Commit Graph

299 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Rong Xu a4a09b2398 [PGO] Clang part of change for context-sensitive PGO (part1)
Part 1 of CSPGO change in Clang. This includes changes in clang options
and calls to llvm PassManager. Tests will be committed in part2.
This change needs the PassManager change in llvm.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54176

llvm-svn: 355331
2019-03-04 20:21:31 +00:00
Fangrui Song 524b3c1810 Fix file headers. NFC
llvm-svn: 355176
2019-03-01 06:49:51 +00:00
Thomas Lively f3b4f99007 [WebAssembly] Remove uses of ThreadModel
Summary:
In the clang UI, replaces -mthread-model posix with -matomics as the
source of truth on threading. In the backend, replaces
-thread-model=posix with the atomics target feature, which is now
collected on the WebAssemblyTargetMachine along with all other used
features. These collected features will also be used to emit the
target features section in the future.

The default configuration for the backend is thread-model=posix and no
atomics, which was previously an invalid configuration. This change
makes the default valid because the thread model is ignored.

A side effect of this change is that objects are never emitted with
passive segments. It will instead be up to the linker to decide
whether sections should be active or passive based on whether atomics
are used in the final link.

Reviewers: aheejin, sbc100, dschuff

Subscribers: mehdi_amini, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, sunfish, steven_wu, dexonsmith, rupprecht, jfb, jdoerfert, cfe-commits, llvm-commits

Tags: #clang, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58742

llvm-svn: 355112
2019-02-28 18:39:08 +00:00
Alexey Bataev 8061acd501 [OPENMP][NVPTX]Use faster teams reduction algorithm.
A faster way to reduce the values in teams reductions was found, the
codegen is updated to use this faster algorithm and new runtime functions.

llvm-svn: 354479
2019-02-20 16:36:22 +00:00
Oliver Stannard e3c8ce8b75 [ARM] Add pre-defined macros for ROPI and RWPI
This adds ACLE-defined macros to test for code being compiled in the ROPI and
RWPI position-independence modes.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23610

llvm-svn: 354265
2019-02-18 12:39:47 +00:00
Heejin Ahn 9d5a089bf5 [WebAssembly] Make thread-related options consistent
Summary:
There have been three options related to threads and users had to set
all three of them separately to get the correct compilation results.
This makes sure the relationship between the options makes sense and
sets necessary options for users if only part of the necessary options
are specified. This does:

- Remove `-matomics`; this option alone does not enable anything, so
  removed it to not confuse users.
- `-mthread-model posix` sets `-target-feature +atomics`
- `-pthread` sets both `-target-feature +atomics` and
  `-mthread-model posix`
Also errors out when explicitly given options don't match, such as
`-pthread` is given with `-mthread-model single`.

Reviewers: dschuff, sbc100, tlively, sunfish

Subscribers: jgravelle-google, jfb, cfe-commits

Tags: #clang

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57874

llvm-svn: 353761
2019-02-11 22:47:50 +00:00
Anton Korobeynikov f1f897cac2 Do not use frame pointer by default for MSP430
This is suggested by 3.3.9 of MSP430 EABI document.
We do allow user to manually enable frame pointer. GCC toolchain uses the same behavior.

Patch by Dmitry Mikushev!

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56925

llvm-svn: 353212
2019-02-05 20:15:03 +00:00
Philip Pfaffe e3f105c651 [NewPM] Add support for new-PM plugins to clang
Summary:
This adds support for new-PM plugin loading to clang. The option
`-fpass-plugin=` may be used to specify a dynamic shared object file
that adheres to the PassPlugin API.

Tested: created simple plugin that registers an EP callback; with optimization level > 0, the pass is run as expected.

Committed on behalf of Marco Elver

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56935

llvm-svn: 352972
2019-02-02 23:19:32 +00:00
Artem Belevich 8fa28a0db0 [CUDA] Propagate detected version of CUDA to cc1
..and use it to control that parts of CUDA compilation
that depend on the specific version of CUDA SDK.

