An enum may be considered to be a complete type if it was forward
declared. It may be declared with a fixed underlying type, or, in MSVC
compatiblity mode, with no type at all.
Previously, the code was written with special handling for fixed enums.
I generalized the code to check if the underlying integer type is known,
which should be the case when targetting the MSVC C++ ABI.
Fixes PR45409
When a category/extension doesn't repeat a type bound, corresponding
type parameter is substituted with `id` when used as a type argument. As
a result, in the added test case it was causing errors like
> type argument 'T' (aka 'id') does not satisfy the bound ('id<NSCopying>') of type parameter 'T'
We are already checking that type parameters should be consistent
everywhere (see `checkTypeParamListConsistency`) and update
`ObjCTypeParamDecl` to have correct underlying type. And when we use the
type parameter as a method return type or a method parameter type, it is
substituted to the bounded type. But when we use the type parameter as a
type argument, we check `ObjCTypeParamType` that wasn't updated and
remains `id`.
Fix by updating not only `ObjCTypeParamDecl` UnderlyingType but also
TypeForDecl as we use the underlying type to create a canonical type for
`ObjCTypeParamType` (see `ASTContext::getObjCTypeParamType`).
This is a different approach to fixing the issue. The previous one was
02c2ab3d88 which was reverted in
4c539e8da1. The problem with the previous
approach was that `ObjCTypeParamType::desugar` was returning underlying
type for `ObjCTypeParamDecl` without applying any protocols stored in
`ObjCTypeParamType`. It caused inconsistencies in comparing types before
and after desugaring.
rdar://problem/54329242
Reviewed By: erik.pilkington
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72872
clang with -flto does not handle -foptimization-record-path=<path>
This dulicates the code from ToolChains/Clang.cpp with modifications to
support everything in the same fashion.
See rational here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76173#1922916
Time to compile Attr.h in isolation goes from 2.6s to 1.8s.
Original patch by Johannes, plus some additions from Reid to fix some
clang tooling targets.
Effect on transitive includes is marginal, though:
$ diff -u <(sort thedeps-before.txt) <(sort thedeps-after.txt) \
| grep '^[-+] ' | sort | uniq -c | sort -nr
104 - /usr/local/google/home/rnk/llvm-project/clang/include/clang/AST/OpenMPClause.h
87 - /usr/local/google/home/rnk/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Frontend/OpenMP/OMPContext.h
19 - /usr/local/google/home/rnk/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/ADT/SmallSet.h
19 - /usr/local/google/home/rnk/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/ADT/SetVector.h
14 - /usr/include/c++/9/set
...
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76184
Adds a new data structure, ImmutableGraph, and uses RDF to find LVI gadgets and add them to a MachineGadgetGraph.
More specifically, a new X86 machine pass finds Load Value Injection (LVI) gadgets consisting of a load from memory (i.e., SOURCE), and any operation that may transmit the value loaded from memory over a covert channel, or use the value loaded from memory to determine a branch/call target (i.e., SINK).
Also adds a new target feature to X86: +lvi-load-hardening
The feature can be added via the clang CLI using -mlvi-hardening.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75936
This patch adds a test for the PowerPC fma compiler builtins, some variations
of which negate inputs and outputs. The code to generate IR for these
builtins was untested before this patch.
Originally, the code used the outdated method of subtracting floating point
values from -0.0 as floating point negation. This patch remedies that.
Patch by: Drew Wock <drew.wock@sas.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76949
Summary:
- `RegisterVar` has `void` return type and `size_t` in its variable size
parameter in HIP or CUDA 9.0+.
Reviewers: tra, yaxunl
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77398
Summary:
This matches llvm::VectorType.
It moves the size from the type bitfield into VectorType, increasing size by 8
bytes (including padding of 4). This is OK as we don't expect to create terribly
many of these types.
c.f. D77313 which enables large power-of-two sizes without growing VectorType.
Reviewers: efriedma, hokein
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77335
Summary:
C++ defines a number of keywords that are regular identifiers in
JavaScript, e.g. `concept`:
const concept = 1; // legit JS
This change expands the existing `IsJavaScriptIdentifier(Tok)` function
to return false for C++ keywords that aren't keywords in JS.
Reviewers: krasimir
Subscribers: jfb, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77311
This pass replaces each indirect call/jump with a direct call to a thunk that looks like:
lfence
jmpq *%r11
This ensures that if the value in register %r11 was loaded from memory, then
the value in %r11 is (architecturally) correct prior to the jump.
Also adds a new target feature to X86: +lvi-cfi
("cfi" meaning control-flow integrity)
The feature can be added via clang CLI using -mlvi-cfi.
This is an alternate implementation to https://reviews.llvm.org/D75934 That merges the thunk insertion functionality with the existing X86 retpoline code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76812
Summary:
In the case of a coroutine that takes no arguments,
`Sema::buildCoroutinePromise` constructs a list-initialization
(`clang::InitializationKind::InitKind::IK_DirectList`) of the
promise variable, using a list of empty arguments. So, if one were to
dump the promise `VarDecl` immediately after `Sema::ActOnCoroutineBodyStart`
calls `checkCoroutineContext`, for a coroutine function that takes no
arguments, they'd see the following:
```
VarDecl 0xb514490 <test.cpp:26:3> col:3 __promise '<dependent type>' callinit
`-ParenListExpr 0xb514510 <col:3> 'NULL TYPE'
```
But after this patch, the `ParenListExpr` is no longer constructed, and
the promise variable uses default initialization
(`clang::InitializationKind::InitKind::IK_Default`):
```
VarDecl 0x63100012dae0 <test.cpp:26:3> col:3 __promise '<dependent type>'
```
As far as I know, there's no case in which list-initialization with no
arguments differs from default initialization, but if I'm wrong please
let me know (and I'll add a test case that demonstrates the change --
but as-is I can't think of a functional test case for this). I think both
comply with the wording of C++20 `[dcl.fct.def.coroutine]p5`:
> _promise-constructor-arguments_ is determined as follows: overload
resolution is performed on a promise constructor call created by
assembling an argument list with lvalues `p1 ... pn`. If a viable
constructor is found (12.4.2), then _promise-constructor-arguments_
is `(p1, ... , pn)`, otherwise _promise-constructor-arguments_ is
empty.
