Android does not allow shared text relocations. Enable the linker
warning to detect them by default.
Reviewers: srhines, pirama
Reviewed By: srhines
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53344
llvm-svn: 357296
Effectively reverts r337612. The issues that cropped up with the last
attempt appear to have gone away.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59008
llvm-svn: 357285
Add an -mtp=el[0-3] option to select which of the AArch64 thread ID registers
will be used for the TLS base pointer.
This is a followup to rL356657 which added subtarget features to enable
accesses to the privileged thread ID registers.
Patch by Philip Derrin!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59631
llvm-svn: 357250
In gcc, -gsplit-dwarf is handled in gcc/gcc.c as a spec
(ASM_FINAL_SPEC): objcopy --extract-dwo + objcopy --strip-dwo. In
gcc/opts.c, -gsplit_dwarf has the same semantic of a -g. Except for the
availability of the external command 'objcopy', nothing precludes the
feature working on other ELF OSes. llvm doesn't use objcopy, so it doesn't
have to exclude other OSes.
llvm-svn: 357150
Since AArch64 has default outlining behaviour, we need to make sure that
-mno-outline is actually passed along to the linker in this case. Otherwise,
it will run by default on minsize functions even when -mno-outline is specified.
Also fix the darwin-ld test for this, which wasn't actually doing anything.
llvm-svn: 357031
The RISC-V assembler needs the target ABI because it defines a flag of the ELF
file, as described in [1].
Make clang (the driver) to pass the target ABI to -cc1as in exactly the same
way it does for -cc1.
Currently -cc1as knows about -target-abi but is not handling it. Handle it and
pass it to the MC layer via MCTargetOptions.
[1] https://github.com/riscv/riscv-elf-psabi-doc/blob/master/riscv-elf.md#file-header
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59298
llvm-svn: 356981
We can't (don't want to) honor the same set of "-fuse-ld" flags with
WebAssembly since the ELF linkers (ld.lld, ld.gnu, etc) don't work with
wasm object files.
Instead we implement our own linker finding logic, similar or other
non-ELF platforms like MSVC.
We've had a few issues with CLANG_DEFAULT_LINKER overriding the
WebAssembly linker which doesn't make sense since there is no generic
linker that can handle WebAssembly today.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59743
llvm-svn: 356953
Summary:
This eliminates a linker error the user might otherwise see about how
using the 'atomics' feature requires --shared-memory.
Reviewers: sbc100, aheejin
Subscribers: dschuff, jgravelle-google, sunfish, jfb, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59721
llvm-svn: 356817
-malign-double is currently only implemented in the -cc1 interface. But its declared in Options.td so it is a driver option too. But you try to use it with the driver you'll get a message about the option being unused.
This patch teaches the driver to pass the option through to cc1 so it won't be unused. The Options.td says the option is x86 only but I didn't see any x86 specific code in its impementation in cc1 so not sure if the documentation is wrong or if I should only pass this option through the driver on x86 targets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59624
llvm-svn: 356706
"clang++ hello.cc --rtlib=compiler-rt"
now can works without specifying additional unwind or exception
handling libraries.
This reworked version of the feature no longer modifies today's default
unwind library for compiler-rt: which is nothing. Rather, a user
can specify -DCLANG_DEFAULT_UNWINDLIB=libunwind when configuring
the compiler.
This should address the issues from the previous version.
Update tests for new --unwindlib semantics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59109
llvm-svn: 356508
Improved some checks and moved testing of the default header
in C++ mode into the Headers folder.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59486
llvm-svn: 356450
Change the HIP Toolchain to pass the OPT_mllvm options into OPT and LLC stages. Added a lit test to verify the command args.
Reviewers: yaxunl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59316
llvm-svn: 356277
llvm-svn 356197 relanded previously failing test case max_align.c.
This commit will reland the rest of llvm-svn 356060 commit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59048
llvm-svn: 356208
The above commit breaks the usage of PGO and LTO when -fprofile-use is
supplied without a path. This patch changes the usage of this argument
to be inline with its use in addPGOAndCoverageFlags().
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59304
llvm-svn: 356111
Summary:
A first pass over platform-specific properties of the C API/ABI
on AIX for both 32-bit and 64-bit modes.
This is a continuation of D18360 by Andrew Paprocki and further work by Wu Zhao.
Patch by Andus Yu
Reviewers: apaprocki, chandlerc, hubert.reinterpretcast, jasonliu,
xingxue, sfertile
Reviewed by: hubert.reinterpretcast, apaprocki, sfertile
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59048
llvm-svn: 356060
Currently we have -Rpass for filtering the remarks that are displayed as
diagnostics, but when using -fsave-optimization-record, there is no way
to filter the remarks while generating them.
This adds support for filtering remarks by passes using a regex.
Ex: `clang -fsave-optimization-record -foptimization-record-passes=inline`
will only emit the remarks coming from the pass `inline`.
This adds:
* `-fsave-optimization-record` to the driver
* `-opt-record-passes` to cc1
* `-lto-pass-remarks-filter` to the LTOCodeGenerator
* `--opt-remarks-passes` to lld
* `-pass-remarks-filter` to llc, opt, llvm-lto, llvm-lto2
* `-opt-remarks-passes` to gold-plugin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59268
Original llvm-svn: 355964
llvm-svn: 355984
Currently we have -Rpass for filtering the remarks that are displayed as
diagnostics, but when using -fsave-optimization-record, there is no way
to filter the remarks while generating them.
This adds support for filtering remarks by passes using a regex.
Ex: `clang -fsave-optimization-record -foptimization-record-passes=inline`
will only emit the remarks coming from the pass `inline`.
This adds:
* `-fsave-optimization-record` to the driver
* `-opt-record-passes` to cc1
* `-lto-pass-remarks-filter` to the LTOCodeGenerator
* `--opt-remarks-passes` to lld
* `-pass-remarks-filter` to llc, opt, llvm-lto, llvm-lto2
* `-opt-remarks-passes` to gold-plugin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59268
llvm-svn: 355964
It hasn't seen active development in years, and it hasn't reached a
state where it was useful.
Remove the code until someone is interested in working on it again.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59133
llvm-svn: 355862
We will now warn about such options being unused,
which is better than the current
"no such file or directory: '/d2foo'" errors.
Note that we can still handle specific flags separately,
e.g. we were already ignoring /d2FastFail and /d2Zi+
llvm-svn: 355682
This change is a consequence of the discussion in "RFC: Place libs in
Clang-dedicated directories", specifically the suggestion that
libunwind, libc++abi and libc++ shouldn't be using Clang resource
directory. Tools like clangd make this assumption, but this is
currently not true for the LLVM_ENABLE_PER_TARGET_RUNTIME_DIR build.
This change addresses that by moving the output of these libraries to
lib/<target> and include/ directories, leaving resource directory only
for compiler-rt runtimes and Clang builtin headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59013
llvm-svn: 355665
When -fno-gpu-rdc is set, device code is compiled, linked, and assembled into fat binary
and embedded as string in object files. The object files are normal object files which
can be linked by host linker. In the linking stage, the object files should not be unbundled
when -fno-gpu-rdc is set since they are normal object files, not bundles. The object files
only need to be unbundled when -fgpu-rdc is set.
Currently clang always unbundles object files, disregarding -fgpu-rdc option.
This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58917
llvm-svn: 355410
When -forder-file-instrumentation is on, we pass llvm flag to enable the order file instrumentation pass.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D58751
llvm-svn: 355333
Summary:
To prevent the instability of bulk-memory in the wasm backend from
blocking separate pthread testing, temporarily remove the logic that
adds -mbulk-memory in the presence of -pthread. Since browsers will
ship bulk memory before or alongside threads, this change will be
reverted as soon as bulk memory has stabilized in the backend.
Reviewers: sbc100
Subscribers: dschuff, jgravelle-google, aheejin, sunfish, jfb, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58854
llvm-svn: 355248
Summary:
In the clang UI, replaces -mthread-model posix with -matomics as the
source of truth on threading. In the backend, replaces
-thread-model=posix with the atomics target feature, which is now
collected on the WebAssemblyTargetMachine along with all other used
features. These collected features will also be used to emit the
target features section in the future.
