Compute and propagate conversion kind to diagnostics helper in C++
to provide more specific diagnostics about incorrect implicit
conversions in assignments, initializations, params, etc...
Duplicated some diagnostics as errors because C++ is more strict.
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74116
Summary:
Clang's "asm goto" feature didn't initially support outputs constraints. That
was the same behavior as gcc's implementation. The decision by gcc not to
support outputs was based on a restriction in their IR regarding terminators.
LLVM doesn't restrict terminators from returning values (e.g. 'invoke'), so
it made sense to support this feature.
Output values are valid only on the 'fallthrough' path. If an output value's used
on an indirect branch, then it's 'poisoned'.
In theory, outputs *could* be valid on the 'indirect' paths, but it's very
difficult to guarantee that the original semantics would be retained. E.g.
because indirect labels could be used as data, we wouldn't be able to split
critical edges in situations where two 'callbr' instructions have the same
indirect label, because the indirect branch's destination would no longer be
the same.
Reviewers: jyknight, nickdesaulniers, hfinkel
Reviewed By: jyknight, nickdesaulniers
Subscribers: MaskRay, rsmith, hiraditya, llvm-commits, cfe-commits, craig.topper, rnk
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69876
The diagnostic added in D72231 also shows a diagnostic when casting to a
_Bool. This is unwanted. This patch removes the diagnostic for _Bool types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74860
For tag typedefs like this one:
/*!
@class Foo
*/
typedef class { } Foo;
clang -Wdocumentation gives:
warning: '@class' command should not be used in a comment attached to a
non-struct declaration [-Wdocumentation]
... while doxygen seems fine with it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74746
Summary:
As @rsmith notes in https://reviews.llvm.org/D73020#inline-672219
while that is certainly UB land, it may not be actually reachable at runtime, e.g.:
```
template<int N> void *make() {
if ((N & (N-1)) == 0)
return operator new(N, std::align_val_t(N));
else
return operator new(N);
}
void *p = make<7>();
```
and we shouldn't really error-out there.
That being said, i'm not really following the logic here.
Which ones of these cases should remain being an error?
Reviewers: rsmith, erichkeane
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Subscribers: cfe-commits, rsmith
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73996
Use the more accurate location when emitting the location of the
function being called's prototype in diagnostics emitted when calling
a function with an incorrect number of arguments.
In particular, avoids showing a trace of irrelevant macro expansions
for "MY_EXPORT static int AwesomeFunction(int, int);". Fixes PR#23564.
Converting a pointer to an integer whose result cannot represented in the
integer type is undefined behavior is C and prohibited in C++. C++ already
has a diagnostic when casting. This adds a diagnostic for C.
Since this diagnostic uses the range of the conversion it also modifies
int-to-pointer-cast diagnostic to use a range.
Fixes PR8718: No warning on casting between pointer and non-pointer-sized int
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72231
Summary:
Zero-parameter K&R definitions specify that the function has no
parameters, but they are still not prototypes, so calling the function
with the wrong number of parameters is just a warning, not an error.
The C11 standard doesn't seem to directly define what a prototype is,
but it can be inferred from 6.9.1p7: "If the declarator includes a
parameter type list, the list also specifies the types of all the
parameters; such a declarator also serves as a function prototype
for later calls to the same function in the same translation unit."
This refers to 6.7.6.3p5: "If, in the declaration “T D1”, D1 has
the form
D(parameter-type-list)
or
D(identifier-list_opt)
[...]". Later in 6.11.7 it also refers only to the parameter-type-list
variant as prototype: "The use of function definitions with separate
parameter identifier and declaration lists (not prototype-format
parameter type and identifier declarators) is an obsolescent feature."
We already correctly treat an empty parameter list as non-prototype
declaration, so we can just take that information.
GCC also warns about this with -Wstrict-prototypes.
This shouldn't affect C++, because there all FunctionType's are
FunctionProtoTypes. I added a simple test for that.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66919
whether a call is to a builtin.
We already had a general mechanism to do this but for some reason
weren't using it. In passing, check for the other unary operators that
can intervene in a reasonably-direct function call (we already handled
'&' but missed '*' and '+').
This reverts commit aaae6b1b61,
reinstating af80b8ccc5, with a fix to
clang-tidy.
Summary:
These instructions generate a vector of consecutive elements starting
from a given base value and incrementing by 1, 2, 4 or 8. The `wdup`
versions also wrap the values back to zero when they reach a given
limit value. The instruction updates the scalar base register so that
another use of the same instruction will continue the sequence from
where the previous one left off.
