Summary:
The -fxray-always-instrument= and -fxray-never-instrument= flags take
filenames that are used to imbue the XRay instrumentation attributes
using a whitelist mechanism (similar to the sanitizer special cases
list). We use the same syntax and semantics as the sanitizer blacklists
files in the implementation.
As implemented, we respect the attributes that are already defined in
the source file (i.e. those that have the
[[clang::xray_{always,never}_instrument]] attributes) before applying
the always/never instrument lists.
Reviewers: rsmith, chandlerc
Subscribers: jfb, mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30388
llvm-svn: 299041
FPContractModeKind is the codegen option flag which is already ternary (off,
on, fast). This makes it universally the type for the contractable info
across the front-end:
* In FPOptions (i.e. in the Sema + in the expression nodes).
* In LangOpts::DefaultFPContractMode which is the option that initializes
FPOptions in the Sema.
Another way to look at this change is that before fp-contractable on/off were
the only states handled to the front-end:
* For "on", FMA folding was performed by the front-end
* For "fast", we simply forwarded the flag to TargetOptions to handle it in
LLVM
Now off/on/fast are all exposed because for fast we will generate
fast-math-flags during CodeGen.
This is toward moving fp-contraction=fast from an LLVM TargetOption to a
FastMathFlag in order to fix PR25721.
---
This is a recommit of r299027 with an adjustment to the test
CodeGenCUDA/fp-contract.cu. The test assumed that even
though -ffp-contract=on is passed FE-based folding of FMA won't happen.
This is obviously wrong since the user is asking for this explicitly with the
option. CUDA is different that -ffp-contract=fast is on by default.
The test used to "work" because contract=fast and contract=on were maintained
separately and we didn't fold in the FE because contract=fast was on due to
the target-default. This patch consolidates the contract=on/fast/off state
into a ternary state hence the change in behavior.
---
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31167
llvm-svn: 299033
FPContractModeKind is the codegen option flag which is already ternary (off,
on, fast). This makes it universally the type for the contractable info
across the front-end:
* In FPOptions (i.e. in the Sema + in the expression nodes).
* In LangOpts::DefaultFPContractMode which is the option that initializes
FPOptions in the Sema.
Another way to look at this change is that before fp-contractable on/off were
the only states handled to the front-end:
* For "on", FMA folding was performed by the front-end
* For "fast", we simply forwarded the flag to TargetOptions to handle it in
LLVM
Now off/on/fast are all exposed because for fast we will generate
fast-math-flags during CodeGen.
This is toward moving fp-contraction=fast from an LLVM TargetOption to a
FastMathFlag in order to fix PR25721.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31167
llvm-svn: 299027
Summary:
When a PCH is included via -include-pch, clang should treat the
current TU as dependent on the sourcefile that the PCH was generated from.
This is currently _partly_ accomplished by InitializePreprocessor calling
AddImplicitIncludePCH to synthesize an implicit #include of the sourcefile,
into the preprocessor's Predefines buffer.
For FrontendActions such as PreprocessOnlyAction (which is, curiously, what the
driver winds up running one of in response to a plain clang -M) this is
sufficient: the preprocessor cranks over its Predefines and emits a dependency
reference to the initial sourcefile.
For other FrontendActions (for example -emit-obj or -fsyntax-only) the
Predefines buffer is reset to the suggested predefines buffer from the PCH, so
the dependency edge is lost. The result is that clang emits a .d file in those
cases that lacks a reference to the .h file responsible for the input (and in
Swift's case, our .swiftdeps file winds up not including a reference to the
source file for a PCH bridging header.)
This patch fixes the problem by taking a different tack: ignoring the
Predefines buffer (which seems a bit like a hack anyways) and directly
attaching the CompilerInstance's DependencyCollectors (and legacy
DependencyFileGenerator) to the ASTReader for the external AST.
This approach is similar to the one chosen in earlier consultation with Bruno
and Ben, and I think it's the least-bad solution, given several options.
Reviewers: bruno, benlangmuir, doug.gregor
Reviewed By: bruno, doug.gregor
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31378
llvm-svn: 299009
Sema holds the current FPOptions which is adjusted by 'pragma STDC
FP_CONTRACT'. This then gets propagated into expression nodes as they are
built.
This encapsulates FPOptions so that this propagation happens opaquely rather
than directly with the fp_contractable on/off bit. This allows controlled
transitioning of fp_contractable to a ternary value (off, on, fast). It will
also allow adding more fast-math flags later.
This is toward moving fp-contraction=fast from an LLVM TargetOption to a
FastMathFlag in order to fix PR25721.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31166
llvm-svn: 298877
The flag CXXOperatorNames was overwritten unconditionally
after being set for OpenCL.
There seems to be no necessity to set it, so removing the line.
llvm-svn: 298709
Summary:
Clang companion patch to LLVM patch D31027, which adds support
for emitting minimized bitcode file for use in the thin link step.
Add a cc1 option -fthin-link-bitcode=<file> to trigger this behavior.
Depends on D31027.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini, pcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits, Prazek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31050
llvm-svn: 298639
and into TargetInfo::adjust so that it gets called in more places
throughout the compiler (AST serialization in particular).
Should fix PPC modules after removing of faltivec.
llvm-svn: 298487
The alias was only ever used on darwin and had some issues there,
and isn't used in practice much. Also fixes a problem with -mno-altivec
not turning off -maltivec.
Also add a diagnostic for faltivec/fno-altivec that directs users to use
maltivec options and include the altivec.h file explicitly.
llvm-svn: 298449
In doing so, clean up the MD5 interface a little. Most
existing users only care about the lower 8 bytes of an MD5,
but for some users that care about the upper and lower,
there wasn't a good interface. Furthermore, consumers
of the MD5 checksum were required to handle endianness
details on their own, so it seems reasonable to abstract
this into a nicer interface that just gives you the right
value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31105
llvm-svn: 298322
This reverts commit r298185, effectively reapplying r298165, after fixing the
new unit tests (PR32338). The memory buffer generator doesn't null-terminate
the MemoryBuffer it creates; this version of the commit informs getMemBuffer
about that to avoid the assert.
Original commit message follows:
----
Clang's internal build system for implicit modules uses lock files to
ensure that after a process writes a PCM it will read the same one back
in (without contention from other -cc1 commands). Since PCMs are read
from disk repeatedly while invalidating, building, and importing, the
lock is not released quickly. Furthermore, the LockFileManager is not
robust in every environment. Other -cc1 commands can stall until
timeout (after about eight minutes).
This commit changes the lock file from being necessary for correctness
to a (possibly dubious) performance hack. The remaining benefit is to
reduce duplicate work in competing -cc1 commands which depend on the
same module. Follow-up commits will change the internal build system to
continue after a timeout, and reduce the timeout. Perhaps we should
reconsider blocking at all.
This also fixes a use-after-free, when one part of a compilation
validates a PCM and starts using it, and another tries to swap out the
PCM for something new.
The PCMCache is a new type called MemoryBufferCache, which saves memory
buffers based on their filename. Its ownership is shared by the
CompilerInstance and ModuleManager.
- The ModuleManager stores PCMs there that it loads from disk, never
touching the disk if the cache is hot.
- When modules fail to validate, they're removed from the cache.
- When a CompilerInstance is spawned to build a new module, each
already-loaded PCM is assumed to be valid, and is frozen to avoid
the use-after-free.
- Any newly-built module is written directly to the cache to avoid the
round-trip to the filesystem, making lock files unnecessary for
correctness.
Original patch by Manman Ren; most testcases by Adrian Prantl!
llvm-svn: 298278
Duncan's r298165 introduced the PCMCache mechanism, which guarantees
that locks aren't necessary anymore for correctness but only for
performance, by avoiding building it twice when possible.
Change the logic to avoid an error but actually build the module in case
the timeout happens. Instead of an error, still emit a remark for
debugging purposes.
rdar://problem/30297862
llvm-svn: 298175
Clang's internal build system for implicit modules uses lock files to
ensure that after a process writes a PCM it will read the same one back
in (without contention from other -cc1 commands). Since PCMs are read
from disk repeatedly while invalidating, building, and importing, the
lock is not released quickly. Furthermore, the LockFileManager is not
robust in every environment. Other -cc1 commands can stall until
timeout (after about eight minutes).
This commit changes the lock file from being necessary for correctness
to a (possibly dubious) performance hack. The remaining benefit is to
reduce duplicate work in competing -cc1 commands which depend on the
same module. Follow-up commits will change the internal build system to
continue after a timeout, and reduce the timeout. Perhaps we should
reconsider blocking at all.
This also fixes a use-after-free, when one part of a compilation
validates a PCM and starts using it, and another tries to swap out the
PCM for something new.
The PCMCache is a new type called MemoryBufferCache, which saves memory
buffers based on their filename. Its ownership is shared by the
CompilerInstance and ModuleManager.
- The ModuleManager stores PCMs there that it loads from disk, never
touching the disk if the cache is hot.
- When modules fail to validate, they're removed from the cache.
- When a CompilerInstance is spawned to build a new module, each
already-loaded PCM is assumed to be valid, and is frozen to avoid
the use-after-free.
- Any newly-built module is written directly to the cache to avoid the
round-trip to the filesystem, making lock files unnecessary for
correctness.
Original patch by Manman Ren; most testcases by Adrian Prantl!
llvm-svn: 298165
This fixes lookup mismatches that could happen when the module cache
path contained a '/./' component.
<rdar://problem/30413458>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30915
llvm-svn: 297790
Change ASTFileSignature from a random 32-bit number to the hash of the
PCM content.
- Move definition ASTFileSignature to Basic/Module.h so Module and
ASTSourceDescriptor can use it.
- Change the signature from uint64_t to std::array<uint32_t,5>.
- Stop using (saving/reading) the size and modification time of PCM
files when there is a valid SIGNATURE.
- Add UNHASHED_CONTROL_BLOCK, and use it to store the SIGNATURE record
and other records that shouldn't affect the hash. Because implicit
modules reuses the same file for multiple levels of -Werror, this
includes DIAGNOSTIC_OPTIONS and DIAG_PRAGMA_MAPPINGS.
This helps to solve a PCH + implicit Modules dependency issue: PCH files
are handled by the external build system, whereas implicit modules are
handled by internal compiler build system. This prevents invalidating a
PCH when the compiler overwrites a PCM file with the same content
(modulo the diagnostic differences).
