OpenMP 4.5 adds 'taksloop' and 'taskloop simd' directives, which have 'grainsize' clause. Patch adds parsing/sema analysis of this clause.
llvm-svn: 254903
OpenMP 4.5 adds 'taskloop' and 'taskloop simd' directives. These directives have new 'nogroup' clause. Patch adds basic parsing/sema support for this clause.
llvm-svn: 254899
clang converts C++ lambdas to blocks with an implicit user-defined conversion
operator method on the lambda record. This method returns a block that captures a copy
of the lambda. To inline a lambda-converted block, the analyzer now calls the lambda
records's call operator method on the lambda captured by the block.
llvm-svn: 254702
This CL is for discussion how to better fix bit-filed layout compatibility issue with GCC (see PR25575 for test case and more details). Current clang behavior is compatible with GCC 4.1-4.3 series but it was fixed in 4.4+. Ignoring packed attribute looks very odd and because it was also fixed in GCC 4.4+, it makes sense also fix it in clang.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14872
llvm-svn: 254596
`pass_object_size` is our way of enabling `__builtin_object_size` to
produce high quality results without requiring inlining to happen
everywhere.
A link to the design doc for this attribute is available at the
Differential review link below.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13263
llvm-svn: 254554
Summary:
This patch implements the 4.5 specification for the implicit data maps. OpenMP 4.5 specification changes the default way data is captured into a target region. All the non-aggregate kinds are passed by value by default. This required activating the capturing by value during SEMA for the target region. All the non-aggregate values that can be encoded in the size of a pointer are properly casted and forwarded to the runtime library. On top of fixing the previous weird behavior for mapping pointers in nested data regions (an explicit map was always required), this also improves performance as the number of allocations/transactions to the device per non-aggregate map are reduced from two to only one - instead of passing a reference and the value, only the value passed.
Explicit maps will be added later on once firstprivate, private, and map clauses' SEMA and parsing are available.
Reviewers: hfinkel, rjmccall, ABataev
Subscribers: cfe-commits, carlo.bertolli
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14940
llvm-svn: 254521
OpenMP 4.5 defines new clause 'priority' for 'task', 'taskloop' and 'taskloop simd' directives. Added parsing and sema analysis for 'priority' clause in 'task' and 'taskloop' directives.
llvm-svn: 254398
Add/Subtract.
The following instructions are added to AArch32 instruction set:
- VQRDMLAH: Vector Saturating Rounding Doubling Multiply Accumulate
Returning High Half
- VQRDMLSH: Vector Saturating Rounding Doubling Multiply Subtract
Returning High Half
The following instructions are added to AArch64 instruction set:
- SQRDMLAH: Signed Saturating Rounding Doubling Multiply Accumulate
Returning High Half
- SQRDMLSH: Signed Saturating Rounding Doubling Multiply Subtract
Returning High Half
This patch adds intrinsic and ACLE macro support for these instructions,
as well as corresponding tests.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14982
llvm-svn: 254250
Summary: This patch adds support for the interrupt attribute for mips32r2+.
Patch by Simon Dardis.
Reviewers: dsanders, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: aaron.ballman, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10802
llvm-svn: 254205
Summary: This patch adds support for the interrupt attribute for mips32r2+.
Reviewers: dsanders, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: aaron.ballman, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10802
llvm-svn: 254203
According to OpenMP 4.5 the parameter of 'ordered' clause must be greater than or equal to the parameter of 'collapse' clause. Patch adds this rule.
llvm-svn: 254141
than reusing the "overridden buffer" mechanism. This will allow us to make
embedded files and overridden files behave differently in future.
llvm-svn: 254121
We will still allow it in system headers, in macros from system headers, when
combined with an 'asm' label, and under the flag -Wno-register.
llvm-svn: 254097
take a queue; some supported versions of GCC believe that this substitution
failure is an error. Instead, use a partial specialization to detect the type
of a pointer to the corresponding member. This is less general, but good enough
for our uses.
llvm-svn: 254083
MSVC supports 'property' attribute and allows to apply it to the declaration of an empty array in a class or structure definition.
For example:
```
__declspec(property(get=GetX, put=PutX)) int x[];
```
The above statement indicates that x[] can be used with one or more array indices. In this case, i=p->x[a][b] will be turned into i=p->GetX(a, b), and p->x[a][b] = i will be turned into p->PutX(a, b, i);
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13336
llvm-svn: 254067
to allow them to explicitly opt into data recursion despite having overridden
Traverse*Stmt or Traverse*Expr. Use this to reintroduce data recursion to the
one place that lost it when DataRecursiveASTVisitor was removed.
llvm-svn: 254041
This flag causes all files that were read by the compilation to be embedded
into a produced module file. This is useful for distributed build systems that
use an include scanning system to determine which files are "needed" by a
compilation, and only provide those files to remote compilation workers. Since
using a module can require any file that is part of that module (or anything it
transitively includes), files that are not found by an include scanner can be
required in a regular build using explicit modules. With this flag, only files
that are actually referenced by transitively-#included files are required to be
present on the build machine.
llvm-svn: 253950
When RAV traverses a Stmt or Expr node, if the corresponding Traverse*
functions have not been overridden, it will now use data recursion to walk
those nodes. We arrange this to be an unobservable optimization to RAV
subclasses, and to gracefully degrade as parts of the visitation are overridden
with functions that might observe the visitation.
For instance, if an RAV subclass overrides TraverseUnaryNot, we will ensure
that there are real recursive stack frames for those traversals, but we'll
use data recursion for all other traversals.
This removes the need for DataRecursiveASTVisitor, and for the
'shouldUseDataRecursionFor' extension point, both of which are removed by this
change.
llvm-svn: 253948
This patch changes the generation of CGFunctionInfo to contain
the FunctionProtoType if it is available. This enables the code
generation for call instructions to look into this type for
exception information and therefore generate better quality
IR - it will not create invoke instructions for functions that
are know not to throw.
llvm-svn: 253926
Right now clang_Cursor_getMangling will attempt to mangle any
declaration, even if the declaration isn't mangled (extern C). This
results in a partially mangled name which isn't useful for much. This
patch makes clang_Cursor_getMangling return an empty string if the
declaration isn't mangled.
Patch by Michael Wu <mwu@mozilla.com>.
llvm-svn: 253909
This allows us to construct Linux toolchains without a valid linker. This
is needed for example to build a CUDA device toolchain after r253385.
llvm-svn: 253707
This patch adds support of #pragma vtordisp inside functions in attempt to improve compatibility. Microsoft compiler appears to save the stack of vtordisp modes on entry of struct methods' bodies and restore it on exit (method-local vtordisp).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14467
llvm-svn: 253650
Add support for vector mode attributes like "attribute((mode(V4SF)))". Also add warning about deprecated vector modes like GCC does.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14744
llvm-svn: 253551
driving a canonical difference between that and an unqualified
type is a really bad idea when both are valid. Instead, remember
that it was there in a non-canonical way, then look for that in
the one place we really care about it: block captures. The net
effect closely resembles the behavior of a decl attribute, except
still closely following ARC's standard qualifier parsing rules.
llvm-svn: 253534
This provides both a more uniform interface and makes libclang behave like
clang tooling wrt relative paths against argv[0]. This is necessary for
finding paths to a c++ standard library relative to a clang binary given
in a compilation database. It can also be used to find paths relative to
libclang.so if the full path to it is passed in.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14695
llvm-svn: 253466
unsafe, since many operations on the types can trigger lazy deserialization of
more types and invalidate the iterators. This fixes a crasher, but I've not
been able to reduce it to a reasonable testcase yet.
llvm-svn: 253420
Currently, when there is a global register variable in a program that
is bound to an invalid register, clang/llvm prints an error message that
is not very user-friendly.
This commit improves the diagnostic and moves the check that used to be
in the backend to Sema. In addition, it makes changes to error out if
the size of the register doesn't match the declared variable size.
e.g., volatile register int B asm ("rbp");
rdar://problem/23084219
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13834
llvm-svn: 253405
other than the top level, we issue an error. This breaks a fair amount of C++
code wrapping C libraries, where the C library is #included within a namespace
/ extern "C" combination, because the C library (probably) includes C++
standard library headers which may be within modules.
Without modules, this setup is harmless if (and *only* if) the corresponding
standard library module was already included outside the namespace, so
downgrade the error to a default-error extension in that case, so that it can
be selectively disabled for such misbehaving libraries.
llvm-svn: 253398
- added detection of libdevice bitcode file and API to find one appropriate for the GPU we're compiling for.
- pass additional cc1 options for linking with detected libdevice bitcode
- added -nocudalib to prevent automatic linking with libdevice
- added test cases to verify new functionality
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14556
llvm-svn: 253387
In order to compile a CUDA file clang must be able to find
include files for both both host and device.
This patch passes AuxToolchain to AddPreprocessingOptions and
uses it to add include paths for the opposite side of compilation.
We also must be able to find CUDA include files. If the driver
found CUDA installation, it adds appropriate include path
to CUDA headers. This can be disabled with '-nocudainc'.
- Added include paths for the opposite side of compilation.
- Added include paths to detected CUDA installation.
- Added -nocudainc to prevent adding CUDA include path.
- Added test cases to verify new functionality.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13170
llvm-svn: 253386
Clang needs to know target triple for both sides of compilation so that
preprocessor macros and target builtins from both sides are available.
This change augments Compilation class to carry information about
toolchains used during different CUDA compilation passes and refactors
BuildActions to use it when it constructs CUDA jobs.
Removed DeviceTriple from CudaHostAction/CudaDeviceAction as it's no
longer needed.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13144
llvm-svn: 253385
This reverts commit r253269.
This leads to assert / segfault triggering on the following reduced example:
float foo(float U, float base, float cell) { return (U = 2 * base) - cell; }
llvm-svn: 253337
This has seen quite some usage and I am not aware of any issues. Also
add a style option to enable/disable include sorting. The existing
command line flag can from now on be used to override whatever is set
in the style.
llvm-svn: 253202
Clang tries to figure out if a call to abs is suspicious by looking
through implicit casts to look at the underlying, implicitly converted
type.
Interestingly, C has implicit conversions from pointer-ish types like
function to less exciting types like int. This trips up our 'abs'
checker because it doesn't know which variant of 'abs' is appropriate.
Instead, diagnose 'abs' called on function types upfront. This sort of
thing is highly suspicious and is likely indicative of a missing
pointer dereference/function call/array index operation.
This fixes PR25532.
llvm-svn: 253156
actually hidden before we check its linkage. This avoids computing the linkage
"too early" for an anonymous struct with a typedef name for linkage.
llvm-svn: 253012
the linkage of the enumeration. For enumerators of unnamed enumerations, extend
the -Wmodules-ambiguous-internal-linkage extension to allow selecting an
arbitrary enumerator (but only if they all have the same value, otherwise it's
ambiguous).
llvm-svn: 253010
The ``disable_tail_calls`` attribute instructs the backend to not
perform tail call optimization inside the marked function.
For example,
int callee(int);
int foo(int a) __attribute__((disable_tail_calls)) {
return callee(a); // This call is not tail-call optimized.
}
Note that this attribute is different from 'not_tail_called', which
prevents tail-call optimization to the marked function.
rdar://problem/8973573
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12547
llvm-svn: 252986
declarations in redeclaration lookup. A declaration is now visible to
lookup if:
* It is visible (not in a module, or in an imported module), or
* We're doing redeclaration lookup and it's externally-visible, or
* We're doing typo correction and looking for unimported decls.
We now support multiple modules having different internal-linkage or no-linkage
definitions of the same name for all entities, not just for functions,
variables, and some typedefs. As previously, if multiple such entities are
visible, any attempt to use them will result in an ambiguity error.
This patch fixes the linkage calculation for a number of entities where we
previously didn't need to get it right (using-declarations, namespace aliases,
and so on). It also classifies enumerators as always having no linkage, which
is a slight deviation from the C++ standard's definition, but not an observable
change outside modules (this change is being discussed on the -core reflector
currently).
This also removes the prior special case for tag lookup, which made some cases
of this work, but also led to bizarre, bogus "must use 'struct' to refer to type
'Foo' in this scope" diagnostics in C++.
llvm-svn: 252960
This failed to solve the problem it was aimed at, and introduced just as many
issues as it resolved. Realistically, we need to deal with the possibility that
multiple modules might define different internal linkage symbols with the same
name, and this isn't a problem unless two such symbols are simultaneously
visible.
The case where two modules define equivalent internal linkage symbols is
handled by r252063: if lookup finds multiple sufficiently-similar entities from
different modules, we just pick one of them as an extension (but we keep them
separate).
llvm-svn: 252957
This function permits the mangling of a C++ 'structor. Depending on the ABI and
the declaration, the declaration may contain more than one associated symbol for
a given declaration. This allows the consumer to retrieve all of the associated
symbols for the declaration the cursor points to.
llvm-svn: 252853
This allows the return of a set of CXStrings from libclang. This is setup work
for an upcoming change to permit returning multiple mangled symbols.
llvm-svn: 252852
target features that the caller function doesn't provide. This matches
the existing backend failure to inline functions that don't have
matching target features - and diagnoses earlier in the case of
always_inline.
Fix up a few test cases that were, in fact, invalid if you tried
to generate code from the backend with the specified target features
and add a couple of tests to illustrate what's going on.
This should fix PR25246.
llvm-svn: 252834
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Typeof.html
Differences from the GCC extension:
* __auto_type is also permitted in C++ (but only in places where
it could appear in C), allowing its use in headers that might
be shared across C and C++, or used from C++98
* __auto_type can be combined with a declarator, as with C++ auto
(for instance, "__auto_type *p")
* multiple variables can be declared in a single __auto_type
declaration, with the C++ semantics (the deduced type must be
the same in each case)
This patch also adds a missing restriction on applying typeof to
a bit-field, which GCC has historically rejected in C (due to
lack of clarity as to whether the operand should be promoted).
The same restriction also applies to __auto_type in C (in both
GCC and Clang).
This also fixes PR25449.
Patch by Nicholas Allegra!
llvm-svn: 252690
std::initializer_list<T> type. Instead, the list must contain a single element
and the type is deduced from that.
In Clang 3.7, we warned by default on all the cases that would change meaning
due to this change. In Clang 3.8, we will support only the new rules -- per
the request in N3922, this change is applied as a Defect Report against earlier
versions of the C++ standard.
This change is not entirely trivial, because for lambda init-captures we
previously did not track the difference between direct-list-initialization and
copy-list-initialization. The difference was not previously observable, because
the two forms of initialization always did the same thing (the elements of the
initializer list were always copy-initialized regardless of the initialization
style used for the init-capture).
llvm-svn: 252688
The attrubite is applicable to functions and variables and changes
the linkage of the subject to internal.
This is the same functionality as C-style "static", but applicable to
class methods; and the same as anonymouns namespaces, but can apply
to individual methods of a class.
Following the proposal in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2015-October/045580.html
llvm-svn: 252648
When adding profiling instrumentation, use libclang_rt.profile_tvos.a
for TVOS targets and libclang_rt.profile_watchos.a for WatchOS targets.
I've also fixed up a comment and added an assert() that prevents us from
defaulting to an incorrect platform.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14521
Reviewed-by: t.p.northover
llvm-svn: 252558
The -meabi flag to control LLVM EABI version.
Without '-meabi' or with '-meabi default' imply LLVM triple default.
With '-meabi gnu' sets EABI GNU.
With '-meabi 4' or '-meabi 5' set EABI version 4 and 5 respectively.
A similar patch was introduced in LLVM.
Patch by Vinicius Tinti.
llvm-svn: 252463
This attribute is used to prevent tail-call optimizations to the marked
function. For example, in the following piece of code, foo1 will not be
tail-call optimized:
int __attribute__((not_tail_called)) foo1(int);
int foo2(int a) {
return foo1(a); // Tail-call optimization is not performed.
}
The attribute has effect only on statically bound calls. It has no
effect on indirect calls. Also, virtual functions and objective-c
methods cannot be marked as 'not_tail_called'.
rdar://problem/22667622
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12922
llvm-svn: 252369
This checker looks for unsafe constructs in vforked process:
function calls (excluding whitelist), memory write and returns.
This was originally motivated by a vfork-related bug in xtables package.
Patch by Yury Gribov.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14014
llvm-svn: 252285
Summary:
This is needed to handle per-project configurations when adding extra
arguments in clang-tidy for example.
Reviewers: klimek, djasper
Subscribers: djasper, cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14191
llvm-svn: 252134
we can't load that file due to a configuration mismatch, and implicit module
building is disabled, and the user turns off the error-by-default warning for
that situation, then fall back to textual inclusion for the module rather than
giving an error if any of its headers are included.
llvm-svn: 252114
internal linkage entities in different modules from r250884 to apply to all
names, not just function names.
This is really awkward: we don't want to merge internal-linkage symbols from
separate modules, because they might not actually be defining the same entity.
But we don't want to reject programs that use such an ambiguous symbol if those
internal-linkage symbols are in fact equivalent. For now, we're resolving the
ambiguity by picking one of the equivalent definitions as an extension.
llvm-svn: 252063
This new builtin template allows for incredibly fast instantiations of
templates like std::integer_sequence.
Performance numbers follow:
My work station has 64 GB of ram + 20 Xeon Cores at 2.8 GHz.
__make_integer_seq<std::integer_sequence, int, 90000> takes 0.25
seconds.
std::make_integer_sequence<int, 90000> takes unbound time, it is still
running. Clang is consuming gigabytes of memory.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13786
llvm-svn: 252036
Introduce the notion of a module file extension, which introduces
additional information into a module file at the time it is built that
can then be queried when the module file is read. Module file
extensions are identified by a block name (which must be unique to the
extension) and can write any bitstream records into their own
extension block within the module file. When a module file is loaded,
any extension blocks are matched up with module file extension
readers, that are per-module-file and are given access to the input
bitstream.
Note that module file extensions can only be introduced by
programmatic clients that have access to the CompilerInvocation. There
is only one such extension at the moment, which is used for testing
the module file extension harness. As a future direction, one could
imagine allowing the plugin mechanism to introduce new module file
extensions.
llvm-svn: 251955
Now that the properties created within Objective-C class extensions go
into the extension themselves, we don't need any of the extra
complexity here.
llvm-svn: 251949
A 'readonly' Objective-C property declared in the primary class can
effectively be shadowed by a 'readwrite' property declared within an
extension of that class, so long as the types and attributes of the
two property declarations are compatible.
Previously, this functionality was implemented by back-patching the
original 'readonly' property to make it 'readwrite', destroying source
information and causing some hideously redundant, incorrect
code. Simplify the implementation to express how this should actually
be modeled: as a separate property declaration in the extension that
shadows (via the name lookup rules) the declaration in the primary
class. While here, correct some broken Fix-Its, eliminate a pile of
redundant code, clean up the ARC migrator's handling of properties
declared in extensions, and fix debug info's naming of methods that
come from categories.
A wonderous side effect of doing this write is that it eliminates the
"AddedObjCPropertyInClassExtension" method from the AST mutation
listener, which in turn eliminates the last place where we rewrite
entire declarations in a chained PCH file or a module file. This
change (which fixes rdar://problem/18475765) will allow us to
eliminate the rewritten-decls logic from the serialization library,
and fixes a crash (rdar://problem/23247794) illustrated by the
test/PCH/chain-categories.m example.
llvm-svn: 251874
Summary:
The hasBase and hasIndex don't tell anything about the position of the
base and the index in the code, so we need hasLHS and hasRHS in some cases.
Reviewers: klimek
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14212
llvm-svn: 251842
We permit implicit conversion from pointer-to-function to
pointer-to-object when -fms-extensions is specified. This is rather
unfortunate, move this into -fms-compatibility and only permit it within
system headers unless -Wno-error=microsoft-cast is specified.
llvm-svn: 251738
This sets the mostly expected Darwin default ABI options for these two
platforms. Active changes from these defaults for watchOS are in a later patch.
llvm-svn: 251708
This patch should add support for almost all command-line options and
driver tinkering necessary to produce a correct "clang -cc1"
invocation for watchOS and tvOS.
llvm-svn: 251706
Summary: This matchers are going to be used in modernize-use-default, but are generic enough to be placed in ASTMatchers.h.
Reviewers: klimek
Subscribers: alexfh, cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14152
llvm-svn: 251693
Summary:
Dear All,
We have been looking at the following problem, where any code after the constant bound loop is not analyzed because of the limit on how many times the same block is visited, as described in bugzillas #7638 and #23438. This problem is of interest to us because we have identified significant bugs that the checkers are not locating. We have been discussing a solution involving ranges as a longer term project, but I would like to propose a patch to improve the current implementation.
Example issue:
```
for (int i = 0; i < 1000; ++i) {...something...}
int *p = 0;
*p = 0xDEADBEEF;
```
The proposal is to go through the first and last iterations of the loop. The patch creates an exploded node for the approximate last iteration of constant bound loops, before the max loop limit / block visit limit is reached. It does this by identifying the variable in the loop condition and finding the value which is “one away” from the loop being false. For example, if the condition is (x < 10), then an exploded node is created where the value of x is 9. Evaluating the loop body with x = 9 will then result in the analysis continuing after the loop, providing x is incremented.
The patch passes all the tests, with some modifications to coverage.c, in order to make the ‘function_which_gives_up’ continue to give up, since the changes allowed the analysis to progress past the loop.
This patch does introduce possible false positives, as a result of not knowing the state of variables which might be modified in the loop. I believe that, as a user, I would rather have false positives after loops than do no analysis at all. I understand this may not be the common opinion and am interested in hearing your views. There are also issues regarding break statements, which are not considered. A more advanced implementation of this approach might be able to consider other conditions in the loop, which would allow paths leading to breaks to be analyzed.
Lastly, I have performed a study on large code bases and I think there is little benefit in having “max-loop” default to 4 with the patch. For variable bound loops this tends to result in duplicated analysis after the loop, and it makes little difference to any constant bound loop which will do more than a few iterations. It might be beneficial to lower the default to 2, especially for the shallow analysis setting.
Please let me know your opinions on this approach to processing constant bound loops and the patch itself.
Regards,
Sean Eveson
SN Systems - Sony Computer Entertainment Group
Reviewers: jordan_rose, krememek, xazax.hun, zaks.anna, dcoughlin
Subscribers: krememek, xazax.hun, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12358
llvm-svn: 251621
GCC has a warning called -Wdouble-promotion, which warns you when
an implicit conversion increases the width of a floating point type.
This is useful when writing code for architectures that can perform
hardware FP ops on floats, but must fall back to software emulation for
larger types (i.e. double, long double).
This fixes PR15109 <https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=15109>.
Thanks to Carl Norum for the patch!
llvm-svn: 251588
Fake arguments are automatically handled for serialization, cloning,
and other representational tasks, but aren't included in pretty-printing
or parsing (should we eventually ever automate that).
This is chiefly useful for attributes that can be written by the
user, but which are also frequently synthesized by the compiler,
and which we'd like to remember details of the synthesis for.
As a simple example, use this to narrow the cases in which we were
generating a specialized note for implicitly unavailable declarations.
llvm-svn: 251469
The analyzer assumes that system functions will not free memory or modify the
arguments in other ways, so we assume that arguments do not escape when
those are called. However, this may lead to false positive leak errors. For
example, in code like this where the pointers added to the rb_tree are freed
later on:
struct alarm_event *e = calloc(1, sizeof(*e));
<snip>
rb_tree_insert_node(&alarm_tree, e);
Add a heuristic to assume that calls to system functions taking void*
arguments allow for pointer escape.
llvm-svn: 251449
Linking options for particular file depend on the option that specifies the file.
Currently there are two:
* -mlink-bitcode-file links in complete content of the specified file.
* -mlink-cuda-bitcode links in only the symbols needed by current TU.
Linked symbols are internalized. This bitcode linking mode is used to
link device-specific bitcode provided by CUDA.
Files are linked in order they are specified on command line.
-mlink-cuda-bitcode replaces -fcuda-uses-libdevice flag.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13913
llvm-svn: 251427
Summary:
If this option is set, clang-format will always insert a line wrap, e.g.
before the first parameter of a function call unless all parameters fit
on the same line. This obviates the need to make a decision on the
alignment itself.
Use this style for Google's JavaScript style and add some minor tweaks
to correctly handle nested blocks etc. with it. Don't use this option
for for/while loops.
Reviewers: klimek
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14104
llvm-svn: 251405
only one of a group of possibilities.
This changes the syntax in the builtin files to represent:
, as the and operator
| as the or operator
The former syntax matches how the backend tablegen files represent
multiple subtarget features being required.
Updated the builtin and intrinsic headers accordingly for the new
syntax.
llvm-svn: 251388
allow them to be written in certain kinds of user declaration and
diagnose on the use-site instead.
Also, improve and fix some diagnostics relating to __weak and
properties.
rdar://23228631
llvm-svn: 251384
This relands r250831 after some fixes to shrink the ParentMap overall
with one addtional tweak: nodes with pointer identity (e.g. Decl* and
friends) can be store more efficiently so I put them in a separate map.
All other nodes (so far only TypeLoc and NNSLoc) go in a different map
keyed on DynTypedNode. This further uglifies the code but significantly
reduces memory overhead.
Overall this change still make ParentMap significantly larger but it's
nowhere as bad as before. I see about 25 MB over baseline (pre-r251008)
on X86ISelLowering.cpp. If this becomes an issue we could consider
splitting the maps further as DynTypedNode is still larger (32 bytes)
than a single TypeLoc (16 bytes) but I didn't want to introduce even
more complexity now.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14011
llvm-svn: 251101
Previously, __weak was silently accepted and ignored in MRC mode.
That makes this a potentially source-breaking change that we have to
roll out cautiously. Accordingly, for the time being, actual support
for __weak references in MRC is experimental, and the compiler will
reject attempts to actually form such references. The intent is to
eventually enable the feature by default in all non-GC modes.
(It is, of course, incompatible with ObjC GC's interpretation of
__weak.)
If you like, you can enable this feature with
-Xclang -fobjc-weak
but like any -Xclang option, this option may be removed at any point,
e.g. if/when it is eventually enabled by default.
This patch also enables the use of the ARC __unsafe_unretained qualifier
in MRC. Unlike __weak, this is being enabled immediately. Since
variables are essentially __unsafe_unretained by default in MRC,
the only practical uses are (1) communication and (2) changing the
default behavior of by-value block capture.
As an implementation matter, this means that the ObjC ownership
qualifiers may appear in any ObjC language mode, and so this patch
removes a number of checks for getLangOpts().ObjCAutoRefCount
that were guarding the processing of these qualifiers. I don't
expect this to be a significant drain on performance; it may even
be faster to just check for these qualifiers directly on a type
(since it's probably in a register anyway) than to do N dependent
loads to grab the LangOptions.
rdar://9674298
llvm-svn: 251041
One problem in clang-tidy and other clang tools face is that there is no
way to lookup an arbitrary name in the AST, that's buried deep inside Sema
and might not even be what the user wants as the new name may be freshly
inserted and not available in the AST.
A common use case for lookups is replacing one nested name with another
while minimizing namespace qualifications, so replacing 'ns::foo' with
'ns::bar' will use just 'bar' if we happen to be inside the namespace 'ns'.
This adds a little helper utility for exactly that use case.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13931
llvm-svn: 251022
This patch adds hashes to the plist and html output to be able to identfy bugs
for suppressing false positives or diff results against a baseline. This hash
aims to be resilient for code evolution and is usable to identify bugs in two
different snapshots of the same software. One missing piece however is a
permanent unique identifier of the checker that produces the warning. Once that
issue is resolved, the hashes generated are going to change. Until that point
this feature is marked experimental, but it is suitable for early adoption.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10305
Original patch by: Bence Babati!
llvm-svn: 251011
These are by far the most common types to be parents in the AST so it makes
sense to optimize for them. Put them directly into the value of the map.
This currently saves 32 bytes per parent in the map and a pointer
indirection at the cost of some additional complexity in the code.
Sadly this means we cannot return an ArrayRef from getParents anymore, add
a proxy class that can own a single DynTypedNode and otherwise behaves
exactly the same as ArrayRef.
For example on a random large file (X86ISelLowering.cpp) this reduces the
size of the parent map by 24 MB.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13976
llvm-svn: 251008
In this patch, the file static method addProfileRT is
moved to be a virtual member function of base ToolChain class.
This allows derived toolchain to override the default behavior
easily and make it consistent with Darwin toolchain (a TODO was
added for this refactoring - now removed). A new helper method
is also introduced to test if instrumentation profile option
is turned on or not.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13326
llvm-svn: 250994
This is almost entirely a matter of just flipping a switch. 99% of
the runtime support is available all the way back to when it was
implemented in the non-fragile runtime, i.e. in Lion. However,
fragile runtimes do not recognize ARC-style ivar layout strings,
which means that accessing __strong or __weak ivars reflectively
(e.g. via object_setIvar) will end up accessing the ivar as if it
were __unsafe_unretained. Therefore, when using reflective
technologies like KVC, be sure that your paths always refer to a
property.
rdar://23209307
llvm-svn: 250955
Since r249754 MemorySanitizer should work equally well for PIE and
non-PIE executables on Linux/x86_64.
