Recommit r293585 that was reverted in r293611 with new fixes. The previous
issue was determined to be an overly aggressive AST visitor from forward
declared objects. The visitor will now only deeply visit certain Decl's and
only do a shallow information extraction from all other Decl's.
When objects are imported for modules, there is a chance that a name collision
will cause an ODR violation. Previously, only a small number of such
violations were detected. This patch provides a stronger check based on
AST nodes.
The information needed to uniquely identify an object is taken from the AST and
put into a one-dimensional byte stream. This stream is then hashed to give
a value to represent the object, which is stored with the other object data
in the module.
When modules are loaded, and Decl's are merged, the hash values of the two
Decl's are compared. Only Decl's with matched hash values will be merged.
Mismatch hashes will generate a module error, and if possible, point to the
first difference between the two objects.
The transform from AST to byte stream is a modified depth first algorithm.
Due to references between some AST nodes, a pure depth first algorithm could
generate loops. For Stmt nodes, a straight depth first processing occurs.
For Type and Decl nodes, they are replaced with an index number and only on
first visit will these nodes be processed. As an optimization, boolean
values are saved and stored together in reverse order at the end of the
byte stream to lower the ammount of data that needs to be hashed.
Compile time impact was measured at 1.5-2.0% during module building, and
negligible during builds without module building.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 295284
Following up on r291465 after a regression in r276159. When we use
-fmodule-name=X while building a PCH, modular headers in X will be
textually included and the compiler knows that we are not building
module X, so don't serialize such headers in the PCH as being part of a
module, because at this point they are not.
This was causing subtle bugs and malformed AST crashes, for instance,
when using the PCH in subsequent compiler invocation with -fmodules, the
HFI for a modular header would map to the PCH, which would force a
module load of and unexistent module ID.
rdar://problem/30171164
llvm-svn: 294361
We model deduction-guides as functions with a new kind of name that identifies
the template whose deduction they guide; the bulk of this patch is adding the
new name kind. This gives us a clean way to attach an extensible list of guides
to a class template in a way that doesn't require any special handling in AST
files etc (and we're going to need these functions we come to performing
deduction).
llvm-svn: 294266
The Module::WithCodegen flag was only being set when the module was
parsed from a ModuleMap. Instead set it late, in the ASTWriter to match
the layer where the MODULAR_CODEGEN_DECLs list is determined (the
WithCodegen flag essentially means "are this module's decls in
MODULAR_CODEGEN_DECLs").
When simultaneous emission of AST file and modular object is implemented
this may need to change - the Module::WithCodegen flag will need to be
set earlier, and ideally the MODULAR_CODEGEN_DECLs gathering will
consult this flag (that's not possible right now since Decls destined
for an AST File don't have a Module - only if they're /read/ from a
Module is that true - I expect that would need to change as well).
llvm-svn: 293692
We're seeing what we believe are false positives. (It's hard to tell with the
available diagnostics, and I'm not sure how to reduce them yet).
I'll send Richard reproduction details offline.
djasper/chandlerc suggested this should be a warning for now, to make rolling it
out feasible.
llvm-svn: 293611
When objects are imported for modules, there is a chance that a name collision
will cause an ODR violation. Previously, only a small number of such
violations were detected. This patch provides a stronger check based on
AST nodes.
The information needed to uniquely identify an object is taked from the AST and
put into a one-dimensional byte stream. This stream is then hashed to give
a value to represent the object, which is stored with the other object data
in the module.
When modules are loaded, and Decl's are merged, the hash values of the two
Decl's are compared. Only Decl's with matched hash values will be merged.
Mismatch hashes will generate a module error, and if possible, point to the
first difference between the two objects.
The transform from AST to byte stream is a modified depth first algorithm.
Due to references between some AST nodes, a pure depth first algorithm could
generate loops. For Stmt nodes, a straight depth first processing occurs.
For Type and Decl nodes, they are replaced with an index number and only on
first visit will these nodes be processed. As an optimization, boolean
values are saved and stored together in reverse order at the end of the
byte stream to lower the ammount of data that needs to be hashed.
Compile time impact was measured at 1.5-2.0% during module building, and
negligible during builds without module building.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21675
llvm-svn: 293585
First pass at generating weak definitions of inline functions from module files
(& skipping (-O0) or emitting available_externally (optimizations)
definitions where those modules are used).
External functions defined in modules are emitted into the modular
object file as well (this may turn an existing ODR violation (if that
module were imported into multiple translations) into valid/linkable
code).
Internal symbols (static functions, for example) are not correctly
supported yet. The symbol will be produced, internal, in the modular
object - unreferenceable from the users.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28845
llvm-svn: 293456
Hide the pointer indirection in ModuleManager::begin, ModuleManager::end,
ModuleManager::rbegin, and ModuleManager::rend. Besides tidying up the call
sites, this is preparation for making ownership of ModuleFile explicit.
llvm-svn: 293394
This change adds a new type node, DeducedTemplateSpecializationType, to
represent a type template name that has been used as a type. This is modeled
around AutoType, and shares a common base class for representing a deduced
placeholder type.
We allow deduced class template types in a few more places than the standard
does: in conditions and for-range-declarators, and in new-type-ids. This is
consistent with GCC and with discussion on the core reflector. This patch
does not yet support deduced class template types being named in typename
specifiers.
llvm-svn: 293207
Rather than storing a single flat list of SourceLocations where the diagnostic
state changes (in source order), we now store a separate list for each FileID
in which there is a diagnostic state transition. (State for other files is
built and cached lazily, on demand.) This has two consequences:
1) We can now sensibly support modules, and properly track the diagnostic state
for modular headers (this matters when, for instance, triggering instantiation
of a template defined within a module triggers diagnostics).
2) It's much faster than the old approach, since we can now just do a binary
search on the offsets within the FileID rather than needing to call
isBeforeInTranslationUnit to determine source order (which is surprisingly
slow). For some pathological (but real world) files, this reduces total
compilation time by more than 10%.
For now, the diagnostic state points for modules are loaded eagerly. It seems
feasible to defer this until diagnostic state information for one of the
module's files is needed, but that's not part of this patch.
llvm-svn: 293123
D28684 changed llvm::zlib to return Error instead of Status.
It was accepted and committed in r292214, but then reverted in r292217
because I missed that clang code also needs to be updated.
Patch do that.
D28684 recommitted again as r292226
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28807
llvm-svn: 292227
Summary:
We do not currently track the source locations for exception specifications such
that their source range can be queried through the AST. This leads to trying to
write more complex code to determine the source range for uses like FixItHints
(see D18575 for an example). In addition to use within tools like clang-tidy, I
think this information may become more important to track as exception
specifications become more integrated into the type system.
Patch by Don Hinton.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: malcolm.parsons, sbarzowski, alexfh, hintonda, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20428
llvm-svn: 291771
In r276159, we started to say that a module X is defined in a pch if we specify
-fmodule-name when building the pch. This caused a regression that reports
module X is defined in both pch and pcm if we generate the pch with
-fmodule-name=X and then in a separate clang invocation, we include the pch and
also import X.pcm.
This patch adds an option CompilingPCH similar to CompilingModule. When we use
-fmodule-name=X while building a pch, modular headers in X will be textually
included and the compiler knows that we are not building module X, so we don't
put module X in SUBMODULE_DEFINITION of the pch.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D28415
llvm-svn: 291465
Added a map to associate types and declarations with extensions.
Refactored existing diagnostic for disabled types associated with extensions and extended it to declarations for generic situation.
Fixed some bugs for types associated with extensions.
Allow users to use pragma to declare types and functions for supported extensions, e.g.
#pragma OPENCL EXTENSION the_new_extension_name : begin
// declare types and functions associated with the extension here
#pragma OPENCL EXTENSION the_new_extension_name : end
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21698
llvm-svn: 289979
copy constructors of classes with array members, instead using
ArrayInitLoopExpr to represent the initialization loop.
This exposed a bug in the static analyzer where it was unable to differentiate
between zero-initialized and unknown array values, which has also been fixed
here.
llvm-svn: 289618
This adds the access qualifier to the Pipe Type, rather than using a class
hierarchy.
