urllib2 as been renamed into urllib and the library layout has changed.
Workaround that in a consistent manner.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55199
llvm-svn: 349627
Using from __future__ import print_function it is possible to have a compatible behavior of `print(...)` across Python version.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55213
llvm-svn: 349454
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
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
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
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
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 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
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
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
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
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
Summary:
clang has `-Wextra-semi` (D43162), which is not dictated by the currently selected standard.
While that is great, there is at least one more source of need-less semis - 'null statements'.
Sometimes, they are needed:
```
for(int x = 0; continueToDoWork(x); x++)
; // Ugly code, but the semi is needed here.
```
But sometimes they are just there for no reason:
```
switch(X) {
case 0:
return -2345;
case 5:
return 0;
default:
return 42;
}; // <- oops
;;;;;;;;;;; <- OOOOPS, still not diagnosed. Clearly this is junk.
```
Additionally:
```
if(; // <- empty init-statement
true)
;
switch (; // empty init-statement
x) {
...
}
for (; // <- empty init-statement
int y : S())
;
}
As usual, things may or may not go sideways in the presence of macros.
While evaluating this diag on my codebase of interest, it was unsurprisingly
discovered that Google Test macros are *very* prone to this.
And it seems many issues are deep within the GTest itself, not
in the snippets passed from the codebase that uses GTest.
So after some thought, i decided not do issue a diagnostic if the semi
is within *any* macro, be it either from the normal header, or system header.
Fixes [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39111 | PR39111 ]]
Reviewers: rsmith, aaron.ballman, efriedma
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52695
llvm-svn: 347339
This clarifies that __has_cpp_attribute is no longer always an extension since it's now available in C++2a. Also, Both __has_cpp_attribute and __has_c_attribute can accept attribute scope tokens with alternative spelling (clang vs _Clang and gnu vs __gnu__).
llvm-svn: 347312
Summary:
As reported by @regehr (thanks!) on twitter (https://twitter.com/johnregehr/status/1057681496255815686),
we (me) has completely forgot about the binary assignment operator.
In AST, it isn't represented as separate `ImplicitCastExpr`'s,
but as a single `CompoundAssignOperator`, that does all the casts internally.
Which means, out of these two, only the first one is diagnosed:
```
auto foo() {
unsigned char c = 255;
c = c + 1;
return c;
}
auto bar() {
unsigned char c = 255;
c += 1;
return c;
}
```
https://godbolt.org/z/JNyVc4
This patch does handle the `CompoundAssignOperator`:
```
int main() {
unsigned char c = 255;
c += 1;
return c;
}
```
```
$ ./bin/clang -g -fsanitize=integer /tmp/test.c && ./a.out
/tmp/test.c:3:5: runtime error: implicit conversion from type 'int' of value 256 (32-bit, signed) to type 'unsigned char' changed the value to 0 (8-bit, unsigned)
#0 0x2392b8 in main /tmp/test.c:3:5
#1 0x7fec4a612b16 in __libc_start_main (/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6+0x22b16)
#2 0x214029 in _start (/build/llvm-build-GCC-release/a.out+0x214029)
```
However, the pre/post increment/decrement is still not handled.
Reviewers: rsmith, regehr, vsk, rjmccall, #sanitizers
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Subscribers: mclow.lists, cfe-commits, regehr
Tags: #clang, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53949
llvm-svn: 347258
Summary:
the previous patch (https://reviews.llvm.org/rC346642) has been reverted because of test failure under windows.
So this patch fix the test cfe/trunk/test/CodeGen/code-coverage-filter.c.
Reviewers: marco-c
Reviewed By: marco-c
Subscribers: cfe-commits, sylvestre.ledru
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54600
llvm-svn: 347144
Summary:
These options are taking regex separated by colons to filter files.
- if both are empty then all files are instrumented
- if -fprofile-filter-files is empty then all the filenames matching any of the regex from exclude are not instrumented
- if -fprofile-exclude-files is empty then all the filenames matching any of the regex from filter are instrumented
- if both aren't empty then all the filenames which match any of the regex in filter and which don't match all the regex in filter are instrumented
- this patch is a follow-up of https://reviews.llvm.org/D52033
Reviewers: marco-c, vsk
Reviewed By: marco-c, vsk
Subscribers: cfe-commits, sylvestre.ledru
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52034
llvm-svn: 346642
The clang-cl driver disables access to command line options outside of the
"Core" and "CLOption" sets of command line arguments. This filtering makes it
impossible to pass arguments that are interpreted by the clang driver and not
by either 'cc1' (the frontend) or one of the other tools invoked by the driver.