Beware, with this change -fsanitize=memory no longer adds implicit
-fPIE -pie compiler/linker flags on Linux/x86_64.
This is a re-land of r250941, limited to Linux/x86_64 + a very minor
refactoring in SanitizerArgs.
llvm-svn: 250949
The MemoizationData cache was introduced to avoid a series of enum
compares at the cost of making DynTypedNode bigger. This change reverts
to using an enum compare but instead of building a chain of comparison
the enum values are reordered so the check can be performed with a
simple greater than. The alternative would be to steal a bit from the
enum but I think that's a more complex solution and not really needed
here.
I tried this on several large .cpp files with clang-tidy and didn't
notice any performance difference. The test change is due to matchers
being sorted by their node kind.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13946
llvm-svn: 250905
Putting DynTypedNode in the ParentMap bloats its memory foot print.
Before the void* key had 8 bytes, now we're at 40 bytes per key which
can mean multiple gigabytes increase for large ASTs and this count
doesn't even include all the added TypeLoc nodes. Revert until I come
up with a better data structure.
This reverts commit r250831.
llvm-svn: 250889
headers. If those headers end up being textually included twice into the same
module, we get ambiguity errors.
Work around this by downgrading the ambiguity error to a warning if multiple
identical internal-linkage functions appear in an overload set, and just pick
one of those functions as the lookup result.
llvm-svn: 250884
Microsoft's ATL headers make use of this MSVC extension, add support for
it and issue a diagnostic under -Wmicrosoft-exception-spec.
This fixes PR25265.
llvm-svn: 250854
Firstly this changes the type of parent map to be keyed on DynTypedNode to
simplify the following changes. This comes with a DenseMapInfo for
DynTypedNode, which is a bit incomplete still and will probably only work
for parentmap right now.
Then the RecursiveASTVisitor in ASTContext is updated and finally
ASTMatchers hasParent and hasAncestor learn about the new functionality.
Now ParentMap is only missing TemplateArgumentLocs and CXXCtorInitializers.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13897
llvm-svn: 250831
Summary: It breaks the build for the ASTMatchers
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13893
llvm-svn: 250827
According to the Intel documentation, the mask operand of a maskload and
maskstore intrinsics is always a vector of packed integer/long integer values.
This patch introduces the following two changes:
1. It fixes the avx maskload/store intrinsic definitions in avxintrin.h.
2. It changes BuiltinsX86.def to match the correct gcc definitions for avx
maskload/store (see D13861 for more details).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13861
llvm-svn: 250816
This reverts commit r250592.
It has issues around unevaluated contexts, like this:
template <class T> struct A { T i; };
template <class T>
struct B : A<T> {
using A<T>::i;
typedef decltype(i) U;
};
template struct B<int>;
llvm-svn: 250774
During the initial template parse for this code, 'member' is unresolved
and we don't know anything about it:
struct A { int member };
template <typename T>
struct B : public T {
using T::member;
static void f() {
(void)member; // Could be static or non-static.
}
};
template class B<A>;
The pattern declaration contains an UnresolvedLookupExpr rather than an
UnresolvedMemberExpr because `f` is static, and `member` should never be
a field. However, if the code is invalid, it may become a field, in
which case we should diagnose it.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6700
llvm-svn: 250592
via -fmodule-file= to be turned off; in that case, just include the relevant
files textually. This allows module files to be unconditionally passed to all
compile actions via CXXFLAGS, and to be ignored for rules that specify custom
incompatible flags.
llvm-svn: 250577
match the feature set of the function that they're being called from.
This ensures that we can effectively diagnose some[1] code that would
instead ICE in the backend with a failure to select message.
Example:
__m128d foo(__m128d a, __m128d b) {
return __builtin_ia32_addsubps(b, a);
}
compiled for normal x86_64 via:
clang -target x86_64-linux-gnu -c
would fail to compile in the back end because the normal subtarget
features for x86_64 only include sse2 and the builtin requires sse3.
[1] We're still not erroring on:
__m128i bar(__m128i const *p) { return _mm_lddqu_si128(p); }
where we should fail and error on an always_inline function being
inlined into a function that doesn't support the subtarget features
required.
llvm-svn: 250473
Update the fma builtins to be fma/fma4 until some we can find some
documentation either way.
Update a couple of the avx intrinsics because they were in the wrong
category.
llvm-svn: 250470
This recommits r250398 with fixes to the tests for bot failures.
Add "-target x86_64-unknown-linux" to the clang invocations that
check for the gold plugin.
llvm-svn: 250455
Rolling this back for now since there are a couple of bot failures on
the new tests I added, and I won't have a chance to look at them in detail
until later this afternoon. I think the new tests need some restrictions on
having the gold plugin available.
This reverts commit r250398.
llvm-svn: 250402
Summary:
Add clang support for -flto=thin option, which is used to set the
EmitFunctionSummary code gen option on compiles.
Add -flto=full as an alias to the existing -flto.
Add tests to check for proper overriding of -flto variants on the
command line, and convert grep tests to FileCheck.
Reviewers: dexonsmith, joker.eph
Subscribers: davidxl, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11908
llvm-svn: 250398
There was a minor problem with a test. Sorry for the noise yesterday.
This patch adds missing pieces to clang, including the PS4 toolchain
definition, added warnings, PS4 defaults, and Driver changes needed for
our compiler.
A patch by Filipe Cabecinhas, Pierre Gousseau and Katya Romanova!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13482
llvm-svn: 250293
Resubmitting the patch.
This patch adds missing pieces to clang, including the PS4 toolchain
definition, added warnings, PS4 defaults, and Driver changes needed for
our compiler.
A patch by Filipe Cabecinhas, Pierre Gousseau and Katya Romanova!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13482
llvm-svn: 250262
definition, added warnings, PS4 defaults, and Driver changes needed for
our compiler.
A patch by Filipe Cabecinhas, Pierre Gousseau and Katya Romanova!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13482
llvm-svn: 250252
Prevent invalidation of `this' when a method is const; fixing PR 21606.
A patch by Sean Eveson!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13099
llvm-svn: 250237
context (but otherwise at the top level) to be disabled, to support use of C++
standard library implementations that (legitimately) mark their <blah.h>
headers as being C++ headers from C libraries that wrap things in 'extern "C"'
a bit too enthusiastically.
llvm-svn: 250137
Add support for the `-fdebug-prefix-map=` option as in GCC. The syntax is
`-fdebug-prefix-map=OLD=NEW`. When compiling files from a path beginning with
OLD, change the debug info to indicate the path as start with NEW. This is
particularly helpful if you are preprocessing in one path and compiling in
another (e.g. for a build cluster with distcc).
Note that the linearity of the implementation is not as terrible as it may seem.
This is normally done once per file with an expectation that the map will be
small (1-2) entries, making this roughly linear in the number of input paths.
Addresses PR24619.
llvm-svn: 250094
This fixes a bug where one can take the address of a conditionally
enabled function to drop its enable_if guards. For example:
int foo(int a) __attribute__((enable_if(a > 0, "")));
int (*p)(int) = &foo;
int result = p(-1); // compilation succeeds; calls foo(-1)
Overloading logic has been updated to reflect this change, as well.
Functions with enable_if attributes that are always true are still
allowed to have their address taken.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13607
llvm-svn: 250090
This is a more principled version of what I did earlier. Path
normalization is generally a good thing, but may break users in strange
environments, e. g. using lots of symlinks. Let the user choose and
default it to on.
This also changes adding a duplicated file into returning an error if
the file contents are different instead of an assertion failure.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13658
llvm-svn: 250060
Automatically insert line feed after pretty printing of all pragma-like attributes + fix printing of pragma-like pragmas on declarations.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13546
llvm-svn: 250017
C allows for some implicit conversions that C++ does not, e.g. void* ->
char*. This patch teaches clang that these conversions are okay when
dealing with overloads in C.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13604
llvm-svn: 249995
The goal of wanting this to avoid munging the feature list is so
that it can be used for various targets as a way of both adding
and verifying the features that are going to be output into the
IR.
llvm-svn: 249894
Since the original commit in r145858, we've had `CFG::graph_iterator`
and `CFG::const_graph_iterator`, and both have derefenced to a
`const`-ified `value_type`. The former has an implicit conversion to
non-`const`, which is how this worked at all until r249782 started using
the dereference operator (partially reverted in r249783).
This fixes the non-const iterator to be non-const (sometimes
const-iterators are intentional, but with a separate const-ified class
(and a non-const implicit conversion leak) that's not likely to be the
case here).
llvm-svn: 249849
This means file remappings can now be managed by ClangTool (or a
ToolInvocation user) instead of by ToolInvocation itself. The
ToolInvocation remapping is still in place so users can migrate.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13474
llvm-svn: 249815
These are enabled by default in clang-cl, because the whole idea is that
it should work like cl.exe, but I suppose it can make sense to disable
them if someone wants to compile code in a more strict mode.
llvm-svn: 249775
consider the following:
enum E *p;
enum E { e };
The above snippet is not ANSI C because 'enum E' has not bee defined
when we are processing the declaration of 'p'; however, it is a popular
extension to make the above work. This would fail using the Microsoft
enum semantics because the definition of 'E' would implicitly have a
fixed underlying type of 'int' which would trigger diagnostic messages
about a mismatch between the declaration and the definition.
Instead, treat fixed underlying types as not fixed for the purposes of
the diagnostic.
llvm-svn: 249674
With this change, most 'g' options are rejected by CompilerInvocation.
They remain only as Driver options. The new way to request debug info
from cc1 is with "-debug-info-kind={line-tables-only|limited|standalone}"
and "-dwarf-version={2|3|4}". In the absence of a command-line option
to specify Dwarf version, the Toolchain decides it, rather than placing
Toolchain-specific logic in CompilerInvocation.
Also fix a bug in the Windows compatibility argument parsing
in which the "rightmost argument wins" principle failed.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13221
llvm-svn: 249655
AllCallbacks is currently only used to call onStartOfTranslationUnit and
onEndOfTranslationUnit on them. In this (and any other scenario I can
come up with), it is important (or at least better) not to have
duplicates in this container. E.g. currently onEndOfTranslationUnit is
called repeatedly on the same callback for every matcher that is
registered with it.
llvm-svn: 249598
ASTUnit was creating multiple FileManagers and throwing them away. Reuse
the one from Tooling. No functionality change now but necessary for
VFSifying tooling.
llvm-svn: 249410
This was made much easier by introducing an IncludeCategory struct to
replace the previously used std::pair.
Also, cleaned up documentation and added examples.
llvm-svn: 249392
Adds `addTargetAndModeForProgramName`, a utility function that will add
appropriate `-target foo` and `--driver-mode=g++` tokens to a command
line for driver invocations of the form `a/b/foo-g++`. It is intended to
support tooling: for example, should a compilation database record some
invocation of `foo-g++` without these implicit flags, a Clang tool may
use this function to add them back.
Patch by Luke Zarko.
llvm-svn: 249391
Apart from being cleaner this also means that clang-format no longer has
access to the host file system. This isn't necessary because clang-format
never reads includes :)
Includes minor tweaks and bugfixes found in the VFS implementation while
running clang-format tests.
llvm-svn: 249385
that change turns out to not be reasonable: mutating the AST of a parsed
template during instantiation is not a sound thing to do, does not work across
chained PCH / modules builds, and is in any case a special-case workaround to a
more general problem that should be solved centrally.
llvm-svn: 249342
include/clang/CodeGenABITypes.h is in meant to be included by external
users, but using a unique_ptr on the private CodeGenModule introduces a
dependency on the type definition that prevents such a use.
NFC
llvm-svn: 249328
For RealFileSystem this is getcwd()/chdir(), the synthetic file systems can
make up one for themselves. OverlayFileSystem now synchronizes the working
directories when a new FS is added to the overlay or the overlay working
directory is set. This allows purely artificial file systems that have zero
ties to the underlying disks.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13430
llvm-svn: 249316
This is a simple file system tree of memory buffers that can be filled by a
client. In conjunction with an OverlayFS it can be used to make virtual
files accessible right next to physical files. This can be used as a
replacement for the virtual file handling in FileManager and which I intend
to remove eventually.
llvm-svn: 249315
In versions of clang prior to r238238, __declspec was recognized as a keyword in
all modes. It was then changed to only be enabled when Microsoft or Borland
extensions were enabled (and for CUDA, as a temporary measure). There is a
desire to support __declspec in Playstation code, and possibly other
environments. This commit adds a command-line switch to allow explicit
enabling/disabling of the recognition of __declspec as a keyword. Recognition
is enabled by default in Microsoft, Borland, CUDA, and PS4 environments, and
disabled in all other environments.
Patch by Warren Ristow!
llvm-svn: 249279
Diagnose when a pointer to const T is used as the first argument in at atomic
builtin unless that builtin is a load operation. This is already checked for
C11 atomics builtins but not for __atomic ones.
This patch was given the LGTM by rsmith when it was part
of a larger review. (See http://reviews.llvm.org/D10407)
llvm-svn: 249252
All global variables that are not enclosed in a declare target region
must be captured in the target region as local variables do. Currently,
there is no support for declare target, so this patch adds support for
capturing all the global variables used in a the target region.
llvm-svn: 249154
Reapply r248935.
Usually, when using LTO with a clang installation newer than the
system's one, there's a libLTO.dylib version mismatch and LTO fails. One
solution to this is to make ld point to the right libLTO.dylib by
changing DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH.
However, ld64 supports specifying the complete path to the desired
libLTO.dylib through the -lto_library option. This commit adds support
for the clang driver to use this option whenever it's capable of finding
a libLTO.dylib in clang's installed library directory. This way, we
don't need to rely on DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH nor get caught by version
mismatches.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13117
rdar://problem/7363476
llvm-svn: 249143
Objective-C ARC lifetime qualifiers are dropped when canonicalizing
function types. Perform the same adjustment before comparing the
deduced result types of lambdas. Fixes rdar://problem/22344904.
llvm-svn: 249065
This commit supports Sean Eveson's work on loop widening. It is NFC for now.
It adds a new TK_EntireMemSpace invalidation trait that, when applied to a
MemSpaceRegion, indicates that the entire memory space should be invalidated.
Clients can add this trait before invalidating. For example:
RegionAndSymbolInvalidationTraits ITraits;
ITraits.setTrait(MRMgr.getStackLocalsRegion(STC),
RegionAndSymbolInvalidationTraits::TK_EntireMemSpace);
This commit updates the existing logic invalidating global memspace regions for
calls to additionally handle arbitrary memspaces. When generating initial
clusters during cluster analysis we now add a cluster to the worklist if
the memspace for its base is marked with TK_EntireMemSpace.
This also moves the logic for invalidating globals from ClusterAnalysis to
invalidateRegionsWorker so that it is not shared with removeDeadBindingsWorker.
There are no explicit tests with this patch -- but when applied to Sean's patch
for loop widening in http://reviews.llvm.org/D12358 and after updating his code
to set the trait, the failing tests in that patch now pass.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12993
llvm-svn: 249063
Summary:
This patch moves getCompilerRT() from the clang::driver::tools namespace to
the ToolChain class. This is needed for multilib toolchains that need to
place their libraries in Clang's resource directory with a layout that is
different from the default one.
Reviewers: atanasyan, rsmith
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13339
llvm-svn: 249030
This allows clang-format to align identifiers in consecutive
declarations. This is useful for increasing the readability of the code
in the same way the alignment of assignations is.
The code is a slightly modified version of the consecutive assignment
alignment code. Currently only the identifiers are aligned, and there is
no support of alignment of the pointer star or reference symbol.
The patch also solve the issue of alignments not being possible due to
the ColumnLimit for both the existing AlignConsecutiveAligments and the
new AlignConsecutiveDeclarations.
Patch by Beren Minor, thank you.
Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12362
llvm-svn: 248999
When an Objective-C method implements a protocol requirement, do not
inherit any availability information from the protocol
requirement. Rather, check that the implementation is not less
available than the protocol requirement, as we do when overriding a
method that has availability. Fixes rdar://problem/22734745.
llvm-svn: 248949
Usually, when using LTO with a clang installation newer than the
system's one, there's a libLTO.dylib version mismatch and LTO fails. One
solution to this is to make ld point to the right libLTO.dylib by
changing DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH.
However, ld64 supports specifying the complete path to the desired
libLTO.dylib through the -lto_library option. This commit adds support
for the clang driver to use this option whenever it's capable of finding
a libLTO.dylib in clang's installed library directory. This way, we
don't need to rely on DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH nor get caught by version
mismatches.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13117
rdar://problem/7363476
llvm-svn: 248932
- Remove virtual SC_OpenCLWorkGroupLocal storage type specifier
as it conflicts with static local variables now and prevents
diagnosing static local address space variables correctly.
- Allow static local and global variables (OpenCL2.0 s6.8 and s6.5.1).
- Improve diagnostics of allowed ASes for variables in different scopes:
(i) Global or static local variables have to be in global
or constant ASes (OpenCL1.2 s6.5, OpenCL2.0 s6.5.1);
(ii) Non-kernel function variables can't be declared in local
or constant ASes (OpenCL1.1 s6.5.2 and s6.5.3).
http://reviews.llvm.org/D13105
llvm-svn: 248906
FunctionParmPackExpr actually stores an array of ParmVarDecl* (and
accessors return that). But, the FunctionParmPackExpr::Create()
constructor accepted an array of Decl *s instead.
It was easy for this mismatch to occur without any obvious sign of
something wrong, since both the store and the access used independent
'reinterpet_cast<XX>(this+1)' calls.
llvm-svn: 248905
Applied restrictions from OpenCL v2.0 s6.13.11.8
that mainly disallow operations on atomic types (except for taking their address - &).
The patch is taken from SPIR2.0 provisional branch, contributed by Guy Benyei!
llvm-svn: 248896
specification) to an error. No compiler other than Clang seems to allow this,
and it doesn't seem like a useful thing to accept as an extension in general.
The current behavior was added for PR5957, where the problem was specifically
related to mismatches of the exception specification on the implicitly-declared
global operator new and delete. To retain that workaround, we downgrade the
error to an ExtWarn when the declaration is of a replaceable global allocation
function.
Now that this is an error, stop trying (and failing) to recover from a missing
computed noexcept specification. That recovery didn't work, and led to crashes
in code like the added testcase.
llvm-svn: 248867
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D13190
Implemented the following interfaces to conform to ELF V2 ABI version 1.1.
vector signed __int128 vec_adde (vector signed __int128, vector signed __int128, vector signed __int128);
vector unsigned __int128 vec_adde (vector unsigned __int128, vector unsigned __int128, vector unsigned __int128);
vector signed __int128 vec_addec (vector signed __int128, vector signed __int128, vector signed __int128);
vector unsigned __int128 vec_addec (vector unsigned __int128, vector unsigned __int128, vector unsigned __int128);
vector signed int vec_addc(vector signed int __a, vector signed int __b);
vector bool char vec_cmpge (vector signed char __a, vector signed char __b);
vector bool char vec_cmpge (vector unsigned char __a, vector unsigned char __b);
vector bool short vec_cmpge (vector signed short __a, vector signed short __b);
vector bool short vec_cmpge (vector unsigned short __a, vector unsigned short __b);
vector bool int vec_cmpge (vector signed int __a, vector signed int __b);
vector bool int vec_cmpge (vector unsigned int __a, vector unsigned int __b);
vector bool char vec_cmple (vector signed char __a, vector signed char __b);
vector bool char vec_cmple (vector unsigned char __a, vector unsigned char __b);
vector bool short vec_cmple (vector signed short __a, vector signed short __b);
vector bool short vec_cmple (vector unsigned short __a, vector unsigned short __b);
vector bool int vec_cmple (vector signed int __a, vector signed int __b);
vector bool int vec_cmple (vector unsigned int __a, vector unsigned int __b);
vector double vec_double (vector signed long long __a);
vector double vec_double (vector unsigned long long __a);
vector bool char vec_eqv(vector bool char __a, vector bool char __b);
vector bool short vec_eqv(vector bool short __a, vector bool short __b);
vector bool int vec_eqv(vector bool int __a, vector bool int __b);
vector bool long long vec_eqv(vector bool long long __a, vector bool long long __b);
vector signed short vec_madd(vector signed short __a, vector signed short __b, vector signed short __c);
vector signed short vec_madd(vector signed short __a, vector unsigned short __b, vector unsigned short __c);
vector signed short vec_madd(vector unsigned short __a, vector signed short __b, vector signed short __c);
vector unsigned short vec_madd(vector unsigned short __a, vector unsigned short __b, vector unsigned short __c);
vector bool long long vec_mergeh(vector bool long long __a, vector bool long long __b);
vector bool long long vec_mergel(vector bool long long __a, vector bool long long __b);
vector bool char vec_nand(vector bool char __a, vector bool char __b);
vector bool short vec_nand(vector bool short __a, vector bool short __b);
vector bool int vec_nand(vector bool int __a, vector bool int __b);
vector bool long long vec_nand(vector bool long long __a, vector bool long long __b);
vector bool char vec_orc(vector bool char __a, vector bool char __b);
vector bool short vec_orc(vector bool short __a, vector bool short __b);
vector bool int vec_orc(vector bool int __a, vector bool int __b);
vector bool long long vec_orc(vector bool long long __a, vector bool long long __b);
vector signed long long vec_sub(vector signed long long __a, vector signed long long __b);
vector signed long long vec_sub(vector bool long long __a, vector signed long long __b);
vector signed long long vec_sub(vector signed long long __a, vector bool long long __b);
vector unsigned long long vec_sub(vector unsigned long long __a, vector unsigned long long __b);
vector unsigned long long vec_sub(vector bool long long __a, vector unsigned long long __b);
vector unsigned long long vec_sub(vector unsigned long long __V2 ABI V1.1
http://ror float vec_sub(vector float __a, vector float __b);
unsigned char vec_extract(vector bool char __a, int __b);
signed short vec_extract(vector signed short __a, int __b);
unsigned short vec_extract(vector bool short __a, int __b);
signed int vec_extract(vector signed int __a, int __b);
unsigned int vec_extract(vector bool int __a, int __b);
signed long long vec_extract(vector signed long long __a, int __b);
unsigned long long vec_extract(vector unsigned long long __a, int __b);
unsigned long long vec_extract(vector bool long long __a, int __b);
double vec_extract(vector double __a, int __b);
vector bool char vec_insert(unsigned char __a, vector bool char __b, int __c);
vector signed short vec_insert(signed short __a, vector signed short __b, int __c);
vector bool short vec_insert(unsigned short __a, vector bool short __b, int __c);
vector signed int vec_insert(signed int __a, vector signed int __b, int __c);
vector bool int vec_insert(unsigned int __a, vector bool int __b, int __c);
vector signed long long vec_insert(signed long long __a, vector signed long long __b, int __c);
vector unsigned long long vec_insert(unsigned long long __a, vector unsigned long long __b, int __c);
vector bool long long vec_insert(unsigned long long __a, vector bool long long __b, int __c);
vector double vec_insert(double __a, vector double __b, int __c);
vector signed long long vec_splats(signed long long __a);
vector unsigned long long vec_splats(unsigned long long __a);
vector signed __int128 vec_splats(signed __int128 __a);
vector unsigned __int128 vec_splats(unsigned __int128 __a);
vector double vec_splats(double __a);
int vec_all_eq(vector double __a, vector double __b);
int vec_all_ge(vector double __a, vector double __b);
int vec_all_gt(vector double __a, vector double __b);
int vec_all_le(vector double __a, vector double __b);
int vec_all_lt(vector double __a, vector double __b);
int vec_all_nan(vector double __a);
int vec_all_ne(vector double __a, vector double __b);
int vec_all_nge(vector double __a, vector double __b);
int vec_all_ngt(vector double __a, vector double __b);
int vec_any_eq(vector double __a, vector double __b);
int vec_any_ge(vector double __a, vector double __b);
int vec_any_gt(vector double __a, vector double __b);
int vec_any_le(vector double __a, vector double __b);
int vec_any_lt(vector double __a, vector double __b);
int vec_any_ne(vector double __a, vector double __b);
vector unsigned char vec_sbox_be (vector unsigned char);
vector unsigned char vec_cipher_be (vector unsigned char, vector unsigned char);
vector unsigned char vec_cipherlast_be (vector unsigned char, vector unsigned char);
vector unsigned char vec_ncipher_be (vector unsigned char, vector unsigned char);
vector unsigned char vec_ncipherlast_be (vector unsigned char, vector unsigned char);
vector unsigned int vec_shasigma_be (vector unsigned int, const int, const int);
vector unsigned long long vec_shasigma_be (vector unsigned long long, const int, const int);
vector unsigned short vec_pmsum_be (vector unsigned char, vector unsigned char);
vector unsigned int vec_pmsum_be (vector unsigned short, vector unsigned short);
vector unsigned long long vec_pmsum_be (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
vector unsigned __int128 vec_pmsum_be (vector unsigned long long, vector unsigned long long);
vector unsigned char vec_gb (vector unsigned char);
vector unsigned long long vec_bperm (vector unsigned __int128 __a, vector unsigned char __b);
Removed the folowing interfaces either because their signatures have changed
in version 1.1 of the ABI or because they were implemented for ELF V2 ABI but
have actually been deprecated in version 1.1.
vector signed char vec_eqv(vector bool char __a, vector signed char __b);
vector signed char vec_eqv(vector signed char __a, vector bool char __b);
vector unsigned char vec_eqv(vector bool char __a, vector unsigned char __b);
vector unsigned char vec_eqv(vector unsigned char __a, vector bool char __b);
vector signed short vec_eqv(vector bool short __a, vector signed short __b);
vector signed short vec_eqv(vector signed short __a, vector bool short __b);
vector unsigned short vec_eqv(vector bool short __a, vector unsigned short __b);
vector unsigned short vec_eqv(vector unsigned short __a, vector bool short __b);
vector signed int vec_eqv(vector bool int __a, vector signed int __b);
vector signed int vec_eqv(vector signed int __a, vector bool int __b);
vector unsigned int vec_eqv(vector bool int __a, vector unsigned int __b);
vector unsigned int vec_eqv(vector unsigned int __a, vector bool int __b);
vector signed long long vec_eqv(vector bool long long __a, vector signed long long __b);
vector signed long long vec_eqv(vector signed long long __a, vector bool long long __b);
vector unsigned long long vec_eqv(vector bool long long __a, vector unsigned long long __b);
vector unsigned long long vec_eqv(vector unsigned long long __a, vector bool long long __b);
vector float vec_eqv(vector bool int __a, vector float __b);
vector float vec_eqv(vector float __a, vector bool int __b);
vector double vec_eqv(vector bool long long __a, vector double __b);
vector double vec_eqv(vector double __a, vector bool long long __b);
vector unsigned short vec_nand(vector bool short __a, vector unsigned short __b);
llvm-svn: 248813
control the individual braces. The existing choices for brace wrapping
are now merely presets for the different flags that get expanded upon
calling the reformat function.
All presets have been chose to keep the existing formatting, so there
shouldn't be any difference in formatting behavior.
Also change the dump_format_style.py to properly document the nested
structs that are used to keep these flags discoverable among all the
configuration flags.
llvm-svn: 248802
Recognize the main module header as well as different #include categories.
This should now mimic the behavior of llvm/utils/sort_includes.py as
well as clang-tools-extra/clang-tidy/llvm/IncludeOrderCheck.cpp very
closely.
llvm-svn: 248782
Currently it's 64-bit which will lead to mismatch between host and
device code if we compile for i386.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13181
llvm-svn: 248753
Parsing and sema analysis for 'simd' clause in 'ordered' directive.
Description
If the simd clause is specified, the ordered regions encountered by any thread will use only a single SIMD lane to execute the ordered
regions in the order of the loop iterations.
Restrictions
An ordered construct with the simd clause is the only OpenMP construct that can appear in the simd region
llvm-svn: 248696
logic to select an alternate target based on the executable it was
called as. For instance, if you symlink i686-linux-android-gcc to clang
and invoke it, the driver will act as though it were called with another
argument ("-target i686-linux-android"). This leads to visible effects
even in syntax-only compilations (like the ANDROID preprocessor symbol
being defined).
This behavior is not replicated for tool invocations--for instance,
clang::createInvocationFromCommandLine will not choose an alternate
target based on ArgList[0]. This means that configurations stored in
compilation databases aren't accurately replayed.
This patch separates the logic for selecting a mode flag and target from
the executable name into a new member function on ToolChain. It should
have no functional effects (but will allow other code to reuse the
target/mode selection logic).
