We really ought to support no_sanitize("coverage") in line with other
sanitizers. This came up again in discussions on the Linux-kernel
mailing lists, because we currently do workarounds using objtool to
remove coverage instrumentation. Since that support is only on x86, to
continue support coverage instrumentation on other architectures, we
must support selectively disabling coverage instrumentation via function
attributes.
Unfortunately, for SanitizeCoverage, it has not been implemented as a
sanitizer via fsanitize= and associated options in Sanitizers.def, but
rolls its own option fsanitize-coverage. This meant that we never got
"automatic" no_sanitize attribute support.
Implement no_sanitize attribute support by special-casing the string
"coverage" in the NoSanitizeAttr implementation. To keep the feature as
unintrusive to existing IR generation as possible, define a new negative
function attribute NoSanitizeCoverage to propagate the information
through to the instrumentation pass.
Fixes: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49035
Reviewed By: vitalybuka, morehouse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102772
variables emitted on both host and device side with different addresses
when ODR-used by host function should not cause device side counter-part
to be force emitted.
This fixes the regression caused by https://reviews.llvm.org/D102237
Reviewed by: Artem Belevich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102801
when implementing an optional protocol requirement
When an Objective-C method implements an optional protocol requirement,
allow the method to use a newer introduced or older obsoleted
availability version than what's specified on the method in the protocol
itself. This allows SDK adopters to adopt an optional method from a
protocol later than when the method is introduced in the protocol. The users
that call an optional method on an object that conforms to this protocol
are supposed to check whether the object implements the method or not,
so a lack of appropriate `if (@available)` check for a new OS version
is not a cause of concern as there's already another runtime check that's required.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102459
Clang's coverage data for auto-generated switch cases is really, really
large. Before this change, when I enable code coverage, SemaDeclAttr.obj
is 4.0GB. Naturally, this fails to link.
Replacing the RISCV builtin id check with a comparison reduces object
file size from 4.0GB to 330MB. Replacing the AArch64 SVE range check
reduces the size again down to 17MB, which is reasonable.
I think the RISCV switch is larger in coverage data because it uses more
levels of macro expansion, while the SVE intrinsics only use one. In any
case, please try to avoid switches with 1000+ cases, they usually don't
optimize well.
Add front end diagnostics to report error for unimplemented TLS models set by
- compiler option `-ftls-model`
- attributes like `__thread int __attribute__((tls_model("local-exec"))) var_name;`
Reviewed by: aaron.ballman, nemanjai, PowerPC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102070
Reduces numbers of files built for clang-format from 575 to 449.
Requires two small changes:
1. Don't use llvm::ExceptionHandling in LangOptions. This isn't
even quite the right type since we don't use all of its values.
Tweaks the changes made in:
- https://reviews.llvm.org/D93215
- https://reviews.llvm.org/D93216
2. Move section name validation code added (long ago) in commit 30ba67439 out
of libBasic into Sema and base the check on the triple. This is a bit less
OOP-y, but completely in line with what we do in many other places in Sema.
No behavior change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101463
Commit 2a1332245f extracted this code to a new function checkSectionName() and
added a call to it, but didn't remove the original code. The original code
is dead since the checkSectionName() early return would fire when it would
trigger. (If it weren't dead, it'd make clang crash since
err_attribute_section_invalid_for_target now takes two args instead of just the
one that's passed.)
No behavior change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101457
In some cases, we want to provide the alias name for the clang builtins.
For example, the arguments must be constant integers for some RISC-V builtins.
If we use wrapper functions, we could not constrain the arguments be constant
integer. This attribute is used to achieve the purpose.
Besides this, use `clang_builtin_alias` is more efficient than using
wrapper functions. We use this attribute to deal with test time issue
reported in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49962.