Still, I think this patch is an improvement regardless, because it
reduces the size of the AST.
Reviewers: GorNishanov, rsmith, lewissbaker
Subscribers: EricWF, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70555
Summary:
Previously we induced a state split if there were multiple argument
constraints given for a function. This was because we called
`addTransition` inside the for loop.
The fix is to is to store the state and apply the next argument
constraint on that. And once the loop is finished we call `addTransition`.
Reviewers: NoQ, Szelethus, baloghadamsoftware
Subscribers: whisperity, xazax.hun, szepet, rnkovacs, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, donat.nagy, dkrupp, gamesh411, C
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76790
Add the sub-group builtin functions from the OpenCL Extension
specification. This patch excludes the sub_group_barrier builtins
that take argument types not yet handled by the
`-fdeclare-opencl-builtins` machinery.
Co-authored-by: Pierre Gondois <pierre.gondois@arm.com>
Summary:
The construction of constants for structs/unions was conflicting the
expected memory layout for over-sized bit-fields. When building the
necessary bits for those fields, clang was ignoring the size information
computed for the struct/union memory layout and using the original data
from the AST's FieldDecl information. This caused an issue in big-endian
targets, where the field's contant was incorrectly misplaced due to
endian calculations.
This patch aims to separate the constant value from the necessary
padding bits, using the proper size information for each one of them.
With this, the layout of constants for over-sized bit-fields matches the
ABI requirements.
Reviewers: rsmith, eli.friedman, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: efriedma, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77048
Summary:
As defined by Arm C Language Extensions (ACLE) these macro defines
should be set to specific values depending on -mbranch-protection.
Reviewers: chill
Reviewed By: chill
Subscribers: danielkiss, cfe-commits, kristof.beyls
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77134
This is a cleanup and normalization patch that also enables reuse with
Flang later on. A follow up will clean up and move the directive ->
clauses mapping.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77112
In d1705c1196 (D77238) we accidentally included subsequent changes and
did not only move the code into a new file (which was the intention).
We undo the changes now and re-introduce them with the appropriate test
changes later.
This is not supported to change anything but allow us to reuse the math
functions separately from the device functions, e.g., source them at
different times. This will be used by the OpenMP overlay.
This also adds two `return` keywords that were missing.
Reviewed By: tra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77238
Currently deferred diagnostic emitter checks variable decl in DeclRefExpr, which
causes infinite recursion for cases like long a = (long)&a;.
Deferred diagnostic emitter does not need check variable decls in DeclRefExpr
since reference of a variable does not cause emission of functions directly or
indirectly. Therefore there is no need to check variable decls in DeclRefExpr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76937
This API is used by LLDB to attach owning module information to
Declarations deserialized from DWARF.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75561
Caused an assertion due to mismatched bit widths - this seems like the
right API to use for a possibly width-varying equality test. Though
certainly open to some post-commit review feedback if there's a more
suitable way to do this comparison/test.
Summary:
The convention for the wasm_simd128.h intrinsics is to have the
integer sign in the lane interpretation rather than as a suffix. This
PR changes the names of the integer min, max, and avgr intrinsics to
match this convention.
Reviewers: aheejin
Subscribers: dschuff, sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77185
This wasn't respecting the flush mode based on the default, and also
wasn't correctly handling the explicit
-fno-cuda-flush-denormals-to-zero overriding the mode.
Summary:
Swift would like to use clang's apis to emit protocol declarations.
This commits adds the public API:
```
emitObjCProtocolObject(CodeGenModule &CGM, const ObjCProtocolDecl *p);
```
rdar://60888524
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77077
Prior to this change the clang interface stubs format resembled
something ending with a symbol list like this:
Symbols:
a: { Type: Func }
This was problematic because we didn't actually want a map format and
also because we didn't like that an empty symbol list required
"Symbols: {}". That is to say without the empty {} llvm-ifs would crash
on an empty list.
With this new format it is much more clear which field is the symbol
name, and instead the [] that is used to express an empty symbol vector
is optional, ie:
Symbols:
- { Name: a, Type: Func }
or
Symbols: []
or
Symbols:
This further diverges the format from existing llvm-elftapi. This is a
good thing because although the format originally came from the same
place, they are not the same in any way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76979
Summary:
Function pointers should be created with program address space.
This fixes function pointers on AVR.
Reviewers: dylanmckay
Reviewed By: dylanmckay
Subscribers: Jim, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77119
The driver enables -fdiagnostics-show-option by default, so flip the CC1
default to reduce the lengths of common CC1 command lines.
This change also makes ParseDiagnosticArgs() consistently enable
-fdiagnostics-show-option by default.
