MSVC delays parsing of default arguments until instantiation. If the
default argument is never used, it is never parsed. We don't model
this.
Instead, if lookup of a type name fails in a template argument context,
we form a DependentNameType, which will be looked up at instantiation
time.
This fixes errors about 'CControlWinTraits' in atlwin.h.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3995
llvm-svn: 210382
This patch implements call lower from dynamic_cast to __RTDynamicCast
and __RTCastToVoid. Test cases are included. A feature of note is that
helper function getPolymorphicOffset is placed in such a way that it can
be used by EmitTypeid (to be implemented in a later patch) without being
moved. Details are included as comments directly in the code.
llvm-svn: 210377
A previous patch r210330 (and possibly another) introduced DOS-style newlines
into a UNIX newline formatted file.
Patch by Mark Heffernan (http://reviews.llvm.org/D4046)
llvm-svn: 210369
As suggested by Reid:
- class has GVA_Internal linkage -> internal
- thunk has return adjustment -> weak_odr, to handle evil corner case [1]
- all other normal methods -> linkonce_odr
1. Evil corner case:
struct Incomplete;
struct A { int a; virtual A *bar(); };
struct B { int b; virtual B *foo(Incomplete); };
struct C : A, B { int c; virtual C *foo(Incomplete); };
C c;
Here, the thunk for C::foo() will be emitted when C::foo() is defined, which
might be in a different translation unit, so it needs to be weak_odr.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3992
llvm-svn: 210368
We would previously fail to emit a definition of bar() for the following code:
struct __declspec(dllexport) S {
void foo() {
t->bar();
}
struct T {
void bar() {}
};
T *t;
};
Note that foo() is an exported method, but bar() is not. However, foo() refers
to bar() so we need to emit its definition. We would previously fail to
realise that bar() is used.
By deferring the method definitions until the end of the top level declaration,
we can simply call EmitTopLevelDecl on them and rely on the usual mechanisms
to decide whether the method should be emitted or not.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4038
llvm-svn: 210356
results in a template having too many arguments, but all the trailing arguments
are packs, that's OK if we have a partial pack substitution: the trailing pack
expansions may end up empty.
llvm-svn: 210350
The PowerPC vector-pack instructions are defined architecturally with
a big-endian bias, in that the vector element numbering is assumed to
be "left to right" regardless of whether the processor is in
big-endian or little-endian mode. This definition is unnatural for
little-endian code generation.
To facilitate ease of porting, the vec_pack and related interfaces are
designed to use natural element ordering, so that elements are
numbered according to little-endian design principles when code is
generated for a little-endian target. The vec_pack calls are
implemented as calls to vec_perm, specifying selection of the
odd-numbered vector elements. For little endian, this means the
odd-numbered elements counting from the right end of the register.
Since the underlying instructions count from the left end, we must
instead select the even-numbered vector elements for little endian to
achieve the desired semantics.
The correctness of this code is tested by the new pack.c test added in
a previous patch. I plan to later make the existing ppc32 Altivec
compile-time tests work for ppc64 and ppc64le as well.
llvm-svn: 210340
The PowerPC vector-multiply-even and vector-multiply-odd instructions
are defined architecturally with a big-endian bias, in that the vector
element numbering is assumed to be "left to right" regardless of
whether the processor is in big-endian or little-endian mode. This
definition is unnatural for little-endian code generation.
To facilitate ease of porting, the vec_mule and vec_mulo interfacs are
designed to use natural element ordering, so that elements are
numbered according to little-endian design principles when code is
generated for a little-endian target. The desired semantics can be
achieved by using the opposite instruction for little-endian mode.
That is, when a call to vec_mule appears in the code, a
vector-multiply-odd is generated, and when a call to vec_mulo appears
in the code, a vector-multiply-even is generated.
The correctness of this code is tested by the new mult-even-odd.c test
added in a previous patch. I plan to later make the existing ppc32
Altivec compile-time tests work for ppc64 and ppc64le as well.
llvm-svn: 210337
Before (JavaScript example, but can extend to other languages):
return {
a: 'E',
b: function() {
return function() {
f(); // This is wrong.
