This makes it consistent with libstdc++ and the other default
include directories.
If these headers are found in both locations and one isn't a
symlink to the other, this will cause errors due to libc++ headers
having wrapper headers for some standard C headers, wrappers that
do #include_next the actual one.
If the same libc++ standard C wrapper header exists in more than one
include directory before the real system one, the header include
guard will stop it from doing another #include_next to pick up the
real one, breaking things.
As this is a rather uncommon situation, this should be acceptable
and toolchain maintainers can adapt accordingly if necessary.
Also simplify some of the existing code with a local variable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45500
llvm-svn: 329946
Summary: The logic was broken for Linux triples as it returns true in the switch for Triple.isOSLinux().
Reviewers: asb, apazos
Reviewed By: asb
Subscribers: kito-cheng, shiva0217, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45237
llvm-svn: 329941
Summary:
GCC compresses the pseudo instruction "mv rd, rs", which is an alias of
"addi rd, rs, 0", to "c.mv rd, rs".
In LLVM we rely on the canonical MC instruction (MCInst) to do our compression
checks and since there is no rule to compress "addi rd, rs, 0" --> "c.mv
rd, rs" we lose this compression opportunity to gcc.
In this patch we fix that by adding an addi to c.mv compression pattern, the
instruction "mv rd, rs" will be compressed to "c.mv rd, rs" just like
gcc does.
Patch by Zhaoshi Zheng (zzheng) and Sameer (sabuasal).
Reviewers: asb, apazos, zzheng, mgrang, shiva0217
Reviewed By: asb
Subscribers: rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, jordy.potman.lists, niosHD, kito-cheng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45583
llvm-svn: 329939
A previously missing intrinsic for an old instruction.
Reviewers: craig.topper, echristo
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45311
llvm-svn: 329937
A previously missing intrinsic for an old instruction.
Reviewers: craig.topper, echristo
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45312
llvm-svn: 329936
Summary:
Now that common options are propagated again for runtimes build with D45507,
the -f{data,function}-sections flags are now duplicates, remove them.
Reviewers: alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: mgorny, delcypher, #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45575
llvm-svn: 329925
AFI->setRedZone(false) was put in the wrong place before, and so it only fired
on functions that didn't have stack frames. This moves that to the top of
emitPrologue to make sure that every function without a redzone has it set
correctly.
This also adds a function representing one of the early exit cases (GHC calling
convention) to the MachineOutliner noredzone test to ensure that we can outline
from functions like these, where we never use a redzone.
llvm-svn: 329922
I broke this test in D45498 when I changed the formatter to remove
spaces before Objective-C lightweight generics.
This fixes the test.
Test Plan:
% make -j16 check-llvm-tools-llvm-lit && ./bin/llvm-lit -sv ../llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/comment-objc-parameterized-classes.m
llvm-svn: 329921
This change is exposing UB in source code - as was warned/predicted. :)
See D44909 for discussion. Reverting while we figure out how to fix things.
llvm-svn: 329920
Summary:
Previously, `clang-format` would break Objective-C
category extensions after the opening parenthesis to avoid
breaking the protocol list:
```
% echo "@interface ccccccccccccc (ccccccccccc) <ccccccccccccc> { }" | \
clang-format -assume-filename=foo.h -style="{BasedOnStyle: llvm, \
ColumnLimit: 40}"
@interface ccccccccccccc (
ccccccccccc) <ccccccccccccc> {
}
```
This looks fairly odd, as we could have kept the category extension
on the previous line.
Category extensions are a single item, so they are generally very
short compared to protocol lists. We should prefer breaking after the
opening `<` of the protocol list over breaking after the opening `(`
of the category extension.
