The default limit is 1000000 but it can be configured with a cache
policy. The motivation is that some filesystems (notably ext4) have
a limit on the number of files that can be contained in a directory
(separate from the inode limit).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40327
llvm-svn: 318857
In the future the compiler will analyze whether the OpenMP
runtime needs to be (fully) initialized and avoid that overhead
if possible. The functions already take an argument to transfer
that information to the runtime, so pass in the default value 1.
(This is needed for binary compatibility with libomptarget-nvptx
currently being upstreamed.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40354
llvm-svn: 318836
The support for relax relocations is dependent on the linker and
different toolchains within the same compiler can be using different
linkers some of which may or may not support relax relocations.
Give toolchains the option to control whether they want to use relax
relocations in addition to the existing (global) build system option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39831
llvm-svn: 318816
This clang patch changes the __tgt_* API function signatures in preparation for the new map interface.
Changes are: Device IDs 32bits --> 64bits, Flags 32bits --> 64bits
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40281
llvm-svn: 318789
This is an instrumentation flag that's similar to
-finstrument-functions, but it only inserts calls on function entry, the
calls are inserted post-inlining, and they don't take any arugments.
This is intended for users who want to instrument function entry with
minimal overhead.
(-pg would be another alternative, but forces frame pointer emission and
affects link flags, so is probably best left alone to be used for
generating gcov data.)
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40276
llvm-svn: 318785
OpenMP 5.0 introduces asynchronous data update/dependecies clauses on
target data directives. Patch adds initial support for outer task
regions to use task-based codegen for future async target data
directives.
llvm-svn: 318781
Summary:
This patch is part of the development effort to add support in the current OpenMP GPU offloading implementation for implicitly sharing variables between a target region executed by the team master thread and the worker threads within that team.
This patch is the first of three required for successfully performing the implicit sharing of master thread variables with the worker threads within a team. The remaining two patches are:
- Patch D38978 to the LLVM NVPTX backend which ensures the lowering of shared variables to an device memory which allows the sharing of references;
- Patch (coming soon) is a patch to libomptarget runtime library which ensures that a list of references to shared variables is properly maintained.
A simple code snippet which illustrates an implicit data sharing situation is as follows:
```
#pragma omp target
{
// master thread only
int v;
#pragma omp parallel
{
// worker threads
// use v
}
}
```
Variable v is implicitly shared from the team master thread which executes the code in between the target and parallel directives. The worker threads must operate on the latest version of v, including any updates performed by the master.
The code generated in this patch relies on the LLVM NVPTX patch (mentioned above) which prevents v from being lowered in the thread local memory of the master thread thus making the reference to this variable un-shareable with the workers. This ensures that the code generated by this patch is correct.
Since the parallel region is outlined the passing of arguments to the outlined regions must preserve the original order of arguments. The runtime therefore maintains a list of references to shared variables thus ensuring their passing in the correct order. The passing of arguments to the outlined parallel function is performed in a separate function which the data sharing infrastructure constructs in this patch. The function is inlined when optimizations are enabled.
Reviewers: hfinkel, carlo.bertolli, arpith-jacob, Hahnfeld, ABataev, caomhin
Reviewed By: ABataev
Subscribers: cfe-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38976
llvm-svn: 318773
This was previously done in some places, but for example not for
bundling so that single object compilation with -c failed. In
addition cubin was used for all file types during unbundling which
is incorrect for assembly files that are passed to ptxas.
Tighten up the tests so that we can't regress in that area.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40250
llvm-svn: 318763
move _WIN64 and _WIN32 defines to lib/Basic/Targets/OSTargets.h
move WIN32, WIN64 and __MINGW64__ to addMinGWDefines
fixes __MINGW64__ not being defined for aarch64
adds WIN32 definition for x64
Reviewers: mstorsjo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40285
llvm-svn: 318755
CFG wass built in non-deterministic order due to the fact that indirect
goto labels' declarations (LabelDecl's) are stored in the llvm::SmallSet
container. LabelDecl's are pointers, whose order is not deterministic,
and llvm::SmallSet sorts them by their non-deterministic addresses after
"small" container is exceeded. This leads to non-deterministic processing
of the elements of the container.
The fix is to use llvm::SmallSetVector that was designed to have
deterministic iteration order.
