When targetting CodeView, the goal is to store argv0 & cc1 cmd-line in the emitted .OBJ, in order to allow a reproducer from the .OBJ alone.
This patch is to simplify https://reviews.llvm.org/D80833
Summary:
This patch upstreams support for a new storage only bfloat16 C type.
This type is used to implement primitive support for bfloat16 data, in
line with the Bfloat16 extension of the Armv8.6-a architecture, as
detailed here:
https://community.arm.com/developer/ip-products/processors/b/processors-ip-blog/posts/arm-architecture-developments-armv8-6-a
The bfloat type, and its properties are specified in the Arm Architecture
Reference Manual:
https://developer.arm.com/docs/ddi0487/latest/arm-architecture-reference-manual-armv8-for-armv8-a-architecture-profile
In detail this patch:
- introduces an opaque, storage-only C-type __bf16, which introduces a new bfloat IR type.
This is part of a patch series, starting with command-line and Bfloat16
assembly support. The subsequent patches will upstream intrinsics
support for BFloat16, followed by Matrix Multiplication and the
remaining Virtualization features of the armv8.6-a architecture.
The following people contributed to this patch:
- Luke Cheeseman
- Momchil Velikov
- Alexandros Lamprineas
- Luke Geeson
- Simon Tatham
- Ties Stuij
Reviewers: SjoerdMeijer, rjmccall, rsmith, liutianle, RKSimon, craig.topper, jfb, LukeGeeson, fpetrogalli
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer
Subscribers: labrinea, majnemer, asmith, dexonsmith, kristof.beyls, arphaman, danielkiss, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76077
This patch implements matrix index expressions
(matrix[RowIdx][ColumnIdx]).
It does so by introducing a new MatrixSubscriptExpr(Base, RowIdx, ColumnIdx).
MatrixSubscriptExprs are built in 2 steps in ActOnMatrixSubscriptExpr. First,
if the base of a subscript is of matrix type, we create a incomplete
MatrixSubscriptExpr(base, idx, nullptr). Second, if the base is an incomplete
MatrixSubscriptExpr, we create a complete
MatrixSubscriptExpr(base->getBase(), base->getRowIdx(), idx)
Similar to vector elements, it is not possible to take the address of
a MatrixSubscriptExpr.
For CodeGen, a new MatrixElt type is added to LValue, which is very
similar to VectorElt. The only difference is that we may need to cast
the type of the base from an array to a vector type when accessing it.
Reviewers: rjmccall, anemet, Bigcheese, rsmith, martong
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76791
Not sure about other platforms but `install-xcode-toolchain` was already
including diagtool in the toolchain. This change makes it possible to
install diagtool during Apple's 2-stage build.
Instead of dropping `if (NOT LLVM_INSTALL_TOOLCHAIN_ONLY)` conditional
I've switched to `add_clang_tool` which handles install targets. Also a
few other clang tools like clang-format, clang-scan-deps are using this
macro, so it is good to be consistent.
rdar://problem/15386909
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80770
Summary:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46043
Git's config is generally of the format 'key=val', but a setting
'key=true' can be written as just 'key'. The git-clang-format script
expects a value and crashes in this case; this change handles implicit
'true' values in the script.
Reviewers: MyDeveloperDay, krasimir, sammccall
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80486
Fixes "Use of uninitialized value $ScanView in exec" error on systems
with scan-view executable not located in the expected place.
Patch by Oliver Tušla!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77880
This operator is intended for casting between
pointers to objects in different address spaces
and follows similar logic as const_cast in C++.
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60193
This patch adds a matrix type to Clang as described in the draft
specification in clang/docs/MatrixSupport.rst. It introduces a new option
-fenable-matrix, which can be used to enable the matrix support.
The patch adds new MatrixType and DependentSizedMatrixType types along
with the plumbing required. Loads of and stores to pointers to matrix
values are lowered to memory operations on 1-D IR arrays. After loading,
the loaded values are cast to a vector. This ensures matrix values use
the alignment of the element type, instead of LLVM's large vector
alignment.
