Summary:
Implicit Conversion Sanitizer is *almost* feature complete.
There aren't *that* much unsanitized things left,
two major ones are increment/decrement (this patch) and bit fields.
As it was discussed in
[[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39519 | PR39519 ]],
unlike `CompoundAssignOperator` (which is promoted internally),
or `BinaryOperator` (for which we always have promotion/demotion in AST)
or parts of `UnaryOperator` (we have promotion/demotion but only for
certain operations), for inc/dec, clang omits promotion/demotion
altogether, under as-if rule.
This is technically correct: https://rise4fun.com/Alive/zPgD
As it can be seen in `InstCombineCasts.cpp` `canEvaluateTruncated()`,
`add`/`sub`/`mul`/`and`/`or`/`xor` operators can all arbitrarily
be extended or truncated:
901cd3b3f6/llvm/lib/Transforms/InstCombine/InstCombineCasts.cpp (L1320-L1334)
But that has serious implications:
1. Since we no longer model implicit casts, do we pessimise
their AST representation and everything that uses it?
2. There is no demotion, so lossy demotion sanitizer does not trigger :]
Now, i'm not going to argue about the first problem here,
but the second one **needs** to be addressed. As it was stated
in the report, this is done intentionally, so changing
this in all modes would be considered a penalization/regression.
Which means, the sanitization-less codegen must not be altered.
It was also suggested to not change the sanitized codegen
to the one with demotion, but i quite strongly believe
that will not be the wise choice here:
1. One will need to re-engineer the check that the inc/dec was lossy
in terms of `@llvm.{u,s}{add,sub}.with.overflow` builtins
2. We will still need to compute the result we would lossily demote.
(i.e. the result of wide `add`ition/`sub`traction)
3. I suspect it would need to be done right here, in sanitization.
Which kinda defeats the point of
using `@llvm.{u,s}{add,sub}.with.overflow` builtins:
we'd have two `add`s with basically the same arguments,
one of which is used for check+error-less codepath and other one
for the error reporting. That seems worse than a single wide op+check.
4. OR, we would need to do that in the compiler-rt handler.
Which means we'll need a whole new handler.
But then what about the `CompoundAssignOperator`,
it would also be applicable for it.
So this also doesn't really seem like the right path to me.
5. At least X86 (but likely others) pessimizes all sub-`i32` operations
(due to partial register stalls), so even if we avoid promotion+demotion,
the computations will //likely// be performed in `i32` anyways.
So i'm not really seeing much benefit of
not doing the straight-forward thing.
While looking into this, i have noticed a few more LLVM middle-end
missed canonicalizations, and filed
[[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44100 | PR44100 ]],
[[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44102 | PR44102 ]].
Those are not specific to inc/dec, we also have them for
`CompoundAssignOperator`, and it can happen for normal arithmetics, too.
But if we take some other path in the patch, it will not be applicable
here, and we will have most likely played ourselves.
TLDR: front-end should emit canonical, easy-to-optimize yet
un-optimized code. It is middle-end's job to make it optimal.
I'm really hoping reviewers agree with my personal assessment
of the path this patch should take..
Fixes [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44054 | PR44054 ]].
Reviewers: rjmccall, erichkeane, rsmith, vsk
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, #sanitizers, llvm-commits, aaron.ballman, t.p.northover, efriedma, regehr
Tags: #llvm, #clang, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70539
We seem to have been gradually growing support for atomic min/max operations
(exposing longstanding IR atomicrmw instructions). But until now there have
been gaps in the expected intrinsics. This adds support for the C11-style
intrinsics (i.e. taking _Atomic, rather than individually blessed by C11
standard), and the variants that return the new value instead of the original
one.
That way, people won't be misled by trying one form and it not working, and the
front-end is more friendly to people using _Atomic types, as we recommend.
Make it possible to use online profile merging ("%m" mode) with
continuous sync ("%c" mode).
To implement this, the merged profile is locked in the runtime
initialization step and either a) filled out for the first time or b)
checked for compatibility. Then, the profile can simply be mmap()'d with
MAP_SHARED set. With the mmap() in place, counter updates from every
process which uses an image are mapped onto the same set of physical
pages assigned by the filesystem cache. After the mmap() is set up, the
profile is unlocked.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69586
and a follow-up NFC rearrangement as it's causing a crash on valid. Testcase is on the original review thread.