An example driver-level flag is the '-fno-slp-vectorize' flag, which is
processed by the driver in Clang::ConstructJob and used to set the cc1 flag
"-vectorize-slp". There is no negative cc1 flag or -mllvm flag, so it is not
currently possible to disable the SLP vectorizer from the clang-cl driver.
This change introduces the "/clang:" argument that is available when the
driver mode is set to CL compatibility. This option works similarly to the
"-Xclang" option, except that the option values are processed by the clang
driver rather than by 'cc1'. An example usage is:
clang-cl /clang:-fno-slp-vectorize /O2 test.c
Another example shows how "/clang:" can be used to pass a flag where there is
a conflict between a clang-cl compat option and an overlapping clang driver
option:
clang-cl /MD /clang:-MD /clang:-MF /clang:test_dep_file.dep test.c
In the previous example, the unprefixed /MD selects the DLL version of the msvc
CRT, while the prefixed -MD flag and the -MF flags are used to create a make
dependency file for included headers.
One note about flag ordering: the /clang: flags are concatenated to the end of
the argument list, so in cases where the last flag wins, the /clang: flags
will be chosen regardless of their order relative to other flags on the driver
command line.
Patch by Neeraj K. Singh!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53457
llvm-svn: 346393
Handle it in the driver and propagate it to cc1
Reviewers: rjmccall, kcc, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52615
llvm-svn: 346001
This is the second half of Implicit Integer Conversion Sanitizer.
It completes the first half, and finally makes the sanitizer
fully functional! Only the bitfield handling is missing.
Summary:
C and C++ are interesting languages. They are statically typed, but weakly.
The implicit conversions are allowed. This is nice, allows to write code
while balancing between getting drowned in everything being convertible,
and nothing being convertible. As usual, this comes with a price:
```
void consume(unsigned int val);
void test(int val) {
consume(val);
// The 'val' is `signed int`, but `consume()` takes `unsigned int`.
// If val is negative, then consume() will be operating on a large
// unsigned value, and you may or may not have a bug.
// But yes, sometimes this is intentional.
// Making the conversion explicit silences the sanitizer.
consume((unsigned int)val);
}
```
Yes, there is a `-Wsign-conversion`` diagnostic group, but first, it is kinda
noisy, since it warns on everything (unlike sanitizers, warning on an
actual issues), and second, likely there are cases where it does **not** warn.
The actual detection is pretty easy. We just need to check each of the values
whether it is negative, and equality-compare the results of those comparisons.
The unsigned value is obviously non-negative. Zero is non-negative too.
https://godbolt.org/g/w93oj2
We do not have to emit the check *always*, there are obvious situations
where we can avoid emitting it, since it would **always** get optimized-out.
But i do think the tautological IR (`icmp ult %x, 0`, which is always false)
should be emitted, and the middle-end should cleanup it.
This sanitizer is in the `-fsanitize=implicit-conversion` group,
and is a logical continuation of D48958 `-fsanitize=implicit-integer-truncation`.
As for the ordering, i'we opted to emit the check **after**
`-fsanitize=implicit-integer-truncation`. At least on these simple 16 test cases,
this results in 1 of the 12 emitted checks being optimized away,
as compared to 0 checks being optimized away if the order is reversed.
This is a clang part.
The compiler-rt part is D50251.
Finishes fixing [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=21530 | PR21530 ]], [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37552 | PR37552 ]], [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35409 | PR35409 ]].
Finishes partially fixing [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=9821 | PR9821 ]].
Finishes fixing https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/940.
Only the bitfield handling is missing.
