so that when --sysroot is specified, the detected GCC installation will not be
overridden by another from /usr which happens to have a larger version.
This behavior is particularly inconvenient when the system has a larger version
GCC while the user wants to try out an older sysroot.
Delete some tests from linux-ld.c which overlap with cross-linux.c
In GCC, if `-B $prefix` is specified, `$prefix` is used to find executable files and startup files.
`$prefix/include` is added as an include search directory.
Clang overloads -B with GCC installation detection semantics which make the
behavior less predictable (due to the "largest GCC version wins" rule) and
interact poorly with --gcc-toolchain (--gcc-toolchain can be overridden by -B).
* `clang++ foo.cpp` detects GCC installation under `/usr`.
* `clang++ --gcc-toolchain=Inputs foo.cpp` detects GCC installation under `Inputs`.
* `clang++ -BA --gcc-toolchain=B foo.cpp` detects GCC installation under A and B and the larger version wins. With this patch, only B is used for detection.
* `clang++ -BA foo.cpp` detects GCC installation under `A` and `/usr`, and the larger GCC version wins. With this patch `A` is not used for detection.
This patch changes -B to drop the GCC detection semantics. Its executable
searching semantics are preserved. --gcc-toolchain is the recommended option to
specify the GCC installation detection directory.
(
Note: Clang detects GCC installation in various target dependent directories.
`$sysroot/usr` (sysroot defaults to "") is a common directory used by most targets.
Such a directory is expected to contain something like `lib{,32,64}/gcc{,-cross}/$triple`.
Clang will then construct library/include paths from the directory.
)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97993
This patch adds a new command line option to clang which outputs the directory containing clangs runtime libraries to stdout.
The primary use case for this command line flag is for build systems using clang-cl. Build systems when using clang-cl invoke the linker, that is either link or lld-link in this case, directly instead of invoking the compiler for the linking process as is common with the other drivers. This leads to issues when runtime libraries of clang, such as sanitizers or profiling, have to be linked in as the compiler cannot communicate the link directory to the linker.
Using this flag, build systems would be capable of getting the directory containing all of clang's runtime libraries and add it to the linker path.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98868
At the moment "link.exe" is hard-coded as default linker in MSVC.cpp,
so there's no way to use LLD as default linker for MSVC driver.
This patch adds checking of CLANG_DEFAULT_LINKER to MSVC.cpp and
updates unit-tests that expect link.exe linker to explicitly select it
via -fuse-ld=link, so that buildbots and other builds that set
-DCLANG_DEFAULT_LINKER=foobar don't fail these tests.
This is a squash of
- https://reviews.llvm.org/D98493 (MSVC.cpp change) and
- https://reviews.llvm.org/D98862 (unit-tests change)
Reviewed By: maxim-kuvyrkov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98935
At the moment "link.exe" is hard-coded as default linker in MSVC.cpp,
so there's no way to use LLD as default linker for MSVC driver.
This patch adds checking of CLANG_DEFAULT_LINKER to MSVC.cpp.
Reviewed By: asl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98493
SYCL compilations initiated by the driver will spawn off one or more
frontend compilation jobs (one for device and one for host). This patch
reworks the driver options to make upstreaming this from the downstream
SYCL fork easier.
This patch introduces a language option to identify host executions
(SYCLIsHost) and a -cc1 frontend option to enable this mode. -fsycl and
-fno-sycl become driver-only options that are rejected when passed to
-cc1. This is because the frontend and beyond should be looking at
whether the user is doing a device or host compilation specifically.
Because the frontend should only ever be in one mode or the other,
-fsycl-is-device and -fsycl-is-host are mutually exclusive options.
Remove emit-llvm-bc from addClangTargetOptions as it conflicts with -E for save-temps.
AMDGCN does not yet support linking object files so backend and assemble actions are
skipped, leaving LLVM IR as the output format.
Reviewed By: JonChesterfield, ronlieb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96769
This broke the check-profile tests on Mac, see comment on the code
review.
> This is no longer needed, we can add __llvm_profile_runtime directly
> to llvm.compiler.used or llvm.used to achieve the same effect.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98325
This reverts commit c7712087cb.
Also reverting the dependent follow-up commit:
Revert "[InstrProfiling] Generate runtime hook for ELF platforms"
> When using -fprofile-list to selectively apply instrumentation only
> to certain files or functions, we may end up with a binary that doesn't
> have any counters in the case where no files were selected. However,
> because on Linux and Fuchsia, we pass -u__llvm_profile_runtime, the
> runtime would still be pulled in and incur some non-trivial overhead,
> especially in the case when the continuous or runtime counter relocation
> mode is being used. A better way would be to pull in the profile runtime
> only when needed by declaring the __llvm_profile_runtime symbol in the
> translation unit only when needed.
>
> This approach was already used prior to 9a041a7522, but we changed it
> to always generate the __llvm_profile_runtime due to a TAPI limitation.
> Since TAPI is only used on Mach-O platforms, we could use the early
> emission of __llvm_profile_runtime there, and on other platforms we
> could change back to the earlier approach where the symbol is generated
> later only when needed. We can stop passing -u__llvm_profile_runtime to
> the linker on Linux and Fuchsia since the generated undefined symbol in
> each translation unit that needed it serves the same purpose.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98061
This reverts commit 87fd09b25f.
When using -fprofile-list to selectively apply instrumentation only
to certain files or functions, we may end up with a binary that doesn't
have any counters in the case where no files were selected. However,
because on Linux and Fuchsia, we pass -u__llvm_profile_runtime, the
runtime would still be pulled in and incur some non-trivial overhead,
especially in the case when the continuous or runtime counter relocation
mode is being used. A better way would be to pull in the profile runtime
only when needed by declaring the __llvm_profile_runtime symbol in the
translation unit only when needed.
This approach was already used prior to 9a041a7522, but we changed it
to always generate the __llvm_profile_runtime due to a TAPI limitation.
Since TAPI is only used on Mach-O platforms, we could use the early
emission of __llvm_profile_runtime there, and on other platforms we
could change back to the earlier approach where the symbol is generated
later only when needed. We can stop passing -u__llvm_profile_runtime to
the linker on Linux and Fuchsia since the generated undefined symbol in
each translation unit that needed it serves the same purpose.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98061
If --gcc-toolchain is specified, we should detect GCC installation there, and suppress other directories for detection.
Reviewed By: mgorny, manojgupta
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97894
This moves code that sets the architecture name
and Float ABI into two new functions in
ToolChains/Arch/ARM.cpp. Greatly simplifying ComputeLLVMTriple.
Some light refactoring in setArchNameInTriple to
move local variables closer to their first use.
Reviewed By: ostannard
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98253
Initially, this flag was meant to only be used through cc1 and not directly
through the clang driver. However, we accidentally ended up using this flag
as a driver flag already for selecting multilibs within the fuchsia toolchain.
We're currently in an awkward state where it's only accepted as a driver flag
when targeting Fuchsia, and all other instances it can only be added via
-Xclang. Since we're ready to use this in Fuchsia, we can just expose this to
the driver for simplicity.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98375
In -fno-exceptions -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -g0 mode,
GCC does not emit `.cfi_*` directives.
```
% diff <(gcc -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -dM -E a.c) <(gcc -dM -E a.c)
130a131
> #define __GCC_HAVE_DWARF2_CFI_ASM 1
```
This macro is useful because code can decide whether inline asm should include `.cfi_*` directives.
`.cfi_*` directives without `.cfi_startproc` can cause assembler errors
(integrated assembler: `this directive must appear between .cfi_startproc and .cfi_endproc directives`).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97743
By default, the driver uses the compiler-rt builtins and links with
-l:libunwind.a.
Restore the previous behavior by passing --rtlib=libgcc.
Reviewed By: danalbert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96404
In D97003, CUDA 9.2 is the minimum requirement for OpenMP offloading on
NVPTX target. We don't need to have macros in source code to select right functions
based on CUDA version. we don't need to compile multiple bitcode libraries of
different CUDA versions for each SM. We don't need to worry about future
compatibility with newer CUDA version.
`-target-feature +ptx61` is used in this patch, which corresponds to the highest
PTX version that CUDA 9.2 can support.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97198
From `man ld`:
-why_load Log why each object file in a static library is loaded.
That is, what symbol was needed.
Also called -whyload for compatibility.
`-why_load` is the spelling preferred by the linker and `-whyload` an old
compatibility setting. clang should accept the preferred form, and map both
forms to the preferred form.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98156
Spack is a package management tool extensively used by HPC community.
As ROCm packages are built by Spack by HPC community, we need to teach
clang driver to detect ROCm installation built by Spack.
Reviewed by: Artem Belevich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97340
For MinGW targets, we distinguish between an explicitly shared unwinder
library (requested via -shared-libgcc), an explicitly static one
(requested via -static-libgcc or -static) and the default case (which
just passes -lunwind to the linker, which will pick either shared or
static depending on what's available, with the normal linker logic).
This makes the implicit default case (as added in D79995) actually work as
it was intended, when using the g++ driver (which is the main usecase for
libunwind as far as I know).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98023
A bug was introduced when adding -munsafe-fp-atomics.
By default it should be off.
Reviewed by: Artem Belevich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97967
Like nvptx and some other targets, -mconstructor-aliases does not work well with amdgpu,
therefore we disable it in the same approach.
Reviewed by: Artem Belevich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97959
Add support for the following Fortran dialect options:
- -default*
- -flarge-sizes
It also adds two test cases:
# For checking whether `flang-new` is passing options correctly to `flang-new -fc1`.
# For checking if `fdefault-` arguments are processed properly.
Also moves the Dialect related option parsing to a dedicated function
and adds a member `defaultKinds()` to `CompilerInvocation`
Depends on: D96032
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96344
Adding it to the general filepaths results in it being added to the
linker arguments. The AIX linker always looks in this path anyway
and adds it as a default library path component. Adding this duplicate
explicitly results in duplicate entries in path in the loader section
of executables and messes up tools like CMake that parse the default
library flags.
