SLH doesn't support asm goto and is unlikely to ever support it. Users of asm
goto need a way to choose whether to use asm goto or fallback to an SLH
compatible code path when SLH is enabled. This feature flag will give users
this ability.
Tested via unit test
Reviewed By: mattdr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79733
Adds a new data structure, ImmutableGraph, and uses RDF to find LVI gadgets and add them to a MachineGadgetGraph.
More specifically, a new X86 machine pass finds Load Value Injection (LVI) gadgets consisting of a load from memory (i.e., SOURCE), and any operation that may transmit the value loaded from memory over a covert channel, or use the value loaded from memory to determine a branch/call target (i.e., SINK).
Also adds a new target feature to X86: +lvi-load-hardening
The feature can be added via the clang CLI using -mlvi-hardening.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75936
This patch adds a matrix type to Clang as described in the draft
specification in clang/docs/MatrixSupport.rst. It introduces a new option
-fenable-matrix, which can be used to enable the matrix support.
The patch adds new MatrixType and DependentSizedMatrixType types along
with the plumbing required. Loads of and stores to pointers to matrix
values are lowered to memory operations on 1-D IR arrays. After loading,
the loaded values are cast to a vector. This ensures matrix values use
the alignment of the element type, instead of LLVM's large vector
alignment.
The operators and builtins described in the draft spec will will be added in
follow-up patches.
Reviewers: martong, rsmith, Bigcheese, anemet, dexonsmith, rjmccall, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72281
Currently all Fuchsia ABIs use a 4k page size, departing from
the recommended page sizes in the respective psABI documents.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79667
The compact format is fully supported on Fuchsia and is the
preferred default.
Patch By: mcgrathr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79665
Summary:
`AsmPrinter::emitGlobalIndirectSymbol` is dependent on
`MCStreamer::emitAssignment` to produce `.set` directives for alias
symbols; however, the `.set` pseudo-op on AIX is documented as not
usable with external relocatable terms or expressions, which limits its
applicability in generating alias symbols.
Disable generating aliases on AIX until a different implementation
strategy is available.
Reviewers: cebowleratibm, jasonliu, sfertile, daltenty, DiggerLin
Reviewed By: jasonliu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79044
This is a standalone patch and this would help Propeller do a better job of code
layout as it can accurately attribute the profiles to the right internal linkage
function.
This also helps SampledFDO/AutoFDO correctly associate sampled profiles to the
right internal function. Currently, if there is more than one internal symbol
foo, their profiles are aggregated by SampledFDO.
This patch adds a new clang option, -funique-internal-funcnames, to generate
unique names for functions with internal linkage. This patch appends the md5
hash of the module name to the function symbol as a best effort to generate a
unique name for symbols with internal linkage.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73307
Summary:
MemTag does not have any runtime at the moment, it's strictly code
instrumentation.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: cryptoad, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79522
Summary:
When forking in several threads, the counters were written out in using the same global static variables (see GCDAProfiling.c): that leads to crashes.
So when there is a fork, the counters are resetted in the child process and they will be dumped at exit using the interprocess file locking.
When there is an exec, the counters are written out and in case of failures they're resetted.
Reviewers: jfb, vsk, marco-c, serge-sans-paille
Reviewed By: marco-c, serge-sans-paille
Subscribers: llvm-commits, serge-sans-paille, dmajor, cfe-commits, hiraditya, dexonsmith, #sanitizers, marco-c, sylvestre.ledru
Tags: #sanitizers, #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78477
We need a way to know supported targets by clang since
people may use clang as assembler and they want to
choose the clang which supports their target.
This patch let clang print registered targets when
--version option is passed to clang.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79210
Summary: The current code for GNU/Linux is actually completely generic, and can be moved to Gnu, so it can benefit GNU/Hurd and GNU/kFreeBSD
Reviewers: kristina, sammccall, lebedev.ri, MaskRay, arsenm, phosek
Reviewed By: MaskRay, phosek
Subscribers: wdng, ormris, emaste, arichardson, krytarowski, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73845
This is to avoid checking for the validity of a file that is not used.
