Contrary to MSVC, GCC/MinGW needs to have the dllexport attribute
on the template instantiation declaration, not on the definition.
Previously clang never marked explicit template instantiations as
dllexport in MinGW mode, if the instantiation had a previous
declaration, regardless of where the attribute was placed. This
makes Clang behave like GCC in this regard, and allows using the
same attribute form for both MinGW compilers.
This fixes PR40256.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61118
llvm-svn: 359285
internal linkage entities.
Such constructs are ill-formed by [temp.explicit]p13. We make a special
exception to permit an invalid construct used by libc++ in some build
modes: its <valarray> header declares some functions with the
internal_linkage attribute and then (meaninglessly) provides explicit
instantiation declarations for them. Luckily, Clang happens to
effectively ignore the explicit instantiation declaration when
generating code in this case, and this change codifies that behavior.
This reinstates part of r359048, reverted in r359076. (The libc++ issue
triggering the rollback has been addressed.)
llvm-svn: 359259
These builtins provide access to the new integer and
sub-integer variants of MMA (matrix multiply-accumulate) instructions
provided by CUDA-10.x on sm_75 (AKA Turing) GPUs.
Also added a feature for PTX 6.4. While Clang/LLVM does not generate
any PTX instructions that need it, we still need to pass it through to
ptxas in order to be able to compile code that uses the new 'mma'
instruction as inline assembly (e.g used by NVIDIA's CUTLASS library
https://github.com/NVIDIA/cutlass/blob/master/cutlass/arch/mma.h#L101)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60279
llvm-svn: 359248
loop nests.
Added a checks that the initializer/condition expressions depend only
only of the single previous loop iteration variable.
llvm-svn: 359200
Summary:
Add a new variant to GlobalDecl for these so that we can detect them
more easily during debug info emission and handle them appropriately.
Reviewers: rsmith, rjmccall, jyu2
Subscribers: aprantl, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60930
llvm-svn: 359148
The change breaks libc++ with the follwing error:
In file included from valarray:4:
.../include/c++/v1/valarray:1062:60: error: explicit instantiation declaration of 'valarray<_Tp>' with internal linkage
_LIBCPP_EXTERN_TEMPLATE(_LIBCPP_FUNC_VIS valarray<size_t>::valarray(size_t))
^
.../include/c++/v1/valarray:1063:60: error: explicit instantiation declaration of '~valarray<_Tp>' with internal linkage
_LIBCPP_EXTERN_TEMPLATE(_LIBCPP_FUNC_VIS valarray<size_t>::~valarray())
llvm-svn: 359076
Summary:
This patch implements `__builtin_is_constant_evaluated` as specifier by [P0595R2](https://wg21.link/p0595r2). It is built on the back of Bill Wendling's work for `__builtin_constant_p()`.
More tests to come, but early feedback is appreciated.
I plan to implement warnings for common mis-usages like those belowe in a following patch:
```
void foo(int x) {
if constexpr (std::is_constant_evaluated())) { // condition is always `true`. Should use plain `if` instead.
foo_constexpr(x);
} else {
foo_runtime(x);
}
}
```
Reviewers: rsmith, MaskRay, bruno, void
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: dexonsmith, zoecarver, fdeazeve, kristina, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55500
llvm-svn: 359067
of an auto"
This commit changed the initializer expression passed into
initialization (stripping off an enclosing pair of parentheses or
braces) and subtly changing the meaning of programs, typically by
inserting bogus calls to copy constructors.
See the added testcase in test/SemaCXX/cxx1y-init-captures.cpp for an
example of the breakage.
llvm-svn: 359066
recursively captured.
Under ARC, a block variable is zero-initialized when it is recursively
captured by the block literal initializer.
rdar://problem/11022762
llvm-svn: 359049
It now comes with a follow-up fix for the clients of this API
in clangd and clang-tidy.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59977
llvm-svn: 359035
Summary:
The existing CTU mechanism imports `FunctionDecl`s where the definition is available in another TU. This patch extends that to VarDecls, to bind more constants.
- Add VarDecl importing functionality to CrossTranslationUnitContext
- Import Decls while traversing them in AnalysisConsumer
- Add VarDecls to CTU external mappings generator
- Name changes from "external function map" to "external definition map"
Reviewers: NoQ, dcoughlin, xazax.hun, george.karpenkov, martong
Reviewed By: xazax.hun
Subscribers: Charusso, baloghadamsoftware, mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, george.karpenkov, mgorny, whisperity, szepet, rnkovacs, a.sidorin, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46421
llvm-svn: 358968
Stuffing invalid source locations (such as those in functions produced by
body farms) into path diagnostics causes crashes.
Fix a typo in a nearby function name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60808
llvm-svn: 358945
Implement cplusplus.SmartPtrModeling, a new checker that doesn't
emit any warnings but models methods of smart pointers more precisely.
For now the only thing it does is make `(bool) P` return false when `P`
is a freshly moved pointer. This addresses a false positive in the
use-after-move-checker.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60796
llvm-svn: 358944
Previously, it was only documented by `-cc1 -help`, so people weren't
aware of it, as discussed in D60732.
Reviewed By: Charusso, NoQ
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60845
llvm-svn: 358917
Summary:
isClassMessage is an equivalent to isInstanceMessage for ObjCMessageExpr, but matches message expressions to classes.
isClassMethod and isInstanceMethod check whether a method declaration (or definition) is for a class method or instance method (respectively).
Contributed by @mywman!
Reviewers: benhamilton, klimek, mwyman
Reviewed By: benhamilton, mwyman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60920
llvm-svn: 358904
Moved UninitializedObjectChecker from the 'alpha.cplusplus' to the
'optin.cplusplus' package.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58573
llvm-svn: 358797
TL;DR:
* Add checker and package options to the TableGen files
* Added a new class called CmdLineOption, and both Package and Checker recieved
a list<CmdLineOption> field.
* Added every existing checker and package option to Checkers.td.
* The CheckerRegistry class
* Received some comments to most of it's inline classes
* Received the CmdLineOption and PackageInfo inline classes, a list of
CmdLineOption was added to CheckerInfo and PackageInfo
* Added addCheckerOption and addPackageOption
* Added a new field called Packages, used in addPackageOptions, filled up in
addPackage
Detailed description:
In the last couple months, a lot of effort was put into tightening the
analyzer's command line interface. The main issue is that it's spectacularly
easy to mess up a lenghty enough invocation of the analyzer, and the user was
given no warnings or errors at all in that case.
We can divide the effort of resolving this into several chapters:
* Non-checker analyzer configurations:
Gather every analyzer configuration into a dedicated file. Emit errors for
non-existent configurations or incorrect values. Be able to list these
configurations. Tighten AnalyzerOptions interface to disallow making such
a mistake in the future.
* Fix the "Checker Naming Bug" by reimplementing checker dependencies:
When cplusplus.InnerPointer was enabled, it implicitly registered
unix.Malloc, which implicitly registered some sort of a modeling checker
from the CStringChecker family. This resulted in all of these checker
objects recieving the name "cplusplus.InnerPointer", making AnalyzerOptions
asking for the wrong checker options from the command line:
cplusplus.InnerPointer:Optimisic
istead of
unix.Malloc:Optimistic.
This was resolved by making CheckerRegistry responsible for checker
dependency handling, instead of checkers themselves.
* Checker options: (this patch included!)
Same as the first item, but for checkers.
(+ minor fixes here and there, and everything else that is yet to come)
There were several issues regarding checker options, that non-checker
configurations didn't suffer from: checker plugins are loaded runtime, and they
could add new checkers and new options, meaning that unlike for non-checker
configurations, we can't collect every checker option purely by generating code.
Also, as seen from the "Checker Naming Bug" issue raised above, they are very
rarely used in practice, and all sorts of skeletons fell out of the closet while
working on this project.
They were extremely problematic for users as well, purely because of how long
they were. Consider the following monster of a checker option:
alpha.cplusplus.UninitializedObject:CheckPointeeInitialization=false
While we were able to verify whether the checker itself (the part before the
colon) existed, any errors past that point were unreported, easily resulting
in 7+ hours of analyses going to waste.
This patch, similarly to how dependencies were reimplemented, uses TableGen to
register checker options into Checkers.td, so that Checkers.inc now contains
entries for both checker and package options. Using the preprocessor,
Checkers.inc is converted into code in CheckerRegistry, adding every builtin
(checkers and packages that have an entry in the Checkers.td file) checker and
package option to the registry. The new addPackageOption and addCheckerOption
functions expose the same functionality to statically-linked non-builtin and
plugin checkers and packages as well.
Emitting errors for incorrect user input, being able to list these options, and
some other functionalies will land in later patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57855
llvm-svn: 358752
Ideally, there is no reason behind not being able to depend on checkers that
come from a different plugin (or on builtin checkers) -- however, this is only
possible if all checkers are added to the registry before resolving checker
dependencies. Since I used a binary search in my addDependency method, this also
resulted in an assertion failure (due to CheckerRegistry::Checkers not being
sorted), since the function used by plugins to register their checkers
(clang_registerCheckers) calls addDependency.
This patch resolves this issue by only noting which dependencies have to
established when addDependency is called, and resolves them at a later stage
when no more checkers are added to the registry, by which point
CheckerRegistry::Checkers is already sorted.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59461
llvm-svn: 358750
Summary: The requires directive containing target related clauses must appear before any target region in the compilation unit.
Reviewers: ABataev, AlexEichenberger, caomhin
Reviewed By: ABataev
Subscribers: guansong, jfb, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60875
llvm-svn: 358709
Summary: This revision allows users to specify independent changes to multiple (related) sections of the input. Previously, only a single section of input could be selected for replacement.
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov
Reviewed By: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: jfb, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60408
llvm-svn: 358697
Summary:
It's never set to true. Its only effect would be to set stdout to binary mode.
Hopefully we have better ways of doing this by now :-)
Reviewers: hokein
Subscribers: jkorous, arphaman, kadircet, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60871
llvm-svn: 358696
Summary:
This file defines the *Stencil* abstraction: a code-generating object, parameterized by named references to (bound) AST nodes. Given a match result, a stencil can be evaluated to a string of source code.
A stencil is similar in spirit to a format string: it is composed of a series of raw text strings, references to nodes (the parameters) and helper code-generation operations.
See thread on cfe-dev list with subject "[RFC] Easier source-to-source transformations with clang tooling" for background.
Reviewers: sbenza
Reviewed By: sbenza
Subscribers: ilya-biryukov, mgorny, jfb, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59371
llvm-svn: 358691
There are barely any lines I haven't changed in these files, so I think I could
might as well leave it in an LLVM coding style conforming state. I also renamed
2 functions and moved addDependency out of line to ease on followup patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59457
llvm-svn: 358676
Summary:
Also add a test to verify clang-tidy only apply the first alternative
fix.
Reviewers: alexfh
Subscribers: xazax.hun, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60857
llvm-svn: 358666
global module fragment.
We know that the declaration in question should have been introduced by
a '#include', so try to figure out which one and suggest it. Don't
suggest importing the global module fragment itself!
llvm-svn: 358631
retaining block and all of the enclosing blocks are non-escaping.
If the block implicitly retaining self doesn't escape, there is no risk
of creating retain cycles, so clang shouldn't diagnose it and force
users to add self-> to silence the diagnostic.
Also, fix a bug where clang was failing to diagnose an implicitly
retained self inside a c++ lambda nested inside a block.
rdar://problem/25059955
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60736
llvm-svn: 358624
Summary:
Motivation/Context: in the code review system integrating with clang-tidy,
clang-tidy doesn't provide a human-readable description of the fix. Usually
developers have to preview a code diff (before vs after apply the fix) to
understand what the fix does before applying a fix.
This patch proposes that each clang-tidy check provides a short and
actional fix description that can be shown in the UI, so that users can know
what the fix does without previewing diff.
This patch extends clang-tidy framework to support fix descriptions (will add implementations for
existing checks in the future). Fix descriptions and fixes are emitted via diagnostic::Note (rather than
attaching the main warning diagnostic).
Before this patch:
```
void MyCheck::check(...) {
...
diag(loc, "my check warning") << FixtItHint::CreateReplacement(...);
}
```
After:
```
void MyCheck::check(...) {
...
diag(loc, "my check warning"); // Emit a check warning
diag(loc, "fix description", DiagnosticIDs::Note) << FixtItHint::CreateReplacement(...); // Emit a diagnostic note and a fix
}
```
Reviewers: sammccall, alexfh
Reviewed By: alexfh
Subscribers: MyDeveloperDay, Eugene.Zelenko, aaron.ballman, JonasToth, xazax.hun, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang-tools-extra, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59932
llvm-svn: 358576
Summary:
Previously, we would return true/false signifying if the cache/lookup
succeeded or failed. Instead, provide clients with the underlying error
that was thrown while attempting to look up in the cache.