The operators and builtins described in the draft spec will will be added in
follow-up patches.
Reviewers: martong, rsmith, Bigcheese, anemet, dexonsmith, rjmccall, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72281
Based on the discussion on D55415, also make the flag default to false.
Having libclang depend on clang-tools-extra means check-clang builds all
of clang-tools-extra, which besides being a layering violation takes
quite some time, since clang-tools-extra has many files that are slow
to compile.
Longer term, we likely will want to remove this flag completely. If
people need this functionality, maybe there could be a
libclang-tools-extra that's libclang + clang-tidy and
clang-includes-fixer linked in.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79599
Summary:
Add --relative to the suggested git-diff one liner. If the user does not
pass this argument, then git will produce a diff with the path relative
to the repository root. If the user's working directory is not the
repository root, then clang-format will complain that the file is not
found. The --relative argument makes git produce a diff with the files
relative to the working directory.
Add note to doc string to warn users about the fact that filenames
embedded in the diff are used as-is with no attempts to "do what they
mean, not what they say"
Reviewers: djasper, alexfh, efriedma, klimek, thakis
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79054
This makes the previously unaccessible AST nodes for C++17 "if with
init statements" accessible to consumers of libclang.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78214
This makes the BindingDecl accessible to consumers of libclang
as CXCursor_UnexposedDecl where previously these AST nodes were
not visited at all from the libclang API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78213
Fix a few bugs where we would fail to properly determine header to
module correspondence when determining whether to suggest a #include or
import, and suggest a #include more often in language modes where there
is no import syntax. Generally, if the target is in a header with
include guards or #pragma once, we should suggest either #including or
importing that header, and not importing a module that happens to
textually include it.
In passing, improve the notes we attach to the corresponding
diagnostics: calling an entity that we couldn't see "previous" is
confusing.
This is a code clean up of the PropertyAttributeKind and
ObjCPropertyAttributeKind enums in ObjCPropertyDecl and ObjCDeclSpec that are
exactly identical. This non-functional change consolidates these enums
into one. The changes are to many files across clang (and comments in LLVM) so
that everything refers to the new consolidated enum in DeclObjCCommon.h.
2nd Landing Attempt...
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77233
This is a code clean up of the PropertyAttributeKind and
ObjCPropertyAttributeKind enums in ObjCPropertyDecl and ObjCDeclSpec that are
exactly identical. This non-functional change consolidates these enums
into one. The changes are to many files across clang (and comments in LLVM) so
that everything refers to the new consolidated enum in DeclObjCCommon.h.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77233
This reverts commit 61ba1481e2.
I'm reverting this because it breaks the lldb build with
incomplete switch coverage warnings. I would fix it forward,
but am not familiar enough with lldb to determine the correct
fix.
lldb/source/Plugins/TypeSystem/Clang/TypeSystemClang.cpp:3958:11: error: enumeration values 'DependentExtInt' and 'ExtInt' not handled in switch [-Werror,-Wswitch]
switch (qual_type->getTypeClass()) {
^
lldb/source/Plugins/TypeSystem/Clang/TypeSystemClang.cpp:4633:11: error: enumeration values 'DependentExtInt' and 'ExtInt' not handled in switch [-Werror,-Wswitch]
switch (qual_type->getTypeClass()) {
^
lldb/source/Plugins/TypeSystem/Clang/TypeSystemClang.cpp:4889:11: error: enumeration values 'DependentExtInt' and 'ExtInt' not handled in switch [-Werror,-Wswitch]
switch (qual_type->getTypeClass()) {
Introduction/Motivation:
LLVM-IR supports integers of non-power-of-2 bitwidth, in the iN syntax.
Integers of non-power-of-two aren't particularly interesting or useful
on most hardware, so much so that no language in Clang has been
motivated to expose it before.
However, in the case of FPGA hardware normal integer types where the
full bitwidth isn't used, is extremely wasteful and has severe
performance/space concerns. Because of this, Intel has introduced this
functionality in the High Level Synthesis compiler[0]
under the name "Arbitrary Precision Integer" (ap_int for short). This
has been extremely useful and effective for our users, permitting them
to optimize their storage and operation space on an architecture where
both can be extremely expensive.