It also fixes mergeTypes for Pipes, by disallowing merges. Only identical
pipe types can be merged. The test case in invalid-pipes-cl2.0.cl is added
to check that.
llvm-svn: 288332
No block info block should need to define local abbreviations, so we can
always use a code width of 2.
Also change all block info block writers to use EnterBlockInfoBlock.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26168
llvm-svn: 285660
Summary:
This is possible now that MapVector supports move-only values.
Depends on D25404.
Reviewers: timshen
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25405
llvm-svn: 283766
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
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
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
Processing update records (and loading a module, in general) might trigger
unexpected calls to the ASTWriter (being a mutation listener). Now we have a
mechanism to suppress those calls to the ASTWriter but notify other possible
mutation listeners.
Fixes https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=28332
Patch by Cristina Cristescu and me.
Reviewed by Richard Smith (D21800).
llvm-svn: 276473
we first touch any part of that module. Instead, defer them until the first
time that module is (transitively) imported. The initializer step for a module
then recursively initializes modules that its own headers imported.
For example, this avoids running the <iostream> global initializer in programs
that don't actually use iostreams, but do use other parts of the standard
library.
llvm-svn: 276159
Summary:
Space for storing the //constraint-expression// of the
//requires-clause// associated with a `TemplateParameterList` is
arranged by taking a bit out of the `NumParams` field for the purpose
of determining whether there is a //requires-clause// or not, and by
adding to the trailing objects tied to the `TemplateParameterList`. An
accessor is provided.
An appropriate argument is supplied to `TemplateParameterList::Create`
at the various call sites.
Serialization changes will addressed as the Concepts implementation
becomes more solid.
Drive-by fix:
This change also replaces the custom
`FixedSizeTemplateParameterListStorage` implementation with one that
follows the interface provided by `llvm::TrailingObjects`.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, faisalv, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits, nwilson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D19322
llvm-svn: 276069
This patch adds a __nth_element builtin that allows fetching the n-th type of a
parameter pack with very little compile-time overhead. The patch was inspired by
r252036 and r252115 by David Majnemer, which add a similar __make_integer_seq
builtin for efficiently creating a std::integer_sequence.
Reviewed as D15421. http://reviews.llvm.org/D15421
llvm-svn: 274316
Replace inheriting constructors implementation with new approach, voted into
C++ last year as a DR against C++11.
Instead of synthesizing a set of derived class constructors for each inherited
base class constructor, we make the constructors of the base class visible to
constructor lookup in the derived class, using the normal rules for
using-declarations.
For constructors, UsingShadowDecl now has a ConstructorUsingShadowDecl derived
class that tracks the requisite additional information. We create shadow
constructors (not found by name lookup) in the derived class to model the
actual initialization, and have a new expression node,
CXXInheritedCtorInitExpr, to model the initialization of a base class from such
a constructor. (This initialization is special because it performs real perfect
forwarding of arguments.)
In cases where argument forwarding is not possible (for inalloca calls,
variadic calls, and calls with callee parameter cleanup), the shadow inheriting
constructor is not emitted and instead we directly emit the initialization code
into the caller of the inherited constructor.
Note that this new model is not perfectly compatible with the old model in some
corner cases. In particular:
* if B inherits a private constructor from A, and C uses that constructor to
construct a B, then we previously required that A befriends B and B
befriends C, but the new rules require A to befriend C directly, and
* if a derived class has its own constructors (and so its implicit default
constructor is suppressed), it may still inherit a default constructor from
a base class
llvm-svn: 274049
Handles the cases where old __va_list_tag is coming from a module and the new
is not, needing an update record.
Fixes https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27890
Patch by Cristina Cristescu, Richard Smith and me.
llvm-svn: 273159
When we import a module that defines a builtin identifier from prefix header and
precompile the prefix header, the macro information related to the identifier
is lost.
If we don't precompile the prefix header, the source file can still see the
macro information. The reason is that we write out the identifier in the pch
but not the macro information since the macro is not defined locally.
This is related to r251565. In that commit, if we read a builtin identifier from
a module that wasn't "interesting" to that module, we will still write it out to
a PCH that imports that module.
The fix is to write exported module macros for PCH as well.
rdar://24666630
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20383
llvm-svn: 271310
a base class via a using-declaration. If a class has a using-declaration
declaring either a constructor or an assignment operator, eagerly declare its
special members in case they need to displace a shadow declaration from a
using-declaration.
llvm-svn: 269398
Support OpenMP version 4.5 syntax for #pragma omp declare target.
Syntax:
#pragma omp declare target (extended-list) new-line
or
#pragma omp declare target clause[ [,] clause ... ] new-line
Where clause is one of the following:
to(extended-list)
link(list)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20011
llvm-svn: 268925
a selector, the entry should be complete, containing everything introduced by
that module and all modules it imports.
Before writing out the method pool of a module, we sync up the out of date
selectors by pulling in methods for the selectors, from all modules it imports.
In ReadMethodPool, after pulling in the method pool entry for module A, this
lets us skip the modules that module A imports.
rdar://problem/25900131
llvm-svn: 268091
The Decl::isUsed has a value for every decl. In non-module builds it is very
difficult (but possible) to break this invariant but when we walk up the redecl
chain we find the neccessary information.
When deserializing the decls from a module it is much more difficult to update
correctly this invariant. The patch centralizes the information whether a decl
is used in the canonical decl marking the entire entity as being used.
Fixes https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27401
Patch by Cristina Cristescu and me.
Thanks to Richard Smith who helped to debug and understand the issue!
Reviewed by Richard Smith.
llvm-svn: 267691
table for a module / PCH, never map from a normal declaration of a class to an
injected-class-name declaration (or vice versa). Those declarations live in
distinct lookup tables and should not be confused.
We really shouldn't be using a CXXRecordDecl to represent an
injected-class-name in the first place; I've filed PR27532 so we don't forget.
llvm-svn: 267632
a table entry in the corresponding decl, store an offset from the current
record to the relevant CXX_BASE_SPECIFIERS record. This results in fewer
indirections and a minor .pcm file size reduction.
llvm-svn: 266266
of a table entry in the corresponding decl, store an offset from the current
record to the relevant CXX_CTOR_INITIALIZERS record. This results in fewer
indirections and a minor .pcm file size reduction.
llvm-svn: 266254
Add parsing, sema analysis for 'declare target' construct for OpenMP 4.0
(4.5 support will be added in separate patch).
The declare target directive specifies that variables, functions (C, C++
and Fortran), and subroutines (Fortran) are mapped to a device. The declare
target directive is a declarative directive. In Clang declare target is
implemented as implicit attribute for the declaration.
The syntax of the declare target directive is as follows:
#pragma omp declare target
declarations-definition-seq
#pragma omp end declare target
Based on patch from Michael Wong http://reviews.llvm.org/D15321
llvm-svn: 265530
a separate class. The goal is for this class to have a separate lifetime from
the AST writer so that it can meaningfully track pending statement nodes and
context for more compact encoding of various types.
llvm-svn: 265195
In some cases a slot for an identifier is requested but it gets written to
another module, causing an assertion.
At the point when we start serializing Rtypes, we have no imported IdentifierID
for float_round_style. We start serializing stuff and allocate an ID for it.
Then, during the serialization process, we pull in the identifier info for it
from TSchemaHelper. Finally, WriteIdentifierTable decides that the identifier
has not changed since it was deserialized, so doesn't emit it.
Fixes https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27041
Discussed on IRC with Richard Smith. Agreed on post commit review if needed.
llvm-svn: 264913
bit from the top bit to the bottom bit, so that we don't need 6 VBR6 hunks for
each macro location. Reduces libstdc++ module size by about 1%.
llvm-svn: 264540
Implement lambda capture of *this by copy.
For e.g.:
struct A {
int d = 10;
auto foo() { return [*this] (auto a) mutable { d+=a; return d; }; }
};
auto L = A{}.foo(); // A{}'s lifetime is gone.
// Below is still ok, because *this was captured by value.
assert(L(10) == 20);
assert(L(100) == 120);
If the capture was implicit, or [this] (i.e. *this was captured by reference), this code would be otherwise undefined.
