Summary:
Add a new variant to GlobalDecl for these so that we can detect them
more easily during debug info emission and handle them appropriately.
Reviewers: rsmith, rjmccall, jyu2
Subscribers: aprantl, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60930
llvm-svn: 359148
The behaviour of not quoting spaces appears to have been introduced by
mistake in r190620.
Patch by Brad Moody!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60997
llvm-svn: 359077
The change breaks libc++ with the follwing error:
In file included from valarray:4:
.../include/c++/v1/valarray:1062:60: error: explicit instantiation declaration of 'valarray<_Tp>' with internal linkage
_LIBCPP_EXTERN_TEMPLATE(_LIBCPP_FUNC_VIS valarray<size_t>::valarray(size_t))
^
.../include/c++/v1/valarray:1063:60: error: explicit instantiation declaration of '~valarray<_Tp>' with internal linkage
_LIBCPP_EXTERN_TEMPLATE(_LIBCPP_FUNC_VIS valarray<size_t>::~valarray())
llvm-svn: 359076
Summary:
This patch implements `__builtin_is_constant_evaluated` as specifier by [P0595R2](https://wg21.link/p0595r2). It is built on the back of Bill Wendling's work for `__builtin_constant_p()`.
More tests to come, but early feedback is appreciated.
I plan to implement warnings for common mis-usages like those belowe in a following patch:
```
void foo(int x) {
if constexpr (std::is_constant_evaluated())) { // condition is always `true`. Should use plain `if` instead.
foo_constexpr(x);
} else {
foo_runtime(x);
}
}
```
Reviewers: rsmith, MaskRay, bruno, void
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: dexonsmith, zoecarver, fdeazeve, kristina, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55500
llvm-svn: 359067
of an auto"
This commit changed the initializer expression passed into
initialization (stripping off an enclosing pair of parentheses or
braces) and subtly changing the meaning of programs, typically by
inserting bogus calls to copy constructors.
See the added testcase in test/SemaCXX/cxx1y-init-captures.cpp for an
example of the breakage.
llvm-svn: 359066
current trunk GCC.
GCC permits information from outside the operand of
__builtin_constant_p (but in the same constant evaluation context) to be
used within that operand; clang now does so too. A few other minor
deviations from GCC's behavior showed up in my testing and are also
fixed (matching GCC):
* Clang now supports nullptr_t as the argument type for
__builtin_constant_p
* Clang now returns true from __builtin_constant_p if called with a
null pointer
* Clang now returns true from __builtin_constant_p if called with an
integer cast to pointer type
llvm-svn: 359059
recursively captured.
Under ARC, a block variable is zero-initialized when it is recursively
captured by the block literal initializer.
rdar://problem/11022762
llvm-svn: 359049
AMDGPU currently relies on global properties being set before
setTargetProperties is called. Existing targets like MIPS which rely on
setTargetProperties do not rely on the current behavior, so this patch
moves the call later in SetFunctionAttributes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60967
llvm-svn: 359039
If macro "CHECK_X(x)" expands to something like "if (x != NULL) ...",
the "Assuming..." note no longer says "Assuming 'x' is equal to CHECK_X".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59121
llvm-svn: 359037
Summary:
The opt level was not being passed down to the ThinLTO backend when
invoked via clang (for distributed ThinLTO).
This exposed an issue where the new PM was asserting if the Thin or
regular LTO backend pipelines were invoked with -O0 (not a new issue,
could be provoked by invoking in-process *LTO backends via linker using
new PM and -O0). Fix this similar to the old PM where -O0 only does the
necessary lowering of type metadata (WPD and LowerTypeTest passes) and
then quits, rather than asserting.
Reviewers: xur
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, llvm-commits, pcc
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61022
llvm-svn: 359025
Without this patch, APSInt inherits APInt::isNegative, which merely
checks the sign bit without regard to whether the type is actually
signed. isNonNegative and isStrictlyPositive call isNegative and so
are also affected.
This patch adjusts APSInt to override isNegative, isNonNegative, and
isStrictlyPositive with implementations that consider whether the type
is signed.
A large set of Clang OpenMP tests are affected. Without this patch,
these tests assume that `true` is not a valid argument for clauses
like `collapse`. Indeed, `true` fails APInt::isStrictlyPositive but
not APSInt::isStrictlyPositive. This patch adjusts those tests to
assume `true` should be accepted.
This patch also adds tests revealing various other similar fixes due
to APSInt::isNegative calls in Clang's ExprConstant.cpp and
SemaExpr.cpp: `++` and `--` overflow in `constexpr`, evaluated object
size based on `alloc_size`, `<<` and `>>` shift count validation, and
OpenMP array section validation.
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri, ABataev, hfinkel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59712
llvm-svn: 359012
Summary:
The existing CTU mechanism imports `FunctionDecl`s where the definition is available in another TU. This patch extends that to VarDecls, to bind more constants.
- Add VarDecl importing functionality to CrossTranslationUnitContext
- Import Decls while traversing them in AnalysisConsumer
- Add VarDecls to CTU external mappings generator
- Name changes from "external function map" to "external definition map"
Reviewers: NoQ, dcoughlin, xazax.hun, george.karpenkov, martong
Reviewed By: xazax.hun
Subscribers: Charusso, baloghadamsoftware, mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, george.karpenkov, mgorny, whisperity, szepet, rnkovacs, a.sidorin, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46421
llvm-svn: 358968
Port mmintrin.h which include x86 MMX intrinsics implementation to PowerPC platform (using Altivec).
To make the include process correct, PowerPC's toolchain class is overrided to insert new headers directory (named ppc_wrappers) into the path. Basic test cases for several intrinsic functions are added.
The header is mainly developed by Steven Munroe, with contributions from Paul Clarke, Bill Schmidt, Jinsong Ji and Zixuan Wu.
Reviewed By: Jinsong Ji
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59924
llvm-svn: 358949
When growing a body on a body farm, it's essential to use the same redeclaration
of the function that's going to be used during analysis. Otherwise our
ParmVarDecls won't match the ones that are used to identify argument regions.
This boils down to trusting the reasoning in AnalysisDeclContext. We shouldn't
canonicalize the declaration before farming the body because it makes us not
obey the sophisticated decision-making process of AnalysisDeclContext.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60899
llvm-svn: 358946
Stuffing invalid source locations (such as those in functions produced by
body farms) into path diagnostics causes crashes.
Fix a typo in a nearby function name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60808
llvm-svn: 358945
Implement cplusplus.SmartPtrModeling, a new checker that doesn't
emit any warnings but models methods of smart pointers more precisely.
For now the only thing it does is make `(bool) P` return false when `P`
is a freshly moved pointer. This addresses a false positive in the
use-after-move-checker.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60796
llvm-svn: 358944
CWG 1691 changed the definition of the namespaces associated with a class
type or enumeration type.
For a class type, the associated namespaces are the innermost enclosing
namespaces of the associated classes. For an enumeration type, the associated
namespace is the innermost enclosing namespace of its declaration.
This also fixes CWG 1690 and CWG 1692.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60573
Reviewed By: rjmccall, rsmith
llvm-svn: 358882
The goal here is to exercise each rule in [basic.lookup.argdep] at least once.
These new tests expose what I believe are 2 issues:
1. CWG 1691 needs to be implemented (p2: [...] Its associated namespaces are
the innermost enclosing namespaces of its associated classes [...]) The
corresponding tests are adl_class_type::X2 and adl_class_type::X5.
2. The end of paragraph 2 ([...] Additionally, if the aforementioned set of
overloaded functions is named with a template-id, its associated classes
and namespaces also include those of its type template-arguments and its
template template-arguments.) is not implemented. Closely related, the
restriction on non-dependent parameter types in this same paragraph needs
to be removed. The corresponding tests are in adl_overload_set (both issues
are from CWG 997).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60570
Reviewed By: riccibruno, Quuxplusone
llvm-svn: 358881
Clang emits a warning when using a pure specifier =0 in a function definition
at class scope (a MS-specific construct), when using -fms-extensions.
However, to detect this, it was using FD->isCanonicalDecl() on function
declaration, which was also detecting out-of-class definition of member
functions of class templates. Fix this by using !FD->isOutOfLine() instead.
Fixes PR21334.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29707
Reviewed By: riccibruno
Reviewers: rnk, riccibruno
Patch By: Rudy Pons
llvm-svn: 358849
Moved UninitializedObjectChecker from the 'alpha.cplusplus' to the
'optin.cplusplus' package.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58573
llvm-svn: 358797
Exposed by a related bug about visibility of default arguments of nested
templates - without the correct decl context, default template
parameters of variable templates nested in classes would have incorrect
visibility computed.
llvm-svn: 358796
The code is/was already correct for the case where a parameter is a
parameter of its enclosing lexical DeclContext (functions and classes).
