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// NOTE: Assertions have been autogenerated by utils/update_cc_test_checks.py
// RUN: %clang_cc1 -verify -fopenmp -fopenmp-enable-irbuilder -x c++ -emit-llvm %s -triple x86_64-unknown-unknown -fexceptions -fcxx-exceptions -o - | FileCheck %s --check-prefixes=ALL,IRBUILDER
// %clang_cc1 -fopenmp -fopenmp-enable-irbuilder -x c++ -std=c++11 -triple x86_64-unknown-unknown -fexceptions -fcxx-exceptions -emit-pch -o /tmp/t1 %s
// %clang_cc1 -fopenmp -fopenmp-enable-irbuilder -x c++ -triple x86_64-unknown-unknown -fexceptions -fcxx-exceptions -debug-info-kind=limited -std=c++11 -include-pch /tmp/t1 -verify %s -emit-llvm -o - | FileCheck --check-prefixes=ALL-DEBUG,IRBUILDER-DEBUG %s
// expected-no-diagnostics
// TODO: Teach the update script to check new functions too.
#ifndef HEADER
#define HEADER
// ALL-LABEL: @_Z17nested_parallel_0v(
// ALL-NEXT: entry:
[OpenMP] Overhaul `declare target` handling This patch fixes various issues with our prior `declare target` handling and extends it to support `omp begin declare target` as well. This started with PR49649 in mind, trying to provide a way for users to avoid the "ref" global use introduced for globals with internal linkage. From there it went down the rabbit hole, e.g., all variables, even `nohost` ones, were emitted into the device code so it was impossible to determine if "ref" was needed late in the game (based on the name only). To make it really useful, `begin declare target` was needed as it can carry the `device_type`. Not emitting variables eagerly had a ripple effect. Finally, the precedence of the (explicit) declare target list items needed to be taken into account, that meant we cannot just look for any declare target attribute to make a decision. This caused the handling of functions to require fixup as well. I tried to clean up things while I was at it, e.g., we should not "parse declarations and defintions" as part of OpenMP parsing, this will always break at some point. Instead, we keep track what region we are in and act on definitions and declarations instead, this is what we do for declare variant and other begin/end directives already. Highlights: - new diagnosis for restrictions specificed in the standard, - delayed emission of globals not mentioned in an explicit list of a declare target, - omission of `nohost` globals on the host and `host` globals on the device, - no explicit parsing of declarations in-between `omp [begin] declare variant` and the corresponding end anymore, regular parsing instead, - precedence for explicit mentions in `declare target` lists over implicit mentions in the declaration-definition-seq, and - `omp allocate` declarations will now replace an earlier emitted global, if necessary. --- Notes: The patch is larger than I hoped but it turns out that most changes do on their own lead to "inconsistent states", which seem less desirable overall. After working through this I feel the standard should remove the explicit declare target forms as the delayed emission is horrible. That said, while we delay things anyway, it seems to me we check too often for the current status even though that is often not sufficient to act upon. There seems to be a lot of duplication that can probably be trimmed down. Eagerly emitting some things seems pretty weak as an argument to keep so much logic around. --- Reviewed By: ABataev Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101030
2021-04-22 13:57:28 +08:00
// ALL-NEXT: [[OMP_GLOBAL_THREAD_NUM:%.*]] = call i32 @__kmpc_global_thread_num(%struct.ident_t* @[[GLOB1:[0-9]+]])
// ALL-NEXT: br label [[OMP_PARALLEL:%.*]]
// ALL: omp_parallel:
[OpenMP] Overhaul `declare target` handling This patch fixes various issues with our prior `declare target` handling and extends it to support `omp begin declare target` as well. This started with PR49649 in mind, trying to provide a way for users to avoid the "ref" global use introduced for globals with internal linkage. From there it went down the rabbit hole, e.g., all variables, even `nohost` ones, were emitted into the device code so it was impossible to determine if "ref" was needed late in the game (based on the name only). To make it really useful, `begin declare target` was needed as it can carry the `device_type`. Not emitting variables eagerly had a ripple effect. Finally, the precedence of the (explicit) declare target list items needed to be taken into account, that meant we cannot just look for any declare target attribute to make a decision. This caused the handling of functions to require fixup as well. I tried to clean up things while I was at it, e.g., we should not "parse declarations and defintions" as part of OpenMP parsing, this will always break at some point. Instead, we keep track what region we are in and act on definitions and declarations instead, this is what we do for declare variant and other begin/end directives already. Highlights: - new diagnosis for restrictions specificed in the standard, - delayed