At the IR level, I've represented these instructions as a family of
target-specific intrinsics with two return values (the constructed
vector and the updated base). The user-facing ACLE API provides a set
of intrinsics that throw away the written-back base and another set
that receive it as a pointer so they can update it, plus the usual
predicated versions.
Because the intrinsics return two values (as do the underlying
instructions), the isel has to be done in C++.
This is the first family of MVE intrinsics that use the `imm_1248`
immediate type in the clang Tablegen framework, so naturally, I found
I'd given it the wrong C integer type. Also added some tests of the
check that the immediate has a legal value, because this is the first
time those particular checks have been exercised.
Finally, I also had to fix a bug in MveEmitter which failed an
assertion when I nested two `seq` nodes (the inner one used to extract
the two values from the pair returned by the IR intrinsic, and the
outer one put on by the predication multiclass).
Reviewers: dmgreen, MarkMurrayARM, miyuki, ostannard
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73357
Summary:
The 'z' length modifier, signalling that an integer format specifier
takes a `size_t` sized integer, is only supported by the C library of
MSVC 2015 and later. Earlier versions don't recognize the 'z' at all,
and respond to `printf("%zu", x)` by just printing "zu".
So, if the MS compatibility version is set to a value earlier than
MSVC2015, it's useful to warn about 'z' modifiers in printf format
strings we check.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, lebedev.ri, rnk, majnemer, zturner
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: amccarth, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73457
whether a call is to a builtin.
We already had a general mechanism to do this but for some reason
weren't using it. In passing, check for the other unary operators that
can intervene in a reasonably-direct function call (we already handled
'&' but missed '*' and '+').
Implement a pessimistic evaluator of the minimal required size for a buffer
based on the format string, and couple that with the fortified version to emit a
warning when the buffer size is lower than the lower bound computed from the
format string.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71566
There is llvm::Value::MaximumAlignment, which is numerically
equivalent to these constants, but we can't use it directly
because we can't include llvm IR headers in clang Sema.
So instead, copy-paste the constant, and fixup the places to use it.
This was initially reviewed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D72998
Summary:
For `__builtin_assume_aligned()`, we do validate that the alignment
is not greater than `536870912` (D68824), but we don't do that for
`__attribute__((assume_aligned(N)))` attribute.
I suspect we should.
This was initially committed in a4cfb15d15
but reverted in 210f0882c9 due to
suspicious bot failures.
Reviewers: erichkeane, aaron.ballman, hfinkel, rsmith, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Subscribers: cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72994
Summary:
`alloc_align` attribute takes parameter number, not the alignment itself,
so given **just** the attribute/function declaration we can't do any
sanity checking for said alignment.
However, at call site, given the actual `Expr` that is passed
into that parameter, we //might// be able to evaluate said `Expr`
as Integer Constant Expression, and perform the sanity checks.
But since there is no requirement for that argument to be an immediate,
we may fail, and that's okay.
However if we did evaluate, we should enforce the same constraints
as with `__builtin_assume_aligned()`/`__attribute__((assume_aligned(imm)))`:
said alignment is a power of two, and is not greater than our magic threshold
This was initially committed in c2a9061ac5
but reverted in 00756b1823 because of
suspicious bot failures.
Reviewers: erichkeane, aaron.ballman, hfinkel, rsmith, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72996
Summary:
`alloc_align` attribute takes parameter number, not the alignment itself,
so given **just** the attribute/function declaration we can't do any
sanity checking for said alignment.
However, at call site, given the actual `Expr` that is passed
into that parameter, we //might// be able to evaluate said `Expr`
as Integer Constant Expression, and perform the sanity checks.
But since there is no requirement for that argument to be an immediate,
we may fail, and that's okay.
However if we did evaluate, we should enforce the same constraints
as with `__builtin_assume_aligned()`/`__attribute__((assume_aligned(imm)))`:
said alignment is a power of two, and is not greater than our magic threshold
Reviewers: erichkeane, aaron.ballman, hfinkel, rsmith, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72996
Summary:
For `__builtin_assume_aligned()`, we do validate that the alignment
is not greater than `536870912` (D68824), but we don't do that for
`__attribute__((assume_aligned(N)))` attribute.
I suspect we should.
Reviewers: erichkeane, aaron.ballman, hfinkel, rsmith, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Subscribers: cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72994
Summary:
Immediate vmvnq is code-generated as a simple vector constant in IR,
and left to the backend to recognize that it can be created with an
MVE VMVN instruction. The predicated version is represented as a
select between the input and the same constant, and I've added a
Tablegen isel rule to turn that into a predicated VMVN. (That should
be better than the previous VMVN + VPSEL: it's the same number of
instructions but now it can fold into an adjacent VPT block.)