This reverts commits af57dbf12e and e6584b2b7b
For RISC-V the value provided to -march should determine whether to
compile for 32- or 64-bit RISC-V irrespective of the target provided to
the Clang driver. This adds a test for this flag for RISC-V and sets the
Target architecture correctly in these cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54214
Provides support for using r6-r11 as globally scoped
register variables. This requires a -ffixed-rN flag
in order to reserve rN against general allocation.
If for a given GRV declaration the corresponding flag
is not found, or the the register in question is the
target's FP, we fail with a diagnostic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68862
Summary: Adds a new option SpaceBeforeBrackets to add spaces before brackets (i.e. int a[23]; -> int a [23];) This is present as an option in the Visual Studio C++ code formatting settings, but there was no matching setting in clang-format.
Reviewers: djasper, MyDeveloperDay, mitchell-stellar
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Subscribers: llvm-commits, cfe-commits, klimek
Patch by: Anteru
Tags: #clang, #clang-format, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D6920
Summary:
Clang/LLVM is a cross-compiler, and so we don't have to make a choice
about `-march`/`-mabi` at build-time, but we may have to compute a
default `-march`/`-mabi` when compiling a program. Until now, each
place that has needed a default `-march` has calculated one itself.
This patch adds a single place where a default `-march` is calculated,
in order to avoid calculating different defaults in different places.
This patch adds a new function `riscv::getRISCVArch` which encapsulates
this logic based on GCC's for computing a default `-march` value
when none is provided. This patch also updates the logic in
`riscv::getRISCVABI` to match the logic in GCC's build system for
computing a default `-mabi`.
This patch also updates anywhere that `-march` is used to now use the
new function which can compute a default. In particular, we now
explicitly pass a `-march` value down to the gnu assembler.
GCC has convoluted logic in its build system to choose a default
`-march`/`-mabi` based on build options, which would be good to match.
This patch is based on the logic in GCC 9.2.0. This commit's logic is
different to GCC's only for baremetal targets, where we default
to rv32imac/ilp32 or rv64imac/lp64 depending on the target triple.
Tests have been updated to match the new logic.
Reviewers: asb, luismarques, rogfer01, kito-cheng, khchen
Reviewed By: asb, luismarques
Subscribers: sameer.abuasal, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, shiva0217, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, rkruppe, PkmX, jocewei, psnobl, benna, Jim, s.egerton, pzheng, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69383
Summary:
By additional regex match, grouping of main include can be enabled in files that are not normally considered as a C/C++ source code.
For example, this might be useful in templated code, where template implementations are being held in *Impl.hpp files.
On the occassion, 'assume-filename' option description was reworded as it was misleading. It has nothing to do with `style=file` option and it does not influence sourced style filename.
Reviewers: rsmith, ioeric, krasimir, sylvestre.ledru, MyDeveloperDay
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Subscribers: MyDeveloperDay, cfe-commits
Patch by: furdyna
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67750
Summary:
Format.h is used to generate ClangFormatStyleOptions.rst, the layout of the comments is critical to the rst file. Accidentally clang-formatting Format.h can lead to the .rst changing.
This revision simply add // clang-format off/on statement around the areas who formatting needs to be maintained, mainly around the options that are related to what happens when the line breaks due to `ColumnLimit` (which is what is happening to the comment)
This allows Format.h to be clang-formatted without causing a change in the documentation when dump_format_style.py is rerun, which is also part of the revision.
Reviewers: mitchell-stellar, klimek, sammccall, owenpan
Reviewed By: mitchell-stellar
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #clang-format
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69951
Summary:
This revision is the last in a series of revisions to return `clang/doc/tools/dump_format_style.py` to be being able to parse Format.h without needing to manually merge the ClangFormatStyleOptions.rst file.
The final modification to dump_format_style.py is needed following the addition of a nested enumeration inside a nested structure following the introduction of {D68296}
Prior related revisions will allow for a fully clang-formatted `clang/include/clang/Format/Format.h` to once again be used at the source.
{D69951}
{D69433}
{D69404}
Reviewers: mitchell-stellar, klimek, sammccall, owenpan
Reviewed By: mitchell-stellar
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang-format, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70003
Summary: This is updating the OpenMP status table. Cray has volunteered for `defaultmap` and supporting `in_reduction` on the `target` construct, so the status on those entries from was changed from "unclaimed". Also, a new entry was added for supporting non-contiguous arrays sections on the `target update` directive.
