Add parsing, sema analysis and serialization/deserialization for 'declare reduction' construct.
User-defined reductions are defined as
#pragma omp declare reduction( reduction-identifier : typename-list : combiner ) [initializer ( initializer-expr )]
These custom reductions may be used in 'reduction' clauses of OpenMP constructs. The combiner specifies how partial results can be combined into a single value. The
combiner can use the special variable identifiers omp_in and omp_out that are of the type of the variables being reduced with this reduction-identifier. Each of them will
denote one of the values to be combined before executing the combiner. It is assumed that the special omp_out identifier will refer to the storage that holds the resulting
combined value after executing the combiner.
As the initializer-expr value of a user-defined reduction is not known a priori the initializer-clause can be used to specify one. Then the contents of the initializer-clause
will be used as the initializer for private copies of reduction list items where the omp_priv identifier will refer to the storage to be initialized. The special identifier
omp_orig can also appear in the initializer-clause and it will refer to the storage of the original variable to be reduced.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11182
llvm-svn: 262582
This is like r262493, but for pragma detect_mismatch instead of pragma comment.
The two pragmas have similar behavior, so use the same approach for both.
llvm-svn: 262506
`#pragma comment` was handled by Sema calling a function on ASTConsumer, and
CodeGen then implementing this function and writing things to its output.
Instead, introduce a PragmaCommentDecl AST node and hang one off the
TranslationUnitDecl for every `#pragma comment` line, and then use the regular
serialization machinery. (Since PragmaCommentDecl has codegen relevance, it's
eagerly deserialized.)
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17799
llvm-svn: 262493
OMPCapturedExprDecl allows caopturing not only of fielddecls, but also
other expressions. It also allows to simplify codegen for several
clauses.
llvm-svn: 260492
OpenMP 4.5 introduces privatization of non-static data members of current class in non-static member functions.
To correctly handle such kind of privatization a new (pseudo)declaration VarDecl-based node is added. It allows to reuse an existing code for capturing variables in Lambdas/Block/Captured blocks of code for correct privatization and codegen.
llvm-svn: 260077
reclaiming a call result in order to ignore it or assign it
to an __unsafe_unretained variable. This avoids adding
an unwanted retain/release pair when the return value is
not actually returned autoreleased (e.g. when it is returned
from a nonatomic getter or a typical collection accessor).
This runtime function is only available on the latest Apple
OS releases; the backwards-compatibility story is that you
don't get the optimization unless your deployment target is
recent enough. Sorry.
rdar://20530049
llvm-svn: 258962
This new builtin template allows for incredibly fast instantiations of
templates like std::integer_sequence.
Performance numbers follow:
My work station has 64 GB of ram + 20 Xeon Cores at 2.8 GHz.
__make_integer_seq<std::integer_sequence, int, 90000> takes 0.25
seconds.
std::make_integer_sequence<int, 90000> takes unbound time, it is still
running. Clang is consuming gigabytes of memory.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13786
llvm-svn: 252036
We don't have a good place to put them. Our previous spot was causing us
to optimize loads from the exception object to undef, because it was
after the catchpad instruction that models the write to the catch
object.
llvm-svn: 249616
- Remove virtual SC_OpenCLWorkGroupLocal storage type specifier
as it conflicts with static local variables now and prevents
diagnosing static local address space variables correctly.
- Allow static local and global variables (OpenCL2.0 s6.8 and s6.5.1).
- Improve diagnostics of allowed ASes for variables in different scopes:
(i) Global or static local variables have to be in global
or constant ASes (OpenCL1.2 s6.5, OpenCL2.0 s6.5.1);
(ii) Non-kernel function variables can't be declared in local
or constant ASes (OpenCL1.1 s6.5.2 and s6.5.3).
http://reviews.llvm.org/D13105
llvm-svn: 248906
separately from building the instruction so that it's
preserved even in -Asserts builds.
Employ C++'s mystical "comment" feature to discourage
breaking this in the future.
llvm-svn: 246991
Introduce an Address type to bundle a pointer value with an
alignment. Introduce APIs on CGBuilderTy to work with Address
values. Change core APIs on CGF/CGM to traffic in Address where
appropriate. Require alignments to be non-zero. Update a ton
of code to compute and propagate alignment information.
As part of this, I've promoted CGBuiltin's EmitPointerWithAlignment
helper function to CGF and made use of it in a number of places in
the expression emitter.
