On some Apple platforms, the ObjC BOOL type is defined as a signed char.
When performing instrumentation for -fsanitize=bool, we'd like to treat
the range of BOOL like it's always {0, 1}. While we can't change clang's
IRGen for char-backed BOOL's due to ABI compatibility concerns, we can
teach ubsan to catch potential abuses of this type.
rdar://problem/29502773
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27607
llvm-svn: 289290
This allows us to negate preceding --cuda-gpu-arch=X.
This comes handy when user needs to override default
flags set for them by the build system.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27631
llvm-svn: 289287
We first decide that the symbol is global, than that it should have
version foo. Since it was already not the default version, we were
producing a bogus warning.
llvm-svn: 289284
This ports the ELF linker's symbol table design, introduced in r268178,
to the COFF linker.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21166
llvm-svn: 289280
Summary:
The Swift frontend is acquiring the ability to load non-module PCH files containing
bridging definitions from C/ObjC. As part of this work, it needs to know which submodules
were imported by a PCH in order to wrap them in local Swift modules. This information
is collected by ASTReader::ReadAST in a local vector, but is currently kept private.
The change here is just to make the type of the vector elements public, and provide
an optional out-parameter to the ReadAST method to provide the vector's contents to
a caller after a successful read.
Reviewers: manmanren, rsmith, doug.gregor
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27580
llvm-svn: 289276
The code pattern used to implement the token rewriting hack doesn't
interact well with token caching in the pre-processor. As a result,
clang would crash on 'int f(::(id));' while doing a tenative parse of
the contents of the outer parentheses. The original code from PR11852
still doesn't crash the compiler.
This error recovery also often does the wrong thing with member function
pointers. The test case from the original PR doesn't recover the right
way either:
void S::(*pf)() = S::f; // should be 'void (S::*pf)()'
Instead we were recovering as 'void S::*pf()', which is still wrong.
If we still think that users mistakenly parenthesize identifiers in
nested name specifiers, we should change clang to intentionally parse
that form with an error, rather than doing a token rewrite.
Fixes PR26623, but I think there will be many more bugs like this around
token rewriting in the parser.
Reviewers: rsmith, rtrieu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25882
llvm-svn: 289273
The former option bases the filename on the output name, e.g. if the
link output is a.exe, the map will be written to a.map. This matches the
behaviour of link.exe's /MAP option and is useful for creating a map
file of each executable when building a large project.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27595
llvm-svn: 289271
Profiling revealed that we were spending 5% of our time linking
chrome_child.dll just in this call to toString().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27628
llvm-svn: 289270
LLVM's use of DW_OP_bit_piece is incorrect and a based on a
misunderstanding of the wording in the DWARF specification. The offset
argument of DW_OP_bit_piece refers to the offset into the location
that is on the top of the DWARF expression stack, and not an offset
into the source variable. This has since also been clarified in the
DWARF specification.
This patch fixes all uses of DW_OP_bit_piece to emit the correct
offset and simplifies the DwarfExpression class to semi-automaticaly
emit empty DW_OP_pieces to adjust the offset of the source variable,
thus simplifying the code using DwarfExpression.
While this is an incompatible bugfix, in practice I don't expect this
to be much of a problem since LLVM's old interpretation and the
correct interpretation of DW_OP_bit_piece differ only when there are
gaps in the fragmented locations of the described variables or if
individual fragments are smaller than a byte. LLDB at least won't
interpret locations with gaps in them because is has no way to present
undefined bits in a variable, and there is a high probability that an
old-form expression will be malformed when interpreted correctly,
because the DW_OP_bit_piece offset will be outside of the location at
the top of the stack.
As a nice side-effect, this patch enables us to use a more efficient
encoding for subregisters: In order to express a sub-register at a
non-zero offset we now use a DW_OP_bit_piece instead of shifting the
value into place manually.
This patch also adds missing test coverage for code paths that weren't
exercised before.
<rdar://problem/29335809>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27550
llvm-svn: 289266
test/support/test_macros.h
For convenience/greppability, add macros for libcxx-specific static_asserts about noexceptness.
(Moving the definitions of ASSERT_NOEXCEPT/ASSERT_NOT_NOEXCEPT isn't technically necessary
because they're macros, but I think it's better style to define stuff before using it.)
test/std/utilities/tuple/tuple.tuple/tuple.apply/apply.pass.cpp
There was a completely unused `TrackedCallable obj;`.
apply() isn't depicted with conditional noexcept in C++17.
test/std/utilities/tuple/tuple.tuple/tuple.apply/make_from_tuple.pass.cpp
Now that we have LIBCPP_ASSERT_NOEXCEPT, use it.
Fixes D27622.
llvm-svn: 289264
Summary:
There is no point in setting SGPRS=104, because VI allocates SGPRs
in multiples of 16, so 104 -> 112. That enables us to use all 102 SGPRs
for general purposes.
