If a function or variable has a type with no linkage (and is not extern "C"),
any use of it requires a definition within the same translation unit; the idea
is that it is not possible to define the entity elsewhere, so any such use is
necessarily an error.
There is an exception, though: some types formally have no linkage but
nonetheless can be referenced from other translation units (for example, this
happens to anonymous structures defined within inline functions). For entities
with those types, we suppress the diagnostic except under -pedantic.
llvm-svn: 313729
This reverts commit r313722.
It looks like compiler-rt/lib/tsan/rtl/tsan_libdispatch_mac.cc cannot be
compiled because some of the functions declared in the file do not match
the ones in the SDK headers (which are annotated with 'noescape').
llvm-svn: 313725
The attribute informs the compiler that the annotated pointer parameter
of a function cannot escape and enables IRGen to attach attribute
'nocapture' to parameters that are annotated with the attribute. That is
the only optimization that currently takes advantage of 'noescape', but
there are other optimizations that will be added later that improves
IRGen for ObjC blocks.
rdar://problem/19886775
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32210
llvm-svn: 313722
The attribute informs the compiler that the annotated pointer parameter
of a function cannot escape and enables IRGen to attach attribute
'nocapture' to parameters that are annotated with the attribute. That is
the only optimization that currently takes advantage of 'noescape', but
there are other optimizations that will be added later that improves
IRGen for ObjC blocks.
rdar://problem/19886775
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32520
llvm-svn: 313720
Summary:
To improve CodeView quality for static member functions, we need to make the
static explicit. In addition to a small change in LLVM's CodeViewDebug to
return the appropriate MethodKind, this requires a small change in Clang to
note the staticness in the debug info metadata.
Subscribers: aprantl, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37715
llvm-svn: 313192
This change will make it possible to use -fsanitize=function on Darwin and
possibly on other platforms. It fixes an issue with the way RTTI is stored into
function prologue data.
On Darwin, addresses stored in prologue data can't require run-time fixups and
must be PC-relative. Run-time fixups are undesirable because they necessitate
writable text segments, which can lead to security issues. And absolute
addresses are undesirable because they break PIE mode.
The fix is to create a private global which points to the RTTI, and then to
encode a PC-relative reference to the global into prologue data.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37597
llvm-svn: 313096
Summary:
Microsoft Visual Studio expects debug locations to correspond to
statements. We used to emit locations for expressions nested inside statements.
This would confuse the debugger, causing it to stop multiple times on the
same line and breaking the "step into specific" feature. This change inhibits
the emission of debug locations for nested expressions when emitting CodeView
debug information, unless column information is enabled.
Fixes PR34312.
Reviewers: rnk, zturner
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: majnemer, echristo, aprantl, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37529
llvm-svn: 312965
This is to fix PR34347. EmitAtomicExpr now only uses alignment information from
Type, instead of Decl, so when the declaration of an atomic variable is marked
to have the alignment equal as its size, EmitAtomicExpr doesn't know about it and
will generate libcall instead of atomic op. The patch uses EmitPointerWithAlignment
to get the precise alignment information.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37310
llvm-svn: 312830
This is to fix PR34347. EmitAtomicExpr now only uses alignment information from
Type, instead of Decl, so when the declaration of an atomic variable is marked
to have the alignment equal as its size, EmitAtomicExpr doesn't know about it and
will generate libcall instead of atomic op. The patch uses EmitPointerWithAlignment
to get the precise alignment information.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37310
llvm-svn: 312801
This is a recommit of r312781; in some build configurations
variable names are omitted, so changed the new regression
test accordingly.
llvm-svn: 312794
This adds _Float16 as a source language type, which is a 16-bit floating point
type defined in C11 extension ISO/IEC TS 18661-3.
In follow up patches documentation and more tests will be added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33719
llvm-svn: 312781
By exposing the constant initializer, the optimizer can fold many
of these constructs.
This is a recommit of r311857 that was reverted in r311898 because
an assert was hit when building Chromium.
We have to take into account that the GlobalVariable may be first
created with a different type than the initializer. This can
happen for example when the variable is a struct with tail padding
while the initializer does not have padding. In such case, the
variable needs to be destroyed an replaced with a new one with the
type of the initializer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34992
llvm-svn: 312512
This fixes cases where dynamic classes produced RTTI data with
external linkage, producing linker errors about duplicate symbols.