Reviewers: ABataev, hfinkel, jdoerfert, kkwli0
Reviewed By: ABataev
Subscribers: guansong, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69923
Add options to control floating point behavior: trapping and
exception behavior, rounding, and control of optimizations that affect
floating point calculations. More details in UsersManual.rst.
Reviewers: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62731
Summary:
a change {D67541} cause LanguageStandard to now be subtly different from all other clang-format options, in that the Enum value (less the prefix) is not always allowed as valid as the configuration option.
This caused the ClangFormatStyleOptions.rst and the Format.h to diverge so that the ClangFormatStyleOptions.rst could no longer be generated from the Format.h using dump_format_stlye.py
This fix tried to remedy that:
1) by allowing an additional comment (in Format.h) after the enum to be used as the `in configuration ( XXXX )` text, and changing the dump_format_style.py to support that.
This makes the following code:
```
enum {
...
LS_Cpp03, // c++03
LS_Cpp11, // c++11
...
};
```
would render as:
```* ``LS_Cpp03`` (in configuration: ``c++03``)
* ``LS_Cpp11`` (in configuration: ``c++11``)
```
And we also move the deprecated alias into the text of the enum (otherwise it won't be added at the end as an option)
This patch includes a couple of other whitespace changes which help bring Format.h and ClangFormatStyleOptions.rst almost back into line and regeneratable... (there is still one more)
Reviewers: klimek, mitchell-stellar, sammccall
Reviewed By: mitchell-stellar, sammccall
Subscribers: mrexodia, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #clang-format
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69433
-mvzeroupper will force the vzeroupper insertion pass to run on
CPUs that normally wouldn't. -mno-vzeroupper disables it on CPUs
where it normally runs.
To support this with the default feature handling in clang, we
need a vzeroupper feature flag in X86.td. Since this flag has
the opposite polarity of the fast-partial-ymm-or-zmm-write we
used to use to disable the pass, we now need to add this new
flag to every CPU except KNL/KNM and BTVER2 to keep identical
behavior.
Remove -fast-partial-ymm-or-zmm-write which is no longer used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69786
Add support for continuously syncing profile counter updates to a file.
The motivation for this is that programs do not always exit cleanly. On
iOS, for example, programs are usually killed via a signal from the OS.
Running atexit() handlers after catching a signal is unreliable, so some
method for progressively writing out profile data is necessary.
The approach taken here is to mmap() the `__llvm_prf_cnts` section onto
a raw profile. To do this, the linker must page-align the counter and
data sections, and the runtime must ensure that counters are mapped to a
page-aligned offset within a raw profile.
Continuous mode is (for the moment) incompatible with the online merging
mode. This limitation is lifted in https://reviews.llvm.org/D69586.
Continuous mode is also (for the moment) incompatible with value
profiling, as I'm not sure whether there is interest in this and the
implementation may be tricky.
As I have not been able to test extensively on non-Darwin platforms,
only Darwin support is included for the moment. However, continuous mode
may "just work" without modification on Linux and some UNIX-likes. AIUI
the default value for the GNU linker's `--section-alignment` flag is set
to the page size on many systems. This appears to be true for LLD as
well, as its `no_nmagic` option is on by default. Continuous mode will
not "just work" on Fuchsia or Windows, as it's not possible to mmap() a
section on these platforms. There is a proposal to add a layer of
indirection to the profile instrumentation to support these platforms.
rdar://54210980
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68351
Removed the explicit list of supported features from OpenMP 5.0 and used
the reference to the table instead. Also, fixed info about constructs
that can be executed in SPMD mode, if and num_threads clauses do not
affect it anymore.
Summary:
A new function pass (Transforms/CFGuard/CFGuard.cpp) inserts CFGuard checks on
indirect function calls, using either the check mechanism (X86, ARM, AArch64) or
or the dispatch mechanism (X86-64). The check mechanism requires a new calling
convention for the supported targets. The dispatch mechanism adds the target as
an operand bundle, which is processed by SelectionDAG. Another pass
(CodeGen/CFGuardLongjmp.cpp) identifies and emits valid longjmp targets, as
required by /guard:cf. This feature is enabled using the `cfguard` CC1 option.
