WebAssembly enforces a rule that caller and callee signatures must
match. This means that the traditional technique of passing `main`
`argc` and `argv` even when it doesn't need them doesn't work.
Currently the backend renames `main` to `__original_main`, however this
doesn't interact well with LTO'ing libc, and the name isn't intuitive.
This patch allows us to transition to `__main_argc_argv` instead.
This implements the proposal in
https://github.com/WebAssembly/tool-conventions/pull/134
with a flag to disable it when targeting Emscripten, though this is
expected to be temporary, as discussed in the proposal comments.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70700
Summary:
Right now we annotate C++'s `operator new` with `noalias` attribute,
which very much is healthy for optimizations.
However as per [[ http://eel.is/c++draft/basic.stc.dynamic.allocation | `[basic.stc.dynamic.allocation]` ]],
there are more promises on global `operator new`, namely:
* non-`std::nothrow_t` `operator new` *never* returns `nullptr`
* If `std::align_val_t align` parameter is taken, the pointer will also be `align`-aligned
* ~~global `operator new`-returned pointer is `__STDCPP_DEFAULT_NEW_ALIGNMENT__`-aligned ~~ It's more caveated than that.
Supplying this information may not cause immediate landslide effects
on any specific benchmarks, but it for sure will be healthy for optimizer
in the sense that the IR will better reflect the guarantees provided in the source code.
The caveat is `-fno-assume-sane-operator-new`, which currently prevents emitting `noalias`
attribute, and is automatically passed by Sanitizers ([[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=16386 | PR16386 ]]) - should it also cover these attributes?
The problem is that the flag is back-end-specific, as seen in `test/Modules/explicit-build-flags.cpp`.
But while it is okay to add `noalias` metadata in backend, we really should be adding at least
the alignment metadata to the AST, since that allows us to perform sema checks on it.
Reviewers: erichkeane, rjmccall, jdoerfert, eugenis, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: xbolva00, jrtc27, atanasyan, nlopes, cfe-commits
Tags: #llvm, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73380
This patch fixes PR44896. For IR input files, option fdiscard-value-names
should be ignored as we need named values in loadModule().
Commit 60d3947922 sets this option after loadModule() where valued names
already created. This creates an inconsistent state in setNameImpl()
that leads to a seg fault.
This patch forces fdiscard-value-names to be false for IR input files.
This patch also emits a warning of "ignoring -fdiscard-value-names" if
option fdiscard-value-names is explictly enabled in the commandline for
IR input files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74878
Summary:
Clang's "asm goto" feature didn't initially support outputs constraints. That
was the same behavior as gcc's implementation. The decision by gcc not to
support outputs was based on a restriction in their IR regarding terminators.
LLVM doesn't restrict terminators from returning values (e.g. 'invoke'), so
it made sense to support this feature.
Output values are valid only on the 'fallthrough' path. If an output value's used
on an indirect branch, then it's 'poisoned'.
In theory, outputs *could* be valid on the 'indirect' paths, but it's very
difficult to guarantee that the original semantics would be retained. E.g.
because indirect labels could be used as data, we wouldn't be able to split
critical edges in situations where two 'callbr' instructions have the same
indirect label, because the indirect branch's destination would no longer be
the same.
Reviewers: jyknight, nickdesaulniers, hfinkel
Reviewed By: jyknight, nickdesaulniers
Subscribers: MaskRay, rsmith, hiraditya, llvm-commits, cfe-commits, craig.topper, rnk
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69876
Previously we emitted an fmadd and a fmadd+fneg and combined them with a shufflevector. But this doesn't follow the correct exception behavior for unselected elements so the backend can't merge them into the fmaddsub/fmsubadd instructions.
This patch restores the the fmaddsub intrinsics so we don't have two arithmetic operations. We lose out on optimization opportunity in the non-strict FP case, but I don't think this is a big loss. If someone gives us a test case we can look into adding instcombine/dagcombine improvements. I'd rather not have the frontend do completely different things for strict and non-strict.