This also contains a minor fix for the test, as the cfi sanitizer requires -flto and -fvisibility= arguments.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79043
This matches what is done for MSVC in
b8000c0ce8. Since that commit, compiler
rt sanitizer libraries aren't linked to with absolute path on windows,
but using their basenames, requiring the libdirs to be passed to
the linker.
This fixes undefined behaviour sanitizer on MinGW after
b8000c0ce8.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79076
Prior to this change, for a few compiler-rt libraries such as ubsan and
the profile library, Clang would embed "-defaultlib:path/to/rt-arch.lib"
into the .drective section of every object compiled with
-finstr-profile-generate or -fsanitize=ubsan as appropriate.
These paths assume that the link step will run from the same working
directory as the compile step. There is also evidence that sometimes the
paths become absolute, such as when clang is run from a different drive
letter from the current working directory. This is fragile, and I'd like
to get away from having paths embedded in the object if possible. Long
ago it was suggested that we use this for ASan, and apparently I felt
the same way back then:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D4428#56536
This is also consistent with how all other autolinking usage works for
PS4, Mac, and Windows: they all use basenames, not paths.
To keep things working for people using the standard GCC driver
workflow, the driver now adds the resource directory to the linker
library search path when it calls the linker. This is enough to make
check-ubsan pass, and seems like a generally good thing.
Users that invoke the linker directly (most clang-cl users) will have to
add clang's resource library directory to their linker search path in
their build system. I'm not sure where I can document this. Ideally I'd
also do it in the MSBuild files, but I can't figure out where they go.
I'd like to start with this for now.
Reviewed By: hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65543
Add support for reserving LR in:
* the driver through `-ffixed-x30`
* cc1 through `-target-feature +reserve-x30`
* the backend through `-mattr=+reserve-x30`
* a subtarget feature `reserve-x30`
the same way we're doing for the other registers.
The current code for GNU/Linux is actually completely generic, and can be moved to ToolChains/Gnu.cpp,
so that it can benefit GNU/Hurd and GNU/kFreeBSD.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73845
This patch upstreams support for the Armv8.6-a Matrix Multiplication
Extension. A summary of the features can be found here:
https://community.arm.com/developer/ip-products/processors/b/processors-ip-blog/posts/arm-architecture-developments-armv8-6-a
This patch includes:
- Command line options to enable these features with +i8mm, +f32mm, or f64mm
Note: +f32mm and +f64mm are optional and so are not enabled by default
This is part of a patch series, starting with BFloat16 support and
the other components in the armv8.6a extension (in previous patches
linked in phabricator)
Based on work by:
- Luke Geeson
- Oliver Stannard
- Luke Cheeseman
Reviewers: t.p.northover, DavidSpickett
Reviewed By: DavidSpickett
Subscribers: DavidSpickett, ostannard, kristof.beyls, danielkiss,
cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77875
Summary:
Change the default ABI to be compatible with GCC. For 32-bit ELF
targets other than Linux, Clang now returns small structs in registers
r3/r4. This affects FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD. There is no change for
32-bit Linux, where Clang continues to return all structs in memory.
Add clang options -maix-struct-return (to return structs in memory) and
-msvr4-struct-return (to return structs in registers) to be compatible
with gcc. These options are only for PPC32; reject them on PPC64 and
other targets. The options are like -fpcc-struct-return and
-freg-struct-return for X86_32, and use similar code.
To actually return a struct in registers, coerce it to an integer of the
same size. LLVM may optimize the code to remove unnecessary accesses to
memory, and will return i32 in r3 or i64 in r3:r4.
Fixes PR#40736
Patch by George Koehler!
Reviewed By: jhibbits, nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73290
Summary:
This flag has been deprecated, with an on-by-default warning encouraging
users to explicitly specify whether they mean "all" or ubsan for 5 years
(released in Clang 3.7). Change it to mean what we wanted and
undeprecate it.
Also make the argument to -fsanitize-trap optional, and likewise default
it to 'all', and express the aliases for these flags in the .td file
rather than in code. (Plus documentation updates for the above.)
Reviewers: kcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77753
Since the default logic was based on having fast denormal/fma
features, and the default target has no features, we assumed flushing
by default. This fixes incorrectly assuming flushing in builds for
"generic" IR libraries.