Reviewers: thakis, rnk, theraven, pcc
Subscribers: ychen, hans, metalcanine, dmajor, tomrittervg, alex, mehdi_amini, mgorny, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65761
Taking a value and the bitwise-or it with a non-zero constant will always
result in a non-zero value. In a boolean context, this is always true.
if (x | 0x4) {} // always true, intended '&'
This patch creates a new warning group -Wtautological-bitwise-compare for this
warning. It also moves in the existing tautological bitwise comparisons into
this group. A few other changes were needed to the CFGBuilder so that all bool
contexts would be checked. The warnings in -Wtautological-bitwise-compare will
be off by default due to using the CFG.
Fixes: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42666
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66046
llvm-svn: 375318
The idea of this page is to document work in progress functionality
and also describe the plan of future development work.
Patch by Anastasia Stulova.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69072
llvm-svn: 375111
I noticed that compiling on Windows with -fno-ms-compatibility had the
side effect of defining __GNUC__, along with __GNUG__, __GXX_RTTI__, and
a number of other macros for GCC compatibility. This is undesirable and
causes Chromium to do things like mix __attribute__ and __declspec,
which doesn't work. We should have a positive language option to enable
GCC compatibility features so that we can experiment with
-fno-ms-compatibility on Windows. This change adds -fgnuc-version= to be
that option.
My issue aside, users have, for a long time, reported that __GNUC__
doesn't match their expectations in one way or another. We have
encouraged users to migrate code away from this macro, but new code
continues to be written assuming a GCC-only environment. There's really
nothing we can do to stop that. By adding this flag, we can allow them
to choose their own adventure with __GNUC__.
This overlaps a bit with the "GNUMode" language option from -std=gnu*.
The gnu language mode tends to enable non-conforming behaviors that we'd
rather not enable by default, but the we want to set things like
__GXX_RTTI__ by default, so I've kept these separate.
Helps address PR42817
Reviewed By: hans, nickdesaulniers, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68055
llvm-svn: 374449
Summary:
Quote from http://eel.is/c++draft/expr.add#4:
```
4 When an expression J that has integral type is added to or subtracted
from an expression P of pointer type, the result has the type of P.
(4.1) If P evaluates to a null pointer value and J evaluates to 0,
the result is a null pointer value.
(4.2) Otherwise, if P points to an array element i of an array object x with n
elements ([dcl.array]), the expressions P + J and J + P
(where J has the value j) point to the (possibly-hypothetical) array
element i+j of x if 0≤i+j≤n and the expression P - J points to the
(possibly-hypothetical) array element i−j of x if 0≤i−j≤n.
(4.3) Otherwise, the behavior is undefined.
```
Therefore, as per the standard, applying non-zero offset to `nullptr`
(or making non-`nullptr` a `nullptr`, by subtracting pointer's integral value
from the pointer itself) is undefined behavior. (*if* `nullptr` is not defined,
i.e. e.g. `-fno-delete-null-pointer-checks` was *not* specified.)
To make things more fun, in C (6.5.6p8), applying *any* offset to null pointer
is undefined, although Clang front-end pessimizes the code by not lowering
that info, so this UB is "harmless".
Since rL369789 (D66608 `[InstCombine] icmp eq/ne (gep inbounds P, Idx..), null -> icmp eq/ne P, null`)
LLVM middle-end uses those guarantees for transformations.
If the source contains such UB's, said code may now be miscompiled.
Such miscompilations were already observed:
* https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20190826/687838.html
* https://github.com/google/filament/pull/1566
Surprisingly, UBSan does not catch those issues
... until now. This diff teaches UBSan about these UB's.
`getelementpointer inbounds` is a pretty frequent instruction,
so this does have a measurable impact on performance;
I've addressed most of the obvious missing folds (and thus decreased the performance impact by ~5%),
and then re-performed some performance measurements using my [[ https://github.com/darktable-org/rawspeed | RawSpeed ]] benchmark:
(all measurements done with LLVM ToT, the sanitizer never fired.)
