from those that aren't.
This patch changes the way __block variables that aren't captured by
escaping blocks are handled:
- Since non-escaping blocks on the stack never get copied to the heap
(see https://reviews.llvm.org/D49303), Sema shouldn't error out when
the type of a non-escaping __block variable doesn't have an accessible
copy constructor.
- IRGen doesn't have to use the specialized byref structure (see
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/Block-ABI-Apple.html#id8) for a
non-escaping __block variable anymore. Instead IRGen can emit the
variable as a normal variable and copy the reference to the block
literal. Byref copy/dispose helpers aren't needed either.
This reapplies r343518 after fixing a use-after-free bug in function
Sema::ActOnBlockStmtExpr where the BlockScopeInfo was dereferenced after
it was popped and deleted.
rdar://problem/39352313
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51564
llvm-svn: 343542
from those that aren't.
This patch changes the way __block variables that aren't captured by
escaping blocks are handled:
- Since non-escaping blocks on the stack never get copied to the heap
(see https://reviews.llvm.org/D49303), Sema shouldn't error out when
the type of a non-escaping __block variable doesn't have an accessible
copy constructor.
- IRGen doesn't have to use the specialized byref structure (see
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/Block-ABI-Apple.html#id8) for a
non-escaping __block variable anymore. Instead IRGen can emit the
variable as a normal variable and copy the reference to the block
literal. Byref copy/dispose helpers aren't needed either.
This reapplies r341754, which was reverted in r341757 because it broke a
couple of bots. r341754 was calling markEscapingByrefs after the call to
PopFunctionScopeInfo, which caused the popped function scope to be
cleared out when the following code was compiled, for example:
$ cat test.m
struct A {
id data[10];
};
void foo() {
__block A v;
^{ (void)v; };
}
This commit calls markEscapingByrefs before calling PopFunctionScopeInfo
to prevent that from happening.
rdar://problem/39352313
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51564
llvm-svn: 343518
from those that aren't.
This patch changes the way __block variables that aren't captured by
escaping blocks are handled:
- Since non-escaping blocks on the stack never get copied to the heap
(see https://reviews.llvm.org/D49303), Sema shouldn't error out when
the type of a non-escaping __block variable doesn't have an accessible
copy constructor.
- IRGen doesn't have to use the specialized byref structure (see
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/Block-ABI-Apple.html#id8) for a
non-escaping __block variable anymore. Instead IRGen can emit the
variable as a normal variable and copy the reference to the block
literal. Byref copy/dispose helpers aren't needed either.
rdar://problem/39352313
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51564
llvm-svn: 341754
by a block.
Added checks for capturing of the variable in the block when trying to
emit correct address for the variable with the reference type. This
extra check allows correctly identify the variables that are not
captured in the block context.
llvm-svn: 340181
The compiler may produce unexpected error messages/crashes when declare
target variables were used. Patch fixes problems with the declarations
marked as declare target to or link.
llvm-svn: 339805
When a non-extended temporary object is created in a conditional branch, the
lifetime of that temporary ends outside the conditional (at the end of the
full-expression). If we're inserting lifetime markers, this means we could end
up generating
if (some_cond) {
lifetime.start(&tmp);
Tmp::Tmp(&tmp);
}
// ...
if (some_cond) {
lifetime.end(&tmp);
}
... for a full-expression containing a subexpression of the form `some_cond ?
Tmp().x : 0`. This patch moves the lifetime start for such a temporary out of
the conditional branch so that we don't need to generate an additional basic
block to hold the lifetime end marker.
This is disabled if we want precise lifetime markers (for asan's
stack-use-after-scope checks) or of the temporary has a non-trivial destructor
(in which case we'd generate an extra basic block anyway to hold the destructor
call).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50286
llvm-svn: 338945
Summary:
Emmiting new intrinsic that strips invariant.groups to make
devirtulization sound, as described in RFC: Devirtualization v2.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, amharc, kuhar
Subscribers: llvm-commits, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47299
Co-authored-by: Krzysztof Pszeniczny <krzysztof.pszeniczny@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 336137
Introduced CreateMemTempWithoutCast and CreateTemporaryAllocaWithoutCast to emit alloca
without casting to default addr space.
ActiveFlag is a temporary variable emitted for clean up. It is defined as AllocaInst* type and there is
a cast to AlllocaInst in SetActiveFlag. An alloca casted to generic pointer causes assertion in
SetActiveFlag.
Since there is only load/store of ActiveFlag, it is safe to use the original alloca, therefore use
CreateMemTempWithoutCast is called.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47099
llvm-svn: 332982
lifetime.start/end expects pointer argument in alloca address space.
However in C++ a temporary variable is in default address space.
This patch changes API CreateMemTemp and CreateTempAlloca to
get the original alloca instruction and pass it lifetime.start/end.
It only affects targets with non-zero alloca address space.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45900
llvm-svn: 332593
This is similar to the LLVM change https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290.
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\@brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\@brief //g' $i & done
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46320
llvm-svn: 331834
When we enter a __finally block, the CGF's CurCodeDecl will be null
(because CodeGenFunction::StartFunction is given an empty GlobalDecl for
a __finally block), and so the dyn_cast here will result in an assertion
failure. Change it to dyn_cast_or_null to handle this case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45523
llvm-svn: 329836
the tail padding is not reused.
We track on the AggValueSlot (and through a couple of other
initialization actions) whether we're dealing with an object that might
share its tail padding with some other object, so that we can avoid
emitting stores into the tail padding if that's the case. We still
widen stores into tail padding when we can do so.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45306
llvm-svn: 329342
variables.
Added emission of the offloading data sections for the variables within
declare target regions + fixes emission of the declare target variables
marked as declare target not within the declare target region.
llvm-svn: 328888
If the link clause is used on the declare target directive, the object
should be linked on target or target data directives, not during the
codegen. Patch adds support for this clause.
llvm-svn: 328544
source expressions when iterating over a PseudoObjectExpr's semantic
subexpression list.
Previously the loop in emitPseudoObjectExpr would emit the IR for each
OpaqueValueExpr that was in a PseudoObjectExpr's semantic-form
expression list and use the result when the OpaqueValueExpr later
appeared in other expressions. This caused an assertion failure when
AggExprEmitter tried to copy the result of an OpaqueValueExpr and the
copied type didn't have trivial copy/move constructors or assignment
operators.
This patch adds flag IsUnique to OpaqueValueExpr which indicates it is a
unique reference to its source expression (it is not used in multiple
places). The loop in emitPseudoObjectExpr ignores OpaqueValueExprs that
are unique and CodeGen visitors simply traverse the source expressions
of such OpaqueValueExprs.
rdar://problem/34363596
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39562
llvm-svn: 327939
Summary:
This patch enables debugging of C99 VLA types by generating more precise
LLVM Debug metadata, using the extended DISubrange 'count' field that
takes a DIVariable.
This should implement:
Bug 30553: Debug info generated for arrays is not what GDB expects (not as good as GCC's)
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=30553
Reviewers: echristo, aprantl, dexonsmith, clayborg, pcc, kristof.beyls, dblaikie
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: jholewinski, schweitz, davide, fhahn, JDevlieghere, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41698
llvm-svn: 323952
As discussed in the mail thread <https://groups.google.com/a/isocpp.org/forum/
#!topic/std-discussion/T64_dW3WKUk> "Calling noexcept function throug non-
noexcept pointer is undefined behavior?", such a call should not be UB.
However, Clang currently warns about it.
This change removes exception specifications from the function types recorded
for -fsanitize=function, both in the functions themselves and at the call sites.
That means that calling a non-noexcept function through a noexcept pointer will
also not be flagged as UB. In the review of this change, that was deemed
acceptable, at least for now. (See the "TODO" in compiler-rt
test/ubsan/TestCases/TypeCheck/Function/function.cpp.)
To remove exception specifications from types, the existing internal
ASTContext::getFunctionTypeWithExceptionSpec was made public, and some places
otherwise unrelated to this change have been adapted to call it, too.
