This adds support under AArch64 for the target("..") attributes. The
current parsing is very X86-shaped, this patch attempts to bring it line
with the GCC implementation from
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/AArch64-Function-Attributes.html#AArch64-Function-Attributes.
The supported formats are:
- "arch=<arch>" strings, that specify the architecture features for a
function as per the -march=arch+feature option.
- "cpu=<cpu>" strings, that specify the target-cpu and any implied
atributes as per the -mcpu=cpu+feature option.
- "tune=<cpu>" strings, that specify the tune-cpu cpu for a function as
per -mtune.
- "+<feature>", "+no<feature>" enables/disables the specific feature, for
compatibility with GCC target attributes.
- "<feature>", "no-<feature>" enabled/disables the specific feature, for
backward compatibility with previous releases.
To do this, the parsing of target attributes has been moved into
TargetInfo to give the target the opportunity to override the existing
parsing. The only non-aarch64 change should be a minor alteration to the
error message, specifying using "CPU" to describe the cpu, not
"architecture", and the DuplicateArch/Tune from ParsedTargetAttr have
been combined into a single option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133848
This cc1 option -fallow-half-arguments-and-returns allows __fp16 to be
passed by argument and returned, without giving an error. It is
currently always enabled for Arm and AArch64, by forcing the option in
the driver. This means any cc1 tests (especially those needing
arm_neon.h) need to specify the option too, to prevent the error from
being emitted.
This changes it to a target option instead, set to true for Arm and
AArch64. This allows the option to be removed. Previously it was implied
by -fnative_half_arguments_and_returns, which is set for certain
languages like open_cl, renderscript and hlsl, so that option now too
controls the errors. There were are few other non-arm uses of
-fallow-half-arguments-and-returns but I believe they were unnecessary.
The strictfp_builtins.c tests were converted from __fp16 to _Float16 to
avoid the issues.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133885
Although the instruction names begin "frint", the ACLE spec states that
the intrinsic names begin "__rint", without the "f".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134824
k: A memory operand whose address is formed by a base register and
(optionally scaled) index register.
m: A memory operand whose address is formed by a base register and
offset that is suitable for use in instructions with the same
addressing mode as st.w and ld.w.
ZB: An address that is held in a general-purpose register. The offset
is zero.
ZC: A memory operand whose address is formed by a base register and
offset that is suitable for use in instructions with the same
addressing mode as ll.w and sc.w.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134638
Currently, clang does not emit debuginfo for the switch stmt
case value if it is an enum value. For example,
$ cat test.c
enum { AA = 1, BB = 2 };
int func1(int a) {
switch(a) {
case AA: return 10;
case BB: return 11;
default: break;
}
return 0;
}
$ llvm-dwarfdump test.o | grep AA
$
Note that gcc does emit debuginfo for the same test case.
This patch added such a support with similar implementation
to CodeGenFunction::EmitDeclRefExprDbgValue(). With this patch,
$ clang -g -c test.c
$ llvm-dwarfdump test.o | grep AA
DW_AT_name ("AA")
$
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134705
This eagerly reports use of undef values when passed to noundef
parameters or returned from noundef functions.
This also decreases binary sizes under msan.
To go back to the previous behavior, pass `-fno-sanitize-memory-param-retval`.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134669
A given function is compatible with all previous arch versions.
To avoid compering values of the attribute this logic adds all predecessor
architecture values.
Reviewed By: dmgreen, DavidSpickett
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134353
This patch adds support for constraints `f`, `l`, `I`, `K` according
to [1]. The remain constraints (`k`, `m`, `ZB`, `ZC`) will be added
later as they are a little more complex than the others.
f: A floating-point register (if available).
l: A signed 16-bit constant.
I: A signed 12-bit constant (for arithmetic instructions).
K: An unsigned 12-bit constant (for logic instructions).
