Summary:
These cause us to consider all functions in-between to be __host__
__device__.
You can nest these pragmas; you just can't have more 'end's than
'begin's.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: tra, jhen, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24975
llvm-svn: 283677
Summary:
Move CheckCUDACall from ActOnCallExpr and BuildDeclRefExpr to
DiagnoseUseOfDecl. This lets us catch some edge cases we were missing,
specifically around class operators.
This necessitates a few other changes:
- Avoid emitting duplicate deferred diags in CheckCUDACall.
Previously we'd carefully placed our call to CheckCUDACall such that
it would only ever run once for a particular callsite. But now this
isn't the case.
- Emit deferred diagnostics from a template
specialization/instantiation's primary template, in addition to from
the specialization/instantiation itself. DiagnoseUseOfDecl ends up
putting the deferred diagnostics on the template, rather than the
specialization, so we need to check both.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits, tra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24573
llvm-svn: 283637
Revert the -print-libgcc-file-name change as the new test fails
on Darwin. It needs to be updated to run the libgcc part only on systems
supporting that rtlib.
llvm-svn: 283586
The problem that caused the msvc crash has been indentified and fixed
in the previous commit. This patch contains the rest of r283092.
llvm-svn: 283584
This is the primary suspect for causing the msvc crash, now that vector of
smart pointers was proven to be safe. Probably the default {}-initializer
is the problem.
llvm-svn: 283573
Make the -print-libgcc-file-name option print an appropriate compiler
runtime library, that is libgcc.a if gcc runtime is used
and an appropriate compiler-rt library if that runtime is used.
The main use for this is to allow linking executables built with
-nodefaultlibs (e.g. to avoid linking to the standard C++ library) to
the compiler runtime library, e.g. using:
clang++ ... -nodefaultlibs $(clang++ ... -print-libgcc-file-name)
in which case currently a program built like this linked to the gcc
runtime unconditionally. The patch fixes it to use compiler-rt libraries
instead when compiler-rt is the active runtime.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25338
llvm-svn: 283572
Define the list of pieces in BugReport class. This is half of the changes
in the BugReport class code, which is pointed to by the msvc crash message.
llvm-svn: 283568
Define PathDiagnosticNotePiece. The next commit would be able to address the
BugReport class code that is pointed to by the msvc crash message.
llvm-svn: 283566
Returns when calling an inline function should not be merged in the ExplodedGraph unless they are same.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25326
llvm-svn: 283554
CheckSingleAssignmentConstraints. These no longer produce ExprError() when they
have not emitted an error, and reliably inform the caller when they *have*
emitted an error.
This fixes some serious issues where we would fail to emit any diagnostic for
invalid code and then attempt to emit code for an invalid AST, and conversely
some issues where we would emit two diagnostics for the same problem.
llvm-svn: 283508
Currently if the path diagnostic consumer (e.g HTMLDiagnostics and PlistDiagnostics) do not support cross file diagnostics then the path diagnostic report is silently omitted in the case of cross file diagnostics. The patch adds a little verbosity to Clang in this case.
The patch also adds help entry for the "--analyzer-output" driver option.
llvm-svn: 283499
the resulting specialization is not referenced by the rest of the AST. This
both avoids performing unnecessary reinstantiations in downstream users of the
AST file and fixes a bug (breaking modules self-host right now) where we would
sometimes fail to emit a definition of a class template specialization if we
imported just a declaration of it from elsewhere (see new testcase for reduced
example).
llvm-svn: 283489
new expression, distinguish between the case of a constant and non-constant
initializer. In the former case, if the bound is erroneous (too many
initializer elements, bound is negative, or allocated size overflows), reject,
and take the bound into account when determining whether we need to
default-construct any elements. In the remanining cases, move the logic to
check for default-constructibility of trailing elements into the initialization
code rather than inventing a bogus array bound, to cope with cases where the
number of initialized elements is not the same as the number of initializer
list elements (this can happen due to string literal initialization or brace
elision).
This also fixes rejects-valid and crash-on-valid errors when initializing a
new'd array of character type from a braced string literal.
llvm-svn: 283406
In the analyzer's path-sensitive reports, when a report goes through a branch
and the branch condition cannot be decided to be definitely true or false
(based on the previous execution path), an event piece is added that tells the
user that a new assumption is added upon the symbolic value of the branch
condition. For example, "Assuming 'a' is equal to 3".
The text of the assumption is hand-crafted in various manners depending on
the AST expression. If the AST expression is too complex and the text of
the assumption fails to be constructed, the event piece is omitted.
This causes loss of information and misunderstanding of the report.
Do not omit the event piece even if the expression is too complex;
add a piece with a generic text instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23300
llvm-svn: 283301
Summary:
This will let us (in a separate patch) allocate deferred diagnostics in
the ASTContext's PartialDiagnostic arena.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25260
llvm-svn: 283271
Summary: We need x86-64-specific builtins if we want to implement some of the MS intrinsics - winnt.h contains definitions of some functions for i386, but not for x86-64 (for example _InterlockedOr64), which means that we cannot treat them as builtins for both i386 and x86-64, because then we have definitions of builtin functions in winnt.h on i386.
Reviewers: thakis, majnemer, hans, rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24598
llvm-svn: 283264
We could hook up /GL as an alias for -flto, but that might be
confusing, as clang-cl in that mode would not be drop-in compatible
with cl.exe /GL, as it requires the linker to be lld.
Exposing -flto seems like a less confusing way to expose this
functionality.
llvm-svn: 283255
Previously if a file-level function was defined inside befriending
template class, it always was treated as defined. For instance, the code like:
```
int func(int x);
template<typename T> class C1 {
friend int func(int x) { return x; }
};
template<typename T> class C2 {
friend int func(int x) { return x; }
};
```
could not be compiled due to function redefinition, although not of the templates
is instantiated. Moreover, the body of friend function can contain use of template
parameters, attempt to get definition of such function outside any instantiation
causes compiler abnormal termination.
Other compilers (gcc, icc) follow viewpoint that the body of the function defined
in friend declaration becomes available when corresponding class is instantiated.
This patch implements this viewpoint in clang.
Definitions introduced by friend declarations in template classes are not added
to the redeclaration chain of corresponding function. Only when the template is
instantiated, instantiation of the function definition is placed to the chain.
The fix was made in collaboration with Richard Smith.
This change fixes PR8035, PR17923, PR22307 and PR25848.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16989
llvm-svn: 283207
Summary:
With this commit simple coroutines can be created in plain C using coroutine builtins.