The unpredicated forms of VBIC and VORR are done by enabling the same
isel lowering as for NEON, recognizing appropriate immediates and
rewriting them as ARMISD::VBICIMM / ARMISD::VORRIMM SDNodes, which I
then instruction-select into the right MVE instructions (now that I've
also reworked those instructions to use the same MC operand encoding).
In order to do that, I had to promote the Tablegen SDNode instance
`NEONvorrImm` to a general `ARMvorrImm` available in MVE as well, and
similarly for `NEONvbicImm`.
The predicated forms of VBIC and VORR are represented as a vector
select between the original input vector and the output of the
unpredicated operation. The main convenience of this is that it still
lets me use the existing isel lowering for VBICIMM/VORRIMM, and not
have to write another copy of the operand encoding translation code.
This intrinsic family is the first to use the `imm_simd` system I put
into the MveEmitter tablegen backend. So, naturally, it showed up a
bug or two (emitting bogus range checks and the like). Fixed those,
and added a full set of tests for the permissible immediates in the
existing Sema test.
Also adjusted the isel pattern for `vmovlb.u8`, which stopped matching
because lowering started turning its input into a VBICIMM. Now it
recognizes the VBICIMM instead.
Reviewers: dmgreen, MarkMurrayARM, miyuki, ostannard
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72934
This patch broke the Sanitizer buildbots. Please see the commit's
differential revision for more information
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D67678).
This reverts commit b72a8c65e4.
This is applied to the vector types defined in <arm_mve.h> for use
with the intrinsics for the ARM MVE vector architecture.
Its purpose is to inhibit lax vector conversions, but only in the
context of overload resolution of the MVE polymorphic intrinsic
functions. This solves an ambiguity problem with polymorphic MVE
intrinsics that take a vector and a scalar argument: the scalar
argument can often have the wrong integer type due to default integer
promotions or unsuffixed literals, and therefore, the type of the
vector argument should be considered trustworthy when resolving MVE
polymorphism.
As part of the same change, I've added the new attribute to the
declarations generated by the MveEmitter Tablegen backend (and
corrected a namespace issue with the other attribute while I was
there).
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, dmgreen
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, JDevlieghere, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72518
GCC supports the conditional operator on VectorTypes that acts as a
'select' in C++ mode. This patch implements the support. Types are
converted as closely to GCC's behavior as possible, though in a few
places consistency with our existing vector type support was preferred.
Note that this implementation is different from the OpenCL version in a
number of ways, so it unfortunately required a different implementation.
First, the SEMA rules and promotion rules are significantly different.
Secondly, GCC implements COND[i] != 0 ? LHS[i] : RHS[i] (where i is in
the range 0- VectorSize, for each element). In OpenCL, the condition is
COND[i] < 0 ? LHS[i]: RHS[i].
In the process of implementing this, it was also required to make the
expression COND ? LHS : RHS type dependent if COND is type dependent,
since the type is now dependent on the condition. For example:
T ? 1 : 2;
Is not typically type dependent, since the result can be deduced from
the operands. HOWEVER, if T is a VectorType now, it could change this
to a 'select' (basically a swizzle with a non-constant mask) with the 1
and 2 being promoted to vectors themselves.
While this is a change, it is NOT a standards incompatible change. Based
on my (and D. Gregor's, at the time of writing the code) reading of the
standard, the expression is supposed to be type dependent if ANY
sub-expression is type dependent.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71463
This feature is generic. Make it applicable for AArch64 and X86 because
the backend has only implemented NOP insertion for AArch64 and X86.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72221
Summary:
Avoid using the `nocf_check` attribute with Control Flow Guard. Instead, use a
new `"guard_nocf"` function attribute to indicate that checks should not be
added on indirect calls within that function. Add support for
`__declspec(guard(nocf))` following the same syntax as MSVC.
Reviewers: rnk, dmajor, pcc, hans, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: aaron.ballman, tomrittervg, hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72167
This change introduces three new builtins (which work on both pointers
and integers) that can be used instead of common bitwise arithmetic:
__builtin_align_up(x, alignment), __builtin_align_down(x, alignment) and
__builtin_is_aligned(x, alignment).
I originally added these builtins to the CHERI fork of LLVM a few years ago
to handle the slightly different C semantics that we use for CHERI [1].