Patch by Luke Zarko!
llvm-svn: 248592
OpenMP 4.1 extends format of '#pragma omp ordered'. It adds 3 additional clauses: 'threads', 'simd' and 'depend'.
If no clause is specified, the ordered construct behaves as if the threads clause had been specified. If the threads clause is specified, the threads in the team executing the loop region execute ordered regions sequentially in the order of the loop iterations.
The loop region to which an ordered region without any clause or with a threads clause binds must have an ordered clause without the parameter specified on the corresponding loop directive.
llvm-svn: 248569
definition, added warnings, PS4 defaults, and Driver changes needed for
our compiler.
A patch by Filipe Cabecinhas, Pierre Gousseau and Katya Romanova!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11279
llvm-svn: 248546
Change the analyzer's modeling of memcpy to be more precise when copying into fixed-size
array fields. With this change, instead of invalidating the entire containing region the
analyzer now invalidates only offsets for the array itself when it can show that the
memcpy stays within the bounds of the array.
This addresses false positive memory leak warnings of the kind reported by
krzysztof in https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22954
(This is the second attempt, now with assertion failures resolved.)
A patch by Pierre Gousseau!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12571
llvm-svn: 248516
Trace the ranges through the macro backtrace better. This allows better
range highlighting through all levels of the macro bracktrace. Also some
improvements to backtrace printer for omitting different backtraces.
Patch by Zhengkai Wu.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12379
llvm-svn: 248454
silently ignore them on arguments when they're provided indirectly
(.e.g behind a template argument or typedef).
This is mostly just good language design --- specifying that a
generic argument is __weak doesn't actually do anything --- but
it also prevents assertions when trying to apply a different
ownership qualifier.
rdar://21612439
llvm-svn: 248436
someone thought all the bits would be value bits in this case.
Also fix the wording of the warning -- it claimed that the width of 'bool' is
8, which is not correct; the width is 1 bit, whereas the size is 8 bits in our
implementation.
llvm-svn: 248435
Added new option --cuda-path=<path> which allows
overriding default search paths.
If it's not specified we look for CUDA installation in
/usr/include/cuda and /usr/include/cuda-7.0.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12989
llvm-svn: 248433
This doesn't quite get alias template equivalence right yet, but handles the
egregious cases where we would silently give the wrong answers.
llvm-svn: 248431
and fix the only code that was depending on this so that it sets all the
relevant flags appropriately.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 248430
Added new option --cuda-path=<path> which allows
overriding default search paths.
If it's not specified we look for CUDA installation in
/usr/include/cuda and /usr/include/cuda-7.0.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12989
llvm-svn: 248408
This translates to -load name.so in the cc1 command. We can't name the driver
option -load, as that means "link against oad", so instead we follow GCC's lead
and name the option -fplugin.
llvm-svn: 248378
To implement this nicely, add a function that merges two sets of
replacements that are meant to be done in sequence. This functionality
will also be useful for other applications, e.g. formatting the result
of clang-tidy fixes.
llvm-svn: 248367
when building a module. Clang already records the module signature when
building a skeleton CU to reference a clang module.
Matching the id in the skeleton with the one in the module allows a DWARF
consumer to verify that they found the correct version of the module
without them needing to know about the clang module format.
llvm-svn: 248345
This fixes PR16833, in which the analyzer was using large amounts of memory
for switch statements with large case ranges.
rdar://problem/14685772
A patch by Aleksei Sidorin!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5102
llvm-svn: 248318
* adds -aux-triple option to specify target triple
* propagates aux target info to AST context and Preprocessor
* pulls in target specific preprocessor macros.
* pulls in target-specific builtins from aux target.
* sets appropriate host or device attribute on builtins.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12917
llvm-svn: 248299
The changes are part of attribute-based CUDA function overloading (D12453)
and as such are only enabled when it's in effect (-fcuda-target-overloads).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12122
llvm-svn: 248296
The patch makes it possible to parse CUDA files that contain host/device
functions with identical signatures, but different attributes without
having to physically split source into host-only and device-only parts.
This change is needed in order to parse CUDA header files that have
a lot of name clashes with standard include files.
Gory details are in design doc here: https://goo.gl/EXnymm
Feel free to leave comments there or in this review thread.
This feature is controlled with CC1 option -fcuda-target-overloads
and is disabled by default.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12453
llvm-svn: 248295
This is useful for debugging of issues and reduction of test cases.
For example, an issue may show up due to the order that some commands were processed.
It is convenient to be able to remove commands from the file and still preserve the order
that they are returned, instead of getting a completely different order when removing a few commands.
llvm-svn: 248292
Several inputs may not refer to one output constraint in inline assembler
insertions, clang was failing on assertion on such test case.
llvm-svn: 248158
128-bit vector integer sign extensions correctly lower to the pmovsx instructions even for debug builds.
This patch removes the builtins and reimplements the _mm_cvtepi*_epi* intrinsics __using builtin_shufflevector (to extract the bottom most subvector) and __builtin_convertvector (to actually perform the sign extension).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12835
llvm-svn: 248092
If an import directive was put into wrong context, the error message was obscure,
complaining on misbalanced braces. To get more descriptive messages, annotation
tokens related to modules are processed where they must not be seen.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11844
llvm-svn: 248085
Binary literals predate C++14, but they are listed as a C++14 extension since
this was the first time they were standardized in the language. Move the
warning into a subgroup so it can be selectively disabled when checking for
other C++14 features.
llvm-svn: 248064
LLVM r217812 made it so that clang-cl implicitly creates bigobj files when
needed, independent of this flag. It looks like cl has this flag to produce obj
flags compatible with MSVS 2003's linker by default, something we don't care
about. Since clang-cl always has /bigobj behavior, don't warn that the flag is
unused, just ignore it silently.
llvm-svn: 248034
Summary:
This change adds support for `__builtin_ms_va_list`, a GCC extension for
variadic `ms_abi` functions. The existing `__builtin_va_list` support is
inadequate for this because `va_list` is defined differently in the Win64
ABI vs. the System V/AMD64 ABI.
Depends on D1622.
Reviewers: rsmith, rnk, rjmccall
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D1623
llvm-svn: 247941
convert i64 to FP and vice versa
reduceps & reducepd
rangeps & rangepd
all in their 512bit versions
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11716
llvm-svn: 247881
The analyzer trims unnecessary nodes from the exploded graph before reporting
path diagnostics. However, in some cases it can trim all nodes (including the
error node), leading to an assertion failure (see
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24184).
This commit addresses the issue by adding two new APIs to CheckerContext to
explicitly create error nodes. Unless the client provides a custom tag, these
APIs tag the node with the checker's tag -- preventing it from being trimmed.
The generateErrorNode() method creates a sink error node, while
generateNonFatalErrorNode() creates an error node for a path that should
continue being explored.
The intent is that one of these two methods should be used whenever a checker
creates an error node.
This commit updates the checkers to use these APIs. These APIs
(unlike addTransition() and generateSink()) do not take an explicit Pred node.
This is because there are not any error nodes in the checkers that were created
with an explicit different than the default (the CheckerContext's Pred node).
It also changes generateSink() to require state and pred nodes (previously
these were optional) to reduce confusion.
Additionally, there were several cases where checkers did check whether a
generated node could be null; we now explicitly check for null in these places.
This commit also includes a test case written by Ying Yi as part of
http://reviews.llvm.org/D12163 (that patch originally addressed this issue but
was reverted because it introduced false positive regressions).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12780
llvm-svn: 247859
Patch improves codegen for OpenMP constructs. If the OpenMP region does not have internal 'cancel' construct, a call to 'void __kmpc_barrier()' runtime function is generated for all implicit/explicit barriers. If the region has inner 'cancel' directive, then
```
if (__kmpc_cancel_barrier())
exit from outer construct;
```
code is generated.
Also, the code for 'canellation point' directive is not generated if parent directive does not have 'cancel' directive.
llvm-svn: 247681
In Objective-C, method calls with nil receivers are essentially no-ops. They
do not fault (although the returned value may be garbage depending on the
declared return type and architecture). Programmers are aware of this
behavior and will complain about a false alarm when the analyzer
diagnoses API violations for method calls when the receiver is known to
be nil.
Rather than require each individual checker to be aware of this behavior
and suppress a warning when the receiver is nil, this commit
changes ExprEngineObjC so that VisitObjCMessage skips calling checker
pre/post handlers when the receiver is definitely nil. Instead, it adds a
new event, ObjCMessageNil, that is only called in that case.
The CallAndMessageChecker explicitly cares about this case, so I've changed it
to add a callback for ObjCMessageNil and moved the logic in PreObjCMessage
that handles nil receivers to the new callback.
rdar://problem/18092611
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12123
llvm-svn: 247653
This makes int_fast64_t and int_least64_t the same type as int64_t, and
eliminates a difference between wasm32 and wasm64.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12861
llvm-svn: 247622
MS compiler ignores calling convention modifiers for structors. This patch makes
clang do the same (for MS ABI). This fixes PR24595 and makes vswriter.h header
(from Windows SDK 8.1) compilable.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12402
llvm-svn: 247619
Add an option (-analyzer-config min-blocks-for-inline-large=14) to control the function
size the inliner considers as large, in relation to "max-times-inline-large". The option
defaults to the original hard coded behaviour, which I believe should be adjustable with
the other inlining settings.
The analyzer-config test has been modified so that the analyzer will reach the
getMinBlocksForInlineLarge() method and store the result in the ConfigTable, to ensure it
is dumped by the debug checker.
A patch by Sean Eveson!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12406
llvm-svn: 247463
-force-align-stack.
Also, make changes to the driver so that -mno-stack-realign is no longer
an option exposed to the end-user that disallows stack realignment in
the backend.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11815
llvm-svn: 247451
While this may seem like a lot of unrelated changes, they all relate back to fixing HasDeclarationMatcher.
This now allows us to write a matcher like:
varDecl(hasType(namedDecl(hasName("Foo"))))
that matches code using typedefs, objc interfaces, template type parameters, injected class names, or unresolved using typenames.
llvm-svn: 247404
This flag causes the compiler to emit bit set entries for functions as well
as runtime bitset checks at indirect call sites. Depends on the new function
bitset mechanism.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11857
llvm-svn: 247238
This reapply a variant commit r247179 after post-commit review from
D.Blaikie.
Hopefully I got it right this time: lifetime of initializer list ends
as with any expression, which make invalid the pattern:
ArrayRef<int> Arr = { 1, 2, 3, 4};
Just like StringRef, ArrayRef shouldn't be used to initialize local
variable but only as function argument.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 247233
Summary:
Currently clang provides no general way to generate nontemporal loads/stores.
There are some architecture specific builtins for doing so (e.g. in x86), but
there is no way to generate non-temporal store on, e.g. AArch64. This patch adds
generic builtins which are expanded to a simple store with '!nontemporal'
attribute in IR.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12313
llvm-svn: 247104
This is making our internal build bot fail because it results in extra warnings being
emitted past what should be sink nodes. (There is actually an example of this in the
updated malloc.c test in the reverted commit.)
I'm working on a patch to fix the original issue by adding a new checker API to explicitly
create error nodes. This API will ensure that error nodes are always tagged in order to
prevent them from being reclaimed.
This reverts commit r246188.
llvm-svn: 247103
them directly to the control block. These are fairly large, and in a build with
lots of modules / chained PCH, we don't need to read most of them. No
functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 247055
Currently, the documentation for numSelectorArgs includes an incorrect
example. It shows a case where an argument of 1 will match a property
getter, but a getter will be matched only when N == 0.
This diff corrects the documentation and adds a test for numSelectorArgs(0).
Patch by Dave Lee.
llvm-svn: 246998
Introduce an Address type to bundle a pointer value with an
alignment. Introduce APIs on CGBuilderTy to work with Address
values. Change core APIs on CGF/CGM to traffic in Address where
appropriate. Require alignments to be non-zero. Update a ton
of code to compute and propagate alignment information.
As part of this, I've promoted CGBuiltin's EmitPointerWithAlignment
helper function to CGF and made use of it in a number of places in
the expression emitter.
The end result is that we should now be significantly more correct
when performing operations on objects that are locally known to
be under-aligned. Since alignment is not reliably tracked in the
type system, there are inherent limits to this, but at least we
are no longer confused by standard operations like derived-to-base
conversions and array-to-pointer decay. I've also fixed a large
number of bugs where we were applying the complete-object alignment
to a pointer instead of the non-virtual alignment, although most of
these were hidden by the very conservative approach we took with
member alignment.
Also, because IRGen now reliably asserts on zero alignments, we
should no longer be subject to an absurd but frustrating recurring
bug where an incomplete type would report a zero alignment and then
we'd naively do a alignmentAtOffset on it and emit code using an
alignment equal to the largest power-of-two factor of the offset.
We should also now be emitting much more aggressive alignment
attributes in the presence of over-alignment. In particular,
field access now uses alignmentAtOffset instead of min.
Several times in this patch, I had to change the existing
code-generation pattern in order to more effectively use
the Address APIs. For the most part, this seems to be a strict
improvement, like doing pointer arithmetic with GEPs instead of
ptrtoint. That said, I've tried very hard to not change semantics,
but it is likely that I've failed in a few places, for which I
apologize.
ABIArgInfo now always carries the assumed alignment of indirect and
indirect byval arguments. In order to cut down on what was already
a dauntingly large patch, I changed the code to never set align
attributes in the IR on non-byval indirect arguments. That is,
we still generate code which assumes that indirect arguments have
the given alignment, but we don't express this information to the
backend except where it's semantically required (i.e. on byvals).
This is likely a minor regression for those targets that did provide
this information, but it'll be trivial to add it back in a later
patch.
I partially punted on applying this work to CGBuiltin. Please
do not add more uses of the CreateDefaultAligned{Load,Store}
APIs; they will be going away eventually.
llvm-svn: 246985
If we build with -Werror=implicit-function-declaration, only implicit
function declarations of non-library functions throw compiler errors.
For library functions, we only produce a warning. There is no way to
promote both of these cases to an error without promoting other
warnings.
It makes little sense to introduce an additional compiler flag just to
control this specific warning. In my opinion it should just be part of
the same group.
llvm-svn: 246857
This implements basic support for compiling (though not yet assembling
or linking) for a WebAssembly target. Note that ABI details are not yet
finalized, and may change.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12002
llvm-svn: 246814
OpenMP 4.1 added special 'directive-name-modifier' to the 'if' clause.
Format of 'if' clause is as follows:
```
if([ directive-name-modifier :] scalar-logical-expression)
```
The restriction rules are also changed.
1. If any 'if' clause on the directive includes a 'directive-name-modifier' then all 'if' clauses on the directive must include a 'directive-name-modifier'.
2. At most one 'if' clause without a 'directive-name-modifier' can appear on the directive.
3. At most one 'if' clause with some particular 'directive-name-modifier' can appear on the directive.
'directive-name-modifier' is important for combined directives and allows to separate conditions in 'if' clause for simple sub-directives in combined directive. This 'directive-name-modifier' identifies the sub-directive to which this 'if' clause must be applied.
llvm-svn: 246747
every time it's called rather than attempting to cache the result.
It's unlikely to be called frequently and the overhead of using
it in the first place is already factored out.
llvm-svn: 246706
Summary:
Do not include default sanitizer blacklists into -M/-MM/-MD/-MMD output.
Introduce a frontend option -fdepfile-entry, and only insert them
for the user-defined sanitizer blacklists. In frontend, grab ExtraDeps
from -fdepfile-entry, instead of -fsanitize-blacklist.
Reviewers: rsmith, pcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12544
llvm-svn: 246700
This patch depends on r246688 (D12341).
The goal is to make LLVM generate different code for these functions for a target that
has cheap branches (see PR23827 for more details):
int foo();
int normal(int x, int y, int z) {
if (x != 0 && y != 0) return foo();
return 1;
}
int crazy(int x, int y) {
if (__builtin_unpredictable(x != 0 && y != 0)) return foo();
return 1;
}
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12458
llvm-svn: 246699
the main attribute and cache the results so we don't have to parse
a single attribute more than once.
This reapplies r246596 with a fix for an uninitialized class member,
and a couple of cleanups and formatting changes.
llvm-svn: 246610
r246546, with a workaround for an MSVC 2013 miscompile and an MSVC 2015
rejects-valid.
Original commit message:
[modules] Rework serialized DeclContext lookup table management. Instead of
walking the loaded ModuleFiles looking for lookup tables for the context, store
them all in one place, and merge them together if we find we have too many
(currently, more than 4). If we do merge, include the merged form in our
serialized lookup table, so that downstream readers never need to look at our
imports' tables.
This gives a huge performance improvement to builds with very large numbers of
modules (in some cases, more than a 2x speedup was observed).
llvm-svn: 246582
GCC 4.8+ has a PowerPC-specific intrinsic, __builtin_ppc_get_timebase, to do
what Clang's __builtin_readcyclecounter does. For compatibility with code that
uses GCC's spelling (including glibc), support it as well.
Partially fixes PR23681.
llvm-svn: 246510
walking the loaded ModuleFiles looking for lookup tables for the context, store
them all in one place, and merge them together if we find we have too many
(currently, more than 4). If we do merge, include the merged form in our
serialized lookup table, so that downstream readers never need to look at our
imports' tables.
This gives a huge performance improvement to builds with very large numbers of
modules (in some cases, more than a 2x speedup was observed).
llvm-svn: 246497
A class without a name for linkage purposes gets a name along the lines
of <unnamed-type-foo> where foo is either the name of a declarator which
defined it (like a variable or field) or a
typedef-name (like a typedef or alias-declaration).
We handled the declarator case correctly but it would fall down during
template instantiation if the declarator didn't share the tag's type.
We failed to handle the typedef-name case at all.
Instead, keep track of the association between the two and keep it up to
date in the face of template instantiation.
llvm-svn: 246469
Also:
- Add a typedef to make working with the result easier.
- Update callers to use the new function.
- Make initFeatureMap out of line.
llvm-svn: 246468
This replaces the filtered generic iterator with a type-specfic one based
on dyn_cast instead of comparing the kind enum. This allows us to use
range-based for loops and eliminates casts. No functionality change
intended.
llvm-svn: 246384
Change the analyzer's modeling of memcpy to be more precise when copying into fixed-size
array fields. With this change, instead of invalidating the entire containing region the
analyzer now invalidates only offsets for the array itself when it can show that the
memcpy stays within the bounds of the array.
This addresses false positive memory leak warnings of the kind reported by
krzysztof in https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22954
A patch by Pierre Gousseau!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11832
llvm-svn: 246345
to enable the use of external type references in the debug info
(a.k.a. module debugging).
The driver expands -gmodules to "-g -fmodule-format=obj -dwarf-ext-refs"
and passes that to cc1. All this does at the moment is set a flag
codegenopts.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D11958
llvm-svn: 246192
The LLVM patch changes the analysis diagnostics produced when loops with
floating-point recurrences or memory operations are identified. The new messages
say "cannot prove it is safe to reorder * operations; allow reordering by
specifying #pragma clang loop vectorize(enable)". Depending on the type of
diagnostic the message will include additional options such as ffast-math or
__restrict__.
llvm-svn: 246189
The assertion is caused by reusing a “filler” ExplodedNode as an error node.
The “filler” nodes are only used for intermediate processing and are not
essential for analyzer history, so they can be reclaimed when the
ExplodedGraph is trimmed by the “collectNode” function. When a checker finds a
bug, they generate a new transition in the ExplodedGraph. The analyzer will
try to reuse the existing predecessor node. If it cannot, it creates a new
ExplodedNode, which always has a tag to uniquely identify the creation site.
The assertion is caused when the analyzer reuses a “filler” node.
In the test case, some “filler” nodes were reused and then reclaimed later
when the ExplodedGraph was trimmed. This caused an assertion because the node
was needed to generate the report. The “filler” nodes should not be reused as
error nodes. The patch adds a constraint to prevent this happening, which
solves the problem and makes the test cases pass.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11433
Patch by Ying Yi!
llvm-svn: 246188
with multiple uses of feature map construction.
Note: We could make this a static function on TargetInfo if we
fix the x86 port needing to check the triple in an isolated case.
llvm-svn: 246128
DeclarationName (because all ctor names are considered the same, and so on).
Reflect this in the type used as the lookup table key. As a side-effect, remove
one copy of the duplicated code used to compute the hash of the key.
llvm-svn: 246124
and CompilerInvocation::getFileSystemOpts by renaming it to getFileSystemOpts,
marking the const-returning access method const and adding a non-const version,
making the function prototypes identical to CompilerInstance::getFileSystemOpts.
llvm-svn: 246026
Summary:
- Store the exception specification range's begin and end SourceLocation in DeclaratorChuck::FunctionTypeInfo. These SourceLocations can be used in a FixItHint Range.
- Add diagnostic; function concept having an exception specification.
Reviewers: hubert.reinterpretcast, fraggamuffin, faisalv, aaron.ballman, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11789
llvm-svn: 246005
Adds parsing/sema analysis/serialization/deserialization for array sections in OpenMP constructs (introduced in OpenMP 4.0).
Currently it is allowed to use array sections only in OpenMP clauses that accepts list of expressions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10732
llvm-svn: 245937
I'm not sure why TypoExpr had its classof left out - but I expect every AST node should fulfill the 'contract of classof' (http://llvm.org/docs/HowToSetUpLLVMStyleRTTI.html).
There should be no functionality change. I just happened to notice it was missing, while messing around with something else.
llvm-svn: 245812
If a function declaration is found inside a template function as in:
template<class T> void f() {
void g(int x = T::v) except(T::w);
}
it must be instantiated along with the enclosing template function,
including default arguments and exception specification.
Together with the patch committed in r240974 this implements DR1484.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11194
llvm-svn: 245810
Instead of eagerly deserializing a list of DeclIDs when we load a module file
and doing a binary search to find the redeclarations of a decl, store a list of
redeclarations of each chain before the first declaration and load it directly.
llvm-svn: 245789
all modules and reduce the number of declarations we load when loading a
redeclaration chain.
The new approach is:
* when loading the first declaration of an entity within a module file, we
first load all declarations of the entity that were imported into that
module file, and then load all the other declarations of that entity from
that module file and build a suitable decl chain from them
* when loading any other declaration of an entity, we first load the first
declaration from the same module file
As before, we complete redecl chains through name lookup where necessary.
To make this work, I also had to change the way that template specializations
are stored -- it no longer suffices to track only canonical specializations; we
now emit all "first local" declarations when emitting a list of specializations
for a template.
On one testcase with several thousand imported module files, this reduces the
total runtime by 72%.
llvm-svn: 245779
We can use the 'H' typespec modifier to use 128-bit vectors directly
in the only two users of this special-case: the vcvt f16 intrinsics.
This also lets us use more meaningful prototype modifiers.
llvm-svn: 245778
We had "vcvt_f16" and "VCVT_HIGH_F16": for other FP types, this naming
is used for intrinsics with integer overloads. The FP->FP conversions,
on the other hand, use the full "vcvt_f32_f64" name instead.
Use the same naming convention for the f16<->f32 conversions.
While there, reorder the definitions a little bit.
llvm-svn: 245763
Add parsing/sema analysis for 'simdlen' clause in simd directives. Also add check that if both 'safelen' and 'simdlen' clauses are specified, the value of 'simdlen' parameter is less than the value of 'safelen' parameter.
llvm-svn: 245692
This lets us optimize them better. We agreed to remove the intrinsics,
instead of combining them later, as, at -O0, we generate the expected
instructions. Plus, it's a nice cleanup.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10556
llvm-svn: 245605
Standard allows to use 'uval' and 'ref' modifiers in 'linear' clause for variables with reference types only. Added check for it and modified test.
llvm-svn: 245556
OpenMP 4.1 adds 3 optional modifiers to 'linear' clause.
Format of 'linear' clause has changed to:
```
linear(linear-list[ : linear-step])
```
where linear-list is one of the following
```
list
modifier(list)
```
where modifier is one of the following:
```
ref (C++)
val (C/C++)
uval (C++)
```
Patch adds parsing and sema analysis for these modifiers.
llvm-svn: 245550
doing assembly-only, and unify the Driver's PIC argument parsing.
On a few architectures, parsing of assembly files annoyingly depends
on whether PIC is enabled or not. This was handled for external 'as'
already (passing -KPIC), but was missed for calls to the standalone
internal assembler.
The integrated-as.s test needed to be modified to not expect
-fsanitize=address to be unused, as now fsanitize *IS* used for
assembly, since -fsanitize=memory can sometimes imply -fPIE, which the
assembler needs to know (gack!!).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11845
llvm-svn: 245447
Maybe this and the NumDeclsFound member should just be a std::vector
instead. (it could be a std::dynarray, but that missed standardization)
llvm-svn: 245392
OpenMP 4.1 allows to use variables with reference types in all private clauses (private, firstprivate, lastprivate, linear etc.). Patch allows to use such variables and fixes codegen for linear variables with reference types.
llvm-svn: 245268
Summary:
If a module was unavailable (either a missing requirement on the module
being imported, or a missing file anywhere in the top-level module (and
not dominated by an unsatisfied `requires`)), we would silently treat
inclusions as textual. This would cause all manner of crazy and
confusing errors (and would also silently "work" sometimes, making the
problem difficult to track down).
I'm really not a fan of the `M->isAvailable(getLangOpts(), getTargetInfo(),
Requirement, MissingHeader)` function; it seems to do too many things at
once, but for now I've done things in a sort of awkward way.
The changes to test/Modules/Inputs/declare-use/module.map
were necessitated because the thing that was meant to be tested there
(introduced in r197805) was predicated on silently falling back to textual
inclusion, which we no longer do.
The changes to test/Modules/Inputs/macro-reexport/module.modulemap
are just an overlooked missing header that seems to have been missing since
this code was committed (r213922), which is now caught.
Reviewers: rsmith, benlangmuir, djasper
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10423
llvm-svn: 245228
Added an additional ctor that takes a NumOccurrenceFlag parameter for the
SourcePaths option. This frees applications from always having to pass at least
one source file, e.g., -list-checks.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D12069
Patch by Don Hinton!
llvm-svn: 245204
This enables Clang to correctly handle code such as:
struct __declspec(dllexport) S {
int x = 42;
};
where it would otherwise error due to trying to generate the default
constructor before the in-class initializer for x has been parsed.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11850
llvm-svn: 245139
Summary: Adding check to emit diagnostic for invalid tag when concept is specified and associated tests.
Reviewers: rsmith, hubert.reinterpretcast, fraggamuffin, faisalv, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: aaron.ballman, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11916
llvm-svn: 245123
So, we now reject that. We also warn for any external-linkage global
variable named main in C, because it results in undefined behavior.
PR: 24309
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11658
Reviewed by: rsmith
llvm-svn: 245051
blender uses statements expression in condition of the loop under control of the '#pragma omp parallel for'. This condition is used several times in different expressions required for codegen of the loop directive. If there are some variables defined in statement expression, it fires an assert during codegen because of redefinition of the same variables.
We have to rebuild several expression to be sure that all variables are unique.
llvm-svn: 245041
Fix a bug in the matcher docs where callExpr(on(...)) was in the examples,
but didn't work (on() only works for memberCallExpr).
Fix a bug in the doc dump script that was introduced in r231575 when
removing a regexp capture without adapting the code that uses the
captures.
llvm-svn: 245040
Currently, arguments are passed via the string attribute 'command',
assuming a shell-escaped / quoted command line to extract the original
arguments. This works well enough on Unix systems, but turns out to be
problematic for Windows tools to generate.
This CL adds a new attribute 'arguments', an array of strings, which
specifies the exact command line arguments. If 'arguments' is available
in the compilation database, it is preferred to 'commands'.
Currently there is no plan to retire 'commands': there are enough
different use cases where users want to create their own mechanism for
creating compilation databases, that it doesn't make sense to force them
all to implement shell command line parsing.
Patch by Daniel Dilts.
llvm-svn: 245036
file in the .pcm files. This allows a smaller set of files to be sent to a
remote build worker when building with explicit modules (for instance, module
map files need not be sent along with the corresponding precompiled modules).
This doesn't actually make the embedded files visible to header search, so
it's not useful as a packaging format for public header files.
llvm-svn: 245028
ConsumedBlockInfo objects were move assigned, but only in a state where
the dtor was a no-op anyway. Subtle and easily could've happened in ways
that wouldn't've been safe - so this change makes it safe no matter what
state the ConsumedBlockInfo object is in.
llvm-svn: 244998
We risk iterator invalidation issues if we use a DenseMap to hold the
backing storage for an APValue. Instead, BumpPtrAllocate them and
use APValue * as our DenseMap value.
Also, don't assume that MaterializedGlobalTemporaryMap won't regrow
between when we initially perform a lookup and later on when we actually
try to insert into it.