Reviewers: tstellarAMD
Subscribers: qcolombet, arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, tony-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27149
llvm-svn: 289260
Other compilers accept invalid code here that we reject, and we need a
better error message to try to convince users that the code is really
incorrect. Consider:
class Foo {
typedef MyIterHelper<Foo> iterator;
friend class iterator;
};
Previously our wording was "elaborated type refers to a typedef".
"elaborated type" isn't widely known terminology, so the new diagnostic
says "typedef 'iterator' cannot be referenced with class specifier".
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25216
llvm-svn: 289259
Like DBG_VALUE, these emit nothing to the .text section, and sometimes
have no source location specified. Just ignore them.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D27492
llvm-svn: 289256
test/CodeGen/MIR should contain tests that intent to test the MIR
printing or parsing. Tests that test something else should be in
test/CodeGen/TargetName even when they are written in .mir.
As a rule of thumb, only tests using "llc -run-pass none" should be in
test/CodeGen/MIR.
llvm-svn: 289254
In amdgcn target, null pointers in global, constant, and generic address space take value 0 but null pointers in private and local address space take value -1. Currently LLVM assumes all null pointers take value 0, which results in incorrectly translated IR. To workaround this issue, instead of emit null pointers in local and private address space, a null pointer in generic address space is emitted and casted to local and private address space.
Tentative definition of global variables with non-zero initializer will have weak linkage instead of common linkage since common linkage requires zero initializer and does not have explicit section to hold the non-zero value.
Virtual member functions getNullPointer and performAddrSpaceCast are added to TargetCodeGenInfo which by default returns ConstantPointerNull and emitting addrspacecast instruction. A virtual member function getNullPointerValue is added to TargetInfo which by default returns 0. Each target can override these virtual functions to get target specific null pointer and the null pointer value for specific address space, and perform specific translations for addrspacecast.
Wrapper functions getNullPointer is added to CodegenModule and getTargetNullPointerValue is added to ASTContext to facilitate getting the target specific null pointers and their values.
This change has no effect on other targets except amdgcn target. Other targets can provide support of non-zero null pointer in a similar way.
This change only provides support for non-zero null pointer for C and OpenCL. Supporting for other languages will be added later incrementally.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26196
llvm-svn: 289252
mirror the description in the standard. Per DR1295, this means that binding a
const / rvalue reference to a bit-field no longer "binds directly", and per
P0135R1, this means that we materialize a temporary in reference binding
after adjusting cv-qualifiers and before performing a derived-to-base cast.
In C++11 onwards, this should have fixed the last case where we would
materialize a temporary of the wrong type (with a subobject adjustment inside
the MaterializeTemporaryExpr instead of outside), but we still have to deal
with that possibility in C++98, unless we want to start using xvalues to
represent materialized temporaries there too.
llvm-svn: 289250
Tagged instruction names with <c> INSTR_NAME </c> to display them in typewriter font.
In the past, \c command was used, unfortunately it applied to only one word.
<c> .. </c> has the same meaning, but applies to all words in between the tags.
llvm-svn: 289249
We don't parse ObjC v1 types from the runtime metadata like we do for ObjC v2, but doing so by creating empty types was ruining the i386 v1 debugging experience.
<rdar://problem/24093343>
llvm-svn: 289233
Reapplied with fix for PR31323 - X86 SSE2 vXi16 multiplies for illegal types were creating CONCAT_VECTORS nodes with vector inputs that might not total the number of elements in the result type.
llvm-svn: 289232
PCH files store the macro history for a given macro, and the whole history list
for one identifier is given to the Preprocessor at once via
Preprocessor::setLoadedMacroDirective(). This contained an assert that no macro
history exists yet for that identifier. That's usually true, but it's not true
for builtin macros, which are created in Preprocessor() before flags and pchs
are processed. Luckily, ASTWriter stops writing macro history lists at builtins
(see shouldIgnoreMacro() in ASTWriter.cpp), so the head of the history list was
missing for builtin macros. So make the assert weaker, and splice the history
list to the existing single define for builtins.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D27545
llvm-svn: 289228
This saves two pointers from FunctionDecl that were being used for some
rare and questionable C-only functionality. The DeclsInPrototypeScope
ArrayRef was added in r151712 in order to parse this kind of C code:
enum e {x, y};
int f(enum {y, x} n) {
return x; // should return 1, not 0
}
The challenge is that we parse 'int f(enum {y, x} n)' it its own
function prototype scope that gets popped before we build the
FunctionDecl for 'f'. The original change was doing two questionable
things:
1. Saving all tag decls introduced in prototype scope on a TU-global
Sema variable. This is problematic when you have cases like this, where
'x' and 'y' shouldn't be visible in 'f':
void f(void (*fp)(enum { x, y } e)) { /* no x */ }
This patch fixes that, so now 'f' can't see 'x', which is consistent
with GCC.
2. Storing the decls in FunctionDecl in ActOnFunctionDeclarator so that
they could be used in ActOnStartOfFunctionDef. This is just an
inefficient way to move information around. The AST lives forever, but
the list of non-parameter decls in prototype scope is short lived.
Moving these things to the Declarator solves both of these issues.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: jmolloy, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27279
llvm-svn: 289225