In our downstream testing, it could decrease the testing time from 6.3
seconds to 3.7 seconds for vloxei.c test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100611
I have been trying to statically find and analyze all calls to heap
allocation functions to determine how many of them use sizes known at
compile time vs only at runtime. While doing so I saw that quite a few
projects use replaceable function pointers for heap allocation and noticed
that clang was not able to annotate functions pointers with alloc_size.
I have changed the Sema checks to allow alloc_size on all function pointers
and typedefs for function pointers now and added checks that these
attributes are propagated to the LLVM IR correctly.
With this patch we can also compute __builtin_object_size() for calls to
allocation function pointers with the alloc_size attribute.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, erik.pilkington
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55212
Currently, when one or more attributes are mutually exclusive, the
developer adding the attribute has to manually emit diagnostics. In
practice, this is highly error prone, especially for declaration
attributes, because such checking is not trivial. Redeclarations
require you to write a "merge" function to diagnose mutually exclusive
attributes and most attributes get this wrong.
This patch introduces a table-generated way to specify that a group of
two or more attributes are mutually exclusive:
def : MutualExclusions<[Attr1, Attr2, Attr3]>;
This works for both statement and declaration attributes (but not type
attributes) and the checking is done either from the common attribute
diagnostic checking code or from within mergeDeclAttribute() when
merging redeclarations.
The original implementation didn't fire on non-template classes when a
base class was an instantiation of a template with a dependent base.
In that case the base of the base is dependent as seen from the base,
but not from the class we're interested in, which isn't a template.
Also it simplifies the code a lot.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98724
Clang currently automates a fair amount of diagnostic checking for
declaration attributes based on the declarations in Attr.td. It checks
for things like subject appertainment, number of arguments, language
options, etc. This patch uses the same machinery to perform diagnostic
checking on statement attributes.
There is no syntax like {@code ...} in Doxygen, @code is a block command
that ends with @endcode, and generally these are not enclosed in braces.
The correct syntax for inline code snippets is @c <code>.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98665
These functions were local to SemaDeclAttr.cpp, but these functions are
useful in general (for instance, for statement or type attribute
processing). This refactoring is in advance of beginning to tablegen
diagnostic checks for statement attributes the way we already do for
declaration attributes.
There is one functional change in here as a drive-by. The
external_source_symbol attribute had one of its diagnostic checks
inside of an assert, which was corrected.
This is the first patch supporting M68k in Clang
- Register M68k as a target
- Target specific CodeGen support
- Target specific attribute support
Authors: myhsu, m4yers, glaubitz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88393
The swift_bridge attribute warns when the attribute is applied multiple
times to the same declaration. However, it warns about the arguments
being different to the attribute without ever checking if the arguments
actually are different. If the arguments are different, diagnose,
otherwise silently accept the code. Either way, drop the duplicated
attribute.
This patch implements codegen for __managed__ variable attribute for HIP.
Diagnostics will be added later.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94814
Introduce a function attribute 'enforce_tcb' that prevents the function
from calling other functions without the same attribute. This allows
isolating code that's considered to be somehow privileged so that it could not
use its privileges to exhibit arbitrary behavior.
Introduce an on-by-default warning '-Wtcb-enforcement' that warns
about violations of the above rule.
Introduce a function attribute 'enforce_tcb_leaf' that suppresses
the new warning within the function it is attached to. Such leaf functions
may implement common functionality between the trusted and the untrusted code
but they require extra careful audit with respect to their capabilities.
Fixes after a revert in 419ef38a50293c58078f830517f5e305068dbee6:
Fix a test.
Add workaround for GCC bug (https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=67274).
Attribute the patch appropriately!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91898
Introduce a function attribute 'enforce_tcb' that prevents the function
from calling other functions without the same attribute. This allows
isolating code that's considered to be somehow privileged so that it could not
use its privileges to exhibit arbitrary behavior.
Introduce an on-by-default warning '-Wtcb-enforcement' that warns
about violations of the above rule.
Introduce a function attribute 'enforce_tcb_leaf' that suppresses
the new warning within the function it is attached to. Such leaf functions
may implement common functionality between the trusted and the untrusted code
but they require extra careful audit with respect to their capabilities.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91898
This commit introduces a new attribute `called_once`.