This is the cfe part of a patch covering both cfe and compiler-rt.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40720
llvm-svn: 321859
only.
Added support for -fopenmp-simd option that allows compilation of
simd-based constructs without emission of OpenMP runtime calls.
llvm-svn: 321560
...when such an operation is done on an object during con-/destruction.
This is the cfe part of a patch covering both cfe and compiler-rt.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40295
llvm-svn: 321519
The new format requires to specify both the type of the access
and its size. This patch fixes setting access sizes for TBAA tags
that denote accesses to structure members. This fix affects all
future TBAA metadata tests for the new format, so I guess we
don't need any special tests for this fix.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41452
llvm-svn: 321250
Diagnose 'unreachable' UB when a noreturn function returns.
1. Insert a check at the end of functions marked noreturn.
2. A decl may be marked noreturn in the caller TU, but not marked in
the TU where it's defined. To diagnose this scenario, strip away the
noreturn attribute on the callee and insert check after calls to it.
Testing: check-clang, check-ubsan, check-ubsan-minimal, D40700
rdar://33660464
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40698
llvm-svn: 321231
At least <http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/sanitizer-x86_64-linux-android/
builds/6013/steps/annotate/logs/stdio> complains about
__ubsan::__ubsan_handle_function_type_mismatch_abort (compiler-rt
lib/ubsan/ubsan_handlers.cc) returning now despite being declared 'noreturn', so
looks like a different approach is needed for the function_type_mismatch check
to be called also in cases that may ultimately succeed.
llvm-svn: 320982
As discussed in the mail thread <https://groups.google.com/a/isocpp.org/forum/
#!topic/std-discussion/T64_dW3WKUk> "Calling noexcept function throug non-
noexcept pointer is undefined behavior?", such a call should not be UB.
However, Clang currently warns about it.
There is no cheap check whether two function type_infos only differ in noexcept,
so pass those two type_infos as additional data to the function_type_mismatch
handler (with the optimization of passing a null "static callee type" info when
that is already noexcept, so the additional check can be avoided anyway). For
the Itanium ABI (which appears to be the only one that happens to be used on
platforms that support -fsanitize=function, and which appears to only record
noexcept information for pointer-to-function type_infos, not for function
type_infos themselves), we then need to check the mangled names for occurrence
of "Do" representing "noexcept".
This is the cfe part of a patch covering both cfe and compiler-rt.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40720
llvm-svn: 320978
Most of the -Wsign-compare warnings are due to the fact that
enums are signed by default in the MS ABI, while the
tautological comparison warnings trigger on x86 builds where
sizeof(size_t) is 4 bytes, so N > numeric_limits<unsigned>::max()
is always false.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41256
llvm-svn: 320750
This is a follow-up to r320128. Eli pointed out that there is some gray
area in the language standard about whether the constant size is exact,
or a lower bound.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40940
llvm-svn: 320185
The basic idea behind this patch is that since in strict aliasing
mode all accesses to union members require their outermost
enclosing union objects to be specified explicitly, then for a
couple given accesses to union members of the form
p->a.b.c...
q->x.y.z...
it is known they can only alias if both p and q point to the same
union type and offset ranges of members a.b.c... and x.y.z...
overlap. Note that the actual types of the members do not matter.
Specifically, in this patch we do the following:
* Make unions to be valid TBAA base access types. This enables
generation of TBAA type descriptors for unions.
* Encode union types as structures with a single member of a
special "union member" type. Currently we do not encode
information about sizes of types, but conceptually such union
members are considered to be of the size of the whole union.
* Encode accesses to direct and indirect union members, including
member arrays, as accesses to these special members. All
accesses to members of a union thus get the same offset, which
is the offset of the union they are part of. This means the
existing LLVM TBAA machinery is able to handle such accesses
with no changes.
While this is already an improvement comparing to the current
situation, that is, representing all union accesses as may-alias
ones, there are further changes planned to complete the support
for unions. One of them is storing information about access sizes
so we can distinct accesses to non-overlapping union members,
including accesses to different elements of member arrays.
Another change is encoding type sizes in order to make it
possible to compute offsets within constant-indexed array
elements. These enhancements will be addressed with separate
patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39455
llvm-svn: 319413
Summary:
This change allows generalizing pointers in type signatures used for
cfi-icall by enabling the -fsanitize-cfi-icall-generalize-pointers flag.
This works by 1) emitting an additional generalized type signature
metadata node for functions and 2) llvm.type.test()ing for the
generalized type for translation units with the flag specified.
This flag is incompatible with -fsanitize-cfi-cross-dso because it would
require emitting twice as many type hashes which would increase artifact
size.
Reviewers: pcc, eugenis
Reviewed By: pcc
Subscribers: kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39358
llvm-svn: 317044
This patch fixes various places in clang to propagate may-alias
TBAA access descriptors during construction of lvalues, thus
eliminating the need for the LValueBaseInfo::MayAlias flag.
This is part of D38126 reworked to be a separate patch to
simplify review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39008
llvm-svn: 316988
For non-zero alloca addr space, alloca is usually casted to default addr
space immediately.
For non-vla, alloca is inserted at AllocaInsertPt, therefore the addr
space cast should also be insterted at AllocaInsertPt. However,
for vla, alloca is inserted at the current insertion point of IRBuilder,
therefore the addr space cast should also inserted at the current
insertion point of IRBuilder.
Currently clang always insert addr space cast at AllocaInsertPt, which
causes invalid IR.
This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39374
llvm-svn: 316909
Builder save/restores insertion pointer when emitting addr space cast
for alloca, but does not save/restore debug loc, which causes verifier
failure for certain call instructions.
This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39069
llvm-svn: 316484
The main change is that now we generate TBAA info before
constructing the resulting lvalue instead of constructing lvalue
with some default TBAA info and fixing it as necessary
afterwards. We also keep the TBAA info close to lvalue base info,
which is supposed to simplify their future merging.
This patch should not bring in any functional changes.
This is part of D38126 reworked to be a separate patch to
simplify review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38947
llvm-svn: 315989
This patch addresses the rest of the cases where we pass lvalue
base info, but do not provide corresponding TBAA info.
This patch should not bring in any functional changes.
This is part of D38126 reworked to be a separate patch to make
reviewing easier.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38945
llvm-svn: 315986
This patch enables explicit generation of TBAA information in all
cases where LValue base info is propagated or constructed in
non-trivial ways. Eventually, we will consider each of these
cases to make sure the TBAA information is correct and not too
conservative. For now, we just fall back to generating TBAA info
from the access type.
This patch should not bring in any functional changes.
This is part of D38126 reworked to be a separate patch to
simplify review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38733
llvm-svn: 315575
Besides obvious code simplification, avoiding explicit creation
of LValueBaseInfo objects makes it easier to make TBAA
information to be part of such objects.
This is part of D38126 reworked to be a separate patch to
simplify review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38695
llvm-svn: 315289
In C++11 variable to global variables are considered as constant
expressions and these variables are not captured in the outlined
regions. Patch allows capturing of such variables in the OpenMP regions.
llvm-svn: 315074
This patch is an attempt to clarify and simplify generation and
propagation of TBAA information. The idea is to pack all values
that describe a memory access, namely, base type, access type and
offset, into a single structure. This is supposed to make further
changes, such as adding support for unions and array members,
easier to prepare and review.
DecorateInstructionWithTBAA() is no more responsible for
converting types to tags. These implicit conversions not only
complicate reading the code, but also suggest assigning scalar
access tags while we generally prefer full-size struct-path tags.
TBAAPathTag is replaced with TBAAAccessInfo; the latter is now
the type of the keys of the cache map that translates access
descriptors to metadata nodes.
Fixed a bug with writing to a wrong map in
getTBAABaseTypeMetadata() (former getTBAAStructTypeInfo()).
We now check for valid base access types every time we
dereference a field. The original code only checks the top-level
base type. See isValidBaseType() / isTBAAPathStruct() calls.
Some entities have been renamed to sound more adequate and less
confusing/misleading in presence of path-aware TBAA information.