For now, no need to support register alias (e.g. `$a0`) in llvm as
clang will correctly decode the usage of register name aliases into
their official names. And AFAIK, the not yet upstreamed `rustc` for
LoongArch will always use official register names (e.g. `$r4`).
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gccint/Machine-Constraints.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134157
This reverts commit 794b7ea960, and
thus restores commit a212d8da94, and
follow on fixes 0cd6763fa9,
e9ff53d42f, and
37c6a25e9a.
Use a hash function (BLAKE3) instead of hash_combine/hash_code which are
not guaranteed to be stable across executions.
Additionally, it adds a "REQUIRES: x86_64-linux" to the tests that have
raw profile inputs to avoid failures on big endian bots.
Reviewers: snehasish, davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128142
This reverts commit a212d8da94, and follow
on fixes 0cd6763fa9,
e9ff53d42f, and
37c6a25e9a.
After re-reading the documentation for hash_combine, I don't think this
is the appropriate hash function to use for computing the hash to use as
a stack id in the metadata, since it is not guaranteed to produce stable
values across executions. I have not hit this problem, but plan to
switch to using an MD5 hash. I am hitting an issue with one of the bots
(https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/171/builds/20732)
where the values produced are only the lower 32 bits of the expected
hash values, however, which I assume is related to the implementation of
hash_combine and hash_code.
I believe I fixed all of the other bot failures with the follow on fixes,
which I'll merge into the new version before reapplying.
The ArgumentPromotion pass uses Mem2Reg promotion at the end to cutting
down generated `alloca` instructions as well as meaningless `store`s and
this behavior can leave unused (dead) arguments. To eliminate the dead
arguments and therefore let the DeadCodeElimination remove becoming dead
inserted `GEP`s as well as `load`s and `cast`s in the callers, the
DeadArgumentElimination pass should be run after the ArgumentPromotion
one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128830
Profile matching and IR annotation for memprof profiles.
See also related RFCs:
RFC: Sanitizer-based Heap Profiler [1]
RFC: A binary serialization format for MemProf [2]
RFC: IR metadata format for MemProf [3]*
* Note that the IR metadata format has changed from the RFC during
implementation, as described in the preceeding patch adding the basic
metadata and verification support.
The matching is performed during the normal PGO annotation phase, to
ensure that the inlines applied in the IR at that point are a subset
of the inlines in the profiled binary and thus reflected in the
profile's call stacks. This is important because the call frames are
associated with functions in the profile based on the inlining in the
symbolized call stacks, and this simplifies locating the subset of
profile data relevant for matching onto each function's IR.
The PGOInstrumentationUse pass is enhanced to perform matching for
whatever combination of memprof and regular PGO profile data exists in
the profile.
Using the utilities introduced in D128854:
The memprof profile data for each context is converted to "cold" or
"notcold" based on parameterized thresholds for size, access count, and
lifetime. The memprof allocation contexts are trimmed to the minimal
amount of context required to uniquely identify whether the context is
cold or not cold. For allocations where all profiled contexts have the
same allocation type, no memprof metadata is attached and instead the
allocation call is directly annotated with an attribute specifying the
alloction type. This is the same attributed that will be applied to
allocation calls once cloned for different contexts, and later used
during LibCall simplification to emit allocation hints [4].
Depends on D128141 and D128854.
[1] https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-June/142744.html
[2] https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-September/153007.html
[3] https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-ir-metadata-format-for-memprof/59165
[4] ab87cf382d
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128142
One must pick the same name as the one referenced in CodeGenFunction when
generating .inline version of an inline builtin, otherwise they are not
correctly replaced.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134362
`__builtin_arm_crc*` requires the target feature crc which is available on armv8
and above. Calling the fuctions for armv7 leads to a SelectionDAG crash.
```
% clang -c --target=armv7-unknown-linux-gnueabi -c a.c
fatal error: error in backend: Cannot select: intrinsic %llvm.arm.crc32b
PLEASE submit a bug report to ...