};
}
};
After:
return {
a: 'E',
b: function() {
return function() {
f(); // This is better.
};
}
};
llvm-svn: 210334
A leftover -S was generating unwanted output in the source tree overriding
-only flags that normally disable output.
This reverts commit r210323 and implements the proper fix.
Reported by Timur Iskhodzhanov!
llvm-svn: 210326
We probably just need to touch LLVM's configure this time to work around the
totally inadequate Makefile build server integration.
This reverts commit r210314.
llvm-svn: 210320
This will unbreak clang vendor builds as a follow-up to r210238, now that we
can't poke into LLVM's private config.h (nor should the string be exposed by
llvm-config.h).
This hopefully removes for good the last include of LLVM's config.h.
llvm-svn: 210313
Instead of disembodied diagnostics when debug info is disabled it's now
possible to identify the associated function's location in order to provide
some amount of of context.
We use the definition's body right brace location to differentiate the fallback
from diagnostics that genuinely relate to the function declaration itself (a
convention also used by gcc).
llvm-svn: 210294
Add driver and frontend support for the GCC -Wframe-larger-than=bytes warning.
This is the first GCC-compatible backend diagnostic built around LLVM's
reporting feature.
This commit adds infrastructure to perform reverse lookup from mangled names
emitted after LLVM IR generation. We use that to resolve precise locations and
originating AST functions, lambdas or block declarations to produce seamless
codegen-guided diagnostics.
An associated change, StringMap now maintains unique mangled name strings
instead of allocating copies. This is a net memory saving in C++ and a small
hit for C where we no longer reuse IdentifierInfo storage, pending further
optimisation.
llvm-svn: 210293
Summary:
This change generalizes the code used to create global LLVM
variables referencing predefined strings (e.g. __FUNCTION__): now it
just calls GetAddrOfConstantStringFromLiteral method. As a result,
global variables for these predefined strings may get mangled names
and linkonce_odr linkage. Fix the test accordingly.
Test Plan: clang regression tests
Reviewers: majnemer
Reviewed By: majnemer
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4023
llvm-svn: 210284
The PowerPC vperm (vector permute) instruction is defined
architecturally with a big-endian bias, in that the two input vectors
are assumed to be concatenated "left to right" and the elements of the
combined input vector are assumed to be numbered from "left to right"
(i.e., with element 0 referencing the high-order element). This
definition is unnatural for little-endian code generation.
To facilitate ease of porting, the vec_perm interface is designed to
use natural element ordering, so that elements are numbered according
to little-endian design principles when code is generated for a
little-endian target. The desired semantics can be achieved with the
vperm instruction provided that the two input vector registers are
reversed, and the permute control vector is complemented. The
complementing is performed using an xor with a vector containing all
one bits.
Only the rightmost 5 bits of each element of the permute control
vector are relevant, so it would be possible to complement the vector
with respect to a <16xi8> vector containing all 31s. However, when
the permute control vector is not a constant, using 255 instead has
the advantage that the vec_xor can be recognized during code
generation as a vnor instruction. (Power8 introduces a vnand
instruction which could alternatively be generated.)
The correctness of this code is tested by the new perm.c test added in
a previous patch. I plan to later make the existing ppc32 Altivec
compile-time tests work for ppc64 and ppc64le as well.
llvm-svn: 210279
Summary:
Add hasLocalStorage/hasGlobalStorage matchers for VarDecl nodes.
Update the doc. Also add them to the dynamic registry.
Reviewers: klimek
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4034
llvm-svn: 210278
This patch adds support for pointer types in global named registers variables.
It'll be lowered as a pair of read/write_register and inttoptr/ptrtoint calls.
Also adds some early checks on types on SemaDecl to avoid the assert.
Tests changed accordingly. (PR19837)
llvm-svn: 210274
Summary: The Linux Kernel is one example of a piece of software that relies on them.
Reviewers: atanasyan
Reviewed By: atanasyan
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3756
llvm-svn: 210270
Summary:
Move the 'const' in the AST_*MATCHER_P* macros to the right of ParamType to
avoiad applying the constness on the wrong level when ParamType is a pointer.