Reviewers: rnk, EricWF, rsmith
Subscribers: modocache, mgorny, mehdi_amini, beanz, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24373
llvm-svn: 283155
Highlight code clones referenced by the warning message with the help of
the extra notes feature recently introduced in r283092.
Change warning text to more clang-ish. Remove suggestions from the copy-paste
error checker diagnostics, because currently our suggestions are strictly 50%
wrong (we do not know which of the two code clones contains the error), and
for that reason we should not sound as if we're actually suggesting this.
Hopefully a better solution would bring them back.
Make sure the suspicious clone pair structure always mentions
the correct variable for the second clone.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24916
llvm-svn: 283094
These diagnostics are separate from the path-sensitive engine's path notes,
and can be added manually on top of path-sensitive or path-insensitive reports.
The new note diagnostics would appear as note:-diagnostic on console and
as blue bubbles in scan-build. In plist files they currently do not appear,
because format needs to be discussed with plist file users.
The analyzer option "-analyzer-config notes-as-events=true" would convert
notes to normal path notes, and put them at the beginning of the path.
This is a temporary hack to show the new notes in plist files.
A few checkers would be updated in subsequent commits,
including tests for this new feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24278
llvm-svn: 283092
Summary:
Also makes -fcoroutines_ts to be both a Driver and CC1 flag.
Patch mostly by EricWF.
Reviewers: rnk, cfe-commits, rsmith, EricWF
Subscribers: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25130
llvm-svn: 283064
With templated classes, is possible to not be able to determine is a member
function is a special member function before the class is instantiated. Only
these special member functions can be defaulted. In some cases, knowing
whether a function is a special member function can't be determined until
instantiation, so an uninstantiated function could possibly be defaulted too.
Add a case to the error diagnostic when the function marked with a default is
not known to be a special member function.
llvm-svn: 282989
Also add a test that we disallow
__constant__ __shared__ int x;
because it's possible to break this without breaking
__shared__ __constant__ int x;
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits, tra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25125
llvm-svn: 282985
assume that ::operator new provides no more alignment than is necessary for any
primitive type, except when we're on a GNU OS, where glibc's malloc guarantees
to provide 64-bit alignment on 32-bit systems and 128-bit alignment on 64-bit
systems. This can be controlled by the command-line -fnew-alignment flag.
llvm-svn: 282974
Summary: The title says it all.
Reviewers: rsmith, GorNishanov
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25078
llvm-svn: 282973
Summary:
This is probably the sane place for the attribute to go, but nvcc
specifically rejects it. Other GNU-style attributes are allowed in this
position (although judging from the warning it emits for
host/device/global, those attributes are applied to the lambda's
anonymous struct, not to the function itself).
It would be nice to have a FixIt message here, but doing so, or even
just getting the correct range for the attribute, including its '((' and
'))'s, is apparently Hard.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits, tra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25115
llvm-svn: 282911
These are supposed to produce the same as normal volatile
pointer loads/stores. When -volatile:ms is specified,
normal volatile pointers are forced to have atomic semantics
(as is the default on x86 in MSVC mode). In that case,
these builtins should still produce non-atomic volatile
loads/stores without acquire/release semantics, which
the new test verifies.
These are only available on ARM (and on AArch64,
although clang doesn't support AArch64/Windows yet).
This implements what is missing for PR30394, making it possible
to compile C++ for ARM in MSVC mode with MSVC headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24986
llvm-svn: 282900
Summary:
This patch proposes a new class to generate and record action dependences related with offloading. The builder provides three main functionalities:
- Add device dependences to host actions.
- Add host dependence to device actions.
- Register device top-level actions.
The constructor of the builder detect the programming models that should be supported, and generates a specialized builder for each. If a new programming model is to be added in the future, only a new specialized builder has to be implemented.
When the specialized builder is generated, it produces programming-model-specific diagnostics.
A CUDA specialized builder is proposed in the patch that mostly consists of the partition of the current `buildCudaAction` by the three different functionalities.
Reviewers: tra, echristo, ABataev, jlebar, hfinkel
Subscribers: Hahnfeld, whchung, guansong, jlebar, mehdi_amini, andreybokhanko, tcramer, mkuron, cfe-commits, arpith-jacob, carlo.bertolli, caomhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18172
llvm-svn: 282865
function correctly when targeting MS ABIs (this appears to have never mattered
prior to this change).
Update test case to always cover both 32-bit and 64-bit Windows ABIs, since
they behave somewhat differently from each other here.
Update test case to also cover operators , && and ||, which it appears are also
affected by P0145R3 (they're not explicitly called out by the design document,
but this is the emergent behavior of the existing wording).
Original commit message:
P0145R3 (C++17 evaluation order tweaks): evaluate the right-hand side of
assignment and compound-assignment operators before the left-hand side. (Even
if it's an overloaded operator.)
This completes the implementation of P0145R3 + P0400R0 for all targets except
Windows, where the evaluation order guarantees for <<, >>, and ->* are
unimplementable as the ABI requires the function arguments are evaluated from
right to left (because parameter destructors are run from left to right in the
callee).
llvm-svn: 282619
Summary:
Now two replacements are considered order-independent if applying them in
either order produces the same result. These include (but not restricted
to) replacements that:
- don't overlap (being directly adjacent is fine) and
- are overlapping deletions.
- are insertions at the same offset and applying them in either order
has the same effect, i.e. X + Y = Y + X if one inserts text X and the
other inserts text Y.
Discussion about this design can be found in D24717
Reviewers: djasper, klimek
Subscribers: omtcyfz, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24800
llvm-svn: 282577
assignment and compound-assignment operators before the left-hand side. (Even
if it's an overloaded operator.)
This completes the implementation of P0145R3 + P0400R0 for all targets except
Windows, where the evaluation order guarantees for <<, >>, and ->* are
unimplementable as the ABI requires the function arguments are evaluated from
right to left (because parameter destructors are run from left to right in the
callee).
llvm-svn: 282556
This patch corresponds to review:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D24397
It adds the __POWER9_VECTOR__ macro and the -mpower9-vector option along with
a number of altivec.h functions (refer to the code review for a list).
llvm-svn: 282481
This option behaves in a similar spirit as -save-temps and writes
internal llvm statistics in json format to a file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24820
llvm-svn: 282426
__attribute__((amdgpu_flat_work_group_size(<min>, <max>))) - request minimum and maximum flat work group size
__attribute__((amdgpu_waves_per_eu(<min>[, <max>]))) - request minimum and/or maximum waves per execution unit
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24513
llvm-svn: 282371
Summary:
Currently, a linker option must be used to control the backend
parallelism of ThinLTO. The linker option varies depending on the
linker (e.g. gold vs ld64). Add a new clang option -flto-jobs=N
to control this.