This fixes PR24289.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11629
llvm-svn: 244989
makeFilter returns Filters by value which seems to be only safe when the
copy doesn't occur and RVO kicks in. Make the object safely movable to
support this more reliably.
llvm-svn: 244983
Make the copy/move ctors defaulted in the base class and make the
derived classes final to avoid any intermediate hierarchy slicing if
these types were further derived.
llvm-svn: 244979
(return by value is in ExprEngine::processPointerEscapedOnBind and any
other call to the scanReachableSymbols function template used there)
Protect the special members in the base class to avoid slicing, and make
derived classes final so these special members don't accidentally become
public on an intermediate base which would open up the possibility of
slicing again.
llvm-svn: 244975
Turns out the one place that relied on the implicit copy ctor was safe
because it created an object in a state where the dtor was a no-op, but
that's more luck that good management.
Sure up the API by defining move construction and using it, which
implicitly disallows the unreliable copy operations.
llvm-svn: 244968
Partly addressed by r244843, but the explicit dtor in LambdaScopeInfo
was still thwarting the implicit copy ctor. This does remove the key
function from LambdaScopeInfo unfortunately, but it seems neater than
having to explicitly default any special members LambdaScopeInfo needs.
llvm-svn: 244957
files: include the .pcm file itself in the .d output, rather than including its
own input files. Other forms of module file continue to be transparent for .d
output.
Arguably, the input files for the .pcm file are still inputs to the
compilation, but that's unnecessary for make-like build systems (where the
mtime of the .pcm file is sufficient) and harmful for smarter build systems
that know about module files and want to track only the local dependencies.
llvm-svn: 244923
This preserves backwards compatibility for two hacks in the Darwin
system module map files:
1. The use of 'requires excluded' to make headers non-modular, which
should really be mapped to 'textual' now that we have this feature.
2. Silently removes a bogus cplusplus requirement from IOKit.avc.
Once we start diagnosing missing requirements and headers on
auto-imports these would have broken compatibility with existing Darwin
SDKs.
llvm-svn: 244912
Summary:
Clang sanitizers, such as AddressSanitizer, ThreadSanitizer, MemorySanitizer,
Control Flow Integrity and others, use blacklists to specify which types / functions
should not be instrumented to avoid false positives or suppress known failures.
This change adds the blacklist filenames to the list of dependencies of the rules,
generated with -M/-MM/-MD/-MMD. This lets CMake/Ninja recognize that certain
C/C++/ObjC files need to be recompiled (if a blacklist is updated).
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: rsmith, honggyu.kim, pcc, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11968
llvm-svn: 244867
All of the other docblocks for the CXCursor_* cursor kind enum values
include documentation that ends with a period. Add a period to the end
of the CXCursor_TypedefDecl documentation to follow this convention.
Patch by Brian Gesiak!
llvm-svn: 244715
emit lexical contents for a declaration for another module. Track which module
those contents came from, and ensure that we only grab the lexical contents
from a single such instantiation.
llvm-svn: 244682
This non-conforming extension was introduced to make it possible for us
to correctly compile <atomic> in VS 2013 and 2015. Let's limit its
impact to system headers to encourage portable code.
llvm-svn: 244650
Following one of the appended options will allow the loop to be vectorized. We do not include a command line option for modifying the pointer checking threshold because there is no clang-level interface for this currently.
llvm-svn: 244526
The main purpose is to avoid errors and warnings while parsing CUDA
header files. The attributes are currently unused otherwise.
Differential version: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11690
llvm-svn: 244497
With this patch clang appends the command line options that would allow vectorization when floating-point commutativity is required. Specifically those are enabling fast-math or specifying a loop hint.
llvm-svn: 244492
This change adds the new unroll metadata "llvm.loop.unroll.enable" which directs
the optimizer to unroll a loop fully if the trip count is known at compile time, and
unroll partially if the trip count is not known at compile time. This differs from
"llvm.loop.unroll.full" which explicitly does not unroll a loop if the trip count is not
known at compile time
With this change "#pragma unroll" generates "llvm.loop.unroll.enable" rather than
"llvm.loop.unroll.full" metadata. This changes the semantics of "#pragma unroll" slightly
to mean "unroll aggressively (fully or partially)" rather than "unroll fully or not at all".
The motivating example for this change was some internal code with a loop marked
with "#pragma unroll" which only sometimes had a compile-time trip count depending
on template magic. When the trip count was a compile-time constant, everything works
as expected and the loop is fully unrolled. However, when the trip count was not a
compile-time constant the "#pragma unroll" explicitly disabled unrolling of the loop(!).
Removing "#pragma unroll" caused the loop to be unrolled partially which was desirable
from a performance perspective.
llvm-svn: 244467
Summary:
Add brace style `BS_WebKit` as described on https://www.webkit.org/coding/coding-style.html:
* Function definitions: place each brace on its own line.
* Other braces: place the open brace on the line preceding the code block; place the close brace on its own line.
Set brace style used in `getWebKitStyle()` to the newly added `BS_WebKit`.
Reviewers: djasper, klimek
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11837
llvm-svn: 244446
arguments because the reloaded form might have become non-canonical across the
serialization/deserialization step (this particularly happens when the
canonical form of the type involves an expression).
llvm-svn: 244409
so that we can populate it on a per-target basis with required features.
Future commits will start using this information for warnings.
llvm-svn: 244286
This initial commit serves as an example -- the remainder of the
classes using pointer arithmetic for trailing objects will be
converted in subsequent changes.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11298
llvm-svn: 244262
OpenMP 4.1 allows to use variables with reference types in private clauses and, therefore, in init expressions of the cannonical loop forms.
llvm-svn: 244209
determine the primary context, rather than sometimes registering the lookup
table on the wrong context.
This exposed a couple of bugs:
* the odr violation check didn't deal properly with mergeable declarations
if the declaration retained by name lookup wasn't in the canonical
definition of the class
* the (broken) RewriteDecl mechanism would emit two name lookup tables for
the same DeclContext into the same module file (one as part of the
rewritten declaration and one as a visible update for the old declaration)
These are both fixed too.
llvm-svn: 244192
useless return value. Switch to using it directly when completing the
redeclaration chain for an anonymous declaration, and reduce the set of
declarations that we load in the process to just those of the right kind.
llvm-svn: 244161
This patch adds flags -fno-profile-instr-generate and
-fno-profile-instr-use, and the GCC aliases -fno-profile-generate and
-fno-profile-use.
These flags are used in situations where users need to disable profile
generation or use for specific files in a build, without affecting other
files.
llvm-svn: 244153
Summary:
By default, 'clang' emits dwarf and 'clang-cl' emits codeview. You can
force emission of one or both by passing -gcodeview and -gdwarf to
either driver.
Reviewers: dblaikie, hans
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11742
llvm-svn: 244097
This brings ASTContext closer to LLVM's Allocator concept. Ideally we
would just derive ASTContext from llvm::AllocatorBase, but that does
not work because ASTContext's allocator is mutable and we allocate using
const ASTContext& everywhere.
llvm-svn: 243972
This adds the required target feature names to x86 builtins that need
particular features. Most have exactly one ("avx", "aes", etc), but some
of the avx512 features have multiple requirements, eg "avx512vl,avx512bw".
llvm-svn: 243908
Summary: Add IsConcept bit to VarDecl::NonParmVarDeclBitfields and associated isConcept/setConcept member functions. Set IsConcept to true when 'concept' specifier is in variable declaration. Create diagnostic when variable concept is not initialized.
Reviewers: fraggamuffin, hubert.reinterpretcast, faisalv, aaron.ballman, rsmith
Subscribers: aemerson, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11600
llvm-svn: 243876
Compiler crashed when vector elements / global register vars were used in inline assembler with "m" restriction. This patch fixes this.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10476
llvm-svn: 243870
The new EH instructions make it possible for LLVM to generate .xdata
tables that the MSVC personality routines will be happy about. Because
this is experimental, hide it behind a -cc1 flag (-fnew-ms-eh).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11405
llvm-svn: 243767
Parsing of pragmas followed by a class member declaration is outlined into a separate function Parser::ParseCXXClassMemberDeclarationWithPragmas().
llvm-svn: 243739
The z13 vector facility has an associated language extension,
closely modeled on AltiVec/VSX. The main differences are:
- vector long, vector float and vector pixel are not supported
- vector long long and vector double are supported (like VSX)
- comparison operators return a vector rather than a scalar integer
- shift operators behave like the OpenCL shift operators
- vector bool is only supported as argument to certain operators;
some operators allow mixing a bool with a non-bool vector
This patch adds clang support for the extension. It is closely modelled
on the AltiVec support. Similarly to the -faltivec option, there's a
new -fzvector option to enable the extensions (as well as an -mzvector
alias for compatibility with GCC). There's also a separate LangOpt.
The extension as implemented here is intended to be compatible with
the -mzvector extension recently implemented by GCC.
Based on a patch by Richard Sandiford.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11001
llvm-svn: 243642
OpenMP 4.1 introduces optional argument '(n)' for 'ordered' clause, where 'n' is a number of loops that immediately follow the directive.
'n' must be constant positive integer expressions and it must be less or equal than the number of the loops in the resulting loop nest.
Patch adds parsing and semantic analysis for this optional argument.
llvm-svn: 243635
Store the locations for a macro expansion in a vector, then iterate over them
instead of using recursion. This simplifies the logic around the backtrace
limit and gives easier access to the source locations. No functionality change.
Patch by Zhengkai Wu.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11542
llvm-svn: 243477
(Keep -Wmsvc-include around as an alias.)
While here, also replace the one other mention of "MSVC" in diagnostics with
"Microsoft", for consistency.
llvm-svn: 243444
This will be used for old targets like Android that do not
support ELF TLS models.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10524
llvm-svn: 243441
Also move "pragma comment" warning from -Wmicrosoft to -Wignored-pragmas.
-Wmicrosoft currently covers many different areas, some more useful than
others. Split it into many targeted flags, so that projects can choose to
enable only a subset of these warnings. This is also useful for incrementally
fixing and turning on these warnings.
-Wno-microsoft still disables all these warnings, and -Wmicrosoft still enables
them all. After this change, it's possible to pass `-Wno-microsoft
-Wmicrosoft-unqualified-friend` to only enable -Wmicrosoft-unqualified-friend,
and `-Wmicrosoft -Wno-microsoft-unqualified-friend` to enable all other
Microsoft warnings.
I put all the template-related warnings behind -Wmicrosoft-template; if that
turns out to be too coarse we can make that finer later on. (In practice, I
haven't seen the template-related warnings fire frequently.)
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D11504
llvm-svn: 243371
We had multiple bugs here:
- We didn't support multiple optimization options in one argument.
e.g. -O2y-
- We didn't correctly expand -O[12dx] to their respective options.
- We treated -O1 as clang -O1 instead of clang -Os.
- We treated -Ox as clang -O3 instead of clang -O2. In fact, cl's -Ox
option is *less* powerful than cl's -O2 option despite -Ox described
as "Full Optimization".
This fixes PR24003.
llvm-svn: 243261
chain and fix the cases where it fires.
* Handle the __va_list_tag as a predefined decl. Previously we failed to merge
sometimes it because it's not visible to name lookup. (In passing, remove
redundant __va_list_tag typedefs that we were creating for some ABIs. These
didn't affect the mangling or representation of the type.)
* For Decls derived from Redeclarable that are not in fact redeclarable
(implicit params, function params, ObjC type parameters), remove them from
the list of expected redeclarable decls.
llvm-svn: 243259
RecordLayoutBuilder is an inaccruate name because it does not build all
records. It only builds layouts for targets using the Itanium C++ ABI.
llvm-svn: 243225
This lets us pass functors (and lambdas) without void * tricks. On the
downside we can't pass CXXRecordDecl's Find* members (which are now type
safe) to lookupInBases directly, but a lambda trampoline is a small
price to pay. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 243217
The flag allows users to specify that they do not want the object file
to have any implicit /defaultlib directives.
This fixes PR24236.
llvm-svn: 243097
Generating available_externally vtables for optimizations purposes.
Unfortunatelly ItaniumABI doesn't guarantee that we will be able to
refer to virtual inline method by name.
But when we don't have any inline virtual methods, and key function is
not defined in this TU, we can generate that there will be vtable and
mark it as available_externally.
This is patch will help devirtualize better.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11441
llvm-svn: 243090
to consider the storage size of the vector instead of its
sizeof. In other words, ban <3 x int> to <4 x int> casts,
which produced invalid IR anyway.
Also, attempt to be a little more rigorous, or at least
explicit, about when enums are allowed in these casts.
rdar://21901132
llvm-svn: 243069
MSVC 2013 ships, as part of its STL implementation, a class named
'_Atomic'. This is unfortunate because this keyword is in conflict with
the C11 keyword with the same name. Our solution was to disable this
keyword when targeting MSVC 2013 and reenable it for 2015.
However, this makes it impossible for clang's headers to make use of
_Atomic. This is problematic in the case of libc++ as it makes heavy
use of this keyword.
Let the keywordness of _Atomic float under certain circumstances:
the body of a class named _Atomic, or a class with a base specifier
named _Atomic, will not have the keyword variant of _Atomic for the
duration of the class body. This is sufficient to allow us to correctly
handle _Atomic in the STL while permitting us to use _Atomic as a
keyword everywhere else.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11233
llvm-svn: 242970
Summary:
Create diagnostic for function concept declaration which is not a
definition.
Create diagnostic for concept declaration which isn't in namespace
scope.
Create associated tests.
Reviewers: rsmith, faisalv, fraggamuffin, hubert.reinterpretcast
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11027
Patch by Nathan Wilson!
llvm-svn: 242899
the identifier table. This is redundant, since the TU-scope lookups are also
serialized as part of the TU DeclContext, and wasteful in a number of ways. We
still emit the decls for PCH / preamble builds, since for those we want
identical results, not merely semantically equivalent ones.
llvm-svn: 242855
Clang used to silently ignore __declspec(novtable). It is implemented
now, but leaving the vtable uninitialized does not work when using the
Itanium ABI, where the class layout for complex class hierarchies is
stored in the vtable. It might be possible to honor the novtable
attribute in some simple cases and either report an error or ignore
it in more complex situations, but it’s not clear if that would be
worthwhile. There is also value in having a simple and predictable
behavior, so this changes clang to simply ignore novtable when not using
the Microsoft C++ ABI.
llvm-svn: 242730
StmtRange was just a convenient wrapper for two StmtIterators before
we had real range support. This removes some of the implicit conversions
StmtRange had leading to slightly more verbose code but also should make
more obvious what's going on. No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 242615
- Make it a proper random access iterator with a little help from iterator_adaptor_base
- Clean up users of magic dereferencing. The iterator should behave like an Expr **.
- Make it an implementation detail of Stmt. This allows inlining of the assertions.
llvm-svn: 242608
Currently, -save-temp will cause ObjCARC optimization to be dropped,
sanitizer pass to run early in the pipeline, and profiling
instrumentation to run twice.
Fix the issue by properly disable all passes in the optimization
pipeline when generating bitcode output and parse some of the Language
Options even when the input is bitcode so the passes can be setup
correctly.
llvm-svn: 242565
Some const-correctness changes snuck in here too, since they were in the
area of code I was modifying.
This seems to make Clang actually work without Bus Error on
32bit-sparc.
Follow-up patches will factor out a trailing-object helper class, to
make classes using the idiom of appending objects to other objects
easier to understand, and to ensure (with static_assert) that required
alignment guarantees continue to hold.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10272
llvm-svn: 242554
Individual matchers might not be convertible to each other's kind, but
they might still all be convertible to the target kind.
All the callers already know the target kind, so just pass it down.
llvm-svn: 242534
Guessing which file name to replace based on the -main-file-name
argument to -cc1 is flawed. Instead, keep track of which arguments are
inputs to each command.
llvm-svn: 242504
- introduces a new cc1 option -fmodule-format=[raw,obj]
with 'raw' being the default
- supports arbitrary module container formats that libclang is agnostic to
- adds the format to the module hash to avoid collisions
- splits the old PCHContainerOperations into PCHContainerWriter and
a PCHContainerReader.
Thanks to Richard Smith for reviewing this patch!
llvm-svn: 242499
-fapple-kext is an exception because calls will still go through
the vtable in that mode. Add a note to make the user aware of that.
PR: 23215
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10935
llvm-svn: 242246
can be different from the normal variable maximum.
Add an error diagnostic for when TLS variables exceed maximum TLS alignment.
Currenty only PS4 sets an explicit maximum TLS alignment.
Patch by Charles Li!
llvm-svn: 242198
We referred to all declaration in definitions in our diagnostic messages
which is can be inaccurate. Instead, classify the declaration and emit
an appropriate diagnostic for the new declaration and an appropriate
note pointing to the old one.
This fixes PR24116.
llvm-svn: 242190
Rather than making -fexceptions a core option that enables C++ EH in
clang-cl, users can use the '-Xclang -fexceptions -Xclang
-fcxx-exceptions' flag set. We weren't going to expose -fexceptions in
clang-cl in the long run, so this way we don't add and then remove a
flag.
llvm-svn: 242176
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D11184
A number of new interfaces for altivec.h (as mandated by the ABI):
vector float vec_cpsgn(vector float, vector float)
vector double vec_cpsgn(vector double, vector double)
vector double vec_or(vector bool long long, vector double)
vector double vec_or(vector double, vector bool long long)
vector double vec_re(vector double)
vector signed char vec_cntlz(vector signed char)
vector unsigned char vec_cntlz(vector unsigned char)
vector short vec_cntlz(vector short)
vector unsigned short vec_cntlz(vector unsigned short)
vector int vec_cntlz(vector int)
vector unsigned int vec_cntlz(vector unsigned int)
vector signed long long vec_cntlz(vector signed long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_cntlz(vector unsigned long long)
vector signed char vec_nand(vector bool signed char, vector signed char)
vector signed char vec_nand(vector signed char, vector bool signed char)
vector signed char vec_nand(vector signed char, vector signed char)
vector unsigned char vec_nand(vector bool unsigned char, vector unsigned char)
vector unsigned char vec_nand(vector unsigned char, vector bool unsigned char)
vector unsigned char vec_nand(vector unsigned char, vector unsigned char)
vector short vec_nand(vector bool short, vector short)
vector short vec_nand(vector short, vector bool short)
vector short vec_nand(vector short, vector short)
vector unsigned short vec_nand(vector bool unsigned short, vector unsigned short)
vector unsigned short vec_nand(vector unsigned short, vector bool unsigned short)
vector unsigned short vec_nand(vector unsigned short, vector unsigned short)
vector int vec_nand(vector bool int, vector int)
vector int vec_nand(vector int, vector bool int)
vector int vec_nand(vector int, vector int)
vector unsigned int vec_nand(vector bool unsigned int, vector unsigned int)
vector unsigned int vec_nand(vector unsigned int, vector bool unsigned int)
vector unsigned int vec_nand(vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int)
vector signed long long vec_nand(vector bool long long, vector signed long long)
vector signed long long vec_nand(vector signed long long, vector bool long long)
vector signed long long vec_nand(vector signed long long, vector signed long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_nand(vector bool long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_nand(vector unsigned long long, vector bool long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_nand(vector unsigned long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector signed char vec_orc(vector bool signed char, vector signed char)
vector signed char vec_orc(vector signed char, vector bool signed char)
vector signed char vec_orc(vector signed char, vector signed char)
vector unsigned char vec_orc(vector bool unsigned char, vector unsigned char)
vector unsigned char vec_orc(vector unsigned char, vector bool unsigned char)
vector unsigned char vec_orc(vector unsigned char, vector unsigned char)
vector short vec_orc(vector bool short, vector short)
vector short vec_orc(vector short, vector bool short)
vector short vec_orc(vector short, vector short)
vector unsigned short vec_orc(vector bool unsigned short, vector unsigned short)
vector unsigned short vec_orc(vector unsigned short, vector bool unsigned short)
vector unsigned short vec_orc(vector unsigned short, vector unsigned short)
vector int vec_orc(vector bool int, vector int)
vector int vec_orc(vector int, vector bool int)
vector int vec_orc(vector int, vector int)
vector unsigned int vec_orc(vector bool unsigned int, vector unsigned int)
vector unsigned int vec_orc(vector unsigned int, vector bool unsigned int)
vector unsigned int vec_orc(vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int)
vector signed long long vec_orc(vector bool long long, vector signed long long)
vector signed long long vec_orc(vector signed long long, vector bool long long)
vector signed long long vec_orc(vector signed long long, vector signed long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_orc(vector bool long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_orc(vector unsigned long long, vector bool long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_orc(vector unsigned long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector signed char vec_div(vector signed char, vector signed char)
vector unsigned char vec_div(vector unsigned char, vector unsigned char)
vector signed short vec_div(vector signed short, vector signed short)
vector unsigned short vec_div(vector unsigned short, vector unsigned short)
vector signed int vec_div(vector signed int, vector signed int)
vector unsigned int vec_div(vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int)
vector signed long long vec_div(vector signed long long, vector signed long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_div(vector unsigned long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector unsigned char vec_mul(vector unsigned char, vector unsigned char)
vector unsigned int vec_mul(vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int)
vector unsigned long long vec_mul(vector unsigned long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector unsigned short vec_mul(vector unsigned short, vector unsigned short)
vector signed char vec_mul(vector signed char, vector signed char)
vector signed int vec_mul(vector signed int, vector signed int)
vector signed long long vec_mul(vector signed long long, vector signed long long)
vector signed short vec_mul(vector signed short, vector signed short)
vector signed long long vec_mergeh(vector signed long long, vector signed long long)
vector signed long long vec_mergeh(vector signed long long, vector bool long long)
vector signed long long vec_mergeh(vector bool long long, vector signed long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_mergeh(vector unsigned long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_mergeh(vector unsigned long long, vector bool long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_mergeh(vector bool long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector double vec_mergeh(vector double, vector double)
vector double vec_mergeh(vector double, vector bool long long)
vector double vec_mergeh(vector bool long long, vector double)
vector signed long long vec_mergel(vector signed long long, vector signed long long)
vector signed long long vec_mergel(vector signed long long, vector bool long long)
vector signed long long vec_mergel(vector bool long long, vector signed long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_mergel(vector unsigned long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_mergel(vector unsigned long long, vector bool long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_mergel(vector bool long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector double vec_mergel(vector double, vector double)
vector double vec_mergel(vector double, vector bool long long)
vector double vec_mergel(vector bool long long, vector double)
vector signed int vec_pack(vector signed long long, vector signed long long)
vector unsigned int vec_pack(vector unsigned long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector bool int vec_pack(vector bool long long, vector bool long long)
llvm-svn: 242171
add 2 bit to ObjCOrBuiltinID (changed from 11bits to 13bits), see discussion in
Add new intrinsics support that already covered by the BE.
All the intrinsics are covered by tests
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10893
llvm-svn: 242144
If the variable is marked as private in OpenMP construct, the reference to this variable should not keep type qualifiers for the original variable. Private copy is not volatile or constant, so we can use unqualified type for private copy.
llvm-svn: 242133
NOTE: reverts r242077 to reinstate r242058, r242065, 242067
and includes fix for OS X test failures.
- Changed driver pipeline to compile host and device side of CUDA
files and incorporate results of device-side compilation into host
object file.
- Added a test for cuda pipeline creation in clang driver.
New clang options:
--cuda-host-only - Do host-side compilation only.
--cuda-device-only - Do device-side compilation only.
--cuda-gpu-arch=<ARCH> - specify GPU architecture for device-side
compilation. E.g. sm_35, sm_30. Default is sm_20. May be used more
than once in which case one device-compilation will be done per
unique specified GPU architecture.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9509
llvm-svn: 242085
The tests were failing on OS X.
Revert "[cuda] Driver changes to compile and stitch together host and device-side CUDA code."
Revert "Fixed regex to properly match '64' in the test case."
Revert "clang/test/Driver/cuda-options.cu REQUIRES clang-driver, at least."
llvm-svn: 242077
- Changed driver pipeline to compile host and device side of CUDA
files and incorporate results of device-side compilation into host
object file.
- Added a test for cuda pipeline creation in clang driver.
New clang options:
--cuda-host-only - Do host-side compilation only.
--cuda-device-only - Do device-side compilation only.
--cuda-gpu-arch=<ARCH> - specify GPU architecture for device-side
compilation. E.g. sm_35, sm_30. Default is sm_20. May be used more
than once in which case one device-compilation will be done per
unique specified GPU architecture.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9509
llvm-svn: 242058
It always takes me a while to figure out how to say "preprocess to file
foo.txt" with clang-cl. With this, it might be easier.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10890
llvm-svn: 242051
before the first imported declaration.
We don't need to track all formerly-canonical declarations of an entity; it's sufficient to track those ones for which no other formerly-canonical declaration was imported into the same module. We call those ones "key declarations", and use them as our starting points for collecting redeclarations and performing namespace lookups.
llvm-svn: 241999
It's possible for TagRedeclarations to involve decls without a name,
ie, anonymous enums. We hit some undefined behaviour if we bind these
null names to the reference here.
We never dereference the name, so it's harmless if it's null - make it
a pointer to allow that.
Fixes the Modules/submodules-merge-defs.cpp test under ubsan.
llvm-svn: 241963
visible in the module we're considering entering. Previously we assumed that if
we knew the include guard for a modular header, we'd already parsed it, but
that need not be the case if a header is present in the current module and one
of its dependencies; the result of getting this wrong was that the current
module's submodule for the header would end up empty.
llvm-svn: 241953
We don't need any more bug reports from users telling us that MSVC-style
C++ exceptions are broken. Developers and adventurous users can still
test the existing functionality by passing along -fexceptions to either
clang or clang-cl.
llvm-svn: 241952
The winpthreads library in mingw-w64 passes -no-pthread when building
since pthreads is not available to build itself and pthreads it is linked
by default. clang does not link to pthreads by default but did error on
unknown -no-pthread option thus stopping the winpthreads build.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D11087
Patch by Martell Malone.
llvm-svn: 241929
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10972
Fix for the handling of dependent features that are enabled by default
on some CPU's (such as -mvsx, -mpower8-vector).
Also provides a number of new interfaces or fixes existing ones in
altivec.h.
Changed signatures to conform to ABI:
vector short vec_perm(vector signed short, vector signed short, vector unsigned char)
vector int vec_perm(vector signed int, vector signed int, vector unsigned char)
vector long long vec_perm(vector signed long long, vector signed long long, vector unsigned char)
vector signed char vec_sld(vector signed char, vector signed char, const int)
vector unsigned char vec_sld(vector unsigned char, vector unsigned char, const int)
vector bool char vec_sld(vector bool char, vector bool char, const int)
vector unsigned short vec_sld(vector unsigned short, vector unsigned short, const int)
vector signed short vec_sld(vector signed short, vector signed short, const int)
vector signed int vec_sld(vector signed int, vector signed int, const int)
vector unsigned int vec_sld(vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int, const int)
vector float vec_sld(vector float, vector float, const int)
vector signed char vec_splat(vector signed char, const int)
vector unsigned char vec_splat(vector unsigned char, const int)
vector bool char vec_splat(vector bool char, const int)
vector signed short vec_splat(vector signed short, const int)
vector unsigned short vec_splat(vector unsigned short, const int)
vector bool short vec_splat(vector bool short, const int)
vector pixel vec_splat(vector pixel, const int)
vector signed int vec_splat(vector signed int, const int)
vector unsigned int vec_splat(vector unsigned int, const int)
vector bool int vec_splat(vector bool int, const int)
vector float vec_splat(vector float, const int)
Added a VSX path to:
vector float vec_round(vector float)
Added interfaces:
vector signed char vec_eqv(vector signed char, vector signed char)
vector signed char vec_eqv(vector bool char, vector signed char)
vector signed char vec_eqv(vector signed char, vector bool char)
vector unsigned char vec_eqv(vector unsigned char, vector unsigned char)
vector unsigned char vec_eqv(vector bool char, vector unsigned char)
vector unsigned char vec_eqv(vector unsigned char, vector bool char)
vector signed short vec_eqv(vector signed short, vector signed short)
vector signed short vec_eqv(vector bool short, vector signed short)
vector signed short vec_eqv(vector signed short, vector bool short)
vector unsigned short vec_eqv(vector unsigned short, vector unsigned short)
vector unsigned short vec_eqv(vector bool short, vector unsigned short)
vector unsigned short vec_eqv(vector unsigned short, vector bool short)
vector signed int vec_eqv(vector signed int, vector signed int)
vector signed int vec_eqv(vector bool int, vector signed int)
vector signed int vec_eqv(vector signed int, vector bool int)
vector unsigned int vec_eqv(vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int)
vector unsigned int vec_eqv(vector bool int, vector unsigned int)
vector unsigned int vec_eqv(vector unsigned int, vector bool int)
vector signed long long vec_eqv(vector signed long long, vector signed long long)
vector signed long long vec_eqv(vector bool long long, vector signed long long)
vector signed long long vec_eqv(vector signed long long, vector bool long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_eqv(vector unsigned long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_eqv(vector bool long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_eqv(vector unsigned long long, vector bool long long)
vector float vec_eqv(vector float, vector float)
vector float vec_eqv(vector bool int, vector float)
vector float vec_eqv(vector float, vector bool int)
vector double vec_eqv(vector double, vector double)
vector double vec_eqv(vector bool long long, vector double)
vector double vec_eqv(vector double, vector bool long long)
vector bool long long vec_perm(vector bool long long, vector bool long long, vector unsigned char)
vector double vec_round(vector double)
vector double vec_splat(vector double, const int)
vector bool long long vec_splat(vector bool long long, const int)
vector signed long long vec_splat(vector signed long long, const int)
vector unsigned long long vec_splat(vector unsigned long long,
vector bool int vec_sld(vector bool int, vector bool int, const int)
vector bool short vec_sld(vector bool short, vector bool short, const int)
llvm-svn: 241904
This patch adds support for specifying where the profile is emitted in a
way similar to GCC. These flags are used to specify directories instead
of filenames. When -fprofile-generate=DIR is used, the compiler will
generate code to write to <DIR>/default.profraw.
