This patch extends the -fzvector language feature to enable the new
"vector float" data type when compiling at -march=z14. This matches
the updated extension definition implemented by other compilers for
the platform, which is indicated to applications by pre-defining
__VEC__ to 10302 (instead of 10301).
llvm-svn: 308198
This patch series adds support for the IBM z14 processor. This part includes:
- Basic support for the new processor and its features.
- Support for low-level builtins mapped to new LLVM intrinsics.
Support for the -fzvector extension to vector float and the new
high-level vector intrinsics is provided by separate patches.
llvm-svn: 308197
The goal of this commit is to fix clang-format so it does not merge tokens when
using the alternative spelling keywords. (eg: "not foo" should not become "notfoo")
The problem is that Preprocessor::HandleIdentifier used to drop the identifier info
from the token for these keyword. This means the first condition of
TokenAnnotator::spaceRequiredBefore is not met. We could add explicit check for
the spelling in that condition, but I think it is better to keep the IdentifierInfo
and handle the operator keyword explicitly when needed. That actually leads to simpler
code, and probably slightly more efficient as well.
Another side effect of this change is that __identifier(and) will now work as
one would expect, removing a FIXME from the MicrosoftExtensions.cpp test
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35172
llvm-svn: 308008
This introduces helper functions that set target defines for different ARMV8-A
architecture kinds. It fixes an issue that the v8.1 define ARM_FEATURE_QRDMX
was not set for v8.2. These helper functions make things more “scalable” if we
want to add ARMv8.3 at some point, and a cleanup has been done to hold the
architecture kind in one variable (instead of one for each).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34686
llvm-svn: 306805
Summary: This is the clang part of the initial implementation to support Windows ARM64 COFF format.
Reviewers: ruiu, t.p.northover, rnk, compnerd
Reviewed By: ruiu, compnerd
Subscribers: aemerson, kristof.beyls, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34706
llvm-svn: 306489
This reverts commit r305399.
This breaks a build in libcxx:
libcxx/src/system_error.cpp:90:16: error: assigning to 'int' from incompatible type 'char *'
if ((ret = ::strerror_r(ev, buffer, strerror_buff_size)) != 0) {
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1 error generated.
Which makes sense according to:
https://linux.die.net/man/3/strerror_r
Not entirely sure how this needs to be fixed.
llvm-svn: 305456
The test in r304929 broke multiple buildbots as it expected mips target to
be registered and available (which is not necessarily true). Updating the
test with this condition.
Original commit:
[mips] Add runtime options to enable/disable madd.fmt and msub.fmt
Add options to clang: -mmadd4 and -mno-madd4, use it to enable or disable
generation of madd.fmt and similar instructions respectively, as per GCC.
Patch by Stefan Maksimovic.
llvm-svn: 304953
Revert r304929 since the test broke buildbots.
Original commit:
[mips] Add runtime options to enable/disable madd.fmt and msub.fmt
Add options to clang: -mmadd4 and -mno-madd4, use it to enable or disable
generation of madd.fmt and similar instructions respectively, as per GCC.
Patch by Stefan Maksimovic.
llvm-svn: 304935
Add options to clang: -mmadd4 and -mno-madd4, use it to enable or disable
generation of madd.fmt and similar instructions respectively, as per GCC.
Patch by Stefan Maksimovic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33401
llvm-svn: 304929
The WebAssembly threads proposal has changed such that C++
implementations can now declare that atomics up to 64 bits are
"lock free" in C++'s terms.
llvm-svn: 304859
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
The whitespace should come from the argument name in the macro
expansion, rather than from the token passed to the macro (same as it
does when not pasting).
Added a new test case for the change in behavior to stringize_space.c.
FileCheck'ized macro_paste_commaext.c, tweaked the test case, and
added a comment; no behavioral change to this test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30427
llvm-svn: 302195
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
diagnostic in #pragma diagnostic
This matches the warning group that's specified for the unknown warning options
that are passed-in as command line arguments.
rdar://29526025
llvm-svn: 301647
size_t is usually defined as unsigned long, but on 64-bit platforms,
stdint.h currently defines SIZE_MAX using "ull" (unsigned long long).
Although this is the same width, it doesn't necessarily have the same
alignment or calling convention. It also triggers printf warnings when
using the format flag "%zu" to print SIZE_MAX.
This changes SIZE_MAX to reuse the compiler-provided __SIZE_MAX__, and
provides similar fixes for the other integers:
- INTPTR_MIN
- INTPTR_MAX
- UINTPTR_MAX
- PTRDIFF_MIN
- PTRDIFF_MAX
- INTMAX_MIN
- INTMAX_MAX
- UINTMAX_MAX
- INTMAX_C()
- UINTMAX_C()
... and fixes the typedefs for intptr_t and uintptr_t to use
__INTPTR_TYPE__ and __UINTPTR_TYPE__ instead of int32_t, effectively
reverting r89224, r89226, and r89237 (r89221 already having been
effectively reverted).
We can probably also kill __INTPTR_WIDTH__, __INTMAX_WIDTH__, and
__UINTMAX_WIDTH__ in a follow-up, but I was hesitant to delete all the
per-target CHECK lines in this commit since those might serve their own
purpose.
rdar://problem/11811377
llvm-svn: 301593
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
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 typically is only for a new enough linker (bfd >= 2.16.2 or gold), but
our ppc suppport post-dates this and it should work on all linux platforms. It
is guaranteed to work on all elfv2 platforms.
llvm-svn: 298765
Summary:
Historically, NetBSD, FreeBSD and OpenBSD have defined the macro ABICALLS in
the preprocessor when -mabicalls is in effect.
Mainline GCC later defined __mips_abicalls when -mabicalls is in effect.
This patch teaches the preprocessor to define these macros when appropriate.
NetBSD does not require the ABICALLS macro.
This resolves PR/31694.
Thanks to Sean Bruno for highlighting this issue!
Reviewers: slthakur, seanbruno
Reviewed By: seanbruno
Subscribers: joerg, brad, emaste, seanbruno, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29032
llvm-svn: 295728