The test test/Driver/darwin-sdk-version.c from r349380 checks if the macOS
deployment target can be correctly inferred from the SDK version. When the
SDK version is > host version, the driver will pick the host version, so
the old test failed on macOS < 10.14. This commit makes this test more
resilient by using an older SDK version.
llvm-svn: 349393
is not specified
The -target option allows the user to specify the build target using LLVM
triple. The triple includes the arch, and so the -arch option is redundant.
This should work just as well without the -arch. However, the driver has a bug
in which it doesn't target the "Cyclone" CPU for darwin if -target is used
without -arch. This commit fixes this issue.
rdar://46743182
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55731
llvm-svn: 349382
On Darwin, using '-arch x86_64h' would always override the option passed
through '-march'.
This patch allows users to use '-march' with x86_64h, while keeping the
default to 'core-avx2'
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55775
llvm-svn: 349381
pass in the -target-sdk-version to the compiler and backend
This commit adds support for reading the SDKSettings.json file in the Darwin
driver. This file is used by the driver to determine the SDK's version, and it
uses that information to pass it down to the compiler using the new
-target-sdk-version= option. This option is then used to set the appropriate
SDK Version module metadata introduced in r349119.
Note: I had to adjust the two ast tests as the SDKROOT environment variable
on macOS caused SDK version to be picked up for the compilation of source file
but not the AST.
rdar://45774000
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55673
llvm-svn: 349380
Summary:
There are certain cases when normal C/C++ lookup (localUncachedLookup)
does not find AST nodes. E.g.:
Example 1:
template <class T>
struct X {
friend void foo(); // this is never found in the DC of the TU.
};
Example 2:
// The fwd decl to Foo is not found in the lookupPtr of the DC of the
// translation unit decl.
struct A { struct Foo *p; };
In these cases we create a new node instead of returning with the old one.
To fix it we create a new lookup table which holds every node and we are
not interested in any C++ specific visibility considerations.
Simply, we must know if there is an existing Decl in a given DC.
Reviewers: a_sidorin, a.sidorin
Subscribers: mgorny, rnkovacs, dkrupp, Szelethus, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53708
llvm-svn: 349351
Summary:
The crux of the issue that is being fixed is that lookup could not find
previous decls of a friend class. The solution involves making the
friend declarations visible in their decl context (i.e. adding them to
the lookup table).
Also, we simplify `VisitRecordDecl` greatly.
This fix involves two other repairs (without these the unittests fail):
(1) We could not handle the addition of injected class types properly
when a redecl chain was involved, now this is fixed.
(2) DeclContext::removeDecl failed if the lookup table in Vector form
did not contain the to be removed element. This caused troubles in
ASTImporter::ImportDeclContext. This is also fixed.
Reviewers: a_sidorin, balazske, a.sidorin
Subscribers: rnkovacs, dkrupp, Szelethus, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53655
llvm-svn: 349349
Accidentally commited earlier with the same commit title, but really it
should've been
"Revert rC349283 '[analyzer][MallocChecker] Improve warning messages on double-delete errors'"
llvm-svn: 349344
Improve the description of these command line options
by providing specific heuristic information, as outlined
for the ssp function attribute(s) in LLVM's documentation.
Also rewords -fstack-protector-all for affinity.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55428
llvm-svn: 349335
This checker warns you when you re-use an object after moving it.
Mostly developed by Peter Szecsi!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38675
llvm-svn: 349328
Re-using a moved-from local variable is most likely a bug because there's
rarely a good motivation for not introducing a separate variable instead.
We plan to keep emitting such warnings by default.
Introduce a flag that allows disabling warnings on local variables that are
not of a known move-unsafe type. If it doesn't work out as we expected,
we'll just flip the flag.
We still warn on move-unsafe objects and unsafe operations on known move-safe
objects.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55730
llvm-svn: 349327
This re-applies commit r349226 that was reverted in r349233 due to failures
on clang-x64-windows-msvc.
Specify enum type as unsigned for use in bit field. Otherwise overflows
may cause UB.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55388
llvm-svn: 349326
StaticAnalyzer uses the CFG-based RelaxedLiveVariables analysis in order to,
in particular, figure out values of which expressions are still needed.
When the expression becomes "dead", it is garbage-collected during
the dead binding scan.
Expressions that constitute branches/bodies of control flow statements,
eg. `E1' in `if (C1) E1;' but not `E2' in `if (C2) { E2; }', were kept alive
for too long. This caused false positives in MoveChecker because it relies
on cleaning up loop-local variables when they go out of scope, but some of those
live-for-too-long expressions were keeping a reference to those variables.
Fix liveness analysis to correctly mark these expressions as dead.
Add a debug checker, debug.DumpLiveStmts, in order to test expressions liveness.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55566
llvm-svn: 349320
Summary:
The pattern is problematic with C++ exceptions, and not as widespread as
scoped locks, but it's still used by some, for example Chromium.
We are a bit stricter here at join points, patterns that are allowed for
scoped locks aren't allowed here. That could still be changed in the
future, but I'd argue we should only relax this if people ask for it.
Fixes PR36162.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, delesley, pwnall
Reviewed By: delesley, pwnall
Subscribers: pwnall, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52578
llvm-svn: 349300
This patch merely reorganizes some things, and features no functional change.
In detail:
* Provided documentation, or moved existing documentation in more obvious
places.
* Added dividers. (the //===----------===// thing).
* Moved getAllocationFamily, printAllocDeallocName, printExpectedAllocName and
printExpectedDeallocName in the global namespace on top of the file where
AllocationFamily is declared, as they are very strongly related.
* Moved isReleased and MallocUpdateRefState near RefState's definition for the
same reason.
* Realloc modeling was very poor in terms of variable and structure naming, as
well as documentation, so I renamed some of them and added much needed docs.
* Moved function IdentifierInfos to a separate struct, and moved isMemFunction,
isCMemFunction adn isStandardNewDelete inside it. This makes the patch affect
quite a lot of lines, should I extract it to a separate one?
* Moved MallocBugVisitor out of MallocChecker.
* Preferred switches to long else-if branches in some places.
* Neatly organized some RUN: lines.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54823
llvm-svn: 349281
Now that CheckerRegistry lies in Frontend, we can finally eliminate
ClangCheckerRegistry. Fortunately, this also provides us with a
DiagnosticsEngine, so I went ahead and removed some parameters from it's
methods.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54437
llvm-svn: 349280
ClangCheckerRegistry is a very non-obvious, poorly documented, weird concept.
It derives from CheckerRegistry, and is placed in lib/StaticAnalyzer/Frontend,
whereas it's base is located in lib/StaticAnalyzer/Core. It was, from what I can
imagine, used to circumvent the problem that the registry functions of the
checkers are located in the clangStaticAnalyzerCheckers library, but that
library depends on clangStaticAnalyzerCore. However, clangStaticAnalyzerFrontend
depends on both of those libraries.
One can make the observation however, that CheckerRegistry has no place in Core,
it isn't used there at all! The only place where it is used is Frontend, which
is where it ultimately belongs.
This move implies that since
include/clang/StaticAnalyzer/Checkers/ClangCheckers.h only contained a single function:
class CheckerRegistry;
void registerBuiltinCheckers(CheckerRegistry ®istry);
it had to re purposed, as CheckerRegistry is no longer available to
clangStaticAnalyzerCheckers. It was renamed to BuiltinCheckerRegistration.h,
which actually describes it a lot better -- it does not contain the registration
functions for checkers, but only those generated by the tblgen files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54436
llvm-svn: 349275
Renaming collectCheckers to getEnabledCheckers
Changing the functionality to acquire all enabled checkers, rather then collect
checkers for a specific CheckerOptInfo (for example, collecting all checkers for
{ "core", true }, which meant enabling all checkers from the core package, which
was an unnecessary complication).