The patch also adds a couple of extensions: LLVM_PROFILE_FILE can still be
used to override the directory and file name to use and -fprofile-use
accepts both directories and filenames.
To simplify the set of flags used in the backend, all the flags get
canonicalized to -fprofile-instr-{generate,use} when passed to the
backend. The decision to use a default name for the profile is done
in the driver.
llvm-svn: 241825
One of the problems libclang tests has running under Windows is memory
allocated in libclang.dll but being freed in the test executable, possibly
by a different memory manager. This patch exposes a new export function,
clang_free(), used to free any allocated memory with the same libclang.dll
memory manager that allocated the memory.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10949
Reviewed by Reid Kleckner, Douglas Gregor.
llvm-svn: 241789
Move the diagnostic back to codegen so that we can compile ATL on the
self-host bot. We don't actually end up emitting code for the __try, so
the diagnostic won't be hit.
llvm-svn: 241761
Until somebody writes the code for it, be loud about the fact that
it's not implemented yet.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11020
llvm-svn: 241708
This reverts commit r239846 and r239879. They caused clang's
-fms-extensions behavior to incorrectly parse lambdas and includes a
testcase to ensure we don't regress again.
This issue was found in PR24027.
llvm-svn: 241668
This patch adds ObjectFilePCHContainerOperations uses the LLVM backend
to put the contents of a PCH into a __clangast section inside a COFF, ELF,
or Mach-O object file container.
This is done to facilitate module debugging by makeing it possible to
store the debug info for the types defined by a module alongside the AST.
rdar://problem/20091852
llvm-svn: 241620
when importing type parameter lists. The reason is that type parameters
have their DeclContexts set to the interface that is parameterized with those
types, and the importer would follow that loop and blow the stack out.
I've changed the way this works so that the type parameters are only imported
after the interface that contains them has been registered via the Imported()
function.
This is tested by LLDB.
<rdar://problem/20315663>
llvm-svn: 241556
Introduce co- and contra-variance for Objective-C type parameters,
which allows us to express that (for example) an NSArray is covariant
in its type parameter. This means that NSArray<NSMutableString *> * is
a subtype of NSArray<NSString *> *, which is expected of the immutable
Foundation collections.
Type parameters can be annotated with __covariant or __contravariant
to make them co- or contra-variant, respectively. This feature can be
detected by __has_feature(objc_generics_variance). Implements
rdar://problem/20217490.
llvm-svn: 241549
The __kindof type qualifier can be applied to Objective-C object
(pointer) types to indicate id-like behavior, which includes implicit
"downcasting" of __kindof types to subclasses and id-like message-send
behavior. __kindof types provide better type bounds for substitutions
into unspecified generic types, which preserves more type information.
llvm-svn: 241548
Warn in cases where one has provided redundant protocol qualification
that might be a typo for a specialization, e.g., NSArray<NSObject>,
which is pointless (NSArray declares that it conforms to NSObject) and
is likely to be a typo for NSArray<NSObject *>, i.e., an array of
NSObject pointers. This warning is very narrow, only applying when the
base type being qualified is parameterized, has the same number of
parameters as their are protocols listed, all of the names can also
refer to types (including Objective-C class types, of course), and at
least one of those types is an Objective-C class (making this a typo
for a missing '*'). The limitations are partly for performance reasons
(we don't want to do redundant name lookup unless we really need to),
and because we want the warning to apply in very limited cases to
limit false positives.
Part of rdar://problem/6294649.
llvm-svn: 241547
Objective-C collection literals produce unspecialized
NSArray/NSDictionary objects that can then be implicitly converted to
specialized versions of these types. In such cases, check that the
elements in the collection are suitable for the specialized
collection. Part of rdar://problem/6294649.
llvm-svn: 241546
Teach C++'s tentative parsing to handle specializations of Objective-C
class types (e.g., NSArray<NSString *>) as well as Objective-C
protocol qualifiers (id<NSCopying>) by extending type-annotation
tokens to handle this case. As part of this, remove Objective-C
protocol qualifiers from the declaration specifiers, which never
really made sense: instead, provide Sema entry points to make them
part of the type annotation token. Among other things, this properly
diagnoses bogus types such as "<NSCopying> id" which should have been
written as "id <NSCopying>".
Implements template instantiation support for, e.g., NSArray<T>*
in C++. Note that parameterized classes are not templates in the C++
sense, so that cannot (for example) be used as a template argument for
a template template parameter. Part of rdar://problem/6294649.
llvm-svn: 241545
The Objective-C common-type computation had a few problems that
required a significant rework, including:
- Quadradic behavior when finding the common base type; now it's
linear.
- Keeping around type arguments when computing the common type
between a specialized and an unspecialized type
- Introducing redundant protocol qualifiers.
Part of rdar://problem/6294649. Also fixes rdar://problem/19572837 by
addressing a longstanding bug in
ASTContext::CollectInheritedProtocols().
llvm-svn: 241544
When messaging a method that was defined in an Objective-C class (or
category or extension thereof) that has type parameters, substitute
the type arguments for those type parameters. Similarly, substitute
into property accesses, instance variables, and other references.
This includes general infrastructure for substituting the type
arguments associated with an ObjCObject(Pointer)Type into a type
referenced within a particular context, handling all of the
substitutions required to deal with (e.g.) inheritance involving
parameterized classes. In cases where no type arguments are available
(e.g., because we're messaging via some unspecialized type, id, etc.),
we substitute in the type bounds for the type parameters instead.
Example:
@interface NSSet<T : id<NSCopying>> : NSObject <NSCopying>
- (T)firstObject;
@end
void f(NSSet<NSString *> *stringSet, NSSet *anySet) {
[stringSet firstObject]; // produces NSString*
[anySet firstObject]; // produces id<NSCopying> (the bound)
}
When substituting for the type parameters given an unspecialized
context (i.e., no specific type arguments were given), substituting
the type bounds unconditionally produces type signatures that are too
strong compared to the pre-generics signatures. Instead, use the
following rule:
- In covariant positions, such as method return types, replace type
parameters with “id” or “Class” (the latter only when the type
parameter bound is “Class” or qualified class, e.g,
“Class<NSCopying>”)
- In other positions (e.g., parameter types), replace type
parameters with their type bounds.
- When a specialized Objective-C object or object pointer type
contains a type parameter in its type arguments (e.g.,
NSArray<T>*, but not NSArray<NSString *> *), replace the entire
object/object pointer type with its unspecialized version (e.g.,
NSArray *).
llvm-svn: 241543
Objective-C type arguments can be provided in angle brackets following
an Objective-C interface type. Syntactically, this is the same
position as one would provide protocol qualifiers (e.g.,
id<NSCopying>), so parse both together and let Sema sort out the
ambiguous cases. This applies both when parsing types and when parsing
the superclass of an Objective-C class, which can now be a specialized
type (e.g., NSMutableArray<T> inherits from NSArray<T>).
Check Objective-C type arguments against the type parameters of the
corresponding class. Verify the length of the type argument list and
that each type argument satisfies the corresponding bound.
Specializations of parameterized Objective-C classes are represented
in the type system as distinct types. Both specialized types (e.g.,
NSArray<NSString *> *) and unspecialized types (NSArray *) are
represented, separately.
llvm-svn: 241542
Produce type parameter declarations for Objective-C type parameters,
and attach lists of type parameters to Objective-C classes,
categories, forward declarations, and extensions as
appropriate. Perform semantic analysis of type bounds for type
parameters, both in isolation and across classes/categories/extensions
to ensure consistency.
Also handle (de-)serialization of Objective-C type parameter lists,
along with sundry other things one must do to add a new declaration to
Clang.
Note that Objective-C type parameters are typedef name declarations,
like typedefs and C++11 type aliases, in support of type erasure.
Part of rdar://problem/6294649.
llvm-svn: 241541
This reverts commit r241244, but restricts SEH support to Win64.
This way, Chromium builds will still fall back on TUs with SEH, and
Clang developers can work on this incrementally upstream while patching
this small predicate locally. It'll also make it easier to review small
fixes.
llvm-svn: 241533
Describes the general syntax of how it's used with the unfortunate
usage of "subtarget features" and some examples from the x86 port
to help users.
llvm-svn: 241524
The patch is the same except for the addition of a new test for the
issue that required reverting the dependent llvm commit.
--Original Commit Message--
Pass down the -flto option to the -cc1 job, and from there into the
CodeGenOptions and onto the PassManagerBuilder. This enables gating
the new EliminateAvailableExternally module pass on whether we are
preparing for LTO.
If we are preparing for LTO (e.g. a -flto -c compile), the new pass is not
included as we want to preserve available externally functions for possible
link time inlining.
llvm-svn: 241467
The MacroBlockBegin and MacroBlockEnd options make matching macro identifiers
behave like '{' and '}', respectively, in terms of indentation.
Mozilla code, for example, uses several macros that begin and end a scope.
Previously, Clang-Format removed the indentation resulting in:
MACRO_BEGIN(...)
MACRO_ENTRY(...)
MACRO_ENTRY(...)
MACRO_END
Now, using the options
MacroBlockBegin: "^[A-Z_]+_BEGIN$"
MacroBlockEnd: "^[A-Z_]+_END$"
will yield the expected result:
MACRO_BEGIN(...)
MACRO_ENTRY(...)
MACRO_ENTRY(...)
MACRO_END
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10840
llvm-svn: 241363
We had a strange relationship here where we made a list of Jobs
inherit from a single Job, but there weren't actually any places where
this arbitrary nesting was used or needed.
Simplify all of this by removing Job entirely and updating all of the
users to either work with a JobList or a single Command.
llvm-svn: 241310
We use findModuleForHeader() in several places, but in header search we
were not calling it when a framework module didn't show up with the
expected name, which would then lead to unexpected non-modular includes.
Now we will find the module unconditionally for frameworks. For regular
frameworks, we use the spelling of the module name from the module map
file, and for inferred ones we use the canonical directory name.
In the future we might want to lock down framework modules sufficiently
that these name mismatches cannot happen.
rdar://problem/20465870
llvm-svn: 241258
Objective-C format strings now support modifier flags
that can be attached to a '@' conversion. Currently
the only one supported, as of iOS 9 and OS X 10.11,
is the new "technical term", denoted by the flag "tt",
for example:
%[tt]@
instead of just:
%@
The 'tt' stands for "technical term", which is used
by the string-localization facilities on Darwin to
add the appropriate spacing or quotation depending
the language locale.
Implements <rdar://problem/20374720>.
llvm-svn: 241243
This change reduces some unnecessary boilerplate
since all calls to 'setPosition' are currently paired
with setting the flag of OptionalFlag.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 241242
No more hardcoded paths: clang will use -sysroot as gcc root location if
provided. Otherwise, it will search for gcc on the path. If not found it
will use the driver installed location.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D5268
Patch by Ruben Van Boxem, Martell Malone, Yaron Keren.
Reviewed by Reid Kleckner.
llvm-svn: 241241
On Windows the user may invoke the linker directly, so we might not have an
opportunity to add runtime library flags to the linker command line. Instead,
instruct the code generator to embed linker directive in the object file
that cause the required runtime libraries to be linked.
We might also want to do something similar for ASan, but it seems to have
its own special complexities which may make this infeasible.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10862
llvm-svn: 241225
This re-lands r236052 and adds support for __exception_code().
In 32-bit SEH, the exception code is not available in eax. It is only
available in the filter function, and now we arrange to load it and
store it into an escaped variable in the parent frame.
As a consequence, we have to disable the "catch i8* null" optimization
on 32-bit and always generate a filter function. We can re-enable the
optimization if we detect an __except block that doesn't use the
exception code, but this probably isn't worth optimizing.
Reviewers: majnemer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10852
llvm-svn: 241171
update the identifier in case we've imported a definition of the macro (and
thus the contents of the header) from a module.
Also fold ExternalIdentifierLookup into ExternalPreprocessorSource; it no longer
makes sense to keep these separate now that the only user of the former also
needs the latter.
llvm-svn: 241137
re-entering a modular header.
When we do the include guard check, we're in the visibility state for the file
with the #include; the include guard may not be visible there, but we don't
actually need it to be: if we've already parsed the submodule we're considering
entering, it's always safe to skip it.
llvm-svn: 241135
local submodule visibility enabled; that top-level file might not actually be
the module includes buffer if use of prebuilt modules is disabled.
llvm-svn: 241120
Summary: This change adds parsing for the concept keyword in a
declaration and tracks the location. Diagnostic testing added for
invalid use of concept keyword.
Reviewers: faisalv, fraggamuffin, rsmith, hubert.reinterpretcast
Reviewed By: rsmith, hubert.reinterpretcast
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10528
Patch by Nathan Wilson!
llvm-svn: 241060
Add intrinsics for the FXSR instructions (FXSAVE/FXSAVE64/FXRSTOR/FXRSTOR64)
These were previously declared in Intrin.h for MSVC compatibility, but now
that we have them implemented, these declarations can be removed.
llvm-svn: 241053
This matches the implementation of the gcc support for the same
feature, including checking the values set up by libgcc at runtime.
The structure looks like this:
unsigned int __cpu_vendor;
unsigned int __cpu_type;
unsigned int __cpu_subtype;
unsigned int __cpu_features[1];
with a set of enums to match various fields that are field out after
parsing the output of the cpuid instruction.
This also adds a set of errors checking for valid input (and cpu).
compiler-rt support for this and the other builtins in this family
(__builtin_cpu_init and __builtin_cpu_is) are forthcoming.
llvm-svn: 240994
- Hexagon options were physically next to to ones that had a
preceding comment saying "Double dash options", which they aren't.
- The 'ld' tool classes are named Linker, not Link.
llvm-svn: 240980
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10637
This is the first round of additions of missing builtins listed in the ABI document. More to come (this builds onto what seurer already addes). This patch adds:
vector signed long long vec_abs(vector signed long long)
vector double vec_abs(vector double)
vector signed long long vec_add(vector signed long long, vector signed long long)
vector unsigned long long vec_add(vector unsigned long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector double vec_add(vector double, vector double)
vector double vec_and(vector bool long long, vector double)
vector double vec_and(vector double, vector bool long long)
vector double vec_and(vector double, vector double)
vector signed long long vec_and(vector signed long long, vector signed long long)
vector double vec_andc(vector bool long long, vector double)
vector double vec_andc(vector double, vector bool long long)
vector double vec_andc(vector double, vector double)
vector signed long long vec_andc(vector signed long long, vector signed long long)
vector double vec_ceil(vector double)
vector bool long long vec_cmpeq(vector double, vector double)
vector bool long long vec_cmpge(vector double, vector double)
vector bool long long vec_cmpge(vector signed long long, vector signed long long)
vector bool long long vec_cmpge(vector unsigned long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector bool long long vec_cmpgt(vector double, vector double)
vector bool long long vec_cmple(vector double, vector double)
vector bool long long vec_cmple(vector signed long long, vector signed long long)
vector bool long long vec_cmple(vector unsigned long long, vector unsigned long long)
vector bool long long vec_cmplt(vector double, vector double)
vector bool long long vec_cmplt(vector signed long long, vector signed long long)
vector bool long long vec_cmplt(vector unsigned long long, vector unsigned long long)
llvm-svn: 240821
This patch implements the functionality specified by DR948.
The changes are two fold. First, the parser was modified
to allow 'constexpr's to appear in condition declarations
(which was a hard error before). Second, Sema was modified
to cleanup maybe odr-used declarations by way of a call to
'ActOnFinishFullExpr'. As 'constexpr's were not allowed in
condition declarations before the cleanup wasn't necessary
(such declarations were always odr-used).
This fixes PR22491.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8978
llvm-svn: 240707
This is exercised by existing tests, and fixes a failure with -fsanitize=null.
No observable change otherwise; the code happened to do the right thing in
practice under recent versions of Clang and GCC because
MacroDirective::getDefinition happens to check whether this == null.
llvm-svn: 240691
Summary:
For better or worse the OS X command line tools refer to the iOS simulator as iphonesimucator. We should provide an alias flag -miphonesimulator-version-min that matches a consistent pattern with the other tools.
This is in the interest of making it easier for people to write platform-agnostic darwin build scripts.
Reviewers: bob.wilson, bogner
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10743
llvm-svn: 240686
Summary:
This change implements parse-only acceptance of the optional
requires-clause in a template-declaration. Diagnostic testing is added
for cases where the grammar is ambiguous with the expectation that the
longest token sequence which matches the syntax of a
constraint-expression is consumed without backtracking.
Reviewers: faisalv, fraggamuffin, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10462
llvm-svn: 240611
Addresses a conflict with glibc's __nonnull macro by renaming the type
nullability qualifiers as follows:
__nonnull -> _Nonnull
__nullable -> _Nullable
__null_unspecified -> _Null_unspecified
This is the major part of rdar://problem/21530726, but does not yet
provide the Darwin-specific behavior for the old names.
llvm-svn: 240596
The ARM _MoveToCoprocessor and _MoveFromCoprocessor builtins require
integer constants for most arguments, but clang was not checking that.
With this change, we now report meaningful errors instead of crashing
in the backend.
llvm-svn: 240463
Virtual inheritance member pointers are always relative to the vbindex,
even when the member pointer doesn't point into a virtual base. This is
corrected by adjusting the non-virtual offset backwards from the vbptr
back to the top of the most derived class. While we performed this
adjustment when manifesting member pointers as constants or when
performing conversions, we didn't perform the adjustment when mangling
them.
llvm-svn: 240453
Any extra features from -fmodule-feature are part of the module hash and
need to get validated on load. Also print them with -module-file-info.
llvm-svn: 240433
Parsing and sema analysis (without support for array sections in arguments) for 'depend' clause (used in 'task' directive, OpenMP 4.0).
llvm-svn: 240409
Member pointers in the MS ABI are made complicated due to the following:
- Virtual methods in the most derived class (MDC) might live in a
vftable in a virtual base.
- There are four different representations of member pointer: single
inheritance, multiple inheritance, virtual inheritance and the "most
general" representation.
- Bases might have a *more* general representation than classes which
derived from them, a most surprising result.
We believed that we could treat all member pointers as-if they were a
degenerate case of the multiple inheritance model. This fell apart once
we realized that implementing standard member pointers using this ABI
requires referencing members with a non-zero vbindex.
On a bright note, all but the virtual inheritance model operate rather
similarly. The virtual inheritance member pointer representation
awkwardly requires a virtual base adjustment in order to refer to
entities in the MDC.
However, the first virtual base might be quite far from the start of the
virtual base. This means that we must add a negative non-virtual
displacement.
However, things get even more complicated. The most general
representation interprets vbindex zero differently from the virtual
inheritance model: it doesn't reference the vbtable at all.
It turns out that this complexity can increase for quite some time:
consider a derived to base conversion from the most general model to the
multiple inheritance model...
To manage this complexity we introduce a concept of "normalized" member
pointer which allows us to treat all three models as the most general
model. Then we try to figure out how to map this generalized member
pointer onto the destination member pointer model. I've done my best to
furnish the code with comments explaining why each adjustment is
performed.
This fixes PR23878.
llvm-svn: 240384
Currently if the variable is captured in captured region, capture record for this region stores reference to this variable for future use. But we don't need to provide the reference to the original variable if it was explicitly marked as private in the 'private' clause of the OpenMP construct, this variable is replaced by private copy.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9550
llvm-svn: 240377
Such conflicts are an accident waiting to happen, and this feature conflicts
with the desire to include existing headers into multiple modules and merge the
results. (In an ideal world, it should not be possible to export internal
linkage symbols from a module, but sadly the glibc and libstdc++ headers
provide 'static inline' functions in a few cases.)
llvm-svn: 240335
The patch is generated using this command:
$ tools/extra/clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py -fix \
-checks=-*,llvm-namespace-comment -header-filter='llvm/.*|clang/.*' \
work/llvm/tools/clang
To reduce churn, not touching namespaces spanning less than 10 lines.
llvm-svn: 240270
The same pattern was repeated a few times. Create a trivial helper method to
map the Type Specifier to an ID for the diagnostic. Flip the selection order on
one of the diagnostic messages to get the same ordering across all of the
messages. This makes the emission of the diagnostic slightly more legible by
changing the cascading ternary into a switch in a function. NFC.
llvm-svn: 240251
Move /Qvec flags from the "// Non-aliases:" section up to the "// Aliases:"
section since the flags are just aliases. For the same reason, move the
/vm flags the other way. Also reflow a few lines to 80 columns.
No behavior change.
llvm-svn: 240248
This is a better approach to fixing the undefined behaviour I tried to
fix in r240228. This data doesn't necessarily have suitable alignment
for uint64_t, so use unaligned_uint64_t instead.
This fixes 225 test failures when clang is built with ubsan.
llvm-svn: 240247
We interpret Blob as an array of uint64_t here, but there's no reason
to think that it has suitable alignment. Instead, read the data in in
an alignment-safe way and store it in a std::vector.
This fixes 225 test failures when clang is built with ubsan.
llvm-svn: 240228
A PCHContainerOperations abstract interface provides operations for
creating and unwrapping containers for serialized ASTs (precompiled
headers and clang modules). The default implementation is
RawPCHContainerOperations, which uses a flat file for the output.
The main application for this interface will be an
ObjectFilePCHContainerOperations implementation that uses LLVM to
wrap the module in an ELF/Mach-O/COFF container to store debug info
alongside the AST.
rdar://problem/20091852
llvm-svn: 240225
...instead of as a special case in ParseObjCTypeName with lots of
duplicated logic. Besides being a nice refactoring, this also allows
"- (instancetype __nonnull)self" in addition to "- (nonnull instancetype)self".
rdar://problem/19924646
llvm-svn: 240188
Includes a simple static analyzer check and not much else, but we'll also
be able to take advantage of this in Swift.
This feature can be tested for using __has_feature(cf_returns_on_parameters).
This commit also contains two fixes:
- Look through non-typedef sugar when deciding whether something is a CF type.
- When (cf|ns)_returns(_not)?_retained is applied to invalid properties,
refer to "property" instead of "method" in the error message.
rdar://problem/18742441
llvm-svn: 240185
Introduce ToolChain::getSupportedSanitizers() that would return the set
of sanitizers available on given toolchain. By default, these are
sanitizers which don't necessarily require runtime support and are
not toolchain- or architecture-dependent.
Sanitizers (ASan, DFSan, TSan, MSan etc.) which cannot function
without runtime library are marked as supported only on platforms
for which we actually build these runtimes.
This would allow more fine-grained checks in the future: for instance,
we have to restrict availability of -fsanitize=vptr to Mac OS 10.9+
(PR23539).
Update test cases accrodingly: add tests for certain unsupported
configurations, remove test cases for -fsanitize=vptr + PS4
integration, as we don't build the runtime for PS4 at the moment.
This change was first submitted as r239953 and reverted in r239958.
The problem was and still is in Darwin toolchains, which get the
knowledge about target platform too late after initializaition, while
now we require this information when ToolChain::getSanitizerArgs() is
called. r240170 works around this issue.
llvm-svn: 240179
Summary:
This is unfortunate, but would let us land http://reviews.llvm.org/D10467,
that makes ToolChains responsible for computing the set of sanitizers
they support.
Unfortunately, Darwin ToolChains doesn't know about actual OS they
target until ToolChain::TranslateArgs() is called. In particular, it
means we won't be able to construct SanitizerArgs for these ToolChains
before that.
This change removes SanitizerArgs::needsLTO() method, so that now
ToolChain::IsUsingLTO(), which is called very early, doesn't need
SanitizerArgs to implement this method.
Docs and test cases are updated accordingly. See
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23539, which describes why we
start all these.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10560
llvm-svn: 240170
Adds a new warning (under -Wnullability-completeness) that complains
about pointer, block pointer, or member pointer declarations that have
not been annotated with nullability information (directly or inferred)
within a header that contains some nullability annotations. This is
intended to be used to help maintain the completeness of nullability
information within a header that has already been audited.
Note that, for performance reasons, this warning will underrepresent
the number of non-annotated pointers in the case where more than one
pointer is seen before the first nullability type specifier, because
we're only tracking one piece of information per header. Part of
rdar://problem/18868820.
llvm-svn: 240158
Introduce the clang pragmas "assume_nonnull begin" and "assume_nonnull
end" in which we make default assumptions about the nullability of many
unannotated pointers:
- Single-level pointers are inferred to __nonnull
- NSError** in a (function or method) parameter list is inferred to
NSError * __nullable * __nullable.
- CFErrorRef * in a (function or method) parameter list is inferred
to CFErrorRef __nullable * __nullable.
- Other multi-level pointers are never inferred to anything.
Implements rdar://problem/19191042.
llvm-svn: 240156
'null_resettable' properties are those whose getters return nonnull
but whose setters take nil, to "reset" the property to some
default. Implements rdar://problem/19051334.
llvm-svn: 240155
Introduce context-sensitive, non-underscored nullability specifiers
(nonnull, nullable, null_unspecified) for Objective-C method return
types, method parameter types, and properties.
Introduce Objective-C-specific semantics, including computation of the
nullability of the result of a message send, merging of nullability
information from the @interface of a class into its @implementation,
etc .
This is the Objective-C part of rdar://problem/18868820.
llvm-svn: 240154
This generalizes the checking of null arguments to also work with
values of pointer-to-function, reference-to-function, and block
pointer type, using the nullability information within the underling
function prototype to extend non-null checking, and diagnoses returns
of 'nil' within a function with a __nonnull return type.
Note that we don't warn about nil returns from Objective-C methods,
because it's common for Objective-C methods to mimic the nil-swallowing
behavior of the receiver by checking ostensibly non-null parameters
and returning nil from otherwise non-null methods in that
case.
It also diagnoses (via a separate flag) conversions from nullable to
nonnull pointers. It's a separate flag because this warning can be noisy.
llvm-svn: 240153
Introduces the type specifiers __nonnull, __nullable, and
__null_unspecified that describe the nullability of the pointer type
to which the specifier appertains. Nullability type specifiers improve
on the existing nonnull attributes in a few ways:
- They apply to types, so one can represent a pointer to a non-null
pointer, use them in function pointer types, etc.
- As type specifiers, they are syntactically more lightweight than
__attribute__s or [[attribute]]s.
- They can express both the notion of 'should never be null' and
also 'it makes sense for this to be null', and therefore can more
easily catch errors of omission where one forgot to annotate the
nullability of a particular pointer (this will come in a subsequent
patch).
Nullability type specifiers are maintained as type sugar, and
therefore have no effect on mangling, encoding, overloading,
etc. Nonetheless, they will be used for warnings about, e.g., passing
'null' to a method that does not accept it.
This is the C/C++ part of rdar://problem/18868820.
llvm-svn: 240146
This patch adds initial support for the -fsanitize=kernel-address flag to Clang.
Right now it's quite restricted: only out-of-line instrumentation is supported, globals are not instrumented, some GCC kasan flags are not supported.
Using this patch I am able to build and boot the KASan tree with LLVMLinux patches from github.com/ramosian-glider/kasan/tree/kasan_llvmlinux.
To disable KASan instrumentation for a certain function attribute((no_sanitize("kernel-address"))) can be used.
llvm-svn: 240131
Base type of attribute((mode)) can actually be a vector type.
The patch is to distinguish between base type and base element type.
This fixes http://llvm.org/PR17453.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10058
llvm-svn: 240125
This flag controls whether a given sanitizer traps upon detecting
an error. It currently only supports UBSan. The existing flag
-fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error has been made an alias of
-fsanitize-trap=undefined.
