This legacy option (available in other Fortran compilers with various
spellings) implies the SAVE attribute for local variables on subprograms
that are not explicitly RECURSIVE. The SAVE attribute essentially implies
static rather than stack storage. This was the default setting in Fortran
until surprisingly recently, so explicit SAVE statements & attributes
could be and often were omitted from older codes. Note that initialized
objects already have an implied SAVE attribute, and objects in COMMON
effectively do too, as data overlays are extinct; and since objects that are
expected to survive from one invocation of a procedure to the next in static
storage should probably be explicit initialized in the first place, so the
use cases for this option are somewhat rare, and all of them could be
handled with explicit SAVE statements or attributes.
This implicit SAVE attribute must not apply to automatic (in the Fortran sense)
local objects, whose sizes cannot be known at compilation time. To get the
semantics of IsSaved() right, the IsAutomatic() predicate was moved into
Evaluate/tools.cpp to allow for dynamic linking of the compiler. The
redundant predicate IsAutomatic() was noticed, removed, and its uses replaced.
GNU Fortran's spelling of the option (-fno-automatic) was added to
the clang-based driver and used for basic sanity testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114209
Currently, `printHelp` behaves differently for options that:
* do not define `HelpText` (such options _are not printed_), and
* define its `HelpText` as `HelpText<"">` (such options _are printed_).
In practice, both approaches lead to no help text and `printHelp` should
treat them consistently. This patch addresses that by making
`printHelpt` check the length of the help text to be printed.
All affected tests have been updated accordingly. The option definitions
for llvm-cvtres have been updated with a short description or "Not
implemented" for options that are ignored by the tool.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107557
For boolean options, e.g. `-fxor-operator`/`-fno-xor-operator`, we ought
to be using TableGen multi-classes. This way, we only have to write one
definition to have both forms auto-generated. This patch refactors all
of Flang's boolean options to use two new multi-classes:
`OptInFC1FFOption` and `OptOutFC1FFOption`. These multi-classes are
based on `OptInFFOption`/`OptOutFFOption`, respectively. I've also
simplified the processing of the updated options in
CompilerInvocation.cpp.
With the new approach, "empty" help text (i.e. no `HelpText`) is now
replaced with an empty string (i.e. HelpText<"">). When running
flang-new --help, that's considered as non-empty help messages, which is
then printed (that's controlled by `printHelp` from
llvm/lib/Option/OptTable.cpp). This means that with this patch,
flang-new --help will start printing e.g. -fno-backslash, even though
there is no actual help text to print for this option (apart from the
empty string ""). Tests are updated accordingly.
Note that with this patch, both `-fxor-operator` and `-fno-xor-operator`
(and other boolean options refactored here) remain available in
`flang-new` and `flang-new -fc1`. In this respect, nothing changes. In a
forthcoming patch, I will refine this so that `flang-new -fc1` only
accepts `-ffoo` (`OptInFC1FFOption`) or `-fno-foo` (`OptOutCC1FFOption`).
For clarity, `OptInFFOption`/`OptOutFFOption` are renamed as
`OptInCC1FFOption`/`OptOutCC1FFOption`, respectively. Otherwise, this is
an NFC from Clang's perspective.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105881
Rename the current -E option to "-E -Xflang -fno-reformat".
Add a new Parsing::EmitPreprocessedSource() routine to convert the
cooked character stream output of the prescanner back to something
more closely resembling output from a traditional preprocessor;
call this new routine when -E appears.
The new -E output is suitable for use as fixed form Fortran source to
compilation by (one hopes) any Fortran compiler. If the original
top-level source file had been free form source, the output will be
suitable for use as free form source as well; otherwise there may be
diagnostics about missing spaces if they were indeed absent in the
original fixed form source.
Unless the -P option appears, #line directives are interspersed
with the output (but be advised, f18 will ignore these if presented
with them in a later compilation).
An effort has been made to preserve original alphabetic character case
and source indentation.
Add -P and -fno-reformat to the new drivers.
Tweak test options to avoid confusion with prior -E output; use
-fno-reformat where needed, but prefer to keep -E, sometimes
in concert with -P, on most, updating expected results accordingly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106727
`%flang-new` was introduced in the early days of the new driver to make
a clear distinction between the tests for the current and the new
driver. We have since introduced `%flang` (compiler driver) and
`%flang_fc1` (frontend driver) as the long term solution. This has allowed
us to share tests between `flang-new` and `f18`. This patch replaces
all uses of `%flang-new` with `%flang` and `%flang_fc1`.
Some tests are reformatted so that all tests look uniform and are easier
to follow. Where possible, `! REQUIRES: new-flang-driver` is deleted so
that more tests can be shared with `f18`. To facilitate this,
`f{no-}implicit-none` are introduced in `f18` with semantics identical
to `flang-new`.
Two tests are deleted rather than updated:
* flang/test/Frontend/print-preprocess-C-file.f90
* flang/test/Frontend/print-preprocessed-file.f90
Instead, there is plenty of preprocessor tests in
flang/test/Preprocessing/.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100174
This patch adds support for the `-cpp` and `-nocpp` flags. The
implemented semantics match f18 (i.e. the "throwaway" driver), but are
different to gfortran. In Flang the preprocessor is always run. Instead,
`-cpp/-nocpp` are used to control whether predefined and command-line
preprocessor macro definitions are enabled or not. In practice this is
sufficient to model gfortran`s `-cpp/-nocpp`.
In the absence of `-cpp/-nocpp`, the driver will use the extension of
the input file to decide whether to include the standard macro
predefinitions. gfortran's documentation [1] was used to decide which
file extension to use for this.
The logic mentioned above was added in FrontendAction::BeginSourceFile.
That's relatively late in the driver set-up, but this roughly where the
name of the input file becomes available. The logic for deciding between
fixed and free form works in a similar way and was also moved to
FrontendAction::BeginSourceFile for consistency (and to reduce
code-duplication).
The `-cpp/-nocpp` flags are respected also when the input is read from
stdin. This is different to:
* gfortran (behaves as if `-cpp` was used)
* f18 (behaves as if `-nocpp` was used)
Starting with this patch, file extensions are significant and some test
files had to be renamed to reflect that. Where possible, preprocessor
tests were updated so that they can be shared between `f18` and
`flang-new`. This was implemented on top of adding new test for
`-cpp/-nocpp`.
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Overall-Options.html
Reviewed By: kiranchandramohan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99292
Until now we've been maintaining 2 test directories for Flang's drivers:
* test/Driver for `f18` (the current driver)
* test/Flang-Driver for `flang-new` (the new driver)
As we have started sharing tests between the drivers, this separation is
no longer required. This patch merges the two test directories. As
suggested in the review, moving forward we'll avoid having tests
specifically for the old driver.
A few notable changes:
* Driver/version-test.f90 and Driver/no-files.f90 are deleted. The
versions for the new driver are more robust, but tricky to share.
* Driver/write-module.f90 is deleted in favour of
Flang-Driver/write-module.f90 (see https://reviews.llvm.org/D97197
for more context)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98257