Summary:
"-fmerge-all-constants" is a non-conforming optimization and should not
be the default. It is also causing miscompiles when building Linux
Kernel (https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/3/20/872).
Fixes PR18538.
Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, chandlerc
Reviewed By: rsmith, chandlerc
Subscribers: srhines, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45289
llvm-svn: 329300
The original revert was done in r326869, since reverting r326602 broke
the test added by this.
The new test should be less dependent on r326602.
llvm-svn: 326872
The patch fixes a number of bugs related to parameter indexing in
attributes:
* Parameter indices in some attributes (argument_with_type_tag,
pointer_with_type_tag, nonnull, ownership_takes, ownership_holds,
and ownership_returns) are specified in source as one-origin
including any C++ implicit this parameter, were stored as
zero-origin excluding any this parameter, and were erroneously
printing (-ast-print) and confusingly dumping (-ast-dump) as the
stored values.
* For alloc_size, the C++ implicit this parameter was not subtracted
correctly in Sema, leading to assert failures or to silent failures
of __builtin_object_size to compute a value.
* For argument_with_type_tag, pointer_with_type_tag, and
ownership_returns, the C++ implicit this parameter was not added
back to parameter indices in some diagnostics.
This patch fixes the above bugs and aims to prevent similar bugs in
the future by introducing careful mechanisms for handling parameter
indices in attributes. ParamIdx stores a parameter index and is
designed to hide the stored encoding while providing accessors that
require each use (such as printing) to make explicit the encoding that
is needed. Attribute declarations declare parameter index arguments
as [Variadic]ParamIdxArgument, which are exposed as ParamIdx[*]. This
patch rewrites all attribute arguments that are processed by
checkFunctionOrMethodParameterIndex in SemaDeclAttr.cpp to be declared
as [Variadic]ParamIdxArgument. The only exception is xray_log_args's
argument, which is encoded as a count not an index.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43248
llvm-svn: 326602
So I wrote a clang-tidy check to lint out redundant `isa`, `cast`, and
`dyn_cast`s for fun. This is a portion of what it found for clang; I
plan to do similar cleanups in LLVM and other subprojects when I find
time.
Because of the volume of changes, I explicitly avoided making any change
that wasn't highly local and obviously correct to me (e.g. we still have
a number of foo(cast<Bar>(baz)) that I didn't touch, since overloading
is a thing and the cast<Bar> did actually change the type -- just up the
class hierarchy).
I also tried to leave the types we were cast<>ing to somewhere nearby,
in cases where it wasn't locally obvious what we were dealing with
before.
llvm-svn: 326416
When indirect field is initialized with another field, you have
MemberExpr with CXXThisExpr that corresponds to the field's immediate
anonymous parent. But 'this' was referring to the non-anonymous parent.
So when we were building LValue Designator, it was incorrect as it had
wrong starting point. Usage of such designator would cause unexpected
APValue changes and crashes.
The fix is in adjusting 'this' for indirect fields from non-anonymous
parent to the field's immediate parent.
Discovered by OSS-Fuzz:
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=4985
rdar://problem/36359187
Reviewers: rsmith, efriedma
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits, jkorous-apple
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42498
llvm-svn: 325997
expressions, if their lifetime began during the evaluation of the expression.
This is technically not allowed in C++11, though we could consider permitting
it there too, as an extension.
llvm-svn: 325663
This patch fixes clang to not consider braced initializers for
aggregate elements of arrays to be potentially dependent on the
indices of the initialized elements. Resolves bug 18978:
initialize a large static array = clang oom?
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=18978
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43187
llvm-svn: 325120
These just overloads for _Float128. They're supported by GCC 7 and used
by glibc. APFloat support is already there so just add the overloads.
__builtin_copysignf128
__builtin_fabsf128
__builtin_huge_valf128
__builtin_inff128
__builtin_nanf128
__builtin_nansf128
This is the same support that GCC has, according to the documentation,
but limited to _Float128.
llvm-svn: 321948
__builtin_object_size with incomplete array type in struct
The commit r316245 introduced a regression that causes an assertion failure when
Clang tries to cast an IncompleteArrayType to a PointerType when evaluating
__builtin_object_size.
rdar://36094951
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41405
llvm-svn: 321222
Adding the new enumerator forced a bunch more changes into this patch than I
would have liked. The -Wtautological-compare warning was extended to properly
check the new comparison operator, clang-format needed updating because it uses
precedence levels as weights for determining where to break lines (and several
operators increased their precedence levels with this change), thread-safety
analysis needed changes to build its own IL properly for the new operator.
All "real" semantic checking for this operator has been deferred to a future
patch. For now, we use the relational comparison rules and arbitrarily give
the builtin form of the operator a return type of 'void'.
llvm-svn: 320707
C++14 [dcl.constexpr]p4 states that in the body of a constexpr
constructor,
> every non-variant non-static data member and base class sub-object
shall be initialized
However, [class.bit]p2 notes that
> Unnamed bit-fields are not members and cannot be initialized.
Therefore, we should make sure to filter them out of the check that
all fields are initialized.
Fixing this makes the constant evaluator a bit smarter, and
specifically allows constexpr constructors to avoid tripping
-Wglobal-constructors when the type contains unnamed bitfields.
Reviewed at https://reviews.llvm.org/D39035.
llvm-svn: 316408
constant expressions.
We permit array-to-pointer decay on such arrays, but disallow pointer
arithmetic (since we do not know whether it will have defined behavior).
This is based on r311970 and r301822 (the former by me and the latter by Robert
Haberlach). Between then and now, two things have changed: we have committee
feedback indicating that this is indeed the right direction, and the code
broken by this change has been fixed.
This is necessary in C++17 to continue accepting certain forms of non-type
template argument involving arrays of unknown bound.
llvm-svn: 316245
The standard is not clear on how these are supposed to be handled, so we
conservatively treat as non-constant any cases whose value is unknown or whose
evaluation might result in undefined behavior.
llvm-svn: 311970
When r310905 moved the pointer and bool out of a PointerIntPair, it made
them end up uninitialized and caused UBSan failures when copying the
uninitialized boolean. However, making the pointer be null should avoid
the reference to the boolean entirely.
llvm-svn: 310994
They are stack allocated, so their alignment is not to be trusted.
32-bit MSVC only guarantees 4 byte stack alignment, even though alignof
would tell you otherwise. I tried fixing this with __declspec align, but
that apparently upsets GCC. Hopefully this version will satisfy all
compilers.
See PR32018 for some info about the mingw issues.
Should supercede https://reviews.llvm.org/D34873
llvm-svn: 310905
Summary:
r306137 made dllimport pointers to member functions non-constant. This
is correct because a load must be executed to resolve any dllimported
data. However, r306137 did not account for the use of dllimport member
function pointers used as template arguments.
This change re-lands r306137 with a template instantiation fix.
This fixes PR33570.
Reviewers: rnk, majnemer
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34714
llvm-svn: 307446
Also add testcases for a bunch of expression forms that cause our evaluator to
crash. See PR33140 and PR32864 for crashes that this was causing.
This reverts r305287, which reverted r305239, which reverted r301742. The
previous revert claimed that buildbots were broken, but did not add any
testcases and the buildbots have lost all memory of what was wrong here.
Changes to test/OpenMP are not reverted; another change has triggered those
tests to change their output in the same way that r301742 did.
llvm-svn: 306346
This reverts commit r306137. It has problems on code like this:
struct __declspec(dllimport) Foo {
int a;
int get_a() { return a; }
};
template <int (Foo::*Getter)()> struct HasValue {
int operator()(Foo *p) { return (p->*Getter)(); }
};
int main() {
Foo f;
f.a = 3;
int x = HasValue<&Foo::get_a>()(&f);
}
llvm-svn: 306175
We were already applying the same rules to dllimport function pointers.
David Majnemer added that logic back in r211677 to fix PR20130. We
failed to extend that logic to non-virtual member function pointers,
which are basically function pointers in a struct with some extra
offsets.
Fixes PR33570.
llvm-svn: 306137
We were leaving the SubobjectDesignator in a surprising situation, where
it was allegedly valid but didn't actually refer to a type. This caused
a crash later on.
This patch fills out the SubobjectDesignator with the pointee type (as
happens in other evaluations of constant pointers) so that we don't
crash later.
llvm-svn: 303957
handling of constexprs with unknown bounds.
This triggers a corner case of the language where it's not yet clear
whether this should be an error:
struct A {
static void *const a[];
static void *const b[];
};
constexpr void *A::a[] = {&b[0]};
constexpr void *A::b[] = {&a[0]};
When discovering the initializer for A::a, the bounds of A::b aren't known yet.
