Summary:
Changed EABIVersion type from string to llvm::EABI.
It seems it was just a typo and this is intended implementation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34595
llvm-svn: 306953
Summary:
Un-revert https://reviews.llvm.org/D34868, but with a slight tweak to the
documentation to fix an error -- I had used the wrong syntax for a link.
llvm-svn: 306948
Summary:
Depends on https://reviews.llvm.org/D34867.
Add a Clang frontend option to enable optimization remark hotness
thresholds, which were added to LLVM in https://reviews.llvm.org/D34867.
This prevents diagnostics that do not meet a minimum hotness
threshold from being output. When generating optimization remarks for large
codebases with a ton of cold code paths, this option can be used
to limit the optimization remark output at a reasonable size.
Discussion of this change can be read here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-June/114377.html
Reviewers: anemet, davidxl, hfinkel
Reviewed By: anemet
Subscribers: fhahn, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34868
llvm-svn: 306945
basic block vectorizer. This vectorizer has had no known users for many,
many years and is completely surpassed by the normal
'-fvectorize-slp'-controlled SLP vectorizer in LLVM.
Hal proposed this back in 2014 to no objections:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2014-November/079091.html
While this patch completely removes the flag, Joerg is working on
a patch that will add it back in a way that warns users and ignores the
flag in a clear and well factored way (so that we can keep doing this
going forward).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34846
llvm-svn: 306786
We use this when running a preprocessor-only action on an AST file in order to
avoid paying the runtime cost of loading the extra information.
llvm-svn: 306760
a c++17 aligned allocation/deallocation function that is unavailable in
the standard library on Apple platforms.
The aligned functions are implemented only in the following versions or
later versions of the OSes, so clang issues diagnostics if the deployment
target being targeted is older than these:
macosx: 10.13
ios: 11.0
tvos: 11.0
watchos: 4.0
The diagnostics are issued whenever the aligned functions are selected
except when the selected function has a definition in the same file.
If there is a user-defined function available somewhere else, option
-Wno-aligned-allocation-unavailable can be used to silence the
diagnostics.
rdar://problem/32664169
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34574
llvm-svn: 306722
Summary: Device offloading requires the specification of an additional flag containing the triple of the //other// architecture the code is being compiled on if such an architecture exists. If compiling for the host, the auxiliary triple flag will contain the triple describing the device and vice versa.
Reviewers: arpith-jacob, sfantao, caomhin, carlo.bertolli, ABataev, Hahnfeld, jlebar, hfinkel, tstellar
Reviewed By: Hahnfeld
Subscribers: rengolin, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29339
llvm-svn: 306689
Summary: It used to always call into the RealFileSystem before.
Reviewers: bkramer, krasimir, klimek, bruno
Reviewed By: klimek
Subscribers: bruno, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34469
llvm-svn: 306549
This reverts commit r305688 meaning it reintroduces r305684. To repeat:
[NFC] Refactor DiagnosticRenderer to use FullSourceLoc
Move the DiagnosticRenderer and its dependents to using FullSourceLocs
instead of a SourceLocation and SourceManager pointer. The changeset is
rather large but entirely mechanical.
This is step one to allow DiagnosticRenderer to take either
llvm::SMLocs or clang::SourceLocations.
This breaks clang-tidy and clng-query which will be fixed in a commit
soon after.
Patch by Sanne Wouda
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31709
llvm-svn: 306384
modules to preprocessing of nested .pcm files.
Making those module files available results in loading more .pcm files than
necessary, and potentially in misbehavior if a module makes itself visible
during its own compilation (as parts of that module that have not yet been
processed would then become visible).
llvm-svn: 306320
Restore the `-gz` option to the driver with some minor tweaks to handle
the additional case for `-Wa,--compress-debug-sections`.
This intends to make the compression of the debug information
controllable from the driver. The following is the behaviour:
-gz enable compression (ambiguous for format, will default to zlib-gnu)
-gz=none disable compression
-gz=zlib-gnu enable compression (deprecated GNU style zlib compression)
-gz=zlib enable compression (zlib based compression)
Although -Wa,-compress-debug-sections works, it should be discouraged
when using the driver to invoke the assembler. However, we permit the
assembler to accept the GNU as style argument --compress-debug-sections
to maintain compatibility.