I've added in the wiring to pass this to the gold plugin. I also
added in the logic to pass this down in the form I understand that
ld64 uses on MacOS, for the darwin target.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini, dexonsmith
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24826
llvm-svn: 282291
Summary:
- If a replacement has offset UINT_MAX, length 0, and a replacement text
that is an #include directive, this will insert the #include into the
correct block in the \p Code.
- If a replacement has offset UINT_MAX, length 1, and a replacement text
that is the name of the header to be removed, the header will be removed
from \p Code if it exists.
Reviewers: djasper
Subscribers: cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24829
llvm-svn: 282253
The backend can't encode all possible values of the argument and will fail isel. Checking in the frontend presents a friendlier experience to the user.
I started with builtins that can only take _MM_CUR_DIRECTION or _MM_NO_EXC. More builtins coming in the future.
llvm-svn: 282228
Summary: People might want to receive warnings about pragmas but not about intrinsics that are implemented in intrin.h.
Reviewers: thakis, hans
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24775
llvm-svn: 282108
The return types on the AVX512 __builtin_ia32_gather3XivXdi builtins are incorrect. The return type should match the type of the pass through vector.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24785
-This line, and those below, will be ignored--
M include/clang/Basic/BuiltinsX86.def
llvm-svn: 282082
This checker should find the calls to blocking functions (for example: sleep, getc, fgets,read,recv etc.) inside a critical section. When sleep(x) is called while a mutex is held, other threads cannot lock the same mutex. This might take some time, leading to bad performance or even deadlock.
Example:
mutex_t m;
void f() {
sleep(1000); // Error: sleep() while m is locked! [f() is called from foobar() while m is locked]
// do some work
}
void foobar() {
lock(m);
f();
unlock(m);
}
A patch by zdtorok (Zoltán Dániel Török)!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21506
llvm-svn: 282011
Summary:
Diff to r281457:
- added a test case `CalculateRangesOfInsertionAroundReplacement`.
Reviewers: djasper
Subscribers: cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24606
llvm-svn: 281891
Summary:
No behavioral change intended. The change makes iterating the replacements set more intuitive in Replacements class implementation. Previously, insertion is ordered before an deletion/replacement with the same offset, which is counter-intuitive for implementation, especially for a followup patch to support adding insertions around replacements.
With the current ordering, we only need to make `applyAllReplacements` iterate the replacements set reversely when applying them so that deletion/replacement is still applied before insertion with the same offset.
Reviewers: klimek, djasper
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24663
llvm-svn: 281819
* Fix an egregious comma usage.
* Remove the `static` keyword in the example since the variables should have
external linkage.
* Use C++11 attributes in the example.
llvm-svn: 281712
Currently, the Clang version is computed as follows:
1. LLVM defines major, minor, and patch versions, all statically set. Today,
these are 4, 0, and 0, respectively.
2. The static version numbers are combined into PACKAGE_VERSION along with a
suffix, so the result today looks like "4.0.0svn".
3. Clang extracts CLANG_VERSION from PACKAGE_VERSION using a regexp. The regexp
allows the patch level to omitted, and drops any non-digit trailing values.
Today, this result looks like "4.0.0".
4. CLANG_VERSION is then split further into CLANG_VERSION_MAJOR and
CLANG_VERSION_MINOR. Today, these resolve to 4 and 0, respectively.
5. If CLANG_VERSION matches a regexp with three version components, then
CLANG_VERSION_PATCHLEVEL is extracted and the CLANG_HAS_VERSION_PATCHLEVEL
variable is set to 1. Today, these values are 0 and 1, respectively.
6. The CLANG_VERSION_* variables (and CLANG_HAS_VERSION_PATCHLEVEL) are
configured into [llvm/tools/clang/]include/clang/Basic/Version.inc
verbatim by CMake.
7. In [llvm/tools/clang/]include/clang/Basic/Version.h, macros are defined
conditionally, based on CLANG_HAS_VERSION_PATCHLEVEL, to compute
CLANG_VERSION_STRING as either a two- or three-level version number. Today,
this value is "4.0.0", because despite the patchlevel being 0, it was
matched by regexp and is thus "HAS"ed by the preprocessor. This string is
then used wherever Clang's "version" is needed [*].
[*] Including, notably, by compiler-rt, for computing its installation path.
This change collapses steps 2-5 by defaulting Clang to use LLVM's (non-string)
version components for the Clang version (see [*] for why not PACKAGE_VERSION),
and collapses steps 6 and 7 by simply writing CLANG_VERSION_STRING into
Version.inc. The Clang version today always uses the patchlevel form, so the
collapsed Version.inc does not have logic for a version without a patch level.
Historically speaking, this technique began with the VER file in r82085 (which
survives in the form of the regexp in #3). The major, minor, and patchlevel
versions were introduced by r106863 (which remains in #4-6). The VER file itself
was deleted in favor of the LLVM version number in r106914. On the LLVM side,
the individual LLVM_VERSION_MAJOR, LLVM_VERSION_MINOR, and PACKAGE_VERSION
weren't introduced for nearly two more years, until r150405.
llvm-svn: 281666
The ARM-specific C attributes (currently just interrupt) need to check
for both the big- and little-endian versions of the triples, so that
they are accepted for both big and little endian targets.
TargetWindows and TargetMicrosoftCXXABI also only use the little-endian
triples, but this is correct as windows is not supported on big-endian
ARM targets (and this is asserted in lib/Basic/Targets.cpp).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24245
llvm-svn: 281596
Assert text for getSingleDecl() is inaccurate. Appears to have been copy pasted
from getDeclGroup().
Patch by Ben Taylor!
Reviewers: alexfh
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24518
llvm-svn: 281525
Summary: This patch converts finite/__finite to builtin functions so that it will be inlined by compiler.
Reviewers: hfinkel, davidxl, efriedma
Subscribers: efriedma, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24483
llvm-svn: 281509
Summary:
Extend `tooling::Replacements::add()` to support adding order-independent replacements.
Two replacements are considered order-independent if one of the following conditions is true:
- They do not overlap. (This is already supported.)
- One replacement is insertion, and the other is a replacement with
length > 0, and the insertion is adjecent to but not contained in the
other replacement. In this case, the replacement should always change
the original code instead of the inserted text.