We are proposing upstreaming a more palatable version of this to the
community, in the form of this proposal and accompanying patch. We are
proposing the syntax _ExtInt(N). We intend to propose this to the WG14
committee[1], and the underscore-capital seems like the active direction
for a WG14 paper's acceptance. An alternative that Richard Smith
suggested on the initial review was __int(N), however we believe that
is much less acceptable by WG14. We considered _Int, however _Int is
used as an identifier in libstdc++ and there is no good way to fall
back to an identifier (since _Int(5) is indistinguishable from an
unnamed initializer of a template type named _Int).
[0]https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/software/programmable/quartus-prime/hls-compiler.html)
[1]http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2472.pdf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73967
Summary:
Previously, we treated CXXUuidofExpr as quite a special case: it was the
only kind of expression that could be a canonical template argument, it
could be a constant lvalue base object, and so on. In addition, we
represented the UUID value as a string, whose source form we did not
preserve faithfully, and that we partially parsed in multiple different
places.
With this patch, we create an MSGuidDecl object to represent the
implicit object of type 'struct _GUID' created by a UuidAttr. Each
UuidAttr holds a pointer to its 'struct _GUID' and its original
(as-written) UUID string. A non-value-dependent CXXUuidofExpr behaves
like a DeclRefExpr denoting that MSGuidDecl object. We cache an APValue
representation of the GUID on the MSGuidDecl and use it from constant
evaluation where needed.
This allows removing a lot of the special-case logic to handle these
expressions. Unfortunately, many parts of Clang assume there are only
a couple of interesting kinds of ValueDecl, so the total amount of
special-case logic is not really reduced very much.
This fixes a few bugs and issues:
* PR38490: we now support reading from GUID objects returned from
__uuidof during constant evaluation.
* Our Itanium mangling for a non-instantiation-dependent template
argument involving __uuidof no longer depends on which CXXUuidofExpr
template argument we happened to see first.
* We now predeclare ::_GUID, and permit use of __uuidof without
any header inclusion, better matching MSVC's behavior. We do not
predefine ::__s_GUID, though; that seems like a step too far.
* Our IR representation for GUID constants now uses the correct IR type
wherever possible. We will still fall back to using the
{i32, i16, i16, [8 x i8]}
layout if a definition of struct _GUID is not available. This is not
ideal: in principle the two layouts could have different padding.
Reviewers: rnk, jdoerfert
Subscribers: arphaman, cfe-commits, aeubanks
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78171
The (supposedly superfluous) LLVMFuzzerInitialize function was removed when this file was copied from clang-fuzzer, but this is causing link errors on some targets. @morehouse confirmed on D69171 that it was OK to add back.
Summary: Testing for None should use the 'is' operator.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Patch By: eagleoflqj
Tags: #clang-format
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77974
This reverts commit 21efb06f0a.
Changes since last attempt to land this patch:
- Sort files before deduplicating. This hopefully avoids some buildbot failures.
- Fix use of uninitialized variable when running without --use-analyzer.
- Remove the "REQUIRES: windows" item.
This is a cleanup and normalization patch that also enables reuse with
Flang later on. A follow up will clean up and move the directive ->
clauses mapping.
Reviewed By: fghanim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77112
This is a cleanup and normalization patch that also enables reuse with
Flang later on. A follow up will clean up and move the directive ->
clauses mapping.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77112
Summary:
Added basic representation and parsing/sema handling of array-shaping
operations. Array shaping expression is an expression of form ([s0]..[sn])base,
where s0, ..., sn must be a positive integer, base - a pointer. This
expression is a kind of cast operation that converts pointer expression
into an array-like kind of expression.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, jdoerfert
Subscribers: guansong, arphaman, cfe-commits, caomhin, kkwli0
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74144
When Clang crashes a useful message is output:
"PLEASE submit a bug report to https://bugs.llvm.org/ and include the
crash backtrace, preprocessed source, and associated run script."