The default configuration for the backend is thread-model=posix and no
atomics, which was previously an invalid configuration. This change
makes the default valid because the thread model is ignored.
A side effect of this change is that objects are never emitted with
passive segments. It will instead be up to the linker to decide
whether sections should be active or passive based on whether atomics
are used in the final link.
Reviewers: aheejin, sbc100, dschuff
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, sunfish, steven_wu, dexonsmith, rupprecht, jfb, jdoerfert, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58742
llvm-svn: 355112
Remove comments and tests about passing -mcode-object-v3 to driver since it does
not work. Other -m options are OK.
Also put back -mattr=-code-object-v3 since HIP is still not ready for code object
v3.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57977
llvm-svn: 355106
This patch enables the following
1) AMD family 17h "znver2" tune flag (-march, -mcpu).
2) ISAs that are enabled for "znver2" architecture.
3) For the time being, it uses the znver1 scheduler model.
4) Tests are updated.
5) This patch is the clang counterpart to D58343
Reviewers: craig.topper
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58344
llvm-svn: 354899
Summary: This change mimics GCC's support for the "-static-pie" argument.
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58307
llvm-svn: 354502
A faster way to reduce the values in teams reductions was found, the
codegen is updated to use this faster algorithm and new runtime functions.
llvm-svn: 354479
This can be used to disable libc linking. This flag is supported by
GCC since version 9 as well as some Clang target toolchains.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58326
llvm-svn: 354210
This can be used to disable libc linking. This flag is supported by
GCC since version 9 as well as some Clang target toolchains. This
change also includes tests for all -no* flags which previously weren't
covered.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58325
llvm-svn: 354208
Summary:
There are an insignificant number of ARM Android devices that don't
support NEON. Default to using NEON since that will improve
performance on the majority of devices. Users that need to target
non-NEON devices can still explicitly disable NEON.
Reviewers: srhines, pirama, kristof.beyls
Reviewed By: pirama
Subscribers: efriedma, javed.absar, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58153
llvm-svn: 354166
Instead of letting a program fail at runtime, emit an error during
compilation.
rdar://problem/12206955
Reviewers: dexonsmith, bob.wilson, steven_wu
Reviewed By: steven_wu
Subscribers: jkorous, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57991
llvm-svn: 354084
The CHECK lines as structured were requiring them to appear only in a certain
position while all that is really needed is to check that they are present.
llvm-svn: 354001
This is a follow up to D48580 and D48581 which allows reserving
arbitrary general purpose registers with the exception of registers
with special purpose (X8, X16-X18, X29, X30) and registers used by LLVM
(X0, X19). This change also generalizes some of the existing logic to
rely entirely on values generated from tablegen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56305
llvm-svn: 353957
Allow the compile options for -m such as -mxnack/-mno-xnack, -msram-ecc/-mno-sram-ecc, -mcode-object-v3/-mno-code-object-v3 to propagate into LLC args. Fix an issue where -mattr was pushed even when it was empty.
Also add lit tests to verify features are properly passed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57977
Reviewers: yaxunl, kzhuravl
llvm-svn: 353952
Force -fuse-ld=ld, as some other tests in the same file do.
Loosen the regex matching the linker tool name as well, as this
can end up being <triple>-ld in case such a named tool exists.
llvm-svn: 353946
Profiling still doesn't seem to work properly, but this at least
hooks up the library and eases completing whatever is missing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58107
llvm-svn: 353917
Since we removed changed the way HIP Toolchain will propagate -m options into LLC, we need to remove from these older tests.
This is related to rC353880.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57977
llvm-svn: 353885
Allow the compile options for -m such as -mxnack/-mno-xnack, -msram-ecc/-mno-sram-ecc, -mcode-object-v3/-mno-code-object-v3 to propagate into LLC args.
Also add lit tests to verify features are properly passed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57977
Reviewers: yaxunl, kzhuravl
llvm-svn: 353880
Summary:
There have been three options related to threads and users had to set
all three of them separately to get the correct compilation results.
This makes sure the relationship between the options makes sense and
sets necessary options for users if only part of the necessary options
are specified. This does:
- Remove `-matomics`; this option alone does not enable anything, so
removed it to not confuse users.
- `-mthread-model posix` sets `-target-feature +atomics`
- `-pthread` sets both `-target-feature +atomics` and
`-mthread-model posix`
Also errors out when explicitly given options don't match, such as
`-pthread` is given with `-mthread-model single`.
Reviewers: dschuff, sbc100, tlively, sunfish
Subscribers: jgravelle-google, jfb, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57874
llvm-svn: 353761
Instead of calling CUDA runtime to arrange function arguments,
the new API constructs arguments in a local array and the kernels
are launched with __cudaLaunchKernel().
The old API has been deprecated and is expected to go away
in the next CUDA release.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57488
llvm-svn: 352799
..and use it to control that parts of CUDA compilation
that depend on the specific version of CUDA SDK.
This patch has a placeholder for a 'new launch API' support
which is in a separate patch. The list will be further
extended in the upcoming patch to support CUDA-10.1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57487
llvm-svn: 352798
Introduce an option to request global visibility settings be applied to
declarations without a definition or an explicit visibility, rather than
the existing behavior of giving these default visibility. When the
visibility of all or most extern definitions are known this allows for
the same optimisations -fvisibility permits without updating source code
to annotate all declarations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56868
llvm-svn: 352391
Add tests that arguments for enabling/disabling
sb and predres are correctly being or not passed
by the driver.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57060
llvm-svn: 352203
The /AI flag is for #using directives, which I don't think we support.
This is consistent with how the /I flag is handled by MSVC. Add a test
for it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57189
llvm-svn: 352119
These two options enable/disable emission of R_{MICRO}MIPS_JALR fixups along
with PIC calls. The linker may then try to turn PIC calls into direct jumps.
By default, these fixups do get emitted by the backend, use
'-mno-relax-pic-calls' to omit them.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56878
llvm-svn: 351579
Implements PR40180.
clang-cl has one minor behavior difference with cl with this change.
Clang allows the user to enable the C++17 feature of aligned allocation
without enabling all of C++17, but MSVC will not call the aligned
allocation overloads unless -std:c++17 is passed. While our behavior is
technically incompatible, it would require making driver mode specific
changes to match MSVC precisely, and clang's behavior is useful because
it allows people to experiment with new C++17 features individually.
Therefore, I plan to leave it as is.
llvm-svn: 351249
This is an initial implementation for msp430 toolchain including
-mmcu option support
-mhwmult options support
-integrated-as by default
The toolchain uses msp430-elf-as as a linker and supports msp430-gcc toolchain tree.
Patch by Kristina Bessonova!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56658
llvm-svn: 351228
This adds support for multilib paths for wasm32 targets, following
[Debian's Multiarch conventions], and also adds an experimental OS name in
order to test it.
[Debian's Multiarch conventions]: https://wiki.debian.org/Multiarch/
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56553
llvm-svn: 351164
Summary:
After r327851, Driver::GetTemporaryPath will create the file rather than
just create a potientially unqine filename. If clang driver pass the
file as parameter as -object_path_lto, ld64 will pass it back to libLTO
as GeneratedObjectsDirectory, which is going to cause a LLVM ERROR if it
is not a directory.
Now during thinLTO, pass a temp directory path to linker instread.
rdar://problem/47194182
Reviewers: arphaman, dexonsmith
Reviewed By: arphaman
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, jkorous, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56608
llvm-svn: 350970
Summary:
Adds a new -f[no]split-lto-unit flag that is disabled by default to
control module splitting during ThinLTO. It is automatically enabled
for -fsanitize=cfi and -fwhole-program-vtables.
The new EnableSplitLTOUnit codegen flag is passed down to llvm
via a new module flag of the same name.
