According to C7109, "A boz-literal-constant shall appear only as a
data-stmt-constant in a DATA statement, or where explicitly allowed in
16.9 as an actual argument of an intrinsic procedure." This change
enforces that constraint for output list items.
I also added a general interface to determine if an expression is a BOZ
literal constant and changed all of the places I could find where it
could be used.
I also added a test.
This change stemmed from the following issue --
https://gitlab-master.nvidia.com/fortran/f18-stage/issues/108
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106893
Use derived type information tables to drive default component
initialization (when needed), component destruction, and calls to
final subroutines. Perform these operations automatically for
ALLOCATE()/DEALLOCATE() APIs for allocatables, automatics, and
pointers. Add APIs for use in lowering to perform these operations
for non-allocatable/automatic non-pointer variables.
Data pointer component initialization supports arbitrary constant
designators, a F'2008 feature, which may be a first for Fortran
implementations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106297
With derived type description tables now available to the
runtime library, it is possible to implement the concept
of "child" I/O statements in the runtime and use them to
convert instances of derived type I/O data transfers into
calls to user-defined subroutines when they have been specified
for a type. (See Fortran 2018, subclauses 12.6.4.8 & 13.7.6).
- Support formatted, list-directed, and NAMELIST
transfers to internal parent units; support these, and unformatted
transfers, for external parent units.
- Support nested child defined derived type I/O.
- Parse DT'foo'(v-list) FORMAT data edit descriptors and passes
their strings &/or v-list values as arguments to the defined
formatted I/O routines.
- Fix problems with this feature encountered in semantics and
FORMAT valiation during development and end-to-end testing.
- Convert typeInfo::SpecialBinding from a struct to a class
after adding a member function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104930
A recent change that extended semantic analysis for actual arguments
that associate with procedure dummy arguments exposed some bugs in
regression test suites due to points of confusion in symbol table
handling in situations where a generic interface contains a specific
procedure of the same name. When passing that name as an actual
argument, for example, it's necessary to take this possibility into
account because the symbol for the generic interface shadows the
symbol of the same name for the specific procedure, which is
what needs to be checked. So add a small utility that bypasses
the symbol for a generic interface in this case, and use it
where needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104929
This patch adds a new option for the new Flang driver:
`-fno-analyzed-objects-for-unparse`. The semantics are similar to
`-funparse-typed-exprs-to-f18-fc` from `f18`. For consistency, the
latter is replaced with `-fno-analyzed-objects-for-unparse`.
The new option controls the behaviour of the unparser (i.e. the action
corresponding to `-fdebug-unparse`). The default behaviour is to use the
analyzed objects when unparsing. The new flag can be used to turn this
off, so that the original parse-tree objects are used. The analyzed
objects are generated during the semantic checks [1].
This patch also updates the semantics of
`-fno-analyzed-objects-for-unparse`/`-funparse-typed-exprs-to-f18-fc`
in `f18`, so that this flag is always taken into account when `Unparse`
is used (this way the semantics in `f18` and `flang-new` are identical).
The added test file is based on example from Peter Steinfeld.
[1]
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/main/flang/docs/Semantics.md
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103612
This adjusts the workaround from D104731.
The issue lies in libstdc++'s classes, not GCC itself, and manifests
itself in the same way if building e.g. with clang while using
libstdc++ headers from GCC 7 (e.g. if building with Clang on Ubuntu 18.04,
while using the system default C++ library).
Therefore, change the condition to look for the version of libstdc++
instead of the compiler.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104779
Work around two problems with GCC 7.3.
One is its inability to implement "constexpr operator=(...) = default;"
in a class with a std::optional<> component; another is a legitimate-
looking warning about an unused variable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104731
Refactor the recently-implemented MAXVAL/MINVAL folding so
that the parts that can be used to implement other reduction
transformational intrinsic function folding are exposed.
Use them to implement folding of IALL, IANY, IPARITY,
SUM. and PRODUCT. Replace the folding of ALL & ANY to
use the new infrastructure and become able to handle DIM=
arguments.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104562
This is *not* user-defined derived type I/O, but rather Fortran's
built-in capabilities for using derived type data in I/O lists
and NAMELIST groups.
This feature depends on having the derived type description tables
that are created by Semantics available, passed through compilation
as initialized static objects to which pointers can be targeted
in the descriptors of I/O list items and NAMELIST groups.
NAMELIST processing now handles component references on input
(e.g., "&GROUP x%component = 123 /").
The C++ perspectives of the derived type information records
were transformed into proper classes when it was necessary to add
member functions to them.
The code in Semantics that generates derived type information
was changed to emit derived type components in component order,
not alphabetic order.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104485
When a function is called in a specification expression, it must be
sufficiently defined, and cannot be a recursive call (10.1.11(5)).
The best fix for this is to change the contract for the procedure
characterization infrastructure to catch and report such errors,
and to guarantee that it does emit errors on failed characterizations.
Some call sites were adjusted to avoid cascades.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104330
Implement constant folding for the reduction transformational
intrinsic functions MAXVAL and MINVAL.
In anticipation of more folding work to follow, with (I hope)
some common infrastructure, these two have been implemented in a
new header file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104337
Flang diverges from the llvm coding style in that it requires braces
around the bodies of if/while/etc statements, even when the body is
a single statement.
This commit adds the readability-braces-around-statements check to
flang's clang-tidy config file. Hopefully the premerge bots will pick it
up and report violations in Phabricator.
We also explicitly disable the check in the directories corresponding to
the Lower and Optimizer libraries, which rely heavily on mlir and llvm
and therefore follow their coding style. Likewise for the tools
directory.
We also fix any outstanding violations in the runtime and in
lib/Semantics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104100
The new option will run the semantic checks and then dump the parse tree
and all the symbols. This is equivalent to running the driver twice,
once with `-fdebug-dump-parse-tree` and then with
the `-fdebug-dump-symbols` action flag.
Currently we wouldn't be able to achieve the same by simply running:
```
flang-new -fc1 -fdebug-dump-parse-tree -fdebug-dump-symbols <input-file>
```
That's because the new driver will only run one frontend action per
invocation (both of the flags used here are action flags). Diverging
from this design would lead to costly compromises and it's best avoided.
We may want to consider re-designing our debugging actions (and action
options) in the future so that there's more code re-use. For now, I'm
focusing on making sure that we support all the major cases requested by
our users.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104305
This patch adds the 4th Fortran specific semantic check for the OpenMP
allocate directive: "If a list item has the SAVE attribute, is a common
block name, or is declared in the scope of a module, then only predefined
memory allocator parameters can be used in the allocator clause".