```
Add `TARGET_BUILTIN` and define required features for these builtins to
report an error in `CodeGenFunction::checkTargetFeatures`. The problem is quite widespread.
I will add `TARGET_BUILTIN` for more builtins later.
Fix https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/57802
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134127
These directives define per-test lit substitutions. The concept was
discussed at
<https://discourse.llvm.org/t/iterating-lit-run-lines/62596/10>.
For example, the following directives can be inserted into a test file
to define `%{cflags}` and `%{fcflags}` substitutions with empty
initial values, which serve as the parameters of another newly defined
`%{check}` substitution:
```
// DEFINE: %{cflags} =
// DEFINE: %{fcflags} =
// DEFINE: %{check} = %clang_cc1 %{cflags} -emit-llvm -o - %s | \
// DEFINE: FileCheck %{fcflags} %s
```
The following directives then redefine the parameters before each use
of `%{check}`:
```
// REDEFINE: %{cflags} = -foo
// REDEFINE: %{fcflags} = -check-prefix=FOO
// RUN: %{check}
// REDEFINE: %{cflags} = -bar
// REDEFINE: %{fcflags} = -check-prefix=BAR
// RUN: %{check}
```
Of course, `%{check}` would typically be more elaborate, increasing
the benefit of the reuse.
One issue is that the strings `DEFINE:` and `REDEFINE:` already appear
in 5 tests. This patch adjusts those tests not to use those strings.
Our prediction is that, in the vast majority of cases, if a test
author mistakenly uses one of those strings for another purpose, the
text appearing after the string will not happen to have the syntax
required for these directives. Thus, the test author will discover
the mistake immediately when lit reports the syntax error.
This patch also expands the documentation on existing lit substitution
behavior.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, MaskRay, awarzynski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132513
This extension does not appear to be on its way to ratification.
Out of the unratified bitmanip extensions, this one had the
largest impact on the compiler.
Posting this patch to start a discussion about whether we should
remove these extensions. We'll talk more at the RISC-V sync meeting this
Thursday.
Reviewed By: asb, reames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133834
Fix __builtin_assume_aligned incorrect type descriptor
example from @rsmith
struct A { int n; };
struct B { int n; };
struct C : A, B {};
void *f(C *c) {
// Incorrectly returns `c` rather than the address of the B base class.
return __builtin_assume_aligned((B*)c, 8);
}
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133583
When passing arguments with `__fastcall` or `__vectorcall` in 32-bit MSVC, the following arguments have chance to be passed by register if the current one failed. `__regcall` from ICC is on the contrary: https://godbolt.org/z/4MPbzhaMG
All the three calling conversions are not supported in GCC.
Fixes: #57737
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133920
Reuse most of RISCV's implementation with several exceptions:
1. Assign signext/zeroext attribute to args passed in stack.
On RISCV, integer scalars passed in registers have signext/zeroext
when promoted, but are anyext if passed on the stack. This is defined
in early RISCV ABI specification. But after this change [1], integers
should also be signext/zeroext if passed on the stack. So I think
RISCV's ABI lowering should be updated [2].
While in LoongArch ABI spec, we can see that integer scalars narrower
than GRLEN bits are zero/sign-extended no matter passed in registers
or on the stack.
2. Zero-width bit fields are ignored.
This matches GCC's behavior but it hasn't been documented in ABI sepc.
See https://gcc.gnu.org/r12-8294.
3. `char` is signed by default.
There is another difference worth mentioning is that `char` is signed
by default on LoongArch while it is unsigned on RISCV.
This patch also adds `_BitInt` type support to LoongArch and handle it
in LoongArchABIInfo::classifyArgumentType.
[1] cec39a064e
[2] https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/57261
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132285
Previsouly the module-initializer*.cpp lives in the CodeGen dir instead
of CodeGenCXX dir, which is not consistency with other tests since
modules are features for C++.