It is unclear whether warning about errors should be deferred until the end of
the translation unit, possibly resolving errors that can be resolved. In
practice, the compiler can know the bounds of all arrays in this example.
Credits for reproducers and explanation go to Richard Smith. Richard, please
add more info in case my explanation is wrong.
llvm-svn: 301963
The fix is that ExprEvaluatorBase::VisitInitListExpr should handle transparent exprs instead of exprs with one element. Fixing that uncovers one testcase failure because the AST for "constexpr _Complex float test2 = {1};" is wrong (the _Complex prvalue should not be const-qualified), and a number of test failures in test/OpenMP where the captured stmt contains an InitListExpr that is in syntactic form.
llvm-svn: 301891
Do not spuriously reject constexpr functions that access elements of an array
of unknown bound; this may later become valid once the bound is known. Permit
array-to-pointer decay on such arrays, but disallow pointer arithmetic (since
we do not know whether it will have defined behavior).
The standard is not clear on how this should work, but this seems to be a
decent answer.
Patch by Robert Haberlach!
llvm-svn: 301822
CheckForIntOverflow used to implement a whitelist of top-level expressions to
send to the constant expression evaluator, which handled many more expressions
than the CheckForIntOverflow whitelist did.
llvm-svn: 301742
A boxed expression evaluates its subexpr and then calls an objc method to transform it into another value with pointer type. The objc method can never be constexpr and therefore this expression can never be evaluated. Fixes a miscompile boxing expressions with side-effects.
Also make ObjCBoxedExpr handling a normal part of the expression evaluator instead of being the only case besides full-expression where we check for integer overflow.
llvm-svn: 301721
This patch honors the unaligned type qualifier (currently available through he
keyword __unaligned and -fms-extensions) in CodeGen. In the current form the
patch affects declarations and expressions. It does not affect fields of
classes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30166
llvm-svn: 297276
Summary:
The changes contained in this patch are:
1. Defines a new AST node `CoawaitDependentExpr` for representing co_await expressions while the promise type is still dependent.
2. Correctly detect and transform the 'co_await' operand to `p.await_transform(<expr>)` when possible.
3. Change the initial/final suspend points to build during the initial parse, so they have the correct operator co_await lookup results.
4. Fix transformation of the CoroutineBodyStmt so that it doesn't re-build the final/initial suspends.
@rsmith: This change is a little big, but it's not trivial for me to split it up. Please let me know if you would prefer this submitted as multiple patches.
Reviewers: rsmith, GorNishanov
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: ABataev, rsmith, mehdi_amini, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26057
llvm-svn: 297093
This is necessary in order for the evaluation of an _Atomic initializer for
those types to have an associated object, which an initializer for class or
array type needs.
llvm-svn: 295886
Removed ndrange_t as Clang builtin type and added
as a struct type in the OpenCL header.
Use type name to do the Sema checking in enqueue_kernel
and modify IR generation accordingly.
Review: D28058
Patch by Dmitry Borisenkov!
llvm-svn: 295311
Enable evaluation of captures within constexpr lambdas by using a strategy similar to that used in CodeGen:
- when starting evaluation of a lambda's call operator, create a map from VarDecl's to a closure's FieldDecls
- every time a VarDecl (or '*this) that represents a capture is encountered while evaluating the expression via the expression evaluator (specifically the LValueEvaluator) in ExprConstant.cpp - it is replaced by the corresponding FieldDecl LValue (an Lvalue-to-Rvalue conversion on this LValue representation then determines the right rvalue when needed).
Thanks to Richard Smith and Hubert Tong for their review and feedback!
https://reviews.llvm.org/D29748
llvm-svn: 295279
What we want to actually control this behavior is something more local
than an EvalutationMode. Please see the linked revision for more
discussion on why/etc.
This fixes PR31843.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29469
llvm-svn: 294800
This fixes an assertion failure that occurs later in the function when
an ObjCEncodeExpr is cast to StringLiteral.
rdar://problem/30111207
llvm-svn: 293596
Don't try to map an APSInt addend to an int64_t in pointer arithmetic before
bounds-checking it. This gives more consistent behavior (outside C++11, we
consistently use 2s complement semantics for both pointer and integer overflow
in constant expressions) and fixes some cases where in C++11 we would fail to
properly check for out-of-bounds pointer arithmetic (if the 2s complement
64-bit overflow landed us back in-bounds).
In passing, also fix some cases where we'd perform possibly-overflowing
arithmetic on CharUnits (which have a signed underlying type) during constant
expression evaluation.
llvm-svn: 293595
This fixes various ways to tickle an assertion in constant expression
evaluation when using __int128. Longer term, we need to figure out what should
happen here: either any kind of overflow in offset calculation should result in
a non-constant value or we should truncate to 64 bits. In C++11 onwards, we're
effectively already checking for overflow because we strictly enforce array
bounds checks, but even there some forms of overflow can slip past undetected.
llvm-svn: 293568
This change adds a new type node, DeducedTemplateSpecializationType, to
represent a type template name that has been used as a type. This is modeled
around AutoType, and shares a common base class for representing a deduced
placeholder type.
We allow deduced class template types in a few more places than the standard
does: in conditions and for-range-declarators, and in new-type-ids. This is
consistent with GCC and with discussion on the core reflector. This patch
does not yet support deduced class template types being named in typename
specifiers.
llvm-svn: 293207
by providing a memchr builtin that returns char* instead of void*.
Also add a __has_feature flag to indicate the presence of constexpr forms of
the relevant <string> functions.
llvm-svn: 292555
Summary:
Per https://wg21.link/CWG1677, the C++11 standard did not clarify that constant
initialization of an object allowed constexpr brace-or-equal initialization of
subobjects:
struct foo_t { union { int i; volatile int j; } u; };
__attribute__((__require_constant_initialization__))
static const foo_t x = {{0}};
Because foo_t::u has a volatile member, the initializer for x fails. However,
there is really no good reason, because this:
union foo_u { int i; volatile int j; };
__attribute__((__require_constant_initialization__))
static const foo_u x = {0};
does have a constant initializer.
(This was triggered by musl's pthread_mutex_t type when building under C++11.)
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: EricWF, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28427
llvm-svn: 291480
`diagnose_if` can be used to have clang emit either warnings or errors
for function calls that meet user-specified conditions. For example:
```
constexpr int foo(int a)
__attribute__((diagnose_if(a > 10, "configurations with a > 10 are "
"expensive.", "warning")));
int f1 = foo(9);
int f2 = foo(10); // warning: configuration with a > 10 are expensive.
int f3 = foo(f2);
```
It currently only emits diagnostics in cases where the condition is
guaranteed to always be true. So, the following code will emit no
warnings:
```
constexpr int bar(int a) {
foo(a);
return 0;
}
constexpr int i = bar(10);
```
We hope to support optionally emitting diagnostics for cases like that
(and emitting runtime checks) in the future.
Release notes will appear shortly. :)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27424
llvm-svn: 291418
Add a visitor for lambda expressions to RecordExprEvaluator in ExprConstant.cpp that creates an empty APValue of Struct type to represent the closure object. Additionally, add a LambdaExpr visitor to the TemporaryExprEvaluator that forwards constant evaluation of immediately-called-lambda-expressions to the one in RecordExprEvaluator through VisitConstructExpr.
This patch supports:
constexpr auto ID = [] (auto a) { return a; };
static_assert(ID(3.14) == 3.14);
static_assert([](auto a) { return a + 1; }(10) == 11);
Lambda captures are still not supported for constexpr lambdas.
llvm-svn: 291416
This patch has been sitting in review hell since july 2016 and our lack of constexpr lambda support is getting embarrassing (given that I've had a branch that implements the feature (modulo *this capture) for over a year. While in Issaquah I was enjoying shamelessly trying to convince folks of the lie that this was Richard's fault ;) I won't be able to do so in Kona since I won't be attending - so I'm going to aim to have this feature be implemented by then.
I'm quite confident of the approach in this patch, which simply maps the static-invoker 'thunk' back to the corresponding call-operator (specialization).
Thanks!
llvm-svn: 291397
This is a recommit of r290149, which was reverted in r290169 due to msan
failures. msan was failing because we were calling
`isMostDerivedAnUnsizedArray` on an invalid designator, which caused us
to read uninitialized memory. To fix this, the logic of the caller of
said function was simplified, and we now have a `!Invalid` assert in
`isMostDerivedAnUnsizedArray`, so we can catch this particular bug more
easily in the future.
Fingers crossed that this patch sticks this time. :)
Original commit message:
This patch does three things:
- Gives us the alloc_size attribute in clang, which lets us infer the
number of bytes handed back to us by malloc/realloc/calloc/any user
functions that act in a similar manner.
