Previously, it was a tedious task to comprehend Z3 dumps.
We will use the same name prefix just as we use in the corresponding dump method
For all `SymbolData` values:
`$###` -> `conj_$###`
`$###` -> `derived_$###`
`$###` -> `extent_$###`
`$###` -> `meta_$###`
`$###` -> `reg_$###`
Reviewed By: xazax.hun,mikhail.ramalho
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86223
We did not evaluate such expressions, just returned `Unknown` for such cases.
After this patch, we will be able to access a unique value identifying a template instantiation via the value of the `PRETTY_FUNCTION` predefined expression.
Reviewed By: vsavchenko
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87004
This is recommit of 6c8041aa0f, reverted in de044f7562 because of some
fails. Original commit message is below.
This change allow a CastExpr to have optional FPOptionsOverride object,
stored in trailing storage. Of all cast nodes only ImplicitCastExpr,
CStyleCastExpr, CXXFunctionalCastExpr and CXXStaticCastExpr are allowed
to have FPOptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85960
Right now the ASTImporter assumes for most Expr nodes that they are always equal
which leads to non-compatible declarations ending up being merged. This patch
adds the basic framework for comparing Stmts (and with that also Exprs) and
implements the custom checks for a few Stmt subclasses. I'll implement the
remaining subclasses in follow up patches (mostly because there are a lot of
subclasses and some of them require further changes like having GNU language in
the testing framework)
The motivation for this is that in LLDB we try to import libc++ source code and
some of the types we are importing there contain expressions (e.g. because they
use `enable_if<expr>`), so those declarations are currently merged even if they
are completely different (e.g. `enable_if<value> ...` and `enable_if<!value>
...` are currently considered equal which is clearly not true).
Reviewed By: martong, balazske
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87444
gcov is an "Edge Profiling with Edge Counters" application according to
Optimally Profiling and Tracing Programs (1994).
The minimum number of counters necessary is |E|-(|V|-1). The unmeasured edges
form a spanning tree. Both GCC --coverage and clang -fprofile-generate leverage
this optimization. This patch implements the optimization for clang --coverage.
The produced .gcda files are much smaller now.
Adds link/code sample to avoid rendering two dashes as non-ASCII "en dash".
Also make wording a complete sentence.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers, tmfink
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85596
Also add the +mutable-globals features in clang when
building with `-fPIC` since the linker will generate mutable
globals imports and exports in that case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87537
i.e. change the work flow from
* .gcno for function A
* .gcno for function B
* .gcno for function C
* .gcda for function A
* .gcda for function B
* .gcda for function C
to
* .gcno for function A
* .gcda for function A
* .gcno for function B
* .gcda for function B
* .gcno for function C
* .gcda for function C
Currently there is duplicate logic in .gcno & .gcda processing: how functions
are filtered, which edges are instrumented, etc. This refactor enables simplification.
Since we always process .gcno, in -fprofile-arcs -fno-test-coverage mode,
__llvm_internal_gcov_emit_function_args.0 will have non-zero checksums.
In MinGW world, UNIX like lib prefix is preferred for the libraries.
This patch adjusts CMake files to do that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87517
After the recent discussion on cfe-dev 'Can indirect class parameters be
noalias?' [1], it seems like using using noalias is problematic for
current C++, but should be allowed for C-only code.
This patch introduces a new option to let the user indicate that it is
safe to mark indirect class parameters as noalias. Note that this also
applies to external callers, e.g. it might not be safe to use this flag
for C functions that are called by C++ functions.
In targets that allocate indirect arguments in the called function, this
enables more agressive optimizations with respect to memory operations
and brings a ~1% - 2% codesize reduction for some programs.
[1] : http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2020-July/066353.html
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85473
NOTE: There is a mailing list discussion on this: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-December/137632.html
Complemantary to the assumption outliner prototype in D71692, this patch
shows how we could simplify the code emitted for an alignemnt
assumption. The generated code is smaller, less fragile, and it makes it
easier to recognize the additional use as a "assumption use".