It can be applied to function-like parameters to signify that
this parameter should be called exactly once. This concept
is particularly widespread in asynchronous programs.
Additionally, this commit introduce a new group of dataflow
analysis-based warnings to check this property. It identifies
and reports the following situations:
* parameter is called twice
* parameter is never called
* parameter is not called on one of the paths
Current implementation can also automatically infer `called_once`
attribute for completion handler paramaters that should follow the
same principle by convention. This behavior is OFF by default and
can be turned on by using `-Wcompletion-handler`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92039
rdar://72812043
If two variables are declared with __attribute__((section(name))) and
the implicit section types (e.g. read only vs writeable) conflict, an
error is raised. Extend this mechanism so that an error is raised if the
section type implied by a function's __attribute__((section)) conflicts
with that of another variable.
The `assume` attribute is a way to provide additional, arbitrary
information to the optimizer. For now, assumptions are restricted to
strings which will be accumulated for a function and emitted as comma
separated string function attribute. The key of the LLVM-IR function
attribute is `llvm.assume`. Similar to `llvm.assume` and
`__builtin_assume`, the `assume` attribute provides a user defined
assumption to the compiler.
A follow up patch will introduce an LLVM-core API to query the
assumptions attached to a function. We also expect to add more options,
e.g., expression arguments, to the `assume` attribute later on.
The `omp [begin] asssumes` pragma will leverage this attribute and
expose the functionality in the absence of OpenMP.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91979
This attribute permits a typedef to be associated with a class template
specialization as a preferred way of naming that class template
specialization. This permits us to specify that (for example) the
preferred way to express 'std::basic_string<char>' is as 'std::string'.
The attribute is applied to the various class templates in libc++ that have
corresponding well-known typedef names.
This is a re-commit. The previous commit was reverted because it exposed
a pre-existing bug that has since been fixed / worked around; see
PR48434.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91311
This change exposed a pre-existing issue with deserialization cycles
caused by a combination of attributes and template instantiations
violating the deserialization ordering restrictions; see PR48434 for
details.
A previous commit attempted to work around PR48434, but appears to have
only been a partial fix, and fixing this properly seems non-trivial.
Backing out for now to unblock things.
This reverts commit 98f76adf4e and
commit a64c26a47a.
This attributes specifies how (or if) a given function or method will be
imported into a swift async method. rdar://70111252
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92742
This attribute permits a typedef to be associated with a class template
specialization as a preferred way of naming that class template
specialization. This permits us to specify that (for example) the
preferred way to express 'std::basic_string<char>' is as 'std::string'.
The attribute is applied to the various class templates in libc++ that have
corresponding well-known typedef names.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91311
The swift_async_name attribute provides a name for a function/method that can be used
to call the async overload of this method from Swift. This name specified in this attribute
assumes that the last parameter in the function/method its applied to is removed when
Swift invokes it, as the the Swift's await/async transformation implicitly constructs the callback.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92355
The swift_attr attribute is a generic annotation attribute that's not used by clang,
but is used by the Swift compiler. The Swift compiler can use these annotations to provide
various syntactic and semantic sugars for the imported Objective-C API declarations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92354
Similar to Windows Itanium, PS4 is also an Itanium C++ ABI variant
which shares the goal of semantic compatibility with Microsoft C++
code that uses dllimport/export.
This change introduces a new function to determine from the triple
if an environment aims for compatibility with MS C++ code w.r.t to
these attributes and guards the relevant code paths using that
function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90299
This allows using annotation in a much more contexts than it currently has.
especially when annotation with template or constexpr.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88645
folding to not constant folding.
Constant folding of ICEs is done as a GCC compatibility measure, but new
code was picking it up, presumably by accident, due to the bad default.
