This is a temporary workaround while MIPS64 has not yet fully supported
128-bit integers. But declaration of int128 type is necessary even though
`__SIZEOF_INT128__` is undefined because c++ standard header files like
`limits` throw error message if `__int128` is not available.
Patch by Sagar Thakur.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6402
llvm-svn: 223927
This is long-since overdue, and matches GCC 5.0. This should also be
backwards-compatible, because we already supported all of C11 as an extension
in C99 mode.
llvm-svn: 220244
The current default abi when no environment is given is "apcs-gnu",
which is obsolete. This patch changes the default to "aapcs". "aapcs" has both
hard- and soft-float variants, so the -mhard-float, -msoft-float and
-mfloat-abi= options now all behave as expected when no environment is
specified in the triple.
While writing this I also noticed that a preprocessor test claims to be
checking darwin, but is actually checking the defaults, which are
different for darwin.
llvm-svn: 216662
char-based types from "char" to "signed char". Adjust stdint.h to use
__INTx_TYPE__ directly without prefixing it with signed and to use
__UINTx_TYPE__ for unsigned ones.
The value of __INTx_TYPE__ now matches GCC.
llvm-svn: 214119
While Clang now supports both ELFv1 and ELFv2 ABIs, their use is currently
hard-coded via the target triple: powerpc64-linux is always ELFv1, while
powerpc64le-linux is always ELFv2.
These are of course the most common scenarios, but in principle it is
possible to support the ELFv2 ABI on big-endian or the ELFv1 ABI on
little-endian systems (and GCC does support that), and there are some
special use cases for that (e.g. certain Linux kernel versions could
only be built using ELFv1 on LE).
This patch implements the Clang side of supporting this, based on the
LLVM commit 214072. The command line options -mabi=elfv1 or -mabi=elfv2
select the desired ABI if present. (If not, Clang uses the same default
rules as now.)
Specifically, the patch implements the following changes based on the
presence of the -mabi= option:
In the driver:
- Pass the appropiate -target-abi flag to the back-end
- Select the correct dynamic loader version (/lib64/ld64.so.[12])
In the preprocessor:
- Define _CALL_ELF to the appropriate value (1 or 2)
In the compiler back-end:
- Select the correct ABI in TargetInfo.cpp
- Select the desired ABI for LLVM via feature (elfv1/elfv2)
llvm-svn: 214074
arm64_be doesn't really exist; it was useful for testing while AArch64 and
ARM64 were separate, but now the only real way to refer to the system is
aarch64_be.
llvm-svn: 213747
constants. Comparing int against a constant of the given type like
UINT8_MAX will otherwise force a promotion to unsigned int, which is
typically not expected.
llvm-svn: 213301
corresponding AST context function, only restricted to basic integer
types. Use this to ensure getUIntPtrType() gives types consistent with
getIntPtrType(). Fix NVPTX backend to give signed intptr_t.
llvm-svn: 212982
Summary:
This removes the need to pass -mnan=2008 explicitly to be able to compile
the test-suite for MIPS32r6/MIPS64r6.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4433
llvm-svn: 212619
Add predefined stdint macros that match the given patterns:
U?INT{_,_FAST,_LEAST}{8,16,32,64}_{MAX,TYPE}
U?INT{PTR,MAX}_{MAX,TYPE}
http://reviews.llvm.org/D4141
Author: binji
llvm-svn: 211657
Summary: The Linux Kernel is one example of a piece of software that relies on them.
Reviewers: atanasyan
Reviewed By: atanasyan
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3756
llvm-svn: 210270
Most 64-bit targets define int64_t as long int, and AArch64 should
make same definition to follow LP64 model. In GNU tool chain, int64_t
is defined as long int for 64-bit target. So to get consistent with GNU,
it's better Changing int64_t from 'long long int' to 'long int',
otherwise clang will get different name mangling suffix compared with g++.
llvm-svn: 202004
TargetInfo::getSuitableAlign() was introduced in r146762 and is defined
as alignof(std::max_align_t).
Introduce __ALIGNOF_MAX_ALIGN_T__ which exposes getSuitableAlign() so
that libc++ may take advantage of it.
llvm-svn: 201037
currently, for thumbv8, two predefined macros are missing:
define __THUMB_INTERWORK__ 1
define __THUMB_INTERWORK__ 1
This patch adds them for thumbv8.
llvm-svn: 199819
Clang uses UTF-16 and UTF-32 for its char16_t's and char32_t's
exclusively. This means that we can define __STDC_UTF_16__ and
__STDC_UTF_32__ unconditionally.
While there, define __STDC_MB_MIGHT_NEQ_WC__ for FreeBSD. FreeBSD's
wchar_t's don't encode characters as ISO-10646; the encoding depends on
the locale used. Because the character set used might not be a superset
of ASCII, we must define __STDC_MB_MIGHT_NEQ_WC__.
llvm-svn: 191631