AIX and z/OS lack Objective-C support, so mark these tests as unsupported for AIX and z/OS.
Reviewed By: jsji
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109060
This patch increases the expected line number for one of the checks so that it doesn't have to be updated for any added/removed lines in the RUN section.
This change is in preparation for the following patch: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109060
Reviewed By: jsji
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109541
When deserializing a RecordDecl we don't enforce that redeclaration
chain contains only a single definition. So if the canonical decl is not
a definition itself, `RecordType::getDecl` can return different objects
before and after an include. It means we can build CGRecordLayout for
one RecordDecl with its set of FieldDecl but try to use it with
FieldDecl belonging to a different RecordDecl. With assertions enabled
it results in
> Assertion failed: (FieldInfo.count(FD) && "Invalid field for record!"),
> function getLLVMFieldNo, file llvm-project/clang/lib/CodeGen/CGRecordLayout.h, line 199.
and with assertions disabled a bunch of fields are treated as their
memory is located at offset 0.
Fix by keeping the first encountered RecordDecl definition and marking
the subsequent ones as non-definitions. Also need to merge FieldDecl
properly, so that `getPrimaryMergedDecl` works correctly and during name
lookup we don't treat fields from same-name RecordDecl as ambiguous.
rdar://80184238
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106994
@arichardson pointed out in post-commit review for
https://reviews.llvm.org/D95583 (b714f73def) that `-verify` has an
optional argument that works a lot like `FileCheck`'s `-check-prefix`.
Use it to simplify the test for `-fno-implicit-modules-use-lock`!
Add -cc1 flags `-fmodules-uses-lock` and `-fno-modules-uses-lock` to
allow the lock manager to be turned off when building implicit modules.
Add `-Rmodule-lock` so that we can see when it's being used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95583
D31709 added an assertion was added to `FullSourceLoc::hasManager()` that ensured a valid `SourceLocation` is always paired with a `SourceManager`, and missing `SourceManager` is always paired with an invalid `SourceLocation`.
This appears to be incorrect, since clients never cared about constructing `FullSourceLoc` to uphold that invariant, or always checking `isValid()` before calling `hasManager()`.
The assertion started failing when serializing diagnostics pointing into an explicit module. Explicit modules don't have valid `SourceLocation` for the `import` statement, since they are "imported" from the command-line argument `-fmodule-name=x.pcm`.
This patch removes the assertion, since `FullSourceLoc` was never intended to uphold any kind of invariants between the validity of `SourceLocation` and presence of `SourceManager`.
Reviewed By: arphaman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106862
For some use-cases, it might be useful to be able to turn off modules for C++ in `-cc1`. (The feature is implied by `-std=C++20`.)
This patch exposes the `-fno-cxx-modules` option in `-cc1`.
Reviewed By: arphaman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106864
It's useful to be able to load explicitly-built PCH files into an implicit build (e.g. during dependency scanning). That's currently impossible, since the explicitly-built PCH has an empty modules cache path, while the current compilation has (and needs to have) a valid path, triggering an error in the `PCHValidator`.
This patch adds a preprocessor option and command-line flag that can be used to omit this check.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103802
Prior to this patch when you used `clang -module-file-info` clang would
delete the module on completion because the module was treated as an
output file.
This fixes the issue so you don't need to invoke cc1 directly to get
module file information.
Reviewed By: steven_wu, phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103547
This patch enables explicitly building inferred modules.
Effectively a cherry-pick of https://github.com/apple/llvm-project/pull/699 authored by @Bigcheese with libclang and dependency scanner changes omitted.
Contains the following changes:
1. [Clang] Fix the header paths in clang::Module for inferred modules.
* The UmbrellaAsWritten and NameAsWritten fields in clang::Module are a lie for framework modules. For those they actually are the path to the header or umbrella relative to the clang::Module::Directory.
* The exception to this case is for inferred modules. Here it actually is the name as written, because we print out the module and read it back in when implicitly building modules. This causes a problem when explicitly building an inferred module, as we skip the printing out step.
* In order to fix this issue this patch adds a new field for the path we want to use in getInputBufferForModule. It also makes NameAsWritten actually be the name written in the module map file (or that would be, in the case of an inferred module).
2. [Clang] Allow explicitly building an inferred module.
* Building the actual module still fails, but make sure it fails for the right reason.