The end result is that we should now be significantly more correct
when performing operations on objects that are locally known to
be under-aligned. Since alignment is not reliably tracked in the
type system, there are inherent limits to this, but at least we
are no longer confused by standard operations like derived-to-base
conversions and array-to-pointer decay. I've also fixed a large
number of bugs where we were applying the complete-object alignment
to a pointer instead of the non-virtual alignment, although most of
these were hidden by the very conservative approach we took with
member alignment.
Also, because IRGen now reliably asserts on zero alignments, we
should no longer be subject to an absurd but frustrating recurring
bug where an incomplete type would report a zero alignment and then
we'd naively do a alignmentAtOffset on it and emit code using an
alignment equal to the largest power-of-two factor of the offset.
We should also now be emitting much more aggressive alignment
attributes in the presence of over-alignment. In particular,
field access now uses alignmentAtOffset instead of min.
Several times in this patch, I had to change the existing
code-generation pattern in order to more effectively use
the Address APIs. For the most part, this seems to be a strict
improvement, like doing pointer arithmetic with GEPs instead of
ptrtoint. That said, I've tried very hard to not change semantics,
but it is likely that I've failed in a few places, for which I
apologize.
ABIArgInfo now always carries the assumed alignment of indirect and
indirect byval arguments. In order to cut down on what was already
a dauntingly large patch, I changed the code to never set align
attributes in the IR on non-byval indirect arguments. That is,
we still generate code which assumes that indirect arguments have
the given alignment, but we don't express this information to the
backend except where it's semantically required (i.e. on byvals).
This is likely a minor regression for those targets that did provide
this information, but it'll be trivial to add it back in a later
patch.
I partially punted on applying this work to CGBuiltin. Please
do not add more uses of the CreateDefaultAligned{Load,Store}
APIs; they will be going away eventually.
llvm-svn: 246985
Sometimes we can provide an initializer for static locals, in which case
we sometimes might need to change the type. Changing the type requires
making a new LLVM GlobalVariable, and in this codepath we were
forgetting to transfer the comdat.
Fixes PR23838.
Patch by Ivan Garramona.
llvm-svn: 242704
Produce type parameter declarations for Objective-C type parameters,
and attach lists of type parameters to Objective-C classes,
categories, forward declarations, and extensions as
appropriate. Perform semantic analysis of type bounds for type
parameters, both in isolation and across classes/categories/extensions
to ensure consistency.
Also handle (de-)serialization of Objective-C type parameter lists,
along with sundry other things one must do to add a new declaration to
Clang.
Note that Objective-C type parameters are typedef name declarations,
like typedefs and C++11 type aliases, in support of type erasure.
Part of rdar://problem/6294649.
llvm-svn: 241541
Function static variables, typedefs and records (class, struct or union) declared inside
a lexical scope were associated with the function as their parent scope, rather than the
lexical scope they are defined or declared in.
This fixes PR19238
Patch by: amjad.aboud@intel.com
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9760
llvm-svn: 241154
The patch is generated using this command:
$ tools/extra/clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py -fix \
-checks=-*,llvm-namespace-comment -header-filter='llvm/.*|clang/.*' \
work/llvm/tools/clang
To reduce churn, not touching namespaces spanning less than 10 lines.
llvm-svn: 240270
Summary:
In addition to easier syntax, IRBuilder makes sure to set correct
debug locations for newly added instructions (bitcast and
llvm.lifetime itself). This restores the original behavior, which
was modified by r234581 (reapplied as r235553).
Extend one of the tests to check for debug locations.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: aadg, dblaikie
Subscribers: cfe-commits, majnemer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10418
llvm-svn: 239643
Functions with available_externally linkage will not be emitted to object
files (they will just be undefined symbols), so it does not make sense to
put them in comdats.
Creates a second overload of maybeSetTrivialComdat that uses the GlobalObject
instead of the Decl, and uses that in several places that had the faulty
logic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9580
llvm-svn: 236879
Fix for codegen of static variables declared inside of captured statements. Captured statements are actually a transparent DeclContexts, so we have to skip them when trying to get a mangled name for statics.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9522
llvm-svn: 236701
In r235553, Clang started emitting lifetime markers more often. This
caused false negative in MSan, because MSan only poisons all allocas
once at function entry. Eventually, MSan should poison allocas at
lifetime start and probably also lifetime end, but until then, let's not
emit markers that aren't going to be useful.
llvm-svn: 235613
This reverts commit r234700. It turns out that the lifetime markers
were not the cause of Chromium failing but a bug which was uncovered by
optimizations exposed by the markers.
llvm-svn: 235553
Now that TailRecursionElimination has been fixed with r222354, the
threshold on size for lifetime marker insertion can be removed. This
only affects named temporary though, as the patch for unnamed temporaries
is still in progress.