* no sanitization vs. existing check: average `+21.62%` slowdown
* existing check vs. check after this patch: average `22.04%` slowdown
* no sanitization vs. this patch: average `48.42%` slowdown
Reviewers: vsk, filcab, rsmith, aaron.ballman, vitalybuka, rjmccall, #sanitizers
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, nickdesaulniers, nikic, ychen, dtzWill, xbolva00, dberris, arphaman, rupprecht, reames, regehr, llvm-commits, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #sanitizers, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67122
llvm-svn: 374293
Summary: The Google C++ and Chromium style guides are broken in the clang-format docs. This patch updates them.
Reviewers: djasper, MyDeveloperDay
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Patch by: m4tx
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61256
llvm-svn: 373844
Summary:
This patch makes the `SpacesInSquareBrackets` setting also apply to C++ lambdas with parameters.
Looking through the revision history, it appears support for only array brackets was added, and lambda brackets were ignored. Therefore, I am inclined to think it was simply an omission, rather than a deliberate choice.
See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=17887 and https://reviews.llvm.org/D4944.
Reviewers: MyDeveloperDay, reuk, owenpan
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Patch by: mitchell-stellar
Tags: #clang-format, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68473
llvm-svn: 373821
Summary:
Change the BraceWrappingFlags' AfterControlStatement from a bool to an enum with three values:
* "Never": This is the default, and does not do any brace wrapping after control statements.
* "MultiLine": This only wraps braces after multi-line control statements (this really only happens when a ColumnLimit is specified).
* "Always": This always wraps braces after control statements.
The first and last options are backwards-compatible with "false" and "true", respectively.
The new "MultiLine" option is useful for when a wrapped control statement's indentation matches the subsequent block's indentation. It makes it easier to see at a glance where the control statement ends and where the block's code begins. For example:
```
if (
foo
&& bar )
{
baz();
}
```
vs.
```
if (
foo
&& bar ) {
baz();
}
```
Short control statements (1 line) do not wrap the brace to the next line, e.g.
```
if (foo) {
bar();
} else {
baz();
}
```
Reviewers: sammccall, owenpan, reuk, MyDeveloperDay, klimek
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Subscribers: MyDeveloperDay, cfe-commits
Patch By: mitchell-stellar
Tags: #clang-format, #clang, #clang-tools-extra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68296
llvm-svn: 373647
Summary:
The historical context:
- clang-format was written when C++11 was current,
and the main language-version concern was >> vs > > template-closers.
An option was added to allow selection of the 03/11 behavior, or auto-detection.
- there was no option to choose simply "latest standard" so anyone who didn't
ever want 03 behavior or auto-detection specified Cpp11.
- In r185149 this option started to affect lexer mode.
- no options were added to cover c++14, as parsing/formatting
didn't change that much. The usage of Cpp11 to mean "latest" became
codified e.g. in r206263
- c++17 added some new constructs. These were mostly backwards-compatible and so
not used in old programs, so having no way to turn them off was OK.
- c++20 added some new constructs and keywords (e.g. co_*) that changed the
meaning of existing programs, and people started to complain that
the c++20 parsing couldn't be turned off.
New plan:
- Default ('Auto') behavior remains unchanged: parse as latest, format
template-closers based on input.
- Add new 'Latest' option that more clearly expresses the intent "use
modern features" that many projects have chosen for their .clang-format files.
- Allow pinning to *any* language version, using the same name as clang -std:
c++03, c++11, c++14 etc. These set precise lexer options, and any
clang-format code depending on these can use a >= check.
- For backwards compatibility, `Cpp11` is an alias for `Latest`, not `c++11`.
This matches the historical documented semantics of this option.
This spelling (and `Cpp03`) are deprecated.
Reviewers: klimek, modocache
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67541
llvm-svn: 373439
And move the relevant information in the doc.
Summary:
Currently, building a large software like Firefox shows
'Use chrome://tracing or Speedscope App (https://www.speedscope.app) for flamegraph visualization'
for each file.
Reviewers: anton-afanasyev
Reviewed By: anton-afanasyev
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68260
llvm-svn: 373308
This matches how GCC handles it, see e.g. https://gcc.godbolt.org/z/HPplnl.
GCC documents the gnu_inline attribute with "In C++, this attribute does
not depend on extern in any way, but it still requires the inline keyword
to enable its special behavior."