- Teaches our constexpr evaluator that evaluating some `const` variables
is OK sometimes. This is why we have a change in
test/SemaCXX/constant-expression-cxx11.cpp and other seemingly
unrelated tests. Richard Smith okay'ed this idea some time ago in
person.
- Uniques some Blocks in CodeGen, which was reviewed separately at
D26410. Lack of uniquing only really shows up as a problem when
combined with our new eagerness in the face of const.
llvm-svn: 290297
This reverts commit r290171. It triggers a bunch of warnings, because
the new enumerator isn't handled in all switches. We want a warning-free
build.
Replied on the commit with more details.
llvm-svn: 290173
Summary: Enabling the compression of CLK_NULL_QUEUE to variable of type queue_t.
Reviewers: Anastasia
Subscribers: cfe-commits, yaxunl, bader
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27569
llvm-svn: 290171
This commit fails MSan when running test/CodeGen/object-size.c in
a confusing way. After some discussion with George, it isn't really
clear what is going on here. We can make the MSan failure go away by
testing for the invalid bit, but *why* things are invalid isn't clear.
And yet, other code in the surrounding area is doing precisely this and
testing for invalid.
George is going to take a closer look at this to better understand the
nature of the failure and recommit it, for now backing it out to clean
up MSan builds.
llvm-svn: 290169
This patch does three things:
- Gives us the alloc_size attribute in clang, which lets us infer the
number of bytes handed back to us by malloc/realloc/calloc/any user
functions that act in a similar manner.
- Teaches our constexpr evaluator that evaluating some `const` variables
is OK sometimes. This is why we have a change in
test/SemaCXX/constant-expression-cxx11.cpp and other seemingly
unrelated tests. Richard Smith okay'ed this idea some time ago in
person.
- Uniques some Blocks in CodeGen, which was reviewed separately at
D26410. Lack of uniquing only really shows up as a problem when
combined with our new eagerness in the face of const.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D14274
llvm-svn: 290149
At least the plugin used by the LibreOffice build
(<https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/Clang_plugins>) indirectly
uses those members (through inline functions in LLVM/Clang include files in turn
using them), but they are not exported by utils/extract_symbols.py on Windows,
and accessing data across DLL/EXE boundaries on Windows is generally
problematic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26671
llvm-svn: 289647
32-bit MSVC doesn't provide more than 4 byte stack alignment by default.
This conflicts with PointerUnion's attempt to make assertions about
alignment. This fixes the problem by explicitly asking the compiler for
8 byte alignment.
llvm-svn: 289575
initialization of each array element:
* ArrayInitLoopExpr is a prvalue of array type with two subexpressions:
a common expression (an OpaqueValueExpr) that represents the up-front
computation of the source of the initialization, and a subexpression
representing a per-element initializer
* ArrayInitIndexExpr is a prvalue of type size_t representing the current
position in the loop
This will be used to replace the creation of explicit index variables in lambda
capture of arrays and copy/move construction of classes with array elements,
and also C++17 structured bindings of arrays by value (which inexplicably allow
copying an array by value, unlike all of C++'s other array declarations).
No uses of these nodes are introduced by this change, however.
llvm-svn: 289413
In amdgcn target, null pointers in global, constant, and generic address space take value 0 but null pointers in private and local address space take value -1. Currently LLVM assumes all null pointers take value 0, which results in incorrectly translated IR. To workaround this issue, instead of emit null pointers in local and private address space, a null pointer in generic address space is emitted and casted to local and private address space.
Tentative definition of global variables with non-zero initializer will have weak linkage instead of common linkage since common linkage requires zero initializer and does not have explicit section to hold the non-zero value.
Virtual member functions getNullPointer and performAddrSpaceCast are added to TargetCodeGenInfo which by default returns ConstantPointerNull and emitting addrspacecast instruction. A virtual member function getNullPointerValue is added to TargetInfo which by default returns 0. Each target can override these virtual functions to get target specific null pointer and the null pointer value for specific address space, and perform specific translations for addrspacecast.
Wrapper functions getNullPointer is added to CodegenModule and getTargetNullPointerValue is added to ASTContext to facilitate getting the target specific null pointers and their values.
This change has no effect on other targets except amdgcn target. Other targets can provide support of non-zero null pointer in a similar way.
This change only provides support for non-zero null pointer for C and OpenCL. Supporting for other languages will be added later incrementally.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26196
llvm-svn: 289252
mirror the description in the standard. Per DR1295, this means that binding a
const / rvalue reference to a bit-field no longer "binds directly", and per
P0135R1, this means that we materialize a temporary in reference binding
after adjusting cv-qualifiers and before performing a derived-to-base cast.
In C++11 onwards, this should have fixed the last case where we would
materialize a temporary of the wrong type (with a subobject adjustment inside
the MaterializeTemporaryExpr instead of outside), but we still have to deal
with that possibility in C++98, unless we want to start using xvalues to
represent materialized temporaries there too.
llvm-svn: 289250
When an object of class type is initialized from a prvalue of the same type
(ignoring cv qualifications), use the prvalue to initialize the object directly
instead of inserting a redundant elidable call to a copy constructor.
llvm-svn: 288866
latter case, a temporary array object is materialized, and can be
lifetime-extended by binding a reference to the member access. Likewise, in an
array-to-pointer decay, an rvalue array is materialized before being converted
into a pointer.
This caused IR generation to stop treating file-scope array compound literals
as having static storage duration in some cases in C++; that has been rectified
by modeling such a compound literal as an lvalue. This also improves clang's
compatibility with GCC for those cases.
llvm-svn: 288654
common case of a call to a non-builtin, particularly for unoptimized ASan
builds (where the per-variable stack usage can be quite high).
llvm-svn: 287066
Only look for a variable's value in the constant expression evaluation activation frame, if the variable was indeed declared in that frame, otherwise it might be a constant expression and be usable within a nested local scope or emit an error.
void f(char c) {
struct X {
static constexpr char f() {
return c; // error gracefully here as opposed to crashing.
}
};
int I = X::f();
}
llvm-svn: 286748
The struct CallStackFrame is in lib/AST/ExprConstant.cpp
inside anonymous namespace.
This diff reorders the fields and removes excessive padding.
Test plan: make -j8 check-clang
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23901
llvm-svn: 281907
This patch makes us act more conservatively when trying to determine
the objectsize for an array at the end of an object. This is in
response to code like the following:
```
struct sockaddr {
/* snip */
char sa_data[14];
};
void foo(const char *s) {
size_t slen = strlen(s) + 1;
size_t added_len = slen <= 14 ? 0 : slen - 14;
struct sockaddr *sa = malloc(sizeof(struct sockaddr) + added_len);
strcpy(sa->sa_data, s);
// ...
}
```
`__builtin_object_size(sa->sa_data, 1)` would return 14, when there
could be more than 14 bytes at `sa->sa_data`.
Code like this is apparently not uncommon. FreeBSD's manual even
explicitly mentions this pattern:
https://www.freebsd.org/doc/en/books/developers-handbook/sockets-essential-functions.html
(section 7.5.1.1.2).
In light of this, we now just give up on any array at the end of an
object if we can't find the object's initial allocation.
I lack numbers for how much more conservative we actually become as a
result of this change, so I chose the fix that would make us as
compatible with GCC as possible. If we want to be more aggressive, I'm
happy to consider some kind of whitelist or something instead.
llvm-svn: 281277
tuple-like decomposition declaration. This significantly simplifies the
semantics of BindingDecls for AST consumers (they can now always be evalated
at the point of use).
llvm-svn: 278640
Currently Clang use int32 to represent sampler_t, which have been a source of issue for some backends, because in some backends sampler_t cannot be represented by int32. They have to depend on kernel argument metadata and use IPA to find the sampler arguments and global variables and transform them to target specific sampler type.
This patch uses opaque pointer type opencl.sampler_t* for sampler_t. For each use of file-scope sampler variable, it generates a function call of __translate_sampler_initializer. For each initialization of function-scope sampler variable, it generates a function call of __translate_sampler_initializer.
Each builtin library can implement its own __translate_sampler_initializer(). Since the real sampler type tends to be architecture dependent, allowing it to be initialized by a library function simplifies backend design. A typical implementation of __translate_sampler_initializer could be a table lookup of real sampler literal values. Since its argument is always a literal, the returned pointer is known at compile time and easily optimized to finally become some literal values directly put into image read instructions.