Depends on D53890.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: ormris, mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53891
llvm-svn: 350949
Summary:
By using '..' instead of fs::parent_path.
The intention of the code was to go from 'path/to/clang/bin' to
'path/to/clang/include'. In most cases parent_path works, however it
would fail when clang is run as './clang'.
This was noticed in Chromium's bug tracker, see
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=919761
Reviewers: arphaman, thakis, EricWF
Reviewed By: arphaman, thakis
Subscribers: christof, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56446
llvm-svn: 350714
Summary:
r306722 added diagnostics when aligned allocation is used with deployment
targets that do not support it, but the first macosx supporting aligned
allocation was incorrectly set to 10.13. In reality, the dylib shipped
with macosx10.13 does not support aligned allocation, but the dylib
shipped with macosx10.14 does.
Reviewers: ahatanak
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56445
llvm-svn: 350649
The problem is similar to D55986 but for threads: a process with the
interceptor hwasan library loaded might have some threads started by
instrumented libraries and some by uninstrumented libraries, and we
need to be able to run instrumented code on the latter.
The solution is to perform per-thread initialization lazily. If a
function needs to access shadow memory or add itself to the per-thread
ring buffer its prologue checks to see whether the value in the
sanitizer TLS slot is null, and if so it calls __hwasan_thread_enter
and reloads from the TLS slot. The runtime does the same thing if it
needs to access this data structure.
This change means that the code generator needs to know whether we
are targeting the interceptor runtime, since we don't want to pay
the cost of lazy initialization when targeting a platform with native
hwasan support. A flag -fsanitize-hwaddress-abi={interceptor,platform}
has been introduced for selecting the runtime ABI to target. The
default ABI is set to interceptor since it's assumed that it will
be more common that users will be compiling application code than
platform code.
Because we can no longer assume that the TLS slot is initialized,
the pthread_create interceptor is no longer necessary, so it has
been removed.
Ideally, lazy initialization should only cost one instruction in the
hot path, but at present the call may cause us to spill arguments
to the stack, which means more instructions in the hot path (or
theoretically in the cold path if the spills are moved with shrink
wrapping). With an appropriately chosen calling convention for
the per-thread initialization function (TODO) the hot path should
always need just one instruction and the cold path should need two
instructions with no spilling required.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56038
llvm-svn: 350429
The offload bundler action should not unbundle the input file types that does not match the action type. This fixes an issue where .so files are unbundled when the action type is object files.
Reviewers: yaxunl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56321
llvm-svn: 350426
The offload bundler action should not unbundle the input file types that does not match the action type. This fixes an issue where .so files are unbundled when the action type is object files.
llvm-svn: 350425
For some reason, the cmake build on my macbook has
LLVM_HOST_TRIPLE:STRING=i386-apple-darwin16.7.0 .
test/Driver/darwin-sdk-version.c assumed that the host triple is 64-bit, so
make it resilient against 32-bit host triples.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56067
llvm-svn: 350278
midl invokes the compiler on .idl files with /E. Before this change, we
would treat unrecognized inputs as object files. Now we pre-process to
stdout as expected. I checked that MSVC defines __cplusplus when invoked
this way, so treating the input as C++ seems like the right thing to do.
After this change, I was able to run midl like this with clang-cl:
$ midl -cpp_cmd clang-cl.exe foo.idl
Things worked for the example IDL file in the Microsoft documentation,
but beyond that, I don't know if this will work well.
Fixes PR40140
llvm-svn: 350072
Gentoo supports combining clang toolchain with GNU binutils, and many
users actually do that. As -faddrsig is not supported by GNU strip,
this results in a lot of warnings. Disable it by default and let users
enable it explicitly if they want it; with the intent of reevaluating
when the underlying feature becomes standarized.
See also: https://bugs.gentoo.org/667854
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56047
llvm-svn: 350028
NFC for targets other than PS4.
Respect -nostdlib and -nodefaultlibs when enabling asan or ubsan.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55712
llvm-svn: 349508
For targets where SEH exceptions are used by default (on MinGW,
only x86_64 so far), -munwind-tables are added automatically. If
-fseh-exeptions is enabled on a target where SEH exeptions are
availble but not enabled by default yet (aarch64), we need to
pass -munwind-tables if -fseh-exceptions was specified.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55749
llvm-svn: 349452
Summary:
Add an option to initialize automatic variables with either a pattern or with
zeroes. The default is still that automatic variables are uninitialized. Also
add attributes to request uninitialized on a per-variable basis, mainly to disable
initialization of large stack arrays when deemed too expensive.
This isn't meant to change the semantics of C and C++. Rather, it's meant to be
a last-resort when programmers inadvertently have some undefined behavior in
their code. This patch aims to make undefined behavior hurt less, which
security-minded people will be very happy about. Notably, this means that
there's no inadvertent information leak when:
- The compiler re-uses stack slots, and a value is used uninitialized.
- The compiler re-uses a register, and a value is used uninitialized.
- Stack structs / arrays / unions with padding are copied.
This patch only addresses stack and register information leaks. There's many
more infoleaks that we could address, and much more undefined behavior that
could be tamed. Let's keep this patch focused, and I'm happy to address related
issues elsewhere.
To keep the patch simple, only some `undef` is removed for now, see
`replaceUndef`. The padding-related infoleaks are therefore not all gone yet.
This will be addressed in a follow-up, mainly because addressing padding-related
leaks should be a stand-alone option which is implied by variable
initialization.
There are three options when it comes to automatic variable initialization:
0. Uninitialized
This is C and C++'s default. It's not changing. Depending on code
generation, a programmer who runs into undefined behavior by using an
uninialized automatic variable may observe any previous value (including
program secrets), or any value which the compiler saw fit to materialize on
the stack or in a register (this could be to synthesize an immediate, to
refer to code or data locations, to generate cookies, etc).
1. Pattern initialization
This is the recommended initialization approach. Pattern initialization's
goal is to initialize automatic variables with values which will likely
transform logic bugs into crashes down the line, are easily recognizable in
a crash dump, without being values which programmers can rely on for useful
program semantics. At the same time, pattern initialization tries to
generate code which will optimize well. You'll find the following details in
`patternFor`:
- Integers are initialized with repeated 0xAA bytes (infinite scream).
- Vectors of integers are also initialized with infinite scream.
- Pointers are initialized with infinite scream on 64-bit platforms because
it's an unmappable pointer value on architectures I'm aware of. Pointers
are initialize to 0x000000AA (small scream) on 32-bit platforms because
32-bit platforms don't consistently offer unmappable pages. When they do
it's usually the zero page. As people try this out, I expect that we'll
want to allow different platforms to customize this, let's do so later.
- Vectors of pointers are initialized the same way pointers are.
- Floating point values and vectors are initialized with a negative quiet
NaN with repeated 0xFF payload (e.g. 0xffffffff and 0xffffffffffffffff).
NaNs are nice (here, anways) because they propagate on arithmetic, making
it more likely that entire computations become NaN when a single
uninitialized value sneaks in.
- Arrays are initialized to their homogeneous elements' initialization
value, repeated. Stack-based Variable-Length Arrays (VLAs) are
runtime-initialized to the allocated size (no effort is made for negative
size, but zero-sized VLAs are untouched even if technically undefined).
- Structs are initialized to their heterogeneous element's initialization
values. Zero-size structs are initialized as 0xAA since they're allocated
a single byte.
- Unions are initialized using the initialization for the largest member of
the union.
Expect the values used for pattern initialization to change over time, as we
refine heuristics (both for performance and security). The goal is truly to
avoid injecting semantics into undefined behavior, and we should be
comfortable changing these values when there's a worthwhile point in doing
so.
Why so much infinite scream? Repeated byte patterns tend to be easy to
synthesize on most architectures, and otherwise memset is usually very
efficient. For values which aren't entirely repeated byte patterns, LLVM
will often generate code which does memset + a few stores.