emission of globals not mentioned in an explicit list of a declare target, - omission of `nohost` globals on the host and `host` globals on the device, - no explicit parsing of declarations in-between `omp [begin] declare variant` and the corresponding end anymore, regular parsing instead, - precedence for explicit mentions in `declare target` lists over implicit mentions in the declaration-definition-seq, and - `omp allocate` declarations will now replace an earlier emitted global, if necessary. --- Notes: The patch is larger than I hoped but it turns out that most changes do on their own lead to "inconsistent states", which seem less desirable overall. After working through this I feel the standard should remove the explicit declare target forms as the delayed emission is horrible. That said, while we delay things anyway, it seems to me we check too often for the current status even though that is often not sufficient to act upon. There seems to be a lot of duplication that can probably be trimmed down. Eagerly emitting some things seems pretty weak as an argument to keep so much logic around. --- Reviewed By: ABataev Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101030
2021-04-22 13:57:28 +08:00
// ALL-NEXT: call void (%struct.ident_t*, i32, void (i32*, i32*, ...)*, ...) @__kmpc_fork_call(%struct.ident_t* @[[GLOB1]], i32 0, void (i32*, i32*, ...)* bitcast (void (i32*, i32*)* @_Z17nested_parallel_0v..omp_par.1 to void (i32*, i32*, ...)*))
// ALL-NEXT: br label [[OMP_PAR_OUTLINED_EXIT12:%.*]]
// ALL: omp.par.outlined.exit12:
// ALL-NEXT: br label [[OMP_PAR_EXIT_SPLIT:%.*]]
// ALL: omp.par.exit.split:
// ALL-NEXT: ret void
//
void nested_parallel_0(void) {
#pragma omp parallel
{
#pragma omp parallel
{
}
}
}
// ALL-LABEL: @_Z17nested_parallel_1Pfid(
// ALL-NEXT: entry:
// ALL-NEXT: [[R_ADDR:%.*]] = alloca float*, align 8
// ALL-NEXT: [[A_ADDR:%.*]] = alloca i32, align 4
// ALL-NEXT: [[B_ADDR:%.*]] = alloca double, align 8
// ALL-NEXT: store float* [[R:%.*]], float** [[R_ADDR]], align 8
// ALL-NEXT: store i32 [[A:%.*]], i32* [[A_ADDR]], align 4
// ALL-NEXT: store double [[B:%.*]], double* [[B_ADDR]], align 8
[OpenMP] Overhaul `declare target` handling This patch fixes various issues with our prior `declare target` handling and extends it to support `omp begin declare target` as well. This started with PR49649 in mind, trying to provide a way for users to avoid the "ref" global use introduced for globals with internal linkage. From there it went down the rabbit hole, e.g., all variables, even `nohost` ones, were emitted into the device code so it was impossible to determine if "ref" was needed late in the game (based on the name only). To make it really useful, `begin declare target` was needed as it can carry the `device_type`. Not emitting variables eagerly had a ripple effect. Finally, the precedence of the (explicit) declare target list items needed to be taken into account, that meant we cannot just look for any declare target attribute to make a decision. This caused the handling of functions to require fixup as well. I tried to clean up things while I was at it, e.g., we should not "parse declarations and defintions" as part of OpenMP parsing, this will always break at some point. Instead, we keep track what region we are in and act on definitions and declarations instead, this is what we do for declare variant and other begin/end directives already. Highlights: - new diagnosis for restrictions specificed in the standard, - delayed emission of globals not mentioned in an explicit list of a declare target, - omission of `nohost` globals on the host and `host` globals on the device, - no explicit parsing of declarations in-between `omp [begin] declare variant` and the corresponding end anymore, regular parsing instead, - precedence for explicit mentions in `declare target` lists over implicit mentions in the declaration-definition-seq, and - `omp allocate` declarations will now replace an earlier emitted global, if necessary. --- Notes: The patch is larger than I hoped but it turns out that most changes do on their own lead to "inconsistent states", which seem less desirable overall. After working through this I feel the standard should remove the explicit declare target forms as the delayed emission is horrible. That said, while we delay things anyway, it seems to me we check too often for the current status even though that is often not sufficient to act upon. There seems to be a lot of duplication that can probably be trimmed down. Eagerly emitting some things seems pretty weak as an argument to keep so much logic around. --- Reviewed By: ABataev Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101030
2021-04-22 13:57:28 +08:00
// ALL-NEXT: [[OMP_GLOBAL_THREAD_NUM:%.*]] = call i32 @__kmpc_global_thread_num(%struct.ident_t* @[[GLOB1]])
// ALL-NEXT: br label [[OMP_PARALLEL:%.*]]
// ALL: omp_parallel:
[OpenMP] Overhaul `declare target` handling This patch fixes various issues with our prior `declare target` handling and extends it to support `omp begin declare target` as well. This started with PR49649 in mind, trying to provide a way for users to avoid the "ref" global use introduced for globals with internal linkage. From there it went down the rabbit hole, e.g., all variables, even `nohost` ones, were emitted into the device code so it was impossible to determine if "ref" was needed late in the game (based on the name only). To make it really useful, `begin declare target` was needed as it can carry the `device_type`. Not emitting variables eagerly had a ripple effect. Finally, the precedence of the (explicit) declare target list items needed to be taken into account, that meant we cannot just look for any declare target attribute to make a decision. This caused the handling of functions to require fixup as well. I tried to clean up things while I was at it, e.g., we should not "parse declarations and defintions" as part of OpenMP parsing, this will always break at some point. Instead, we keep track what region we are in and act on definitions and declarations instead, this is what we do for declare variant and other begin/end directives already. Highlights: - new diagnosis for restrictions specificed in the standard, - delayed emission of globals not mentioned in an explicit list of a declare target, - omission of `nohost` globals on the host and `host` globals on the device, - no explicit parsing of declarations in-between `omp [begin] declare variant` and the corresponding end anymore, regular parsing instead, - precedence for explicit mentions in `declare target` lists over implicit mentions in the declaration-definition-seq, and - `omp allocate` declarations will now replace an earlier emitted global, if necessary. --- Notes: The patch is larger than I hoped but it turns out that most changes do on their own lead to "inconsistent states", which seem less desirable overall. After working through this I feel the standard should remove the explicit declare target forms as the delayed emission is horrible. That said, while we delay things anyway, it seems to me we check too often for the current status even though that is often not sufficient to act upon. There seems to be a lot of duplication that can probably be trimmed down. Eagerly emitting some things seems pretty weak as an argument to keep so much logic around. --- Reviewed By: ABataev Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101030
2021-04-22 13:57:28 +08:00
// ALL-NEXT: call void (%struct.ident_t*, i32, void (i32*, i32*, ...)*, ...) @__kmpc_fork_call(%struct.ident_t* @[[GLOB1]], i32 3, void (i32*, i32*, ...)* bitcast (void (i32*, i32*, i32*, double*, float**)* @_Z17nested_parallel_1Pfid..omp_par.2 to void (i32*, i32*, ...)*), i32* [[A_ADDR]], double* [[B_ADDR]], float** [[R_ADDR]])
// ALL-NEXT: br label [[OMP_PAR_OUTLINED_EXIT13:%.*]]
// ALL: omp.par.outlined.exit13:
// ALL-NEXT: br label [[OMP_PAR_EXIT_SPLIT:%.*]]
// ALL: omp.par.exit.split:
// ALL-NEXT: ret void
//
void nested_parallel_1(float *r, int a, double b) {
#pragma omp parallel
{
#pragma omp parallel
{
*r = a + b;
}
}
}
// ALL-LABEL: @_Z17nested_parallel_2Pfid(
// ALL-NEXT: entry:
// ALL-NEXT: [[R_ADDR:%.*]] = alloca float*, align 8
// ALL-NEXT: [[A_ADDR:%.*]] = alloca i32, align 4
// ALL-NEXT: [[B_ADDR:%.*]] = alloca double, align 8
// ALL-NEXT: store float* [[R:%.*]], float** [[R_ADDR]], align 8
// ALL-NEXT: store i32 [[A:%.*]], i32* [[A_ADDR]], align 4
// ALL-NEXT: store double [[B:%.*]], double* [[B_ADDR]], align 8
[OpenMP] Overhaul `declare target` handling This patch fixes various issues with our prior `declare target` handling and extends it to support `omp begin declare target` as well. This started with PR49649 in mind, trying to provide a way for users to avoid the "ref" global use introduced for globals with internal linkage. From there it went down the rabbit hole, e.g., all variables, even `nohost` ones, were emitted into the device code so it was impossible to determine if "ref" was needed late in the game (based on the name only). To make it really useful, `begin declare target` was needed as it can carry the `device_type`. Not emitting variables eagerly had a ripple effect. Finally, the precedence of the (explicit) declare target list items needed to be taken into account, that meant we cannot just look for any declare target attribute to make a decision. This caused the handling of functions to require fixup as well. I tried to clean up things while I was at it, e.g., we should not "parse declarations and defintions" as part of OpenMP parsing, this will always break at some point. Instead, we keep track what region we are in and act on definitions and declarations instead, this is what we do for declare variant and other begin/end directives already. Highlights: - new diagnosis for restrictions specificed in the standard, - delayed emission of globals not mentioned in an explicit list of a declare target, - omission of `nohost` globals on the host and `host` globals on the device, - no explicit parsing