This patch is partially based on Alexey Sotkin's work in Khronos Clang (3d4eec6162).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21567
llvm-svn: 277024
This patch adds a new AST node: ObjCAvailabilityCheckExpr, and teaches the
Parser and Sema to generate it. This node represents an availability check of
the form:
@available(macos 10.10, *);
Which will eventually compile to a runtime check of the host's OS version. This
is the first patch of the feature I proposed here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2016-July/049851.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22171
llvm-svn: 275654
Currently, we have CCEDiags (C++11 core constant expression diags) and Fold failure diagnostics [I don't claim to yet fully understand exactly why we need the difference]. This patch explicitly replaces Info.Diag (whose use always represents a fold failure diag within the file) with Info.FFDiag. This makes it more easily greppable in the file, and just like the name Info.CCEDiag, it gives the reader slight further insight into the nature of the diagnostic (as opposed to Info.Diag).
This patch is a preliminary refactoring step in an effort to allow support for compatibility-warnings and extensions (such as constexpr lambda) during constant expression evaluation.
All regressions pass.
llvm-svn: 274454
Replace inheriting constructors implementation with new approach, voted into
C++ last year as a DR against C++11.
Instead of synthesizing a set of derived class constructors for each inherited
base class constructor, we make the constructors of the base class visible to
constructor lookup in the derived class, using the normal rules for
using-declarations.
For constructors, UsingShadowDecl now has a ConstructorUsingShadowDecl derived
class that tracks the requisite additional information. We create shadow
constructors (not found by name lookup) in the derived class to model the
actual initialization, and have a new expression node,
CXXInheritedCtorInitExpr, to model the initialization of a base class from such
a constructor. (This initialization is special because it performs real perfect
forwarding of arguments.)
In cases where argument forwarding is not possible (for inalloca calls,
variadic calls, and calls with callee parameter cleanup), the shadow inheriting
constructor is not emitted and instead we directly emit the initialization code
into the caller of the inherited constructor.
Note that this new model is not perfectly compatible with the old model in some
corner cases. In particular:
* if B inherits a private constructor from A, and C uses that constructor to
construct a B, then we previously required that A befriends B and B
befriends C, but the new rules require A to befriend C directly, and
* if a derived class has its own constructors (and so its implicit default
constructor is suppressed), it may still inherit a default constructor from
a base class
llvm-svn: 274049
This fixes a crash in code like:
```
struct A {
struct B b;
char c[1];
}
int foo(struct A* a) { return __builtin_object_size(a->c, 0); }
```
We wouldn't check whether the structs we were examining were invalid,
and getting the layout of an invalid struct is (unsurprisingly) A Bad
Thing. With this patch, we'll always return conservatively if we see an
invalid struct, since I'm assuming the presence of an invalid struct
means that our compilation failed (so having a conservative result isn't
such a big deal).
llvm-svn: 273911
Summary:
OpenCL should support array with const value size length, those const
varibale in global and constant address space and variable in constant
address space.
Fixed test case error.
Reviewers: Anastasia, yaxunl, bader
Subscribers: bader, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20090
llvm-svn: 271978
Summary:
OpenCL should support array with const value size length, those const varibale in global and constant address space and variable in constant address space.
Reviewers: Anastasia, yaxunl, bader
Subscribers: bader, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20090
llvm-svn: 271971
We would attempt to evaluate the sizeof a dependent type to check for an
integral overflow. However, because the dependent type is not yet resolved, we
cannot determine if the expression would overflow. Report a failure to perform
a symbolic evaluation of a constant involving the dependent type.
llvm-svn: 271762
r270781 introduced the ability to track whether or not we might have
had unmodeled side-effects during constant expression evaluation. This
patch makes the constexpr evaluator use that tracking.
Reviewed as a part of D18540.
llvm-svn: 270784
Currently, the constexpr evaluator is very conservative about unmodeled
side-effects when we're evaluating an expression in a mode that allows
such side-effects.
This patch makes us note when we might have actually encountered an
unmodeled side-effect, which allows us to be more accurate when we know
an unmodeled side-effect couldn't have occurred.
This patch has been split into two commits; this one primarily
introduces the bits necessary to track whether we might have potentially
hit such a side-effect. The one that actually does the tracking (which
boils down to more or less a rename of keepEvaluatingAfterFailure to
noteFailure) is coming soon.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18540
llvm-svn: 270781
const' variable. That variable might be defined as 'constexpr', so we cannot
prove that a use of it could never be a constant expression.
llvm-svn: 270774
Restructure the implict floating point to integer conversions so that
interesting sub-groups are under different flags. Breakdown of warnings:
No warning:
Exact conversions from floating point to integer:
int x = 10.0;
int x = 1e10;
-Wliteral-conversion - Floating point literal to integer with rounding:
int x = 5.5;
int x = -3.4;
-Wfloat-conversion - All conversions not covered by the above two:
int x = GetFloat();
int x = 5.5 + 3.5;
-Wfloat-zero-conversion - The expression converted has a non-zero floating
point value that gets converted to a zero integer value, excluded the cases
falling under -Wliteral-conversion. Subset of -Wfloat-conversion.
int x = 1.0 / 2.0;
-Wfloat-overflow-conversion - The floating point value is outside the range
of the integer type, exluding cases from -Wliteral conversion. Subset of
-Wfloat-conversion.
char x = 500;
char x = -1000;
-Wfloat-bool-conversion - Any conversion of a floating point type to bool.
Subset of -Wfloat-conversion.
if (GetFloat()) {}
bool x = 5.0;
-Wfloat-bool-constant-conversion - Conversion of a compile time evaluatable
floating point value to bool. Subset of -Wfloat-bool-conversion.
bool x = 1.0;
bool x = 4.0 / 20.0;
Also add EvaluateAsFloat to Sema, which is similar to EvaluateAsInt, but for
floating point values.
llvm-svn: 267054
Putting OpenCLImageTypes.def to clangAST library violates layering requirement: "It's not OK for a Basic/ header to include an AST/ header".
This fixes the modules build.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18954
Reviewers: Richard Smith, Vassil Vassilev.
llvm-svn: 266180
I. Current implementation of images is not conformant to spec in the following points:
1. It makes no distinction with respect to access qualifiers and therefore allows to use images with different access type interchangeably. The following code would compile just fine:
void write_image(write_only image2d_t img);
kernel void foo(read_only image2d_t img) { write_image(img); } // Accepted code
which is disallowed according to s6.13.14.
2. It discards access qualifier on generated code, which leads to generated code for the above example:
call void @write_image(%opencl.image2d_t* %img);
In OpenCL2.0 however we can have different calls into write_image with read_only and wite_only images.
Also generally following compiler steps have no easy way to take different path depending on the image access: linking to the right implementation of image types, performing IR opts and backend codegen differently.
3. Image types are language keywords and can't be redeclared s6.1.9, which can happen currently as they are just typedef names.
4. Default access qualifier read_only is to be added if not provided explicitly.
II. This patch corrects the above points as follows:
1. All images are encapsulated into a separate .def file that is inserted in different points where image handling is required. This avoid a lot of code repetition as all images are handled the same way in the code with no distinction of their exact type.
2. The Cartesian product of image types and image access qualifiers is added to the builtin types. This simplifies a lot handling of access type mismatch as no operations are allowed by default on distinct Builtin types. Also spec intended access qualifier as special type qualifier that are combined with an image type to form a distinct type (see statement above - images can't be created w/o access qualifiers).
3. Improves testing of images in Clang.
Author: Anastasia Stulova
Reviewers: bader, mgrang.
Subscribers: pxli168, pekka.jaaskelainen, yaxunl.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17821
llvm-svn: 265783
Support the constexpr specifier on lambda expressions - and support its inference from the lambda call operator's body.
i.e.
auto L = [] () constexpr { return 5; };
static_assert(L() == 5); // OK
auto Implicit = [] (auto a) { return a; };
static_assert(Implicit(5) == 5);
We do not support evaluation of lambda's within constant expressions just yet.
Implementation Strategy:
- teach ParseLambdaExpressionAfterIntroducer to expect a constexpr specifier and mark the invented function call operator's declarator's decl-specifier with it; Have it emit fixits for multiple decl-specifiers (mutable or constexpr) in this location.
- for cases where constexpr is not explicitly specified, have buildLambdaExpr check whether the invented function call operator satisfies the requirements of a constexpr function, by calling CheckConstexprFunctionDecl/Body.
Much obliged to Richard Smith for his patience and his care, in ensuring the code is clang-worthy.
llvm-svn: 264513
A member expression's base doesn't always have an impact on what the
member decl would evaluate to. In such a case, the base is used as a
poor man's scope qualifier.
This fixes PR26738.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17619
llvm-svn: 261975
This patch fixes the following bugs in __builtin_classify_type implementation:
1) Support for member functions and fields
2) Same behavior as GCC in C mode (specifically, return integer_type_class for
enums and pointer_type_class for function pointers and arrays). Behavior in
C++ mode didn't changed.