Removing CheckerOptInfo, instead of storing whether the option was claimed via a
field, we handle errors immediately, as getEnabledCheckers can now access a
DiagnosticsEngine. Realize that the remaining information it stored is directly
accessible through AnalyzerOptions.CheckerControlList.
Fix a test with -analyzer-disable-checker -verify accidentally left in.
llvm-svn: 349274
Frontend headers have undefined reference on the symbol `clang::PCHContainerOperations::PCHContainerOperations()` through some shared_ptr usage. Any dependents will get the undefined reference which can only be resolved by explicit dependency on clangSerialization (due to -z defs).
llvm-svn: 349259
This matches what GCC does in these situations.
This fixes compiling Qt in debug mode. In release mode, references to
the vtable of this particular class ends up optimized away, but in debug
mode, the compiler creates references to the vtable, which is expected
to be dllexported from a different DLL. Make sure the dllexported
version actually ends up emitted.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55698
llvm-svn: 349256
Right now they report to have one parameter with null decl,
because initializing an ArrayRef of pointers with a nullptr
yields an ArrayRef to an array of one null pointer.
Fixes a crash in the OSObject section of RetainCountChecker.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55671
llvm-svn: 349229
The checker wasn't prepared to see the dealloc message sent to the class itself
rather than to an instance, as if it was +dealloc.
Additionally, it wasn't prepared for pure-unknown or undefined self values.
The new guard covers that as well, but it is annoying to test because
both kinds of values shouldn't really appear and we generally want to
get rid of all of them (by modeling unknown values with symbols and
by warning on use of undefined values before they are used).
The CHECK: directive for FileCheck at the end of the test looks useless,
so i removed it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55680
llvm-svn: 349228
Use trackExpressionValue() (previously known as trackNullOrUndefValue())
to track index value in the report, so that the user knew
what Static Analyzer thinks the index is.
Additionally, implement printState() to help debugging the checker later.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55458
llvm-svn: 349227
Calling operator*() or operator->() on a null STL smart pointer is
undefined behavior.
Smart pointers are specified to become null after being moved from.
So we can't warn on arbitrary method calls, but these two operators
definitely make no sense.
The new bug is fatal because it's an immediate UB,
unlike other use-after-move bugs.
The work on a more generic null smart pointer dereference checker
is still pending.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55388
llvm-svn: 349226
Summary:
GCC 5.1 began mangling these Windows calling conventions into function
types, since they can be used for overloading. They've always been
mangled in the MS ABI, but they are new to the Itanium mangler. Note
that the calling convention doesn't appear as part of the main
declaration, it only appears on function parameter types and other
types.
Fixes PR39860
Reviewers: rjmccall, efriedma
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55672
llvm-svn: 349212
All of the symbols demangle on llvm-undname and demangler.com. This
address space qualifier is useful for when we want to use opencl C++ in
Windows mode. Additionally, C++ address-space using functions will now
be usable on windows.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55715
Change-Id: Ife4506613c3cce778a783456d62117fbf7d83c26
llvm-svn: 349209
This reverts commit 46efdf2ccc2a80aefebf8433dbf9c7c959f6e629.
Richard Smith commented just after I submitted this that this is the
wrong solution. Reverting so that I can fix differently.
llvm-svn: 349206
Core issue 1013 suggests that having an uninitialied std::nullptr_t be
UB is a bit foolish, since there is only a single valid value. This DR
reports that DR616 fixes it, which does so by making lvalue-to-rvalue
conversions from nullptr_t be equal to nullptr.
However, just implementing that results in warnings/etc in many places.
In order to fix all situations where nullptr_t would seem uninitialized,
this patch instead (as an otherwise transparent extension) default
initializes uninitialized VarDecls of nullptr_t.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53713
Change-Id: I84d72a9290054fa55341e8cbdac43c8e7f25b885
llvm-svn: 349201
Summary:
This patch adds `__builtin_launder`, which is required to implement `std::launder`. Additionally GCC provides `__builtin_launder`, so thing brings Clang in-line with GCC.
I'm not exactly sure what magic `__builtin_launder` requires, but based on previous discussions this patch applies a `@llvm.invariant.group.barrier`. As noted in previous discussions, this may not be enough to correctly handle vtables.
Reviewers: rnk, majnemer, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: kristina, Romain-Geissler-1A, erichkeane, amharc, jroelofs, cfe-commits, Prazek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40218
llvm-svn: 349195
Inlined runtime with the current implementation of the interwarp copy
function leads to the undefined behavior because of the not quite
correct implementation of the barriers. Start using generic
__kmpc_barier function instead of the custom made barriers.
llvm-svn: 349192
Some C++ standard library classes provide additional guarantees about their
state after move. Suppress warnings on such classes until a more precise
behavior is implemented. Warnings for locals are not suppressed anyway
because it's still most likely a bug.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55307
llvm-svn: 349191
If a moved-from object is passed into a conservatively evaluated function
by pointer or by reference, we assume that the function may reset its state.
Make sure it doesn't apply to const pointers and const references. Add a test
that demonstrates that it does apply to rvalue references.
Additionally, make sure that the object is invalidated when its contents change
for reasons other than invalidation caused by evaluating a call conservatively.
In particular, when the object's fields are manipulated directly, we should
assume that some sort of reset may be happening.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55289
llvm-svn: 349190
Functional changes include:
* The run.files property is now an array instead of a mapping.
* fileLocation objects now have a fileIndex property specifying the array index into run.files.
* The resource.rules property is now an array instead of a mapping.
* The result object was given a ruleIndex property that is an index into the resource.rules array.
* rule objects now have their "id" field filled out in addition to the name field.
* Updated the schema and spec version numbers to 11-28.
llvm-svn: 349188
Implement options in clang to enable recording the driver command-line
in an ELF section.
Implement a new special named metadata, llvm.commandline, to support
frontends embedding their command-line options in IR/ASM/ELF.
This differs from the GCC implementation in some key ways:
* In GCC there is only one command-line possible per compilation-unit,
in LLVM it mirrors llvm.ident and multiple are allowed.
* In GCC individual options are separated by NULL bytes, in LLVM entire
command-lines are separated by NULL bytes. The advantage of the GCC
approach is to clearly delineate options in the face of embedded
spaces. The advantage of the LLVM approach is to support merging
multiple command-lines unambiguously, while handling embedded spaces
with escaping.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54487
Clang Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54489
llvm-svn: 349155
Move some diagnostics around between Diagnostic*Kinds.td files. Diagnostics
used in multiple places were moved to DiagnosticCommonKinds.td. Diagnostics
listed in the wrong place (ie, Sema diagnostics listed in
DiagnosticsParseKinds.td) were moved to the correct places. One diagnostic
split into two so that the diagnostic string is in the .td file instead of in
code. Cleaned up the diagnostic includes after all the changes.
llvm-svn: 349125
This reverts commit r349064.
This wasn't updating the right test. Causing (not the different line number
from the previous revert):
======================================================================
FAIL: test_diagnostic_warning (tests.cindex.test_diagnostics.TestDiagnostics)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/Users/buildslave/jenkins/workspace/clang-stage1-configure-RA/llvm/tools/clang/bindings/python/tests/cindex/test_diagnostics.py", line 18, in test_diagnostic_warning
self.assertEqual(len(tu.diagnostics), 2)
AssertionError: 1 != 2
llvm-svn: 349118
intrin.h had forward declarations for these and lzcntintrin.h had implementations that were only available with -mlzcnt or a -march that supported the lzcnt feature.