Until recently these builtins (or sequences of other builtins) were
required to generate correct code. I have since made changes to the default
C semantics so that they are no longer strictly necessary (but using them
does generate slightly more efficient code). However, based on our experience
using them in various projects over the past few years, I believe that adding
these builtins to clang would be useful.
These builtins have the following benefit over bit-manipulation and casts
via uintptr_t:
- The named builtins clearly convey the semantics of the operation. While
checking alignment using __builtin_is_aligned(x, 16) versus
((x & 15) == 0) is probably not a huge win in readably, I personally find
__builtin_align_up(x, N) a lot easier to read than (x+(N-1))&~(N-1).
- They preserve the type of the argument (including const qualifiers). When
using casts via uintptr_t, it is easy to cast to the wrong type or strip
qualifiers such as const.
- If the alignment argument is a constant value, clang can check that it is
a power-of-two and within the range of the type. Since the semantics of
these builtins is well defined compared to arbitrary bit-manipulation,
it is possible to add a UBSAN checker that the run-time value is a valid
power-of-two. I intend to add this as a follow-up to this change.
- The builtins avoids int-to-pointer casts both in C and LLVM IR.
In the future (i.e. once most optimizations handle it), we could use the new
llvm.ptrmask intrinsic to avoid the ptrtoint instruction that would normally
be generated.
- They can be used to round up/down to the next aligned value for both
integers and pointers without requiring two separate macros.
- In many projects the alignment operations are already wrapped in macros (e.g.
roundup2 and rounddown2 in FreeBSD), so by replacing the macro implementation
with a builtin call, we get improved diagnostics for many call-sites while
only having to change a few lines.
- Finally, the builtins also emit assume_aligned metadata when used on pointers.
This can improve code generation compared to the uintptr_t casts.
[1] In our CHERI compiler we have compilation mode where all pointers are
implemented as capabilities (essentially unforgeable 128-bit fat pointers).
In our original model, casts from uintptr_t (which is a 128-bit capability)
to an integer value returned the "offset" of the capability (i.e. the
difference between the virtual address and the base of the allocation).
This causes problems for cases such as checking the alignment: for example, the
expression `if ((uintptr_t)ptr & 63) == 0` is generally used to check if the
pointer is aligned to a multiple of 64 bytes. The problem with offsets is that
any pointer to the beginning of an allocation will have an offset of zero, so
this check always succeeds in that case (even if the address is not correctly
aligned). The same issues also exist when aligning up or down. Using the
alignment builtins ensures that the address is used instead of the offset. While
I have since changed the default C semantics to return the address instead of
the offset when casting, this offset compilation mode can still be used by
passing a command-line flag.
Reviewers: rsmith, aaron.ballman, theraven, fhahn, lebedev.ri, nlopes, aqjune
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, lebedev.ri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71499
In common with most MVE immediate shift instructions, the left shift
takes an immediate in the range [0,n-1], while the right shift takes
one in the range [1,n]. I had absent-mindedly made them both the
latter.
While I'm here, I've added a set of regression tests checking both
ends of the immediate range for a representative sample of the
immediate shifts.
Summary:
The ACLE intrinsics with `gather_base` or `scatter_base` in the name
are wrappers on the MVE load/store instructions that take a vector of
base addresses and an immediate offset. The immediate offset can be up
to 127 times the alignment unit, and it can be positive or negative.
At the MC layer, we got that right. But in the Sema error checking for
the wrapping intrinsics, the offset was erroneously constrained to be
positive.
To fix this I've adjusted the `imm_mem7bit` class in the Tablegen that
defines the intrinsics. But that causes integer literals like
`0xfffffffffffffe04` to appear in the autogenerated calls to
`SemaBuiltinConstantArgRange`, which provokes a compiler warning
because that's out of the non-overflowing range of an `int64_t`. So
I've also tweaked `MveEmitter` to emit that as `-0x1fc` instead.
Updated the tests of the Sema checks themselves, and also adjusted a
random sample of the CodeGen tests to actually use negative offsets
and prove they get all the way through code generation without causing
a crash.
Reviewers: dmgreen, miyuki, MarkMurrayARM
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72268
The current handling of the operators ||, && and ?: has a number of false
positive and false negative. The issues for operator || and && are:
1. We need to add sequencing regions for the LHS and RHS as is done for the
comma operator. Not doing so causes false positives in expressions like
`((a++, false) || (a++, false))` (from PR39779, see PR22197 for another
example).
2. In the current implementation when the evaluation of the LHS fails, the RHS
is added to a worklist to be processed later. This results in false negatives
in expressions like `(a && a++) + a`.