Code in this patch was based on code from https://reviews.llvm.org/D93549/new/.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102400
Revision https://reviews.llvm.org/D104190 renamed MemRefDataFlow -> AffineScalarReplacement. After this rename, mlir failed to build. With this change, all of clang, mlir, and flang build and test correctly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104223
In the interests of disabling misc-no-recursion across LLVM (this seems
like a stylistic choice that is not consistent with LLVM's
style/development approach) this NFC preliminary change adjusts all the
.clang-tidy files to inherit from their parents as much as possible.
This change specifically preserves all the quirks of the current configs
in order to make it easier to review as NFC.
I validatad the change is NFC as follows:
for X in `cat ../files.txt`;
do
mkdir -p ../tmp/$(dirname $X)
touch $(dirname $X)/blaikie.cpp
clang-tidy -dump-config $(dirname $X)/blaikie.cpp > ../tmp/$(dirname $X)/after
rm $(dirname $X)/blaikie.cpp
done
(similarly for the "before" state, without this patch applied)
for X in `cat ../files.txt`;
do
echo $X
diff \
../tmp/$(dirname $X)/before \
<(cat ../tmp/$(dirname $X)/after \
| sed -e "s/,readability-identifier-naming\(.*\),-readability-identifier-naming/\1/" \
| sed -e "s/,-llvm-include-order\(.*\),llvm-include-order/\1/" \
| sed -e "s/,-misc-no-recursion\(.*\),misc-no-recursion/\1/" \
| sed -e "s/,-clang-diagnostic-\*\(.*\),clang-diagnostic-\*/\1/")
done
(using sed to strip some add/remove pairs to reduce the diff and make it easier to read)
The resulting report is:
.clang-tidy
clang/.clang-tidy
2c2
< Checks: 'clang-diagnostic-*,clang-analyzer-*,-*,clang-diagnostic-*,llvm-*,misc-*,-misc-unused-parameters,-misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes,-readability-identifier-naming,-misc-no-recursion'
---
> Checks: 'clang-diagnostic-*,clang-analyzer-*,-*,clang-diagnostic-*,llvm-*,misc-*,-misc-unused-parameters,-misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes,-misc-no-recursion'
compiler-rt/.clang-tidy
2c2
< Checks: 'clang-diagnostic-*,clang-analyzer-*,-*,clang-diagnostic-*,llvm-*,-llvm-header-guard,misc-*,-misc-unused-parameters,-misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes'
---
> Checks: 'clang-diagnostic-*,clang-analyzer-*,-*,clang-diagnostic-*,llvm-*,misc-*,-misc-unused-parameters,-misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes,-llvm-header-guard'
flang/.clang-tidy
2c2
< Checks: 'clang-diagnostic-*,clang-analyzer-*,-*,llvm-*,-llvm-include-order,misc-*,-misc-no-recursion,-misc-unused-parameters,-misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes'
---
> Checks: 'clang-diagnostic-*,clang-analyzer-*,-*,llvm-*,misc-*,-misc-unused-parameters,-misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes,-llvm-include-order,-misc-no-recursion'
flang/include/flang/Lower/.clang-tidy
flang/include/flang/Optimizer/.clang-tidy
flang/lib/Lower/.clang-tidy
flang/lib/Optimizer/.clang-tidy
lld/.clang-tidy
lldb/.clang-tidy
llvm/tools/split-file/.clang-tidy
mlir/.clang-tidy
The `clang/.clang-tidy` change is a no-op, disabling an option that was never enabled.
The compiler-rt and flang changes are no-op reorderings of the same flags.
(side note, the .clang-tidy file in parallel-libs is broken and crashes
clang-tidy because it uses "lowerCase" as the style instead of "lower_case" -
so I'll deal with that separately)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103842
Adding the `-init-only` option and corresponding frontend action to
generate a diagnostic.
`-init-only` vs `-test-io`:
`-init-only` ignores the input (it never calls the prescanner)
`-test-io` is similar to `-init-only`, but does read and print the input
without calling the prescanner.
This patch also adds a Driver test to check this action.
Reviewed By: awarzynski, AMDChirag
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102849
It's possible to specify refer to an undefined derived type as the type of a
component of another derived type and then never define the type of the
component. We were not detecting this situation. To fix this, I
changed the value of isForwardReferenced_ in the symbol's
DerivedTypeDetails and checked for it when performing other derived type
checks.
I also had to record the fact that error messages were previously
emitted for the same problem in some cases so that I could avoid
duplicate messages.
I also added a test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103714
To ensure that errors are emitted by CheckConformance and
its callers in all situations, it's necessary for the returned result
of that function to distinguish between three possible
outcomes: the arrays are known to conform at compilation time,
the arrays are known to not conform (and a message has been
produced), and an indeterminate result in which is not possible
to determine conformance. So convert CheckConformance's
result into an optional<bool>, and convert its confusing
Boolean flag arguments into a bit-set of named flags too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103654
This option is supported in `f18`, but not yet available in `flang-new`.
It is required in order to call `flang-new` from the `flang` bash
script.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103613
In something like "ASSOCIATE(X=>T(1))", the "T(1)" is parsed
as a Variable because it looks like a function reference or
array reference; if it turns out to be a structure constructor,
which is something we can't know until we're able to attempt
generic interface resolution in semantics, the parse tree needs
to be fixed up by replacing the Variable with an Expr.
The compiler could already do this for putative function references
encapsulated as Exprs, so this patch moves some code around and
adds parser::Selector to the overloads of expression analysis.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103572
The constexpr-capable class evaluate::DynamicType represented
CHARACTER length only with a nullable pointer into the declared
parameters of types in the symbol table, which works fine for
anything with a declaration but turns out to not suffice to
describe the results of the ACHAR() and CHAR() intrinsic
functions. So extend DynamicType to also accommodate known
constant CHARACTER lengths, too; use them for ACHAR & CHAR;
clean up several use sites and fix regressions found in test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103571
As a benign extension common to other Fortran compilers,
accept BOZ literals in array constructors w/o explicit
types, treating them as integers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103569
In error recovery situations, the mappings from source locations
to scopes were failing in a way that tripped some asserts.
Specifically, FindPureProcedureContaining() wasn't coping well
when starting at the global scope. (And since the global scope
no longer has a source range, clean up the Semantics constructor
to avoid confusion.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103567
This patch adds the following Fortran specific semantic checks for the OpenMP
Allocate directive.