For MS compatibility we should always have these builtins available regardless of X86 being the target or the CPU support the lzcnt instruction. The backends should be able to gracefully fallback to something support even if its just shifts and bit ops.
Unfortunately, gcc also implements 2 of the 3 function names here on X86 when lzcnt feature is enabled.
This patch adds builtins for these for MSVC compatibility and drops the forward declarations from intrin.h. To keep the gcc compatibility the two intrinsics that collided have been turned into macros that use the X86 specific builtins with the lzcnt feature check. These macros are only defined when _MSC_VER is not defined. Without them being macros we can get a redefinition error because -ms-extensions doesn't seem to set _MSC_VER but does make the MS builtins available.
Should fix PR40014
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55677
llvm-svn: 349098
The host-side code can't (and should not) access the values that may
only exist on the device side. E.g. address of a __device__ function
does not exist on the host side as we don't generate the code for it there.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55663
llvm-svn: 349087
This updates the scan-build perl script to allow outputting to sarif in a more natural fashion by specifying -sarif as a command line argument, similar to how -plist is already supported.
llvm-svn: 349082
The DIFile used by the CU is special and distinct from the main source
file. Its directory part specifies what becomes the DW_AT_comp_dir
(the compilation directory), even if the source file was specified
with an absolute path.
To support the .dwo workflow, a valid DW_AT_comp_dir is necessary even
if source files were specified with an absolute path.
llvm-svn: 349065
Found the case in the clang codebase where the assertion fires.
To avoid crashing assertion-enabled builds before I re-add the missing
operation.
Will restore the assertion alongside the upcoming fix.
llvm-svn: 349061
Some versions of gcc, especially when invoked through ccache (-E), can have
trouble with raw string literals inside macros. This moves the string out of
the macro.
llvm-svn: 349059
Address spaces are cast into generic before invoking the constructor.
Added support for a trailing Qualifiers object in FunctionProtoType.
Note: This recommits the previously reverted patch,
but now it is commited together with a fix for lldb.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54862
llvm-svn: 349019
Summary:
private and internal: should not trigger ODR at all.
unnamed_addr: current ODR checking approach fail and rereport false violation if
a linker merges such globals
linkonce_odr, weak_odr: could cause similar problems and they are already not
instrumented for ELF.
Reviewers: eugenis, kcc
Subscribers: kubamracek, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55621
llvm-svn: 349015
Summary:
This change adds a new AST matcher for block expressions.
Test Notes:
Ran the clang unit tests.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55546
llvm-svn: 349004
Statement memoization was removed in r348822 because it was noticed to cause
memory corruption. This was happening because a reference to an object
in a DenseMap was used after being invalidated by inserting a new key
into the map.
This test case crashes reliably under ASan (i.e., when Clang is built with
-DLLVM_USE_SANITIZER="Address") on at least some machines before r348822
and doesn't crash after it.
llvm-svn: 349000
The previous assertion was relatively easy to trigger, and likely will
be easy to trigger going forward. EmitDelegateCallArg is relatively
popular.
This cleanly diagnoses PR28299 while I work on a proper solution.
llvm-svn: 348991
__builtin_cpu_supports and __builtin_cpu_is use information in __cpu_model to decide cpu features. Before this change, __cpu_model was not declared as dso local. The generated code looks up the address in GOT when reading __cpu_model. This makes it impossible to use these functions in ifunc, because at that time GOT entries have not been relocated. This change makes it dso local.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53850
llvm-svn: 348978
Summary:
Currently the Clang AST doesn't store information about how the callee of a CallExpr was found. Specifically if it was found using ADL.
However, this information is invaluable to tooling. Consider a tool which renames usages of a function. If the originally CallExpr was formed using ADL, then the tooling may need to additionally qualify the replacement.
Without information about how the callee was found, the tooling is left scratching it's head. Additionally, we want to be able to match ADL calls as quickly as possible, which means avoiding computing the answer on the fly.
This patch changes `CallExpr` to store whether it's callee was found using ADL. It does not change the size of any AST nodes.
Reviewers: fowles, rsmith, klimek, shafik
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: aaron.ballman, riccibruno, calabrese, titus, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55534
llvm-svn: 348977
The __builtin_unpredictable implementation is confused by any implicit
casts, which happen in C++. This patch strips those off so that
if/switch statements now work with it in C++.
Change-Id: I73c3bf4f1775cd906703880944f4fcdc29fffb0a
llvm-svn: 348969
CallGraph previously would just show the normal name of a function,
which gets really confusing when using it on large C++ projects. This
patch switches the printName call to a printQualifiedName, so that the
namespaces are included.
Change-Id: Ie086d863f6b2251be92109ea1b0946825b28b49a
llvm-svn: 348950
When multiple loop transformation are defined in a loop's metadata, their order of execution is defined by the order of their respective passes in the pass pipeline. For instance, e.g.
#pragma clang loop unroll_and_jam(enable)
#pragma clang loop distribute(enable)
is the same as
#pragma clang loop distribute(enable)
#pragma clang loop unroll_and_jam(enable)
and will try to loop-distribute before Unroll-And-Jam because the LoopDistribute pass is scheduled after UnrollAndJam pass. UnrollAndJamPass only supports one inner loop, i.e. it will necessarily fail after loop distribution. It is not possible to specify another execution order. Also,t the order of passes in the pipeline is subject to change between versions of LLVM, optimization options and which pass manager is used.
This patch adds 'followup' attributes to various loop transformation passes. These attributes define which attributes the resulting loop of a transformation should have. For instance,
!0 = !{!0, !1, !2}
!1 = !{!"llvm.loop.unroll_and_jam.enable"}
!2 = !{!"llvm.loop.unroll_and_jam.followup_inner", !3}
!3 = !{!"llvm.loop.distribute.enable"}
defines a loop ID (!0) to be unrolled-and-jammed (!1) and then the attribute !3 to be added to the jammed inner loop, which contains the instruction to distribute the inner loop.
Currently, in both pass managers, pass execution is in a fixed order and UnrollAndJamPass will not execute again after LoopDistribute. We hope to fix this in the future by allowing pass managers to run passes until a fixpoint is reached, use Polly to perform these transformations, or add a loop transformation pass which takes the order issue into account.
For mandatory/forced transformations (e.g. by having been declared by #pragma omp simd), the user must be notified when a transformation could not be performed. It is not possible that the responsible pass emits such a warning because the transformation might be 'hidden' in a followup attribute when it is executed, or it is not present in the pipeline at all. For this reason, this patche introduces a WarnMissedTransformations pass, to warn about orphaned transformations.
Since this changes the user-visible diagnostic message when a transformation is applied, two test cases in the clang repository need to be updated.
To ensure that no other transformation is executed before the intended one, the attribute `llvm.loop.disable_nonforced` can be added which should disable transformation heuristics before the intended transformation is applied. E.g. it would be surprising if a loop is distributed before a #pragma unroll_and_jam is applied.
With more supported code transformations (loop fusion, interchange, stripmining, offloading, etc.), transformations can be used as building blocks for more complex transformations (e.g. stripmining+stripmining+interchange -> tiling).
Reviewed By: hfinkel, dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49281
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55288
llvm-svn: 348944
Clang's CallGraph analysis doesn't use the RecursiveASTVisitor's setting
togo into template instantiations. The result is that anything wanting
to do call graph analysis ends up missing any template function calls.