Since clang::FileManager doesn't make use of this information, it discards the
error that's received and casts away to bool.
This change is NFC.
Reviewers: benlangmuir, arphaman
Subscribers: dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60735
llvm-svn: 358509
This reverts r358409, which I think broke the bots in compiler-rt.
Since I'm having trouble reproducing the failure, I'm reverting this
until I can investigate locally.
llvm-svn: 358437
The pattern we replaced these with may be too hard to match as demonstrated by
PR41496 and PR41316.
This patch restores the intrinsics and then we can start focusing
on the optimizing the intrinsics.
I've mostly reverted the original patch that removed them. Though I modified
the avx512 intrinsics to not have masking built in.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60674
llvm-svn: 358427
Summary:
In r350649, I changed aligned allocation from being available starting
in macosx10.13 to macosx10.14. However, aligned allocation is indeed
available starting with macosx10.13, my investigation had been based
on the wrong libc++abi dylib.
This means that Clang before the fix will be more stringent when it
comes to aligned allocation -- it will not allow it when back-deploying
to macosx 10.13, when it would actually be safe to do so.
Note that a companion change will be coming to fix the libc++ tests.
Reviewers: ahatanak
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60626
llvm-svn: 358409
Summary:
For example, a renamed type in a header file can conflict with declaration in
a random file that includes the header, but we should not consider the decl ambiguous if
it's not visible at the rename location. This improves consistency of generated replacements
when header file is included in different TUs.
Reviewers: hokein
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60257
llvm-svn: 358378
and the global and private module fragment.
For now, the private module fragment introducer is ignored, but use of
the global module fragment introducer should be properly enforced.
llvm-svn: 358353
A marker (matching /#[A-Za-z0-9_-]/) is specified by attaching a comment
containing the marker to the line at which the diagnostic is expected,
and then can be referenced from an expected-* directive after an @:
foo // #1
// expected-error@#1 {{undeclared identifier 'foo'}}
The intent is for markers to be used in situations where relative line
numbers are currently used, to avoid the need to renumber when the test
case is rearranged.
llvm-svn: 358326
Systematically add the const-qualified version of children()
to all statement/expression nodes. Previously the const-qualified
variant was only defined for some nodes. NFC.
Patch by: Nicolas Manichon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60029
Reviewed By: riccibruno
llvm-svn: 358288
Disabled by default as this is still an experimental feature.
Reviewed By: thakis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59221
llvm-svn: 358285
Statements, expressions and types are not supposed to be copied/moved,
and trying to do so is only going to result in tears. Someone tripped
on this a few days ago on the mailing list. NFC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60123
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
llvm-svn: 358283
internal lexing steps in the preprocessor.
It is not safe to use the preprocessor's token lookahead except when
operating on the final sequence of tokens that would be produced by
phase 4 of translation. Doing so corrupts the token lookahead cache used
by the parser. (See added testcase for an example.) Lookahead should
instead be viewed as a layer on top of the normal lexer.
Added assertions to catch any further incorrect uses of lookahead within
lexing actions.
llvm-svn: 358230
We want to make objc_nonlazy_class apply to implementations, but ran into this.
There doesn't seem to be any reason that this isn't supported.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60542
llvm-svn: 358200
Make sure ASTImporter::Import_New(const Decl *) returns
a Expected<const Decl *> and not Expected<Decl *> to
make the clang/unittests/AST/ASTImporterTest.cpp compile
without the warning
clang/unittests/AST/ASTImporterTest.cpp:117:12: error: no viable conversion from 'Expected<clang::Decl *>' to 'Expected<const clang::Decl *>'
return Imported;
(I got the above when building with clang 3.6).
llvm-svn: 357985
As the unit test demonstrates, subtracting 1 from the offset was unnecessary.
The only user of this function was the plist file emitter (in Static Analyzer
and ARCMigrator). It means that a lot of Static Analyzer's plist arrows
are in fact off by one character. The patch carefully preserves this
completely incorrect behavior and causes no functional change,
i.e. no plist format breakage.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59977
llvm-svn: 357823
Summary:
Use cases:
- a tool that dumps the heuristic used for each header in a project can
be used to evaluate changes to the heuristic
- we want to expose this information to users in clangd as it affects
accuracy/reliability of editor features
- express interpolation tests more directly
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov, klimek
Subscribers: ioeric, kadircet, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60194
llvm-svn: 357770
Summary: Adds a basic version of Transformer, a library supporting the concise specification of clang-based source-to-source transformations. A full discussion of the end goal can be found on the cfe-dev list with subject "[RFC] Easier source-to-source transformations with clang tooling".
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov
Reviewed By: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: ioeric, ABataev, mgorny, jfb, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59376
llvm-svn: 357768
Summary:
Introduces a utility library in Refactoring/ to collect routines related to
source-code manipulation. In this change, we move "extended-range" functions
from the FixIt library (in clangTooling) to this new library.
We need to use this functionality in Refactoring/ and cannot access it if it
resides in Tooling/, because that would cause clangToolingRefactor to depend on
clangTooling, which would be a circular dependency.
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov, ioeric
Reviewed By: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60269
llvm-svn: 357764
Requires making the llvm::MemoryBuffer* stored by SourceManager const,
which in turn requires making the accessors for that return const
llvm::MemoryBuffer*s and updating all call sites.
The original motivation for this was to use it and fix the TODO in
CodeGenAction.cpp's ConvertBackendLocation() by using the UnownedTag
version of createFileID, and since llvm::SourceMgr* hands out a const
llvm::MemoryBuffer* this is required. I'm not sure if fixing the TODO
this way actually works, but this seems like a good change on its own
anyways.
No intended behavior change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60247
llvm-svn: 357724
This moves documentation for some attributes into new categories that are hopefully a bit more clear. In general, "Type" documentation should be for attributes that appertain to types while "Declaration" documentation should be for attributes that appertain to declarations other than functions or variables.
llvm-svn: 357585
Summary: Adds a basic version of Transformer, a library supporting the concise specification of clang-based source-to-source transformations. A full discussion of the end goal can be found on the cfe-dev list with subject "[RFC] Easier source-to-source transformations with clang tooling".
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov
Reviewed By: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: mgorny, jfb, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59376
llvm-svn: 357576
moveAttrFromListToList only makes sense when moving an attribute to a list with
a pool that's either equivalent, or has a shorter lifetime. Therefore, using it
to move a ParsedAttr from a declarator to a declaration specifier doesn't make
sense, since the declaration specifier's pool outlives the declarator's. The
patch adds a new function, ParsedAttributes::takeOneFrom, which transfers the
attribute from one pool to another, fixing the use-after-deallocate.
rdar://49175426
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60101
llvm-svn: 357516
According to OpenMP 5.0, 2.11.4 allocate Clause, Restrictions, allocate
clauses that appear on a target construct or on constructs in a target
region must specify an allocator expression unless a requires directive
with the dynamic_allocators clause is present in the same compilation
unit. Patch adds a check for this restriction.
llvm-svn: 357412
Summary:
ODR errors are not necessarily true errors during the import of ASTs.
ASTMerge and CrossTU should use the warning equivalent of every CTU error,
while Sema should emit errors as before.
Reviewers: martong, a_sidorin, shafik, a.sidorin
Reviewed By: a_sidorin
Subscribers: rnkovacs, dkrupp, Szelethus, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58897
Patch by Endre Fulop!
llvm-svn: 357394
According to OpenMP 5.0 standard, 2.11.4 allocate Clause, Restrictions,
For any list item that is specified in the allocate clause on a
directive, a data-sharing attribute clause that may create a private
copy of that list item must be specified on the same directive. Patch
adds the checks for this restriction.
llvm-svn: 357390
This patch aims to add support for the following rules from the JUCE coding standards:
- Always put a space before an open parenthesis that contains text - e.g. foo (123);
- Never put a space before an empty pair of open/close parenthesis - e.g. foo();
Patch by Reuben Thomas
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55170
llvm-svn: 357344
This change adds hierarchical "time trace" profiling blocks that can be visualized in Chrome, in a "flame chart" style. Each profiling block can have a "detail" string that for example indicates the file being processed, template name being instantiated, function being optimized etc.
This is taken from GitHub PR: https://github.com/aras-p/llvm-project-20170507/pull/2
Patch by Aras Pranckevičius.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58675
llvm-svn: 357340
It is now an inter-checker communication API, similar to the one that
connects MallocChecker/CStringChecker/InnerPointerChecker: simply a set of
setters and getters for a state trait.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59861
llvm-svn: 357326
Almost all path-sensitive checkers need to tell the user when something specific
to that checker happens along the execution path but does not constitute a bug
on its own. For instance, a call to operator delete in C++ has consequences
that are specific to a use-after-free bug. Deleting an object is not a bug
on its own, but when the Analyzer finds an execution path on which a deleted
object is used, it'll have to explain to the user when exactly during that path
did the deallocation take place.
Historically such custom notes were added by implementing "bug report visitors".
These visitors were post-processing bug reports by visiting every ExplodedNode
along the path and emitting path notes whenever they noticed that a change that
is relevant to a bug report occurs within the program state. For example,
it emits a "memory is deallocated" note when it notices that a pointer changes
its state from "allocated" to "deleted".
The "visitor" approach is powerful and efficient but hard to use because
such preprocessing implies that the developer first models the effects
of the event (say, changes the pointer's state from "allocated" to "deleted"
as part of operator delete()'s transfer function) and then forgets what happened
and later tries to reverse-engineer itself and figure out what did it do
by looking at the report.
The proposed approach tries to avoid discarding the information that was
available when the transfer function was evaluated. Instead, it allows the
developer to capture all the necessary information into a closure that
will be automatically invoked later in order to produce the actual note.
This should reduce boilerplate and avoid very painful logic duplication.
On the technical side, the closure is a lambda that's put into a special kind of
a program point tag, and a special bug report visitor visits all nodes in the
report and invokes all note-producing closures it finds along the path.
For now it is up to the lambda to make sure that the note is actually relevant
to the report. For instance, a memory deallocation note would be irrelevant when
we're reporting a division by zero bug or if we're reporting a use-after-free
of a different, unrelated chunk of memory. The lambda can figure these thing out
by looking at the bug report object that's passed into it.
A single checker is refactored to make use of the new functionality: MIGChecker.
Its program state is trivial, making it an easy testing ground for the first
version of the API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58367
llvm-svn: 357323
Summary:
This feature is not actually used for anything in the WebAssembly
backend, but adding it allows users to get it into the target features
sections of their objects, which makes these objects
future-compatible.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, sunfish, jdoerfert, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60013
llvm-svn: 357321
Add an -mtp=el[0-3] option to select which of the AArch64 thread ID registers
will be used for the TLS base pointer.
This is a followup to rL356657 which added subtarget features to enable
accesses to the privileged thread ID registers.
Patch by Philip Derrin!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59631
llvm-svn: 357250
Summary:
PowerPC64/PowerPC64le supports the builtin function __builtin_setrnd to set the floating point rounding mode. This function will use the least significant two bits of integer argument to set the floating point rounding mode.
double __builtin_setrnd(int mode);
The effective values for mode are:
0 - round to nearest
1 - round to zero
2 - round to +infinity
3 - round to -infinity
Note that the mode argument will modulo 4, so if the int argument is greater than 3, it will only use the least significant two bits of the mode. Namely, builtin_setrnd(102)) is equal to builtin_setrnd(2).
Reviewed By: jsji
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59403
llvm-svn: 357242
Future versions of MSVC make these intrinsics available on x86 & x64,
according to:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-March/061711.html
The purpose of these builtins is to emit plain, non-atomic, volatile
stores when /volatile:ms (-cc1 -fms-volatile) is enabled.
llvm-svn: 357220
target and task-based directives.
According to OpenMP 5.0, 2.11.4 allocate Clause, Restrictions, For task,
taskloop or target directives, allocation requests to memory allocators
with the trait access set to thread result in unspecified behavior.
Patch introduces a check for omp_thread_mem_alloc predefined allocator
on target- and trask-based directives.
llvm-svn: 357205
Since rL335814, if the constraint manager cannot find a range set for `A - B`
(where `A` and `B` are symbols) it looks for a range for `B - A` and returns
it negated if it exists. However, if a range set for both `A - B` and `B - A`
is stored then it only returns the first one. If we both use `A - B` and
`B - A`, these expressions behave as two totally unrelated symbols. This way
we miss some useful deductions which may lead to false negatives or false
positives.