Implementation Strategy:
- amend the parser to accept *this in the lambda introducer
- add a new king of capture LCK_StarThis
- teach Sema::CheckCXXThisCapture to handle by copy captures of the
enclosing object (i.e. *this)
- when CheckCXXThisCapture does capture by copy, the corresponding
initializer expression for the closure's data member
direct-initializes it thus making a copy of '*this'.
- in codegen, when assigning to CXXThisValue, if *this was captured by
copy, make sure it points to the corresponding field member, and
not, unlike when captured by reference, what the field member points
to.
- mark feature as implemented in svn
Much gratitude to Richard Smith for his carefully illuminating reviews!
llvm-svn: 263921
When clang adds argument dependent lookup candidates, it can perform template
instantiation. For example, it can instantiate a templated friend function and
register it in the enclosing namespace's lookup table.
Fixes https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24954
Reviewed by Richard Smith.
llvm-svn: 263634
pragma ms_struct has an effect on struct decls, and the effect is serialized
correctly already. But the "is ms_struct currently on" state wasn't before
this change.
This uses the same approach as `pragma clang optimize`: When writing a module,
the state isn't serialized, only when writing a pch file.
llvm-svn: 262539
to allow arbitrary data to be associated with a parameter.
Also, fix a bug where we apparently haven't been serializing
this information for the last N years.
llvm-svn: 262278
r261297 called hasUserProvidedDefaultConstructor() to check if defining a
const object is ok. This is incorrect for this example:
struct X { template<typename ...T> X(T...); int n; };
const X x; // formerly OK, now bogus error
Instead, track if a class has a defaulted default constructor, and disallow
a const object for classes that either have defaulted default constructors or
if they need an implicit constructor.
Bug report and fix approach by Richard Smith, thanks!
llvm-svn: 261770
C++11 requires const objects to have a user-provided constructor, even for
classes without any fields. DR 253 relaxes this to say "If the implicit default
constructor initializes all subobjects, no initializer should be required."
clang is currently the only compiler that implements this C++11 rule, and e.g.
libstdc++ relies on something like DR 253 to compile in newer versions. This
change makes it possible to build code that says `const vector<int> v;' again
when using libstdc++5.2 and _GLIBCXX_DEBUG
(https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=60284).
Fixes PR23381.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D16552
llvm-svn: 261297
name lookup information have changed since deserialization. For a C++ modules
build, we do not need to re-emit the identifier into the serialized identifier
table if only the name lookup information has changed (and in all cases, we
don't need to re-emit the macro information if only the name lookup information
has changed).
llvm-svn: 259901
Per review feedback the name was wrong and it can be used outside
Objective-C.
Unfortunately, making the internal struct visible broke some ASTMatchers
tests that assumed that the first record decl would be from user code,
rather than a builtin type. I'm worried that this will also affect
users' code. So this patch adds a typedef to wrap the internal struct
and only makes the typedef visible to namelookup. This is sufficient to
allow the ASTReader to merge the decls we need without making the struct
itself visible.
rdar://problem/24425801
llvm-svn: 259734
Original message:
Make CF constant string decl visible to name lookup to fix module errors
The return type of the __builtin___*StringMakeConstantString functions
is a pointer to a struct, so we need that struct to be visible to name
lookup so that we will correctly merge multiple declarations of that
type if they come from different modules.
Incidentally, to make this visible to name lookup we need to rename the
type to __NSConstantString, since the real NSConstantString is an
Objective-C interface type. This shouldn't affect anyone outside the
compiler since users of the constant string builtins cast the result
immediately to CFStringRef.
Since this struct type is otherwise implicitly created by the AST
context and cannot access namelookup, we make this a predefined type
and initialize it in Sema.
Note: this issue of builtins that refer to types not visible to name
lookup technically also affects other builtins (e.g. objc_msgSendSuper),
but in all other cases the builtin is a library builtin and the issue
goes away if you include the library that defines the types it uses,
unlike for these constant string builtins.
rdar://problem/24425801
llvm-svn: 259721
The return type of the __builtin___*StringMakeConstantString functions
is a pointer to a struct, so we need that struct to be visible to name
lookup so that we will correctly merge multiple declarations of that
type if they come from different modules.
Incidentally, to make this visible to name lookup we need to rename the
type to __NSConstantString, since the real NSConstantString is an
Objective-C interface type. This shouldn't affect anyone outside the
compiler since users of the constant string builtins cast the result
immediately to CFStringRef.
Since this struct type is otherwise implicitly created by the AST
context and cannot access namelookup, we make this a predefined type
and initialize it in Sema.
Note: this issue of builtins that refer to types not visible to name
lookup technically also affects other builtins (e.g. objc_msgSendSuper),
but in all other cases the builtin is a library builtin and the issue
goes away if you include the library that defines the types it uses,
unlike for these constant string builtins.
rdar://problem/24425801
llvm-svn: 259624
Summary:
Support for OpenCL 2.0 pipe type.
This is a bug-fix version for bader's patch reviews.llvm.org/D14441
Reviewers: pekka.jaaskelainen, Anastasia
Subscribers: bader, Anastasia, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15603
llvm-svn: 257254
By storing the instantiated expression back in the ParmVarDecl,
we remove the last need for separately storing the sub-expression
of a CXXDefaultArgExpr. This makes PCH/Modules merging quite
simple: CXXDefaultArgExpr records are serialized as references
to the ParmVarDecl, and we ignore redundant attempts to overwrite
the instantiated expression.
This has some extremely marginal impact on user-facing semantics.
However, the major effect is that it avoids IRGen errors about
conflicting definitions due to lambdas in the argument being
instantiated multiple times while sharing the same mangling.
It should also slightly improve memory usage and module file size.
rdar://23810407
llvm-svn: 256983
This patch attempts to fix the regressions identified when the patch was committed initially.
Thanks to Michael Liao for identifying the fix in the offloading metadata generation
related with side effects in evaluation of function arguments.
llvm-svn: 256933
Summary:
In order to offloading work properly two things need to be in place:
- a descriptor with all the offloading information (device entry functions, and global variable) has to be created by the host and registered in the OpenMP offloading runtime library.
- all the device functions need to be emitted for the device and a convention has to be in place so that the runtime library can easily map the host ID of an entry point with the actual function in the device.
This patch adds support for these two things. However, only entry functions are being registered given that 'declare target' directive is not yet implemented.
About offloading descriptor:
The details of the descriptor are explained with more detail in http://goo.gl/L1rnKJ. Basically the descriptor will have fields that specify the number of devices, the pointers to where the device images begin and end (that will be defined by the linker), and also pointers to a the begin and end of table whose entries contain information about a specific entry point. Each entry has the type:
```
struct __tgt_offload_entry{
void *addr;
char *name;
int64_t size;
};
```
and will be implemented in a pre determined (ELF) section `.omp_offloading.entries` with 1-byte alignment, so that when all the objects are linked, the table is in that section with no padding in between entries (will be like a C array). The code generation ensures that all `__tgt_offload_entry` entries are emitted in the same order for both host and device so that the runtime can have the corresponding entries in both host and device in same index of the table, and efficiently implement the mapping.
The resulting descriptor is registered/unregistered with the runtime library using the calls `__tgt_register_lib` and `__tgt_unregister_lib`. The registration is implemented in a high priority global initializer so that the registration happens always before any initializer (that can potentially include target regions) is run.
The driver flag -omptargets= was created to specify a comma separated list of devices the user wants to support so that the new functionality can be exercised. Each device is specified with its triple.
About target codegen:
The target codegen is pretty much straightforward as it reuses completely the logic of the host version for the same target region. The tricky part is to identify the meaningful target regions in the device side. Unlike other programming models, like CUDA, there are no already outlined functions with attributes that mark what should be emitted or not. So, the information on what to emit is passed in the form of metadata in host bc file. This requires a new option to pass the host bc to the device frontend. Then everything is similar to what happens in CUDA: the global declarations emission is intercepted to check to see if it is an "interesting" declaration. The difference is that instead of checking an attribute, the metadata information in checked. Right now, there is only a form of metadata to pass information about the device entry points (target regions). A class `OffloadEntriesInfoManagerTy` was created to manage all the information and queries related with the metadata. The metadata looks like this:
```
!omp_offload.info = !{!0, !1, !2, !3, !4, !5, !6}
!0 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_ZN2S12r1Ei", i32 479, i32 13, i32 4}
!1 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_ZL7fstatici", i32 461, i32 11, i32 5}
!2 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_Z9ftemplateIiET_i", i32 444, i32 11, i32 6}
!3 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_Z3fooi", i32 99, i32 11, i32 0}
!4 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_Z3fooi", i32 272, i32 11, i32 3}
!5 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_Z3fooi", i32 127, i32 11, i32 1}
!6 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_Z3fooi", i32 159, i32 11, i32 2}
```
The fields in each metadata entry are (in sequence):
Entry 1) an ID of the type of metadata - right now only zero is used meaning "OpenMP target region".