As mentioned in D71692 and on the mailing list, we could adopt this
scheme, and similar schemes for other patterns, without adopting the
assumption outlining.
This change allow a CastExpr to have optional FPOptionsOverride object,
stored in trailing storage. Of all cast nodes only ImplicitCastExpr,
CStyleCastExpr, CXXFunctionalCastExpr and CXXStaticCastExpr are allowed
to have FPOptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85960
Because why would that be necessary? (I joke - I hadn't actually
expected this to be an issue but a content-hash-named filesystem means
the clang binary's just a bunch of numbers, and doesn't have 'clang'
anywhere in the name)
Building on Mac OS with clang 12:
```
jhemphill@jhemphill-mbp build % clang --version
Apple clang version 12.0.0 (clang-1200.0.26.2)
Target: x86_64-apple-darwin19.6.0
Thread model: posix
InstalledDir: /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/usr/bin
```
yields one warning:
```
/Users/jhemphill/oss/llvm-project/clang/lib/Tooling/Syntax/BuildTree.cpp:1126:22: warning: loop variable 'Arg' is always a copy because the range of type 'llvm::iterator_range<clang::Stmt::CastIterator<clang::Expr, clang::Expr *, clang::Stmt *> >' does not return a reference [-Wrange-loop-analysis]
for (const auto &Arg : Args) {
^
/Users/jhemphill/oss/llvm-project/clang/lib/Tooling/Syntax/BuildTree.cpp:1126:10: note: use non-reference type 'clang::Expr *'
for (const auto &Arg : Args) {
```
It appears that `Arg` is an `Expr*`, passed by value rather than by const reference.
Reviewed By: eduucaldas, gribozavr2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87482
Introduce a new attribute that is used to indicate the error handling
convention used by a function. This is used to translate the error
semantics from the decorated interface to a compatible Swift interface.
The supported error convention is one of:
- none: no error handling
- nonnull_error: a non-null error parameter indicates an error signifier
- null_result: a return value of NULL is an error signifier
- zero_result: a return value of 0 is an error signifier
- nonzero_result: a non-zero return value is an error signifier
Since this is the first of the attributes needed to support the semantic
annotation for Swift, this change also includes the necessary supporting
infrastructure for a new category of attributes (Swift).
This is based on the work of the original changes in
8afaf3aad2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87331
Reviewed By: John McCall, Aaron Ballman, Dmitri Gribenko
gcc translates -gz=zlib to --compress-debug-options=zlib for both assembler and linker
but clang only does this for assembler.
The linker needs --compress-debug-options=zlib option to compress the debug sections
in the generated executable or shared library.
Due to this bug, -gz=zlib has no effect on the generated executable or shared library.
This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87321
In a future patch
* Implement helper function to generate Trees for tests
* and test Tree methods, namely `findFirstLeaf` and `findLastLeaf`
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87533
In generating the code for symmetric transfer, a temporary object is created to store the returned handle from await_suspend() call of the awaiter. Previously this temp won't be cleaned up until very later, which ends up causing this temp to be spilled to the heap. However, we know that this temp will no longer be needed after the coro_resume call. We can clean it up right after.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87470
d4ce862f introduced HasStrictFP to disable generating constrained FP
operations for platforms lacking support. Since work for enabling
constrained FP on PowerPC is almost done, we'd like to enable it.
Reviewed By: kpn, steven.zhang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87223
Based on the discussion in D82598#2171312. Thanks @NoQ!