Patch by Ilya Palachev!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40073
llvm-svn: 318754
This patch introduces a couple of helper functions that make it
possible to handle the caching logic in a single place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39953
llvm-svn: 318752
CFG wass built in non-deterministic order due to the fact that indirect
goto labels' declarations (LabelDecl's) are stored in the llvm::SmallSet
container. LabelDecl's are pointers, whose order is not deterministic,
and llvm::SmallSet sorts them by their non-deterministic addresses after
"small" container is exceeded. This leads to non-deterministic processing
of the elements of the container.
The fix is to use llvm::SmallSetVector that was designed to have
deterministic iteration order.
Patch by Ilya Palachev!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40073
llvm-svn: 318750
This implements [dcl.modules.export] from the C++ Modules TS, which lets a module re-export another module with the "export import" syntax.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40270
llvm-svn: 318744
Summary:
This raises __STDCPP_DEFAULT_NEW_ALIGNMENT__ from 8 to 16 on Win64.
This matches platforms that follow the usual `2 * sizeof(void*)`
alignment requirement for malloc. We might want to consider making that
the default rather than relying on long double alignment.
Fixes PR35356
Reviewers: STL_MSFT, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40277
llvm-svn: 318723
This is still breaking greendragon.
At this point I give up until someone can fix the greendragon
bots, and I will probably abandon this effort in favor of using
a private github repository.
llvm-svn: 318722
This diff extends StackAddrEscapeChecker
to catch stack addresses leaks via block captures
if the block is executed asynchronously or
returned from a function.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39438
llvm-svn: 318705
This was reverted due to the tests being run twice on some
build bots. Each run had a slightly different configuration
due to the way in which it was being invoked. This fixes
the problem (albeit in a somewhat hacky way). Hopefully in
the future we can get rid of the workflow of running
debuginfo-tests as part of clang, and then this hack can
go away.
llvm-svn: 318697
https://reviews.llvm.org/D40187
This patch implements code gen for 'teams distribute parallel for' on the host, including all its clauses and related regression tests.
llvm-svn: 318692
As reported in llvm bugzilla 32377.
Here’s a patch to add preinclude of stdc-predef.h.
The gcc documentation says “On GNU/Linux, <stdc-predef.h> is pre-included.”
See https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-4.8/porting_to.html;
The preinclude is inhibited with –ffreestanding.
Basically I fixed the failing test cases by adding –ffreestanding which inhibits
this behavior.
I fixed all the failing tests, including some in extra/test, there's a separate
patch for that which is linked here
Patch By: mibintc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34158
llvm-svn: 318669
This caused warnings also when the if or else comes from macros. There was an
attempt to fix this in r318556, but that introduced new problems and was
reverted. Reverting this too until the whole issue is sorted.
> This looks like it was just an oversight.
>
> Fixes http://llvm.org/pr35319
>
> git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk@318456 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
llvm-svn: 318667
It seems this somehow made -Wempty-body fire in some macro cases where
it didn't before, e.g.
../../third_party/ffmpeg/libavcodec/bitstream.c(169,5): error: if statement has empty body [-Werror,-Wempty-body]
ff_dlog(NULL, "new table index=%d size=%d\n", table_index, table_size);
^
../../third_party/ffmpeg\libavutil/internal.h(276,80): note: expanded from macro 'ff_dlog'
# define ff_dlog(ctx, ...) do { if (0) av_log(ctx, AV_LOG_DEBUG, __VA_ARGS__); } while (0)
^
../../third_party/ffmpeg/libavcodec/bitstream.c(169,5): note: put the
semicolon on a separate line to silence this warning
Reverting until this can be figured out.
> Do not show it when `if` or `else` come from macros.
> E.g.,
>
> #define USED(A) if (A); else
> #define SOME_IF(A) if (A)
>
> void test() {
> // No warnings are shown in those cases now.
> USED(0);
> SOME_IF(0);
> }
>
> Patch by Ilya Biryukov!
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40185
llvm-svn: 318665
The Unified Arm Assembler Language is designed so that the majority of
assembler files can be assembled for both Arm and Thumb with the choice
made as a compilation option.