My previous commit (r222993) was not handling debuginfo correctly, but
this could only be seen with some asan tests. Basically, lifetime markers
are just instrumentation for the compiler's usage and should not affect
debug information; however, the cleanup infrastructure was assuming it
contained only destructors, i.e. actual code to be executed, and was
setting the breakpoint for the end of the function to the closing '}', and
not the return statement, in order to show some destructors have been
called when leaving the function. This is wrong when the cleanups are only
lifetime markers, and this is now fixed.
llvm-svn: 234581
of extern "C" declarations. This is simpler and vastly more efficient for
modules builds (we no longer need to load *all* extern "C" declarations to
determine if we have a redeclaration).
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 231538
distinction between the different use-cases. With the previous default
behavior we would occasionally emit empty debug locations in situations
where they actually were strictly required (= on invoke insns).
We now have a choice between defaulting to an empty location or an
artificial location.
Specifically, this fixes a bug caused by a missing debug location when
emitting C++ EH cleanup blocks from within an artificial function, such as
an ObjC destroy helper function.
rdar://problem/19670595
llvm-svn: 228003
Several pieces of code were relying on implicit debug location setting
which usually lead to incorrect line information anyway. So I've fixed
those (in r225955 and r225845) separately which should pave the way for
this commit to be cleanly reapplied.
The reason these implicit dependencies resulted in crashes with this
patch is that the debug location would no longer implicitly leak from
one place to another, but be set back to invalid. Once a call with
no/invalid location was emitted, if that call was ever inlined it could
produce invalid debugloc chains and assert during LLVM's codegen.
There may be further cases of such bugs in this patch - they're hard to
flush out with regression testing, so I'll keep an eye out for reports
and investigate/fix them ASAP if they come up.
Original commit message:
Reapply "DebugInfo: Generalize debug info location handling"
Originally committed in r224385 and reverted in r224441 due to concerns
this change might've introduced a crash. Turns out this change fixes the
crash introduced by one of my earlier more specific location handling
changes (those specific fixes are reverted by this patch, in favor of
the more general solution).
Recommitted in r224941 and reverted in r224970 after it caused a crash
when building compiler-rt. Looks to be due to this change zeroing out
the debug location when emitting default arguments (which were meant to
inherit their outer expression's location) thus creating call
instructions without locations - these create problems for inlining and
must not be created. That is fixed and tested in this version of the
change.
Original commit message:
This is a more scalable (fixed in mostly one place, rather than many
places that will need constant improvement/maintenance) solution to
several commits I've made recently to increase source fidelity for
subexpressions.
This resetting had to be done at the DebugLoc level (not the
SourceLocation level) to preserve scoping information (if the resetting
was done with CGDebugInfo::EmitLocation, it would've caused the tail end
of an expression's codegen to end up in a potentially different scope
than the start, even though it was at the same source location). The
drawback to this is that it might leave CGDebugInfo out of sync. Ideally
CGDebugInfo shouldn't have a duplicate sense of the current
SourceLocation, but for now it seems it does... - I don't think I'm
going to tackle removing that just now.
I expect this'll probably cause some more buildbot fallout & I'll
investigate that as it comes up.
Also these sort of improvements might be starting to show a weakness/bug
in LLVM's line table handling: we don't correctly emit is_stmt for
statements, we just put it on every line table entry. This means one
statement split over multiple lines appears as multiple 'statements' and
two statements on one line (without column info) are treated as one
statement.
I don't think we have any IR representation of statements that would
help us distinguish these cases and identify the beginning of each
statement - so that might be something we need to add (possibly to the
lexical scope chain - a scope for each statement). This does cause some
problems for GDB and possibly other DWARF consumers.
llvm-svn: 225956
The llvm IR until recently had no support for comdats. This was a problem when
targeting C++ on ELF/COFF as just using weak linkage would cause quite a bit of
dead bits to remain on the executable (unless -ffunction-sections,
-fdata-sections and --gc-sections were used).
To fix the problem, llvm's codegen will just assume that any weak or linkonce
that is not in an explicit comdat should be output in one with the same name as
the global.
This unfortunately breaks cases like pr19848 where a weak symbol is not
xpected to be part of any comdat.