The handling for no specified --cuda-gpu-arch in HIP is kind of
broken. Somewhere else forces a default target of gfx803, which does
not enable denormal handling by default. We don't see this default
switching here, so you'll end up with a different denormal mode
depending on whether you explicitly requested gfx803, or used it by
default.
I didn't realize HIP was a distinct offloading kind, so the subtarget
was looking for -march, which isn't correct for HIP. We also have the
possibility of different denormal defaults in the case of multiple
offload targets, so we need to thread the JobAction through the target
hook.
Summary:
This commit adds two command-line options to clang.
These options let the user decide which functions will receive SanitizerCoverage instrumentation.
This is most useful in the libFuzzer use case, where it enables targeted coverage-guided fuzzing.
Patch by Yannis Juglaret of DGA-MI, Rennes, France
libFuzzer tests its target against an evolving corpus, and relies on SanitizerCoverage instrumentation to collect the code coverage information that drives corpus evolution. Currently, libFuzzer collects such information for all functions of the target under test, and adds to the corpus every mutated sample that finds a new code coverage path in any function of the target. We propose instead to let the user specify which functions' code coverage information is relevant for building the upcoming fuzzing campaign's corpus. To this end, we add two new command line options for clang, enabling targeted coverage-guided fuzzing with libFuzzer. We see targeted coverage guided fuzzing as a simple way to leverage libFuzzer for big targets with thousands of functions or multiple dependencies. We publish this patch as work from DGA-MI of Rennes, France, with proper authorization from the hierarchy.
Targeted coverage-guided fuzzing can accelerate bug finding for two reasons. First, the compiler will avoid costly instrumentation for non-relevant functions, accelerating fuzzer execution for each call to any of these functions. Second, the built fuzzer will produce and use a more accurate corpus, because it will not keep the samples that find new coverage paths in non-relevant functions.
The two new command line options are `-fsanitize-coverage-whitelist` and `-fsanitize-coverage-blacklist`. They accept files in the same format as the existing `-fsanitize-blacklist` option <https://clang.llvm.org/docs/SanitizerSpecialCaseList.html#format>. The new options influence SanitizerCoverage so that it will only instrument a subset of the functions in the target. We explain these options in detail in `clang/docs/SanitizerCoverage.rst`.
Consider now the woff2 fuzzing example from the libFuzzer tutorial <https://github.com/google/fuzzer-test-suite/blob/master/tutorial/libFuzzerTutorial.md>. We are aware that we cannot conclude much from this example because mutating compressed data is generally a bad idea, but let us use it anyway as an illustration for its simplicity. Let us use an empty blacklist together with one of the three following whitelists:
```
# (a)
src:*
fun:*
# (b)
src:SRC/*
fun:*
# (c)
src:SRC/src/woff2_dec.cc
fun:*
```
Running the built fuzzers shows how many instrumentation points the compiler adds, the fuzzer will output //XXX PCs//. Whitelist (a) is the instrument-everything whitelist, it produces 11912 instrumentation points. Whitelist (b) focuses coverage to instrument woff2 source code only, ignoring the dependency code for brotli (de)compression; it produces 3984 instrumented instrumentation points. Whitelist (c) focuses coverage to only instrument functions in the main file that deals with WOFF2 to TTF conversion, resulting in 1056 instrumentation points.
For experimentation purposes, we ran each fuzzer approximately 100 times, single process, with the initial corpus provided in the tutorial. We let the fuzzer run until it either found the heap buffer overflow or went out of memory. On this simple example, whitelists (b) and (c) found the heap buffer overflow more reliably and 5x faster than whitelist (a). The average execution times when finding the heap buffer overflow were as follows: (a) 904 s, (b) 156 s, and (c) 176 s.
We explain these results by the fact that WOFF2 to TTF conversion calls the brotli decompression algorithm's functions, which are mostly irrelevant for finding bugs in WOFF2 font reconstruction but nevertheless instrumented and used by whitelist (a) to guide fuzzing. This results in longer execution time for these functions and a partially irrelevant corpus. Contrary to whitelist (a), whitelists (b) and (c) will execute brotli-related functions without instrumentation overhead, and ignore new code paths found in them. This results in faster bug finding for WOFF2 font reconstruction.