This touches code close to what was changed in SVN r244266, but
this change doesn't break the tests added in that revision.
The previous version had missed to update CodeGenCXX/virt-dtor-key.cpp,
which had a behaviour change only when running the testsuite on windows.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37327
llvm-svn: 312306
This fixes cases where dynamic classes produced RTTI data with
external linkage, producing linker errors about duplicate symbols.
This touches code close to what was changed in SVN r244266, but
this change doesn't break the tests added in that revision.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37206
llvm-svn: 312224
Overriding a method from a virtual base with a covariant return type
consumes a slot from the vftable in the virtual base. This can make it
impossible to implement certain diamond inheritance hierarchies, but we
have to follow along for compatibility in the simple cases.
This patch only affects our vtable dumper and member pointer function
mangling, since all other callers of getMethodVFTableLocation seem to
recompute VBTableIndex instead of using the one in the method location.
Patch by David Majnemer
llvm-svn: 312017
It caused PR759744.
> Emit static constexpr member as available_externally definition
>
> By exposing the constant initializer, the optimizer can fold many
> of these constructs.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34992
llvm-svn: 311898
By exposing the constant initializer, the optimizer can fold many
of these constructs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34992
llvm-svn: 311857
This patch adds a flag -fclang-abi-compat that can be used to request that
Clang attempts to be ABI-compatible with some older version of itself.
This is provided on a best-effort basis; right now, this can be used to undo
the ABI change in r310401, reverting Clang to its prior C++ ABI for pass/return
by value of class types affected by that change, and to undo the ABI change in
r262688, reverting Clang to using integer registers rather than SSE registers
for passing <1 x long long> vectors. The intent is that we will maintain this
backwards compatibility path as we make ABI-breaking fixes in future.
The reversion to the old behavior for r310401 is also applied to the PS4 target
since that change is not part of its platform ABI (which is essentially to do
whatever Clang 3.2 did).
llvm-svn: 311823
expressions
C++ allows us to reference static variables through member expressions. Prior to
this commit, non-integer static variables that were referenced using a member
expression were always emitted using lvalue loads. The old behaviour introduced
an inconsistency between regular uses of static variables and member expressions
uses. For example, the following program compiled and linked successfully:
struct Foo {
constexpr static const char *name = "foo";
};
int main() {
return Foo::name[0] == 'f';
}
but this program failed to link because "Foo::name" wasn't found:
struct Foo {
constexpr static const char *name = "foo";
};
int main() {
Foo f;
return f.name[0] == 'f';
}
This commit ensures that constant static variables referenced through member
expressions are emitted in the same way as ordinary static variable references.
rdar://33942261
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36876
llvm-svn: 311772
Do not sanitize the 'this' pointer of a member call operator for a lambda with
no capture-default, since that call operator can legitimately be called with a
null this pointer from the static invoker function. Any actual call with a null
this pointer should still be caught in the caller (if it is being sanitized).
This reinstates r311589 (reverted in r311680) with the above fix.
llvm-svn: 311695
Summary:
Most DIExpressions are empty or very simple. When they are complex, they
tend to be unique, so checking them inline is reasonable.
This also avoids the need for CodeGen passes to append to the
llvm.dbg.mir named md node.
See also PR22780, for making DIExpression not be an MDNode.
Reviewers: aprantl, dexonsmith, dblaikie
Subscribers: qcolombet, javed.absar, eraman, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37075
llvm-svn: 311594
constructors when deciding whether classes should be passed indirectly.
This fixes ABI differences between Clang and GCC:
* Previously, Clang ignored the move constructor when making this
determination. It now takes the move constructor into account, per
https://github.com/itanium-cxx-abi/cxx-abi/pull/17 (this change may
seem recent, but the ABI change was agreed on the Itanium C++ ABI
list a long time ago).
* Previously, Clang's behavior when the copy constructor was deleted
was unstable -- depending on whether the lazy declaration of the
copy constructor had been triggered, you might get different behavior.