This still has problems because target specific intrinsics don't support strict semantics yet. We also still have all of the problems with masking. But we at least generate the right instruction in constrained mode now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74268
This PR enables "XL" C++ ABI in frontend AST to IR codegen. And it is driven by
static init work. The current kind in Clang by default is Generic Itanium, which
has different behavior on static init with IBM xlclang compiler on AIX.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74015
Summary:
As @rsmith notes in https://reviews.llvm.org/D73020#inline-672219
while that is certainly UB land, it may not be actually reachable at runtime, e.g.:
```
template<int N> void *make() {
if ((N & (N-1)) == 0)
return operator new(N, std::align_val_t(N));
else
return operator new(N);
}
void *p = make<7>();
```
and we shouldn't really error-out there.
That being said, i'm not really following the logic here.
Which ones of these cases should remain being an error?
Reviewers: rsmith, erichkeane
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Subscribers: cfe-commits, rsmith
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73996
This has no effect on how LLVM passes the arguments, but it prevents
rewriteWithInAlloca from thinking that these parameters should be part
of the inalloca pack.
Follow-up to D72114
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74452
This commit removes the artificial types <512 x i1> and <1024 x i1>
from HVX intrinsics, and makes v512i1 and v1024i1 no longer legal on
Hexagon.
It may cause existing bitcode files to become invalid.
* Converting between vector predicates and vector registers must be
done explicitly via vandvrt/vandqrt instructions (their intrinsics),
i.e. (for 64-byte mode):
%Q = call <64 x i1> @llvm.hexagon.V6.vandvrt(<16 x i32> %V, i32 -1)
%V = call <16 x i32> @llvm.hexagon.V6.vandqrt(<64 x i1> %Q, i32 -1)
The conversion intrinsics are:
declare <64 x i1> @llvm.hexagon.V6.vandvrt(<16 x i32>, i32)
declare <128 x i1> @llvm.hexagon.V6.vandvrt.128B(<32 x i32>, i32)
declare <16 x i32> @llvm.hexagon.V6.vandqrt(<64 x i1>, i32)
declare <32 x i32> @llvm.hexagon.V6.vandqrt.128B(<128 x i1>, i32)
They are all pure.
* Vector predicate values cannot be loaded/stored directly. This directly
reflects the architecture restriction. Loading and storing or vector
predicates must be done indirectly via vector registers and explicit
conversions via vandvrt/vandqrt instructions.
This patch introduces a new helper class `OMPBuilderCBHelpers`,
which will contain all reusable C/C++ language specific function-
alities required by the `OMPIRBuilder`.
Initially, this helper class contains the body and finalization
codegen functionalities implemented using callbacks which were
moved here for reusability among the different directives
implemented in the `OMPIRBuilder`, along with RAIIs for preserving
state prior to emitting outlined and/or inlined OpenMP regions.
In the future this helper class will also contain all the different
call backs required by OpenMP clauses/variable privatization.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74562
Summary:
Depends on https://reviews.llvm.org/D71902.
The last in a series of six patches that ports the LLVM coroutines
passes to the new pass manager infrastructure.
This patch has Clang schedule the new coroutines passes when the
`-fexperimental-new-pass-manager` option is used. With this and the
previous 5 patches, Clang is capable of building and successfully
running the test suite of large coroutines projects such as
https://github.com/lewissbaker/cppcoro with
`ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL_NEW_PASS_MANAGER=On`.
Reviewers: GorNishanov, lewissbaker, chandlerc, junparser
Subscribers: EricWF, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71903
This patch enables the debug entry values feature.
- Remove the (CC1) experimental -femit-debug-entry-values option
- Enable it for x86, arm and aarch64 targets
- Resolve the test failures
- Leave the llc experimental option for targets that do not
support the CallSiteInfo yet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73534
Summary:
These are in some sense the inverse of vmovl[bt]q: they take a vector
of n wide elements and truncate each to half its width. So they only
write half a vector's worth of output data, and therefore they also
take an 'inactive' parameter to provide the other half of the data in
the output vector. So vmovnb overwrites the even lanes of 'inactive'
with the narrowed values from the main input, and vmovnt overwrites
the odd lanes.