Now we do not lookup twice for the same cache entry in
getAccessTagInfo().
Refined relevant comments and descriptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37826
llvm-svn: 315048
This patch makes it possible to produce access tags in a uniform
manner regardless whether the resulting tag will be a scalar or a
struct-path one. getAccessTagInfo() now takes care of the actual
translation of access descriptors to tags and can handle all
kinds of accesses. Facilities that specific to scalar accesses
are eliminated.
Some more details:
* DecorateInstructionWithTBAA() is not responsible for conversion
of types to access tags anymore. Instead, it takes an access
descriptor (TBAAAccessInfo) and generates corresponding access
tag from it.
* getTBAAInfoForVTablePtr() reworked to
getTBAAVTablePtrAccessInfo() that now returns the
virtual-pointer access descriptor and not the virtual-point
type metadata.
* Added function getTBAAMayAliasAccessInfo() that returns the
descriptor for may-alias accesses.
* getTBAAStructTagInfo() renamed to getTBAAAccessTagInfo() as now
it is the only way to generate access tag by a given access
descriptor. It is capable of producing both scalar and
struct-path tags, depending on options and availability of the
base access type. getTBAAScalarTagInfo() and its cache
ScalarTagMetadataCache are eliminated.
* Now that we do not need to care about whether the resulting
access tag should be a scalar or struct-path one,
getTBAAStructTypeInfo() is renamed to getBaseTypeInfo().
* Added function getTBAAAccessInfo() that constructs access
descriptor by a given QualType access type.
This is part of D37826 reworked to be a separate patch to
simplify review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38503
llvm-svn: 314979
This patch makes it possible to produce access tags in a uniform
manner regardless whether the resulting tag will be a scalar or a
struct-path one. getAccessTagInfo() now takes care of the actual
translation of access descriptors to tags and can handle all
kinds of accesses. Facilities that specific to scalar accesses
are eliminated.
Some more details:
* DecorateInstructionWithTBAA() is not responsible for conversion
of types to access tags anymore. Instead, it takes an access
descriptor (TBAAAccessInfo) and generates corresponding access
tag from it.
* getTBAAInfoForVTablePtr() reworked to
getTBAAVTablePtrAccessInfo() that now returns the
virtual-pointer access descriptor and not the virtual-point
type metadata.
* Added function getTBAAMayAliasAccessInfo() that returns the
descriptor for may-alias accesses.
* getTBAAStructTagInfo() renamed to getTBAAAccessTagInfo() as now
it is the only way to generate access tag by a given access
descriptor. It is capable of producing both scalar and
struct-path tags, depending on options and availability of the
base access type. getTBAAScalarTagInfo() and its cache
ScalarTagMetadataCache are eliminated.
* Now that we do not need to care about whether the resulting
access tag should be a scalar or struct-path one,
getTBAAStructTypeInfo() is renamed to getBaseTypeInfo().
* Added function getTBAAAccessInfo() that constructs access
descriptor by a given QualType access type.
This is part of D37826 reworked to be a separate patch to
simplify review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38503
llvm-svn: 314977
With this patch we implement a concept of TBAA access descriptors
that are capable of representing both scalar and struct-path
accesses in a generic way.
This is part of D37826 reworked to be a separate patch to
simplify review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38456
llvm-svn: 314780
Don't emit alignment checks which the IR constant folder throws away.
I've tested this out on X86FastISel.cpp. While this doesn't decrease
end-to-end compile-time significantly, it results in 122 fewer type
checks (1% reduction) overall, without adding any real complexity.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37544
llvm-svn: 314752
This patch fixes misleading names of entities related to getting,
setting and generation of TBAA access type descriptors.
This is effectively an attempt to provide a review for D37826 by
breaking it into smaller pieces.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38404
llvm-svn: 314657
Added missing addrspacecast case in alignment computation
logic of pointer type emission in IR generation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37804
llvm-svn: 314304
Summary:
This is the follow-up patch to D37924.
This change refactors clang to use the the newly added section headers
in SpecialCaseList to specify which sanitizers blacklists entries
should apply to, like so:
[cfi-vcall]
fun:*bad_vcall*
[cfi-derived-cast|cfi-unrelated-cast]
fun:*bad_cast*
The SanitizerSpecialCaseList class has been added to allow querying by
SanitizerMask, and SanitizerBlacklist and its downstream users have been
updated to provide that information. Old blacklists not using sections
will continue to function identically since the blacklist entries will
be placed into a '[*]' section by default matching against all
sanitizers.
Reviewers: pcc, kcc, eugenis, vsk
Reviewed By: eugenis
Subscribers: dberris, cfe-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37925
llvm-svn: 314171
This change will make it possible to use -fsanitize=function on Darwin and
possibly on other platforms. It fixes an issue with the way RTTI is stored into
function prologue data.
On Darwin, addresses stored in prologue data can't require run-time fixups and
must be PC-relative. Run-time fixups are undesirable because they necessitate
writable text segments, which can lead to security issues. And absolute
addresses are undesirable because they break PIE mode.
The fix is to create a private global which points to the RTTI, and then to
encode a PC-relative reference to the global into prologue data.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37597
llvm-svn: 313096
Because it is common to treat vector types as an array of their elements, or
even some other type that's not the element type, and thus index into them, we
can't use struct-path TBAA for these accesses. Even though we already treat all
vector types as equivalent to 'char', we were using field-offset information
for them with TBAA, and this renders undefined the intra-value indexing we
intend to allow. Note that, although 'char' is universally aliasing, with path
TBAA, we can still differentiate between access to s.a and s.b in
struct { char a, b; } s;. We can't use this capability as-is for vector types.
Fixes PR33967.
llvm-svn: 312447
Summary:
An implementation of ubsan runtime library suitable for use in production.
Minimal attack surface.
* No stack traces.
* Definitely no C++ demangling.
* No UBSAN_OPTIONS=log_file=/path (very suid-unfriendly). And no UBSAN_OPTIONS in general.
* as simple as possible
Minimal CPU and RAM overhead.
* Source locations unnecessary in the presence of (split) debug info.
* Values and types (as in A+B overflows T) can be reconstructed from register/stack dumps, once you know what type of error you are looking at.
* above two items save 3% binary size.
When UBSan is used with -ftrap-function=abort, sometimes it is hard to reason about failures. This library replaces abort with a slightly more informative message without much extra overhead. Since ubsan interface in not stable, this code must reside in compiler-rt.
Reviewers: pcc, kcc
Subscribers: srhines, mgorny, aprantl, krytarowski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36810
llvm-svn: 312029
expressions
C++ allows us to reference static variables through member expressions. Prior to
this commit, non-integer static variables that were referenced using a member
expression were always emitted using lvalue loads. The old behaviour introduced
an inconsistency between regular uses of static variables and member expressions
uses. For example, the following program compiled and linked successfully:
struct Foo {
constexpr static const char *name = "foo";
};
int main() {
return Foo::name[0] == 'f';
}
but this program failed to link because "Foo::name" wasn't found:
struct Foo {
constexpr static const char *name = "foo";
};
int main() {
Foo f;
return f.name[0] == 'f';
}
This commit ensures that constant static variables referenced through member
expressions are emitted in the same way as ordinary static variable references.
rdar://33942261
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36876
llvm-svn: 311772
of class fails to map class static variable.
If the global variable is captured and it has several redeclarations,
sometimes it may lead to a compiler crash. Patch fixes this by working
only with canonical declarations.
llvm-svn: 311479
the interface.
The ultimate goal here is to make it easier to do some more interesting
things in constant emission, like emit constant initializers that have
ignorable side-effects, or doing the majority of an initialization
in-place and then patching up the last few things with calls. But for
now this is mostly just a refactoring.
llvm-svn: 310964
OpenCL 2.0 atomic builtin functions have a scope argument which is ideally
represented as synchronization scope argument in LLVM atomic instructions.
Clang supports translating Clang atomic builtin functions to LLVM atomic
instructions. However it currently does not support synchronization scope
of LLVM atomic instructions. Without this, users have to use LLVM assembly
code to implement OpenCL atomic builtin functions.
