This moves the dependency of several files on include/llvm/ADT/STLExtras.h to
the much shorter llvm/ADT/STLArrayExtras.h
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118342
This reverts commit ef82063207.
- It conflicts with the existing llvm::size in STLExtras, which will now
never be called.
- Calling it without llvm:: breaks C++17 compat
The tryLockFor method from raw_fd_sotreamis the sole user of that
header, and it's not referenced in the mono repo. I still chose to keep
it (may be useful for downstream user) but added a transient type that's
forward declared to hold the duration parameter.
Notable changes:
- "llvm/Support/Duration.h" must be included in order to use tryLockFor.
- "llvm/Support/raw_ostream.h" no longer includes <chrono>
This sole change has an interesting impact on the number of processed
line, as measured by:
clang++ -E -Iinclude -I../llvm/include ../llvm/lib/Support/*.cpp -std=c++14 -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions | wc -l
before: 7917500
after: 7835142
Discourse thread on the topic: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup/5831
The cleanup was manual, but assisted by "include-what-you-use". It consists in
1. Removing unused forward declaration. No impact expected.
2. Removing unused headers in .cpp files. No impact expected.
3. Removing unused headers in .h files. This removes implicit dependencies and
is generally considered a good thing, but this may break downstream builds.
I've updated llvm, clang, lld, lldb and mlir deps, and included a list of the
modification in the second part of the commit.
4. Replacing header inclusion by forward declaration. This has the same impact
as 3.
Notable changes:
- llvm/Support/TargetParser.h no longer includes llvm/Support/AArch64TargetParser.h nor llvm/Support/ARMTargetParser.h
- llvm/Support/TypeSize.h no longer includes llvm/Support/WithColor.h
- llvm/Support/YAMLTraits.h no longer includes llvm/Support/Regex.h
- llvm/ADT/SmallVector.h no longer includes llvm/Support/MemAlloc.h nor llvm/Support/ErrorHandling.h
You may need to add some of these headers in your compilation units, if needs be.
As an hint to the impact of the cleanup, running
clang++ -E -Iinclude -I../llvm/include ../llvm/lib/Support/*.cpp -std=c++14 -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions | wc -l
before: 8000919 lines
after: 7917500 lines
Reduced dependencies also helps incremental rebuilds and is more ccache
friendly, something not shown by the above metric :-)
Discourse thread on the topic: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup/5831
Since 65b13610a5, raw_string_ostream
has been unbuffered by default, making .flush() a no-op. This diff
formalizes this by no longer .flush()ing in the .str() method or
the destructor. .str() has been marked as "consider removing", since
its primary use case used to be making .flush()+access a one-liner,
and it also has issues such as preventing NRVO/implicit move when used
in return statements.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115421
In https://reviews.llvm.org/D86905, we introduce an optimization, when lld emits LLVM bitcode,
we allow bitcode writer flush data to disk early when buffered data size is above some threshold.
But when `--plugin-opt=emit-llvm` and `-o /dev/null` are used,
lld will trigger assertion `BytesRead >= 0 && static_cast<size_t>(BytesRead) == BytesFromDisk`.
When we write output to /dev/null, BytesRead is zero, but at this program point BytesFromDisk is always non-zero.
Reviewed By: stephan.yichao.zhao, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112297
As described on D111049, we're trying to remove the <string> dependency from error handling and replace uses of report_fatal_error(const std::string&) with the Twine() variant which can be forward declared.
On Windows, we want to open a file in Binary mode if OF_CRLF bit is not set. On z/OS, we want to open a file in Binary mode if the OF_Text bit is not set.
This patch creates two new functions called ChangeStdinMode and ChangeStdoutMode which will take OpenFlags as an arg to determine which mode to set stdin and stdout to. This will enable patches like https://reviews.llvm.org/D100056 to not affect Windows when setting the OF_Text flag for raw_fd_streams.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100130
writeToOutput function is useful when it is necessary to create different kinds
of streams(based on stream name) and when we need to use a temporary file
while writing(which would be renamed into the resulting file in a success case).