This patch has a placeholder for a 'new launch API' support
which is in a separate patch. The list will be further
extended in the upcoming patch to support CUDA-10.1.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57487

llvm-svn: 352798
2019-01-31 21:32:24 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 2946cd7010 Update the file headers across all of the LLVM projects in the monorepo
to reflect the new license.

We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.

Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.

llvm-svn: 351636
2019-01-19 08:50:56 +00:00
Vladimir Stefanovic 99113a0ccf [mips] Add '-mrelax-pic-calls', '-mno-relax-pic-calls'
These two options enable/disable emission of R_{MICRO}MIPS_JALR fixups along
with PIC calls. The linker may then try to turn PIC calls into direct jumps.
By default, these fixups do get emitted by the backend, use
'-mno-relax-pic-calls' to omit them.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56878

llvm-svn: 351579
2019-01-18 19:54:51 +00:00
Anton Korobeynikov 93165d648f [MSP430] Provide a toolchain description
This is an initial implementation for msp430 toolchain including
-mmcu option support
-mhwmult options support
-integrated-as by default

The toolchain uses msp430-elf-as as a linker and supports msp430-gcc toolchain tree.

Patch by Kristina Bessonova!

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56658

llvm-svn: 351228
2019-01-15 19:44:05 +00:00
Teresa Johnson 84cecfcb3d [LTO] Add option to enable LTOUnit splitting, and disable unless needed
Summary:
Adds a new -f[no]split-lto-unit flag that is disabled by default to
control module splitting during ThinLTO. It is automatically enabled
for -fsanitize=cfi and -fwhole-program-vtables.

The new EnableSplitLTOUnit codegen flag is passed down to llvm
via a new module flag of the same name.

Depends on D53890.

Reviewers: pcc

Subscribers: ormris, mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53891

llvm-svn: 350949
2019-01-11 18:32:07 +00:00
Gheorghe-Teodor Bercea a3afcf2445 [OpenMP] Add flag for preventing the extension to 64 bits for the collapse loop counter
Summary: Introduce a compiler flag for cases when the user knows that the collapsed loop counter can be safely represented using at most 32 bits. This will prevent the emission of expensive mathematical operations (such as the div operation) on the iteration variable using 64 bits where 32 bit operations are sufficient.

Reviewers: ABataev, caomhin

Reviewed By: ABataev

Subscribers: hfinkel, kkwli0, guansong, cfe-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55928

llvm-svn: 350758
2019-01-09 20:38:35 +00:00
Dan Albert dd14234b60 [Driver] Default to -fno-addrsig on Android.
Summary: The Android NDK still uses GNU binutils by default.

Reviewers: srhines, pirama

Reviewed By: srhines

Subscribers: cfe-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56456

llvm-svn: 350668
2019-01-08 22:33:59 +00:00
Michal Gorny dae01c352b [Driver] Disable -faddrsig on Gentoo by default
Gentoo supports combining clang toolchain with GNU binutils, and many
users actually do that.  As -faddrsig is not supported by GNU strip,
this results in a lot of warnings.  Disable it by default and let users
enable it explicitly if they want it; with the intent of reevaluating
when the underlying feature becomes standarized.

See also: https://bugs.gentoo.org/667854

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56047

llvm-svn: 350028
2018-12-23 15:07:26 +00:00
Artem Dergachev 0ec95c8651 [driver] [analyzer] Fix --analyze -Xanalyzer after r349863.
If an -analyzer-config is passed through -Xanalyzer, it is not found while
looking for -Xclang.

Additionally, don't emit -analyzer-config-compatibility-mode for *every*
-analyzer-config flag we encounter; one is enough.

https://reviews.llvm.org/D55823

rdar://problem/46504165

llvm-svn: 349866
2018-12-21 01:11:21 +00:00
George Karpenkov 6d45b1f3b0 Revert "Revert "[driver] [analyzer] Fix a backward compatibility issue after r348038.""
This reverts commit 144927939587b790c0536f4ff08245043fc8d733.

Fixes the bug in the original commit.

llvm-svn: 349863
2018-12-21 00:26:19 +00:00
Artem Dergachev 46debda1c7 Revert "[driver] [analyzer] Fix a backward compatibility issue after r348038."
This reverts commits r349824, r349828, r349835.