Reviewers: klimek, djasper
Subscribers: cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24515
llvm-svn: 281457
This patch adds an entry for "-rtlib" in the output of `man clang` and `clang -help`.
Patch by Lei Zhang!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24069
llvm-svn: 281440
-Wdiv-by-zero may as well be an alias for -Wdivision-by-zero rather than a GCC-compatibility no-op.
-Wno-shadow should disable -Wshadow-ivar.
-Weffc++ may as well enable -Wnon-virtual-dtor like it does in GCC.
llvm-svn: 281412
This mostly behaves cl.exe's behavior, even though clang-cl is stricter in some
corner cases and more lenient in others (see the included test).
To make the uuid declared previously here diagnostic work correctly, tweak
stripTypeAttributesOffDeclSpec() to keep attributes in the right order.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D24469
llvm-svn: 281367
We also need to add ObjCTypeParamTypeLoc. ObjCTypeParamType supports the
representation of "T <protocol>" where T is a type parameter. Before this,
we use TypedefType to represent the type parameter for ObjC.
ObjCTypeParamType has "ObjCTypeParamDecl *OTPDecl" and it extends from
ObjCProtocolQualifiers. It is a non-canonical type and is canonicalized
to the underlying type with the protocol qualifiers.
rdar://24619481
rdar://25060179
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23079
llvm-svn: 281355
To construct the canonical type of ObjCTypeParamType, we need to apply
qualifiers on ObjCObjectPointerType. The updated applyObjCProtocolQualifiers
handles this case by merging the protocol lists, constructing a new
ObjCObjectType, then a new ObjCObjectPointerType.
rdar://24619481
rdar://25060179
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D24059
llvm-svn: 281353
Now ObjCObjectType extends from ObjCProtocolQualifiers. We save number of
protocols in ObjCProtocolQualifiers.
This is in preparation of adding a new type class ObjCTypeParamType that
can take protocol qualifiers.
rdar://24619481
rdar://25060179
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23078
llvm-svn: 281351
The unit tests in this patch demonstrate the need to traverse template
parameter lists of DeclaratorDecls (e.g. VarDecls, CXXMethodDecls) and
TagDecls (e.g. EnumDecls, RecordDecls).
Fixes PR29042.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D24268
Patch from Lukasz
Łukasz Anforowicz <lukasza@chromium.org>!
llvm-svn: 281345
Original commit message:
Add -fdiagnostics-show-hotness
Summary:
I've recently added the ability for optimization remarks to include the
hotness of the corresponding code region. This uses PGO and allows
filtering of the optimization remarks by relevance. The idea was first
discussed here:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.compilers.llvm.devel/98334
The general goal is to produce a YAML file with the remarks. Then, an
external tool could dynamically filter these by hotness and perhaps by
other things.
That said it makes sense to also expose this at the more basic level
where we just include the hotness info with each optimization remark.
For example, in D22694, the clang flag was pretty useful to measure the
overhead of the additional analyses required to include hotness.
(Without the flag we don't even run the analyses.)
For the record, Hal has already expressed support for the idea of this
patch on IRC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23284
llvm-svn: 281293
Summary:
I've recently added the ability for optimization remarks to include the
hotness of the corresponding code region. This uses PGO and allows
filtering of the optimization remarks by relevance. The idea was first
discussed here:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.compilers.llvm.devel/98334
The general goal is to produce a YAML file with the remarks. Then, an
external tool could dynamically filter these by hotness and perhaps by
other things.
That said it makes sense to also expose this at the more basic level
where we just include the hotness info with each optimization remark.
For example, in D22694, the clang flag was pretty useful to measure the
overhead of the additional analyses required to include hotness.
(Without the flag we don't even run the analyses.)
For the record, Hal has already expressed support for the idea of this
patch on IRC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23284
llvm-svn: 281276
remark flags. For now I'm checking in a copy of the built documentation, but we
can replace this with a placeholder (as we do for the attributes reference
documentation) once we enable building this server-side.
llvm-svn: 281192
Our limited debug info optimizations are breaking down at DLL
boundaries, so we're going to evaluate the size impact of these
settings, and possibly change the default.
Users should be able to override our settings, though.
llvm-svn: 281056
Avoided wrapping NullabilityDocs at 80cols, since that would've made
this diff much bigger, and never-ending lines seems to be the style for
many of the null-related docs.
llvm-svn: 281017
- Simplify signature of CreateVTableInitializer function.
- Move vtable component builder to a separate function.
- Remove unnecessary accessors from VTableLayout class.
This is in preparation for a future change that will alter the type of the
vtable initializer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22642
llvm-svn: 280897
r280553 introduced an issue where we'd emit ambiguity errors for code
like:
```
void foo(int *, int);
void foo(unsigned int *, unsigned int);
void callFoo() {
unsigned int i;
foo(&i, 0); // ambiguous: int->unsigned int is worse than int->int,
// but unsigned int*->unsigned int* is better than
// int*->int*.
}
```
This patch fixes this issue by changing how we handle ill-formed (but
valid) implicit conversions. Candidates with said conversions now always
rank worse than candidates without them, and two candidates are
considered to be equally bad if they both have these conversions for
the same argument.
Additionally, this fixes a case in C++11 where we'd complain about an
ambiguity in a case like:
```
void f(char *, int);
void f(const char *, unsigned);
void g() { f("abc", 0); }
```
...Since conversion to char* from a string literal is considered
ill-formed in C++11 (and deprecated in C++03), but we accept it as an
extension.
llvm-svn: 280847
There is a bug causing pch to be validated even though -fno-validate-pch is set. This patch fixes it.
ASTReader relies on ASTReaderListener to initialize SuggestedPredefines, which is required for compilations using PCH. Before this change, PCHValidator is the default ASTReaderListener. After this change, when -fno-validate-pch is set, PCHValidator is disabled, but we need a replacement ASTReaderListener to initialize SuggestedPredefines. Class SimpleASTReaderListener is implemented for this purpose.
This change only affects -fno-validate-pch. There is no functional change if -fno-validate-pch is not set.
If -fno-validate-pch is not set, conflicts in predefined macros between pch and current compiler instance causes error.
If -fno-validate-pch is set, predefine macros in current compiler override those in pch so that compilation can continue.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24054
llvm-svn: 280842
Parse pragma intrinsic, display warning if the function isn't a builtin
function in clang and suggest including intrin.h.
Patch by Albert Gutowski!