This patch moves the writeToStream helper into the Support library.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98426
Add a new `raw_pwrite_ostream` variant, `buffer_unique_ostream`, which
is like `buffer_ostream` but with unique ownership of the stream it's
wrapping. Use this in CompilerInstance to simplify the ownership of
non-seeking output streams, avoiding logic sprawled around to deal with
them specially.
This also simplifies future work to encapsulate output files in a
different class.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93260
Currently `strace llvm-dwarfdump x.debug >/tmp/file`:
ioctl(1, TCGETS, 0x7ffd64d7f340) = -1 ENOTTY (Inappropriate ioctl for device)
write(1, " DW_AT_decl_line\t(89)\n"..., 4096) = 4096
ioctl(1, TCGETS, 0x7ffd64d7f400) = -1 ENOTTY (Inappropriate ioctl for device)
ioctl(1, TCGETS, 0x7ffd64d7f410) = -1 ENOTTY (Inappropriate ioctl for device)
ioctl(1, TCGETS, 0x7ffd64d7f400) = -1 ENOTTY (Inappropriate ioctl for device)
After this patch:
write(1, "0000000000001102 \"strlen\")\n "..., 4096) = 4096
write(1, "site\n DW_AT_low"..., 4096) = 4096
write(1, "d53)\n\n0x000e4d4d: DW_TAG_G"..., 4096) = 4096
The same speedup can be achieved by `--color=0` but that is not much convenient.
This implementation has been suggested by Joerg Sonnenberger.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86406
This change define RAII class `FileLocker` and methods `lock` and
`tryLockFor` of the class `raw_fd_stream` to facilitate using file locks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79066
This reverts part of D81156.
Accessing errs() concurrently was safe before and racy after D81156.
(`errs() << 'a'` is always racy)
Accessing outs() and errs() concurrently was safe before and racy after D81156.
Don't tie errs() to outs() by default to fix the fallout.
llvm-dwarfdump is single-threaded and opting in the tie behavior is safe.
errs() is now tied to outs() so that if something prints to errs(),
outs() will be flushed before the printing occurs. This avoids
interleaving output between the two and is consistent with standard cout
and cerr behaviour.
Reviewed by: labath, JDevlieghere, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81156
Move the color handling code from raw_fd_ostream to raw_ostream. This
makes it possible to use colors with any ostream when enabled. The
existing behavior where only raw_fd_ostream supports colors by default
remains unchanged.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81110
Summary:
If the output filename was specified as "-", the ToolOutputFile class
would create a brand new raw_ostream object referring to the stdout.
This patch changes it to reuse the llvm::outs() singleton.
At the moment, this change should be "NFC", but it does enable other
enhancements, like the automatic stdout/stderr synchronization as
discussed on D80803.
I've checked the history, and I did not find any indication that this
class *has* to use a brand new stream object instead of outs() --
indeed, it is special-casing "-" in a number of places already, so this
change fits the pattern pretty well. I suspect the main reason for the
current state of affairs is that the class was originally introduced
(r111595, in 2010) as a raw_fd_ostream subclass, which made any other
solution impossible.
Another potential benefit of this patch is that it makes it possible to
move the raw_ostream class out of the business of special-casing "-" for
stdout handling. That state of affairs does not seem appropriate because
"-" is a valid filename (albeit hard to access with a lot of command
line tools) on most systems. Handling "-" in ToolOutputFile seems more
appropriate.
To make this possible, this patch changes the return type of
llvm::outs() and errs() to raw_fd_ostream&. Previously the functions
were constructing objects of that type, but returning a generic
raw_ostream reference. This makes it possible for new ToolOutputFile and
other code to use raw_fd_ostream methods like error() on the outs()
object. This does not seem like a bad thing (since stdout is a file
descriptor which can be redirected to anywhere, it makes sense to ask it
whether the writing was successful or if it supports seeking), and
indeed a lot of code was already depending on this fact via the
ToolOutputFile "back door".