The previous behaviour of gnu_inline in C++, without the extern
keyword, can be traced back to the original commit that added
support for gnu_inline, SVN r69045.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67414
llvm-svn: 373078
Summary:
This new Style rule is made as a part of adding support for NetBSD KNF in clang-format. NetBSD have it's own priority of includes which should be followed while formatting NetBSD code. This style sorts the Cpp Includes according to the priorities of NetBSD, as mentioned in the [Style Guide](http://cvsweb.netbsd.org/bsdweb.cgi/src/share/misc/style?rev=HEAD&content-type=text/x-cvsweb-markup)
The working of this Style rule shown below:
**Configuration:**
This revision introduces a new field under IncludeCategories named `SortPriority` which defines the priority of ordering the `#includes` and the `Priority` will define the categories for grouping the `#include blocks`.
Reviewers: cfe-commits, mgorny, christos, MyDeveloperDay
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Subscribers: lebedev.ri, rdwampler, christos, mgorny, krytarowski
Patch By: Manikishan
Tags: #clang, #clang-format
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64695
llvm-svn: 372919
Summary: This patch fixes the __is_signed builtin type trait to work with floating point types and enums. Now, the builtin will return true if it is passed a floating point type and false for an enum type.
Reviewers: EricWF, rsmith, erichkeane, craig.topper, efriedma
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67897
llvm-svn: 372621
Commit c15aa241f8 ("[CLANG][BPF] change __builtin_preserve_access_index()
signature") changed the builtin function signature to
PointerT __builtin_preserve_access_index(PointerT ptr)
with a pointer type as the argument/return type, where argument and
return types must be the same.
There is really no reason for this constraint. The builtin just
presented a code region so that IR builtins
__builtin_{array, struct, union}_preserve_access_index
can be applied.
This patch removed the pointer type restriction to permit any
argument type as long as it is permitted by the compiler.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67883
llvm-svn: 372516
Summary:
This patch adds support for the Whitesmiths indentation style to clang-format. It’s an update to a patch submitted in 2015 (D6833), but reworks it to use the newer API.
There are still some issues with this patch, primarily around `switch` and `case` support. The added unit test won’t currently pass because of the remaining issues.
Reviewers: mboehme, MyDeveloperDay, djasper
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Subscribers: krasimir, MyDeveloperDay, echristo, cfe-commits
Patch By: @timwoj (Tim Wojtulewicz)
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67627
llvm-svn: 372497
-Wtautological-overlap-compare and self-comparison from -Wtautological-compare
relay on detecting the same operand in different locations. Previously, each
warning had it's own operand checker. Now, both are merged together into
one function that each can call. The function also now looks through member
access and array accesses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66045
llvm-svn: 372453
Allow this warning to detect a larger number of constant values, including
negative numbers, and handle non-int types better.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66044
llvm-svn: 372448
The clang intrinsic __builtin_preserve_access_index() currently
has signature:
const void * __builtin_preserve_access_index(const void * ptr)
This may cause compiler warning when:
- parameter type is "volatile void *" or "const volatile void *", or
- the assign-to type of the intrinsic does not have "const" qualifier.
Further, this signature does not allow dereference of the
builtin result pointer as it is a "const void *" type, which
adds extra step for the user to do type casting.
Let us change the signature to:
PointerT __builtin_preserve_access_index(PointerT ptr)
such that the result and argument types are the same.
With this, directly dereferencing the builtin return value
becomes possible.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67734
llvm-svn: 372294
Commit message below, original caused the sphinx build bot to fail, this
one should fix it.
Create UsersManual section entitled 'Controlling Floating Point
Behavior'
Create a new section for documenting the floating point options. Move
all the floating point options into this section, and add new entries
for the floating point options that exist but weren't previously
described in the UsersManual.
Patch By: mibintc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67517
llvm-svn: 372229
Behavior'
Create a new section for documenting the floating point options. Move
all the floating point options into this section, and add new entries
for the floating point options that exist but weren't previously
described in the UsersManual.
Patch By: mibintc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67517
llvm-svn: 372180
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 371834
Summary:
This option determines whether goto labels are indented according to scope. Setting this option to false causes goto labels to be flushed to the left.
This is mostly copied from [[ http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2015-September/045014.html | this patch ]] submitted by Christian Neukirchen that didn't make its way into trunk.