Summary: This allows instrumenting things like global initializers
Reviewers: dberris, MaskRay, smeenai
Subscribers: cfe-commits, johnislarry
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77191
Per the documentation, this class is supposed to forward every virtual
method, but we had missed on (shouldEraseOutputFiles). This fixes using
a wrapped frontend action over the PCH generator when using
-fallow-pch-with-compiler-errors. I do not think any upstream wrapper
actions can test this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77180
rdar://61110294
Apparently HIPToolChain does not subclass from AMDGPUToolChain, so
this was not applying the new denormal attributes. I'm not sure why
this doesn't subclass. Just copy the implementation for now.
Need to allow arrayshaping expression in a list of expressions, so use
ParseAssignmentExpression() when try to parse the base of the shaping
operation.
Previously we would emit a PCH with errors, but fail the overall
compilation. If run using the driver, that would result in removing the
just-produced PCH. Instead, we should have the compilation result match
whether we were able to emit the PCH.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77159
rdar://61110294
Instead, represent the mask as out-of-line data in the instruction. This
should be more efficient in the places that currently use
getShuffleVector(), and paves the way for further changes to add new
shuffles for scalable vectors.
This doesn't change the syntax in textual IR. And I don't currently plan
to change the bitcode encoding in this patch, although we'll probably
need to do something once we extend shufflevector for scalable types.
I expect that once this is finished, we can then replace the raw "mask"
with something more appropriate for scalable vectors. Not sure exactly
what this looks like at the moment, but there are a few different ways
we could handle it. Maybe we could try to describe specific shuffles.
Or maybe we could define it in terms of a function to convert a fixed-length
array into an appropriate scalable vector, using a "step", or something
like that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72467
Since GlobalISel is maturing and is already on at -O0 for AArch64, it's not
completely "experimental". Create a more appropriate driver flag and make
the older option an alias for it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77103
Summary:
CGProfilePass is run by default in certain new pass manager optimization pipeline. Assemblers other than llvm as (such as gnu as) cannot recognize the .cgprofile entries generated and emitted from this pass, causing build time error.
This patch adds new options in clang CodeGenOpts and PassBuilder options so that we can turn cgprofile off when not using integrated assembler.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, xur, george.burgess.iv, chandlerc, manojgupta
Reviewed By: manojgupta
Subscribers: manojgupta, void, hiraditya, dexonsmith, llvm-commits, tcwang, llozano
Tags: #llvm, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62627
Summary:
The basic idea is to walk through the concept definition, looking for
t.foo() where t has the constrained type.
In this patch:
- nested types are recognized and offered after ::
- variable/function members are recognized and offered after the correct
dot/arrow/colon trigger
- member functions are recognized (anything directly called). parameter
types are presumed to be the argument types. parameters are unnamed.
- result types are available when a requirement has a type constraint.
These are printed as constraints, except same_as<T> which prints as T.
Not in this patch:
- support for merging/overloading when two locations describe the same member.
The last one wins, for any given name. This is probably important...
- support for nested template members (T::x<int>)
- support for completing members of (instantiations of) template template parameters
Reviewers: nridge, saar.raz
Subscribers: mgrang, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73649
Summary:
This patch removes delayed folding and replaces it with forward peeking.
Delayed folding was previously used as a solution to the problem that
declaration doesn't have a representation in the AST. For example following
code:
```
int a,b;
```
is expressed in the AST as:
```
TranslationUnitDecl
|-...
|-VarDecl `int a`
`-VarDecl `int b`
```
And in the syntax tree we need:
```
*: TranslationUnit
`-SimpleDeclaration
|-int
|-SimpleDeclarator
| `-a
|-,
|-SimpleDeclarator
| `-b
|-;
```
So in words, we need to create SimpleDeclaration to be a parent of
SimpleDeclarator nodes. Previously we used delayed folding to make sure SimpleDeclarations will be
eventually created. And in case multiple declarators requested declaration
creation, declaration range was extended to cover all declarators.
This design started to be hard to reason about, so we decided to replace it with
forward peeking. The last declarator node in the chain is responsible for creating
SimpleDeclaration for the whole chain. Range of the declaration corresponds to
the source range of the declarator node. Declarator decides whether its the last
one by peeking to the next AST node (see `isResponsibleForCreatingDeclaration`).
This patch does following:
* Removed delayed folding logic
* Tweaks Token.dumpForTests
* Moves getQualifiedNameStart inside BuildTreeVisitor
* Extracts BuildTreeVisitor.ProcessDeclaratorAndDeclaration
* Renames Builder.getDeclRange to Builder.getDeclarationRange and uses the
method in all places.
* Adds a bunch of tests
Reviewers: gribozavr2
Reviewed By: gribozavr2
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76922
Summary:
As the WebAssembly SIMD proposal nears stabilization, there is desire
to use it with toolchains other than Emscripten. Moving the intrinsics
header to clang will make it available to WASI toolchains as well.
Reviewers: aheejin, sunfish
Subscribers: dschuff, mgorny, sbc100, jgravelle-google, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76959
Summary:
This check was causing a crash in a test case where the 0th argument was
uninitialized ('Assertion `T::isKind(*this)' at line SVals.h:104). This
was happening since the argument was actually undefined, but the castAs
assumes the value is DefinedOrUnknownSVal.
The fix appears to be simply to check for an undefined value and skip
the check allowing the uninitalized value checker to detect the error.
I included a test case that I verified to produce the negative case
prior to the fix, and passes with the fix.