Change equalsNode() to explicitly accept 'const Decl*' or 'const Stmt*'.
Reviewers: klimek
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3994
llvm-svn: 210269
Due to what can only be described as a CRT bug, stdout and amazingly
even stderr are not always flushed upon process termination, especially
when the system is under high threading pressure. I have found two
repros for this:
1) In lib\Support\Threading.cpp, change sys::Mutex to an
std::recursive_mutex and run check-clang. Usually between 30 and 40
tests will fail.
2) Add OutputDebugStrings in code that runs during static initialization
and static shutdown. This will sometimes generate similar failures.
After a substantial amount of troubleshooting and debugging, I found
that I could reproduce this from the command line without running
check-clang. Simply make the mutex change described in #1, then
manually run the following command many times by running it once, then
pressing Up -> Enter very quickly:
D:\src\llvm\build\vs2013\Debug\bin\c-index-test.EXE -cursor-at=D:\src\llvm\tools\clang\test\Index\targeted-preamble.h:2:15 D:\src\llvm\tools\clang\test\Index\targeted-cursor.c -include D:\src\llvm\build\vs2013\tools\clang\test\Index\Output\targeted-cursor.c.tmp.h -Xclang -error-on-deserialized-decl=NestedVar1 -Xclang -error-on-deserialized-decl=TopVar | D:\src\llvm\build\vs2013\Debug\bin\FileCheck.EXE D:\src\llvm\tools\clang\test\Index\targeted-cursor.c -check-prefix=PREAMBLE-CURSOR1
Sporadically they will fail, and attaching a debugger to a failed
instance indicates that stdin of FileCheck.exe is empty.
Note that due to the repro in #2, we can rule out a bug in the STL's
mutex implementation, and instead conclude that this is a real flake in
the windows test harness.
Test Plan:
Without patch: Ran check-clang 10 times and saw over 30 Unexpected failures on every run.
With patch: Ran check-clang 10 times and saw 0 unexpected failures across all runs.
Reviewers: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4021
Patch by Zachary Turner!
llvm-svn: 210225
library. That results in the linker resolving all references to weak symbols in
the DSO to the definition from within that DSO. Ironically, this rarely causes
observable problems, except that it causes ubsan's own dynamic type check to
spuriously fail (because we fail to properly merge type_info object names).
llvm-svn: 210220
Share mode code between these functions and re-structure them in a way
which shows how similar they actually are. The latter function works well
with literals of multi-byte chars and does a GlobalVariable name mangling
(if global strings are non-writable).
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 210212
Straightforward implementation of UDLs, it's compatible with VS "14".
This nearly completes our implementation of C++ name mangling for the
MS-ABI.
llvm-svn: 210197
These are commonly used to structure things like enums or long braced
lists. There doesn't seem to be a good reason to have the behavior in
such structures be different from the behavior between statements.
llvm-svn: 210183
Fix post-commit review comments by Carlo Bertolli
for commit r209660 - OMP collapse clause.
Re-formatted TransformOMP* functions in TreeTransform.h with clang-format.
llvm-svn: 210169
This corrects long-standing misuses of LLVM's internal config.h.
In most cases the public llvm-config.h header was intended and we can now
remove the old hacks thanks to LLVM r210144.
The config.h header is private, won't be installed and should no longer be
included by clang or other modules.
llvm-svn: 210145
This allows us to compile the following kind of code, which occurs in MSVC
headers:
template <typename> struct S {
__declspec(dllimport) static int x;
};
template <typename T> int S<T>::x;
The definition works similarly to a dllimport inline function definition and
gets available_externally linkage.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3998
llvm-svn: 210141
to the normal non-placement ::operator new and ::operator delete, but allow
optimizations like new-expressions and delete-expressions do.
llvm-svn: 210137
This patch implements semantic analysis to make sure that the loop is in OpenMP canonical form.
This is the form required for 'omp simd', 'omp for' and other loop pragmas.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3778
llvm-svn: 210095
elements from {}, rather than value-initializing them. This permits calling an
initializer-list constructor or constructing a std::initializer_list object.