Now that we have explicit comdats in the IR, we can finally get both cases
right.
This first patch just makes clang give explicit comdats to GlobalValues where
t is allowed to.
A followup patch to llvm will then stop implicitly producing comdats.
llvm-svn: 225705
This reverts commit r225000, r225021, r225083, r225086, r225090.
The root change (r225000) still has several issues where it's caused
calls to be emitted without debug locations. This causes assertion
failures if/when those calls are inlined.
I'll work up some test cases and fixes before recommitting this.
llvm-svn: 225555
Originally committed in r224385 and reverted in r224441 due to concerns
this change might've introduced a crash. Turns out this change fixes the
crash introduced by one of my earlier more specific location handling
changes (those specific fixes are reverted by this patch, in favor of
the more general solution).
Recommitted in r224941 and reverted in r224970 after it caused a crash
when building compiler-rt. Looks to be due to this change zeroing out
the debug location when emitting default arguments (which were meant to
inherit their outer expression's location) thus creating call
instructions without locations - these create problems for inlining and
must not be created. That is fixed and tested in this version of the
change.
Original commit message:
This is a more scalable (fixed in mostly one place, rather than many
places that will need constant improvement/maintenance) solution to
several commits I've made recently to increase source fidelity for
subexpressions.
This resetting had to be done at the DebugLoc level (not the
SourceLocation level) to preserve scoping information (if the resetting
was done with CGDebugInfo::EmitLocation, it would've caused the tail end
of an expression's codegen to end up in a potentially different scope
than the start, even though it was at the same source location). The
drawback to this is that it might leave CGDebugInfo out of sync. Ideally
CGDebugInfo shouldn't have a duplicate sense of the current
SourceLocation, but for now it seems it does... - I don't think I'm
going to tackle removing that just now.
I expect this'll probably cause some more buildbot fallout & I'll
investigate that as it comes up.
Also these sort of improvements might be starting to show a weakness/bug
in LLVM's line table handling: we don't correctly emit is_stmt for
statements, we just put it on every line table entry. This means one
statement split over multiple lines appears as multiple 'statements' and
two statements on one line (without column info) are treated as one
statement.
I don't think we have any IR representation of statements that would
help us distinguish these cases and identify the beginning of each
statement - so that might be something we need to add (possibly to the
lexical scope chain - a scope for each statement). This does cause some
problems for GDB and possibly other DWARF consumers.
llvm-svn: 225000
Originally committed in r224385 and reverted in r224441 due to concerns
this change might've introduced a crash. Turns out this change fixes the
crash introduced by one of my earlier more specific location handling
changes (those specific fixes are reverted by this patch, in favor of
the more general solution).
Original commit message:
This is a more scalable (fixed in mostly one place, rather than many
places that will need constant improvement/maintenance) solution to
several commits I've made recently to increase source fidelity for
subexpressions.
This resetting had to be done at the DebugLoc level (not the
SourceLocation level) to preserve scoping information (if the resetting
was done with CGDebugInfo::EmitLocation, it would've caused the tail end
of an expression's codegen to end up in a potentially different scope
than the start, even though it was at the same source location). The
drawback to this is that it might leave CGDebugInfo out of sync. Ideally
CGDebugInfo shouldn't have a duplicate sense of the current
SourceLocation, but for now it seems it does... - I don't think I'm
going to tackle removing that just now.
I expect this'll probably cause some more buildbot fallout & I'll
investigate that as it comes up.
Also these sort of improvements might be starting to show a weakness/bug
in LLVM's line table handling: we don't correctly emit is_stmt for
statements, we just put it on every line table entry. This means one
statement split over multiple lines appears as multiple 'statements' and
two statements on one line (without column info) are treated as one
statement.
I don't think we have any IR representation of statements that would
help us distinguish these cases and identify the beginning of each
statement - so that might be something we need to add (possibly to the
lexical scope chain - a scope for each statement). This does cause some
problems for GDB and possibly other DWARF consumers.
llvm-svn: 224941
This is a more scalable (fixed in mostly one place, rather than many
places that will need constant improvement/maintenance) solution to
several commits I've made recently to increase source fidelity for
subexpressions.
This resetting had to be done at the DebugLoc level (not the
SourceLocation level) to preserve scoping information (if the resetting
was done with CGDebugInfo::EmitLocation, it would've caused the tail end
of an expression's codegen to end up in a potentially different scope
than the start, even though it was at the same source location). The
drawback to this is that it might leave CGDebugInfo out of sync. Ideally
CGDebugInfo shouldn't have a duplicate sense of the current
SourceLocation, but for now it seems it does... - I don't think I'm
going to tackle removing that just now.