But for other templates (alias and variable templates) they don't create
their own scope to be members of - in those cases, they parameter should
be considered visible if any definition of the lexical decl context is
visible.
[this should cleanup the failure on the libstdc++ modules buildbot]
[this doesn't actually fix the variable template case for a
secondary/compounding reason (its lexical decl context is incorrectly
considered to be the translation unit)]
Test covers all 4 kinds of templates with default args, including a
regression test for the still broken variable template case.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60892
llvm-svn: 358795
runtime.
target [teams distribute] simd costructs do not require full runtime for
the correct execution, we can run them without full runtime.
llvm-svn: 358766
TL;DR:
* Add checker and package options to the TableGen files
* Added a new class called CmdLineOption, and both Package and Checker recieved
a list<CmdLineOption> field.
* Added every existing checker and package option to Checkers.td.
* The CheckerRegistry class
* Received some comments to most of it's inline classes
* Received the CmdLineOption and PackageInfo inline classes, a list of
CmdLineOption was added to CheckerInfo and PackageInfo
* Added addCheckerOption and addPackageOption
* Added a new field called Packages, used in addPackageOptions, filled up in
addPackage
Detailed description:
In the last couple months, a lot of effort was put into tightening the
analyzer's command line interface. The main issue is that it's spectacularly
easy to mess up a lenghty enough invocation of the analyzer, and the user was
given no warnings or errors at all in that case.
We can divide the effort of resolving this into several chapters:
* Non-checker analyzer configurations:
Gather every analyzer configuration into a dedicated file. Emit errors for
non-existent configurations or incorrect values. Be able to list these
configurations. Tighten AnalyzerOptions interface to disallow making such
a mistake in the future.
* Fix the "Checker Naming Bug" by reimplementing checker dependencies:
When cplusplus.InnerPointer was enabled, it implicitly registered
unix.Malloc, which implicitly registered some sort of a modeling checker
from the CStringChecker family. This resulted in all of these checker
objects recieving the name "cplusplus.InnerPointer", making AnalyzerOptions
asking for the wrong checker options from the command line:
cplusplus.InnerPointer:Optimisic
istead of
unix.Malloc:Optimistic.
This was resolved by making CheckerRegistry responsible for checker
dependency handling, instead of checkers themselves.
* Checker options: (this patch included!)
Same as the first item, but for checkers.
(+ minor fixes here and there, and everything else that is yet to come)
There were several issues regarding checker options, that non-checker
configurations didn't suffer from: checker plugins are loaded runtime, and they
could add new checkers and new options, meaning that unlike for non-checker
configurations, we can't collect every checker option purely by generating code.
Also, as seen from the "Checker Naming Bug" issue raised above, they are very
rarely used in practice, and all sorts of skeletons fell out of the closet while
working on this project.
They were extremely problematic for users as well, purely because of how long
they were. Consider the following monster of a checker option:
alpha.cplusplus.UninitializedObject:CheckPointeeInitialization=false
While we were able to verify whether the checker itself (the part before the
colon) existed, any errors past that point were unreported, easily resulting
in 7+ hours of analyses going to waste.
This patch, similarly to how dependencies were reimplemented, uses TableGen to
register checker options into Checkers.td, so that Checkers.inc now contains
entries for both checker and package options. Using the preprocessor,
Checkers.inc is converted into code in CheckerRegistry, adding every builtin
(checkers and packages that have an entry in the Checkers.td file) checker and
package option to the registry. The new addPackageOption and addCheckerOption
functions expose the same functionality to statically-linked non-builtin and
plugin checkers and packages as well.
Emitting errors for incorrect user input, being able to list these options, and
some other functionalies will land in later patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57855
llvm-svn: 358752
Ideally, there is no reason behind not being able to depend on checkers that
come from a different plugin (or on builtin checkers) -- however, this is only
possible if all checkers are added to the registry before resolving checker
dependencies. Since I used a binary search in my addDependency method, this also
resulted in an assertion failure (due to CheckerRegistry::Checkers not being
sorted), since the function used by plugins to register their checkers
(clang_registerCheckers) calls addDependency.
This patch resolves this issue by only noting which dependencies have to
established when addDependency is called, and resolves them at a later stage
when no more checkers are added to the registry, by which point
CheckerRegistry::Checkers is already sorted.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59461
llvm-svn: 358750
Default RegionStore bindings represent values that can be obtained by loading
from anywhere within the region, not just the specific offset within the region
that they are said to be bound to. For example, default-binding a character \0
to an int (eg., via memset()) means that the whole int is 0, not just
that its lower byte is 0.
Even though memset and bzero were modeled this way, it didn't work correctly
when applied to simple variables. Eg., in
int x;
memset(x, 0, sizeof(x));
we did produce a default binding, but were unable to read it later, and 'x'
was perceived as an uninitialized variable even after memset.
At the same time, if we replace 'x' with a variable of a structure or array
type, accessing fields or elements of such variable was working correctly,
which was enough for most cases. So this was only a problem for variables of
simple integer/enumeration/floating-point/pointer types.
Fix loading default bindings from RegionStore for regions of simple variables.
Add a unit test to document the API contract as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60742
llvm-svn: 358722
Summary: The requires directive containing target related clauses must appear before any target region in the compilation unit.
Reviewers: ABataev, AlexEichenberger, caomhin
Reviewed By: ABataev
Subscribers: guansong, jfb, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60875
llvm-svn: 358709
global module fragment.
We know that the declaration in question should have been introduced by
a '#include', so try to figure out which one and suggest it. Don't
suggest importing the global module fragment itself!
llvm-svn: 358631
retaining block and all of the enclosing blocks are non-escaping.
If the block implicitly retaining self doesn't escape, there is no risk
of creating retain cycles, so clang shouldn't diagnose it and force
users to add self-> to silence the diagnostic.
Also, fix a bug where clang was failing to diagnose an implicitly
retained self inside a c++ lambda nested inside a block.
rdar://problem/25059955
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60736
llvm-svn: 358624
For the following code snippet:
void builtin_function_call_crash_fixes(char *c) {
__builtin_strncpy(c, "", 6);
__builtin_memset(c, '\0', (0));
__builtin_memcpy(c, c, 0);
}
security.insecureAPI.DeprecatedOrUnsafeBufferHandling caused a regression, as it
didn't recognize functions starting with __builtin_. Fixed exactly that.
I wanted to modify an existing test file, but the two I found didn't seem like
perfect candidates. While I was there, I prettified their RUN: lines.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59812
llvm-svn: 358609
All target-parallel-based constructs can be run in SPMD mode from now
on. Even if num_threads clauses or if clauses are used, such constructs
can be executed in SPMD mode.
llvm-svn: 358595
Summary:
When -gsplit-dwarf is used together with other -g options, in most cases
the computed debug info level is decided by the last -g option, with one
special case (see below). This patch drops that special case and thus
makes it easy to reason about:
// If a lower debug level -g comes after -gsplit-dwarf, in some cases
// -gsplit-dwarf is cancelled.
-gsplit-dwarf -g0 => 0
-gsplit-dwarf -gline-directives-only => DebugDirectivesOnly
-gsplit-dwarf -gmlt -fsplit-dwarf-inlining => 1
-gsplit-dwarf -gmlt -fno-split-dwarf-inlining => 1 + split
// If -gsplit-dwarf comes after -g options, with this patch, the net
// effect is 2 + split for all combinations
-g0 -gsplit-dwarf => 2 + split
-gline-directives-only -gsplit-dwarf => 2 + split
-gmlt -gsplit-dwarf -fsplit-dwarf-inlining => 2 + split
-gmlt -gsplit-dwarf -fno-split-dwarf-inlining => 1 + split (before) 2 + split (after)
The last case has been changed. In general, if the user intends to lower
debug info level, place that -g option after -gsplit-dwarf.
Some context:
In gcc, the last of -gsplit-dwarf -g0 -g1 -g2 -g3 -ggdb[0-3] -gdwarf-*
... decides the debug info level (-gsplit-dwarf -gdwarf-* have level 2).
It is a bit unfortunate that -gsplit-dwarf -gdwarf-* ... participate in
the level computation but that is the status quo.
Reviewers: dblaikie, echristo, probinson
Reviewed By: dblaikie, probinson
Subscribers: probinson, aprantl, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59923
llvm-svn: 358544
The FIXME of this test case has been addressed in r335084/r338800. Its
execution still does not succeed because of multiple syntax errors.
First, the "clang" namespace is missing on each of the 4 pragmas.
Second, the pragma for defining the vector width is "vectorize_width(4)"
instead of "vectorize(4)". Third, the pragma for defining the interleave
factor is "interleave_count(8)" instead of "interleave(8)".