The results for whitelist (b) are similar to the ones for whitelist (c). Indeed, WOFF2 to TTF conversion calls functions that are mostly located in SRC/src/woff2_dec.cc. The 2892 extra instrumentation points allowed by whitelist (b) do not tamper with bug finding, even though they are mostly irrelevant, simply because most of these functions do not get called. We get a slightly faster average time for bug finding with whitelist (b), which might indicate that some of the extra instrumentation points are actually relevant, or might just be random noise.
Reviewers: kcc, morehouse, vitalybuka
Reviewed By: morehouse, vitalybuka
Subscribers: pratyai, vitalybuka, eternalsakura, xwlin222, dende, srhines, kubamracek, #sanitizers, lebedev.ri, hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #sanitizers, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63616
Currently the library is separately linked, but this isn't correct to
implement fast math flags correctly. Each module should get the
version of the library appropriate for its combination of fast math
and related flags, with the attributes propagated into its functions
and internalized.
HIP already maintains the list of libraries, but this is not used for
OpenCL. Unfortunately, HIP uses a separate --hip-device-lib argument,
despite both languages using the same bitcode library. Eventually
these two searches need to be merged.
An additional problem is there are 3 different locations the libraries
are installed, depending on which build is used. This also needs to be
consolidated (or at least the search logic needs to deal with this
unnecessary complexity).
Summary:
* accept -x cu to indicate language is CUDA
* transfer CUDA language flag to header-file arguments
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77451
This adds support for enabling experimental/unratified RISC-V ISA
extensions in the -march string in the case where an explicit version
number has been declared, and the -menable-experimental-extensions flag
has been provided.
This follows the design as discussed on the mailing lists in the
following RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-January/138364.html
Since the RISC-V toolchain definition currently rejects any extension
with an explicit version number, the parsing logic has been tweaked to
support this, and to allow standard extensions to have their versions
checked in future patches.
The bitmanip 'b' extension has been added as a first use of this support,
it should easily extend to other as yet unratified extensions (such as
the vector 'v' extension).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73891
Summary:
The option `-mpad-max-prefix-size` performs some checking and delegate to MC option `-x86-pad-max-prefix-size`. This option is designed for eliminate NOPs when we need to align something by adding redundant prefixes to instructions, e.g. it can be used along with `-malign-branch`, `-malign-branch-boundary` to prefix padding branch.
It has similar (but slightly different) effect as GAS's option `-malign-branch-prefix-size`, e.g. `-mpad-max-prefix-size` can also elminate NOPs emitted by align directive, so we use a different name here. I remove the option `-malign-branch-prefix-size` since is unimplemented and not needed. If we need to be compatible with GAS, we can make `-malign-branch-prefix-size` an alias for this option later.
Reviewers: jyknight, reames, MaskRay, craig.topper, LuoYuanke
Reviewed By: MaskRay, LuoYuanke
Subscribers: annita.zhang, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77628
Generate PTX using newer versions of PTX and allow using sm_80 with CUDA-11.
None of the new features of CUDA-10.2+ have been implemented yet, so using these
versions will still produce a warning.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77670
Instead of hardcoding individual GPU mappings in multiple functions, keep them
all in one table and use it to look up the mappings.
We also don't care about 'virtual' architecture much, so the API is trimmed down
down to a simpler GPU->Virtual arch name lookup.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77665
For OpenMP target regions to piggy back on the CUDA/AMDGPU/... implementation of math functions,
we include the appropriate definitions inside of an `omp begin/end declare variant match(device={arch(nvptx)})` scope.
This way, the vendor specific math functions will become specialized versions of the system math functions.
When a system math function is called and specialized version is available the selection logic introduced in D75779
instead call the specialized version. In contrast to the code path we used so far, the system header is actually included.
This means functions without specialized versions are available and so are macro definitions.
This should address PR42061, PR42798, and PR42799.
Reviewed By: ye-luo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75788
Update the sysroot expectation to match other targets and breakout
linux/musl toolchain tests into a new file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77440
Summary:
- Use `device_builtin_surface` and `device_builtin_texture` for
surface/texture reference support. So far, both the host and device
use the same reference type, which could be revised later when
interface/implementation is stablized.