Reviewers: martong, NoQ
Subscribers: xazax.hun, szepet, rnkovacs, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, Charusso, ASDenysPetrov, baloghadamsoftware, dkrupp, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77012
-Wthread-safety was failing to detect certain AST patterns it should
detect. Make the pattern detection a bit more comprehensive.
Due to an unrelated bug involving template instantiation, this showed up
as a regression in 10.0 vs. 9.0 in the original bug report. The included
testcase fails on older versions of clang, though.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45323 .
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76943
clauses.
Implemented codegen for array shaping operation in depend clauses. The
begin of the expression is the pointer itself, while the size of the
dependence data is the mukltiplacation of all dimensions in the array
shaping expression.
Since its important to know whether a function frees memory (even if its a
reallocating function!), I used two CallDescriptionMaps to merge all
CallDescriptions into it. MemFunctionInfoTy no longer makes sense, it may never
have, but for now, it would be more of a distraction then anything else.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68165
Summary:
Added basic representation and parsing/sema handling of array-shaping
operations. Array shaping expression is an expression of form ([s0]..[sn])base,
where s0, ..., sn must be a positive integer, base - a pointer. This
expression is a kind of cast operation that converts pointer expression
into an array-like kind of expression.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, jdoerfert
Subscribers: guansong, arphaman, cfe-commits, caomhin, kkwli0
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74144
Summary: We mark these decls as invalid.
Reviewers: sammccall
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77037
On Ubuntu, we want to raise default CLANG_SYSTEMZ_ARCH to z13,
thus allow configuring this via CMake.
On Debian, we want to raise it to z196.
Author: Dimitri John Ledkov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75914
Commit "[clang-format] Handle C# generic type constraints",
dcbcec4822
regressed the formatting of code containing `where` as an identifier in other
languages.
Summary:
If the bitwith expr contains errors, we mark the field decl invalid.
This patch also tweaks the behavior of ObjCInterfaceDecl to be consistent with
existing RecordDecl -- getObjCLayout method is only called with valid decls.
Reviewers: sammccall
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76953
Summary:
The kernel kmalloc function may return a constant value ZERO_SIZE_PTR
if a zero-sized block is allocated. This special value is allowed to
be passed to kfree and should produce no warning.
This is a simple version but should be no problem. The macro is always
detected independent of if this is a kernel source code or any other
code.
Reviewers: Szelethus, martong
Reviewed By: Szelethus, martong
Subscribers: rnkovacs, xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, gamesh411, Charusso, martong, ASDenysPetrov, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76830
Iterator checkers (and planned container checkers) need the option
aggressive-binary-operation-simplification to be enabled. Without this
option they may cause assertions. To prevent such misuse, this patch adds
a preventive check which issues a warning and denies the registartion of
the checker if this option is disabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75171
Currently, bpf does not specify 128bit alignment in its
layout spec. So for a structure like
struct ipv6_key_t {
unsigned pid;
unsigned __int128 saddr;
unsigned short lport;
};
clang will generate IR type
%struct.ipv6_key_t = type { i32, [12 x i8], i128, i16, [14 x i8] }
Additional padding is to ensure later IR->MIR can generate correct
stack layout with target layout spec.
But it is common practice for a tracing program to be
first compiled with target flag (e.g., x86_64 or aarch64) through
clang to generate IR and then go through llc to generate bpf
byte code. Tracing program often refers to kernel internal
data structures which needs to be compiled with non-bpf target.
But such a compilation model may cause a problem on aarch64.
The bcc issue https://github.com/iovisor/bcc/issues/2827
reported such a problem.
For the above structure, since aarch64 has "i128:128" in its
layout string, the generated IR will have
%struct.ipv6_key_t = type { i32, i128, i16 }
Since bpf does not have "i128:128" in its spec string,
the selectionDAG assumes alignment 8 for i128 and
computes the stack storage size for the above is 32 bytes,
which leads incorrect code later.
The x86_64 does not have this issue as it does not have
"i128:128" in its layout spec as it does permits i128 to
be alignmented at 8 bytes at stack. Its IR type looks like
%struct.ipv6_key_t = type { i32, [12 x i8], i128, i16, [14 x i8] }
The fix here is add i128 support in layout spec, the same as
aarch64. The only downside is we may have less optimal stack
allocation in certain cases since we require 16byte alignment
for i128 instead of 8. But this is probably fine as i128 is
not used widely and in most cases users should already
have proper alignment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76587
The main purpose of introducing these builtins is to add a range
metadata [1, 1025) on the work group size loaded from dispatch
ptr, which cannot be done by source code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76772
scope.
There are a few contexts in which we assume a name is a template name;
if such a context is one where we should perform an unqualified lookup,
and lookup finds nothing, we would form a dependent template name even
if the name is not dependent. This happens in particular for the lookup
of a pseudo-destructor.
In passing, rename ActOnDependentTemplateName to just ActOnTemplateName
given that we apply it for non-dependent template names too.
Instead of bailing out of parsing when we encounter an invalid
template-name or template arguments in a template-id, produce an
annotation token describing the invalid construct.
This avoids duplicate errors and generally allows us to recover better.
In principle we should be able to extend this to store some kinds of
invalid template-id in the AST for tooling use, but that isn't handled
as part of this change.
Summary:
This makes it easier/safer to add bits (error) to other node types without
worrying about bit layout all the time.
For now, just use to implement the ad-hoc conversion functions.
Next: remove these functions and use this directly.
Reviewers: hokein
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76939
Currently -fno-unroll-loops is ignored when doing LTO on Darwin. This
patch adds a new -lto-no-unroll-loops option to the LTO code generator
and forwards it to the linker if -fno-unroll-loops is passed.