Note, -gz/-gz= does *NOT* imply -g. That is, you need to additionally
specific -g for debug information to be generated.
llvm-svn: 306115
Summary:
Prior to this change, using `-fdiagnostics-show-hotness` with a sampling
profile specified via `-fprofile-sample-use=` would result in the Clang
frontend emitting a warning: "argument '-fdiagnostics-show-hotness' requires
profile-guided optimization information". Of course, a sampling profile
*is* profile-guided optimization information, so the warning is misleading.
Furthermore, despite the warning, hotness was displayed based on the data in
the sampling profile.
Prevent the warning from being emitted when a sampling profile is used, and
add a test that verifies this.
Reviewers: anemet, davidxl
Reviewed By: davidxl
Subscribers: danielcdh, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34082
llvm-svn: 306079
-frewrite-imports mode.
This could end up accumulating a very large amount of intermediate state. Clear
it out after each module file is processed.
llvm-svn: 305764
Move the DiagnosticRenderer and its dependents to using FullSourceLocs
instead of a SourceLocation and SourceManager pointer. The changeset is
rather large but entirely mechanical.
This is step one to allow DiagnosticRenderer to take either
llvm::SMLocs or clang::SourceLocations.
Patch by Sanne Wouda
Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31709
Change-Id: If351a112cdf6718e2d3ef6721b8da9c6376b32dd
llvm-svn: 305684
for preprocessing
r300667 added support for editor placeholder to Clang. That commit didn’t take
into account that users who use Clang for preprocessing only (-E) will get the
"editor placeholder in source file" error when preprocessing their source
(PR33394). This commit ensures that Clang doesn't lex editor placeholders when
running a preprocessor only action.
rdar://32718000
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34256
llvm-svn: 305576
Summary:
It seems -flto must be either "thin" or "full". I think the use of
containValue is just a typo.
Reviewers: ruiu, tejohnson
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34055
llvm-svn: 305392
cc1as does not currently access the "--" version of this flag. At the
very least this needs to be fixed and proper test cases need to be
added.
Simple reproducer:
clang -Wa,--compress-debug-sections /tmp/test.cc
Result:
error: unknown argument: '--compress-debug-sections'
llvm-svn: 305182
These options control the behaviour of the compression of debug info
sections on ELF targets. Our behaviour slightly diverges from the
behaviour of GCC. `-gz` maps to the `-compress-debug-sections` rather
than `-compress-debug-sections=zlib` or
`-compress-debug-sections=zlib-gnu`. This small divergence allows us to
be compatible across versions of binutils (=zlib support was introduced
in 2.26, while earlier versions only support =zlib-gnu). This also
allows users to not have to worry about the version of the assembler
they may be using if they are not using the IAS. Previously, users
would have had to go through the internal option
`-compress-debug-sectionss` and pass that through to the assembler,
which is no longer needed.
llvm-svn: 305165
If specified, when preprocessing, the contents of imported .pcm files will be
included in preprocessed output. The resulting preprocessed file can then be
compiled standalone without the module sources or .pcm files.
llvm-svn: 305116
as part of a compilation.
This is intended for two purposes:
1) Writing self-contained test cases for modules: we can now write a single
source file test that builds some number of module files on the side and
imports them.
2) Debugging / test case reduction. A single-source testcase is much more
amenable to reduction, compared to a VFS tarball or .pcm files.
llvm-svn: 305101
Cache filename - SourceLocation pairs to speed up preamble loading and
global completion. This is especially relevant for windows, where
preamble loading takes a while.
Patch by Ivan Donchevskii!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D33493
llvm-svn: 305061
No-one was using this, and it's not meaningful in general -- FrontendActions
can be run on inputs that don't have a corresponding source file. The current
frontend input can be obtained by asking the FrontendAction if any future
action actually needs it.
llvm-svn: 305045
This is useful for parsing a single file, as a fast/inaccurate 'mode' that can still provide declarations from the file, like the classes and their methods.
llvm-svn: 305044
This is tied with the LLVM side of the change to expose the debug
information compression types to clang. We now track the compression
type as an enumeration rather than a boolean. We still use the same
value (GNU) that we did previously. This is in preparation to support
passing down the compression type and switch it based on the command
line.
llvm-svn: 305039
replay the steps taken to create the AST file with the preprocessor-only action
installed to produce preprocessed output.
This can be used to produce the preprocessed text for an existing .pch or .pcm
file.
llvm-svn: 304726
This patch adds support for a `header` declaration in a module map to specify
certain `stat` information (currently, size and mtime) about that header file.
This has two purposes:
- It removes the need to eagerly `stat` every file referenced by a module map.