Entry 2) a unique ID of the device where the input source file that contain the target region lives.
Entry 3) a unique ID of the file where the input source file that contain the target region lives.
Entry 4) a mangled name of the function that encloses the target region.
Entries 5) and 6) line and column number where the target region was found.
Entry 7) is the order the entry was emitted.
Entry 2) and 3) are required to distinguish files that have the same function name.
Entry 4) is required to distinguish different instances of the same declaration (usually templated ones)
Entries 5) and 6) are required to distinguish the particular target region in body of the function (it is possible that a given target region is not an entry point - if clause can evaluate always to zero - and therefore we need to identify the "interesting" target regions. )
This patch replaces http://reviews.llvm.org/D12306.
Reviewers: ABataev, hfinkel, tra, rjmccall, sfantao
Subscribers: FBrygidyn, piotr.rak, Hahnfeld, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12614
llvm-svn: 256842
than reusing the "overridden buffer" mechanism. This will allow us to make
embedded files and overridden files behave differently in future.
llvm-svn: 254121
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Typeof.html
Differences from the GCC extension:
* __auto_type is also permitted in C++ (but only in places where
it could appear in C), allowing its use in headers that might
be shared across C and C++, or used from C++98
* __auto_type can be combined with a declarator, as with C++ auto
(for instance, "__auto_type *p")
* multiple variables can be declared in a single __auto_type
declaration, with the C++ semantics (the deduced type must be
the same in each case)
This patch also adds a missing restriction on applying typeof to
a bit-field, which GCC has historically rejected in C (due to
lack of clarity as to whether the operand should be promoted).
The same restriction also applies to __auto_type in C (in both
GCC and Clang).
This also fixes PR25449.
Patch by Nicholas Allegra!
llvm-svn: 252690
This new builtin template allows for incredibly fast instantiations of
templates like std::integer_sequence.
Performance numbers follow:
My work station has 64 GB of ram + 20 Xeon Cores at 2.8 GHz.
__make_integer_seq<std::integer_sequence, int, 90000> takes 0.25
seconds.
std::make_integer_sequence<int, 90000> takes unbound time, it is still
running. Clang is consuming gigabytes of memory.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13786
llvm-svn: 252036
Introduce the notion of a module file extension, which introduces
additional information into a module file at the time it is built that
can then be queried when the module file is read. Module file
extensions are identified by a block name (which must be unique to the
extension) and can write any bitstream records into their own
extension block within the module file. When a module file is loaded,
any extension blocks are matched up with module file extension
readers, that are per-module-file and are given access to the input
bitstream.
Note that module file extensions can only be introduced by
programmatic clients that have access to the CompilerInvocation. There
is only one such extension at the moment, which is used for testing
the module file extension harness. As a future direction, one could
imagine allowing the plugin mechanism to introduce new module file
extensions.
llvm-svn: 251955
A 'readonly' Objective-C property declared in the primary class can
effectively be shadowed by a 'readwrite' property declared within an
extension of that class, so long as the types and attributes of the
two property declarations are compatible.
Previously, this functionality was implemented by back-patching the
original 'readonly' property to make it 'readwrite', destroying source
information and causing some hideously redundant, incorrect
code. Simplify the implementation to express how this should actually
be modeled: as a separate property declaration in the extension that
shadows (via the name lookup rules) the declaration in the primary
class. While here, correct some broken Fix-Its, eliminate a pile of
redundant code, clean up the ARC migrator's handling of properties
declared in extensions, and fix debug info's naming of methods that
come from categories.
A wonderous side effect of doing this write is that it eliminates the
"AddedObjCPropertyInClassExtension" method from the AST mutation
listener, which in turn eliminates the last place where we rewrite
entire declarations in a chained PCH file or a module file. This
change (which fixes rdar://problem/18475765) will allow us to
eliminate the rewritten-decls logic from the serialization library,
and fixes a crash (rdar://problem/23247794) illustrated by the
test/PCH/chain-categories.m example.
llvm-svn: 251874
We model predefined declarations as not being from AST files, but in most ways
they act as if they come from some implicit prebuilt module file imported
before all others. Therefore, if we see an update to the predefined 'struct
__va_list_tag' declaration (and we've already loaded any modules), it needs a
corresponding update record, even though it didn't technically come from an AST
file.
llvm-svn: 250134
Summary:
This change adds support for `__builtin_ms_va_list`, a GCC extension for
variadic `ms_abi` functions. The existing `__builtin_va_list` support is
inadequate for this because `va_list` is defined differently in the Win64
ABI vs. the System V/AMD64 ABI.
Depends on D1622.
Reviewers: rsmith, rnk, rjmccall
CC: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D1623
llvm-svn: 247941
This reapply a variant commit r247179 after post-commit review from
D.Blaikie.
Hopefully I got it right this time: lifetime of initializer list ends
as with any expression, which make invalid the pattern:
ArrayRef<int> Arr = { 1, 2, 3, 4};
Just like StringRef, ArrayRef shouldn't be used to initialize local
variable but only as function argument.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 247233
them directly to the control block. These are fairly large, and in a build with
lots of modules / chained PCH, we don't need to read most of them. No
functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 247055
r246546, with a workaround for an MSVC 2013 miscompile and an MSVC 2015
rejects-valid.
Original commit message:
[modules] Rework serialized DeclContext lookup table management. Instead of
walking the loaded ModuleFiles looking for lookup tables for the context, store
them all in one place, and merge them together if we find we have too many
(currently, more than 4). If we do merge, include the merged form in our
serialized lookup table, so that downstream readers never need to look at our
imports' tables.
This gives a huge performance improvement to builds with very large numbers of
modules (in some cases, more than a 2x speedup was observed).
llvm-svn: 246582
walking the loaded ModuleFiles looking for lookup tables for the context, store
them all in one place, and merge them together if we find we have too many
(currently, more than 4). If we do merge, include the merged form in our
serialized lookup table, so that downstream readers never need to look at our
imports' tables.
This gives a huge performance improvement to builds with very large numbers of
modules (in some cases, more than a 2x speedup was observed).
llvm-svn: 246497
DeclarationName (because all ctor names are considered the same, and so on).
Reflect this in the type used as the lookup table key. As a side-effect, remove
one copy of the duplicated code used to compute the hash of the key.
llvm-svn: 246124
and CompilerInvocation::getFileSystemOpts by renaming it to getFileSystemOpts,
marking the const-returning access method const and adding a non-const version,
making the function prototypes identical to CompilerInstance::getFileSystemOpts.
llvm-svn: 246026
Instead of eagerly deserializing a list of DeclIDs when we load a module file
and doing a binary search to find the redeclarations of a decl, store a list of
redeclarations of each chain before the first declaration and load it directly.
llvm-svn: 245789
all modules and reduce the number of declarations we load when loading a
redeclaration chain.
The new approach is:
* when loading the first declaration of an entity within a module file, we
first load all declarations of the entity that were imported into that
module file, and then load all the other declarations of that entity from
that module file and build a suitable decl chain from them
* when loading any other declaration of an entity, we first load the first
declaration from the same module file
As before, we complete redecl chains through name lookup where necessary.
To make this work, I also had to change the way that template specializations
are stored -- it no longer suffices to track only canonical specializations; we
now emit all "first local" declarations when emitting a list of specializations
for a template.
On one testcase with several thousand imported module files, this reduces the
total runtime by 72%.
llvm-svn: 245779
via a module map found by -fmodule-map-file=, the home directory of the module
is the current working directory, even if that's a different directory on
reload.
llvm-svn: 244988
determine the primary context, rather than sometimes registering the lookup
table on the wrong context.