Fix these issues by introducing sequencing regions for the LHS and RHS, and by
not deferring the visitation of the RHS.
The issues with the ternary operator ?: are similar, with the added twist that
we should not warn on expressions like `(x ? y += 1 : y += 2)` since exactly
one of the 2nd and 3rd expression is going to be evaluated, but we should still
warn on expressions like `(x ? y += 1 : y += 2) = y`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57747
Reviewed By: rsmith
These annotations will be used in an upcomming static analyzer check
that finds handle leaks, use after releases, and double releases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70469
Summary:
This adds parsing of the qualifiers __ptr32, __ptr64, __sptr, and __uptr and
lowers them to the corresponding address space pointer for 32-bit and 64-bit pointers.
(32/64-bit pointers added in https://reviews.llvm.org/D69639)
A large part of this patch is making these pointers ignore the address space
when doing things like overloading and casting.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42359
Reviewers: rnk, rsmith
Subscribers: jholewinski, jvesely, nhaehnle, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71039
The FP-classification builtins (__builtin_isfinite, etc) use variadic
packs in the definition file to mean an overload set. Because of that,
floats were converted to doubles, which is incorrect. There WAS a patch
to remove the cast after the fact.
THis patch switches these builtins to just be custom type checking,
calls the implicit conversions for the integer members, and makes sure
the correct L->R casts are put into place, then does type checking like
normal.
A future direction (that wouldn't be NFC) would consider making
conversions for the floating point parameter legal.
Note: The initial patch for this missed that certain systems need to
still convert half to float, since they dont' support that type.
This covers:
* usual arithmetic conversions (comparisons, arithmetic, conditionals)
between different enumeration types
* usual arithmetic conversions between enums and floating-point types
* comparisons between two operands of array type
The deprecation warnings are on-by-default (in C++20 compilations); it
seems likely that these forms will become ill-formed in C++23, so
warning on them now by default seems wise.
For the first two bullets, off-by-default warnings were also added for
all the cases where we didn't already have warnings (covering language
modes prior to C++20). These warnings are in subgroups of the existing
-Wenum-conversion (except that the first case is not warned on if either
enumeration type is anonymous, consistent with our existing
-Wenum-conversion warnings).
This reverts commit b1e542f302.
The original 'hack' didn't chop out fp-16 to double conversions, so
systems that use FP16ConversionIntrinsics end up in IR-CodeGen with an
i16 type isntead of a float type (like PPC64-BE). The bots noticed
this.
Reverting until I figure out how to fix this
The FP-classification builtins (__builtin_isfinite, etc) use variadic
packs in the definition file to mean an overload set. Because of that,
floats were converted to doubles, which is incorrect. There WAS a patch
to remove the cast after the fact.
THis patch switches these builtins to just be custom type checking,
calls the implicit conversions for the integer members, and makes sure
the correct L->R casts are put into place, then does type checking like
normal.
A future direction (that wouldn't be NFC) would consider making
conversions for the floating point parameter legal.
Now Clang does not check that features required by built-in functions
are enabled. That causes errors in the backend reported in PR44018.
This patch fixes this bug by checking that required features
are enabled.
This should fix PR44018.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70808
References need somewhat special treatment. While copying a gsl::Pointer
will propagate the points-to set, creating an object from a reference
often behaves more like a dereference operation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70755
Current EvalInfo ctor causes EnableNewConstInterp to be true even though
it is supposed to be false on MSVC 2017. This is because a virtual function
getLangOpts() is called in member initializer lists, whereas on MSVC
member ctors are called before function virtual function pointers are
initialized.
This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70729
Summary:
As noted in PR, we have a poor test coverage for this warning. I think macro support was just overlooked. GCC warns in these cases.
Clang missed a real bug in the code I am working with, GCC caught it.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70624
This fixes an assertion in Sema::CreateBuiltinBinOp that fails when one
of the vector operand's element type is a typedef of __fp16.
rdar://problem/55983556
Summary:
A user may want to use freestanding mode with the standard "main" entry
point. It's not useful to warn about a missing prototype as it's not
typical to have a prototype for "main".
Reviewers: efriedma, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: aaron.ballman, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70588
We seem to have been gradually growing support for atomic min/max operations
(exposing longstanding IR atomicrmw instructions). But until now there have
been gaps in the expected intrinsics. This adds support for the C11-style
intrinsics (i.e. taking _Atomic, rather than individually blessed by C11
standard), and the variants that return the new value instead of the original
one.
That way, people won't be misled by trying one form and it not working, and the
front-end is more friendly to people using _Atomic types, as we recommend.