Change-Id: Ib4af44ed59f15d43f37af91622a203146a3c3189
llvm-svn: 348942
The Darwin targets use `int64_t` and `uint64_t` to define the `int_least64_t`
and `int_fast64_t` types. The underlying type is actually a `long long`. Match
the types to allow the printf specifiers to work properly and have the compiler
vended macros match the implementation on the target.
llvm-svn: 348939
Summary:
`memchr` and `memcmp` operate upon the character units of the object
representation; that is, the `size_t` parameter expresses the number of
character units. The constant folding implementation is updated in this
patch to account for multibyte element types in the arrays passed to
`memchr`/`memcmp` and, in the case of `memcmp`, to account for the
possibility that the arrays may have differing element types (even when
they are byte-sized).
Actual inspection of the object representation is not implemented.
Comparisons are done only between elements with the same object size;
that is, `memchr` will fail when inspecting at least one character unit
of a multibyte element. The integer types are assumed to have two's
complement representation with 0 for `false`, 1 for `true`, and no
padding bits.
`memcmp` on multibyte elements will only be able to fold in cases where
enough elements are equal for the answer to be 0.
Various tests are added to guard against incorrect folding for cases
that miscompile on some system or other prior to this patch. At the same
time, the unsigned 32-bit `wchar_t` testing in
`test/SemaCXX/constexpr-string.cpp` is restored.
Reviewers: rsmith, aaron.ballman, hfinkel
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55510
llvm-svn: 348938
Summary:
Added support for the -gline-directives-only option + fixed logic of the
debug info for CUDA devices. If optimization level is O0, then options
--[no-]cuda-noopt-device-debug do not affect the debug info level. If
the optimization level is >O0, debug info options are used +
--no-cuda-noopt-device-debug is used or no --cuda-noopt-device-debug is
used, the optimization level for the device code is kept and the
emission of the debug directives is used.
If the opt level is > O0, debug info is requested +
--cuda-noopt-device-debug option is used, the optimization is disabled
for the device code + required debug info is emitted.
Reviewers: tra, echristo
Subscribers: aprantl, guansong, JDevlieghere, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51554
llvm-svn: 348930
This library was breaking my -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=1 build. rC348915 seemed to miss this case.
As this seems an "obvious" fix, I am committing without pre-commit review as
per the LLVM developer policy.
llvm-svn: 348929
Address spaces are cast into generic before invoking the constructor.
Added support for a trailing Qualifiers object in FunctionProtoType.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54862
llvm-svn: 348927
This is a more thorough fix of rC348911.
The story about -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=on build after rC348907 (Move PCHContainerOperations from Frontend to Serialization) is:
1. libclangSerialization.so defines PCHContainerReader dtor, ...
2. clangFrontend and clangTooling define classes inheriting from PCHContainerReader, thus their DSOs have undefined references on PCHContainerReader dtor
3. Components depending on either clangFrontend or clangTooling cannot be linked unless they have explicit dependency on clangSerialization due to the default linker option -z defs. The explicit dependency could be avoided if libclang{Frontend,Tooling}.so had these undefined references.
This patch adds the explicit dependency on clangSerialization to make them build.
llvm-svn: 348915
As reported in PR39946, these two implementations cause stack overflows
to occur when a type recursively contains itself. While this only
happens when an incomplete version of itself is used by membership (and
thus an otherwise invalid program), the crashes might be surprising.
The solution here is to replace the recursive implementation with one
that uses a std::vector as a queue. Old values are kept around to
prevent re-checking already checked types.
Change-Id: I582bb27147104763d7daefcfee39d91f408b9fa8
llvm-svn: 348899
The AST matcher documentation dumping script was being a bit over-zealous about stripping comment markers, which ended up causing comments in example code to stop being comments. Fix that by only stripping comments at the start of a line, rather than removing any forward slash (which also impacts prose text).
llvm-svn: 348891
Only explicitly look through integer and floating-point promotion where the result type is actually a promotion, which is not always the case for bit-fields in C.
llvm-svn: 348889
- explicit_bzero has limited scope/usage only for security/crypto purposes but is non-optimisable version of memset/0 and bzero.
- explicit_memset has similar signature and semantics as memset but is also a non-optimisable version.
Reviewers: NoQ
Reviewed By: NoQ
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54592
llvm-svn: 348884
for the DICompileUnit.
This addresses post-commit feedback for D55085. Without this patch, a
main source file with an absolute paths may appear in different
DIFiles, once with the absolute path and once with the common prefix
between the absolute path and the current working directory.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55519
llvm-svn: 348865
Summary:
ASan does not support statically linked binaries, but ASan runtime itself can
be statically linked into a target binary executable.
Reviewers: eugenis, kcc
Reviewed By: eugenis
Subscribers: cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55066
llvm-svn: 348863
Memoization dose not seem to be necessary, as other statement visitors
run just fine without it,
and in fact seems to be causing memory corruptions.
Just removing it instead of investigating the root cause.
rdar://45945002
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54921
llvm-svn: 348822
This is currently a diagnostics, but might be upgraded to an error in the future,
especially if we introduce os_return_on_success attributes.
rdar://46359592
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55530
llvm-svn: 348820
Summary: Don't add a child just for the label.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55495
llvm-svn: 348794
Implement support for try-catch blocks in constexpr functions, as
proposed in http://wg21.link/P1002 and voted in San Diego for c++20.
The idea is that we can still never throw inside constexpr, so the catch
block is never entered. A try-catch block like this:
try { f(); } catch (...) { }
is then morally equivalent to just
{ f(); }
Same idea should apply for function/constructor try blocks.
rdar://problem/45530773
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55097
llvm-svn: 348789
Summary:
SSE2 vectorization was added in 2012, but it is 2018 now and I can't
observe any performance boost (testing clang -E [all Sema/* CodeGen/* with proper -I options]) with the existing _mm_movemask_epi8+countTrailingZeros or the following SSE4.2 (compiling with -msse4.2):
__m128i C = _mm_setr_epi8('\r','\n',0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0);
_mm_cmpestri(C, 2, Chunk, 16, _SIDD_UBYTE_OPS | _SIDD_CMP_EQUAL_ANY | _SIDD_POSITIVE_POLARITY | _SIDD_LEAST_SIGNIFICANT)
Delete the vectorization to simplify the code.
Also simplify the code a bit and don't check the line ending sequence \n\r
Reviewers: bkramer, #clang
Reviewed By: bkramer
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55484
llvm-svn: 348777
Use zip_longest in two locations that compare iterator ranges.
zip_longest allows the iteration using a range-based for-loop and to be
symmetric over both ranges instead of prioritizing one over the other.
In that latter case code have to handle the case that the first is
longer than the second, the second is longer than the first, and both
are of the same length, which must partially be checked after the loop.
With zip_longest, this becomes an element comparison within the loop
like the comparison of the elements themselves. The symmetry makes it
clearer that neither the first and second iterators are handled
differently. The iterators are not event used directly anymore, just
the ranges.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55468
llvm-svn: 348762
Summary:
If a function argument is byval and RV is located in default or alloca address space
an optimization of creating addrspacecast instead of memcpy is performed. That is
not correct for OpenCL, where that can lead to a situation of address space casting
from __private * to __global *. See an example below:
```
typedef struct {
int x;
} MyStruct;
void foo(MyStruct val) {}
kernel void KernelOneMember(__global MyStruct* x) {
foo (*x);
}
```
for this code clang generated following IR:
...