Reviewers: yaxunl
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77583
clang with -flto does not handle -foptimization-record-path=<path>
This dulicates the code from ToolChains/Clang.cpp with modifications to
support everything in the same fashion.
Adds a new data structure, ImmutableGraph, and uses RDF to find LVI gadgets and add them to a MachineGadgetGraph.
More specifically, a new X86 machine pass finds Load Value Injection (LVI) gadgets consisting of a load from memory (i.e., SOURCE), and any operation that may transmit the value loaded from memory over a covert channel, or use the value loaded from memory to determine a branch/call target (i.e., SINK).
Also adds a new target feature to X86: +lvi-load-hardening
The feature can be added via the clang CLI using -mlvi-hardening.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75936
This pass replaces each indirect call/jump with a direct call to a thunk that looks like:
lfence
jmpq *%r11
This ensures that if the value in register %r11 was loaded from memory, then
the value in %r11 is (architecturally) correct prior to the jump.
Also adds a new target feature to X86: +lvi-cfi
("cfi" meaning control-flow integrity)
The feature can be added via clang CLI using -mlvi-cfi.
This is an alternate implementation to https://reviews.llvm.org/D75934 That merges the thunk insertion functionality with the existing X86 retpoline code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76812
This wasn't respecting the flush mode based on the default, and also
wasn't correctly handling the explicit
-fno-cuda-flush-denormals-to-zero overriding the mode.
Prior to this change the clang interface stubs format resembled
something ending with a symbol list like this:
Symbols:
a: { Type: Func }
This was problematic because we didn't actually want a map format and
also because we didn't like that an empty symbol list required
"Symbols: {}". That is to say without the empty {} llvm-ifs would crash
on an empty list.
With this new format it is much more clear which field is the symbol
name, and instead the [] that is used to express an empty symbol vector
is optional, ie:
Symbols:
- { Name: a, Type: Func }
or
Symbols: []
or
Symbols:
This further diverges the format from existing llvm-elftapi. This is a
good thing because although the format originally came from the same
place, they are not the same in any way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76979
The driver enables -fdiagnostics-show-option by default, so flip the CC1
default to reduce the lengths of common CC1 command lines.
This change also makes ParseDiagnosticArgs() consistently enable
-fdiagnostics-show-option by default.
Apparently HIPToolChain does not subclass from AMDGPUToolChain, so
this was not applying the new denormal attributes. I'm not sure why
this doesn't subclass. Just copy the implementation for now.
Since GlobalISel is maturing and is already on at -O0 for AArch64, it's not
completely "experimental". Create a more appropriate driver flag and make
the older option an alias for it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77103
On Ubuntu, we want to raise default CLANG_SYSTEMZ_ARCH to z13,
thus allow configuring this via CMake.
On Debian, we want to raise it to z196.
Author: Dimitri John Ledkov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75914
Currently -fno-unroll-loops is ignored when doing LTO on Darwin. This
patch adds a new -lto-no-unroll-loops option to the LTO code generator
and forwards it to the linker if -fno-unroll-loops is passed.
Reviewers: thegameg, steven_wu
Reviewed By: thegameg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76916
Before this patch, it wasn't possible to extend the ThinLTO threads to all SMT/CMT threads in the system. Only one thread per core was allowed, instructed by usage of llvm::heavyweight_hardware_concurrency() in the ThinLTO code. Any number passed to the LLD flag /opt:lldltojobs=..., or any other ThinLTO-specific flag, was previously interpreted in the context of llvm::heavyweight_hardware_concurrency(), which means SMT disabled.
One can now say in LLD:
/opt:lldltojobs=0 -- Use one std::thread / hardware core in the system (no SMT). Default value if flag not specified.
/opt:lldltojobs=N -- Limit usage to N threads, regardless of usage of heavyweight_hardware_concurrency().
/opt:lldltojobs=all -- Use all hardware threads in the system. Equivalent to /opt:lldltojobs=$(nproc) on Linux and /opt:lldltojobs=%NUMBER_OF_PROCESSORS% on Windows. When an affinity mask is set for the process, threads will be created only for the cores selected by the mask.
When N > number-of-hardware-threads-in-the-system, the threads in the thread pool will be dispatched equally on all CPU sockets (tested only on Windows).