This patch adds OpenCL 2.0 atomic builtin functions as Clang builtin
functions, which supports generating LLVM atomic instructions with
synchronization scope operand.
Currently only constant memory scope argument is supported. Support of
non-constant memory scope argument will be added later.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28691
llvm-svn: 310082
In r309007, I made -fsanitize=null a hard prerequisite for -fsanitize=vptr. I
did not see the need for the two checks to have separate null checking logic
for the same pointer. I expected the two checks to either always be enabled
together, or to be mutually compatible.
In the mailing list discussion re: r309007 it became clear that that isn't the
case. If a codebase is -fsanitize=vptr clean but not -fsanitize=null clean,
it's useful to have -fsanitize=vptr emit its own null check. That's what this
patch does: with it, -fsanitize=vptr can be used without -fsanitize=null.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36112
llvm-svn: 309846
The instrumentation generated by -fsanitize=vptr does not null check a
user pointer before loading from it. This causes crashes in the face of
UB member calls (this=nullptr), i.e it's causing user programs to crash
only after UBSan is turned on.
The fix is to make run-time null checking a prerequisite for enabling
-fsanitize=vptr, and to then teach UBSan to reuse these run-time null
checks to make -fsanitize=vptr safe.
Testing: check-clang, check-ubsan, a stage2 ubsan-enabled build
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35735https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33881
llvm-svn: 309007
The uses of alloca may be in different blocks other than the block containing the alloca.
Therefore if the alloca addr space is non-zero and it needs to be casted to default
address space, the cast needs to be inserted in the same BB as the alloca insted of
the current builder insert point since the current insert point may be in a different BB.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35438
llvm-svn: 308313
The pointer overflow check gives false negatives when dealing with
expressions in which an unsigned value is subtracted from a pointer.
This is summarized in PR33430 [1]: ubsan permits the result of the
subtraction to be greater than "p", but it should not.
To fix the issue, we should track whether or not the pointer expression
is a subtraction. If it is, and the indices are unsigned, we know to
expect "p - <unsigned> <= p".
I've tested this by running check-{llvm,clang} with a stage2
ubsan-enabled build. I've also added some tests to compiler-rt, which
are in D34122.
[1] https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33430
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34121
llvm-svn: 307955
Certain targets (e.g. amdgcn) require global variable to stay in global or constant address
space. In C or C++ global variables are emitted in the default (generic) address space.
This patch introduces virtual functions TargetCodeGenInfo::getGlobalVarAddressSpace
and TargetInfo::getConstantAddressSpace to handle this in a general approach.
It only affects IR generated for amdgcn target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33842
llvm-svn: 307470
In C++ all variables are in default address space. Previously change has been
made to cast automatic variables to default address space. However that is
not sufficient since all temporary variables need to be casted to default
address space.
This patch casts all temporary variables to default address space except those
for passing indirect arguments since they are only used for load/store.
This patch only affects target having non-zero alloca address space.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33706
llvm-svn: 305711
Skip checks for null dereference, alignment violation, object size
violation, and dynamic type violation if the pointer points to volatile
data.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34262
llvm-svn: 305546
Summary:
The title says it all.
Reviewers: GorNishanov, rsmith
Reviewed By: GorNishanov
Subscribers: rjmccall, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34194
llvm-svn: 305496
Adding an unsigned offset to a base pointer has undefined behavior if
the result of the expression would precede the base. An example from
@regehr:
int foo(char *p, unsigned offset) {
return p + offset >= p; // This may be optimized to '1'.
}
foo(p, -1); // UB.
This patch extends the pointer overflow check in ubsan to detect invalid
unsigned pointer index expressions. It changes the instrumentation to
only permit non-negative offsets in pointer index expressions when all
of the GEP indices are unsigned.
Testing: check-llvm, check-clang run on a stage2, ubsan-instrumented
build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33910
llvm-svn: 305216
Summary:
If the first parameter of the function is the ImplicitParamDecl, codegen
automatically marks it as an implicit argument with `this` or `self`
pointer. Added internal kind of the ImplicitParamDecl to separate
'this', 'self', 'vtt' and other implicit parameters from other kind of
parameters.
Reviewers: rjmccall, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33735
llvm-svn: 305075
Check pointer arithmetic for overflow.
For some more background on this check, see:
https://wdtz.org/catching-pointer-overflow-bugs.htmlhttps://reviews.llvm.org/D20322
Patch by Will Dietz and John Regehr!
This version of the patch is different from the original in a few ways:
- It introduces the EmitCheckedInBoundsGEP utility which inserts
checks when the pointer overflow check is enabled.
- It does some constant-folding to reduce instrumentation overhead.
- It does not check some GEPs in CGExprCXX. I'm not sure that
inserting checks here, or in CGClass, would catch many bugs.
Possible future directions for this check:
- Introduce CGF.EmitCheckedStructGEP, to detect overflows when
accessing structures.
Testing: Apart from the added lit test, I ran check-llvm and check-clang
with a stage2, ubsan-instrumented clang. Will and John have also done
extensive testing on numerous open source projects.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33305
llvm-svn: 304459
Summary:
We need to emit barrier if the union field
is CXXRecordDecl because it might have vptrs. The testcode
was wrongly devirtualized. It also proves that having different
groups for different dynamic types is not sufficient.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: amharc, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31830
llvm-svn: 304448
The functions creating LValues propagated information about alignment
source. Extend the propagated data to also include information about
possible unrestricted aliasing. A new class LValueBaseInfo will
contain both AlignmentSource and MayAlias info.
This patch should not introduce any functional changes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33284
llvm-svn: 303358
Use variadic templates instead of relying on <cstdarg> + sentinel.
This enforces better type checking and makes code more readable.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32550
llvm-svn: 302572
Fix the nullability-assign check so that it can handle assignments into
C++ structs. Previously, such assignments were not instrumented.
Testing: check-clang, check-ubsan, enabling the existing test in ObjC++
mode, and building some Apple frameworks with -fsanitize=nullability.
llvm-svn: 301482
It's possible to determine the alignment of an alloca at compile-time.
Use this information to skip emitting some runtime alignment checks.
Testing: check-clang, check-ubsan.
This significantly reduces the amount of alignment checks we emit when
compiling X86ISelLowering.cpp. Here are the numbers from patched/unpatched
clangs based on r301361.
------------------------------------------
| Setup | # of alignment checks |
------------------------------------------
| unpatched, -O0 | 47195 |
| patched, -O0 | 30876 | (-34.6%)
------------------------------------------
llvm-svn: 301377
The IR builder can constant-fold null checks if the pointer operand
points to a constant. If the "is-non-null" check is folded away to
"true", don't emit the null check + branch.
Testing: check-clang, check-ubsan.
This slightly reduces the amount of null checks we emit when compiling
X86ISelLowering.cpp. Here are the numbers from patched/unpatched clangs
based on r300371.
-------------------------------------
| Setup | # of null checks |
-------------------------------------
| unpatched, -O0 | 25251 |
| patched, -O0 | 23925 | (-5.3%)
-------------------------------------
llvm-svn: 300509
Pointers to the start of an alloca are non-null, so we don't need to
emit runtime null checks for them.
Testing: check-clang, check-ubsan.
This significantly reduces the amount of null checks we emit when
compiling X86ISelLowering.cpp. Here are the numbers from patched /
unpatched clangs based on r300371.
-------------------------------------
| Setup | # of null checks |
-------------------------------------
| unpatched, -O0 | 45439 |
| patched, -O0 | 25251 | (-44.4%)
-------------------------------------
llvm-svn: 300508
If a pointer is 1-byte aligned, there's no use in checking its
alignment. Somewhat surprisingly, ubsan can spend a significant amount
of time doing just that!
This loosely depends on D30283.
Testing: check-clang, check-ubsan, and a stage2 ubsan build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30285
llvm-svn: 300371
This patch teaches ubsan to insert an alignment check for the 'this'
pointer at the start of each method/lambda. This allows clang to emit
significantly fewer alignment checks overall, because if 'this' is
aligned, so are its fields.