The way this is done in gcc is to pass -mthumb to the assembler with either
-Wa,-mthumb or -Xassembler -mthumb. This change adds support for these
options to clang. There is no assembler equivalent of -mno-thumb, -marm or
-mno-arm so we don't need to recognize these.
Ideally we would do all of the processing in
CollectArgsForIntegratedAssembler(). Unfortunately we need to change the
triple and at that point it is too late. Instead we look for the option
earlier in ComputeLLVMTriple().
Fixes PR34519
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40127
llvm-svn: 318647
set -pie as default for musl linux targets
add detection of alpine linux
append appropriate compile flags for alpine
Reviewers: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39588
llvm-svn: 318608
Some target devices (e.g. Nvidia GPUs) don't support dynamic stack
allocation and hence no VLAs. Print errors with description instead
of failing in the backend or generating code that doesn't work.
This patch handles explicit uses of VLAs (local variable in target
or declare target region) or implicitly generated (private) VLAs
for reductions on VLAs or on array sections with non-constant size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39505
llvm-svn: 318601
After the recent lit test changes, clang attempts to run its tests
via llvm-lit by default. However, the llvm-lit binary is not present
when performing stand-alone build resulting in a failure out of the box.
To solve that, add the llvm-lit directory to CMake when performing
a stand-alone build and LLVM sources are provided. This includes
the CMake rules generating the llvm-lit binary and effectively makes
it possible for clang to use it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40142
llvm-svn: 318562
Do not show it when `if` or `else` come from macros.
E.g.,
#define USED(A) if (A); else
#define SOME_IF(A) if (A)
void test() {
// No warnings are shown in those cases now.
USED(0);
SOME_IF(0);
}
Patch by Ilya Biryukov!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40185
llvm-svn: 318556
The object is provided by the objc runtime and is never visible in the
module itself, but even so, the address point we compute points into it,
and "+16" is guaranteed not to overflow.
This matches the c++ vtable IRGen.
Note that I'm not entirely convinced the 'i8*' type is correct here: at
the IR level, we're accessing memory that's outside the global object.
But we don't control the allocation, so it's not obviously wrong either.
But either way, this is only in a global initializer, so I don't think
it's going to be mucked with. Filed PR35352 to discuss that.
llvm-svn: 318545
Summary:
clang-format already removes empty lines at the beginning & end of
blocks:
int x() {
foo(); // lines before and after will be removed.
}
However because lamdas and arrow functions are parsed as expressions,
the existing logic to remove empty lines in UnwrappedLineFormatter
doesn't handle them.
This change special cases arrow functions in ContinuationIndenter to
remove empty lines:
x = []() {
foo(); // lines before and after will now be removed.
};
Reviewers: djasper
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40178
llvm-svn: 318537
Summary:
The ArgumentsAdjuster returned from `getClangStripDependencyFileAdjuster` will
skip dependency flags, and also their associated values for those flags that
take an argument. This change corrects the handling of the `-MD` and `-MMD`
flags, which do not take an argument.
Reviewers: saugustine, klimek, alexshap
Reviewed By: alexshap
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40024
llvm-svn: 318529
For each line that we break in a protruding token, compute whether the
penalty of breaking is actually larger than the penalty of the excess
characters. Only break if that is the case.
llvm-svn: 318515
Since SVN r318510, the MinGW/ARM configuration defaults to
dwarf exception handling.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39533
llvm-svn: 318511
When mixing PCH and Implicit Modules, missing a header search path
can lead to the implicit built PCM to complaint about not finding its
matching module map.
Instead of adding more magic to implicit modules engine, add a note to
help the user add the appropriate path.
rdar://problem/33388847
llvm-svn: 318503
Summary:
__builtin_nexttoward lowers to a libcall, e.g. nexttowardf(), that CUDA
does not have.
Rather than try to implement it, we simply remove these functions --
nvcc doesn't support them either, and nextafter, which does work, does
essentially the same thing on GPUs, because GPUs don't have long double.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: cfe-commits, sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40152
llvm-svn: 318494
This is still broken because it causes certain tests to be
run twice with slightly different configurations, which is
wrong in some cases.