Some clients of this function want to know about any expression that is known
to produce a 0/1 value, and others care about expressions that are semantically
boolean.
This fixes a -Wswitch-bool regression I introduced in 8bfb353bb3, pointed out
by Chris Hamilton!
Summary:
Semantically they're the same thing, and it's important when the underlying
struct is anonymous.
There doesn't seem to be a problem attaching the same comment to multiple things
as it already happens with `/** doc */ int a, b;`
This affects an Index test but the results look better (name present, USR points
to the typedef).
Fixes https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/189
Reviewers: kadircet, lh123
Subscribers: ilya-biryukov, jkorous, arphaman, usaxena95, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70203
Provides support for using r6-r11 as globally scoped
register variables. This requires a -ffixed-rN flag
in order to reserve rN against general allocation.
If for a given GRV declaration the corresponding flag
is not found, or the the register in question is the
target's FP, we fail with a diagnostic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68862
This adds the `vgetq_lane` and `vsetq_lane` families, to copy between
a scalar and a specified lane of a vector.
One of the new `vgetq_lane` intrinsics returns a `float16_t`, which
causes a compile error if `%clang_cc1` doesn't get the option
`-fallow-half-arguments-and-returns`. The driver passes that option to
cc1 already, but I've had to edit all the explicit cc1 command lines
in the existing MVE intrinsics tests.
A couple of fixes are included for the code I wrote up front in
MveEmitter to support lane-index immediates (and which nothing has
tested until now): the type was wrong (`uint32_t` instead of `int`)
and the range was off by one.
I've also added a method of bypassing the default promotion to `i32`
that is done by the MveEmitter code generation: it's sensible to
promote short scalars like `i16` to `i32` if they're going to be
passed to custom IR intrinsics representing a machine instruction
operating on GPRs, but not if they're going to be passed to standard
IR operations like `insertelement` which expect the exact type.
Reviewers: ostannard, MarkMurrayARM, dmgreen
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70188
This patch is a follow-up for commit 4e2ce228ae
[BPF] Add preserve_access_index attribute for record definition
to restrict attribute for C only. A new test case is added
to check for this restriction.
Additional code polishing is done based on
Aaron Ballman's suggestion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D69759/new/.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70257
This is a resubmission for the previous reverted commit
9434360401 with the same subject. This commit fixed the
segfault issue and addressed additional review comments.
This patch introduced a new bpf specific attribute which can
be added to struct or union definition. For example,
struct s { ... } __attribute__((preserve_access_index));
union u { ... } __attribute__((preserve_access_index));
The goal is to simplify user codes for cases
where preserve access index happens for certain struct/union,
so user does not need to use clang __builtin_preserve_access_index
for every members.
The attribute has no effect if -g is not specified.
When the attribute is specified and -g is specified, any member
access defined by that structure or union, including array subscript
access and inner records, will be preserved through
__builtin_preserve_{array,struct,union}_access_index()
IR intrinsics, which will enable relocation generation
in bpf backend.
The following is an example to illustrate the usage:
-bash-4.4$ cat t.c
#define __reloc__ __attribute__((preserve_access_index))
struct s1 {
int c;
} __reloc__;
struct s2 {
union {
struct s1 b[3];
};
} __reloc__;
struct s3 {
struct s2 a;
} __reloc__;
int test(struct s3 *arg) {
return arg->a.b[2].c;
}
-bash-4.4$ clang -target bpf -g -S -O2 t.c
A relocation with access string "0:0:0:0:2:0" will be generated
representing access offset of arg->a.b[2].c.
forward declaration with attribute is also handled properly such
that the attribute is copied and populated in real record definition.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69759
Some warnings in -Wtautological-compare subgroups are DefaultIgnore.
Adding this group to -Wmost, which is part of -Wall, will aid in their
discoverability.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69292
This patch introduced a new bpf specific attribute which can
be added to struct or union definition. For example,
struct s { ... } __attribute__((preserve_access_index));
union u { ... } __attribute__((preserve_access_index));
The goal is to simplify user codes for cases
where preserve access index happens for certain struct/union,
so user does not need to use clang __builtin_preserve_access_index
for every members.
The attribute has no effect if -g is not specified.
When the attribute is specified and -g is specified, any member
access defined by that structure or union, including array subscript
access and inner records, will be preserved through
__builtin_preserve_{array,struct,union}_access_index()
IR intrinsics, which will enable relocation generation
in bpf backend.