Reviewers: vsk, rsmith, rjmccall, #sanitizers, erichkeane
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: chandlerc, filcab, cfe-commits, regehr
Tags: #sanitizers, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50250
llvm-svn: 345660
This reverts commit r345487, which reverted r345486. I think the crashes were
caused by an OOM on the builder, trying again to confirm...
llvm-svn: 345517
This commit enables pushing an empty #pragma clang attribute push, then adding
multiple attributes to it, then popping them all with #pragma clang attribute
pop, just like #pragma clang diagnostic. We still support the current way of
adding these, #pragma clang attribute push(__attribute__((...))), by treating it
like a combined push/attribute. This is needed to create macros like:
DO_SOMETHING_BEGIN(attr1, attr2, attr3)
// ...
DO_SOMETHING_END
rdar://45496947
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53621
llvm-svn: 345486
Summary:
- Add `UETT_PreferredAlignOf` to account for the difference between `__alignof` and `alignof`
- `AlignOfType` now returns ABI alignment instead of preferred alignment iff clang-abi-compat > 7, and one uses _Alignof or alignof
Patch by Nicole Mazzuca!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53207
llvm-svn: 345419
Summary:
As per IRC disscussion, it seems we really want to have more fine-grained `-fsanitize=implicit-integer-truncation`:
* A check when both of the types are unsigned.
* Another check for the other cases (either one of the types is signed, or both of the types is signed).
This is clang part.
Compiler-rt part is D50902.
Reviewers: rsmith, vsk, Sanitizers
Reviewed by: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50901
llvm-svn: 344230
This can be used to preserve profiling information across codebase
changes that have widespread impact on mangled names, but across which
most profiling data should still be usable. For example, when switching
from libstdc++ to libc++, or from the old libstdc++ ABI to the new ABI,
or even from a 32-bit to a 64-bit build.
The user can provide a remapping file specifying parts of mangled names
that should be treated as equivalent (eg, std::__1 should be treated as
equivalent to std::__cxx11), and profile data will be treated as
applying to a particular function if its name is equivalent to the name
of a function in the profile data under the provided equivalences. See
the documentation change for a description of how this is configured.
Remapping is supported for both sample-based profiling and instruction
profiling. We do not support remapping indirect branch target
information, but all other profile data should be remapped
appropriately.
Support is only added for the new pass manager. If someone wants to also
add support for this for the old pass manager, doing so should be
straightforward.
llvm-svn: 344199
Summary:
Some macros are used in the body of function, and actually contain the trailing semicolon: they should thus be automatically followed by a new line, and not get merged with the next line. This is for example the case with Qt's Q_UNUSED macro:
void foo(int a, int b) {
Q_UNUSED(a)
return b;
}
This patch deals with these cases by introducing a new option to specify list of statement macros. This re-uses the system already in place for foreach macros, to ensure there is no impact on performance.
Reviewers: krasimir, djasper, klimek
Reviewed By: krasimir
Subscribers: acoomans, mgrang, alexfh, klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33440
llvm-svn: 343602
Summary: Previous to this the example didn't work out of the box, it seems some cmake config changed between when this was written and now.
Author: Dan Zimmerman <daniel.zimmerman@me.com>
Reviewers: modocache, steveire
Reviewed By: steveire
Subscribers: smeenai, steveire, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52664
llvm-svn: 343530
Tests introduced in r329780 was disabled in r342317 because these tests
were accidentally testing dump infrastructure, when all they cared about was
how symbols relate to each other. So when dump infrastructure changed,
tests became annoying to maintain.
Add a new feature to ExprInspection: clang_analyzer_denote() and
clang_analyzer_explain(). The former adds a notation to a symbol, the latter
expresses another symbol in terms of previously denoted symbols.
It's currently a bit wonky - doesn't print parentheses and only supports
denoting atomic symbols. But it's even more readable that way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52133
llvm-svn: 343048
Summary:
Making X[8-15,18] registers call-saved is used to support
CONFIG_ARM64_LSE_ATOMICS in Linux kernel.
Signed-off-by: Tri Vo <trong@android.com>
Reviewers: srhines, nickdesaulniers, javed.absar
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, jfb, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52399
llvm-svn: 342990
Allows module map writers to add build requirements based on
platform/os. This helps when target features and language dialects
aren't enough to conditionalize building a module, among other things,
it allow module maps for different platforms to live in the same file.
rdar://problem/43909745
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51910
llvm-svn: 342499
Summary: Reserving registers x1-7 is used to support CONFIG_ARM64_LSE_ATOMICS in Linux kernel. This change adds support for reserving registers x1 through x7.