1) A type parameter inquiry cannot appear in an ALLOCATE directive.
2) List items specified in the ALLOCATE directive must not have the ALLOCATABLE
attribute unless the directive is associated with an ALLOCATE statement.
Co-authored-by: Irina Dobrescu <irina.dobrescu@arm.com>
Reviewed By: kiranchandramohan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102061
- Replace class(*) member by a c_ptr member to avoid having to handle
polymorphic components in the type info table generation. Polymorphic
entity handling will require these very tables to be lowered properly.
Note: keep the init as NullPointer/Designators. This is technically
invalid Fortran, the init should have c_ptr type. But wrapping this
in a C_LOC intrinsic call would make runtime generation and lowering
more complex with no real benefits.
- ComponentIterator is crashing when used on the generated derived
types in GetScope. This patch makes GetScope more robust, but it
is not entirely clear to me why this is only happening with the
generated derived types.
- The type of generated character globals was incorrect because
Scope::FindType was matching character types with different
length. Add a CharacterTypeSpec == operator to fix this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102768
Add overloads to AsGenericExpr() in Evaluate/tools.h to take care
of wrapping an untyped DataRef or bare Symbol in a typed Designator
wrapped up in a generic Expr<SomeType>. Use the new overloads to
replace a few instances of code that was calling TypedWrapper<>()
with a dynamic type.
This new tool will be useful in lowering to drive some code that
works with typed expressions (viz., list-directed I/O list items)
when starting with only a bare Symbol (viz., NAMELIST).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102352
We sometimes unroll an ac-implied-do of an array constructor into a flat list
of values. We then re-analyze the array constructor that contains the
resulting list of expressions. Such a list may or may not contain errors.
But when processing an array constructor with an unrolled ac-implied-do, the
compiler was building an expression to represent the extent of the resulting
array constructor containing the list of values. The number of operands
in this extent expression was based on the number of elements in the
unrolled list of values. For very large lists, this created an
expression so large that it could not be evaluated by the compiler
without overflowing the stack.
I fixed this by continuously folding the extent expression as each operand is
added to it. I added the test .../flang/test/Semantics/array-constr-big.f90
that will cause the compiler to seg fault without this change.
Also, when the unrolled ac-implied-do expression contains errors, we were
repeating the same error message referencing the same source line for every
instance of the erroneous expression in the unrolled list. This potentially
resulted in a very long list of messages for a single error in the source code.
I fixed this by comparing the message being emitted to the previously emitted
message. If they are the same, I do not emit the message. This change is also
tested by the new test array-constr-big.f90.
Several of the existing tests had duplicate error messages for the same source
line, and this change caused differences in their output. So I adjusted the
tests to match the new message emitting behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102210
Add InputNamelist and OutputNamelist as I/O data transfer APIs
to be used with internal & external list-directed I/O; delete the
needless original namelist-specific Begin... calls.
Implement NAMELIST output and input; add basic tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101931
We were not correctly handling structure constructors that had forward
references to parameterized derived types. I harvested the code that checks
for forward references that was used during analysis of function call
expressions and called it from there and also called it during the
analysis of structure constructors.
I also added a test that will produce an internal error without this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101330
Andrezj W. @ Arm discovered that the runtime derived type table
building code in semantics was detecting fatal errors in the tests
that the f18 driver wasn't printing. This patch fixes f18 so that
these messages are printed; however, the messages were not valid user
errors, and the rest of this patch fixes them up.
There were two sources of the bogus errors. One was that the runtime
derived type information table builder was calculating the shapes of
allocatable and pointer array components in derived types, and then
complaining that they weren't constant or LEN parameter values, which
of course they couldn't be since they have to have deferred shapes
and those bounds were expressions like LBOUND(component,dim=1).
The second was that f18 was forwarding the actual LEN type parameter
expressions of a type instantiation too far into the uses of those
parameters in various expressions in the declarations of components;
when an actual LEN type parameter is not a constant value, it needs
to remain a "bare" type parameter inquiry so that it will be lowered
to a descriptor inquiry and acquire a captured expression value.
Fixing this up properly involved: moving some code into new utility
function templates in Evaluate/tools.h, tweaking the rewriting of
conversions in expression folding to elide needless integer kind
conversions of type parameter inquiries, making type parameter
inquiry folding *not* replace bare LEN type parameters with
non-constant actual parameter values, and cleaning up some
altered test results.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101001
This patch adds semantic checks for the General Restrictions of the
Allocate Directive.
Since the requires directive is not yet implemented in Flang, the
restriction:
```
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
```
will need to be updated at a later time.
A different patch will be made with the Fortran specific restrictions of
this directive.
I have used the code from https://reviews.llvm.org/D89395 for the
CheckObjectListStructure function.
Co-authored-by: Isaac Perry <isaac.perry@arm.com>
Reviewed By: clementval, kiranchandramohan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91159
We were erroneously not taking into account the constant values of LEN type
parameters of parameterized derived types when checking for argument
compatibility. The required checks are identical to those for assignment
compatibility. Since argument compatibility is checked in .../lib/Evaluate and
assignment compatibility is checked in .../lib/Semantics, I moved the common
code into .../lib/Evaluate/tools.cpp and changed the assignment compatibility
checking code to call it.
After implementing these new checks, tests in resolve53.f90 were failing
because the tests were erroneous. I fixed these tests and added new tests
to call03.f90 to test argument passing of parameterized derived types more
completely.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100989
This patch adds `-fget-definition` to `flang-new`. The semantics of this
option are identical in both drivers. The error message in the
"throwaway" driver is updated so that it matches the one from
`flang-new` (which is auto-generated and cannot be changed easily).
Tests are updated accordingly. A dedicated test for error handling was
added: get-definition.f90 (for the sake of simplicity,
getdefinition01.f90 no longer tests for errors).
The `ParseFrontendArgs` function is updated so that it can return
errors. This change is required in order to report invalid values
following `-fget-definition`.
The actual implementation of `GetDefinitionAction::ExecuteAction()` was
extracted from f18.cpp (i.e. the bit that deals with
`-fget-definition`).
Depends on: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100556
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100558
We were erroneously emitting error messages for assignments of derived types
where the associated objects were instantiated with non-constant LEN type
parameters.
I fixed this by adding the member function MightBeAssignmentCompatibleWith() to
the class DerivedTypeSpec and calling it to determine whether it's possible
that objects of parameterized derived types can be assigned to each other. Its
implementation first compares the uninstantiated values of the types. If they
are equal, it then compares the values of the constant instantiated type
parameters.