The following is an example to illustrate the usage:
-bash-4.4$ cat t.c
#define __reloc__ __attribute__((preserve_access_index))
struct s1 {
int c;
} __reloc__;
struct s2 {
union {
struct s1 b[3];
};
} __reloc__;
struct s3 {
struct s2 a;
} __reloc__;
int test(struct s3 *arg) {
return arg->a.b[2].c;
}
-bash-4.4$ clang -target bpf -g -S -O2 t.c
A relocation with access string "0:0:0:0:2:0" will be generated
representing access offset of arg->a.b[2].c.
forward declaration with attribute is also handled properly such
that the attribute is copied and populated in real record definition.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69759
While here, wordsmith the error a bit. Now clang says:
error: filter expression has non-integral type 'Foo'
Fixes PR43779
Reviewers: amccarth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69969
This patch adds two new families of intrinsics, both of which are
memory accesses taking a vector of locations to load from / store to.
The vldrq_gather_base / vstrq_scatter_base intrinsics take a vector of
base addresses, and an immediate offset to be added consistently to
each one. vldrq_gather_offset / vstrq_scatter_offset take a scalar
base address, and a vector of offsets to add to it. The
'shifted_offset' variants also multiply each offset by the element
size type, so that the vector is effectively of array indices.
At the IR level, these operations are represented by a single set of
four IR intrinsics: {gather,scatter} × {base,offset}. The other
details (signed/unsigned, shift, and memory element size as opposed to
vector element size) are all specified by IR intrinsic polymorphism
and immediate operands, because that made the selection job easier
than making a huge family of similarly named intrinsics.
I considered using the standard IR representations such as
llvm.masked.gather, but they're not a good fit. In order to use
llvm.masked.gather to represent a gather_offset load with element size
smaller than a pointer, you'd have to expand the <8 x i16> vector of
offsets into an <8 x i16*> vector of pointers, which would be split up
during legalization, so you'd spend most of your time undoing the mess
it had made. Also, ISel support for llvm.masked.gather would be easy
enough in a trivial way (you can expand it into a gather-base load
with a zero immediate offset), but instruction-selecting lots of
fiddly idioms back into all the _other_ MVE load instructions would be
much more work. So I think dedicated IR intrinsics are the more
sensible approach, at least for the moment.
On the clang tablegen side, I've added two new features to the
Tablegen source accepted by MveEmitter: a 'CopyKind' type node for
defining a type that varies with the parameter type (it lets you ask
for an unsigned integer type of the same width as the parameter), and
an 'unsignedflag' value node for passing an immediate IR operand which
is 0 for a signed integer type or 1 for an unsigned one. That lets me
write each kind of intrinsic just once and get all its subtypes and
immediate arguments generated automatically.
Also I've tweaked the handling of pointer-typed values in the code
generation part of MveEmitter: they're generated as Address rather
than Value (i.e. including an alignment) so that they can be given to
the ordinary IR load and store operations, but I'd omitted the code to
convert them back to Value when they're going to be used as an
argument to an IR intrinsic.
On the MC side, I've enhanced MVEVectorVTInfo so that it can tell you
not only the full assembly-language suffix for a given vector type
(like 's32' or 'u16') but also the numeric-only one used by store
instructions (just '32' or '16').
Reviewers: dmgreen
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69791
Summary:
This is a follow up on https://reviews.llvm.org/D61634
This patch is simpler and only adds the no_builtin attribute.
Reviewers: tejohnson, courbet, theraven, t.p.northover, jdoerfert
Subscribers: mgrang, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68028
This is a re-submit after it got reverted in https://reviews.llvm.org/rGbd8791610948 since the breakage doesn't seem to come from this patch.
Summary:
This is a follow up on https://reviews.llvm.org/D61634
This patch is simpler and only adds the no_builtin attribute.
Reviewers: tejohnson, courbet, theraven, t.p.northover, jdoerfert
Subscribers: mgrang, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68028
See also: D67515
- For the given call expression we would end up repeatedly
trying to transform the same expression over and over again
- Fix is to keep the old TransformCache when checking for ambiguity
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69060
This allows you to declare a function with a name of your choice (say
`foo`), but have clang treat it as if it were a builtin function (say
`__builtin_foo`), by writing
static __inline__ __attribute__((__clang_arm_mve_alias(__builtin_foo)))
int foo(args);
I'm intending to use this for the ACLE intrinsics for MVE, which have
to be polymorphic on their argument types and also need to be
implemented by builtins. To avoid having to implement the polymorphism
with several layers of nested _Generic and make error reporting
hideous, I want to make all the user-facing intrinsics correspond
directly to clang builtins, so that after clang resolves
__attribute__((overloadable)) polymorphism it's already holding the
right BuiltinID for the intrinsic it selected.