Reviewers: javed.absar, efriedma, nickdesaulniers, srhines, phosek
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Subscribers: manojgupta, jfb, cfe-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48581
llvm-svn: 342100
Dimitar et. al. in [1] proposed a novel VTable layout scheme that enables efficient implementation of virtual call CFI.
This patch adds an introduction of this scheme to the CFI design documentation.
[1] Protecting C++ Dynamic Dispatch Through VTable Interleaving. Dimitar Bounov, Rami Gökhan Kıcı, Sorin Lerner. https://cseweb.ucsd.edu/~lerner/papers/ivtbl-ndss16.pdf
Patch by Zhaomo Yang!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50372
llvm-svn: 341989
With clang-cl, when the user specifies /Yc or /Yu without a filename
the compiler uses a #pragma hdrstop in the main source file to
determine the end of the PCH. If a header is specified with /Yc or
/Yu #pragma hdrstop has no effect.
The optional #pragma hdrstop filename argument is not yet supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51391
llvm-svn: 341963
Summary:
The new matchers can be used to check if an expression is type-, value- or instantiation-dependent
in a templated context.
These matchers are used in a clang-tidy check and generally useful as the
problem of unresolved templates occurs more often in clang-tidy and they
provide an easy way to check for this issue.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, alexfh, klimek
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51880
llvm-svn: 341958
This is a partial retry of rL340137 (reverted at rL340138 because of gcc host compiler crashing)
with 1 change:
Remove the changes to make microsoft builtins also use the LLVM intrinsics.
This exposes the LLVM funnel shift intrinsics as more familiar bit rotation functions in clang
(when both halves of a funnel shift are the same value, it's a rotate).
We're free to name these as we want because we're not copying gcc, but if there's some other
existing art (eg, the microsoft ops) that we want to replicate, we can change the names.
The funnel shift intrinsics were added here:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D49242
With improved codegen in:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL337966https://reviews.llvm.org/rL339359
And basic IR optimization added in:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL338218https://reviews.llvm.org/rL340022
...so these are expected to produce asm output that's equal or better to the multi-instruction
alternatives using primitive C/IR ops.
In the motivating loop example from PR37387:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37387#c7
...we get the expected 'rolq' x86 instructions if we substitute the rotate builtin into the source.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50924
llvm-svn: 340141
This is a retry of rL340135 (reverted at rL340136 because of gcc host compiler crashing)
with 2 changes:
1. Move the code into a helper to reduce code duplication (and hopefully work-around the crash).
2. The original commit had a formatting bug in the docs (missing an underscore).
Original commit message:
This exposes the LLVM funnel shift intrinsics as more familiar bit rotation functions in clang
(when both halves of a funnel shift are the same value, it's a rotate).
We're free to name these as we want because we're not copying gcc, but if there's some other
existing art (eg, the microsoft ops that are modified in this patch) that we want to replicate,
we can change the names.
The funnel shift intrinsics were added here:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D49242
With improved codegen in:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL337966https://reviews.llvm.org/rL339359
And basic IR optimization added in:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL338218https://reviews.llvm.org/rL340022
...so these are expected to produce asm output that's equal or better to the multi-instruction
alternatives using primitive C/IR ops.
In the motivating loop example from PR37387:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37387#c7
...we get the expected 'rolq' x86 instructions if we substitute the rotate builtin into the source.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50924
llvm-svn: 340137
This exposes the LLVM funnel shift intrinsics as more familiar bit rotation functions in clang
(when both halves of a funnel shift are the same value, it's a rotate).
We're free to name these as we want because we're not copying gcc, but if there's some other
existing art (eg, the microsoft ops that are modified in this patch) that we want to replicate,
we can change the names.
The funnel shift intrinsics were added here:
D49242
With improved codegen in:
rL337966
rL339359
And basic IR optimization added in:
rL338218
rL340022
...so these are expected to produce asm output that's equal or better to the multi-instruction
alternatives using primitive C/IR ops.
In the motivating loop example from PR37387:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37387#c7
...we get the expected 'rolq' x86 instructions if we substitute the rotate builtin into the source.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50924
llvm-svn: 340135
Summary:
The number of threads used for ThinLTO backend parallelism was
dropped to the number of cores in r284618 to avoid oversubscribing
physical cores due to hyperthreading. This updates the documentation
to reflect that change.