The file was already using the wrong syntax when added in
r210925 2014-06-13. The file ast-print-pragmas.cpp already checks for
the correct pragma order, making this test redundant even if fixed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60749
llvm-svn: 358507
Combined constructs with parallel and if clauses without modifiers may
be executed in SPMD mode since if the condition is true for the target
region, it is also true for parallel region and the threads must be run
in parallel.
llvm-svn: 358503
The original commit caused false positives from AddressSanitizer's
use-after-scope checks, which have now been fixed in r358478.
> The code was previously checking that candidates for sinking had exactly
> one use or were a store instruction (which can't have uses). This meant
> we could sink call instructions only if they had a use.
>
> That limitation seemed a bit arbitrary, so this patch changes it to
> "instruction has zero or one use" which seems more natural and removes
> the need to special-case stores.
>
> Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59936
llvm-svn: 358483
LLDB can't currently handle Clang's default (limit/no-standalone) DWARF,
so platforms that default to LLDB (Darwin) or anyone else manually
requesting LLDB tuning, should also get standalone DWARF.
That doesn't mean a user can't explicitly enable (because they have
other reasons to prefer standalone DWARF (such as that they're only
building half their application with debug info enabled, and half
without - or because they're tuning for GDB, but want to be able to use
it under LLDB too (this is the default on FreeBSD))) or disable (testing
LLDB fixes/improvements that handle no-standalone mode, building C code,
perhaps, which wouldn't have the LLDB<>no-standalone conflict, etc) the
feature regardless of the tuning.
llvm-svn: 358464
mode.
After the previous patch with the more correct handling of the number of
threads in parallel regions, the parallel regions with num_threads
clauses can be executed in SPMD mode.
llvm-svn: 358445
This reverts r358409, which I think broke the bots in compiler-rt.
Since I'm having trouble reproducing the failure, I'm reverting this
until I can investigate locally.
llvm-svn: 358437
I plan to use this as the basis for backend IR test cases. We currently crash hard for using 32 or 64 bit mask registers without avx512bw.
llvm-svn: 358435
The pattern we replaced these with may be too hard to match as demonstrated by
PR41496 and PR41316.
This patch restores the intrinsics and then we can start focusing
on the optimizing the intrinsics.
I've mostly reverted the original patch that removed them. Though I modified
the avx512 intrinsics to not have masking built in.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60674
llvm-svn: 358427
Summary:
In r350649, I changed aligned allocation from being available starting
in macosx10.13 to macosx10.14. However, aligned allocation is indeed
available starting with macosx10.13, my investigation had been based
on the wrong libc++abi dylib.
This means that Clang before the fix will be more stringent when it
comes to aligned allocation -- it will not allow it when back-deploying
to macosx 10.13, when it would actually be safe to do so.
Note that a companion change will be coming to fix the libc++ tests.
Reviewers: ahatanak
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60626
llvm-svn: 358409
and the global and private module fragment.
For now, the private module fragment introducer is ignored, but use of
the global module fragment introducer should be properly enforced.
llvm-svn: 358353
A marker (matching /#[A-Za-z0-9_-]/) is specified by attaching a comment
containing the marker to the line at which the diagnostic is expected,
and then can be referenced from an expected-* directive after an @:
foo // #1
// expected-error@#1 {{undeclared identifier 'foo'}}
The intent is for markers to be used in situations where relative line
numbers are currently used, to avoid the need to renumber when the test
case is rearranged.
llvm-svn: 358326
Writing stuff into an argument variable is usually equivalent to writing stuff
to a local variable: it will have no effect outside of the function.
There's an important exception from this rule: if the argument variable has
a non-trivial destructor, the destructor would be invoked on
the parent stack frame, exposing contents of the otherwise dead
argument variable to the caller.
If such argument is the last place where a pointer is stored before the function
exits and the function is the one we've started our analysis from (i.e., we have
no caller context for it), we currently diagnose a leak. This is incorrect
because the destructor of the argument still has access to the pointer.
The destructor may deallocate the pointer or even pass it further.
Treat writes into such argument regions as "escapes" instead, suppressing
spurious memory leak reports but not messing with dead symbol removal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60112
llvm-svn: 358321
[MS] Add metadata for __declspec(allocator)
Original summary:
Emit !heapallocsite in the metadata for calls to functions marked with
__declspec(allocator). Eventually this will be emitted as S_HEAPALLOCSITE debug
info in codeview.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60237
llvm-svn: 358307
Use -mlink-builtin-bitcode instead of llvm-link to link
device library so that device library bitcode and user
device code can be compiled in a consistent way.
This is the same approach used by CUDA and OpenMP.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60513
llvm-svn: 358290
Disabled by default as this is still an experimental feature.
Reviewed By: thakis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59221
llvm-svn: 358285
Summary:
alloca isn’t auto-init’d right now because it’s a different path in clang that
all the other stuff we support (it’s a builtin, not an expression).
Interestingly, alloca doesn’t have a type (as opposed to even VLA) so we can
really only initialize it with memset.
<rdar://problem/49794007>
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, rjmccall, glider, kees, kcc, pcc
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60548
llvm-svn: 358243
internal lexing steps in the preprocessor.
It is not safe to use the preprocessor's token lookahead except when
operating on the final sequence of tokens that would be produced by
phase 4 of translation. Doing so corrupts the token lookahead cache used
by the parser. (See added testcase for an example.) Lookahead should
instead be viewed as a layer on top of the normal lexer.
Added assertions to catch any further incorrect uses of lookahead within
lexing actions.
llvm-svn: 358230
Summary:
These flags are used when emitting debug info and needed to initialize subprogram and member function attributes (function options) for Codeview. These function options are used to create an accurate compiler type for UDT symbols (class/struct/union) from PDBs.
The Trivial flag was introduced in https://reviews.llvm.org/D45122
It's been pointed out that Trivial and NonTrivial may imply each other and that seems to be the case in the current tests. This change combines them into a single flag -- NonTrivial -- and updates the corresponding unit tests. There is an additional change to llvm to update the flags.
Reviewers: rnk, zturner, dblaikie, probinson, Hui
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: aprantl, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59347
llvm-svn: 358219
We want to make objc_nonlazy_class apply to implementations, but ran into this.
There doesn't seem to be any reason that this isn't supported.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60542
llvm-svn: 358200
Summary:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D53809 fixed wrong address space(assert in debug build)
generated for event_ret argument. But exactly the same problem exists for
event_wait_list argument. This patch should fix both.
Reviewers: Anastasia, yaxunl
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Subscribers: kristina, ebevhan, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59985
llvm-svn: 358151
This test was duplicated, and the last declaration had some syntax errors since
the invalid attribute caused the @implementation to be skipped by the parser.
llvm-svn: 358136
Summary:
As was already stated in a previous comment, the parameter isn't
necessarily referring to one of the DeclContext's parameter. We
should check the index is within the range to avoid out-of-boundary
access.
Reviewers: gribozavr, rsmith, lebedev.ri
Reviewed By: gribozavr, rsmith
Subscribers: lebedev.ri, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60055
Patch by Violet.
llvm-svn: 358134
regions.
Added more complex analysis for number of teams and number of threads in
the target regions, also merged related common code between CGOpenMPRuntime
and CGOpenMPRuntimeNVPTX classes.
llvm-svn: 358126
named metadata.
This fixes a bug where ARC contract wasn't inserting the retainRV
marker when LTO was enabled, which caused objects returned from a
function to be auto-released.
rdar://problem/49464214
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60302
llvm-svn: 358048
Summary:
Emit !heapallocsite in the metadata for calls to functions marked with
__declspec(allocator). Eventually this will be emitted as S_HEAPALLOCSITE debug
info in codeview.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: jfb, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60237
llvm-svn: 357928
Added special processing of the memory management directives/clauses for
NVPTX target. For private locals, omp_default_mem_alloc and
omp_thread_mem_alloc result in allocation in local memory.
omp_const_mem_alloc allocates const memory, omp_teams_mem_alloc
allocates shared memory, and omp_cgroup_mem_alloc and
omp_large_cap_mem_alloc allocate global memory.
llvm-svn: 357923
The idea behind this heuristic is that normally the visitor is there to
inform the user that a certain function may fail to initialize a certain
out-parameter. For system header functions this is usually dictated by the
contract, and it's unlikely that the header function has accidentally
forgot to put the value into the out-parameter; it's more likely
that the user has intentionally skipped the error check.
Warnings on skipped error checks are more like security warnings;
they aren't necessarily useful for all users, and they should instead
be introduced on a per-API basis.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60107
llvm-svn: 357810
`test/Driver/debug-options.c` to ensure that the driver
selects the DWARF 2 version as intended by the test.
Fixes the `test/Driver/debug-options.c` test regression on GreenDragon
on macOS that started failing after r357713.
llvm-svn: 357740
Summary:
In the future, Android releases will support DWARF 5, but we need to
ensure that older targets only have DWARF 4 generated for them. This
patch inserts that verification for all Android releases now. The patch
also fixes 2 minor mistakes (a mistakenly moved RUN line, and the
missing G_DWARF2 check label).