While here, also switch the flag from a bool to an enum to make it more
obvious what it means at call sites. This highlighted a couple of places
where our behavior is different between C++11 and C++14 due to switching
from checking for an ICE to checking for a converted constant
expression (where there is no 'fold' codepath).
Summary:
Motivated by the new objc_direct attribute, this change adds a new
attribute that remotes metadata from Protocols that the programmer knows
isn't going to be used at runtime. We simply have the frontend skip
generating any protocol metadata entries (e.g. OBJC_CLASS_NAME,
_OBJC_$_PROTOCOL_INSTANCE_METHDOS, _OBJC_PROTOCOL, etc) for a protocol
marked with `__attribute__((objc_non_runtime_protocol))`.
There are a few APIs used to retrieve a protocol at runtime.
`@protocol(SomeProtocol)` will now error out of the requested protocol
is marked with attribute. `objc_getProtocol` will return `NULL` which
is consistent with the behavior of a non-existing protocol.
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75574
This attribute allows declarations to be restricted to the framework
itself, enabling Swift to remove the declarations when importing
libraries. This is useful in the case that the functions can be
implemented in a more natural way for Swift.
This is based on the work of the original changes in
8afaf3aad2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87720
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman
This code never actually did anything in the implementation.
`mergeDeclAttribute` is declared as `static`, and referenced exactly
once in the file: from `Sema::mergeDeclAttributes`.
`Sema::mergeDeclAttributes` sets `LocalAMK` to `AMK_None`. If the
attribute is `DeprecatedAttr`, `UnavailableAttr`, or `AvailabilityAttr`
then the `LocalAMK` is updated. However, because we are dealing with a
`SwiftNameDeclAttr` here, `LocalAMK` remains `AMK_None`. This is then
passed to the function which will as a result pass the value of
`AMK_None == AMK_Override` aka `false`. Simply propagate the value
through and erase the dead codepath.
Thanks to Aaron Ballman for flagging the use of the availability merge
kind here leading to this simplification!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88263
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman
Add the `swift_newtype` attribute which allows a type definition to be
imported into Swift as a new type. The imported type must be either an
enumerated type (enum) or an object type (struct).
This is based on the work of the original changes in
8afaf3aad2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87652
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman
Sema::DiagnoseSwiftName uses the constant 12 instead of the
corresponding enumerator ExpectedFunctionWithProtoType. This is
fragile and will fail if a new value gets added in the middle of the
enum.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88164
This introduces the new `swift_name` attribute that allows annotating
APIs with an alternate spelling for Swift. This is used as part of the
importing mechanism to allow interfaces to be imported with a new name
into Swift. It takes a parameter which is the Swift function name.
This parameter is validated to check if it matches the possible
transformed signature in Swift.
This is based on the work of the original changes in
8afaf3aad2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87534
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman, Dmitri Gribenko
This extends semantic analysis of attributes for Swift interoperability
by introducing the `swift_bridge` attribute. This attribute enables
bridging Objective-C types to Swift specific types.
This is based on the work of the original changes in
8afaf3aad2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87532
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman
Extend the semantic attributes that clang processes for Swift to include
`swift_bridged_typedef`. This attribute enables typedefs to be bridged
into Swift with a bridged name.
This is based on the work of the original changes in
8afaf3aad2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87396
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman
This adds the `__swift_objc_members__` attribute to the semantic
analysis. It allows for annotating ObjC interfaces to provide Swift
semantics indicating that the types derived from this interface will be
back-bridged to Objective-C to allow interoperability with Objective-C
and Swift.
This is based on the work of the original changes in
8afaf3aad2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87395
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman, Dmitri Gribenko
Introduce a new attribute that is used to indicate the error handling
convention used by a function. This is used to translate the error
semantics from the decorated interface to a compatible Swift interface.
The supported error convention is one of:
- none: no error handling
- nonnull_error: a non-null error parameter indicates an error signifier
- null_result: a return value of NULL is an error signifier
- zero_result: a return value of 0 is an error signifier
- nonzero_result: a non-zero return value is an error signifier
Since this is the first of the attributes needed to support the semantic
annotation for Swift, this change also includes the necessary supporting
infrastructure for a new category of attributes (Swift).