More buildbot failures were noticed.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55823

rdar://problem/46504165

llvm-svn: 349843
2018-12-20 22:29:49 +00:00
Artem Dergachev d001380a69 [driver] [analyzer] Fix a backward compatibility issue after r348038.
Since r348038 we emit an error every time an -analyzer-config option is not
found. The driver, however, suppresses this error with another flag,
-analyzer-config-compatibility-mode, so backwards compatibility is maintained,
while analyzer developers still enjoy the new typo-free experience.

The backwards compatibility turns out to be still broken when the -analyze
action is not specified; it is still possible to specify -analyzer-config
in that case. This should be fixed now.

Patch by Kristóf Umann!

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55823

rdar://problem/46504165

llvm-svn: 349824
2018-12-20 21:26:40 +00:00
Michal Gorny 5a409d0e30 Replace getOS() == llvm::Triple::*BSD with isOS*BSD() [NFCI]
Replace multiple comparisons of getOS() value with FreeBSD, NetBSD,
OpenBSD and DragonFly with matching isOS*BSD() methods.  This should
improve the consistency of coding style without changing the behavior.
Direct getOS() comparisons were left whenever used in switch or switch-
like context.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55916

llvm-svn: 349752
2018-12-20 13:09:30 +00:00
Douglas Yung 25f0477195 Disable -faddsig by default for PS4 target.
llvm-svn: 349691
2018-12-19 22:45:26 +00:00
Michal Gorny aaf83c267d [Driver] Disable -faddrsig by default on NetBSD
Avoid passing -faddrsig by default on NetBSD.  This platform is still
using old GNU binutils that crashes on executables containing those
sections.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55828

llvm-svn: 349647
2018-12-19 17:25:46 +00:00
Pierre Gousseau 53b5cfb080 [Driver][PS4] Do not implicitly link against asan or ubsan if -nostdlib or -nodefaultlibs on PS4.
NFC for targets other than PS4.

Respect -nostdlib and -nodefaultlibs when enabling asan or ubsan.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55712

llvm-svn: 349508
2018-12-18 17:03:35 +00:00
JF Bastien 14daa20be1 Automatic variable initialization
Summary:
Add an option to initialize automatic variables with either a pattern or with
zeroes. The default is still that automatic variables are uninitialized. Also
add attributes to request uninitialized on a per-variable basis, mainly to disable
initialization of large stack arrays when deemed too expensive.

This isn't meant to change the semantics of C and C++. Rather, it's meant to be
a last-resort when programmers inadvertently have some undefined behavior in
their code. This patch aims to make undefined behavior hurt less, which
security-minded people will be very happy about. Notably, this means that
there's no inadvertent information leak when:

  - The compiler re-uses stack slots, and a value is used uninitialized.
  - The compiler re-uses a register, and a value is used uninitialized.
  - Stack structs / arrays / unions with padding are copied.

This patch only addresses stack and register information leaks. There's many
more infoleaks that we could address, and much more undefined behavior that
could be tamed. Let's keep this patch focused, and I'm happy to address related
issues elsewhere.

To keep the patch simple, only some `undef` is removed for now, see
`replaceUndef`. The padding-related infoleaks are therefore not all gone yet.
This will be addressed in a follow-up, mainly because addressing padding-related
leaks should be a stand-alone option which is implied by variable
initialization.

There are three options when it comes to automatic variable initialization:

  0. Uninitialized

    This is C and C++'s default. It's not changing. Depending on code
    generation, a programmer who runs into undefined behavior by using an
    uninialized automatic variable may observe any previous value (including
    program secrets), or any value which the compiler saw fit to materialize on
    the stack or in a register (this could be to synthesize an immediate, to
    refer to code or data locations, to generate cookies, etc).