Reviewers: dblaikie, JDevlieghere, MaskRay, jhenderson
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81078
Currently, when building with the Unix support library and `isatty` does
not exist for the target platform (i.e. `HAVE_ISATTY` is false),
compilation of the file `raw_ostream.cpp` will fail due to direct use of
`isatty` in the function `raw_fd_ostream::preferred_buffer_size()`.
Use is_displayed() to fix the problem.
Reviewed By: probinson, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75278
llvm-ar is using CompareStringOrdinal which is available
only starting with Windows Vista (WINVER 0x600).
Fix this by hoising WindowsSupport.h, which sets _WIN32_WINNT
to 0x0601, up to llvm/include/llvm/Support and use it in llvm-ar.
Patch by Cristian Adam!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74599
This reverts commit r368849, because it breaks some bots (e.g.
llvm-clang-x86_64-win-fast).
It turns out this is not as NFC as we had hoped, because operator== will
consider two std::error_codes to be distinct even though they both hold
"success" values if they have different categories.
llvm-svn: 368854
Summary:
The main motivation for this is unit tests, which contain a large macro
for pretty-printing std::error_code, and this macro is duplicated in
every file that needs to do this. However, the functionality may be
useful elsewhere too.
In this patch I have reimplemented the existing ASSERT_NO_ERROR macros
to reuse the new functionality, but I have kept the macro (as a
one-liner) as it is slightly more readable than ASSERT_EQ(...,
std::error_code()).
Reviewers: sammccall, ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: zturner, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65643
llvm-svn: 368849
1. raw_ostream supports ANSI colors so that you can write messages to
the termina with colors. Previously, in order to change and reset
color, you had to call `changeColor` and `resetColor` functions,
respectively.
So, if you print out "error: " in red, for example, you had to do
something like this:
OS.changeColor(raw_ostream::RED);
OS << "error: ";
OS.resetColor();
With this patch, you can write the same code as follows:
OS << raw_ostream::RED << "error: " << raw_ostream::RESET;
2. Add a boolean flag to raw_ostream so that you can disable colored
output. If you disable colors, changeColor, operator<<(Color),
resetColor and other color-related functions have no effect.
Most LLVM tools automatically prints out messages using colors, and
you can disable it by passing a flag such as `--disable-colors`.
This new flag makes it easy to write code that works that way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65564
llvm-svn: 367649
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
Summary:
Calling WriteConsoleW is the most reliable way to print Unicode
characters to a Windows console.
If binary data gets printed to the console, attempting to re-encode it
shouldn't be a problem, since garbage in can produce garbage out.
This breaks printing strings in the local codepage, which WriteConsoleA
knows how to handle. For example, this can happen when user source code
is encoded with the local codepage, and an LLVM tool quotes it while
emitting a caret diagnostic. This is unfortunate, but well-behaved tools
should validate that their input is UTF-8 and escape non-UTF-8
characters before sending them to raw_fd_ostream. Clang already does
this, but not all LLVM tools do this.
One drawback to the current implementation is printing a string a byte
at a time doesn't work. Consider this LLVM code:
for (char C : MyStr) outs() << C;
Because outs() is now unbuffered, we wil try to convert each byte to
UTF-16, which will fail. However, this already didn't work, so I think
we may as well update callers that do that as we find them to print
complete portions of strings. You can see a real example of this in my
patch to SourceMgr.cpp
Fixes PR38669 and PR36267.
Reviewers: zturner, efriedma
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51558
llvm-svn: 341433
On windows when raw_fd_ostream::write_impl calls write, a 32 bit input is required for character count. As a variable with size_t is used for this argument, on x64 integral demotion occurs. In the case of large files an infinite loop follows.