Design and original patch by Manman Ren!
llvm-svn: 297655
This commit adds support for a new -iframeworkwithsysroot compiler option which
allows the user to specify a framework path that can be prefixed with the
sysroot. This option is similar to the -iwithsysroot option that exists to
supplement -isystem.
rdar://21316352
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30183
llvm-svn: 297614
Summary:
This is a revised version of D28796. Included test is changed to
resolve the target compatibility issue reported (rL293032).
Reviewers: inglorion, dblaikie, echristo, aprantl, probinson
Reviewed By: inglorion
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30663
llvm-svn: 297194
Modules/preambles/PCH files can contain diagnostics, which, when used,
are added to the current ASTUnit. For that to work, they are translated
to use the current FileManager's FileIDs. When the entry is not the
main file, all local source locations will be checked by a linear
search. Now this is a problem, when there are lots of diagnostics (say,
25000) and lots of local source locations (say, 440000), and end up
taking seconds when using such a preamble.
The fix is to cache the last FileID, because many subsequent diagnostics
refer to the same file. This reduces the time spent in
ASTUnit::TranslateStoredDiagnostics from seconds to a few milliseconds
for files with many slocs/diagnostics.
This fixes PR31353.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29755
llvm-svn: 295301
In case user did not provide valid standard name for -std option, available
values (with short description) will be reported.
Patch by Paweł Żukowski!
llvm-svn: 295113
If the preamble had diagnostic state this would leave behind invalid
state in the DiagnosticsEngine and crash later. The test case runs into
an assertion in DiagnosticsEngine::setSourceManager.
llvm-svn: 294963
Initialize fields directly in header. Note that the ModuleManager field is an
IntrusiveRefCntPtr, so there's no need for explicit initialization.
llvm-svn: 293863
First pass at generating weak definitions of inline functions from module files
(& skipping (-O0) or emitting available_externally (optimizations)
definitions where those modules are used).
External functions defined in modules are emitted into the modular
object file as well (this may turn an existing ODR violation (if that
module were imported into multiple translations) into valid/linkable
code).
Internal symbols (static functions, for example) are not correctly
supported yet. The symbol will be produced, internal, in the modular
object - unreferenceable from the users.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28845
llvm-svn: 293456
Summary:
Now when you ask clang to link in a bitcode module, you can tell it to
set attributes on that module's functions to match what we would have
set if we'd emitted those functions ourselves.
This is particularly important for fast-math attributes in CUDA
compilations.
Each CUDA compilation links in libdevice, a bitcode library provided by
nvidia as part of the CUDA distribution. Without this patch, if we have
a user-function F that is compiled with -ffast-math that calls a
function G from libdevice, F will have the unsafe-fp-math=true (etc.)
attributes, but G will have no attributes.
Since F calls G, the inliner will merge G's attributes into F's. It
considers the lack of an unsafe-fp-math=true attribute on G to be
tantamount to unsafe-fp-math=false, so it "merges" these by setting
unsafe-fp-math=false on F.
This then continues up the call graph, until every function that
(transitively) calls something in libdevice gets unsafe-fp-math=false
set, thus disabling fastmath in almost all CUDA code.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: hfinkel, llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28538
llvm-svn: 293097
This reverts commit r293004 because it broke the buildbots with "unknown CPU"
errors. I tried to fix it in r293026, but that broke on Green Dragon with this
kind of error:
error: expected string not found in input
// CHECK: l{{ +}}df{{ +}}*ABS*{{ +}}{{0+}}{{.+}}preprocessed-input.c{{$}}
^
<stdin>:2:1: note: scanning from here
/Users/buildslave/jenkins/sharedspace/incremental@2/clang-build/tools/clang/test/Frontend/Output/preprocessed-input.c.tmp.o: file format Mach-O 64-bit x86-64
^
<stdin>:2:67: note: possible intended match here
/Users/buildslave/jenkins/sharedspace/incremental@2/clang-build/tools/clang/test/Frontend/Output/preprocessed-input.c.tmp.o: file format Mach-O 64-bit x86-64
I suppose this means that llvm-objdump doesn't support Mach-O, so the test
should indeed check for linux (but not for x86). I'll leave it to someone that
knows better.
llvm-svn: 293032
Summary:
Clang appears to always use name as specified on the command
line, whereas gcc uses the name as specified in the linemarker at the
first line when compiling a preprocessed source. This results mismatch
between two compilers in FILE symbol table entry. This patch makes clang
to resemble gcc's behavior in finding the original source file name and
use it as an input file name.
Even with this patch, values of FILE symbol table entry may still be
different because clang uses dirname+basename for the entry whlie gcc
uses basename only. I'll write a patch for that once this patch is
committed.
Reviewers: dblaikie, inglorion
Reviewed By: inglorion
Subscribers: inglorion, aprantl, bruno
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28796
llvm-svn: 293004
Summary:
SamplePGO uses profile with debug info to collect profile. Unlike the traditional debugging purpose, sample pgo needs more accurate debug info to represent the profile. We add -femit-accurate-debug-info for this purpose. It can be combined with all debugging modes (-g, -gmlt, etc). It makes sure that the following pieces of info is always emitted:
* start line of all subprograms
* linkage name of all subprograms
* standalone subprograms (functions that has neither inlined nor been inlined)
The impact on speccpu2006 binary size (size increase comparing with -g0 binary, also includes data for -g binary, which does not change with this patch):
-gmlt(orig) -gmlt(patched) -g
433.milc 4.68% 5.40% 19.73%
444.namd 8.45% 8.93% 45.99%
447.dealII 97.43% 115.21% 374.89%
450.soplex 27.75% 31.88% 126.04%
453.povray 21.81% 26.16% 92.03%
470.lbm 0.60% 0.67% 1.96%
482.sphinx3 5.77% 6.47% 26.17%
400.perlbench 17.81% 19.43% 73.08%
401.bzip2 3.73% 3.92% 12.18%
403.gcc 31.75% 34.48% 122.75%
429.mcf 0.78% 0.88% 3.89%
445.gobmk 6.08% 7.92% 42.27%
456.hmmer 10.36% 11.25% 35.23%
458.sjeng 5.08% 5.42% 14.36%
462.libquantum 1.71% 1.96% 6.36%
464.h264ref 15.61% 16.56% 43.92%
471.omnetpp 11.93% 15.84% 60.09%
473.astar 3.11% 3.69% 14.18%
483.xalancbmk 56.29% 81.63% 353.22%
geomean 15.60% 18.30% 57.81%
Debug info size change for -gmlt binary with this patch:
433.milc 13.46%
444.namd 5.35%
447.dealII 18.21%
450.soplex 14.68%
453.povray 19.65%
470.lbm 6.03%
482.sphinx3 11.21%
400.perlbench 8.91%
401.bzip2 4.41%
403.gcc 8.56%
429.mcf 8.24%
445.gobmk 29.47%
456.hmmer 8.19%
458.sjeng 6.05%
462.libquantum 11.23%
464.h264ref 5.93%
471.omnetpp 31.89%
473.astar 16.20%
483.xalancbmk 44.62%
geomean 16.83%
Reviewers: davidxl, andreadb, rob.lougher, dblaikie, echristo
Reviewed By: dblaikie, echristo
Subscribers: hfinkel, rob.lougher, andreadb, gbedwell, cfe-commits, probinson, llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25435
llvm-svn: 292458
In ThinLTO mode, type metadata will require the module to be written as a
multi-module bitcode file, which is currently incompatible with the Darwin
linker. It is also useful to be able to enable or disable multi-module bitcode
for testing purposes. This introduces a cc1-level flag, -f{,no-}lto-unit,
which is used by the driver to enable multi-module bitcode on all but
Darwin+ThinLTO, and can also be used to enable/disable the feature manually.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28877
llvm-svn: 292448
Correct the logic used to set ATOMIC_*_LOCK_FREE preprocessor macros not
to rely on the ABI alignment of types. Instead, just assume all those
types are aligned correctly by default since clang uses safe alignment
for _Atomic types even if the underlying types are aligned to a lower
boundary by default.
For example, the 'long long' and 'double' types on x86 are aligned to
32-bit boundary by default. However, '_Atomic long long' and '_Atomic
double' are aligned to 64-bit boundary, therefore satisfying
the requirements of lock-free atomic operations.
This fixes PR #19355 by correcting the value of
__GCC_ATOMIC_LLONG_LOCK_FREE on x86, and therefore also fixing
the assumption made in libc++ tests. This also fixes PR #30581 by
applying a consistent logic between the functions used to implement
both interfaces.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28213
llvm-svn: 291477
In r276159, we started to say that a module X is defined in a pch if we specify
-fmodule-name when building the pch. This caused a regression that reports
module X is defined in both pch and pcm if we generate the pch with
-fmodule-name=X and then in a separate clang invocation, we include the pch and
also import X.pcm.
This patch adds an option CompilingPCH similar to CompilingModule. When we use
-fmodule-name=X while building a pch, modular headers in X will be textually
included and the compiler knows that we are not building module X, so we don't
put module X in SUBMODULE_DEFINITION of the pch.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D28415
llvm-svn: 291465
Aleksey Shlypanikov pointed out my mistake in migrating an explicit
unique_ptr to auto - I was expecting the function returned a unique_ptr,
but instead it returned a raw pointer - introducing a leak.
Thanks Aleksey!
This reapplies r291184, reverted in r291249.
llvm-svn: 291270
in non-void functions that fall off at the end without returning a value when
compiling C++.
Clang uses the new compiler flag to determine when it should treat control flow
paths that fall off the end of a non-void function as unreachable. If
-fno-strict-return is on, the code generator emits the ureachable and trap
IR only when the function returns either a record type with a non-trivial
destructor or another non-trivially copyable type.