Fixes PR38610.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50882
llvm-svn: 340021
Yes, i erroneously assumed that the "after" was meant,
but i was wrong:
> I really meant "performed before", for cases like 4u / -2,
> where -2 is implicitly converted to UINT_MAX - 2 before
> the computation. Conversions that are performed after
> a computation aren't part of the computation at all,
> so I think it's much clearer that they're not in scope
> for this sanitizer.
llvm-svn: 338306
Summary:
C and C++ are interesting languages. They are statically typed, but weakly.
The implicit conversions are allowed. This is nice, allows to write code
while balancing between getting drowned in everything being convertible,
and nothing being convertible. As usual, this comes with a price:
```
unsigned char store = 0;
bool consume(unsigned int val);
void test(unsigned long val) {
if (consume(val)) {
// the 'val' is `unsigned long`, but `consume()` takes `unsigned int`.
// If their bit widths are different on this platform, the implicit
// truncation happens. And if that `unsigned long` had a value bigger
// than UINT_MAX, then you may or may not have a bug.
// Similarly, integer addition happens on `int`s, so `store` will
// be promoted to an `int`, the sum calculated (0+768=768),
// and the result demoted to `unsigned char`, and stored to `store`.
// In this case, the `store` will still be 0. Again, not always intended.
store = store + 768; // before addition, 'store' was promoted to int.
}
// But yes, sometimes this is intentional.
// You can either make the conversion explicit
(void)consume((unsigned int)val);
// or mask the value so no bits will be *implicitly* lost.
(void)consume((~((unsigned int)0)) & val);
}
```
Yes, there is a `-Wconversion`` diagnostic group, but first, it is kinda
noisy, since it warns on everything (unlike sanitizers, warning on an
actual issues), and second, there are cases where it does **not** warn.
So a Sanitizer is needed. I don't have any motivational numbers, but i know
i had this kind of problem 10-20 times, and it was never easy to track down.
The logic to detect whether an truncation has happened is pretty simple
if you think about it - https://godbolt.org/g/NEzXbb - basically, just
extend (using the new, not original!, signedness) the 'truncated' value
back to it's original width, and equality-compare it with the original value.
The most non-trivial thing here is the logic to detect whether this
`ImplicitCastExpr` AST node is **actually** an implicit conversion, //or//
part of an explicit cast. Because the explicit casts are modeled as an outer
`ExplicitCastExpr` with some `ImplicitCastExpr`'s as **direct** children.
https://godbolt.org/g/eE1GkJ
Nowadays, we can just use the new `part_of_explicit_cast` flag, which is set
on all the implicitly-added `ImplicitCastExpr`'s of an `ExplicitCastExpr`.
So if that flag is **not** set, then it is an actual implicit conversion.
As you may have noted, this isn't just named `-fsanitize=implicit-integer-truncation`.
There are potentially some more implicit conversions to be warned about.
Namely, implicit conversions that result in sign change; implicit conversion
between different floating point types, or between fp and an integer,
when again, that conversion is lossy.
One thing i know isn't handled is bitfields.
This is a clang part.
The compiler-rt part is D48959.
Fixes [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=21530 | PR21530 ]], [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37552 | PR37552 ]], [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35409 | PR35409 ]].
Partially fixes [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=9821 | PR9821 ]].
Fixes https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/940. (other than sign-changing implicit conversions)
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, samsonov, pcc, vsk, eugenis, efriedma, kcc, erichkeane
Reviewed By: rsmith, vsk, erichkeane
Subscribers: erichkeane, klimek, #sanitizers, aaron.ballman, RKSimon, dtzWill, filcab, danielaustin, ygribov, dvyukov, milianw, mclow.lists, cfe-commits, regehr
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48958
llvm-svn: 338288
ObjCIvarExpr is *not* a subclass of MemberExpr, and a separate matcher
is required to support it.
Adding a hasDeclaration support as well, as it's not very useful without
it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49701
llvm-svn: 338137
Summary:
Extend the Clang-Format IncludeCategories documentation by adding a link to the supported regular expression standard (POSIX).
And extenting the example with a system header regex.