This change also cleans up some awkward behavior around the combination
of -fsanitize-trap=undefined and -fsanitize=undefined. Previously we
would reject command lines containing the combination of these two flags,
as -fsanitize=vptr is not compatible with trapping. This required the
creation of -fsanitize=undefined-trap, which excluded -fsanitize=vptr
(and -fsanitize=function, but this seems like an oversight).
Now, -fsanitize=undefined is an alias for -fsanitize=undefined-trap,
and if -fsanitize-trap=undefined is specified, we treat -fsanitize=vptr
as an "unsupported" flag, which means that we error out if the flag is
specified explicitly, but implicitly disable it if the flag was implied
by -fsanitize=undefined.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10464
llvm-svn: 240105
Added parsing, sema analysis and codegen for '#pragma omp taskgroup' directive (OpenMP 4.0).
The code for directive is generated the following way:
#pragma omp taskgroup
<body>
void __kmpc_taskgroup(<loc>, thread_id);
<body>
void __kmpc_end_taskgroup(<loc>, thread_id);
llvm-svn: 240011
In essence this is meant to consistently indent multiline strings by a
fixed amount of spaces from the start of the line. Don't do this in
cases where it wouldn't help anyway.
Before:
someFunction(aaaaa,
"aaaaa"
"bbbbb");
After:
someFunction(aaaaa, "aaaaa"
"bbbbb");
llvm-svn: 240004
Summary:
Introduce ToolChain::getSupportedSanitizers() that would return the set
of sanitizers available on given toolchain. By default, these are
sanitizers which don't necessarily require runtime support (i.e.
set from -fsanitize=undefined-trap).
Sanitizers (ASan, DFSan, TSan, MSan etc.) which cannot function
without runtime library are marked as supported only on platforms
for which we actually build these runtimes.
This would allow more fine-grained checks in the future: for instance,
we have to restrict availability of -fsanitize=vptr to Mac OS 10.9+
(PR23539)
Update test cases accrodingly: add tests for certain unsupported
configurations, remove test cases for -fsanitize=vptr + PS4
integration, as we don't build the runtime for PS4 at the moment.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits, filcab, eugenis, thakis, kubabrecka, emaste, rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10467
llvm-svn: 239953
Summary:
Qualify all types used in AST matcher macros. This makes it possible to
put AST matchers in user code into a namespace other than clang::ast_matchers
and this way prevent ODR violations that could happen when a matcher with the
same name is defined in multiple translation units. Updated comments
accordingly.
Reviewers: djasper, klimek
Reviewed By: djasper, klimek
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10501
llvm-svn: 239902
MS attributes do not permit empty attribute blocks. Correctly diagnose those.
We continue to parse to ensure that we recover correctly. Because the block is
empty, we do not need to skip any tokens.
Bonus: tweak the comment that I updated but forgot to remove the function name
in a previous commit.
llvm-svn: 239846
Previously the last iteration for simd loop-based OpenMP constructs were generated as a separate code. This feature is not required and codegen is simplified.
llvm-svn: 239810
We used to have a flag to enable module maps, and two more flags to enable
implicit module maps. This is all redundant; we don't need any flag for
enabling module maps in the abstract, and we don't usually have -fno- flags for
-cc1. We now have just a single flag, -fimplicit-module-maps, that enables
implicitly searching the file system for module map files and loading them.
The driver interface is unchanged for now. We should probably rename
-fmodule-maps to -fimplicit-module-maps at some point.
llvm-svn: 239789
This patch adds the -fsanitize=safe-stack command line argument for clang,
which enables the Safe Stack protection (see http://reviews.llvm.org/D6094
for the detailed description of the Safe Stack).
This patch is our implementation of the safe stack on top of Clang. The
patches make the following changes:
- Add -fsanitize=safe-stack and -fno-sanitize=safe-stack options to clang
to control safe stack usage (the safe stack is disabled by default).
- Add __attribute__((no_sanitize("safe-stack"))) attribute to clang that can be
used to disable the safe stack for individual functions even when enabled
globally.
Original patch by Volodymyr Kuznetsov and others at the Dependable Systems
Lab at EPFL; updates and upstreaming by myself.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6095
llvm-svn: 239762
in section 10.1, __arm_{w,r}sr{,p,64}.
This includes arm_acle.h definitions with builtins and codegen to support
these, the intrinsics are implemented by generating read/write_register calls
which get appropriately lowered in the backend based on the register string
provided. SemaChecking is also implemented to fault invalid parameters.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9697
llvm-svn: 239737
Summary:
The goal of this patch is to make `-verify` easier to use when testing libc++. The `notes` attached to compile error diagnostics are numerous and relatively unstable when they reference libc++ header internals. This patch allows libc++ to write stable compilation failure tests by allowing unexpected diagnostic messages to be ignored where they are not relevant.
This patch adds a new CC1 flag called `-verify-ignore-unexpected`. `-verify-ignore-unexpected` tells `VerifyDiagnosticsConsumer` to ignore *all* unexpected diagnostic messages. `-verify-ignore-unexpected=<LevelList>` can be used to only ignore certain diagnostic levels. `<LevelList>` is a comma separated list of diagnostic levels to ignore. The supported levels are `note`, `remark`, `warning` and `error`.
Reviewers: bogner, grosser, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10138
llvm-svn: 239665
Removed comment in Driver::ShouldUseClangCompiler implying that there
was an opt-out ability at that point - there isn't.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10246
llvm-svn: 239608
Since we're ignoring the tune= and fpmath= attributes go ahead
and add a warning alerting people to the fact that we're going
to ignore that part of it during code generation and tie it to
the attribute warning set.
llvm-svn: 239583
Modeled after the gcc attribute of the same name, this feature
allows source level annotations to correspond to backend code
generation. In llvm particular parlance, this allows the adding
of subtarget features and changing the cpu for a particular function
based on source level hints.
This has been added into the existing support for function level
attributes without particular verification for any target outside
of whether or not the backend will support the features/cpu given
(similar to section, etc).
llvm-svn: 239579
Specifying #pragma clang loop vectorize(assume_safety) on a loop adds the
mem.parallel_loop_access metadata to each load/store operation in the loop. This
metadata tells loop access analysis (LAA) to skip memory dependency checking.
llvm-svn: 239572
In the long run, these two might be independent or we might to only
allow specific combinations. Until we have a corresponding request,
however, it is hard to do the right thing and choose the right
configuration options. Thus, just don't touch the options yet and
just modify the behavior slightly.
llvm-svn: 239531
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10095
This is for just two instructions and related builtins:
vbpermq
vgbbd
llvm-svn: 239506
CodeGenOptions and onto the PassManagerBuilder. This enables gating
the new EliminateAvailableExternally module pass on whether we are
preparing for LTO.
If we are preparing for LTO (e.g. a -flto -c compile), the new pass is not
included as we want to preserve available externally functions for possible
link time inlining.
llvm-svn: 239481
The RequestingModule argument was unused and always its default value of
nullptr.
Also move a declaration closer to its use, and range-for'ify.
llvm-svn: 239453
Based on previous discussion on the mailing list, clang currently lacks support
for C99 partial re-initialization behavior:
Reference: http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-dev/2013-April/029188.html
Reference: http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/dr_253.htm
This patch attempts to fix this problem.
Given the following code snippet,
struct P1 { char x[6]; };
struct LP1 { struct P1 p1; };
struct LP1 l = { .p1 = { "foo" }, .p1.x[2] = 'x' };
// this example is adapted from the example for "struct fred x[]" in DR-253;
// currently clang produces in l: { "\0\0x" },
// whereas gcc 4.8 produces { "fox" };
// with this fix, clang will also produce: { "fox" };
Differential Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5789
llvm-svn: 239446
GCC mangles long double like __float128 in order to support
compatibility with ABI variants which had a different interpretation of
long double.
This fixes PR23791.
llvm-svn: 239421
This is a follow-up to r225570 which enabled adding DLL attributes when a
class template goes from explicit instantiation declaration to explicit
instantiation definition.
llvm-svn: 239375
Don't warn about not being able to propagate dll attribute to a base class template
when that base already has a different attribute.
MSVC doesn't actually try to do this; the first attribute that was propagated
takes precedence, so Clang is already doing the right thing and there's no
need to warn.
(This is a step towards fixing PR21718.)
llvm-svn: 239372
There are still problems here, but this is a better starting point.
The main part of the change is: when doing a lookup that would accept visible
or hidden declarations, prefer to produce the latest visible declaration if
there are any visible declarations, rather than always producing the latest
declaration.
Thus, when we inherit default arguments (and other properties) from a previous
declaration, we inherit them from the previous visible declaration; if the
previous declaration is hidden, we already suppress inheritance of default
arguments.
There are a couple of other changes here that fix latent bugs exposed by this
change.
llvm-svn: 239371
Summary:
This modifies Clang to reflect that under pre-C99 ISO C, decimal
constants may have type `unsigned long` even if they do not contain `u`
or `U` in their suffix (C90 subclause 6.1.3.2 paragraph 5). The same is
done for C++ without C++11 which--because of undefined behaviour--allows
for behaviour compatible with ISO C90 in the case of an unsuffixed
decimal literal and is otherwise identical to C90 in its treatment of
integer literals (C++03 subclause 2.13.1 [lex.icon] paragraph 2).
Messages are added to the `c99-compat` and `c++11-compat` groups to warn
on such literals, since they behave differently under the newer
standards.
Fixes PR 16678.
Test Plan:
A new test file is added to exercise both pre-C99/C++11 and C99/C++11-up
on decimal literals with no suffix or suffixes `l`/`L` for both 32-bit
and 64-bit `long`.
In the file, 2^31 (being `INT_MAX+1`) is tested for the expected type
using `__typeof__` and multiple declarations of the same entity. 2^63
is similarly tested when it is within the range of `unsigned long`.
Preprocessor arithmetic tests are added to ensure consistency given
that Clang (like GCC) uses greater than 32 bits for preprocessor
arithmetic even when `long` and `unsigned long` is 32 bits and a
pre-C99/C++11 mode is in effect.
Tests added:
test/Sema/PR16678.c
Reviewers: fraggamuffin, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9794
llvm-svn: 239356
It's better not to rely on the diagnostics engine to pretty print the
argument to decltype. Instead, exercise the functionality in
DeclPrinterTest.
llvm-svn: 239197
input / output with memory constraint.
One generally can't get address of a bit field, so the general solution is to
error on such cases. GCC does the same.
Patch by Andrey Bokhanko
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10086
llvm-svn: 239153
Summary:
This patch enables lexing of `concept` and `requires` as keywords.
Further changes which add messages for future keyword compat are to
follow.
Test Plan:
Testing of C++14 + Concepts TS mode is added to
`test/Lexer/keywords_test.cpp`, which expects that the new keywords are
enabled under said mode.
Reviewers: faisalv, fraggamuffin, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10233
llvm-svn: 239128
If we crash while handling headers, the crash report mechanism
currently tries to make a string out of a null pointer when it tries
to make up a file extension.
Map *-header input types to reasonable extensions to avoid this.
llvm-svn: 238994
The default language options will lead to incorrect replacements in C++
code, for example when trying to replace nested name specifiers ending
in "::".
llvm-svn: 238922
Summary:
This patch is part of http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2181.
In-class initializers are appended to the CFG when CFGBuilder::addInitializer is called.
Reviewers: jordan_rose, rsmith
Reviewed By: jordan_rose
Subscribers: cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D2370
llvm-svn: 238913
The MSVC 2013 and 2015 implementation of std::atomic is specialized for
pointer types. The member functions are implemented using a static_cast
from void-ptr to function-ptr which is not allowed in the standard.
Permit this conversion if -fms-compatibility is present.
This fixes PR23733.
llvm-svn: 238877
If the type isn't trivially moveable emplace can skip a potentially
expensive move. It also saves a couple of characters.
Call sites were found with the ASTMatcher + some semi-automated cleanup.
memberCallExpr(
argumentCountIs(1), callee(methodDecl(hasName("push_back"))),
on(hasType(recordDecl(has(namedDecl(hasName("emplace_back")))))),
hasArgument(0, bindTemporaryExpr(
hasType(recordDecl(hasNonTrivialDestructor())),
has(constructExpr()))),
unless(isInTemplateInstantiation()))
No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 238601
This isn't an actual revert of r237769, it just restores the behavior of
the Clang driver prior to it while completely re-implementing how that
behavior works.
This also re-does the work of making the default OpenMP runtime
selectable at CMake (or configure) time to work in the way all of our
other such hooks do (config.h, configure and cmake hooks, etc.).
I've re-implemented how we manage the '-fopenmp' flagset in an important
way. Now, the "default" hook just makes '-fopenmp' equivalent to
'-fopenmp=<default>' rather than a separate special beast. Also, there
is an '-fno-openmp' flag which does the obvious thing. Also, the code is
shared between all the places to select a known OpenMP runtime and act
on it.
Finally, and most significantly, I've taught the driver to inspect the
selected runtime when choosing whether to propagate the '-fopenmp' flag
to the frontend in the CC1 commandline. Without this, it isn't possible
to use Clang with libgomp, even if you were happy with the serial,
boring way in which it worked previously (ignoring all #pragmas but
linking in the library to satisfy direct calls into the runtime).
While I'm here, I've gone ahead and sketched out a path for the future
name of LLVM's OpenMP runtime (libomp) and the legacy support for its
current name (libiomp5) in what seems a more reasonable way.
To re-enable LLVM's OpenMP runtime (which I think should wait until the
normal getting started instructions are a reasonable way for falks to
check out, build, and install Clang with the runtime) all that needs to
change is the default string in the CMakeLists.txt and configure.ac
file. No code changes necessary.
I also added a test for the driver's behavior around OpenMP since it was
*completely missing* previously. Makes it unsurprising that we got it
wrong.
llvm-svn: 238389
When checking if a function is noreturn, consider a codepath to be noreturn if
the path destroys a class and the class destructor, base class destructors, or
member field destructors are marked noreturn.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9454
llvm-svn: 238382
Previously, we wouldn't call checkDLLAttribute() after the class template
specialization definition if the class template was already instantiated
by an explicit class template specialization declaration.
llvm-svn: 238266
Note: __declspec is also temporarily enabled when compiling for a CUDA target because there are implementation details relying on __declspec(property) support currently. When those details change, __declspec should be disabled for CUDA targets.
llvm-svn: 238238
in POWER8.
These are the Clang-related changes for http://reviews.llvm.org/D9081
vadduqm
vaddeuqm
vaddcuq
vaddecuq
vsubuqm
vsubeuqm
vsubcuq
vsubecuq
All builtins are added in altivec.h, and guarded with the POWER8_VECTOR and
powerpc64 macros.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9903
llvm-svn: 238145
in-progress implementation of the Concepts TS. The recommended feature
test macro __cpp_experimental_concepts is set to 1 (as opposed to
201501) to indicate that the feature is enabled, but the
implementation is incomplete.
The link to the Concepts TS in cxx_status is updated to refer to the
PDTS (N4377). Additional changes related to __has_feature and
__has_extension are to follow in a later change.
Relevant tests include:
test/Lexer/cxx-features.cpp
The test file is updated with testing of the C++14 + Concepts TS mode.
The expected behaviour is the same as that of the C++14 modes except
for the case of __cpp_experimental_concepts."
- Hubert Tong.
Being committed for Hubert (as per his understanding with Richard Smith) as we start work on the concepts-ts following our preliminary strategy session earlier today.
The patch is tiny and seems quite standard.
Thanks Hubert!
llvm-svn: 237982
visibility is enabled) or leave and re-enter it, restore the macro and module
visibility state from last time we were in that submodule.
This allows mutually-#including header files to stand a chance at being
modularized with local visibility enabled.
llvm-svn: 237871
-fopenmp turns on OpenMP support and links libiomp5 as OpenMP library. Also there is -fopenmp={libiomp5|libgomp} option that allows to override effect of -fopenmp and link libgomp library (if -fopenmp=libgomp is specified).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9736
llvm-svn: 237769
VarDeclBitfields contained bits which are never present in parameters.
Split these out so that ParmVarDeclBitfields wouldn't grow past 32-bits
if another field was added.
llvm-svn: 237648
-Wmove includes the three existing warnings for std::move calls, self move,
reduntant move, and pessimizing move. -Wmove is included in -Wmost, so that
it can be discoverable to people using that or -Wall.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9493
llvm-svn: 237610
Emit warning when operand to `delete` is allocated with `new[]` or
operand to `delete[]` is allocated with `new`.
rev 2 update:
`getNewExprFromInitListOrExpr` should return `dyn_cast_or_null`
instead of `dyn_cast`, since `E` might be null.
Reviewers: rtrieu, jordan_rose, rsmith
Subscribers: majnemer, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4661
llvm-svn: 237608
This patch adds support for the following new instructions in the
Power ISA 2.07:
vpksdss
vpksdus
vpkudus
vpkudum
vupkhsw
vupklsw
These instructions are available through the vec_packs, vec_packsu,
vec_unpackh, and vec_unpackl built-in interfaces. These are
lane-sensitive instructions, so the built-ins have different
implementations for big- and little-endian, and the instructions must
be marked as killing the vector swap optimization for now.
The first three instructions perform saturating pack operations. The
fourth performs a modulo pack operation, which means it can be
represented with a vector shuffle, and conversely the appropriate
vector shuffles may cause this instruction to be generated. The other
instructions are only generated via built-in support for now.
I noticed during patch preparation that the macro __VSX__ was not
previously predefined when the power8-vector or direct-move features
are requested. This is an error, and I've corrected that here as
well.
Appropriate tests have been added.
There is a companion patch to llvm for the rest of this support.
llvm-svn: 237500
The error has the form ... 'int' ... 'const int' ... dropped qualifiers. At
first glance, it appears that the const qualifier is added. Reverse the types
so that the second type is less qualified than the first.
llvm-svn: 237482
With this change, enabling -fmodules-local-submodule-visibility results in name
visibility rules being applied to submodules of the current module in addition
to imported modules (that is, names no longer "leak" between submodules of the
same top-level module). This also makes it much safer to textually include a
non-modular library into a module: each submodule that textually includes that
library will get its own "copy" of that library, and so the library becomes
visible no matter which including submodule you import.
llvm-svn: 237473
Summary:
r235215 enables support in LLVM for legalizing f16 type in the IR. AArch64
already had support for this. r235215 and some backend patches brought support
for ARM, X86, X86-64, Mips and Mips64.
This change exposes the LangOption 'NativeHalfType' in the command line, so the
backend legalization can be used if desired. NativeHalfType is enabled for
OpenCL (current behavior) or if '-fnative-half-type' is set.
Reviewers: olista01, steven_wu, ab
Subscribers: cfe-commits, srhines, aemerson
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9781
llvm-svn: 237406
This reverts commit 742dc9b6c9686ab52860b7da39c3a126d8a97fbc.
This is generating multiple segfaults in our internal builds.
Test case coming up shortly.
llvm-svn: 237391
Emit warning when operand to `delete` is allocated with `new[]` or
operand to `delete[]` is allocated with `new`.
Reviewers: rtrieu, jordan_rose, rsmith
Subscribers: majnemer, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4661
llvm-svn: 237368
This, in preparation for the introduction of more new keywords in the
implementation of the C++ language, generalizes the support for future keyword
compat diagnostics (e.g., diag::warn_cxx11_keyword) by extending the
applicability of the relevant property in IdentifierTable with appropriate
renaming.
Patch by Hubert Tong!
llvm-svn: 237332
Previously, if a semi-colon is unexpectedly added before a closing ')', ']' or
'}', two errors and one note would emitted, and the parsing would get confused
to which scope it was in. This change consumes the semi-colon, recovers
parsing better, and emits only one error with a fix-it.
llvm-svn: 237192
'schedule' clause for combined directives requires additional processing. Special helper variable is generated, that is captured in the outlined parallel region for 'parallel for' region. This captured variable is used to store chunk expression from the 'schedule' clause in this 'parallel for' region.
llvm-svn: 237100
After mailing list discussion on 11-13 March we would prefer to stick to a
single spelling of the long option.
This reverts commit 30035fe1a7c759c89ee62eb46efce6b3790fcc08.
llvm-svn: 237003
Summary:
Possible coverage levels are:
* -fsanitize-coverage=func - function-level coverage
* -fsanitize-coverage=bb - basic-block-level coverage
* -fsanitize-coverage=edge - edge-level coverage
Extra features are:
* -fsanitize-coverage=indirect-calls - coverage for indirect calls
* -fsanitize-coverage=trace-bb - tracing for basic blocks
* -fsanitize-coverage=trace-cmp - tracing for cmp instructions
* -fsanitize-coverage=8bit-counters - frequency counters
Levels and features can be combined in comma-separated list, and
can be disabled by subsequent -fno-sanitize-coverage= flags, e.g.:
-fsanitize-coverage=bb,trace-bb,8bit-counters -fno-sanitize-coverage=trace-bb
is equivalient to:
-fsanitize-coverage=bb,8bit-counters
Original semantics of -fsanitize-coverage flag is preserved:
* -fsanitize-coverage=0 disables the coverage
* -fsanitize-coverage=1 is a synonym for -fsanitize-coverage=func
* -fsanitize-coverage=2 is a synonym for -fsanitize-coverage=bb
* -fsanitize-coverage=3 is a synonym for -fsanitize-coverage=edge
* -fsanitize-coverage=4 is a synonym for -fsanitize-coverage=edge,indirect-calls
Driver tries to diagnose invalid flag usage, in particular:
* At most one level (func,bb,edge) must be specified.
* "trace-bb" and "8bit-counters" features require some level to be specified.
See test case for more examples.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: kcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9577
llvm-svn: 236790
- added -fcuda-include-gpubinary option to incorporate results of
device-side compilation into host-side one.
- generate code to register GPU binaries and associated kernels
with CUDA runtime and clean-up on exit.
- added test case for init/deinit code generation.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9507
llvm-svn: 236765
A LambdaCapture does not have sufficient information
to correctly determine whether it is an init-capture or not.
Doing so requires knowledge held in the LambdaExpr itself.
It the case of a nested capture of an init-capture it is not
sufficient to check (as LambdaCapture::isInitCapture did)
whether the associated VarDecl was from an init-capture.
This patch moves isInitCapture to LambdaExpr and updates
Capture->isInitCapture() to Lambda->isInitCapture(Capture).
llvm-svn: 236760
Summary:
The next step is to add user-friendly control over these options
to driver via -fsanitize-coverage= option.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: kcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9545
llvm-svn: 236756
The MSVC 2015 ABI utilizes a rather straightforward adaptation of the
algorithm found in the appendix of N2382. While we are here, implement
support for emitting cleanups if an exception is thrown while we are
intitializing a static local variable.
llvm-svn: 236697
This adds low-level builtins to allow access to all of the z13 vector
instructions. Note that instructions whose semantics can be described
by standard C (including clang extensions) do not get any builtins.
For each instructions whose semantics *cannot* (fully) be described, we
define a builtin named __builtin_s390_<insn> that directly maps to this
instruction. These are intended to be compatible with GCC.
For instructions that also set the condition code, the builtin will take
an extra argument of type "int *" at the end. The integer pointed to by
this argument will be set to the post-instruction CC value.
For many instructions, the low-level builtin is mapped to the corresponding
LLVM IR intrinsic. However, a number of instructions can be represented
in standard LLVM IR without requiring use of a target intrinsic.
Some instructions require immediate integer operands within a certain
range. Those are verified at the Sema level.
Based on a patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 236532
This patch adds support for the z13 architecture type. For compatibility
with GCC, a pair of options -mvx / -mno-vx can be used to selectively
enable/disable use of the vector facility.
When the vector facility is present, we default to the new vector ABI.
This is characterized by two major differences:
- Vector types are passed/returned in vector registers
(except for unnamed arguments of a variable-argument list function).
- Vector types are at most 8-byte aligned.
The reason for the choice of 8-byte vector alignment is that the hardware
is able to efficiently load vectors at 8-byte alignment, and the ABI only
guarantees 8-byte alignment of the stack pointer, so requiring any higher
alignment for vectors would require dynamic stack re-alignment code.
However, for compatibility with old code that may use vector types, when
*not* using the vector facility, the old alignment rules (vector types
are naturally aligned) remain in use.
These alignment rules are not only implemented at the C language level,
but also at the LLVM IR level. This is done by selecting a different
DataLayout string depending on whether the vector ABI is in effect or not.
Based on a patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 236531
This is needed to prevent a TypoExpr from being corrected to a variable
when the TypoExpr is a subexpression of that variable's initializer.
Also exclude more keywords from the correction candidate pool when the
subsequent token is .* or ->* since keywords like "new" or "return"
aren't valid on the left side of those operators.
Fixes PR23140.
llvm-svn: 236519
clang::MacroDefinition now models the currently-defined value of a macro. The
previous MacroDefinition type, which represented a record of a macro definition
directive for a detailed preprocessing record, is now called MacroDefinitionRecord.
llvm-svn: 236400
The MSVC ABI has a bug introduced by appending to the end of vftables
which come from virtual bases: covariant thunks introduces via
non-overlapping regions of the inheritance lattice both append to the
same slot in the vftable.
It is possible to generate correct vftables in cases where one node in
the lattice completely dominates the other on the way to the base with
the vfptr; in all other cases, we must raise a diagnostic in order to
prevent the illusion that we succeeded in laying out the vftable.
This fixes PR16759.
llvm-svn: 236354
This flag specifies that the normal visibility rules should be used even for
local submodules (submodules of the currently-being-built module). Thus names
will only be visible if a header / module that declares them has actually been
included / imported, and not merely because a submodule that happened to be
built earlier declared those names. This also removes the need to modularize
bottom-up: textually-included headers will be included into every submodule
that includes them, since their include guards will not leak between modules.
So far, this only governs visibility of macros, not of declarations, so is not
ready for real use yet.
llvm-svn: 236350
It has no place there; it's not a property of the Module, and it makes
restoring the visibility set when we leave a submodule more difficult.
llvm-svn: 236300
This change is the third of 3 patches to add support for specifying
the profile output from the command line via -fprofile-instr-generate=<path>,
where the specified output path/file will be overridden by the
LLVM_PROFILE_FILE environment variable.
This patch adds the necessary support to the clang frontend, and adds a
new test.
The compiler-rt and llvm parts are r236055 and r236288, respectively.
Patch by Teresa Johnson. Thanks!
llvm-svn: 236289
No functionality change; no-one inspects this field yet, and probably no-one
will ever inspect it in the "invalid" state, but ubsan could be unhappy about
this if such a DefInfo is copied.
llvm-svn: 236256
And thereby stop asserting.
In ObjC++ modes, we tentatively parse the lambda introducer twice: once
to disambiguate designators, which we also do in C++, and a second time
to disambiguate objc message expressions. During the second tentative
parse, the last cached token will be the annotation token we built in
the first parse. So use getLastLoc() to get the correct end location
for the rebuilt annotation.
llvm-svn: 236246
For proper codegen we need to capture variable in the OpenMP region. In loop-based directives loop control variables are private by default and they must be captured in this region. There was a problem with capturing of globals, used as lcv, as they was not marked as private by default.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9336
llvm-svn: 236201
Modules builds fundamentally have a non-linear macro history. In the interest
of better source fidelity, represent the macro definition information
faithfully: we have a linear macro directive history within each module, and at
any point we have a unique "latest" local macro directive and a collection of
visible imported directives. This also removes the attendent complexity of
attempting to create a correct MacroDirective history (which we got wrong
in the general case).
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 236176
This issue was fixed elsewhere in r235396 in a more general way, hence these
changes no longer do anything. Keep the testcase however, to ensure that we
don't regress this for ARM.
llvm-svn: 236104
In Objective-C some style guides use a style where assignment operators are
aligned, in an effort to increase code readability. This patch adds an option
to the format library which allows this functionality. It is disabled by
default for all the included styles, so it must be explicitly enabled.
The option will change code such as:
- (void)method {
NSNumber *one = @1;
NSNumber *twentyFive = @25;
}
to:
- (void)method {
NSNumber *one = @1;
NSNumber *twentyFive = @25;
}
Patch by Matt Oakes. Thank you!
Accidentally reformatted all the tests...
llvm-svn: 236100
-Wpessimizing-move warns when a call to std::move would prevent copy elision
if the argument was not wrapped in a call. This happens when moving a local
variable in a return statement when the variable is the same type as the
return type or using a move to create a new object from a temporary object.
-Wredundant-move warns when an implicit move would already be made, so the
std::move call is not needed, such as when moving a local variable in a return
that is different from the return type.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7633
llvm-svn: 236075
This is just the clang-side of 32-bit SEH. LLVM still needs work, and it
will determinstically fail to compile until it's feature complete.
On x86, all outlined handlers have no parameters, but they do implicitly
take the EBP value passed in and use it to address locals of the parent
frame. We model this with llvm.frameaddress(1).