Reviewers: aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: chh, pirama, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60238
llvm-svn: 357713
When setting up library and tools paths when detecting an accompanying GCC
installation only riscv32 was handled. As a consequence when targetting
riscv64 neither the linker nor libraries would be found. This adds handling
and tests for riscv64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53392
Patch by Edward Jones.
llvm-svn: 357699
riscv32-linux-unknown-elf was a weird thing to test for as it doesn't match
the triple used in any common RISC-V toolchain distributions (e.g.
riscv-gnu-toolchain scripts produce riscv{32,64}-unknown-linux-gnu).
llvm-svn: 357693
Summary:
The fix isn't great, but it's hard to fix properly because the completion
code sensibly uses ParmVarDecl to represent parameters, but the AST-building
code sensibly doesn't synthesize them if the type is broken.
Also this case is apparently really rare, so it's probably not worth bending
over backwards for.
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, arphaman, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60258
llvm-svn: 357686
Prevent adding initializers implicitly to variables declared in
local address space. This happens when they get converted into
global variables and therefore theoretically have to be default
initialized in C++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59646
llvm-svn: 357684
Improved classification of address space cast when qualification
conversion is performed - prevent adding addr space cast for
non-pointer and non-reference types. Take address space correctly
from the pointee.
Also pass correct address space from 'this' object using
AggValueSlot when generating addrspacecast in the constructor
call.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59988
llvm-svn: 357682
This revision causes tests to fail under ASAN. Since the cause of the failures
is not clear (could be ASAN, could be a Clang bug, could be a bug in this
revision), the safest course of action seems to be to revert while investigating.
llvm-svn: 357667
__builtin_constant_p(x) is a compiler builtin that evaluates to 1 when
its argument x is a compile-time constant and to 0 otherwise. In CodeGen
it is simply lowered to the respective LLVM intrinsic. In the Analyzer
we've been trying to delegate modeling to Expr::EvaluateAsInt, which is
allowed to sometimes fail for no apparent reason.
When it fails, let's conservatively return false. Modeling it as false
is pretty much never wrong, and it is only required to return true
on a best-effort basis, which every user should expect.
Fixes VLAChecker false positives on code that tries to emulate
static asserts in C by constructing a VLA of dynamic size -1 under the
assumption that this dynamic size is actually a constant
in the sense of __builtin_constant_p.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60110
llvm-svn: 357557
Also for CUDA, we need to disable producing these fat binary functions when there is no GPU code.
Reviewers: yaxunl, tra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60141
llvm-svn: 357526
Skip producing the fat binary functions for HIP when no device code is present.
Reviewers: yaxunl
Differential Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60141
llvm-svn: 357520
moveAttrFromListToList only makes sense when moving an attribute to a list with
a pool that's either equivalent, or has a shorter lifetime. Therefore, using it
to move a ParsedAttr from a declarator to a declaration specifier doesn't make
sense, since the declaration specifier's pool outlives the declarator's. The
patch adds a new function, ParsedAttributes::takeOneFrom, which transfers the
attribute from one pool to another, fixing the use-after-deallocate.
rdar://49175426
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60101
llvm-svn: 357516
This ability was removed in r351487, but it's needed when a lambda appears as an
OpaqueValueExpr subexpression of a PseudoObjectExpr.
rdar://49030379
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60099
llvm-svn: 357515
In case of N64 ABI toolchain paths migth have `mips-linux-gnuabi64`
or `mips-linux-gnu` directory regardless of selected environment.
Check both variants while detecting a multiarch triple.
Fix for the bug https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41204
llvm-svn: 357506
Allow the optimizer to remove unnecessary EH cleanups surrounding calls
to os_log_helper, to save some code size.
As a follow-up, it might be worthwhile to add a BasicNoexcept exception
spec to os_log_helper, and to then teach CGCall to emit direct calls for
callees which can't throw. This could save some compile-time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60108
llvm-svn: 357501
If the pointer is captured by reference, it must be mapped as
_PTR_AND_OBJ kind of mapping to correctly translate the pointer address
on the device.
llvm-svn: 357488
The code was previously checking that candidates for sinking had exactly
one use or were a store instruction (which can't have uses). This meant
we could sink call instructions only if they had a use.
That limitation seemed a bit arbitrary, so this patch changes it to
"instruction has zero or one use" which seems more natural and removes
the need to special-case stores.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59936
llvm-svn: 357452
Before this patch, CGLoop would dump all transformations for a loop into
a single LoopID without encoding any order in which to apply them.
rL348944 added the possibility to encode a transformation order using
followup-attributes.
When a loop has more than one transformation, use the follow-up
attribute define the order in which they are applied. The emitted order
is the defacto order as defined by the current LLVM pass pipeline,
which is:
LoopFullUnrollPass
LoopDistributePass
LoopVectorizePass
LoopUnrollAndJamPass
LoopUnrollPass
MachinePipeliner
This patch should therefore not change the assembly output, assuming
that all explicit transformations can be applied, and no implicit
transformations in-between. In the former case,
WarnMissedTransformationsPass should emit a warning (except for
MachinePipeliner which is not implemented yet). The latter could be
avoided by adding 'llvm.loop.disable_nonforced' attributes.
Because LoopUnrollAndJamPass processes a loop nest, generation of the
MDNode is delayed to after the inner loop metadata have been processed.
A temporary LoopID is therefore used to annotate instructions and
RAUW'ed by the actual LoopID later.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57978
llvm-svn: 357415
According to OpenMP 5.0, 2.11.4 allocate Clause, Restrictions, allocate
clauses that appear on a target construct or on constructs in a target
region must specify an allocator expression unless a requires directive
with the dynamic_allocators clause is present in the same compilation
unit. Patch adds a check for this restriction.
llvm-svn: 357412
According to OpenMP 5.0 standard, 2.11.4 allocate Clause, Restrictions,
For any list item that is specified in the allocate clause on a
directive, a data-sharing attribute clause that may create a private
copy of that list item must be specified on the same directive. Patch
adds the checks for this restriction.
llvm-svn: 357390
In PR41304:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41304
...we have a case where we want to fold a binop of select-shuffle (blended) values.
Rather than try to match commuted variants of the pattern, we can canonicalize the
shuffles and check for mask equality with commuted operands.
We don't produce arbitrary shuffle masks in instcombine, but select-shuffles are a
special case that the backend is required to handle because we already canonicalize
vector select to this shuffle form.
So there should be no codegen difference from this change. It's possible that this
improves CSE in IR though.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60016
llvm-svn: 357366
Summary:
Based on a patch by Dustin Howett, modified to not change the ABI for
ELF platforms.
Use more Windows-like section names.
This also makes things more readable by PE/COFF debug tools that assume
sections fit in the first header.
With these changes in, it is now possible to build a working WinObjC
with clang and the WinObjC version of GNUstep libobjc (upstream GNUstep
libobjc + a work around for incremental linking, which can be removed
once LINK.EXE gains a feature to opt sections out of receiving extra
padding during an incremental link).
Patch by Dustin Howett!
Reviewers: DHowett-MSFT
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58724
llvm-svn: 357364
Without this change, linking multiple objects containing block
descriptors together on Windows will generate duplicate symbol errors.
Patch by Dustin Howett!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58807
llvm-svn: 357363
Summary:
When building the `check-all` target on AIX, lit produces
```
warning: unable to inject shared library path on 'AIX'
```
This patch addresses this. `LIBPATH` is the environment variable of
interest on AIX. Newer versions of AIX may consider `LD_LIBRARY_PATH`,
but only when `LIBPATH` is unset.
Reviewers: xingxue, jasonliu, sfertile, serge-sans-paille
Reviewed By: xingxue
Subscribers: jsji, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59741
llvm-svn: 357334
It turns out that SourceManager::isInSystemHeader() crashes when an invalid
source location is passed into it. Invalid source locations are relatively
common: not only they come from body farms, but also, say, any function in C
that didn't come with a forward declaration would have an implicit
forward declaration with invalid source locations.
There's a more comfy API for us to use in the Static Analyzer:
CallEvent::isInSystemHeader(), so just use that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59901
llvm-svn: 357329
It is now an inter-checker communication API, similar to the one that
connects MallocChecker/CStringChecker/InnerPointerChecker: simply a set of
setters and getters for a state trait.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59861
llvm-svn: 357326
The transfer function for the CFG element that represents a logical operation
computes the value of the operation and does nothing else. The element
appears after all the short circuit decisions were made, so they don't need
to be made again at this point.
Because our expression evaluation is imprecise, it is often hard to
discriminate between:
(1) we don't know the value of the RHS because we failed to evaluate it
and
(2) we don't know the value of the RHS because it didn't need to be evaluated.