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, rnk
Subscribers: aaron.ballman, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23944
llvm-svn: 280825
OpenCL requires __ENDIAN_LITTLE__ be set for little endian targets.
The default for targets was also apparently big endian, so AMDGPU
was incorrectly reported as big endian. Set this from the triple
so targets don't have another place to set the endianness.
llvm-svn: 280787
Some Windows SDK classes, for example
Windows::Storage::Streams::IBufferByteAccess, use the ATL way of spelling
attributes:
[uuid("....")] class IBufferByteAccess {};
To be able to use __uuidof() to grab the uuid off these types, clang needs to
support uuid as a Microsoft attribute. There was already code to skip Microsoft
attributes, extend that to look for uuid and parse it. Use the new "Microsoft"
attribute type added in r280575 (and r280574, r280576) for this.
Final part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D23895
llvm-svn: 280578
There was already a function that moved attributes off the declspec into
an attribute list for attributes applying to the type, teach that function to
also move Microsoft attributes around and rename it to match its new broader
role.
Nothing uses Microsoft attributes yet, so no behavior change.
Part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D23895
llvm-svn: 280576
This is for attributes in []-delimited lists preceding a class, like e.g.
`[uuid("...")] class Foo {};` Not used by anything yet, so no behavior change.
Part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D23895
llvm-svn: 280575
This patch allows us to perform incompatible pointer conversions when
resolving overloads in C. So, the following code will no longer fail to
compile (though it will still emit warnings, assuming the user hasn't
opted out of them):
```
void foo(char *) __attribute__((overloadable));
void foo(int) __attribute__((overloadable));
void callFoo() {
unsigned char bar[128];
foo(bar); // selects the char* overload.
}
```
These conversions are ranked below all others, so:
A. Any other viable conversion will win out
B. If we had another incompatible pointer conversion in the example
above (e.g. `void foo(int *)`), we would complain about
an ambiguity.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24113
llvm-svn: 280553
Summary:
This attribute specifies expectations about the initialization of static and
thread local variables. Specifically that the variable has a
[constant initializer](http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/constant_initialization)
according to the rules of [basic.start.static]. Failure to meet this expectation
will result in an error.
Static objects with constant initializers avoid hard-to-find bugs caused by
the indeterminate order of dynamic initialization. They can also be safely
used by other static constructors across translation units.
This attribute acts as a compile time assertion that the requirements
for constant initialization have been met. Since these requirements change
between dialects and have subtle pitfalls it's important to fail fast instead
of silently falling back on dynamic initialization.
```c++
// -std=c++14
#define SAFE_STATIC __attribute__((require_constant_initialization)) static
struct T {
constexpr T(int) {}
~T();
};
SAFE_STATIC T x = {42}; // OK.
SAFE_STATIC T y = 42; // error: variable does not have a constant initializer
// copy initialization is not a constant expression on a non-literal type.
```
This attribute can only be applied to objects with static or thread-local storage
duration.
Reviewers: majnemer, rsmith, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: jroelofs, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23385
llvm-svn: 280525
Summary:
This attribute specifies expectations about the initialization of static and
thread local variables. Specifically that the variable has a
[constant initializer](http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/constant_initialization)
according to the rules of [basic.start.static]. Failure to meet this expectation
will result in an error.
Static objects with constant initializers avoid hard-to-find bugs caused by
the indeterminate order of dynamic initialization. They can also be safely
used by other static constructors across translation units.
This attribute acts as a compile time assertion that the requirements
for constant initialization have been met. Since these requirements change
between dialects and have subtle pitfalls it's important to fail fast instead
of silently falling back on dynamic initialization.
```c++
// -std=c++14
#define SAFE_STATIC __attribute__((require_constant_initialization)) static
struct T {
constexpr T(int) {}
~T();
};
SAFE_STATIC T x = {42}; // OK.
SAFE_STATIC T y = 42; // error: variable does not have a constant initializer
// copy initialization is not a constant expression on a non-literal type.
```
This attribute can only be applied to objects with static or thread-local storage
duration.
Reviewers: majnemer, rsmith, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: jroelofs, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23385
llvm-svn: 280516
textually included, create an ImportDecl just as we would if we reached a
#include of any other modular header. This is necessary in order to correctly
determine the set of variables to initialize for an imported module.
This should hopefully make the modules selfhost buildbot green again.
llvm-svn: 280409
This patch also introduces AnalysisOrderChecker which is intended for testing
of callback call correctness.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23804
llvm-svn: 280367
explicit specialization to a warning for C++98 mode (this is a defect report
resolution, so per our informal policy it should apply in C++98), and turn
the warning on by default for C++11 and later. In all cases where it fires, the
right thing to do is to remove the pointless explicit instantiation.
llvm-svn: 280308
-fprofile-dir=path allows the user to specify where .gcda files should be
emitted when the program is run. In particular, this is the first flag that
causes the .gcno and .o files to have different paths, LLVM is extended to
support this. -fprofile-dir= does not change the file name in the .gcno (and
thus where lcov looks for the source) but it does change the name in the .gcda
(and thus where the runtime library writes the .gcda file). It's different from
a GCOV_PREFIX because a user can observe that the GCOV_PREFIX_STRIP will strip
paths off of -fprofile-dir= but not off of a supplied GCOV_PREFIX.
To implement this we split -coverage-file into -coverage-data-file and
-coverage-notes-file to specify the two different names. The !llvm.gcov
metadata node grows from a 2-element form {string coverage-file, node dbg.cu}
to 3-elements, {string coverage-notes-file, string coverage-data-file, node
dbg.cu}. In the 3-element form, the file name is already "mangled" with
.gcno/.gcda suffixes, while the 2-element form left that to the middle end
pass.
llvm-svn: 280306
within the instantiation of that same specialization. This could previously
happen for eagerly-instantiated function templates, variable templates,
exception specifications, default arguments, and a handful of other cases.
We still have an issue here for default template arguments that recursively
make use of themselves and likewise for substitution into the type of a
non-type template parameter, but in those cases we're producing a different
entity each time, so they should instead be caught by the instantiation depth
limit. However, currently we will typically run out of stack before we reach
it. :(
llvm-svn: 280190
r280133. Original commit message:
C++ Modules TS: driver support for building modules.
This works as follows: we add --precompile to the existing gamut of options for
specifying how far to go when compiling an input (-E, -c, -S, etc.). This flag
specifies that an input is taken to the precompilation step and no further, and
this can be specified when building a .pcm from a module interface or when
building a .pch from a header file.