This tiny patch changes this behavior: if the symbolic expression the
constraint manager is looking for is a difference `A - B`, it tries to
retrieve the range for both `A - B` and `B - A` and if both exists it returns
the intersection of range `A - B` and the negated range of `B - A`. This way
every time a checker applies new constraints to the symbolic difference or to
its negated it always affects both the original difference and its negated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55007
llvm-svn: 357167
MarkVarDeclODRUsed indirectly calls captureInBlock, which creates a copy
expression. The copy expression is insulated in it's own
ExpressionEvaluationContext, so it saves, mutates, and restores MaybeODRUseExprs
as CleanupVarDeclMarking is iterating through it, leading to a crash. Fix this
by iterating through a local copy of MaybeODRUseExprs.
rdar://47493525
https://reviews.llvm.org/D59670
llvm-svn: 357040
FileManager constructs a VFS in its constructor if it isn't passed one,
and there's no way to reset it. Make that contract clear by returning a
reference from its accessor.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D59388
llvm-svn: 357038
Remove CompilerInstance::VirtualFileSystem and
CompilerInstance::setVirtualFileSystem, instead relying on the VFS in
the FileManager. CompilerInstance and its clients already went to some
trouble to make these match. Now they are guaranteed to match.
As part of this, I added a VFS parameter (defaults to nullptr) to
CompilerInstance::createFileManager, to avoid repeating construction
logic in clients that just wanted to customize the VFS.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D59377
llvm-svn: 357037
Summary:
This option `AllowShortLambdasOnASingleLine` similar to the other `AllowShort*` options, but applied to C++ lambdas.
Reviewers: djasper, klimek
Reviewed By: klimek
Subscribers: MyDeveloperDay, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57687
llvm-svn: 357027
The intention is to add metadata to direct call sites of functions
marked with __declspec(allocator), which will ultimately result in some
S_HEAPALLOCSITE debug info records when emitting codeview.
This is a piece of PR38491
llvm-svn: 356964
The various CorrectionCandidateCallbacks are currently heap-allocated
unconditionally. This was needed because of delayed typo correction.
However these allocations represent currently 15.4% of all allocations
(number of allocations) when parsing all of Boost (!), mostly because
of ParseCastExpression, ParseStatementOrDeclarationAfterAttrtibutes
and isCXXDeclarationSpecifier. Note that all of these callback objects
are small. Let's not do this.
Instead initially allocate the callback on the stack, and only do a
heap allocation if we are going to do some typo correction. Do this by:
1. Adding a clone function to each callback, which will do a polymorphic
clone of the callback. This clone function is required to be implemented
by every callback (of which there is a fair amount). Make sure this is
the case by making it pure virtual.
2. Use this clone function when we are going to try to correct a typo.
This additionally cut the time of -fsyntax-only on all of Boost by 0.5%
(not that much, but still something). No functional changes intended.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58827
Reviewed By: rnk
llvm-svn: 356925
For backwards compatibility we allow alternative spelling of address
spaces - 'private', 'local', 'global', 'constant', 'generic'.
In order to accept 'private' correctly, parsing has been changed to
understand different use cases - access specifier vs address space.
Fixes PR40707 and PR41011!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59603
llvm-svn: 356888
Summary:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D59076 added a new coroutine error that
prevented users from using 'co_await' or 'co_yield' within a exception
handler. However, it was reverted in https://reviews.llvm.org/rC356774
because it caused a regression in nested scopes in C++ catch statements,
as documented by https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41171.
The issue was due to an incorrect use of a `clang::ParseScope`. To fix:
1. Add a regression test for catch statement parsing that mimics the bug
report from https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41171.
2. Re-apply the coroutines error patch from
https://reviews.llvm.org/D59076, but this time with the correct
ParseScope behavior.
Reviewers: GorNishanov, tks2103, rsmith, riccibruno, jbulow
Reviewed By: riccibruno
Subscribers: EricWF, jdoerfert, lewissbaker, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59752
llvm-svn: 356865
Summary:
These changes were corrected directly in ClangFormatStyleOptions.rst (llvm-svn: 350192 and llvm-svn: 351976) but these sections can be produced automatically using `dump_format_style.py` so sync the corresponding doc comments in `Format.h` as well.
Patch by Ronald Wampler
Reviewers: eugene, sylvestre.ledru, djasper
Reviewed By: sylvestre.ledru
Subscribers: jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58186
llvm-svn: 356842
clause in target region.
According to the OpenMP 5.0, 2.11.3 allocate Directive, Restrictions,
allocate directives that appear in a target region must specify an
allocator clause unless a requires directive with the dynamic_allocators
clause is present in the same compilation unit.
llvm-svn: 356752
in the include path.
Instead of making the incorrect claim that the included file has an
absolute path, describe the actual problem: the including file was found
either by absolute path, or relative to such a file, or relative to the
primary source file.
llvm-svn: 356712
Summary:
`OMPClause` is the base class, it is not descendant from **any**
other class, therefore for it to work with e.g.
`VariadicDynCastAllOfMatcher<>`, it needs to be handled here.
Reviewers: sbenza, bkramer, pcc, klimek, hokein, gribozavr, aaron.ballman, george.karpenkov
Reviewed By: gribozavr, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: guansong, jdoerfert, alexfh, ABataev, cfe-commits
Tags: #openmp, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57112
llvm-svn: 356675
After https://reviews.llvm.org/rL355317 we noticed that quite a decent
amount of code redeclares builtins (memcpy in particular, I believe
reduced from an MSVC header) with a calling convention specified.
This gets particularly troublesome when the user specifies a new
'default' calling convention on the command line.
When looking to add a diagnostic for this case, it was noticed that we
had 3 other diagnostics that differed only slightly. This patch ALSO
unifies those under a 'select'. Unfortunately, the order of words in
ONE of these diagnostics was reversed ("'thiscall' calling convention"
vs "calling convention 'thiscall'"), so this patch also standardizes on
the former.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59560
Change-Id: I79f99fe7c2301640755ffdd774b46eb44526bb22
llvm-svn: 356663
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
allocators.
It is better to deduce omp_allocator_handle_t type from the predefined
allocators, because omp.h header might not define it explicitly. Plus,
it allows to identify the predefined allocators correctly when trying to
build the allcoator for the global variables.
llvm-svn: 356607
Before this commit, we emit unavailable errors for calls to functions during
overload resolution, and for references to all other declarations in
DiagnoseUseOfDecl. The early checks during overload resolution aren't as good as
the DiagnoseAvailabilityOfDecl based checks, as they error on the code from
PR40991. This commit fixes this by removing the early checking.
llvm.org/PR40991
rdar://48564179
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59394
llvm-svn: 356599
Summary:
`ASTImporter::Imported` currently returns a Decl, but that return value is not used by the ASTImporter (or anywhere else)
nor is it documented.
Reviewers: balazske, martong, a.sidorin, shafik
Reviewed By: balazske, martong
Subscribers: rnkovacs, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59595
llvm-svn: 356592
Summary:
https://www.openmp.org/wp-content/uploads/OpenMP-API-Specification-5.0.pdf, page 3:
```
structured block
For C/C++, an executable statement, possibly compound, with a single entry at the
top and a single exit at the bottom, or an OpenMP construct.
COMMENT: See Section 2.1 on page 38 for restrictions on structured
blocks.
```
```
2.1 Directive Format
Some executable directives include a structured block. A structured block:
• may contain infinite loops where the point of exit is never reached;
• may halt due to an IEEE exception;
• may contain calls to exit(), _Exit(), quick_exit(), abort() or functions with a
_Noreturn specifier (in C) or a noreturn attribute (in C/C++);
• may be an expression statement, iteration statement, selection statement, or try block, provided
that the corresponding compound statement obtained by enclosing it in { and } would be a
structured block; and
Restrictions
Restrictions to structured blocks are as follows:
• Entry to a structured block must not be the result of a branch.
• The point of exit cannot be a branch out of the structured block.
C / C++
• The point of entry to a structured block must not be a call to setjmp().
• longjmp() and throw() must not violate the entry/exit criteria.
```
Of particular note here is the fact that OpenMP structured blocks are as-if `noexcept`,
in the same sense as with the normal `noexcept` functions in C++.
I.e. if throw happens, and it attempts to travel out of the `noexcept` function
(here: out of the current structured-block), then the program terminates.
Now, one of course can say that since it is explicitly prohibited by the Specification,
then any and all programs that violate this Specification contain undefined behavior,
and are unspecified, and thus no one should care about them. Just don't write broken code /s
But i'm not sure this is a reasonable approach.
I have personally had oss-fuzz issues of this origin - exception thrown inside
of an OpenMP structured-block that is not caught, thus causing program termination.
This issue isn't all that hard to catch, it's not any particularly different from
diagnosing the same situation with the normal `noexcept` function.
Now, clang static analyzer does not presently model exceptions.
But clang-tidy has a simplisic [[ https://clang.llvm.org/extra/clang-tidy/checks/bugprone-exception-escape.html | bugprone-exception-escape ]] check,
and it is even refactored as a `ExceptionAnalyzer` class for reuse.
So it would be trivial to use that analyzer to check for
exceptions escaping out of OpenMP structured blocks. (D59466)
All that sounds too great to be true. Indeed, there is a caveat.
Presently, it's practically impossible to do. To check a OpenMP structured block
you need to somehow 'get' the OpenMP structured block, and you can't because
it's simply not modelled in AST. `CapturedStmt`/`CapturedDecl` is not it's representation.
Now, it is of course possible to write e.g. some AST matcher that would e.g.
match every OpenMP executable directive, and then return the whatever `Stmt` is
the structured block of said executable directive, if any.
But i said //practically//. This isn't practical for the following reasons:
1. This **will** bitrot. That matcher will need to be kept up-to-date,
and refreshed with every new OpenMP spec version.
2. Every single piece of code that would want that knowledge would need to
have such matcher. Well, okay, if it is an AST matcher, it could be shared.
But then you still have `RecursiveASTVisitor` and friends.
`2 > 1`, so now you have code duplication.
So it would be reasonable (and is fully within clang AST spirit) to not
force every single consumer to do that work, but instead store that knowledge
in the correct, and appropriate place - AST, class structure.
Now, there is another hoop we need to get through.
It isn't fully obvious //how// to model this.
The best solution would of course be to simply add a `OMPStructuredBlock` transparent
node. It would be optimal, it would give us two properties:
* Given this `OMPExecutableDirective`, what's it OpenMP structured block?
* It is trivial to check whether the `Stmt*` is a OpenMP structured block (`isa<OMPStructuredBlock>(ptr)`)
But OpenMP structured block isn't **necessarily** the first, direct child of `OMP*Directive`.
(even ignoring the clang's `CapturedStmt`/`CapturedDecl` that were inserted inbetween).
So i'm not sure whether or not we could re-create AST statements after they were already created?
There would be other costs to a new AST node: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40563#c12
```
1. You will need to break the representation of loops. The body should be replaced by the "structured block" entity.
2. You will need to support serialization/deserialization.
3. You will need to support template instantiation.
4. You will need to support codegen and take this new construct to account in each OpenMP directive.
```
Instead, there **is** an functionally-equivalent, alternative solution, consisting of two parts.
Part 1:
* Add a member function `isStandaloneDirective()` to the `OMPExecutableDirective` class,
that will tell whether this directive is stand-alone or not, as per the spec.
We need it because we can't just check for the existance of associated statements,
see code comment.
* Add a member function `getStructuredBlock()` to the OMPExecutableDirective` class itself,
that assert that this is not a stand-alone directive, and either return the correct loop body
if this is a loop-like directive, or the captured statement.
This way, given an `OMPExecutableDirective`, we can get it's structured block.
Also, since the knowledge is ingrained into the clang OpenMP implementation,
it will not cause any duplication, and //hopefully// won't bitrot.
Great we achieved 1 of 2 properties of `OMPStructuredBlock` approach.
Thus, there is a second part needed:
* How can we check whether a given `Stmt*` is `OMPStructuredBlock`?
Well, we can't really, in general. I can see this workaround:
```
class FunctionASTVisitor : public RecursiveASTVisitor<FunctionASTVisitor> {
using Base = RecursiveASTVisitor<FunctionASTVisitor>;
public:
bool VisitOMPExecDir(OMPExecDir *D) {
OmpStructuredStmts.emplace_back(D.getStructuredStmt());
}
bool VisitSOMETHINGELSE(???) {
if(InOmpStructuredStmt)
HI!