[[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35041 | bug 35041]]
Contributed by WimLeflere!
Reviewers: krasimir, Typz
Reviewed By: krasimir
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48827
llvm-svn: 337899
no-ops.
A non-escaping block on the stack will never be called after its
lifetime ends, so it doesn't have to be copied to the heap. To prevent
a non-escaping block from being copied to the heap, this patch sets
field 'isa' of the block object to NSConcreteGlobalBlock and sets the
BLOCK_IS_GLOBAL bit of field 'flags', which causes the runtime to treat
the block as if it were a global block (calling _Block_copy on the block
just returns the original block and calling _Block_release is a no-op).
Also, a new flag bit 'BLOCK_IS_NOESCAPE' is added, which allows the
runtime or tools to distinguish between true global blocks and
non-escaping blocks.
rdar://problem/39352313
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49303
llvm-svn: 337580
Summary:
Support for this option is needed for building Linux kernel.
This is a very frequently requested feature by kernel developers.
More details : https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/4/4/601
GCC option description for -fdelete-null-pointer-checks:
This Assume that programs cannot safely dereference null pointers,
and that no code or data element resides at address zero.
-fno-delete-null-pointer-checks is the inverse of this implying that
null pointer dereferencing is not undefined.
This feature is implemented in as the function attribute
"null-pointer-is-valid"="true".
This CL only adds the attribute on the function.
It also strips "nonnull" attributes from function arguments but
keeps the related warnings unchanged.
Corresponding LLVM change rL336613 already updated the
optimizations to not treat null pointer dereferencing
as undefined if the attribute is present.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, efriedma, jyknight, chandlerc, rnk, srhines, void, george.burgess.iv
Reviewed By: jyknight
Subscribers: drinkcat, xbolva00, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47894
llvm-svn: 337433
which was reverted in r337336.
The problem that required a revert was fixed in r337338.
Also added a missing "REQUIRES: x86-registered-target" to one of
the tests.
Original commit message:
> Teach Clang to emit address-significance tables.
>
> By default, we emit an address-significance table on all ELF
> targets when the integrated assembler is enabled. The emission of an
> address-significance table can be controlled with the -faddrsig and
> -fno-addrsig flags.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48155
llvm-svn: 337339
Causing multiple failures on sanitizer bots due to TLS symbol errors,
e.g.
/usr/bin/ld: __msan_origin_tls: TLS definition in /home/buildbots/ppc64be-clang-test/clang-ppc64be/stage1/lib/clang/7.0.0/lib/linux/libclang_rt.msan-powerpc64.a(msan.cc.o) section .tbss.__msan_origin_tls mismatches non-TLS reference in /tmp/lit_tmp_0a71tA/mallinfo-3ca75e.o
llvm-svn: 337336
By default, we emit an address-significance table on all ELF
targets when the integrated assembler is enabled. The emission of an
address-significance table can be controlled with the -faddrsig and
-fno-addrsig flags.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48155
llvm-svn: 337333
Summary:
Introduce built-ins to read the unsafe stack top and bottom. The unsafe
stack top is required to implement garbage collection scanning for
Oilpan. Currently there is already a built-in 'get_unsafe_stack_start'
to read the bottom of the unsafe stack, but I chose to duplicate this
API because 'start' is ambiguous (e.g. Oilpan uses WTF::GetStackStart to
read the safe stack top.)
Reviewers: pcc
Reviewed By: pcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49152
llvm-svn: 337037
Summary:
Setting UBSAN_OPTIONS=silence_unsigned_overflow=1 will silence all UIO
reports. This feature, combined with
-fsanitize-recover=unsigned-integer-overflow, is useful for providing
fuzzing signal without the excessive log output.
Helps with https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz/issues/910.
Reviewers: kcc, vsk
Reviewed By: vsk
Subscribers: vsk, kubamracek, Dor1s, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48660
llvm-svn: 335762
Similarly to CFI on virtual and indirect calls, this implementation
tries to use program type information to make the checks as precise
as possible. The basic way that it works is as follows, where `C`
is the name of the class being defined or the target of a call and
the function type is assumed to be `void()`.
For virtual calls:
- Attach type metadata to the addresses of function pointers in vtables
(not the functions themselves) of type `void (B::*)()` for each `B`
that is a recursive dynamic base class of `C`, including `C` itself.