I expect this'll probably cause some more buildbot fallout & I'll
investigate that as it comes up.
Also these sort of improvements might be starting to show a weakness/bug
in LLVM's line table handling: we don't correctly emit is_stmt for
statements, we just put it on every line table entry. This means one
statement split over multiple lines appears as multiple 'statements' and
two statements on one line (without column info) are treated as one
statement.
I don't think we have any IR representation of statements that would
help us distinguish these cases and identify the beginning of each
statement - so that might be something we need to add (possibly to the
lexical scope chain - a scope for each statement). This does cause some
problems for GDB and possibly other DWARF consumers.
llvm-svn: 224385
This particularly helps the fidelity of ASan reports (which can occur
even in these examples - if, for example, one uses placement new over a
buffer of insufficient size - now ASan will correctly identify which
member's initialization went over the end of the buffer).
This doesn't cover all types of members - more coming.
llvm-svn: 223726
Now that TailRecursionElimination has been fixed with r222354, the
threshold on size for lifetime marker insertion can be removed. This
only affects named temporary though, as the patch for unnamed temporaries
is still in progress.
llvm-svn: 222993
Local variables are not initialized, and every target has
been (incorrectly) ignoring the unnecessary request for
zero initialization.
llvm-svn: 221162
This patch generates some helper variables that used as private copies of the corresponding original variables inside an OpenMP 'parallel' directive. These generated variables are initialized by copy using values of the original variables (with the copy constructor, if any). For arrays, initializator is generated for single element and in the codegen procedure this initial value is automatically propagated between all elements of the private copy.
In outlined function, references to original variables are replaced by the references to these private helper variables. At the end of the initialization of the private variables an implicit barier is generated by calling __kmpc_barrier(...) runtime function to be sure that all threads were initialized using original values of the variables.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5140
llvm-svn: 219306
Boostrapping LLVM+Clang+LLDB without threshold on object size for
lifetime markers insertion has shown there was no significant change
in compile time, so let the stack slot colorizer do its optimization
for all slots.
llvm-svn: 219303
This patch generates some helper variables that used as private copies of the corresponding original variables inside an OpenMP 'parallel' directive. These generated variables are initialized by copy using values of the original variables (with the copy constructor, if any). For arrays, initializator is generated for single element and in the codegen procedure this initial value is automatically propagated between all elements of the private copy.
In outlined function, references to original variables are replaced by the references to these private helper variables. At the end of the initialization of the private variables an implicit barier is generated by calling __kmpc_barrier(...) runtime function to be sure that all threads were initialized using original values of the variables.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5140
llvm-svn: 219297
This patch generates some helper variables that used as private copies of the corresponding original variables inside an OpenMP 'parallel' directive. These generated variables are initialized by copy using values of the original variables (with the copy constructor, if any). For arrays, initializator is generated for single element and in the codegen procedure this initial value is automatically propagated between all elements of the private copy.
In outlined function, references to original variables are replaced by the references to these private helper variables. At the end of the initialization of the private variables an implicit barier is generated by calling __kmpc_barrier(...) runtime function to be sure that all threads were initialized using original values of the variables.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5140
llvm-svn: 219295
Summary:
Previously CodeGen assumed that static locals were emitted before they
could be accessed, which is true for automatic storage duration locals.
However, it is possible to have CodeGen emit a nested function that uses
a static local before emitting the function that defines the static
local, breaking that assumption.
Fix it by creating the static local upon access and ensuring that the
deferred function body gets emitted. We may not be able to emit the
initializer properly from outside the function body, so don't try.
Fixes PR18020. See also previous attempts to fix static locals in
PR6769 and PR7101.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4787
llvm-svn: 219265
Due to the possible presence of return-by-out parameters, using the LLVM
argument number count when numbering debug info arguments can end up
off-by-one. This could produce two arguments with the same number, which
would in turn cause LLVM to emit only one of those arguments (whichever
it found last) or assert (r215157).
llvm-svn: 215227
It is responsible for generating metadata consumed by sanitizer instrumentation
passes in the backend. Move several methods from CodeGenModule to SanitizerMetadata.
For now the class is stateless, but soon it won't be the case.
Instead of creating globals providing source-level information to ASan, we will create
metadata nodes/strings which will be turned into actual global variables in the
backend (if needed).