  1. Pattern initialization

    This is the recommended initialization approach. Pattern initialization's
    goal is to initialize automatic variables with values which will likely
    transform logic bugs into crashes down the line, are easily recognizable in
    a crash dump, without being values which programmers can rely on for useful
    program semantics. At the same time, pattern initialization tries to
    generate code which will optimize well. You'll find the following details in
    `patternFor`:

    - Integers are initialized with repeated 0xAA bytes (infinite scream).
    - Vectors of integers are also initialized with infinite scream.
    - Pointers are initialized with infinite scream on 64-bit platforms because
      it's an unmappable pointer value on architectures I'm aware of. Pointers
      are initialize to 0x000000AA (small scream) on 32-bit platforms because
      32-bit platforms don't consistently offer unmappable pages. When they do
      it's usually the zero page. As people try this out, I expect that we'll
      want to allow different platforms to customize this, let's do so later.
    - Vectors of pointers are initialized the same way pointers are.
    - Floating point values and vectors are initialized with a negative quiet
      NaN with repeated 0xFF payload (e.g. 0xffffffff and 0xffffffffffffffff).
      NaNs are nice (here, anways) because they propagate on arithmetic, making
      it more likely that entire computations become NaN when a single
      uninitialized value sneaks in.
    - Arrays are initialized to their homogeneous elements' initialization
      value, repeated. Stack-based Variable-Length Arrays (VLAs) are
      runtime-initialized to the allocated size (no effort is made for negative
      size, but zero-sized VLAs are untouched even if technically undefined).
    - Structs are initialized to their heterogeneous element's initialization
      values. Zero-size structs are initialized as 0xAA since they're allocated
      a single byte.
    - Unions are initialized using the initialization for the largest member of
      the union.

    Expect the values used for pattern initialization to change over time, as we
    refine heuristics (both for performance and security). The goal is truly to
    avoid injecting semantics into undefined behavior, and we should be
    comfortable changing these values when there's a worthwhile point in doing
    so.

    Why so much infinite scream? Repeated byte patterns tend to be easy to
    synthesize on most architectures, and otherwise memset is usually very
    efficient. For values which aren't entirely repeated byte patterns, LLVM
    will often generate code which does memset + a few stores.

  2. Zero initialization

    Zero initialize all values. This has the unfortunate side-effect of
    providing semantics to otherwise undefined behavior, programs therefore
    might start to rely on this behavior, and that's sad. However, some
    programmers believe that pattern initialization is too expensive for them,
    and data might show that they're right. The only way to make these
    programmers wrong is to offer zero-initialization as an option, figure out
    where they are right, and optimize the compiler into submission. Until the
    compiler provides acceptable performance for all security-minded code, zero
    initialization is a useful (if blunt) tool.

I've been asked for a fourth initialization option: user-provided byte value.
This might be useful, and can easily be added later.

Why is an out-of band initialization mecanism desired? We could instead use
-Wuninitialized! Indeed we could, but then we're forcing the programmer to
provide semantics for something which doesn't actually have any (it's
uninitialized!). It's then unclear whether `int derp = 0;` lends meaning to `0`,
or whether it's just there to shut that warning up. It's also way easier to use
a compiler flag than it is to manually and intelligently initialize all values
in a program.

Why not just rely on static analysis? Because it cannot reason about all dynamic
code paths effectively, and it has false positives. It's a great tool, could get
even better, but it's simply incapable of catching all uses of uninitialized
values.

Why not just rely on memory sanitizer? Because it's not universally available,
has a 3x performance cost, and shouldn't be deployed in production. Again, it's
a great tool, it'll find the dynamic uses of uninitialized variables that your
test coverage hits, but it won't find the ones that you encounter in production.

What's the performance like? Not too bad! Previous publications [0] have cited
2.7 to 4.5% averages. We've commmitted a few patches over the last few months to
address specific regressions, both in code size and performance. In all cases,
the optimizations are generally useful, but variable initialization benefits
from them a lot more than regular code does. We've got a handful of other
optimizations in mind, but the code is in good enough shape and has found enough
latent issues that it's a good time to get the change reviewed, checked in, and
have others kick the tires. We'll continue reducing overheads as we try this out
on diverse codebases.

Is it a good idea? Security-minded folks think so, and apparently so does the
Microsoft Visual Studio team [1] who say "Between 2017 and mid 2018, this
feature would have killed 49 MSRC cases that involved uninitialized struct data
leaking across a trust boundary. It would have also mitigated a number of bugs
involving uninitialized struct data being used directly.". They seem to use pure
zero initialization, and claim to have taken the overheads down to within noise.
Don't just trust Microsoft though, here's another relevant person asking for
this [2]. It's been proposed for GCC [3] and LLVM [4] before.