This is based on the work of the original changes in
8afaf3aad2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87331
Reviewed By: John McCall, Aaron Ballman, Dmitri Gribenko
This adds parsing and codegen support for tune in target attribute.
I've implemented this so that arch in the target attribute implicitly disables tune from the command line. I'm not sure what gcc does here. But since -march implies -mtune. I assume 'arch' in the target attribute implies tune in the target attribute.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86187
ns_error_domain can be used by, e.g. NS_ERROR_ENUM, in order to
identify a global declaration representing the domain constant.
Introduces the attribute, Sema handling, diagnostics, and test case.
This is cherry-picked from a14779f504
and adapted to updated Clang APIs.
Reviewed By: gribozavr2, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84005
Background:
-----------
There are two related argument types which can be sent into a diagnostic to
display the name of an entity: DeclarationName (ak_declarationname) or
NamedDecl* (ak_nameddecl) (there is also ak_identifierinfo for
IdentifierInfo*, but we are not concerned with it here).
A DeclarationName in a diagnostic will just be streamed to the output,
which will directly result in a call to DeclarationName::print.
A NamedDecl* in a diagnostic will also ultimately result in a call to
DeclarationName::print, but with two customisation points along the way:
The first customisation point is NamedDecl::getNameForDiagnostic which is
overloaded by FunctionDecl, ClassTemplateSpecializationDecl and
VarTemplateSpecializationDecl to print the template arguments, if any.
The second customisation point is NamedDecl::printName. By default it just
streams the stored DeclarationName into the output but it can be customised
to provide a user-friendly name for an entity. It is currently overloaded by
DecompositionDecl and MSGuidDecl.
What this patch does:
---------------------
For many diagnostics a DeclarationName is used instead of the NamedDecl*.
This bypasses the two customisation points mentioned above. This patches fix
this for diagnostics in Sema.cpp, SemaCast.cpp, SemaChecking.cpp, SemaDecl.cpp,
SemaDeclAttr.cpp, SemaDecl.cpp, SemaOverload.cpp and SemaStmt.cpp.
I have only modified diagnostics where I could construct a test-case which
demonstrates that the change is appropriate (either with this patch or the next
one).
Reviewed By: erichkeane, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84656
Reapply 49e5f603d4
which had been reverted in c94332919b.
Originally reverted because I hadn't updated it in quite a while when I
got around to committing it, so there were a bunch of missing changes to
new code since I'd written the patch.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76646
There is a version that just tests (also called
isIntegerConstantExpression) & whereas this version is specifically used
when the value is of interest (a few call sites were actually refactored
to calling the test-only version) so let's make the API look more like
it.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76646
1. Provides no piroirity supoort && disables three priority related
attributes: init_priority, ctor attr, dtor attr;
2. '-qunique' in XL compiler equivalent behavior of emitting sinit
and sterm functions name using getUniqueModuleId() util function
in LLVM (currently no support for InternalLinkage and WeakODRLinkage
symbols);
3. Add testcases to emit IR sample with __sinit80000000, __dtor, and
__sterm80000000;
4. Temporarily side-steps the need to implement the functionality of
llvm.global_ctors and llvm.global_dtors arrays. The uses of that
functionality in this patch (with respect to the name of the functions
involved) are not representative of how the functionality will be used
once implemented.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74166
This patch addresses the review comments on r352930:
- Removes redundant diagnostic checking code
- Removes errnoneous use of diag::err_alias_is_definition, which
turned out to be ineffective anyway since functions can be defined later
in the translation unit and avoid detection.
- Adds a test for various invalid cases for import_name and import_module.