Reviewed By: ZarkoCA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97574
Fix regression where we aren't passing `-platform_version` to new ld64.lld after {D95204}.
Most of the changes were originally in D95204, but I backed them out due to
test failures on builds which have `CLANG_DEFAULT_LINKER=lld`. The tests are
properly updated in this diff.
Reviewed By: #lld-macho, thakis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97741
ccb4124a41 fixed translating -gz=zlib to --compress-debug-sections for
linker invocation for several ToolChains, but omitted FreeBSD.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97752
This makes CC1 and driver defaults consistent.
In addition, for more common cases (-g is specified without -gsplit-dwarf), users will not see -fno-split-dwarf-inlining in CC1 options.
Verified that the below is still true:
* `clang -g` => `splitDebugInlining: false` in DICompileUnit
* `clang -g -gsplit-dwarf` => `splitDebugInlining: false` in DICompileUnit
* `clang -g -gsplit-dwarf -fsplit-dwarf-inlining` => no `splitDebugInlining: false`
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97706
The new Darwin backend for LLD is now able to link reasonably large
real-world programs on x86_64. For instance, we have achieved
self-hosting for the X86_64 target, where all LLD tests pass when
building lld with itself on macOS. As such, we would like to make it the
default back-end.
The new port is now named `ld64.lld`, and the old port remains
accessible as `ld64.lld.darwinold`
This [annoucement email][1] has some context. (But note that, unlike
what the email says, we are no longer doing this as part of the LLVM 12
branch cut -- instead we will go into LLVM 13.)
Numerous mechanical test changes were required to make this change; in
the interest of creating something that's reviewable on Phabricator,
I've split out the boring changes into a separate diff (D95905). I plan to
merge its contents with those in this diff before landing.
(@gkm made the original draft of this diff, and he has agreed to let me
take over.)
[1]: https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-January/147665.html
Reviewed By: #lld-macho, thakis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95204
Added supporting CC_PRINT_PROC_STAT and CC_PRINT_PROC_STAT_FILE
environment variables to trigger clang driver reporting the process
statistics into specified file (alternate for -fproc-stat-report
option).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97094
When writing report file by option -proc-stat-report some part of output
can be written to unlocked file because destructor of raw_fd_ostream
calls `flush()`. In high thread contention environment it can result in
file operation failure. With this change `flush` is called explicitly when
file is locked, so call of `flush()` in the destructor does not cause
write to file.
These flags affect coverage mapping (-fcoverage-mapping), not
-fprofile-[instr-]generate so it makes more sense to use the
-fcoverage-* prefix.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97434
We introduce -ffile-compilation-dir shorthand to avoid having to set
-fdebug-compilation-dir and -fprofile-compilation-dir separately. This
is similar to -ffile-prefix-map.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97433
On Android, the unwinder isn't part of the C++ STL and isn't (in older
versions) exported from libc.so. Instead, the driver links the static
unwinder archive implicitly. Currently, the Android NDK implicitly
links libgcc.a to provide both builtins and the unwinder.
To support switching to compiler-rt builtins and libunwind, make
--rtlib=compiler-rt behave the same way on Android, and implicitly pass
-l:libunwind.a to the linker.
Adjust the -ldl logic. For the Android NDK, the unwinder (whether
libgcc.a or libunwind.a) is linked statically and calls a function in
the dynamic loader for finding unwind tables (e.g. dl_iterate_phdr).
On Android, this function is in libc.a for static executables and
libdl.so otherwise, so -ldl is needed. (glibc doesn't need -ldl because
its libc.so exports dl_iterate_phdr.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96403
This fixes an issue where the toolchain discovery doesn't respect the
VFS's current working directory, specifically clangd not respecting a
relative /winsysroot.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97437
The new `-fsanitize-address-destructor-kind=` option allows control over how module
destructors are emitted by ASan.
The new option is consumed by both the driver and the frontend and is propagated into
codegen options by the frontend.
Both the legacy and new pass manager code have been updated to consume the new option
from the codegen options.
It would be nice if the new utility functions (`AsanDtorKindToString` and
`AsanDtorKindFromString`) could live in LLVM instead of Clang so they could be
consumed by other language frontends. Unfortunately that doesn't work because
the clang driver doesn't link against the LLVM instrumentation library.
rdar://71609176
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96572
This patch makes sure that for the following invocation of the new Flang
driver, clangDriver sets the input type to Fortran:
```
flang-new -E -
```
This change does not affect `clang`, i.e. for the following invocation
the input type is set to C:
```
clang -E -
```
This change leverages the fact that for `flang-new` the driver is in
Flang mode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96777
There are two preconditions to reproduce the issue,
1. Use -save-temps option
2. Provide the -o option with name equal to the input file name
without the file extension. For e.g. clang a.c -o a
With the -o specified, the AssembleJobAction after OffloadWrapperJobAction
will produce the object file with same name as host code object file.
Due to this clash, the OffloadWrapperAction overwrites the initial host
object file, which results in lld error. This also fixes the `multiple definition of __dummy.omp_offloading.entry'` issue in D96769 .
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97273
When targeting a MSVC triple, --dependant-libs with the name of the clang runtime library for profiling is added to the command line args. In it's current implementations clang_rt.profile-<ARCH> is chosen as the name. When building a distribution using LLVM_ENABLE_PER_TARGET_RUNTIME_DIR this fails, due to the runtime file names not having an architecture suffix in the filename.
This patch refactors getCompilerRT and getCompilerRTBasename to always consider per-target runtime directories. getCompilerRTBasename now simply returns the filename component of the path found by getCompilerRT
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96638
In current implementation of `deviceRTLs`, we're using some functions
that are CUDA version dependent (if CUDA_VERSION < 9, it is one; otheriwse, it
is another one). As a result, we have to compile one bitcode library for each
CUDA version supported. A worse problem is forward compatibility. If a new CUDA
version is released, we have to update CMake file as well.
CUDA 9.2 has been released for three years. Instead of using various weird tricks
to make `deviceRTLs` work with different CUDA versions and still have forward
compatibility, we can simply drop support for CUDA 9.1 or lower version. It has at
least two benifits:
- We don't need to generate bitcode libraries for each CUDA version;
- Clang driver doesn't need to search for the bitcode lib based on CUDA version.
We can claim that starting from LLVM 12, OpenMP offloading on NVPTX target requires
CUDA 9.2+.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert, JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97003
This change enables the builtin function declarations
in clang driver by default using the Tablegen solution
along with the implicit include of 'opencl-c-base.h'
header.
A new flag '-cl-no-stdinc' disabling all default
declarations and header includes is added. If any other
mechanisms were used to include the declarations (e.g.
with -Xclang -finclude-default-header) and the new default
approach is not sufficient the, `-cl-no-stdinc` flag has
to be used with clang to activate the old behavior.
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96515
This patch adds support for `-Xflang` in `flang-new`. The semantics are
identical to `-Xclang`.
With the addition of `-Xflang`, we can modify `-test-io` to be a
compiler-frontend only flag. This makes more sense, this flag is:
* very frontend specific
* to be used for development and testing only
* not to be exposed to the end user
Originally we added it to the compiler driver, `flang-new`, in order to
facilitate testing. With `-Xflang` this is no longer needed. Tests are
updated accordingly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96864
This patch moves the creation of the '-Wspir-compat' argument from cc1 to the driver.
Without this change, generating command line arguments from `CompilerInvocation` cannot be done reliably: there's no way to distinguish whether '-Wspir-compat' was passed to cc1 on the command line (should be generated), or if it was created within `CompilerInvocation::CreateFromArgs` (should not be generated).
This is also in line with how other '-W' flags are handled.
(This was introduced in D21567.)
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97041
Add option -fgpu-sanitize to enable sanitizer for AMDGPU target.
Since it is experimental, it is off by default.
Reviewed by: Artem Belevich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96835
We currently always store absolute filenames in coverage mapping. This
is problematic for several reasons. It poses a problem for distributed
compilation as source location might vary across machines. We are also
duplicating the path prefix potentially wasting space.
This change modifies how we store filenames in coverage mapping. Rather
than absolute paths, it stores the compilation directory and file paths
as given to the compiler, either relative or absolute. Later when
reading the coverage mapping information, we recombine relative paths
with the working directory. This approach is similar to handling
ofDW_AT_comp_dir in DWARF.
Finally, we also provide a new option, -fprofile-compilation-dir akin
to -fdebug-compilation-dir which can be used to manually override the
compilation directory which is useful in distributed compilation cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95753
We currently always store absolute filenames in coverage mapping. This
is problematic for several reasons. It poses a problem for distributed
compilation as source location might vary across machines. We are also
duplicating the path prefix potentially wasting space.
This change modifies how we store filenames in coverage mapping. Rather
than absolute paths, it stores the compilation directory and file paths
as given to the compiler, either relative or absolute. Later when
reading the coverage mapping information, we recombine relative paths
with the working directory. This approach is similar to handling
ofDW_AT_comp_dir in DWARF.
Finally, we also provide a new option, -fprofile-compilation-dir akin
to -fdebug-compilation-dir which can be used to manually override the
compilation directory which is useful in distributed compilation cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95753
would otherwise include template specialization types
This helps reduce the size of the encoded C++ type strings in the binary.
This is enabled by default only on Darwin, but can be enabled/disabled
via command line options.
rdar://63288571
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96816
The following commits added commandline arguments to control following the Arm
Procedure Call Standard for certain volatile bitfield operations:
- https://reviews.llvm.org/D67399
- https://reviews.llvm.org/D72932
This commit fixes the oversight that these args weren't passed from the driver
to cc1 if appropriate.
Where *appropriate* means:
- `-faapcs-bitfield-width`: is the default, so won't be passed
- `-fno-aapcs-bitfield-width`: should be passed
- `-faapcs-bitfield-load`: should be passed
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96784
This fixes an issue when "-gdwarf-N" switch was ignored if it was given
before another debug option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96865
The new spec does not have `exnref` so EH does not have dependency of
the reference types proposal anymore.