I added tests to assign04.f90 to exercise this new code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100868
This is just a small update that makes sure that errors arising from
parsing command-line options are captured more visibly. Also, all
parsing methods will now consistently return either a bool ("may fail")
or void ("never fails").
An instance of `InputKind` coming from `-x` is added to
`FrontendOptions` rather then being returned from `ParseFrontendArgs`.
It's currently not used, but we will require it shortly. In particular,
once code-generation is available we will use it to differentiate
between LLVM IR and Fortran input. `FrontendOptions` is a very suitable
place to keep it.
This changes don't affect the error reporting in the driver. In this
respect these are non-functional-changes. However, it will simplify
things in the forthcoming patches in which we may need a better error
tracking/recovery mechanism.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100556
For pernicious test cases with explicit non-constant actual
type parameter expressions in components, e.g.:
type :: t(k)
integer, kind :: k
type(t(k+1)), pointer :: p
end type
we should detect the infinite recursion and complain rather
than looping until the stack overflows.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100065
Call static functions using the class name (fir::NameUniquer).
Add function for mangling derivedTypes.
All the name mangling functions that are ultimately called are
tested in unittests/Optimizer/InternalNamesTest.cpp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99967
This patch adds two debugging options in the new Flang driver
(flang-new):
*fdebug-unparse-no-sema
*fdebug-dump-parse-tree-no-sema
Each of these options combines two options from the "throwaway" driver
(left: f18, right: flang-new):
* `-fdebug-uparse -fdebug-no-semantics` --> `-fdebug-unparse-no-sema`
* `-fdebug-dump-parse-tree -fdebug-no-semantics` -->
`-fdebug-dump-parse-tree-no-sema`
There are no plans to implement `-fdebug-no-semantics` in the new
driver. Such option would be too powerful. Also, it would only make
sense when combined with specific frontend actions (`-fdebug-unparse`
and `-fdebug-dump-parse-tree`). Instead, this patch adds 2 specialised
options listed above. Each of these is implemented through a dedicated
FrontendAction (also added).
The new frontend actions are implemented in terms of a new abstract base
action: `PrescanAndSemaAction`. This new base class was required so that
we can have finer control over what steps within the frontend are
executed:
* `PrescanAction`: run the _prescanner_
* `PrescanAndSemaAction`: run the _prescanner_ and the _parser_ (new
in this patch)
* `PrescanAndSemaAction`: run the _prescanner_, _parser_ and run the
_semantic checks_
This patch introduces `PrescanAndParseAction::BeginSourceFileAction`.
Apart from the semantic checks removed at the end, it is similar to
`PrescanAndSemaAction::BeginSourceFileAction`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99645
The -fdebug-dump-provenance flag is meant to be used with
needProvenanceRangeToCharBlockMappings set to true. This way, extra
mapping is generated that allows e.g. IDEs to retrieve symbol's scope
(offset into cooked character stream) based on symbol's source code
location. This patch makes sure that this option is set when using
-fdebug-dump-provenance.
With this patch, the implementation of -fdebug-dump-provenance in
`flang-new -fc1` becomes consistent with `f18`. The corresponding LIT
test is updated so that it can be shared with `f18`. I refined it a bit
so that:
* it becomes a frontend-only test
* it's stricter about the expected output
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98847
This patch adds support for the `-cpp` and `-nocpp` flags. The
implemented semantics match f18 (i.e. the "throwaway" driver), but are
different to gfortran. In Flang the preprocessor is always run. Instead,
`-cpp/-nocpp` are used to control whether predefined and command-line
preprocessor macro definitions are enabled or not. In practice this is
sufficient to model gfortran`s `-cpp/-nocpp`.
In the absence of `-cpp/-nocpp`, the driver will use the extension of
the input file to decide whether to include the standard macro
predefinitions. gfortran's documentation [1] was used to decide which
file extension to use for this.
The logic mentioned above was added in FrontendAction::BeginSourceFile.
That's relatively late in the driver set-up, but this roughly where the
name of the input file becomes available. The logic for deciding between
fixed and free form works in a similar way and was also moved to
FrontendAction::BeginSourceFile for consistency (and to reduce
code-duplication).
The `-cpp/-nocpp` flags are respected also when the input is read from
stdin. This is different to:
* gfortran (behaves as if `-cpp` was used)
* f18 (behaves as if `-nocpp` was used)
Starting with this patch, file extensions are significant and some test
files had to be renamed to reflect that. Where possible, preprocessor
tests were updated so that they can be shared between `f18` and
`flang-new`. This was implemented on top of adding new test for
`-cpp/-nocpp`.
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Overall-Options.html
Reviewed By: kiranchandramohan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99292
Add runtime APIs, implementations, and tests for ALL, ANY, COUNT,
MAXLOC, MAXVAL, MINLOC, MINVAL, PRODUCT, and SUM reduction
transformantional intrinsic functions for all relevant argument
and result types and kinds, both without DIM= arguments
(total reductions) and with (partial reductions).
Complex-valued reductions have their APIs in C so that
C's _Complex types can be used for their results.
Some infrastructure work was also necessary or noticed:
* Usage of "long double" in the compiler was cleaned up a
bit, and host dependences on x86 / MSVC have been isolated
in a new Common/long-double header.
* Character comparison has been exposed via an extern template
so that reductions could use it.
* Mappings from Fortran type category/kind to host C++ types
and vice versa have been isolated into runtime/cpp-type.h and
then used throughout the runtime as appropriate.
* The portable 128-bit integer package in Common/uint128.h
was generalized to support signed comparisons.
* Bugs in descriptor indexing code were fixed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99666
f18 was emitting a bogus error message about the lack of a TARGET
attribute when a pointer was initialized with a component of a
variable that was a legitimate TARGET.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99665
Before the conversion to LLVM-IR dialect and ultimately LLVM IR, FIR is
partially rewritten into a codegen form. This patch adds that pass, the
fircg dialect, and the small set of Ops in the fircg (sub) dialect.
Fircg is not part of the FIR dialect and should never be used outside of
the (closed) conversion to LLVM IR.
Authors: Eric Schweitz, Jean Perier, Rajan Walia, et.al.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98063
Binding labels start as expressions but they have to evaluate to
constant character of default kind, so they can be represented as an
std::string. Leading and trailing blanks have to be removed, so the
folded expression isn't exactly right anyway.
So all BIND(C) symbols now have a string binding label, either the
default or user-supplied one. This is recorded in the .mod file.