You can observe this by running:
ninja -nv check-all | grep debuginfo-tests
And seeing that it passes clang/test and clang/test/debuginfo-tests
to lit, which causes it to run debuginfo-tests twice. The fix is
going to involve either:
a) figuring out that we're running in this "deprecated" configuration,
and then deleting the clang/test/debuginfo-tests path, which should
cause it to behave identically to before, or:
b) make lit smart enough that it doesn't descend into a sub-suite if
that sub-suite already has a lit.cfg file.
llvm-svn: 318486
explicitly instantiated, still emit it with each use.
We don't emit a definition of the member with an explicit instantiation
definition (and indeed it appears that we're not allowed to, since an explicit
instantiation definition does not constitute an odr-use and only odr-use
permits definition for defaulted special members). So we still need to emit a
weak definition with each use.
This also makes defaulted-in-class declarations behave more like
implicitly-declared special members, which matches their design intent.
And it matches the way this problem was solved in GCC.
llvm-svn: 318474
Summary:
In https://reviews.llvm.org/D39572 , I added support for specifying
`Type` when invoking `InMemoryFileSystem::addFile()`.
However, I didn't account for the fact that when `Type` is
`directory_file`, we need to construct an `InMemoryDirectory`, not an
`InMemoryFile`, or else clients cannot create files inside that
directory.
This diff fixes the bug and adds a test.
Test Plan: New test added. Ran test with:
% make -j12 check-clang-tools
Reviewers: bkramer, hokein
Reviewed By: bkramer
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40140
llvm-svn: 318445
Summary:
The MS ABI convention is that the 'this' pointer on entry is the address
of the vfptr that was used to make the virtual method call. In other
words, the pointer on entry always points to the base subobject that
introduced the virtual method. Consider this hierarchy:
struct A { virtual void f() = 0; };
struct B { virtual void g() = 0; };
struct C : A, B {
void f() override;
void g() override;
};
On entry to C::g, [ER]CX will contain the address of C's B subobject,
and C::g will have to subtract sizeof(A) to recover a pointer to C.
Before this change, we applied this adjustment in the prologue and
stored the new value into the "this" local variable alloca used for
debug info. However, MSVC does not do this, presumably because it is
often profitable to fold the adjustment into later field accesses. This
creates a problem, because the debugger expects the variable to be
unadjusted. Unfortunately, CodeView doesn't have anything like DWARF
expressions for computing variables that aren't in the program anymore,
so we have to declare 'this' to be the unadjusted value if we want the
debugger to see the right value.
This has the side benefit that, in optimized builds, the 'this' pointer
will usually be available on function entry because it doesn't require
any adjustment.
Reviewers: hans
Subscribers: aprantl, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40109
llvm-svn: 318440
This was reverted due to some failures on specific darwin buildbots,
the issue being that the new lit configuration was not setting the
SDKROOT environment variable. We've tested a fix locally and confirmed
that it works, so this patch resubmits everything with the fix
applied.
llvm-svn: 318435
Summary:
These preambles are built by ASTUnit and clangd. Previously, preambles
were always stored on disk.
In-memory preambles are routed back to the compiler as virtual files in
a custom VFS.
Interface of ASTUnit does not allow to use in-memory preambles, as
ASTUnit::CodeComplete receives FileManager as a parameter, so we can't
change VFS used by the compiler inside the CodeComplete method.
A follow-up commit will update clangd in clang-tools-extra to use
in-memory preambles.
Reviewers: klimek, sammccall, bkramer
Reviewed By: klimek
Subscribers: ioeric, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39842
llvm-svn: 318411
A first step toward removing the repetition of
features/CPU info in the x86 target info, this
patch pulls all the processor information out into
its own .def file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40093
llvm-svn: 318343
In the PR, Clang ended up in a situation where it tried to mangle the
__float128 type, which isn't supported when targetingt MSVC, because
Clang instantiated a variable template with that type when searching for
a conversion to use in an arithmetic expression.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39579
llvm-svn: 318309
Internal linkage variables ODR referenced from inline functions create
ODR violations (the same inline function ends up having different
definitions in each TU, since it references different variables - rather
than one definition).
This also happens to break modular code generation - so this is the last
fix to allow clang to compile with modular code generation.
llvm-svn: 318304
Summary:
Constant samplers are handled as static variables and clang's code generation
library, which leads to llvm::unreachable. We bypass emitting sampler variable
as static since it's translated to a function call later.