%0 = load %struct.MyStruct addrspace(1)*, %struct.MyStruct addrspace(1)**
%x.addr, align 4
%1 = addrspacecast %struct.MyStruct addrspace(1)* %0 to %struct.MyStruct*
...
So the optimization was disallowed for OpenCL if RV is located in an address space
different than that of the argument (0).
Reviewers: yaxunl, Anastasia
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Subscribers: cfe-commits, asavonic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54947
llvm-svn: 348752
The addcarry and addcarryx builtins do the same thing. The only difference is that addcarryx previously required adx feature.
This commit removes the adx feature check from addcarryx and removes the addcarry builtin. This matches the builtins that gcc has. We don't guarantee compatibility in builtins, but we generally try to be consistent if its not a burden.
llvm-svn: 348738
There is a clang::TemplateDecl AST type, so a method called
VisitTemplateDecl looks like it should 'override' the method from the
base visitor, but it does not because of the extra parameters it takes.
In reality, these methods are utilities, so name them like utilities.
llvm-svn: 348720
If the label is present, it is added as a child, with the statement a
child of the label. This preserves behavior of the InitListExpr dump
output.
llvm-svn: 348717
Summary:
This causes no change in the output of ast-dump-stmt.cpp due to the way
child nodes are printed with a delay.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55398
llvm-svn: 348714
It is faster to directly call the ObjC runtime for methods such as alloc/allocWithZone instead of sending a message to those functions.
This patch adds support for converting messages to alloc/allocWithZone to their equivalent runtime calls.
Tests included for the positive case of applying this transformation, negative tests that we ensure we only convert "alloc" to objc_alloc, not "alloc2", and also a driver test to ensure we enable this only for supported runtime versions.
Reviewed By: rjmccall
https://reviews.llvm.org/D55349
llvm-svn: 348687
Move enums from */*Diagnostic.h to Basic/Diagnostic*.h. Basic/AllDiagnostics.h
needs all the enums and moving the sources to Basic prevents a Basic->*->Basic
dependency loop. This also allows each Basic/Diagnostics*Kinds.td to have a
header at Basic/Diagnostic*.h (except for Common). The old headers are kept in place since other packages are still using them.
llvm-svn: 348685
Escaping to void * / uint64_t / others non-OSObject * should stop tracking,
as such functions can have heterogeneous semantics depending on context,
and can not always be annotated.
rdar://46439133
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55465
llvm-svn: 348675
Summary: The test passes on Windows only when it is executed on the C: drive. If the build and tests run on a different drive, the test is currently failing.
Reviewers: kadircet, asmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55451
llvm-svn: 348665
Change in r337953 violated the contract for `CXTranslationUnit_KeepGoing`:
> Do not stop processing when fatal errors are encountered.
Use different approach to fix long processing times with multiple inclusion
cycles. Instead of stopping preprocessing for fatal errors, do this after
reaching the max allowed include depth and only for the files that were
processed already. It is likely but not guaranteed those files cause a cycle.
rdar://problem/46108547
Reviewers: erik.pilkington, arphaman
Reviewed By: erik.pilkington
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, ilya-biryukov, Dmitry.Kozhevnikov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55095
llvm-svn: 348641
Allow enabling and disabling tracking of ObjC/CF objects
separately from tracking of OS objects.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55400
llvm-svn: 348638
The option has no tests, is not used anywhere, and is actually
incorrect: it prints the line number without the reference to a file,
which can be outright incorrect.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55385
llvm-svn: 348637
Summary:
We introduce a strict policy for C++ CTU. It can work across TUs only if
the C++ dialects are the same. We neither allow C vs C++ CTU. We do this
because the same constructs might be represented with different properties in
the corresponding AST nodes or even the nodes might be completely different (a
struct will be RecordDecl in C, but it will be a CXXRectordDecl in C++, thus it
may cause certain assertions during cast operations).
Reviewers: xazax.hun, a_sidorin
Subscribers: rnkovacs, dkrupp, Szelethus, gamesh411, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55134
llvm-svn: 348610
Summary:
Adding some more CTU list tests. E.g. to check if a construct is unsupported.
We also slightly modify the handling of the return value of the `Import`
function from ASTImporter.
Reviewers: xazax.hun, balazske, a_sidorin
Subscribers: rnkovacs, dkrupp, Szelethus, gamesh411, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55131
llvm-svn: 348605
Inline cpu_specific versions referenced before the cpu_dispatch function
weren't properly emitted, since they hadn't been referred to. This
patch ensures that during resolver generation that all appropriate
versions are emitted.
Change-Id: I94c3766aaf9c75ca07a0ad8258efdbb834654ff8
llvm-svn: 348600
This reverts commit 65df29f9318ac13a633c0ce13b2b0bccf06e79ca.
AS suggested by @rsmith here: https://reviews.llvm.org/rL345839
I'm reverting this and solving the initial problem in a different way.
llvm-svn: 348595
Summary:
With a new switch we may be able to print to stderr if a new TU is being loaded
during CTU. This is very important for higher level scripts (like CodeChecker)
to be able to parse this output so they can create e.g. a zip file in case of
a Clang crash which contains all the related TU files.
Reviewers: xazax.hun, Szelethus, a_sidorin, george.karpenkov
Subscribers: whisperity, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, rnkovacs, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, donat.nagy, dkrupp,
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55135
llvm-svn: 348594
Summary:
...that fires when running completion inside an argument of
UnresolvedMemberExpr (see the added test).
The assertion that fires is from Sema::TryObjectArgumentInitialization:
assert(FromClassification.isLValue());
This happens because Sema::AddFunctionCandidates does not account for
object types which are pointers. It ends up classifying them incorrectly.
All usages of the function outside code completion are used to run
overload resolution for operators. In those cases the object type being
passed is always a non-pointer type, so it's not surprising the function
did not expect a pointer in the object argument.
However, code completion reuses the same function and calls it with the
object argument coming from UnresolvedMemberExpr, which can be a pointer
if the member expr is an arrow ('->') access.
Extending AddFunctionCandidates to allow pointer object types does not
seem too crazy since all the functions down the call chain can properly
handle pointer object types if we properly classify the object argument
as an l-value, i.e. the classification of the implicitly dereferenced
pointer.
Reviewers: kadircet
Reviewed By: kadircet
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55331
llvm-svn: 348590
Summary:
We plan to introduce additional CTU related lit test. Since lit may run the
tests in parallel, it is not safe to use the same directory (%T) for these
tests. It is safe to use however test case specific directories (%t).
Reviewers: xazax.hun, a_sidorin
Subscribers: rnkovacs, dkrupp, Szelethus, gamesh411, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55129
llvm-svn: 348587
Summary:
The patch is to add the VSX register support for inline assembly. After this
patch, we can use VSX register in inline assembly clobber list without error.
Reviewed By: jsji, nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55192
llvm-svn: 348572
Thunks that return member pointers via sret are broken due to using temporary
storage for the return value on the stack and then passing that pointer to a
tail call, violating the rule that a tail call can't access allocas in the
caller (see bug).
Since r90526, we put aggregate return values directly in the sret slot, but
this doesn't apply to member pointers which are considered scalar.
Unless I'm missing something subtle, we should be able to always use the sret
slot directly for indirect return values.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55371
llvm-svn: 348569
Summary:
The call is duplicated in the handlers of all Expr subclasses.