When N <= number-of-hardware-threads-on-a-CPU-socket, the threads will remain on the CPU socket where the process started (only on Windows).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75153
In this case we interpret the path as relative the clang driver binary.
This allows SDKs to be built that include clang along with a custom
sysroot without requiring users to specify --sysroot to point to the
directory where they installed the SDK.
See https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-sdk/issues/58
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76653
When Clang crashes a useful message is output:
"PLEASE submit a bug report to https://bugs.llvm.org/ and include the
crash backtrace, preprocessed source, and associated run script."
A similar message is now output for all tools.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74324
The argument after -Xarch_device will be added to the arguments for CUDA/HIP
device compilation and will be removed for host compilation.
The argument after -Xarch_host will be added to the arguments for CUDA/HIP
host compilation and will be removed for device compilation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76520
Extract common code to a function. To prepare for
adding an option for CUDA/HIP host and device only
option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76455
The ".sdk" component is usually the last one in the -isysroot, so it
makes more sense to scan from the back. Also, technically, someone
could install Xcode into a directory ending with .sdk, which would
break this heuristic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76097
Passing small data limit to RISCVELFTargetObjectFile by module flag,
So the backend can set small data section threshold by the value.
The data will be put into the small data section if the data smaller than
the threshold.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57497
HIPToolChain::TranslateArgs call TranslateArgs of host toolchain with
the input args to get a list of derived args called DAL, then
go through the input args by itself and append them to DAL.
This assumes that the host toolchain should not append any unchanged
args to DAL, otherwise there will be duplicates since
HIPToolChain will append it again.
This works for GNU toolchain since it returns an empty list for DAL.
However, MSVC toolchain will append unchanged args to DAL, which
causes duplicate args.
This patch let MSVC toolchain not append unchanged args for HIP
offloading kind, which fixes this issue.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76032
This flag is used by avr-gcc (starting with v10) to set the width of the
double type. The double type is by default interpreted as a 32-bit
floating point number in avr-gcc instead of a 64-bit floating point
number as is common on other architectures. Starting with GCC 10, a new
option has been added to control this behavior:
https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/avr-gcc#Deviations_from_the_Standard
This commit keeps the default double at 32 bits but adds support for the
-mdouble flag (-mdouble=32 and -mdouble=64) to control this behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76181
- libclang_rt.profile should be added when -fcs-profile-generate is on thecommand line.
- OPT_fno_profile_instr_generate was used as a negative for OPT_fprofile_generate. Fix it to use OPT_fno_profile_generate.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75274
This fixes an issue with clang issuing a warning about unknown CUDA SDK if it's
detected during non-CUDA compilation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76030
Device-side compilation does not support some features and we need to
filter them out when command line options enable them for the host.
We're already doing this in various places in the regular clang driver,
but clang-cl mode constructs cc1 options independently and needs to
implement the filtering, too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75310
After a first attempt to fix the test-suite failures, my first recommit
caused the same failures again. I had updated CMakeList.txt files of
tests that needed -fcommon, but it turns out that there are also
Makefiles which are used by some bots, so I've updated these Makefiles
now too.
See the original commit message for more details on this change:
0a9fc9233e
This includes fixes for:
- test-suite: some benchmarks need to be compiled with -fcommon, see D75557.
- compiler-rt: one test needed -fcommon, and another a change, see D75520.
Summary:
User can select the version of SYCL the compiler will
use via the flag -sycl-std, similar to -cl-std.
The flag defines the LangOpts.SYCLVersion option to the
version of SYCL. The default value is undefined.
If driver is building SYCL code, flag is set to the default SYCL
version (1.2.1)
The preprocessor uses this variable to define CL_SYCL_LANGUAGE_VERSION macro,
which should be defined according to SYCL 1.2.1 standard.
Only valid value at this point for the flag is 1.2.1.
Co-Authored-By: David Wood <Q0KPU0H1YOEPHRY1R2SN5B5RL@david.davidtw.co>
Signed-off-by: Ruyman Reyes <ruyman@codeplay.com>
Subscribers: ebevhan, Anastasia, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72857
This reverts commit 737394c490.