The .cppm extension (and some related extensions) are implicitly recognized as
C++ module interface files. If --precompile is /not/ specified, the file is
compiled (via a .pcm) to a .o file containing the code for the module (and then
potentially also assembled and linked, if -S, -c, etc. are not specified). We
do not yet suppress the emission of object code for other users of the module
interface, so for now this will only work if everything in the .cppm file has
vague linkage.
As with the existing support for module-map modules, prebuilt modules can be
provided as compiler inputs either via the -fmodule-file= command-line argument
or via files named ModuleName.pcm in one of the directories specified via
-fprebuilt-module-path=.
This also exposes the -fmodules-ts cc1 flag in the driver. This is still
experimental, and in particular, the concrete syntax is subject to change as
the Modules TS evolves in the C++ committee. Unlike -fmodules, this flag does
not enable support for implicitly loading module maps nor building modules via
the module cache, but those features can be turned on separately and used in
conjunction with the Modules TS support.
llvm-svn: 280134
to CC1, which are translated to function attributes and can e.g. be mapped on
build attributes FP_exceptions and FP_denormal. Setting these build attributes
allows better selection of floating point libraries.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23840
llvm-svn: 280064
This works as follows: we add --precompile to the existing gamut of options for
specifying how far to go when compiling an input (-E, -c, -S, etc.). This flag
specifies that an input is taken to the precompilation step and no further, and
this can be specified when building a .pcm from a module interface or when
building a .pch from a header file.
The .cppm extension (and some related extensions) are implicitly recognized as
C++ module interface files. If --precompile is /not/ specified, the file is
compiled (via a .pcm) to a .o file containing the code for the module (and then
potentially also assembled and linked, if -S, -c, etc. are not specified). We
do not yet suppress the emission of object code for other users of the module
interface, so for now this will only work if everything in the .cppm file has
vague linkage.
As with the existing support for module-map modules, prebuilt modules can be
provided as compiler inputs either via the -fmodule-file= command-line argument
or via files named ModuleName.pcm in one of the directories specified via
-fprebuilt-module-path=.
This also exposes the -fmodules-ts cc1 flag in the driver. This is still
experimental, and in particular, the concrete syntax is subject to change as
the Modules TS evolves in the C++ committee. Unlike -fmodules, this flag does
not enable support for implicitly loading module maps nor building modules via
the module cache, but those features can be turned on separately and used in
conjunction with the Modules TS support.
llvm-svn: 280035
Clang always assumes that files are utf-8. If an invalidly encoded character is
used in an identifier, clang always errors. If it's used in a character
literal, clang warns Winvalid-source-encoding (on by default). Clang never
checks the encoding of things in comments (adding this seems like a nice
feature if it doesn't impact performance).
For cl.exe /utf-8 (which enables /validate-charset), if a bad character is used
in an identifier, it emits both an error and a warning. If it's used in a
literal or a comment, it emits a warning.
So mapping /validate-charset to -Winvalid-source-encoding seems like a fairly
decent fit.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D23945
llvm-svn: 279872
Clang tracks only start columns, not start-end ranges. CodeView allows for that, but the VS debugger doesn't handle anything less than a complete range well--it either highlights the wrong part of a statement or truncates source lines in the assembly view. It's better to have no column information at all.
So by default, we'll omit the column information for CodeView targeting Windows.
Since the column info is still useful for sanitizers, I've promoted -gcolumn-info (and -gno-column-info) to a CoreOption and added a couple tests to make sure that works for clang-cl.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23720
llvm-svn: 279765
In cases where .dwo/.dwp files are guaranteed to be available, skipping
the extra online (in the .o file) inline info can save a substantial
amount of space - see the original r221306 for more details there.
llvm-svn: 279651
Summary:
Add a cmake check for sys/resource.h and replace the __has_include() check with its result, in order to make it possible to use rlimits when building with compilers not supporting __has_include() -- i.e. when bootstrapping.
// Please also re-apply dfcd52eb1d8e5d322404b40414cb7331c7380a8c (llvm-config.h fix)
Patch by: Michał Górny
Reviewers: rsmith, beanz
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23744
llvm-svn: 279559
/Brepro means we want reproducible builds, i.e. we _don't_ want the timestamp
that's needed to be compatible with the incremental linker.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D23805
llvm-svn: 279555
iOS (and other 32-bit ARM variants) always require a valid frame pointer to
improve backtraces. Previously the -fomit-frame-pointer and
-momit-leaf-frame-pointer options were being silently discarded via hacks in
the backend. It's better if Clang configures itself to emit the correct IR and
warns about (ignored) attempts to override this.
llvm-svn: 279546
clang already treats all inputs as utf-8. Warn if anything but utf-8 is passed.
Do this by mapping source-charset to finput-charset, which already behaves like
this. Slightly tweak finput-charset to accept "utf-8" case-insensitively. This
matches gcc's and cl.exe's behavior, and IANA says that character set names are
case-insensitive.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D23807
llvm-svn: 279531
This replaces the old approach of fingerprinting every AST node into a string,
which avoided collisions and was simple to implement, but turned out to be
extremely ineffective with respect to both performance and memory.
The collisions are now dealt with in a separate pass, which no longer causes
performance problems because collisions are rare.
Patch by Raphael Isemann!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22515
llvm-svn: 279378
So far macro-generated code was treated by the CloneDetector as normal code.
This caused that some macros where reported as false-positive clones because
large chunks of code coming from otherwise concise macro expansions were treated
as copy-pasted code.
This patch ensures that macros are treated in the same way as literals/function
calls. This prevents macros that expand into multiple statements
from being reported as clones.
Patch by Raphael Isemann!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23316
llvm-svn: 279367
This is in preparation of adding a new type class ObjCTypeParamType that
can take protocol qualifiers. ObjCProtocolQualifiers will be shared between
ObjCObjectType and ObjCTypeParamType.
rdar://24619481
rdar://25060179
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23078
llvm-svn: 279351
Currently nodes_iterator may dereference to a NodeType* or a NodeType&. Make them all dereference to NodeType*, which is NodeRef later.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23704
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23705
llvm-svn: 279326
from p0273r0 approved by EWG). We'll eventually need to handle this from the
lexer as well, in order to disallow preprocessor directives preceding the
module declaration and to support macro import.
llvm-svn: 279196
Summary:
int __builtin_amdgcn_ds_swizzle (int a, int imm);
while imm is a constant.