This is hard because it depends on our knowledge about the value of the LHS
(eg., if LHS is true, then RHS in (LHS || RHS) doesn't need to be computed)
but LHS itself may have been evaluated imprecisely and we don't know whether
it is true or not. Additionally, the Analyzer wouldn't necessarily even remember
what the value of the LHS was because theoretically it's not really necessary
to know it for any future evaluations.
In order to work around these issues, the transfer function for logical
operations consists in looking at the ExplodedGraph we've constructed so far
in order to figure out from which CFG direction did we arrive here.
Such post-factum backtracking that doesn't involve looking up LHS and RHS values
is usually possible. However sometimes it fails because when we deduplicate
exploded nodes with the same program point and the same program state we may end
up in a situation when we reached the same program point from two or more
different directions.
By removing the assertion, we admit that the procedure indeed sometimes fails to
work. When it fails, we also admit that we don't know the value of the logical
operator.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59857
llvm-svn: 357325
Almost all path-sensitive checkers need to tell the user when something specific
to that checker happens along the execution path but does not constitute a bug
on its own. For instance, a call to operator delete in C++ has consequences
that are specific to a use-after-free bug. Deleting an object is not a bug
on its own, but when the Analyzer finds an execution path on which a deleted
object is used, it'll have to explain to the user when exactly during that path
did the deallocation take place.
Historically such custom notes were added by implementing "bug report visitors".
These visitors were post-processing bug reports by visiting every ExplodedNode
along the path and emitting path notes whenever they noticed that a change that
is relevant to a bug report occurs within the program state. For example,
it emits a "memory is deallocated" note when it notices that a pointer changes
its state from "allocated" to "deleted".
The "visitor" approach is powerful and efficient but hard to use because
such preprocessing implies that the developer first models the effects
of the event (say, changes the pointer's state from "allocated" to "deleted"
as part of operator delete()'s transfer function) and then forgets what happened
and later tries to reverse-engineer itself and figure out what did it do
by looking at the report.
The proposed approach tries to avoid discarding the information that was
available when the transfer function was evaluated. Instead, it allows the
developer to capture all the necessary information into a closure that
will be automatically invoked later in order to produce the actual note.
This should reduce boilerplate and avoid very painful logic duplication.
On the technical side, the closure is a lambda that's put into a special kind of
a program point tag, and a special bug report visitor visits all nodes in the
report and invokes all note-producing closures it finds along the path.
For now it is up to the lambda to make sure that the note is actually relevant
to the report. For instance, a memory deallocation note would be irrelevant when
we're reporting a division by zero bug or if we're reporting a use-after-free
of a different, unrelated chunk of memory. The lambda can figure these thing out
by looking at the bug report object that's passed into it.
A single checker is refactored to make use of the new functionality: MIGChecker.
Its program state is trivial, making it an easy testing ground for the first
version of the API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58367
llvm-svn: 357323
Summary:
This feature is not actually used for anything in the WebAssembly
backend, but adding it allows users to get it into the target features
sections of their objects, which makes these objects
future-compatible.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, sunfish, jdoerfert, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60013
llvm-svn: 357321
Fixes the assertion
> no Attr* for AttributedType*
> UNREACHABLE executed at llvm-project/clang/lib/Sema/SemaType.cpp:298!
In `TypeProcessingState::getAttributedType` we put into `AttrsForTypes`
types with `auto` but later in
`TypeProcessingState::takeAttrForAttributedType` we use transformed
types and that's why cannot find `Attr` corresponding to
`AttributedType`.
Fix by keeping `AttrsForTypes` up to date after replacing `AutoType`.
rdar://problem/47689465
Reviewers: rsmith, arphaman, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58659
llvm-svn: 357298
Android does not allow shared text relocations. Enable the linker
warning to detect them by default.
Reviewers: srhines, pirama
Reviewed By: srhines
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53344
llvm-svn: 357296
Effectively reverts r337612. The issues that cropped up with the last
attempt appear to have gone away.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59008
llvm-svn: 357285
Add an -mtp=el[0-3] option to select which of the AArch64 thread ID registers
will be used for the TLS base pointer.
This is a followup to rL356657 which added subtarget features to enable
accesses to the privileged thread ID registers.
Patch by Philip Derrin!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59631
llvm-svn: 357250
Summary:
PowerPC64/PowerPC64le supports the builtin function __builtin_setrnd to set the floating point rounding mode. This function will use the least significant two bits of integer argument to set the floating point rounding mode.
double __builtin_setrnd(int mode);
The effective values for mode are:
0 - round to nearest
1 - round to zero
2 - round to +infinity
3 - round to -infinity
Note that the mode argument will modulo 4, so if the int argument is greater than 3, it will only use the least significant two bits of the mode. Namely, builtin_setrnd(102)) is equal to builtin_setrnd(2).
Reviewed By: jsji
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59403
llvm-svn: 357242
Summary:
- If a parameter is used, nonnull checking needs function prototype to
retrieve the corresponding parameter's attributes. However, at the
prototype substitution phase when a template is being instantiated,
expression may be created and checked without a fully specialized
prototype. Under such a scenario, skip nonnull checking on that
argument.
Reviewers: rjmccall, tra, yaxunl
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59900
llvm-svn: 357236
copy/move constructor/assignment operator functions for non-trivial C
structs.
This commit fixes a bug where the offset of struct fields weren't being
taken into account when computing the addresses passed to calls to the
special functions.
For example, the copy constructor for S1 (__copy_constructor_8_8_s0_s8)
would pass the start addresses of the destination and source structs to
the call to S0's copy constructor (_copy_constructor_8_8_s0) without
adding the offset of field f1 to the addresses.
typedef struct {
id f0;
S0 f1;
} S1;
void test(S1 s1) {
S1 t = s1;
}
rdar://problem/49400610
llvm-svn: 357229
Future versions of MSVC make these intrinsics available on x86 & x64,
according to:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-March/061711.html
The purpose of these builtins is to emit plain, non-atomic, volatile
stores when /volatile:ms (-cc1 -fms-volatile) is enabled.
llvm-svn: 357220
target and task-based directives.
According to OpenMP 5.0, 2.11.4 allocate Clause, Restrictions, For task,
taskloop or target directives, allocation requests to memory allocators
with the trait access set to thread result in unspecified behavior.
Patch introduces a check for omp_thread_mem_alloc predefined allocator
on target- and trask-based directives.
llvm-svn: 357205
In https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41206 we observe bad codegen
when embedding a non-trivial C struct within a C struct. This is due to
the fact that name mangling for non-trivial structs marks the two
structs as identical. This diff contains a fix for this issue.
Patch by Dan Zimmerman <daniel.zimmerman@me.com>.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59873
llvm-svn: 357184
Since rL335814, if the constraint manager cannot find a range set for `A - B`
(where `A` and `B` are symbols) it looks for a range for `B - A` and returns
it negated if it exists. However, if a range set for both `A - B` and `B - A`
is stored then it only returns the first one. If we both use `A - B` and
`B - A`, these expressions behave as two totally unrelated symbols. This way
we miss some useful deductions which may lead to false negatives or false
positives.
This tiny patch changes this behavior: if the symbolic expression the
constraint manager is looking for is a difference `A - B`, it tries to
retrieve the range for both `A - B` and `B - A` and if both exists it returns
the intersection of range `A - B` and the negated range of `B - A`. This way
every time a checker applies new constraints to the symbolic difference or to
its negated it always affects both the original difference and its negated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55007
llvm-svn: 357167
Fixed bug in C++ to prevent parsing 'private' as a
valid address space qualifier.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59874
llvm-svn: 357162
In gcc, -gsplit-dwarf is handled in gcc/gcc.c as a spec
(ASM_FINAL_SPEC): objcopy --extract-dwo + objcopy --strip-dwo. In
gcc/opts.c, -gsplit_dwarf has the same semantic of a -g. Except for the
availability of the external command 'objcopy', nothing precludes the
feature working on other ELF OSes. llvm doesn't use objcopy, so it doesn't
have to exclude other OSes.
llvm-svn: 357150
This fixes a false positive on the following, where st is configured to have
different sizes based on some preprocessor logic:
if (sizeof(buf) == sizeof(*st))
memcpy(&buf, st, sizeof(*st));
llvm-svn: 357041
MarkVarDeclODRUsed indirectly calls captureInBlock, which creates a copy
expression. The copy expression is insulated in it's own
ExpressionEvaluationContext, so it saves, mutates, and restores MaybeODRUseExprs
as CleanupVarDeclMarking is iterating through it, leading to a crash. Fix this
by iterating through a local copy of MaybeODRUseExprs.
rdar://47493525
https://reviews.llvm.org/D59670
llvm-svn: 357040
Since AArch64 has default outlining behaviour, we need to make sure that
-mno-outline is actually passed along to the linker in this case. Otherwise,
it will run by default on minsize functions even when -mno-outline is specified.