This is essentially the same thing r295515 does, but for the alignment
check instead of the null check. One difference is that we keep the
alignment checks on member expressions where the base is a DeclRefExpr.
There's an opportunity to diagnose unaligned accesses in this situation
(as pointed out by Eli, see PR32630).
Testing: check-clang, check-ubsan, and a stage2 ubsan build.
Along with the patch from D30285, this roughly halves the amount of
alignment checks we emit when compiling X86FastISel.cpp. Here are the
numbers from patched/unpatched clangs based on r298160.
------------------------------------------
| Setup | # of alignment checks |
------------------------------------------
| unpatched, -O0 | 24326 |
| patched, -O0 | 12717 | (-47.7%)
------------------------------------------
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30283
llvm-svn: 300370
Previously __cfi_check was created in LTO optimization pipeline, which
means LLD has no way of knowing about the existence of this symbol
without rescanning the LTO output object. As a result, LLD fails to
export __cfi_check, even when given --export-dynamic-symbol flag.
llvm-svn: 299806
It's possible to load out-of-range values from bitfields backed by a
boolean or an enum. Check for UB loads from bitfields.
This is the motivating example:
struct S {
BOOL b : 1; // Signed ObjC BOOL.
};
S s;
s.b = 1; // This is actually stored as -1.
if (s.b == 1) // Evaluates to false, -1 != 1.
...
Changes since the original commit:
- Single-bit bools are a special case (see CGF::EmitFromMemory), and we
can't avoid dealing with them when loading from a bitfield. Don't try to
insert a check in this case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30423
llvm-svn: 297389
It's possible to load out-of-range values from bitfields backed by a
boolean or an enum. Check for UB loads from bitfields.
This is the motivating example:
struct S {
BOOL b : 1; // Signed ObjC BOOL.
};
S s;
s.b = 1; // This is actually stored as -1.
if (s.b == 1) // Evaluates to false, -1 != 1.
...
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30423
llvm-svn: 297298
Summary:
Because of the existence branches out of GNU statement expressions, it
is possible that emitting cleanups for a full expression may cause the
new insertion point to not be dominated by the result of the inner
expression. Consider this example:
struct Foo { Foo(); ~Foo(); int x; };
int g(Foo, int);
int f(bool cond) {
int n = g(Foo(), ({ if (cond) return 0; 42; }));
return n;
}
Before this change, result of the call to 'g' did not dominate its use
in the store to 'n'. The early return exit from the statement expression
branches to a shared cleanup block, which ends in a switch between the
fallthrough destination (the assignment to 'n') or the function exit
block.
This change solves the problem by spilling and reloading expression
evaluation results when any of the active cleanups have branches.
I audited the other call sites of enterFullExpression, and they don't
appear to keep and Values live across the site of the cleanup, except in
ARC code. I wasn't able to create a test case for ARC that exhibits this
problem, though.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30590
llvm-svn: 297084
This patch teaches ubsan to insert exactly one null check for the 'this'
pointer per method/lambda.
Previously, given a load of a member variable from an instance method
('this->x'), ubsan would insert a null check for 'this', and another
null check for '&this->x', before allowing the load to occur.
Similarly, given a call to a method from another method bound to the
same instance ('this->foo()'), ubsan would a redundant null check for
'this'. There is also a redundant null check in the case where the
object pointer is a reference ('Ref.foo()').
This patch teaches ubsan to remove the redundant null checks identified
above.
Testing: check-clang, check-ubsan, and a stage2 ubsan build.
I also compiled X86FastISel.cpp with -fsanitize=null using
patched/unpatched clangs based on r293572. Here are the number of null
checks emitted:
-------------------------------------
| Setup | # of null checks |
-------------------------------------
| unpatched, -O0 | 21767 |
| patched, -O0 | 10758 |
-------------------------------------
Changes since the initial commit:
- Don't introduce any unintentional object-size or alignment checks.
- Don't rely on IRGen of C labels in the test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29530
llvm-svn: 295515
CodeGenFunction::EmitTypeCheck accepts a bool flag which controls
whether or not null checks are emitted. Make this a bit more flexible by
changing the bool to a SanitizerSet.
Needed for an upcoming change which deals with a scenario in which we
only want to emit null checks.
llvm-svn: 295514
This reverts commit r295401. It breaks the ubsan self-host. It inserts
object size checks once per C++ method which fire when the structure is
empty.
llvm-svn: 295494
This patch teaches ubsan to insert exactly one null check for the 'this'
pointer per method/lambda.
Previously, given a load of a member variable from an instance method
('this->x'), ubsan would insert a null check for 'this', and another
null check for '&this->x', before allowing the load to occur.
Similarly, given a call to a method from another method bound to the
same instance ('this->foo()'), ubsan would a redundant null check for
'this'. There is also a redundant null check in the case where the
object pointer is a reference ('Ref.foo()').
This patch teaches ubsan to remove the redundant null checks identified
above.
Testing: check-clang and check-ubsan. I also compiled X86FastISel.cpp
with -fsanitize=null using patched/unpatched clangs based on r293572.
Here are the number of null checks emitted:
-------------------------------------
| Setup | # of null checks |
-------------------------------------
| unpatched, -O0 | 21767 |
| patched, -O0 | 10758 |
-------------------------------------
Changes since the initial commit: don't rely on IRGen of C labels in the
test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29530
llvm-svn: 295401
This patch teaches ubsan to insert exactly one null check for the 'this'
pointer per method/lambda.
Previously, given a load of a member variable from an instance method
('this->x'), ubsan would insert a null check for 'this', and another
null check for '&this->x', before allowing the load to occur.
Similarly, given a call to a method from another method bound to the
same instance ('this->foo()'), ubsan would a redundant null check for
'this'. There is also a redundant null check in the case where the
object pointer is a reference ('Ref.foo()').
This patch teaches ubsan to remove the redundant null checks identified
above.
Testing: check-clang and check-ubsan. I also compiled X86FastISel.cpp
with -fsanitize=null using patched/unpatched clangs based on r293572.
Here are the number of null checks emitted:
-------------------------------------
| Setup | # of null checks |
-------------------------------------
| unpatched, -O0 | 21767 |
| patched, -O0 | 10758 |
-------------------------------------
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29530
llvm-svn: 295391
Summary:
This patch makes the type_mismatch static data 7 bytes smaller (and it
ends up being 16 bytes smaller due to alignment restrictions, at least
on some x86-64 environments).
It revs up the type_mismatch handler version since we're breaking binary
compatibility. I will soon post a patch for the compiler-rt side.
Reviewers: rsmith, kcc, vitalybuka, pgousseau, gbedwell
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28242
llvm-svn: 291236
The UBSAN runtime is built static on Windows. This requires that we give local
storage always. This impacts Windows where the linker would otherwise have to
generate a thunk to access the symbol via the IAT. This should repair the
windows clang build bots.
llvm-svn: 289829
This adds a way for us to version any UBSan handler by itself.
The patch overrides D21289 for a better implementation (we're able to
rev up a single handler).
After this, then we can land a slight modification of D19667+D19668.
We probably don't want to keep all the versions in compiler-rt (maybe we
want to deprecate on one release and remove the old handler on the next
one?), but with this patch we will loudly fail to compile when mixing
incompatible handler calls, instead of silently compiling and then
providing bad error messages.
Reviewers: kcc, samsonov, rsmith, vsk
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21695
llvm-svn: 289444
On some Apple platforms, the ObjC BOOL type is defined as a signed char.
When performing instrumentation for -fsanitize=bool, we'd like to treat
the range of BOOL like it's always {0, 1}. While we can't change clang's
IRGen for char-backed BOOL's due to ABI compatibility concerns, we can
teach ubsan to catch potential abuses of this type.
rdar://problem/29502773
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27607
llvm-svn: 289290
When an object of class type is initialized from a prvalue of the same type
(ignoring cv qualifications), use the prvalue to initialize the object directly
instead of inserting a redundant elidable call to a copy constructor.
llvm-svn: 288866
Instead of always displaying the mangled name, try to do better
and get something closer to regular functions.