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 214564
The target method of the thunk will perform the cleanup. This can't be
tested in 32-bit x86 yet because passing something by value would create
an inalloca, and we refuse to generate broken code for that.
llvm-svn: 213976
Currently ASan instrumentation pass creates a string with global name
for each instrumented global (to include global names in the error report). Global
name is already mangled at this point, and we may not be able to demangle it
at runtime (e.g. there is no __cxa_demangle on Android).
Instead, create a string with fully qualified global name in Clang, and pass it
to ASan instrumentation pass in llvm.asan.globals metadata. If there is no metadata
for some global, ASan will use the original algorithm.
This fixes https://code.google.com/p/address-sanitizer/issues/detail?id=264.
llvm-svn: 212872
See https://code.google.com/p/address-sanitizer/issues/detail?id=299 for the
original feature request.
Introduce llvm.asan.globals metadata, which Clang (or any other frontend)
may use to report extra information about global variables to ASan
instrumentation pass in the backend. This metadata replaces
llvm.asan.dynamically_initialized_globals that was used to detect init-order
bugs. llvm.asan.globals contains the following data for each global:
1) source location (file/line/column info);
2) whether it is dynamically initialized;
3) whether it is blacklisted (shouldn't be instrumented).
Source location data is then emitted in the binary and can be picked up
by ASan runtime in case it needs to print error report involving some global.
For example:
0x... is located 4 bytes to the right of global variable 'C::array' defined in '/path/to/file:17:8' (0x...) of size 40
These source locations are printed even if the binary doesn't have any
debug info.
This is an ABI-breaking change. ASan initialization is renamed to
__asan_init_v4(). Pre-built libraries compiled with older Clang will not work
with the fresh runtime.
llvm-svn: 212188
Init-order and use-after-return modes can currently be enabled
by runtime flags. use-after-scope mode is not really working at the
moment.
The only problem I see is that users won't be able to disable extra
instrumentation for init-order and use-after-scope by a top-level Clang flag.
But this instrumentation was implicitly enabled for quite a while and
we didn't hear from users hurt by it.
llvm-svn: 210924
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
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
Summary:
A reference temporary should inherit the linkage of the variable it
initializes. Otherwise, we may hit cases where a reference temporary
wouldn't have the same value in all translation units.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3515
llvm-svn: 207451
data members by addition of CXXDefaultInitExpr node to the initializer expression,
it has broken treatment of arc code for such initializations. Reviewed by John McCall.
// rdar://16299964
llvm-svn: 203935
LLVM currently has a hack (shouldEmitUsedDirectiveFor) that causes it to not
print no_dead_strip for symbols starting with 'l' or 'L'. These are exactly the
ones that the clang's objc codegen is producing. The net result, is that it is
equivalent to llvm.compiler.used.
The need for putting the private symbol in llvm.compiler.used should be clear
(the objc runtime uses them). The reason for also putting the weak symbols in
it is for LTO: ld64 will not ask us to preserve the it.
llvm-svn: 203172
When a non-trivial parameter is present, clang now gathers up all the
parameters that lack inreg and puts them into a packed struct. MSVC
always aligns each parameter to 4 bytes and no more, so this is a pretty
simple struct to lay out.
On win64, non-trivial records are passed indirectly. Prior to this
change, clang was incorrectly using byval on win64.
I'm able to self-host a working clang with this change and additional
LLVM patches.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2636
llvm-svn: 200597
Summary:
MSVC destroys arguments in the callee from left to right. Because C++
objects have to be destroyed in the reverse order of construction, Clang
has to construct arguments from right to left and destroy arguments from
left to right.
This patch fixes the ordering by reversing the order of evaluation of
all call arguments under the MS C++ ABI.
Fixes PR18035.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2275
llvm-svn: 196402
CodeGenABITypes is a wrapper built on top of CodeGenModule that exposes
some of the functionality of CodeGenTypes (held by CodeGenModule),
specifically methods that determine the LLVM types appropriate for
function argument and return values.
I addition to CodeGenABITypes.h, CGFunctionInfo.h is introduced, and the
definitions of ABIArgInfo, RequiredArgs, and CGFunctionInfo are moved
into this new header from the private headers ABIInfo.h and CGCall.h.
Exposing this functionality is one part of making it possible for LLDB
to determine the actual ABI locations of function arguments and return
values, making it possible for it to determine this for any supported
target without hard-coding ABI knowledge in the LLDB code.
llvm-svn: 193717