Differential Revision:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D23682
llvm-svn: 279165
Pointers of certain GPUs in AMDGCN target in private address space is 32 bit but pointers in other address spaces are 64 bit. size_t type should be defined as 64 bit for these GPUs so that it could hold pointers in all address spaces. Also fixed issues in pointer arithmetic codegen by using pointer specific intptr type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23361
llvm-svn: 279121
This patch introduced the ability to decide at runtime whether to parse
JSON compilation database command lines using Gnu syntax or Windows
syntax. However, there were many existing unit tests written that
hardcoded Gnu-specific paths. These tests were now failing because
the auto-detection logic was choosing to parse them using Windows
rules.
This resubmission of the patch fixes this by introducing an enum
which defines the syntax mode, which defaults to auto-detect, but
for which the unit tests force Gnu style parsing.
Reviewed By: alexfh
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23628
llvm-svn: 279120
In this mode, there is no need to load any module map and the programmer can
simply use "@import" syntax to load the module directly from a prebuilt
module path. When loading from prebuilt module path, we don't support
rebuilding of the module files and we ignore compatible configuration
mismatches.
rdar://27290316
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23125
llvm-svn: 279096
This complements the clang_getSkippedRanges function which returns skipped ranges filtered by a specific file.
This function is useful when all the ranges are desired (and a lot more efficient than the equivalent of asking for the ranges file by file, since the implementation of clang_getSkippedRanges iterates over all ranges anyway).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20132
llvm-svn: 279076
The original clone checker tries to find copy-pasted code that is exactly
identical to the original code, up to minor details.
As an example, if the copy-pasted code has all references to variable 'a'
replaced with references to variable 'b', it is still considered to be
an exact clone.
The new check finds copy-pasted code in which exactly one variable seems
out of place compared to the original code, which likely indicates
a copy-paste error (a variable was forgotten to be renamed in one place).
Patch by Raphael Isemann!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23314
llvm-svn: 279056
This reverts commit r279003 as it breaks some of our buildbots (e.g.
clang-cmake-aarch64-quick, clang-x86_64-linux-selfhost-modules).
The error is in OpenMP/teams_distribute_simd_ast_print.cpp:
clang: /home/buildslave/buildslave/clang-cmake-aarch64-quick/llvm/include/llvm/ADT/DenseMap.h:527:
bool llvm::DenseMapBase<DerivedT, KeyT, ValueT, KeyInfoT, BucketT>::LookupBucketFor(const LookupKeyT&, const BucketT*&) const
[with LookupKeyT = clang::Stmt*; DerivedT = llvm::DenseMap<clang::Stmt*, long unsigned int>;
KeyT = clang::Stmt*; ValueT = long unsigned int;
KeyInfoT = llvm::DenseMapInfo<clang::Stmt*>;
BucketT = llvm::detail::DenseMapPair<clang::Stmt*, long unsigned int>]:
Assertion `!KeyInfoT::isEqual(Val, EmptyKey) && !KeyInfoT::isEqual(Val, TombstoneKey) &&
"Empty/Tombstone value shouldn't be inserted into map!"' failed.
llvm-svn: 279045
trying to write out its macro graph, in case we imported a module that added
another module macro between the most recent local definition and the end of
the module.
llvm-svn: 279024
This patch is to implement sema and parsing for 'teams distribute simd’ pragma.
This patch is originated by Carlo Bertolli.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23528
llvm-svn: 279003
standard's Annex B. We now attempt to increase the process's stack rlimit to
8MiB on startup, which appears to be enough to allow this to work reliably.
(And if it turns out not to be, we can investigate increasing it further.)
llvm-svn: 278983
This new checker tries to find execution paths on which implicit integral casts
cause definite loss of information: a certainly-negative integer is converted
to an unsigned integer, or an integer is definitely truncated to fit into
a smaller type.
Being implicit, such casts are likely to produce unexpected results.
Patch by Daniel Marjamäki!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D13126
llvm-svn: 278941
Like SymbolConjured, SymbolMetadata also needs to be uniquely
identified by the moment of its birth.
Such moments are coded by the (Statement, LocationContext, Block count) triples.
Each such triple represents the moment of analyzing a statement with a certain
call backtrace, with corresponding CFG block having been entered a given amount
of times during analysis of the current code body.
The LocationContext information was accidentally omitted for SymbolMetadata,
which leads to reincarnation of SymbolMetadata upon re-entering a code body
with a different backtrace; the new symbol is incorrectly unified with
the old symbol, which leads to unsound assumptions.
Patch by Alexey Sidorin!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21978
llvm-svn: 278937
Summary:
rL277342 made RecursiveASTVisitor visit lambda capture initialization
expressions (these are the Exprs in LambdaExpr::capture_inits()).
jdennett identified two issues with rL277342 (see comments there for details):
- It visits initialization expressions for implicit lambda captures, even if
shouldVisitImplicitCode() returns false.
- It visits initialization expressions for init captures twice (because these
were already traveresed in TraverseLambdaCapture() before rL277342)
This patch fixes these issues and moves the code for traversing initialization
expressions into TraverseLambdaCapture().
This patch also makes two changes required for the tests:
- It adds Lang_CXX14 to the Language enum in TestVisitor.
- It adds a parameter to ExpectedLocationVisitor::ExpectMatch() that specifies
the number of times a match is expected to be seen.
Reviewers: klimek, jdennett, alexfh
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23204
llvm-svn: 278933
This commit adds a traversal of the AST after Sema of a function that diagnoses
unguarded references to declarations that are partially available (based on
availability attributes). This traversal is only done when we would otherwise
emit -Wpartial-availability.
This commit is part of a feature I proposed here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2016-July/049851.html
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23003
llvm-svn: 278826
Summary:
Some function calls in CUDA are allowed to appear in
semantically-correct programs but are an error if they're ever
codegen'ed. Specifically, a host+device function may call a host
function, but it's an error if such a function is ever codegen'ed in
device mode (and vice versa).
Previously, clang made no attempt to catch these errors. For the most
part, they would be caught by ptxas, and reported as "call to unknown
function 'foo'".
Now we catch these errors and report them the same as we report other
illegal calls (e.g. a call from a host function to a device function).
This has a small change in error-message behavior for calls that were
previously disallowed (e.g. calls from a host to a device function).
Previously, we'd catch disallowed calls fairly early, before doing
additional semantic checking e.g. of the call's arguments. Now we catch
these illegal calls at the very end of our semantic checks, so we'll
only emit a "illegal CUDA call" error if the call is otherwise
well-formed.