LLVM had existing codegen which generates these MVE instructions in
response to IR that takes two vectors of wide elements, or two vectors
of narrow ones. But in this case, we have one vector of each. So my
clang codegen strategy is to narrow the input vector of wide elements
by simply reinterpreting it as the output type, and then we have two
narrow vectors and can represent the operation as a vector shuffle
that interleaves lanes from both of them.
Even so, not all the cases I needed ended up being selected as a
single MVE instruction, so I've added a couple more patterns that spot
combinations of the 'MVEvmovn' and 'ARMvrev32' SDNodes which can be
generated as a VMOVN instruction with operands swapped.
This commit adds the unpredicated forms only.
Reviewers: dmgreen, miyuki, MarkMurrayARM, ostannard
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74337
Summary:
These intrinsics take a vector of 2n elements, and return a vector of
n wider elements obtained by sign- or zero-extending every other
element of the input vector. They're represented in IR as a
shufflevector that extracts the odd or even elements of the input,
followed by a sext or zext.
Existing LLVM codegen already matches this pattern and generates the
VMOVLB instruction (which widens the even-index input lanes). But no
existing isel rule was generating VMOVLT, so I've added some. However,
the new rules currently only work in little-endian MVE, because the
pattern they expect from isel lowering includes a bitconvert which
doesn't have the right semantics in big-endian.
The output of one existing codegen test is improved by those new
rules.
This commit adds the unpredicated forms only.
Reviewers: dmgreen, miyuki, MarkMurrayARM, ostannard
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74336
Summary:
These intrinsics just reorder the lanes of a vector, so the natural IR
representation is as a shufflevector operation. Existing LLVM codegen
already recognizes those particular shufflevectors and generates the
MVE VREV instruction.
This commit adds the unpredicated forms only.
Reviewers: dmgreen, miyuki, MarkMurrayARM, ostannard
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74334
Summary:
This commit adds the unpredicated intrinsics for the unary operations
vabsq (absolute value), vnegq (arithmetic negation), vmvnq (bitwise
complement), vqabsq and vqnegq (saturating versions of abs and neg for
signed integers, in the sense that they give INT_MAX if an input lane
is INT_MIN).
This is done entirely in clang: all of these operations have existing
isel patterns and existing tests for them on the LLVM side, so I've
just made clang emit the same IR that those patterns already match.
Reviewers: dmgreen, miyuki, MarkMurrayARM, ostannard
Reviewed By: MarkMurrayARM
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74331
Relative to the original commit, this fixes some warnings,
and is based on the deletion of the IRBuilder copy constructor
in D74693. The automatic copy constructor would no longer be
safe.
-----
Related llvm-dev thread:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-February/138951.html
This patch moves the IRBuilder from templating over the constant
folder and inserter towards making both of these virtual.
There are a couple of motivations for this:
1. It's not possible to share code between use-sites that use
different IRBuilder folders/inserters (short of templating the code
and moving it into headers).
2. Methods currently defined on IRBuilderBase (which is not templated)
do not use the custom inserter, resulting in subtle bugs (e.g.
incorrect InstCombine worklist management). It would be possible to
move those into the templated IRBuilder, but...
3. The vast majority of the IRBuilder implementation has to live
in the header, because it depends on the template arguments.
4. We have many unnecessary dependencies on IRBuilder.h,
because it is not easy to forward-declare. (Significant parts of
the backend depend on it via TargetLowering.h, for example.)
This patch addresses the issue by making the following changes:
* IRBuilderDefaultInserter::InsertHelper becomes virtual.
IRBuilderBase accepts a reference to it.
* IRBuilderFolder is introduced as a virtual base class. It is
implemented by ConstantFolder (default), NoFolder and TargetFolder.
IRBuilderBase has a reference to this as well.
* All the logic is moved from IRBuilder to IRBuilderBase. This means
that methods can in the future replace their IRBuilder<> & uses
(or other specific IRBuilder types) with IRBuilderBase & and thus
be usable with different IRBuilders.
* The IRBuilder class is now a thin wrapper around IRBuilderBase.