With this diff, we now avoid breaking after the category extension's
open paren, which causes us to break after the protocol list's
open angle bracket:
```
% echo "@interface ccccccccccccc (ccccccccccc) <ccccccccccccc> { }" | \
./bin/clang-format -assume-filename=foo.h -style="{BasedOnStyle: llvm, \
ColumnLimit: 40}"
@interface ccccccccccccc (ccccccccccc) <
ccccccccccccc> {
}
```
Test Plan: New test added. Confirmed test failed before diff and
passed after diff by running:
% make -j16 FormatTests && ./tools/clang/unittests/Format/FormatTests
Reviewers: djasper, jolesiak
Reviewed By: djasper
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45526
llvm-svn: 329919
Summary:
This diff improves the Objective-C guessing heuristic by
replacing the hard-coded list of a subset of Objective-C @keywords
with a general check which supports all @keywords.
I also added a few more Foundation keywords which were missing from
the heuristic.
Test Plan: Unit tests updated. Ran tests with:
% make -j16 FormatTests && ./tools/clang/unittests/Format/FormatTests
Reviewers: djasper, jolesiak
Reviewed By: djasper
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45521
llvm-svn: 329918
Summary:
In D45185, I added clang-format parser support for Objective-C
generics. However, I didn't touch the whitespace logic, so they
got the same space logic as Objective-C protocol lists.
In every example in the Apple SDK and in the documentation,
there is no space between the class name and the opening `<`
for the lightweight generic specification, so this diff
removes the space and updates the tests.
Test Plan: Tests updated. Ran tests with:
% make -j16 FormatTests && ./tools/clang/unittests/Format/FormatTests
Reviewers: djasper, jolesiak
Reviewed By: djasper
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45498
llvm-svn: 329917
Summary:
Currently, indentation of Objective-C method names which are wrapped
onto the next line due to a long return type is controlled by the
style option `IndentWrappedFunctionNames`.
This diff changes the behavior so we always indent wrapped Objective-C
selector names.
NOTE: I partially reverted 6159c0fbd1 / rL242484, as it was causing wrapped selectors to be double-indented. Its tests in FormatTestObjC.cpp still pass.
Test Plan: Tests updated. Ran tests with:
% make -j12 FormatTests && ./tools/clang/unittests/Format/FormatTests
Reviewers: djasper, jolesiak, stephanemoore, thakis
Reviewed By: djasper
Subscribers: stephanemoore, klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45004
llvm-svn: 329916
There are cases when individual NodeSets can be equal with respect to
the ordering criteria. Since they are stored in an ordered container,
use stable_sort to preserve the relative order of equal NodeSets.
This should remove non-determinism discovered by shuffling done in
llvm::sort with expensive checks enabled.
llvm-svn: 329915
Summary:
This patch adds two new diagnostics, which are off by default:
**-Wreturn-std-move**
This diagnostic is enabled by `-Wreturn-std-move`, `-Wmove`, or `-Wall`.
Diagnose cases of `return x` or `throw x`, where `x` is the name of a local variable or parameter, in which a copy operation is performed when a move operation would have been available. The user probably expected a move, but they're not getting a move, perhaps because the type of "x" is different from the return type of the function.
A place where this comes up in the wild is `stdext::inplace_function<Sig, N>` which implements conversion via a conversion operator rather than a converting constructor; see https://github.com/WG21-SG14/SG14/issues/125#issue-297201412
Another place where this has come up in the wild, but where the fix ended up being different, was
try { ... } catch (ExceptionType ex) {
throw ex;
}
where the appropriate fix in that case was to replace `throw ex;` with `throw;`, and incidentally to catch by reference instead of by value. (But one could contrive a scenario where the slicing was intentional, in which case throw-by-move would have been the appropriate fix after all.)
Another example (intentional slicing to a base class) is dissected in https://github.com/accuBayArea/Slides/blob/master/slides/2018-03-07.pdf
**-Wreturn-std-move-in-c++11**
This diagnostic is enabled only by the exact spelling `-Wreturn-std-move-in-c++11`.
Diagnose cases of "return x;" or "throw x;" which in this version of Clang *do* produce moves, but which prior to Clang 3.9 / GCC 5.1 produced copies instead. This is useful in codebases which care about portability to those older compilers.