We now eagerly declare the copy constructor whenever its deletedness
is unclear, and ignore deleted copy/move constructors when looking for
a trivial such constructor.
This also fixes an ABI difference between Clang and MSVC:
* If the copy constructor would be implicitly deleted (but has not been
lazily declared yet), for instance because the class has an rvalue
reference member, we would pass it directly. We now pass such a class
indirectly, matching MSVC.
Based on a patch by Vassil Vassilev, which was based on a patch by Bernd
Schmidt, which was based on a patch by Reid Kleckner!
This is a re-commit of r310401, which was reverted in r310464 due to ARM
failures (which should now be fixed).
llvm-svn: 310983
the class becoming complete and its inline methods being parsed.
This replaces the hack of using the "late parsed template" flag to track member
functions with bodies we've not parsed yet; instead we now use the "will have
body" flag, which carries the desired implication that the function declaration
*is* a definition, and that we've just not parsed its body yet.
llvm-svn: 310776
It was timing out on this test, but for reasons unrelated to the
specific bug it was testing for. Randomly breaking in gdb with `clang
-target i686-windows -fmsc-version=1700` reveals *many* frames from
MicrosoftCXXNameMangler. So, it would seem that some caching is needed
there, as well...
Fingers crossed that specifying a triple is sufficient to work around
this.
llvm-svn: 310444
This is a follow-up to r310436 with actual functional changes. Please
see that commit message for a description of why a cache is appearing
here.
Suggestions for less-bad ways of testing this are appreciated. :)
This fixes PR29160.
llvm-svn: 310437
Converting a _Complex type to a real one simply discards the imaginary part.
This can easily lead to loss of information so for safety (and GCC
compatibility) this patch disallows that when the conversion would be implicit.
The one exception is bool, which actually compares both real and imaginary
parts and so is safe.
llvm-svn: 310427
Previously we limited ourselves to only emitting nested classes, but we
need other kinds of types as well.
This fixes the Visual Studio STL visualizers, so that users can
visualize std::string and other objects.
llvm-svn: 310410
constructors when deciding whether classes should be passed indirectly.
This fixes ABI differences between Clang and GCC:
* Previously, Clang ignored the move constructor when making this
determination. It now takes the move constructor into account, per
https://github.com/itanium-cxx-abi/cxx-abi/pull/17 (this change may
seem recent, but the ABI change was agreed on the Itanium C++ ABI
list a long time ago).
* Previously, Clang's behavior when the copy constructor was deleted
was unstable -- depending on whether the lazy declaration of the
copy constructor had been triggered, you might get different behavior.
We now eagerly declare the copy constructor whenever its deletedness
is unclear, and ignore deleted copy/move constructors when looking for
a trivial such constructor.
This also fixes an ABI difference between Clang and MSVC:
* If the copy constructor would be implicitly deleted (but has not been
lazily declared yet), for instance because the class has an rvalue
reference member, we would pass it directly. We now pass such a class
indirectly, matching MSVC.
llvm-svn: 310401
In r309007, I made -fsanitize=null a hard prerequisite for -fsanitize=vptr. I
did not see the need for the two checks to have separate null checking logic
for the same pointer. I expected the two checks to either always be enabled
together, or to be mutually compatible.
In the mailing list discussion re: r309007 it became clear that that isn't the
case. If a codebase is -fsanitize=vptr clean but not -fsanitize=null clean,
it's useful to have -fsanitize=vptr emit its own null check. That's what this
patch does: with it, -fsanitize=vptr can be used without -fsanitize=null.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36112
llvm-svn: 309846
Summary:
Change the condition of this unnecessary packed warning. The packed is unnecessary when
1. the alignment of the struct/class won't alter.
2. the size is unchanged.
3. the offset of each field is the same.
Remove all field-level warning.
Reviewers: chh, akyrtzi, rtrieu
Reviewed By: chh
Subscribers: rsmith, srhines, cfe-commits, xazax.hun
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34114
llvm-svn: 309750
CodeGenFunction::EmitTypeMetadataCodeForVCall() could output an
llvm.assume(llvm.type.test())when CFI was enabled, optimizing out the
vcall check. This case was only reached when: 1) CFI-vcall was enabled,
2) -fwhole-program-tables was specified, and 3)
-fno-sanitize-trap=cfi-vcall was specified.