This change makes it easy to split statement handling out to
TextNodeDumper.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55339
llvm-svn: 348546
Summary: This call is duplicated in Visits of all direct subclasses of Stmt.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55338
llvm-svn: 348545
The attribute specifies that the call of the C++ method consumes a
reference to "this".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55155
llvm-svn: 348532
The flag -fdebug-compilation-dir is useful to make generated .o files
independent of the path of the build directory, without making the compile
command-line dependent on the path of the build directory, like
-fdebug-prefix-map requires. This change makes it so that the driver can
forward the flag to -cc1as, like it already can for -cc1. We might want to
consider making -fdebug-compilation-dir a driver flag in a follow-up.
(Since -fdebug-compilation-dir defaults to PWD, it's already possible to get
this effect by setting PWD, but explicit compiler flags are better than env
vars, because e.g. ninja tracks command lines and reruns commands that change.)
Somewhat related to PR14625.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55377
llvm-svn: 348515
This reverts commit r348280 and reapplies D55085 without modifications.
Original commit message:
Avoid emitting redundant or unusable directories in DIFile metadata entries.
As discussed on llvm-dev recently, Clang currently emits redundant
directories in DIFile entries, such as
.file 1 "/Volumes/Data/llvm" "/Volumes/Data/llvm/tools/clang/test/CodeGen/debug-info-abspath.c"
This patch looks at any common prefix between the compilation
directory and the (absolute) file path and strips the redundant
part. More importantly it leaves the compilation directory empty if
the two paths have no common prefix.
After this patch the above entry is (assuming a compilation dir of "/Volumes/Data/llvm/_build"):
.file 1 "/Volumes/Data/llvm" "tools/clang/test/CodeGen/debug-info-abspath.c"
When building the FileCheck binary with debug info, this patch makes
the build artifacts ~1kb smaller.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55085
llvm-svn: 348513
If the array section is based on pointer and this sections is mapped in
target region + then it is used in the inner parallel region, it also
must be globalized as the pointer itself is passed by value, not by
reference.
llvm-svn: 348492
Friend function template defined in a class template becomes available if
the enclosing class template is instantiated. Until the function template
is used, it does not have a body, but still is considered a definition for
the purpose of redeclaration checks.
This change modifies redefinition check so that it can find the friend
function template definitions in instantiated classes.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21508
llvm-svn: 348473
Support the Swift calling convention on Windows ARM and AArch64. Both
of these conform to the AAPCS, AAPCS64 calling convention, and LLVM has
been adjusted to account for the register usage. Ensure that the
frontend passes this into the backend. This allows the swift runtime to
be built for Windows.
llvm-svn: 348454
This patch adds the noderef attribute in clang and checks for dereferences of
types that have this attribute. This attribute is currently used by sparse and
would like to be ported to clang.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49511
llvm-svn: 348442
This patch creates a new context for every function definition we enter.
Currently we do not push and pop on these, usually working off of the global
context record added in the Sema constructor, which never gets popped.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54014
llvm-svn: 348434
Summary:
Start by moving some utilities to it. It will eventually house dumping
of individual nodes (after indentation etc has already been accounted
for).
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55189
llvm-svn: 348412
Summary:
Re-order handling of getElementType and getBracketsRange. It is
necessary to perform all printing before any traversal to child nodes.
This causes no change in the output of ast-dump-array.cpp due to the way
child nodes are printed with a delay. This new order of the code is
also the order that produces the expected output anyway.
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55257
llvm-svn: 348409
We would issue a false-positive diagnostic for parameters in function declarations shadowing fields; we now only issue the diagnostic on a function definition instead.
llvm-svn: 348400
This adds a callback to PrintingPolicy to allow CGDebugInfo to remap
file paths according to -fdebug-prefix-map. Otherwise the debug info
(particularly function names for C++ lambdas) may contain paths that
should have been remapped in the debug info.
<rdar://problem/46128056>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55137
llvm-svn: 348397
Summary: The change itself landed as r348365, see the comment for more details.
Reviewers: arphaman, EricWF
Reviewed By: arphaman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55322
llvm-svn: 348394
The Entry pointer in IdentifierInfo was only null for IdentifierInfo
created from a PTH. Now that PTH support has been removed we can remove
some PTH specific code in IdentifierInfo::getLength and
IdentifierInfo::getNameStart.
Also make the constructor of IdentifierInfo private to make sure that
they are only created by IdentifierTable, and move it to the header so
that it can be inlined in IdentifierTable::get and IdentifierTable::getOwn.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54866
Reviewed By: erichkeane
llvm-svn: 348384
Added new diagnostic when templates are instantiated with
different address space from the one provided in its definition.
This also prevents deducing generic address space in pointer
type of templates to allow giving them concrete address space
during instantiation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55127
llvm-svn: 348382
This patch addresses a compilation error with clang when
running in Haiku being unable to compile code using
float128 (throws compilation error such as 'float128 is
not supported on this target').
Patch by kallisti5 (Alexander von Gluck IV)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54901
llvm-svn: 348368
Summary:
The intention is to make the tools replaying compilations from 'compile_commands.json'
(clang-tidy, clangd, etc.) find the same standard library as the original compiler
specified in 'compile_commands.json'.
Previously, the library detection logic was in the frontend (InitHeaderSearch.cpp) and relied
on the value of resource dir as an approximation of the compiler install dir. The new logic
uses the actual compiler install dir and is performed in the driver. This is consistent with
the C++ standard library detection on other platforms and allows to override the resource dir
in the tools using the compile_commands.json without altering the
standard library detection mechanism. The tools have to override the resource dir to make sure
they use a consistent version of the builtin headers.
There is still logic in InitHeaderSearch that attemps to add the absolute includes for the
the C++ standard library, so we keep passing the -stdlib=libc++ from the driver to the frontend
via cc1 args to avoid breaking that. In the long run, we should move this logic to the driver too,
but it could potentially break the library detection on other systems, so we don't tackle it in this
patch to keep its scope manageable.
This is a second attempt to fix the issue, first one was commited in r346652 and reverted in r346675.
The original fix relied on an ad-hoc propagation (bypassing the cc1 flags) of the install dir from the
driver to the frontend's HeaderSearchOptions. Unsurpisingly, the propagation was incomplete, it broke
the libc++ detection in clang itself, which caused LLDB tests to break.
The LLDB tests pass with new fix.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, arphaman, EricWF
Reviewed By: arphaman
Subscribers: mclow.lists, ldionne, dexonsmith, ioeric, christof, kadircet, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54630
llvm-svn: 348365
This is an updated version of the D54576, which was reverted.
Problem was that SplitDebugName calls the InputInfo::getFilename
which asserts if InputInfo given is not of type Filename:
const char *getFilename() const {
assert(isFilename() && "Invalid accessor.");
return Data.Filename;
}
At the same time at that point, it can be of type Nothing and
we need to use getBaseInput(), like original code did.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55006
llvm-svn: 348352
We should have been checking that this state is consistent, but its
possible for it to be filled later, so it isn't really sound to check
it here anyways.
Fixes llvm.org/PR39742
llvm-svn: 348325
Add a static_assert checking that no type class is polymorphic.
People should use LLVM style RTTI instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55225
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
llvm-svn: 348281
This reverts commit r348154 and follow-up commits r348211 and r3248213.
Reason: the original commit broke compiler-rt tests and a follow-up fix
(r348203) broke our integrate and was reverted.
llvm-svn: 348280
Add a static_assert checking that no statement/expression class
is polymorphic. People should use LLVM style RTTI instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55222
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
llvm-svn: 348278
ArrayTypeTraitExpr is the only expression class which is polymorphic.