Essentially it only stores the folder and inserter and takes care
of constructing the base builder.
What this patch doesn't do, but should be simple followups after this change:
* Fixing use of the inserter for creation methods originally defined
on IRBuilderBase.
* Replacing IRBuilder<> uses in arguments with IRBuilderBase, where useful.
* Moving code from the IRBuilder header to the source file.
From the user perspective, these changes should be mostly transparent:
The only thing that consumers using a custom inserted may need to do is
inherit from IRBuilderDefaultInserter publicly and mark their InsertHelper
as public.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73835
norecurse function attr indicates the function is not called recursively
directly or indirectly.
Add norecurse to OpenCL functions, SYCL functions in device compilation
and CUDA/HIP kernels.
Although there is LLVM pass adding norecurse to functions, it only works
for whole-program compilation. Also FE adding norecurse can make that
pass run faster since functions with norecurse do not need to be checked
again.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73651
Related llvm-dev thread:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-February/138951.html
This patch moves the IRBuilder from templating over the constant
folder and inserter towards making both of these virtual.
There are a couple of motivations for this:
1. It's not possible to share code between use-sites that use
different IRBuilder folders/inserters (short of templating the code
and moving it into headers).
2. Methods currently defined on IRBuilderBase (which is not templated)
do not use the custom inserter, resulting in subtle bugs (e.g.
incorrect InstCombine worklist management). It would be possible to
move those into the templated IRBuilder, but...
3. The vast majority of the IRBuilder implementation has to live
in the header, because it depends on the template arguments.
4. We have many unnecessary dependencies on IRBuilder.h,
because it is not easy to forward-declare. (Significant parts of
the backend depend on it via TargetLowering.h, for example.)
This patch addresses the issue by making the following changes:
* IRBuilderDefaultInserter::InsertHelper becomes virtual.
IRBuilderBase accepts a reference to it.
* IRBuilderFolder is introduced as a virtual base class. It is
implemented by ConstantFolder (default), NoFolder and TargetFolder.
IRBuilderBase has a reference to this as well.
* All the logic is moved from IRBuilder to IRBuilderBase. This means
that methods can in the future replace their IRBuilder<> & uses
(or other specific IRBuilder types) with IRBuilderBase & and thus
be usable with different IRBuilders.
* The IRBuilder class is now a thin wrapper around IRBuilderBase.
Essentially it only stores the folder and inserter and takes care
of constructing the base builder.
What this patch doesn't do, but should be simple followups after this change:
* Fixing use of the inserter for creation methods originally defined
on IRBuilderBase.
* Replacing IRBuilder<> uses in arguments with IRBuilderBase, where useful.
* Moving code from the IRBuilder header to the source file.
From the user perspective, these changes should be mostly transparent:
The only thing that consumers using a custom inserted may need to do is
inherit from IRBuilderDefaultInserter publicly and mark their InsertHelper
as public.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73835
Add support for Master and Critical directive in the OMPIRBuilder. Both make use of a new common interface for emitting inlined OMP regions called `emitInlinedRegion` which was added in this patch as well.
Also this patch modifies clang to use the new directives when `-fopenmp-enable-irbuilder` commandline option is passed.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72304
This patch implements an almost complete handling of OpenMP
contexts/traits such that we can reuse most of the logic in Flang
through the OMPContext.{h,cpp} in llvm/Frontend/OpenMP.
All but construct SIMD specifiers, e.g., inbranch, and the device ISA
selector are define in `llvm/lib/Frontend/OpenMP/OMPKinds.def`. From
these definitions we generate the enum classes `TraitSet`,
`TraitSelector`, and `TraitProperty` as well as conversion and helper
functions in `llvm/lib/Frontend/OpenMP/OMPContext.{h,cpp}`.
The above enum classes are used in the parser, sema, and the AST
attribute. The latter is not a collection of multiple primitive variant
arguments that contain encodings via numbers and strings but instead a
tree that mirrors the `match` clause (see `struct OpenMPTraitInfo`).