What are the caveats? A few!

  - Variables declared in unreachable code, and used later, aren't initialized.
    This goto, Duff's device, other objectionable uses of switch. This should
    instead be a hard-error in any serious codebase.
  - Volatile stack variables are still weird. That's pre-existing, it's really
    the language's fault and this patch keeps it weird. We should deprecate
    volatile [5].
  - As noted above, padding isn't fully handled yet.

I don't think these caveats make the patch untenable because they can be
addressed separately.

Should this be on by default? Maybe, in some circumstances. It's a conversation
we can have when we've tried it out sufficiently, and we're confident that we've
eliminated enough of the overheads that most codebases would want to opt-in.
Let's keep our precious undefined behavior until that point in time.

How do I use it:

  1. On the command-line:

    -ftrivial-auto-var-init=uninitialized (the default)
    -ftrivial-auto-var-init=pattern
    -ftrivial-auto-var-init=zero -enable-trivial-auto-var-init-zero-knowing-it-will-be-removed-from-clang

  2. Using an attribute:

    int dont_initialize_me __attribute((uninitialized));

  [0]: https://users.elis.ugent.be/~jsartor/researchDocs/OOPSLA2011Zero-submit.pdf
  [1]: https://twitter.com/JosephBialek/status/1062774315098112001
  [2]: https://outflux.net/slides/2018/lss/danger.pdf
  [3]: https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2014-06/msg00615.html
  [4]: 776a0955ef
  [5]: http://wg21.link/p1152

I've also posted an RFC to cfe-dev: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2018-November/060172.html

<rdar://problem/39131435>

Reviewers: pcc, kcc, rsmith

Subscribers: JDevlieghere, jkorous, dexonsmith, cfe-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54604

llvm-svn: 349442
2018-12-18 05:12:21 +00:00
Alex Lorenz 9b20a99823 [darwin][arm64] use the "cyclone" CPU for Darwin even when `-arch`
is not specified

The -target option allows the user to specify the build target using LLVM
triple. The triple includes the arch, and so the -arch option is redundant.
This should work just as well without the -arch. However, the driver has a bug
in which it doesn't target the "Cyclone" CPU for darwin if -target is used
without -arch. This commit fixes this issue.

rdar://46743182

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55731

llvm-svn: 349382
2018-12-17 19:30:46 +00:00
Scott Linder de6beb02a5 Implement -frecord-command-line (-frecord-gcc-switches)
Implement options in clang to enable recording the driver command-line
in an ELF section.

Implement a new special named metadata, llvm.commandline, to support
frontends embedding their command-line options in IR/ASM/ELF.

This differs from the GCC implementation in some key ways:

* In GCC there is only one command-line possible per compilation-unit,
  in LLVM it mirrors llvm.ident and multiple are allowed.
* In GCC individual options are separated by NULL bytes, in LLVM entire
  command-lines are separated by NULL bytes. The advantage of the GCC
  approach is to clearly delineate options in the face of embedded
  spaces. The advantage of the LLVM approach is to support merging
  multiple command-lines unambiguously, while handling embedded spaces
  with escaping.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54487
Clang Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54489

llvm-svn: 349155
2018-12-14 15:38:15 +00:00
Steven Wu 098742faa9 [Driver] Add support for -fembed-bitcode for assembly file
Summary:
Handle -fembed-bitcode for assembly inputs. When the input file is
assembly, write a marker as "__LLVM,__asm" section.

Fix llvm.org/pr39659

Reviewers: compnerd, dexonsmith

Reviewed By: compnerd

Subscribers: rjmccall, dblaikie, jkorous, cfe-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55525

llvm-svn: 348943
2018-12-12 17:30:16 +00:00
Alexey Bataev c92fc3c8bc [CUDA][OPENMP][NVPTX]Improve logic of the debug info support.
Summary:
Added support for the -gline-directives-only option + fixed logic of the
debug info for CUDA devices. If optimization level is O0, then options
--[no-]cuda-noopt-device-debug do not affect the debug info level. If
the optimization level is >O0, debug info options are used +
--no-cuda-noopt-device-debug is used or no --cuda-noopt-device-debug is
used, the optimization level for the device code is kept and the
emission of the debug directives is used.
If the opt level is > O0, debug info is requested +
--cuda-noopt-device-debug option is used, the optimization is disabled
for the device code + required debug info is emitted.