Reviewers: yaxunl, Anastasia
Reviewed By: yaxunl, Anastasia
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34342
llvm-svn: 318290
When we merge together class definitions, we can end up with the canonical
declaration of a field not being the one that was lexically within the
canonical definition of the class. Additionally, when we merge class
definitions via update records (eg, for a template specialization whose
declaration is instantiated in one module and whose definition is instantiated
in multiple others), we can end up with the list of lexical contents for the
class not including a particular declaration of a field whose lexical parent is
that class definition. In the worst case, we have a field whose canonical
declaration's lexical parent has no fields, and in that case this attempt to
number the fields by walking the fields in the declaration of the class that
contained one of the canonical fields will fail.
Instead, when numbering fields in a class, do the obvious thing: walk the
fields in the definition.
I'm still trying to reduce a testcase; the setup that leads to the above
scenario seems to be quite fragile.
llvm-svn: 318245
LLVM exposes a file in the backend (X86TargetParser.def) that
contains information about the correct list of CpuIs values.
This patch removes 2 of the copied and pasted versions of this
list from clang and instead includes the data from the .def file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40054
llvm-svn: 318234
Lifting from Bob Wilson's notes: The hash value that we compute and
store in PGO profile data to detect out-of-date profiles does not
include enough information. This means that many significant changes to
the source will not cause compiler warnings about the profile being out
of date, and worse, we may continue to use the outdated profile data to
make bad optimization decisions. There is some tension here because
some source changes won't affect PGO and we don't want to invalidate the
profile unnecessarily.
This patch adds a new hashing scheme which is more sensitive to loop
nesting, conditions, and out-of-order control flow. Here are examples
which show snippets which get the same hash under the current scheme,
and different hashes under the new scheme:
Loop Nesting Example
--------------------
// Snippet 1
while (foo()) {
while (bar()) {}
}
// Snippet 2
while (foo()) {}
while (bar()) {}
Condition Example
-----------------
// Snippet 1
if (foo())
bar();
baz();
// Snippet 2
if (foo())
bar();
else
baz();
Out-of-order Control Flow Example
---------------------------------
// Snippet 1
while (foo()) {
if (bar()) {}
baz();
}
// Snippet 2
while (foo()) {
if (bar())
continue;
baz();
}
In each of these cases, it's useful to differentiate between the
snippets because swapping their profiles gives bad optimization hints.
The new hashing scheme considers some logical operators in an effort to
detect more changes in conditions. This isn't a perfect scheme. E.g, it
does not produce the same hash for these equivalent snippets:
// Snippet 1
bool c = !a || b;
if (d && e) {}
// Snippet 2
bool f = d && e;
bool c = !a || b;
if (f) {}
This would require an expensive data flow analysis. Short of that, the
new hashing scheme looks reasonably complete, based on a scan over the
statements we place counters on.
Profiles which use the old version of the PGO hash remain valid and can
be used without issue (there are tests in tree which check this).
rdar://17068282
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39446
llvm-svn: 318229
On e.g. PPC the return value and argument were marked 'signext'. This
makes the test expectations a bit more flexible.
Follow-up to r318199.
llvm-svn: 318214
This updates -mcount to use the new attribute names (LLVM r318195), and
switches over -finstrument-functions to also use these attributes rather
than inserting instrumentation in the frontend.
It also adds a new flag, -finstrument-functions-after-inlining, which
makes the cygprofile instrumentation get inserted after inlining rather
than before.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39331
llvm-svn: 318199
Summary:
Allow the `isDefinition()` matcher to apply to `ObjCMethodDecl` nodes, in
addition to those it already supports. For whatever reason, `ObjCMethodDecl`
does not inherit from `FunctionDecl` and so this is specialization is necessary.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, malcolm.parsons, alexshap
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39948
llvm-svn: 318152
Enabled crash recovery for some libclang operations on a calling thread even
when LIBCLANG_NOTHREAD is specified.
Previously it would only run under crash recovery if LIBCLANG_NOTHREAD is not
set. Moved handling of LIBCLANG_NOTHREAD env variable into RunSafely from its
call sites.
llvm-svn: 318142
Create more orthogonal pieces. The restructuring made it easy to try out
several alternatives to D33589, and while none of the alternatives
turned out to be the right solution, the underlying simplification of
the structure is helpful.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39900
llvm-svn: 318141
Summary: Currently the -fdebug-pass-manager flag for clang doesn't enable the debug logging in the analysis managers. This is different than what the switch does when passed to opt.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40007
llvm-svn: 318140
Not much interesting here. Mostly wiring things together.
