the Linux kernel in its implementation of
BUILD_BUG and BUILD_BUG_ON macros. These macros generally cannot be
converted to use _Static_assert because many of the parameters are not
ICEs. The Linux kernel still needs to be modified to make use of these
when building with Clang; I have a patch that does so I will send once
this feature is landed.
To do so, we create a new IR level Function attribute, "dontcall" (both
error and warning boil down to one IR Fn Attr). Then, similar to calls
to inline asm, we attach a !srcloc Metadata node to call sites of such
attributed callees.
The backend diagnoses these during instruction selection, while we still
know that a call is a call (vs say a JMP that's a tail call) in an arch
agnostic manner.
The frontend then reconstructs the SourceLocation from that Metadata,
and determines whether to emit an error or warning based on the callee's
attribute.
Link: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=16428
Link: https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/1173
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106030
This should reduce the amount of noise issued by clang for the recent-ish CUDA
versions.
Clang still does not support all the features offered by NVCC, but is expected
to handle CUDA headers and produce binaries for all GPUs supported by NVCC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108248
This implements P2362, which has not yet been approved by the
C++ committee, but because wide-multi character literals are
implementation defined, clang might not have to wait for WG21.
This change is also being applied in C mode as the behavior is
implementation-defined in C as well and there's no benefit to
having different rules between the languages.
The other part of P2362, making non-representable character
literals ill-formed, is already implemented by clang
Previously, with AllowShortEnumsOnASingleLine disabled, enums that would have otherwise fit on a single line would always put the opening brace on its own line.
This patch ensures that these enums will only put the brace on its own line if the existing attachment rules indicate that it should.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99840
Summary:
Test and produce warning for subtracting a pointer from null or subtracting
null from a pointer.
This reland adds the functionality that the warning is no longer reusing an
existing warning, it has different wording for C vs C++ to refect the fact
that nullptr-nullptr has defined behaviour in C++, it is suppressed
when the warning is triggered by a system header and adds
-Wnull-pointer-subtraction to allow the warning to be controlled. -Wextra
implies -Wnull-pointer-subtraction.
Author: Jamie Schmeiser <schmeise@ca.ibm.com>
Reviewed By: efriedma (Eli Friedman), nickdesaulniers (Nick Desaulniers)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98798
I find as I develop I'm moving between many different languages C++,C#,JavaScript all the time. As I move between the file types I like to keep `clang-format` as my formatting tool of choice. (hence why I initially added C# support in {D58404}) I know those other languages have their own tools but I have to learn them all, and I have to work out how to configure them, and they may or may not have integration into my IDE or my source code integration.
I am increasingly finding that I'm editing additional JSON files as part of my daily work and my editor and git commit hooks are just not setup to go and run [[ https://stedolan.github.io/jq/ | jq ]], So I tend to go to [[ https://jsonformatter.curiousconcept.com/ | JSON Formatter ]] and copy and paste back and forth. To get nicely formatted JSON. This is a painful process and I'd like a new one that causes me much less friction.
This has come up from time to time:
{D10543}
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/35856565/clang-format-a-json-filehttps://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=18699
I would like to stop having to do that and have formatting JSON as a first class clang-format support `Language` (even if it has minimal style settings at present).
This revision adds support for formatting JSON using the inbuilt JSON serialization library of LLVM, With limited control at present only over the indentation level
This adds an additional Language into the .clang-format file to separate the settings from your other supported languages.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93528
Currently the lambda body indents relative to where the lambda signature is located. This instead lets the user
choose to align the lambda body relative to the parent scope that contains the lambda declaration. Thus:
someFunction([] {
lambdaBody();
});
will always have the same indentation of the body even when the lambda signature goes on a new line:
someFunction(
[] {
lambdaBody();
});
whereas before lambdaBody would be indented 6 spaces.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102706
This allows to set a different indent width for preprocessor statements.
Example:
#ifdef __linux_
# define FOO
#endif
int main(void)
{
return 0;
}
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103286
This re-applies the old patch D27651, which was never landed, into the
latest "main" branch, without understanding the code. I just applied
the changes "mechanically" and made it compiling again.
This makes the right pointer alignment working as expected.
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR27353
For instance
const char* const* v1;
float const* v2;
SomeVeryLongType const& v3;
was formatted as
const char *const * v1;
float const * v2;
SomeVeryLongType const &v3;
This patch keep the *s or &s aligned to the right, next to their variable.
The above example is now formatted as
const char *const *v1;
float const *v2;
SomeVeryLongType const &v3;
It is a pity that this still does not work with clang-format in 2021,
even though there was a fix available in 2016. IMHO right pointer alignment
is the default case in C, because syntactically the pointer belongs to the
variable.
See
int* a, b, c; // wrong, just the 1st variable is a pointer
vs.
int *a, *b, *c; // right
Prominent example is the Linux kernel coding style.
Some styles argue the left pointer alignment is better and declaration
lists as shown above should be avoided. That's ok, as different projects
can use different styles, but this important style should work too.
I hope that somebody that has a better understanding about the code,
can take over this patch and land it into main.
For now I must maintain this fork to make it working for our projects.
Cheers,
Gerhard.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103245
This is a re-application of dc67299 which was reverted in f63adf5b because
it broke the build. The issue should now be fixed.
Attribution note: The original author of this patch is Erik Pilkington.
I'm only trying to land it after rebasing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91630
This inheritance list style has been widely adopted by Symantec,
a division of Broadcom Inc. It breaks after the commas that
separate the base-specifiers:
class Derived : public Base1,
private Base2
{
};
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103204
This patch adds support for GCC's -fstack-usage flag. With this flag, a stack
usage file (i.e., .su file) is generated for each input source file. The format
of the stack usage file is also similar to what is used by GCC. For each
function defined in the source file, a line with the following information is
produced in the .su file.
<source_file>:<line_number>:<function_name> <size_in_byte> <static/dynamic>
"Static" means that the function's frame size is static and the size info is an
accurate reflection of the frame size. While "dynamic" means the function's
frame size can only be determined at run-time because the function manipulates
the stack dynamically (e.g., due to variable size objects). The size info only
reflects the size of the fixed size frame objects in this case and therefore is
not a reliable measure of the total frame size.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100509
This fixes PR46992.
Git stores symlinks as text files and we should not format them even if
they have one of the requested extensions.
(Move the call to `cd_to_toplevel()` up a few lines so we can also print
the skipped symlinks during verbose output.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101878
Warn when a declaration uses an identifier that doesn't obey the reserved
identifier rule from C and/or C++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93095
A need for such an option came up in a few libc++ reviews. That's because libc++ has both code in C++03 and newer standards.
Currently, it uses `Standard: C++03` setting for clang-format, but this breaks e.g. u8"string" literals.
Also, angle brackets are the only place where C++03-specific formatting needs to be applied.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101344
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR41870.
Checks for newlines in option Style.EmptyLineBeforeAccessModifier are now based on the formatted new lines and not on the new lines in the file.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99503
This is a Clang-only change and depends on the existing "musttail"
support already implemented in LLVM.
The [[clang::musttail]] attribute goes on a return statement, not
a function definition. There are several constraints that the user
must follow when using [[clang::musttail]], and these constraints
are verified by Sema.
Tail calls are supported on regular function calls, calls through a
function pointer, member function calls, and even pointer to member.
Future work would be to throw a warning if a users tries to pass
a pointer or reference to a local variable through a musttail call.
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99517
The current logic for access modifiers in classes ignores the option 'MaxEmptyLinesToKeep=1'. It is therefore impossible to have a coding style that requests one empty line after an access modifier. The patch allows the user to configure how many empty lines clang-format should add after an access modifier. This will remove lines if there are to many and will add them if there are missing.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98237
In GCC, if `-B $prefix` is specified, `$prefix` is used to find executable files and startup files.
`$prefix/include` is added as an include search directory.
Clang overloads -B with GCC installation detection semantics which make the
behavior less predictable (due to the "largest GCC version wins" rule) and
interact poorly with --gcc-toolchain (--gcc-toolchain can be overridden by -B).
* `clang++ foo.cpp` detects GCC installation under `/usr`.
* `clang++ --gcc-toolchain=Inputs foo.cpp` detects GCC installation under `Inputs`.
* `clang++ -BA --gcc-toolchain=B foo.cpp` detects GCC installation under A and B and the larger version wins. With this patch, only B is used for detection.