Reviewed By: dschuff
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96903
Drop the `Separate` form of `-fmodule-name X`, `-fprofile-remapping-file X`, and `-frewrite-map-file X`.
To the best of my knowledge they are not used. Their conventional Joined forms (`-fFOO=`) should be used instead.
`-fdebug-compilation-dir X` is used in several places, e.g. chromium/infra/goma.
It is also advertised in http://blog.llvm.org/2019/11/deterministic-builds-with-clang-and-lld.html
So we keep it but make the EQ form canonical and the Separate form an alias.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96886
The option was added in D90507 for C/C++ source files. This patch adds
support for assembly files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96783
Add the following options:
* -fimplicit-none and -fno-implicit-none
* -fbackslash and -fno-backslash
* -flogical-abbreviations and -fno-logical-abbreviations
* -fxor-operator and -fno-xor-operator
* -falternative-parameter-statement
* -finput-charset=<value>
Summary of changes:
- Enable extensions in CompilerInvocation#ParseFrontendArgs
- Add encoding_ to Fortran::frontend::FrontendOptions
- Add encoding to Fortran::parser::Options
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96407
This patch adds 2 new options to control when Clang adds `mustprogress`:
1. -ffinite-loops: assume all loops are finite; mustprogress is added
to all loops, regardless of the selected language standard.
2. -fno-finite-loops: assume no loop is finite; mustprogress is not
added to any loop or function. We could add mustprogress to
functions without loops, but we would have to detect that in Clang,
which is probably not worth it.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96419
This patch uses the existing logic of CUDA for searching libomptarget
and extracts it to a common method.
Reviewed By: JonChesterfield, tianshilei1992
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96248
After D93264, using both -fdebug-info-for-profiling and
-fpseudo-probe-for-profiling will cause the compiler to crash.
Diagnose these conflicting options in the driver.
Also, the existing CodeGen test was using the driver when it should be
running cc1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96354
Add support for the following options:
* -fopenmp
* -fopenacc
Update OpenMP and OpenACC semantics tests to use the new driver if it is built, otherwise use f18.
OpenMP tests that include `use omp_lib` or run `test_symbols.sh` have not been updated as they require options `-intrinsic-module-directory` and `-funparse-with-symbols` which are currently not implemented in the new driver.
Similarly OpenACC tests that run `test_symbols.sh` have not been updated.
This patch also moves semanticsContext to CompilerInvocation and creates it in CompilerInvocation#setSemanticsOpts so that the semantics context can use Fortran::parser::Options#features.
Summary of changes:
- Move semanticsContext to CompilerInvocation.h
- Update OpenMP and OpenACC semantics tests that do not rely on `-intrinsic-module-directory` and `-funparse-with-symbols` to use %flang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96032
Since ToolChain::GetCXXStdlibType() is a simple getter that might emit
the "invalid library name in argument" warning, it can conceivably be
called several times while initializing the build pipeline.
Before this patch, a simple 'clang++ -stdlib=foo ./test.cpp' would print
the warning twice, -rt=lib=foo would print 6 times.
Change this and always only print the warning once. Keep the rest of the
semantics of the functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95915
The patch only plumbs through the option necessary for targeting sm_86 GPUs w/o
adding any new functionality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95974
This patch added a distinct CUID for each input file, which is represented by InputAction.
clang initially creates an InputAction for each input file for the host compilation. In CUDA/HIP action
builder, each InputAction is given a CUID and cloned for each GPU arch, and the CUID is also cloned. In this way,
we guarantee the corresponding device and host compilation for the same file shared the
same CUID. On the other hand, different compilation units have different CUID.
-fuse-cuid=random|hash|none is added to control the method to generate CUID. The default
is hash. -cuid=X is also added to specify CUID explicitly, which overrides -fuse-cuid.
Reviewed by: Artem Belevich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95007
Currently -fgpu-rdc is not passed to host clang -cc1.
This causes issue because -fgpu-rdc affects shadow
variable linkage in host compilation.
Reviewed by: Artem Belevich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96105
This fixes Bugzilla #48894 for Arm, where it
was reported that -Wa,-march was not being handled
by the integrated assembler.
This was previously fixed for -Wa,-mthumb by
parsing the argument in ToolChain::ComputeLLVMTriple
instead of CollectArgsForIntegratedAssembler.
It has to be done in the former because the Triple
is read only by the time we get to the latter.
Previously only mcpu would work via -Wa but only because
"-target-cpu" is it's own option to cc1, which we were
able to modify. Target architecture is part of "-target-triple".
This change applies the same workaround to -march and cleans up
handling of -Wa,-mcpu at the same time. There were some
places where we were not using the last instance of an argument.
The existing -Wa,-mthumb code was doing this correctly,
so I've just added tests to confirm that.
Now the same rules will apply to -Wa,-march/-mcpu as would
if you just passed them to the compiler:
* -Wa/-Xassembler options only apply to assembly files.
* Architecture derived from mcpu beats any march options.
* When there are multiple mcpu or multiple march, the last
one wins.
* If there is a compiler option and an assembler option of
the same type, we prefer the one that fits the input type.
* If there is an applicable mcpu option but it is overruled
by an march, the cpu value is still used for the "-target-cpu"
cc1 option.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95872
Add support for option -J/-module-dir in the new Flang driver. This
will allow for including module files in other directories, as the
default search path is currently the working folder. This also provides
an option of storing the output module in the specified folder.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95448
Add support for the following layout options:
* -ffree-form
* -ffixed-form
- -ffixed-line-length=n (alias -ffixed-line-length-n)
Additionally remove options `-fno-free-form` and `-fno-fixed-form` as they were initially added to forward to gfortran but gfortran does not support these flags.
This patch adds the flag FlangOnlyOption to the existing options `-ffixed-form`, `-ffree-form` and `-ffree-line-length-` in Options.td. As of commit 6a75496836, these flags are not currently forwarded to gfortran anyway.
The default fixed line length in FrontendOptions is 72, based off the current default in Fortran::parser::Options. The line length cannot be set to a negative integer, or a positive integer less than 7 excluding 0, consistent with the behaviour of gfortran.
This patch does not add `-ffree-line-length-n` as Fortran::parser::Options does not have a variable for free form columns.
Whilst the `fixedFormColumns` variable is used in f18 for `-ffree-line-length-n`, f18 only allows `-ffree-line-length-none`/`-ffree-line-length-0` and not a user-specified value. `fixedFormcolumns` cannot be used in the new driver as it is ignored in the frontend when dealing with free form files.
Summary of changes:
- Remove -fno-fixed-form and -fno-free-form from Options.td
- Make -ffixed-form, -ffree-form and -ffree-line-length-n FlangOnlyOption in Options.td
- Create AddFortranDialectOptions method in Flang.cpp
- Create FortranForm enum in FrontendOptions.h
- Add fortranForm_ and fixedFormColumns_ to Fortran::frontend::FrontendOptions
- Update fixed-form-test.f so that it guarantees that it fails when forced as a free form file to better facilitate testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95460
This patch adds AMDGPUOpenMPToolChain for supporting OpenMP
offloading to AMD GPU's.
Originally authored by Greg Rodgers
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94961
Generate outline atomics if compiling for armv8-a non-LSE AArch64 Linux
(including Android) targets to use LSE instructions, if they are available,
at runtime. Library support is checked by clang driver which doesn't enable
outline atomics if no proper libraries (libgcc >= 9.3.1 or compiler-rt) found.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93585
clang-cl already defaults to C17 for .c files, but no harm
in accepting these flags. Fixes PR48185.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95575
On non-Windows platforms, --sysroot can be used to make the compiler use
a single, hermetic directory for all header and library files.
This is useful, but difficult to do on Windows. After D95472 it's
possible to achieve this with two flags:
out/gn/bin/clang-cl win.c -fuse-ld=lld \
/vctoolsdir path/to/VC/Tools/MSVC/14.26.28801 \
/winsdkdir path/to/win_sdk
But that's still cumbersome: It requires two flags instead of one, and
it requires writing down the (changing) VC/Tools/MSVC version.
This adds a new `/winsysroot <dir>` flag that's effectively an alias to
these two flags. With this, building against a hermetic Windows
toolchain only needs:
out/gn/bin/clang-cl win.c -fuse-ld=lld /winsysroot path
`/winsysroot <dir>` is the same as adding
/vctoolsdir <dir>/VC/Tools/MSVC/<vctoolsver>
/winsdkdir <dir>/Windows Kits/<winsdkmajorversion>
`<vctoolsver>` is taken from `/vctoolsversion` if passed, or else it's
the name of the directory in `<dir>/VC/Tools/MSVC` that's the highest
numeric tuple.
`<winsdkmajorversion>` is the major version in /winsdkversion if passed,
else it's the name of the directory in `<dir>/Windows Kits` that's the
highest number.
So `/winsysroot <path>` requires this subfolder structure:
path/
VC/
Tools/
MSVC/
14.26.28801 (or another number)
include/
...
Windows Kits/
10/
Include/
10.0.19041.0/ (or another number)
um/
...
Lib/
10.0.19041.0/ (or another number)
um/
x64/
...
...
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95534
/vctoolsdir and /winsdkdir take precedence over the INCLUDE env var,
so they should also take precedence over LIB. It's not quite as neat
since LIB is still read by the linker and the linker just prefers
the -libpath: paths the driver now passes, but as long as all libraries
are present at /vctoolsdir and /winsdkdir, there's no harm in the linker
also looking at LIB later.
This fixes cl-options.c after a5d85cbe on Windows when LIB is set.
Another way to fix the test would be to prefix the clang-cl
line with `env --unset=LIB`, but I think it's better to fix the
flag to work as expected instead of making the test work around
the surprising behavior that LIB being set causes clang-cl to
not pass -libpath: flags to the linker when /vctoolsdir and
/winsdkdir are used.
These do for the Windows SDK path what D85998 did for
%VCToolsInstallDir% with /vctoolsdir: Offer a way to set them with an
explicit commandline switch.