However, this commit itself just introduces the new attribute, and
doesn't use it for anything.
To avoid unanticipated side effects if this attribute is used to make
aliases to other builtins, there's a restriction mechanism: only
(BuiltinID, alias) pairs that are approved by the function
ArmMveAliasValid() will be permitted. At present, that function
doesn't permit anything, because the Tablegen that will generate its
list of valid pairs isn't yet implemented. So the only test of this
facility is one that checks that an unapproved builtin _can't_ be
aliased.
Reviewers: dmgreen, miyuki, ostannard
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67159
Taking a value and the bitwise-or it with a non-zero constant will always
result in a non-zero value. In a boolean context, this is always true.
if (x | 0x4) {} // always true, intended '&'
This patch creates a new warning group -Wtautological-bitwise-compare for this
warning. It also moves in the existing tautological bitwise comparisons into
this group. A few other changes were needed to the CFGBuilder so that all bool
contexts would be checked. The warnings in -Wtautological-bitwise-compare will
be off by default due to using the CFG.
Fixes: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42666
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66046
llvm-svn: 375318
__builtin_assume_aligned takes a size_t which is a 32 bit int on
hexagon. Thus, the constant gets converted to a 32 bit value, resulting
in 0 not being a power of 2. This patch changes the constant being
passed to 2**30 so that it fails, but doesnt exceed 30 bits.
llvm-svn: 374569
The behavior from the original patch has changed, since we're no longer
allowing LLVM to just ignore the alignment. Instead, we're just
assuming the maximum possible alignment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68824
llvm-svn: 374562
The test fails on Windows, with
error: 'warning' diagnostics expected but not seen:
File builtin-assume-aligned.c Line 62: requested alignment
must be 268435456 bytes or smaller; assumption ignored
error: 'warning' diagnostics seen but not expected:
File builtin-assume-aligned.c Line 62: requested alignment
must be 8192 bytes or smaller; assumption ignored
llvm-svn: 374456
Code to handle __builtin_assume_aligned was allowing larger values, but
would convert this to unsigned along the way. This patch removes the
EmitAssumeAligned overloads that take unsigned to do away with this
problem.
Additionally, it adds a warning that values greater than 1 <<29 are
ignored by LLVM.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68824
llvm-svn: 374450
I noticed that compiling on Windows with -fno-ms-compatibility had the
side effect of defining __GNUC__, along with __GNUG__, __GXX_RTTI__, and
a number of other macros for GCC compatibility. This is undesirable and
causes Chromium to do things like mix __attribute__ and __declspec,
which doesn't work. We should have a positive language option to enable
GCC compatibility features so that we can experiment with
-fno-ms-compatibility on Windows. This change adds -fgnuc-version= to be
that option.
My issue aside, users have, for a long time, reported that __GNUC__
doesn't match their expectations in one way or another. We have
encouraged users to migrate code away from this macro, but new code
continues to be written assuming a GCC-only environment. There's really
nothing we can do to stop that. By adding this flag, we can allow them
to choose their own adventure with __GNUC__.
This overlaps a bit with the "GNUMode" language option from -std=gnu*.
The gnu language mode tends to enable non-conforming behaviors that we'd
rather not enable by default, but the we want to set things like
__GXX_RTTI__ by default, so I've kept these separate.
Helps address PR42817
Reviewed By: hans, nickdesaulniers, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68055
llvm-svn: 374449
Summary:
Character buffers are sometimes used to represent a pool of memory that
contains non-character objects, due to them being synonymous with a stream of
bytes on almost all modern architectures. Often, when interacting with hardware
devices, byte buffers are therefore used as an intermediary and so we can end
Character buffers are sometimes used to represent a pool of memory that
contains non-character objects, due to them being synonymous with a stream of
bytes on almost all modern architectures. Often, when interacting with hardware
devices, byte buffers are therefore used as an intermediary and so we can end
up generating lots of false-positives.
Moreover, due to the ability of character pointers to alias non-character
pointers, the strict aliasing violations that would generally be implied by the
calculations caught by the warning (if the calculation itself is in fact
correct) do not apply here, and so although the length calculation may be
wrong, that is the only possible issue.
Reviewers: rsmith, xbolva00, thakis
Reviewed By: xbolva00, thakis
Subscribers: thakis, lebedev.ri, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68526
llvm-svn: 374035
The warnings now in -Wformat-type-confusion don't align with how we interpret
'pedantic' in clang, and don't belong in -pedantic.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67775
llvm-svn: 373774