This reverts commit 958091c209.
This commit incorrectly sets the _lldb.so symlink (at least it does when
building in Stefans' two build directory mode, where you build llvm with
cmake/ninja and lldb with cmake/Xcode, using a cmake generated project.
The _lldb.so link is SUPPOSED to point to:
bin/LLDB.framework/Versions/A/LLDB
but instead it points to
bin/LLDB
which is where LLDB was staged to before constructing the framework. This
causes all sorts of problems when we then build the lldb driver into bin -
remember that MacOS is a case-preserving but case insensitive filesystem -
so when we later go to dlopen _lldb.so, we dlopen the main executable instead.
llvm-svn: 374226
Summary:
This patch adds SWIG typemaps that can convert arbitrary python
file objects into lldb_private::File.
A SBFile may be initialized from a python file using the
constructor. There are also alternate, tagged constructors
that allow python files to be borrowed, and for the caller
to control whether or not the python I/O methods will be
called even when a file descriptor is available.I
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, jasonmolenda, labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: zturner, amccarth, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68188
llvm-svn: 374225
This patch removes the remaining part of the OpenMP offload linker scripts which was used for inserting device binaries into the output linked binary. Device binaries are now inserted into the host binary with a help of the wrapper bit-code file which contains device binaries as data. Wrapper bit-code file is dynamically created by the clang driver with a help of new tool clang-offload-wrapper which takes device binaries as input and produces bit-code file with required contents. Wrapper bit-code is then compiled to an object and resulting object is appended to the host linking by the clang driver.
This is the second part of the patch for eliminating OpenMP linker script (please see https://reviews.llvm.org/D64943).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68166
llvm-svn: 374219
Adds links to Getting Started/Tutorials, User Guides, and Reference documentation pages to sidebar. Also adds a new section for LLVM IR on the Reference documentation page.
llvm-svn: 374214
Add own version of the mathematical constants from the upcoming C++20 `std::numbers`.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68257
llvm-svn: 374207
Re-apply 9fdfb045ae8b/r365676 with fixes for PPC and Hexagon. This involved
moving defaults from TargetTransformInfoImplBase to MCSubtargetInfo.
Rework the TTI cache and software prefetching APIs to prepare for the
introduction of a general system model. Changes include:
- Marking existing interfaces const and/or override as appropriate
- Adding comments
- Adding BasicTTIImpl interfaces that delegate to a subtarget
implementation
- Moving the default TargetTransformInfoImplBase implementation to a default
MCSubtarget implementation
Only a handful of targets use these interfaces currently: AArch64, Hexagon, PPC
and SystemZ. AArch64 already has a custom subtarget implementation, so its
custom TTI implementation is migrated to use the new facilities in BasicTTIImpl
to invoke its custom subtarget implementation. The custom TTI implementations
continue to exist for the other targets with this change. They are not moved
over to subtarget-based implementations.
The end goal is to have the default subtarget implementation defer to the system
model defined by the target. With this change, the default MCSubtargetInfo
implementation essentially returns the defaults TargetTransformInfoImplBase used
to return. Existing users of TTI defaults will hit the defaults now in
MCSubtargetInfo. Targets that define their own custom TTI implementations won't
use the BasicTTIImpl implementations that route to the subtarget.
Once system models are in place for the targets that use these interfaces, their
custom TTI implementations can be removed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63614
llvm-svn: 374205
When a category/extension doesn't repeat a type bound, corresponding
type parameter is substituted with `id` when used as a type argument. As
a result, in the added test case it was causing errors like
> type argument 'T' (aka 'id') does not satisfy the bound ('id<NSCopying>') of type parameter 'T'
We are already checking that type parameters should be consistent
everywhere (see `checkTypeParamListConsistency`) and update
`ObjCTypeParamDecl` to have correct underlying type. And when we use the
type parameter as a method return type or a method parameter type, it is
substituted to the bounded type. But when we use the type parameter as a
type argument, we check `ObjCTypeParamType` that ignores the updated
underlying type and remains `id`.