Reviewers: tra, echristo

Subscribers: aprantl, guansong, JDevlieghere, cfe-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51554

llvm-svn: 348930
2018-12-12 14:52:27 +00:00
Pete Cooper e388680dfa Convert some ObjC msgSends to runtime calls.
It is faster to directly call the ObjC runtime for methods such as alloc/allocWithZone instead of sending a message to those functions.

This patch adds support for converting messages to alloc/allocWithZone to their equivalent runtime calls.

Tests included for the positive case of applying this transformation, negative tests that we ensure we only convert "alloc" to objc_alloc, not "alloc2", and also a driver test to ensure we enable this only for supported runtime versions.

Reviewed By: rjmccall

https://reviews.llvm.org/D55349

llvm-svn: 348687
2018-12-08 05:13:50 +00:00
Nico Weber 4c9fa4a0a1 Allow forwarding -fdebug-compilation-dir to cc1as
The flag -fdebug-compilation-dir is useful to make generated .o files
independent of the path of the build directory, without making the compile
command-line dependent on the path of the build directory, like
-fdebug-prefix-map requires. This change makes it so that the driver can
forward the flag to -cc1as, like it already can for -cc1. We might want to
consider making -fdebug-compilation-dir a driver flag in a follow-up.

(Since -fdebug-compilation-dir defaults to PWD, it's already possible to get
this effect by setting PWD, but explicit compiler flags are better than env
vars, because e.g. ninja tracks command lines and reruns commands that change.)

Somewhat related to PR14625.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55377

llvm-svn: 348515
2018-12-06 18:50:39 +00:00
Alex Lorenz 1ae9cd7e6a [darwin] remove version number check when enabling -fobjc-subscripting-legacy-runtime
This subscripting feature actually works on older OS versions anyway.

rdar://36287065

llvm-svn: 348448
2018-12-06 02:44:23 +00:00
George Rimar ab090337c5 [clang] - Simplify tools::SplitDebugName.
This is an updated version of the D54576, which was reverted.

Problem was that SplitDebugName calls the InputInfo::getFilename
which asserts if InputInfo given is not of type Filename:

const char *getFilename() const {
  assert(isFilename() && "Invalid accessor.");
  return Data.Filename;
}
At the same time at that point, it can be of type Nothing and
we need to use getBaseInput(), like original code did.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55006

llvm-svn: 348352
2018-12-05 11:09:10 +00:00
Erich Keane 0a6b5b653e PTH-- Remove feature entirely-
When debugging a boost build with a modified
version of Clang, I discovered that the PTH implementation
stores TokenKind in 8 bits. However, we currently have 368
TokenKinds.

The result is that the value gets truncated and the wrong token
gets picked up when including PTH files. It seems that this will
go wrong every time someone uses a token that uses the 9th bit.

Upon asking on IRC, it was brought up that this was a highly
experimental features that was considered a failure. I discovered
via googling that BoostBuild (mostly Boost.Math) is the only user of
this
feature, using the CC1 flag directly. I believe that this can be
transferred over to normal PCH with minimal effort:
https://github.com/boostorg/build/issues/367

Based on advice on IRC and research showing that this is a nearly
completely unused feature, this patch removes it entirely.

Note: I considered leaving the build-flags in place and making them
emit an error/warning, however since I've basically identified and
warned the only user, it seemed better to just remove them.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54547

Change-Id: If32744275ef1f585357bd6c1c813d96973c4d8d9
llvm-svn: 348266
2018-12-04 14:34:09 +00:00
Petr Hosek 821b38f526 [Sema] Provide -fvisibility-global-new-delete-hidden option
When the global new and delete operators aren't declared, Clang
provides and implicit declaration, but this declaration currently
always uses the default visibility. This is a problem when the
C++ library itself is being built with non-default visibility because
the implicit declaration will force the new and delete operators to
have the default visibility unlike the rest of the library.