See: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37926
This fix allows the output of files larger than the previous int32 limit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48948
llvm-svn: 339027
The standard library functions ::isprint/std::isprint have platform-
and locale-dependent behavior which makes LLVM's output less
predictable. In particular, regression tests my fail depending on the
implementation of these functions.
Implement llvm::isPrint in StringExtras.h with a standard behavior and
replace all uses of ::isprint/std::isprint by a call it llvm::isPrint.
The function is inlined and does not look up language settings so it
should perform better than the standard library's version.
Such a replacement has already been done for isdigit, isalpha, isxdigit
in r314883. gtest does the same in gtest-printers.cc using the following
justification:
// Returns true if c is a printable ASCII character. We test the
// value of c directly instead of calling isprint(), which is buggy on
// Windows Mobile.
inline bool IsPrintableAscii(wchar_t c) {
return 0x20 <= c && c <= 0x7E;
}
Similar issues have also been encountered by Julia:
https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/issues/7416
I noticed the problem myself when on Windows isprint('\t') started to
evaluate to true (see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51435249) and
thus caused several unit tests to fail. The result of isprint doesn't
seem to be well-defined even for ASCII characters. Therefore I suggest
to replace isprint by a platform-independent version.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49680
llvm-svn: 338034
On Windows when raw_fd_ostream::write_impl calls write, a 32 bit input
is required for character count. As a variable with size_t is used for
this argument on x64 integral demotion occurs. In the case of large
files an infinite loop follows.
See PR37926.
This fix allows the output of files larger than previous int32 limit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48948
Patch by Owen Reynolds
Reviewed by: zturner
llvm-svn: 338027
This breaks the OpenFlags enumeration into two separate
enumerations: OpenFlags and CreationDisposition. The first
controls the behavior of the API depending on whether or not
the target file already exists, and is not a flags-based
enum. The second controls more flags-like values.
This yields a more easy to understand API, while also allowing
flags to be passed to the openForRead api, where most of the
values didn't make sense before. This also makes the apis more
testable as it becomes easy to enumerate all the configurations
which make sense, so I've added many new tests to exercise all
the different values.
llvm-svn: 334221
LLVM_ON_WIN32 is set exactly with MSVC and MinGW (but not Cygwin) in
HandleLLVMOptions.cmake, which is where _WIN32 defined too. Just use the
default macro instead of a reinvented one.
See thread "Replacing LLVM_ON_WIN32 with just _WIN32" on llvm-dev and cfe-dev.
No intended behavior change.
This moves over all uses of the macro, but doesn't remove the definition
of it in (llvm-)config.h yet.
llvm-svn: 331127
Previously, we call write(2) for each 32767 byte chunk. That is not
efficient because Linux can handle much larger write requests.
This patch changes the chunk size on Linux to 1 GiB.
This patch also changes the default chunks size to SSIZE_MAX. I think
that doesn't in practice change this function's behavior on any operating
system because SSIZE_MAX on 64-bit machine is unrealistically large,
and writing 2 GiB (SSIZE_MAX on 32-bit) on a 32-bit machine by a single
call of write(2) is also unrealistic, as the userspace is usually
limited to 2 GiB. That said, it is in general a good thing to do because
a write larger than SSIZE_MAX is implementation-defined in POSIX.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39444
llvm-svn: 317015
Summary:
Previously, we would emit error messages like "IO failure on output
stream". This change causes use to include information about what
actually went wrong, e.g. "No space left on device".
Reviewers: sunfish, rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39203
llvm-svn: 316404
The full story is in the comments:
// Do not attempt to close stdout or stderr. We used to try to maintain the
// property that tools that support writing file to stdout should not also
// write informational output to stdout, but in practice we were never able to
// maintain this invariant. Many features have been added to LLVM and clang
// (-fdump-record-layouts, optimization remarks, etc) that print to stdout, so
// users must simply be aware that mixed output and remarks is a possibility.
NFC, I am just updating comments to reflect reality.
llvm-svn: 310016