* `clang++ -BA foo.cpp` detects GCC installation under `A` and `/usr`, and the larger GCC version wins. With this patch `A` is not used for detection.
This patch changes -B to drop the GCC detection semantics. Its executable
searching semantics are preserved. --gcc-toolchain is the recommended option to
specify the GCC installation detection directory.
(
Note: Clang detects GCC installation in various target dependent directories.
`$sysroot/usr` (sysroot defaults to "") is a common directory used by most targets.
Such a directory is expected to contain something like `lib{,32,64}/gcc{,-cross}/$triple`.
Clang will then construct library/include paths from the directory.
)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97993
This commit removes the old way of handling Whitesmiths mode in favor of just setting the
levels during parsing and letting the formatter handle it from there. It requires a bit of
special-casing during the parsing, but ends up a bit cleaner than before. It also removes
some of switch/case unit tests that don't really make much sense when dealing with
Whitesmiths.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94500
clang-format documentation states that having enabled
FixNamespaceComments one may expect below code:
c++
namespace a {
foo();
}
to be turned into:
c++
namespace a {
foo();
} // namespace a
In reality, no "// namespace a" was added. The problem was too high
value of kShortNamespaceMaxLines, which is used while deciding whether
a namespace is long enough to be formatted.
As with 9163fe2, clang-format idempotence is preserved.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87587
LIBCLANG_INCLUDE_CLANG_TOOLS_EXTRA causes clang-tools-extra tools
to be included in libclang, which caused a dependency cycle. The option
has been off by default for two releases now, and (based on a web search
and mailing list feedback) nobody seems to turn it on. Remove it, like
planned on https://reviews.llvm.org/D79599
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97693
Adds support for coding styles that make a separate indentation level for access modifiers, such as Code::Blocks or QtCreator.
The new option, `IndentAccessModifiers`, if enabled, forces the content inside classes, structs and unions (“records”) to be indented twice while removing a level for access modifiers. The value of `AccessModifierOffset` is disregarded in this case, aiming towards an ease of use.
======
The PR (https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=19056) had an implementation attempt by @MyDeveloperDay already (https://reviews.llvm.org/D60225) but I've decided to start from scratch. They differ in functionality, chosen approaches, and even the option name. The code tries to re-use the existing functionality to achieve this behavior, limiting possibility of breaking something else.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94661
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40858
CheckShadow is now called for each binding in the structured binding to make sure it does not shadow any other variable in scope. This does use a custom implementation of getShadowedDeclaration though because a BindingDecl is not a VarDecl
Added a few unit tests for this. In theory though all the other shadow unit tests should be duplicated for the structured binding variables too but whether it is probably not worth it as they use common code. The MyTuple and std interface code has been copied from live-bindings-test.cpp
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96147
This allows the define BasedOnStyle: InheritParentConfig and then
clang-format looks into the parent directories for their
.clang-format and takes that as a basis.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93844
Adds an option to [clang-format] which sorts headers in an alphabetical manner using case only for tie-breakers. The options is off by default in favor of the current ASCIIbetical sorting style.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95017
There are two use cases.
Assembler
We have accrued some code gated on MCAsmInfo::useIntegratedAssembler(). Some
features are supported by latest GNU as, but we have to use
MCAsmInfo::useIntegratedAs() because the newer versions have not been widely
adopted (e.g. SHF_LINK_ORDER 'o' and 'unique' linkage in 2.35, --compress-debug-sections= in 2.26).
Linker
We want to use features supported only by LLD or very new GNU ld, or don't want
to work around older GNU ld. We currently can't represent that "we don't care
about old GNU ld". You can find such workarounds in a few other places, e.g.
Mips/MipsAsmprinter.cpp PowerPC/PPCTOCRegDeps.cpp X86/X86MCInstrLower.cpp
AArch64 TLS workaround for R_AARCH64_TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_* (PR ld/18276),
R_AARCH64_TLSLE_LDST8_TPREL_LO12 (https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36727https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22969)
Mixed SHF_LINK_ORDER and non-SHF_LINK_ORDER components (supported by LLD in D84001;
GNU ld feature request https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=16833 may take a while before available).
This feature allows to garbage collect some unused sections (e.g. fragmented .gcc_except_table).
This patch adds `-fbinutils-version=` to clang and `-binutils-version` to llc.
It changes one codegen place in SHF_MERGE to demonstrate its usage.
`-fbinutils-version=2.35` means the produced object file does not care about GNU
ld<2.35 compatibility. When `-fno-integrated-as` is specified, the produced
assembly can be consumed by GNU as>=2.35, but older versions may not work.
`-fbinutils-version=none` means that we can use all ELF features, regardless of
GNU as/ld support.
Both clang and llc need `parseBinutilsVersion`. Such command line parsing is
usually implemented in `llvm/lib/CodeGen/CommandFlags.cpp` (LLVMCodeGen),
however, ClangCodeGen does not depend on LLVMCodeGen. So I add
`parseBinutilsVersion` to `llvm/lib/Target/TargetMachine.cpp` (LLVMTarget).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85474
Currently, empty lines and comments break alignment of assignments on consecutive
lines. This makes the AlignConsecutiveAssignments option an enum that allows controlling
whether empty lines or empty lines and comments should be ignored when aligning
assignments.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks, tinloaf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93986
Currently, empty lines and comments break alignment of assignments on consecutive
lines. This makes the AlignConsecutiveAssignments option an enum that allows controlling
whether empty lines or empty lines and comments should be ignored when aligning
assignments.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks, tinloaf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93986
This allows to ignore for example Qts emit when
AlignConsecutiveDeclarations is set, otherwise it is parsed as a type
and it results in some misformating:
unsigned char MyChar = 'x';
emit signal(MyChar);
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93776
GCC made the switch on 2018-04-10 ("rs6000: Enable -fasynchronous-unwind-tables by default").
In Clang, FreeBSD/NetBSD powerpc have already defaulted to -fasynchronous-unwind-tables.
This patch defaults Generic_GCC powerpc (which affects Linux) to use -fasynchronous-unwind-tables.
Reviewed By: #powerpc, nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92054
cl.exe doesn't understand Zd (in either MSVC 2017 or 2019), so neiter
should we. It used to do the same as `-gline-tables-only` which is
exposed as clang-cl flag as well, so if you want this behavior, use
`gline-tables-only`. That makes it clear that it's a clang-cl-only flag
that won't work with cl.exe.
Motivated by the discussion in D92958.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93458
RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2020-May/065430.html
Agreement from GCC: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gcc-patches/2020-May/545688.html
g_flags_Group options generally don't affect the amount of debugging
information. -gsplit-dwarf is an exception. Its order dependency with
other gN_Group options make it inconvenient in a build system:
* -g0 -gsplit-dwarf -> level 2
-gsplit-dwarf "upgrades" the amount of debugging information despite
the previous intention (-g0) to drop debugging information
* -g1 -gsplit-dwarf -> level 2
-gsplit-dwarf "upgrades" the amount of debugging information.
* If we have a higher-level -gN, -gN -gsplit-dwarf will supposedly decrease the
amount of debugging information. This happens with GCC -g3.
The non-orthogonality has confused many users. GCC 11 will change the semantics
(-gsplit-dwarf no longer implies -g2) despite the backwards compatibility break.
This patch matches its behavior.
New semantics:
* If there is a g_Group, allow split DWARF if useful
(none of: -g0, -gline-directives-only, -g1 -fno-split-dwarf-inlining)
* Otherwise, no-op.
To restore the original behavior, replace -gsplit-dwarf with -gsplit-dwarf -g.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80391
This is a starting point to improve the handling of concepts in clang-format. There is currently no real formatting of concepts and this can lead to some odd formatting, e.g.
Reviewed By: mitchell-stellar, miscco, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79773
Update the ASTNodeTraverser to dump only nodes spelled in source. There
are only a few which need to be handled, but Decl nodes for which
isImplicit() is true are handled together.
Update the RAV instances used in ASTMatchFinder to ignore the nodes too.
As with handling of template instantiations, it is necessary to allow
the RAV to process the implicit nodes because they need to be visitable
before the first traverse() matcher is encountered. An exception to
this is in the MatchChildASTVisitor, because we sometimes wish to make a
node matchable but make its children not-matchable. This is the case
for defaulted CXXMethodDecls for example.