Add WithBindName mix-in for details classes that can have a binding
label so that they are all consistent. Add GetBindName() and
SetBindName() member functions to Symbol.
Add tests that verifies that leading and trailing blanks are ignored
in binding labels and that the default label is folded to lower case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99208
Binding labels start as expressions but they have to evaluate to
constant character of default kind, so they can be represented as an
std::string. Leading and trailing blanks have to be removed, so the
folded expression isn't exactly right anyway.
So all BIND(C) symbols now have a string binding label, either the
default or user-supplied one. This is recorded in the .mod file.
Add WithBindName mix-in for details classes that can have a binding
label so that they are all consistent. Add GetBindName() and
SetBindName() member functions to Symbol.
Add tests that verifies that leading and trailing blanks are ignored
in binding labels and that the default label is folded to lower case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99208
Replace semantics::SymbolSet with alternatives that clarify
whether the set should order its contents by source position
or not. This matters because positionally-ordered sets must
not be used for Symbols that might be subjected to name
replacement during name resolution, and address-ordered
sets must not be used (without sorting) in circumstances
where the order of their contents affects the output of the
compiler.
All set<> and map<> instances in the compiler that are keyed
by Symbols now have explicit Compare types in their template
instantiations. Symbol::operator< is no more.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98878
Adds support for `-fget-symbols-sources` in the new Flang driver. All
relevant tests are updated to use the new driver when
`FLANG_BUILD_NEW_DRIVER` is set.
`RUN` lines in tests are updated so `-fsyntax-only`
comes before `-fget-symbols-sources`. That's because:
* both `-fsyntax-only` and `-fget-symbols-sources` are
action flags, and
* the new driver, flang-new, will only consider the right-most
action flag.
In other words, this change is needed so that the tests work with both
`f18` (requires both flags) and `flang-new` (only considers the last
action flag).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98191
In parser::AllCookedSources, implement a map from CharBlocks to
the CookedSource instances that they cover. This permits a fast
Find() operation based on std::map::equal_range to map a CharBlock
to its enclosing CookedSource instance.
Add a creation order number to each CookedSource. This allows
AllCookedSources to provide a Precedes(x,y) predicate that is a
true source stream ordering between two CharBlocks -- x is less
than y if it is in an earlier CookedSource, or in the same
CookedSource at an earlier position.
Add a reference to the singleton SemanticsContext to each Scope.
All of this allows operator< to be implemented on Symbols by
means of a true source ordering. From a Symbol, we get to
its Scope, then to the SemanticsContext, and then use its
AllCookedSources reference to call Precedes().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98743
`parser::AllocateObject` and `parser::PointerObject` can be represented
as typed expressions once analyzed. This simplifies the work for parse-tree
consumers that work with typed expressions to deal with allocatable and
pointer objects such as lowering.
This change also makes it easier to add typedExpr in the future by
automatically handling nodes that have this member when possible.
Changes:
- Add a `mutable TypedExpr typedExpr` field to `parser::PointerObject` and `parser::AllocateObject`.
- Add a `parser::HasTypedExpr<T>` helper to better share code relating to typedExpr in the parse tree.
- Add hooks in `semantics::ExprChecker` for AllocateObject and PointerObject nodes, and use
ExprOrVariable on it to analyze and set the tyedExpr field during
expression analysis. This required adding overloads for `AssumedTypeDummy`.
- Update check-nullify.cpp and check-deallocate.cpp to not re-analyze the StructureComponent but to
use the typedExpr field instead.
- Update dump/unparse to use HasTypedExpr and use the typedExpr when there is one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98256
Fortran permits a reference to a function whose result is a pointer
to be used as a definable variable in any context where a
designator could appear. This patch wrings out remaining bugs
with such usage and adds more testing.
The utility predicate IsProcedurePointer(expr) had a misleading
name which has been corrected to IsProcedurePointerTarget(expr).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98555
I changed the declaration of symbolCount_ in the type Symbols to be
static to avoid possible problems in the future when we might have
multiple objects of type Symbols. Thanks to Peter for pointing out the
need for this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98357
This allows for storage instances to store data that isn't uniqued in the context, or contain otherwise non-trivial logic, in the rare situations that they occur. Storage instances with trivial destructors will still have their destructor skipped. A consequence of this is that the storage instance definition must be visible from the place that registers the type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98311
The PFT has been updated to support Fortran 77.
clang-tidy cleanup.
Authors: Val Donaldson, Jean Perier, Eric Schweitz, et.al.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98283
This patch adds `-fdebug-dump-parsing-log` in the new driver. This option is
semantically identical to `-fdebug-instrumented-parse` in `f18` (the
former is added as an alias in `f18`).
As dumping the parsing log makes only sense for instrumented parses, we
set Fortran::parser::Options::instrumentedParse to `True` when
`-fdebug-dump-parsing-log` is used. This is consistent with `f18`.
To facilitate tweaking the configuration of the frontend based on the
action being requested, `setUpFrontendBasedOnAction` is introduced in
CompilerInvocation.cpp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97457
We have a "<" operator defined on the type semantics::Symbol that's based on
the symbols' locations in the cooked character stream. This is potentially
problematic when comparing symbols from .mod files when the cooked character
streams themselves might be allocated to varying memory locations.
This change fixes that by using the order in which symbols are created as the
basis for the "<" operator. Thanks to Tim and Peter for consultation on the
necessity of doing this and the idea for what to use as the basis of the sort.
This change in the "<" operator changed the expected results for three of the
tests. I manually inspected the new results, and they look OK to me. The
differences in data05.f90 and typeinfo01.f90 are entirely the order, offsets,
and sizes of the derived type components. The changes in resolve102.f90 are
due to the new, different "<" operator used for sorting.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98225
Add support for the following Fortran dialect options:
- -default*
- -flarge-sizes
It also adds two test cases:
# For checking whether `flang-new` is passing options correctly to `flang-new -fc1`.
# For checking if `fdefault-` arguments are processed properly.
Also moves the Dialect related option parsing to a dedicated function
and adds a member `defaultKinds()` to `CompilerInvocation`
Depends on: D96032
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96344
It's possible to define a procedure whose interface depends on a procedure
which has an interface that depends on the original procedure. Such a circular
definition was causing the compiler to fall into an infinite loop when
resolving the name of the second procedure. It's also possible to create
circular dependency chains of more than two procedures.
I fixed this by adding the function HasCycle() to the class DeclarationVisitor
and calling it from DeclareProcEntity() to detect procedures with such
circularly defined interfaces. I marked the associated symbols of such
procedures by calling SetError() on them. When processing subsequent
procedures, I called HasError() before attempting to analyze their interfaces.