Fix by desugaring `ObjCTypeParamType` to the underlying type, the same
way we are doing with `TypedefType`.
rdar://problem/54329242
Reviewers: erik.pilkington, ahatanak
Reviewed By: erik.pilkington
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, ributzka, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66696
llvm-svn: 374202
Summary:
- [Itanium C++ ABI][1], for certain contexts like default parameter and
etc., mangling numbering will be local to the particular argument in
which it appears.
- However, for these cases, the mangle numbering context is allocated per
expression evaluation stack entry. That causes, for example, two
lambdas defined/used understand the same default parameter are
numbered as the same value and, in turn, one of them is not generated
at all.
- In this patch, an extra mangle numbering context map is maintained in
the AST context to map taht extra declaration context to its numbering
context. So that, 2 different lambdas defined/used in the same default
parameter are numbered differently.
[1]: https://itanium-cxx-abi.github.io/cxx-abi/abi.html
Reviewers: rsmith, eli.friedman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68715
llvm-svn: 374200
Currently clang does not save some of the intermediate file generated during device compilation for HIP when -save-temps is specified.
This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68665
llvm-svn: 374198
Summary:
We now have valid files that will return NULL from GetStream().
libedit and the LLDB gui are the only places left that need FILE*
streams. Both are doing curses-like user interaction that only
make sense with a real terminal anyway, so there is no need to convert
them off of their use of FILE*. But we should check for null streams
before enabling these features.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, jasonmolenda, labath
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere, labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68677
llvm-svn: 374197
(specifying an underlying type for the enum might also be suitable - but
this seems better/as good, since there's a clear expectation this can
contain values other than the actual enumerators of this enum)
llvm-svn: 374196
The lifetime of a ValueObject and all its derivative ValueObjects (children, clones, etc.) is managed by a ClusterManager. These objects are only destroyed when every shared pointer to any of the managed objects in the cluster is destroyed. This means that no object in the cluster can store a shared pointer to another object in the cluster without creating a memory leak of the entire cluster. However, some of the synthetic children front-end implementations do exactly this; this patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68641
llvm-svn: 374195
Move progress display to separate file. Simplify some code paths.
Decouple from other components via progress callback. Remove unused
`_Display` class.
Reviewed By: serge-sans-paille
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68525
llvm-svn: 374194
Really, we were already 99% of the way there; just needed a couple minor
fixes that affected 64-bit-only builtins. Based on D61717.
Note that the change to builtin_str changes the type of a few
__builtin_neon_* intrinsics that had the "wrong" type.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43341
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68683
llvm-svn: 374191
Summary:
This clang builtin and corresponding LLVM intrinsic are necessary to
expose the exact semantics of the underlying WebAssembly instruction
to users. LLVM produces a poison value if the dynamic swizzle indices
are greater than the vector size, but the WebAssembly instruction sets
the corresponding output lane to zero. Users who depend on this
behavior can safely use this builtin.
Depends on D68527.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, sunfish, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68531
llvm-svn: 374189
Summary:
Adds the new v8x16.swizzle SIMD instruction as specified at
https://github.com/WebAssembly/simd/blob/master/proposals/simd/SIMD.md#swizzling-using-variable-indices.
In addition to adding swizzles as a candidate lowering in
LowerBUILD_VECTOR, also rewrites and simplifies the lowering to
minimize the number of replace_lanes necessary rather than trying to
minimize code size. This leads to more uses of v128.const instead of
splats, which is expected to increase performance.
The new code will be easier to tune once V8 implements all the vector
construction operations, and it will also be easier to add new
candidate instructions in the future if necessary.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, sunfish, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68527
llvm-svn: 374188
In particular, the function definition is not marked strictfp despite
containing a function marked strictfp. Also, if any function call is marked
strictfp then all function calls in that function must be marked.