Instead, we track a list of unresolved header files with each size / mtime
(actually, for simplicity, we track submodules with such headers), and when
attempting to look up a header file based on a `FileEntry`, we check if there
are any unresolved header directives with that `FileEntry`'s size / mtime and
perform deferred `stat`s if so.
- It permits a preprocessed module to be compiled without the original files
being present on disk. The only reason we used to need those files was to get
the `stat` information in order to do header -> module lookups when using the
module. If we're provided with the `stat` information in the preprocessed
module, we can avoid requiring the files to exist.
Unlike most `header` directives, if a `header` directive with `stat`
information has no corresponding on-disk file the enclosing module is *not*
marked unavailable (so that behavior is consistent regardless of whether we've
resolved a header directive, and so that preprocessed modules don't get marked
unavailable). We could actually do this for all `header` directives: the only
reason we mark the module unavailable if headers are missing is to give a
diagnostic slightly earlier (rather than waiting until we actually try to build
the module / load and validate its .pcm file).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33703
llvm-svn: 304515
This patch makes it an error to have a mismatch between the enabled
sanitizers in a CU, and in any module being imported into the CU. Only
mismatches between non-modular sanitizers are treated as errors.
This patch also includes non-modular sanitizers in module hashes, in
order to ensure module rebuilds occur when -fsanitize=X is toggled on
and off for non-modular sanitizers, and to cut down on module rebuilds
when the option is toggled for modular sanitizers.
This fixes a longstanding issue with implicit modules and sanitizers,
which Duncan originally diagnosed.
When building with implicit modules it's possible to hit a scenario
where modules are built without -fsanitize=address, and are subsequently
imported into CUs with -fsanitize=address enabled. This causes strange
failures at runtime. The case Duncan found affects libcxx, since its
vector implementation behaves differently when ASan is enabled.
Implicit module builds should "just work" when -fsanitize=X is toggled
on and off across multiple compiler invocations, which is what this
patch does.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32724
llvm-svn: 304463
to the original module map.
Also use the path and name of the original module map when emitting that
information into the .pcm file. The upshot of this is that the produced .pcm
file will track information for headers in their original locations (where the
module was preprocessed), not relative to whatever directory the preprocessed
module map was in when it was built.
llvm-svn: 304346
A suspended translation unit uses significantly less memory but on the
other side does not support any other calls than
clang_reparseTranslationUnit to resume it or
clang_disposeTranslationUnit to dispose it completely.
This helps IDEs to reduce the memory footprint. The data that is freed
by a call to clang_suspendTranslationUnit will be re-generated on the
next (re)parse anyway. Used with a preamble, this allows pretty fast
resumption of the translation unit for further use (compared to disposal
of the translation unit and a parse from scratch).
Patch by Nikolai Kosjar!
llvm-svn: 304212
Previously, a preamble only included #if blocks (and friends like
ifdef) if there was a corresponding #endif before any declaration or
definition. The problem is that any header file that uses include guards
will not have a preamble generated, which can make code-completion very
slow.
To prevent errors about unbalanced preprocessor conditionals in the
preamble, and unbalanced preprocessor conditionals after a preamble
containing unfinished conditionals, the conditional stack is stored
in the pch file.
This fixes PR26045.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15994
llvm-svn: 304207
Amongst other, this will help LTO to correctly handle/honor files
compiled with O0, helping debugging failures.
It also seems in line with how we handle other options, like how
-fnoinline adds the appropriate attribute as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28404
llvm-svn: 304127
Summary: This patch is needed so that Libc++ can actually tess if Clang supports coroutines, instead of just paying lip service with a partial implementation. Otherwise the libc++ test suite will fail against older versions of Clang
Reviewers: GorNishanov, rsmith
Reviewed By: GorNishanov
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33536
llvm-svn: 303867
There's a Microsoft header in the Windows SDK which won't
compile with clang because it uses an operator name (and)
as a field name. This patch allows that file to compile by
setting the option which disables operator names.
The header which doesn't compile <Query.h> C:/Program Files (x86)/
Windows Kits/10/include/10.0.14393.0/um\Query.h:259:40:
error: expected member name or ';' after declaration specifiers
/* [case()] */ NODERESTRICTION or;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^
1 error generated.
Contributed for Melanie Blower
Differential Revision:https://reviews.llvm.org/D33505
llvm-svn: 303798
Now FixedCompilationDatabase::loadFromCommandLine has no means to report
which error occurred if it fails to create compilation object. This is
a block for implementing D33013, because after that change driver will
refuse to create compilation if command line contains erroneous options.