With this (and /vctoolsdir), it's possible to compile and link
against hermetic vctools and winsdk directories with:
out/gn/bin/clang-cl win.c -fuse-ld=lld \
/vctoolsdir path/to/VC/Tools/MSVC/14.26.28801 \
/winsdkdir path/to/win_sdk
compared to a long list of -imsvc and /link /libpath: flags.
While here:
- Change the case of the "Include" folder inside the windows sdk
from "include" to "Include" to match on-disk case. Since the
Windows file system is case-insensitive this isn't a behavior
change, it's just a bit cleaner.
- Add libpath tests to the /vctoolsdir
- Add a FIXME about reading env vars for win sdk and ucrt sdk
if these flags aren't present, to match the VCToolsInstallDir
logic
We should also cache all these computed paths in the driver instead
of computing them every time they're queried, but that's for a future
patch.
It'd also be nice to invent a /winsysroot: flag that sets both
/vctoolsdir: and /winsdkdir: to some well-known subdirectory.
That's for a future patch as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95472
This change implements support for applying profile instrumentation
only to selected files or functions. The implementation uses the
sanitizer special case list format to select which files and functions
to instrument, and relies on the new noprofile IR attribute to exclude
functions from instrumentation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94820
The unwinder used by the crash handler on versions of Android prior to
API 29 did not correctly handle binaries built with rosegment, which is
enabled by default for LLD. Android only supports LLD, so it's not an
issue that this flag is not accepted by other linkers.
Reviewed By: srhines
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95166
There are two use cases.
Assembler
We have accrued some code gated on MCAsmInfo::useIntegratedAssembler(). Some
features are supported by latest GNU as, but we have to use
MCAsmInfo::useIntegratedAs() because the newer versions have not been widely
adopted (e.g. SHF_LINK_ORDER 'o' and 'unique' linkage in 2.35, --compress-debug-sections= in 2.26).
Linker
We want to use features supported only by LLD or very new GNU ld, or don't want
to work around older GNU ld. We currently can't represent that "we don't care
about old GNU ld". You can find such workarounds in a few other places, e.g.
Mips/MipsAsmprinter.cpp PowerPC/PPCTOCRegDeps.cpp X86/X86MCInstrLower.cpp
AArch64 TLS workaround for R_AARCH64_TLSLD_MOVW_DTPREL_* (PR ld/18276),
R_AARCH64_TLSLE_LDST8_TPREL_LO12 (https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36727https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22969)
Mixed SHF_LINK_ORDER and non-SHF_LINK_ORDER components (supported by LLD in D84001;
GNU ld feature request https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=16833 may take a while before available).
This feature allows to garbage collect some unused sections (e.g. fragmented .gcc_except_table).
This patch adds `-fbinutils-version=` to clang and `-binutils-version` to llc.
It changes one codegen place in SHF_MERGE to demonstrate its usage.
`-fbinutils-version=2.35` means the produced object file does not care about GNU
ld<2.35 compatibility. When `-fno-integrated-as` is specified, the produced
assembly can be consumed by GNU as>=2.35, but older versions may not work.
`-fbinutils-version=none` means that we can use all ELF features, regardless of
GNU as/ld support.
Both clang and llc need `parseBinutilsVersion`. Such command line parsing is
usually implemented in `llvm/lib/CodeGen/CommandFlags.cpp` (LLVMCodeGen),
however, ClangCodeGen does not depend on LLVMCodeGen. So I add
`parseBinutilsVersion` to `llvm/lib/Target/TargetMachine.cpp` (LLVMTarget).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85474
This change implements support for applying profile instrumentation
only to selected files or functions. The implementation uses the
sanitizer special case list format to select which files and functions
to instrument, and relies on the new noprofile IR attribute to exclude
functions from instrumentation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94820
From this patch (plus some landed patches), `deviceRTLs` is taken as a regular OpenMP program with just `declare target` regions. In this way, ideally, `deviceRTLs` can be written in OpenMP directly. No CUDA, no HIP anymore. (Well, AMD is still working on getting it work. For now AMDGCN still uses original way to compile) However, some target specific functions are still required, but they're no longer written in target specific language. For example, CUDA parts have all refined by replacing CUDA intrinsic and builtins with LLVM/Clang/NVVM intrinsics.
Here're a list of changes in this patch.
1. For NVPTX, `DEVICE` is defined empty in order to make the common parts still work with AMDGCN. Later once AMDGCN is also available, we will completely remove `DEVICE` or probably some other macros.
2. Shared variable is implemented with OpenMP allocator, which is defined in `allocator.h`. Again, this feature is not available on AMDGCN, so two macros are redefined properly.
3. CUDA header `cuda.h` is dropped in the source code. In order to deal with code difference in various CUDA versions, we build one bitcode library for each supported CUDA version. For each CUDA version, the highest PTX version it supports will be used, just as what we currently use for CUDA compilation.
4. Correspondingly, compiler driver is also updated to support CUDA version encoded in the name of bitcode library. Now the bitcode library for NVPTX is named as `libomptarget-nvptx-cuda_[cuda_version]-sm_[sm_number].bc`, such as `libomptarget-nvptx-cuda_80-sm_20.bc`.
With this change, there are also multiple features to be expected in the near future:
1. CUDA will be completely dropped when compiling OpenMP. By the time, we also build bitcode libraries for all supported SM, multiplied by all supported CUDA version.
2. Atomic operations used in `deviceRTLs` can be replaced by `omp atomic` if OpenMP 5.1 feature is fully supported. For now, the IR generated is totally wrong.
3. Target specific parts will be wrapped into `declare variant` with `isa` selector if it can work properly. No target specific macro is needed anymore.
4. (Maybe more...)
Reviewed By: JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94745
The previous implementation required that `-maltivec` be specified when using either `-mabi=vec-extabi` or `-mabi=vec-default`, this patch removes that requirement.
Reviewed By: cebowleratibm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94986
We're choosing to take an opt-in approach for landing Relative VTables, so we'll
need asan-equivalent multilibs with relative vtables enabled. Afterwards, we can
just flip the switch in our build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95253
D94700 removed the static library so we no longer need to pass
`-llibomptarget-nvptx` to `nvlink`. Since the bitcode library is the only device
runtime for now, instead of emitting a warning when it is not found, an error
should be raised. We also set a new option `libomptarget-nvptx-bc-path` to let
user choose which bitcode library is being used.
Reviewed By: JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95161
Add support for option -I in the new Flang driver. This will allow for
included headers and module files in other directories, as the default
search path is currently the working folder. The behaviour of this is
consistent with the current f18 driver, where the current folder (i.e.
".") has the highest priority followed by the order of '-I's taking
priority from first to last.
Summary of changes:
- Add SearchDirectoriesFromDashI to PreprocessorOptions, to be forwarded
into the parser's searchDirectories
- Add header files and non-functional module files to be used in
regression tests. The module files are just text files and are used to
demonstrated that paths specified with `-I` are taken into account when
searching for .mod files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93453
This generalizes D94647 to IR input, as suggested by @tejohnson.
Ideally the driver should just forward split dwarf options, but doing this currently will cause `clang -gsplit-dwarf -c a.c` to create a .dwo with just `.strtab`.
Reviewed By: dblaikie, tejohnson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94655
-g is an IR generation option while -gsplit-dwarf is an object file generation option.
For -gsplit-dwarf in the backend phase of a distributed ThinLTO (-fthinlto-index=) which does object file generation and no IR generation, -g should not be needed.
This patch makes `-fthinlto-index= -gsplit-dwarf` emit .dwo even in the absence of -g.
This should fix https://crbug.com/1158215 after D80391.
```
// Distributed ThinLTO usage
clang -g -O2 -c -flto=thin -fthin-link-bitcode=a.indexing.o a.c
clang -g -O2 -c -flto=thin -fthin-link-bitcode=b.indexing.o b.c
clang -fuse-ld=lld -Wl,--thinlto-index-only=a.rsp -Wl,--thinlto-prefix-replace=';lto/' -Wl,--thinlto-object-suffix-replace='.indexing.o;.o' a.indexing.o b.indexing.o
clang -gsplit-dwarf -O2 -c -fthinlto-index=lto/a.o.thinlto.bc a.o -o lto/a.o
clang -gsplit-dwarf -O2 -c -fthinlto-index=lto/b.o.thinlto.bc b.o -o lto/b.o
clang -fuse-ld=lld @a.rsp -o exe
```
Note: for implicit regular/Thin LTO, .dwo emission works without this patch:
`clang -flto=thin -gsplit-dwarf a.o b.o` passes `-plugin-opt=dwo_dir=` to the linker.
The linker forwards the option to LTO. LTOBackend.cpp emits `$dwo_dir/[01234].dwo`.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94647
If conflicting `-fprofile-generate -fcs-profile-generate` are used together,
there is currently an assertion failure. Fix the failure.
Also add some driver tests.
Reviewed By: xur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94463
This patch removes the -f[no-]trapping-math flags from the -cc1 command line. These flags are ignored in the command line parser and their semantics is fully handled by -ffp-exception-mode.
This patch does not remove -f[no-]trapping-math from the driver command line. The driver flags are being used and do affect compilation.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith, SjoerdMeijer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93395
When building a 64-bit big endian PowerPC Linux kernel with a 64-bit
little endian PowerPC target, the 32-bit vDSO errors:
```
$ make ARCH=powerpc CC=clang CROSS_COMPILE=powerpc64le-linux-gnu- \
pseries_defconfig arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/
ld.lld: error: arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/sigtramp.o is incompatible with elf32-powerpc
ld.lld: error: arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/gettimeofday.o is incompatible with elf32-powerpc
ld.lld: error: arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/datapage.o is incompatible with elf32-powerpc
ld.lld: error: arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/cacheflush.o is incompatible with elf32-powerpc
ld.lld: error: arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/note.o is incompatible with elf32-powerpc
ld.lld: error: arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/getcpu.o is incompatible with elf32-powerpc
ld.lld: error: arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/vgettimeofday.o is incompatible with elf32-powerpc
...