Extend TransformerTests to illustrate the kinds of problems that can
arise when performing source code rewriting due to matching implicit
nodes.
This change accounts for handling nodes not spelled in source when using
direct matching of nodes, and when using the has() and hasDescendant()
matchers. Other matchers such as
cxxRecordDecl(hasMethod(cxxMethodDecl())) still succeed for
compiler-generated methods for example after this change. Updating the
implementations of hasMethod() and other matchers is for a follow-up
patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90982
arguments.
* Adds 'nonnull' and 'dereferenceable(N)' to 'this' pointer arguments
* Gates 'nonnull' on -f(no-)delete-null-pointer-checks
* Introduces this-nonnull.cpp and microsoft-abi-this-nullable.cpp tests to
explicitly test the behavior of this change
* Refactors hundreds of over-constrained clang tests to permit these
attributes, where needed
* Updates Clang12 patch notes mentioning this change
Reviewed-by: rsmith, jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D17993
This patch mainly made the following changes:
1. Support AVX-VNNI instructions;
2. Introduce ExplicitVEXPrefix flag so that vpdpbusd/vpdpbusds/vpdpbusds/vpdpbusds instructions only use vex-encoding when user explicity add {vex} prefix.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89105
This implements the likelihood attribute for the switch statement. Based on the
discussion in D85091 and D86559 it only handles the attribute when placed on
the case labels or the default labels.
It also marks the likelihood attribute as feature complete. There are more QoI
patches in the pipeline.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89210
As suggested by @rsmith on PR47267, by replacing the builtin_memcpy bitcast pattern with builtin_bit_cast we can use _castf32_u32, _castu32_f32, _castf64_u64 and _castu64_f64 inside constant expresssions (constexpr). Although __builtin_bit_cast was added for c++20 it works on all clang c/c++ modes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86398
This enables us to use the __builtin_rotateleft / __builtin_rotateright 8/16/32/64 intrinsics inside constexpr code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86342
This is a first step patch to enable constexpr support and testing to a large number of x86 intrinsics.
All I've done here is provide a DEFAULT_FN_ATTRS_CONSTEXPR variant to our existing DEFAULT_FN_ATTRS tag approach that adds constexpr on c++ builds. The clang cuda headers do something similar.
I've started with POPCNT mainly as its tiny and are wrappers to generic __builtin_* intrinsics which already act as constexpr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86229
This fixes an inconsistency: clang -c -gz -fno-integrated-as means SHF_COMPRESSED
while clang -c -gz -fintegrated-as means zlib-gnu.
---
Since July 15, 2015 (binutils-gdb commit
19a7fe52ae3d0971e67a134bcb1648899e21ae1c, included in 2.26), gas
--compress-debug-sections=zlib (gcc -gz) means zlib-gabi:
SHF_COMPRESSED. Before that GCC/binutils used zlib-gnu (.zdebug).
clang's -gz was introduced in rC306115 (Jun 2017) to indicate zlib-gnu. It
is 2020 now and it is not unreasonable to assume users of the new
feature to have new linkers (ld.bfd/gold >= 2.26, lld >= rLLD273661).
Change clang's default accordingly to improve standard conformance.
zlib-gnu becomes out of fashion and gets poorer toolchain support.
Its mangled names confuse tools and are more likely to cause problems.
Reviewed By: compnerd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61689
Using -fmodules-* options for PCHs is a bit confusing, so add -fpch-*
variants. Having extra options also makes it simple to do a configure
check for the feature.
Also document the options in the release notes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83623
Summary:
This feature was only used in two places, but contributed a non-trivial
amount to the complexity of RecursiveASTVisitor, and was buggy (see my
recent patches where I was fixing the bugs that I noticed). I don't
think the convenience benefit of this feature is worth the complexity.
Besides complexity, another issue with the current state of
RecursiveASTVisitor is the non-uniformity in how it handles different
AST nodes. All AST nodes follow a regular pattern, but operators are
special -- and this special behavior not documented. Correct usage of
RecursiveASTVisitor relies on shadowing member functions with specific
names and signatures. Near misses don't cause any compile-time errors,
incorrectly named or typed methods are just silently ignored. Therefore,
predictability of RecursiveASTVisitor API is quite important.
This change reduces the size of the `clang` binary by 38 KB (0.2%) in
release mode, and by 7 MB (0.3%) in debug mode. The `clang-tidy` binary
is reduced by 205 KB (0.3%) in release mode, and by 5 MB (0.4%) in debug
mode. I don't think these code size improvements are significant enough
to justify this change on its own (for me, the primary motivation is
reducing code complexity), but they I think are a nice side-effect.
Reviewers: rsmith, sammccall, ymandel, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: rsmith, sammccall, ymandel, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82921
This fixes a unit test. Otherwise here is the original commit:
1) Shared writable directories like /tmp are a security problem.
2) Systems provide dedicated cache directories these days anyway.
3) This also refines LLVM's cache_directory() on Darwin platforms to use
the Darwin per-user cache directory.
Reviewers: compnerd, aprantl, jakehehrlich, espindola, respindola, ilya-biryukov, pcc, sammccall
Reviewed By: compnerd, sammccall
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82362
1) Shared writable directories like /tmp are a security problem.
2) Systems provide dedicated cache directories these days anyway.
3) This also refines LLVM's cache_directory() on Darwin platforms to use
the Darwin per-user cache directory.
Reviewers: compnerd, aprantl, jakehehrlich, espindola, respindola, ilya-biryukov, pcc, sammccall
Reviewed By: compnerd, sammccall
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82362
And bump its version number accordingly.
This is a patched recommit of 7c298c104b
Previous hash implementation was incorrectly passing an uint64_t, that got converted
to an uint8_t, to finalize the hash computation. This led to different functions
having the same hash if they only differ by the remaining statements, which is
incorrect.
Added a new test case that trivially tests that a small function change is
reflected in the hash value.
Not that as this patch fixes the hash computation, it would invalidate all hashes
computed before that patch applies, this is why we bumped the version number.
Update profile data hash entries due to hash function update, except for binary
version, in which case we keep the buggy behavior for backward compatibility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79961
This makes many scenarios simpler by not requiring the user to write
ignoringImplicit() all the time, nor to account for non-visible
cxxConstructExpr() and cxxMemberCalExpr() nodes. This is also, in part,
inclusive of the equivalent of adding a use of ignoringParenImpCasts()
between all expr()-related matchers in an expression.
The pre-existing traverse(TK_AsIs, ...) matcher can be used to explcitly
match on implicit/invisible nodes. See
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-December/064143.html
for more
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72534
Summary:
Its currently not possible to recreate the GNU style using the `BreakBeforeBraces: Custom` style due to a lack of missing `BeforeWhile` in the `BraceWrappingFlags`
The following request was raised to add `BeforeWhile` in a `do..while` context like `BeforeElse` and `BeforeCatch` to give greater control over the positioning of the `while`
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42164
Reviewers: krasimir, mitchell-stellar, sammccall
Reviewed By: krasimir
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #clang-format
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79325
Summary:
The following revision follows D80115 since @MyDeveloperDay and I apparently both had the same idea at the same time, for https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45816 and my efforts on tooling support for AMDVLK, respectively.
This option aligns adjacent bitfield separators across lines, in a manner similar to AlignConsecutiveAssignments and friends.
Example:
```
struct RawFloat {
uint32_t sign : 1;
uint32_t exponent : 8;
uint32_t mantissa : 23;
};
```
would become
```
struct RawFloat {
uint32_t sign : 1;
uint32_t exponent : 8;
uint32_t mantissa : 23;
};
```
This also handles c++2a style bitfield-initializers with AlignConsecutiveAssignments.
```
struct RawFloat {
uint32_t sign : 1 = 0;
uint32_t exponent : 8 = 127;
uint32_t mantissa : 23 = 0;
}; // defaults to 1.0f
```
Things this change does not do:
- Align multiple comma-chained bitfield variables. None of the other
AlignConsecutive* options seem to implement that either.
- Detect bitfields that have a width specified with something other
than a numeric literal (ie, `int a : SOME_MACRO;`). That'd be fairly
difficult to parse and is rare.
Patch By: JakeMerdichAMD
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Subscribers: cfe-commits, MyDeveloperDay
Tags: #clang, #clang-format
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80176
Based on the discussion on D55415, also make the flag default to false.