A similar message is now output for all tools.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74324
to reduce spurios changes in patches after clang-formatting them. In
particular, these files contain long enums that clang-format reformats
in their entirety if e.g. an element is added.
Reviews having this problem include https://reviews.llvm.org/D76342 and
https://reviews.llvm.org/D71447.
Normally clang avoids creating expressions when it encounters semantic
errors, even if the parser knows which expression to produce.
This works well for the compiler. However, this is not ideal for
source-level tools that have to deal with broken code, e.g. clangd is
not able to provide navigation features even for names that compiler
knows how to resolve.
The new RecoveryExpr aims to capture the minimal set of information
useful for the tools that need to deal with incorrect code:
source range of the expression being dropped,
subexpressions of the expression.
We aim to make constructing RecoveryExprs as simple as possible to
ensure writing code to avoid dropping expressions is easy.
Producing RecoveryExprs can result in new code paths being taken in the
frontend. In particular, clang can produce some new diagnostics now and
we aim to suppress bogus ones based on Expr::containsErrors.
We deliberately produce RecoveryExprs only in the parser for now to
minimize the code affected by this patch. Producing RecoveryExprs in
Sema potentially allows to preserve more information (e.g. type of an
expression), but also results in more code being affected. E.g.
SFINAE checks will have to take presence of RecoveryExprs into account.
Initial implementation only works in C++ mode, as it relies on compiler
postponing diagnostics on dependent expressions. C and ObjC often do not
do this, so they require more work to make sure we do not produce too
many bogus diagnostics on the new expressions.
See documentation of RecoveryExpr for more details.
original patch from Ilya
This change is based on https://reviews.llvm.org/D61722
Reviewers: sammccall, rsmith
Reviewed By: sammccall, rsmith
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69330
The only reason we export symbols from these tools is to support
plugins; if we don't have plugins, exporting symbols just bloats the
executable and makes LTO less effective.
See review of D75879 for the discussion that led to this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76527
MCTargetOptionsCommandFlags.inc and CommandFlags.inc are headers which contain
cl::opt with static storage.
These headers are meant to be incuded by tools to make it easier to parametrize
codegen/mc.
However, these headers are also included in at least two libraries: lldCommon
and handle-llvm. As a result, when creating DYLIB, clang-cpp holds a reference
to the options, and lldCommon holds another reference. Linking the two in a
single executable, as zig does[0], results in a double registration.
This patch explores an other approach: the .inc files are moved to regular
files, and the registration happens on-demand through static declaration of
options in the constructor of a static object.
[0] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1756977#c5
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75579
After a crash catched by the CrashRecoveryContext, this patch prevents from accessing dangling pointers in TimerGroup structures before the clang tool exits. Previously, the default TimerGroup had internal linked lists which were still pointing to old Timer or TimerGroup instances, which lived in stack frames released by the CrashRecoveryContext.
Fixes PR45164.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76099
Most clients of SourceManager.h need to do things like turning source
locations into file & line number pairs, but this doesn't require
bringing in FileManager.h and LLVM's FS headers.
The main code change here is to sink SM::createFileID into the cpp file.
I reason that this is not performance critical because it doesn't happen
on the diagnostic path, it happens along the paths of macro expansion
(could be hot) and new includes (less hot).
Saves some includes:
309 - /usr/local/google/home/rnk/llvm-project/clang/include/clang/Basic/FileManager.h
272 - /usr/local/google/home/rnk/llvm-project/clang/include/clang/Basic/FileSystemOptions.h
271 - /usr/local/google/home/rnk/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/VirtualFileSystem.h
267 - /usr/local/google/home/rnk/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/FileSystem.h
266 - /usr/local/google/home/rnk/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/Chrono.h
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75406
Fix a bug in IRGen where it wasn't destructing compound literals in C
that are ObjC pointer arrays or non-trivial structs. Also diagnose jumps
that enter or exit the lifetime of the compound literals.
rdar://problem/51867864
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64464
Lower priority of __tgt_register_lib in order to make sure that __tgt_register_requires is called before loading a libomptarget plugin.