The primary goal of this flag is to avoid treating falling off the end of a
non-void function as undefined behaviour. The burden of undefined behaviour
is placed on the caller instead: if the caller ignores the returned value then
the undefined behaviour is avoided. This kind of behaviour is useful in
several cases, e.g. when compiling C code in C++ mode.
rdar://13102603
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27163
llvm-svn: 290960
This commit fixes a crash that occurs when -print-decl-contexts AST consumer
tries to print an unhandled declaration.
rdar://19467234
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26964
llvm-svn: 290887
This commit fixes a crash that occurs when -print-decl-contexts AST consumer
tries to print an unhandled declaration.
rdar://19467234
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26964
llvm-svn: 290886
This commit fixes a crash that occurs when -print-decl-contexts AST consumer
tries to print an unhandled declaration.
rdar://19467234
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26964
llvm-svn: 290885
This commit fixes a crash that occurs when -print-decl-contexts AST consumer
tries to print an unhandled declaration.
rdar://19467234
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26964
llvm-svn: 290884
This commit fixes a crash that occurs when -print-decl-contexts AST consumer
tries to print an unhandled declaration.
rdar://19467234
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26964
llvm-svn: 290882
This commit fixes a crash that occurs when -print-decl-contexts AST consumer
tries to print an unhandled declaration.
rdar://19467234
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26964
llvm-svn: 290881
This commit fixes a crash that occurs when -print-decl-contexts AST consumer
tries to print an unhandled declaration.
rdar://19467234
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26964
llvm-svn: 290880
to be specified for a template template parameter whenever the parameter is at
least as specialized as the argument (when there's an obvious and correct
mapping from uses of the parameter to uses of the argument). For example, a
template with more parameters can be passed to a template template parameter
with fewer, if those trailing parameters have default arguments.
This is disabled by default, despite being a DR resolution, as it's fairly
broken in its current state: there are no partial ordering rules to cope with
template template parameters that have different parameter lists, meaning that
code that attempts to decompose template-ids based on arity can hit unavoidable
ambiguity issues.
The diagnostics produced on a non-matching argument are also pretty bad right
now, but I aim to improve them in a subsequent commit.
llvm-svn: 290792
manager, and a code path to use it.
The option is actually a top-level option but does contain
'experimental' in the name. This is the compromise suggested by Richard
in discussions. We expect this option will be around long enough and
have enough users towards the end that it merits not being relegated to
CC1, but it still needs to be clear that this option will go away at
some point.
The backend code is a fresh codepath dedicated to handling the flow with
the new pass manager. This was also Richard's suggested code structuring
to essentially leave a clean path for development rather than carrying
complexity or idiosyncracies of how we do things just to share code with
the parts of this in common with the legacy pass manager. And it turns
out, not much is really in common even though we use the legacy pass
manager for codegen at this point.
I've switched a couple of tests to run with the new pass manager, and
they appear to work. There are still plenty of bugs that need squashing
(just with basic experiments I've found two already!) but they aren't in
this code, and the whole point is to expose the necessary hooks to start
experimenting with the pass manager in more realistic scenarios.
That said, I want to *strongly caution* anyone itching to play with
this: it is still *very shaky*. Several large components have not yet
been shaken down. For example I have bugs in both the always inliner and
inliner that I have already spotted and will be fixing independently.
Still, this is a fun milestone. =D
One thing not in this patch (but that might be very reasonable to add)
is some level of support for raw textual pass pipelines such as what
Sean had a patch for some time ago. I'm mostly interested in the more
traditional flow of getting the IR out of Clang and then running it
through opt, but I can see other use cases so someone may want to add
it.
And of course, *many* features are not yet supported!
- O1 is currently more like O2
- None of the sanitizers are wired up
- ObjC ARC optimizer isn't wired up
- ...
So plenty of stuff still lef to do!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28077
llvm-svn: 290450
-fno-inline-functions, -O0, and optnone.
These were really, really tangled together:
- We used the noinline LLVM attribute for -fno-inline
- But not for -fno-inline-functions (breaking LTO)
- But we did use it for -finline-hint-functions (yay, LTO is happy!)
- But we didn't for -O0 (LTO is sad yet again...)
- We had weird structuring of CodeGenOpts with both an inlining
enumeration and a boolean. They interacted in weird ways and
needlessly.
- A *lot* of set smashing went on with setting these, and then got worse
when we considered optnone and other inlining-effecting attributes.
- A bunch of inline affecting attributes were managed in a completely
different place from -fno-inline.
- Even with -fno-inline we failed to put the LLVM noinline attribute
onto many generated function definitions because they didn't show up
as AST-level functions.
- If you passed -O0 but -finline-functions we would run the normal
inliner pass in LLVM despite it being in the O0 pipeline, which really
doesn't make much sense.
- Lastly, we used things like '-fno-inline' to manipulate the pass
pipeline which forced the pass pipeline to be much more
parameterizable than it really needs to be. Instead we can *just* use
the optimization level to select a pipeline and control the rest via
attributes.
Sadly, this causes a bunch of churn in tests because we don't run the
optimizer in the tests and check the contents of attribute sets. It
would be awesome if attribute sets were a bit more FileCheck friendly,
but oh well.
I think this is a significant improvement and should remove the semantic
need to change what inliner pass we run in order to comply with the
requested inlining semantics by relying completely on attributes. It
also cleans up tho optnone and related handling a bit.
One unfortunate aspect of this is that for generating alwaysinline
routines like those in OpenMP we end up removing noinline and then
adding alwaysinline. I tried a bunch of other approaches, but because we
recompute function attributes from scratch and don't have a declaration
here I couldn't find anything substantially cleaner than this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28053
llvm-svn: 290398
Much to my surprise, '-disable-llvm-optzns' which I thought was the
magical flag I wanted to get at the raw LLVM IR coming out of Clang
deosn't do that. It still runs some passes over the IR. I don't want
that, I really want the *raw* IR coming out of Clang and I strongly
suspect everyone else using it is in the same camp.
There is actually a flag that does what I want that I didn't know about
called '-disable-llvm-passes'. I suspect many others don't know about it
either. It both does what I want and is much simpler.
This removes the confusing version and makes that spelling of the flag
an alias for '-disable-llvm-passes'. I've also moved everything in Clang
to use the 'passes' spelling as it seems both more accurate (*all* LLVM
passes are disabled, not just optimizations) and much easier to remember
and spell correctly.
This is part of simplifying how Clang drives LLVM to make it cleaner to
wire up to the new pass manager.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28047
llvm-svn: 290392
Merge all VFS mapped files inside -ivfsoverlay inputs into the vfs
overlay provided by the crash reproducer. This is the last missing piece
to allow crash reproducers to fully work with user frameworks; when
combined with headermaps, it allows clang to find additional frameworks.
rdar://problem/27913709
llvm-svn: 290326
Added a map to associate types and declarations with extensions.
Refactored existing diagnostic for disabled types associated with extensions and extended it to declarations for generic situation.
Fixed some bugs for types associated with extensions.
Allow users to use pragma to declare types and functions for supported extensions, e.g.
#pragma OPENCL EXTENSION the_new_extension_name : begin
// declare types and functions associated with the extension here
#pragma OPENCL EXTENSION the_new_extension_name : end
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21698
llvm-svn: 289979
At least the plugin used by the LibreOffice build
(<https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/Clang_plugins>) indirectly
uses those members (through inline functions in LLVM/Clang include files in turn
using them), but they are not exported by utils/extract_symbols.py on Windows,
and accessing data across DLL/EXE boundaries on Windows is generally
problematic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26671
llvm-svn: 289647
In r267772, we had set the PS4's default dialect for both C and
Objective-C to gnu99. Make that change only for C; we don't really
support Objective-C/C++ so there's no point fiddling the dialect.
llvm-svn: 289625
Sort the headers by name before adding the includes in
collectModuleHeaderIncludes. This makes the include order for building
umbrellas deterministic across different filesystems and also guarantees
that the ASTWriter always dump top headers in the same order.
There's currently no good way to test for this behavior.
rdar://problem/28116411
llvm-svn: 289478
Collect the necessary input PCH files.
Do not try to validate the AST before copying it out because if the
crash is in this path, we won't be able to collect it. Instead only
check if it's a file containg an AST.
rdar://problem/27913709
llvm-svn: 289460
Use the vfs lookup instead of real filesytem and handle the case where
-include-pch is a directory and this dir is searched for a PCH.
llvm-svn: 289459
Include headermaps (.hmap files) in the .cache directory and
add VFS entries. All headermaps are known after HeaderSearch
setup, collect them right after.
rdar://problem/27913709
llvm-svn: 289360
Recover better from an incompatible .pcm file being provided by -fmodule-file=. We try to include the headers of the module textually in this case, still enforcing the modules semantic rules. In order to make that work, we need to still track that we're entering and leaving the module. Also, if the module was also marked as unavailable (perhaps because it was missing a file), we shouldn't mark the module unavailable -- we don't need the module to be complete if we're going to enter it textually.
llvm-svn: 288741
This reverts commit r288449.
I believe that this is currently faulty wrt. modules being imported
inside namespaces. Adding these lines to the new test:
namespace n {
#include "foo.h"
}
Makes it break with
fatal error: import of module 'M' appears within namespace 'n'
However, I believe it should fail with
error: redundant #include of module 'M' appears within namespace 'n'
I have tracked this down to us now inserting a tok::annot_module_begin
instead of a tok::annot_module_include in
Preprocessor::HandleIncludeDirective() and then later in
Parser::parseMisplacedModuleImport(), we hit the code path for
tok::annot_module_begin, which doesn't set FromInclude of
checkModuleImportContext to true (thus leading to the "wrong"
diagnostic).
llvm-svn: 288626
removed as a duplicate header search path
The commit r126167 started passing the First index into RemoveDuplicates, but
forgot to update 0 to First in the loop that looks for the duplicate. This
resulted in a bug where an -iquoted search path was incorrectly removed if you
passed in the same path into -iquote and more than one time into -isystem.
rdar://23991350
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27298
llvm-svn: 288491
We try to include the headers of the module textually in this case, still
enforcing the modules semantic rules. In order to make that work, we need to
still track that we're entering and leaving the module. Also, if the module was
also marked as unavailable (perhaps because it was missing a file), we
shouldn't mark the module unavailable -- we don't need the module to be
complete if we're going to enter it textually.
llvm-svn: 288449
This commit adds a new predefined macro named __OBJC_BOOL_IS_BOOL that describes
the Objective-C boolean type: its value is zero if the Objective-C boolean uses
the signed character type, otherwise its value is one as the Objective-C boolean
uses the builtin boolean type.
rdar://21170440
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26234
llvm-svn: 287529
Summary:
This used to work because system headers are found in a (somewhat)
predictable set of locations on Linux. But this is not the case on
MacOS; without this change, we don't look in the right places for our
headers when doing device-side compilation on Mac.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26776
llvm-svn: 287286
Re-introduce r285411.
Implement the -dI as supported by GCC: Output ‘#include’ directives in addition
to the result of preprocessing.