2. Zero initialization
Zero initialize all values. This has the unfortunate side-effect of
providing semantics to otherwise undefined behavior, programs therefore
might start to rely on this behavior, and that's sad. However, some
programmers believe that pattern initialization is too expensive for them,
and data might show that they're right. The only way to make these
programmers wrong is to offer zero-initialization as an option, figure out
where they are right, and optimize the compiler into submission. Until the
compiler provides acceptable performance for all security-minded code, zero
initialization is a useful (if blunt) tool.
I've been asked for a fourth initialization option: user-provided byte value.
This might be useful, and can easily be added later.
Why is an out-of band initialization mecanism desired? We could instead use
-Wuninitialized! Indeed we could, but then we're forcing the programmer to
provide semantics for something which doesn't actually have any (it's
uninitialized!). It's then unclear whether `int derp = 0;` lends meaning to `0`,
or whether it's just there to shut that warning up. It's also way easier to use
a compiler flag than it is to manually and intelligently initialize all values
in a program.
Why not just rely on static analysis? Because it cannot reason about all dynamic
code paths effectively, and it has false positives. It's a great tool, could get
even better, but it's simply incapable of catching all uses of uninitialized
values.
Why not just rely on memory sanitizer? Because it's not universally available,
has a 3x performance cost, and shouldn't be deployed in production. Again, it's
a great tool, it'll find the dynamic uses of uninitialized variables that your
test coverage hits, but it won't find the ones that you encounter in production.
What's the performance like? Not too bad! Previous publications [0] have cited
2.7 to 4.5% averages. We've commmitted a few patches over the last few months to
address specific regressions, both in code size and performance. In all cases,
the optimizations are generally useful, but variable initialization benefits
from them a lot more than regular code does. We've got a handful of other
optimizations in mind, but the code is in good enough shape and has found enough
latent issues that it's a good time to get the change reviewed, checked in, and
have others kick the tires. We'll continue reducing overheads as we try this out
on diverse codebases.
Is it a good idea? Security-minded folks think so, and apparently so does the
Microsoft Visual Studio team [1] who say "Between 2017 and mid 2018, this
feature would have killed 49 MSRC cases that involved uninitialized struct data
leaking across a trust boundary. It would have also mitigated a number of bugs
involving uninitialized struct data being used directly.". They seem to use pure
zero initialization, and claim to have taken the overheads down to within noise.
Don't just trust Microsoft though, here's another relevant person asking for
this [2]. It's been proposed for GCC [3] and LLVM [4] before.
What are the caveats? A few!
- Variables declared in unreachable code, and used later, aren't initialized.
This goto, Duff's device, other objectionable uses of switch. This should
instead be a hard-error in any serious codebase.
- Volatile stack variables are still weird. That's pre-existing, it's really
the language's fault and this patch keeps it weird. We should deprecate
volatile [5].
- As noted above, padding isn't fully handled yet.
I don't think these caveats make the patch untenable because they can be
addressed separately.
Should this be on by default? Maybe, in some circumstances. It's a conversation
we can have when we've tried it out sufficiently, and we're confident that we've
eliminated enough of the overheads that most codebases would want to opt-in.
Let's keep our precious undefined behavior until that point in time.
How do I use it:
1. On the command-line:
-ftrivial-auto-var-init=uninitialized (the default)
-ftrivial-auto-var-init=pattern
-ftrivial-auto-var-init=zero -enable-trivial-auto-var-init-zero-knowing-it-will-be-removed-from-clang
2. Using an attribute:
int dont_initialize_me __attribute((uninitialized));
[0]: https://users.elis.ugent.be/~jsartor/researchDocs/OOPSLA2011Zero-submit.pdf
[1]: https://twitter.com/JosephBialek/status/1062774315098112001
[2]: https://outflux.net/slides/2018/lss/danger.pdf
[3]: https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2014-06/msg00615.html
[4]: 776a0955ef
[5]: http://wg21.link/p1152
I've also posted an RFC to cfe-dev: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2018-November/060172.html
<rdar://problem/39131435>
Reviewers: pcc, kcc, rsmith
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, jkorous, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54604
llvm-svn: 349442
The test test/Driver/darwin-sdk-version.c from r349380 checks if the macOS
deployment target can be correctly inferred from the SDK version. When the
SDK version is > host version, the driver will pick the host version, so
the old test failed on macOS < 10.14. This commit makes this test more
resilient by using an older SDK version.
llvm-svn: 349393
is not specified
The -target option allows the user to specify the build target using LLVM
triple. The triple includes the arch, and so the -arch option is redundant.
This should work just as well without the -arch. However, the driver has a bug
in which it doesn't target the "Cyclone" CPU for darwin if -target is used
without -arch. This commit fixes this issue.
rdar://46743182
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55731
llvm-svn: 349382
On Darwin, using '-arch x86_64h' would always override the option passed
through '-march'.
This patch allows users to use '-march' with x86_64h, while keeping the
default to 'core-avx2'
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55775
llvm-svn: 349381
pass in the -target-sdk-version to the compiler and backend
This commit adds support for reading the SDKSettings.json file in the Darwin
driver. This file is used by the driver to determine the SDK's version, and it
uses that information to pass it down to the compiler using the new
-target-sdk-version= option. This option is then used to set the appropriate
SDK Version module metadata introduced in r349119.
Note: I had to adjust the two ast tests as the SDKROOT environment variable
on macOS caused SDK version to be picked up for the compilation of source file
but not the AST.
rdar://45774000
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55673
llvm-svn: 349380
Implement options in clang to enable recording the driver command-line
in an ELF section.
Implement a new special named metadata, llvm.commandline, to support
frontends embedding their command-line options in IR/ASM/ELF.
This differs from the GCC implementation in some key ways:
* In GCC there is only one command-line possible per compilation-unit,
in LLVM it mirrors llvm.ident and multiple are allowed.
* In GCC individual options are separated by NULL bytes, in LLVM entire
command-lines are separated by NULL bytes. The advantage of the GCC
approach is to clearly delineate options in the face of embedded
spaces. The advantage of the LLVM approach is to support merging
multiple command-lines unambiguously, while handling embedded spaces
with escaping.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54487
Clang Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54489
llvm-svn: 349155
Summary:
Added support for the -gline-directives-only option + fixed logic of the
debug info for CUDA devices. If optimization level is O0, then options
--[no-]cuda-noopt-device-debug do not affect the debug info level. If
the optimization level is >O0, debug info options are used +
--no-cuda-noopt-device-debug is used or no --cuda-noopt-device-debug is
used, the optimization level for the device code is kept and the
emission of the debug directives is used.
If the opt level is > O0, debug info is requested +
--cuda-noopt-device-debug option is used, the optimization is disabled
for the device code + required debug info is emitted.
Reviewers: tra, echristo
Subscribers: aprantl, guansong, JDevlieghere, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51554
llvm-svn: 348930
It is faster to directly call the ObjC runtime for methods such as alloc/allocWithZone instead of sending a message to those functions.
This patch adds support for converting messages to alloc/allocWithZone to their equivalent runtime calls.
Tests included for the positive case of applying this transformation, negative tests that we ensure we only convert "alloc" to objc_alloc, not "alloc2", and also a driver test to ensure we enable this only for supported runtime versions.
Reviewed By: rjmccall
https://reviews.llvm.org/D55349
llvm-svn: 348687
The flag -fdebug-compilation-dir is useful to make generated .o files
independent of the path of the build directory, without making the compile
command-line dependent on the path of the build directory, like
-fdebug-prefix-map requires. This change makes it so that the driver can
forward the flag to -cc1as, like it already can for -cc1. We might want to
consider making -fdebug-compilation-dir a driver flag in a follow-up.
(Since -fdebug-compilation-dir defaults to PWD, it's already possible to get
this effect by setting PWD, but explicit compiler flags are better than env
vars, because e.g. ninja tracks command lines and reruns commands that change.)
Somewhat related to PR14625.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55377
llvm-svn: 348515
Summary:
The intention is to make the tools replaying compilations from 'compile_commands.json'
(clang-tidy, clangd, etc.) find the same standard library as the original compiler
specified in 'compile_commands.json'.