Having libclang depend on clang-tools-extra means check-clang builds all
of clang-tools-extra, which besides being a layering violation takes
quite some time, since clang-tools-extra has many files that are slow
to compile.
Longer term, we likely will want to remove this flag completely. If
people need this functionality, maybe there could be a
libclang-tools-extra that's libclang + clang-tidy and
clang-includes-fixer linked in.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79599
Prior to this change, for a few compiler-rt libraries such as ubsan and
the profile library, Clang would embed "-defaultlib:path/to/rt-arch.lib"
into the .drective section of every object compiled with
-finstr-profile-generate or -fsanitize=ubsan as appropriate.
These paths assume that the link step will run from the same working
directory as the compile step. There is also evidence that sometimes the
paths become absolute, such as when clang is run from a different drive
letter from the current working directory. This is fragile, and I'd like
to get away from having paths embedded in the object if possible. Long
ago it was suggested that we use this for ASan, and apparently I felt
the same way back then:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D4428#56536
This is also consistent with how all other autolinking usage works for
PS4, Mac, and Windows: they all use basenames, not paths.
To keep things working for people using the standard GCC driver
workflow, the driver now adds the resource directory to the linker
library search path when it calls the linker. This is enough to make
check-ubsan pass, and seems like a generally good thing.
Users that invoke the linker directly (most clang-cl users) will have to
add clang's resource library directory to their linker search path in
their build system. I'm not sure where I can document this. Ideally I'd
also do it in the MSBuild files, but I can't figure out where they go.
I'd like to start with this for now.
Reviewed By: hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65543
Summary:
This change mentions CDE assembly in the LLVM release notes and CDE
intrinsics in both Clang and LLVM release notes.
Reviewers: kristof.beyls, simon_tatham
Reviewed By: kristof.beyls
Subscribers: danielkiss, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78481
Summary:
This flag has been deprecated, with an on-by-default warning encouraging
users to explicitly specify whether they mean "all" or ubsan for 5 years
(released in Clang 3.7). Change it to mean what we wanted and
undeprecate it.
Also make the argument to -fsanitize-trap optional, and likewise default
it to 'all', and express the aliases for these flags in the .td file
rather than in code. (Plus documentation updates for the above.)
Reviewers: kcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77753
This reverts commit 61ba1481e2.
I'm reverting this because it breaks the lldb build with
incomplete switch coverage warnings. I would fix it forward,
but am not familiar enough with lldb to determine the correct
fix.
lldb/source/Plugins/TypeSystem/Clang/TypeSystemClang.cpp:3958:11: error: enumeration values 'DependentExtInt' and 'ExtInt' not handled in switch [-Werror,-Wswitch]
switch (qual_type->getTypeClass()) {
^
lldb/source/Plugins/TypeSystem/Clang/TypeSystemClang.cpp:4633:11: error: enumeration values 'DependentExtInt' and 'ExtInt' not handled in switch [-Werror,-Wswitch]
switch (qual_type->getTypeClass()) {
^
lldb/source/Plugins/TypeSystem/Clang/TypeSystemClang.cpp:4889:11: error: enumeration values 'DependentExtInt' and 'ExtInt' not handled in switch [-Werror,-Wswitch]
switch (qual_type->getTypeClass()) {
Introduction/Motivation:
LLVM-IR supports integers of non-power-of-2 bitwidth, in the iN syntax.
Integers of non-power-of-two aren't particularly interesting or useful
on most hardware, so much so that no language in Clang has been
motivated to expose it before.
However, in the case of FPGA hardware normal integer types where the
full bitwidth isn't used, is extremely wasteful and has severe
performance/space concerns. Because of this, Intel has introduced this
functionality in the High Level Synthesis compiler[0]
under the name "Arbitrary Precision Integer" (ap_int for short). This
has been extremely useful and effective for our users, permitting them
to optimize their storage and operation space on an architecture where
both can be extremely expensive.
We are proposing upstreaming a more palatable version of this to the
community, in the form of this proposal and accompanying patch. We are
proposing the syntax _ExtInt(N). We intend to propose this to the WG14
committee[1], and the underscore-capital seems like the active direction
for a WG14 paper's acceptance. An alternative that Richard Smith
suggested on the initial review was __int(N), however we believe that
is much less acceptable by WG14. We considered _Int, however _Int is
used as an identifier in libstdc++ and there is no good way to fall
back to an identifier (since _Int(5) is indistinguishable from an
unnamed initializer of a template type named _Int).
[0]https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/software/programmable/quartus-prime/hls-compiler.html)
[1]http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2472.pdf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73967
Summary:
The next release of LLVM will support the full ACLE spec for MVE intrinsics,
so it's worth saying so in the release notes.
Reviewers: kristof.beyls
Reviewed By: kristof.beyls
Subscribers: cfe-commits, hans, dmgreen, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76513
Summary:
The parsing of GNU C extended asm statements was a little brittle and
had a few issues:
- It was using Parse::ParseTypeQualifierListOpt to parse the `volatile`
qualifier. That parser is really meant for TypeQualifiers; an asm
statement doesn't really have a type qualifier. This is still maybe
nice to have, but not necessary. We now can check for the `volatile`
token by properly expanding the grammer, rather than abusing
Parse::ParseTypeQualifierListOpt.
- The parsing of `goto` was position dependent, so `asm goto volatile`
wouldn't parse. The qualifiers should be position independent to one
another. Now they are.
- We would warn on duplicate `volatile`, but the parse error for
duplicate `goto` was a generic parse error and wasn't clear.
- We need to add support for the recent GNU C extension `asm inline`.
Adding support to the parser with the above issues highlighted the
need for this refactoring.
Link: https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Extended-Asm.html
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: aheejin, jfb, nathanchance, cfe-commits, echristo, efriedma, rsmith, chandlerc, craig.topper, erichkeane, jyu2, void, srhines
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75563
Summary:
This diff extends the -style=file option to allow a config file to be specified explicitly. This is useful (for instance) when adding IDE commands to reformat code to a personal style.
Reviewers: djasper, ioeric, krasimir, MyDeveloperDay
Reviewed by: MyDeveloperDay
Contributed by: tnorth
Subscribers: cfe-commits, lebedev.ri, MyDeveloperDay, klimek, sammccall, mitchell-stellar
Tags: #clang, #clang-format
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72326
After a first attempt to fix the test-suite failures, my first recommit
caused the same failures again. I had updated CMakeList.txt files of
tests that needed -fcommon, but it turns out that there are also
Makefiles which are used by some bots, so I've updated these Makefiles
now too.
See the original commit message for more details on this change:
0a9fc9233e
This includes fixes for:
- test-suite: some benchmarks need to be compiled with -fcommon, see D75557.
- compiler-rt: one test needed -fcommon, and another a change, see D75520.
This reverts commit 0a9fc9233e.
Going to look at the asan failures.
I find the failures in the test suite weird, because they look
like compile time test and I don't understand how that can be
failing, but will have a brief look at that too.
This makes -fno-common the default for all targets because this has performance
and code-size benefits and is more language conforming for C code.
Additionally, GCC10 also defaults to -fno-common and so we get consistent
behaviour with GCC.
With this change, C code that uses tentative definitions as definitions of a
variable in multiple translation units will trigger multiple-definition linker
errors. Generally, this occurs when the use of the extern keyword is neglected
in the declaration of a variable in a header file. In some cases, no specific
translation unit provides a definition of the variable. The previous behavior
can be restored by specifying -fcommon.
As GCC has switched already, we benefit from applications already being ported
and existing documentation how to do this. For example:
- https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-10/porting_to.html
- https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Gcc_10_porting_notes/fno_common
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75056
Converting a pointer to an integer whose result cannot represented in the
integer type is undefined behavior is C and prohibited in C++. C++ already
has a diagnostic when casting. This adds a diagnostic for C.
Since this diagnostic uses the range of the conversion it also modifies
int-to-pointer-cast diagnostic to use a range.
Fixes PR8718: No warning on casting between pointer and non-pointer-sized int
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72231
This option add a line break then a lambda is inside a function call.
Reviewers : djasper, klimek, krasimir, MyDeveloperDay
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44609
Implement protection against the stack clash attack [0] through inline stack
probing.
Probe stack allocation every PAGE_SIZE during frame lowering or dynamic
allocation to make sure the page guard, if any, is touched when touching the
stack, in a similar manner to GCC[1].
This extends the existing `probe-stack' mechanism with a special value `inline-asm'.