(It would also permit initializing a const reference or rvalue reference if
that weren't explicitly prohibited by other rules.)
llvm-svn: 210091
just the extremely specific case of a trailing array element that couldn't be
initialized because the default constructor for the element type is deleted.
Also reword the diagnostic to better match our other context diagnostics and to
prepare for the implementation of core issue 1070.
llvm-svn: 210083
trailing elements as a single loop, rather than sometimes emitting a nest of
several loops. This fixes a bug where CodeGen would sometimes try to emit an
expression with the wrong type for the element being initialized. Plus various
other minor cleanups to the IR produced for array new initialization.
llvm-svn: 210079
The only remaining user didn't actually use the non-dynamic storage facility
this class provides.
The std::string is transitional and likely to be StringRefized shortly.
llvm-svn: 210058
Allow the tests to succeed with tne signext (or other) attribute is present. The attributes
show up for Power, but not for x86*, so need to be appropriately wildcarded.
llvm-svn: 210050
Instrumentation passes now use attributes
address_safety/thread_safety/memory_safety which are added by Clang frontend.
Clang parses the blacklist file and adds the attributes accordingly.
Currently blacklist is still used in ASan module pass to disable instrumentation
for certain global variables. We should fix this as well by collecting the
set of globals we're going to instrument in Clang and passing it to ASan
in metadata (as we already do for dynamically-initialized globals and init-order
checking).
This change also removes -tsan-blacklist and -msan-blacklist LLVM commandline
flags in favor of -fsanitize-blacklist= Clang flag.
llvm-svn: 210037
There is a pattern where evaluation order is used as control flow.
This patch special-cases a commonly occuring version of this pattern.
Before:
Aaaaa *aaa = nullptr;
// ...
aaa &&aaa->f();
After:
Aaaaa *aaa = nullptr;
// ...
aaa && aaa->f();
llvm-svn: 210017
We should treat tentative definitions as undefined for the purpose of
ODR-use linkage checking.
This broke somewhere around r149731 when tests were disabled.
Note that test coverage for these diagnostics is generally lacking due to a
separate issue (PR19910: Don't suppress unused/undefined warnings when there
are errors).
llvm-svn: 209996
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=18498
This code was resulting in a crash:
auto L = [](auto ... v) { };
L.operator()<int>(3);
The reason is that the partially-substituted-pack is incorrectly retained within the current-instantiation-scope during template-argument-finalization, and because lambda's are local, there parent instantiation scopes are merged, which leads to the expansion-pattern being retained in the finalized specialization.
This patch ensures that once we have finalized deduction of a parameter-pack, we remove the partially-substituted-pack so that it doesn't cause CheckParameterPacksForExpansion to incorrectly inform the caller that it needs to retain the expansion pattern.
Thanks to Richard Smith for the review!
http://reviews.llvm.org/D2135
llvm-svn: 209992
Remove redundant -fno-stack-protector run with openbsd.
Add -target to the -fstack-protector tests so they pass on openbsd.
Patch by Brad Smith.
llvm-svn: 209991
With recent changes, this is now a compatible language extension and can be
safely enabled with -ms-extensions instead of requiring the full
-ms-compatibility MSVC drop-in mode. As such we can now also emit an extension
warning under -Wmicrosoft to help users port their code.
llvm-svn: 209978
This allows us to be more careful when dealing with enums whose fixed
underlying type requires special handling in a format string, like
NSInteger.
A refinement of r163266 from a year and a half ago, which added the
special handling for NSInteger and friends in the first place.
<rdar://problem/16616623>
llvm-svn: 209966
Also move the attribute-specific dumping to after dumping this and
the Implicit flag.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3971
llvm-svn: 209965
This failure mode shows up occasionally when users try to include C headers in
C++ projects or when porting from Windows. We might as well recover in the way
the user expected, thus avoiding confusing diagnostic messages at point of use.
llvm-svn: 209963
The checks below can hypothetically apply to converted operator name
identifiers.