This exposed a couple of bugs:
* the odr violation check didn't deal properly with mergeable declarations
if the declaration retained by name lookup wasn't in the canonical
definition of the class
* the (broken) RewriteDecl mechanism would emit two name lookup tables for
the same DeclContext into the same module file (one as part of the
rewritten declaration and one as a visible update for the old declaration)
These are both fixed too.
llvm-svn: 244192
chain and fix the cases where it fires.
* Handle the __va_list_tag as a predefined decl. Previously we failed to merge
sometimes it because it's not visible to name lookup. (In passing, remove
redundant __va_list_tag typedefs that we were creating for some ABIs. These
didn't affect the mangling or representation of the type.)
* For Decls derived from Redeclarable that are not in fact redeclarable
(implicit params, function params, ObjC type parameters), remove them from
the list of expected redeclarable decls.
llvm-svn: 243259
the identifier table. This is redundant, since the TU-scope lookups are also
serialized as part of the TU DeclContext, and wasteful in a number of ways. We
still emit the decls for PCH / preamble builds, since for those we want
identical results, not merely semantically equivalent ones.
llvm-svn: 242855
before the first imported declaration.
We don't need to track all formerly-canonical declarations of an entity; it's sufficient to track those ones for which no other formerly-canonical declaration was imported into the same module. We call those ones "key declarations", and use them as our starting points for collecting redeclarations and performing namespace lookups.
llvm-svn: 241999
The __kindof type qualifier can be applied to Objective-C object
(pointer) types to indicate id-like behavior, which includes implicit
"downcasting" of __kindof types to subclasses and id-like message-send
behavior. __kindof types provide better type bounds for substitutions
into unspecified generic types, which preserves more type information.
llvm-svn: 241548
When messaging a method that was defined in an Objective-C class (or
category or extension thereof) that has type parameters, substitute
the type arguments for those type parameters. Similarly, substitute
into property accesses, instance variables, and other references.
This includes general infrastructure for substituting the type
arguments associated with an ObjCObject(Pointer)Type into a type
referenced within a particular context, handling all of the
substitutions required to deal with (e.g.) inheritance involving
parameterized classes. In cases where no type arguments are available
(e.g., because we're messaging via some unspecialized type, id, etc.),
we substitute in the type bounds for the type parameters instead.
Example:
@interface NSSet<T : id<NSCopying>> : NSObject <NSCopying>
- (T)firstObject;
@end
void f(NSSet<NSString *> *stringSet, NSSet *anySet) {
[stringSet firstObject]; // produces NSString*
[anySet firstObject]; // produces id<NSCopying> (the bound)
}
When substituting for the type parameters given an unspecialized
context (i.e., no specific type arguments were given), substituting
the type bounds unconditionally produces type signatures that are too
strong compared to the pre-generics signatures. Instead, use the
following rule:
- In covariant positions, such as method return types, replace type
parameters with “id” or “Class” (the latter only when the type
parameter bound is “Class” or qualified class, e.g,
“Class<NSCopying>”)
- In other positions (e.g., parameter types), replace type
parameters with their type bounds.
- When a specialized Objective-C object or object pointer type
contains a type parameter in its type arguments (e.g.,
NSArray<T>*, but not NSArray<NSString *> *), replace the entire
object/object pointer type with its unspecialized version (e.g.,
NSArray *).
llvm-svn: 241543
Objective-C type arguments can be provided in angle brackets following
an Objective-C interface type. Syntactically, this is the same
position as one would provide protocol qualifiers (e.g.,
id<NSCopying>), so parse both together and let Sema sort out the
ambiguous cases. This applies both when parsing types and when parsing
the superclass of an Objective-C class, which can now be a specialized
type (e.g., NSMutableArray<T> inherits from NSArray<T>).
Check Objective-C type arguments against the type parameters of the
corresponding class. Verify the length of the type argument list and
that each type argument satisfies the corresponding bound.
Specializations of parameterized Objective-C classes are represented
in the type system as distinct types. Both specialized types (e.g.,
NSArray<NSString *> *) and unspecialized types (NSArray *) are
represented, separately.
llvm-svn: 241542
Any extra features from -fmodule-feature are part of the module hash and
need to get validated on load. Also print them with -module-file-info.
llvm-svn: 240433
The patch is generated using this command:
$ tools/extra/clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py -fix \
-checks=-*,llvm-namespace-comment -header-filter='llvm/.*|clang/.*' \
work/llvm/tools/clang
To reduce churn, not touching namespaces spanning less than 10 lines.
llvm-svn: 240270
Based on previous discussion on the mailing list, clang currently lacks support
for C99 partial re-initialization behavior:
Reference: http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-dev/2013-April/029188.html
Reference: http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/dr_253.htm
This patch attempts to fix this problem.
Given the following code snippet,
struct P1 { char x[6]; };
struct LP1 { struct P1 p1; };
struct LP1 l = { .p1 = { "foo" }, .p1.x[2] = 'x' };
// this example is adapted from the example for "struct fred x[]" in DR-253;
// currently clang produces in l: { "\0\0x" },
// whereas gcc 4.8 produces { "fox" };
// with this fix, clang will also produce: { "fox" };
Differential Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5789
llvm-svn: 239446
MSVC 2015 includes the std::data() template function added to C++17. ADL
causes both cl.exe and clang-cl to prefer std::data over our static
helper here, and we get errors about converting int64_t* to StringRef.
Renaming it to bytes avoids the ambiguity.
llvm-svn: 237863
Emit warning when operand to `delete` is allocated with `new[]` or
operand to `delete[]` is allocated with `new`.
rev 2 update:
`getNewExprFromInitListOrExpr` should return `dyn_cast_or_null`
instead of `dyn_cast`, since `E` might be null.
Reviewers: rtrieu, jordan_rose, rsmith
Subscribers: majnemer, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4661
llvm-svn: 237608
With this change, enabling -fmodules-local-submodule-visibility results in name
visibility rules being applied to submodules of the current module in addition
to imported modules (that is, names no longer "leak" between submodules of the
same top-level module). This also makes it much safer to textually include a
non-modular library into a module: each submodule that textually includes that
library will get its own "copy" of that library, and so the library becomes
visible no matter which including submodule you import.
llvm-svn: 237473
This reverts commit 742dc9b6c9686ab52860b7da39c3a126d8a97fbc.
This is generating multiple segfaults in our internal builds.
Test case coming up shortly.
llvm-svn: 237391
Emit warning when operand to `delete` is allocated with `new[]` or
operand to `delete[]` is allocated with `new`.
Reviewers: rtrieu, jordan_rose, rsmith
Subscribers: majnemer, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4661
llvm-svn: 237368
xmmintrin.h includes emmintrin.h and vice versa if SSE2 is enabled. We break
this cycle for a modules build, and instead make the xmmintrin.h module
re-export the immintrin.h module. Also included is a fix for an assert in the
serialization code if a module exports another module that was declared later
in the same module map.
llvm-svn: 237321
clang::MacroDefinition now models the currently-defined value of a macro. The
previous MacroDefinition type, which represented a record of a macro definition
directive for a detailed preprocessing record, is now called MacroDefinitionRecord.
llvm-svn: 236400
This flag specifies that the normal visibility rules should be used even for
local submodules (submodules of the currently-being-built module). Thus names
will only be visible if a header / module that declares them has actually been
included / imported, and not merely because a submodule that happened to be
built earlier declared those names. This also removes the need to modularize
bottom-up: textually-included headers will be included into every submodule
that includes them, since their include guards will not leak between modules.
So far, this only governs visibility of macros, not of declarations, so is not
ready for real use yet.
llvm-svn: 236350
It has no place there; it's not a property of the Module, and it makes
restoring the visibility set when we leave a submodule more difficult.
llvm-svn: 236300
Modules builds fundamentally have a non-linear macro history. In the interest
of better source fidelity, represent the macro definition information
faithfully: we have a linear macro directive history within each module, and at
any point we have a unique "latest" local macro directive and a collection of
visible imported directives. This also removes the attendent complexity of
attempting to create a correct MacroDirective history (which we got wrong
in the general case).