As far as I can tell this is completely pointless.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55221
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
llvm-svn: 348276
Critical regions in NVPTX are the constructs, which, generally speaking,
are not supported by the NVPTX target. Instead we're using special
technique to handle the critical regions. Currently they are supported
only within the loop and all the threads in the loop must execute the
same critical region.
Inside of this special regions the regions still must be emitted as
critical, to avoid possible data races between the teams +
synchronization must use __kmpc_barrier functions.
llvm-svn: 348272
__kmpc_barrier runtime functions must be marked as convergent to prevent
some dangerous optimizations. Also, for NVPTX target all barriers must
be emitted as simple barriers.
llvm-svn: 348271
When debugging a boost build with a modified
version of Clang, I discovered that the PTH implementation
stores TokenKind in 8 bits. However, we currently have 368
TokenKinds.
The result is that the value gets truncated and the wrong token
gets picked up when including PTH files. It seems that this will
go wrong every time someone uses a token that uses the 9th bit.
Upon asking on IRC, it was brought up that this was a highly
experimental features that was considered a failure. I discovered
via googling that BoostBuild (mostly Boost.Math) is the only user of
this
feature, using the CC1 flag directly. I believe that this can be
transferred over to normal PCH with minimal effort:
https://github.com/boostorg/build/issues/367
Based on advice on IRC and research showing that this is a nearly
completely unused feature, this patch removes it entirely.
Note: I considered leaving the build-flags in place and making them
emit an error/warning, however since I've basically identified and
warned the only user, it seemed better to just remove them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54547
Change-Id: If32744275ef1f585357bd6c1c813d96973c4d8d9
llvm-svn: 348266
As of rev. 268898, clang supports __float128 on SystemZ. This seems to
have been in error. GCC has never supported __float128 on SystemZ,
since the "long double" type on the platform is already IEEE-128. (GCC
only supports __float128 on platforms where "long double" is some other
data type.)
For compatibility reasons this patch removes __float128 on SystemZ
again. The test case is updated accordingly.
llvm-svn: 348247
Previously, the iterator range checker only warned upon dereferencing of
iterators outside their valid range as well as increments and decrements of
out-of-range iterators where the result remains out-of-range. However, the C++
standard is more strict than this: decrementing begin() or incrementing end()
results in undefined behaviour even if the iterator is not dereferenced
afterwards. Coming back to the range once out-of-range is also undefined.
This patch corrects the behaviour of the iterator range checker: warnings are
given for any operation whose result is ahead of begin() or past the end()
(which is the past-end iterator itself, thus now we are speaking of past
past-the-end).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53812
llvm-svn: 348245
If an iterator is represented by a derived C++ class but its comparison operator
is for its base the iterator checkers cannot recognize the iterators compared.
This results in false positives in very straightforward cases (range error when
dereferencing an iterator after disclosing that it is equal to the past-the-end
iterator).
To overcome this problem we always use the region of the topmost base class for
iterators stored in a region. A new method called getMostDerivedObjectRegion()
was added to the MemRegion class to get this region.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54466
llvm-svn: 348244
Summary:
In our codebase, `static_assert(std::some_type_trait<Ts...>::value, "msg")`
(where `some_type_trait` is an std type_trait and `Ts...` is the
appropriate template parameters) account for 11.2% of the `static_assert`s.
In these cases, the `Ts` are typically not spelled out explicitly, e.g.
`static_assert(std::is_same<SomeT::TypeT, typename SomeDependentT::value_type>::value, "message");`
The diagnostic when the assert fails is typically not very useful, e.g.
`static_assert failed due to requirement 'std::is_same<SomeT::TypeT, typename SomeDependentT::value_type>::value' "message"`
This change makes the diagnostic spell out the types explicitly , e.g.
`static_assert failed due to requirement 'std::is_same<int, float>::value' "message"`
See tests for more examples.
After this is submitted, I intend to handle
`static_assert(!std::some_type_trait<Ts...>::value, "msg")`,
which is another 6.6% of static_asserts.
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54903
llvm-svn: 348239
Includes "resize" and "shrink" because they can reset the object to a known
state in certain circumstances.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54563
llvm-svn: 348235
When the global new and delete operators aren't declared, Clang
provides and implicit declaration, but this declaration currently
always uses the default visibility. This is a problem when the
C++ library itself is being built with non-default visibility because
the implicit declaration will force the new and delete operators to
have the default visibility unlike the rest of the library.
The existing workaround is to use assembly to enforce the visiblity:
https://fuchsia.googlesource.com/zircon/+/master/system/ulib/zxcpp/new.cpp#108
but that solution is not always available, e.g. in the case of of
libFuzzer which is using an internal version of libc++ that's also built
with -fvisibility=hidden where the existing behavior is causing issues.
This change introduces a new option -fvisibility-global-new-delete-hidden
which makes the implicit declaration of the global new and delete
operators hidden.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53787
llvm-svn: 348234
headers.
Previously, we would only check whether the new declaration is in a
system header, but that requires the user to be able to correctly guess
whether a declaration in a system header is declared as a struct or a
class when specializing standard library traits templates.
We now entirely ignore declarations for which the warning was disabled
when determining whether to warn on a tag mismatch.
Also extend the diagnostic message to clarify that
a) code containing such a tag mismatch is in fact valid and correct,
and
b) the (non-coding-style) reason to emit such a warning is that the
Microsoft C++ ABI is broken and includes the tag kind in decorated
names,
as it seems a lot of users are confused by our diagnostic here (either
not understanding why we produce it, or believing that it represents an
actual language rule).
llvm-svn: 348233
The warning piece traditionally describes the bug itself, i.e.
"The bug is a _____", eg. "Attempt to delete released memory",
"Resource leak", "Method call on a moved-from object".
Event pieces produced by the visitor are usually in a present tense, i.e.
"At this moment _____": "Memory is released", "File is closed",
"Object is moved".
Additionally, type information is added into the event pieces for STL objects
(in order to highlight that it is in fact an STL object), and the respective
event piece now mentions that the object is left in an unspecified state
after it was moved, which is a vital piece of information to understand the bug.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54560
llvm-svn: 348229
Downstream forks that have their own attributes often run into this
test failing when a new attribute is added to clang because the
number of supported attributes no longer match. This is redundant
information for this test, so we can get by without it.
rdar://46288577
llvm-svn: 348218
In general case there use-after-move is not a bug. It depends on how the
move-constructor or move-assignment is implemented.
In STL, the convention that applies to most classes is that the move-constructor
(-assignment) leaves an object in a "valid but unspecified" state. Using such
object without resetting it to a known state first is likely a bug. Objects
Local value-type variables are special because due to their automatic lifetime
there is no intention to reuse space. If you want a fresh object, you might
as well make a new variable, no need to move from a variable and than re-use it.
Therefore, it is not always a bug, but it is obviously easy to suppress when it
isn't, and in most cases it indeed is - as there's no valid intention behind
the intentional use of a local after move.
This applies not only to local variables but also to parameter variables,
not only of value type but also of rvalue reference type (but not to lvalue
references).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54557
llvm-svn: 348210
The checker had extra code to clean up memory regions that were sticking around
in the checker without ever being cleaned up due to the bug that was fixed in
r347953. Because of that, if a region was moved from, then became dead,
and then reincarnated, there were false positives.
Why regions are even allowed to reincarnate is a separate story. Luckily, this
only happens for local regions that don't produce symbols when loaded from.