This change to move the one strictfp call to a new properly marked function
meets all the new rules.
Tested with a stricter version of D68233.
Reviewed by: spatel
Approved by: spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68713
llvm-svn: 374186
LLDB has three major testing strategies: unit tests, tests that exercise
the SB API though dotest.py and what we currently call lit tests. The
later is rather confusing as we're now using lit as the driver for all
three types of tests. As most of this grew organically, the directory
structure in the LLDB repository doesn't really make this clear.
The 'lit' tests are part of the root and among these tests there's a
Unit and Suite folder for the unit and dotest-tests. This layout makes
it impossible to run just the lit tests.
This patch changes the directory layout to match the 3 testing
strategies, each with their own directory and their own configuration
file. This means there are now 3 directories under lit with 3
corresponding targets:
- API (check-lldb-api): Test exercising the SB API.
- Shell (check-lldb-shell): Test exercising command line utilities.
- Unit (check-lldb-unit): Unit tests.
Finally, there's still the `check-lldb` target that runs all three test
suites.
Finally, this also renames the lit folder to `test` to match the LLVM
repository layout.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68606
llvm-svn: 374184
We failed to account for the target register width (max vector factor)
when vectorizing starting from GEPs. This causes vectorization to
proceed to obviously illegal widths as in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43578
For x86, this also means that SLP can produce rogue AVX or AVX512
code even when the user specifies a narrower vector width.
The AArch64 test in ext-trunc.ll appears to be better using the
narrower width. I'm not exactly sure what getelementptr.ll is trying
to do, but it's testing with "-slp-threshold=-18", so I'm not worried
about those diffs. The x86 test is an over-reduction from SPEC h264;
this patch appears to restore the perf loss caused by SLP when using
-march=haswell.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68667
llvm-svn: 374183
stack
This patch makes sure that if we tag some memory, we untag that memory before
the function returns/throws via any exit, reachable from the tag operation. For
that we place the untag operation either at:
a) the lifetime end call for the alloca, if that call post-dominates the
lifetime start call (where the tag operation is placed), or it (the
lifetime end call) dominates all reachable exits, otherwise
b) at the reachable exits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68469
llvm-svn: 374182
Testing whether a name is mangled or not is extremely cheap and can be
done by looking at the first two characters. Mangled knows how to do
it. On the flip side, many call sites that currently pass in an
is_mangled determination do not know how to correctly do it (for
example, they leave out Swift mangling prefixes).
This patch removes this entry point and just forced Mangled to
determine the mangledness of a string itself.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68674
llvm-svn: 374180
Summary:
According the the XCOFF document,
If
Then
XTY_SD
x_scnlen contains the csect length.
XTY_LD
x_scnlen contains the symbol table index of the containing csect.
XTY_CM
x_scnlen contains the csect length.
XTY_ER
x_scnlen contains 0.
Change the SectionLen member name to SectionOrLength is more reasonable.
Authored By: DiggerLin
Reviewed By: hubert.reinterpretcast
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68650
llvm-svn: 374179
The original patch got reverted because it hit a long-standing legacy
issue on Windows that prevents files from being named `com`. Thanks
Kristina & Jeremy for pointing this out.
llvm-svn: 374178
Summary:
The rule for the moveAllAfterMergeBlocks API si for all instructions
from `From` to have been moved to `To`, while keeping the CFG edges (and
block terminators) unchanged.
Update all the callsites for moveAllAfterMergeBlocks to follow this.
Pending follow-up: since the same behavior is needed everytime, merge
all callsites into one. The common denominator may be the call to
`MergeBlockIntoPredecessor`.
