of its argument, perform function-to-pointer and array-to-pointer decay on the
parameter type first.
Otherwise deduction will fail, as the type of the argument will be decayed.
llvm-svn: 319584
The driver-based test is still not identical to the front-end line, remove the
hotness threshold from there and add a new front-end based test with
threshold.
llvm-svn: 319578
1. Require hotness on all remark lines with -verify.
3. Fix the samplePGO file to actually produce hotness on each line.
The second remark has hotness 60 rather 30 which I don't quite understand but
testing this is strictly better than before. It also unblocks the commit of
D40678.
llvm-svn: 319577
A RUN line was referring to the previous RUN line but a new test was added in
between them. Just reorder the lines.
Note this still does not completely fix this the brokenness of the comment as
the driver-based test gained a new hotness-threshold argument in r306948 but
I'll fix that is a separate commit.
llvm-svn: 319576
distribute directives.
OpenMP standard does not allow to mark the variables as firstprivate and lastprivate at the same time in distribute-based directives. Patch fixes this problem.
llvm-svn: 319560
When we break a long line like:
Column limit: 21
|
// foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo
The local decision when to allow protruding vs. breaking can lead to this
outcome (2 excess characters, 2 breaks):
// foo foo foo foo foo
// foo foo foo foo foo
// foo foo
While strictly staying within the column limit leads to this strictly better
outcome (fully below the column limit, 2 breaks):
// foo foo foo foo
// foo foo foo foo
// foo foo foo foo
To get an optimal solution, we would need to consider all combinations of excess
characters vs. breaking for all lines, but that would lead to a significant
increase in the search space of the algorithm for little gain.
Instead, we blindly try both approches and·select the one that leads to the
overall lower penalty.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40605
llvm-svn: 319541
These command line options are not intended for public use, and often
don't even make sense in the context of a particular tool anyway. About
90% of them are already hidden, but when people add new options they
forget to hide them, so if you were to make a brand new tool today, link
against one of LLVM's libraries, and run tool -help you would get a
bunch of junk that doesn't make sense for the tool you're writing.
This patch hides these options. The real solution is to not have
libraries defining command line options, but that's a much larger effort
and not something I'm prepared to take on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40674
llvm-svn: 319505
Use this function to create the install targets rather than doing so
manually, which gains us the `-stripped` install targets to perform
stripped installations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40675
llvm-svn: 319489
CUDA-9 headers check for specific libc++ version and ifdef out
some of the definitions we need if LIBCPP_VERSION >= 3800.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40198
llvm-svn: 319485
Clang asserts on undeclared variables on the to or link clause in the declare
target directive. The patch is to properly diagnose the error.
// foo1 and foo2 are not declared
#pragma omp declare target to(foo1)
#pragma omp declare target link(foo2)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40588
llvm-svn: 319458
teams region.
If the inner teams region is not correct, it may cause an assertion when
processing outer target region. Patch fixes this problem.
llvm-svn: 319450
As rsmith pointed out, the original implementation of this intrinsic
missed a number of important situations. This patch fixe a bunch of
shortcomings and implementation details to make it work correctly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39347
llvm-svn: 319446
To be compatible with GCC if soft floating point is in effect any FPU
specified is effectively ignored, eg,
-mfloat-abi=soft -fpu=neon
If any floating point features which require FPU hardware are enabled
they must be disable.
There was some support for doing this for NEON, but it did not handle
VFP, nor did it prevent the backend from emitting the build attribute
Tag_FP_arch describing the generated code as using the floating point
hardware if a FPU was specified (even though soft float does not use
the FPU).
Disabling the hardware floating point features for targets which are
compiling for soft float has meant that some tests which were incorrectly
checking for hardware support also needed to be updated. In such cases,
where appropriate the tests have been updated to check compiling for
soft float and a non-soft float variant (usually softfp). This was
usually because the target specified in the test defaulted to soft float.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40256
llvm-svn: 319420
The basic idea behind this patch is that since in strict aliasing
mode all accesses to union members require their outermost
enclosing union objects to be specified explicitly, then for a
couple given accesses to union members of the form
p->a.b.c...
q->x.y.z...
it is known they can only alias if both p and q point to the same
union type and offset ranges of members a.b.c... and x.y.z...
overlap. Note that the actual types of the members do not matter.
Specifically, in this patch we do the following:
* Make unions to be valid TBAA base access types. This enables
generation of TBAA type descriptors for unions.
* Encode union types as structures with a single member of a
special "union member" type. Currently we do not encode
information about sizes of types, but conceptually such union
members are considered to be of the size of the whole union.
* Encode accesses to direct and indirect union members, including
member arrays, as accesses to these special members. All
accesses to members of a union thus get the same offset, which
is the offset of the union they are part of. This means the
existing LLVM TBAA machinery is able to handle such accesses
with no changes.
While this is already an improvement comparing to the current
situation, that is, representing all union accesses as may-alias
ones, there are further changes planned to complete the support
for unions. One of them is storing information about access sizes
so we can distinct accesses to non-overlapping union members,
including accesses to different elements of member arrays.