This change aims to add this option, pass it through to the preprocessor via
the options class, and when inclusions occur we output some information (+ test
cases).
Patch by Steve O'Brien!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26089
llvm-svn: 287275
This can be used to append alternative typo corrections to an existing diag.
include-fixer can use it to suggest includes to be added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26745
llvm-svn: 287128
Summary:
Just like gcc, we should have the -Og option as more and more software are using it:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20765
Reviewers: echristo, dberlin, dblaikie, keith.walker.arm, rengolin
Subscribers: aprantl, friss, mehdi_amini, RKSimon, probinson, majnemer, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24998
llvm-svn: 286602
As proposed on llvm-dev:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-October/106630.html
Move block info block state to a new class, BitstreamBlockInfo.
Clients may set the block info for a particular cursor with the
BitstreamCursor::setBlockInfo() method.
At this point BitstreamReader is not much more than a container for an
ArrayRef<uint8_t>, so remove it and replace all uses with direct uses
of memory buffers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26259
llvm-svn: 286207
code, let's just assert that the DiagonsticEngine doesn't own the client
because our constructor took ownership of it and has a std::unique_ptr
that handles deleting it. This seems much more clear -- the release was
harmless but confusing as if there were some memory there it would have
leaked, and the reset was harmless but confusing as if there were some
memory there it would have been double-freed. But in both cases there
was nothing there.
llvm-svn: 285950
As proposed on llvm-dev:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-October/106595.html
This change also fixes an API oddity where BitstreamCursor::Read() would
return zero for the first read past the end of the bitstream, but would
report_fatal_error for subsequent reads. Now we always report_fatal_error
for all reads past the end. Updated clients to check for the end of the
bitstream before reading from it.
I also needed to add padding to the invalid bitcode tests in
test/Bitcode/. This is because the streaming interface was not checking that
the file size is a multiple of 4.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26219
llvm-svn: 285773
Summary:
This patch adds a command line option '-cl-ext' to control a set of
supported OpenCL extensions. Option accepts a comma-separated list
of extensions prefixed with '+' or '-'.
It can be used together with a target triple to override support for some
extensions:
// spir target supports all extensions, but we want to disable fp64
clang -cc1 -triple spir-unknown-unknown -cl-ext=-cl_khr_fp64
Special 'all' extension allows to enable or disable all possible
extensions:
// only fp64 will be supported
clang -cc1 -triple spir-unknown-unknown -cl-ext=-all,+cl_khr_fp64
Patch by asavonic (Andrew Savonichev).
Reviewers: joey, yaxunl
Subscribers: yaxunl, bader, Anastasia, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23712
llvm-svn: 285700
on cxx-abi-dev (thread starting 2016-10-11). This is currently hidden behind a
cc1-only -m flag, pending discussion of how best to deal with language changes
that require use of new symbols from the ABI library.
llvm-svn: 285664
No block info block should need to define local abbreviations, so we can
always use a code width of 2.
Also change all block info block writers to use EnterBlockInfoBlock.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26168
llvm-svn: 285660
Implement the -dI as supported by GCC: Output ‘#include’ directives in addition
to the result of preprocessing.
This change aims to add this option, pass it through to the preprocessor via
the options class, and when inclusions occur we output some information (+ test
cases).
Patch by Steve O'Brien!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25153
llvm-svn: 285411
r276653 suppressed the pragma once warning when generating a PCH file.
This patch extends that to any main file for which clang is told (with
the -x option) that it's a header file. It will also suppress the
warning "#include_next in primary source file".
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D25989
llvm-svn: 285295
Summary:
SetVector already used DenseSet, but SmallSetVector used std::set. This
leads to surprising performance differences. Moreover, it means that
the set of key types accepted by SetVector and SmallSetVector are
quite different!
In order to make this change, we had to convert some callsites that used
SmallSetVector<std::string, N> to use SmallSetVector<CachedHashString, N>
instead.
Reviewers: timshen
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25648
llvm-svn: 284887
Reapply r283827 by fixing the tests to not be target specific
Currently, driver level warnings do not show option names (e.g. warning:
complain about foo [-Woption-name]) in a diagnostic unless
-fdiagnostics-show-option is explictly specified. OTOH, the driver by
default turn this option on for CC1. Change the logic to show option
names by default in the driver as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24516
rdar://problem/27300909
llvm-svn: 283913
The backend now has the capability to save information from optimizations, the
same information that can be used to generate optimization diagnostics but in
machine-consumable form, into an output file. This can be enabled when using
opt (see r282539), and this change enables it when using clang. The idea is
that other tools will be able to consume these files, and perhaps in
combination with the original source code, produce various kinds of
optimization reports for users (and for compiler developers).
We now have at-least two tools that can consume these files:
* tools/llvm-opt-report
* utils/opt-viewer
Using the flag -fsave-optimization-record will cause the YAML file to be
generated; the file name will be based on the output file name (if we're using
-c or -S and have an output name), or the input file name. When we're using
CUDA, or some other offloading mechanism, separate files are generated for each
backend target. The output file name can be specified by the user using
-foptimization-record-file=filename.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25225
llvm-svn: 283834
Currently, driver level warnings do not show option names (e.g. warning:
complain about foo [-Woption-name]) in a diagnostic unless
-fdiagnostics-show-option is explictly specified. OTOH, the driver by
default turn this option on for CC1. Change the logic to show option
names by default in the driver as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24516
rdar://problem/27300909
llvm-svn: 283827
Summary: This matches the idiom we use for our other CUDA wrapper headers.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24978
llvm-svn: 283679
Summary:
Also makes -fcoroutines_ts to be both a Driver and CC1 flag.
Patch mostly by EricWF.
Reviewers: rnk, cfe-commits, rsmith, EricWF
Subscribers: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25130
llvm-svn: 283064
assume that ::operator new provides no more alignment than is necessary for any
primitive type, except when we're on a GNU OS, where glibc's malloc guarantees
to provide 64-bit alignment on 32-bit systems and 128-bit alignment on 64-bit
systems. This can be controlled by the command-line -fnew-alignment flag.
llvm-svn: 282974
Summary:
This lets people link against LLVM and their own version of the UTF
library.
I determined this only affects llvm, clang, lld, and lldb by running
$ git grep -wl 'UTF[0-9]\+\|\bConvertUTF\bisLegalUTF\|getNumBytesFor' | cut -f 1 -d '/' | sort | uniq
clang
lld
lldb
llvm
Tested with
ninja lldb
ninja check-clang check-llvm check-lld
(ninja check-lldb doesn't complete for me with or without this patch.)
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: klimek, beanz, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24996
llvm-svn: 282822
This option behaves in a similar spirit as -save-temps and writes
internal llvm statistics in json format to a file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24820
llvm-svn: 282426
Clang has the default FP contraction setting of “-ffp-contract=on”, which
doesn't really mean “on” in the conventional sense of the word, but rather
really means “according to the per-statement effective value of the relevant
pragma”.
Before this patch, Clang has that pragma defaulting to “off”. Since the
“-ffp-contract=on” mode is really an AND of two booleans and the second of them
defaults to “off”, the whole thing effectively defaults to “off”. This patch
changes the default value of the pragma to “on”, thus making the default pair of
booleans (on, on) rather than (on, off). This makes FP optimization slightly
more aggressive than before when not using either “-Ofast”, “-ffast-math”, or
“-ffp-contract=fast”. Even with this patch the compiler still respects
“-ffp-contract=off”.
As per a suggestion by Steve Canon, the added code does _not_ require “-O3” or
higher. This is so as to try our best to preserve identical floating-point
results for unchanged source code compiling for an unchanged target when only
changing from any optimization level in the set (“-O0”, “-O1”, “-O2”, “-O3”) to
any other optimization level in that set. “-Os” and “-Oz” seem to be behaving
identically, i.e. should probably be considered a part of the aforementioned
set, but I have not reviewed this rigorously. “-Ofast” is explicitly _not_ a
member of that set.
Patch authored by Abe Skolnik [a.skolnik@samsung.com] and Stephen Canon [scanon@apple.com].
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24481
llvm-svn: 282259
Currently, the Clang version is computed as follows:
1. LLVM defines major, minor, and patch versions, all statically set. Today,
these are 4, 0, and 0, respectively.
2. The static version numbers are combined into PACKAGE_VERSION along with a
suffix, so the result today looks like "4.0.0svn".
3. Clang extracts CLANG_VERSION from PACKAGE_VERSION using a regexp. The regexp
allows the patch level to omitted, and drops any non-digit trailing values.
Today, this result looks like "4.0.0".
4. CLANG_VERSION is then split further into CLANG_VERSION_MAJOR and
CLANG_VERSION_MINOR. Today, these resolve to 4 and 0, respectively.
5. If CLANG_VERSION matches a regexp with three version components, then
CLANG_VERSION_PATCHLEVEL is extracted and the CLANG_HAS_VERSION_PATCHLEVEL
variable is set to 1. Today, these values are 0 and 1, respectively.
6. The CLANG_VERSION_* variables (and CLANG_HAS_VERSION_PATCHLEVEL) are
configured into [llvm/tools/clang/]include/clang/Basic/Version.inc
verbatim by CMake.
7. In [llvm/tools/clang/]include/clang/Basic/Version.h, macros are defined
conditionally, based on CLANG_HAS_VERSION_PATCHLEVEL, to compute
CLANG_VERSION_STRING as either a two- or three-level version number. Today,
this value is "4.0.0", because despite the patchlevel being 0, it was
matched by regexp and is thus "HAS"ed by the preprocessor. This string is
then used wherever Clang's "version" is needed [*].
[*] Including, notably, by compiler-rt, for computing its installation path.
This change collapses steps 2-5 by defaulting Clang to use LLVM's (non-string)
version components for the Clang version (see [*] for why not PACKAGE_VERSION),
and collapses steps 6 and 7 by simply writing CLANG_VERSION_STRING into
Version.inc. The Clang version today always uses the patchlevel form, so the
collapsed Version.inc does not have logic for a version without a patch level.
Historically speaking, this technique began with the VER file in r82085 (which
survives in the form of the regexp in #3). The major, minor, and patchlevel
versions were introduced by r106863 (which remains in #4-6). The VER file itself
was deleted in favor of the LLVM version number in r106914. On the LLVM side,
the individual LLVM_VERSION_MAJOR, LLVM_VERSION_MINOR, and PACKAGE_VERSION
weren't introduced for nearly two more years, until r150405.
llvm-svn: 281666
The class PTHWriter is in lib/Frontend/CacheTokens.cpp
inside the anonymous namespace.