Technically the former uses function call before stack allocation while this
patch provides inlined stack probes and chunk allocation.
Only implemented for x86.
[0] https://www.qualys.com/2017/06/19/stack-clash/stack-clash.txt
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2017-07/msg00556.html
This a recommit of 39f50da2a3 with proper LiveIn
declaration, better option handling and more portable testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
Implement protection against the stack clash attack [0] through inline stack
probing.
Probe stack allocation every PAGE_SIZE during frame lowering or dynamic
allocation to make sure the page guard, if any, is touched when touching the
stack, in a similar manner to GCC[1].
This extends the existing `probe-stack' mechanism with a special value `inline-asm'.
Technically the former uses function call before stack allocation while this
patch provides inlined stack probes and chunk allocation.
Only implemented for x86.
[0] https://www.qualys.com/2017/06/19/stack-clash/stack-clash.txt
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2017-07/msg00556.html
This a recommit of 39f50da2a3 with proper LiveIn
declaration, better option handling and more portable testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
Implement protection against the stack clash attack [0] through inline stack
probing.
Probe stack allocation every PAGE_SIZE during frame lowering or dynamic
allocation to make sure the page guard, if any, is touched when touching the
stack, in a similar manner to GCC[1].
This extends the existing `probe-stack' mechanism with a special value `inline-asm'.
Technically the former uses function call before stack allocation while this
patch provides inlined stack probes and chunk allocation.
Only implemented for x86.
[0] https://www.qualys.com/2017/06/19/stack-clash/stack-clash.txt
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2017-07/msg00556.html
This a recommit of 39f50da2a3 with better option
handling and more portable testing
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
Summary:
Due to a recent (but retroactive) C++ rule change, only sufficiently
C-compatible classes are permitted to be given a typedef name for
linkage purposes. Add an enabled-by-default warning for these cases, and
rephrase our existing error for the case where we encounter the typedef
name for linkage after we've already computed and used a wrong linkage
in terms of the new rule.
Reviewers: rjmccall
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74103
Implement protection against the stack clash attack [0] through inline stack
probing.
Probe stack allocation every PAGE_SIZE during frame lowering or dynamic
allocation to make sure the page guard, if any, is touched when touching the
stack, in a similar manner to GCC[1].
This extends the existing `probe-stack' mechanism with a special value `inline-asm'.
Technically the former uses function call before stack allocation while this
patch provides inlined stack probes and chunk allocation.
Only implemented for x86.
[0] https://www.qualys.com/2017/06/19/stack-clash/stack-clash.txt
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2017-07/msg00556.html
This a recommit of 39f50da2a3 with correct option
flags set.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
This reverts commit 39f50da2a3.
The -fstack-clash-protection is being passed to the linker too, which
is not intended.
Reverting and fixing that in a later commit.
Implement protection against the stack clash attack [0] through inline stack
probing.
Probe stack allocation every PAGE_SIZE during frame lowering or dynamic
allocation to make sure the page guard, if any, is touched when touching the
stack, in a similar manner to GCC[1].
This extends the existing `probe-stack' mechanism with a special value `inline-asm'.
Technically the former uses function call before stack allocation while this
patch provides inlined stack probes and chunk allocation.
Only implemented for x86.
[0] https://www.qualys.com/2017/06/19/stack-clash/stack-clash.txt
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2017-07/msg00556.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
Summary:
From `clang-format` version 3.7.0 and up, , there is no way to keep following format of ObjectiveC block:
```
- (void)_aMethod
{
[self.test1 t:self w:self callback:^(typeof(self) self, NSNumber *u, NSNumber *v) {
u = c;
}]
}
```
Regardless of the change in `.clang-format` configuration file, all parameters will be lined up so that colons will be on the same column, like following:
```
- (void)_aMethod
{
[self.test1 t:self
w:self
callback:^(typeof(self) self, NSNumber *u, NSNumber *v) {
u = c;
}]
}
```
Considering with ObjectiveC, the first code style is cleaner & more readable for some people, I've added a config option: `ObjCDontBreakBeforeNestedBlockParam` (boolean) so that if it is enable, the first code style will be favored.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Patch By: ghvg1313
Tags: #clang, #clang-format
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70926
Summary:
The documentation for IndentCaseLabels claimed that the "Switch
statement body is always indented one level more than case labels". This
is technically false for the code block immediately following the label.
Its closing bracket aligns with the start of the label.
If the case label are not indented, it leads to a style where the
closing bracket of the block aligns with the closing bracket of the
switch statement, which can be hard to parse.
This change introduces a new option, IndentCaseBlocks, which when true
treats the block as a scope block (which it technically is).
(Note: regenerated ClangFormatStyleOptions.rst using tools/dump_style.py)
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Patch By: capn
Tags: #clang-format, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72276
Flags are clang's default UI is flags.
We can have an env var in addition to that, but in D69825 nobody has yet
mentioned why this needs an env var, so omit it for now. If someone
needs to set the flag via env var, the existing CCC_OVERRIDE_OPTIONS
mechanism works for it (set CCC_OVERRIDE_OPTIONS=+-fno-integrated-cc1
for example).
Also mention the cc1-in-process change in the release notes.
Also spruce up the test a bit so it actually tests something :)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72769
D39317 made clang use .init_array when no gcc installations is found.
This change changes all gcc installations to use .init_array .
GCC 4.7 by default stopped providing .ctors/.dtors compatible crt files,
and stopped emitting .ctors for __attribute__((constructor)).
.init_array should always work.
FreeBSD rules are moved to FreeBSD.cpp to make Generic_ELF rules clean.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71434
Summary:
Implicit Conversion Sanitizer is *almost* feature complete.
There aren't *that* much unsanitized things left,
two major ones are increment/decrement (this patch) and bit fields.
As it was discussed in
[[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39519 | PR39519 ]],
unlike `CompoundAssignOperator` (which is promoted internally),
or `BinaryOperator` (for which we always have promotion/demotion in AST)
or parts of `UnaryOperator` (we have promotion/demotion but only for
certain operations), for inc/dec, clang omits promotion/demotion
altogether, under as-if rule.
This is technically correct: https://rise4fun.com/Alive/zPgD
As it can be seen in `InstCombineCasts.cpp` `canEvaluateTruncated()`,
`add`/`sub`/`mul`/`and`/`or`/`xor` operators can all arbitrarily
be extended or truncated:
901cd3b3f6/llvm/lib/Transforms/InstCombine/InstCombineCasts.cpp (L1320-L1334)
But that has serious implications:
1. Since we no longer model implicit casts, do we pessimise
their AST representation and everything that uses it?
2. There is no demotion, so lossy demotion sanitizer does not trigger :]
Now, i'm not going to argue about the first problem here,
but the second one **needs** to be addressed. As it was stated
in the report, this is done intentionally, so changing
this in all modes would be considered a penalization/regression.
Which means, the sanitization-less codegen must not be altered.
It was also suggested to not change the sanitized codegen
to the one with demotion, but i quite strongly believe
that will not be the wise choice here:
1. One will need to re-engineer the check that the inc/dec was lossy
in terms of `@llvm.{u,s}{add,sub}.with.overflow` builtins
2. We will still need to compute the result we would lossily demote.
(i.e. the result of wide `add`ition/`sub`traction)
3. I suspect it would need to be done right here, in sanitization.
Which kinda defeats the point of
using `@llvm.{u,s}{add,sub}.with.overflow` builtins:
we'd have two `add`s with basically the same arguments,
one of which is used for check+error-less codepath and other one
for the error reporting. That seems worse than a single wide op+check.
4. OR, we would need to do that in the compiler-rt handler.
Which means we'll need a whole new handler.
But then what about the `CompoundAssignOperator`,
it would also be applicable for it.
So this also doesn't really seem like the right path to me.
5. At least X86 (but likely others) pessimizes all sub-`i32` operations
(due to partial register stalls), so even if we avoid promotion+demotion,
the computations will //likely// be performed in `i32` anyways.
So i'm not really seeing much benefit of
not doing the straight-forward thing.
While looking into this, i have noticed a few more LLVM middle-end
missed canonicalizations, and filed
[[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44100 | PR44100 ]],
[[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44102 | PR44102 ]].
Those are not specific to inc/dec, we also have them for
`CompoundAssignOperator`, and it can happen for normal arithmetics, too.
