Handling of the third parameter was only checking for *_n and not for the C11 variant, which means that cmpxchg of a 'desired' 0 value was erroneously warning. Handle C11 properly, and add extgensive tests for this as well as NULL pointers in a bunch of places.
Fixes r333246 from D47229.
llvm-svn: 333290
Because template parameter lists were not displayed
in the plist output, it was difficult to decide in
some cases whether a given checker found a true or a
false positive. This patch aims to correct this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46933
llvm-svn: 333275
Currently getting such completions requires source correction, reparsing
and calling completion again. And if it shows no results and rollback is
required then it costs one more reparse.
With this change it's possible to get all results which can be later
filtered to split changes which require correction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41537
llvm-svn: 333272
An intrinsic for an old instruction, as described in the Intel SDM.
Reviewers: craig.topper, rnk
Reviewed By: craig.topper, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47142
llvm-svn: 333256
Summary:
As a companion to libc++ patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D47225, mark builtin atomic non-member functions which accept pointers as nonnull.
The atomic non-member functions accept pointers to std::atomic / std::atomic_flag as well as to the non-atomic value. These are all dereferenced unconditionally when lowered, and therefore will fault if null. It's a tiny gotcha for new users, especially when they pass in NULL as expected value (instead of passing a pointer to a NULL value).
<rdar://problem/18473124>
Reviewers: arphaman
Subscribers: aheejin, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47229
llvm-svn: 333246
Unless the user uses -Wno-module-file-config-mismatch (or -Wno-error=...),
allow the AST reader to produce errors describing the nature of the config
mismatch.
llvm-svn: 333220
Summary: This allows the use of the casa instruction available in most Leon3's.
Reviewers: jyknight
Reviewed By: jyknight
Subscribers: joerg, fedor.sergeev, jrtc27, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47138
llvm-svn: 333157
to checking for attributes on the call site - and fix up builtin
functions that we were testing for but not ensuring wouldn't be
optimized by the backend.
Leave one set of asm tests to make sure that we're also communicating
builtin-ness to TLI.
llvm-svn: 333154
Summary:
Remove the call to DiagnoseUseOfDecl in LookupMemberExpr because:
1. LookupMemberExpr eagerly lookup both getter and setter, reguardless
if they are used or not. It causes wrong diagnostics if you are only
using getter.
2. LookupMemberExpr only diagnoses getter, but not setter.
3. ObjCPropertyOpBuilder already DiagnoseUseOfDecl when building getter
and setter. Doing it again in LookupMemberExpr causes duplicated
diagnostics.
rdar://problem/38479756
Reviewers: erik.pilkington, arphaman, doug.gregor
Reviewed By: arphaman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47280
llvm-svn: 333148
unusual types.
Following the observed behavior of GCC, we now return -1 for vector types
(along with all of our extensions that GCC doesn't support), and for atomic
types we classify the underlying type.
GCC appears to have changed its classification for function and array arguments
between version 5 and version 6. Previously it would classify them as pointers
in C and as functions or arrays in C++, but from version 6 onwards, it
classifies them as pointers. We now follow the more recent GCC behavior rather
than emulating what I can only assume to be a historical bug in their C++
support for this builtin.
Finally, no version of GCC that I can find has ever used the "method"
classification for C++ pointers to member functions. Instead, GCC classifies
them as record types, presumably reflecting an internal implementation detail,
but whatever the reason we now produce compatible results.
llvm-svn: 333126
It caused asserts, see PR37560.
> Use zeroinitializer for (trailing zero portion of) large array initializers
> more reliably.
>
> Clang has two different ways it emits array constants (from InitListExprs and
> from APValues), and both had some ability to emit zeroinitializer, but neither
> was able to catch all cases where we could use zeroinitializer reliably. In
> particular, emitting from an APValue would fail to notice if all the explicit
> array elements happened to be zero. In addition, for large arrays where only an
> initial portion has an explicit initializer, we would emit the complete
> initializer (which could be huge) rather than emitting only the non-zero
> portion. With this change, when the element would have a suffix of more than 8
> zero elements, we emit the array constant as a packed struct of its initial
> portion followed by a zeroinitializer constant for the trailing zero portion.
>
> In passing, I found a bug where SemaInit would sometimes walk the entire array
> when checking an initializer that only covers the first few elements; that's
> fixed here to unblock testing of the rest.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47166
llvm-svn: 333067
Previously we negated the whole vector after splatting infinity. But its better to negate the infinity before splatting. This generates IR with the negate already folded with the infinity constant.
llvm-svn: 333062
Again, strlc* does not return a pointer so the zero size case doest not fit.
Reviewers: NoQ, george.karpenkov
Reviewed by: NoQ
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47007
llvm-svn: 333060
more reliably.