}
bool TraverseStmt(Stmt *Node) {
if (!Node)
return Base::TraverseStmt(Node);
if (OmpStructuredStmts.back() == Node)
++InOmpStructuredStmt;
Base::TraverseStmt(Node);
if (OmpStructuredStmts.back() == Node) {
OmpStructuredStmts.pop_back();
--InOmpStructuredStmt;
}
return true;
}
std::vector<Stmt*> OmpStructuredStmts;
int InOmpStructuredStmt = 0;
};
```
But i really don't see using it in practice.
It's just too intrusive; and again, requires knowledge duplication.
.. but no. The solution lies right on the ground.
Why don't we simply store this `i'm a openmp structured block` in the bitfield of the `Stmt` itself?
This does not appear to have any impact on the memory footprint of the clang AST,
since it's just a single extra bit in the bitfield. At least the static assertions don't fail.
Thus, indeed, we can achieve both of the properties without a new AST node.
We can cheaply set that bit right in sema, at the end of `Sema::ActOnOpenMPExecutableDirective()`,
by just calling the `getStructuredBlock()` that we just added.
Test coverage that demonstrates all this has been added.
This isn't as great with serialization though. Most of it does not use abbrevs,
so we do end up paying the full price (4 bytes?) instead of a single bit.
That price, of course, can be reclaimed by using abbrevs.
In fact, i suspect that //might// not just reclaim these bytes, but pack these PCH significantly.
I'm not seeing a third solution. If there is one, it would be interesting to hear about it.
("just don't write code that would require `isa<OMPStructuredBlock>(ptr)`" is not a solution.)
Fixes [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40563 | PR40563 ]].
Reviewers: ABataev, rjmccall, hfinkel, rsmith, riccibruno, gribozavr
Reviewed By: ABataev, gribozavr
Subscribers: mgorny, aaron.ballman, steveire, guansong, jfb, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #openmp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59214
llvm-svn: 356570
PentiumPro has HasNOPL set in the backend. i686 does not.
Despite having a function that looks like it canonicalizes alias names. It
doesn't seem to be called. So I don't think this is a functional change. But its
good to be consistent between the backend and frontend.
llvm-svn: 356537
Use the new kind for both angled header-name tokens and for
double-quoted header-name tokens.
This is in preparation for C++20's context-sensitive header-name token
formation rules.
llvm-svn: 356530
The attribute pass_dynamic_object_size(n) behaves exactly like
pass_object_size(n), but instead of evaluating __builtin_object_size on calls,
it evaluates __builtin_dynamic_object_size, which has the potential to produce
runtime code when the object size can't be determined statically.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58757
llvm-svn: 356515
If the allocator was specified for the variable and next one is found
with the different allocator, the warning is emitted, and the allocator
is ignored.
llvm-svn: 356513
"clang++ hello.cc --rtlib=compiler-rt"
now can works without specifying additional unwind or exception
handling libraries.
This reworked version of the feature no longer modifies today's default
unwind library for compiler-rt: which is nothing. Rather, a user
can specify -DCLANG_DEFAULT_UNWINDLIB=libunwind when configuring
the compiler.
This should address the issues from the previous version.
Update tests for new --unwindlib semantics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59109
llvm-svn: 356508
According to OpenMP, 2.11.3 allocate Directive, Restrictions, C / C++,
if a list item has a static storage type, the allocator expression in
the allocator clause must be a constant expression that evaluates to
one of the predefined memory allocator values. Added check for this
restriction.
llvm-svn: 356496
Summary:
`wasm.throw` builtin's first 'tag' argument should be an immediate index
into the event section.
Reviewers: dschuff, craig.topper
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59448
llvm-svn: 356436
tokens.
We now actually form an angled_string_literal token for a header name by
concatenation rather than just working out what its contents would be.
This substantially simplifies downstream processing and is necessary for
C++20 header unit imports.
llvm-svn: 356433
Summary:
Similar to D56967, we add the existing diag::note_locked_here to tell
the user where we saw the locking that isn't matched correctly.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, delesley
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59455
llvm-svn: 356427
These diagnose overflowing calls to subset of fortifiable functions. Some
functions, like sprintf or strcpy aren't supported right not, but we should
probably support these in the future. We previously supported this kind of
functionality with -Wbuiltin-memcpy-chk-size, but that diagnostic doesn't work
with _FORTIFY implementations that use wrapper functions. Also unlike that
diagnostic, we emit these warnings regardless of whether _FORTIFY_SOURCE is
actually enabled, which is nice for programs that don't enable the runtime
checks.
Why not just use diagnose_if, like Bionic does? We can get better diagnostics in
the compiler (i.e. mention the sizes), and we have the potential to diagnose
sprintf and strcpy which is impossible with diagnose_if (at least, in languages
that don't support C++14 constexpr). This approach also saves standard libraries
from having to add diagnose_if.
rdar://48006655
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58797
llvm-svn: 356397
Summary:
Removed the `GDM` checking what could prevent reports made by this visitor.
Now we rely on constraint changes instead.
(It reapplies 356318 with a feature from 356319 because build-bot failure.)
Reviewers: NoQ, george.karpenkov
Reviewed By: NoQ
Subscribers: cfe-commits, jdoerfert, gerazo, xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware,
szepet, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54811
llvm-svn: 356322
Summary: Removed the `GDM` checking what could prevent reports made by this visitor. Now we rely on constraint changes instead.
Reviewers: NoQ, george.karpenkov
Reviewed By: NoQ
Subscribers: jdoerfert, gerazo, xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54811
llvm-svn: 356318
Summary:
Because in wasm we merge all catch clauses into one big catchpad, in
case none of the types in catch handlers matches after we test against
each of them, we should unwind to the next EH enclosing scope. For this,
we should NOT use a call to `__cxa_rethrow` but rather a call to our own
rethrow intrinsic, because what we're trying to do here is just to
transfer the control flow into the next enclosing EH pad (or the
caller). Calls to `__cxa_rethrow` should only be used after a call to
`__cxa_begin_catch`.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59353
llvm-svn: 356317
__pragma(execution_character_set(push, "UTF-8")) is used in
TraceLoggingProvider.h. This commit implements a no-op handler for
compatability, similar to how the flag -fexec_charset is handled.
Patch by Matt Gardner!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58530
llvm-svn: 356185
For a rather short code snippet, if debug.ReportStmts (added in this patch) was
enabled, a bug reporter visitor crashed:
struct h {
operator int();
};
int k() {
return h();
}
Ultimately, this originated from PathDiagnosticLocation::createMemberLoc, as it
didn't handle the case where it's MemberExpr typed parameter returned and
invalid SourceLocation for MemberExpr::getMemberLoc. The solution was to find
any related valid SourceLocaion, and Stmt::getBeginLoc happens to be just that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58777
llvm-svn: 356161
This adds support for static_assert() (and _Static_assert()) in
@interface/@implementation ivar lists and in @interface method declarations.
It was already supported in @implementation blocks outside of the ivar lists.
The assert AST nodes are added at file scope, matching where other
(non-Objective-C) declarations at @interface / @implementation level go (cf
`allTUVariables`).
Also add a `__has_feature(objc_c_static_assert)` that's true in C11 (and
`__has_extension(objc_c_static_assert)` that's always true) and
`__has_feature(objc_cxx_static_assert)` that's true in C++11 modea fter this
patch, so it's possible to check if this is supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59223
llvm-svn: 356148
This reverts commit r353765. After talking with our c stdlib folks, we decided
to use the existing pass_object_size attribute to implement _FORTIFY_SOURCE
wrappers, like Bionic does (I didn't realize that pass_object_size could be used
for this purpose). Sorry for the flip/flop, and thanks to James Y. Knight for
pointing this out to me.
llvm-svn: 356103
Running `clang-format -debug` prints "Unknown" for tablegen files because of this missing mapping, even though it is recognized as a tablegen file.
llvm-svn: 356097
Summary:
Introduces variants of `getText` and `getSourceRange` that extract the source text of an AST node potentially with a trailing token.
Some of the new functions manipulate `CharSourceRange`s, rather than `SourceRange`s, because they document and dynamically enforce their type. So, this revision also updates the corresponding existing FixIt functions to manipulate `CharSourceRange`s. This change is not strictly necessary, but seems like the correct choice, to keep the API self-consistent.
This revision is the first in a series intended to improve the abstractions available to users for writing source-to-source transformations. A full discussion of the end goal can be found on the cfe-dev list with subject "[RFC] Easier source-to-source transformations with clang tooling".
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov
Reviewed By: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: kimgr, riccibruno, JonasToth, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58556
llvm-svn: 356095
Summary:
This is useful because otherwise there's no easy way to distinguish #pragma
packed(N) from attribute(packed, aligned(N)) that isn't looking at field
offsets (since pragma packed() also creates a packed attribute).
Reviewers: Anastasia, arphaman, serge-sans-paille
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59299
llvm-svn: 356062
Summary:
Addressing: PR25010 - https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=25010
Code like:
```
if(true) var++;
else {
var--;
}
```
is reformatted to be
```
if (true)
var++;
else {
var--;
}
```
Even when `AllowShortIfStatementsOnASingleLine` is true
The following revision comes from a +1'd suggestion in the PR to support AllowShortIfElseStatementsOnASingleLine
This suppresses the clause prevents the merging of the if when there is a compound else
Reviewers: klimek, djasper, JonasToth, alexfh, krasimir, reuk
Reviewed By: reuk
Subscribers: reuk, Higuoxing, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang-tools-extra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59087
llvm-svn: 356031
Summary:
Addressing: PR25010 - https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=25010
Code like:
```
if(true) var++;
else {
var--;
}
```
is reformatted to be
```
if (true)
var++;
else {
var--;
}
```
Even when `AllowShortIfStatementsOnASingleLine` is true
The following revision comes from a +1'd suggestion in the PR to support AllowShortIfElseStatementsOnASingleLine
This suppresses the clause prevents the merging of the if when there is a compound else
Reviewers: klimek, djasper, JonasToth, alexfh, krasimir, reuk
Reviewed By: reuk
Subscribers: reuk, Higuoxing, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang-tools-extra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59087
llvm-svn: 356029
Currently we have -Rpass for filtering the remarks that are displayed as
diagnostics, but when using -fsave-optimization-record, there is no way
to filter the remarks while generating them.
This adds support for filtering remarks by passes using a regex.
Ex: `clang -fsave-optimization-record -foptimization-record-passes=inline`
will only emit the remarks coming from the pass `inline`.
This adds:
* `-fsave-optimization-record` to the driver
* `-opt-record-passes` to cc1
* `-lto-pass-remarks-filter` to the LTOCodeGenerator
* `--opt-remarks-passes` to lld
* `-pass-remarks-filter` to llc, opt, llvm-lto, llvm-lto2
* `-opt-remarks-passes` to gold-plugin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59268
Original llvm-svn: 355964
llvm-svn: 355984
Currently we have -Rpass for filtering the remarks that are displayed as
diagnostics, but when using -fsave-optimization-record, there is no way
to filter the remarks while generating them.
This adds support for filtering remarks by passes using a regex.
Ex: `clang -fsave-optimization-record -foptimization-record-passes=inline`
will only emit the remarks coming from the pass `inline`.
This adds:
* `-fsave-optimization-record` to the driver
* `-opt-record-passes` to cc1
* `-lto-pass-remarks-filter` to the LTOCodeGenerator
* `--opt-remarks-passes` to lld
* `-pass-remarks-filter` to llc, opt, llvm-lto, llvm-lto2
* `-opt-remarks-passes` to gold-plugin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59268
llvm-svn: 355964
Add an option to cache the generated PCH in the ModuleCache when
emitting it. This protects clients that build PCHs and read them in the
same process, allowing them to avoid race conditions between parallel
jobs the same way that Clang's implicit module build system does.
rdar://problem/48740787
llvm-svn: 355950
This change introduces support for object files in addition to static
and shared libraries which were already supported which requires
changing the type of the argument from boolean to an enum.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56044
llvm-svn: 355891
It hasn't seen active development in years, and it hasn't reached a
state where it was useful.
Remove the code until someone is interested in working on it again.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59133
llvm-svn: 355862
Leverage the InMemoryModuleCache to invalidate a module the first time
it fails to import (and to lock a module as soon as it's built or
imported successfully). For implicit module builds, this optimizes
importing deep graphs where the leaf module is out-of-date; see example
near the end of the commit message.