This diff changes the order of fields an removes excessive padding.
Test plan: make -j8 check-clang
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23902
llvm-svn: 281385
Original commit message:
Add -fdiagnostics-show-hotness
Summary:
I've recently added the ability for optimization remarks to include the
hotness of the corresponding code region. This uses PGO and allows
filtering of the optimization remarks by relevance. The idea was first
discussed here:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.compilers.llvm.devel/98334
The general goal is to produce a YAML file with the remarks. Then, an
external tool could dynamically filter these by hotness and perhaps by
other things.
That said it makes sense to also expose this at the more basic level
where we just include the hotness info with each optimization remark.
For example, in D22694, the clang flag was pretty useful to measure the
overhead of the additional analyses required to include hotness.
(Without the flag we don't even run the analyses.)
For the record, Hal has already expressed support for the idea of this
patch on IRC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23284
llvm-svn: 281293
Summary:
I've recently added the ability for optimization remarks to include the
hotness of the corresponding code region. This uses PGO and allows
filtering of the optimization remarks by relevance. The idea was first
discussed here:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.compilers.llvm.devel/98334
The general goal is to produce a YAML file with the remarks. Then, an
external tool could dynamically filter these by hotness and perhaps by
other things.
That said it makes sense to also expose this at the more basic level
where we just include the hotness info with each optimization remark.
For example, in D22694, the clang flag was pretty useful to measure the
overhead of the additional analyses required to include hotness.
(Without the flag we don't even run the analyses.)
For the record, Hal has already expressed support for the idea of this
patch on IRC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23284
llvm-svn: 281276
OpenCL requires __ENDIAN_LITTLE__ be set for little endian targets.
The default for targets was also apparently big endian, so AMDGPU
was incorrectly reported as big endian. Set this from the triple
so targets don't have another place to set the endianness.
llvm-svn: 280787
-fprofile-dir=path allows the user to specify where .gcda files should be
emitted when the program is run. In particular, this is the first flag that
causes the .gcno and .o files to have different paths, LLVM is extended to
support this. -fprofile-dir= does not change the file name in the .gcno (and
thus where lcov looks for the source) but it does change the name in the .gcda
(and thus where the runtime library writes the .gcda file). It's different from
a GCOV_PREFIX because a user can observe that the GCOV_PREFIX_STRIP will strip
paths off of -fprofile-dir= but not off of a supplied GCOV_PREFIX.
To implement this we split -coverage-file into -coverage-data-file and
-coverage-notes-file to specify the two different names. The !llvm.gcov
metadata node grows from a 2-element form {string coverage-file, node dbg.cu}
to 3-elements, {string coverage-notes-file, string coverage-data-file, node
dbg.cu}. In the 3-element form, the file name is already "mangled" with
.gcno/.gcda suffixes, while the 2-element form left that to the middle end
pass.
llvm-svn: 280306
r280133. Original commit message:
C++ Modules TS: driver support for building modules.
This works as follows: we add --precompile to the existing gamut of options for
specifying how far to go when compiling an input (-E, -c, -S, etc.). This flag
specifies that an input is taken to the precompilation step and no further, and
this can be specified when building a .pcm from a module interface or when
building a .pch from a header file.
The .cppm extension (and some related extensions) are implicitly recognized as
C++ module interface files. If --precompile is /not/ specified, the file is
compiled (via a .pcm) to a .o file containing the code for the module (and then
potentially also assembled and linked, if -S, -c, etc. are not specified). We
do not yet suppress the emission of object code for other users of the module
interface, so for now this will only work if everything in the .cppm file has
vague linkage.
As with the existing support for module-map modules, prebuilt modules can be
provided as compiler inputs either via the -fmodule-file= command-line argument
or via files named ModuleName.pcm in one of the directories specified via
-fprebuilt-module-path=.
This also exposes the -fmodules-ts cc1 flag in the driver. This is still
experimental, and in particular, the concrete syntax is subject to change as
the Modules TS evolves in the C++ committee. Unlike -fmodules, this flag does
not enable support for implicitly loading module maps nor building modules via
the module cache, but those features can be turned on separately and used in
conjunction with the Modules TS support.
llvm-svn: 280134
to CC1, which are translated to function attributes and can e.g. be mapped on
build attributes FP_exceptions and FP_denormal. Setting these build attributes
allows better selection of floating point libraries.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23840
llvm-svn: 280064
This works as follows: we add --precompile to the existing gamut of options for
specifying how far to go when compiling an input (-E, -c, -S, etc.). This flag
specifies that an input is taken to the precompilation step and no further, and
this can be specified when building a .pcm from a module interface or when
building a .pch from a header file.
The .cppm extension (and some related extensions) are implicitly recognized as
C++ module interface files. If --precompile is /not/ specified, the file is
compiled (via a .pcm) to a .o file containing the code for the module (and then
potentially also assembled and linked, if -S, -c, etc. are not specified). We
do not yet suppress the emission of object code for other users of the module
interface, so for now this will only work if everything in the .cppm file has
vague linkage.
As with the existing support for module-map modules, prebuilt modules can be
provided as compiler inputs either via the -fmodule-file= command-line argument
or via files named ModuleName.pcm in one of the directories specified via
-fprebuilt-module-path=.
This also exposes the -fmodules-ts cc1 flag in the driver. This is still
experimental, and in particular, the concrete syntax is subject to change as
the Modules TS evolves in the C++ committee. Unlike -fmodules, this flag does
not enable support for implicitly loading module maps nor building modules via
the module cache, but those features can be turned on separately and used in
conjunction with the Modules TS support.
llvm-svn: 280035
In cases where .dwo/.dwp files are guaranteed to be available, skipping
the extra online (in the .o file) inline info can save a substantial
amount of space - see the original r221306 for more details there.
llvm-svn: 279651
In this mode, there is no need to load any module map and the programmer can
simply use "@import" syntax to load the module directly from a prebuilt
module path. When loading from prebuilt module path, we don't support
rebuilding of the module files and we ignore compatible configuration
mismatches.
rdar://27290316
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23125
llvm-svn: 279096
standard's Annex B. We now attempt to increase the process's stack rlimit to
8MiB on startup, which appears to be enough to allow this to work reliably.
(And if it turns out not to be, we can investigate increasing it further.)
llvm-svn: 278983
Add 'ignore-non-existent-contents' to tell the VFS whether an invalid path
obtained via 'external-contents' should cause iteration on the VFS to stop.
If 'true', the VFS should ignore the entry and continue with the next. Allows
YAML files to be shared across multiple compiler invocations regardless of
prior existent paths in 'external-contents'. This global value is overridable
on a per-file basis.
This adds the parsing and write test part, but use by VFS comes next.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23422
rdar://problem/27531549
llvm-svn: 278456
Let the driver pass the option to frontend. Do not set precision metadata for division instructions when this option is set. Set function attribute "correctly-rounded-divide-sqrt-fp-math" based on this option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22940
llvm-svn: 278155
Adjust target features for amdgcn target when -cl-denorms-are-zero is set.
Denormal support is controlled by feature strings fp32-denormals fp64-denormals in amdgcn target. If -cl-denorms-are-zero is not set and the command line does not set fp32/64-denormals feature string, +fp32-denormals +fp64-denormals will be on for GPU's supporting them.
A new virtual function virtual void TargetInfo::adjustTargetOptions(const CodeGenOptions &CGOpts, TargetOptions &TargetOpts) const is introduced to allow adjusting target option by codegen option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22815
llvm-svn: 278151
This patch adds a command line option to list the checkers that were enabled
by analyzer-checker and not disabled by -analyzer-disable-checker.
It can be very useful to debug long command lines when it is not immediately
apparent which checkers are turned on and which checkers are turned off.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23060
llvm-svn: 278006
This differs from the previous version by being more careful about template
instantiation/specialization in order to prevent errors when building with
clang -Werror. Specifically:
* begin is not defined in the template and is instead instantiated when Head
is. I think the warning when we don't do that is wrong (PR28815) but for now
at least do it this way to avoid the warning.
* Instead of performing template specializations in LLVM_INSTANTIATE_REGISTRY
instead provide a template definition then do explicit instantiation. No
compiler I've tried has problems with doing it the other way, but strictly
speaking it's not permitted by the C++ standard so better safe than sorry.
Original commit message:
Currently the Registry class contains the vestiges of a previous attempt to
allow plugins to be used on Windows without using BUILD_SHARED_LIBS, where a
plugin would have its own copy of a registry and export it to be imported by
the tool that's loading the plugin. This only works if the plugin is entirely
self-contained with the only interface between the plugin and tool being the
registry, and in particular this conflicts with how IR pass plugins work.
This patch changes things so that instead the add_node function of the registry
is exported by the tool and then imported by the plugin, which solves this
problem and also means that instead of every plugin having to export every
registry they use instead LLVM only has to export the add_node functions. This
allows plugins that use a registry to work on Windows if
LLVM_EXPORT_SYMBOLS_FOR_PLUGINS is used.
llvm-svn: 277806
Currently Clang use int32 to represent sampler_t, which have been a source of issue for some backends, because in some backends sampler_t cannot be represented by int32. They have to depend on kernel argument metadata and use IPA to find the sampler arguments and global variables and transform them to target specific sampler type.
This patch uses opaque pointer type opencl.sampler_t* for sampler_t. For each use of file-scope sampler variable, it generates a function call of __translate_sampler_initializer. For each initialization of function-scope sampler variable, it generates a function call of __translate_sampler_initializer.
Each builtin library can implement its own __translate_sampler_initializer(). Since the real sampler type tends to be architecture dependent, allowing it to be initialized by a library function simplifies backend design. A typical implementation of __translate_sampler_initializer could be a table lookup of real sampler literal values. Since its argument is always a literal, the returned pointer is known at compile time and easily optimized to finally become some literal values directly put into image read instructions.
This patch is partially based on Alexey Sotkin's work in Khronos Clang (3d4eec6162).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21567
llvm-svn: 277024
This version has two fixes compared to the original:
* In Registry.h the template static members are instantiated before they are
used, as clang gives an error if you do it the other way around.
* The use of the Registry template in clang-tidy is updated in the same way as
has been done everywhere else.