Split from D100934.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102491
If a module contains errors (ie. it was built with
-fallow-pcm-with-compiler-errors and had errors) and was from the module
cache, it is marked as out of date - see
a2c1054c30.
When a module is imported multiple times in the one compile, this caused
it to be recompiled each time - removing the existing buffer from the
module cache and replacing it. This results in various errors further
down the line.
Instead, only mark the module as out of date if it isn't already
finalized in the module cache.
Reviewed By: akyrtzi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100619
Summary: The tags DW_LANG_C_plus_plus_14 and DW_LANG_C_plus_plus_11, introduced in Dwarf-5, are unexpected in previous versions. Fixing the mismathing doesn't have any drawbacks for any other debuggers, but helps dbx.
Reviewed By: aprantl, shchenz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99250
A module with errors would be marked as out-of-date, then the `compilerModule` action would produce it, but due to the error it would be treated as failure and the resulting PCM would not get used.
rdar://74087062
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96246
A module in the cache with an error should just be a cache miss. If
allowing errors (with -fallow-pcm-with-compiler-errors), a rebuild is
needed so that the appropriate diagnostics are output and in case search
paths have changed. If not allowing errors, the module was built
*allowing* errors and thus should be rebuilt regardless.
Reviewed By: akyrtzi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95989
For a default visibility external linkage definition, dso_local is set for ELF
-fno-pic/-fpie and COFF and Mach-O. Since default clang -cc1 for ELF is similar
to -fpic ("PIC Level" is not set), this nuance causes unneeded binary format differences.
To make emitted IR similar, ELF -cc1 -fpic will default to -fno-semantic-interposition,
which sets dso_local for default visibility external linkage definitions.
To make this flip smooth and enable future (dso_local as definition default),
this patch replaces (function) `define ` with `define{{.*}} `,
(variable/constant/alias) `= ` with `={{.*}} `, or inserts appropriate `{{.*}} `.
For a definition (of most linkage types), dso_local is set for ELF -fno-pic/-fpie
and COFF, but not for Mach-O. This nuance causes unneeded binary format differences.
This patch replaces (function) `define ` with `define{{.*}} `,
(variable/constant/alias) `= ` with `={{.*}} `, or inserts appropriate `{{.*}} `
if there is an explicit linkage.
* Clang will set dso_local for Mach-O, which is currently implied by TargetMachine.cpp. This will make COFF/Mach-O and executable ELF similar.
* Eventually I hope we can make dso_local the textual LLVM IR default (write explicit "dso_preemptable" when applicable) and -fpic ELF will be similar to everything else. This patch helps move toward that goal.
The static_assert in "libcxx/include/memory" was the main offender here,
but then I figured I might as well `git grep -i instantat` and fix all
the instances I found. One was in user-facing HTML documentation;
the rest were in comments or tests.
In some cases, when deserializing a `CXXMethodDecl` of a `CXXSpecializationTemplateDecl`,
the call to `FunctionDecl::setPure()` happens before the `DefinitionData` member has been
populated (which appears to happen lower down in a `mergeRedeclarable` call), causing a
crash (https://reviews.llvm.org/P8228).
This diff fixes this by deferring the `FunctionDecl::setPure()` till after the `DefinitionData` has
been filled in.
Reviewed By: lxfind
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86853
As with precompiled headers, it's useful for indexers to be able to
continue through compiler errors in dependent modules.
Resolves rdar://69816264
Reviewed By: akyrtzi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91580
The behavior is controlled by the `-fprebuilt-implicit-modules` option, and
allows searching for implicit modules in the prebuilt module cache paths.
The current command-line options for prebuilt modules do not allow to easily
maintain and use multiple versions of modules. Both the producer and users of
prebuilt modules are required to know the relationships between compilation
options and module file paths. Using a particular version of a prebuilt module
requires passing a particular option on the command line (e.g.
`-fmodule-file=[<name>=]<file>` or `-fprebuilt-module-path=<directory>`).
However the compiler already knows how to distinguish and automatically locate
implicit modules. Hence this proposal to introduce the
`-fprebuilt-implicit-modules` option. When set, it enables searching for
implicit modules in the prebuilt module paths (specified via
`-fprebuilt-module-path`). To not modify existing behavior, this search takes
place after the standard search for prebuilt modules. If not
Here is a workflow illustrating how both the producer and consumer of prebuilt
modules would need to know what versions of prebuilt modules are available and
where they are located.