This works (mostly), but __finally block inlining can break it. For now,
we apply the 'noinline' attribute. If we really want to inline __finally
blocks on 32-bit x86, we should teach the inliner how to untangle
frameescape and framerecover.
Promote the error diagnostic from codegen to sema. It now rejects SEH on
non-Windows platforms. LLVM doesn't implement SEH on non-x86 Windows
platforms, but there's nothing preventing it.
llvm-svn: 236052
some bugs in the ASTImporter that this exposed:
- When importing functions, the body (if any) was
previously ignored. This patch ensures that the
body is imported also.
- When a function-local Decl is imported, the first
thing the ASTImporter does is import its context
(via ImportDeclParts()). This can trigger
importing the Decl again as part of the body of
the function (but only once, since the function's
Decl has been added to ImportedDecls). This patch
fixes that problem by extending ImportDeclParts()
to return the imported Decl if it was imported as
part of importing its context, and the patch adds
ASTImporter::GetAlreadyImportedOrNull() to support
this query. All callers of ImportDeclParts return
the imported version of the Decl if ImportDeclParts()
returns it.
- When creating functions, InnerLocStart of the source
function was re-used without importing. This is a
straight up bug, and this patch makes ASTImporter
import the InnerLocStart and use the imported version.
- When importing FileIDs, the ASTImporter previously
always tried to re-load the file for the corresponding
CacheEntry from disk. This doesn't work if the
CacheEntry corresponds to a named memory buffer. This
patch changes the code so that if the UniqueID for the
cache entry is invalid (i.e., it is not a disk file)
the whole entry is treated as if it were invalid, which
forces an in-memory copy of the buffer.
Also added test cases, using the new support committed in
236011.
llvm-svn: 236012
When creating a global variable with a type of a struct with bitfields, we must
forcibly set the alignment of the global from the RecordDecl. We must do this so
that the proper bitfield alignment makes its way down to LLVM, since clang will
mangle the bitfields into one large type.
llvm-svn: 235976
the active module macros at the point of definition, rather than reconstructing
it from the macro history. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 235941
Previously we'd try to perform checks on the captures from the middle of
parsing the lambda's body, at the point where we detected that a variable
needed to be captured. This was wrong in a number of subtle ways. In
PR23334, we couldn't correctly handle the list of potential odr-uses
resulting from the capture, and our attempt to recover from that resulted
in a use-after-free.
We now defer building the initialization expression until we leave the lambda
body and return to the enclosing context, where the initialization does the
right thing. This patch only covers lambda-expressions, but we should apply
the same change to blocks and captured statements too.
llvm-svn: 235921
During device-side CUDA compilation clang currently complains about
all TLS variables, regardless of whether they are __host__ or
__device__.
This patch suppresses "TLS unsupported" errors for host variables
during device compilation and for device variables during host
compilation.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9269
llvm-svn: 235907
NMake is a Make-like builder that comes with Microsoft Visual Studio.
Jom (https://wiki.qt.io/Jom) is an NMake-compatible build tool.
Dependency files for NMake/Jom need to use double-quotes to wrap
filespecs containing special characters, instead of the backslash
escapes that GNU Make wants.
Adds the -MV option, which specifies to use double-quotes as needed
instead of backslash escapes when writing the dependency file.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9260
llvm-svn: 235903
Previously we'd defer this determination until writing the AST, which doesn't
allow us to use this information when building other submodules of the same
module. This change also allows us to use a uniform mechanism for writing
module macro records, independent of whether they are local or imported.
llvm-svn: 235614
This graph will be used to determine the current set of active macros. This is
foundation work for getting macro visibility correct across submodules of the
current module. No functionality change for now.
llvm-svn: 235461
- Changed CUDALaunchBounds arguments from integers to Expr* so they can
be saved in AST for instantiation.
- Added support for template instantiation of launch_bounds attrubute.
- Moved evaluation of launch_bounds arguments to NVPTXTargetCodeGenInfo::
SetTargetAttributes() where it can be done after template instantiation.
- Added a warning on negative launch_bounds arguments.
- Amended test cases.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8985
llvm-svn: 235452
This is substantially simpler, provides better space usage accounting in bcanalyzer,
and gives a more compact representation. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 235420
The GCC construct __attribute__((aligned)) is defined to set alignment
to "the default alignment for the target architecture" according to
the GCC documentation:
The default alignment is sufficient for all scalar types, but may not be
enough for all vector types on a target that supports vector operations.
The default alignment is fixed for a particular target ABI.
clang currently hard-coded an alignment of 16 bytes for that construct,
which is correct on some platforms (including X86), but wrong on others
(including SystemZ). Since this value is ABI-relevant, it is important
to get correct for compatibility purposes.
This patch adds a new TargetInfo member "DefaultAlignForAttributeAligned"
that targets can set to the appropriate default __attribute__((aligned))
value.
Note that I'm deliberately *not* using the existing "SuitableAlign"
value, which is used to set the pre-defined macro __BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT__,
since those two values may not be the same on all platforms. In fact,
on X86, __attribute__((aligned)) always uses 16-byte alignment, while
__BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT__ may be larger if AVX-2 or AVX-512 are supported.
(This is actually not yet correctly implemented in clang either.)
The patch provides a value for DefaultAlignForAttributeAligned only for
SystemZ, and leaves the default for all other targets at 16, which means
no visible change in behavior on all other targets. (The value is still
wrong for some other targets, but I'd prefer to leave it to the target
maintainers for those platforms to fix.)
llvm-svn: 235397
in the context of the container itself.
Otherwise we will emit 'unavailable' errors when referencing an unavailable super class
even though the subclass is also marked 'unavailable'.
rdar://20598702
llvm-svn: 235276
__declspec(align(...)) is unlike all other attributes in that it is not
applied to a variable if it appears before the class-key. If the
tag in question isn't part of a variable declaration, it is not ignored.
Instead, the alignment attribute is applied to the tag.
This fixes PR18024.
llvm-svn: 235272
r235046 turned "extern __declspec(selectany) int a;" from a declaration into
a definition to fix PR23242 (required for compatibility with mc.exe output).
However, this broke parsing Windows headers: A d3d11 headers contain something
like
struct SomeStruct {};
extern const __declspec(selectany) SomeStruct some_struct;
This is now a definition, and const objects either need an explicit default
ctor or an initializer so this errors out with
d3d11.h(1065,48) :
error: default initialization of an object of const type
'const CD3D11_DEFAULT' without a user-provided default constructor
(cl.exe just doesn't implement this rule, independent of selectany.)
To work around this, weaken this error into a warning for selectany decls
in microsoft mode, and recover with zero-initialization.
Doing this is a bit hairy since it adds a fixit on an error emitted
by InitializationSequence – this means it needs to build a correct AST, which
in turn means InitializationSequence::Failed() cannot return true when this
fixit is applied. As a workaround, the patch adds a fixit member to
InitializationSequence, and InitializationSequence::Perform() prints the
diagnostic if the fixit member is set right after its call to Diagnose.
That function is usually called when InitializationSequences are used –
InitListChecker::PerformEmptyInit() doesn't call it, but the InitListChecker
case never performs default-initialization, so this is technically OK.
This is the alternative, original fix for PR20208 that got reviewed in the
thread "[patch] Improve diagnostic on default-initializing const variables
(PR20208)". This change basically reverts r213725, adds the original fix for
PR20208, and makes the error a warning in Microsoft mode.
llvm-svn: 235166
This allows callers to pass a char ** (such as the one coming from the
standard decreed main declaration - even though everyone usually puts
const on that themselves).
llvm-svn: 235150
attribute to be placed on Objective-C pointer typedef
to make them strong enough so on their "new" method
family no attempt is made to override these
types. rdar://20255473
llvm-svn: 235128
Emits the following code for the clause at the beginning of the outlined function for implicit threads:
if (<not a master thread>) {
...
<thread local copy of var> = <master thread local copy of var>;
...
}
<sync point>;
Checking for a non-master thread is performed by comparing of the address of the thread local variable with the address of the master's variable. Master thread always uses original variables, so you always know the address of the variable in the master thread.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9026
llvm-svn: 235075
#pragma omp for lastprivate(<var>)
for (i = a; i < b; ++b)
<BODY>;
This construct is translated into something like:
<last_iter> = alloca i32
<lastprivate_var> = alloca <type>
<last_iter> = 0
; No initializer for simple variables or a default constructor is called for objects.
; For arrays perform element by element initialization by the call of the default constructor.
...
OMP_FOR_START(...,<last_iter>, ..); sets <last_iter> to 1 if this is the last iteration.
<BODY>
...
OMP_FOR_END
if (<last_iter> != 0) {
<var> = <lastprivate_var> ; Update original variable with the lastprivate value.
}
call __kmpc_cancel_barrier() ; an implicit barrier to avoid possible data race.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8658
llvm-svn: 235074
For CUDA source, Sema checks that the targets of call expressions make sense
(e.g. a host function can't call a device function).
Adding a flag that lets us skip this check. Motivation: for source-to-source
translation tools that have to accept code that's not strictly kosher CUDA but
is still accepted by nvcc. The source-to-source translation tool can then fix
the code and leave calls that are semantically valid for the actual compilation
stage.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9036
llvm-svn: 235049
"multiple methods named '<selector>' found" warning by noting
the method that is actualy used. It also cleans up and refactors
code in this area and selects a method that matches actual arguments
in case of receiver being a forward class object.
rdar://19265430
llvm-svn: 235023
Stop relying on `cl::opt` to pass along the driver's decision to
preserve use-lists. Create a new `-cc1` option called
`-emit-llvm-uselists` that does the right thing (when -emit-llvm-bc).
Note that despite its generic name, it *doesn't* do the right thing when
-emit-llvm (LLVM assembly) yet. I'll hook that up soon.
This doesn't really change the behaviour of the driver. The default is
still to preserve use-lists for `clang -emit-llvm` and `clang
-save-temps`, and nothing else. But it stops relying on global state
(and also is a nicer interface for hackers using `clang -cc1`).
llvm-svn: 234962
This patch generates a warning for invalid combination of '-mnan' and
'-march' options, it properly sets NaN encoding for a given '-march',
and it passes a proper NaN encoding to the assembler.
Patch by Vladimir Radosavljevic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8170
llvm-svn: 234882
-Wrange-loop-analysis is a subgroup of -Wloop-analysis and will warn when
a range-based for-loop makes copies of the elements in the range. If possible,
suggest the proper type to prevent copies, or the non-reference to help
distinguish copy versus non-copy forms. Existing warnings in -Wloop-analysis
are moved to -Wfor-loop-analysis, also a subgroup of -Wloop-analysis.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4169
llvm-svn: 234804
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8930
This just adds a front end option to let the back end know the target has PPC
direct move instructions.
llvm-svn: 234683
Previously, many error messages would simply be "read-only variable is not
assignable" This change provides more information about why the variable is
not assignable, as well as note to where the const is located.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4479
llvm-svn: 234677
Follow-up to r234666. With this, the -m[no-]global-merge options
have the expected behavior. Previously, -mglobal-merge was ignored,
and there was no way of enabling the optimization.
llvm-svn: 234668
Even though these symbols are in a comdat group, the Microsoft linker
really wants them to have internal linkage.
I'm planning to tweak the mangling in a follow-up change. This is a
straight revert with a 1-line fix.
llvm-svn: 234613
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8398
It adds some builtin functions to access the extended divide and bit permute instructions.
llvm-svn: 234547
WinEHPrepare was going to have to pattern match the control flow merge
and split that the old lowering used, and that wasn't really feasible.
Now we can teach WinEHPrepare to pattern match this, which is much
simpler:
%fp = call i8* @llvm.frameaddress(i32 0)
call void @func(iN [01], i8* %fp)
This prototype happens to match the prototype used by the Win64 SEH
personality function, so this is really simple.
llvm-svn: 234532
The previous implementation would copy the attribute from the class to
functions that have the class as their return type when the functions
are first declared. This proved to have two flaws:
1) if the class is forward-declared without the attribute and a
function or method with the class as a its return type is declared,
and afterward the class is defined with warn_unused_result, the
function or method would never inherit the attribute, and
2) the check simply failed for functions and methods that are part of
a template instantiation, regardless of whether the class with
warn_unused_result is part of a specific instantiation or part of
the template itself (presumably because those function/method
declaration does not hit the same code path as a non-template one
and so never inherits the attribute).
The new approach is to instead modify the two places where a function or
method call is checked for the warn_unused_result attribute on the decl
by extending the checks to also look for the attribute on the decl's
return type.
Additionally, the check for return types that have the warn_unused_result
now excludes pointers and references to such types, as such return types do
not necessarily imply a transfer of ownership for the underlying object
being referred to by the return value. This does not change the behavior
of functions that are directly given the warn_unused_result attribute.
llvm-svn: 234526
The driver currently accepts but ignores the -freciprocal-math flag.
This patch passes the flag through and enables 'arcp' fast-math-flag
generation in IR.
Note that this change does not actually enable the optimization for
any target. The reassociation optimization that this flag specifies
was implemented by http://reviews.llvm.org/D6334 :
http://llvm.org/viewvc/llvm-project?view=revision&revision=222510
Because the optimization is done in the backend rather than IR,
the backend must be modified to understand instruction-level
fast-math-flags or a new function-level attribute must be created.
Also note that -freciprocal-math is independent of any target-specific
usage of reciprocal estimate hardware instructions. That requires
its own flag ('-mrecip').
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20912
llvm-svn: 234493
This hooks up the /fp options as aliases for -f[no-]fast-math and
-f[no]-trapping-math. It probably doesn't match cl.exe's behaviour
completely (e.g. LLVM is currently never as precise as /fp:precise),
but it's close enough.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8909
llvm-svn: 234449
A dependent alignment attribute (like __attribute__((aligned(...))) or
__declspec(align(...))) on a non-dependent typedef or using declaration
poses a considerable challenge: the type is _not_ dependent, the size
_may_ be dependent if the type is used as an array type, the alignment
_is_ dependent.
It is reasonable for a compiler to be able to query the size and
alignment of a complete type. Let's help that become an invariant.
This fixes PR22042.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8693
llvm-svn: 234280
It was documented as 8 and operator new[] defaults to 8, but the normal
operator new was never updated and happily wasted bytes on every other
allocation.
We still have to allocate all Types with 16 byte alignment, update the
allocation calls for Types that were missing explicit alignment.
llvm-svn: 233922
MSVC 2013 can't even parse __declspec(align(sizeof(foo))). We'll have to
wait until MSVC 2015 for this.
This partially reverts commit r233911.
llvm-svn: 233912
This isn't perfect as it still assumes sizeof(void*) == alignof(void*),
but we can fix that when compiler support gets better.
Shrinks some Stmts that happen to inherit from Stmt and have a
SourceLocation as the first member (64 bit archs only).
llvm-svn: 233911
This uses the same class metadata currently used for virtual call and
cast checks.
The new flag is -fsanitize=cfi-nvcall. For consistency, the -fsanitize=cfi-vptr
flag has been renamed -fsanitize=cfi-vcall.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8756
llvm-svn: 233874
The zEC12 provides the transactional-execution facility. This is exposed
to users via a set of builtin routines on other compilers. This patch
adds clang support to enable those builtins. In partciular, the patch:
- enables the transactional-execution feature by default on zEC12
- allows to override presence of that feature via the -mhtm/-mno-htm options
- adds a predefined macro __HTM__ if the feature is enabled
- adds support for the transactional-execution GCC builtins
- adds Sema checking to verify the __builtin_tabort abort code
- adds the s390intrin.h header file (for GCC compatibility)
- adds s390 sections to the htmintrin.h and htmxlintrin.h header files
Since this is first use of target-specific intrinsics on the platform,
the patch creates the include/clang/Basic/BuiltinsSystemZ.def file and
hooks it up in TargetBuiltins.h and lib/Basic/Targets.cpp.
An associated LLVM patch adds the required LLVM IR intrinsics.
For reference, the transactional-execution instructions are documented
in the z/Architecture Principles of Operation for the zEC12:
http://publibfp.boulder.ibm.com/cgi-bin/bookmgr/download/DZ9ZR009.pdf
The associated builtins are documented in the GCC manual:
http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/S_002f390-System-z-Built-in-Functions.html
The htmxlintrin.h intrinsics provided for compatibility with the IBM XL
compiler are documented in the "z/OS XL C/C++ Programming Guide".
llvm-svn: 233804
Added sema checks for forms of expressions/statements allowed under control of 'atomic capture' directive + generation of helper objects for future codegen.
llvm-svn: 233785
The argument range checks for the HTM and Crypto builtins were implemented in
CGBuiltin.cpp, not in Sema. This change moves them to the appropriate location
in SemaChecking.cpp. It requires the creation of a new method in the Sema class
to do checks for PPC-specific builtins.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8672
llvm-svn: 233586
Adds atomic update codegen for the following forms of expressions:
x binop= expr;
x++;
++x;
x--;
--x;
x = x binop expr;
x = expr binop x;
If x and expr are integer and binop is associative or x is a LHS in a RHS of the assignment expression, and atomics are allowed for type of x on the target platform atomicrmw instruction is emitted.
Otherwise compare-and-swap sequence is emitted:
bb:
...
atomic load <x>
cont:
<expected> = phi [ <x>, label %bb ], [ <new_failed>, %cont ]
<desired> = <expected> binop <expr>
<res> = cmpxchg atomic &<x>, desired, expected
<new_failed> = <res>.field1;
br <res>field2, label %exit, label %cont
exit:
...
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8536
llvm-svn: 233513
Utilizing IMAGEREL relocations for synthetic IR constructs isn't
valuable, just clutter. While we are here, simplify HandlerType names
by making the numeric value for the 'adjective' part of the mangled name
instead of appending '.const', etc. The old scheme made for very long
global names and leads to wordy things like '.std_bad_alloc'
llvm-svn: 233503
order based on order of insertion.
This should cause both our warnings about these and the modules
serialization to be deterministic as a consequence.
Found by inspection.
llvm-svn: 233343
rewritten decls for Objective-C modules.
Found by inspection and completely obvious, so no test case. Many of the
remaining determinism fixes won't have precise test cases at this point,
but these are the kinds of things we wouldn't ask for a specific test of
during code review but ask authors to fix. The functionality isn't
changing, and should (he he!) already be tested.
llvm-svn: 233333
traversing the identifier table.
No easy test case as this table is somewhere between hard and impossible
to observe as non-deterministically ordered. The table is a hash table
but we hash the string contents and never remove entries from the table
so the growth pattern, etc, is all completely fixed. However, relying on
the hash function being deterministic is specifically against the
long-term direction of LLVM's hashing datastructures, which are intended
to provide *no* ordering guarantees. As such, this defends against these
things by sorting the identifiers. Sorting identifiers right before we
emit them to a serialized form seems a low cost for predictability here.
llvm-svn: 233332
Clang was inserting these into a dense map. While it never iterated the
dense map during normal compilation, it did when emitting a module. Fix
this by using a standard MapVector to preserve the order in which we
encounter the late parsed templates.
I suspect this still isn't ideal, as we don't seem to remove things from
this map even when we mark the templates as no longer late parsed. But
I don't know enough about this particular extension to craft a nice,
subtle test case covering this. I've managed to get the stress test to
at least do some late parsing and demonstrate the core problem here.
This patch fixes the test and provides deterministic behavior which is
a strict improvement over the prior state.
I've cleaned up some of the code here as well to be explicit about
inserting when that is what is actually going on.
llvm-svn: 233264
deterministically.
This fixes a latent issue where even Clang's Sema (and diagnostics) were
non-deterministic in the face of this pragma. The fix is super simple --
just use a MapVector so we track the order in which these are parsed (or
imported). Especially considering how rare they are, this seems like the
perfect tradeoff. I've also simplified the client code with judicious
use of auto and range based for loops.
I've added some pretty hilarious code to my stress test which now
survives the binary diff without issue.
llvm-svn: 233261
updated decl contexts get emitted.
Since this code was added, we have newer vastly simpler code for
handling this. The code I'm removing was very expensive and also
generated unstable order of declarations which made module outputs
non-deterministic.
All of the tests continue to pass for me and I'm able to check the
difference between the .pcm files after merging modules together.
llvm-svn: 233251
non-visible definition, skip the new definition and make the old one visible
instead of trying to parse it again and failing horribly. C++'s ODR allows
us to assume that the two definitions are identical.
llvm-svn: 233250
decl context lookup tables.
The first attepmt at this caused problems. We had significantly more
sources of non-determinism that I realized at first, and my change
essentially turned them from non-deterministic output into
use-after-free. Except that they weren't necessarily caught by tools
because the data wasn't really freed.
The new approach is much simpler. The first big simplification is to
inline the "visit" code and handle this directly. That works much
better, and I'll try to go and clean up the other caller of the visit
logic similarly.
The second key to the entire approach is that we need to *only* collect
names into a stable order at first. We then need to issue all of the
actual 'lookup()' calls in the stable order of the names so that we load
external results in a stable order. Once we have loaded all the results,
the table of results will stop being invalidated and we can walk all of
the names again and use the cheap 'noload_lookup()' method to quickly
get the results and serialize them.
To handle constructors and conversion functions (whose names can't be
stably ordered) in this approach, what we do is record only the visible
constructor and conversion function names at first. Then, if we have
any, we walk the decls of the class and add those names in the order
they occur in the AST. The rest falls out naturally.
This actually ends up simpler than the previous approach and seems much
more robust.
It uncovered a latent issue where we were building on-disk hash tables
for lookup results when the context was a linkage spec! This happened to
dodge all of the assert by some miracle. Instead, add a proper predicate
to the DeclContext class and use that which tests both for function
contexts and linkage specs.
It also uncovered PR23030 where we are forming somewhat bizarre negative
lookup results. I've just worked around this with a FIXME in place
because fixing this particular Clang bug seems quite hard.
I've flipped the first part of the test case I added for stability back
on in this commit. I'm taking it gradually to try and make sure the
build bots are happy this time.
llvm-svn: 233249
More than 2x speedup on modules builds with large redecl chains.
Roughly 15-20% speedup on non-modules builds for very large TUs.
Between 2-3% cost in memory on large TUs.
llvm-svn: 233228
they enable/disable.
This fixes two things:
a) sse4 isn't actually a target feature, don't treat it as one.
b) we weren't correctly disabling sse4.1 when we'd pass -mno-sse4
after enabling it, thus passing preprocessor directives and
(soon) passing the function attribute as well when we shouldn't.
llvm-svn: 233223
This patch adds Hardware Transaction Memory (HTM) support supported by ISA 2.07
(POWER8). The intrinsic support is based on GCC one [1], with both 'PowerPC HTM
Low Level Built-in Functions' and 'PowerPC HTM High Level Inline Functions'
implemented.
Along with builtins a new driver switch is added to enable/disable HTM
instruction support (-mhtm) and a header with common definitions (mostly to
parse the TFHAR register value). The HTM switch also sets a preprocessor builtin
HTM.
The HTM usage requires a recently newer kernel with PPC HTM enabled. Tested on
powerpc64 and powerpc64le.
This is send along a llvm patch to enabled the builtins and option switch.
[1]
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/PowerPC-Hardware-Transactional-Memory-Built-in-Functions.html
Phabricator Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8248
llvm-svn: 233205
This fixes my stress tests non-determinism so far. However, I've not
started playing with templates, friends, or terrible macros. I've found
at least two more seeming instabilities and am just waiting for a test
case to actually trigger them.
llvm-svn: 233162
There are two aspects of non-determinism fixed here, which was the
minimum required to cause at least an empty module to be deterministic.
First, the random number signature is only inserted into the module when
we are building modules implicitly. The use case for these random
signatures is to work around the very fact that modules are not
deterministic in their output when working with the implicitly built and
populated module cache. Eventually this should go away entirely when
we're confident that Clang is producing deterministic output.
Second, the on-disk hash table is populated based on the order of
iteration over a DenseMap. Instead, use a MapVector so that we can walk
it in insertion order.
I've added a test that an empty module, when built twice, produces the
same binary PCM file.
llvm-svn: 233115
Previously we'd deserialize the list of mem-initializers for a constructor when
we deserialized the declaration of the constructor. That could trigger a
significant amount of unnecessary work (pulling in all base classes
recursively, for a start) and was causing problems for the modules buildbot due
to cyclic deserializations. We now deserialize these on demand.
This creates a certain amount of duplication with the handling of
CXXBaseSpecifiers; I'll look into reducing that next.
llvm-svn: 233052
* Strength reduce a std::function to a function pointer,
* Factor out checking the AST file magic number,
* Add a brief doc comment to readAStFileSignature
Thanks to Chandler for spotting these oddities.
llvm-svn: 233050
rather than just the primary context. This is technically correct but results
in no functionality change (in Clang nor LLDB) because all users of this
functionality only use it on single-context DCs.
llvm-svn: 233045
All ParseCXXInlineMethodDef does with it is assign it on the ParsingDeclarator.
Since that is passed in as well, the (single) caller may as well set the
DefinitionKind, thus simplifying the code.
No change in functionality.
llvm-svn: 233043
PS4 target recognizes the #pragma comment() syntax as in -fms-extensions, but
only handles the case of #pragma comment(lib). This patch adds a warning if any
other arguments are encountered.
This patch also refactors the code in ParsePragma.cpp a little bit to make it
more obvious that some codes are being shared between -fms-extensions and PS4.
llvm-svn: 233015
If there is at least one 'copyprivate' clause is associated with the single directive, the following code is generated:
```
i32 did_it = 0; \\ for 'copyprivate' clause
if(__kmpc_single(ident_t *, gtid)) {
SingleOpGen();
__kmpc_end_single(ident_t *, gtid);
did_it = 1; \\ for 'copyprivate' clause
}
<copyprivate_list>[0] = &var0;
...
<copyprivate_list>[n] = &varn;
call __kmpc_copyprivate(ident_t *, gtid, <copyprivate_list_size>,
<copyprivate_list>, <copy_func>, did_it);
...
void<copy_func>(void *LHSArg, void *RHSArg) {
Dst = (void * [n])(LHSArg);
Src = (void * [n])(RHSArg);
Dst[0] = Src[0];
... Dst[n] = Src[n];
}
```
All list items from all 'copyprivate' clauses are gathered into single <copyprivate list> (<copyprivate_list_size> is a size in bytes of this list) and <copy_func> is used to propagate values of private or threadprivate variables from the 'single' region to other implicit threads from outer 'parallel' region.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8410
llvm-svn: 232932
for a DeclContext, and fix propagation of exception specifications along
redeclaration chains.
This reverts r232905, r232907, and r232907, which reverted r232793, r232853,
and r232853.
One additional change is present here to resolve issues with LLDB: distinguish
between whether lexical decls missing from the lookup table are local or are
provided by the external AST source, and still look in the external source if
that's where they came from.
llvm-svn: 232928
The deduplication here is negligible, but it allows the compiler to
skip emission of many templated base class destructors. Shrinks
clang-query by 53k. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 232924
This allows dumping to any given output stream but without requiring a SourceManager, similar to the interface provided by Decl.
It's useful when writing certain generic debug functions, external to the clang code base (for e.g.).
llvm-svn: 232912
Decide whether or not to use thread-safe statics depending on whether or
not we have an explicit request from the driver. If we don't have an
explicit request, infer which behavior to use depending on the
compatibility version we are targeting.
N.B. CodeGen support is still ongoing.
llvm-svn: 232906
The linear variable is privatized (similar to 'private') and its
value on current iteration is calculated, similar to the loop
counter variables.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8375
llvm-svn: 232890
give an exception specification to a declaration that didn't have an exception
specification in any of our imported modules, emit an update record ourselves.
Without this, code importing the current module would not see an exception
specification that we could see and might have relied on.
llvm-svn: 232870
We are not able to make a reliable solution for using UBSan together
with other sanitizers with runtime support (and sanitizer_common).
Instead, we want to follow the path used for LSan: have a "standalone"
UBSan tool, and plug-in UBSan that would be explicitly embedded into
specific sanitizers (in short term, it will be only ASan).
llvm-svn: 232829
MS compiler emits no errors in case of explicit specializations outside declaration enclosing namespaces, even when language extensions are disabled.
The patch is to suppress errors and emit extension warnings if explicit specializations are not declared in the corresponding namespaces.
This fixes PR13738.
Patch by Alexey Frolov.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8283
llvm-svn: 232800
When we need to build the lookup table for a DeclContext, we used to pull in
all lexical declarations for the context; instead, just build a lookup table
for the local lexical declarations. We previously didn't guarantee that the
imported declarations would be in the returned map, but in some cases we'd
happen to put them all in there regardless. Now we're even lazier about this.
This unnecessary work was papering over some other bugs:
- LookupVisibleDecls would use the DC for name lookups in the TU in C, and
this was not guaranteed to find all imported names (generally, the DC for
the TU in C is not a reliable place to perform lookups). We now use an
identifier-based lookup mechanism for this.