Also, it refactors the whole implementation, by replacing a sequence of
if-else-if with a couple of switches.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16846
llvm-svn: 260881
Fix a crash while parsing this code:
struct X {
friend constexpr int foo(X*) { return 12; }
static constexpr int j = foo(static_cast<X*>(nullptr));
};
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16973
llvm-svn: 260675
In {CG,}ExprConstant.cpp, we weren't treating vector splats properly.
This patch makes us treat splats more properly.
Additionally, this patch adds a new cast kind which allows a bool->int
cast to result in -1 or 0, instead of 1 or 0 (for true and false,
respectively), so we can sanely model OpenCL bool->int casts in the AST.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14877
llvm-svn: 257559
variables in C, in the cases where we can constant-fold it to a value
regardless (such as floating-point division by zero and signed integer
overflow). Strictly enforcing this rule breaks too much code.
llvm-svn: 254992
to treat as an ICE results in undefined behavior. Instead, return the "natural"
result of the operation (signed wraparound / inf / nan).
llvm-svn: 254699
side-effect, so that we don't allow speculative evaluation of such expressions
during code generation.
This caused a diagnostic quality regression, so fix constant expression
diagnostics to prefer either the first "can't be constant folded" diagnostic or
the first "not a constant expression" diagnostic depending on the kind of
evaluation we're doing. This was always the intent, but didn't quite work
correctly before.
This results in certain initializers that used to be constant initializers to
no longer be; in particular, things like:
float f = 1e100;
are no longer accepted in C. This seems appropriate, as such constructs would
lead to code being executed if sanitizers are enabled.
llvm-svn: 254574
`pass_object_size` is our way of enabling `__builtin_object_size` to
produce high quality results without requiring inlining to happen
everywhere.
A link to the design doc for this attribute is available at the
Differential review link below.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13263
llvm-svn: 254554
MSVC supports 'property' attribute and allows to apply it to the declaration of an empty array in a class or structure definition.
For example:
```
__declspec(property(get=GetX, put=PutX)) int x[];
```
The above statement indicates that x[] can be used with one or more array indices. In this case, i=p->x[a][b] will be turned into i=p->GetX(a, b), and p->x[a][b] = i will be turned into p->PutX(a, b, i);
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13336
llvm-svn: 254067
r246877 made __builtin_object_size substantially more aggressive with
unknown bases if Type=1 or Type=3, which causes issues when we encounter
code like this:
struct Foo {
int a;
char str[1];
};
const char str[] = "Hello, World!";
struct Foo *f = (struct Foo *)malloc(sizeof(*f) + strlen(str));
strcpy(&f->str, str);
__builtin_object_size(&f->str, 1) would hand back 1, which is
technically correct given the type of Foo, but the type of Foo lies to
us about how many bytes are available in this case.
This patch adds support for this "writing off the end" idiom -- we now
answer conservatively when we're given the address of the very last
member in a struct.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12169
llvm-svn: 250488
The root cause here is that ObjCSelectorExpr is an rvalue, yet it can have its
address taken. That's kind of awkward, but fixing this is awkward in other
ways, see https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24774#c16 . For now, just
fix the crash.
llvm-svn: 247740
Apparently there are many cast kinds that may cause implicit pointer
arithmetic to happen. In light of this, the cast ignoring logic
introduced in r246877 has been changed to only ignore a small set of
cast kinds, and a test for this behavior has been added.
Thanks to Richard for catching this before it became a bug report. :)
llvm-svn: 246890
Improvements:
- For all types, we would give up in a case such as:
__builtin_object_size((char*)&foo, N);
even if we could provide an answer to
__builtin_object_size(&foo, N);
We now provide the same answer for both of the above examples in all
cases.
- For type=1|3, we now support subobjects with unknown bases, as long
as the designator is valid.
Thanks to Richard Smith for the review + design planning.
Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12169
llvm-svn: 246877
We cannot tell if an object is past-the-end if its type is incomplete.
Zero sized objects satisfy past-the-end criteria and our object might
turn out to be such an object.
This fixes PR24622.
llvm-svn: 246359
Adds parsing/sema analysis/serialization/deserialization for array sections in OpenMP constructs (introduced in OpenMP 4.0).
Currently it is allowed to use array sections only in OpenMP clauses that accepts list of expressions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10732
llvm-svn: 245937
__builtin_object_size would return incorrect answers for many uses where
type=3. This fixes the inaccuracy by making us emit 0 instead of LLVM's
objectsize intrinsic.
Additionally, there are many cases where we would emit suboptimal (but
correct) answers, such as when arrays are involved. This patch fixes
some of these cases (please see new tests in test/CodeGen/object-size.c
for specifics on which cases are improved)
Resubmit of r245323 with PR24493 fixed.
Patch mostly by Richard Smith.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12000
This fixes PR15212.
llvm-svn: 245403
__builtin_object_size would return incorrect answers for many uses where
type=3. This fixes the inaccuracy by making us emit 0 instead of LLVM's
objectsize intrinsic.
Additionally, there are many cases where we would emit suboptimal (but
correct) answers, such as when arrays are involved. This patch fixes
some of these cases (please see new tests in test/CodeGen/object-size.c
for specifics on which cases are improved)
Patch mostly by Richard Smith.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12000
This fixes PR15212.
llvm-svn: 245323
The patch is generated using this command:
$ tools/extra/clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py -fix \
-checks=-*,llvm-namespace-comment -header-filter='llvm/.*|clang/.*' \
work/llvm/tools/clang
To reduce churn, not touching namespaces spanning less than 10 lines.
llvm-svn: 240270
Based on previous discussion on the mailing list, clang currently lacks support
for C99 partial re-initialization behavior:
Reference: http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-dev/2013-April/029188.html
Reference: http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/dr_253.htm
This patch attempts to fix this problem.
Given the following code snippet,
struct P1 { char x[6]; };
struct LP1 { struct P1 p1; };
struct LP1 l = { .p1 = { "foo" }, .p1.x[2] = 'x' };
// this example is adapted from the example for "struct fred x[]" in DR-253;
// currently clang produces in l: { "\0\0x" },
// whereas gcc 4.8 produces { "fox" };
// with this fix, clang will also produce: { "fox" };
Differential Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5789
llvm-svn: 239446
Currently, the NaN values emitted for MIPS architectures do not cover
non-IEEE754-2008 compliant case. This change fixes the issue.
Patch by Vladimir Radosavljevic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7882
llvm-svn: 230653
When visiting AssignmentOps, keep evaluating after a failure (when possible) in
order to identify overflow in subexpressions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D1238
llvm-svn: 228202
Comparing the address of an object with an incomplete type might return
true with a 'distinct' object if the former has a size of zero.
However, such an object should compare unequal with null.
llvm-svn: 224040
OpenCL v2.0 s6.5.5 restricts conversion of pointers to different address spaces:
- the named address spaces (__global, __local, and __private) => __generic - implicitly converted;
- __generic => named - with an explicit cast;
- named <=> named - disallowed;
- __constant <=> any other - disallowed.
llvm-svn: 222834
This is a new form of expression of the form:
(expr op ... op expr)
where one of the exprs is a parameter pack. It expands into
(expr1 op (expr2onwards op ... op expr))
(and likewise if the pack is on the right). The non-pack operand can be
omitted; in that case, an empty pack gives a fallback value or an error,
depending on the operator.
llvm-svn: 221573
complete object to a pointer to the start of another complete object does
not evaluate to the constant 'false'. All other comparisons between the
addresses of subobjects of distinct complete objects still do.
llvm-svn: 220343
and !=) to support mixed complex and real operand types.
This requires removing an assert from SemaChecking, and adding support
both to the constant evaluator and the code generator to synthesize the
imaginary part when needed. This seemed somewhat cleaner than having
just the comparison operators force real-to-complex conversions.
I've added test cases for these operations. I'm really terrified that
there were *no* tests in-tree which exercised this.
This turned up when trying to build R after my change to the complex
type lowering.
llvm-svn: 219570
operators where one type is a C complex type, and to emit both the
efficient and correct implementation for complex arithmetic according to
C11 Annex G using this extra information.
For both multiply and divide the old code was writing a long-hand
reduced version of the math without any of the special handling of inf
and NaN recommended by the standard here. Instead of putting more
complexity here, this change does what GCC does which is to emit
a libcall for the fully general case.
However, the old code also failed to do the proper minimization of the
set of operations when there was a mixed complex and real operation. In
those cases, C provides a spec for much more minimal operations that are
valid. Clang now emits the exact suggested operations. This change isn't
*just* about performance though, without minimizing these operations, we
again lose the correct handling of infinities and NaNs. It is critical
that this happen in the frontend based on assymetric type operands to
complex math operations.