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 236176
Previously we'd defer this determination until writing the AST, which doesn't
allow us to use this information when building other submodules of the same
module. This change also allows us to use a uniform mechanism for writing
module macro records, independent of whether they are local or imported.
llvm-svn: 235614
This is substantially simpler, provides better space usage accounting in bcanalyzer,
and gives a more compact representation. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 235420
order based on order of insertion.
This should cause both our warnings about these and the modules
serialization to be deterministic as a consequence.
Found by inspection.
llvm-svn: 233343
DeclIDs so that in addition to be grouped by file, the order of these
groups is stable.
Found by inspection, no test case. Not sure this can be observed without
a randomized seed for the hash table, but we shouldn't be relying on the
hash table layout under any circumstances.
llvm-svn: 233339
traversing the identifier table.
No easy test case as this table is somewhere between hard and impossible
to observe as non-deterministically ordered. The table is a hash table
but we hash the string contents and never remove entries from the table
so the growth pattern, etc, is all completely fixed. However, relying on
the hash function being deterministic is specifically against the
long-term direction of LLVM's hashing datastructures, which are intended
to provide *no* ordering guarantees. As such, this defends against these
things by sorting the identifiers. Sorting identifiers right before we
emit them to a serialized form seems a low cost for predictability here.
llvm-svn: 233332
logic removed.
This logic was both inserting all builtins into the identifier table and
ensuring they would get serialized. The first happens unconditionally
now, and we always write out the entire identifier table. This code can
simply go away.
llvm-svn: 233331
constructors in the current lexical context even though name lookup
found them via some other context merged into the redecl chain.
This can only happen for implicit constructors which can only have the
name of the type of the current context, so we can fix this by simply
*always* merging those names first. This also has the advantage of
removing the walk of the current lexical context from the common case
when this is the only constructor name we need to deal with (implicit or
otherwise).
I've enhanced the tests to cover this case (and uncovered an unrelated
bug which I fixed in r233325).
llvm-svn: 233327
Clang was inserting these into a dense map. While it never iterated the
dense map during normal compilation, it did when emitting a module. Fix
this by using a standard MapVector to preserve the order in which we
encounter the late parsed templates.
I suspect this still isn't ideal, as we don't seem to remove things from
this map even when we mark the templates as no longer late parsed. But
I don't know enough about this particular extension to craft a nice,
subtle test case covering this. I've managed to get the stress test to
at least do some late parsing and demonstrate the core problem here.
This patch fixes the test and provides deterministic behavior which is
a strict improvement over the prior state.
I've cleaned up some of the code here as well to be explicit about
inserting when that is what is actually going on.
llvm-svn: 233264
deterministically.
This fixes a latent issue where even Clang's Sema (and diagnostics) were
non-deterministic in the face of this pragma. The fix is super simple --
just use a MapVector so we track the order in which these are parsed (or
imported). Especially considering how rare they are, this seems like the
perfect tradeoff. I've also simplified the client code with judicious
use of auto and range based for loops.
I've added some pretty hilarious code to my stress test which now
survives the binary diff without issue.
llvm-svn: 233261
updated decl contexts get emitted.
Since this code was added, we have newer vastly simpler code for
handling this. The code I'm removing was very expensive and also
generated unstable order of declarations which made module outputs
non-deterministic.
All of the tests continue to pass for me and I'm able to check the
difference between the .pcm files after merging modules together.
llvm-svn: 233251
non-visible definition, skip the new definition and make the old one visible
instead of trying to parse it again and failing horribly. C++'s ODR allows
us to assume that the two definitions are identical.
llvm-svn: 233250
decl context lookup tables.
The first attepmt at this caused problems. We had significantly more
sources of non-determinism that I realized at first, and my change
essentially turned them from non-deterministic output into
use-after-free. Except that they weren't necessarily caught by tools
because the data wasn't really freed.
The new approach is much simpler. The first big simplification is to
inline the "visit" code and handle this directly. That works much
better, and I'll try to go and clean up the other caller of the visit
logic similarly.
The second key to the entire approach is that we need to *only* collect
names into a stable order at first. We then need to issue all of the
actual 'lookup()' calls in the stable order of the names so that we load
external results in a stable order. Once we have loaded all the results,
the table of results will stop being invalidated and we can walk all of
the names again and use the cheap 'noload_lookup()' method to quickly
get the results and serialize them.
To handle constructors and conversion functions (whose names can't be
stably ordered) in this approach, what we do is record only the visible
constructor and conversion function names at first. Then, if we have
any, we walk the decls of the class and add those names in the order
they occur in the AST. The rest falls out naturally.
This actually ends up simpler than the previous approach and seems much
more robust.
It uncovered a latent issue where we were building on-disk hash tables
for lookup results when the context was a linkage spec! This happened to
dodge all of the assert by some miracle. Instead, add a proper predicate
to the DeclContext class and use that which tests both for function
contexts and linkage specs.
It also uncovered PR23030 where we are forming somewhat bizarre negative
lookup results. I've just worked around this with a FIXME in place
because fixing this particular Clang bug seems quite hard.
I've flipped the first part of the test case I added for stability back
on in this commit. I'm taking it gradually to try and make sure the
build bots are happy this time.
llvm-svn: 233249
lookup tables, we need to establish a stable ordering for constructing
the hash table. This is trickier than it might seem.
Most of these cases are easily handled by sorting the lookup results
associated with a specific name that has an identifier. However for
constructors and conversion functions, the story is more complicated.
Here we need to merge all of the constructors or conversion functions
together and this merge needs to be stable. We don't have any stable
ordering for either constructors or conversion functions as both would
require a stable ordering across types.
Instead, when we have constructors or conversion functions in the
results, we reconstruct a stable order by walking the decl context in
lexical order and merging them in the order their particular declaration
names are encountered. This doesn't generalize as there might be found
declaration names which don't actually occur within the lexical context,
but for constructors and conversion functions it is safe. It does
require loading the entire decl context if necessary to establish the
ordering but there doesn't seem to be a meaningful way around that.
Many thanks to Richard for talking through all of the design choices
here. While I wrote the code, he guided all the actual decisions about
how to establish the order of things.
No test case yet because the test case I have doesn't pass yet -- there
are still more sources of non-determinism. However, this is complex
enough that I wanted it to go into its own commit in case it causes some
unforseen issue or needs to be reverted.
llvm-svn: 233156
There are two aspects of non-determinism fixed here, which was the
minimum required to cause at least an empty module to be deterministic.
First, the random number signature is only inserted into the module when
we are building modules implicitly. The use case for these random
signatures is to work around the very fact that modules are not
deterministic in their output when working with the implicitly built and
populated module cache. Eventually this should go away entirely when
we're confident that Clang is producing deterministic output.
Second, the on-disk hash table is populated based on the order of
iteration over a DenseMap. Instead, use a MapVector so that we can walk
it in insertion order.
I've added a test that an empty module, when built twice, produces the
same binary PCM file.
llvm-svn: 233115
Previously we'd deserialize the list of mem-initializers for a constructor when
we deserialized the declaration of the constructor. That could trigger a
significant amount of unnecessary work (pulling in all base classes
recursively, for a start) and was causing problems for the modules buildbot due
to cyclic deserializations. We now deserialize these on demand.
This creates a certain amount of duplication with the handling of
CXXBaseSpecifiers; I'll look into reducing that next.
llvm-svn: 233052
for a DeclContext, and fix propagation of exception specifications along
redeclaration chains.
This reverts r232905, r232907, and r232907, which reverted r232793, r232853,
and r232853.
One additional change is present here to resolve issues with LLDB: distinguish
between whether lexical decls missing from the lookup table are local or are
provided by the external AST source, and still look in the external source if
that's where they came from.
llvm-svn: 232928
give an exception specification to a declaration that didn't have an exception
specification in any of our imported modules, emit an update record ourselves.
Without this, code importing the current module would not see an exception
specification that we could see and might have relied on.
llvm-svn: 232870
Now that SmallString is a first-class citizen, most SmallString::str()
calls are not required. This patch removes a whole bunch of them, yet
there are lots more.
There are two use cases where str() is really needed:
1) To use one of StringRef member functions which is not available in
SmallString.