- We didn't actually load in the list of eagerly-deserialized declarations
when importing a module (so external definitions in a module wouldn't be
emitted by users of those modules unless they happened to be deserialized
by the user of the module).
llvm-svn: 232793
There are no widely deployed standard libraries providing sized
deallocation functions, so we have to punt and ask the user if they want
us to use sized deallocation. In the future, when such libraries are
deployed, we can teach the driver to detect them and enable this
feature.
N3536 claimed that a weak thunk from sized to unsized deallocation could
be emitted to avoid breaking backwards compatibility with standard
libraries not providing sized deallocation. However, this approach and
other variations don't work in practice.
With the weak function approach, the thunk has to have default
visibility in order to ensure that it is overridden by other DSOs
providing sized deallocation. Weak, default visibility symbols are
particularly expensive on MachO, so John McCall was considering
disabling this feature by default on Darwin. It also changes behavior
ELF linking behavior, causing certain otherwise unreferenced object
files from an archive to be pulled into the link.
Our second approach was to use an extern_weak function declaration and
do an inline conditional branch at the deletion call site. This doesn't
work because extern_weak only works on MachO if you have some archive
providing the default value of the extern_weak symbol. Arranging to
provide such an archive has the same challenges as providing the symbol
in the standard library. Not to mention that extern_weak doesn't really
work on COFF.
Reviewers: rsmith, rjmccall
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8467
llvm-svn: 232788
consider C++ that looks like:
inline int &f(bool b) {
if (b) {
static int i;
return i;
}
static int i;
return i;
}
Both 'i' variables must have distinct (and stable) names for linkage
purposes. The MSVC 2013 ABI would number the variables using a count of
the number of scopes that have been created. However, the final 'i'
returns to a scope that has already been created leading to a mangling
collision.
MSVC 2015 fixes this by giving the second 'i' the name it would have if
it were declared before the 'if'. However, this results in ABI breakage
because the mangled name, in cases where there was no ambiguity, would
now be different.
We implement the new behavior and only enable it if we are targeting the
MSVC 2015 ABI, otherwise the old behavior will be used.
This fixes PR18131.
llvm-svn: 232766
This warns when using decls that are not available on all deployment targets.
For example, a call to
- (void)ppartialMethod __attribute__((availability(macosx,introduced=10.8)));
will warn if -mmacosx-version-min is set to less than 10.8.
To silence the warning, one has to explicitly redeclare the method like so:
@interface Whatever(MountainLionAPI)
- (void)ppartialMethod;
@end
This way, one cannot accidentally call a function that isn't available
everywhere. Having to add the redeclaration will hopefully remind the user
to add an explicit respondsToSelector: call as well.
Some projects build against old SDKs to get this effect, but building against
old SDKs suppresses some bug fixes -- see http://crbug.com/463171 for examples.
The hope is that SDK headers are annotated well enough with availability
attributes that new SDK + this warning offers the same amount of protection
as using an old SDK.
llvm-svn: 232750
We know all subclasses in tblgen so just generate a giant switch for
the few virtual methods or turn them into a member variable using spare
bits. The giant jump tables aren't pretty but still much smaller than
a vtable for every attribute, shrinking Release+Asserts clang by ~400k.
Also halves the size of the Attr base class. No functional change
intended.
llvm-svn: 232726
Construction of LocalInstantiationScope automatically updates the current scope
inside Sema. However, when cloning a scope, the current scope does not change.
Change the cloning function to preserve the current scope.
Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8407
BUG: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22931
llvm-svn: 232675
OpenCL C Spec v2.0 Section 6.13.11
- Made c11 _Atomic being not accepted for OpenCL
- Implemented CL2.0 atomics by aliasing them to the corresponding c11 atomic types using implicit typedef
- Added diagnostics for atomics Khronos extension enabling
llvm-svn: 232631
We disabled support for _Atomic because the STL had name conflicts,
they've been resolved in 2015. Similarly, reenable char16_t and
char32_t.
llvm-svn: 232611
We used to support the 2013 mangling and changed it to the more
reasonable 2015 mangling. Let's make the mangling conditional on what
version of MSVC is targeted.
This fixes PR21888.
llvm-svn: 232609
consumers of that module.
Previously, such a file would only be available if the module happened to
actually import something from that module.
llvm-svn: 232583
The HandlerMap describes, to the runtime, what sort of catches surround
the try. In principle, this structure has to be emitted by the backend
because only it knows the layout of the stack (the runtime needs to know
where on the stack the destination of a copy lives, etc.) but there is
some C++ specific information that the backend can't reason about.
Stick this information in special LLVM globals with the relevant
"const", "volatile", "reference" info mangled into the name.
llvm-svn: 232538
Previously, we would error out on this code because the default argument
wasn't parsed until the end of Outer:
struct __declspec(dllexport) Outer {
struct __declspec(dllexport) Inner {
Inner(void *p = 0);
};
};
Now we do the checking on the closing brace of Outer instead of Inner.
llvm-svn: 232519
This exposes the optional exit block placement logic from r232438 as a
clang -cc1 option. There is a test on the llvm side, but there isn't
really a way to inspect the gcov options from clang to test it here as
well.
llvm-svn: 232439
This basically creates a wrapper around an 'int' that poses as an iterator.
While that looks a bit counter-intuitive it works just fine because iterator
operations and basic integer arithmetic works in exactly the same way.
Remove the manual integer wrapping code and reduce the reliance on iterator
internals in the implementation. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 232322
with a subset of the existing target CPU features or mismatched CPU
names.
While we can't check that the CPU name used to build the module will end
up being able to codegen correctly for the translation unit, we actually
check that the imported features are a subset of the existing features.
While here, rewrite the code to use std::set_difference and have it
diagnose all of the differences found.
Test case added which walks the set relationships and ensures we
diagnose all the right cases and accept the others.
No functional change for implicit modules here, just better diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 232248
This scheme checks that pointer and lvalue casts are made to an object of
the correct dynamic type; that is, the dynamic type of the object must be
a derived class of the pointee type of the cast. The checks are currently
only introduced where the class being casted to is a polymorphic class.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8312
llvm-svn: 232241
std::make_exception_ptr calls std::__GetExceptionInfo in order to figure
out how to properly copy the exception object.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8280
llvm-svn: 232188
This guarantees the order and doesn't increase malloc counts a lot as there are
typically very few elements int the map. Provide a little iterator adapter to
keep the same interface as we had with the flat sorted list.
No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 232173
This is nearly identical to the v*f128_si256 parts of r231792 and r232052.
AVX2 introduced proper integer variants of the hacked integer insert/extract
C intrinsics that were created for this same functionality with AVX1.
This should complete the front end fixes for insert/extract128 intrinsics.
Corresponding LLVM patch to follow.
llvm-svn: 232109
This is very much like D8088 (checked in at r231792).
Now that we've replaced the vinsertf128 intrinsics,
do the same for their extract twins.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8275
llvm-svn: 232052
Add some matchers for Objective-C selectors and messages to
ASTMatchers.h. Minor mods to ASTMatchersTest.h to allow test files with
".m" extension in addition to ".cpp". New tests added to
ASTMatchersTest.c.
Patch by Dean Sutherland.
llvm-svn: 232051
This adds support for copy-constructor closures. These are generated
when the C++ runtime has to call a copy-constructor with a particular
calling convention or with default arguments substituted in to the call.
Because the runtime has no mechanism to call the function with a
different calling convention or know-how to evaluate the default
arguments at run-time, we create a thunk which will do all the
appropriate work and package it in a way the runtime can use.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8225
llvm-svn: 231952
OpenCL C Spec v2.0 Section 6.13.11
- Made c11 _Atomic being accepted only for c11 compilations
- Implemented CL2.0 atomics by aliasing them to the corresponding c11 atomic types using implicit typedef
- Added diagnostics for atomics Khronos extension enabling
llvm-svn: 231932
Using declarations which are aliases to struct types have their name
used as the struct type's name for linkage purposes. Otherwise, make
sure to give an anonymous struct defined inside a using declaration a
mangling number to disambiguate it from other anonymous structs in the
same context.
This fixes PR22809.
llvm-svn: 231909
Because the catchable type has a reference to its name, mangle the
location to ensure that two catchable types with different locations are
distinct.
llvm-svn: 231819
We want to replace as much custom x86 shuffling via intrinsics
as possible because pushing the code down the generic shuffle
optimization path allows for better codegen and less complexity
in LLVM.
This is the sibling patch for the LLVM half of this change:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8086
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8088
llvm-svn: 231792
Using clang as a cross-compiler with the 'target' option could be confusing
for those inexperienced in the realm of cross compiling.
This patch would allow the use of all these four variants of the target option:
-target <triple>
--target <triple>
-target=<triple>
--target=<triple>
Patch by Gabor Ballabas.
llvm-svn: 231787
move the operator delete updating into a separate update record so we can cope
with updating another module's destructor's operator delete.
llvm-svn: 231735
This is a recommit of r231150, reverted in r231409. Turns out
that -fsanitize=shift-base check implementation only works if the
shift exponent is valid, otherwise it contains undefined behavior
itself.
Make sure we check that exponent is valid before we proceed to
check the base. Make sure that we actually report invalid values
of base or exponent if -fsanitize=shift-base or
-fsanitize=shift-exponent is specified, respectively.
llvm-svn: 231711
override where at least a declaration of a designated initializer is in a super
class and not necessarily in the current class. rdar://19653785.
llvm-svn: 231700
ParseCompoundStatement() currently never returns StmtError, but if it did,
Sema would keep the __finally scope on its stack indefinitely. Explicitly
add an error callback that clears it.
llvm-svn: 231625
Since continue, break, return are much more common than __finally, this tries
to keep the work for continue, break, return O(1). Sema keeps a stack of active
__finally scopes (to do this, ActOnSEHFinally() is split into
ActOnStartSEHFinally() and ActOnFinishSEHFinally()), and the various jump
statements then check if the current __finally scope (if present) is deeper
than then destination scope of the jump.
The same warning for goto statements is still missing.
This is the moral equivalent of MSVC's C4532.
llvm-svn: 231623
of extern "C" declarations. This is simpler and vastly more efficient for
modules builds (we no longer need to load *all* extern "C" declarations to
determine if we have a redeclaration).
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 231538
Find all unambiguous public classes of the exception object's class type
and reference all of their copy constructors. Yes, this is not
conforming but it is necessary in order to implement their ABI. This is
because the copy constructor is actually referenced by the metadata
describing which catch handlers are eligible to handle the exception
object.
N.B. This doesn't yet handle the copy constructor closure case yet,
that work is ongoing.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8101
llvm-svn: 231499
The method decl is not marked as overriding any other method decls
until the template is instantiated.
Use the override attribute as another signal.
llvm-svn: 231487
We used to save out and eagerly load a (potentially huge) table of merged
formerly-canonical declarations when we loaded each module. This was extremely
inefficient in the presence of large amounts of merging, and didn't actually
save any merging lookup work, because we still needed to perform name lookup to
check that our merged declaration lists were complete. This also resulted in a
loss of laziness -- even if we only needed an early declaration of an entity, we
would eagerly pull in all declarations that had been merged into it regardless.
We now store the relevant fragments of the table within the declarations
themselves. In detail:
* The first declaration of each entity within a module stores a list of first
declarations from imported modules that are merged into it.
* Loading that declaration pre-loads those other entities, so that they appear
earlier within the redeclaration chain.
* The name lookup tables list the most recent local lookup result, if there
is one, or all directly-imported lookup results if not.
llvm-svn: 231424
It's not that easy. If we're only checking -fsanitize=shift-base we
still need to verify that exponent has sane value, otherwise
UBSan-inserted checks for base will contain undefined behavior
themselves.
llvm-svn: 231409
Throwing a C++ exception, under the MS ABI, is implemented using three
components:
- ThrowInfo structure which contains information like CV qualifiers,
what destructor to call and a pointer to the CatchableTypeArray.
- In a significant departure from the Itanium ABI, copying by-value
occurs in the runtime and not at the catch site. This means we need
to enumerate all possible types that this exception could be caught as
and encode the necessary information to convert from the exception
object's type to the catch handler's type. This includes complicated
derived to base conversions and the execution of copy-constructors.
N.B. This implementation doesn't support the execution of a
copy-constructor from within the runtime for now. Adding support for
that functionality is quite difficult due to things like default
argument expressions which may evaluate arbitrary code hiding in the
copy-constructor's parameters.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8066
llvm-svn: 231328
This commit adds new warning to prevent user from creating 'circular containers'.
Mutable collections from NSFoundation allows user to add collection to itself, e.g.:
NSMutableArray *a = [NSMutableArray new];
[a addObject:a];
The code above leads to really weird behaviour (crashes, 'endless' recursion) and
retain cycles (collection retains itself) if ARC enabled.
Patch checks the following collections:
- NSMutableArray,
- NSMutableDictionary,
- NSMutableSet,
- NSMutableOrderedSet,
- NSCountedSet.
llvm-svn: 231265
Summary:
When using the IAS from clang, the 'target-abi' option gets passed to cc1as, but cc1as doesn't know about it and gives an "unknown argument" error.
This is fixed by adding the 'CC1AsOption' flag to the 'target-abi' option in CC1Options.td.
Reviewers: atanasyan, echristo, dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7903
llvm-svn: 231244
GCC -pedantic produces a format warning when the "%p" specifier is used with
arguments that are not void*. It's useful for portability to be able to
catch such warnings with clang as well. The warning is off by default in
both gcc and with this patch. This patch enables it either when extensions
are disabled with -pedantic, or with the specific flag -Wformat-pedantic.
The C99 and C11 specs do appear to require arguments corresponding to 'p'
specifiers to be void*: "If any argument is not the correct type for the
corresponding conversion specification, the behavior is undefined."
[7.19.6.1 p9], and of the 'p' format specifier "The argument shall be a
pointer to void." [7.19.6.1 p8]
Both printf and scanf format checking are covered.
llvm-svn: 231211
-fsanitize=shift is now a group that includes both these checks, so
exisiting users should not be affected.
This change introduces two new UBSan kinds that sanitize only left-hand
side and right-hand side of shift operation. In practice, invalid
exponent value (negative or too large) tends to cause more portability
problems, including inconsistencies between different compilers, crashes
and inadequeate results on non-x86 architectures etc. That is,
-fsanitize=shift-exponent failures should generally be addressed first.
As a bonus, this change simplifies CodeGen implementation for emitting left
shift (separate checks for base and exponent are now merged by the
existing generic logic in EmitCheck()), and LLVM IR for these checks
(the number of basic blocks is reduced).
llvm-svn: 231150
There are two test case updates for very basic testing. While I was editing cxx-altivec.cpp I also updated it to better match some other changes in altivec.c.
Note: "vector bool long" was not also added because its use is considered deprecated.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7235
llvm-svn: 231118
Originally we were using the same GCC builtins to lower this AVX2 vector
intrinsic. Instead we will now lower it directly to a vector shuffle.
This will not only allow LLVM to generate better code, but it will also allow us
to remove the GCC intrinsics.
Reviewed by Andrea
This is related to rdar://problem/18742778.
llvm-svn: 231081
There is no need to list sanitizers in both "UndefinedTrap" and
"Undefined" groups - it turns out using one group in a defintion
of another group "just works".
llvm-svn: 231040
This adds the -fapplication-extension option, along with the
ios_app_extension and macosx_app_extension availability attributes.
Patch by Ted Kremenek
llvm-svn: 230989
dynamic classes in the translation unit and check whether each one's key
function is defined when we got to the end of the TU (and when we got to the
end of each module). This is really terrible for modules performance, since it
causes unnecessary deserialization of every dynamic class in every compilation.
We now use a much simpler (and, in a modules build, vastly more efficient)
system: when we see an out-of-line definition of a virtual function, we check
whether that function was in fact its class's key function. (If so, we need to
emit the vtable.)
llvm-svn: 230830
MSVC doesn't warn on this. Users are expected to apply the WINAPI macro
to functions passed by pointer to the Win32 API, and this macro expands
to __stdcall. This means we end up with a lot of useless noisy warnings
about ignored calling conventions when compiling code with clang for
Win64.
llvm-svn: 230668
Currently, the NaN values emitted for MIPS architectures do not cover
non-IEEE754-2008 compliant case. This change fixes the issue.
Patch by Vladimir Radosavljevic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7882
llvm-svn: 230653
are now:
FrontendTool -> StaticAnalyzer/Frontend -> Frontend -> StaticAnalyzer/Core
The final dependency edge here is probably removable: AnalyzerOptions (and
Analyses.def) should probably live in Basic rather than StaticAnalyzer/Core.
llvm-svn: 230600
Currently -fms-extensions controls this behavior, which doesn't make
much sense. It means we can't identify what is and isn't a system header
when compiling our own preprocessed output, because #line doesn't
represent this information.
If someone is feeding Clang's preprocessed output to another compiler,
they can use this flag.
Fixes PR20553.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5217
llvm-svn: 230587
While it's true that we don't create the PDB as requested on the command
line, this is a well-documented limitation. Warning about it doesn't
help people using legacy build systems with clang-cl, and it makes the
clang-cl self-host very noisy.
llvm-svn: 230527
The original commit failed to handle "shift assign" (<<=), which
broke the test mentioned in r228406. This is now fixed and the
test added to the lit tests under SemaOpenCL.
*** Original commit message from r228382 ***
OpenCL: handle shift operator with vector operands
Introduce a number of checks:
1. If LHS is a scalar, then RHS cannot be a vector.
2. Operands must be of integer type.
3. If both are vectors, then the number of elements must match.
Relax the requirement for "usual arithmetic conversions":
When LHS is a vector, a scalar RHS can simply be expanded into a
vector; OpenCL does not require that its rank be lower than the LHS.
For example, the following code is not an error even if the implicit
type of the constant literal is "int".
char2 foo(char2 v) { return v << 1; }
Consolidate existing tests under CodeGenOpenCL, and add more tests
under SemaOpenCL.
llvm-svn: 230464
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies and testcase requirements. Over the last iteration this
version adds
- missing target requirements for testcases that specify an x86 triple,
- a missing clangCodeGen.a dependency to libClang.a in the make build.
rdar://problem/19104245
llvm-svn: 230423
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
rdar://problem/19104245
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies. Take 3.
llvm-svn: 230305
the presence of an abstract declarator with a ptr-operator as proof that a
construct cannot parse as an expression to improve diagnostics along error
recovery paths.
llvm-svn: 230261
llvm.eh.sjlj.setjmp / llvm.eh.sjlj.longjmp, if the backend is known to
support them outside the Exception Handling context. The default
handling in LLVM codegen doesn't work and will create incorrect code.
The ARM backend on the other hand will assert if the intrinsics are
used.
llvm-svn: 230255
invalidate lookup_iterators and lookup_results for some name within a
DeclContext if the lookup results for a *different* name change.
llvm-svn: 230121
This is only a problem in C++03 mode targeting MS ABI (MinGW doesn't
export inline methods, and C++11 marks these methods implicitly
deleted).
Since targeting the MS ABI in pre-C++11 mode is a rare configuration,
this will probably not get fixed, but we can at least have a better
error message.
llvm-svn: 230115
The patch teaches the clang's driver to understand new MIPS ISA names,
pass appropriate options to the assembler, defines corresponding macros etc
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7737
llvm-svn: 230092
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
rdar://problem/19104245
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies. Take 2.
llvm-svn: 230089
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
rdar://problem/19104245
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies.
llvm-svn: 230067
This patch introduces the -fsanitize=cfi-vptr flag, which enables a control
flow integrity scheme that checks that virtual calls take place using a vptr of
the correct dynamic type. More details in the new docs/ControlFlowIntegrity.rst
file.
It also introduces the -fsanitize=cfi flag, which is currently a synonym for
-fsanitize=cfi-vptr, but will eventually cover all CFI checks implemented
in Clang.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7424
llvm-svn: 230055
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
rdar://problem/19104245
llvm-svn: 230044
For now -funique-section-names is the default, so no change in default behavior.
The total .o size in a build of llvm and clang goes from 241687775 to 230649031
bytes if -fno-unique-section-names is used.
llvm-svn: 230031
If this flag is set, we error out when a module build is required. This is
useful in environments where all required modules are passed via -fmodule-file.
llvm-svn: 230006
This adds a new __freebsd_kprintf__ format string type, which enables
checking when used in __attribute__((format(...))) attributes. It can
check the FreeBSD kernel specific %b, %D, %r and %y specifiers, using
existing diagnostic messages. Also adds test cases for all these
specifiers.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7154
llvm-svn: 229921
the one in the current compiler invocation. If they differ reject the PCH.
This protects against the badness occurring from getting modules loaded from different module caches (see crashes).
rdar://19889860
llvm-svn: 229909
This patch removes the huge blob of code that is dealing with
rtti/exceptions/sanitizers and replaces it with:
A ToolChain function which, for a given set of Args, figures out if rtti
should be:
- enabled
- disabled implicitly
- disabled explicitly
A change in the way SanitizerArgs figures out what sanitizers to enable
(or if it should error out, or warn);
And a check for exceptions/rtti interaction inside addExceptionArgs.
The RTTIMode algorithm is:
- If -mkernel, -fapple-kext, or -fno-rtti are passed, rtti was disabled explicitly;
- If -frtti was passed or we're not targetting the PS4, rtti is enabled;
- If -fexceptions or -fcxx-exceptions was passed and we're targetting
the PS4, rtti was enabled implicitly;
- If we're targetting the PS4, rtti is disabled implicitly;
- Otherwise, rtti is enabled;
Since the only flag needed to pass to -cc1 is -fno-rtti if we want to
disable it, there's no problem in saying rtti is enabled if we're
compiling C code, so we don't look at the input file type.
addExceptionArgs now looks at the RTTIMode and warns that rtti is being
enabled implicitly if targetting the PS4 and exceptions are on. It also
errors out if, targetting the PS4, -fno-rtti was passed, and exceptions
were turned on.
SanitizerArgs now errors out if rtti was disabled explicitly and the vptr
sanitizer was enabled implicitly, but just turns off vptr if rtti is
disabled but -fsanitize=undefined was passed.
Also fixed tests, removed duplicate name from addExceptionArgs comment,
and added one or two surrounding lines when running clang-format.
This changes test/Driver/fsanitize.c to make it not expect a warning when
passed -fsanitize=undefined -fno-rtti, but expect vptr to not be on.
Removed all users and definition of SanitizerArgs::sanitizesVptr().
Reviewers: samsonov
Subscribers: llvm-commits, samsonov, rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7525
llvm-svn: 229801
The coverage mapping generation code previously generated a large
number of redundant coverage regions and then tried to merge similar
ones back together. This then relied on some awkward heuristics to
prevent combining of regions that were importantly different but
happened to have the same count. The end result was inefficient and
hard to follow.
Now, we more carefully create the regions we actually want. This makes
it much easier to create regions at precise locations as well as
making the basic approach quite a bit easier to follow. There's still
a fair bit of complexity here dealing with included code and macro
expansions, but that's pretty hard to avoid without significantly
reducing the quality of data we provide.
I had to modify quite a few tests where the source ranges became more
precise or the old ranges seemed to be wrong anyways, and I've added
quite a few new tests since a large number of constructs didn't seem
to be tested before.
llvm-svn: 229748
Un-parameterize the warning as there is exactly one attribute added in C++14.
Partially addresses post-commit review comments from Richard Smith.
llvm-svn: 229636
This is typically used to suppress warnings about calling snprintf and
other "deprecated" POSIX functions. Accepting this flag helps avoid tons
of useless warnings when trying out clang-cl on a new project.
Patch by Scott Graham!
llvm-svn: 229583
The deprecated attribute was adopted as part of the C++14, however, there is a
GNU version available in C++11. When using C++ earlier than C++14, diagnose the
use of the attribute without the GNU scope, but only when using the generalised
attribute syntax.
llvm-svn: 229447
The /volatile:ms semantics turn volatile loads and stores into atomic
acquire and release operations. This distinction is important because
volatile memory operations do not form a happens-before relationship
with non-atomic memory. This means that a volatile store is not
sufficient for implementing a mutex unlock routine.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7580
llvm-svn: 229082
When mangling the module map path into a .pcm file name, also mangle the
IsSystem bit, which can also depend on the header search paths. For
example, the user may change from -I to -isystem. This can affect
diagnostics in the importing TU.
llvm-svn: 228966
based on whether "redundant" braces are ever reasonable as part of the
initialization of the entity, rather than whether the initialization is
"top-level". In passing, add a warning flag for it.
llvm-svn: 228896
(or of a lambda init-capture, which is sort-of such a variable). The semantics
of such constructs will change when we implement N3922, so we intend to warn on
this in Clang 3.6 then change the semantics in Clang 3.7.
llvm-svn: 228792
The parameter definition of this API is const volatile __int64*, but it is not defined correctly in clang. Move the 'CD' to the correct location.
Bug tracked here: http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=21004
Patch by Daniel Jump!
llvm-svn: 228678
already have, check whether the name from the module is actually newer than the
existing declaration. If it isn't, we might (say) replace a visible declaration
with an injected friend, and thus make it invisible (or lose a default argument
or an array bound).
llvm-svn: 228661
If the lock file manager times out, we should give an error rather than
silently trying to load the existing module. And delete the
(presumably) dead lock file, since it will otherwise prevent progress in
future invokations. This is unsound since we have no way to prove that
the lock file we are deleting is the same one we timed out on, but since
the lock is only to avoid excessive rebuilding anyway it should be okay.
Depends on llvm r228603.
llvm-svn: 228604
Also removed unused builtins.
Original patch by Andrea Di Biagio!
Reviewers: craig.topper, nadav
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7199
llvm-svn: 228481
If you request that the file manager not close your file immediately
after reading, it's useful to be able to close it later to prevent a
file descriptor leak.
llvm-svn: 228407
This reverts commit r228382.
This breaks the following case: Reported by Jeroen Ketema:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20150202/122961.html
typedef __attribute__((ext_vector_type(3))) char char3;
void foo() {
char3 v = {1,1,1};
char3 w = {1,2,3};
w <<= v;
}
If I compile with:
clang -x cl file.c
Then an error is produced:
file.c:10:5: error: expression is not assignable
w <<= v;
~ ^
1 error generated.
llvm-svn: 228406
Introduce a number of checks:
1. If LHS is a scalar, then RHS cannot be a vector.
2. Operands must be of integer type.
3. If both are vectors, then the number of elements must match.
Relax the requirement for "usual arithmetic conversions":
When LHS is a vector, a scalar RHS can simply be expanded into a
vector; OpenCL does not require that its rank be lower than the LHS.
For example, the following code is not an error even if the implicit
type of the constant literal is "int".
char2 foo(char2 v) { return v << 1; }
Consolidate existing tests under CodeGenOpenCL, and add more tests
under SemaOpenCL.
llvm-svn: 228382
After r228258, Clang started emitting C++ EH IR that LLVM wasn't ready
to deal with, even when exceptions were disabled with /EHs-. This time,
make /EHs- turn off -fexceptions while still emitting exceptional
constructs in functions using __try. Since Sema rejects C++ exception
handling constructs before CodeGen, landingpads should only appear in
such functions as the result of a __try.
llvm-svn: 228329
It caused a chromium base unittest that tests throwing and catching SEH
exceptions to fail (http://crbug.com/455488) and I suspect it might also
be the cause of the chromium clang win 64-bit shared release builder timing
out during compiles. So revert to see if that's true.
llvm-svn: 228262
object. In such a case, use the TU's DC for merging global decls rather than
giving up when we find there is no TU scope.
Ultimately, we should probably avoid all loading of decls when preprocessing,
but there are other reasonable use cases for loading an AST file with no Sema
object for which this is the right thing.
llvm-svn: 228234
Previously we would simply double-emit the body of the __finally block,
but that doesn't work when it contains any kind of Decl, which we can't
double emit.
This fixes that by emitting the block once and branching into a shared
code region and then branching back out.
llvm-svn: 228222
Summary:
Allow user to provide multiple blacklists by passing several
-fsanitize-blacklist= options. These options now don't override
default blacklist from Clang resource directory, which is always
applied (which fixes PR22431).
-fno-sanitize-blacklist option now disables all blacklists that
were specified earlier in the command line (including the default
one).
This change depends on http://reviews.llvm.org/D7367.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: timurrrr
Subscribers: cfe-commits, kcc, pcc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7368
llvm-svn: 228156
While probably technically correct, the solution r228138 was quite hard
to read/understand. This should be simpler.
Also added a test to ensure that we are still visiting the syntactic form
as well.
llvm-svn: 228144
Otherwise, this can lead to unexpected results when AST matching as
some nodes are only present in the semantic form.
For example, only looking at the syntactic form does not find the
DeclRefExpr to f() in:
struct S { S(void (*a)()); };
void f();
S s[1] = {&f};
llvm-svn: 228138