This type metadata has an annotation that the type is for virtual
calls (to distinguish it from the non-virtual case).
- At the call site, check that the computed address of the function
pointer in the vtable has type `void (C::*)()`.
For non-virtual calls:
- Attach type metadata to each non-virtual member function whose address
can be taken with a member function pointer. The type of a function
in class `C` of type `void()` is each of the types `void (B::*)()`
where `B` is a most-base class of `C`. A most-base class of `C`
is defined as a recursive base class of `C`, including `C` itself,
that does not have any bases.
- At the call site, check that the function pointer has one of the types
`void (B::*)()` where `B` is a most-base class of `C`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47567
llvm-svn: 335569
Summary: Mention that no_sanitize attribute can be used with globals.
Reviewers: alekseyshl
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48390
llvm-svn: 335193
Summary:
It seems that the changes done to `ClangFormatStyleOptions.rst` @334408 are causing the generation of the documentation to fail, with the following error:
Warning, treated as error:
/llvm/tools/clang/docs/ClangFormatStyleOptions.rst:1060: WARNING: Definition list ends without a blank line; unexpected unindent.
This is due to missing indent in some code block, and fixed by this patch.
Reviewers: krasimir, djasper, klimek
Reviewed By: krasimir
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48161
llvm-svn: 334709
WebKit C++ style for object initialization is as follows:
Foo foo { bar };
Yet using clang-format -style=webkit changes this to:
Foo foo{ bar };
As there is no existing combination of rules that will ensure a space
before a braced list in this fashion, this patch adds a new
SpaceBeforeCpp11BracedList rule.
Patch by Ross Kirsling!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46024
llvm-svn: 334692
Summary:
In many cases we can't devirtualize
because definition of vtable is not present. Most of the
time it is caused by inline virtual function not beeing
emitted. Forcing emitting of vtable adds a reference of these
inline virtual functions.
Note that GCC was always doing it.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, amharc, kuhar
Subscribers: llvm-commits, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47108
Co-authored-by: Krzysztof Pszeniczny <krzysztof.pszeniczny@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 334600
Register x20 is a callee-saved register which may be used for other
purposes in certain contexts, for example to hold special variables
within the kernel. This change adds support for reserving this register
both to frontend and backend to make this register usable for these
purposes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46552
llvm-svn: 334531
Summary:
This option replaces the BreakBeforeInheritanceComma option with an
enum, thus introducing a mode where the colon stays on the same line as
constructor declaration:
// When it fits on line:
class A : public B, public C {
...
};
// When it does not fit:
class A :
public B,
public C {
...
};
This matches the behavior of the `BreakConstructorInitializers` option,
introduced in https://reviews.llvm.org/D32479.
Reviewers: djasper, klimek
Reviewed By: djasper
Subscribers: mzeren-vmw, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43015
llvm-svn: 334408
Summary:
There are cases where the same string or select is repeated verbatim in a lot of diagnostics. This can be a pain to maintain and update. Tablegen provides no way stash the common text somewhere and reuse it in the diagnostics, until now!
This patch allows diagnostic texts to contain `%sub{<definition-name>}`, where `<definition-name>` names a Tablegen record of type `TextSubstitution`. These substitutions are done early, before the diagnostic string is otherwise processed. All `%sub` modifiers will be replaced before the diagnostic definitions are emitted.
The substitution must specify all arguments used by the substitution, and modifier indexes in the substitution are re-numbered accordingly. For example:
```
def select_ovl_candidate : TextSubstitution<"%select{function|constructor}0%select{| template| %2}1">;
```
when used as
```
"candidate `%sub{select_ovl_candidate}3,2,1 not viable"
```
will act as if we wrote:
```
"candidate %select{function|constructor}3%select{| template| %1}2 not viable"
```
Reviewers: rsmith, rjmccall, aaron.ballman, a.sidorin
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46740
llvm-svn: 332799
in gcc by https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-cvs/2018-04/msg00534.html.
The -mibt feature flag is being removed, and the -fcf-protection
option now also defines a CET macro and causes errors when used
on non-X86 targets, while X86 targets no longer check for -mibt
and -mshstk to determine if -fcf-protection is supported. -mshstk
is now used only to determine availability of shadow stack intrinsics.