2) To convert to std::string, as StringRef implicitly converts while
SmallString do not. We may wish to change this, but it may introduce
ambiguity.
llvm-svn: 232622
consumers of that module.
Previously, such a file would only be available if the module happened to
actually import something from that module.
llvm-svn: 232583
move the operator delete updating into a separate update record so we can cope
with updating another module's destructor's operator delete.
llvm-svn: 231735
of extern "C" declarations. This is simpler and vastly more efficient for
modules builds (we no longer need to load *all* extern "C" declarations to
determine if we have a redeclaration).
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 231538
We used to save out and eagerly load a (potentially huge) table of merged
formerly-canonical declarations when we loaded each module. This was extremely
inefficient in the presence of large amounts of merging, and didn't actually
save any merging lookup work, because we still needed to perform name lookup to
check that our merged declaration lists were complete. This also resulted in a
loss of laziness -- even if we only needed an early declaration of an entity, we
would eagerly pull in all declarations that had been merged into it regardless.
We now store the relevant fragments of the table within the declarations
themselves. In detail:
* The first declaration of each entity within a module stores a list of first
declarations from imported modules that are merged into it.
* Loading that declaration pre-loads those other entities, so that they appear
earlier within the redeclaration chain.
* The name lookup tables list the most recent local lookup result, if there
is one, or all directly-imported lookup results if not.
llvm-svn: 231424
dynamic classes in the translation unit and check whether each one's key
function is defined when we got to the end of the TU (and when we got to the
end of each module). This is really terrible for modules performance, since it
causes unnecessary deserialization of every dynamic class in every compilation.
We now use a much simpler (and, in a modules build, vastly more efficient)
system: when we see an out-of-line definition of a virtual function, we check
whether that function was in fact its class's key function. (If so, we need to
emit the vtable.)
llvm-svn: 230830
invalidate lookup_iterators and lookup_results for some name within a
DeclContext if the lookup results for a *different* name change.
llvm-svn: 230121
the one in the current compiler invocation. If they differ reject the PCH.
This protects against the badness occurring from getting modules loaded from different module caches (see crashes).
rdar://19889860
llvm-svn: 229909
When mangling the module map path into a .pcm file name, also mangle the
IsSystem bit, which can also depend on the header search paths. For
example, the user may change from -I to -isystem. This can affect
diagnostics in the importing TU.
llvm-svn: 228966
context as anonymous for merging purposes. They can't be found by their names,
so we merge them based on their position within the surrounding context.
llvm-svn: 228485
This fixes PR21587, what r221933 fixed for regular programs is now also
fixed for decls coming from PCH files.
Use another bit from the count/bits uint16_t for storing the "more than one
decl" bit. This reduces the number of bits for the count from 14 to 13.
The selector with the most overloads in Cocoa.h has ~55 overloads, so 13 bits
should still be plenty. Since this changes the meaning of a serialized bit
pattern, also increase clang::serialization::VERSION_MAJOR.
Storing the "more than one decl" state of only the first overload isn't quite
correct, but Sema::AreMultipleMethodsInGlobalPool() currently only looks at
the state of the first overload so it's good enough for now.
llvm-svn: 224892
Remove ObjCMethodList::Count, instead store a "has more than one decl" bit in
the low bit of the ObjCMethodDecl pointer, using a PointerIntPair.
Most of this patch is replacing ".Method" with ".getMethod()".
No intended behavior change.
llvm-svn: 224876
components. These sometimes get synthetically added, and we don't want -Ifoo
and -I./foo to be treated fundamentally differently here.
llvm-svn: 224055
the root of the module and use paths relative to that directory wherever
possible. This is a step towards allowing explicit modules to be relocated
without being rebuilt, which is important for some kinds of distributed builds,
for good paths in diagnostics, and for appropriate .d output.
This is a recommit of r223443, reverted in r223465; when joining together
imported file paths, we now use the system's separator rather than always
using '/'. This avoids path mismatches between the original module build and
the module user on Windows (at least, in some cases). A more comprehensive
fix will follow.
llvm-svn: 223539
the root of the module and use paths relative to that directory wherever
possible. This is a step towards allowing explicit modules to be relocated
without being rebuilt, which is important for some kinds of distributed builds,
for good paths in diagnostics, and for appropriate .d output.
llvm-svn: 223443
rather than trying to extract this information from the FileEntry after the
fact.
This has a number of beneficial effects. For instance, diagnostic messages for
failed module builds give a path relative to the "module root" rather than an
absolute file path, and the contents of the module includes file is no longer
dependent on what files the including TU happened to inspect prior to
triggering the module build.
llvm-svn: 223095
For all threadprivate variables which have constructor/destructor emit call to void __kmpc_threadprivate_register(ident_t * <Current Location>, void *<Original Global Addr>, kmpc_ctor <Constructor>, kmpc_cctor NULL, kmpc_dtor <Destructor>);
In expressions all references to such variables are replaced by calls to void *__kmpc_threadprivate_cached(ident_t *<Current Location>, kmp_int32 <Current Thread Id>, void *<Original Global Addr>, size_t <Size of Data>, void ***<Pointer to autogenerated cache – array of private copies of threadprivate variable>);
Test test/OpenMP/threadprivate_codegen.cpp checks that codegen is correct. Also it checks that codegen is correct after serialization/deserialization and one of passes verifies debug info.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4002
llvm-svn: 221663
Use the bitmask to store the set of enabled sanitizers instead of a
bitfield. On the negative side, it makes syntax for querying the
set of enabled sanitizers a bit more clunky. On the positive side, we
will be able to use SanitizerKind to eventually implement the
new semantics for -fsanitize-recover= flag, that would allow us
to make some sanitizers recoverable, and some non-recoverable.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 221558
Since the order of the IDs in the AST file (e.g. DeclIDs, SelectorIDs)
is not stable, it is not safe to load an AST file that depends on
another AST file that has been rebuilt since the importer was built,
even if "nothing changed". We previously used size and modtime to check
this, but I've seen cases where a module rebuilt quickly enough to foil
this check and caused very hard to debug build errors.
To save cycles when we're loading the AST, we just generate a random
nonce value and check that it hasn't changed when we load an imported
module, rather than actually hash the whole file.
This is slightly complicated by the fact that we need to verify the
signature inside addModule, since we might otherwise consider that a
mdoule is "OutOfDate" when really it is the importer that is out of
date. I didn't see any regressions in module load time after this
change.
llvm-svn: 220493
This allows a module to specify that it logically contains a file, but that
said file is non-modular and intended for textual inclusion. This allows
layering checks to work properly in the presence of such files.
llvm-svn: 220448
This is a better fix for 'duplicate key' problems in module continuous
range maps (vs what I added in r215810) by not adding any mappings at
all when there are no local entities. Now it also covers selectors,
which were not always being bumped because the record SELECTOR_OFFSET is
not always emitted. I'll back out most of r215810 in a future commit,
since it should no longer be needed.
llvm-svn: 220207
Plumb through the full QualType of the TemplateArgument::Declaration, as
it's insufficient to only know whether the type is a reference or
pointer (that was necessary for mangling, but insufficient for debug
info). This shouldn't increase the size of TemplateArgument as
TemplateArgument::Integer is still longer by another 32 bits.
Several bits of code were testing that the reference-ness of the
parameters matched, but this seemed to be insufficient (various other
features of the type could've mismatched and wouldn't've been caught)
and unnecessary, at least insofar as removing those tests didn't cause
anything to fail.
(Richard - perchaps you can hypothesize why any of these checks might
need to test reference-ness of the parameters (& explain why
reference-ness is part of the mangling - I would've figured that for the
reference-ness to be different, a prior template argument would have to
be different). I'd be happy to add them in/beef them up and add test
cases if there's a reason for them)
llvm-svn: 219900
We build a NestedNameSpecifier that records the CXXRecordDecl in which
__super appeared. Name lookup is performed in all base classes of the
recorded CXXRecordDecl. Use of __super is allowed only inside class and
member function scope.
llvm-svn: 218484
The warning warns on TypedefNameDecls -- typedefs and C++11 using aliases --
that are !isReferenced(). Since the isReferenced() bit on TypedefNameDecls
wasn't used for anything before this warning it wasn't always set correctly,
so this patch also adds a few missing MarkAnyDeclReferenced() calls in
various places for TypedefNameDecls.