```
This happens because the endian information is missing from the call to
the assembler, even though it was explicitly passed to clang. See the
below example.
```
$ echo | clang --target=powerpc64le-linux-gnu \
--prefix=/usr/bin/powerpc64le-linux-gnu- \
-no-integrated-as -m32 -mbig-endian -### -x c -c -
".../clang-12" "-cc1" "-triple" "powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu" ...
...
"/usr/bin/powerpc64le-linux-gnu-as" "-a32" "-mppc" "-many" "-o" "-.o" "/tmp/--e69e28.s"
```
clang sets the right target with -m32 and -mbig-endian but -mbig-endian
does not make it to the assembler, resulting in a 32-bit little endian
binary. This differs from the little endian targets, which always pass
-mlittle-endian.
```
$ echo | clang --target=powerpc64-linux-gnu \
--prefix=/usr/bin/powerpc64-linux-gnu- \
-no-integrated-as -m32 -mlittle-endian -### -x c -c -
".../clang-12" "-cc1" "-triple" "powerpcle-unknown-linux-gnu" ...
...
"/usr/bin/powerpc64-linux-gnu-as" "-a32" "-mppc" "-mlittle-endian" "-many" "-o" "-.o" "/tmp/--405dbd.s"
```
Do the same thing for the big endian targets so that there is no more
error. This matches GCC's behavior, where -mbig and -mlittle are always
passed along to GNU as.
```
$ echo | powerpc64-linux-gcc -### -x c -c -
...
.../powerpc64-linux/bin/as -a64 -mpower4 -many -mbig -o -.o /tmp/ccVn7NAm.s
...
$ echo | powerpc64le-linux-gcc -### -x c -c -
...
.../powerpc64le-linux/bin/as -a64 -mpower8 -many -mlittle -o -.o /tmp/ccPN9ato.s
...
```
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94442
GCC r218397 "x86-64: Optimize access to globals in PIE with copy reloc" made
-fpie code emit R_X86_64_PC32 to reference external data symbols by default.
Clang adopted -mpie-copy-relocations D19996 as a flexible alternative.
The name -mpie-copy-relocations can be improved [1] and does not capture the
idea that this option can apply to -fno-pic and -fpic [2], so this patch
introduces -f[no-]direct-access-external-data and makes -mpie-copy-relocations
their aliases for compatibility.
[1]
For
```
extern int var;
int get() { return var; }
```
if var is defined in another translation unit in the link unit, there is no copy
relocation.
[2]
-fno-pic -fno-direct-access-external-data is useful to avoid copy relocations.
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=65888
If a shared object is linked with -Bsymbolic or --dynamic-list and exports a
data symbol, normally the data symbol cannot be accessed by -fno-pic code
(because by default an absolute relocation is produced which will lead to a copy
relocation). -fno-direct-access-external-data can prevent copy relocations.
-fpic -fdirect-access-external-data can avoid GOT indirection. This is like the
undefined counterpart of -fno-semantic-interposition. However, the user should
define var in another translation unit and link with -Bsymbolic or
--dynamic-list, otherwise the linker will error in a -shared link. Generally
the user has better tools for their goal but I want to mention that this
combination is valid.
On COFF, the behavior is like always -fdirect-access-external-data.
`__declspec(dllimport)` is needed to enable indirect access.
There is currently no plan to affect non-ELF behaviors or -fpic behaviors.
-fno-pic -fno-direct-access-external-data will be implemented in the subsequent patch.
GCC feature request https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=98112
Reviewed By: tmsriram
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92633
@ikudrin enabled support for dwarf64 in D87011. Adding a clang flag so it can be used through that compilation pass.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90507
While trying to compile clang and openmp with a freshly built clang with the gcc/7.4.0
toolchain on the Summit supercomputer I face some error because of the triple under which
the GCC toolchain is installed was not present in for PPC64LE triples.
This patch add the powerpc64le-none-linux-gnu used on system like Summit and Ascent.
Reviewed By: jdenny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94261
This patch adds a frontend action for emitting object files. While Flang
does not support code-generation, this action remains a placeholder.
This patch simply provides glue-code to connect the compiler driver
with the appropriate frontend action.
The new action is triggered with the `-c` compiler driver flag, i.e.
`flang-new -c`. This is then translated to `flang-new -fc1 -emit-obj`,
so `-emit-obj` has to be marked as supported as well.
As code-generation is not available yet, `flang-new -c` results in a
driver error:
```
error: code-generation is not available yet
```
Hopefully this will help communicating the level of available
functionality within Flang.
The definition of `emit-obj` is updated so that it can be shared between
Clang and Flang. As the original definition was enclosed within a
Clang-specific TableGen `let` statement, it is extracted into a new `let`
statement. That felt like the cleanest option.
I also commented out `-triple` in Flang::ConstructJob and updated some
comments there. This is similar to https://reviews.llvm.org/D93027. I
wanted to make sure that it's clear that we can't support `-triple`
until we have code-generation. However, once code-generation is
available we _will need_ `-triple`.
As this patch adds `-emit-obj`, the emit-obj.f90 becomes irrelevant and
is deleted. Instead, phases.f90 is added to demonstrate that users can
control compilation phases (indeed, `-c` is a phase control flag).
Reviewed By: SouraVX, clementval
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93301
- Need trimming before parsing major or minor version numbers. This's required
due to the different line ending on Windows.
- In addition, the integer conversion may fail due to invalid char. Return that
parsing function return `true` when the parsing fails.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93587
Summary:
Optimized debugging is not supported by ptxas. Debugging information is degraded to line information only if optimizations are enabled, but debugging information would be added back in by the driver if remarks were enabled. This solves https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48153.
Reviewers: jdoerfert tra jholewinski serge-sans-paille
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94123
Add support for options -D and -U in the new Flang driver.
Summary of changes:
- Create PreprocessorOptions, to be used by the driver then translated
into Fortran::parser::Options
- Create CompilerInvocation::setFortranOpts to pass preprocessor
options into the parser options
- Add a dedicated method, Flang::AddPreprocessingOptions, to extract
preprocessing options from the driver arguments into the preprocessor
command arguments
Macros specified like -DName will default to definition 1.
When defining macros, the new driver will drop anything after an
end-of-line character. This is consistent with gfortran and clang, but
different to what currently f18 does. However, flang (which is a bash
wrapper for f18), also drops everything after an end-of-line character.
So gfortran-like behaviour felt like the natural choice. Test is added
to demonstrate this behaviour.
Reviewed By: awarzynski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93401
This patch propagates the -moutline flag when LTO is enabled and avoids
passing it explicitly to the linker plugin.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93385
Add powerpcle support to clang.
For FreeBSD, assume a freestanding environment for now, as we only need it in the first place to build loader, which runs in the OpenFirmware environment instead of the FreeBSD environment.
For Linux, recognize glibc and musl environments to match current usage in Void Linux PPC.
Adjust driver to match current binutils behavior regarding machine naming.
Adjust and expand tests.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93919
The idea is that the CC1 default for ELF should set dso_local on default
visibility external linkage definitions in the default -mrelocation-model pic
mode (-fpic/-fPIC) to match COFF/Mach-O and make output IR similar.
The refactoring is made available by 2820a2ca3a.
Currently only x86 supports local aliases. We move the decision to the driver.
There are three CC1 states:
* -fsemantic-interposition: make some linkages interposable and make default visibility external linkage definitions dso_preemptable.
* (default): selected if the target supports .Lfoo$local: make default visibility external linkage definitions dso_local
* -fhalf-no-semantic-interposition: if neither option is set or the target does not support .Lfoo$local: like -fno-semantic-interposition but local aliases are not used. So references can be interposed if not optimized out.
Add -fhalf-no-semantic-interposition to a few tests using the half-based semantic interposition behavior.
GCC made the switch on 2018-04-10 ("rs6000: Enable -fasynchronous-unwind-tables by default").
In Clang, FreeBSD/NetBSD powerpc have already defaulted to -fasynchronous-unwind-tables.
This patch defaults Generic_GCC powerpc (which affects Linux) to use -fasynchronous-unwind-tables.
Reviewed By: #powerpc, nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92054
The command line syntax is identical to the -mharden-sls= command line
syntax for AArch64 targets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93221
cl.exe doesn't understand Zd (in either MSVC 2017 or 2019), so neiter
should we. It used to do the same as `-gline-tables-only` which is
exposed as clang-cl flag as well, so if you want this behavior, use
`gline-tables-only`. That makes it clear that it's a clang-cl-only flag
that won't work with cl.exe.
Motivated by the discussion in D92958.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93458
[amdgpu] Default to code object v3
v4 is not yet readily available, and doesn't appear
to be implemented in the back end
Reviewed By: t-tye, yaxunl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93258
This introduces command-line support for the 'armv8.7-a' architecture name
(and an alias without the '-', as usual), and for the 'ls64' extension name.
Based on patches written by Simon Tatham.
Reviewed By: ostannard
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91776
There are out-of-tree tools using clang-offload-bundler to extract
bundles from bundled files. When a bundle is not in the bundled
file, clang-offload-bundler is expected to emit an error message
and return non-zero value. However currently clang-offload-bundler
silently generates empty file for the missing bundles.
Since OpenMP/HIP toolchains expect the current behavior, an option
-allow-missing-bundles is added to let clang-offload-bundler
create empty file when a bundle is missing when unbundling.
The unbundling job action is updated to use this option by
default.
clang-offload-bundler itself will emit error when a bundle
is missing when unbundling by default.
Changes are also made to check duplicate targets in -targets
option and emit error.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93068
There is a use case that users want to emit preprocessor
output as file and compile the preprocessor output later
with -x hip-cpp-output.
Clang emits bundled preprocessor output when users
compile with -E for combined host/device compilations.
Clang should be able to compile the bundled preprocessor
output with -x hip-cpp-output. Basically clang should
unbundle the bundled preprocessor output and launch
device and host compilation actions.
Currently there is a bug in clang driver causing bundled
preprocessor output not unbundled.