Previously, the library detection logic was in the frontend (InitHeaderSearch.cpp) and relied
on the value of resource dir as an approximation of the compiler install dir. The new logic
uses the actual compiler install dir and is performed in the driver. This is consistent with
the C++ standard library detection on other platforms and allows to override the resource dir
in the tools using the compile_commands.json without altering the
standard library detection mechanism. The tools have to override the resource dir to make sure
they use a consistent version of the builtin headers.
There is still logic in InitHeaderSearch that attemps to add the absolute includes for the
the C++ standard library, so we keep passing the -stdlib=libc++ from the driver to the frontend
via cc1 args to avoid breaking that. In the long run, we should move this logic to the driver too,
but it could potentially break the library detection on other systems, so we don't tackle it in this
patch to keep its scope manageable.
This is a second attempt to fix the issue, first one was commited in r346652 and reverted in r346675.
The original fix relied on an ad-hoc propagation (bypassing the cc1 flags) of the install dir from the
driver to the frontend's HeaderSearchOptions. Unsurpisingly, the propagation was incomplete, it broke
the libc++ detection in clang itself, which caused LLDB tests to break.
The LLDB tests pass with new fix.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, arphaman, EricWF
Reviewed By: arphaman
Subscribers: mclow.lists, ldionne, dexonsmith, ioeric, christof, kadircet, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54630
llvm-svn: 348365
When debugging a boost build with a modified
version of Clang, I discovered that the PTH implementation
stores TokenKind in 8 bits. However, we currently have 368
TokenKinds.
The result is that the value gets truncated and the wrong token
gets picked up when including PTH files. It seems that this will
go wrong every time someone uses a token that uses the 9th bit.
Upon asking on IRC, it was brought up that this was a highly
experimental features that was considered a failure. I discovered
via googling that BoostBuild (mostly Boost.Math) is the only user of
this
feature, using the CC1 flag directly. I believe that this can be
transferred over to normal PCH with minimal effort:
https://github.com/boostorg/build/issues/367
Based on advice on IRC and research showing that this is a nearly
completely unused feature, this patch removes it entirely.
Note: I considered leaving the build-flags in place and making them
emit an error/warning, however since I've basically identified and
warned the only user, it seemed better to just remove them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54547
Change-Id: If32744275ef1f585357bd6c1c813d96973c4d8d9
llvm-svn: 348266
Make sure that symbols needed to implement runtime support for gcov are
exported when using an export list on Darwin.
Without the clang driver exporting these symbols, the linker hides them,
resulting in tapi verification failures.
rdar://45944768
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55151
llvm-svn: 348187
Summary:
SSBS (Speculative Store Bypass Safe) is only mandatory from 8.5
onwards but is optional from Armv8.0-A. This patch adds testing for
the ssbs command line option, added to allow enabling the feature
in previous Armv8-A architectures to 8.5.
Reviewers: olista01, samparker, aemerson
Reviewed By: samparker
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54961
llvm-svn: 348142
Summary:
This patch passes an option '-z max-page-size=4096' to lld through clang driver.
This is for Android on Aarch64 target.
The lld default page size is too large for Aarch64, which produces larger .so files and images for arm64 device targets.
In this patch we set default page size to 4KB for Android Aarch64 targets instead.
Reviewers: srhines, danalbert, ruiu, chh, peter.smith
Reviewed By: srhines
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, cfe-commits, george.burgess.iv, llozano
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55029
llvm-svn: 347897
This adds Hurd toolchain support to Clang's driver in addition
to handling translating the triple from Hurd-compatible form to
the actual triple registered in LLVM.
(Phabricator was stripping the empty files from the patch so I
manually created them)
Patch by sthibaul (Samuel Thibault)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54379
llvm-svn: 347833
This is skylake-avx512 with the addition of avx512vnni ISA.
Patch by Jianping Chen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54792
llvm-svn: 347682
Summary:
Linux toolchain accidentally added "-u__llvm_runtime_variable" when "-fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage", this is not added when "--coverage" option is used.
Using "-u__llvm_runtime_variable" generates an empty default.profraw file while an application built with "-fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage" is running.
Reviewers: calixte, marco-c, sylvestre.ledru
Reviewed By: marco-c
Subscribers: vsk, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54195
llvm-svn: 347677
This reverts commit r347413: older versions of ld.gold that are used
by Android don't support --push/pop-state which broke sanitizer bots.
llvm-svn: 347430
Sanitizer runtime link deps handling passes --no-as-needed because of
PR15823, but it never undoes it and this flag may affect other libraries
that come later on the link line. To avoid this, wrap Sanitizer link
deps in --push/pop-state.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54805
llvm-svn: 347413
Because SCS relies on system-provided runtime support, we can use it
together with any other sanitizer simply by linking the runtime for
the other sanitizer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54735
llvm-svn: 347282
Summary:
If you're using the Microsoft ABI, chances are that you want PDBs and
codeview debug info. Currently, everyone has to remember to specific
-gcodeview by default, when it would be nice if the standard -g option
did the right thing by default.
Also, do some related cleanup of -cc1 options. When targetting the MS
C++ ABI, we probably shouldn't pass -debugger-tuning=gdb. We were also
passing -gcodeview twice, which is silly.
Reviewers: smeenai, zturner
Subscribers: aprantl, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54499
llvm-svn: 346907
The DWARF5 specification says(Appendix F.1):
"The sections that do not require relocation, however, can be
written to the relocatable object (.o) file but ignored by the
linker or they can be written to a separate DWARF object (.dwo)
file that need not be accessed by the linker."
The first part describes a single file split DWARF feature and there
is no way to trigger this behavior atm.
Fortunately, no many changes are required to keep *.dwo sections
in a .o, the patch does that.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52296
llvm-svn: 346837
ray's gcc installation puts C++ headers in PREFIX/include/g++ without
indicating a gcc version at all. Typically this is because the version
is encoded somewhere in PREFIX.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53770
llvm-svn: 346802
Summary:
This saves a lot of relocations in optimized object files (at the cost
of some cost/increase in linked executable bytes), but gold's 32 bit
gdb-index support has a bug (
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=21894 ) so we can't
switch to this unconditionally. (& even if it weren't for that bug, one
might argue that some users would want to optimize in one direction or
the other - prioritizing object size or linked executable size)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54243
llvm-svn: 346789
Summary: /Zc:dllexportInlines with /fallback may cause unexpected linker error. It is better to disallow compile rather than warn for this combination.
Reviewers: hans, thakis
Reviewed By: hans
Subscribers: cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54426
llvm-svn: 346733
The clang-cl driver disables access to command line options outside of the
"Core" and "CLOption" sets of command line arguments. This filtering makes it
impossible to pass arguments that are interpreted by the clang driver and not
by either 'cc1' (the frontend) or one of the other tools invoked by the driver.
An example driver-level flag is the '-fno-slp-vectorize' flag, which is
processed by the driver in Clang::ConstructJob and used to set the cc1 flag
"-vectorize-slp". There is no negative cc1 flag or -mllvm flag, so it is not
currently possible to disable the SLP vectorizer from the clang-cl driver.
This change introduces the "/clang:" argument that is available when the
driver mode is set to CL compatibility. This option works similarly to the
"-Xclang" option, except that the option values are processed by the clang
driver rather than by 'cc1'. An example usage is:
clang-cl /clang:-fno-slp-vectorize /O2 test.c
Another example shows how "/clang:" can be used to pass a flag where there is
a conflict between a clang-cl compat option and an overlapping clang driver
option:
clang-cl /MD /clang:-MD /clang:-MF /clang:test_dep_file.dep test.c
In the previous example, the unprefixed /MD selects the DLL version of the msvc
CRT, while the prefixed -MD flag and the -MF flags are used to create a make
dependency file for included headers.
One note about flag ordering: the /clang: flags are concatenated to the end of
the argument list, so in cases where the last flag wins, the /clang: flags
will be chosen regardless of their order relative to other flags on the driver
command line.