But if we take some other path in the patch, it will not be applicable
here, and we will have most likely played ourselves.
TLDR: front-end should emit canonical, easy-to-optimize yet
un-optimized code. It is middle-end's job to make it optimal.
I'm really hoping reviewers agree with my personal assessment
of the path this patch should take..
This originally landed in 9872ea4ed1
but got immediately reverted in cbfa237892
because the assertion was faulty. That fault ended up being caused
by the enum - while there will be promotion, both types are unsigned,
with same width. So we still don't need to sanitize non-signed cases.
So far. Maybe the assert will tell us this isn't so.
Fixes [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44054 | PR44054 ]].
Refs. https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/940
Reviewers: rjmccall, erichkeane, rsmith, vsk
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, #sanitizers, llvm-commits, aaron.ballman, t.p.northover, efriedma, regehr
Tags: #llvm, #clang, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70539
The asssertion that was added does not hold,
breaks on test-suite/MultiSource/Applications/SPASS/analyze.c
Will reduce the testcase and revisit.
This reverts commit 9872ea4ed1, 870f3542d3.
Summary:
Implicit Conversion Sanitizer is *almost* feature complete.
There aren't *that* much unsanitized things left,
two major ones are increment/decrement (this patch) and bit fields.
As it was discussed in
[[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39519 | PR39519 ]],
unlike `CompoundAssignOperator` (which is promoted internally),
or `BinaryOperator` (for which we always have promotion/demotion in AST)
or parts of `UnaryOperator` (we have promotion/demotion but only for
certain operations), for inc/dec, clang omits promotion/demotion
altogether, under as-if rule.
This is technically correct: https://rise4fun.com/Alive/zPgD
As it can be seen in `InstCombineCasts.cpp` `canEvaluateTruncated()`,
`add`/`sub`/`mul`/`and`/`or`/`xor` operators can all arbitrarily
be extended or truncated:
901cd3b3f6/llvm/lib/Transforms/InstCombine/InstCombineCasts.cpp (L1320-L1334)
But that has serious implications:
1. Since we no longer model implicit casts, do we pessimise
their AST representation and everything that uses it?
2. There is no demotion, so lossy demotion sanitizer does not trigger :]
Now, i'm not going to argue about the first problem here,
but the second one **needs** to be addressed. As it was stated
in the report, this is done intentionally, so changing
this in all modes would be considered a penalization/regression.
Which means, the sanitization-less codegen must not be altered.
It was also suggested to not change the sanitized codegen
to the one with demotion, but i quite strongly believe
that will not be the wise choice here:
1. One will need to re-engineer the check that the inc/dec was lossy
in terms of `@llvm.{u,s}{add,sub}.with.overflow` builtins
2. We will still need to compute the result we would lossily demote.
(i.e. the result of wide `add`ition/`sub`traction)
3. I suspect it would need to be done right here, in sanitization.
Which kinda defeats the point of
using `@llvm.{u,s}{add,sub}.with.overflow` builtins:
we'd have two `add`s with basically the same arguments,
one of which is used for check+error-less codepath and other one
for the error reporting. That seems worse than a single wide op+check.
4. OR, we would need to do that in the compiler-rt handler.
Which means we'll need a whole new handler.
But then what about the `CompoundAssignOperator`,
it would also be applicable for it.
So this also doesn't really seem like the right path to me.
5. At least X86 (but likely others) pessimizes all sub-`i32` operations
(due to partial register stalls), so even if we avoid promotion+demotion,
the computations will //likely// be performed in `i32` anyways.
So i'm not really seeing much benefit of
not doing the straight-forward thing.
While looking into this, i have noticed a few more LLVM middle-end
missed canonicalizations, and filed
[[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44100 | PR44100 ]],
[[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44102 | PR44102 ]].
Those are not specific to inc/dec, we also have them for
`CompoundAssignOperator`, and it can happen for normal arithmetics, too.
But if we take some other path in the patch, it will not be applicable
here, and we will have most likely played ourselves.
TLDR: front-end should emit canonical, easy-to-optimize yet
un-optimized code. It is middle-end's job to make it optimal.
I'm really hoping reviewers agree with my personal assessment
of the path this patch should take..
Fixes [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44054 | PR44054 ]].
Reviewers: rjmccall, erichkeane, rsmith, vsk
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, #sanitizers, llvm-commits, aaron.ballman, t.p.northover, efriedma, regehr
Tags: #llvm, #clang, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70539
For RISC-V the value provided to -march should determine whether to
compile for 32- or 64-bit RISC-V irrespective of the target provided to
the Clang driver. This adds a test for this flag for RISC-V and sets the
Target architecture correctly in these cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54214
Summary:
Clang/LLVM is a cross-compiler, and so we don't have to make a choice
about `-march`/`-mabi` at build-time, but we may have to compute a
default `-march`/`-mabi` when compiling a program. Until now, each
place that has needed a default `-march` has calculated one itself.
This patch adds a single place where a default `-march` is calculated,
in order to avoid calculating different defaults in different places.
This patch adds a new function `riscv::getRISCVArch` which encapsulates
this logic based on GCC's for computing a default `-march` value
when none is provided. This patch also updates the logic in
`riscv::getRISCVABI` to match the logic in GCC's build system for
computing a default `-mabi`.
This patch also updates anywhere that `-march` is used to now use the
new function which can compute a default. In particular, we now
explicitly pass a `-march` value down to the gnu assembler.
GCC has convoluted logic in its build system to choose a default
`-march`/`-mabi` based on build options, which would be good to match.
This patch is based on the logic in GCC 9.2.0. This commit's logic is
different to GCC's only for baremetal targets, where we default
to rv32imac/ilp32 or rv64imac/lp64 depending on the target triple.
Tests have been updated to match the new logic.
Reviewers: asb, luismarques, rogfer01, kito-cheng, khchen
Reviewed By: asb, luismarques
Subscribers: sameer.abuasal, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, shiva0217, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, rkruppe, PkmX, jocewei, psnobl, benna, Jim, s.egerton, pzheng, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69383
Summary:
By additional regex match, grouping of main include can be enabled in files that are not normally considered as a C/C++ source code.
For example, this might be useful in templated code, where template implementations are being held in *Impl.hpp files.
On the occassion, 'assume-filename' option description was reworded as it was misleading. It has nothing to do with `style=file` option and it does not influence sourced style filename.
Reviewers: rsmith, ioeric, krasimir, sylvestre.ledru, MyDeveloperDay
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Subscribers: MyDeveloperDay, cfe-commits
Patch by: furdyna
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67750
-mvzeroupper will force the vzeroupper insertion pass to run on
CPUs that normally wouldn't. -mno-vzeroupper disables it on CPUs
where it normally runs.
To support this with the default feature handling in clang, we
need a vzeroupper feature flag in X86.td. Since this flag has
the opposite polarity of the fast-partial-ymm-or-zmm-write we
used to use to disable the pass, we now need to add this new
flag to every CPU except KNL/KNM and BTVER2 to keep identical
behavior.
Remove -fast-partial-ymm-or-zmm-write which is no longer used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69786
Taking a value and the bitwise-or it with a non-zero constant will always
result in a non-zero value. In a boolean context, this is always true.
if (x | 0x4) {} // always true, intended '&'
This patch creates a new warning group -Wtautological-bitwise-compare for this
warning. It also moves in the existing tautological bitwise comparisons into
this group. A few other changes were needed to the CFGBuilder so that all bool
contexts would be checked. The warnings in -Wtautological-bitwise-compare will
be off by default due to using the CFG.
Fixes: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42666
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66046
llvm-svn: 375318
I noticed that compiling on Windows with -fno-ms-compatibility had the
side effect of defining __GNUC__, along with __GNUG__, __GXX_RTTI__, and
a number of other macros for GCC compatibility. This is undesirable and
causes Chromium to do things like mix __attribute__ and __declspec,
which doesn't work. We should have a positive language option to enable
GCC compatibility features so that we can experiment with
-fno-ms-compatibility on Windows. This change adds -fgnuc-version= to be
that option.
My issue aside, users have, for a long time, reported that __GNUC__
doesn't match their expectations in one way or another. We have
encouraged users to migrate code away from this macro, but new code
continues to be written assuming a GCC-only environment. There's really
nothing we can do to stop that. By adding this flag, we can allow them
to choose their own adventure with __GNUC__.
This overlaps a bit with the "GNUMode" language option from -std=gnu*.