One thing worth noting is that the approach is substantially different
from the old PM. Here, the -O0 case works fundamentally differently in
that we just directly build the pipeline without any callbacks or other
cruft. In some ways, this is nice and clean. However, I don't like that
it causes the sanitizers to be enabled with different changes at
different times. =/ Suggestions for a better way to do this are welcome.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39085
llvm-svn: 318131
Registers it and everything, updates all the references, etc.
Next patch will add support to Clang's `-fexperimental-new-pass-manager`
path to actually enable BoundsChecking correctly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39084
llvm-svn: 318128
This reverts the aforementioned patch and 2 subsequent follow-ups,
as some buildbots are still failing 2 tests because of it.
Investigation is ongoing into the cause of the failures.
llvm-svn: 318112
cbrt() is always constant because it can't overflow or underflow. Therefore, it can't set errno.
fma() is not always constant because it can overflow or underflow. Therefore, it can set errno.
But we know that it never sets errno on GNU / MSVC, so make it constant in those environments.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39641
llvm-svn: 318093
The ObjCGenerics checker warns on a cast when there is no subtyping relationship
between the tracked type of the value and the destination type of the cast. It
does this even if the cast was explicitly written. This means the user can't
write an explicit cast to silence the diagnostic.
This commit treats explicit casts involving generic types as an indication from
the programmer that the Objective-C type system is not rich enough to express
the needed invariant. On explicit casts, the checker now removes any existing
information inferred about the type arguments. Further, it no longer assumes
the casted-to specialized type because the invariant the programmer specifies
in the cast may only hold at a particular program point and not later ones. This
prevents a suppressing cast from requiring a cascade of casts down the
line.
rdar://problem/33603303
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39711
llvm-svn: 318054
Recommit of r317951 and r317951 along with what I believe should fix
the remaining buildbot failures - the target triple should be specified
for both the ThinLTO pre-thinlink compile and backend (post-thinlink)
compile to ensure it is consistent.
Original description:
The LTO Config field wasn't being set when invoking a ThinLTO backend
via clang (i.e. for distributed builds).
llvm-svn: 318042
Change Header files of the intrinsics for lowering test and testn intrinsics to IR code.
Removed test and testn builtins from clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38737
llvm-svn: 318035
This patch, together with a matching llvm patch (https://reviews.llvm.org/D38671), implements the lowering of X86 shuffle i/f intrinsics to IR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38672
Change-Id: I9b3c2f2b34323bd9ccb21d0c1832f848b88ec047
llvm-svn: 318025
Starting with r314037, anonymous namespaces no longer give
unique-external linkage to variables. However, this linkage can still be
achieved by using a type which is not exterally visible,
e.g. through being declared in an anonymous namespace but used outside
it. Fix the test to take advantage of that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39810
llvm-svn: 317986
The anonymous union did NOT save us storage, but instead behaved as if we added an additional integer data member to FunctionDecl.
For additional context, the anonymous union renders the bit fields as non-adjacent and prevents them from sharing the same 'memory location' (i.e. bit-storage) by requiring the anonymous union object to be appropriately aligned.
This was confirmed through discussion with Richard Smith in Albuquerque (ISO C++ Meeting)
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL316292
llvm-svn: 317984
Summary:
We don't want to store cleanup dest slot saved into the coroutine frame (as some of the cleanup code may
access them after coroutine frame destroyed).
This is an alternative to https://reviews.llvm.org/D37093
It is possible to do this for all functions, but, cursory check showed that in -O0, we get slightly longer function (by 1-3 instructions), thus, we are only limiting cleanup.dest.slot elimination to coroutines.
Reviewers: rjmccall, hfinkel, eric_niebler
Reviewed By: eric_niebler
Subscribers: EricWF, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39768
llvm-svn: 317981
Summary:
How embarrassing.
This is tested in the test-suite -- fix to come there in a separate
patch.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: sanjoy, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39817
llvm-svn: 317961