Original commit message:
Currently the Registry class contains the vestiges of a previous attempt to
allow plugins to be used on Windows without using BUILD_SHARED_LIBS, where a
plugin would have its own copy of a registry and export it to be imported by
the tool that's loading the plugin. This only works if the plugin is entirely
self-contained with the only interface between the plugin and tool being the
registry, and in particular this conflicts with how IR pass plugins work.
This patch changes things so that instead the add_node function of the registry
is exported by the tool and then imported by the plugin, which solves this
problem and also means that instead of every plugin having to export every
registry they use instead LLVM only has to export the add_node functions. This
allows plugins that use a registry to work on Windows if
LLVM_EXPORT_SYMBOLS_FOR_PLUGINS is used.
llvm-svn: 276973
Currently the Registry class contains the vestiges of a previous attempt to
allow plugins to be used on Windows without using BUILD_SHARED_LIBS, where a
plugin would have its own copy of a registry and export it to be imported by
the tool that's loading the plugin. This only works if the plugin is entirely
self-contained with the only interface between the plugin and tool being the
registry, and in particular this conflicts with how IR pass plugins work.
This patch changes things so that instead the add_node function of the registry
is exported by the tool and then imported by the plugin, which solves this
problem and also means that instead of every plugin having to export every
registry they use instead LLVM only has to export the add_node functions. This
allows plugins that use a registry to work on Windows if
LLVM_EXPORT_SYMBOLS_FOR_PLUGINS is used.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21385
llvm-svn: 276856
With PCH+Module, sometimes compiler gives a hard error:
Module file ‘<some-file path>.pcm' is out of date and needs to be rebuilt
This happens when we have a pch importing a module and the module gets
overwritten by another compiler instance after we build the pch (one example is
that both compiler instances hash to the same pcm file but use different
diagnostic options). When we try to load the pch later on, the compiler notices
that the imported module is out of date (modification date, size do not match)
but it can't handle this out of date pcm (i.e it does not know how to rebuild
the pch).
This commit introduces a new command line option so for PCH + module, we can
turn on this option and if two compiler instances only differ in diagnostic
options, the latter instance will not invalidate the original pcm.
rdar://26675801
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22773
llvm-svn: 276769
Summary:
This patch replaces the CUDA specific action by a generic offload action. The offload action may have multiple dependences classier in “host” and “device”. The way this generic offloading action is used is very similar to what is done today by the CUDA implementation: it is used to set a specific toolchain and architecture to its dependences during the generation of jobs.
This patch also proposes propagating the offloading information through the action graph so that that information can be easily retrieved at any time during the generation of commands. This allows e.g. the "clang tool” to evaluate whether CUDA should be supported for the device or host and ptas to easily retrieve the target architecture.
This is an example of how the action graphs would look like (compilation of a single CUDA file with two GPU architectures)
```
0: input, "cudatests.cu", cuda, (host-cuda)
1: preprocessor, {0}, cuda-cpp-output, (host-cuda)
2: compiler, {1}, ir, (host-cuda)
3: input, "cudatests.cu", cuda, (device-cuda, sm_35)
4: preprocessor, {3}, cuda-cpp-output, (device-cuda, sm_35)
5: compiler, {4}, ir, (device-cuda, sm_35)
6: backend, {5}, assembler, (device-cuda, sm_35)
7: assembler, {6}, object, (device-cuda, sm_35)
8: offload, "device-cuda (nvptx64-nvidia-cuda:sm_35)" {7}, object
9: offload, "device-cuda (nvptx64-nvidia-cuda:sm_35)" {6}, assembler
10: input, "cudatests.cu", cuda, (device-cuda, sm_37)
11: preprocessor, {10}, cuda-cpp-output, (device-cuda, sm_37)
12: compiler, {11}, ir, (device-cuda, sm_37)
13: backend, {12}, assembler, (device-cuda, sm_37)
14: assembler, {13}, object, (device-cuda, sm_37)
15: offload, "device-cuda (nvptx64-nvidia-cuda:sm_37)" {14}, object
16: offload, "device-cuda (nvptx64-nvidia-cuda:sm_37)" {13}, assembler
17: linker, {8, 9, 15, 16}, cuda-fatbin, (device-cuda)
18: offload, "host-cuda (powerpc64le-unknown-linux-gnu)" {2}, "device-cuda (nvptx64-nvidia-cuda)" {17}, ir
19: backend, {18}, assembler
20: assembler, {19}, object
21: input, "cuda", object
22: input, "cudart", object
23: linker, {20, 21, 22}, image
```
The changes in this patch pass the existent regression tests (keeps the existent functionality) and resulting binaries execute correctly in a Power8+K40 machine.
Reviewers: echristo, hfinkel, jlebar, ABataev, tra
Subscribers: guansong, andreybokhanko, tcramer, mkuron, cfe-commits, arpith-jacob, carlo.bertolli, caomhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18171
llvm-svn: 275645
This changes the CompilerInstance::createOutputFile function to return
a std::unique_ptr<llvm::raw_ostream>, rather than an llvm::raw_ostream
implicitly owned by the CompilerInstance. This in most cases required that
I move ownership of the output stream to the relevant ASTConsumer.
The motivation for this change is to allow BackendConsumer to be a client
of interfaces such as D20268 which take ownership of the output stream.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21537
llvm-svn: 275507
-fxray-instrument: enables XRay annotation of IR
-fxray-instruction-threshold: configures the threshold for function size (looking at IR instructions), and allow LLVM to decide whether to add the nop sleds later on in the process.
Also implements the related xray_always_instrument and xray_never_instrument function attributes.
Patch by Dean Michael Berris.
llvm-svn: 275330
Also fixes strict-aliasing option to only be allowed when OpenCL Version 1.0. Added testcase in test/Frontend/opencl-blocks.cl.
Patch by Aaron En Ye Shi.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22170
llvm-svn: 275318
This is to allow distributed build systems, that do not preserve time stamps, to use PCH files.
Second and last part of the patch proposed at:
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20867
llvm-svn: 275267
Add OCL option -cl-no-signed-zeros to driver options.
Also added to opencl.cl testcases.
Patch by Aaron En Ye Shi.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22067
llvm-svn: 274923
Summary: This patch changes the options used by offloading to start with -fopenmp instead of -fomp. This makes the option naming more consistent and materializes a suggestion by Richard Smith in http://reviews.llvm.org/D9888.
Reviewers: hfinkel, carlo.bertolli, arpith-jacob, ABataev
Subscribers: kkwli0, cfe-commits, caomhin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21841
llvm-svn: 274283
Allow -cl-std and other standard -cl- options from cc1 to driver.
Added a test for the options moved.
Patch by Aaron En Ye Shi.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21031
llvm-svn: 274150
DiagnosticNoteRenderer asserts trying to emit its "while building
module Foo imported from bar.h:5" note when the presumed location
of the import is invalid. This assertion was added in r267914,
where most uses of 'getFilename' were updated to test 'isValid'
instead. This one must have been missed.
I can't come up with a test because this location is always valid
in C-based code, but external clients that manually import modules
(*cough*Swift*cough*) sometimes provide invalid SourceLocations.
rdar://problem/26099576
http://reviews.llvm.org/D21111
llvm-svn: 273976
The PIC and PIE levels are not independent. In fact, if PIE is defined
it is always the same as PIC.
This is clear in the driver where ParsePICArgs returns a PIC level and
a IsPIE boolean. Unfortunately that is currently lost and we pass two
redundant levels down the pipeline.
This patch keeps a bool and a PIC level all the way down to codegen.
llvm-svn: 273566
Add support for /Ob1 (and equivalent -finline-hint-functions), which enable
inlining only for functions marked inline, either explicitly (via inline
keyword, for example), or implicitly (function definition in class body,
for example).
This works by enabling inlining pass, and adding noinline attribute to
every function not marked inline.
Patch by Rudy Pons <rudy.pons@ilod.org>!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20647
llvm-svn: 273440
Include opencl-c.h by default as a module to utilize the automatic AST caching mechanism of clang modules.
Add an option -finclude-default-header to enable default header for OpenCL, which is off by default.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20444
llvm-svn: 273191
Fix a regression which forbids using -std=cl|CL1.1|CL1.2|CL2.0 in driver.
Allow -std and -cl-std={cl|CL}{|1.1|1.2|2.0}.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20630
llvm-svn: 273015
Summary:
Create a new Frontend LangOpt to specify the renderscript language. It
is enabled by the "-x renderscript" option from the driver.
Add a "kernel" function attribute only for RenderScript (an "ignored
attribute" warning is generated otherwise).
Make the NativeHalfType and NativeHalfArgsAndReturns LangOpts be implied
by the RenderScript LangOpt.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits, srhines
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21198
llvm-svn: 272342
Diagnostics that happen during driver time do not have color output support
unless -fcolor-diagonostic is explicitly passed into the driver. This is not a
problem for cc1 since dianostic arguments are properly handled and color is
enabled by default if the terminal supports it.
Make the driver behave like CC1. There are tests that already check for these
flags, but for the color itself there's no sensible way to test it.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20404
rdar://problem/26290980
llvm-svn: 271042
OpenMP version.
If '-fopenmp' option is provided '-fopenmp-version=' allows to control,
which version of OpenMP must be supported. Currently it affects only the
value of _OPENMP define.
llvm-svn: 270838
OpenMP 4.5.
According to OpenMP 4.5 the _OPENMP macro name is defined to have the decimal value yyyymm where yyyy and mm are the year and month designations of the version of the OpenMP API that the implementation supports. Clang supports OpenMP 4.5 so updated value of _OPENMP macro to 201511.
llvm-svn: 270822
-finline-functions and /Ob2 are currently ignored by Clang. The only way to
enable inlining is to use the global O flags, which also enable other options,
or to emit LLVM bitcode using Clang, then running opt by hand with the inline
pass.
This patch allows to simply use the -finline-functions flag (same as GCC) or
/Ob2 in clang-cl mode to enable inlining without other optimizations.
This is the first patch of a serie to improve support for the /Ob flags.