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules_v1 <config 1 options>
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules_v2 <config 2 options>
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules_v3 <config 3 options>
clang -cc1 -x c use.c -fmodules fmodule-map-file=modulemap -fprebuilt-module-path=prebuilt_modules_v1 <config 1 options>
clang -cc1 -x c use.c -fmodules fmodule-map-file=modulemap <non-prebuilt config options>
With prebuilt implicit modules, the producer can generate prebuilt modules as
usual, all in the same output directory. The same mechanisms as for implicit
modules take care of incorporating hashes in the path to distinguish between
module versions.
Note that we do not specify the output module filename, so `-o` implicit modules are generated in the cache path `prebuilt_modules`.
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules <config 1 options>
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules <config 2 options>
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules <config 3 options>
The user can now simply enable prebuilt implicit modules and point to the
prebuilt modules cache. No need to "parse" command-line options to decide
what prebuilt modules (paths) to use.
clang -cc1 -x c use.c -fmodules fmodule-map-file=modulemap -fprebuilt-module-path=prebuilt_modules -fprebuilt-implicit-modules <config 1 options>
clang -cc1 -x c use.c -fmodules fmodule-map-file=modulemap -fprebuilt-module-path=prebuilt_modules -fprebuilt-implicit-modules <non-prebuilt config options>
This is for example particularly useful in a use-case where compilation is
expensive, and the configurations expected to be used are predictable, but not
controlled by the producer of prebuilt modules. Modules for the set of
predictable configurations can be prebuilt, and using them does not require
"parsing" the configuration (command-line options).
Reviewed By: Bigcheese
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68997
This reverts commit 55c4ff91bd.
Issues were introduced as discussed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D88241
where this change made previous bugs in the linker and BitCodeWriter
visible.
Make the corresponding change that was made for byval in
b7141207a4. Like byval, this requires a
bulk update of the test IR tests to include the type before this can
be mandatory.
This is triggered during serialization. The test is for modules, but
will occur for any serialization effort using asm goto.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers, jyknight
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88195
Change the warning message for -Wincomplete-umbrella to report the location of the umbrella header;
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82118
This patch defaults to -mtune=generic unless -march is present. If -march is present we'll use the empty string unless its overridden by mtune. The back should use the target cpu if the tune-cpu isn't present.
It also adds AST serialization support to fix some tests that emit AST and parse it back. These tests diff the IR against the output from not going through AST. So if we don't serialize the tune CPU we fail the diff.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86488
Before the change the diagnostic for
module unknown.submodule {}
was "error: expected module name" which is incorrect and misleading
because both "unknown" and "submodule" are valid module names.
We already have a better error message when a parent module is a
submodule itself and is missing. Make the error for a missing top-level
module more like the one for a submodule.
rdar://problem/64424407
Reviewed By: bruno
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84458
The orignal patch with the missing 'REQUIRES: asserts' as there is a debug-only
flag used in the test.
Original summary:
D81347 changes the ASTFileSignature to be an array of 20 uint8_t instead of 5
uint32_t. However, it didn't update the code in ObjectFilePCHContainerOperations
that creates the dwoID in the module from the ASTFileSignature
(`Buffer->Signature` being the array subclass that is now `std::array<uint8_t,
20>` instead of `std::array<uint32_t, 5>`).
```
uint64_t Signature = [..] (uint64_t)Buffer->Signature[1] << 32 | Buffer->Signature[0]
```
This code works with the old ASTFileSignature (where two uint32_t are enough to
fill the uint64_t), but after the patch this only took two bytes from the
ASTFileSignature and only partly filled the Signature uint64_t.
This caused that the dwoID in the module ref and the dwoID in the actual module
no longer match (which in turns causes that LLDB keeps warning about the dwoID's
not matching when debugging -gmodules-compiled binaries).
This patch just unifies the logic for turning the ASTFileSignature into an
uint64_t which makes the dwoID match again (and should prevent issues like that
in the future).
Reviewed By: aprantl, dang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84013
This relands D84013 but with a test that relies on less shell features to
hopefully make the test pass on Fuchsia (where the test from the previous patch
version strangely failed with a plain "Exit code 1").
Original summary:
D81347 changes the ASTFileSignature to be an array of 20 uint8_t instead of 5 uint32_t.
However, it didn't update the code in ObjectFilePCHContainerOperations that creates
the dwoID in the module from the ASTFileSignature (`Buffer->Signature` being the
array subclass that is now `std::array<uint8_t, 20>` instead of `std::array<uint32_t, 5>`).