Also fix the darwin-ld test for this, which wasn't actually doing anything.
llvm-svn: 357031
The RISC-V assembler needs the target ABI because it defines a flag of the ELF
file, as described in [1].
Make clang (the driver) to pass the target ABI to -cc1as in exactly the same
way it does for -cc1.
Currently -cc1as knows about -target-abi but is not handling it. Handle it and
pass it to the MC layer via MCTargetOptions.
[1] https://github.com/riscv/riscv-elf-psabi-doc/blob/master/riscv-elf.md#file-header
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59298
llvm-svn: 356981
r356634 didn't fix all the problems caused by r356222 - even though simple
constructors involving transparent init-list expressions are now evaluated
precisely, many more complicated constructors aren't, for other reasons.
The attached test case is an example of a constructor that will never be
evaluated precisely - simply because there isn't a constructor there (instead,
the program invokes run-time undefined behavior by returning without a return
statement that should have constructed the return value).
Fix another part of the problem for such situations: evaluate transparent
init-list expressions transparently, so that to avoid creating ill-formed
"transparent" nonloc::CompoundVals.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59622
llvm-svn: 356969
The intention is to add metadata to direct call sites of functions
marked with __declspec(allocator), which will ultimately result in some
S_HEAPALLOCSITE debug info records when emitting codeview.
This is a piece of PR38491
llvm-svn: 356964
Bail-out of CheckArrayAccess when the types of the base expression before
and after eventual casts are dependent. We will get another chance to check
for array bounds during instantiation. Fixes PR41087.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59776
Reviewed By: efriedma
llvm-svn: 356957
We can't (don't want to) honor the same set of "-fuse-ld" flags with
WebAssembly since the ELF linkers (ld.lld, ld.gnu, etc) don't work with
wasm object files.
Instead we implement our own linker finding logic, similar or other
non-ELF platforms like MSVC.
We've had a few issues with CLANG_DEFAULT_LINKER overriding the
WebAssembly linker which doesn't make sense since there is no generic
linker that can handle WebAssembly today.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59743
llvm-svn: 356953
Summary:
SExprBuilder::translateDeclRefExpr was only looking at FunctionDecl and not also looking at ObjCMethodDecl. It should consider both because the attributes can be used on Objective-C as well.
<rdar://problem/48941331>
Reviewers: dexonsmith, erik.pilkington
Subscribers: jkorous, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59523
llvm-svn: 356940
For backwards compatibility we allow alternative spelling of address
spaces - 'private', 'local', 'global', 'constant', 'generic'.
In order to accept 'private' correctly, parsing has been changed to
understand different use cases - access specifier vs address space.
Fixes PR40707 and PR41011!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59603
llvm-svn: 356888
Summary:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D59076 added a new coroutine error that
prevented users from using 'co_await' or 'co_yield' within a exception
handler. However, it was reverted in https://reviews.llvm.org/rC356774
because it caused a regression in nested scopes in C++ catch statements,
as documented by https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41171.
The issue was due to an incorrect use of a `clang::ParseScope`. To fix:
1. Add a regression test for catch statement parsing that mimics the bug
report from https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41171.
2. Re-apply the coroutines error patch from
https://reviews.llvm.org/D59076, but this time with the correct
ParseScope behavior.
Reviewers: GorNishanov, tks2103, rsmith, riccibruno, jbulow
Reviewed By: riccibruno
Subscribers: EricWF, jdoerfert, lewissbaker, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59752
llvm-svn: 356865
Summary:
These are all implemented by icc as well.
I made bit_scan_forward/reverse forward to the __bsfd/__bsrq since we also have
__bsfq/__bsrq.
Note, when lzcnt is enabled the bsr intrinsics generates lzcnt+xor instead of bsr.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel
Subscribers: cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59682
llvm-svn: 356848
Summary:
This eliminates a linker error the user might otherwise see about how
using the 'atomics' feature requires --shared-memory.
Reviewers: sbc100, aheejin
Subscribers: dschuff, jgravelle-google, sunfish, jfb, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59721
llvm-svn: 356817
Just as as llvm IR supports explicitly specifying numeric value ids
for instructions, and emits them by default in textual output, now do
the same for blocks.
This is a slightly incompatible change in the textual IR format.
Previously, llvm would parse numeric labels as string names. E.g.
define void @f() {
br label %"55"
55:
ret void
}
defined a label *named* "55", even without needing to be quoted, while
the reference required quoting. Now, if you intend a block label which
looks like a value number to be a name, you must quote it in the
definition too (e.g. `"55":`).
Previously, llvm would print nameless blocks only as a comment, and
would omit it if there was no predecessor. This could cause confusion
for readers of the IR, just as unnamed instructions did prior to the
addition of "%5 = " syntax, back in 2008 (PR2480).
Now, it will always print a label for an unnamed block, with the
exception of the entry block. (IMO it may be better to print it for
the entry-block as well. However, that requires updating many more
tests.)
Thus, the following is supported, and is the canonical printing:
define i32 @f(i32, i32) {
%3 = add i32 %0, %1
br label %4
4:
ret i32 %3
}
New test cases covering this behavior are added, and other tests
updated as required.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58548
llvm-svn: 356789
dynamic_allocators.
According to the OpenMP 5.0, 2.11.3 allocate Directive, Restrictions,
allocate directives that appear in a target region must specify an
allocator clause unless a requires directive with the dynamic_allocators
clause is present in the same compilation unit. Patch adds a check for a
presence of the requires directive with the dynamic_allocators clause.
llvm-svn: 356758
clause in target region.
According to the OpenMP 5.0, 2.11.3 allocate Directive, Restrictions,
allocate directives that appear in a target region must specify an
allocator clause unless a requires directive with the dynamic_allocators
clause is present in the same compilation unit.
llvm-svn: 356752
This is the result of discussions on the list about how to deal with intrinsics
which require codegen to disambiguate them via only the integer/fp overloads.
It causes problems for GlobalISel as some of that information is lost during
translation, while with other operations like IR instructions the information is
encoded into the instruction opcode.
This patch changes clang to emit the new faddp intrinsic if the vector operands
to the builtin have FP element types. LLVM IR AutoUpgrade has been taught to
upgrade existing calls to aarch64.neon.addp with fp vector arguments, and
we remove the workarounds introduced for GlobalISel in r355865.
This is a more permanent solution to PR40968.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59655
llvm-svn: 356722
in the include path.
Instead of making the incorrect claim that the included file has an
absolute path, describe the actual problem: the including file was found
either by absolute path, or relative to such a file, or relative to the
primary source file.
llvm-svn: 356712
Use the new cx8 feature flag that was added to the backend to represent support for cmpxchg8b. Use this flag to set the MaxAtomicInlineWidth.
This also assumes all the cmpxchg instructions are enabled for CK_Generic which is what cc1 defaults to when nothing is specified.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59566
llvm-svn: 356709
-malign-double is currently only implemented in the -cc1 interface. But its declared in Options.td so it is a driver option too. But you try to use it with the driver you'll get a message about the option being unused.
This patch teaches the driver to pass the option through to cc1 so it won't be unused. The Options.td says the option is x86 only but I didn't see any x86 specific code in its impementation in cc1 so not sure if the documentation is wrong or if I should only pass this option through the driver on x86 targets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59624
llvm-svn: 356706
with notail on x86-64.
On x86-64, the epilogue code inserted before the tail jump blocks the
autoreleased return optimization.
rdar://problem/38675807
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59656
llvm-svn: 356705
For the global variables the allocate directive must specify only the
predefined allocator. This allocator must be translated into the correct
form of the address space for the targets that support different address
spaces.
llvm-svn: 356702
gcc and icc both implement popcntd and popcntq which we did not. gcc doesn't seem to require a feature flag for the _popcnt32/_popcnt64 spelling and will use a libcall if its not supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59567
llvm-svn: 356689
After https://reviews.llvm.org/rL355317 we noticed that quite a decent
amount of code redeclares builtins (memcpy in particular, I believe
reduced from an MSVC header) with a calling convention specified.
This gets particularly troublesome when the user specifies a new
'default' calling convention on the command line.
When looking to add a diagnostic for this case, it was noticed that we
had 3 other diagnostics that differed only slightly. This patch ALSO
unifies those under a 'select'. Unfortunately, the order of words in
ONE of these diagnostics was reversed ("'thiscall' calling convention"
vs "calling convention 'thiscall'"), so this patch also standardizes on
the former.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59560
Change-Id: I79f99fe7c2301640755ffdd774b46eb44526bb22
llvm-svn: 356663
When searching for construction contexts, i.e. figuring out which statements
define the object that is constructed by each construct-expression, ignore
transparent init-list expressions because they don't add anything to the
context. This allows the Static Analyzer to model construction, destruction,
materialization, lifetime extension correctly in more cases. Also fixes
a crash caused by incorrectly evaluating initial values of variables
initialized with such expressions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59573
llvm-svn: 356634
gcc has these intrinsics in ia32intrin.h as well. And icc implements them
though they aren't documented in the Intel Intrinsics Guide.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59533
llvm-svn: 356609
allocators.