Patch by Vlad Tsyrklevich!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36013
llvm-svn: 309622
r303175 made changes to have __cxa_allocate_exception return a 16-byte
aligned pointer, so it's no longer necessary to specify a lower
alignment (8-bytes) for exception objects on Darwin.
rdar://problem/32363695
llvm-svn: 309308
The initializer for a static local variable cannot be hot, because it runs at
most once per program. That's not quite the same thing as having a low branch
probability, but under the assumption that the function is invoked many times,
modeling this as a branch probability seems reasonable.
For TLS variables, the situation is less clear, since the initialization side
of the branch can run multiple times in a program execution, but we still
expect initialization to be rare relative to non-initialization uses. It would
seem worthwhile to add a PGO counter along this path to make this estimation
more accurate in future.
For globals with guarded initialization, we don't yet apply any branch weights.
Due to our use of COMDATs, the guard will be reached exactly once per DSO, but
we have no idea how many DSOs will define the variable.
llvm-svn: 309195
std::byte, when defined as an enum, needs to be given special treatment
with regards to its aliasing properties. An array of std::byte is
allowed to be used as storage for other types.
This fixes PR33916.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35824
llvm-svn: 309058
The instrumentation generated by -fsanitize=vptr does not null check a
user pointer before loading from it. This causes crashes in the face of
UB member calls (this=nullptr), i.e it's causing user programs to crash
only after UBSan is turned on.
The fix is to make run-time null checking a prerequisite for enabling
-fsanitize=vptr, and to then teach UBSan to reuse these run-time null
checks to make -fsanitize=vptr safe.
Testing: check-clang, check-ubsan, a stage2 ubsan-enabled build
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35735https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33881
llvm-svn: 309007
Under Windows Itanium, we need to export virtual and non-virtual thunks
if the functions being thunked are exported. These thunks would
previously inherit their dllexport attribute from the declaration, but
r298330 changed declarations to not have dllexport attributes. We
therefore need to add the dllexport attribute to the definition
ourselves now. This is consistent with MinGW GCC's behavior.
This redoes r306770 but limits the logic to Itanium. MicrosoftCXXABI's
setThunkLinkage ensures that thunks aren't exported under that ABI, so
I'm handling this in ItaniumCXXABI's setThunkLinkage for symmetry.
We need to export these thunks because they can be referenced outside
the library they're defined in. For example, if a child class without a
key function inherits from a parent class with a key function, the
parent's thunks will only be defined in the library with the key
function, but the construction vtable for the parent in the child might
be emitted outside the library (since the child doesn't have a key
function), and it needs to reference the parent's thunks.
We don't need to mark these thunks as imported since any references to
them will occur in data, so the compiler can't generate the IAT load
sequence anyway. Instead, we rely on the linker generating import thunks
for the thunks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34972
llvm-svn: 308899
This change is part of the RegCall calling convention support for LLVM.
Existing RegCall implementation was extended to include correct handling of
Complex Long Double type. Complex long double types should be returned/passed
in memory and not register stack. This patch implements this behavior.
Patch by: eandrews
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35259
llvm-svn: 308769
The uses of alloca may be in different blocks other than the block containing the alloca.
Therefore if the alloca addr space is non-zero and it needs to be casted to default
address space, the cast needs to be inserted in the same BB as the alloca insted of
the current builder insert point since the current insert point may be in a different BB.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35438
llvm-svn: 308313
devirtualized.
The code to detect devirtualized calls is already in IRGen, so move the
code to lib/AST and make it a shared utility between Sema and IRGen.
This commit fixes a linkage error I was seeing when compiling the
following code:
$ cat test1.cpp
struct Base {
virtual void operator()() {}
};
template<class T>
struct Derived final : Base {
void operator()() override {}
};
Derived<int> *d;
int main() {
if (d)
(*d)();
return 0;
}
rdar://problem/33195657
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34301
llvm-svn: 307883
Certain targets (e.g. amdgcn) require global variable to stay in global or constant address
space. In C or C++ global variables are emitted in the default (generic) address space.