The gnu language mode tends to enable non-conforming behaviors that we'd
rather not enable by default, but the we want to set things like
__GXX_RTTI__ by default, so I've kept these separate.
Helps address PR42817
Reviewed By: hans, nickdesaulniers, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68055
llvm-svn: 374449
Summary:
Quote from http://eel.is/c++draft/expr.add#4:
```
4 When an expression J that has integral type is added to or subtracted
from an expression P of pointer type, the result has the type of P.
(4.1) If P evaluates to a null pointer value and J evaluates to 0,
the result is a null pointer value.
(4.2) Otherwise, if P points to an array element i of an array object x with n
elements ([dcl.array]), the expressions P + J and J + P
(where J has the value j) point to the (possibly-hypothetical) array
element i+j of x if 0≤i+j≤n and the expression P - J points to the
(possibly-hypothetical) array element i−j of x if 0≤i−j≤n.
(4.3) Otherwise, the behavior is undefined.
```
Therefore, as per the standard, applying non-zero offset to `nullptr`
(or making non-`nullptr` a `nullptr`, by subtracting pointer's integral value
from the pointer itself) is undefined behavior. (*if* `nullptr` is not defined,
i.e. e.g. `-fno-delete-null-pointer-checks` was *not* specified.)
To make things more fun, in C (6.5.6p8), applying *any* offset to null pointer
is undefined, although Clang front-end pessimizes the code by not lowering
that info, so this UB is "harmless".
Since rL369789 (D66608 `[InstCombine] icmp eq/ne (gep inbounds P, Idx..), null -> icmp eq/ne P, null`)
LLVM middle-end uses those guarantees for transformations.
If the source contains such UB's, said code may now be miscompiled.
Such miscompilations were already observed:
* https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20190826/687838.html
* https://github.com/google/filament/pull/1566
Surprisingly, UBSan does not catch those issues
... until now. This diff teaches UBSan about these UB's.
`getelementpointer inbounds` is a pretty frequent instruction,
so this does have a measurable impact on performance;
I've addressed most of the obvious missing folds (and thus decreased the performance impact by ~5%),
and then re-performed some performance measurements using my [[ https://github.com/darktable-org/rawspeed | RawSpeed ]] benchmark:
(all measurements done with LLVM ToT, the sanitizer never fired.)
* no sanitization vs. existing check: average `+21.62%` slowdown
* existing check vs. check after this patch: average `22.04%` slowdown
* no sanitization vs. this patch: average `48.42%` slowdown
Reviewers: vsk, filcab, rsmith, aaron.ballman, vitalybuka, rjmccall, #sanitizers
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, nickdesaulniers, nikic, ychen, dtzWill, xbolva00, dberris, arphaman, rupprecht, reames, regehr, llvm-commits, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #sanitizers, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67122
llvm-svn: 374293
This matches how GCC handles it, see e.g. https://gcc.godbolt.org/z/HPplnl.
GCC documents the gnu_inline attribute with "In C++, this attribute does
not depend on extern in any way, but it still requires the inline keyword
to enable its special behavior."
The previous behaviour of gnu_inline in C++, without the extern
keyword, can be traced back to the original commit that added
support for gnu_inline, SVN r69045.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67414
llvm-svn: 373078
-Wtautological-overlap-compare and self-comparison from -Wtautological-compare
relay on detecting the same operand in different locations. Previously, each
warning had it's own operand checker. Now, both are merged together into
one function that each can call. The function also now looks through member
access and array accesses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66045
llvm-svn: 372453
Allow this warning to detect a larger number of constant values, including
negative numbers, and handle non-int types better.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66044
llvm-svn: 372448
AVX512 instructions can cause a frequency drop on these CPUs. This
can negate the performance gains from using wider vectors. Enabling
prefer-vector-width=256 will prevent generation of zmm registers
unless explicit 512 bit operations are used in the original source
code.
I believe gcc and icc both do something similar to this by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67259
llvm-svn: 371694
As far as I can tell, gcc passes 256/512 bit vectors __int128 in memory. And passes a vector of 1 _int128 in an xmm register. The backend considers <X x i128> as an illegal type and will scalarize any arguments with that type. So we need to coerce the argument types in the frontend to match to avoid the illegal type.
I'm restricting this to change to Linux and NetBSD based on the
how similar ABI changes have been handled in the past.
PS4, FreeBSD, and Darwin are unaffected. I've also added a
new -fclang-abi-compat version to restore the old behavior.
This issue was identified in PR42607. Though even with the types changed, we still seem to be doing some unnecessary stack realignment.
llvm-svn: 371169
-Deprecate -mmpx and -mno-mpx command line options
-Remove CPUID detection of mpx for -march=native
-Remove MPX from all CPUs
-Remove MPX preprocessor define
I've left the "mpx" string in the backend so we don't fail on old IR, but its not connected to anything.
gcc has also deprecated these command line options. https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=GCC-Patch-To-Drop-MPX
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66669
llvm-svn: 370393
This broke compiling some ASan tests with never versions of MSVC/the Win
SDK, see https://crbug.com/996675
> MSVC 2017 update 3 (_MSC_VER 1911) enables /Zc:twoPhase by default, and
> so should clang-cl:
> https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/reference/zc-twophase
>
> clang-cl takes the MSVC version it emulates from the -fmsc-version flag,
> or if that's not passed it tries to check what the installed version of
> MSVC is and uses that, and failing that it uses a default version that's
> currently 1911. So this changes the default if no -fmsc-version flag is
> passed and no installed MSVC is detected. (It also changes the default
> if -fmsc-version is passed or MSVC is detected, and either indicates
> _MSC_VER >= 1911.)
>
> As mentioned in the MSDN article, the Windows SDK header files in
> version 10.0.15063.0 (Creators Update or Redstone 2) and earlier
> versions do not work correctly with /Zc:twoPhase. If you need to use
> these old SDKs with a new clang-cl, explicitly pass /Zc:twoPhase- to get
> the old behavior.
>
> Fixes PR43032.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66394
llvm-svn: 369647
MSVC 2017 update 3 (_MSC_VER 1911) enables /Zc:twoPhase by default, and
so should clang-cl:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/reference/zc-twophase
clang-cl takes the MSVC version it emulates from the -fmsc-version flag,
or if that's not passed it tries to check what the installed version of
MSVC is and uses that, and failing that it uses a default version that's
currently 1911. So this changes the default if no -fmsc-version flag is
passed and no installed MSVC is detected. (It also changes the default
if -fmsc-version is passed or MSVC is detected, and either indicates
_MSC_VER >= 1911.)
As mentioned in the MSDN article, the Windows SDK header files in
version 10.0.15063.0 (Creators Update or Redstone 2) and earlier
versions do not work correctly with /Zc:twoPhase. If you need to use
these old SDKs with a new clang-cl, explicitly pass /Zc:twoPhase- to get
the old behavior.
Fixes PR43032.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66394
llvm-svn: 369402
Some targets such as Python 2.7.16 still use VERSION in
their builds. Without VERSION defined, the source code
has syntax errors.
Reverting as it will probably break many other things.
Noticed by Sterling Augustine
llvm-svn: 365992
Summary:
It has been introduced in 2011 for gcc compat:
ad1a4c6e89
it is probably time to remove it
Reviewers: rnk, dexonsmith
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: dschuff, aheejin, fedor.sergeev, arphaman, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64062
llvm-svn: 365962
This affects users of older (pre 2.26) binutils in such a way that they can't necessarily
work around it as it doesn't support the compress option on the command line. Reverting
to unblock them and we can revisit whether to make this change now or fix how we want
to express the option.
This reverts commit bdb21337e6e1732c9895966449c33c408336d295/r360403.
llvm-svn: 360703
Since July 15, 2015 (binutils-gdb commit
19a7fe52ae3d0971e67a134bcb1648899e21ae1c, included in 2.26), gas
--compress-debug-sections=zlib (gcc -gz) means zlib-gabi:
SHF_COMPRESSED. Before that it meant zlib-gnu (.zdebug).
clang's -gz was introduced in rC306115 (Jun 2017) to indicate zlib-gnu. It
is 2019 now and it is not unreasonable to assume users of the new
feature to have new linkers (ld.bfd/gold >= 2.26, lld >= rLLD273661).
Change clang's default accordingly to improve standard conformance.
zlib-gnu becomes out of fashion and gets poorer toolchain support.