The performance implications of this change aren't trivial either. I've
run a set of benchmarks in Eigen, an open source mathematics library
that makes heavy use of complex. While a few have slowed down due to the
libcall being introduce, most sped up and some by a huge amount: up to
100% and 140%.
In order to make all of this work, also match the algorithm in the
constant evaluator to the one in the runtime library. Currently it is
a broken port of the simplifications from C's Annex G to the long-hand
formulation of the algorithm.
Splitting this patch up is very hard because none of this works without
the AST change to preserve non-complex operands. Sorry for the enormous
change.
Follow-up changes will include support for sinking the libcalls onto
cold paths in common cases and fastmath improvements to allow more
aggressive backend folding.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5698
llvm-svn: 219557
Assertion failed: "Computed __func__ length differs from type!"
Reworked PredefinedExpr representation with internal StringLiteral field for function declaration.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5365
llvm-svn: 219393
Richard noted in the review of r217349 that extra handling of
__builtin_assume_aligned inside of the expression evaluator was needed. He was
right, and this should address the concerns raised, namely:
1. The offset argument to __builtin_assume_aligned can have side effects, and
we need to make sure that all arguments are properly evaluated.
2. If the alignment assumption does not hold, that introduces undefined
behavior, and undefined behavior cannot appear inside a constexpr.
and hopefully the diagnostics produced are detailed enough to explain what is
going on.
llvm-svn: 218992
Adding handling of __builtin_assume_aligned to IntExprEvaluator does not make
sense because __builtin_assume_aligned returns a pointer (not an integer).
Thanks to Richard for figuring out why this was not doing anything.
I'll add this back in a better place (PointerExprEvaluator perhaps).
llvm-svn: 218958
constexpr function. Part of this fix is a tentative fix for an as-yet-unfiled
core issue (we're missing a prohibition against reading mutable members from
unions via a trivial constructor/assignment, since that doesn't perform an
lvalue-to-rvalue conversion on the members).
llvm-svn: 217852
This makes use of the recently-added @llvm.assume intrinsic to implement a
__builtin_assume(bool) intrinsic (to provide additional information to the
optimizer). This hooks up __assume in MS-compatibility mode to mirror
__builtin_assume (the semantics have been intentionally kept compatible), and
implements GCC's __builtin_assume_aligned as assume((p - o) & mask == 0). LLVM
now contains special logic to deal with assumptions of this form.
llvm-svn: 217349
Changes diagnostic options, language standard options, diagnostic identifiers, diagnostic wording to use c++14 instead of c++1y. It also modifies related test cases to use the updated diagnostic wording.
llvm-svn: 215982
or a class derived from T. We already supported this when initializing
_Atomic(T) from T for most (and maybe all) other reasonable values of T.
llvm-svn: 214390
The class seems to have an invariant that Entries is non-empty if
Invalid is false. It appears this method was previously private, and
all internal uses checked Invalid. Now there is an external caller, so
check Invalid to avoid array OOB underflow.
Fixes PR20420.
llvm-svn: 213816
This is a follow-up to an IRC conversation with Richard last night; __assume
does not evaluate its argument, and so the argument should not contribute to
whether (__assume(e), constant) can be used where a constant is required.
llvm-svn: 213267
This is a follow-up to David's r211677. For the following code,
we would end up referring to 'foo' in the initializer for 'arr',
and then fail to link, because 'foo' is dllimport and needs to be
accessed through the __imp_?foo.
__declspec(dllimport) extern const char foo[];
const char* f() {
static const char* const arr[] = { foo };
return arr[0];
}
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4299
llvm-svn: 211736
The C++ language requires that the address of a function be the same
across all translation units. To make __declspec(dllimport) useful,
this means that a dllimported function must also obey this rule. MSVC
implements this by dynamically querying the import address table located
in the linked executable. This means that the address of such a
function in C++ is not constant (which violates other rules).
However, the C language has no notion of ODR nor does it permit dynamic
initialization whatsoever. This requires implementations to _not_
dynamically query the import address table and instead utilize a wrapper
function that will be synthesized by the linker which will eventually
query the import address table. The effect this has is, to say the
least, perplexing.
Consider the following C program:
__declspec(dllimport) void f(void);
typedef void (*fp)(void);
static const fp var = &f;
const fp fun() { return &f; }
int main() { return fun() == var; }
MSVC will statically initialize "var" with the address of the wrapper
function and "fun" returns the address of the actual imported function.
This means that "main" will return false!
Note that LLVM's optimizers are strong enough to figure out that "main"
should return true. However, this result is dependent on having
optimizations enabled!
N.B. This change also permits the usage of dllimport declarators inside
of template arguments; they are sufficiently constant for such a
purpose. Add tests to make sure we don't regress here.
llvm-svn: 211677
The address of dllimport functions can be accessed one of two ways:
- Through the IAT which is symbolically referred to with a symbol
starting with __imp_.
- Via the wrapper-function which ends up calling through the __imp_
symbol.
The problem with using the wrapper-function is that it's address will
not compare as equal in all translation units. Specifically, it will
compare unequally with the translation unit which defines the function.
This fixes PR19955.
llvm-svn: 211570
The address of dllimport variables isn't something that can be
meaningfully used in a constexpr context and isn't suitable for
evaluation at load-time. They require loads from memory to properly
evaluate.
This fixes PR19955.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4250
llvm-svn: 211568
expression of array-of-unknown-bound type, don't try to complete the array
bound, and return the alignment of the element type rather than 1.
llvm-svn: 210608
Summary:
Gracefully fail to evaluate a constant expression if its type is
unknown, rather than failing an assertion trying to access the type.
Reviewers: klimek
Reviewed By: klimek
CC: chandlerc, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D3075
llvm-svn: 203950
initialized from a constant expression in C++98, it can be used in
constant expressions, even if it was brace-initialized. Patch by
Rahul Jain!
llvm-svn: 200098
A return type is the declared or deduced part of the function type specified in
the declaration.
A result type is the (potentially adjusted) type of the value of an expression
that calls the function.
Rule of thumb:
* Declarations have return types and parameters.
* Expressions have result types and arguments.
llvm-svn: 200082
Remove UnaryTypeTraitExpr and switch all remaining type trait related handling
over to TypeTraitExpr.
The UTT/BTT/TT enum prefix and evaluation code is retained pending further
cleanup.
This is part of the ongoing work to unify type traits following the removal of
BinaryTypeTraitExpr in r197273.
llvm-svn: 198271
There's nothing special about type traits accepting two arguments.
This commit eliminates BinaryTypeTraitExpr and switches all related handling
over to TypeTraitExpr.
Also fixes a CodeGen failure with variadic type traits appearing in a
non-constant expression.
The BTT/TT prefix and evaluation code is retained as-is for now but will soon
be further cleaned up.
This is part of the ongoing work to unify type traits.
llvm-svn: 197273
With the introduction of explicit address space casts into LLVM, there's
a need to provide a new cast kind the front-end can create for C/OpenCL/CUDA
and code to produce address space casts from those kinds when appropriate.
Patch by Michele Scandale!
llvm-svn: 197036
where we didn't. Extend our constant evaluation for __builtin_strlen to handle
any constant array of chars, not just string literals, to match.
llvm-svn: 194762
bit more robust against future changes. This includes a slight diagnostic
improvement: if we know we're only trying to form a constant expression, take
the first diagnostic which shows the expression is not a constant expression,
rather than preferring the first one which makes the expression unfoldable.
llvm-svn: 194098
LLVM supports applying conversion instructions to vectors of the same number of
elements (fptrunc, fptosi, etc.) but there had been no way for a Clang user to
cause such instructions to be generated when using builtin vector types.
C-style casting on vectors is already defined in terms of bitcasts, and so
cannot be used for these conversions as well (without leading to a very
confusing set of semantics). As a result, this adds a __builtin_convertvector
intrinsic (patterned after the OpenCL __builtin_astype intrinsic). This is
intended to aid the creation of vector intrinsic headers that create generic IR
instead of target-dependent intrinsics (in other words, this is a generic
_mm_cvtepi32_ps). As noted in the documentation, the action of
__builtin_convertvector is defined in terms of the action of a C-style cast on
each vector element.
llvm-svn: 190915
Like any other type, an init list for a vector can have the same type as
the vector itself; handle that case.
<rdar://problem/14990460>
llvm-svn: 190844
I changed the diagnostic printing code because it's probably better
to cut off a digit from DBL_MAX than to print something like
1.300000001 when the user wrote 1.3.
llvm-svn: 189625
This is the same way GenericSelectionExpr works, and it's generally a
more consistent approach.