Recommit r287039 (that was reverted in r287039) with a tweak to
be more generic, and test fixes!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26522
llvm-svn: 287085
Instead of always displaying the mangled name, try to do better
and get something closer to regular functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26522
llvm-svn: 287039
constructs.
For __real/__imag unary expressions clang emits lvalue with the
associated type from the original complex expression, but not the
underlying builtin integer or float type. This causes crash in codegen
for atomic constructs, if __real/__imag expression are used in atomic
constructs.
llvm-svn: 286129
After some changes in codegen capturing of VLA variables in OpenMP regions was broken, causing compiler crash. Patch fixes this issue.
llvm-svn: 286103
After some changes in codegen capturing of VLA variables in OpenMP
regions was broken, causing compiler crash. Patch fixes this issue.
llvm-svn: 286098
abstract information about the callee. NFC.
The goal here is to make it easier to recognize indirect calls and
trigger additional logic in certain cases. That logic will come in
a later patch; in the meantime, I felt that this was a significant
improvement to the code.
llvm-svn: 285258
constexpr variable.
When compiling a constexpr NSString initialized with an objective-c
string literal, CodeGen emits objc_storeStrong on an uninitialized
alloca, which causes a crash.
This patch folds the code in EmitScalarInit into EmitStoreThroughLValue
and fixes the crash by calling objc_retain on the string instead of
using objc_storeStrong.
rdar://problem/28562009
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25547
llvm-svn: 284516
This eliminates a class of false positives for -fsanitize=array-bounds
on instrumented ObjC projects.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22227
llvm-svn: 283249
Instead of ignoring the evaluation order rule, ignore the "destroy parameters
in reverse construction order" rule for the small number of problematic cases.
This only causes incorrect behavior in the rare case where both parameters to
an overloaded operator <<, >>, ->*, &&, ||, or comma are of class type with
non-trivial destructor, and the program is depending on those parameters being
destroyed in reverse construction order.
We could do a little better here by reversing the order of parameter
destruction for those functions (and reversing the argument evaluation order
for all direct calls, not just those with operator syntax), but that is not a
complete solution to the problem, as the same situation can be reached by an
indirect function call.
Approach reviewed off-line by rnk.
llvm-svn: 282777
function correctly when targeting MS ABIs (this appears to have never mattered
prior to this change).
Update test case to always cover both 32-bit and 64-bit Windows ABIs, since
they behave somewhat differently from each other here.
Update test case to also cover operators , && and ||, which it appears are also
affected by P0145R3 (they're not explicitly called out by the design document,
but this is the emergent behavior of the existing wording).
Original commit message:
P0145R3 (C++17 evaluation order tweaks): evaluate the right-hand side of
assignment and compound-assignment operators before the left-hand side. (Even
if it's an overloaded operator.)
This completes the implementation of P0145R3 + P0400R0 for all targets except
Windows, where the evaluation order guarantees for <<, >>, and ->* are
unimplementable as the ABI requires the function arguments are evaluated from
right to left (because parameter destructors are run from left to right in the
callee).
llvm-svn: 282619
assignment and compound-assignment operators before the left-hand side. (Even
if it's an overloaded operator.)
This completes the implementation of P0145R3 + P0400R0 for all targets except
Windows, where the evaluation order guarantees for <<, >>, and ->* are
unimplementable as the ABI requires the function arguments are evaluated from
right to left (because parameter destructors are run from left to right in the
callee).
llvm-svn: 282556
Currently Clang use int32 to represent sampler_t, which have been a source of issue for some backends, because in some backends sampler_t cannot be represented by int32. They have to depend on kernel argument metadata and use IPA to find the sampler arguments and global variables and transform them to target specific sampler type.
This patch uses opaque pointer type opencl.sampler_t* for sampler_t. For each use of file-scope sampler variable, it generates a function call of __translate_sampler_initializer. For each initialization of function-scope sampler variable, it generates a function call of __translate_sampler_initializer.
Each builtin library can implement its own __translate_sampler_initializer(). Since the real sampler type tends to be architecture dependent, allowing it to be initialized by a library function simplifies backend design. A typical implementation of __translate_sampler_initializer could be a table lookup of real sampler literal values. Since its argument is always a literal, the returned pointer is known at compile time and easily optimized to finally become some literal values directly put into image read instructions.
This patch is partially based on Alexey Sotkin's work in Khronos Clang (3d4eec6162).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21567
llvm-svn: 277024
With all MaterializeTemporaryExprs coming with a ExprWithCleanups, it's
easy to add correct lifetime.end marks into the right RunCleanupsScope.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20499
llvm-svn: 274385
Underaligned atomic LValues require libcalls which MSVC doesn't have.
MSVC doesn't seem to consider such operations as requiring a barrier
anyway.
This fixes PR27843.
llvm-svn: 270576
clang asserts when compiling the following code because r231508 made
changes to promote constant temporary arrays and records to globals
with constant initializers:
std::vector<NSString*> strs = {@"a", @"b"};
This commit changes the code to return early if the object returned by
createReferenceTemporary is a global variable with an initializer.
rdar://problem/25504992
rdar://problem/25955179
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20045
llvm-svn: 269385
Summary:
This option allows the user to control how much of the file name is
emitted by UBSan. Tuning this option allows one to save space in the
resulting binary, which is helpful for restricted execution
environments.
With a positive N, UBSan skips the first N path components.
With a negative N, UBSan only keeps the last N path components.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19666
llvm-svn: 269309
r268261 made Clang "expand" more struct arguments on Windows. It removed
the check for 'RD->isCLike()', which was preventing us from attempting
to expand structs with reference type fields.
Our expansion code was attempting to load and pass each field of the
type in turn. We were accidentally doing one to many loads on reference
type fields.
On the function prologue side, we can use
EmitLValueForFieldInitialization, which obviously gets the address of
the field. On the call side, I tweaked EmitRValueForField directly,
since this is the only use of this method.
Fixes PR27607
llvm-svn: 268321
Revert the two changes to thread CodeGenOptions into the TargetInfo allocation
and to fix the layering violation by moving CodeGenOptions into Basic.
Code Generation is arguably not particularly "basic". This addresses Richard's
post-commit review comments. This change purely does the mechanical revert and
will be followed up with an alternate approach to thread the desired information
into TargetInfo.
llvm-svn: 265806
This is a mechanical move of CodeGenOptions from libFrontend to libBasic. This
fixes the layering violation introduced earlier by threading CodeGenOptions into
TargetInfo. It should also fix the modules based self-hosting builds. NFC.
llvm-svn: 265702
In the cross-DSO CFI mode clang emits __cfi_check_fail that handles
errors triggered from other modules with targets in the current
module. With this change, __cfi_check_fail will handle errors for
CFI kinds that are not enabled in the current module as if they
have the trapping behaviour (-fsanitize-trap=...).
This fixes a bug where some combinations of -fsanitize* flags may
result in a link failure due to a missing sanitizer runtime library
for the diagnostic calls in __cfi_check_fail.
llvm-svn: 263578
Summary:
This flag is enabled by default in the driver when NDEBUG is set. It
is forwarded on the LLVMContext to discard all value names (but
GlobalValue) for performance purpose.
This an improved version of D18024
Reviewers: echristo, chandlerc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18127
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 263394
commit 60d9845f6a037122d9be9a6d92d4de617ef45b04
Author: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
Date: Fri Mar 11 18:48:02 2016 +0000
Fix clang crash: when CodeGenAction is initialized without a
context, use the member and not the parameter
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk@263273
91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
commit af7ce3bf04a75ad5124b457b805df26006bd215b
Author: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
Date: Fri Mar 11 17:32:58 2016 +0000
Fix build: use -> with pointers and not .