Reviewers: thegameg, steven_wu
Reviewed By: thegameg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76916
in the debug info with -fdebug-prefix-map.
rdar://problem/55685132
This reapplies an earlier attempt to commit this without
modifications.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76385
Built-in SVE types are trivial, since they're trivially copyable
and support default construction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76692
SVE types are trivially copyable: they can be copied simply
by reproducing the byte representation of the source object.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76691
Before this patch, it wasn't possible to extend the ThinLTO threads to all SMT/CMT threads in the system. Only one thread per core was allowed, instructed by usage of llvm::heavyweight_hardware_concurrency() in the ThinLTO code. Any number passed to the LLD flag /opt:lldltojobs=..., or any other ThinLTO-specific flag, was previously interpreted in the context of llvm::heavyweight_hardware_concurrency(), which means SMT disabled.
One can now say in LLD:
/opt:lldltojobs=0 -- Use one std::thread / hardware core in the system (no SMT). Default value if flag not specified.
/opt:lldltojobs=N -- Limit usage to N threads, regardless of usage of heavyweight_hardware_concurrency().
/opt:lldltojobs=all -- Use all hardware threads in the system. Equivalent to /opt:lldltojobs=$(nproc) on Linux and /opt:lldltojobs=%NUMBER_OF_PROCESSORS% on Windows. When an affinity mask is set for the process, threads will be created only for the cores selected by the mask.
When N > number-of-hardware-threads-in-the-system, the threads in the thread pool will be dispatched equally on all CPU sockets (tested only on Windows).
When N <= number-of-hardware-threads-on-a-CPU-socket, the threads will remain on the CPU socket where the process started (only on Windows).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75153
Some checkers may not only depend on language options but also analyzer options.
To make this possible this patch changes the parameter of the shouldRegister*
function to CheckerManager to be able to query the analyzer options when
deciding whether the checker should be registered.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75271
This fixes a regression from D69573 which broke the following example:
$ echo 'operator C<T>*();' | bin/clang-format --style=Chromium
operator C<T> *();
(There should be no space before the asterisk.)
It seems the problem is in TokenAnnotator::spaceRequiredBetween(),
which only looked at the token to the left of the * to see if it was a
type or not. That code only handled simple types or identifiers, not
templates or qualified types. This patch addresses that.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76850
Summary:
Unsigned types can alias the corresponding signed types. I don't see
that this is explicitly mentioned in the Embedded-C specification, but
I think it should work the same as for the integer types.
Patch by: materi
Reviewers: ebevhan, leonardchan
Reviewed By: leonardchan
Subscribers: kosarev, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76856
This is the second part loosely extracted from D71179 and cleaned up.
This patch provides semantic analysis support for `omp begin/end declare
variant`, mostly as defined in OpenMP technical report 8 (TR8) [0].
The sema handling makes code generation obsolete as we generate "the
right" calls that can just be handled as usual. This handling also
applies to the existing, albeit problematic, `omp declare variant
support`. As a consequence a lot of unneeded code generation and
complexity is removed.
A major purpose of this patch is to provide proper `math.h`/`cmath`
support for OpenMP target offloading. See PR42061, PR42798, PR42799. The
current code was developed with this feature in mind, see [1].
The logic is as follows:
If we have seen a `#pragma omp begin declare variant match(<SELECTOR>)`
but not the corresponding `end declare variant`, and we find a function
definition we will:
1) Create a function declaration for the definition we were about to generate.
2) Create a function definition but with a mangled name (according to
`<SELECTOR>`).
3) Annotate the declaration with the `OMPDeclareVariantAttr`, the same
one used already for `omp declare variant`, using and the mangled
function definition as specialization for the context defined by
`<SELECTOR>`.
When a call is created we inspect it. If the target has an
`OMPDeclareVariantAttr` attribute we try to specialize the call. To this
end, all variants are checked, the best applicable one is picked and a
new call to the specialization is created. The new call is used instead
of the original one to the base function. To keep the AST printing and
tooling possible we utilize the PseudoObjectExpr. The original call is
the syntactic expression, the specialized call is the semantic
expression.
[0] https://www.openmp.org/wp-content/uploads/openmp-TR8.pdf
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/D61399#change-496lQkg0mhRN
Reviewers: kiranchandramohan, ABataev, RaviNarayanaswamy, gtbercea, grokos, sdmitriev, JonChesterfield, hfinkel, fghanim, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: bollu, guansong, openmp-commits, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75779
This is the first part extracted from D71179 and cleaned up.
This patch provides parsing support for `omp begin/end declare variant`,
as defined in OpenMP technical report 8 (TR8) [0].
A major purpose of this patch is to provide proper math.h/cmath support
for OpenMP target offloading. See PR42061, PR42798, PR42799. The current
code was developed with this feature in mind, see [1].
[0] https://www.openmp.org/wp-content/uploads/openmp-TR8.pdf
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/D61399#change-496lQkg0mhRN
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74941
In this case we interpret the path as relative the clang driver binary.
This allows SDKs to be built that include clang along with a custom
sysroot without requiring users to specify --sysroot to point to the
directory where they installed the SDK.
See https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-sdk/issues/58
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76653
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 reverts commit 0788acbccb.