In practice there are no builtin macros etc. with those names so there's no
behavioural change to test.
llvm-svn: 209962
I was bitten by this when working with the dll attributes: when a dll
attribute was cloned from a class template declaration to its
specialization, the Inherited flag didn't get cloned.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3972
llvm-svn: 209950
This reapplies r209910 with a fix for the assertion failures hit on the
buildbots.
original commit message:
I thought we could get away without this, but it means that the
FileEntry objects actually refer to the wrong files, since pcms are not
updated inplace, they are atomically renamed into place after compiling
a module.
So we are close to the original behaviour of invalidating the cache for
all modules being removed, but now we should only invalidate the ones
that depend on whichever module failed to load.
Unfortunately I haven't come up with a new test that didn't require
a race between parallel invocations of clang.
<rdar://problem/17038180>
llvm-svn: 209922
I thought we could get away without this, but it means that the
FileEntry objects actually refer to the wrong files, since pcms are not
updated inplace, they are atomically renamed into place after compiling
a module.
So we are close to the original behaviour of invalidating the cache for
all modules being removed, but now we should only invalidate the ones
that depend on whichever module failed to load.
Unfortunately I haven't come up with a new test that didn't require
a race between parallel invocations of clang.
<rdar://problem/17038180>
llvm-svn: 209910
This implements the central part of support for dllimport/dllexport on
classes: allowing the attribute on class declarations, inheriting it
to class members, and forcing emission of exported members. It's based
on Nico Rieck's patch from http://reviews.llvm.org/D1099.
This patch doesn't propagate dllexport to bases that are template
specializations, which is an interesting problem. It also doesn't
look at the rules when redeclaring classes with different attributes,
I'd like to do that separately.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3877
llvm-svn: 209908
There shouldn't be any difference in behaviour here, at least not in
any configurations people care about and possibly not in any reachable
configurations.
llvm-svn: 209899
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=19876
The following C++1y code results in a crash:
struct X {
int m = 10;
int n = [this](auto) { return m; }(20);
};
When implicitly instantiating the generic lambda's call operator specialization body, Sema is unable to determine the current 'this' type when transforming the MemberExpr 'm' - since it looks for the nearest enclosing FunctionDeclDC - which is obviously null.
I considered two ways to fix this:
1) In InstantiateFunctionDefinition, when the context is saved after the lambda scope info is created, retain the 'this' pointer.
2) Teach getCurrentThisType() to recognize it is within a generic lambda within an NSDMI/default-initializer and return the appropriate this type.
I chose to implement #2 (though I confess I do not have a compelling reason for choosing it over #1).
Richard Smith accepted the patch:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D3935
Thank you!
llvm-svn: 209874
These intrinsics are special because they directly take a memory operand (AVX2
adds the register counterparts). Typically, other non-memop intrinsics take
registers and then it's left to isel to fold memory operands.
In order to LICM intrinsics directly reading memory, we require that no stores
are in the loop (LICM) or that the folded load accesses constant memory
(MachineLICM). When neither is the case we fail to hoist a loop-invariant
broadcast.
We can work around this limitation if we expose the load as a regular load and
then just implement the broadcast using the vector initializer syntax. This
exposes the load to LICM and other optimizations.
At the IR level this is translated into a series of insertelements. The
sequence is already recognized as a broadcast so there is no impact on the
quality of codegen.
_mm256_broadcast_pd and _mm256_broadcast_ps are not updated by this patch
because right now we lack the DAG-combiner smartness to recover the broadcast
instructions. This will be tackled in a follow-on.
There will be completing changes on the LLVM side to remove the LLVM
intrinsics and to auto-upgrade bitcode files.
Fixes <rdar://problem/16494520>
llvm-svn: 209846
Summary:
This adds documentation for -Rpass, -Rpass-missed and -Rpass-analysis.
It also adds release notes for 3.5.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3730
llvm-svn: 209841
Summary:
These two flags are in the same family as -Rpass, but are used in
different situations.
-Rpass-missed is used by optimizers to inform the user when they tried
to apply an optimization but couldn't (or wouldn't).
-Rpass-analysis is used by optimizers to report analysis results back
to the user (e.g., why the transformation could not be applied).
Depends on D3682.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3683
llvm-svn: 209839