D82598 is titled "Get rid of statement liveness, because such a thing doesn't
exist", and indeed, expressions express a value, non-expression statements
don't.
if (a && get() || []{ return true; }())
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ has a value
~ has a value
~~~~~~~~~~ has a value
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ has a value
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ doesn't have a value
That is simple enough, so it would only make sense if we only assigned symbolic
values to expressions in the static analyzer. Yet the interface checkers can
access presents, among other strange things, the following two methods:
ProgramState::BindExpr(const Stmt *S, const LocationContext *LCtx, SVal V,
bool Invalidate=true)
ProgramState::getSVal(const Stmt *S, const LocationContext *LCtx)
So, what gives? Turns out, we make an exception for ReturnStmt (which we'll
leave for another time) and ObjCForCollectionStmt. For any other loops, in order
to know whether we should analyze another iteration, among other things, we
evaluate it's condition. Which is a problem for ObjCForCollectionStmt, because
it simply doesn't have one (CXXForRangeStmt has an implicit one!). In its
absence, we assigned the actual statement with a concrete 1 or 0 to indicate
whether there are any more iterations left. However, this is wildly incorrect,
its just simply not true that the for statement has a value of 1 or 0, we can't
calculate its liveness because that doesn't make any sense either, so this patch
turns it into a GDM trait.
Fixing this allows us to reinstate the assert removed in
https://reviews.llvm.org/rG032b78a0762bee129f33e4255ada6d374aa70c71.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86736
In short, macro expansions handled the case where a variadic parameter mapped to
multiple arguments, but not the other way around. An internal ticket was
submitted that demonstrated that we fail an assertion. Macro expansion so far
worked by lexing the source code token-by-token and using the Preprocessor to
turn these tokens into identifiers or just get their proper spelling, but what
this counter intuitively doesn't do, is actually expand these macros, so we have
to do the heavy lifting -- in this case, figure out what __VA_ARGS__ expands
into. Since this case can only occur in a nested macro, the information we
gathered from the containing macro does contain this information. If a parameter
resolves to __VA_ARGS__, we need to temporarily stop getting our tokens from the
lexer, and get the tokens from what __VA_ARGS__ maps to.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86135
Summary:
This is the first patch implementing the new Flang driver as outlined in [1],
[2] & [3]. It creates Flang driver (`flang-new`) and Flang frontend driver
(`flang-new -fc1`). These will be renamed as `flang` and `flang -fc1` once the
current Flang throwaway driver, `flang`, can be replaced with `flang-new`.
Currently only 2 options are supported: `-help` and `--version`.
`flang-new` is implemented in terms of libclangDriver, defaulting the driver
mode to `FlangMode` (added to libclangDriver in [4]). This ensures that the
driver runs in Flang mode regardless of the name of the binary inferred from
argv[0].
The design of the new Flang compiler and frontend drivers is inspired by it
counterparts in Clang [3]. Currently, the new Flang compiler and frontend
drivers re-use Clang libraries: clangBasic, clangDriver and clangFrontend.
To identify Flang options, this patch adds FlangOption/FC1Option enums.
Driver::printHelp is updated so that `flang-new` prints only Flang options.
The new Flang driver is disabled by default. To enable it, set
`-DBUILD_FLANG_NEW_DRIVER=ON` when configuring CMake and add clang to
`LLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS` (e.g. -DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS=“clang;flang;mlir”).
[1] “RFC: new Flang driver - next steps”
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/flang-dev/2020-July/000470.html
[2] “RFC: Adding a fortran mode to the clang driver for flang”
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-June/062669.html
[3] “RFC: refactoring libclangDriver/libclangFrontend to share with Flang”
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2020-July/066393.html
[4] https://reviews.llvm.org/rG6bf55804924d5a1d902925ad080b1a2b57c5c75c
co-authored-by: Andrzej Warzynski <andrzej.warzynski@arm.com>
Reviewed By: richard.barton.arm, sameeranjoshi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86089
As reported in Bug 42535, `clang` doesn't inline atomic ops on 32-bit
Sparc, unlike `gcc` on Solaris. In a 1-stage build with `gcc`, only two
testcases are affected (currently `XFAIL`ed), while in a 2-stage build more
than 100 tests `FAIL` due to this issue.