This reverts commit c2d7a1f79cedfc9fcb518596aa839da4de0adb69: Revert "[clangd] Add test for FindTarget+RecoveryExpr (which already works). NFC"
It causes a crash on invalid code:
class X {
decltype(unresolved()) foo;
};
constexpr int s = sizeof(X);
Originally commited in rG57b8a407493c34c3680e7e1e4cb82e097f43744a, but
it broke the modules bot. This is solved by putting the contructors of
the CheckerManager class to the Frontend library.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75360
When Clang crashes a useful message is output:
"PLEASE submit a bug report to https://bugs.llvm.org/ and include the
crash backtrace, preprocessed source, and associated run script."
A similar message is now output for all tools.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74324
Summary:
The previous behavior was aggressive,
#include "abc/f^/abc.h"
foo/ -> candidate
"f/abc.h" is replaced with "foo/", this patch will preserve the "abc.h".
Reviewers: sammccall
Subscribers: jkorous, arphaman, kadircet, usaxena95, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76770
Summary:
This patch introduces command-line support for the Armv8.6-a architecture and assembly support for BFloat16. Details can be found
https://community.arm.com/developer/ip-products/processors/b/processors-ip-blog/posts/arm-architecture-developments-armv8-6-a
in addition to the GCC patch for the 8..6-a CLI:
https://gcc.gnu.org/legacy-ml/gcc-patches/2019-11/msg02647.html
In detail this patch
- march options for armv8.6-a
- BFloat16 assembly
This is part of a patch series, starting with command-line and Bfloat16
assembly support. The subsequent patches will upstream intrinsics
support for BFloat16, followed by Matrix Multiplication and the
remaining Virtualization features of the armv8.6-a architecture.
Based on work by:
- labrinea
- MarkMurrayARM
- Luke Cheeseman
- Javed Asbar
- Mikhail Maltsev
- Luke Geeson
Reviewers: SjoerdMeijer, craig.topper, rjmccall, jfb, LukeGeeson
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer
Subscribers: stuij, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, dexonsmith, danielkiss, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76062
If an error happens which is related to a container the Container
Modeling checker adds note tags to all the container operations along
the bug path. This may be disturbing if there are other containers
beside the one which is affected by the bug. This patch restricts the
note tags to only the affected container and adjust the debug checkers
to be able to test this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75514
Summary: Previously, we dropped the AST node for nonexistent member exprs.
Reviewers: sammccall
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76764
Container operations such as `push_back()`, `pop_front()`
etc. increment and decrement the abstract begin and end
symbols of containers. This patch introduces note tags
to `ContainerModeling` to track these changes. This helps
the user to better identify the source of errors related
to containers and iterators.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73720
As reported in PR45298 and PR45299, vector_size type checking would
crash when done in a situation where the scalar is dependent, such as
a member of the current instantiation.
This is because the scalar checking ensures that you can implicitly
convert a value to a vector-type as long as it doesn't require
truncation. It does this by using the constant evaluator to get the
value as a float. Unfortunately, if the scalar is dependent (such as a
member of the current instantiation), we would hit the assert in the
evaluator.
This patch suppresses the truncation- of-value check in the first phase
of translation. All values are properly errored upon instantiation. This
has one minor regression, in that previously in a non-asserts build,
template<typename T>
struct S {
float4 f(float4 f) {
return k + f;
}
static constexpr k = 1.1; // causes a truncation on conversion.
};
would error immediately. Because 'k' is value dependent (as a
member-of-the-current-instantiation), this would still be evaluatable
(despite normally asserting). Due to this patch, this diagnostic is
delayed until instantiation time.
Summary:
This patch adds a virtual method `getCPUCacheLineSize()` to `TargetInfo`. Currently, I've only implemented the method in `X86TargetInfo`. It's extremely important that each CPU's cache line size correct (e.g., we can't just define it as `64` across the board) so, it has been a little slow getting to this point.
I'll work on the ARM CPUs next, but that will probably come later in a different patch.
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74918
SPIRV2.0 Spec only specifies Linux mangling, however our downstream has
use for a Windows mangling for these types.
Unfortunately, the SPIRV
spec specifies a single mangling for all pipe types, despite clang
allowing overloading on these types. Because of this, this patch
chooses to mangle the read/writability and element type for the windows
mangling.
The windows manglings in the test all demangle according to demangler:
"void __cdecl test1(struct __clang::ocl_pipe<int,1>)
"void __cdecl test2(struct __clang::ocl_pipe<float,0>)
"void __cdecl test2(struct __clang::ocl_pipe<int,1>)
"void __cdecl test3(struct __clang::ocl_pipe<int const,1>)
"void __cdecl test4(struct __clang::ocl_pipe<union
__clang::__vector<unsigned char,3>,1>)
"void __cdecl test5(struct __clang::ocl_pipe<union
__clang::__vector<int,4>,1>)
"void __cdecl test_reserved_read_pipe(struct __clang::_ASCLglobal<struct
Person > * __ptr64,struct __clang::ocl_pipe<struct Person,1>)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75685
Currently square-bracket-style (CXX11/C2X) attribute names are normalised to
start with :: if they don't have a namespace. This is a bit odd, as such
names are rejected when parsing, so don't do this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76704
In order to support non-user-named kernels, SYCL needs some way in the
integration headers to name the kernel object themselves. Initially, the
design considered just RTTI naming of the lambdas, this results in a
quite unstable situation in light of some device/host macros.
Additionally, this ends up needing to use RTTI, which is a burden on the
implementation and typically unsupported.
Instead, we've introduced a builtin, __builtin_unique_stable_name, which
takes a type or expression, and results in a constexpr constant
character array that uniquely represents the type (or type of the
expression) being passed to it.