of declarations in-between `omp [begin] declare variant` and the corresponding end anymore, regular parsing instead, - precedence for explicit mentions in `declare target` lists over implicit mentions in the declaration-definition-seq, and - `omp allocate` declarations will now replace an earlier emitted global, if necessary. --- Notes: The patch is larger than I hoped but it turns out that most changes do on their own lead to "inconsistent states", which seem less desirable overall. After working through this I feel the standard should remove the explicit declare target forms as the delayed emission is horrible. That said, while we delay things anyway, it seems to me we check too often for the current status even though that is often not sufficient to act upon. There seems to be a lot of duplication that can probably be trimmed down. Eagerly emitting some things seems pretty weak as an argument to keep so much logic around. --- Reviewed By: ABataev Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101030
2021-04-22 13:57:28 +08:00
// ALL-NEXT: [[OMP_GLOBAL_THREAD_NUM:%.*]] = call i32 @__kmpc_global_thread_num(%struct.ident_t* @[[GLOB1]])
// ALL-NEXT: br label [[OMP_PARALLEL:%.*]]
// ALL: omp_parallel:
[OpenMP] Overhaul `declare target` handling This patch fixes various issues with our prior `declare target` handling and extends it to support `omp begin declare target` as well. This started with PR49649 in mind, trying to provide a way for users to avoid the "ref" global use introduced for globals with internal linkage. From there it went down the rabbit hole, e.g., all variables, even `nohost` ones, were emitted into the device code so it was impossible to determine if "ref" was needed late in the game (based on the name only). To make it really useful, `begin declare target` was needed as it can carry the `device_type`. Not emitting variables eagerly had a ripple effect. Finally, the precedence of the (explicit) declare target list items needed to be taken into account, that meant we cannot just look for any declare target attribute to make a decision. This caused the handling of functions to require fixup as well. I tried to clean up things while I was at it, e.g., we should not "parse declarations and defintions" as part of OpenMP parsing, this will always break at some point. Instead, we keep track what region we are in and act on definitions and declarations instead, this is what we do for declare variant and other begin/end directives already. Highlights: - new diagnosis for restrictions specificed in the standard, - delayed emission of globals not mentioned in an explicit list of a declare target, - omission of `nohost` globals on the host and `host` globals on the device, - no explicit parsing of declarations in-between `omp [begin] declare variant` and the corresponding end anymore, regular parsing instead, - precedence for explicit mentions in `declare target` lists over implicit mentions in the declaration-definition-seq, and - `omp allocate` declarations will now replace an earlier emitted global, if necessary. --- Notes: The patch is larger than I hoped but it turns out that most changes do on their own lead to "inconsistent states", which seem less desirable overall. After working through this I feel the standard should remove the explicit declare target forms as the delayed emission is horrible. That said, while we delay things anyway, it seems to me we check too often for the current status even though that is often not sufficient to act upon. There seems to be a lot of duplication that can probably be trimmed down. Eagerly emitting some things seems pretty weak as an argument to keep so much logic around. --- Reviewed By: ABataev Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101030
2021-04-22 13:57:28 +08:00
// ALL-NEXT: call void (%struct.ident_t*, i32, void (i32*, i32*, ...)*, ...) @__kmpc_fork_call(%struct.ident_t* @[[GLOB1]], i32 3, void (i32*, i32*, ...)* bitcast (void (i32*, i32*, i32*, double*, float**)* @_Z17nested_parallel_2Pfid..omp_par.5 to void (i32*, i32*, ...)*), i32* [[A_ADDR]], double* [[B_ADDR]], float** [[R_ADDR]])
// ALL-NEXT: br label [[OMP_PAR_OUTLINED_EXIT55:%.*]]
// ALL: omp.par.outlined.exit55:
// ALL-NEXT: br label [[OMP_PAR_EXIT_SPLIT:%.*]]
// ALL: omp.par.exit.split:
// ALL-NEXT: [[TMP0:%.*]] = load i32, i32* [[A_ADDR]], align 4
// ALL-NEXT: [[CONV56:%.*]] = sitofp i32 [[TMP0]] to double
// ALL-NEXT: [[TMP1:%.*]] = load double, double* [[B_ADDR]], align 8
// ALL-NEXT: [[ADD57:%.*]] = fadd double [[CONV56]], [[TMP1]]
// ALL-NEXT: [[CONV58:%.*]] = fptrunc double [[ADD57]] to float
// ALL-NEXT: [[TMP2:%.*]] = load float*, float** [[R_ADDR]], align 8
// ALL-NEXT: store float [[CONV58]], float* [[TMP2]], align 4
// ALL-NEXT: ret void
//
void nested_parallel_2(float *r, int a, double b) {
#pragma omp parallel
{
*r = a + b;
#pragma omp parallel
{
*r = a + b;
#pragma omp parallel
{
*r = a + b;
}
*r = a + b;
#pragma omp parallel
{
*r = a + b;
}
*r = a + b;
}
*r = a + b;
}
*r = a + b;
}
#endif