Another change is encoding type sizes in order to make it
possible to compute offsets within constant-indexed array
elements. These enhancements will be addressed with separate
patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39455
llvm-svn: 319413
Sometimes we check the validity of some construct between producing a
diagnostic and producing its notes. Ideally, we wouldn't do that, but in
practice running code that "cannot possibly produce a diagnostic" in such a
situation should be safe, and reasonable factoring of some code requires it
with our current diagnostics infrastruture. If this does happen, a diagnostic
that's suppressed due to SFINAE should not cause notes connected to the prior
diagnostic to be suppressed.
llvm-svn: 319408
Summary:
The -fxray-always-emit-customevents flag instructs clang to always emit
the LLVM IR for calls to the `__xray_customevent(...)` built-in
function. The default behaviour currently respects whether the function
has an `[[clang::xray_never_instrument]]` attribute, and thus not lower
the appropriate IR code for the custom event built-in.
This change allows users calling through to the
`__xray_customevent(...)` built-in to always see those calls lowered to
the corresponding LLVM IR to lay down instrumentation points for these
custom event calls.
Using this flag enables us to emit even just the user-provided custom
events even while never instrumenting the start/end of the function
where they appear. This is useful in cases where "phase markers" using
__xray_customevent(...) can have very few instructions, must never be
instrumented when entered/exited.
Reviewers: rnk, dblaikie, kpw
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40601
llvm-svn: 319388
This matches MSVC's behaviour, and we already do it for class templates
since r270897.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40621
llvm-svn: 319386
Emit a gap area starting after the r-paren location and ending at the
start of the body for the braces-optional statements (for, for-each,
while, etc). The count for the gap area equal to the body's count. This
extends the fix in r317758.
Fixes PR35387, rdar://35570345
Testing: stage2 coverage-enabled build of clang, check-clang
llvm-svn: 319373
Fixes regression introduced by r319297. MSVC environments still use SEH
unwind opcodes but they should use the Microsoft C++ EH personality, not
the mingw one.
llvm-svn: 319363
directives.
According to the OpenMP standard, only loop control variables can be
used in linear clauses of distribute-based simd directives.
llvm-svn: 319362
This warning is known to be noisy and projects frequently disable it. In
particular, this should make building isl as bundled in polly with
clang-cl a lot quieter.
llvm-svn: 319336
In the original design of the analyzer, it was assumed that a BlockEntrance
doesn't create a new binding on the Store, but this assumption isn't true when
'widen-loops' is set to true. Fix this by finding an appropriate location
BlockEntrace program points.
Patch by Henry Wong!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37187
llvm-svn: 319333
../tools/clang/lib/Driver/ToolChains/Cuda.cpp:80:18: error: reference to non-static member function must be called; did you mean to call it with no arguments?
if (Distro(D.getVFS).IsDebian())
~~^~~~~~
()
llvm-svn: 319322
This fixes some bugs in the reflowing logic and splits out the concerns
of reflowing from BreakableToken.
Things to do after this patch:
- Refactor the breakProtrudingToken function possibly into a class, so we
can split it up into methods that operate on the common state.
- Optimize whitespace compression when reflowing by using the next possible
split point instead of the latest possible split point.
- Retry different strategies for reflowing (strictly staying below the
column limit vs. allowing excess characters if possible).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40310
llvm-svn: 319314
This is a re-apply of r319294.
adds -fseh-exceptions and -fdwarf-exceptions flags
clang will check if the user has specified an exception model flag,
in the absense of specifying the exception model clang will then check
the driver default and append the model flag for that target to cc1
-fno-exceptions has a higher priority then specifying the model
move __SEH__ macro definitions out of Targets into InitPreprocessor
behind the -fseh-exceptions flag
move __ARM_DWARF_EH__ macrodefinitions out of verious targets and into
InitPreprocessor behind the -fdwarf-exceptions flag and arm|thumb check
remove unused USESEHExceptions from the MinGW Driver
fold USESjLjExceptions into a new GetExceptionModel function that
gives the toolchain classes more flexibility with eh models
Reviewers: rnk, mstorsjo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39673
llvm-svn: 319297
adds -fseh-exceptions and -fdwarf-exceptions flags
clang will check if the user has specified an exception model flag,
in the absense of specifying the exception model clang will then check
the driver default and append the model flag for that target to cc1
clang cc1 assumes dwarf is the default if none is passed
and -fno-exceptions has a higher priority then specifying the model
move __SEH__ macro definitions out of Targets into InitPreprocessor
behind the -fseh-exceptions flag
move __ARM_DWARF_EH__ macrodefinitions out of verious targets and into
InitPreprocessor behind the -fdwarf-exceptions flag and arm|thumb check
remove unused USESEHExceptions from the MinGW Driver
fold USESjLjExceptions into a new GetExceptionModel function that
gives the toolchain classes more flexibility with eh models
Reviewers: rnk, mstorsjo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39673
llvm-svn: 319294