We want to know beforehand which requirements the user has asked for so that upon loading the plugin libomptarget can report how many devices there are that can satisfy these requirements.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75223
Lots of headers pass around MemoryBuffer objects, but very few open
them. Let those that do include FileSystem.h.
Saves ~250 includes of Chrono.h & FileSystem.h:
$ diff -u thedeps-before.txt thedeps-after.txt | grep '^[-+] ' | sort | uniq -c | sort -nr
254 - ../llvm/include/llvm/Support/FileSystem.h
253 - ../llvm/include/llvm/Support/Chrono.h
237 - ../llvm/include/llvm/Support/NativeFormatting.h
237 - ../llvm/include/llvm/Support/FormatProviders.h
192 - ../llvm/include/llvm/ADT/StringSwitch.h
190 - ../llvm/include/llvm/Support/FormatVariadicDetails.h
...
This requires duplicating the file_t typedef, which is unfortunate. I
sunk the choice of mapping mode down into the cpp file using variable
template specializations instead of class members in headers.
follow-up "libclang: Make shared object symbol exporting by default"
This reverts commit 7a7c753b0c.
This reverts commit 7ff1f55a12.
They broke building libclang.dll on Windows, see
https://reviews.llvm.org/D74564
https://reviews.llvm.org/D74564 enabled static building for libclang,
and for non CMake consumers they had to set the `CMAKE_EXPORTS` define
when consuming libclang.
This commit makes the non CMake users of the static building have to define `CMAKE_NO_EXPORTS`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74907
This is useful for performing custom build system integration that works by appending '--analyze --analyzer-output html' to all clang build commands.
For such users there is now still a way to have the fancy index.html file
in the output.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74467
The goal of this patch is to maximize CPU utilization on multi-socket or high core count systems, so that parallel computations such as LLD/ThinLTO can use all hardware threads in the system. Before this patch, on Windows, a maximum of 64 hardware threads could be used at most, in some cases dispatched only on one CPU socket.
== Background ==
Windows doesn't have a flat cpu_set_t like Linux. Instead, it projects hardware CPUs (or NUMA nodes) to applications through a concept of "processor groups". A "processor" is the smallest unit of execution on a CPU, that is, an hyper-thread if SMT is active; a core otherwise. There's a limit of 32-bit processors on older 32-bit versions of Windows, which later was raised to 64-processors with 64-bit versions of Windows. This limit comes from the affinity mask, which historically is represented by the sizeof(void*). Consequently, the concept of "processor groups" was introduced for dealing with systems with more than 64 hyper-threads.
By default, the Windows OS assigns only one "processor group" to each starting application, in a round-robin manner. If the application wants to use more processors, it needs to programmatically enable it, by assigning threads to other "processor groups". This also means that affinity cannot cross "processor group" boundaries; one can only specify a "preferred" group on start-up, but the application is free to allocate more groups if it wants to.
This creates a peculiar situation, where newer CPUs like the AMD EPYC 7702P (64-cores, 128-hyperthreads) are projected by the OS as two (2) "processor groups". This means that by default, an application can only use half of the cores. This situation could only get worse in the years to come, as dies with more cores will appear on the market.
== The problem ==
The heavyweight_hardware_concurrency() API was introduced so that only *one hardware thread per core* was used. Once that API returns, that original intention is lost, only the number of threads is retained. Consider a situation, on Windows, where the system has 2 CPU sockets, 18 cores each, each core having 2 hyper-threads, for a total of 72 hyper-threads. Both heavyweight_hardware_concurrency() and hardware_concurrency() currently return 36, because on Windows they are simply wrappers over std:🧵:hardware_concurrency() -- which can only return processors from the current "processor group".
== The changes in this patch ==
To solve this situation, we capture (and retain) the initial intention until the point of usage, through a new ThreadPoolStrategy class. The number of threads to use is deferred as late as possible, until the moment where the std::threads are created (ThreadPool in the case of ThinLTO).
When using hardware_concurrency(), setting ThreadCount to 0 now means to use all the possible hardware CPU (SMT) threads. Providing a ThreadCount above to the maximum number of threads will have no effect, the maximum will be used instead.