Previously the cache finalized ("locked in") all modules imported so far
when starting a new module build. This was sufficient to prevent
loading two versions of the same module, but was somewhat arbitrary and
hard to reason about.
Now the cache explicitly tracks module state, where each module must be
one of:
- Unknown: module not in the cache (yet).
- Tentative: module in the cache, but not yet fully imported.
- ToBuild: module found on disk could not be imported; need to build.
- Final: module in the cache has been successfully built or imported.
Preventing repeated failed imports avoids variation in builds based on
shifting filesystem state. Now it's guaranteed that a module is loaded
from disk exactly once. It now seems safe to remove
FileManager::invalidateCache, but I'm leaving that for a later commit.
The new, precise logic uncovered a pre-existing problem in the cache:
the map key is the module filename, and different contexts use different
filenames for the same PCM file. (In particular, the test
Modules/relative-import-path.c does not build without this commit.
r223577 started using a relative path to describe a module's base
directory when importing it within another module. As a result, the
module cache sees an absolute path when (a) building the module or
importing it at the top-level, and a relative path when (b) importing
the module underneath another one.)
The "obvious" fix is to resolve paths using FileManager::getVirtualFile
and change the map key for the cache to a FileEntry, but some contexts
(particularly related to ASTUnit) have a shorter lifetime for their
FileManager than the InMemoryModuleCache. This is worth pursuing
further in a later commit; perhaps by tying together the FileManager and
InMemoryModuleCache lifetime, or moving the in-memory PCM storage into a
VFS layer.
For now, use the PCM's base directory as-written for constructing the
filename to check the ModuleCache.
Example
=======
To understand the build optimization, first consider the build of a
module graph TU -> A -> B -> C -> D with an empty cache:
TU builds A'
A' builds B'
B' builds C'
C' builds D'
imports D'
B' imports C'
imports D'
A' imports B'
imports C'
imports D'
TU imports A'
imports B'
imports C'
imports D'
If we build TU again, where A, B, C, and D are in the cache and D is
out-of-date, we would previously get this build:
TU imports A
imports B
imports C
imports D (out-of-date)
TU builds A'
A' imports B
imports C
imports D (out-of-date)
builds B'
B' imports C
imports D (out-of-date)
builds C'
C' imports D (out-of-date)
builds D'
imports D'
B' imports C'
imports D'
A' imports B'
imports C'
imports D'
TU imports A'
imports B'
imports C'
imports D'
After this commit, we'll immediateley invalidate A, B, C, and D when we
first observe that D is out-of-date, giving this build:
TU imports A
imports B
imports C
imports D (out-of-date)
TU builds A' // The same graph as an empty cache.
A' builds B'
B' builds C'
C' builds D'
imports D'
B' imports C'
imports D'
A' imports B'
imports C'
imports D'
TU imports A'
imports B'
imports C'
imports D'
The new build matches what we'd naively expect, pretty closely matching
the original build with the empty cache.
rdar://problem/48545366
llvm-svn: 355778
Change MemoryBufferCache to InMemoryModuleCache, moving it from Basic to
Serialization. Another patch will start using it to manage module build
more explicitly, but this is split out because it's mostly mechanical.
Because of the move to Serialization we can no longer abuse the
Preprocessor to forward it to the ASTReader. Besides the rename and
file move, that means Preprocessor::Preprocessor has one fewer parameter
and ASTReader::ASTReader has one more.
llvm-svn: 355777
Asserting on invalid input isn't very nice, hence the patch to emit an error
instead.
This is the first of many patches to overhaul the way we handle checker options.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57850
llvm-svn: 355704
r355322 fixed this, however is being reverted due to concerns with
enabling it in other modes.
Change-Id: I6a939b7469b8fa196d5871a627eb2330dbd30f29
llvm-svn: 355698
We will now warn about such options being unused,
which is better than the current
"no such file or directory: '/d2foo'" errors.
Note that we can still handle specific flags separately,
e.g. we were already ignoring /d2FastFail and /d2Zi+
llvm-svn: 355682
Summary:
In current indexing logic we get references to class itself when we see
a constructor/destructor which is only syntactically true. Semantically
this information is not correct. This patch marks that reference as
NameReference to let clients deal with it.
Reviewers: akyrtzi, gribozavr, nathawes, benlangmuir
Reviewed By: gribozavr, nathawes
Subscribers: nathawes, arphaman, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58814
llvm-svn: 355668
expression inside the parentheses is a valid UTF-8 string literal.
Previously clang emitted an expression like @("abc") as a message send
to stringWithUTF8String. This commit makes clang emit the boxed
expression as a compile-time constant instead.
This commit also has the effect of silencing the nullable-to-nonnull
conversion warning clang started emitting after r317727, which
originally motivated this commit (see https://oleb.net/2018/@keypath).
rdar://problem/42684601
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58729
llvm-svn: 355662
This change adds a new diagnostic for mismatching address spaces
to be used for C++ casts (only enabled in C style cast for now,
the rest will follow!).
The change extends C-style cast rules to account for address spaces.
It also adds a separate function for address space cast checking that
can be used to map from a separate address space cast operator
addrspace_cast (to be added as a follow up patch).
Note, that after this change clang will no longer allows arbitrary
address space conversions in reinterpret_casts because they can lead
to accidental errors. The implicit safe conversions would still be
allowed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58346
llvm-svn: 355609
We should track mutation of a variable within a comma operator expression.
Current code in ExprMutationAnalyzer does not handle it.
This will handle cases like:
(a, b) ++ < == b is modified
(a, b) = c < == b is modifed
Patch by Djordje Todorovic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58894
llvm-svn: 355605
Since
commit 56f548bbbb7e4387a69708f70724d00e9e076153
[modules] Round-trip -Werror flag through explicit module build.
the behavior of CXTranslationUnit_KeepGoing changed:
Unresolved #includes are fatal errors again. As a consequence, some
templates are not instantiated and lead to confusing errors.
Revert to the old behavior: With CXTranslationUnit_KeepGoing fatal
errors are mapped to errors.
Patch by Nikolai Kosjar.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58501
llvm-svn: 355586
This change fixes temporary materialization to happen in the right
(default) address space when binding to it a reference of different type.
It adds address space conversion afterwards to match the addr space
of a reference.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58634
llvm-svn: 355499
Apparently GCC allows this, and there's code relying on it (see bug).
The idea is to allow expression that would have been allowed if they
were cast to int. So I based the code on how such a cast would be done
(the CK_PointerToIntegral case in IntExprEvaluator::VisitCastExpr()).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58821
llvm-svn: 355491
Summary:
This reverts rL352390 / D57280.
As discussed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D57112#inline-506781,
'flush' clause does not exist in the OpenMP spec, it can not be
specified, and `OMPFlushClause` class is just a helper class.
Now, here's the caveat. I have read @ABataev's
> Well, I think it would be good to filter out OMPC_flush somehow
> because there is no such clause actually, it is a pseudo clause
> for better handling of the flush directive.
as if that clause is pseudo clause that only exists for the sole
purpose of simplifying the parser. As in, it never reaches AST.
I did not however try to verify that. Too bad, i was wrong.
It absolutely *does* reach AST. Therefore my understanding/justification
for the change was flawed, which makes the patch a regression which **must** be reverted.
@gribozavr has brought that up again in https://reviews.llvm.org/D57112#inline-521238
> > ...
> Sorry to be late for this discussion, but I don't think this conclusion
> follows. ASTMatchers are supposed to match the AST as it is.
> Even if OMPC_flush is synthetic, it exists in the AST, and users might
> want to match it. I think users would find anything else (trying to filter
> out AST nodes that are not in the source code) to be surprising. For example,
> there's a matcher materializeTemporaryExpr even though this AST node is a
> Clang invention and is not a part of the C++ spec.
>
> Matching only constructs that appear in the source code is not feasible with
> ASTMatchers, because they are based on Clang's AST that exposes tons of semantic
> information, and its design is dictated by the structure of the semantic information.
> See "RFC: Tree-based refactorings with Clang" in cfe-dev for a library that will
> focus on representing source code as faithfully as possible.
>
> Not to even mention that this code is in ASTTypeTraits, a general library for
> handling AST nodes, not specifically for AST Matchers...
Reviewers: gribozavr, ABataev, rjmccall, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: gribozavr, ABataev
Subscribers: dylanmckay, guansong, arphaman, jdoerfert, cfe-commits, gribozavr, ABataev
Tags: #clang, #openmp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58979
llvm-svn: 355486
Add a remark for importing modules. Depending on whether this is a
direct import (into the TU being built by this compiler instance) or
transitive import (into an already-imported module), the diagnostic has
two forms:
importing module 'Foo' from 'path/to/Foo.pcm'
importing module 'Foo' into 'Bar' from 'path/to/Foo.pcm'
Also drop a redundant FileCheck invocation in Rmodule-build.m that was
using -Reverything, since the notes from -Rmodule-import were confusing
it.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D58891
llvm-svn: 355477
This patch includes the necessary code for converting between a fixed point type and integer.
This also includes constant expression evaluation for conversions with these types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56900
llvm-svn: 355462
Summary:
FileData was only ever used as a container for the values in
llvm::vfs::Status, so they might as well be consolidated.
The `InPCH` member was also always set to false, and unused.
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58924
llvm-svn: 355368
When -forder-file-instrumentation is on, we pass llvm flag to enable the order file instrumentation pass.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D58751
llvm-svn: 355333
Summary:
Currently when we see a built-in we try and import the include location. Instead what we do now is find the buffer like we do for the invalid case and copy that over to the to context.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58743
llvm-svn: 355332
Part 1 of CSPGO change in Clang. This includes changes in clang options
and calls to llvm PassManager. Tests will be committed in part2.
This change needs the PassManager change in llvm.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54176
llvm-svn: 355331
The above builtins are currently implemented for MSVC mode, however GCC
also implements these. This patch enables them for all platforms.
Additionally, this corrects the type for these builtins to always be
'long int' to match the specification in the Intel Intrinsics Guide.
Change-Id: Ida34be98078709584ef5136c8761783435ec02b1
llvm-svn: 355322
Under the term "subchecker", I mean checkers that do not have a checker class on
their own, like unix.MallocChecker to unix.DynamicMemoryModeling.
Since a checker object was required in order to retrieve checker options,
subcheckers couldn't possess options on their own.
This patch is also an excuse to change the argument order of getChecker*Option,
it always bothered me, now it resembles the actual command line argument
(checkername:option=value).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57579
llvm-svn: 355297
Then, as a consequence, remove the complex set of workarounds for
initialization order -- which are apparently not 100% reliable.
The only downside is that some of the member functions are now
specific to kNumElem == 2, and will need to be updated if that
constant is increased in the future.
Unfortunately, the current code caused an initialization-order runtime
failure for me in some compilation modes. It appears that in a
toolchain without init-array enabled, the order of initialization of
static data members of a template can be reversed w.r.t. the order
within a file.
This caused e.g. SanitizerKind::CFI to be initialized to 0.
I'm not quite sure if that is an allowable ordering variation, or
nonconforming behavior, but in any case, making everything constexpr
eliminates the possibility of such an issue.
llvm-svn: 355278
enum SanitizerOrdinal has reached maximum capacity, this change extends the capacity to 128 sanitizer checks.
This can eventually allow us to add gcc 8's options "-fsanitize=pointer-substract" and "-fsanitize=pointer-compare".
This is a recommit of r354873 but with a fix for unqualified lookup error in lldb cmake build bot.
Fixes: https://llvm.org/PR39425
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57914
llvm-svn: 355190
Summary:
getLLVMStyle() sets the default style, but doesn't take the language as a parameter, so can't set default parameters when they differ from C++. This change adds LanguageKind as an input to getLLVMStyle so that we can start doing that.
See D55964 as a motivation for this, where we want Tablegen to be formatted differently than C++.
Reviewers: djasper, krasimir, MyDeveloperDay
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Subscribers: jdoerfert, MyDeveloperDay, kristina, cfe-commits, arphaman
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56943
llvm-svn: 355123
Summary:
In the clang UI, replaces -mthread-model posix with -matomics as the
source of truth on threading. In the backend, replaces
-thread-model=posix with the atomics target feature, which is now
collected on the WebAssemblyTargetMachine along with all other used
features. These collected features will also be used to emit the
target features section in the future.
The default configuration for the backend is thread-model=posix and no
atomics, which was previously an invalid configuration. This change
makes the default valid because the thread model is ignored.