Patch by Neeraj K. Singh!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53457
llvm-svn: 346393
This reverts commit r345963. We have a path forward now.
Original commit message:
The driver accidentally stopped passing the input filenames on to -cc1
in this mode due to confusion over what action was being requested.
This change also fixes a couple of crashes I encountered when passing
multiple files to such a -cc1 invocation.
llvm-svn: 346130
-static relies on lld's behavior, but -Bstatic/dynamic is supported
across all linkers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54082
llvm-svn: 346107
This makes the tests stricter by not only matching the runtime file
name, but the entire path into the resource directory.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54064
llvm-svn: 346088
Summary:
This CL adds /Zc:DllexportInlines flag to clang-cl.
When Zc:DllexportInlines- is specified, inline class member function is not exported if the function does not have local static variables.
By not exporting inline function, code for those functions are not generated and that reduces both compile time and obj size. Also this flag does not import inline functions from dllimported class if the function does not have local static variables.
On my 24C48T windows10 machine, build performance of chrome target in chromium repository is like below.
These stats are come with 'target_cpu="x86" enable_nacl = false is_component_build=true dcheck_always_on=true` build config and applied
* https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/chromium/src/+/1212379
* https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/v8/v8/+/1186017
Below stats were taken with this patch applied on a05115cd4c
| config | build time | speedup | build dir size |
| with patch, PCH on, debug | 1h10m0s | x1.13 | 35.6GB |
| without patch, PCH on, debug | 1h19m17s | | 49.0GB |
| with patch, PCH off, debug | 1h15m45s | x1.16 | 33.7GB |
| without patch, PCH off, debug | 1h28m10s | | 52.3GB |
| with patch, PCH on, release | 1h13m13s | x1.22 | 26.2GB |
| without patch, PCH on, release | 1h29m57s | | 37.5GB |
| with patch, PCH off, release | 1h23m38s | x1.32 | 23.7GB |
| without patch, PCH off, release | 1h50m50s | | 38.7GB |
This patch reduced obj size and the number of exported symbols largely, that improved link time too.
e.g. link time stats of blink_core.dll become like below
| | cold disk cache | warm disk cache |
| with patch, PCH on, debug | 71s | 30s |
| without patch, PCH on, debug | 111s | 48s |
This patch's implementation is based on Nico Weber's patch. I modified to support static local variable, added tests and took stats.
Bug: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33628
Reviewers: hans, thakis, rnk, javed.absar
Reviewed By: hans
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, smeenai, dschuff, probinson, cfe-commits, eraman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51340
llvm-svn: 346069
This avoids introducing unnecessary DT_NEEDED entries when using
C++ driver for linking C code or C++ code that doesn't use C++
standard library.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53854
llvm-svn: 346064
Handle it in the driver and propagate it to cc1
Reviewers: rjmccall, kcc, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52615
llvm-svn: 346001
This reverts commit r345803 and r345915 (a follow-up fix to r345803).
Reason: r345803 blocks our internal integrate because of the new
warnings showing up in too many places. The fix is actually correct,
we will reland it after figuring out how to integrate properly.
llvm-svn: 345963
-fsyntax-only.
The driver accidentally stopped passing the input filenames on to -cc1
in this mode due to confusion over what action was being requested.
This change also fixes a couple of crashes I encountered when passing
multiple files to such a -cc1 invocation.
llvm-svn: 345803
This is the second half of Implicit Integer Conversion Sanitizer.
It completes the first half, and finally makes the sanitizer
fully functional! Only the bitfield handling is missing.
Summary:
C and C++ are interesting languages. They are statically typed, but weakly.
The implicit conversions are allowed. This is nice, allows to write code
while balancing between getting drowned in everything being convertible,
and nothing being convertible. As usual, this comes with a price:
```
void consume(unsigned int val);
void test(int val) {
consume(val);
// The 'val' is `signed int`, but `consume()` takes `unsigned int`.
// If val is negative, then consume() will be operating on a large
// unsigned value, and you may or may not have a bug.
// But yes, sometimes this is intentional.
// Making the conversion explicit silences the sanitizer.
consume((unsigned int)val);
}
```
Yes, there is a `-Wsign-conversion`` diagnostic group, but first, it is kinda
noisy, since it warns on everything (unlike sanitizers, warning on an
actual issues), and second, likely there are cases where it does **not** warn.
The actual detection is pretty easy. We just need to check each of the values
whether it is negative, and equality-compare the results of those comparisons.
The unsigned value is obviously non-negative. Zero is non-negative too.
https://godbolt.org/g/w93oj2
We do not have to emit the check *always*, there are obvious situations
where we can avoid emitting it, since it would **always** get optimized-out.
But i do think the tautological IR (`icmp ult %x, 0`, which is always false)
should be emitted, and the middle-end should cleanup it.
This sanitizer is in the `-fsanitize=implicit-conversion` group,
and is a logical continuation of D48958 `-fsanitize=implicit-integer-truncation`.
As for the ordering, i'we opted to emit the check **after**
`-fsanitize=implicit-integer-truncation`. At least on these simple 16 test cases,
this results in 1 of the 12 emitted checks being optimized away,
as compared to 0 checks being optimized away if the order is reversed.
This is a clang part.
The compiler-rt part is D50251.
Finishes fixing [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=21530 | PR21530 ]], [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37552 | PR37552 ]], [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35409 | PR35409 ]].
Finishes partially fixing [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=9821 | PR9821 ]].
Finishes fixing https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/940.
Only the bitfield handling is missing.
Reviewers: vsk, rsmith, rjmccall, #sanitizers, erichkeane
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: chandlerc, filcab, cfe-commits, regehr
Tags: #sanitizers, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50250
llvm-svn: 345660
When using sanitizers, add <resource_dir>/<target>/lib/<sanitizer>
to the list of library paths to support using sanitized version of
runtime libraries if available.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53487
llvm-svn: 345537
Add a new driver level flag `-fcf-runtime-abi=` that allows one to specify the
runtime ABI for CoreFoundation. This controls the language interoperability.
In particular, this is relevant for generating the CFConstantString classes
(primarily through the `__builtin___CFStringMakeConstantString` builtin) which
construct a reference to the "CFObject"'s `isa` field. This type differs
between swift 4.1 and 4.2+.
Valid values for the new option include:
- objc [default behaviour] - enable ObjectiveC interoperability
- swift-4.1 - enable interoperability with swift 4.1
- swift-4.2 - enable interoperability with swift 4.2
- swift-5.0 - enable interoperability with swift 5.0
- swift [alias] - target the latest swift ABI
Furthermore, swift 4.2+ changed the layout for the CFString when building
CoreFoundation *without* ObjectiveC interoperability. In such a case, a field
was added to the CFObject base type changing it from: <{ const int*, int }> to
<{ uintptr_t, uintptr_t, uint64_t }>.
In swift 5.0, the CFString type will be further adjusted to change the length
from a uint32_t on everything but BE LP64 targets to uint64_t.
Note that the default behaviour for clang remains unchanged and the new layout
must be explicitly opted into via `-fcf-runtime-abi=swift*`.
llvm-svn: 345222
This will allow other generators of LLVM IR to use the auto-vectorizer
without having to change that flag.
Note: on its own, this patch will disable auto-vectorization on Hexagon
in all cases, regardless of the -fvectorize flag. There is a companion
LLVM patch that together with this one forms an NFC for clang users.
llvm-svn: 345170
Summary:
Distinguish "--autocomplete=-someflag" and "--autocomplete=-someflag,"
because the latter indicates that the user put a space before pushing tab
which should end up in a file completion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53639
llvm-svn: 345133
There was a bug that when a flag ends with '=' and no value was suggested,
clang autocompletes the flag itself.
For example, in bash, it looked like this:
```
$ clang -fmodule-file=[tab]
-> $clang -fmodule-file=-fmodule-file
```
This is not what we expect. We expect a file autocompletion when no value
was found. With this patch, pressing tab suggests files in the current
directory.