Silly typo.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk@263267
91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
commit d0eea119192814954e7368c77d0dc5a9eeec1fbb
Author: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
Date: Fri Mar 11 17:15:44 2016 +0000
Remove compile time PreserveName switch based on NDEBUG
Summary:
Following r263086, we are now relying on a flag on the Context to
discard Value names in release builds.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18024
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk@263257
91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
until we can fix the Release builds.
This reverts commits 263257, 263267, 263273
llvm-svn: 263320
Summary:
Following r263086, we are now relying on a flag on the Context to
discard Value names in release builds.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18024
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 263257
Codegen for array sections/array subscripts worked only for expressions with arrays as base. Patch fixes codegen for bases with pointer/reference types.
llvm-svn: 259776
Avoid crashing when printing diagnostics for vtable-related CFI
errors. In diagnostic mode, the frontend does an additional check of
the vtable pointer against the set of all known vtable addresses and
lets the runtime handler know if it is safe to inspect the vtable.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D16823
llvm-svn: 259716
* Runtime diagnostic data for cfi-icall changed to match the rest of
cfi checks
* Layout of all CFI diagnostic data changed to put Kind at the
beginning. There is no ABI stability promise yet.
* Call cfi_slowpath_diag instead of cfi_slowpath when needed.
* Emit __cfi_check_fail function, which dispatches a CFI check
faliure according to trap/recover settings of the current module.
* A tiny driver change to match the way the new handlers are done in
compiler-rt.
llvm-svn: 258745
This is part of a new statistics gathering feature for the sanitizers.
See clang/docs/SanitizerStats.rst for further info and docs.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16175
llvm-svn: 257971
In {CG,}ExprConstant.cpp, we weren't treating vector splats properly.
This patch makes us treat splats more properly.
Additionally, this patch adds a new cast kind which allows a bool->int
cast to result in -1 or 0, instead of 1 or 0 (for true and false,
respectively), so we can sanely model OpenCL bool->int casts in the AST.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14877
llvm-svn: 257559
Clang-side cross-DSO CFI.
* Adds a command line flag -f[no-]sanitize-cfi-cross-dso.
* Links a runtime library when enabled.
* Emits __cfi_slowpath calls is bitset test fails.
* Emits extra hash-based bitsets for external CFI checks.
* Sets a module flag to enable __cfi_check generation during LTO.
This mode does not yet support diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 255694
This patch changes the generation of CGFunctionInfo to contain
the FunctionProtoType if it is available. This enables the code
generation for call instructions to look into this type for
exception information and therefore generate better quality
IR - it will not create invoke instructions for functions that
are know not to throw.
llvm-svn: 253926
target features that the caller function doesn't provide. This matches
the existing backend failure to inline functions that don't have
matching target features - and diagnoses earlier in the case of
always_inline.
Fix up a few test cases that were, in fact, invalid if you tried
to generate code from the backend with the specified target features
and add a couple of tests to illustrate what's going on.
This should fix PR25246.
llvm-svn: 252834
Previously, __weak was silently accepted and ignored in MRC mode.
That makes this a potentially source-breaking change that we have to
roll out cautiously. Accordingly, for the time being, actual support
for __weak references in MRC is experimental, and the compiler will
reject attempts to actually form such references. The intent is to
eventually enable the feature by default in all non-GC modes.
(It is, of course, incompatible with ObjC GC's interpretation of
__weak.)
If you like, you can enable this feature with
-Xclang -fobjc-weak
but like any -Xclang option, this option may be removed at any point,
e.g. if/when it is eventually enabled by default.
This patch also enables the use of the ARC __unsafe_unretained qualifier
in MRC. Unlike __weak, this is being enabled immediately. Since
variables are essentially __unsafe_unretained by default in MRC,
the only practical uses are (1) communication and (2) changing the
default behavior of by-value block capture.
As an implementation matter, this means that the ObjC ownership
qualifiers may appear in any ObjC language mode, and so this patch
removes a number of checks for getLangOpts().ObjCAutoRefCount
that were guarding the processing of these qualifiers. I don't
expect this to be a significant drain on performance; it may even
be faster to just check for these qualifiers directly on a type
(since it's probably in a register anyway) than to do N dependent
loads to grab the LangOptions.
rdar://9674298
llvm-svn: 251041
Currently debug info for types used in explicit cast only is not emitted. It happened after a patch for better alignment handling. This patch fixes this bug.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13582
llvm-svn: 250795
Currently all variables used in OpenMP regions are captured into a record and passed to outlined functions in this record. It may result in some poor performance because of too complex analysis later in optimization passes. Patch makes to emit outlined functions for parallel-based regions with a list of captured variables. It reduces code for 2*n GEPs, stores and loads at least.
Codegen for task-based regions remains unchanged because runtime requires that all captured variables are passed in captured record.
llvm-svn: 247251
This flag causes the compiler to emit bit set entries for functions as well
as runtime bitset checks at indirect call sites. Depends on the new function
bitset mechanism.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11857
llvm-svn: 247238
Summary:
Currently clang provides no general way to generate nontemporal loads/stores.
There are some architecture specific builtins for doing so (e.g. in x86), but
there is no way to generate non-temporal store on, e.g. AArch64. This patch adds
generic builtins which are expanded to a simple store with '!nontemporal'
attribute in IR.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12313
llvm-svn: 247104
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
Fix processing of shared variables with reference types in OpenMP constructs. Previously, if the variable was not marked in one of the private clauses, the reference to this variable was emitted incorrectly and caused an assertion later.
llvm-svn: 246846
Added codegen for array section in 'depend' clause of 'task' directive. It emits to pointers, one for the begin of array section and another for the end of array section. Size of the section is calculated as (end + 1 - start) * sizeof(basic_element_type).
llvm-svn: 246422
Added codegen for array section in 'depend' clause of 'task' directive. It emits to pointers, one for the begin of array section and another for the end of array section. Size of the section is calculated as (end + 1 - start) * sizeof(basic_element_type).
llvm-svn: 246278
Summary:
float_cast_overflow is the only UBSan check without a source location attached.
This patch propagates SourceLocations where necessary to get them to the
EmitCheck() call.
Reviewers: rsmith, ABataev, rjmccall
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11757
llvm-svn: 244568
tools/clang/test/CodeGen/packed-nest-unpacked.c contains this test:
struct XBitfield {
unsigned b1 : 10;
unsigned b2 : 12;
unsigned b3 : 10;
};
struct YBitfield {
char x;
struct XBitfield y;
} __attribute((packed));
struct YBitfield gbitfield;
unsigned test7() {
// CHECK: @test7
// CHECK: load i32, i32* getelementptr inbounds (%struct.YBitfield, %struct.YBitfield* @gbitfield, i32 0, i32 1, i32 0), align 4
return gbitfield.y.b2;
}
The "align 4" is actually wrong. Accessing all of "gbitfield.y" as a single
i32 is of course possible, but that still doesn't make it 4-byte aligned as
it remains packed at offset 1 in the surrounding gbitfield object.
This alignment was changed by commit r169489, which also introduced changes
to bitfield access code in CGExpr.cpp. Code before that change used to take
into account *both* the alignment of the field to be accessed within the
current struct, *and* the alignment of that outer struct itself; this logic
was removed by the above commit.
Neglecting to consider both values can cause incorrect code to be generated
(I've seen an unaligned access crash on SystemZ due to this bug).
In order to always use the best known alignment value, this patch removes
the CGBitFieldInfo::StorageAlignment member and replaces it with a
StorageOffset member specifying the offset from the start of the surrounding
struct to the bitfield's underlying storage. This offset can then be combined
with the best-known alignment for a bitfield access lvalue to determine the
alignment to use when accessing the bitfield's storage.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11034
llvm-svn: 241916
This is needed to use clang's command line option "-ftrap-function" for LTO and
enable changing the trap function name on a per-call-site basis.
rdar://problem/21225723
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10831
llvm-svn: 241306
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
This causes programs compiled with this flag to print a diagnostic when
a control flow integrity check fails instead of aborting. Diagnostics are
printed using UBSan's runtime library.