Patch by Rudy Pons <rudy.pons@ilod.org>!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20576
llvm-svn: 270609
This matches default nvcc behavior and gives substantial
performance boost on GPU where fmad is much cheaper compared to add+mul.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20341
llvm-svn: 270094
When remapped files were changed, they would not always cause the preamble's PCH to be invalidated, because the remapped path didn't necessarily match the include path (e.g. slash direction -- this happens a lot on Windows). I fixed this by moving to a llvm::sys::fs::UniqueID-based map instead of comparing paths stringwise.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20137
llvm-svn: 269769
licensees actually see in the toolchain we deliver to them. This will
reduce the set of local patches we have to maintain. The triple is
not changing. (The term ORBIS is an internal code name for PS4.)
llvm-svn: 269671
Add supported OpenCL extensions to target info. It serves as default values to save the users of the burden setting each supported extensions and optional core features in command line.
Re-commit after fixing build error due to missing override attribute.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19484
llvm-svn: 269670
Clang performs directory walk while searching headers inside modules by
using the ::sys::fs instead of ::vfs. This prevents any code that uses
the VFS (e.g, reproducer scripts) to actually find such headers, since
the VFS will never be searched for those.
Change these places to use vfs::recursive_directory_iterator and
vfs::directory_iterator instead.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20266
rdar://problem/25880368
llvm-svn: 269661
This reverts commit r269492 as the corresponding LLVM commit was
reverted due to lots of warnings. See the review thread for the original
LLVM commit (r269491) for details.
llvm-svn: 269549
(1) Collect headers under inner frameworks (frameworks inside other
other frameworks).
(2) Make sure we also collect the right header files inside them.
More info on (2):
Consider a dummy framework module B, with header Frameworks/B/B.h. Now
consider that another framework A, with header Frameworks/A/A.h, has a
layout with a inner framework Frameworks/A/Frameworks/B/B.h, where the
"B/B.h" part is a symlink for Frameworks/B/B.h. Also assume that
Frameworks/A/A.h includes <B/B.h>.
When parsing header Frameworks/A/A.h, framework module lookup is
performed in search for B, and it happens that
"Frameworks/A/Frameworks/B/B.h" path is registered in the module instead
of real "Frameworks/B/B.h". This occurs because
"Frameworks/A/Frameworks/B/B.h" is scanned first by the FileManager,
when looking for inner framework modules under Frameworks/A/Frameworks.
This makes Frameworks/A/Frameworks/B/B.h the default cached named inside
the FileManager for the B.h file UID.
This leads to modules being built without consistent paths to underlying
header files. This is usually not a problem in regular compilation flow,
but it's an issue when running the crash reproducer. The issue is that
clangs collect "Frameworks/A/Frameworks/B/B.h" but not
"Frameworks/B/B.h" into the VFS, leading to err_mmap_umbrella_clash. So
make sure we also collect the original header.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20194
rdar://problem/25880368
llvm-svn: 269502
Revert r269431 due to build failure caused by warning msg:
llvm/tools/clang/lib/Basic/Targets.cpp:2090:9: error: 'setSupportedOpenCLOpts' overrides a member function but is not marked 'override' [-Werror,-Winconsistent-missing-override]
void setSupportedOpenCLOpts() {
llvm-svn: 269435
Add supported OpenCL extensions to target info. It serves as default values to save the users of the burden setting each supported extensions and optional core features in command line.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19484
llvm-svn: 269431
Summary:
There virtual destructor can't be found and cause a compilation error
on a shared build.
To repro: [Release + Shared]
```
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
```
Which produce this error:
```
tools/clang/unittests/Tooling/CMakeFiles/ToolingTests.dir/ToolingTest.cpp.o: In function `clang::tooling::newFrontendActionFactory_CreatesFrontendActionFactoryFromType_Test::TestBody()':
ToolingTest.cpp:(.text._ZN5clang7tooling66newFrontendActionFactory_CreatesFrontendActionFactoryFromType_Test8TestBodyEv+0x49): undefined reference to `clang::SyntaxOnlyAction::~SyntaxOnlyAction()'
```
Reviewers: alexfh
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20218
llvm-svn: 269334
Summary:
This option allows the user to control how much of the file name is
emitted by UBSan. Tuning this option allows one to save space in the
resulting binary, which is helpful for restricted execution
environments.
With a positive N, UBSan skips the first N path components.
With a negative N, UBSan only keeps the last N path components.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19666
llvm-svn: 269309
Summary:
Teach clang to embed bitcode inside bitcode. When -fembed-bitcode cc1
option is used, clang will embed both the input bitcode and cc1
commandline into the bitcode in special sections before compiling to
the object file. Using -fembed-bitcode-marker will only introduce a
marker in both sections.
Depends on D17390
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: yaron.keren, vsk, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17392
llvm-svn: 269202
[ Copied from https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=26404 ]
clang support on Haiku is lagging a bit, and missing on x86_64.
This patch updates support for x86 and add support for x86_64. It should
apply directly to trunk and it's harmless in the sense that it only
affects Haiku.
Reviewers: rnk, rsmith
Patch by Jérôme Duval
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16797
llvm-svn: 269201
Support OpenMP version 4.5 syntax for #pragma omp declare target.
Syntax:
#pragma omp declare target (extended-list) new-line
or
#pragma omp declare target clause[ [,] clause ... ] new-line
Where clause is one of the following:
to(extended-list)
link(list)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20011
llvm-svn: 268925
When running reproducer scripts we need that original symlinks from the
source filesystem are reproduced in the VFS so that different virtual
paths can map to the same file, allowing the FileManager to share the
same UID between these virtual entries. This avoids all sorts of module
redefinition errors when using frameworks.
llvm-svn: 268825
Use a StringRef instead of a FileEntry in the moduleMapAddHeader
callback to allow more flexibility on what to collect on further
patches. This changes the interface I introduced in r264971.
llvm-svn: 268819
From the GCC manpage:
-I dir
... If dir begins with =, then the = will be replaced by the sysroot prefix;
see --sysroot and -isysroot.
Add support to expand the `=` as a prefix of the include path with the sysroot
if specified. `-isysroot` takes precedence over `--sysroot` as the normal
argument behaviour occurs. The ordering of the `-isysroot` is relevant to the
path substituted. If no `--sysroot=` or `-isysroot` option is present, the = is
not expanded.
Resolves PR26965!
llvm-svn: 268777
This option, like the corresponding gcc option, is SystemZ-specific and
enables storing frame backchain links, as specified in the ABI.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19891
llvm-svn: 268575
Let the loop unroll pass handle /Os. It already checks that option and adjust its thresholds accordingly. Also, will allow the #pragma unroll to have an effect in /Os.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19827
llvm-svn: 268509
The -malign-double flag causes i64 and f64 types to have alignment 8
instead of 4. On x86-64, the behavior of -malign-double is enabled by default.
Rebases and cleans phosek's work here: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12860
Patch by Sean Klein
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: rnk, jfb, dschuff, phosek
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19734
llvm-svn: 268473
Summary:
Host and device types must match, otherwise when we pass values back and
forth between the host and device, we will get the wrong result.
This patch makes NVPTXTargetInfo inherit most of its type information
from the host's target info.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits, jhen, tra
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19346
llvm-svn: 268131
It makes compiler-rt tests fail if the gold plugin is enabled.
Revert "Rework interface for bitset-using features to use a notion of LTO visibility."
Revert "Driver: only produce CFI -fvisibility= error when compiling."
Revert "clang/test/CodeGenCXX/cfi-blacklist.cpp: Exclude ms targets. They would be non-cfi."
llvm-svn: 267871
Bitsets, and the compiler features they rely on (vtable opt, CFI),
only have visibility within the LTO'd part of the linkage unit. Therefore,
only enable these features for classes with hidden LTO visibility. This
notion is based on object file visibility or (on Windows)
dllimport/dllexport attributes.
We provide the [[clang::lto_visibility_public]] attribute to override the
compiler's LTO visibility inference in cases where the class is defined
in the non-LTO'd part of the linkage unit, or where the ABI supports
calling classes derived from abstract base classes with hidden visibility
in other linkage units (e.g. COM on Windows).
If the cross-DSO CFI mode is enabled, bitset checks are emitted even for
classes with public LTO visibility, as that mode uses a separate mechanism
to cause bitsets to be exported.
This mechanism replaces the whole-program-vtables blacklist, so remove the
-fwhole-program-vtables-blacklist flag.
Because __declspec(uuid()) now implies [[clang::lto_visibility_public]], the
support for the special attr:uuid blacklist entry is removed.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18635
llvm-svn: 267784
OpenCL spec requires __OPENCL_C_VERSION__ to be defined based on -cl-std option. This patch implements that.
The patch also defines __FAST_RELAXED_MATH__ based on -cl-fast-relaxed-math option.
Also fixed a test using -std=c99 for OpenCL program. Limit allowed language standard of OpenCL to be OpenCL standards.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19071
llvm-svn: 267590
Hide the real paths when rebuilding from VFS by setting up the crash
reproducer to use 'use-external-names' = false. This way we avoid
module redifinition errors and consistently use the same paths against
all modules.
With this change on Darwin we are able to simulate a crash for a simple
application using "Foundation/Foundation.h" (which relies on a bunch of
different frameworks and headers) and successfully rebuild all the
modules by relying solely at the VFS overlay.
llvm-svn: 266234
It is possible to argue that the EABIVersion field is similar in spirit to the
ABI field in TargetOptions. It represents the embedded ABI that the target
follows. This will allow us to thread this information into the target
information construction.
llvm-svn: 265807
Revert the two changes to thread CodeGenOptions into the TargetInfo allocation
and to fix the layering violation by moving CodeGenOptions into Basic.
Code Generation is arguably not particularly "basic". This addresses Richard's
post-commit review comments. This change purely does the mechanical revert and
will be followed up with an alternate approach to thread the desired information
into TargetInfo.
llvm-svn: 265806
CodeGen-level implementation. Instead of adding an attribute to clang's
FunctionDecl, add the IR attribute directly. This means a module built with
this flag is now compatible with code built without it and vice versa.