Reviewers: teemperor, ruiu
Subscribers: cfe-commits
llvm-svn: 345121
Summary:
Fixes test from r344941 which was broken on Windows. We want to check
the selected toolchain rather than the found toolchain anyways.
Reviewers: srhines, danalbert
Reviewed By: srhines
Subscribers: cfe-commits, bogner, pirama
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53529
llvm-svn: 344958
Some of the test data went missing last time I tried to submit this,
causing the tests to fail when the build did not include libc++.
Original review was https://reviews.llvm.org/D53109.
llvm-svn: 344946
Summary:
Partial revert of r330873 ('[Driver] Reland "Android triples are not
aliases for other triples."')
While we don't want `-target *-linux-android` to alias to non
*-linux-android libs and binaries, it turns out we do want the
opposite. Ie. We would like for `-target *-linux-gnu` to still be
able to use *-android libs and binaries.
In fact, this is used to cross assemble and link the Linux kernel for
Android devices.
`-target *-linux-gnu` needs to be used for the Linux kernel when
using the android binutils prebuilts (*-linux-android).
The use of `-target *-linux-android` on C source files will cause
Clang to perform optimizations based on the presence of bionic (due to
r265481 ('Faster stack-protector for Android/AArch64.')) which is
invalid within the Linux kernel and will produce a non-bootable kernel
image.
Of course, you could just use the standard binutils (*-linux-gnu),
but Android does not distribute these. So this patch fixes a problem
that only occurs when cross assembling and linking a Linux kernel with
the Android provided binutils, which is what is done within Android's
build system.
Reviewers: srhines, pirama, danalbert
Reviewed By: srhines, danalbert
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53463
llvm-svn: 344941
As described in D40225, the C17 standard was balloted and approved in 2017, but the ISO publication process delayed the actual publication until 2018. WG14 considers the release to be C17 and describes it as such, but users can still be confused by the publication year which is why -std=c18 adds value. These aliases map to c17 and are all supported by GCC 8.x with the same behavior. Note that the value of __STDC_VERSION__ remains at 201710L.
llvm-svn: 344749
This patch exposes functionality added in rL344723 to the Clang driver/frontend
as a flag and adds appropriate metadata.
Driver tests pass:
```
ninja check-clang-driver
-snip-
Expected Passes : 472
Expected Failures : 3
Unsupported Tests : 65
```
Odd failure in CodeGen tests but unrelated to this:
```
ninja check-clang-codegen
-snip-
/SourceCache/llvm-trunk-8.0/tools/clang/test/CodeGen/builtins-wasm.c:87:10:
error: cannot compile this builtin function yet
-snip-
Failing Tests (1):
Clang :: CodeGen/builtins-wasm.c
Expected Passes : 1250
Expected Failures : 2
Unsupported Tests : 120
Unexpected Failures: 1
```
Original commit:
[X86] Support for the mno-tls-direct-seg-refs flag
Allows to disable direct TLS segment access (%fs or %gs). GCC supports a
similar flag, it can be useful in some circumstances, e.g. when a thread
context block needs to be updated directly from user space. More info and
specific use cases: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=16145
Patch by nruslan (Ruslan Nikolaev).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53102
llvm-svn: 344739
AMDGPU backend will switch to code object version 3 by default.
Since HIP runtime is not ready, disable it until the runtime is ready.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53325
llvm-svn: 344630
This change adds support for the following MIPS target triples:
mipsisa32r6-linux-gnu
mipsisa32r6el-linux-gnu
mipsisa64r6-linux-gnuabi64
mipsisa64r6el-linux-gnuabi64
mipsisa64r6-linux-gnuabin32
mipsisa64r6el-linux-gnuabin32
Patch by Yun Qiang Su.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50850
llvm-svn: 344608
For MIPS we need to adjust not only architecture name accordingly to ABI
provided by the `-mabi` command line option, but also modify triple's
environment. For example, for `mips-linux-gnu` triple and `-mabi=n32`
option a correct final triple is `mips64-linux-gnuabin32`.
llvm-svn: 344603
The big-endian arm32 Linux builds are currently failing when the
-mbig-endian flag is used but the binutils default on the system is little
endian. This also holds when -mlittle-endian is used and the binutils
default is big endian.
The patch always passes through -EL or -BE to the assembler and linker,
taking into account the target and the -mbig-endian and -mlittle-endian
flag.
Fixes pr38770
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52784
llvm-svn: 344597
The `GNUABIN32` environment in a target triple implies using the N32
ABI. This patch adds support for this environment and switches on N32
ABI if necessary.
Patch by Patch by YunQiang Su.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51464
llvm-svn: 344570
This enables the driver support for direct split DWARF emission for
Fuchsia in addition to Linux.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53248
llvm-svn: 344556
Tests should not assume the linker's name, CLANG_DEFAULT_LINKER could
change it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53219
llvm-svn: 344482
The test was failing on e.g. PPC which can't target Windows. Fix by
requiring X86 target in the test. Also, make sure the output goes to a
temporary directory, since CWD may not be writable.
llvm-svn: 344462
Summary:
Android mandates that devices have at least vfpv3-d16 until
Marshmallow and NEON after that. Still honor the user's decision, but
raise the defaults for Android targets.
Reviewers: srhines, pirama, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, peter.smith
Reviewed By: peter.smith
Subscribers: peter.smith, rengolin, kristof.beyls, chrib, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53121
llvm-svn: 344367
Breaks some of the Android bots because they aren't expecting to need
to explicitly set -stdlib.
This reverts commit 031072f5048654b01a40f639633de1ff4e2f3dc8.
llvm-svn: 344297
Summary:
RTLD_LAZY is not supported on Android (though failing to use `-z now`
will work since it is assumed by the loader).
RelRO is required.
Reviewers: srhines, pirama
Reviewed By: srhines
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53117
llvm-svn: 344295
Summary:
Android supports GNU style hashes as of Marshmallow, so we should be
generating both styles for pre-M targets and GNU hashes for newer
targets.
Reviewers: srhines, pirama
Reviewed By: srhines
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53118
llvm-svn: 344293
This is part of previous commit [HIP] Replace irif library with hip.amdgcn.bc
Reviewers: yaxunl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52673
llvm-svn: 344285
No longer use irif amdgcn library, instead we will use the previous fence functions from new hip.amdgcn.bc bitcode library. Update hip-device-libs.hip test as well.
llvm-svn: 344281
Add a /showFilenames option for users who want clang to echo the
currently compiled filename. MSVC does this echoing by default, and it's
useful for showing progress in build systems that doesn't otherwise
provide any progress report, such as MSBuild.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52773
llvm-svn: 344234
Summary:
As per IRC disscussion, it seems we really want to have more fine-grained `-fsanitize=implicit-integer-truncation`:
* A check when both of the types are unsigned.
* Another check for the other cases (either one of the types is signed, or both of the types is signed).
This is clang part.
Compiler-rt part is D50902.
Reviewers: rsmith, vsk, Sanitizers
Reviewed by: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50901
llvm-svn: 344230
This can be used to preserve profiling information across codebase
changes that have widespread impact on mangled names, but across which
most profiling data should still be usable. For example, when switching
from libstdc++ to libc++, or from the old libstdc++ ABI to the new ABI,
or even from a 32-bit to a 64-bit build.
The user can provide a remapping file specifying parts of mangled names
that should be treated as equivalent (eg, std::__1 should be treated as
equivalent to std::__cxx11), and profile data will be treated as
applying to a particular function if its name is equivalent to the name
of a function in the profile data under the provided equivalences. See
the documentation change for a description of how this is configured.
Remapping is supported for both sample-based profiling and instruction
profiling. We do not support remapping indirect branch target
information, but all other profile data should be remapped
appropriately.
Support is only added for the new pass manager. If someone wants to also
add support for this for the old pass manager, doing so should be
straightforward.
llvm-svn: 344199
For AArch64, crypto means:
- sm4 + sha3 + sha2 + aes for Armv8.4-A and up, and
- sha2 + aes for Armv8.3-A and earlier.