A side effect of this change is that objects are never emitted with
passive segments. It will instead be up to the linker to decide
whether sections should be active or passive based on whether atomics
are used in the final link.
Reviewers: aheejin, sbc100, dschuff
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, sunfish, steven_wu, dexonsmith, rupprecht, jfb, jdoerfert, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58742
llvm-svn: 355112
Summary:
If CPP dialects are different then return with error.
Consider this STL code:
template<typename _Alloc>
struct __alloc_traits
#if __cplusplus >= 201103L
: std::allocator_traits<_Alloc>
#endif
{ // ...
};
This class template would create ODR errors during merging the two units,
since in one translation unit the class template has a base class, however
in the other unit it has none.
Reviewers: xazax.hun, a_sidorin, r.stahl
Subscribers: rnkovacs, dkrupp, Szelethus, gamesh411, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57906
llvm-svn: 355096
Basic data structures for index
Tests are missing from this patch - will be covered properly by tests for the whole feature.
I'm just trying to split into smaller patches to make it easier for reviewers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58478
llvm-svn: 355035
initializes a local auto variable or is assigned to a local auto
variable that is declared in the scope that introduced the block
literal.
rdar://problem/13289333
https://reviews.llvm.org/D58514
llvm-svn: 355012
The current constraint logic is both too lax and too strict. It fails
for input outside the [INT_MIN..INT_MAX] range, but it also implicitly
accepts 0 as value when it should not. Adjust logic to handle both
correctly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58649
llvm-svn: 354937
Summary:
This allows ASTs to be merged when they contain ChooseExpr (the GNU
__builtin_choose_expr construction). This is needed, for example, for
cross-CTU analysis of C code that makes use of __builtin_choose_expr.
The node is already supported in the AST, but it didn't have a matcher
in ASTMatchers. So, this change adds the matcher and adds support to
ASTImporter.
This was originally reviewed and approved in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D58292 and submitted as r354832. It was
reverted in r354839 due to failures on the Windows CI builds.
This version fixes the test failures on Windows, which were caused by
differences in template expansion between versions of clang on different
OSes. The version of clang built with MSVC and running on Windows never
expands the template in the C++ test in ImportExpr.ImportChooseExpr in
clang/unittests/AST/ASTImporter.cpp, but the version on Linux does for
the empty arguments and -fms-compatibility.
So, this version of the patch drops the C++ test for
__builtin_choose_expr, since that version was written to catch
regressions of the logic for isConditionTrue() in the AST import code
for ChooseExpr, and those regressions are also caught by
ASTImporterOptionSpecificTestBase.ImportChooseExpr, which does work on
Windows.
Reviewers: shafik, a_sidorin, martong, aaron.ballman, rnk, a.sidorin
Subscribers: cfe-commits, jdoerfert, rnkovacs, aaron.ballman
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58663
llvm-svn: 354916
This patch enables the following
1) AMD family 17h "znver2" tune flag (-march, -mcpu).
2) ISAs that are enabled for "znver2" architecture.
3) For the time being, it uses the znver1 scheduler model.
4) Tests are updated.
5) This patch is the clang counterpart to D58343
Reviewers: craig.topper
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58344
llvm-svn: 354899
enum SanitizerOrdinal has reached maximum capacity, this change extends the capacity to 128 sanitizer checks.
This can eventually allow us to add gcc 8's options "-fsanitize=pointer-substract" and "-fsanitize=pointer-compare".
Fixes: https://llvm.org/PR39425
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57914
llvm-svn: 354873
Summary:
See the added test for some new cases.
This change also removes special code completion calls inside the
ParseExpressionList function now that we properly propagate expected
type to the function responsible for parsing elements of the expression list
(ParseAssignmentExpression).
Reviewers: kadircet
Reviewed By: kadircet
Subscribers: xbolva00, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58541
llvm-svn: 354864
Summary:
This allows ASTs to be merged when they contain ChooseExpr (the GNU
__builtin_choose_expr construction). This is needed, for example, for
cross-CTU analysis of C code that makes use of __builtin_choose_expr.
The node is already supported in the AST, but it didn't have a matcher
in ASTMatchers. So, this change adds the matcher and adds support to
ASTImporter.
Reviewers: shafik, a_sidorin, martong, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: aaron.ballman, rnkovacs, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58292
llvm-svn: 354832
This patch implements the parsing and sema support for the OpenMP
'from'-clause with potential user-defined mappers attached.
User-defined mappers are a new feature in OpenMP 5.0. A 'from'-clause
can have an explicit or implicit associated mapper, which instructs the
compiler to generate and use customized mapping functions. An example is
shown below:
struct S { int len; int *d; };
#pragma omp declare mapper(id: struct S s) map(s, s.d[0:s.len])
struct S ss;
#pragma omp target update from(mapper(id): ss) // use the mapper with name 'id' to map ss from device
Contributed-by: Lingda Li <lildmh@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58638
llvm-svn: 354817
Summary:
Fixes a data race and makes it possible to run clang-based tools in
multithreaded environment with TSan.
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov, riccibruno
Reviewed By: riccibruno
Subscribers: riccibruno, jfb, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58612
llvm-svn: 354795
This patch implements the parsing and sema support for OpenMP to clause
with potential user-defined mappers attached. User defined mapper is a
new feature in OpenMP 5.0. A to/from clause can have an explicit or
implicit associated mapper, which instructs the compiler to generate and
use customized mapping functions. An example is shown below:
struct S { int len; int *d; };
#pragma omp declare mapper(id: struct S s) map(s, s.d[0:s.len])
struct S ss;
#pragma omp target update to(mapper(id): ss) // use the mapper with name 'id' to map ss to device
Contributed-by: <lildmh@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58523
llvm-svn: 354698
Adapted targetDiag for the CUDA and used for the delayed diagnostics in
asm constructs. Works for both host and device compilation sides.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58463
llvm-svn: 354671
With r354643, the checker is feature-rich and polished enough.
rdar://problem/35380337
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58397
llvm-svn: 354644
This checker detects use-after-free bugs in (various forks of) the Mach kernel
that are caused by errors in MIG server routines - functions called remotely by
MIG clients. The MIG convention forces the server to only deallocate objects
it receives from the client when the routine is executed successfully.
Otherwise, if the server routine exits with an error, the client assumes that
it needs to deallocate the out-of-line data it passed to the server manually.
This means that deallocating such data within the MIG routine and then returning
a non-zero error code is always a dangerous use-after-free bug.
rdar://problem/35380337
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57558
llvm-svn: 354635
Summary:
clangd uses indexing api to provide references and it was not possible
to perform symbol information for template parameters. This patch enables
visiting of TemplateTypeParmTypeLocs.
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov, akyrtzi
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, ioeric, arphaman, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58293
llvm-svn: 354560
These currently use _u32, but they should instead use _f16, the
types of the multiplication (matching the various integer vmlal
variants).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58306
llvm-svn: 354538
The new __attribute__ ((mig_server_routine)) is going to be used for annotating
Mach Interface Generator (MIG) callback functions as such, so that additional
static analysis could be applied to their implementations. It can also be
applied to regular functions behavior of which is supposed to be identical to
that of a MIG server routine.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58365
llvm-svn: 354530
Summary: This change mimics GCC's support for the "-static-pie" argument.
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58307
llvm-svn: 354502
Summary:
Added the ability to emit target-specific builtin assembler error
messages only in case if the function is really is going to be emitted
for the device.
Reviewers: rjmccall
Subscribers: guansong, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58243
llvm-svn: 354486
A faster way to reduce the values in teams reductions was found, the
codegen is updated to use this faster algorithm and new runtime functions.
llvm-svn: 354479
This patch implements the parsing and sema support for OpenMP map
clauses with potential user-defined mapper attached. User defined mapper
is a new feature in OpenMP 5.0. A map clause can have an explicit or
implicit associated mapper, which instructs the compiler to generate
extra data mapping. An example is shown below:
struct S { int len; int *d; };
#pragma omp declare mapper(id: struct S s) map(s, s.d[0:s.len])
struct S ss;
#pragma omp target map(mapper(id) tofrom: ss) // use the mapper with name 'id' to map ss
Contributed-by: Lingda Li <lildmh@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58074
llvm-svn: 354347
This adds ACLE-defined macros to test for code being compiled in the ROPI and
RWPI position-independence modes.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23610
llvm-svn: 354265
Accidentally left this dependency out, resulting in an assert failure if
only valist.Uninitialized is enabled from the valist package.
llvm-svn: 354235
(Originally commited in r354215 and reverted in r354216 because of a
missed failing clang-tidy test (fix in r354228))
Now that the implementation of all of the Expr::Ignore* is in Expr.cpp
we can try to remove some duplication. Do this by separating the logic
of the Expr::Ignore* from the iterative loop.
This is NFC, except for one change: IgnoreParenImpCasts now skips,
among other things, everything that IgnoreImpCasts skips. This means
FullExpr are now skipped by IgnoreParenImpCasts. This was likely an
oversight when FullExpr was added to the nodes skipped by IgnoreImpCasts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57267
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman (with comments from void and rnk)
llvm-svn: 354232
Now that the implementation of all of the Expr::Ignore* is in Expr.cpp
we can try to remove some duplication. Do this by separating the logic of
the Expr::Ignore* from the iterative loop.
This is NFC, except for one change: IgnoreParenImpCasts now skips, among
other things, everything that IgnoreImpCasts skips. This means FullExpr
are now skipped by IgnoreParenImpCasts. This was likely an oversight when
FullExpr was added to the nodes skipped by IgnoreImpCasts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57267
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman (with comments from void and rnk)
llvm-svn: 354215
...instead of just comparing rank. Also, fix a bad warning about
_Float16, since its declared out of order in BuiltinTypes.def,
meaning comparing rank using BuiltinType::getKind() is incorrect.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58254
llvm-svn: 354190
When a template-name is looked up, we need to give injected-class-name
declarations of class templates special treatment, as they denote a
template rather than a type.
Previously we achieved this by applying a filter to the lookup results
after completing name lookup, but that is incorrect in various ways, not
least of which is that it lost all information about access and how
members were named, and the filtering caused us to generally lose
all ambiguity errors between templates and non-templates.
We now preserve the lookup results exactly, and the few places that need
to map from a declaration found by name lookup into a declaration of a
template do so explicitly. Deduplication of repeated lookup results of
the same injected-class-name declaration is done by name lookup instead
of after the fact.
This reinstates r354091, which was previously reverted in r354097
because it exposed bugs in lldb and compiler-rt. Those bugs were fixed
in r354173 and r354174 respectively.
llvm-svn: 354176
Summary:
The main effect is that clang now accepts the following conforming C11
code with MSVC headers:
#include <assert.h>
static_assert(1, "true");
This is a non-conforming extension (the keyword is outside the
implementer's namespace), so it is placed under -fms-compatibility
instead of -fms-extensions like most MSVC-specific keyword extensions.
Normally, in C11, the compiler is supposed to provide the _Static_assert
keyword, and assert.h should define static_assert to _Static_assert.
However, that is not what MSVC does, and MSVC doesn't even provide
_Static_assert.
This also has the less important side effect of enabling static_assert
in C++98 mode with -fms-compatibility. It's exceptionally difficult to
use modern MSVC headers without C++14 even, so this is relatively
unimportant.
Fixes PR26672
Patch by Andrey Bokhanko!
Reviewers: rsmith, thakis
Subscribers: cfe-commits, STL_MSFT
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D17444
llvm-svn: 354162
When a template-name is looked up, we need to give injected-class-name
declarations of class templates special treatment, as they denote a
template rather than a type.
Previously we achieved this by applying a filter to the lookup results
after completing name lookup, but that is incorrect in various ways, not
least of which is that it lost all information about access and how
members were named, and the filtering caused us to generally lose
all ambiguity errors between templates and non-templates.
We now preserve the lookup results exactly, and the few places that need
to map from a declaration found by name lookup into a declaration of a
template do so explicitly. Deduplication of repeated lookup results of
the same injected-class-name declaration is done by name lookup instead
of after the fact.
llvm-svn: 354091
expression is a discarded-value expression.
Summary:
We used to get this wrong in three ways:
1) During parsing, an expression-statement followed by the }) ending a
statement expression was always treated as producing the value of the
statement expression. That's wrong for ({ if (1) expr; })
2) During template instantiation, various kinds of statement (most
statements not appearing directly in a compound-statement) were not
treated as discarded-value expressions, resulting in missing volatile
loads (etc).
3) In all contexts, an expression-statement with attributes was not
treated as producing the value of the statement expression, eg
({ [[attr]] expr; }).