```
true: false:
int f() { vs. int f() {
if (foo()) { if (foo()) {
label1: label1:
bar(); bar();
} }
label2: label2:
return 1; return 1;
} }
```
Reviewers: klimek, MyDeveloperDay
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #clang-tools-extra
Patch by: tetsuo-cpp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67037
llvm-svn: 371719
AVX512 instructions can cause a frequency drop on these CPUs. This
can negate the performance gains from using wider vectors. Enabling
prefer-vector-width=256 will prevent generation of zmm registers
unless explicit 512 bit operations are used in the original source
code.
I believe gcc and icc both do something similar to this by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67259
llvm-svn: 371694
As far as I can tell, gcc passes 256/512 bit vectors __int128 in memory. And passes a vector of 1 _int128 in an xmm register. The backend considers <X x i128> as an illegal type and will scalarize any arguments with that type. So we need to coerce the argument types in the frontend to match to avoid the illegal type.
I'm restricting this to change to Linux and NetBSD based on the
how similar ABI changes have been handled in the past.
PS4, FreeBSD, and Darwin are unaffected. I've also added a
new -fclang-abi-compat version to restore the old behavior.
This issue was identified in PR42607. Though even with the types changed, we still seem to be doing some unnecessary stack realignment.
llvm-svn: 371169
This adds a more fine-grained list of OpenMP features with their
implementation status and associated reviews/commits.
Reviewers: kkwli0, ABataev, RaviNarayanaswamy, gtbercea, Hahnfeld
Subscribers: bollu, guansong, jfb, hfinkel, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64375
llvm-svn: 370930
Breaks BUILD_SHARED_LIBS build, introduces cycles in library dependency
graphs. (clangInterp depends on clangAST which depends on clangInterp)
This reverts r370839, which is an yet another recommit of D64146.
llvm-svn: 370874
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 370839
Enables the users to specify an optional flag which would warn for more dead
stores.
Previously it ignored if the dead store happened e.g. in an if condition.
if ((X = generate())) { // dead store to X
}
This patch introduces the `WarnForDeadNestedAssignments` option to the checker,
which is `false` by default - so this change would not affect any previous
users.
I have updated the code, tests and the docs as well. If I missed something, tell
me.
I also ran the analysis on Clang which generated 14 more reports compared to the
unmodified version. All of them seemed reasonable for me.
Related previous patches:
rGf224820b45c6847b91071da8d7ade59f373b96f3
Reviewers: NoQ, krememek, Szelethus, baloghadamsoftware
Reviewed By: Szelethus
Patch by Balázs Benics!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66733
llvm-svn: 370767
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 370636
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 370584
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 370531
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 370476
-Deprecate -mmpx and -mno-mpx command line options
-Remove CPUID detection of mpx for -march=native
-Remove MPX from all CPUs
-Remove MPX preprocessor define
I've left the "mpx" string in the backend so we don't fail on old IR, but its not connected to anything.
gcc has also deprecated these command line options. https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=GCC-Patch-To-Drop-MPX
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66669
llvm-svn: 370393
-dA was in the d_group, which is a preprocessor state dumping group.
However -dA is a debug flag to cause a verbose asm. It was already
implemented to do the same thing as -fverbose-asm, so make it just be an
alias.
llvm-svn: 369926
This fixes some minor grammatical issues I noticed when reading the docs, and changes the recommended feature testing approach to use __has_attribute instead of __has_extension.
llvm-svn: 369687
This broke compiling some ASan tests with never versions of MSVC/the Win
SDK, see https://crbug.com/996675
> MSVC 2017 update 3 (_MSC_VER 1911) enables /Zc:twoPhase by default, and
> so should clang-cl:
> https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/reference/zc-twophase
>
> clang-cl takes the MSVC version it emulates from the -fmsc-version flag,
> or if that's not passed it tries to check what the installed version of
> MSVC is and uses that, and failing that it uses a default version that's
> currently 1911. So this changes the default if no -fmsc-version flag is
> passed and no installed MSVC is detected. (It also changes the default
> if -fmsc-version is passed or MSVC is detected, and either indicates
> _MSC_VER >= 1911.)
>
> As mentioned in the MSDN article, the Windows SDK header files in
> version 10.0.15063.0 (Creators Update or Redstone 2) and earlier
> versions do not work correctly with /Zc:twoPhase. If you need to use
> these old SDKs with a new clang-cl, explicitly pass /Zc:twoPhase- to get
> the old behavior.
>
> Fixes PR43032.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66394
llvm-svn: 369647