A large part of this patch is devoted to caching the value of the condition
of a ChooseExpr; it's needed to avoid threading an ASTContext into
IgnoreParens().
Fixes <rdar://problem/14438917>.
llvm-svn: 186738
& operator (ignoring any overloaded operator& for the type). The purpose of
this builtin is for use in std::addressof, to allow it to be made constexpr;
the existing implementation technique (reinterpret_cast to some reference type,
take address, reinterpert_cast back) does not permit this because
reinterpret_cast between reference types is not permitted in a constant
expression in C++11 onwards.
llvm-svn: 186053
Introduce CXXStdInitializerListExpr node, representing the implicit
construction of a std::initializer_list<T> object from its underlying array.
The AST representation of such an expression goes from an InitListExpr with a
flag set, to a CXXStdInitializerListExpr containing a MaterializeTemporaryExpr
containing an InitListExpr (possibly wrapped in a CXXBindTemporaryExpr).
This more detailed representation has several advantages, the most important of
which is that the new MaterializeTemporaryExpr allows us to directly model
lifetime extension of the underlying temporary array. Using that, this patch
*drastically* simplifies the IR generation of this construct, provides IR
generation support for nested global initializer_list objects, fixes several
bugs where the destructors for the underlying array would accidentally not get
invoked, and provides constant expression evaluation support for
std::initializer_list objects.
llvm-svn: 183872
must be initialized by a constant expression (not just a core constant
expression), because we're going to emit it as a global. Core issue for this is
pending.
llvm-svn: 183388
handle temporaries which have been lifetime-extended to static storage duration
within constant expressions. This correctly handles nested lifetime extension
(through reference members of aggregates in aggregate initializers) but
non-constant-expression emission hasn't yet been updated to do the same.
llvm-svn: 183283
materialized temporary with the corresponding MaterializeTemporaryExpr. This is
groundwork for providing C++11's guaranteed static initialization for global
references bound to lifetime-extended temporaries (if the initialization is a
constant expression).
In passing, fix a couple of bugs where some evaluation failures didn't trigger
diagnostics, and a rejects-valid where potential constant expression testing
would assume that it knew the dynamic type of *this and would reject programs
which relied on it being some derived type.
llvm-svn: 183093
* Treat _Atomic(T) as a literal type if T is a literal type.
* Evaluate expressions of this type properly.
* Fix a lurking bug where we built completely bogus ASTs for converting to
_Atomic types in C++ in some cases, caught by the tests for this change.
llvm-svn: 182541
The most common (non-buggy) case are where such objects are used as
return expressions in bool-returning functions or as boolean function
arguments. In those cases I've used (& added if necessary) a named
function to provide the equivalent (or sometimes negative, depending on
convenient wording) test.
DiagnosticBuilder kept its implicit conversion operator owing to the
prevalent use of it in return statements.
One bug was found in ExprConstant.cpp involving a comparison of two
PointerUnions (PointerUnion did not previously have an operator==, so
instead both operands were converted to bool & then compared). A test
is included in test/SemaCXX/constant-expression-cxx1y.cpp for the fix
(adding operator== to PointerUnion in LLVM).
llvm-svn: 181869
inefficient; we perform a linear scan of switch labels to find the one matching
the condition, and then walk the body looking for that label. Both parts should
be straightforward to optimize.
llvm-svn: 181671
object x, x's subobjects can be constructed by constexpr constructor even if
they are of non-literal type, and can be read and written even though they're
not members of a constexpr object or temporary.
llvm-svn: 181506
temporary to an lvalue before taking its address. This removes a weird special
case from the AST representation, and allows the constant expression evaluator
to deal with it without (broken) hacks.
llvm-svn: 180866
statement in constexpr functions. Everything which doesn't require variable
mutation is also allowed as an extension in C++11. 'void' becomes a literal
type to support constexpr functions which return 'void'.
llvm-svn: 180022
Add a CXXDefaultInitExpr, analogous to CXXDefaultArgExpr, and use it both in
CXXCtorInitializers and in InitListExprs to represent a default initializer.
There's an additional complication here: because the default initializer can
refer to the initialized object via its 'this' pointer, we need to make sure
that 'this' points to the right thing within the evaluation.
llvm-svn: 179958
For this source:
const int &ref = someStruct.bitfield;
We used to generate this AST:
DeclStmt [...]
`-VarDecl [...] ref 'const int &'
`-MaterializeTemporaryExpr [...] 'const int' lvalue
`-ImplicitCastExpr [...] 'const int' lvalue <NoOp>
`-MemberExpr [...] 'int' lvalue bitfield .bitfield [...]
`-DeclRefExpr [...] 'struct X' lvalue ParmVar [...] 'someStruct' 'struct X'
Notice the lvalue inside the MaterializeTemporaryExpr, which is very
confusing (and caused an assertion to fire in the analyzer - PR15694).
We now generate this:
DeclStmt [...]
`-VarDecl [...] ref 'const int &'
`-MaterializeTemporaryExpr [...] 'const int' lvalue
`-ImplicitCastExpr [...] 'int' <LValueToRValue>
`-MemberExpr [...] 'int' lvalue bitfield .bitfield [...]
`-DeclRefExpr [...] 'struct X' lvalue ParmVar [...] 'someStruct' 'struct X'
Which makes a lot more sense. This allows us to remove code in both
CodeGen and AST that hacked around this special case.
The commit also makes Clang accept this (legal) C++11 code:
int &&ref = std::move(someStruct).bitfield
PR15694 / <rdar://problem/13600396>
llvm-svn: 179250
This change also makes the serialisation store the required semantics,
fixing an issue where PPC128 was always assumed when re-reading a
128-bit value.
llvm-svn: 173139
in case condition type. // rdar://11577384.
Test is conditionalized on x86_64-apple triple as
I am not sure if the INT_MAX/LONG_MAX values in the test
will pass this test for other hosts.
llvm-svn: 172016
with respect to the lower "left-hand-side bitwidth" bits, even when negative);
see OpenCL spec 6.3j. This patch both implements this behaviour in the code
generator and "constant folding" bits of Sema, and also prevents tests
to detect undefinedness in terms of the weaker C99 or C++ specifications
from being applied.
llvm-svn: 171755
GCC has always supported this on PowerPC and 4.8 supports it on all platforms,
so it's a good idea to expose it in clang too. LLVM supports this on all targets.
llvm-svn: 165362
(__builtin_* etc.) so that it isn't possible to take their address.
Specifically, introduce a new type to represent a reference to a builtin
function, and a new cast kind to convert it to a function pointer in the
operand of a call. Fixes PR13195.
llvm-svn: 162962
CheckLValueConstantExpression.
Richard pointed out that using the address of a TLS variable is ok in a
core C++11 constant expression, as long as it isn't part of the eventual
result of constant expression evaluation. Having the check in
CheckLValueConstantExpression accomplishes this.
llvm-svn: 162850
This makes Clang produce an error for code such as:
__thread int x;
int *p = &x;
The lvalue of a thread-local variable cannot be evaluated at compile
time.
llvm-svn: 162835
"castAs<...>->doSomething()". The analyzer was flagging these
as potential null dereferences, which is technically true. The
invariants appear to be that these casts should never fail, so
let's use castAs<> instead and avoid a runtime check.
llvm-svn: 162468
was mistakenly classifying dynamic_casts which might throw as having no side
effects.
Switch it from a visitor to a switch, so it is kept up-to-date as future Expr
nodes are added. Move it from ExprConstant.cpp to Expr.cpp, since it's not
really related to constant expression evaluation.
Since we use HasSideEffect to determine whether to emit an unused global with
internal linkage, this has the effect of suppressing emission of globals in
some cases.
I've left many of the Objective-C cases conservatively assuming that the
expression has side-effects. I'll leave it to someone with better knowledge
of Objective-C than mine to improve them.
llvm-svn: 161388
multidimensional array of class type. Also, preserve zero-initialization when
evaluating an initializer list for an array, in case the initializers refer to
later elements (which have preceding zero-initialization).
llvm-svn: 159904
constexpr function evaluation, and corresponding ASan / valgrind issue in
tests, by storing the corresponding value with the relevant stack frame. This
also prevents re-evaluation of the source of the underlying OpaqueValueExpr,
which makes a major performance difference for certain contrived code (see
testcase update).
llvm-svn: 159189
In addition, I've made the pointer and reference typedef 'void' rather than T*
just so they can't get misused. I would've omitted them entirely but
std::distance likes them to be there even if it doesn't use them.
This rolls back r155808 and r155869.