This patch introduces virtual functions TargetCodeGenInfo::getGlobalVarAddressSpace
and TargetInfo::getConstantAddressSpace to handle this in a general approach.
It only affects IR generated for amdgcn target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33842
llvm-svn: 307470
Under Windows Itanium, we need to export virtual and non-virtual thunks
if the functions being thunked are exported. These thunks would
previously inherit their dllexport attribute from the declaration, but
r298330 changed declarations to not have dllexport attributes. We
therefore need to add the dllexport attribute to the definition
ourselves now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34850
llvm-svn: 306770
This patch extends the `overloadable` attribute to allow for one
function with a given name to not be marked with the `overloadable`
attribute. The overload without the `overloadable` attribute will not
have its name mangled.
So, the following code is now legal:
void foo(void) __attribute__((overloadable));
void foo(int);
void foo(float) __attribute__((overloadable));
In addition, this patch fixes a bug where we'd accept code with
`__attribute__((overloadable))` inconsistently applied. In other words,
we used to accept:
void foo(void);
void foo(void) __attribute__((overloadable));
But we will do this no longer, since it defeats the original purpose of
requiring `__attribute__((overloadable))` on all redeclarations of a
function.
This breakage seems to not be an issue in practice, since the only code
I could find that had this pattern often looked like:
void foo(void);
void foo(void) __attribute__((overloadable)) __asm__("foo");
void foo(int) __attribute__((overloadable));
...Which can now be simplified by simply removing the asm label and
overloadable attribute from the redeclaration of `void foo(void);`
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32332
llvm-svn: 306467
When generating the decorated name for a static variable inside a
BlockDecl, construct a scope for the block invocation function that
homes the parameter. This allows for arbitrary nesting of the blocks
even if the variables are shadowed. Furthermore, using this for the name
allows for undname to properly undecorated the name for us. It shows up
as the synthetic __block_invocation function that the compiler emitted
in the local scope.
llvm-svn: 306347
This reverts commit r306137. It has problems on code like this:
struct __declspec(dllimport) Foo {
int a;
int get_a() { return a; }
};
template <int (Foo::*Getter)()> struct HasValue {
int operator()(Foo *p) { return (p->*Getter)(); }
};
int main() {
Foo f;
f.a = 3;
int x = HasValue<&Foo::get_a>()(&f);
}
llvm-svn: 306175
We were already applying the same rules to dllimport function pointers.
David Majnemer added that logic back in r211677 to fix PR20130. We
failed to extend that logic to non-virtual member function pointers,
which are basically function pointers in a struct with some extra
offsets.
Fixes PR33570.
llvm-svn: 306137
In C++ all variables are in default address space. Previously change has been
made to cast automatic variables to default address space. However that is
not sufficient since all temporary variables need to be casted to default
address space.
This patch casts all temporary variables to default address space except those
for passing indirect arguments since they are only used for load/store.
This patch only affects target having non-zero alloca address space.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33706
llvm-svn: 305711
Summary:
If the first parameter of the function is the ImplicitParamDecl, codegen
automatically marks it as an implicit argument with `this` or `self`
pointer. Added internal kind of the ImplicitParamDecl to separate
'this', 'self', 'vtt' and other implicit parameters from other kind of
parameters.
Reviewers: rjmccall, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33735
llvm-svn: 305075
This patch provides a means to specify section-names for global variables,
functions and static variables, using #pragma directives.
This feature is only defined to work sensibly for ELF targets.
One can specify section names as:
#pragma clang section bss="myBSS" data="myData" rodata="myRodata" text="myText"
One can "unspecify" a section name with empty string e.g.
#pragma clang section bss="" data="" text="" rodata=""
Reviewers: Roger Ferrer, Jonathan Roelofs, Reid Kleckner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33412
llvm-svn: 304705
__unaligned is not currently mangled in any way in the Itanium ABI. This causes
failures when using -fms-extensions and C++ in targets using Itanium ABI.
As suggested by @rsmith the simplest thing to do here is actually mangle the
qualifier as a vendor extension.
This patch also removes the change done in D31976 and updates its test to the
new reality.