The existing workaround is to use assembly to enforce the visiblity:
https://fuchsia.googlesource.com/zircon/+/master/system/ulib/zxcpp/new.cpp#108
but that solution is not always available, e.g. in the case of of
libFuzzer which is using an internal version of libc++ that's also built
with -fvisibility=hidden where the existing behavior is causing issues.

This change introduces a new option -fvisibility-global-new-delete-hidden
which makes the implicit declaration of the global new and delete
operators hidden.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53787

llvm-svn: 348234
2018-12-04 03:25:25 +00:00
Kristof Umann d1a4b06c20 [analyzer] Emit an error for invalid -analyzer-config inputs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53280

llvm-svn: 348038
2018-11-30 21:24:31 +00:00
Kristina Brooks 77a4adc4f9 Add Hurd target to Clang driver (2/2)
This adds Hurd toolchain support to Clang's driver in addition
to handling translating the triple from Hurd-compatible form to
the actual triple registered in LLVM.

(Phabricator was stripping the empty files from the patch so I 
manually created them)

Patch by sthibaul (Samuel Thibault)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54379

llvm-svn: 347833
2018-11-29 03:49:14 +00:00
Jonas Toth 1b2ead17d6 Revert "[clang] - Simplify tools::SplitDebugName."
This reverts commit r347035 as it introduced assertion failures under
certain conditions. More information can be found here:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL347035

llvm-svn: 347676
2018-11-27 17:28:38 +00:00
Zola Bridges c866679a9b [clang][slh] Forward mSLH only to Clang CC1
Summary:
-mno-speculative-load-hardening isn't a cc1 option, therefore,
before this change:

clang -mno-speculative-load-hardening hello.cpp

would have the following error:

error: unknown argument: '-mno-speculative-load-hardening'

This change will only ever forward -mspeculative-load-hardening
which is a CC1 option based on which flag was passed to clang.

Also added a test that uses this option that fails if an error like the
above is ever thrown.

Thank you ericwf for help debugging and fixing this error.

Reviewers: chandlerc, EricWF

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54763

llvm-svn: 347582
2018-11-26 18:13:31 +00:00
Calixte Denizet f4bf671af7 [Clang] Add options -fprofile-filter-files and -fprofile-exclude-files to filter the files to instrument with gcov (after revert https://reviews.llvm.org/rL346659)
Summary:
the previous patch (https://reviews.llvm.org/rC346642) has been reverted because of test failure under windows.
So this patch fix the test cfe/trunk/test/CodeGen/code-coverage-filter.c.

Reviewers: marco-c

Reviewed By: marco-c

Subscribers: cfe-commits, sylvestre.ledru

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54600

llvm-svn: 347144
2018-11-17 19:41:39 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 755577168a [codeview] Expose -gcodeview-ghash for global type hashing
Summary:
Experience has shown that the functionality is useful. It makes linking
optimized clang with debug info for me a lot faster, 20s to 13s. The
type merging phase of PDB writing goes from 10s to 3s.

This removes the LLVM cl::opt and replaces it with a metadata flag.

After this change, users can do the following to use ghash:
- add -gcodeview-ghash to compiler flags
- replace /DEBUG with /DEBUG:GHASH in linker flags

Reviewers: zturner, hans, thakis, takuto.ikuta

Subscribers: aprantl, hiraditya, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54370

llvm-svn: 347072
2018-11-16 18:47:41 +00:00
George Rimar 9982e3b944 [clang] - Simplify tools::SplitDebugName.
This should be NFC change.