This change adds additional argument to loadFromCommandLine, which is
assigned error message text if compilation object was not created. This is
the same way as other methods of CompilationDatabase report failure.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33272
llvm-svn: 303741
When a diagnostic includes a highlighted range spanning multiple lines, clang
now supports printing out multiple lines of context if necessary to show the
highlighted ranges. This is not yet exposed in the driver, but can be enabled
by "-Xclang -fcaret-diagnostics-max-lines -Xclang N".
This is experimental until we can find out whether it works well in practice,
and if so, what a good default for the maximum number of lines is.
llvm-svn: 303589
This allows #line directives to appear in system headers that have code
that clang would normally warn on. This is compatible with GCC, which is
easy to test by running `gcc -E`.
Fixes PR30752
llvm-svn: 303582
Summary:
OnDiskData.TemporaryFiles is filled only by ASTUnit::addTemporaryFile, which is
dead. Also these files are used nowhere in the frontend nor in libclang.
Reviewers: bkramer, ilya-biryukov
Reviewed By: bkramer, ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33270
llvm-svn: 303265
This feature is subtly broken when the linker is gold 2.26 or
earlier. See the following bug for details:
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19002
Since the decision needs to be made at compilation time, we can not
test the linker version. The flag is off by default on ELF targets,
and on otherwise.
llvm-svn: 302591
To support this, an optional marker "#pragma clang module contents" is
recognized in module map files, and the rest of the module map file from that
point onwards is treated as the source of the module. Preprocessing a module
map produces the input module followed by the marker and then the preprocessed
contents of the module.
Ignoring line markers, a preprocessed module might look like this:
module A {
header "a.h"
}
#pragma clang module contents
#pragma clang module begin A
// ... a.h ...
#pragma clang module end
The preprocessed output generates line markers, which are not accepted by the
module map parser, so -x c++-module-map-cpp-output should be used to compile
such outputs.
A couple of major parts do not work yet:
1) The files that are listed in the module map must exist on disk, in order to
build the on-disk header -> module lookup table in the PCM file. To fix
this, we need the preprocessed output to track the file size and other stat
information we might use to build the lookup table.
2) Declaration ownership semantics don't work properly yet, since mapping from
a source location to a module relies on mapping from FileIDs to modules,
which we can't do if module transitions can occur in the middle of a file.
llvm-svn: 302309
These pragmas are intended to simulate the effect of entering or leaving a file
with an associated module. This is not completely implemented yet: declarations
between the pragmas will not be attributed to the correct module, but macro
visibility is already functional.
Modules named by #pragma clang module begin must already be known to clang (in
some module map that's either loaded or on the search path).
llvm-svn: 302098
Many of our supported configurations support modules but do not have any
first-class syntax to perform a module import. This leaves us with a problem:
there is no way to represent the expansion of a #include that imports a module
in the -E output for such languages. (We don't want to just leave it as a
#include because that requires the consumer of the preprocessed source to have
the same file system layout and include paths as the creator.)
This patch adds a new pragma:
#pragma clang module import MODULE.NAME.HERE
that imports a module, and changes -E and -frewrite-includes to use it when
rewriting a #include that maps to a module import. We don't make any attempt
to use a native language syntax import if one exists, to get more consistent
output. (If in the future, @import and #include have different semantics in
some way, the pragma will track the #include semantics.)
llvm-svn: 301725
action to the general FrontendAction infrastructure.
This permits applying -E, -ast-dump, -fsyntax-only, and so on to a module map
compilation. (The -E form is not currently especially useful yet as there's no
good way to take the output and use it to actually build a module.)
In order to support this, -cc1 now accepts -x <lang>-module-map in all cases
where it accepts -x <lang> for a language we can parse (not ir/ast). And for
uniformity, we also accept -x <lang>-header for all such languages (we used
to reject for cuda and renderscript), and -x <lang>-cpp-output for all such
languages (we used to reject for c, cl, and renderscript).
(None of these new alternatives are accepted by the driver yet, so no
user-visible changes.)
llvm-svn: 301610
If a file search involves a header map, suppress
-Wnonportable-include-path. It's firing lots of false positives for
framework authors internally, and it's not trivial to fix.
Consider a framework called "Foo" with a main (installed) framework header
"Foo/Foo.h". It's atypical for "Foo.h" to actually live inside a
directory called "Foo" in the source repository. Instead, the
build system generates a header map while building the framework.