This reapplies D59520, with the addition of adding
`InGroup<IgnoredAttributes>` to the new warnings, to fix the
Misc/warning-flags.c failure.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59520
This patch addresses the review comments on r352930:
- Removes redundant diagnostic checking code
- Removes errnoneous use of diag::err_alias_is_definition, which
turned out to be ineffective anyway since functions can be defined later
in the translation unit and avoid detection.
- Adds a test for various invalid cases for import_name and import_module.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59520
The headers provided with recent GNU toolchains for PPC have code that includes
typedefs such as:
typedef _Complex float __cfloat128 __attribute__ ((__mode__ (__KC__)))
This patch allows clang to compile programs that contain
#include <math.h>
with -mfloat128 which it currently fails to compile.
Fixes: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46068
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80374
The stub function is generated by compiler and its instructions have nothing
to do with the kernel source code.
Currently clang generates debug info for the stub function, which causes
confusion for the HIP debugger. For example, when users set break point
on a line of a kernel, the debugger should break on that line when the kernel is
executed and reaches that line, but instead the debugger breaks in the stub function.
This patch disables debug info for stub function for HIP.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79866
When passing a value of a struct/union type from secure to non-secure
state (that is returning from a CMSE entry function or passing an
argument to CMSE-non-secure call), there is a potential sensitive
information leak via the padding bits in the structure. It is not
possible in the general case to ensure those bits are cleared by using
Standard C/C++.
This patch makes the compiler emit code to clear such padding
bits. Since type information is lost in LLVM IR, the code generation
is done by Clang.
For each interesting record type, we build a bitmask, in which all the
bits, corresponding to user declared members, are set. Values of
record types are returned by coercing them to an integer. After the
coercion, the coerced value is masked (with bitwise AND) and then
returned by the function. In a similar manner, values of record types
are passed as arguments by coercing them to an array of integers, and
the coerced values themselves are masked.
For union types, we effectively clear only bits, which aren't part of
any member, since we don't know which is the currently active one.
The compiler will issue a warning, whenever a union is passed to
non-secure state.
Values of half-precision floating-point types are passed in the least
significant bits of a 32-bit register (GPR or FPR) with the most
significant bits unspecified. Since this is also a potential leak of
sensitive information, this patch also clears those unspecified bits.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76369
This reverts commit 61ba1481e2.
I'm reverting this because it breaks the lldb build with
incomplete switch coverage warnings. I would fix it forward,
but am not familiar enough with lldb to determine the correct
fix.
lldb/source/Plugins/TypeSystem/Clang/TypeSystemClang.cpp:3958:11: error: enumeration values 'DependentExtInt' and 'ExtInt' not handled in switch [-Werror,-Wswitch]
switch (qual_type->getTypeClass()) {
^
lldb/source/Plugins/TypeSystem/Clang/TypeSystemClang.cpp:4633:11: error: enumeration values 'DependentExtInt' and 'ExtInt' not handled in switch [-Werror,-Wswitch]
switch (qual_type->getTypeClass()) {
^
lldb/source/Plugins/TypeSystem/Clang/TypeSystemClang.cpp:4889:11: error: enumeration values 'DependentExtInt' and 'ExtInt' not handled in switch [-Werror,-Wswitch]
switch (qual_type->getTypeClass()) {
Introduction/Motivation:
LLVM-IR supports integers of non-power-of-2 bitwidth, in the iN syntax.
Integers of non-power-of-two aren't particularly interesting or useful
on most hardware, so much so that no language in Clang has been
motivated to expose it before.
However, in the case of FPGA hardware normal integer types where the
full bitwidth isn't used, is extremely wasteful and has severe
performance/space concerns. Because of this, Intel has introduced this
functionality in the High Level Synthesis compiler[0]
under the name "Arbitrary Precision Integer" (ap_int for short). This
has been extremely useful and effective for our users, permitting them
to optimize their storage and operation space on an architecture where
both can be extremely expensive.