This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92720
This patch enables marshalling of the exception model options while enforcing their mutual exclusivity. The clang driver interface remains the same, this only affects the cc1 command line.
Depends on D93215.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93216
[amdgpu] Default to code object v3
v4 is not yet readily available, and doesn't appear
to be implemented in the back end
Reviewed By: t-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93258
This patch add support of riscv multilibs in the Baremetal toolchain. It is
a bit different to what is done in GNU.cpp as we are not iterating a
GNU sysroot to find the multilibs. This is intended for an llvm only
toolchain. We are not checking for the presence of any runtime bits to
enable a specific multilib.
I have structured the patch so that other targets for which
there is no multilibs support yet in Baremetal.cpp (e.g. arm-none-eabi)
will not be affected. Patch also allows some multilibs reuse.
Long term, I would like to go in the direction of data-driven specification of
multilib directories and flags.
Reviewed By: jroelofs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93138
This is just a small change in the Flang tool within libclangDriver.
Currently it passes `-triple` when calling `flang-new -fc1` for various
driver Jobs. As there is no support for code-generation, `-triple` is
not required and should remain unsupported. It is safe to remove it.
This hasn't been a problem as the affected driver Jobs are not yet
implemented or used. However, we will be adding support for them in the
near future and the fact `-triple` is added will become a problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93027
Remove target features crypto for Cortex-R82, because it doesn't have any, and
add LSE which was missing while we are at it.
This also removes crypto from the v8-R architecture description because that
aligns better with GCC and so far none of the R-cores have implemented crypto,
so is probably a more sensible default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91994
... and give more guidance to users.
If specifying -msve-vector-bits on a non-SVE target, clang would say:
error: '-msve-vector-bits' is not supported without SVE enabled
1. The driver lacks logic for "implied features".
This would result in this error being raised for -march=...+sve2,
even though +sve2 implies +sve.
2. Feature implication is well modelled in LLVM, so push the error down
the stack.
3. Hint to the user what flag they need to consider setting.
Now clang fails later, when the feature is used, saying:
aarch64-sve-vector-bits.c:42:41: error: 'arm_sve_vector_bits' attribute is not supported on targets missing 'sve'; specify an appropriate -march= or -mcpu=
typedef svint32_t noflag __attribute__((arm_sve_vector_bits(256)));
Move clang/test/Sema/{neon => arm}-vector-types-support.c and put tests for
this warning together in one place.
Reviewed By: sdesmalen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92487
The new PM is considered stable and many downstream groups have adopted it (some
have adopted it for more than two years). Add -f[no-]legacy-pass-manager to reflect the
fact that it is no longer experimental and the legacy pass manager is something we strive to retire.
In the future, when the legacy PM eventually goes away,
-fno-experimental-new-pass-manager and -flegacy-pass-manager will be removed.
This patch also changes -f[no-]legacy-pass-manager to pass `-plugin-opt={new,legacy}-pass-manager` to the linker (supported by both ld.lld and LLVMgold.so) when -flto/-flto=thin is specified
Reviewed By: aeubanks, rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92915
This is needed for CUDA compilation where NVPTX back-end only supports DWARF2,
but host compilation should be allowed to use newer DWARF versions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92617
Currently when -gsplit-dwarf is specified (could be buried in a build system),
there is no convenient way to cancel debug fission without affecting the debug
information amount (all of -g0, -g1 -fsplit-dwarf-inlining and -gline-directives-only
can, but they affect the debug information amount).
Reviewed By: #debug-info, dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92809
RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2020-May/065430.html
Agreement from GCC: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gcc-patches/2020-May/545688.html
g_flags_Group options generally don't affect the amount of debugging
information. -gsplit-dwarf is an exception. Its order dependency with
other gN_Group options make it inconvenient in a build system:
* -g0 -gsplit-dwarf -> level 2
-gsplit-dwarf "upgrades" the amount of debugging information despite
the previous intention (-g0) to drop debugging information
* -g1 -gsplit-dwarf -> level 2
-gsplit-dwarf "upgrades" the amount of debugging information.
* If we have a higher-level -gN, -gN -gsplit-dwarf will supposedly decrease the
amount of debugging information. This happens with GCC -g3.
The non-orthogonality has confused many users. GCC 11 will change the semantics
(-gsplit-dwarf no longer implies -g2) despite the backwards compatibility break.
This patch matches its behavior.
New semantics:
* If there is a g_Group, allow split DWARF if useful
(none of: -g0, -gline-directives-only, -g1 -fno-split-dwarf-inlining)
* Otherwise, no-op.
To restore the original behavior, replace -gsplit-dwarf with -gsplit-dwarf -g.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80391
Currently, -ftime-report + new pass manager emits one line of report for each
pass run. This potentially causes huge output text especially with regular LTO
or large single file (Obeserved in private tests and was reported in D51276).
The behaviour of -ftime-report + legacy pass manager is
emitting one line of report for each pass object which has relatively reasonable
text output size. This patch adds a flag `-ftime-report=` to control time report
aggregation for new pass manager.
The flag is for new pass manager only. Using it with legacy pass manager gives
an error. It is a driver and cc1 flag. `per-pass` is the new default so
`-ftime-report` is aliased to `-ftime-report=per-pass`. Before this patch,
functionality-wise `-ftime-report` is aliased to `-ftime-report=per-pass-run`.
* Adds an boolean variable TimePassesHandler::PerRun to control per-pass vs per-pass-run.
* Adds a new clang CodeGen flag CodeGenOptions::TimePassesPerRun to work with the existing CodeGenOptions::TimePasses.
* Remove FrontendOptions::ShowTimers, its uses are replaced by the existing CodeGenOptions::TimePasses.
* Remove FrontendTimesIsEnabled (It was introduced in D45619 which was largely reverted.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92436
Currently, Baremetal toolchain requires user to pass a sysroot location
using a --sysroot flag. This is not very convenient for the user. It also
creates problem for toolchain vendors who don't have a fixed location to
put the sysroot bits.
Clang does provide 'DEFAULT_SYSROOT' which can be used by the toolchain
builder to provide the default location. But it does not work if toolchain
is targeting multiple targets e.g. arm-none-eabi/riscv64-unknown-elf which
clang is capable of doing.
This patch tries to solve this problem by providing a default location of
the toolchain if user does not explicitly provides --sysroot. The exact
location and name can be different but it should fulfill these conditions:
1. The sysroot path should have a target triple element so that multi-target
toolchain problem (as I described above) could be addressed.
2. The location should not be $TOP/$Triple as this is used by gcc generally
and will be a problem for installing both gcc and clang based toolchain at
the same location.
Reviewed By: jroelofs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92677
Baremetal toolchain add Driver.SysRoot/include to the system include
paths without checking if Driver.SysRoot is empty. This resulted in
"-internal-isystem" "include" in the command. This patch adds check for
empty sysroot.
Reviewed By: jroelofs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92176
The static variable causes it only initialized once and take
the same value for different GPU archs, whereas they
may be different for different GPU archs, e.g. when
there are both gfx900 and gfx1010.
Removing static fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92628
This also teaches MachO writers/readers about the MachO cpu subtype,
beyond the minimal subtype reader support present at the moment.
This also defines a preprocessor macro to allow users to distinguish
__arm64__ from __arm64e__.
arm64e defaults to an "apple-a12" CPU, which supports v8.3a, allowing
pointer-authentication codegen.
It also currently defaults to ios14 and macos11.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87095
This morally reverts D82777 -- turns out that ld64 crashes with many
response files, so we must stop passing them to it until the crash is
fixed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92357
We have a plan to add libcxx and libcxxabi for VE. In order to do so,
we need to compile cxx source code with bootstarapped header files.
This patch adds such expected path to make clang++ work, at least
not crash at the startup. Add regression test for that, also.
Reviewed By: simoll
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92386
This patch implements correct hostness based overloading resolution
in isBetterOverloadCandidate.
Based on hostness, if one candidate is emittable whereas the other
candidate is not emittable, the emittable candidate is better.
If both candidates are emittable, or neither is emittable based on hostness, then
other rules should be used to determine which is better. This is because
hostness based overloading resolution is mostly for determining
viability of a function. If two functions are both viable, other factors
should take precedence in preference.
If other rules cannot determine which is better, CUDA preference will be
used again to determine which is better.
However, correct hostness based overloading resolution
requires overloading resolution diagnostics to be deferred,
which is not on by default. The rationale is that deferring
overloading resolution diagnostics may hide overloading reslolutions
issues in header files.
An option -fgpu-exclude-wrong-side-overloads is added, which is off by
default.
When -fgpu-exclude-wrong-side-overloads is off, keep the original behavior,
that is, exclude wrong side overloads only if there are same side overloads.
This may result in incorrect overloading resolution when there are no
same side candates, but is sufficient for most CUDA/HIP applications.
When -fgpu-exclude-wrong-side-overloads is on, enable deferring
overloading resolution diagnostics and enable correct hostness
based overloading resolution, i.e., always exclude wrong side overloads.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80450
This allows us to use its value everywhere, rather than just clang. Some
other places, like opt and lld, will use its value soon.
Rename it internally to LLVM_ENABLE_NEW_PASS_MANAGER.
The #define for it is now in llvm-config.h.
The initial land accidentally set the value of
LLVM_ENABLE_NEW_PASS_MANAGER to the string
ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL_NEW_PASS_MANAGER instead of its value.
Reviewed By: rnk, hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92072
This allows us to use its value everywhere, rather than just clang. Some
other places, like opt and lld, will use its value soon.
The #define for it is now in llvm-config.h.
Reviewed By: rnk, hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92072
The new MachO lld just grew support for response files in D92149, so let
the clang driver use it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92399
This adds multilibs for Fuchsia that is built with the relative vtables ABI,
one with and another without exceptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85576
This change introduces a new clang switch `-fpseudo-probe-for-profiling` to enable AutoFDO with pseudo instrumentation. Please refer to https://reviews.llvm.org/D86193 for the whole story.