The reason for this `gcc`/`clang` difference is that `gcc` on 32-bit
Solaris/SPARC defaults to `-mpcu=v9` where atomic ops are supported, unlike
with `clang`'s default of `-mcpu=v8`. This patch changes `clang` to use
`-mcpu=v9` on 32-bit Solaris/SPARC, too.
Doing so uncovered two bugs:
`clang -m32 -mcpu=v9` chokes with any Solaris system headers included:
/usr/include/sys/isa_defs.h:461:2: error: "Both _ILP32 and _LP64 are defined"
#error "Both _ILP32 and _LP64 are defined"
While `clang` currently defines `__sparcv9` in a 32-bit `-mcpu=v9`
compilation, neither `gcc` nor Studio `cc` do. In fact, the Studio 12.6
`cc(1)` man page clearly states:
These predefinitions are valid in all modes:
[...]
__sparcv8 (SPARC)
__sparcv9 (SPARC -m64)
At the same time, the patch defines `__GCC_HAVE_SYNC_COMPARE_AND_SWAP_[1248]`
for a 32-bit Sparc compilation with any V9 cpu. I've also changed
`MaxAtomicInlineWidth` for V9, matching what `gcc` does and the Oracle
Developer Studio 12.6: C User's Guide documents (Ch. 3, Support for Atomic
Types, 3.1 Size and Alignment of Atomic C Types).
The two testcases that had been `XFAIL`ed for Bug 42535 are un-`XFAIL`ed
again.
Tested on `sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11` and `amd64-pc-solaris2.11`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86621
This patch updates the documentation about `__builtin_memcpy_inline` and reorders the sections so it is more consitent and understandable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87458
The tests have been updated and I plan to move them from the MSSA
directory up.
Some end-to-end tests needed small adjustments. One difference to the
legacy DSE is that legacy DSE also deletes trivially dead instructions
that are unrelated to memory operations. Because MemorySSA-backed DSE
just walks the MemorySSA, we only visit/check memory instructions. But
removing unrelated dead instructions is not really DSE's job and other
passes will clean up.
One noteworthy change is in llvm/test/Transforms/Coroutines/ArgAddr.ll,
but I think this comes down to legacy DSE not handling instructions that
may throw correctly in that case. To cover this with MemorySSA-backed
DSE, we need an update to llvm.coro.begin to treat it's return value to
belong to the same underlying object as the passed pointer.
There are some minor cases MemorySSA-backed DSE currently misses, e.g. related
to atomic operations, but I think those can be implemented after the switch.
This has been discussed on llvm-dev:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-August/144417.html
For the MultiSource/SPEC2000/SPEC2006 the number of eliminated stores
goes from ~17500 (legayc DSE) to ~26300 (MemorySSA-backed). More numbers
and details in the thread on llvm-dev.
Impact on CTMark:
```
Legacy Pass Manager
exec instrs size-text
O3 + 0.60% - 0.27%
ReleaseThinLTO + 1.00% - 0.42%
ReleaseLTO-g. + 0.77% - 0.33%
RelThinLTO (link only) + 0.87% - 0.42%
RelLO-g (link only) + 0.78% - 0.33%
```
http://llvm-compile-time-tracker.com/compare.php?from=3f22e96d95c71ded906c67067d75278efb0a2525&to=ae8be4642533ff03803967ee9d7017c0d73b0ee0&stat=instructions
```
New Pass Manager
exec instrs. size-text
O3 + 0.95% - 0.25%
ReleaseThinLTO + 1.34% - 0.41%
ReleaseLTO-g. + 1.71% - 0.35%
RelThinLTO (link only) + 0.96% - 0.41%
RelLO-g (link only) + 2.21% - 0.35%
```
http://195.201.131.214:8000/compare.php?from=3f22e96d95c71ded906c67067d75278efb0a2525&to=ae8be4642533ff03803967ee9d7017c0d73b0ee0&stat=instructions
Reviewed By: asbirlea, xbolva00, nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87163
Currently AMDGPU does not support sanitizer. Disable
sanitizer options for now until they are supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87461