The main motivation of this feature over -fsanitize=vptr is fidelity with
the -fsanitize=cfi implementation: the diagnostics are printed under exactly
the same conditions as those which would cause -fsanitize=cfi to abort the
program. This means that the same restrictions apply regarding compiling
all translation units with -fsanitize=cfi, cross-DSO virtual calls are
forbidden, etc.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10268
llvm-svn: 240109
This flag controls whether a given sanitizer traps upon detecting
an error. It currently only supports UBSan. The existing flag
-fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error has been made an alias of
-fsanitize-trap=undefined.
This change also cleans up some awkward behavior around the combination
of -fsanitize-trap=undefined and -fsanitize=undefined. Previously we
would reject command lines containing the combination of these two flags,
as -fsanitize=vptr is not compatible with trapping. This required the
creation of -fsanitize=undefined-trap, which excluded -fsanitize=vptr
(and -fsanitize=function, but this seems like an oversight).
Now, -fsanitize=undefined is an alias for -fsanitize=undefined-trap,
and if -fsanitize-trap=undefined is specified, we treat -fsanitize=vptr
as an "unsupported" flag, which means that we error out if the flag is
specified explicitly, but implicitly disable it if the flag was implied
by -fsanitize=undefined.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10464
llvm-svn: 240105
The RegionCounter type does a lot of legwork, but most of it is only
meaningful within the implementation of CodeGenPGO. The uses elsewhere
in CodeGen generally just want to increment or read counters, so do
that directly.
llvm-svn: 235664
This scheme checks that pointer and lvalue casts are made to an object of
the correct dynamic type; that is, the dynamic type of the object must be
a derived class of the pointee type of the cast. The checks are currently
only introduced where the class being casted to is a polymorphic class.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8312
llvm-svn: 232241
I disabled putting the new global into the same COMDAT as the function for now.
There's a fundamental problem when we inline references to the global but still
have the global in a COMDAT linked to the inlined function. Since this is only
an optimization there may be other versions of the COMDAT around that are
missing the new global and hell breaks loose at link time.
I hope the chromium build doesn't break this time :)
llvm-svn: 231564
This broke the Chromium build. Links were failing with messages like:
obj/dbus/libdbus_test_support.a(obj/dbus/dbus_test_support.mock_object_proxy.o):../../dbus/mock_object_proxy.cc:function dbus::MockObjectProxy::Detach(): warning: relocation refers to discarded section
/usr/local/google/work/chromium/src/third_party/binutils/Linux_x64/Release/bin/ld.gold: error: treating warnings as errors
llvm-svn: 231541
Instead of creating a copy on the stack just stash them in a private
constant global. This saves both the copying overhead and the stack
space, and gives the optimizer more room to constant fold.
This tries to make array temporaries more similar to regular arrays,
they can't use the same logic because a temporary has no VarDecl to be
bound to so we roll our own version here.
The original use case for this optimization was code like
for (int i : {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10})
foo(i);
where without this patch (assuming that the loop is not unrolled) we
would alloca an array on the stack, copy the 10 values over and
iterate on that. With this patch we put the array in .text use it
directly. Apart from that case this helps on virtually any passing of
a constant std::initializer_list as a function argument.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8034
llvm-svn: 231508
Bools are a little tricky, they are i8 in memory and must be coerced
back to i1 before further operations can be performed on them.
This fixes PR22577.
llvm-svn: 229204
The /volatile:ms semantics turn volatile loads and stores into atomic
acquire and release operations. This distinction is important because
volatile memory operations do not form a happens-before relationship
with non-atomic memory. This means that a volatile store is not
sufficient for implementing a mutex unlock routine.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7580
llvm-svn: 229082
This causes things like assignment to refer to the '=' rather than the
LHS when attributing the store instruction, for example.
There were essentially 3 options for this:
* The beginning of an expression (this was the behavior prior to this
commit). This meant that stepping through subexpressions would bounce
around from subexpressions back to the start of the outer expression,
etc. (eg: x + y + z would go x, y, x, z, x (the repeated 'x's would be
where the actual addition occurred)).
* The end of an expression. This seems to be what GCC does /mostly/, and
certainly this for function calls. This has the advantage that
progress is always 'forwards' (never jumping backwards - except for
independent subexpressions if they're evaluated in interesting orders,
etc). "x + y + z" would go "x y z" with the additions occurring at y
and z after the respective loads.
The problem with this is that the user would still have to think
fairly hard about precedence to realize which subexpression is being
evaluated or which operator overload is being called in, say, an asan
backtrace.
* The preferred location or 'exprloc'. In this case you get sort of what
you'd expect, though it's a bit confusing in its own way due to going
'backwards'. In this case the locations would be: "x y + z +" in
lovely postfix arithmetic order. But this does mean that if the op+
were an operator overload, say, and in a backtrace, the backtrace will
point to the exact '+' that's being called, not to the end of one of
its operands.
(actually the operator overload case doesn't work yet for other reasons,
but that's being fixed - but this at least gets scalar/complex
assignments and other plain operators right)
llvm-svn: 227027
This workaround was to provide unique call sites to ensure LLVM's inline
debug info handling would properly unique two calls to the same function
on the same line. Instead, this has now been fixed in LLVM (r226736) and
the workaround here can be removed.
Originally committed in r176895, but this isn't a straight revert due to
all the changes since then. I just searched for anything ForcedColumn*
related and removed them.
We could test this - but it didn't strike me as terribly valuable once
we're no longer adding this workaround everything just works as expected
& it's no longer a special case to test for.
llvm-svn: 226738
Sorry for the noise, I managed to miss a bunch of recent regressions of
include orderings here. This should actually sort all the includes for
Clang. Again, no functionality changed, this is just a mechanical
cleanup that I try to run periodically to keep the #include lines as
regular as possible across the project.
llvm-svn: 225979
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
Introduce the following -fsanitize-recover flags:
- -fsanitize-recover=<list>: Enable recovery for selected checks or
group of checks. It is forbidden to explicitly list unrecoverable
sanitizers here (that is, "address", "unreachable", "return").
- -fno-sanitize-recover=<list>: Disable recovery for selected checks or
group of checks.
- -f(no-)?sanitize-recover is now a synonym for
-f(no-)?sanitize-recover=undefined,integer and will soon be deprecated.
These flags are parsed left to right, and mask of "recoverable"
sanitizer is updated accordingly, much like what we do for -fsanitize= flags.
-fsanitize= and -fsanitize-recover= flag families are independent.
CodeGen change: If there is a single UBSan handler function, responsible
for implementing multiple checks, which have different recoverable setting,
then we emit two handler calls instead of one:
the first one for the set of "unrecoverable" checks, another one - for
set of "recoverable" checks. If all checks implemented by a handler have the
same recoverability setting, then the generated code will be the same.
llvm-svn: 225719
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
The DeclRefExpr might be for a variable initialized by a constant
expression which hasn't been ODR used.
Emit the initializer for the variable instead of trying to capture the
variable itself.
This fixes PR22071.
llvm-svn: 225060
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
Bitfield RefersToEnclosingLocal of Stmt::DeclRefExprBitfields renamed to RefersToCapturedVariable to reflect latest changes introduced in commit 224323. Also renamed method Expr::refersToEnclosingLocal() to Expr::refersToCapturedVariable() and comments for constant arguments.
No functional changes.
llvm-svn: 224329
Currently, if global variable is marked as a private OpenMP variable, the compiler crashes in debug version or generates incorrect code in release version. It happens because in the OpenMP region the original global variable is used instead of the generated private copy. It happens because currently globals variables are not captured in the OpenMP region.
This patch adds capturing of global variables iff private copy of the global variable must be used in the OpenMP region.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6259
llvm-svn: 224323
The extension has the following syntax:
__builtin_call_with_static_chain(Call, Chain)
where Call must be a function call expression and Chain must be of pointer type
This extension performs a function call Call with a static chain pointer
Chain passed to the callee in a designated register. This is useful for
calling foreign language functions whose ABI uses static chain pointers
(e.g. to implement closures).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6332
llvm-svn: 224167
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