Resolves PR43569.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: Prazek, sanjoy.google, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68659
llvm-svn: 374177
Summary:
Following up on D68471, this CL introduces some `getStats` APIs to
gather statistics in char buffers (`ScopedString` really) instead of
printing them out right away. Ultimately `printStats` will just
output the buffer, but that allows us to potentially do some work
on the intermediate buffer, and can be used for a `mallocz` type
of functionality. This allows us to pretty much get rid of all the
`Printf` calls around, but I am keeping the function in for
debugging purposes.
This changes the existing tests to use the new APIs when required.
I will add new tests as suggested in D68471 in another CL.
Reviewers: morehouse, hctim, vitalybuka, eugenis, cferris
Reviewed By: morehouse
Subscribers: delcypher, #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68653
llvm-svn: 374173
Summary:
r373165 fixed an issue where a templated noexcept member function with a
reference qualifier would be indented more than expected:
```
// Formatting produced with LLVM style with AlwaysBreakTemplateDeclarations: Yes
// before r373165:
struct f {
template <class T>
void bar() && noexcept {}
};
// after:
struct f {
template <class T>
void bar() && noexcept {}
};
```
The way this is done is that in the AnnotatingParser in
`lib/FormatTokenAnnotator.cpp` the determination of the usage of a `&` or `&&`
(the line in determineTokenType
```
Current.Type = determineStarAmpUsage(...
```
is not performed in some cases anymore, combining with a few additional related
checks afterwards. The net effect of these checks results in the `&` or `&&`
token to start being classified as `TT_Unknown` in cases where before `r373165`
it would be classified as `TT_UnaryOperator` or `TT_PointerOrReference` by
`determineStarAmpUsage`.
This inadvertently caused 2 classes of regressions I'm aware of:
- The address-of `&` after a function assignment would be classified as
`TT_Unknown`, causing spaces to surround it, disregarding style options:
```
// before r373165:
void (*fun_ptr)(void) = &fun;
// after:
void (*fun_ptr)(void) = & fun;
```
- In cases where there is a function declaration list -- looking macro between
a template line and the start of the function declaration, an `&` as part of
the return type would be classified as `TT_Unknown`, causing spaces to
surround it:
```
// before r373165:
template <class T>
DEPRECATED("lala")
Type& foo();
// after:
template <class T>
DEPRECATED("lala")
Type & foo();
```
In these cases the problems are rooted in the skipping of the classification of
a `&` (and similarly `&&`) by determineStarAmpUsage which effects the formatting
decisions later in the pipeline.
I've looked into the goal of r373165 and noticed that replacing `noexcept` with
`const` in the given example produces no extra indentation with the old code:
```
// before r373165:
struct f {
template <class T>
int foo() & const {}
};
struct f {
template <class T>
int foo() & noexcept {}
};
```
I investigated how clang-format annotated these two examples differently to
determine the places where the processing of both diverges in the pipeline.
There were two places where the processing diverges, causing the extra indent in
the `noexcept` case:
1. The `const` is annotated as a `TT_TrailingAnnotation`, whereas `noexcept`
is annotated as `TT_Unknown`. I've updated the `determineTokenType` function
to account for this by adding a missing `tok:kw_noexcept` to the clause that
marks a token as `TT_TrailingAnnotation`.
2. The `&` in the second example is wrongly identified as `TT_BinaryOperator`
in `determineStarAmpUsage`. This is the reason for the extra indentation --
clang-format gets confused and thinks this is an expression.
I've updated `determineStarAmpUsage` to check for `tok:kw_noexcept`.
With these two updates in place, the additional parsing introduced by r373165
becomes unnecessary and all added tests pass (with updates, as now clang-format
respects the style configuration for spaces around the `&` in the test
examples).
I've removed these additions and added regression tests for the cases above.
Reviewers: AndWass, MyDeveloperDay
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #clang-format
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68695
llvm-svn: 374172
Summary: Experiments show that this is the alignment we get (for ELF+Linux), but let's ensure that we have it.
Reviewers: gchatelet
Subscribers: tschuett, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68703
llvm-svn: 374170