```
uint64_t Signature = [..] (uint64_t)Buffer->Signature[1] << 32 | Buffer->Signature[0]
```
This code works with the old ASTFileSignature (where two uint32_t are enough to
fill the uint64_t), but after the patch this only took two bytes from the ASTFileSignature
and only partly filled the Signature uint64_t.
This caused that the dwoID in the module ref and the dwoID in the actual module no
longer match (which in turns causes that LLDB keeps warning about the dwoID's not
matching when debugging -gmodules-compiled binaries).
This patch just unifies the logic for turning the ASTFileSignature into an uint64_t which
makes the dwoID match again (and should prevent issues like that in the future).
Reviewed By: aprantl, dang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84013
This commit teaches ASTDeclReader::attachPreviousDecl to successfully merge
two Decl's when one contains an inheritable attribute like the
MSInheritanceAttr. Usually, attributes that are needed to be present along the
redeclaration chain are attached during ASTReading from
ASTDeclReader::attachPreviousDecl, but no such thing is done for inheritable
attributes. Currently, only the logic for merging MSInheritanceAttr is
provided.
D81347 changes the ASTFileSignature to be an array of 20 uint8_t instead of 5
uint32_t. However, it didn't update the code in ObjectFilePCHContainerOperations
that creates the dwoID in the module from the ASTFileSignature
(`Buffer->Signature` being the array subclass that is now `std::array<uint8_t,
20>` instead of `std::array<uint32_t, 5>`).
```
uint64_t Signature = [..] (uint64_t)Buffer->Signature[1] << 32 | Buffer->Signature[0]
```
This code works with the old ASTFileSignature (where two uint32_t are enough to
fill the uint64_t), but after the patch this only took two bytes from the
ASTFileSignature and only partly filled the Signature uint64_t.
This caused that the dwoID in the module ref and the dwoID in the actual module
no longer match (which in turns causes that LLDB keeps warning about the dwoID's
not matching when debugging -gmodules-compiled binaries).
This patch just unifies the logic for turning the ASTFileSignature into an
uint64_t which makes the dwoID match again (and should prevent issues like that
in the future).
Reviewed By: aprantl, dang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84013
HeaderSearch was marking requested HeaderFileInfo as Resolved only based on
the presence of ExternalSource. As the result, using any module was enough
to set ExternalSource and headers unknown to this module would have
HeaderFileInfo with empty fields, including `isImport = 0`, `NumIncludes = 0`.
Such HeaderFileInfo was preserved without changes regardless of how the
header was used in other modules and caused incorrect result in
`HeaderSearch::ShouldEnterIncludeFile`.
Fix by marking HeaderFileInfo as Resolved only if ExternalSource knows
about this header.
rdar://problem/62126911
Reviewed By: bruno
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80263
Background:
-----------
There are two related argument types which can be sent into a diagnostic to
display the name of an entity: DeclarationName (ak_declarationname) or
NamedDecl* (ak_nameddecl) (there is also ak_identifierinfo for
IdentifierInfo*, but we are not concerned with it here).
A DeclarationName in a diagnostic will just be streamed to the output,
which will directly result in a call to DeclarationName::print.
A NamedDecl* in a diagnostic will also ultimately result in a call to
DeclarationName::print, but with two customisation points along the way:
The first customisation point is NamedDecl::getNameForDiagnostic which is
overloaded by FunctionDecl, ClassTemplateSpecializationDecl and
VarTemplateSpecializationDecl to print the template arguments, if any.
The second customisation point is NamedDecl::printName. By default it just
streams the stored DeclarationName into the output but it can be customised
to provide a user-friendly name for an entity. It is currently overloaded by
DecompositionDecl and MSGuidDecl.
What this patch does:
---------------------
For many diagnostics a DeclarationName is used instead of the NamedDecl*.
This bypasses the two customisation points mentioned above. This patches fix
this for diagnostics in Sema.cpp, SemaCast.cpp, SemaChecking.cpp, SemaDecl.cpp,
SemaDeclAttr.cpp, SemaDecl.cpp, SemaOverload.cpp and SemaStmt.cpp.
I have only modified diagnostics where I could construct a test-case which
demonstrates that the change is appropriate (either with this patch or the next
one).
Reviewed By: erichkeane, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84656