We are proposing upstreaming a more palatable version of this to the
community, in the form of this proposal and accompanying patch. We are
proposing the syntax _ExtInt(N). We intend to propose this to the WG14
committee[1], and the underscore-capital seems like the active direction
for a WG14 paper's acceptance. An alternative that Richard Smith
suggested on the initial review was __int(N), however we believe that
is much less acceptable by WG14. We considered _Int, however _Int is
used as an identifier in libstdc++ and there is no good way to fall
back to an identifier (since _Int(5) is indistinguishable from an
unnamed initializer of a template type named _Int).
[0]https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/software/programmable/quartus-prime/hls-compiler.html)
[1]http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2472.pdf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73967
Summary:
Previously, we treated CXXUuidofExpr as quite a special case: it was the
only kind of expression that could be a canonical template argument, it
could be a constant lvalue base object, and so on. In addition, we
represented the UUID value as a string, whose source form we did not
preserve faithfully, and that we partially parsed in multiple different
places.
With this patch, we create an MSGuidDecl object to represent the
implicit object of type 'struct _GUID' created by a UuidAttr. Each
UuidAttr holds a pointer to its 'struct _GUID' and its original
(as-written) UUID string. A non-value-dependent CXXUuidofExpr behaves
like a DeclRefExpr denoting that MSGuidDecl object. We cache an APValue
representation of the GUID on the MSGuidDecl and use it from constant
evaluation where needed.
This allows removing a lot of the special-case logic to handle these
expressions. Unfortunately, many parts of Clang assume there are only
a couple of interesting kinds of ValueDecl, so the total amount of
special-case logic is not really reduced very much.
This fixes a few bugs and issues:
* PR38490: we now support reading from GUID objects returned from
__uuidof during constant evaluation.
* Our Itanium mangling for a non-instantiation-dependent template
argument involving __uuidof no longer depends on which CXXUuidofExpr
template argument we happened to see first.
* We now predeclare ::_GUID, and permit use of __uuidof without
any header inclusion, better matching MSVC's behavior. We do not
predefine ::__s_GUID, though; that seems like a step too far.
* Our IR representation for GUID constants now uses the correct IR type
wherever possible. We will still fall back to using the
{i32, i16, i16, [8 x i8]}
layout if a definition of struct _GUID is not available. This is not
ideal: in principle the two layouts could have different padding.
Reviewers: rnk, jdoerfert
Subscribers: arphaman, cfe-commits, aeubanks
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78171
Summary:
- Use `device_builtin_surface` and `device_builtin_texture` for
surface/texture reference support. So far, both the host and device
use the same reference type, which could be revised later when
interface/implementation is stablized.
Reviewers: yaxunl
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77583
Summary:
- Even though the bindless surface/texture interfaces are promoted,
there are still code using surface/texture references. For example,
[PR#26400](https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=26400) reports the
compilation issue for code using `tex2D` with texture references. For
better compatibility, this patch proposes the support of
surface/texture references.
- Due to the absent documentation and magic headers, it's believed that
`nvcc` does use builtins for texture support. From the limited NVVM
documentation[^nvvm] and NVPTX backend texture/surface related
tests[^test], it's believed that surface/texture references are
supported by replacing their reference types, which are annotated with
`device_builtin_surface_type`/`device_builtin_texture_type`, with the
corresponding handle-like object types, `cudaSurfaceObject_t` or
`cudaTextureObject_t`, in the device-side compilation. On the host
side, that global handle variables are registered and will be
established and updated later when corresponding binding/unbinding
APIs are called[^bind]. Surface/texture references are most like
device global variables but represented in different types on the host
and device sides.
- In this patch, the following changes are proposed to support that
behavior:
+ Refine `device_builtin_surface_type` and
`device_builtin_texture_type` attributes to be applied on `Type`
decl only to check whether a variable is of the surface/texture
reference type.
+ Add hooks in code generation to replace that reference types with
the correponding object types as well as all accesses to them. In
particular, `nvvm.texsurf.handle.internal` should be used to load
object handles from global reference variables[^texsurf] as well as
metadata annotations.