The implementation accomplishes that simply by using a slightly modified
version of the Itanium Mangling. The one exception is when mangling
lambdas, instead of appending the index of the lambda in the function,
it appends the macro-expansion back-trace of the lambda itself in the
form LINE->COL[~LINE->COL...].
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76620
Casts from an SVE type to itself aren't very useful, but they are
supposed to be valid, and could occur in things like macro expansions.
Such casts already work for C++ and are tested by sizeless-1.cpp.
This patch makes them work for C too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76694
When compiling C, a ?: between two values of the same SVE type
currently gives an error such as:
incompatible operand types ('svint8_t' (aka '__SVInt8_t') and 'svint8_t')
It's supposed to be valid to select between (cv-qualified versions of)
the same SVE type, so this patch adds that case.
These expressions already work for C++ and are tested by
SemaCXX/sizeless-1.cpp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76693
The code was pretending to be doing something useful with vectors, but
really it was doing nothing: the element type of a vector is always a
scalar type, so constWithPadding would always just return the input constant.
Split off from D75661 so it can be reviewed separately.
While I'm here, also add testcase to show missing vector handling.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76528
Summary:
After we parse the switch condition, we don't do the type check for
type-dependent expr (e.g. TypoExpr) (in Sema::CheckSwitchCondition), then the
TypoExpr is corrected to an invalid-type expr (in Sema::MakeFullExpr) and passed
to the ActOnStartOfSwitchStmt, which triggers the assertion.
Fix https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/311
Reviewers: sammccall
Subscribers: ilya-biryukov, kadircet, usaxena95, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76592
The argument after -Xarch_device will be added to the arguments for CUDA/HIP
device compilation and will be removed for host compilation.
The argument after -Xarch_host will be added to the arguments for CUDA/HIP
host compilation and will be removed for device compilation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76520
Summary:
This clears the way for adding an Error dependence bit to Type and having it
mostly-automatically propagated.
Reviewers: hokein
Subscribers: jfb, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76424
Normally clang avoids creating expressions when it encounters semantic
errors, even if the parser knows which expression to produce.
This works well for the compiler. However, this is not ideal for
source-level tools that have to deal with broken code, e.g. clangd is
not able to provide navigation features even for names that compiler
knows how to resolve.
The new RecoveryExpr aims to capture the minimal set of information
useful for the tools that need to deal with incorrect code:
source range of the expression being dropped,
subexpressions of the expression.
We aim to make constructing RecoveryExprs as simple as possible to
ensure writing code to avoid dropping expressions is easy.
Producing RecoveryExprs can result in new code paths being taken in the
frontend. In particular, clang can produce some new diagnostics now and
we aim to suppress bogus ones based on Expr::containsErrors.
We deliberately produce RecoveryExprs only in the parser for now to
minimize the code affected by this patch. Producing RecoveryExprs in
Sema potentially allows to preserve more information (e.g. type of an
expression), but also results in more code being affected. E.g.
SFINAE checks will have to take presence of RecoveryExprs into account.
Initial implementation only works in C++ mode, as it relies on compiler
postponing diagnostics on dependent expressions. C and ObjC often do not
do this, so they require more work to make sure we do not produce too
many bogus diagnostics on the new expressions.
See documentation of RecoveryExpr for more details.
original patch from Ilya
This change is based on https://reviews.llvm.org/D61722
Reviewers: sammccall, rsmith
Reviewed By: sammccall, rsmith
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69330
Some methods are sometimes declared in the @implementation blocks which
can cause undiagnosed clashes.
Just write a checkObjCDirectMethodClashes() for this purpose.
Also make sure that "unavailable" selectors do not inherit
objc_direct_members.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76643
Signed-off-by: Pierre Habouzit <phabouzit@apple.com>
Radar-ID: rdar://problem/59332804, rdar://problem/59782963
TableGen and .def files (which are meant to be used with the preprocessor) come
with obvious downsides. One of those issues is that generated switch-case
branches have to be identical. This pushes corner cases either to an outer code
block, or into the generated code.
Inspect the removed code in AnalysisConsumer::DigestAnalyzerOptions. You can see
how corner cases like a not existing output file, the analysis output type being
set to PD_NONE, or whether to complement the output with additional diagnostics
on stderr lay around the preprocessor generated code. This is a bit problematic,
as to how to deal with such errors is not in the hands of the users of this
interface (those implementing output types, like PlistDiagnostics etc).
This patch changes this by moving these corner cases into the generated code,
more specifically, into the called functions. In addition, I introduced a new
output type for convenience purposes, PD_TEXT_MINIMAL, which always existed
conceptually, but never in the actual Analyses.def file. This refactoring
allowed me to move TextDiagnostics (renamed from ClangDiagPathDiagConsumer) to
its own file, which it really deserved.
Also, those that had the misfortune to gaze upon Analyses.def will probably
enjoy the sight that a clang-format did on it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76509
Upon calling one of the functions `std::advance()`, `std::prev()` and
`std::next()` iterators could get out of their valid range which leads
to undefined behavior. If all these funcions are inlined together with
the functions they call internally (e.g. `__advance()` called by
`std::advance()` in some implementations) the error is detected by
`IteratorRangeChecker` but the bug location is inside the STL
implementation. Even worse, if the budget runs out and one of the calls
is not inlined the bug remains undetected. This patch fixes this
behavior: all the bugs are detected at the point of the STL function
invocation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76379
Its been a while since my CheckerRegistry related patches landed, allow me to
refresh your memory:
During compilation, TblGen turns
clang/include/clang/StaticAnalyzer/Checkers/Checkers.td into
(build directory)/tools/clang/include/clang/StaticAnalyzer/Checkers/Checkers.inc.