The changes to the parser make it more forgiving when wrong syntax is
read and they also resulted in more specialized diagnostics. The tests
are updated and the core issues are detected as before. Here and
elsewhere this patch tries to be generic, thus we do not distinguish
what selector set, selector, or property is parsed except if they do
behave exceptionally, as for example `user={condition(EXPR)}` does.
The sema logic changed in two ways: First, the OMPDeclareVariantAttr
representation changed, as mentioned above, and the sema was adjusted to
work with the new `OpenMPTraitInfo`. Second, the matching and scoring
logic moved into `OMPContext.{h,cpp}`. It is implemented on a flat
representation of the `match` clause that is not tied to clang.
`OpenMPTraitInfo` provides a method to generate this flat structure (see
`struct VariantMatchInfo`) by computing integer score values and boolean
user conditions from the `clang::Expr` we keep for them.
The OpenMP context is now an explicit object (see `struct OMPContext`).
This is in anticipation of construct traits that need to be tracked. The
OpenMP context, as well as the `VariantMatchInfo`, are basically made up
of a set of active or respectively required traits, e.g., 'host', and an
ordered container of constructs which allows duplication. Matching and
scoring is kept as generic as possible to allow easy extension in the
future.
---
Test changes:
The messages checked in `OpenMP/declare_variant_messages.{c,cpp}` have
been auto generated to match the new warnings and notes of the parser.
The "subset" checks were reversed causing the wrong version to be
picked. The tests have been adjusted to correct this.
We do not print scores if the user did not provide one.
We print spaces to make lists in the `match` clause more legible.
Reviewers: kiranchandramohan, ABataev, RaviNarayanaswamy, gtbercea, grokos, sdmitriev, JonChesterfield, hfinkel, fghanim
Subscribers: merge_guards_bot, rampitec, mgorny, hiraditya, aheejin, fedor.sergeev, simoncook, bollu, guansong, dexonsmith, jfb, s.egerton, llvm-commits, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71830
The code generation is exactly the same as it was.
But not that the special handling of untied tasks is still handled by
emitUntiedSwitch in clang.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69828
According to OpenMP 5.0, cancel and cancellation point constructs are
supported in taskloop directive. Added support for cancellation in
taskloop, master taskloop and parallel master taskloop.
Reapply 8a56d64d76 with minor fixes.
The problem was that cancellation can cause new edges to the parallel
region exit block which is not outlined. The CodeExtractor will encode
the information which "exit" was taken as a return value. The fix is to
ensure we do not return any value from the outlined function, to prevent
control to value conversion we ensure a single exit block for the
outlined region.
This reverts commit 3aac953afa.
In order to fix PR44560 and to prepare for loop transformations we now
finalize a function late, which will also do the outlining late. The
logic is as before but the actual outlining step happens now after the
function was fully constructed. Once we have loop transformations we
can apply them in the finalize step before the outlining.
Reviewed By: JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74372
Summary:
This is trying to implement the functionality proposed in:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2017-April/053417.html
An exception can throw, but no cleanup is going to happen.
A module compiled with exceptions on, can catch the exception throws
from module compiled with -fignore-exceptions.
The use cases for enabling this option are:
1. Performance analysis of EH instrumentation overhead
2. The ability to QA non EH functionality when EH functionality is not available.
3. User of EH enabled headers knows the calls won't throw in their program and
wants the performance gain from ignoring EH construct.
The implementation tried to accomplish that by removing any landing pad code
that might get generated.
Reviewed by: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72644
This patch enables the debug entry values feature.
- Remove the (CC1) experimental -femit-debug-entry-values option
- Enable it for x86, arm and aarch64 targets
- Resolve the test failures
- Leave the llc experimental option for targets that do not
support the CallSiteInfo yet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73534
This brings back 2af74e27ed and reverts
eaabaf7e04.
The changes were correct, the code that was broken contained an ODR
violation that assumed that these types are passed equivalently:
struct alignas(uint64_t) Wrapper { uint64_t P };
void f(uint64_t p);
void f(Wrapper p);
MSVC does not pass them the same way, and so clang-cl should not pass
them the same way either.