+ Generate host-side registration with proper template argument
parsing.
---
[^nvvm]: https://docs.nvidia.com/cuda/pdf/NVVM_IR_Specification.pdf
[^test]: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/llvm/llvm-project/master/llvm/test/CodeGen/NVPTX/tex-read-cuda.ll
[^bind]: See section 3.2.11.1.2 ``Texture reference API` in [CUDA C Programming Guide](https://docs.nvidia.com/cuda/pdf/CUDA_C_Programming_Guide.pdf).
[^texsurf]: According to NVVM IR, `nvvm.texsurf.handle` should be used. But, the current backend doesn't have that supported. We may revise that later.
Reviewers: tra, rjmccall, yaxunl, a.sidorin
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76365
This makes it possible for plugin attributes to actually do something, and also
removes a lot of boilerplate for simple attributes in SemaDeclAttr.cpp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31342
The SVE ACLE allows using a short-form for the intrinsics, e.g.
the following two declarations generate the same code:
svuint32_t svld1(svbool_t, uint32_t const *);
svuint32_t svld1_u32(svbool_t, uint32_t const *);
using the attribute:
__clang_arm_builtin_alias
so that any call to svld1(svbool_t, uint32_t const *) will
map to __builtin_sve_svld1_u32.
Reviewers: SjoerdMeijer, miyuki, efriedma, simon_tatham, rengolin
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75861
Summary:
[Clang] Attribute to allow defining undef global variables
Initializing global variables is very cheap on hosted implementations. The
C semantics of zero initializing globals work very well there. It is not
necessarily cheap on freestanding implementations. Where there is no loader
available, code must be emitted near the start point to write the appropriate
values into memory.
At present, external variables can be declared in C++ and definitions provided
in assembly (or IR) to achive this effect. This patch provides an attribute in
order to remove this reason for writing assembly for performance sensitive
freestanding implementations.
A close analogue in tree is LDS memory for amdgcn, where the kernel is
responsible for initializing the memory after it starts executing on the gpu.
Uninitalized variables in LDS are observably cheaper than zero initialized.
Patch is loosely based on the cuda __shared__ and opencl __local variable
implementation which also produces undef global variables.
Reviewers: kcc, rjmccall, rsmith, glider, vitalybuka, pcc, eugenis, vlad.tsyrklevich, jdoerfert, gregrodgers, jfb, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: rjmccall, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: Anastasia, aaron.ballman, davidb, Quuxplusone, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74361
A previous patch rejected alignof for sizeless types. This patch
extends that to cover the "aligned" attribute and _Alignas. Since
sizeless types are not meant to be used for long-term data, cannot
be used in aggregates, and cannot have static storage duration,
there shouldn't be any need to fiddle with their alignment.
Like with alignof, this is a conservative position that can be
relaxed in future if it turns out to be too restrictive.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75573
Summary:
This patch generalizes the existing code to support CDE intrinsics
which will share some properties with existing MVE intrinsics
(some of the intrinsics will be polymorphic and accept/return values
of MVE vector types).
Specifically the patch:
* Adds new tablegen backends -gen-arm-cde-builtin-def,
-gen-arm-cde-builtin-codegen, -gen-arm-cde-builtin-sema,
-gen-arm-cde-builtin-aliases, -gen-arm-cde-builtin-header based on
existing MVE backends.
* Renames the '__clang_arm_mve_alias' attribute into
'__clang_arm_builtin_alias' (it will be used with CDE intrinsics as
well as MVE intrinsics)
* Implements semantic checks for the coprocessor argument of the CDE
intrinsics as well as the existing coprocessor intrinsics.
* Adds one CDE intrinsic __arm_cx1 to test the above changes
Reviewers: simon_tatham, MarkMurrayARM, ostannard, dmgreen
Reviewed By: simon_tatham
Subscribers: sdesmalen, mgorny, kristof.beyls, danielkiss, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75850