One implication from pseudo-probe instrumentation is that the profile is now sensitive to CFG changes. We perform the pseudo instrumentation very early in the pre-LTO pipeline, before any CFG transformation. This ensures that the CFG instrumented and annotated is stable and optimization-resilient.
The early instrumentation also allows the inliner to duplicate probes for inlined instances. When a probe along with the other instructions of a callee function are inlined into its caller function, the GUID of the callee function goes with the probe. This allows samples collected on inlined probes to be reported for the original callee function.
Reviewed By: wmi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86502
I am working on a baremetal riscv toolchain using LLVM runtime and
LLD linker. Baremetal.cpp provides most of the things needed for such
toolchain. So I have modified it to also handle riscv64/32-unknown-elf
targets alongside arm-none-eabi.
Currently, targets like riscv64-unknown-elf are handled by RISCVToolChain
which mostly expects a gcc toolchain to be present. If you dont
want the dependency on gcc-toolchain/libgloss or want to use LLD, then
RISCVToolChain is not a good fit.
So in the toolchain selection code, I have made this dependency of
RISCVToolChain on gcc toolchain explicit. It is created if gcc-toolchain
option is present. Otherwise Baremetal toolchain is created. I will be
happy to hear if there is a better way to choose between these two
toolchains.
Reviewed By: jroelofs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91442
Added support for the options mabi=vec-extabi and mabi=vec-default which are analogous to qvecnvol and qnovecnvol when using XL on AIX.
The extended Altivec ABI on AIX is enabled using mabi=vec-extabi in clang and vec-extabi in llc.
Reviewed By: Xiangling_L, DiggerLin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89684
In GCC, `aarch64-*-linux` and `aarch64-*-freebsd` made the switch in 2018
(https://gcc.gnu.org/pipermail/gcc-patches/2018-March/495549.html).
In Clang, FreeBSD/Fuchsia/NetBSD/MinGW aarch64 default to -fasynchronous-unwind-tables.
This patch defaults Generic_GCC aarch64 (which affects Linux) to use -fasynchronous-unwind-tables.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91760
New MachO LLD doesn't implement the old -macos_version_min (etc)
flags, but it understands the modern platform_version flag.
So make the clang driver pass that when using new MachO LLD.
Also, while here, don't pass -lto_library to LLD, since it
links in LTO libraries statically (which it can because it's
versioned alongside clang).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92037
This patch:
- adds an ld64.lld.darwinnew symlink for lld, to go with f2710d4b57,
so that `clang -fuse-ld=lld.darwinnew` can be used to test new
Mach-O lld while it's in bring-up. (The expectation is that we'll
remove this again once new Mach-O lld is the defauld and only Mach-O
lld.)
- lets the clang driver know if the linker is lld (currently
only triggered if `-fuse-ld=lld` or `-fuse-ld=lld.darwinnew` is
passed). Currently only used for the next point, but could be used
to implement other features that need close coordination between
compiler and linker, e.g. having a diag for calling `clang++` instead
of `clang` when link errors are caused by a missing C++ stdlib.
- lets the clang driver pass `-demangle` to Mach-O lld (both old and
new), in addition to ld64
- implements -demangle for new Mach-O lld
- changes demangleItanium() to accept _Z, __Z, ___Z, ____Z prefixes
(and updates one test added in D68014). Mach-O has an extra
underscore for symbols, and the three (or, on Mach-O, four)
underscores are used for block names.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91884
This fixes the Builtins-sparc-linux testsuite failures on Linux
SPARC which occur because clang cannot find the 32-bit runtime
libraries when -m32 is passed on the command line. The same
workaround is already being used on X86 and PPC.
Also, switch the CHECK-DEBIAN-SPARC tests to use debian_multiarch_tree
as both sparc and sparc64 are using the MultiArch mechanism on modern Debian
systems the same way as x86_64, powerpc64el and others. Thus, switch the
CHECK-DEBIAN-SPARC32 and CHECK-DEBIAN-SPARC64 tests to use the files from
the debian_multiarch_tree directory for the header and linker path tests.
Finally, rename CHECK-DEBIAN-SPARC32 to CHECK-DEBIAN-SPARC to match the naming
scheme of the Debian MultiArch checks for the other Debian architectures.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90524
This patch implements out of line atomics for LSE deployment
mechanism. Details how it works can be found in llvm/docs/Atomics.rst
Options -moutline-atomics and -mno-outline-atomics to enable and disable it
were added to clang driver. This is clang and llvm part of out-of-line atomics
interface, library part is already supported by libgcc. Compiler-rt
support is provided in separate patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91157
Baremetal toolchain is not adding sysroot/lib to the library
search path. This is forcing the user to do it manually. This commit
fixes this shortcoming by adding the sysroot/lib to library search path
if sysroot is not empty.
Reviewed By: jroelofs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91559
- The new option, -arcmt-action, is a simple enum based option.
- The driver is modified to translate the existing -ccc-acmt-* options accordingly
Depends on D83298
Reviewed By: Bigcheese
Original patch by Daniel Grumberg.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83315
The option -fproc-stat-report=<file> makes driver to generate child
process resource comsumption report. In the report executable name was
not quoted and it made parsing the report more difficult. With this
change the executable name is surrounded by quotation marks.
Add an option -munsafe-fp-atomics for AMDGPU target.
When enabled, clang adds function attribute "amdgpu-unsafe-fp-atomics"
to any functions for amdgpu target. This allows amdgpu backend to use
unsafe fp atomic instructions in these functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91546
In order to support attribute((constructor)) and attribute((destructor)),
which is used by various LLVM non-C++ runtime components, AIX will include
crti[_64].o and -bcdtors for C language link invocations by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91361
The new option `-fproc-stat-info=<file>` can be used to generate report
about used memory and execution tile of each stage of compilation.
Documentation for this option can be found in `UserManual.rst`. The
option can be used in parallel builds.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78903
VE needs to support integrated assembler and "nas". This "nas"
doesn't recognize ".sigaddr" pseudo mnemonics, so need to disable
it. This patch disable it on VE by default. Also add a regression
test for that.
Reviewed By: simoll
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91350
The behavior is controlled by the `-fprebuilt-implicit-modules` option, and
allows searching for implicit modules in the prebuilt module cache paths.
The current command-line options for prebuilt modules do not allow to easily
maintain and use multiple versions of modules. Both the producer and users of
prebuilt modules are required to know the relationships between compilation
options and module file paths. Using a particular version of a prebuilt module
requires passing a particular option on the command line (e.g.
`-fmodule-file=[<name>=]<file>` or `-fprebuilt-module-path=<directory>`).
However the compiler already knows how to distinguish and automatically locate
implicit modules. Hence this proposal to introduce the
`-fprebuilt-implicit-modules` option. When set, it enables searching for
implicit modules in the prebuilt module paths (specified via
`-fprebuilt-module-path`). To not modify existing behavior, this search takes
place after the standard search for prebuilt modules. If not
Here is a workflow illustrating how both the producer and consumer of prebuilt
modules would need to know what versions of prebuilt modules are available and
where they are located.
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules_v1 <config 1 options>
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules_v2 <config 2 options>
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules_v3 <config 3 options>
clang -cc1 -x c use.c -fmodules fmodule-map-file=modulemap -fprebuilt-module-path=prebuilt_modules_v1 <config 1 options>
clang -cc1 -x c use.c -fmodules fmodule-map-file=modulemap <non-prebuilt config options>
With prebuilt implicit modules, the producer can generate prebuilt modules as
usual, all in the same output directory. The same mechanisms as for implicit
modules take care of incorporating hashes in the path to distinguish between
module versions.
Note that we do not specify the output module filename, so `-o` implicit modules are generated in the cache path `prebuilt_modules`.
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules <config 1 options>
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules <config 2 options>
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules <config 3 options>
The user can now simply enable prebuilt implicit modules and point to the
prebuilt modules cache. No need to "parse" command-line options to decide
what prebuilt modules (paths) to use.
clang -cc1 -x c use.c -fmodules fmodule-map-file=modulemap -fprebuilt-module-path=prebuilt_modules -fprebuilt-implicit-modules <config 1 options>
clang -cc1 -x c use.c -fmodules fmodule-map-file=modulemap -fprebuilt-module-path=prebuilt_modules -fprebuilt-implicit-modules <non-prebuilt config options>
This is for example particularly useful in a use-case where compilation is
expensive, and the configurations expected to be used are predictable, but not
controlled by the producer of prebuilt modules. Modules for the set of
predictable configurations can be prebuilt, and using them does not require
"parsing" the configuration (command-line options).
Reviewed By: Bigcheese
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68997
Summary:
Object of type `Compilation` now can keep a callback that is called
after each execution of `Command`. This must simplify adaptation of
clang in custom distributions and allow facilities like collection of
execution statistics.
Reviewers: rsmith, rjmccall, Eugene.Zelenko
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78899
This patch enhances the clang driver to link the runtime profile
library on AIX when the -fprofile-generate option is used.
Reviewed By: phosek
Differentail Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90641
415f7ee883 had LIT test failures on any build where the clang executable
was not called "clang". I have adjusted the LIT CHECKs to remove the
binary name to fix this.
Original commit message:
For PlayStation we offer source code compatibility with
Microsoft's dllimport/export annotations; however, our file
format is based on ELF.
To support this we translate from DLL storage class to ELF
visibility at the end of codegen in Clang.
Other toolchains have used similar strategies (e.g. see the
documentation for this ARM toolchain:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/dui0530/i/migrating-from-rvct-v3-1-to-rvct-v4-0/changes-to-symbol-visibility-between-rvct-v3-1-and-rvct-v4-0)
This patch adds the ability to perform this translation. Options
are provided to support customizing the mapping behaviour.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89970
Similar to -fprofile-generate=, add -fmemory-profile= which takes a
directory path. This is passed down to LLVM via a new module flag
metadata. LLVM in turn provides this name to the runtime via the new
__memprof_profile_filename variable.
Additionally, always pass a default filename (in $cwd if a directory
name is not specified vi the = form of the option). This is also
consistent with the behavior of the PGO instrumentation. Since the
memory profiles will generally be fairly large, it doesn't make sense to
dump them to stderr. Also, importantly, the memory profiles will
eventually be dumped in a compact binary format, which is another reason
why it does not make sense to send these to stderr by default.