When ‘ffast-math’ is set, ffp-contract is altered this way:
-ffast-math/ Ofast -> ffp-contract=fast
-fno-fast-math -> if ffp-contract= fast then ffp-contract=on else
ffp-contract unchanged
This differs from gcc which doesn’t connect the two options.
Connecting these two options in clang, resulted in spurious warnings
when the user combines these two options -ffast-math -fno-fast-math; see
issue https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/54625.
The issue is that the ‘ffast-math’ option is an on/off flag, but the
‘ffp-contract’ is an on/off/fast flag. So when ‘fno-fast-math’ is used
there is no obvious value for ‘ffp-contract’. What should the value of
ffp-contract be for -ffp-contract=fast -fno-fast-math and -ffast-math
-ffp-contract=fast -fno-fast-math? The current logic sets ffp-contract
back to on in these cases. This doesn’t take into account that the value
of ffp-contract is modified by an explicit ffp-contract` option.
This patch is proposing a set of rules to apply when ffp-contract',
ffast-math and fno-fast-math are combined. These rules would give the
user the expected behavior and no diagnostic would be needed.
See RFC
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-making-ffast-math-option-unrelated-to-ffp-contract-option/61912
For this patch, a simple search was performed for patterns where there are
two types (usually an LHS and an RHS) which are structurally the same, and there
is some result type which is resolved as either one of them (typically LHS for
consistency).
We change those cases to resolve as the common sugared type between those two,
utilizing the new infrastructure created for this purpose.
Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111509
For this patch, a simple search was performed for patterns where there are
two types (usually an LHS and an RHS) which are structurally the same, and there
is some result type which is resolved as either one of them (typically LHS for
consistency).
We change those cases to resolve as the common sugared type between those two,
utilizing the new infrastructure created for this purpose.
Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111509
I used RV32 so I didn't have to write RV32I and RV32E. Ideally
these builtins will be wrapped in a header someday so long term I don't
expect users to see these errors.
Reviewed By: asb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133444
Summary:
The code for generating a name for loops for various reporting scenarios
created a name by serializing the loop into a string. This may result in
a very large name for a loop containing many blocks. Use the getName()
function on the loop instead.
Author: Jamie Schmeiser <schmeise@ca.ibm.com>
Reviewed By: Whitney (Whitney Tsang), aeubanks (Arthur Eubanks)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133587
For this patch, a simple search was performed for patterns where there are
two types (usually an LHS and an RHS) which are structurally the same, and there
is some result type which is resolved as either one of them (typically LHS for
consistency).
We change those cases to resolve as the common sugared type between those two,
utilizing the new infrastructure created for this purpose.
Depends on D111283
Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111509
Make the DataLayout string always hold a vector alignment of 8 bytes,
regardless of the vector ABI. This makes the datalayout depend only on the
target triple which is the general expectation (in assertions).
On older architectures where vectors use the natural alignment (16 bytes),
the front end will maintain the same behavior and produce an overalignment
compared to the datalayout.
Reviewed By: uweigand
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131158
Introduces the frontend flag -fexperimental-sanitize-metadata=, which
enables SanitizerBinaryMetadata instrumentation.
The first intended user of the binary metadata emitted will be a variant
of GWP-TSan [1]. The plan is to open source a stable and production
quality version of GWP-TSan. The development of which, however, requires
upstream compiler support.
[1] https://llvm.org/devmtg/2020-09/slides/Morehouse-GWP-Tsan.pdf
Until the tool has been open sourced, we mark this kind of
instrumentation as "experimental", and reserve the option to change
binary format, remove features, and similar.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130888
Avoid __builtin_assume_aligned crash when the 1st arg is array type (or
string literal).
Fixes Issue #57169
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133202
The backend now has a 32bit feature as part of the recent mtune
patch. We can now use that make our rv32-only builtin error checking
work the same way as rv64-only errors.
Reviewed By: kito-cheng
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132192