This is a file that contains the full name of the checkers, their options, etc.
The class that is responsible for parsing this file is CheckerRegistry. The job
of this class is to establish what checkers are available for the analyzer (even
from plugins and statically linked but non-tblgen generated files!), and
calculate which ones should be turned on according to the analyzer's invocation.
CheckerManager is the class that is responsible for the construction and storage
of checkers. This process works by first creating a CheckerRegistry object, and
passing itself to CheckerRegistry::initializeManager(CheckerManager&), which
will call the checker registry functions (for example registerMallocChecker) on
it.
The big problem here is that these two classes lie in two different libraries,
so their interaction is pretty awkward. This used to be far worse, but I
refactored much of it, which made things better but nowhere near perfect.
---
This patch changes how the above mentioned two classes interact. CheckerRegistry
is mainly used by CheckerManager, and they are so intertwined, it makes a lot of
sense to turn in into a field, instead of a one-time local variable. This has
additional benefits: much of the information that CheckerRegistry conveniently
holds is no longer thrown away right after the analyzer's initialization, and
opens the possibility to pass CheckerManager in the shouldRegister* function
rather then LangOptions (D75271).
There are a few problems with this. CheckerManager isn't the only user, when we
honor help flags like -analyzer-checker-help, we only have access to a
CompilerInstance class, that is before the point of parsing the AST.
CheckerManager makes little sense without ASTContext, so I made some changes and
added new constructors to make it constructible for the use of help flags.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75360
Summary:
Copy of https://reviews.llvm.org/D72446, submitting with Ilya's permission.
Only used to assign roles to child nodes for now. This is more efficient
than doing range-based queries.
In the future, will be exposed in the public API of syntax trees.
Reviewers: gribozavr2
Reviewed By: gribozavr2
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76355
Whenever the analyzer budget runs out just at the point where
`std::advance()`, `std::prev()` or `std::next()` is invoked the function
are not inlined. This results in strange behavior such as
`std::prev(v.end())` equals `v.end()`. To prevent this model these
functions if they were not inlined. It may also happend that although
`std::advance()` is inlined but a function it calls inside (e.g.
`__advance()` in some implementations) is not. This case is also handled
in this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76361
Summary:
Align sequential generic type constraints on a type.
Indent sequential generic type constraints on different types as continuations.
Do not allow '(' and '<' within a generic type constraint to open new scopes.
Reviewers: krasimir
Subscribers: cfe-commits, MyDeveloperDay
Tags: #clang-format, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76597
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
There's inconsistency in handling array types between the
`distributeFunctionTypeAttrXXX` functions and the
`FunctionTypeUnwrapper` in `SemaType.cpp`.
This patch lets `FunctionTypeUnwrapper` apply function type attributes
through array types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75109
Extract common code to a function. To prepare for
adding an option for CUDA/HIP host and device only
option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76455
This type was already well designed - having a protected destructor, and
derived classes being final/public non-virtual destructors, the type
couldn't be destroyed polymorphically & accidentally cause slicing.
This reverts commit 736385c0b4.
Summary: If the size parameter of `__builtin_memcpy_inline` comes from an un-instantiated template parameter current code would crash.
Reviewers: efriedma, courbet
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76504
Summary:
Since the conditional operator cannot be used with vector conditions
in C, we need a builtin to be able to express this operation in C
source.
Reviewers: aheejin
Subscribers: dschuff, sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76538
The ".sdk" component is usually the last one in the -isysroot, so it
makes more sense to scan from the back. Also, technically, someone
could install Xcode into a directory ending with .sdk, which would
break this heuristic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76097
accept as an extension.
This attempts to accept the same cases a GCC, plus cases where a
comparison is rewritten to an operator== with an integral but non-bool
return type; this is sufficient to avoid most problems with various
major open-source projects (such as ICU) and appears to fix all but one
of the comparison-related C++20 build breaks in LLVM.
This approach is being pursued for standardization.
Before this patch a Clang module skeleton CU would have a
DW_AT_comp_dir pointing to the directory of the module map file, and
this information was not used by anyone. Even worse, LLDB actually
resolves relative DWO paths by appending it to DW_AT_comp_dir. This
patch sets it to the same directory that is used as the main CU's
compilation directory, which would make the LLDB code work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76377
region.
According to OpenMP 5.0, exactly one scan directive must appear in the loop body of an enclosing worksharing-loop, worksharing-loop SIMD, or simd construct on which a reduction clause with the inscan modifier is present.
FinishThunk, and the invariant of setting and then unsetting
CurCodeDecl, was added in 7f416cc426 (2015). The invariant didn't
exist when I added this musttail codepath in ab2090d107 (2014).
Recently in 28328c3771, I started using this codepath on non-Windows
platforms, and users reported problems during release testing (PR44987).
The issue was already present for users of EH on i686-windows-msvc, so I
added a test for that case as well.
Reviewed By: hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76444
Discovered by a downstream user, we found that the CallGraph ignores
callees unless they are defined. This seems foolish, and prevents
combining the report with other reports to create unified reports.
Additionally, declarations contain information that is likely useful to
consumers of the CallGraph.
This patch implements this by splitting the includeInGraph function into
two versions, the current one plus one that is for callees only. The
only difference currently is that includeInGraph checks for a body, then
calls includeCalleeInGraph.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76435