If Foo.h lives at the top-level of the source repository (common), and
the git repo is called ssh://some.url/foo.git, then the header map will
have something like:
Foo/Foo.h -> /Users/myname/code/foo/Foo.h
where "/Users/myname/code/foo" is the clone of ssh://some.url/foo.git.
After #import <Foo/Foo.h>, the current implementation of
-Wnonportable-include-path will falsely assume that Foo.h was found in a
nonportable way, because of the name of the git clone (.../foo/Foo.h).
However, that directory name was not involved in the header search at
all.
This commit adds an extra parameter to Preprocessor::LookupFile and
HeaderSearch::LookupFile to track if the search used a header map,
making it easy to suppress the warning. Longer term, once we find a way
to avoid the false positive, we should turn the warning back on.
rdar://problem/28863903
llvm-svn: 301592
The UnknownPragmaHandlers added by DoPrintPreprocessedInput conflict with the
real PragmaHandlers from clang::Parser because they try to handle the same
#pragma directives. This makes it impossible to use a Preprocessor (that was
previously passed to DoPrintPreprocessedInput), as an Preprocessor for a
clang::Parser instance which is what we currently do in cling.
This patch removes the added UnknownPragmaHandler to avoid conflicts these
conflicts and leave the PragmaHandlers of the Preprocessors in a the same state
as before calling DoPrintPreprocessedInput.
Patch by Raphael Isemann (D32486)!
llvm-svn: 301563
Don't list deprecated -std= values (c++0x etc). Only produce one line of output
per standard, even if we know it by multiple names.
In passing, add missing -std=gnu++03 alias (supported by GCC), and add new
spelling '-std=cl1.0' for OpenCL 1.0 for consistency with the other values,
with the same meaning as the preexisting '-std=cl'.
llvm-svn: 301507
We already prohibited this in most cases (in r130710), but had some bugs in our
enforcement of this rule. Specifically, this prevents the following
combinations:
* -x c -std=clN.M, which would previously effectively act as if -x cl were
used, despite the input being a C source file. (-x cl -std=cNN continues
to be disallowed.)
* -x c++ -std=cuda, which would previously select C++98 + CUDA, despite that
not being a C++ standard. (-x cuda -std=c++NN is still permitted, and
selects CUDA with the given C++ standard as its base language.
-x cuda -std=cuda is still supported with the meaning of CUDA + C++98.)
* -x renderscript -std=c++NN, which would previously form a hybrid "C++ with
RenderScript extensions" language. We could support such a thing, but
shouldn't do so by accident.
llvm-svn: 301497
This reverts commit r301449. It breaks the build with:
MacroPPCallbacks.h:114:50: error: non-virtual member function marked 'override' hides virtual member function
llvm-svn: 301469
Summary:
The PPCallbacks::MacroUndefined callback is currently insufficient for clients that need to track the MacroDirectives.
This patch adds an additional argument to PPCallbacks::MacroUndefined that is the undef MacroDirective.
Reviewers: bruno, manmanren
Reviewed By: bruno
Subscribers: nemanjai, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29923
llvm-svn: 301449
Since Split DWARF needs to name the actual .dwo file that is generated,
it can't be known at the time the llvm::Module is produced as it may be
merged with other Modules before the object is generated and that object
may be generated with any name.
By passing the Split DWARF file name when LLVM is producing object code
the .dwo file name in the object file can match correctly.
The support for Split DWARF for implicit modules remains the same -
using metadata to store the dwo name and dwo id so that potentially
multiple skeleton CUs referring to different dwo files can be generated
from one llvm::Module.
llvm-svn: 301063
Summary:
Libc++ currently implements the `ATOMIC_<TYPE>_LOCK_FREE` macros using the `__GCC_ATOMIC_<TYPE>_LOCK_FREE` macros. However these are not available when MSVC compatibility is enabled even though C11 `_Atomic` is. This prevents libc++ from correctly implementing `ATOMIC_<TYPE>_LOCK_FREE`.
This patch adds an alternative spelling `__CLANG_ATOMIC_<TYPE>_LOCK_FREE` that is enabled with `-fms-compatibility`.