Change the existing memprof tests to specify log_path=stderr when that
was being relied on.
Depends on D89086.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89087
As discussed in [1], ClangFlags::DriverOption is currently only used to
mark options that should not be forwarded to other tools via `-Xarch`
options. This patch renames this flag accordingly and updates the
corresponding driver diagnostic.
A comment in ToolChain::TranslateXarchArgs is also updated to reflect
the change. The original comment referred to isDriverOption(), which is
no longer available.
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2020-October/066953.html
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89799
We've implemented integrated assembler. Now, we change to use
integrated assembler by default. Update a regression test also.
Reviewed By: simoll
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90396
Since Wasm comdat sections work similarly to ELF, we can use that mechanism
to eliminate duplicate dwarf type information in the same way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88603
Make the virtual method Toolchain::GetDefaultStackProtectorLevel()
return an explict enum value rather than an integral constant. This
makes the code subjectively easier to read, and should help prevent bugs
that may (or may never) arise from changing the enum values. Previously,
these were just kept in sync via a comment, which is brittle. The trade
off is including a additional header in a few new places. It is not
necessary, but in my opinion helps the readability.
Split off from https://reviews.llvm.org/D90194 to help cut down on lines
changed in code review.
Reviewed By: phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90271
This patch modifies the Clang AVR toolchain so that it always passes
the '-Tdata=0x800100' to the linker for ATmega328 devices. This matches
AVR-GCC behaviour, and also corresponds to the address of the start of
the data section in data space according to the ATmega328 datasheet.
Without this, clang does not produce a valid ATmega328 binary.
When targeting all non-ATmega328 chips, a warning will be emitted due to
the fact that proper handling for the chips data section address is
not yet implemented.
I've held off adding other microcontrollers for now, mostly because the
AVR toolchain logic is smeared across LLVM core TableGen files, and two Clang
libraries. The 'family detection' logic is also only implemented for
ATmega328 at the moment, for similar reasons.
In the future, I aim to write an RFC to llvm-dev to find a better way
for LLVM to expose target-specific details such as these to compiler
frontends.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86629
Summary:
Propagate driver commandline remarks options to linker when LTO is enabled.
This gives novice user a convenient way to collect and filter remarks throughout
a typical toolchain invocation with sample profile and LTO using single switch
from the clang driver.
A typical use of this option from clang command-line:
* Using -Rpass* options to print remarks to screen:
clang -fuse-ld=lld -flto=thin -fprofile-sample-use=foo_sample.txt
-Rpass=inline -Rpass-missed=inline -Rpass-analysis=inline
-fdiagnostics-show-hotness -fdiagnostics-hotness-threshold=100 -o foo foo.cpp
Remarks will be dumped to screen from both pre-lto and lto
compilation.
* Using serialized remarks options
clang -fuse-ld=lld -flto=thin -fprofile-sample-use=foo_sample.txt
-fsave-optimization-record
-fdiagnostics-show-hotness -fdiagnostics-hotness-threshold=100 -o foo foo.cpp
This will produce multiple yaml files containing optimization remarks:
1. foo.opt.yaml : remarks from pre-lto
2. foo.opt.ld.yaml.thin.1.yaml: remark during lto
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85810
Since Wasm comdat sections work similarly to ELF, we can use that mechanism
to eliminate duplicate dwarf type information in the same way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88603
Summary:
Makes linking the sanitizers follow the same logic as the rest of the
driver with respect to the static linking strategy for the C++ standard
library.
Subscribers: mcrosier, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80488
This patch introduces the dependencies required to read and manage input files
provided by the command line option. It also adds the infrastructure to create
and write to output files. The output is sent to either stdout or a file
(specified with the `-o` flag).
Separately, in order to be able to test the code for file I/O, it adds
infrastructure to create frontend actions. As a basic testable example, it adds
the `InputOutputTest` FrontendAction. The sole purpose of this action is to
read a file from the command line and print it either to stdout or the output
file. This action is run by using the `-test-io` flag also introduced in this
patch (available for `flang-new` and `flang-new -fc1`). With this patch:
```
flang-new -test-io input-file.f90
```
will read input-file.f90 and print it in the output file.
The `InputOutputTest` frontend action has been introduced primarily to
facilitate testing. It is hidden from users (i.e. it's only displayed with
`--help-hidden`). Currently Clang doesn’t have an equivalent action.
`-test-io` is used to trigger the InputOutputTest action in the Flang frontend
driver. This patch makes sure that “flang-new” forwards it to “flang-new -fc1"
by creating a preprocessor job. However, in Flang.cpp, `-test-io` is passed to
“flang-new -fc1” without `-E`. This way we make sure that the preprocessor is
_not_ run in the frontend driver. This is the desired behaviour: `-test-io`
should only read the input file and print it to the output stream.
co-authored-by: Andrzej Warzynski <andrzej.warzynski@arm.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87989
If CUDA version can not be determined based on version.txt file, attempt to find
CUDA_VERSION macro in cuda.h.
This is a follow-up to D89752,
Differntial Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89832
CUDA-11.1 does not carry version.txt which causes clang to assume that it's
CUDA-7.0, which used to be the only CUDA version w/o version.txt.
In order to tell CUDA-7.0 apart from the new versions, clang now probes for the
presence of libdevice.10.bc which is not present in the old CUDA versions.
This should keep Clang working for CUDA-11.1.
PR47332: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47332
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89752
1. Emit error for -G driver option on AIX
2. Adjust cmake file to use -Wl,-G instead of -G
On AIX, legacy XL compiler uses -G to produce a shared object enabled
for use with the run-time linker, which has different meanings from what
it is used for in Clang. And in Clang, other targets do not have -G map
to another functionality in their legacy compiler. So this error is more
important when we are on AIX.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89897
LLVM assumes that when it creates a call to a C library function it
can use the C calling convention. On ARM the effective calling
convention is determined from the target triple, however using
-mfloat-abi=hard on ARM means that calls to (and definitions of) C
library functions use the arm_aapcs_vfpcc calling convention which can
result in a mismatch.
Fix this by incorporating -mfloat-abi into the target triple, similar
to how -mbig-endian and -march/-mcpu are. This only works for EABI
targets and not Android or iOS, but there the float abi is fixed so
instead give an error.
Fixes PR45524
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89573
With -fbasicblock-sections=, let the front-end handle the case where the file
doesnt exist. The driver only checks if the option syntax is right.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89500
In D86000 we added a new sanitizer to the integer group
without adding it to the trapping group. This broke usage of
-fsanitize=integer -fsanitize-trap=integer or -fsanitize=integer
-fsanitize-minimal-runtime.
I think we can reasonably expect any new integer sanitizers to be
compatible with trapping and the minimal runtime, so add them to the
trapping group automatically.
Also add a test to ensure that any future additions of sanitizers
to the integer group will most likely result in test failures which
would lead to updates to the minimal runtime if necessary. For this
particular sanitizer no updates are required because it uses the
existing shift_out_of_bounds callback function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89766
* Make cc1 and cc1as --compress-debug-sections an alias for --compress-debug-sections=zlib
* Make -gz an alias for -gz=zlib
The new behavior is consistent with GCC when binutils>=2.26 is detected:
-gz is translated to --compress-debug-sections=zlib instead of --compress-debug-sections.
- The goal of this patch is improve option compatible with RISCV-V GCC,
-mcpu support on GCC side will sent patch in next few days.
- -mtune only affect the pipeline model and non-arch/extension related
target feature, e.g. instruction fusion; in td file it called
TuneFeatures, which is introduced by X86 back-end[1].
- -mtune accept all valid option for -mcpu and extra alias processor
option, e.g. `generic`, `rocket` and `sifive-7-series`, the purpose is
option compatible with RISCV-V GCC.
- Processor alias for -mtune will resolve according the current target arch,
rv32 or rv64, e.g. `rocket` will resolve to `rocket-rv32` or `rocket-rv64`.
- Interaction between -mcpu and -mtune:
* -mtune has higher priority than -mcpu for pipeline model and
TuneFeatures.
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/D85165
Reviewed By: luismarques
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89025
This reverts commits 683b308c07 and
8487bfd4e9.
We will go for a more restricted approach that does not give freedom to
everyone to change ABIs on whichever platform.
See the discussion on https://reviews.llvm.org/D85802.
This implements the flag proposed in RFC http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2020-August/066437.html.
The goal is to add a way to override the default target C++ ABI through
a compiler flag. This makes it easier to test and transition between different
C++ ABIs through compile flags rather than build flags.
In this patch:
- Store `-fc++-abi=` in a LangOpt. This isn't stored in a
CodeGenOpt because there are instances outside of codegen where Clang
needs to know what the ABI is (particularly through
ASTContext::createCXXABI), and we should be able to override the
target default if the flag is provided at that point.
- Expose the existing ABIs in TargetCXXABI as values that can be passed
through this flag.
- Create a .def file for these ABIs to make it easier to check flag
values.
- Add an error for diagnosing bad ABI flag values.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85802
clang --target arm-none-eabi --print-libgcc-file-name --rtlib=compiler-rt
used to print `/path/to/lib/clang/version/lib/libclang_rt.builtins-arm.a`
but should print `/path/to/lib/clang/version/lib/baremetal/libclang_rt.builtins-arm.a`.
Similarly, --target armv7m-none-eabi should print libclang_rt.builtins-armv7m.a
This matches the compiler-rt file name used at link time in the
baremetal driver.
Reviewed By: manojgupta
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89327
Summary:
This patch does the following:
1. Make InitTargetOptionsFromCodeGenFlags() accepts Triple as a
parameter, because some options' default value is triple dependant.
2. DataSections is turned on by default on AIX for llc.
3. Test cases change accordingly because of the default behaviour change.
4. Clang Driver passes in -fdata-sections by default on AIX.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, DiggerLin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88737