It is better to deduce omp_allocator_handle_t type from the predefined
allocators, because omp.h header might not define it explicitly. Plus,
it allows to identify the predefined allocators correctly when trying to
build the allcoator for the global variables.
llvm-svn: 356607
Before this commit, we emit unavailable errors for calls to functions during
overload resolution, and for references to all other declarations in
DiagnoseUseOfDecl. The early checks during overload resolution aren't as good as
the DiagnoseAvailabilityOfDecl based checks, as they error on the code from
PR40991. This commit fixes this by removing the early checking.
llvm.org/PR40991
rdar://48564179
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59394
llvm-svn: 356599
This diff previously exposed a bug in LLVM's IRLinker, breaking
buildbots that tried to self-host LLVM with monolithic LTO.
The bug is now in LLVM by D59552
Original commit message:
As PR17480 describes, clang does not support the used attribute
for member functions of class templates. This means that if the member
function is not used, its definition is never instantiated. This patch
changes clang to emit the definition if it has the used attribute.
Test Plan: Added a testcase
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56928
llvm-svn: 356598
Fails on MSVC buildbot (but not locally).
Not important as it is 'testing' something that isn't supported yet anyway:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41022
llvm-svn: 356577
Summary:
[OpenCL] Generate 'unroll.enable' metadata for __attribute__((opencl_unroll_hint))
For both !{!"llvm.loop.unroll.enable"} and !{!"llvm.loop.unroll.full"} the unroller
will try to fully unroll a loop unless the trip count is not known at compile time.
In that case for '.full' metadata no unrolling will be processed, while for '.enable'
the loop will be partially unrolled with a heuristically chosen unroll factor.
See: docs/LanguageExtensions.rst
From https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenCL/sdk/2.0/docs/man/xhtml/attributes-loopUnroll.html
__attribute__((opencl_unroll_hint))
for (int i=0; i<2; i++)
{
...
}
In the example above, the compiler will determine how much to unroll the loop.
Before the patch for __attribute__((opencl_unroll_hint)) was generated metadata
!{!"llvm.loop.unroll.full"}, which limits ability of loop unroller to decide, how
much to unroll the loop.
Reviewers: Anastasia, yaxunl
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Subscribers: zzheng, dmgreen, jdoerfert, cfe-commits, asavonic, AlexeySotkin
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59493
llvm-svn: 356571
Summary:
https://www.openmp.org/wp-content/uploads/OpenMP-API-Specification-5.0.pdf, page 3:
```
structured block
For C/C++, an executable statement, possibly compound, with a single entry at the
top and a single exit at the bottom, or an OpenMP construct.
COMMENT: See Section 2.1 on page 38 for restrictions on structured
blocks.
```
```
2.1 Directive Format
Some executable directives include a structured block. A structured block:
• may contain infinite loops where the point of exit is never reached;
• may halt due to an IEEE exception;
• may contain calls to exit(), _Exit(), quick_exit(), abort() or functions with a
_Noreturn specifier (in C) or a noreturn attribute (in C/C++);
• may be an expression statement, iteration statement, selection statement, or try block, provided
that the corresponding compound statement obtained by enclosing it in { and } would be a
structured block; and
Restrictions
Restrictions to structured blocks are as follows:
• Entry to a structured block must not be the result of a branch.
• The point of exit cannot be a branch out of the structured block.
C / C++
• The point of entry to a structured block must not be a call to setjmp().
• longjmp() and throw() must not violate the entry/exit criteria.
```
Of particular note here is the fact that OpenMP structured blocks are as-if `noexcept`,
in the same sense as with the normal `noexcept` functions in C++.
I.e. if throw happens, and it attempts to travel out of the `noexcept` function
(here: out of the current structured-block), then the program terminates.
Now, one of course can say that since it is explicitly prohibited by the Specification,
then any and all programs that violate this Specification contain undefined behavior,
and are unspecified, and thus no one should care about them. Just don't write broken code /s
But i'm not sure this is a reasonable approach.
I have personally had oss-fuzz issues of this origin - exception thrown inside
of an OpenMP structured-block that is not caught, thus causing program termination.
This issue isn't all that hard to catch, it's not any particularly different from
diagnosing the same situation with the normal `noexcept` function.
Now, clang static analyzer does not presently model exceptions.
But clang-tidy has a simplisic [[ https://clang.llvm.org/extra/clang-tidy/checks/bugprone-exception-escape.html | bugprone-exception-escape ]] check,
and it is even refactored as a `ExceptionAnalyzer` class for reuse.
So it would be trivial to use that analyzer to check for
exceptions escaping out of OpenMP structured blocks. (D59466)
All that sounds too great to be true. Indeed, there is a caveat.
Presently, it's practically impossible to do. To check a OpenMP structured block
you need to somehow 'get' the OpenMP structured block, and you can't because
it's simply not modelled in AST. `CapturedStmt`/`CapturedDecl` is not it's representation.
Now, it is of course possible to write e.g. some AST matcher that would e.g.
match every OpenMP executable directive, and then return the whatever `Stmt` is
the structured block of said executable directive, if any.
But i said //practically//. This isn't practical for the following reasons:
1. This **will** bitrot. That matcher will need to be kept up-to-date,
and refreshed with every new OpenMP spec version.
2. Every single piece of code that would want that knowledge would need to
have such matcher. Well, okay, if it is an AST matcher, it could be shared.
But then you still have `RecursiveASTVisitor` and friends.
`2 > 1`, so now you have code duplication.
So it would be reasonable (and is fully within clang AST spirit) to not
force every single consumer to do that work, but instead store that knowledge
in the correct, and appropriate place - AST, class structure.
Now, there is another hoop we need to get through.
It isn't fully obvious //how// to model this.
The best solution would of course be to simply add a `OMPStructuredBlock` transparent
node. It would be optimal, it would give us two properties:
* Given this `OMPExecutableDirective`, what's it OpenMP structured block?
* It is trivial to check whether the `Stmt*` is a OpenMP structured block (`isa<OMPStructuredBlock>(ptr)`)
But OpenMP structured block isn't **necessarily** the first, direct child of `OMP*Directive`.
(even ignoring the clang's `CapturedStmt`/`CapturedDecl` that were inserted inbetween).
So i'm not sure whether or not we could re-create AST statements after they were already created?
There would be other costs to a new AST node: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40563#c12
```
1. You will need to break the representation of loops. The body should be replaced by the "structured block" entity.
2. You will need to support serialization/deserialization.
3. You will need to support template instantiation.
4. You will need to support codegen and take this new construct to account in each OpenMP directive.
```
Instead, there **is** an functionally-equivalent, alternative solution, consisting of two parts.
Part 1:
* Add a member function `isStandaloneDirective()` to the `OMPExecutableDirective` class,
that will tell whether this directive is stand-alone or not, as per the spec.
We need it because we can't just check for the existance of associated statements,
see code comment.
* Add a member function `getStructuredBlock()` to the OMPExecutableDirective` class itself,
that assert that this is not a stand-alone directive, and either return the correct loop body
if this is a loop-like directive, or the captured statement.
This way, given an `OMPExecutableDirective`, we can get it's structured block.
Also, since the knowledge is ingrained into the clang OpenMP implementation,
it will not cause any duplication, and //hopefully// won't bitrot.
Great we achieved 1 of 2 properties of `OMPStructuredBlock` approach.
Thus, there is a second part needed:
* How can we check whether a given `Stmt*` is `OMPStructuredBlock`?
Well, we can't really, in general. I can see this workaround:
```
class FunctionASTVisitor : public RecursiveASTVisitor<FunctionASTVisitor> {
using Base = RecursiveASTVisitor<FunctionASTVisitor>;
public:
bool VisitOMPExecDir(OMPExecDir *D) {
OmpStructuredStmts.emplace_back(D.getStructuredStmt());
}
bool VisitSOMETHINGELSE(???) {
if(InOmpStructuredStmt)
HI!
}
bool TraverseStmt(Stmt *Node) {
if (!Node)
return Base::TraverseStmt(Node);
if (OmpStructuredStmts.back() == Node)
++InOmpStructuredStmt;
Base::TraverseStmt(Node);
if (OmpStructuredStmts.back() == Node) {
OmpStructuredStmts.pop_back();
--InOmpStructuredStmt;
}
return true;
}
std::vector<Stmt*> OmpStructuredStmts;
int InOmpStructuredStmt = 0;
};
```
But i really don't see using it in practice.
It's just too intrusive; and again, requires knowledge duplication.