This fixes
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33080https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33178
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33398
llvm-svn: 304523
Summary:
We need to emit barrier if the union field
is CXXRecordDecl because it might have vptrs. The testcode
was wrongly devirtualized. It also proves that having different
groups for different dynamic types is not sufficient.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: amharc, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31830
llvm-svn: 304448
Summary:
We can emit vtable definition having inline function
if they are all emitted.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33437
llvm-svn: 304394
Credit goes to Gor Nishanov for putting together the fix in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D33733!
This patch is essentially me patching it locally and writing some test
cases to convince myself that it was necessary for GNU statement
expressions with branches as well as coroutines. I'll ask Gor to land
his patch with just the coroutines test.
During LValue expression evaluation, references can be bound to
anything, really: call results, aggregate temporaries, local variables,
global variables, or indirect arguments. We really only want to spill
instructions that were emitted as part of expression evaluation, and
static allocas are not that.
llvm-svn: 304335
Amongst other, this will help LTO to correctly handle/honor files
compiled with O0, helping debugging failures.
It also seems in line with how we handle other options, like how
-fnoinline adds the appropriate attribute as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28404
llvm-svn: 304127
Re-commit r303463 now that LLVM is fixed and adjust some lit tests.
llvm::TargetLibraryInfo needs to know the size of wchar_t to work on
functions like `wcslen`. This patch changes clang to always emit the
wchar_size module flag (it would only do so for ARM previously).
This also adds an `assert()` to ensure the LLVM defaults based on the
target triple are in sync with clang.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32982
llvm-svn: 303478
Alloca always returns a pointer in alloca address space, which may
be different from the type defined by the language. For example,
in C++ the auto variables are in the default address space. Therefore
cast alloca to the expected address space when necessary.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32248
llvm-svn: 303370
This fixes a regression introduced in r302915.
Using the lexical decl context is not necessary here for what r302915
wast trying to achieve. Not canonicalizing the NamespaceDecl in
getOrCreateNamespace is suficient.
rdar://problem/29339538
llvm-svn: 303222
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32933
Turns out clang wasn't really handling vla's (*) in C++11's for-range entirely correctly.
For e.g. This would lead to generation of buggy IR:
void foo(int b) {
int vla[b];
b = -1; // This store would affect the '__end = vla + b'
for (int &c : vla)
c = 0;
}
Additionally, code-gen would get confused when VLA's were reference-captured by lambdas, and then used in a for-range, which would result in an attempt to generate IR for '__end = vla + b' within the lambda's body - without any capture of 'b' - hence the assertion.
This patch modifies clang, so that for VLA's it translates the end pointer approximately into:
__end = __begin + sizeof(vla)/sizeof(vla->getElementType())
As opposed to the __end = __begin + b;
I considered passing a magic value into codegen - or having codegen special case the '__end' variable when it referred to a variably-modified type, but I decided against that approach, because it smelled like I would be increasing a complicated form of coupling, that I think would be even harder to maintain than the above approach (which can easily be optimized (-O1) to refer to the run-time bound that was calculated upon array's creation or copied into the lambda's closure object).
(*) why oh why gcc would you enable this by default?! ;)
llvm-svn: 303026
It's failing due to Hexagon calling convention lowering being broken (empty
structs are not passed even if they have nontrivial destructors / copy ctors).
llvm-svn: 302825
in list-initialization, run cleanups for the default argument after each
iteration of the initialization loop.
We previously only ran the destructor for any temporary once, at the end of the
complete loop, rather than once per iteration!
Re-commit of r302750, reverted in r302776.
llvm-svn: 302817
Revert "clang/test/CodeGenCXX/array-default-argument.cpp: Satisfy targets that have x86_thiscallcc."
This reverts commit r302750 and its fixup r302757 because the test is
still breaking on some of the ARM bots.
array-default-argument.cpp:20:12: error: expected string not found in input
// CHECK: {{call|invoke}}[[THISCALL:( x86_thiscallcc)?]] void @_ZN1AC1Ev([[TEMPORARY:.*]])
^
<stdin>:18:1: note: scanning from here
arrayctor.loop: ; preds = %arrayctor.loop, %entry
^
<stdin>:28:2: note: possible intended match here
call void @_Z1fv()
^
--
llvm-svn: 302776