Its mangled names confuse tools and are more likely to cause problems.
Reviewed By: compnerd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61689
llvm-svn: 360403
Summary:
This revision adds basic support for formatting C# files with clang-format, I know the barrier to entry is high here so I'm sending this revision in to test the water as to whether this might be something we'd consider landing.
Tracking in Bugzilla as:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40850
Justification:
C# code just looks ugly in comparison to the C++ code in our source tree which is clang-formatted.
I've struggled with Visual Studio reformatting to get a clean and consistent style, I want to format our C# code on saving like I do now for C++ and i want it to have the same style as defined in our .clang-format file, so it consistent as it can be with C++. (Braces/Breaking/Spaces/Indent etc..)
Using clang format without this patch leaves the code in a bad state, sometimes when the BreakStringLiterals is set, it fails to compile.
Mostly the C# is similar to Java, except instead of JavaAnnotations I try to reuse the TT_AttributeSquare.
Almost the most valuable portion is to have a new Language in order to partition the configuration for C# within a common .clang-format file, with the auto detection on the .cs extension. But there are other C# specific styles that could be added later if this is accepted. in particular how `{ set;get }` is formatted.
Reviewers: djasper, klimek, krasimir, benhamilton, JonasToth
Reviewed By: klimek
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mgorny, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #clang-tools-extra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58404
llvm-svn: 356662
Add an install target for clang's API headers, which allows them to be
included in distributions. The install rules already existed, but they
lacked a component and a target, making them only accessible via a full
install. These headers are useful for writing clang-based tooling, for
example. They're the clang equivalent to the llvm-headers target and
complement the clang-libraries target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58317
llvm-svn: 355853
Summary:
The current install-clang-headers target installs clang's resource
directory headers. This is different from the install-llvm-headers
target, which installs LLVM's API headers. We want to introduce the
corresponding target to clang, and the natural name for that new target
would be install-clang-headers. Rename the existing target to
install-clang-resource-headers to free up the install-clang-headers name
for the new target, following the discussion on cfe-dev [1].
I didn't find any bots on zorg referencing install-clang-headers. I'll
send out another PSA to cfe-dev to accompany this rename.
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-February/061365.html
Reviewers: beanz, phosek, tstellar, rnk, dim, serge-sans-paille
Subscribers: mgorny, javed.absar, jdoerfert, #sanitizers, openmp-commits, lldb-commits, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #sanitizers, #lldb, #openmp, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58791
llvm-svn: 355340
This is a fix for https://reviews.llvm.org/D51229 where we pass the
address_space qualified type as the modified type of an AttributedType. This
change now instead wraps the AttributedType with either the address_space
qualifier or a DependentAddressSpaceType.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55447
llvm-svn: 351997
Summary:
UB isn't nice. It's cool and powerful, but not nice.
Having a way to detect it is nice though.
[[ https://wg21.link/p1007r3 | P1007R3: std::assume_aligned ]] / http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2018/p1007r2.pdf says:
```
We propose to add this functionality via a library function instead of a core language attribute.
...
If the pointer passed in is not aligned to at least N bytes, calling assume_aligned results in undefined behaviour.
```
This differential teaches clang to sanitize all the various variants of this assume-aligned attribute.
Requires D54588 for LLVM IRBuilder changes.
The compiler-rt part is D54590.
This is a second commit, the original one was r351105,
which was mass-reverted in r351159 because 2 compiler-rt tests were failing.
Reviewers: ABataev, craig.topper, vsk, rsmith, rnk, #sanitizers, erichkeane, filcab, rjmccall
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Subscribers: chandlerc, ldionne, EricWF, mclow.lists, cfe-commits, bkramer
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54589
llvm-svn: 351177
Summary:
UB isn't nice. It's cool and powerful, but not nice.
Having a way to detect it is nice though.
[[ https://wg21.link/p1007r3 | P1007R3: std::assume_aligned ]] / http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2018/p1007r2.pdf says:
```
We propose to add this functionality via a library function instead of a core language attribute.
...
If the pointer passed in is not aligned to at least N bytes, calling assume_aligned results in undefined behaviour.
```
This differential teaches clang to sanitize all the various variants of this assume-aligned attribute.
Requires D54588 for LLVM IRBuilder changes.
The compiler-rt part is D54590.
Reviewers: ABataev, craig.topper, vsk, rsmith, rnk, #sanitizers, erichkeane, filcab, rjmccall
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Subscribers: chandlerc, ldionne, EricWF, mclow.lists, cfe-commits, bkramer
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54589
llvm-svn: 351105
Summary: The change itself landed as r348365, see the comment for more details.
Reviewers: arphaman, EricWF
Reviewed By: arphaman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55322
llvm-svn: 348394
When debugging a boost build with a modified
version of Clang, I discovered that the PTH implementation
stores TokenKind in 8 bits. However, we currently have 368
TokenKinds.
The result is that the value gets truncated and the wrong token
gets picked up when including PTH files. It seems that this will
go wrong every time someone uses a token that uses the 9th bit.
Upon asking on IRC, it was brought up that this was a highly
experimental features that was considered a failure. I discovered
via googling that BoostBuild (mostly Boost.Math) is the only user of
this
feature, using the CC1 flag directly. I believe that this can be
transferred over to normal PCH with minimal effort:
https://github.com/boostorg/build/issues/367
Based on advice on IRC and research showing that this is a nearly
completely unused feature, this patch removes it entirely.
Note: I considered leaving the build-flags in place and making them
emit an error/warning, however since I've basically identified and
warned the only user, it seemed better to just remove them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54547
Change-Id: If32744275ef1f585357bd6c1c813d96973c4d8d9
llvm-svn: 348266
Summary:
clang has `-Wextra-semi` (D43162), which is not dictated by the currently selected standard.
While that is great, there is at least one more source of need-less semis - 'null statements'.
Sometimes, they are needed:
```
for(int x = 0; continueToDoWork(x); x++)
; // Ugly code, but the semi is needed here.
```
But sometimes they are just there for no reason:
```
switch(X) {
case 0:
return -2345;
case 5:
return 0;
default:
return 42;
}; // <- oops
;;;;;;;;;;; <- OOOOPS, still not diagnosed. Clearly this is junk.
```
Additionally:
```
if(; // <- empty init-statement
true)
;
switch (; // empty init-statement
x) {
...
}
for (; // <- empty init-statement
int y : S())
;
}
As usual, things may or may not go sideways in the presence of macros.
While evaluating this diag on my codebase of interest, it was unsurprisingly
discovered that Google Test macros are *very* prone to this.
And it seems many issues are deep within the GTest itself, not
in the snippets passed from the codebase that uses GTest.
So after some thought, i decided not do issue a diagnostic if the semi
is within *any* macro, be it either from the normal header, or system header.
Fixes [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39111 | PR39111 ]]
Reviewers: rsmith, aaron.ballman, efriedma
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52695
llvm-svn: 347339
Summary:
As reported by @regehr (thanks!) on twitter (https://twitter.com/johnregehr/status/1057681496255815686),
we (me) has completely forgot about the binary assignment operator.
In AST, it isn't represented as separate `ImplicitCastExpr`'s,
but as a single `CompoundAssignOperator`, that does all the casts internally.
Which means, out of these two, only the first one is diagnosed:
```
auto foo() {
unsigned char c = 255;
c = c + 1;
return c;
}
auto bar() {
unsigned char c = 255;
c += 1;
return c;
}
```
https://godbolt.org/z/JNyVc4
This patch does handle the `CompoundAssignOperator`:
```
int main() {
unsigned char c = 255;
c += 1;
return c;
}
```
```
$ ./bin/clang -g -fsanitize=integer /tmp/test.c && ./a.out
/tmp/test.c:3:5: runtime error: implicit conversion from type 'int' of value 256 (32-bit, signed) to type 'unsigned char' changed the value to 0 (8-bit, unsigned)
#0 0x2392b8 in main /tmp/test.c:3:5
#1 0x7fec4a612b16 in __libc_start_main (/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6+0x22b16)
#2 0x214029 in _start (/build/llvm-build-GCC-release/a.out+0x214029)
```
However, the pre/post increment/decrement is still not handled.
Reviewers: rsmith, regehr, vsk, rjmccall, #sanitizers
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Subscribers: mclow.lists, cfe-commits, regehr
Tags: #clang, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53949
llvm-svn: 347258