.. but no. The solution lies right on the ground.
Why don't we simply store this `i'm a openmp structured block` in the bitfield of the `Stmt` itself?
This does not appear to have any impact on the memory footprint of the clang AST,
since it's just a single extra bit in the bitfield. At least the static assertions don't fail.
Thus, indeed, we can achieve both of the properties without a new AST node.
We can cheaply set that bit right in sema, at the end of `Sema::ActOnOpenMPExecutableDirective()`,
by just calling the `getStructuredBlock()` that we just added.
Test coverage that demonstrates all this has been added.
This isn't as great with serialization though. Most of it does not use abbrevs,
so we do end up paying the full price (4 bytes?) instead of a single bit.
That price, of course, can be reclaimed by using abbrevs.
In fact, i suspect that //might// not just reclaim these bytes, but pack these PCH significantly.
I'm not seeing a third solution. If there is one, it would be interesting to hear about it.
("just don't write code that would require `isa<OMPStructuredBlock>(ptr)`" is not a solution.)
Fixes [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40563 | PR40563 ]].
Reviewers: ABataev, rjmccall, hfinkel, rsmith, riccibruno, gribozavr
Reviewed By: ABataev, gribozavr
Subscribers: mgorny, aaron.ballman, steveire, guansong, jfb, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #openmp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59214
llvm-svn: 356570
Summary:
Split off from D59214.
Not a fully exhaustive test coverage, but better than what there currently is.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59306
llvm-svn: 356569
Use the new kind for both angled header-name tokens and for
double-quoted header-name tokens.
This is in preparation for C++20's context-sensitive header-name token
formation rules.
llvm-svn: 356530
Summary: This test is failing after r356499 (verified with `ninja check-clang-codegen`). Update the register selection used in the test from x0 to x8.
Reviewers: arsenm, MatzeB, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: efriedma, wdng, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59557
llvm-svn: 356517
The attribute pass_dynamic_object_size(n) behaves exactly like
pass_object_size(n), but instead of evaluating __builtin_object_size on calls,
it evaluates __builtin_dynamic_object_size, which has the potential to produce
runtime code when the object size can't be determined statically.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58757
llvm-svn: 356515
If the allocator was specified for the variable and next one is found
with the different allocator, the warning is emitted, and the allocator
is ignored.
llvm-svn: 356513
"clang++ hello.cc --rtlib=compiler-rt"
now can works without specifying additional unwind or exception
handling libraries.
This reworked version of the feature no longer modifies today's default
unwind library for compiler-rt: which is nothing. Rather, a user
can specify -DCLANG_DEFAULT_UNWINDLIB=libunwind when configuring
the compiler.
This should address the issues from the previous version.
Update tests for new --unwindlib semantics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59109
llvm-svn: 356508
According to OpenMP, 2.11.3 allocate Directive, Restrictions, C / C++,
if a list item has a static storage type, the allocator expression in
the allocator clause must be a constant expression that evaluates to
one of the predefined memory allocator values. Added check for this
restriction.
llvm-svn: 356496
When we create overloads for the builtin compound assignment operators
we need to preserve address space for the reference operand taking it
from the argument that is passed in.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59367
llvm-svn: 356475
Added initial codegen for the local variables with the #pragma omp
allocate directive. Instead of allocating the variables on the stack,
__kmpc_alloc|__kmpc_free functions are used for memory (de-)allocation.
llvm-svn: 356472
Improved some checks and moved testing of the default header
in C++ mode into the Headers folder.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59486
llvm-svn: 356450
Summary:
`wasm.throw` builtin's first 'tag' argument should be an immediate index
into the event section.
Reviewers: dschuff, craig.topper
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59448
llvm-svn: 356436
tokens.
We now actually form an angled_string_literal token for a header name by
concatenation rather than just working out what its contents would be.
This substantially simplifies downstream processing and is necessary for
C++20 header unit imports.
llvm-svn: 356433
Summary:
Similar to D56967, we add the existing diag::note_locked_here to tell
the user where we saw the locking that isn't matched correctly.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, delesley
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59455
llvm-svn: 356427
As background, when constructing a complete object, virtual bases are
constructed first. If an exception is thrown later in the ctor, those
virtual bases are destroyed, so sema marks the relevant constructors and
destructors of virtual bases as referenced. If necessary, they are
emitted.
However, an abstract class can never be used to construct a complete
object. In the Itanium C++ ABI, this works out nicely, because we never
end up emitting the "complete" constructor variant, only the "base"
constructor variant, which can be called by constructors of derived
classes. Clang's Sema::MarkBaseAndMemberDestructorsReferenced is aware
of this optimization, and it does not mark ctors and dtors of virtual
bases referenced when the constructor of an abstract class is emitted.
In the Microsoft ABI, there are no complete/base variants, so before
this change, the constructor of an abstract class could reference ctors
and dtors of a virtual base without marking them referenced. This could
lead to unresolved symbol errors at link time, as reported in PR41065.
The fix is to implement the same optimization as Sema: If the class is
abstract, don't bother initializing its virtual bases. The "is this
class the most derived class" check in the constructor will never pass,
and the virtual base constructor calls are always dead. Skip them.
I think Richard noticed this missed optimization back in 2016 when he
was implementing inheriting constructors. I wasn't able to find any bugs
or email about it, though.
Fixes PR41065
llvm-svn: 356425
This is another attempt at what Erich Keane tried to do in r355322.
This adds rolb, rolw, rold, rolq and their ror equivalent as always_inline wrappers around __builtin_rotate* which will lower to funnel shift intrinsics in IR.
Additionally, when _MSC_VER is not defined we will define _rotl, _lrotl, _rotr, _lrotr as macros to one of the always_inline intrinsics mentioned above. Making sure that _lrotl/_lrotr use either 32 or 64 bit based on the size of long. These need to be macros because we have builtins with the same name for MS compatibility, but _MSC_VER isn't always defined when those builtins are enabled.
We also define _rotwl and _rotwr as macros aliasing to rolw/rorw just like gcc to complete the set. These don't need to be gated with _MSC_VER because these aren't MS builtins.
I've added tests both for non-MS and -ms-extensions with and without _MSC_VER being defined.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59346
llvm-svn: 356423
These diagnose overflowing calls to subset of fortifiable functions. Some
functions, like sprintf or strcpy aren't supported right not, but we should
probably support these in the future. We previously supported this kind of
functionality with -Wbuiltin-memcpy-chk-size, but that diagnostic doesn't work
with _FORTIFY implementations that use wrapper functions. Also unlike that
diagnostic, we emit these warnings regardless of whether _FORTIFY_SOURCE is
actually enabled, which is nice for programs that don't enable the runtime
checks.
Why not just use diagnose_if, like Bionic does? We can get better diagnostics in
the compiler (i.e. mention the sizes), and we have the potential to diagnose
sprintf and strcpy which is impossible with diagnose_if (at least, in languages
that don't support C++14 constexpr). This approach also saves standard libraries
from having to add diagnose_if.
rdar://48006655
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58797
llvm-svn: 356397
Summary:
If the constraint information is not changed between two program states the
analyzer has not learnt new information and made no report. But it is
possible to happen because we have no information at all. The new approach
evaluates the condition to determine if that is the case and let the user
know we just `Assuming...` some value.
Reviewers: NoQ, george.karpenkov
Reviewed By: NoQ
Subscribers: llvm-commits, xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin,
mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, gsd, gerazo
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57410
llvm-svn: 356323
Summary: If the constraint information is not changed between two program states the analyzer has not learnt new information and made no report. But it is possible to happen because we have no information at all. The new approach evaluates the condition to determine if that is the case and let the user know we just 'Assuming...' some value.
Reviewers: NoQ, george.karpenkov
Reviewed By: NoQ
Subscribers: xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, Szelethus, donat.nagy, dkrupp, gsd, gerazo
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57410
llvm-svn: 356319
Summary:
Because in wasm we merge all catch clauses into one big catchpad, in
case none of the types in catch handlers matches after we test against
each of them, we should unwind to the next EH enclosing scope. For this,
we should NOT use a call to `__cxa_rethrow` but rather a call to our own
rethrow intrinsic, because what we're trying to do here is just to
transfer the control flow into the next enclosing EH pad (or the
caller). Calls to `__cxa_rethrow` should only be used after a call to
`__cxa_begin_catch`.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59353
llvm-svn: 356317
Change the HIP Toolchain to pass the OPT_mllvm options into OPT and LLC stages. Added a lit test to verify the command args.
Reviewers: yaxunl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59316
llvm-svn: 356277
Don't crash when a function has a name that starts with "CF" and ends with
"Retain" but takes 0 arguments. In particular, don't try to treat it as if
it returns its first argument.
These problems are inevitable because the checker is naming-convention-based,
but at least we shouldn't crash.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59123
llvm-svn: 356223