No functional change intended. The newly added test demonstrates that even
though no cleanup is necessary upon destructor calls, the early return
cannot be removed. It was not failing before the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54372
llvm-svn: 348208
This follows the Static Analyzer's tradition to name checkers after
things in which they find bugs, not after bugs they find.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54556
llvm-svn: 348201
This continues the work that was started in r342313, which now gets applied to
object-under-construction tracking in C++. Makes it possible to debug
temporaries by dumping exploded graphs again.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54459
llvm-svn: 348200
This continues the work started in r342309 and r342315 to provide identifiers
to AST objects that are shorter and easier to read and remember than pointers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54457
llvm-svn: 348198
Buildbot failures were caused by an unrelated UB that was introduced in r347943
and fixed in r347970.
Also the revision was incorrectly specified as r344580 during revert.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54017
llvm-svn: 348188
Make sure that symbols needed to implement runtime support for gcov are
exported when using an export list on Darwin.
Without the clang driver exporting these symbols, the linker hides them,
resulting in tapi verification failures.
rdar://45944768
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55151
llvm-svn: 348187
Workaround naming and hierarchy changes in BaseHTTPServer and SimpleHTTPServer module.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55203
llvm-svn: 348184
Python2 supports both backticks and `repr` to access the __repr__ slot. Python3 only supports `repr`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55201
llvm-svn: 348182
As discussed on llvm-dev recently, Clang currently emits redundant
directories in DIFile entries, such as
.file 1 "/Volumes/Data/llvm" "/Volumes/Data/llvm/tools/clang/test/CodeGen/debug-info-abspath.c"
This patch looks at any common prefix between the compilation
directory and the (absolute) file path and strips the redundant
part. More importantly it leaves the compilation directory empty if
the two paths have no common prefix.
After this patch the above entry is (assuming a compilation dir of "/Volumes/Data/llvm/_build"):
.file 1 "/Volumes/Data/llvm" "tools/clang/test/CodeGen/debug-info-abspath.c"
When building the FileCheck binary with debug info, this patch makes
the build artifacts ~1kb smaller.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55085
llvm-svn: 348154
Remove the pointless "+ 0" which I added for some reason when
modifying these statement/expression classes since it looks
like this is a typo. Following the suggestion of aaron.ballman
in D54902. NFC.
llvm-svn: 348150
CallExpr::setNumArgs is the only thing that prevents storing the arguments
in a trailing array. There is only 3 places in Sema where setNumArgs is called.
D54900 dealt with one of them.
This patch remove the other two calls to setNumArgs in ConvertArgumentsForCall.
To do this we do the following changes:
1.) Replace the first call to setNumArgs by an assertion since we are moving the
responsability to allocate enough space for the arguments from
Sema::ConvertArgumentsForCall to its callers
(which are Sema::BuildCallToMemberFunction, and Sema::BuildResolvedCallExpr).
2.) Add a new member function CallExpr::shrinkNumArgs, which can only be used
to drop arguments and then replace the second call to setNumArgs by
shrinkNumArgs.
3.) Add a new defaulted parameter MinNumArgs to CallExpr and its derived
classes which specifies a minimum number of argument slots to allocate.
The actual number of arguments slots allocated will be
max(number of args, MinNumArgs) with the extra args nulled. Note that
after the creation of the call expression all of the arguments will be
non-null. It is just during the creation of the call expression that some of
the last arguments can be temporarily null, until filled by default arguments.
4.) Update Sema::BuildCallToMemberFunction by passing the number of parameters
in the function prototype to the constructor of CXXMemberCallExpr. Here the
change is pretty straightforward.
5.) Update Sema::BuildResolvedCallExpr. Here the change is more complicated
since the type-checking for the function type was done after the creation of
the call expression. We need to move this before the creation of the call
expression, and then pass the number of parameters in the function prototype
(if any) to the constructor of the call expression.
6.) Update the deserialization of CallExpr and its derived classes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54902
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
llvm-svn: 348145
Summary:
SSBS (Speculative Store Bypass Safe) is only mandatory from 8.5
onwards but is optional from Armv8.0-A. This patch adds testing for
the ssbs command line option, added to allow enabling the feature
in previous Armv8-A architectures to 8.5.
Reviewers: olista01, samparker, aemerson
Reviewed By: samparker
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54961
llvm-svn: 348142
CallExpr::setNumArgs is the only thing that prevents storing the arguments
of a call expression in a trailing array since it might resize the argument
array. setNumArgs is only called in 3 places in Sema, and for all of them it
is possible to avoid it.
This deals with the call to setNumArgs in BuildCallToObjectOfClassType.
Instead of constructing the CXXOperatorCallExpr first and later calling
setNumArgs if we have default arguments, we first construct a large
enough SmallVector, do the promotion/check of the arguments, and
then construct the CXXOperatorCallExpr.
Incidentally this also avoid reallocating the arguments when the
call operator has default arguments but this is not the primary goal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54900
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
llvm-svn: 348134
Have all classes derive from object: that's implicitly the default in Python3,
it needs to be done explicilty in Python2.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55121
llvm-svn: 348127
Python2 supports the two following equivalent construct
raise ExceptionType, exception_value
and
raise ExceptionType(exception_value)
Only the later is supported by Python3.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55195
llvm-svn: 348126
Summary:
This is a follow-up on https://reviews.llvm.org/D52879, addressing a few issues.
This:
- adds a FIXME for later improvement for specific builtins: I previously have only checked OpenCL ones and ensured tests cover those.
- fixed the CallExpr type.
Reviewers: riccibruno
Reviewed By: riccibruno
Subscribers: yaxunl, Anastasia, kristina, svenvh, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55136
llvm-svn: 348120
Summary:
LLDB.framework wants a copy these headers. With this change LLDB can easily glob for the list of files:
```
get_target_property(clang_include_dir clang-headers RUNTIME_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY)
file(GLOB_RECURSE clang_vendor_headers RELATIVE ${clang_include_dir} "${clang_include_dir}/*")
```
By default `RUNTIME_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY` is unset for custom targets like `clang-headers`.
Reviewers: aprantl, JDevlieghere, davide, friss, dexonsmith
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: mgorny, #lldb, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55128
llvm-svn: 348116
Summary:
This has precedent in the StmtVisitor. This change will make it
possible to clean up the comment handling in ASTDumper.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55069
llvm-svn: 348100
The vector modifier is considered separate, so
don't treat it as a conversion specifier.
This is still not warning on some cases, like
using a type that isn't a valid vector element.
Fixes bug 39652
llvm-svn: 348084
The spec is ambiguous on whether vector types are allowed to be
implicitly converted. The only legal context I think this can
be used for OpenCL is printf, where it seems necessary.
llvm-svn: 348083
The two LLVM_DUMP_METHOD methods have a undefined reference on clang::DiagnosticsEngine::DiagStateMap::dump.
tools/clang/tools/extra/clangd/benchmarks/IndexBenchmark links in
clangDaemon but does not link in clangBasic explicitly, which causes a
linker error "undefined symbol" in !NDEBUG + -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=on builds.
Move LLVM_DUMP_METHOD methods to .cpp to fix IndexBenchmark. They should
be unconditionally defined as they are also used by non-dump-method #pragma clang __debug diag_mapping
llvm-svn: 348065
This adds a callback to PrintingPolicy to allow CGDebugInfo to remap
file paths according to -fdebug-prefix-map. Otherwise the debug info
(particularly function names for C++ lambdas) may contain paths that
should have been remapped in the debug info.
<rdar://problem/46128056>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55137
llvm-svn: 348060
It seems the two failing tests can be simply fixed after r348037
Fix 3 cases in Analysis/builtin-functions.cpp
Delete the bad CodeGen/builtin-constant-p.c for now
llvm-svn: 348053