Comes with an LLVM patch (D46882).
Patch by mike.dvoretsky
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46881
llvm-svn: 332704
Although not very well known, diagtool is an incredibly convenient
utility for dealing with diagnostics.
Particularly useful are the "tree" and "show-enabled" commands:
- The former prints the hierarchy of diagnostic (warning) flags and
which of them are enabled by default.
- The latter can be used to replace an invocation to clang and will
print which diagnostics are disabled, warnings or errors.
For instance: `diagtool show-enabled -Wall -Werror /tmp/test.c` will
print that -Wunused-variable (warn_unused_variable) will be treated as
an error.
This patch adds them to the install target so it gets shipped with the
LLVM release. It also adds a very basic man page and mentions this
change in the release notes.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46694
llvm-svn: 332448
Summary:
Introduce `PenaltyBreakTemplateDeclaration` to control the penalty,
and change `AlwaysBreakTemplateDeclarations` to an enum with 3 modes:
* `No` for regular, penalty based, wrapping of template declaration
* `MultiLine` for always wrapping before multi-line declarations (e.g.
same as legacy behavior when `AlwaysBreakTemplateDeclarations=false`)
* `Yes` for always wrapping (e.g. same as legacy behavior when
`AlwaysBreakTemplateDeclarations=true`)
Reviewers: krasimir, djasper, klimek
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42684
llvm-svn: 332436
These intrinsics work exactly as all other atomic_fetch_* intrinsics and allow to create *atomicrmw* with ordering.
Updated the clang-extensions document.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46386
llvm-svn: 332193
This is similar to the LLVM change https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290.
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\@brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\@brief //g' $i & done
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46320
llvm-svn: 331834
This implements the rule intended by the standard (see LWG 2358)
and the rule intended by the Itanium C++ ABI (see
https://github.com/itanium-cxx-abi/cxx-abi/pull/51), and makes
Clang match the behavior of GCC, ICC, and MSVC.
A pedantic reading of both the standard and the ABI indicate that Clang
is currently technically correct, but that's not worth much when it's
clear that the wording is wrong in both those places.
This is an ABI break for classes that derive from a class that is empty
other than one or more unnamed non-zero-length bit-fields. Such cases
are expected to be rare, but -fclang-abi-compat=6 restores the old
behavior just in case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45174
llvm-svn: 331620
As suggested in the post-commit thread for rL331056, we should match these
clang options with the established vocabulary of the corresponding sanitizer
option. Also, the use of 'strict' is well-known for these kinds of knobs,
and we can improve the descriptive text in the docs.
So this intends to match the logic of D46135 but only change the words.
Matching LLVM commit to match this spelling of the attribute to follow shortly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46236
llvm-svn: 331209
Clang incorrectly applied the packed attribute to base classes. Per GCC's
documentation and as can be observed from its behavior, packed only applies to
members, not base classes.
This change is conditioned behind -fclang-abi-compat so that an ABI break can
be avoided by users if desired.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46218
llvm-svn: 331136
As discussed in the post-commit thread for:
rL330437 ( http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20180423/545906.html )
We need a way to opt-out of a float-to-int-to-float cast optimization because too much
existing code relies on the platform-specific undefined result of those casts when the
float-to-int overflows.
The LLVM changes associated with adding this function attribute are here:
rL330947
rL330950
rL330951
Also as suggested, I changed the LLVM doc to mention the specific sanitizer flag that
catches this problem:
rL330958
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46135
llvm-svn: 331041
Summary:
It seems there isn't much enthusiasm for `-wtest` D45685.
This is more conservative version, which i had in the very first
revision of D44883, but that 'erroneously' got removed because of the review.
**Based on some [irc] discussions, it must really be documented that
we want all the new diagnostics to have their own flags, to ease
rollouts, transitions, etc.**
Please do note that i'm only adding `-Wno-self-assign-overloaded`,
but not `-Wno-self-assign-field-overloaded`, because i'm honestly
not aware of any false-positives from the `-field` variant,
but i can just as easily add it if wanted.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D44883#1068561
Reviewers: dblaikie, aaron.ballman, thakis, rjmccall, rsmith
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: Quuxplusone, chandlerc, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45766
llvm-svn: 330651