SplitDebugName recently started to accept the `Output` that
can be used to simplify the logic a bit, also it
seems that code in SplitDebugName that uses
OPT_fdebug_compilation_dir is simply dead.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54576

llvm-svn: 347035
2018-11-16 07:59:24 +00:00
David Blaikie a99b8e4c35 Rewrite-imports on crash: Simplify handling
-frewrite-imports already implies -frewrite-includes (it piggy-backs
on/extends the implementation) so there's no need to conditionally pass
-frewrite-includes when already using -frewrite-imports (& especially I
don't think these would want to be different between crash reporting and
not crash reporting)

llvm-svn: 346927
2018-11-15 03:04:19 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 7b7b1140e3 [codeview] Make "clang -g" emit codeview by default when targetting MSVC
Summary:
If you're using the Microsoft ABI, chances are that you want PDBs and
codeview debug info. Currently, everyone has to remember to specific
-gcodeview by default, when it would be nice if the standard -g option
did the right thing by default.

Also, do some related cleanup of -cc1 options. When targetting the MS
C++ ABI, we probably shouldn't pass -debugger-tuning=gdb. We were also
passing -gcodeview twice, which is silly.

Reviewers: smeenai, zturner

Subscribers: aprantl, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54499

llvm-svn: 346907
2018-11-14 22:59:27 +00:00
Richard Smith 28ddb91dec [c++20] Implement P0482R6: enable -fchar8_t by default in C++20 mode.
This unfortunately results in a substantial breaking change when
switching to C++20, but it's not yet clear what / how much we should
do about that. We may want to add a compatibility conversion from
u8 string literals to const char*, similar to how C++98 provided a
compatibility conversion from string literals to non-const char*,
but that's not handled by this patch.

The feature can be disabled in C++20 mode with -fno-char8_t.

llvm-svn: 346892
2018-11-14 21:04:34 +00:00
George Rimar 91829eef65 [Clang] - Add '-gsplit-dwarf[=split,=single]' version for '-gsplit-dwarf' option.
The DWARF5 specification says(Appendix F.1):

"The sections that do not require relocation, however, can be
written to the relocatable object (.o) file but ignored by the
linker or they can be written to a separate DWARF object (.dwo)
file that need not be accessed by the linker."

The first part describes a single file split DWARF feature and there
is no way to trigger this behavior atm. 
Fortunately, no many changes are required to keep *.dwo sections
in a .o, the patch does that.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52296

llvm-svn: 346837
2018-11-14 09:22:16 +00:00
David Blaikie 27692de9cf DebugInfo: Add a driver flag for DWARF debug_ranges base address specifier use.
Summary:
This saves a lot of relocations in optimized object files (at the cost
of some cost/increase in linked executable bytes), but gold's 32 bit
gdb-index support has a bug (
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=21894 ) so we can't
switch to this unconditionally. (& even if it weren't for that bug, one
might argue that some users would want to optimize in one direction or
the other - prioritizing object size or linked executable size)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54243

llvm-svn: 346789
2018-11-13 20:08:13 +00:00
Takuto Ikuta 245d94776f [clang-cl] Do not allow using both /Zc:dllexportInlines- and /fallback flag
Summary: /Zc:dllexportInlines with /fallback may cause unexpected linker error. It is better to disallow compile rather than warn for this combination.

Reviewers: hans, thakis

Reviewed By: hans

Subscribers: cfe-commits, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54426

llvm-svn: 346733
2018-11-13 04:14:09 +00:00
Calixte Denizet 186d5bd874 Revert rL346644, rL346642: the added test test/CodeGen/code-coverage-filter.c is failing under windows
llvm-svn: 346659
2018-11-12 14:57:17 +00:00
Calixte Denizet cedcc73d93 [Clang] Add options -fprofile-filter-files and -fprofile-exclude-files to filter the files to instrument with gcov
Summary:
These options are taking regex separated by colons to filter files.
- if both are empty then all files are instrumented
- if -fprofile-filter-files is empty then all the filenames matching any of the regex from exclude are not instrumented
- if -fprofile-exclude-files is empty then all the filenames matching any of the regex from filter are instrumented
- if both aren't empty then all the filenames which match any of the regex in filter and which don't match all the regex in filter are instrumented
- this patch is a follow-up of https://reviews.llvm.org/D52033

Reviewers: marco-c, vsk

Reviewed By: marco-c, vsk

Subscribers: cfe-commits, sylvestre.ledru

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52034

llvm-svn: 346642
2018-11-12 09:12:27 +00:00