For AArch32:
Crypto means sha2 + aes, because the Armv8.2-A crypto instructions
were added to AArch64 only.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50179
llvm-svn: 343758
This avoids finding a similar matching GCC installation outside
of the test directory tree in the surrounding environment, which
would make the test fail. (This happened on Ubuntu 16.04.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52533
llvm-svn: 343702
This patch renames -f{no-}cuda-rdc to -f{no-}gpu-rdc and keeps the original
options as aliases. When -fgpu-rdc is off,
clang will assume the device code in each translation unit does not call
external functions except those in the device library, therefore it is possible
to compile the device code in each translation unit to self-contained kernels
and embed them in the host object, so that the host object behaves like
usual host object which can be linked by lld.
The benefits of this feature is: 1. allow users to create static libraries which
can be linked by host linker; 2. amortized device code linking time.
This patch modifies HIP action builder to insert actions for linking device
code and generating HIP fatbin, and pass HIP fatbin to host backend action.
It extracts code for constructing command for generating HIP fatbin as
a function so that it can be reused by early finalization. It also modifies
codegen of HIP host constructor functions to embed the device fatbin
when it is available.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52377
llvm-svn: 343611
The implementation of this is in TargetParser, so we only need to add a
test for it in clang.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52493
llvm-svn: 343566
Linking to ASan for MinGW is similar to MSVC, but MinGW always links
the MSVCRT dynamically, so there is only one of the MSVC cases to
consider.
When linking to a shared compiler runtime library on MinGW, the suffix
of the import library is .dll.a.
The existing case of .dll as suffix for windows in general doesn't
seem correct (since this is used for linking). As long as callers never
actually set the Shared flag, the default static suffix of .lib also
worked fine for import libraries as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52538
llvm-svn: 343537
clang-offload-bundler should not be invoked with the unbundling action
when the input file type does not match the action type. For example,
.so files should be unbundled during linking phase and should be linked
only with the host code.
llvm-svn: 343335
Review D52594 will change the default in llvm for armv6k from the
non-existent cpu arm1176jf-s to mpcore. The tests in arm-cortex-cpus.c
need to be updated to account for this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52595
llvm-svn: 343304
'ld{{.*}}"' seems to match the complete line for me which is failing
the test. Only allow an optional '.exe' for Windows systems as most
other tests do.
Another possibility would be to collapse the greedy expression with
the next check to avoid matching the full line.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52619
llvm-svn: 343240
When looking for the bclib Clang considered the default library
path first while it preferred directories in LIBRARY_PATH when
constructing the invocation of nvlink. The latter actually makes
more sense because during development it allows using a non-default
runtime library. So change the search for the bclib to start
looking in directories given by LIBRARY_PATH.
Additionally add a new option --libomptarget-nvptx-path= which
will be searched first. This will be handy for testing purposes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51686
llvm-svn: 343230
The implementation of this is in TargetParser, so we only need to add a
test for it in clang.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52492
llvm-svn: 343220
Explicitly selected MIPS ABI using the `-mabi` option implies
corresponding target triple. For 'O32' ABI it's a 32-bit target triple
like `mips-linux-gnu`. For 'N32' and 'N64' ABIs it's a 64-bit target
triple like `mips64-linux-gnu`. This patch adjusts target triple
accordingly these rules like we do for pseudo-target flags '-m64',
'-m32' etc already.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52290
llvm-svn: 343169
This patch allows targetting Armv8.5-A from Clang. Most of the
implementation is in TargetParser, so this is mostly just adding tests.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52491
llvm-svn: 343111
Add --cuda-path-ignore-env option to those test cases to ensure the clang
driver always pick the CUDA path specified by --sysroot.
Reviewers: tra, Hahnfeld
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52259
llvm-svn: 343075
types."
It reverts commit r342991 + several other commits intended to fix the
tests. Still have some failed tests, need to investigate it.
llvm-svn: 343002
clang-offload-bundler should not be invoked with the unbundling action
when the input file type does not match the action type. For example,
.so files should be unbundled during linking phase and should be linked
only with the host code.
llvm-svn: 342991
Summary:
Making X[8-15,18] registers call-saved is used to support
CONFIG_ARM64_LSE_ATOMICS in Linux kernel.
Signed-off-by: Tri Vo <trong@android.com>
Reviewers: srhines, nickdesaulniers, javed.absar
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, jfb, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52399
llvm-svn: 342990
This provides better help text in "clang-cl /?".
Also it cleans things up a bit: previously "/Od" could be handled either
as a separate flag aliased to "-O0", or by the main optimization flag
processing in TranslateOptArg. With this patch, all the flags get
aliased back to /O so they're handled by TranslateOptArg.
Thanks to Nico for the idea!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52266
llvm-svn: 342977
When embedding bitcode, only a subset of the arguments should be recorded into
the bitcode compilation commandline. The frontend job is split into two jobs,
one which will generate the bitcode. Ensure that the arguments for the
compilation to bitcode is properly stripped so that the embedded arguments are
the permitted subset.
llvm-svn: 342929
Armv8.4-A adds a few FP16 instructions that can optionally be implemented
in CPUs of Armv8.2-A and above.
This patch adds a feature to clang to permit selection of these
instructions. This interacts with the +fp16 option as follows:
Prior to Armv8.4-A:
*) +fp16fml implies +fp16
*) +nofp16 implies +nofp16fml
From Armv8.4-A:
*) The above conditions apply, additionally: +fp16 implies +fp16fml
Patch by Bernard Ogden.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50229
llvm-svn: 342862
Summary:
Add a test and ensure that we propagate the
-fxray-instrumentation-bundle flag from the driver invocation to the
-cc1 options.
Reviewers: mboerger, tejohnson
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52342
llvm-svn: 342715
Summary:
Previously, any instance of -fomit-frame-pointer would make it such that
-pg was an invalid flag combination. If -fno-omit-frame-pointer is
passed later on the command line (such that it actually takes effect),
-pg should be allowed.
Reviewers: nickdesaulniers
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Subscribers: manojgupta, nickdesaulniers, cfe-commits, kongyi, chh, pirama
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51713
llvm-svn: 342165
Summary: Reserving registers x1-7 is used to support CONFIG_ARM64_LSE_ATOMICS in Linux kernel. This change adds support for reserving registers x1 through x7.
Reviewers: javed.absar, efriedma, nickdesaulniers, srhines, phosek
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Subscribers: manojgupta, jfb, cfe-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48581
llvm-svn: 342100
Change Hexagon so that the setting for fp-contract is the default setting.
This makes Hexagon consistent with all other targets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49999
llvm-svn: 342078
In rL341655 we added additional behaviour to the Driver for riscv32-unknown-elf
when the sysroot is empty.
The new tests that check the new behaviour expect that the absence of --sysroot
in the command-line implies that the sysroot empty. This doesn't hold if clang
is built with a non-empty DEFAULT_SYSROOT in cmake. When this is the case, this
test fails.
Since the new behaviour is triggered when the sysroot is empty, pass an empty
--sysroot to avoid using the default (if any).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51972
llvm-svn: 342060
With clang-cl, when the user specifies /Yc or /Yu without a filename
the compiler uses a #pragma hdrstop in the main source file to
determine the end of the PCH. If a header is specified with /Yc or
/Yu #pragma hdrstop has no effect.
The optional #pragma hdrstop filename argument is not yet supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51391
llvm-svn: 341963
This change allows usage of -march when using the clang-cl driver. This is similar to MSVC's /arch; however -march can target precisely all supported CPUs, while /arch has a more restricted set.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51806
llvm-svn: 341847
[RISCV] Add support for computing sysroot for riscv32-unknown-elf
Extends r338385 to allow the driver to compute the sysroot when an explicit path is not provided. This allows the linker to find C runtime files and the correct include directory for header files.
Patch by lewis-revill (Lewis Revill)
llvm-svn: 341655