Unfortunately, this did not work.
With help from Tim, we determined that the SymbolSet used to track the
erroneous symbols was instantiated using a "<" operator which was defined using
the location of the name of the procedure. But the location of the procedure
name was being changed by a call to ReplaceName() between the times that the
calls to SetError() and HasError() were made. This caused HasError() to
incorrectly report that a symbol was not in the set of erroneous symbols.
I fixed this by changing SymbolSet to be an unordered set that uses the
contents of the name of the symbol as the basis for its hash function. This
works because the contents of the name of the symbol is preserved by
ReplaceName() even though its location changes.
I also fixed the error message used when reporting recursively defined
dummy procedure arguments by removing extra apostrophes and sorting the
list of symbols.
I also added tests that will crash the compiler without this change.
Note that the "<" operator is used in other contexts, for example, in the map
of characterized procedures, maps of items in equivalence sets, maps of
structure constructor values, ... All of these situations happen after name
resolution has been completed and all calls to ReplaceName() have already
happened and thus are not subject to the problem I ran into when ReplaceName()
was called when processing procedure entities.
Note also that the implementation of the "<" operator uses the relative
location in the cooked character stream as the basis of its implementation.
This is potentially problematic when symbols from diffent compilation units
(for example symbols originating in .mod files) are put into the same map since
their names will appear in two different source streams which may not be
allocated in the same relative positions in memory. But I was unable to create
a test that caused a problem. Using a direct comparison of the content of the
name of the symbol in the "<" operator has problems. Symbols in enclosing or
parallel scopes can have the same name. Also using the location of the symbol
in the cooked character stream has the advantage that it preserves the the
order of the symbols in a structure constructor constant, which makes matching
the values with the symbols relatively easy.
This patch supersedes D97749.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97774
It's possible to define a procedure whose interface depends on a procedure
which has an interface that depends on the original procedure. Such a circular
definition was causing the compiler to fall into an infinite loop when
resolving the name of the second procedure. It's also possible to create
circular dependency chains of more than two procedures.
I fixed this by adding the function HasCycle() to the class DeclarationVisitor
and calling it from DeclareProcEntity() to detect procedures with such
circularly defined interfaces. I marked the associated symbols of such
procedures by calling SetError() on them. When processing subsequent
procedures, I called HasError() before attempting to analyze their interfaces.
Unfortunately, this did not work.
With help from Tim, we determined that the SymbolSet used to track the
erroneous symbols was instantiated using a "<" operator which was defined using
the location of the name of the procedure. But the location of the procedure
name was being changed by a call to ReplaceName() between the times that the
calls to SetError() and HasError() were made. This caused HasError() to
incorrectly report that a symbol was not in the set of erroneous symbols.
I fixed this by changing SymbolSet to be an unordered set that uses the
contents of the name of the symbol as the basis for its hash function. This
works because the contents of the name of the symbol is preserved by
ReplaceName() even though its location changes.
I also fixed the error message used when reporting recursively defined dummy
procedure arguments.
I also added tests that will crash the compiler without this change.
Note that the "<" operator is used in other contexts, for example, in the map
of characterized procedures, maps of items in equivalence sets, maps of
structure constructor values, ... All of these situations happen after name
resolution has been completed and all calls to ReplaceName() have already
happened and thus are not subject to the problem I ran into when ReplaceName()
was called when processing procedure entities.
Note also that the implementation of the "<" operator uses the relative
location in the cooked character stream as the basis of its implementation.
This is potentially problematic when symbols from diffent compilation units
(for example symbols originating in .mod files) are put into the same map since
their names will appear in two different source streams which may not be
allocated in the same relative positions in memory. But I was unable to create
a test that caused a problem. Using a direct comparison of the content of the
name of the symbol in the "<" operator has problems. Symbols in enclosing or
parallel scopes can have the same name. Also using the location of the symbol
in the cooked character stream has the advantage that it preserves the the
order of the symbols in a structure constructor constant, which makes matching
the values with the symbols relatively easy.
This change supersedes D97201.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97749
Semantic checks for the following OpenMP 4.5 clauses.
1. 2.15.4.2 - Copyprivate clause
2. 2.15.3.4 - Firstprivate clause
3. 2.15.3.5 - Lastprivate clause
Add related test cases and resolve test cases marked as XFAIL.
Reviewed By: kiranchandramohan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91920
This reverts commit 07de0846a5.
The original patch has caused 6 out 8 of Flang's public buildbots to
fail. As I'm not sure what the fix should be, I'm reverting this for
now. Please see https://reviews.llvm.org/D97201 for more context and
discussion.
- add ops: rebox, insert_on_range, absent, is_present
- embox, coordinate_of: replace old hand-written parser/pretty-printer with assembly format
- remove dead floating point ops, since buitlins work for all types
- update call op
- update documentation
- misc. NFC to formatting
- add op round trip tests
Authors: Eric Schweitz, Jean Perier, Zachary Selk, Kiran Chandramohan, et.al.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97500
It's possible to define a procedure whose interface depends on a procedure
which has an interface that depends on the original procedure. Such a circular
definition was causing the compiler to fall into an infinite loop when
resolving the name of the second procedure. It's also possible to create
circular dependency chains of more than two procedures.
I fixed this by adding the function HasCycle() to the class DeclarationVisitor
and calling it from DeclareProcEntity() to detect procedures with such
circularly defined interfaces. I marked the associated symbols of such
procedures by calling SetError() on them. When processing subsequent
procedures, I called HasError() before attempting to analyze their interfaces.
Unfortunately, this did not work.
With help from Tim, we determined that the SymbolSet used to track the
erroneous symbols was instantiated using a "<" operator which was
defined using the name of the procedure. But the procedure name was
being changed by a call to ReplaceName() between the times that the
calls to SetError() and HasError() were made. This caused HasError() to
incorrectly report that a symbol was not in the set of erroneous
symbols. I fixed this by making SymbolSet be an ordered set, which does
not use the "<" operator.
I also added tests that will crash the compiler without this change.
And I fixed the formatting on an error message from a previous update.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97201
We lower expressions with rank > 0 to a set of high-level array operations.
These operations are then analyzed and refined to more primitve
operations in subsequent pass(es).
This patch upstreams these array operations and some other helper ops.
Authors: Eric Schweitz, Rajan Walia, Kiran Chandramohan, et.al.
https://github.com/flang-compiler/f18-llvm-project/pull/565
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97421
Move the remaing of FIR types to TableGen type definition. This follow suggestion in D96422.