This is made a bit complicated due to local typedefs possibly being used only
after their local scope has closed. Consider:
template <class T>
void template_fun(T t) {
typename T::Foo s3foo; // YYY
(void)s3foo;
}
void template_fun_user() {
struct Local {
typedef int Foo; // XXX
} p;
template_fun(p);
}
Here the typedef in XXX is only used at end-of-translation unit, when YYY in
template_fun() gets instantiated. To handle this, typedefs that are unused when
their scope exits are added to a set of potentially unused typedefs, and that
set gets checked at end-of-TU. Typedefs that are still unused at that point then
get warned on. There's also serialization code for this set, so that the
warning works with precompiled headers and modules. For modules, the warning
is emitted when the module is built, for precompiled headers each time the
header gets used.
Finally, consider a function using C++14 auto return types to return a local
type defined in a header:
auto f() {
struct S { typedef int a; };
return S();
}
Here, the typedef escapes its local scope and could be used by only some
translation units including the header. To not warn on this, add a
RecursiveASTVisitor that marks all delcs on local types returned from auto
functions as referenced. (Except if it's a function with internal linkage, or
the decls are private and the local type has no friends -- in these cases, it
_is_ safe to warn.)
Several of the included testcases (most of the interesting ones) were provided
by Richard Smith.
(gcc's spelling -Wunused-local-typedefs is supported as an alias for this
warning.)
llvm-svn: 217298
tables that correspond to ContinuousRangeMaps, since the keys to those
maps need to be unique, or we may map to the wrong offset.
This fixes a crash + malformed AST file seen when loading some modules
that import Cocoa on Darwin, which is a module with no contents except
imports of other modules. Unfortunately I have not been able to find a
reduced test case that reproduces this problem.
Also add an assert that we aren't mapping one key to multiple values
in CRM. We ought to be able to say there are no duplicate keys at all,
but there are a bunch of 0 -> 0 mappings that are showing up, probably
coming from the source location table.
llvm-svn: 215810
definitions (because some other declaration declares a special member that
isn't present in the canonical definition), we need to search *all* of them; we
can't just stop when we find the requested name in any of the definitions,
because that can fail to find things (and in particular, it can fail to find
the member of the canonical declaration and return a bogus ODR failure).
llvm-svn: 215612
redefinitions of that namespace have already been loaded. When writing out the
names in a namespace, if we see a name that is locally declared and had
imported declarations merged on top of it, export the local declaration as the
lookup result, because it will be the most recent declaration of that entity in
the redeclaration chain of an importer of the module.
llvm-svn: 215518
We already verified the primary module map file (either the one that
defines the top-level module, or the one that allows inferring it if it
is an inferred framework module). Now we also verify any other module
map files that define submodules, such as when there is a
module.private.modulemap file.
llvm-svn: 215455
class Module. It's almost always going to be the same as
getContainingModule() for top-level modules, so just add a map to cover
the remaining cases. This lets us do less bookkeeping to keep the
ModuleMap fields up to date.
llvm-svn: 215268
also emit the updated 'operator delete' looked up for that destructor. Switch
from UpdateDecl to an actual update record when this happens due to implicitly
defining a special member function and unify this code path and the one for
instantiating a function definition.
llvm-svn: 215132
intent when we added remark support, but was never implemented in the general
case, because the first -R flags didn't need it. (-Rpass= had special handling
to accomodate its argument.)
-Rno-foo, -Reverything, and -Rno-everything can be used to turn off a remark,
or to turn on or off all remarks. Per discussion on cfe-commits, -Weverything
does not affect remarks, and -Reverything does not affect warnings or errors.
The only "real" -R flag we have right now is -Rmodule-build; that flag is
effectively renamed from -Wmodule-build to -Rmodule-build by this change.
-Wpass and -Wno-pass (and their friends) are also renamed to -Rpass and
-Rno-pass by this change; it's not completely clear whether we intended to have
a -Rpass (with no =pattern), but that is unchanged by this commit, other than
the flag name. The default pattern is effectively one which matches no passes.
In future, we may want to make the default pattern be .*, so that -Reverything
works for -Rpass properly.
llvm-svn: 215046
* Add abbreviation for CXXMethodDecl and for FunctionProtoType. These come up
a *lot* in C++ modules.
* Allow typedef declarations to use the abbreviation if they're class members,
or if they're used.
In passing, add more record name records for Clang AST node kinds.
The downside is that we had already used up our allotment of 12 abbreviations,
so this pushes us to an extra bit on each record to support the extra abbrev
kinds, which increases file size by ~1%. This patch *barely* pays for that
through the other improvements, but we've got room for another 18 abbrevs,
so we should be able to make it much more profitable with future changes.
llvm-svn: 214024
* Track override set across module load and save
* Track originating module to allow proper re-export of #undef
* Make override set properly transitive when it picks up a #undef
This fixes nearly all of the remaining macro issues with self-host.
llvm-svn: 213922
thorough tests.
Original commit message:
[modules] Fix macro hiding bug exposed if:
* A submodule of module A is imported into module B
* Another submodule of module A that is not imported into B exports a macro
* Some submodule of module B also exports a definition of the macro, and
happens to be the first submodule of B that imports module A.
In this case, we would incorrectly determine that A's macro redefines B's
macro, and so we don't need to re-export B's macro at all.
This happens with the 'assert' macro in an LLVM self-host. =(
llvm-svn: 213416
This is breaking the system modules on Darwin, because something that
was defined and re-exported no longer is. Might be this patch, or might
just be a really poor interaction with an existing visibility bug.
This reverts commit r213348.
llvm-svn: 213395
* A submodule of module A is imported into module B
* Another submodule of module A that is not imported into B exports a macro
* Some submodule of module B also exports a definition of the macro, and
happens to be the first submodule of B that imports module A.
In this case, we would incorrectly determine that A's macro redefines B's
macro, and so we don't need to re-export B's macro at all.
This happens with the 'assert' macro in an LLVM self-host. =(
llvm-svn: 213348
This begins to address cognitive dissonance caused by treating the Note
diagnostic level as a severity in the diagnostic engine.
No change in functionality.
llvm-svn: 210758
Diagnostic mappings are used to calculate the final severity of diagnostic
instances.
Detangle the implementation to reflect the terminology used in documentation
and bindings.
No change in functionality.
llvm-svn: 210518
This patch implements support for selectively disabling optimizations on a
range of function definitions through a pragma. The implementation is that
all function definitions in the range are decorated with attribute
'optnone'.
#pragma clang optimize off
// All function definitions in here are decorated with 'optnone'.
#pragma clang optimize on
// Compilation resumes as normal.
llvm-svn: 209510
instantiated in another module, and the instantiation uses a partial
specialization, include the partial specialization and its template arguments
in the update record. We'll need them if someone imports the second module and
tries to instantiate a member of the template.
llvm-svn: 209472
ensure that querying the first declaration for its most recent declaration
checks for redeclarations from the imported module.
This works as follows:
* The 'most recent' pointer on a canonical declaration grows a pointer to the
external AST source and a generation number (space- and time-optimized for
the case where there is no external source).
* Each time the 'most recent' pointer is queried, if it has an external source,
we check whether it's up to date, and update it if not.
* The ancillary data stored on the canonical declaration is allocated lazily
to avoid filling it in for declarations that end up being non-canonical.
We'll still perform a redundant (ASTContext) allocation if someone asks for
the most recent declaration from a decl before setPreviousDecl is called,
but such cases are probably all bugs, and are now easy to find.
Some finessing is still in order here -- in particular, we use a very general
mechanism for handling the DefinitionData pointer on CXXRecordData, and a more
targeted approach would be more compact.
Also, the MayHaveOutOfDateDef mechanism should now be expunged, since it was
addressing only a corner of the full problem space here. That's not covered
by this patch.
Early performance benchmarks show that this makes no measurable difference to
Clang performance without modules enabled (and fixes a major correctness issue
with modules enabled). I'll revert if a full performance comparison shows any
problems.
llvm-svn: 209046