Reviewers: rsmith, aaron.ballman, majnemer, zturner, compnerd, jfb, rnk
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: BillyONeal, smeenai, jfb, cfe-commits, dschuff
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32265
llvm-svn: 300914
This commit teaches Clang to recognize editor placeholders that are produced
when an IDE like Xcode inserts a code-completion result that includes a
placeholder. Now when the lexer sees a placeholder token, it emits an
'editor placeholder in source file' error and creates an identifier token
that represents the placeholder. The parser/sema can now recognize the
placeholders and can suppress the diagnostics related to the placeholders. This
ensures that live issues in an IDE like Xcode won't get spurious diagnostics
related to placeholders.
This commit also adds a new compiler option named '-fallow-editor-placeholders'
that silences the 'editor placeholder in source file' error. This is useful
for an IDE like Xcode as we don't want to display those errors in live issues.
rdar://31581400
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32081
llvm-svn: 300667
The driver needs to know whether it's building a module interface or
implementation unit because it affects which outputs it produces and how it
builds the command pipeline. But the frontend doesn't need to know and should
not care: all it needs to know is what action it is being asked to perform on
the input.
(This is in preparation for permitting -emit-obj to be used on a module
interface unit to produce object code without going via a "full" PCM file.)
llvm-svn: 300611
Remove the restriction where this is only valid with C++
rdar://problem/29055656
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31781
llvm-svn: 300108
This allows using and testing these two features separately. (noteably,
debug info is, so far as I know, always a win (basically). But function
modular codegen is currently a loss for highly optimized code - where
most of the linkonce_odr definitions are optimized away, so providing
weak_odr definitions is only overhead)
llvm-svn: 300104
This isn't need anymore and modules options -fbuild-session-file and
-fmodules-validate-once-per-build-session already provide a sane
mechanism to validate the system headers.
rdar://problem/19767523
llvm-svn: 300027
Summary:
The refactoring introduced a regression in the flag processing for
-fxray-instruction-threshold which causes it to not get passed properly.
This change should restore the previous behaviour.
Reviewers: rnk, pelikan
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31491
llvm-svn: 299126
Summary:
The -fxray-always-instrument= and -fxray-never-instrument= flags take
filenames that are used to imbue the XRay instrumentation attributes
using a whitelist mechanism (similar to the sanitizer special cases
list). We use the same syntax and semantics as the sanitizer blacklists
files in the implementation.
As implemented, we respect the attributes that are already defined in
the source file (i.e. those that have the
[[clang::xray_{always,never}_instrument]] attributes) before applying
the always/never instrument lists.
Reviewers: rsmith, chandlerc
Subscribers: jfb, mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30388
llvm-svn: 299041
FPContractModeKind is the codegen option flag which is already ternary (off,
on, fast). This makes it universally the type for the contractable info
across the front-end:
* In FPOptions (i.e. in the Sema + in the expression nodes).
* In LangOpts::DefaultFPContractMode which is the option that initializes
FPOptions in the Sema.
Another way to look at this change is that before fp-contractable on/off were
the only states handled to the front-end:
* For "on", FMA folding was performed by the front-end
* For "fast", we simply forwarded the flag to TargetOptions to handle it in
LLVM
Now off/on/fast are all exposed because for fast we will generate
fast-math-flags during CodeGen.
This is toward moving fp-contraction=fast from an LLVM TargetOption to a
FastMathFlag in order to fix PR25721.
---
This is a recommit of r299027 with an adjustment to the test
CodeGenCUDA/fp-contract.cu. The test assumed that even
though -ffp-contract=on is passed FE-based folding of FMA won't happen.
This is obviously wrong since the user is asking for this explicitly with the
option. CUDA is different that -ffp-contract=fast is on by default.
The test used to "work" because contract=fast and contract=on were maintained
separately and we didn't fold in the FE because contract=fast was on due to
the target-default. This patch consolidates the contract=on/fast/off state
into a ternary state hence the change in behavior.
---
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31167
llvm-svn: 299033
FPContractModeKind is the codegen option flag which is already ternary (off,
on, fast). This makes it universally the type for the contractable info
across the front-end:
* In FPOptions (i.e. in the Sema + in the expression nodes).
* In LangOpts::DefaultFPContractMode which is the option that initializes
FPOptions in the Sema.
Another way to look at this change is that before fp-contractable on/off were
the only states handled to the front-end:
* For "on", FMA folding was performed by the front-end
* For "fast", we simply forwarded the flag to TargetOptions to handle it in
LLVM
Now off/on/fast are all exposed because for fast we will generate
fast-math-flags during CodeGen.
This is toward moving fp-contraction=fast from an LLVM TargetOption to a
FastMathFlag in order to fix PR25721.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31167
llvm-svn: 299027