Also fix incorrect enforcement of OpenMP rule that directives can "only
be placed in the program at a position where ignoring or deleting the
directive would result in a program with correct syntax". In particular,
a label (be it goto, case, or default) should not affect whether
directives are permitted.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, rjmccall
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57984
llvm-svn: 354090
Instead of letting a program fail at runtime, emit an error during
compilation.
rdar://problem/12206955
Reviewers: dexonsmith, bob.wilson, steven_wu
Reviewed By: steven_wu
Subscribers: jkorous, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57991
llvm-svn: 354084
This provides a code size win on the caller side, since the init
message send is done in the runtime function.
rdar://44987038
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57936
llvm-svn: 354056
D54902 removed CallExpr::setNumArgs in preparation of tail-allocating the
arguments of CallExpr. It did this by allocating storage for
max(number of arguments, number of parameters in the prototype). The
temporarily nulled arguments however causes issues in BuildResolvedCallExpr
when typo correction is done just after the creation of the call expression.
This was unfortunately missed by the tests /:
To fix this, delay setting the number of arguments to
max(number of arguments, number of parameters in the prototype) until we are
ready for it. It would be nice to have this encapsulated in CallExpr but this
is the best I can come up with under the constraint that we cannot add
anything the CallExpr.
Fixes PR40286.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57948
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
llvm-svn: 354035
Summary:
During import of a global variable with external visibility the lookup
will find variables (with the same name) but with static visibility.
Clearly, we cannot put them into the same redecl chain. The same is
true in case of functions. In this fix we filter the lookup results and
consider only those which have the same visibility as the decl we
currently import.
We consider two decls in two anonymous namsepaces to have the same
visibility only if they are imported from the very same translation
unit.
Reviewers: a_sidorin, shafik, a.sidorin
Reviewed By: shafik
Subscribers: jdoerfert, balazske, rnkovacs, dkrupp, Szelethus, gamesh411, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57232
llvm-svn: 354027
Summary:
This makes it consistent with `memcmp` and `__builtin_bcmp`.
Also see the discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D56593.
Reviewers: jyknight
Subscribers: kristina, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58120
llvm-svn: 354023
__hipRegisterFunction and __hipRegisterVar need to accept device side kernel and variable names
so that HIP runtime can associate kernel stub functions in host code with kernel symbols in fat binaries,
and associate shadow variables in host code with device variables in fat binaries.
Currently, clang assumes kernel functions and device variables have the same name as the kernel
stub functions and shadow variables. However, when host is compiled in windows with MSVC C++
ABI and device is compiled with Itanium C++ ABI (e.g. AMDGPU), kernels and device symbols in fat
binary are mangled differently than host.
This patch gets the device side kernel and variable name by mangling them in the mangle context
of aux target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58163
llvm-svn: 354004
This fixes a regression that was caused by r335084, which reversed
the order that attributes are applied. objc_method_family can change
whether a method is an init method, so the order that these
attributes are applied matters. The commit fixes this by delaying the
init check until after all attributes have been applied.
rdar://47829358
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58152
llvm-svn: 353976
This is a follow up to D48580 and D48581 which allows reserving
arbitrary general purpose registers with the exception of registers
with special purpose (X8, X16-X18, X29, X30) and registers used by LLVM
(X0, X19). This change also generalizes some of the existing logic to
rely entirely on values generated from tablegen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56305
llvm-svn: 353957
For reproducers in LLDB we want to hook up into the existing clang
infrastructure. To make that happen we need to be able to override the
ModuleDependencyCollector's methods.
The alternative was to inherit from the DependencyCollector directly,
but that would mean re-implementing the ModuleDependencyListener and the
ModuleDependencyPPCallbacks and ModuleDependencyMMCallbacks.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58072
llvm-svn: 353882
This attribute applies to declarations of C stdlib functions
(sprintf, memcpy...) that have known fortified variants
(__sprintf_chk, __memcpy_chk, ...). When applied, clang will emit
calls to the fortified variant functions instead of calls to the
defaults.
In GCC, this is done by adding gnu_inline-style wrapper functions,
but that doesn't work for us for variadic functions because we don't
support __builtin_va_arg_pack (and have no intention to).
This attribute takes two arguments, the first is 'type' argument
passed through to __builtin_object_size, and the second is a flag
argument that gets passed through to the variadic checking variants.
rdar://47905754
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57918
llvm-svn: 353765
Summary:
There have been three options related to threads and users had to set
all three of them separately to get the correct compilation results.
This makes sure the relationship between the options makes sense and
sets necessary options for users if only part of the necessary options
are specified. This does:
- Remove `-matomics`; this option alone does not enable anything, so
removed it to not confuse users.
- `-mthread-model posix` sets `-target-feature +atomics`
- `-pthread` sets both `-target-feature +atomics` and
`-mthread-model posix`
Also errors out when explicitly given options don't match, such as
`-pthread` is given with `-mthread-model single`.
Reviewers: dschuff, sbc100, tlively, sunfish
Subscribers: jgravelle-google, jfb, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57874
llvm-svn: 353761
There are certain unsafe or deprecated (since C11) buffer handling
functions which should be avoided in safety critical code. They
could cause buffer overflows. A new checker,
'security.insecureAPI.DeprecatedOrUnsafeBufferHandling' warns for
every occurrence of such functions (unsafe or deprecated printf,
scanf family, and other buffer handling functions, which now have
a secure variant).
Patch by Dániel Kolozsvári!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35068
llvm-svn: 353698
Summary:
Parameters in declarations are useful for clangd, so that we can
provide symbol information for them as well. It also helps clangd to be
consistent whether a function's definition is accessible or not.
Reviewers: hokein, akyrtzi
Subscribers: ilya-biryukov, ioeric, arphaman, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57949
llvm-svn: 353695
This include is needed for types within SMTAPI.h. (It's very possible that
compilation would succeed without it, but that's only by chance.)
llvm-svn: 353599
Fixed diagnostic emission for the exceptions support in case of the
compilation of OpenMP code for the devices. From now on, it uses delayed
diagnostics mechanism, previously used for CUDA only. It allow to
diagnose not allowed used of exceptions only in functions that are going
to be codegen'ed.
llvm-svn: 353542
It is important to delay the emission of the diagnostic messages for the
functions unless it is proved that the function is going to be used on
the device side. It is required to support compilation with some of the
target-specific system headers.
llvm-svn: 353540
Specifically:
* fixes the comments on `hasObjectExpression`,
* clarifies comments on `thisPointerType` and `on`,
* adds comments to `onImplicitObjectArgument`.
It also updates associated reference docs (using the doc tool).
Reviewers: alexfh, steveire, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56849
llvm-svn: 353532
This patch fixes a bug where clang doesn’t reject union fields of
non-trivial C struct types. For example:
```
// This struct is non-trivial under ARC.
struct S0 {
id x;
};
union U0 {
struct S0 s0; // clang should reject this.
struct S0 s1; // clang should reject this.
};
void test(union U0 a) {
// Previously, both 'a.s0.x' and 'a.s1.x' were released in this
// function.
}
```
rdar://problem/46677858
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55659
llvm-svn: 353459
Summary:
Deferred diagnostic interface is going to be used for OpenMP device
compilation. Generalized previously existed deferred diagnostic
interface for CUDA to be used with OpenMP and, possibly, other models.
Reviewers: rjmccall, tra
Subscribers: caomhin, cfe-commits, kkwli0
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57908
llvm-svn: 353456
Valid OpenCL C code should still compile in C++ mode.
This change enables extensions and OpenCL types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57824
llvm-svn: 353431
There is no advantage in having them in separate files, I doubt some will ever use them separately.
This also makes it easier to move the API to LLVM.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54977
llvm-svn: 353372
Now, instead of passing the reference to a shared_ptr, we pass the shared_ptr instead.
I've also removed the check if Z3 is present in CreateZ3ConstraintManager as this function already calls CreateZ3Solver that performs the exactly same check.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54976
llvm-svn: 353371
This patch moves the ConstraintSMT definition to the SMTConstraintManager header to make it easier to move the Z3 backend around.
We achieve this by not using shared_ptr anymore, as llvm::ImmutableSet doesn't seem to like it.
The solver specific exprs and sorts are cached in the Z3Solver object now and we move pointers to those objects around.
As a nice side-effect, SMTConstraintManager doesn't have to be a template anymore. Yay!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54975
llvm-svn: 353370
Memory region that correspond to a variable is identified by the variable's
declaration and, in case of local variables, the stack frame it belongs to.
The declaration needs to be canonical, otherwise we'd have two different
memory regions that correspond to the same variable.
Fix such bug for global variables with forward declarations and assert
that no other problems of this kind happen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57619
llvm-svn: 353353
This reverts commit r341722.
The "postponed" mechanism turns out to be necessary in order to handle
situations when a symbolic region is only kept alive by implicit bindings
in the Store. Otherwise the region is never scanned by the Store's worklist
and the binding gets dropped despite being live, as demonstrated
by the newly added tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57554
llvm-svn: 353350
When a framework with the same name is available at multiple framework
search paths, we use the first matching location. If a framework at this
location doesn't have all the headers, it can be confusing for
developers because they see only an error `'Foo/Foo.h' file not found`,
can find the complete framework with required header, and don't know the
incomplete framework was used instead.
Add a note explaining a framework without required header was found.
Also mention framework directory path to make it easier to find the
incomplete framework.
rdar://problem/39246514
Reviewers: arphaman, erik.pilkington, jkorous
Reviewed By: jkorous
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56561
llvm-svn: 353231
A non-lazy class will be initialized eagerly when the Objective-C runtime is
loaded. This is required for certain system classes which have instances allocated in
non-standard ways, such as the classes for blocks and constant strings.
Adding this attribute is essentially equivalent to providing a trivial
+load method but avoids the (fairly small) load-time overheads associated
with defining and calling such a method.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56555
llvm-svn: 353116
Summary: this commit adds support to a new dependence type introduced in OpenMP
5.0. The LLVM OpenMP RTL already supports this feature, so we only need to
modify CLANG to take advantage of them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57576
llvm-svn: 353018
The description of what the various Expr::Ignore* do has drifted from the
actual implementation.
Inspection reveals that IgnoreParenImpCasts() is not equivalent to doing
IgnoreParens() + IgnoreImpCasts() until reaching a fixed point, but
IgnoreParenCasts() is equivalent to doing IgnoreParens() + IgnoreCasts()
until reaching a fixed point. There is also a fair amount of duplication
in the various Expr::Ignore* functions which increase the chance of further
future inconsistencies. In preparation for the next patch which will factor
out the implementation of the various Expr::Ignore*, do the following cleanups:
Remove Stmt::IgnoreImplicit, in favor of Expr::IgnoreImplicit. IgnoreImplicit
is the only function among all of the Expr::Ignore* which is available in Stmt.
There are only a few users of Stmt::IgnoreImplicit. They can just use instead
Expr::IgnoreImplicit like they have to do for the other Ignore*.
Move Expr::IgnoreImpCasts() from Expr.h to Expr.cpp. This made no difference
in the run-time with my usual benchmark (-fsyntax-only on all of Boost).
While we are at it, make IgnoreParenNoopCasts take a const reference to the
ASTContext for const correctness.
Update the comments to match what the Expr::Ignore* are actually doing.
I am not sure that listing exactly what each Expr::Ignore* do is optimal,
but it certainly looks better than the current state which is in my opinion
between misleading and just plain wrong.
The whole patch is NFC (if you count removing Stmt::IgnoreImplicit as NFC).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57266
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
llvm-svn: 353006
Summary:
This new traverser class allows clients to re-use the traversal logic
which was previously part of ASTDumper. This means that alternative
visit logic may be implemented, such as
* Dump to alternative data formats such as JSON
* Implement AST Matcher parent/child visitation matching AST dumps
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: jfb, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57472
llvm-svn: 352989
Summary:
This adds support for new-PM plugin loading to clang. The option
`-fpass-plugin=` may be used to specify a dynamic shared object file
that adheres to the PassPlugin API.
Tested: created simple plugin that registers an EP callback; with optimization level > 0, the pass is run as expected.
Committed on behalf of Marco Elver
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56935
llvm-svn: 352972
ownership qualifications in C++ unions under ARC.
An ObjC pointer member with non-trivial ownership qualifications causes
all of the defaulted special functions of the enclosing union to be
defined as deleted, except when the member has an in-class initializer,
the default constructor isn't defined as deleted.
rdar://problem/34213306
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57438
llvm-svn: 352949
This argument was added in r254554 in order to support the
pass_object_size attribute. However, in r296076, the attribute's
presence is now also represented in FunctionProtoType's
ExtParameterInfo, and thus it's unnecessary to pass along a separate
FunctionDecl.