Reviewed By: schweitz, jeanPerier, rriddle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96987
This patch adds the new zero_bits operation and upstrams other changes
including the following:
- update tablegen syntax to newer forms
- update memory effects annotations
- update documentation [NFC]
- other NFC, such as whitespace and formatting
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97331
- Add a fatal error handler that can print a message with source location
before aborting.
- Update TODO macro to take an mlir location argument and to use the
newly introduced fatal error handler.
- Introduce TODO_NOLOC for the few places where no source location is
easily accessible.
Reviewed By: schweitz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97190
`verifyConstructionInvariants` is intended to allow for verifying the invariants of an attribute/type on construction, and `getChecked` is intended to enable more graceful error handling aside from an assert. There are a few problems with the current implementation of these methods:
* `verifyConstructionInvariants` requires an mlir::Location for emitting errors, which is prohibitively costly in the situations that would most likely use them, e.g. the parser.
This creates an unfortunate code duplication between the verifier code and the parser code, given that the parser operates on llvm::SMLoc and it is an undesirable overhead to pre-emptively convert from that to an mlir::Location.
* `getChecked` effectively requires duplicating the definition of the `get` method, creating a quite clunky workflow due to the subtle different in its signature.
This revision aims to talk the above problems by refactoring the implementation to use a callback for error emission. Using a callback allows for deferring the costly part of error emission until it is actually necessary.
Due to the necessary signature change in each instance of these methods, this revision also takes this opportunity to cleanup the definition of these methods by:
* restructuring the signature of `getChecked` such that it can be generated from the same code block as the `get` method.
* renaming `verifyConstructionInvariants` to `verify` to match the naming scheme of the rest of the compiler.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97100
This updates the various classes that support the compliation of
Fortran. These classes are shared by the test tools.
Authors: Eric Schweitz, Sameeran Joshi, et.al.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97073
Add the following options:
* -fdebug-measure-parse-tree
* -fdebug-pre-fir-tree
Summary of changes:
- Add 2 new frontend actions: DebugMeasureParseTreeAction and DebugPreFIRTreeAction
- Add MeasurementVisitor to FrontendActions.h
- Make reportFatalSemanticErrors return true if there are any fatal errors
- Port most of the `-fdebug-pre-fir-tree` tests to use the new driver if built, otherwise use f18.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96884
Most Fortran compilers accept the following benign extension,
and it appears in some applications:
SUBROUTINE FOO(A,N)
IMPLICIT NONE
REAL A(N) ! N is used before being typed
INTEGER N
END
Allow it in f18 only for default integer scalar dummy arguments.
Differential Revesion: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96982
Add the following options:
* -fdebug-dump-symbols
* -fdebug-dump-parse-tree
* -fdebug-dump-provenance
Summary of changes:
- Add 3 new frontend actions: DebugDumpSymbolsAction, DebugDumpParseTreeAction and DebugDumpProvenanceAction
- Add a unique pointer to the Semantics instance created in PrescanAndSemaAction
- Move fatal semantic error reporting to its own method, FrontendActions#reportFatalSemanticErrors
- Port most tests using `-fdebug-dump-symbols` and `-fdebug-dump-parse-tree` to the new driver if built, otherwise default to f18
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96716
Fortran 2018 explicitly permits an ignored type declaration
for the result of a generic intrinsic function. See the comment
added to Semantics/expression.cpp for an explanation of why this
is somewhat dangerous and worthy of a warning.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96879
This patch is a follow up of D96422 and move BoxProcType to TableGen.
Reviewed By: schweitz, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96514
This patch is a follow up of D96422 and move CharacterType and BoxCharType to
TableGen.
Reviewed By: schweitz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96446
It's possible to define a procedure that has a procedure dummy argument which
names the procedure that contains it. This was causing the compiler to fall
into an infinite loop when characterizing a call to the procedure.
Following a suggestion from Peter, I fixed this be maintaining a set of
procedure symbols that had already been seen while characterizing a procedure.
This required passing a new parameter to the functions that characterized a
Procedure, a DummyArgument, and a DummyProcedure.
I also added several tests that will crash the compiler without this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96631
Add the following options:
* -fimplicit-none and -fno-implicit-none
* -fbackslash and -fno-backslash
* -flogical-abbreviations and -fno-logical-abbreviations
* -fxor-operator and -fno-xor-operator
* -falternative-parameter-statement
* -finput-charset=<value>
Summary of changes:
- Enable extensions in CompilerInvocation#ParseFrontendArgs
- Add encoding_ to Fortran::frontend::FrontendOptions
- Add encoding to Fortran::parser::Options
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96407
This patch adds the following compiler frontend driver options:
* -fdebug-unparse (f18 spelling: -funparse)
* -fdebug-unparse-with-symbols (f18 spelling: -funparse-with-symbols)
The new driver will only accept the new spelling. `f18` will accept both
the original and the new spelling.
A new base class for frontend actions is added: `PrescanAndSemaAction`.
This is added to reduce code duplication that otherwise these new
options would lead to. Implementation from
* `ParseSyntaxOnlyAction::ExecutionAction`
is moved to:
* `PrescanAndSemaAction::BeginSourceFileAction`
This implementation is now shared between:
* PrescanAndSemaAction
* ParseSyntaxOnlyAction
* DebugUnparseAction
* DebugUnparseWithSymbolsAction
All tests that don't require other yet unimplemented options are
updated. This way `flang-new -fc1` is used instead of `f18` when
`FLANG_BUILD_NEW_DRIVER` is set to `On`. In order to facilitate this,
`%flang_fc1` is added in the LIT configuration (lit.cfg.py).
`asFortran` from f18.cpp is duplicated as `getBasicAsFortran` in
FrontendOptions.cpp. At this stage it's hard to find a good place to
share this method. I suggest that we revisit this once a switch from
`f18` to `flang-new` is complete.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96483
This patch is a follow up of D96422 and move ComplexType to TableGen.
Reviewed By: schweitz, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96610
The kind mapper provides a portable mechanism to map Fortran type KIND values
independent of the front-end to their corresponding MLIR and LLVM types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96362
Most components required for this are already there.
Build and Testing clean.
ninja check-flang
Reviewed By: clementval, tskeith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96411
This patch is a follow up of D96422 and move the ShapeShiftType to
TableGen.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96442
This is the first patch of a serie to move FIR types to TableGen format as suggested in D96172.
This patch is setting up the files for FIR types and move the ShapeType to TableGen.
