There is no need to check for deferred diag when device compilation or target is
not given. This results in considerable build time improvement in some cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109175
This patch fixes various issues with our prior `declare target` handling
and extends it to support `omp begin declare target` as well.
This started with PR49649 in mind, trying to provide a way for users to
avoid the "ref" global use introduced for globals with internal linkage.
From there it went down the rabbit hole, e.g., all variables, even
`nohost` ones, were emitted into the device code so it was impossible to
determine if "ref" was needed late in the game (based on the name only).
To make it really useful, `begin declare target` was needed as it can
carry the `device_type`. Not emitting variables eagerly had a ripple
effect. Finally, the precedence of the (explicit) declare target list
items needed to be taken into account, that meant we cannot just look
for any declare target attribute to make a decision. This caused the
handling of functions to require fixup as well.
I tried to clean up things while I was at it, e.g., we should not "parse
declarations and defintions" as part of OpenMP parsing, this will always
break at some point. Instead, we keep track what region we are in and
act on definitions and declarations instead, this is what we do for
declare variant and other begin/end directives already.
Highlights:
- new diagnosis for restrictions specificed in the standard,
- delayed emission of globals not mentioned in an explicit
list of a declare target,
- omission of `nohost` globals on the host and `host` globals on the
device,
- no explicit parsing of declarations in-between `omp [begin] declare
variant` and the corresponding end anymore, regular parsing instead,
- precedence for explicit mentions in `declare target` lists over
implicit mentions in the declaration-definition-seq, and
- `omp allocate` declarations will now replace an earlier emitted
global, if necessary.
---
Notes:
The patch is larger than I hoped but it turns out that most changes do
on their own lead to "inconsistent states", which seem less desirable
overall.
After working through this I feel the standard should remove the
explicit declare target forms as the delayed emission is horrible.
That said, while we delay things anyway, it seems to me we check too
often for the current status even though that is often not sufficient to
act upon. There seems to be a lot of duplication that can probably be
trimmed down. Eagerly emitting some things seems pretty weak as an
argument to keep so much logic around.
---
Reviewed By: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101030
This third patch in the series removes version 5.0 string from
test cases making them check for default version. It also add test
cases for version 4.5.
Reviewed By: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85214
If the function is not marked exlicitly as declare target and it calls
function(s), marked as declare target device_type(host), these host-only
functions should not be dignosed as used in device mode, if the caller
function is not used in device mode too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86164
Summary:
When -fopenmp option is specified then version 5.0 will be set as
default.
Reviewers: gregrodgers, jdoerfert, ABataev
Reviewed By: ABataev
Subscribers: pdhaliwal, yaxunl, guansong, sstefan1, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81098
This patch removes the explicit call graph for CUDA/HIP/OpenMP deferred
diagnostics generated during parsing since it is error prone due to
incomplete information about function declarations during parsing. In stead,
this patch does a post-parsing AST traverse and emits deferred diagnostics
based on the use graph implicitly generated during the traverse.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70172
CUDA/HIP program may be compiled with -fopenmp. In this case, -fopenmp is only passed to host compilation
to take advantages of multi-threads computation.
CUDA/HIP and OpenMP both use Sema::DeviceCallGraph to store functions to be analyzed and remove them
once they decide the function is sure to be emitted. CUDA/HIP and OpenMP have different functions to determine
if a function is sure to be emitted.
To check host/device correctly for CUDA/HIP when -fopenmp is enabled, there needs a unified logic to determine
whether a function is to be emitted. The logic needs to be aware of both CUDA and OpenMP logic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67837
llvm-svn: 374263
construct.
OpenMP 5.0 introduced new clause for declare target directive, device_type clause, which may accept values host, nohost, and any. Host means
that the function must be emitted only for the host, nohost - only for
the device, and any - for both, device and the host.
llvm-svn: 369775
target.
According to OpenMP 5.0, if a lambda declaration and definition appears between a declare target directive and the matching end declare target directive, all variables that are captured by the lambda expression must also appear in a to clause.
llvm-svn: 369146
Sema analysis should not mark functions as an implicit declare target,
it may break codegen. Simplified semantic analysis and removed extra
code for implicit declare target functions.
llvm-svn: 341939
Add the capability to nest multiple declare target directives
- including header files within a declare target region.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51378
Patch by Patrick Lyster
llvm-svn: 341766
We should not emit warning that the parameters are not marked as declare
target, these declaration are local and cannot be marked as declare
target.
llvm-svn: 331211
constructs.
The compiler may emit some extra warnings for functions, that are
implicit specialization of the templates, declared in the target region.
llvm-svn: 325391
only.
Added support for -fopenmp-simd option that allows compilation of
simd-based constructs without emission of OpenMP runtime calls.
llvm-svn: 321560
This patch is to add diagnose when a function name is
specified on the link clause. According to the OpenMP
spec, only the list items that exclude the function
name are allowed on the link clause.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40968
llvm-svn: 320521
Clang asserts on undeclared variables on the to or link clause in the declare
target directive. The patch is to properly diagnose the error.
// foo1 and foo2 are not declared
#pragma omp declare target to(foo1)
#pragma omp declare target link(foo2)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40588
llvm-svn: 319458
declaration.
Patch allows using of the `#pragma omp declare target`| `#pragma omp end
declare target` directives inside the structures if we need to mark as
declare target only some static members.
llvm-svn: 314833
Support OpenMP version 4.5 syntax for #pragma omp declare target.
Syntax:
#pragma omp declare target (extended-list) new-line
or
#pragma omp declare target clause[ [,] clause ... ] new-line
Where clause is one of the following:
to(extended-list)
link(list)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20011
llvm-svn: 268925
Add parsing, sema analysis for 'declare target' construct for OpenMP 4.0
(4.5 support will be added in separate patch).
The declare target directive specifies that variables, functions (C, C++
and Fortran), and subroutines (Fortran) are mapped to a device. The declare
target directive is a declarative directive. In Clang declare target is
implemented as implicit attribute for the declaration.
The syntax of the declare target directive is as follows:
#pragma omp declare target
declarations-definition-seq
#pragma omp end declare target
Based on patch from Michael Wong http://reviews.llvm.org/D15321
llvm-svn: 265530