This change also results in the 'noalias' attribute no longer being added to
calls to operator new in the IR; it's now only added to the declaration. It
also fixes a bug where we failed to add the attribute to the 'nothrow' versions
(because we didn't implicitly declare them, there was no good time to inject a
fake attribute).
llvm-svn: 265728
This is a mechanical move of CodeGenOptions from libFrontend to libBasic. This
fixes the layering violation introduced earlier by threading CodeGenOptions into
TargetInfo. It should also fix the modules based self-hosting builds. NFC.
llvm-svn: 265702
This threads CodeGenOptions into the TargetInfo hierarchy. This is motivated by
ARM which can change some target information based on the EABI selected
(-meabi). Similar options exist for other platforms (e.g. MIPS) and thus is
generally useful. NFC.
llvm-svn: 265640
This is a SmallVector anyway, and so the exact size doesn't matter.
clang\lib\Frontend\ModuleDependencyCollector.cpp(83) : error C2065: 'PATH_MAX' : undeclared identifier
clang\lib\Frontend\ModuleDependencyCollector.cpp(83) : error C2975: 'InternalLen' : invalid template argument for 'llvm::SmallString', expected compile-time constant expression
llvm\include\llvm/ADT/SmallString.h(24) : see declaration of 'InternalLen'
llvm-svn: 265634
The crash reproducer was not setting up case sensitivity in the
VFS yaml files, which defaults to true. Make the crash reproducer
explicitly set that flag based on the case sensitivity of the .cache
path where vfs and modules are dumped.
llvm-svn: 265622
Add parsing, sema analysis for 'declare target' construct for OpenMP 4.0
(4.5 support will be added in separate patch).
The declare target directive specifies that variables, functions (C, C++
and Fortran), and subroutines (Fortran) are mapped to a device. The declare
target directive is a declarative directive. In Clang declare target is
implemented as implicit attribute for the declaration.
The syntax of the declare target directive is as follows:
#pragma omp declare target
declarations-definition-seq
#pragma omp end declare target
Based on patch from Michael Wong http://reviews.llvm.org/D15321
llvm-svn: 265530
Summary:
Setting this flag causes all functions are annotated with the
"nvvm-f32ftz" = "true" attribute.
In addition, we annotate the module with "nvvm-reflect-ftz" set
to 0 or 1, depending on whether -cuda-flush-denormals-to-zero is set.
This is read by the NVVMReflect pass.
Reviewers: tra, rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18671
llvm-svn: 265435
Add no-jump-tables flag to disable use of jump tables when lowering
switch statements
Reviewers: echristo, hans
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18407
llvm-svn: 265425
The current ModuleDependencyCollector has a AST listener to collect
header files present in loaded modules, but this isn't enough to collect
all headers needed in the crash reproducer. One of the reasons is that
the AST writer doesn't write symbolic link header paths in the pcm modules,
this makes the listeners on the reader only able to collect the real files.
Since the module maps could contain submodules that use headers which
are symbolic links, not collecting those forbid the reproducer scripts
to regen the modules.
For instance:
usr/include/module.map:
...
module pthread {
header "pthread.h"
export *
module impl {
header "pthread_impl.h"
export *
}
}
...
usr/include/pthread/pthread_impl.h
usr/include/pthread_impl.h -> pthread/pthread_impl.h
The AST dump for the module above:
<SUBMODULE_HEADER abbrevid=6/> blob data = 'pthread_impl.h'
<SUBMODULE_TOPHEADER abbrevid=7/> blob data = '/<path_to_sdk>/usr/include/pthread/pthread_impl.h'
Note that we don't have "usr/include/pthread_impl.h" which is requested
by the module.map in case we want to reconstruct the module in the
reproducer. The reason the original symbolic link path isn't used is
because the headers are kept by name and requested through the
FileManager, which unique files and returns the real path only.
To fix that, add a callback to be invoked everytime a header is added
while parsing module maps and hook that up to the module dependecy
collector. This callback is only registered when generating the
reproducer.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18585
rdar://problem/24499339
llvm-svn: 264971
With this patch, by a constexpr function is implicitly host+device
unless:
a) it's a variadic function (variadic functions are not allowed on the
device side), or
b) it's preceeded by a __device__ overload in a system header.
The restriction on overloading __host__ __device__ functions on the
basis of their CUDA attributes remains in place, but we use (b) to allow
us to define __device__ overloads for constexpr functions in cmath,
which would otherwise be __host__ __device__ and thus not overloadable.
You can disable this behavior with -fno-cuda-host-device-constexpr.
Reviewers: tra, rnk, rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18380
llvm-svn: 264964
...as that is apparently what MSVC does. This is an updated version of r263738,
which had to be reverted in r263740 due to test failures. The original version
had erroneously emitted functions that are defined in class templates, too (see
the updated "Handle friend functions" code in EmitDeferredDecls,
lib/CodeGen/ModuleBuilder.cpp). (The updated tests needed to be split out into
their own dllexport-ms-friend.cpp because of the CHECK-NOTs which would have
interfered with subsequent CHECK-DAGs in dllexport.cpp.)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18430
llvm-svn: 264841
- Make ModuleDependencyCollector use the DependencyCollector interface
- Move some methods from ModuleDependencyListener to ModuleDependencyCollector
in order to share common functionality with other future possible
callbacks.
llvm-svn: 264808
Summary:
* -fcuda-target-overloads
Previously unconditionally set to true by the driver. Necessary for
correct functioning of the compiler -- our CUDA headers wrapper won't
compile without this.
* -fcuda-disable-target-call-checks
Previously unconditionally set to true by the driver. Necessary to
compile almost any external CUDA code -- almost all libraries assume
that host+device code can call host or device functions.
* -fcuda-allow-host-calls-from-host-device
No effect when target overloading is enabled.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: rsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18416
llvm-svn: 264739
include altivec.h has come and gone.
Rationale: This causes modules, rewrite-includes, etc to be sad and
people should just include altivec.h in their source.
llvm-svn: 264235
Remove tests that have neither a triple nor an explicit -fmsc-version flag,
since in the absence of an -fmsc-version flag, the implicit value of the flag
is 17 (MSVC2013) with MSVC triples but 0 (not set) for other triples, and
the default triple is platform dependent.
This relands r263974 with a test fix.
llvm-svn: 264210
Instead of putting the /Yc header into ExtraDeps, give DependencyOutputOptions
a dedicated field for /Yc mode, and let HeaderIncludesCallback hang on to the
full DependencyOutputOptions object, not just ExtraDeps.
Reverts parts of r263352 that are now no longer needed.
llvm-svn: 264182
-H in gcc mode doesn't print -include headers, but they are included in
depfiles written by MMD and friends. Since /showIncludes is what's used instead
of depfiles, printing /FI there seems important (and matches cl.exe).
Instead of giving HeaderIncludeGen more options, just switch on ShowAllHeaders
in clang-cl mode and let clang::InitializePreprocessor() not put -include flags
in the <command line> block. This changes the behavior of -E slightly, and it
removes the <command line> flag from the output triggered by setting the
obscure CC_PRINT_HEADERS=1 env var to true while running clang. Both of these
seem ok to change.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18401
llvm-svn: 264174
This reverts commit r263607.
This change caused more objc_retain/objc_release calls in the IR but those
are then incorrectly optimized by the ARC optimizer. Work is going to have
to be done to ensure the ARC optimizer doesn't optimize user written RR, but
that should land before this change.
This change will also need to be updated to take account for any changes required
to ensure that user written calls to RR are distinct from those inserted by ARC.
llvm-svn: 263984
This reapplies r261552 and r263748. Fixed testcase to reapply.
The VFS overlay mapping between virtual paths and real paths is done through
the 'external-contents' entries in YAML files, which contains hardcoded paths
to the real files.
When a module compilation crashes, headers are dumped into <name>.cache/vfs
directory and are mapped via the <name>.cache/vfs/vfs.yaml. The script
generated for reproduction uses -ivfsoverlay pointing to file to gather the
mapping between virtual paths and files inside <name>.cache/vfs. Currently, we
are only capable of reproducing such crashes in the same machine as they
happen, because of the hardcoded paths in 'external-contents'.
To be able to reproduce a crash in another machine, this patch introduces a new
option in the VFS yaml file called 'overlay-relative'. When it's equal to
'true' it means that the provided path to the YAML file through the
-ivfsoverlay option should also be used to prefix the final path for every
'external-contents'.
Example, given the invocation snippet "... -ivfsoverlay
<name>.cache/vfs/vfs.yaml" and the following entry in the yaml file:
"overlay-relative": "true",
"roots": [
...
"type": "directory",
"name": "/usr/include",
"contents": [
{
"type": "file",
"name": "stdio.h",
"external-contents": "/usr/include/stdio.h"
},
...
Here, a file manager request for virtual "/usr/include/stdio.h", that will map
into real path "/<absolute_path_to>/<name>.cache/vfs/usr/include/stdio.h.
This is a useful feature for debugging module crashes in machines other than
the one where the error happened.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17457
rdar://problem/24499339
llvm-svn: 263893
Summary:
r246764 handled __fp16 arguments and returns for AAPCS, but skipped this
handling for OpenCL. Simlar to OpenCL, RenderScript also handles __fp16
type natively.
This patch adds the -fnative-half-arguments-and-returns command line
flag to allow such languages to skip this coercion of __fp16.
Reviewers: srhines, olista01
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18138
llvm-svn: 263795
This reapplies r261552.
The VFS overlay mapping between virtual paths and real paths is done through
the 'external-contents' entries in YAML files, which contains hardcoded paths
to the real files.
When a module compilation crashes, headers are dumped into <name>.cache/vfs
directory and are mapped via the <name>.cache/vfs/vfs.yaml. The script
generated for reproduction uses -ivfsoverlay pointing to file to gather the
mapping between virtual paths and files inside <name>.cache/vfs. Currently, we
are only capable of reproducing such crashes in the same machine as they
happen, because of the hardcoded paths in 'external-contents'.
To be able to reproduce a crash in another machine, this patch introduces a new
option in the VFS yaml file called 'overlay-relative'. When it's equal to
'true' it means that the provided path to the YAML file through the
-ivfsoverlay option should also be used to prefix the final path for every
'external-contents'.
Example, given the invocation snippet "... -ivfsoverlay
<name>.cache/vfs/vfs.yaml" and the following entry in the yaml file:
"overlay-relative": "true",
"roots": [
...
"type": "directory",
"name": "/usr/include",
"contents": [
{
"type": "file",
"name": "stdio.h",
"external-contents": "/usr/include/stdio.h"
},
...
Here, a file manager request for virtual "/usr/include/stdio.h", that will map
into real path "/<absolute_path_to>/<name>.cache/vfs/usr/include/stdio.h.
This is a useful feature for debugging module crashes in machines other than
the one where the error happened.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17457
rdar://problem/24499339
llvm-svn: 263748
Summary: ...as that is apparently what MSVC does
Reviewers: rnk
Patch by Stephan Bergmann
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15267
llvm-svn: 263738