Reviewers: tra, rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23242
llvm-svn: 278759
Summary:
This patch lets you create diagnostics that are emitted if and only if a
particular FunctionDecl is codegen'ed.
This is necessary for CUDA, where some constructs -- e.g. calls from
host+device functions to host functions when compiling for device -- are
allowed to appear in semantically-correct programs, but only if they're
never codegen'ed.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits, tra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23241
llvm-svn: 278735
tuple-like decomposition declaration. This significantly simplifies the
semantics of BindingDecls for AST consumers (they can now always be evalated
at the point of use).
llvm-svn: 278640
Currently, if --driver-mode is not passed at all, it will default
to GCC style driver. This is never an issue for clang because
it manually constructs a --driver-mode option and passes it.
However, we should still try to do as good as we can even if no
--driver-mode is passed. LibTooling, for example, does not pass
a --driver-mode option and while it could, it seems like we should
still fallback to the best possible default we can.
This is one of two steps necessary to get clang-tidy working on Windows.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23454
llvm-svn: 278535
Taking the address of a packed member is dangerous since the reduced
alignment of the pointee is lost. This can lead to memory alignment
faults in some architectures if the pointer value is dereferenced.
This change adds a new warning to clang emitted when taking the address
of a packed member. A packed member is either a field/data member
declared as attribute((packed)) or belonging to a struct/class
declared as such. The associated flag is -Waddress-of-packed-member.
Conversions (either implicit or via a valid casting) to pointer types
with lower or equal alignment requirements (e.g. void* or char*)
will silence the warning.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20561
llvm-svn: 278483
Add 'ignore-non-existent-contents' to tell the VFS whether an invalid path
obtained via 'external-contents' should cause iteration on the VFS to stop.
If 'true', the VFS should ignore the entry and continue with the next. Allows
YAML files to be shared across multiple compiler invocations regardless of
prior existent paths in 'external-contents'. This global value is overridable
on a per-file basis.
This adds the parsing and write test part, but use by VFS comes next.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23422
rdar://problem/27531549
llvm-svn: 278456
The member function is a predicate, and doesn't apply any changes on the
object.
Patch by Visoiu Mistrih Francis!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23433
llvm-svn: 278444
Summary:
I want to reuse "CheckCUDAFoo" in a later patch. Also, I think
IsAllowedCUDACall gets the point across more clearly.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23238
llvm-svn: 278193
Summary:
The corresponding LLVM change: D23217.
LazyVector::iterator breaks, because int isn't an iterator type.
Since iterator_adaptor_base shouldn't be blamed to break at the call to
iterator_traits<int>::xxx, I'd rather "fix" LazyVector::iterator.
The perfect solution is to model "relative pointer", but it's beyond the goal of this patch.
Reviewers: chandlerc, bkramer
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23218
llvm-svn: 278156
Let the driver pass the option to frontend. Do not set precision metadata for division instructions when this option is set. Set function attribute "correctly-rounded-divide-sqrt-fp-math" based on this option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22940
llvm-svn: 278155
Adjust target features for amdgcn target when -cl-denorms-are-zero is set.
Denormal support is controlled by feature strings fp32-denormals fp64-denormals in amdgcn target. If -cl-denorms-are-zero is not set and the command line does not set fp32/64-denormals feature string, +fp32-denormals +fp64-denormals will be on for GPU's supporting them.
A new virtual function virtual void TargetInfo::adjustTargetOptions(const CodeGenOptions &CGOpts, TargetOptions &TargetOpts) const is introduced to allow adjusting target option by codegen option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22815
llvm-svn: 278151
Summary:
This is required for compliance with the Mozilla style guide.
This is a rebase+minor change of Birunthan Mohanathas's patch
Reviewers: djasper
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits, opilarium
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23317
llvm-svn: 278121
Summary:
Based on a patch by Michael Mueller.
This attribute specifies that a function can be hooked or patched. This
mechanism was originally devised by Microsoft for hotpatching their
binaries (which they're constantly updating to stay ahead of crackers,
script kiddies, and other ne'er-do-wells on the Internet), but it's now
commonly abused by Windows programs that want to hook API functions. It
is for this reason that this attribute was added to GCC--hence the name,
`ms_hook_prologue`.
Depends on D19908.
Reviewers: rnk, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D19909
llvm-svn: 278050
This patch (with the corresponding ARM backend patch) adds support for
some new relocation models:
* Read-only position independence (ROPI): Code and read-only data is accessed
PC-relative. The offsets between all code and RO data sections are known at
static link time.
* Read-write position independence (RWPI): Read-write data is accessed relative
to a static base register. The offsets between all writeable data sections
are known at static link time.
These two modes are independent (they specify how different objects
should be addressed), so they can be used individually or together.
These modes are intended for bare-metal systems or systems with small
real-time operating systems. They are designed to avoid the need for a
dynamic linker, the only initialisation required is setting the static
base register to an appropriate value for RWPI code.
There is one C construct not currently supported by these modes: global
variables initialised to the address of another global variable or
function, where that address is not known at static-link time. There are
a few possible ways to solve this:
* Disallow this, and require the user to write their own initialisation
function if they need variables like this.
* Emit dynamic initialisers for these variables in the compiler, called from
the .init_array section (as is currently done for C++ dynamic initialisers).
We have a patch to do this, described in my original RFC email
(http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2015-December/093022.html), but the
feedback from that RFC thread was that this is not something that belongs in
clang.
* Use a small dynamic loader to fix up these variables, by adding the
difference between the load and execution address of the relevant section.
This would require linker co-operation to generate a table of addresses that
need fixing up.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23196
llvm-svn: 278016
This patch adds a command line option to list the checkers that were enabled
by analyzer-checker and not disabled by -analyzer-disable-checker.
It can be very useful to debug long command lines when it is not immediately
apparent which checkers are turned on and which checkers are turned off.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23060
llvm-svn: 278006
Dynamic casts are handled relatively well by the static analyzer.
BaseToDerived casts however are treated conservatively. This can cause some
false positives with the NewDeleteLeaks checker.
This patch alters the behavior of BaseToDerived casts. In case a dynamic cast
would succeed use the same semantics. Otherwise fall back to the conservative
approach.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23014
llvm-svn: 277989
Functions of Sema that work with building of nested name specifiers have too
many parameters (BuildCXXNestedNameSpecifier already expects 10 arguments).
With this change the information about identifier and its context is packed
into a structure, which is then passes to the semantic functions.
llvm-svn: 277976