As discussed with @schweitz, I'm taking over this task to help the FIR upstreaming effort.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96422
Add support for the following options:
* -fopenmp
* -fopenacc
Update OpenMP and OpenACC semantics tests to use the new driver if it is built, otherwise use f18.
OpenMP tests that include `use omp_lib` or run `test_symbols.sh` have not been updated as they require options `-intrinsic-module-directory` and `-funparse-with-symbols` which are currently not implemented in the new driver.
Similarly OpenACC tests that run `test_symbols.sh` have not been updated.
This patch also moves semanticsContext to CompilerInvocation and creates it in CompilerInvocation#setSemanticsOpts so that the semantics context can use Fortran::parser::Options#features.
Summary of changes:
- Move semanticsContext to CompilerInvocation.h
- Update OpenMP and OpenACC semantics tests that do not rely on `-intrinsic-module-directory` and `-funparse-with-symbols` to use %flang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96032
This reverts commit 511dd4f438 along with
a couple fixes.
Original message:
Now the context is the first, rather than the last input.
This better matches the rest of the infrastructure and makes
it easier to move these types to being declaratively specified.
Phabricator: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96111
Now the context is the first, rather than the last input.
This better matches the rest of the infrastructure and makes
it easier to move these types to being declaratively specified.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96111
Add support for option -J/-module-dir in the new Flang driver. This
will allow for including module files in other directories, as the
default search path is currently the working folder. This also provides
an option of storing the output module in the specified folder.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95448
This new action encapsulates all actions that require the prescanner to
be run before proceeding with other processing. By adding this new
action, we are better equipped to control which actions _do_ run the
prescanner and which _do not_.
The following actions that require the prescanner are refactored to
inherit from `PrescanAction`:
* `PrintPreprocessedAction`
* `ParseSyntaxOnlyAction` .
New virtual method is introduced to facilitate all this:
* `BeginSourceFileAction`
Like in Clang, this method is run inside `BeginSourceFile`. In other
words, it is invoked before `ExecuteAction` for the corresponding
frontend action is run. This method allows us to:
* carry out any processing that is always required by the action (e.g.
run the prescanner)
* fine tune the settings/options on a file-by-file basis (e.g. to
decide between fixed-form and free-form based on file extension)
This patch implements non-functional-changes.
Reviewed By: FarisRehman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95464
Add support for the following layout options:
* -ffree-form
* -ffixed-form
- -ffixed-line-length=n (alias -ffixed-line-length-n)
Additionally remove options `-fno-free-form` and `-fno-fixed-form` as they were initially added to forward to gfortran but gfortran does not support these flags.
This patch adds the flag FlangOnlyOption to the existing options `-ffixed-form`, `-ffree-form` and `-ffree-line-length-` in Options.td. As of commit 6a75496836, these flags are not currently forwarded to gfortran anyway.
The default fixed line length in FrontendOptions is 72, based off the current default in Fortran::parser::Options. The line length cannot be set to a negative integer, or a positive integer less than 7 excluding 0, consistent with the behaviour of gfortran.
This patch does not add `-ffree-line-length-n` as Fortran::parser::Options does not have a variable for free form columns.
Whilst the `fixedFormColumns` variable is used in f18 for `-ffree-line-length-n`, f18 only allows `-ffree-line-length-none`/`-ffree-line-length-0` and not a user-specified value. `fixedFormcolumns` cannot be used in the new driver as it is ignored in the frontend when dealing with free form files.
Summary of changes:
- Remove -fno-fixed-form and -fno-free-form from Options.td
- Make -ffixed-form, -ffree-form and -ffree-line-length-n FlangOnlyOption in Options.td
- Create AddFortranDialectOptions method in Flang.cpp
- Create FortranForm enum in FrontendOptions.h
- Add fortranForm_ and fixedFormColumns_ to Fortran::frontend::FrontendOptions
- Update fixed-form-test.f so that it guarantees that it fails when forced as a free form file to better facilitate testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95460
Split up MeasureSizeInBytes() so that array element sizes can be
calculated accurately; use the new API in some places where
DynamicType::MeasureSizeInBytes() was being used but the new
API performs better due to TypeAndShape having precise CHARACTER
length information.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95897
Analyze the shape of the result of TRANSFER(ptr,array) correctly
when "ptr" is an array of deferred shape. Fixing this bug led to
some refactoring and concentration of common code in TypeAndShape
member functions with code in general shape and character length
analysis, and this led to some regression test failures that have
all been cleaned up.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95744
Legacy Fortran implementations support an alternative form of the
PARAMETER statement; it differs syntactically from the standard's
PARAMETER statement by lacking parentheses, and semantically by
using the type and shape of the initialization expression to define
the attributes of the named constant. (GNU Fortran gets that part
wrong; Intel Fortran and nvfortran have full support.)
This patch disables the old style PARAMETER statement by default, as
it is syntactically ambiguous with conforming assignment statements;
adds a new "-falternative-parameter-statement" option to enable it;
and implements it correctly when enabled.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48774, in which a user
tripped over the syntactic ambiguity.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95697
There were two problems with constant arrays whose lower bound is not 1.
First, when folding the arrays, we were creating the folded array to have lower
bounds of 1 but, we were not re-adjusting their lower bounds to the
declared values. Second, we were not calculating the extents correctly.
Both of these problems led to bogus error messages.
I fixed the first problem by adjusting the lower bounds in
NonPointerInitializationExpr() in Evaluate/check-expression.cpp. I wrote the
class ArrayConstantBoundChanger, which is similar to the existing class
ScalarConstantExpander. In the process of implementing and testing it, I found
a bug that I fixed in ScalarConstantExpander which caused it to infinitely
recurse on parenthesized expressions. I also removed the unrelated class
ScalarExpansionVisitor, which was not used.
I fixed the second problem by changing the formula that calculates upper bounds
in in the function ComputeUpperBound() in Evaluate/shape.cpp.
I added tests that trigger the bogus error messages mentioned above along with
a constant folding tests that uses array operands with shapes that conform but
have different bounds.
In the process of adding tests, I discovered that tests in
Evaluate/folding09.f90 and folding16.f90 were written incorrectly, and I
fixed them. This also revealed a bug in contant folding of the
intrinsic "lbounds" which I plan to fix in a later change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95449
Make the #include "file" preprocessing directive begin its
search in the same directory as the file containing the directive,
as other preprocessors and our Fortran INCLUDE statement do.
Avoid current working directory for all source files except the original.
Resolve tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95481