Clang has two different ways it emits array constants (from InitListExprs and
from APValues), and both had some ability to emit zeroinitializer, but neither
was able to catch all cases where we could use zeroinitializer reliably. In
particular, emitting from an APValue would fail to notice if all the explicit
array elements happened to be zero. In addition, for large arrays where only an
initial portion has an explicit initializer, we would emit the complete
initializer (which could be huge) rather than emitting only the non-zero
portion. With this change, when the element would have a suffix of more than 8
zero elements, we emit the array constant as a packed struct of its initial
portion followed by a zeroinitializer constant for the trailing zero portion.
In passing, I found a bug where SemaInit would sometimes walk the entire array
when checking an initializer that only covers the first few elements; that's
fixed here to unblock testing of the rest.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47166
llvm-svn: 333044
The clang builtins have the same semantics as the stdlib functions.
The stdlib functions are defined in section 7.20.6.1 of the C standard with:
"If the result cannot be represented, the behavior is undefined."
That lets us mark the negation with 'nsw' because "sub i32 0, INT_MIN" would
be UB/poison.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47202
llvm-svn: 333038
Introduced CreateMemTempWithoutCast and CreateTemporaryAllocaWithoutCast to emit alloca
without casting to default addr space.
ActiveFlag is a temporary variable emitted for clean up. It is defined as AllocaInst* type and there is
a cast to AlllocaInst in SetActiveFlag. An alloca casted to generic pointer causes assertion in
SetActiveFlag.
Since there is only load/store of ActiveFlag, it is safe to use the original alloca, therefore use
CreateMemTempWithoutCast is called.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47099
llvm-svn: 332982
This change will help Visual Studio resolve forward references to C++ lambda
routines used by captured variables.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45438
llvm-svn: 332975
Summary:
This includes initial support for the (hopefully final) updated Objective-C ABI, developed here:
https://github.com/davidchisnall/clang-gnustep-abi-2
It also includes some cleanups and refactoring from older GNU ABIs.
The current version is ELF only, other formats to follow.
Reviewers: rjmccall, DHowett-MSFT
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Subscribers: smeenai, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46052
llvm-svn: 332950
Because the intrinsics in the headers are implemented as macros, we can't just use a select builtin and pternlog builtin. This would require one of the macro arguments to be used twice. Depending on what was passed to the macro we could expand an expression twice leading to weird behavior. We could maybe declare our local variable in the macro, but that would need to worry about name collisions.
To avoid that just generate IR directly in CGBuiltin.cpp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47125
llvm-svn: 332891
I believe this is safe assuming default default FP environment. The conversion might be inexact, but it can never overflow the FP type so this shouldn't be undefined behavior for the uitofp/sitofp instructions.
We already do something similar for scalar conversions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46863
llvm-svn: 332882
if `-fopenmp-simd` is specified alone, `_OPENMP` macro should not be
defined. If `-fopenmp-simd` is specified along with the `-fopenmp`,
`_OPENMP` macro should be defined with the value `201511`.
llvm-svn: 332852
1. added restrictions to memory scope, order and volatile parameters
2. added custom processing for these builtins - currently is not used code,
needed to switch off GCCBuiltin link to the builtins (ongoing change to llvm
tree)
3. builtins renamed as requested
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43281
llvm-svn: 332848
If a variable has an initializer, codegen tries to build its value. If
the variable is large in size, building its value requires substantial
resources. It causes strange behavior from user viewpoint: compilation
of huge zero initialized arrays like:
char data_1[2147483648u] = { 0 };
consumes enormous amount of time and memory.
With this change codegen tries to determine if variable initializer is
equivalent to zero initializer. In this case variable value is not
constructed.
This change fixes PR18978.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46241
llvm-svn: 332847
Handle attributes before checking the record layout (e.g. underalignment check
during `alignas` processing), as layout may be cached without taking into
account attributes that may affect it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46439
llvm-svn: 332843
The first version of the patch (r332228) was flawed because it was
putting structors into C5/D5 comdats very eagerly. This is correct only
if we can ensure the comdat contains all required versions of the
structor (which wasn't the case). This version uses a more nuanced
approach:
- for local structor symbols we use an alias because we don't have to
worry about comdats or other compilation units.
- linkonce symbols are emitted separately, as we cannot guarantee we
will have all symbols we need to form a comdat (they are emitted
lazily, only when referenced).
- available_externally symbols are also emitted separately, as the code
seemed to be worried about emitting an alias in this case.
- other linkage types are not affected by the optimization level. They
either get put into a comdat (weak) or get aliased (external).
Reviewers: rjmccall, aprantl
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46685
llvm-svn: 332839
Summary:
When https://reviews.llvm.org/D46776 landed to improve the behavior of
`llvm::OptTable::findNearest`, a PS4 buildbot began failing due to an
assertion that a suggestion "-debug-info-macro" should be provided for
the unrecognized option `clang -cc1as -debug-info-macros`. All other
buildbots succeeded in this check, and the PS4 buildbot succeeded in the
other `findNearest` tests.
Temporarily loosen this check in order to reland the `findNearest`
change.
Test Plan: check-clang
llvm-svn: 332804