The heavyweight_hardware_concurrency() is similar to hardware_concurrency(), except that only one thread per hardware *core* will be used.
When LLVM_ENABLE_THREADS is OFF, the threading APIs will always return 1, to ensure any caller loops will be exercised at least once.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71775
Summary:
Currently template parameters has symbolkind `Unknown`. This patch
introduces a new kind `TemplateParm` for templatetemplate, templatetype and
nontypetemplate parameters.
Also adds tests in clangd hover feature.
Reviewers: sammccall
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, ilya-biryukov, jkorous, arphaman, usaxena95, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73696
Added a test for #pragma clang __debug llvm_fatal_error to test for the original issue.
Added llvm::sys::Process::Exit() and replaced ::exit() in places where it was appropriate. This new function would call the current CrashRecoveryContext if one is running on the same thread; or call ::exit() otherwise.
Fixes PR44705.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73742
Summary:
We were linking all the clang objects and shared libraries into
libclang-cpp.so, which was causing the command line options to be
registered twice.
Reviewers: beanz, mgorny
Reviewed By: beanz, mgorny
Subscribers: merge_guards_bot, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68520
instead of the "enabled by default" color.
It may be technically correct to list unimplemented diagnostics as
"enabled by default" but it's quite misleading.
Summary:
Fat object size has significantly increased after D65819 which changed bundler tool to add host object as a normal bundle to the fat output which almost doubled its size. That patch was fixing the following issues
1. Problems associated with the partial linking - global constructors were not called for partially linking objects which clearly resulted in incorrect behavior.
2. Eliminating "junk" target object sections from the linked binary on the host side.
The first problem is no longer relevant because we do not use partial linking for creating fat objects anymore. Target objects sections are now inserted into the resulting fat object with a help of llvm-objcopy tool.
The second issue, "junk" sections in the linked host binary, has been fixed in D73408 by adding "exclude" flag to the fat object's sections which contain target objects. This flag tells linker to drop section from the inputs when linking executable or shared library, therefore these sections will not be propagated in the linked binary.
Since both problems have been solved, we can revert D65819 changes to reduce fat object size and this patch essentially is doing that.
Reviewers: ABataev, alexshap, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: ABataev
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73642
Summary: This flag tells link editor to exclude section from linker inputs when linking executable or shared library.
Reviewers: ABataev, alexshap, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: ABataev
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73408
This is how it should've been and brings it more in line with
std::string_view. There should be no functional change here.
This is mostly mechanical from a custom clang-tidy check, with a lot of
manual fixups. It uncovers a lot of minor inefficiencies.
This doesn't actually modify StringRef yet, I'll do that in a follow-up.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70268
This is a recommit of f978ea4983 with a fix for the PowerPC failure.
The issue was that:
* `CompilerInstance::ExecuteAction` calls
`getTarget().adjust(getLangOpts());`.
* `PPCTargetInfo::adjust` changes `LangOptions::HasAltivec`.
* This happens after the first few calls to `getModuleHash`.
There’s even a FIXME saying:
```
// FIXME: We shouldn't need to do this, the target should be immutable once
// created. This complexity should be lifted elsewhere.
```
This only showed up on PowerPC because it's one of the few targets that
almost always changes a hashed langopt.
I looked into addressing the fixme, but that would be a much larger
change, and it's not the only thing that happens in `ExecuteAction` that
can change the module context hash. Instead I changed the code to not
call `getModuleHash` until after it has been modified in `ExecuteAction`.
Summary:
We were linking all the clang objects and shared libraries into
libclang-cpp.so, which was causing the command line options to be
registered twice.
Reviewers: beanz, mgorny
Reviewed By: beanz, mgorny
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68520
After rGb4a99a061f517e60985667e39519f60186cbb469, passing a response file such as -Wp,@a.rsp wasn't working anymore because .rsp expansion happens inside clang's main() function.
This patch adds response file expansion in the -cc1 tool.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73120
Implement support for C++2a requires-expressions.
Re-commit after compilation failure on some platforms due to alignment issues with PointerIntPair.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50360