The fp-model test was failing on platforms that enable denormal flushing
based on -ffast-math. This needs to reset to IEEE, not the default in
these cases.
Change-Id: Ibbad32f66d0d0b89b9c1173a3a96fb1a570ddd89
The IR hasn't switched the default yet, so explicitly add the ieee
attributes.
I'm still not really sure how the target default denormal mode should
interact with -fno-unsafe-math-optimizations. The target may have
selected the default mode to be non-IEEE based on the flags or based
on its true behavior, but we don't know which is the case. Since the
only users of a non-IEEE mode without a flag still support IEEE mode,
just reset to IEEE.
Pickup the default crt and libs when the target is musl.
Resubmitting after updating the testcase.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75139
This reverts commit 0a9fc9233e.
Going to look at the asan failures.
I find the failures in the test suite weird, because they look
like compile time test and I don't understand how that can be
failing, but will have a brief look at that too.
This makes -fno-common the default for all targets because this has performance
and code-size benefits and is more language conforming for C code.
Additionally, GCC10 also defaults to -fno-common and so we get consistent
behaviour with GCC.
With this change, C code that uses tentative definitions as definitions of a
variable in multiple translation units will trigger multiple-definition linker
errors. Generally, this occurs when the use of the extern keyword is neglected
in the declaration of a variable in a header file. In some cases, no specific
translation unit provides a definition of the variable. The previous behavior
can be restored by specifying -fcommon.
As GCC has switched already, we benefit from applications already being ported
and existing documentation how to do this. For example:
- https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-10/porting_to.html
- https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Gcc_10_porting_notes/fno_common
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75056
A two-stage ThinLTO build previously failed the clang/test/Driver/hurd.c test because of a static_cast in "tools::gnutools::Linker::ConstructJob()" which wrongly converted an instance of "clang::driver::toolchains::Hurd" into that of "clang::driver::toolchains::Linux". ThinLTO would later devirtualize the "ToolChain.getDynamicLinker(Args)" call and use "Linux::getDynamicLinker()" instead, causing the test to generate a wrong "-dynamic-linker" linker flag (/lib/ld-linux.so.2 instead of /lib/ld.so)
Fixes PR45061.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75373
Summary:
User can select the version of SYCL the compiler will
use via the flag -sycl-std, similar to -cl-std.
The flag defines the LangOpts.SYCLVersion option to the
version of SYCL. The default value is undefined.
If driver is building SYCL code, flag is set to the default SYCL
version (1.2.1)
The preprocessor uses this variable to define CL_SYCL_LANGUAGE_VERSION macro,
which should be defined according to SYCL 1.2.1 standard.
Only valid value at this point for the flag is 1.2.1.
Co-Authored-By: David Wood <Q0KPU0H1YOEPHRY1R2SN5B5RL@david.davidtw.co>
Signed-off-by: Ruyman Reyes <ruyman@codeplay.com>
Subscribers: ebevhan, Anastasia, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72857
Signed-off-by: Alexey Bader <alexey.bader@intel.com>
The code in llvmorg-10-init-12188-g25ce33a6e4f is a breaking change for
users of older linkers who don't pass a version parameter, which
prevents a drop-in clang upgrade. Old tools can't know about what future
tools will do, so as a general principle the burden should be new tools
to be compatible by default. Also, for comparison, none of the other
tests of Version within AddLinkArgs add any new behaviors unless the
version is explicitly specified. Therefore, this patch changes the
-platform_version behavior from opt-out to opt-in.
Patch by David Major!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74784
See discussion on PR44792.
This reverts commit 02ce9d8ef5.
It also reverts the follow-up commits
8f46269f0 "[profile] Don't dump counters when forking and don't reset when calling exec** functions"
62c7d8402 "[profile] gcov_mutex must be static"
This patch fixes PR44896. For IR input files, option fdiscard-value-names
should be ignored as we need named values in loadModule().
Commit 60d3947922 sets this option after loadModule() where valued names
already created. This creates an inconsistent state in setNameImpl()
that leads to a seg fault.
This patch forces fdiscard-value-names to be false for IR input files.
This patch also emits a warning of "ignoring -fdiscard-value-names" if
option fdiscard-value-names is explictly enabled in the commandline for
IR input files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74878