The name "-in-c++11" is not technically correct; what caused the version-to-version change in behavior here was actually CWG 1579, not C++14. I think it's likely that codebases that need portability to GCC 4.9-and-earlier may understand "C++11" as a colloquialism for "older compilers." The wording of this diagnostic is based on feedback from @rsmith.
**Discussion**
Notice that this patch is kind of a negative-space version of Richard Trieu's `-Wpessimizing-move`. That diagnostic warns about cases of `return std::move(x)` that should be `return x` for speed. These diagnostics warn about cases of `return x` that should be `return std::move(x)` for speed. (The two diagnostics' bailiwicks do not overlap: we don't have to worry about a `return` statement flipping between the two states indefinitely.)
I propose to write a paper for San Diego that would relax the implicit-move rules so that in C++2a the user //would// see the moves they expect, and the diagnostic could be re-worded in a later version of Clang to suggest explicit `std::move` only "in C++17 and earlier." But in the meantime (and/or forever if that proposal is not well received), this diagnostic will be useful to detect accidental copy operations.
Reviewers: rtrieu, rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: lebedev.ri, Rakete1111, rsmith, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43322
Patch by Arthur O'Dwyer.
llvm-svn: 329914
Summary:
Merged 'addVectorList64Operands' and 'addVectorList128Operands' into a
generic 'addVectorListOperands', which can be easily extended to work
for SVE vectors.
This is patch [4/6] in a series to add assembler/disassembler support for
SVE's contiguous ST1 (scalar+imm) instructions.
Reviewers: fhahn, rengolin, javed.absar, huntergr, SjoerdMeijer, t.p.northover, echristo, evandro
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45430
llvm-svn: 329909
Don't assume SelectionDAG is non-null as the targets can use it with a
null pointer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44611
llvm-svn: 329908
Created a helper function to query for non negative SCEVs. Uses the
SGE predicate to catch constants that could be interpreted as
negative.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45481
llvm-svn: 329907
Summary:
Pretty straight-forward, just count all the variable declarations in the function's body, and if more than the configured threshold - do complain.
Note that this continues perverse practice of disabling the new option by default.
I'm not certain where is the balance point between not being too noisy, and actually enforcing the good practice.
If we really want to not disable this by default, but also to not cause too many new warnings, we could default to 50 or so.
But that is a lot of variables too...
I was able to find one coding style referencing variable count:
- https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v4.15/process/coding-style.html#functions
> Another measure of the function is the number of local variables. They shouldn’t exceed 5-10, or you’re doing something wrong.
Reviewers: hokein, xazax.hun, JonasToth, aaron.ballman, alexfh
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: kimgr, Eugene.Zelenko, rnkovacs, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang-tools-extra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44602
llvm-svn: 329902
Summary:
The fold added in D45108 did not account for the fact that
the and instruction is commutative, and if the mask is a variable,
the mask variable and the fold variable may be swapped.
I have noticed this by accident when looking into [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=6773 | PR6773 ]]
Reviewers: spatel, craig.topper
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45538
llvm-svn: 329901
Summary:
Added 'RegisterKind' to the VectorListOp structure, so that this operand
type can be reused for SVE vector lists in a later patch. It also
refactors the 'tryParseVectorList' function so it can be used directly
in the ParserMethod of an operand. The parsing can now parse multiple
kinds of vectors and recover if there is no match.
This is patch [3/6] in a series to add assembler/disassembler support for
SVE's contiguous ST1 (scalar+imm) instructions.
Reviewers: fhahn, rengolin, javed.absar, huntergr, SjoerdMeijer, t.p.northover, echristo, evandro
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45429
llvm-svn: 329900
Summary:
According RISC-V ELF psABI specification, base RV32 and RV64 ISAs only
allow 32-bit instruction alignment, but instruction allow to be aligned
to 16-bit boundaries for C-extension.
So we just align to 4 bytes and 2 bytes for C-extension is enough.
Reviewers: asb, apazos
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45560
Patch by Kito Cheng.
llvm-svn: 329899