The functions modified are:
RequiredArgs::forPrototype{,Plus}, and
CodeGenTypes::ConvertFunctionType.
After this, it's also (again) unnecessary to have a separate
ConvertFunctionType function ConvertType, so convert callers back to
the latter, leaving the former as an internal helper function.
llvm-svn: 352946
This is similar to import_module, but sets the import field name
instead.
By default, the import field name is the same as the C/asm/.o symbol
name. However, there are situations where it's useful to have it be
different. For example, suppose I have a wasm API with a module named
"pwsix" and a field named "read". There's no risk of namespace
collisions with user code at the wasm level because the generic name
"read" is qualified by the module name "pwsix". However in the C/asm/.o
namespaces, the module name is not used, so if I have a global function
named "read", it is intruding on the user's namespace.
With the import_field module, I can declare my function (in libc) to be
"__read", and then set the wasm import module to be "pwsix" and the wasm
import field to be "read". So at the C/asm/.o levels, my symbol is
outside the user namespace.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57602
llvm-svn: 352930
I recently ran into this code:
```
\#include <iostream>
void foo(const std::string &s, const std::string& = "");
\#include <string>
void test() { foo(""); }
```
The diagnostic produced said it can't bind char[1] to std::string
const&. It didn't mention std::string is incomplete. The user had to
infer that.
This patch causes the diagnostic to now say "incomplete type".
llvm-svn: 352927
This patch implements parsing and sema for "omp declare mapper"
directive. User defined mapper, i.e., declare mapper directive, is a new
feature in OpenMP 5.0. It is introduced to extend existing map clauses
for the purpose of simplifying the copy of complex data structures
between host and device (i.e., deep copy). An example is shown below:
struct S { int len; int *d; };
#pragma omp declare mapper(struct S s) map(s, s.d[0:s.len]) // Memory region that d points to is also mapped using this mapper.
Contributed-by: Lingda Li <lildmh@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56326
llvm-svn: 352906
Token pasted by the preprocessor (through ##) have a Spelling pointing to scratch buffer.
As a result they are not recognized at system macro, even though the pasting happened in
a system macro. Fix that by looking into the parent macro if the original lookup finds a
scratch buffer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55782
This effectively fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35268,
llvm-svn: 352838
- fixes the test on macOS with LLVM_ENABLE_PIC=OFF
- together with D57343, gets the test to pass on Windows
- makes it run everywhere (it seems to just pass on Linux)
The main change is to pull out the resource directory computation into a
function shared by all 3 places that do it. In CIndexer.cpp, this now works no
matter if libclang is in lib/ or bin/ or statically linked to a binary in bin/.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57345
llvm-svn: 352803
Instead of calling CUDA runtime to arrange function arguments,
the new API constructs arguments in a local array and the kernels
are launched with __cudaLaunchKernel().
The old API has been deprecated and is expected to go away
in the next CUDA release.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57488
llvm-svn: 352799
..and use it to control that parts of CUDA compilation
that depend on the specific version of CUDA SDK.
This patch has a placeholder for a 'new launch API' support
which is in a separate patch. The list will be further
extended in the upcoming patch to support CUDA-10.1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57487
llvm-svn: 352798
Preferred types are used by code completion for ranking. This commit
considerably increases the number of points in code where those types
are propagated.
In order to avoid complicating signatures of Parser's methods, a
preferred type is kept as a member variable in the parser and updated
during parsing.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56723
llvm-svn: 352788
This builtin has the same UI as __builtin_object_size, but has the
potential to be evaluated dynamically. It is meant to be used as a
drop-in replacement for libraries that use __builtin_object_size when
a dynamic checking mode is enabled. For instance,
__builtin_object_size fails to provide any extra checking in the
following function:
void f(size_t alloc) {
char* p = malloc(alloc);
strcpy(p, "foobar"); // expands to __builtin___strcpy_chk(p, "foobar", __builtin_object_size(p, 0))
}
This is an overflow if alloc < 7, but because LLVM can't fold the
object size intrinsic statically, it folds __builtin_object_size to
-1. With __builtin_dynamic_object_size, alloc is passed through to
__builtin___strcpy_chk.
rdar://32212419
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56760
llvm-svn: 352665
In 64 bit MSVC environment size_t is defined as unsigned long long.
In single source language like HIP, data layout should be consistent
in device and host compilation, therefore copy data layout controlling
fields from Aux target for AMDGPU target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56318
llvm-svn: 352620
Summary:
We use the existing diag::note_locked_here to tell the user where we saw
the first locking.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, delesley
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56967
llvm-svn: 352549
Re-enable format string warnings on printf.
The warnings are still incomplete. Apparently it is undefined to use a
vector specifier without a length modifier, which is not currently
warned on. Additionally, type warnings appear to not be working with
the hh modifier, and aren't warning on all of the special restrictions
from c99 printf.
llvm-svn: 352540
Track them for ISL/OS objects by default, and for NS/CF under a flag.
rdar://47536377
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57356
llvm-svn: 352534
That weakens inner invariants, but allows the class to be more generic,
allowing usage in situations where the call expression is not known (or
should not matter).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57344
llvm-svn: 352531
Introduce an option to request global visibility settings be applied to
declarations without a definition or an explicit visibility, rather than
the existing behavior of giving these default visibility. When the
visibility of all or most extern definitions are known this allows for
the same optimisations -fvisibility permits without updating source code
to annotate all declarations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56868
llvm-svn: 352391
Summary:
As discussed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D57112#inline-506781,
'flush' clause does not exist in the OpenMP spec, it can not be
specified, and `OMPFlushClause` class is just a helper class.
Therefore `OPENMP_CLAUSE()` in `clang/Basic/OpenMPKinds.def`
should not contain 'flush' "clause".
I have simply removed the `OPENMP_CLAUSE(flush, OMPFlushClause)`
from `clang/Basic/OpenMPKinds.def`, grepped for `OPENMP_CLAUSE`
and added `OPENMP_CLAUSE(flush, OMPFlushClause)` back to the **every**
place where `OPENMP_CLAUSE` is defined and `clang/Basic/OpenMPKinds.def`
is then included.
So as-is, this patch is a NFC. Possibly, some of these
`OPENMP_CLAUSE(flush, OMPFlushClause)` should be dropped,
i don't really know.
Test plan: `ninja check-clang`
Reviewers: ABataev
Reviewed By: ABataev
Subscribers: guansong, arphaman, cfe-commits
Tags: #openmp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57280
llvm-svn: 352390
Introduce a new class GenericSelectionExpr::Association which bundle together
an association expression and its TypeSourceInfo.
An iterator GenericSelectionExpr::AssociationIterator is additionally added to
make it possible to iterate over ranges of Associations. This iterator is a
kind of proxy iterator which abstract over how exactly the expressions and the
TypeSourceInfos are stored.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57106
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, steveire, dblaikie, mclow.lists
llvm-svn: 352369
This patch effectively fixes the almost decade old checker naming issue.
The solution is to assert when CheckerManager::getChecker is called on an
unregistered checker, and assert when CheckerManager::registerChecker is called
on a checker that is already registered.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55429
llvm-svn: 352292
Unfortunately, up until now, the fact that certain checkers depended on one
another was known, but how these actually unfolded was hidden deep within the
implementation. For example, many checkers (like RetainCount, Malloc or CString)
modelled a certain functionality, and exposed certain reportable bug types to
the user. For example, while MallocChecker models many many different types of
memory handling, the actual "unix.MallocChecker" checker the user was exposed to
was merely and option to this modeling part.
Other than this being an ugly mess, this issue made resolving the checker naming
issue almost impossible. (The checker naming issue being that if a checker
registered more than one checker within its registry function, both checker
object recieved the same name) Also, if the user explicitly disabled a checker
that was a dependency of another that _was_ explicitly enabled, it implicitly,
without "telling" the user, reenabled it.
Clearly, changing this to a well structured, declarative form, where the
handling of dependencies are done on a higher level is very much preferred.
This patch, among the detailed things later, makes checkers declare their
dependencies within the TableGen file Checkers.td, and exposes the same
functionality to plugins and statically linked non-generated checkers through
CheckerRegistry::addDependency. CheckerRegistry now resolves these dependencies,
makes sure that checkers are added to CheckerManager in the correct order,
and makes sure that if a dependency is disabled, so will be every checker that
depends on it.
In detail:
* Add a new field to the Checker class in CheckerBase.td called Dependencies,
which is a list of Checkers.
* Move unix checkers before cplusplus, as there is no forward declaration in
tblgen :/
* Add the following new checkers:
- StackAddrEscapeBase
- StackAddrEscapeBase
- CStringModeling
- DynamicMemoryModeling (base of the MallocChecker family)
- IteratorModeling (base of the IteratorChecker family)
- ValistBase
- SecuritySyntaxChecker (base of bcmp, bcopy, etc...)
- NSOrCFErrorDerefChecker (base of NSErrorChecker and CFErrorChecker)
- IvarInvalidationModeling (base of IvarInvalidation checker family)
- RetainCountBase (base of RetainCount and OSObjectRetainCount)
* Clear up and registry functions in MallocChecker, happily remove old FIXMEs.
* Add a new addDependency function to CheckerRegistry.
* Neatly format RUN lines in files I looked at while debugging.
Big thanks to Artem Degrachev for all the guidance through this project!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54438
llvm-svn: 352287
My last patch, D56989, moved the validation of whether a checker exists into
its constructor, but we do support statically linked (and non-plugin) checkers
that were do not have an entry in Checkers.td. However, the handling of this
happens after the creation of the CheckerRegistry object.
This patch fixes this bug by moving even this functionality into
CheckerRegistry's constructor.
llvm-svn: 352284
I added a new enum to CheckerInfo, so we can easily track whether the check is
explicitly enabled, explicitly disabled, or isn't specified in this regard.
Checkers belonging in the latter category may be implicitly enabled through
dependencies in the followup patch. I also made sure that this is done within
CheckerRegisty's constructor, leading to very significant simplifications in
its query-like methods.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56989
llvm-svn: 352282
Since pretty much all methods of CheckerRegistry has AnalyzerOptions as an
argument, it makes sense to just simply require it in it's constructor.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56988
llvm-svn: 352279
Introduce the boolean ento::shouldRegister##CHECKERNAME(const LangOptions &LO)
function very similarly to ento::register##CHECKERNAME. This will force every
checker to implement this function, but maybe it isn't that bad: I saw a lot of
ObjC or C++ specific checkers that should probably not register themselves based
on some LangOptions (mine too), but they do anyways.
A big benefit of this is that all registry functions now register their checker,
once it is called, registration is guaranteed.
This patch is a part of a greater effort to reinvent checker registration, more
info here: D54438#1315953
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55424
llvm-svn: 352277
Store the controlling expression, the association expressions and the
corresponding TypeSourceInfos as trailing objects.
Additionally use the bit-fields of Stmt to store one SourceLocation,
saving one additional pointer. This saves 3 pointers in total per
GenericSelectionExpr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57104
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, steveire
llvm-svn: 352276
Various cleanups to GenericSelectionExpr factored out of D57104. In particular:
1. Move the friend declaration to the top.
2. Introduce a constant ResultDependentIndex instead of the magic "-1".
3. clang-format
4. Group the member function together so that they can be removed as one block
by D57106.
NFC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57238
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
llvm-svn: 352275
Fix a bug where we would compare array sizes with incompatible
element types, and look through explicit casts.
rdar://44800168
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57064
llvm-svn: 352239
As Discussed here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-January/129543.html
There are problems exposing the _Float16 type on architectures that
haven't defined the ABI/ISel for the type yet, so we're temporarily
disabling the type and making it opt-in.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57188
Change-Id: I5db7366dedf1deb9485adb8948b1deb7e612a736
llvm-svn: 352221
declaration in MSVCCompat mode
Microsoft compiler permits the use of 'static' storage specifier outside
of a class definition if it's on an out-of-line member function template
declaration.
This patch allows 'static' storage specifier on an out-of-line member
function template declaration with a warning in Clang (To be compatible
with Microsoft).
Intel C/C++ compiler allows the 'static' keyword with a warning in
Microsoft mode. GCC allows this with -fpermissive.
Patch By: Manna
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56473
Change-Id: I97b2d9e9d57cecbcd545d17e2523142a85ca2702
llvm-svn: 352219