Review by Doug Gregor incorporating feedback from Chandler Carruth.
llvm-svn: 158104
pointer, but such folding encounters side-effects, ignore the side-effects
rather than performing them at runtime: CodeGen generates wrong code for
__builtin_object_size in that case.
llvm-svn: 157310
filter_decl_iterator had a weird mismatch where both op* and op-> returned T*
making it difficult to generalize this filtering behavior into a reusable
library of any kind.
This change errs on the side of value, making op-> return T* and op* return
T&.
(reviewed by Richard Smith)
llvm-svn: 155808
Otherwise we would get this error in C++11 mode (because of a recent change):
error: non-type template argument of type 'const _GUID *' is not a constant expression
For code like:
template <const GUID* g = &__uuidof(struct_with_uuid)>
class COM_CLASS { };
llvm-svn: 154790
initialize an array of unsigned char. Outside C++11 mode, this bug was benign,
and just resulted in us emitting a constant which was double the required
length, padded with 0s. In C++11, it resulted in us generating an array whose
first element was something like i8 ptrtoint ([n x i8]* @str to i8).
llvm-svn: 154756
__atomic_test_and_set, __atomic_clear, plus a pile of undocumented __GCC_*
predefined macros.
Implement library fallback for __atomic_is_lock_free and
__c11_atomic_is_lock_free, and implement __atomic_always_lock_free.
Contrary to their documentation, GCC's __atomic_fetch_add family don't
multiply the operand by sizeof(T) when operating on a pointer type.
libstdc++ relies on this quirk. Remove this handling for all but the
__c11_atomic_fetch_add and __c11_atomic_fetch_sub builtins.
Contrary to their documentation, __atomic_test_and_set and __atomic_clear
take a first argument of type 'volatile void *', not 'void *' or 'bool *',
and __atomic_is_lock_free and __atomic_always_lock_free have an argument
of type 'const volatile void *', not 'void *'.
With this change, libstdc++4.7's <atomic> passes libc++'s atomic test suite,
except for a couple of libstdc++ bugs and some cases where libc++'s test
suite tests for properties which implementations have latitude to vary.
llvm-svn: 154640
<stdatomic.h> header.
In passing, fix LanguageExtensions to note that C11 and C++11 are no longer
"upcoming standards" but are now actually standardized.
llvm-svn: 154513
non-constant value encountered. This allows the evaluator to deduce that
expressions like (x < 5 || true) is equal to true. Previously, it would visit
x and determined that the entire expression is could not evaluated to a
constant.
This fixes PR12318.
llvm-svn: 153226
This allows us to handle extreme cases of chained binary operators without causing stack
overflow.
The binary operators that are handled with the data recursive evaluator are
comma, logical, or operators that have operands with integral or enumeration type.
Part of rdar://10941790.
llvm-svn: 152819
breaking bootstrap. No test yet: it's quite hard to tickle the failure case.
The specific testcase for this wouldn't be useful for testing anything more
general than a reintroduction of this precise bug in any case.
llvm-svn: 152775
locations for diagnostics we're not going to emit, and don't track the subobject
designator outside C++11 (since we're not going to use it anyway).
This seems to give about a 0.5% speedup on 403.gcc/combine.c, but the results
were sufficiently noisy that I can't reject the null hypothesis.
llvm-svn: 152761
track whether the referenced declaration comes from an enclosing
local context. I'm amenable to suggestions about the exact meaning
of this bit.
llvm-svn: 152491
copy-construction, which Daniel Dunbar reports as giving a 0.75% speedup on
403.gcc/combine.c. The performance differences on my constexpr torture tests
are below the noise floor.
llvm-svn: 152455
- This function is not at all free; pass it around along some hot paths instead
of recomputing it deep inside various VarDecl methods.
llvm-svn: 152363
analysis to make the AST representation testable. They are represented by a
new UserDefinedLiteral AST node, which is a sugared CallExpr. All semantic
properties, including full CodeGen support, are achieved for free by this
representation.
UserDefinedLiterals can never be dependent, so no custom instantiation
behavior is required. They are mangled as if they were direct calls to the
underlying literal operator. This matches g++'s apparent behavior (but not its
actual mangling, which is broken for literal-operator-ids).
User-defined *string* literals are now fully-operational, but the semantic
analysis is quite hacky and needs more work. No other forms of user-defined
literal are created yet, but the AST support for them is present.
This patch committed after midnight because we had already hit the quota for
new kinds of literal yesterday.
llvm-svn: 152211
NSNumber, and boolean literals. This includes both Sema and Codegen support.
Included is also support for new Objective-C container subscripting.
My apologies for the large patch. It was very difficult to break apart.
The patch introduces changes to the driver as well to cause clang to link
in additional runtime support when needed to support the new language features.
Docs are forthcoming to document the implementation and behavior of these features.
llvm-svn: 152137
Original log:
When evaluating integer expressions handle logical operators outside
VisitBinaryOperator() to reduce stack pressure for source with huge number
of logical operators.
Fixes rdar://10913206.
llvm-svn: 151464
that provides the behavior of the C++11 library trait
std::is_trivially_constructible<T, Args...>, which can't be
implemented purely as a library.
Since __is_trivially_constructible can have zero or more arguments, I
needed to add Yet Another Type Trait Expression Class, this one
handling arbitrary arguments. The next step will be to migrate
UnaryTypeTrait and BinaryTypeTrait over to this new, more general
TypeTrait class.
Fixes the Clang side of <rdar://problem/10895483> / PR12038.
llvm-svn: 151352
block pointer that returns a block literal which captures (by copy)
the lambda closure itself. Some aspects of the block literal are left
unspecified, namely the capture variable (which doesn't actually
exist) and the body (which will be filled in by IRgen because it can't
be written as an AST).
Because we're switching to this model, this patch also eliminates
tracking the copy-initialization expression for the block capture of
the conversion function, since that information is now embedded in the
synthesized block literal. -1 side tables FTW.
llvm-svn: 151131
complex numbers. Treat complex numbers as arrays of the corresponding component
type, in order to make std::complex behave properly if implemented in terms of
_Complex T.
Apparently libstdc++'s std::complex is implemented this way, and we were
rejecting a member like this:
constexpr double real() { return __real__ val; }
because it was marked constexpr but unable to produce a constant expression.
llvm-svn: 150895
* Fix bug when determining whether && / || are potential constant expressions
* Try harder when determining whether ?: is a potential constant expression
* Produce a diagnostic on sizeof(VLA) to provide a better source location
llvm-svn: 150657
to be core constant expressions (including pointers and references to
temporaries), and makes constexpr calculations Turing-complete. A Turing machine
simulator is included as a testcase.
This opens up the possibilty of removing CCValue entirely, and removing some
copies from the constant evaluator in the process, but that cleanup is not part
of this change.
llvm-svn: 150557
is general goodness because representations of member pointers are
not always equivalent across member pointer types on all ABIs
(even though this isn't really standard-endorsed).
Take advantage of the new information to teach IR-generation how
to do these reinterprets in constant initializers. Make sure this
works when intermingled with hierarchy conversions (although
this is not part of our motivating use case). Doing this in the
constant-evaluator would probably have been better, but that would
require a *lot* of extra structure in the representation of
constant member pointers: you'd really have to track an arbitrary
chain of hierarchy conversions and reinterpretations in order to
get this right. Ultimately, this seems less complex. I also
wasn't quite sure how to extend the constant evaluator to handle
foldings that we don't actually want to treat as extended
constant expressions.
llvm-svn: 150551
constructor, and that constructor is used to initialize an object of static
storage duration such that all members and bases are initialized by constant
expressions, constant initialization is performed. In this case, the object
can still have a non-trivial destructor, and if it does, we must emit a dynamic
initializer which performs no initialization and instead simply registers that
destructor.
llvm-svn: 150419
1358, 1360, 1452 and 1453.
- Instantiations of constexpr functions are always constexpr. This removes the
need for separate declaration/definition checking, which is now gone.
- This makes it possible for a constexpr function to be virtual, if they are
only dependently virtual. Virtual calls to such functions are not constant
expressions.
- Likewise, it's now possible for a literal type to have virtual base classes.
A constexpr constructor for such a type cannot actually produce a constant
expression, though, so add a special-case diagnostic for a constructor call
to such a type rather than trying to evaluate it.
- Classes with trivial default constructors (for which value initialization can
produce a fully-initialized value) are considered literal types.
- Classes with volatile members are not literal types.
- constexpr constructors can be members of non-literal types. We do not yet use
static initialization for global objects constructed in this way.
llvm-svn: 150359
incomplete class type which has an overloaded operator&, it's now just
unspecified whether the overloaded operator or the builtin is used.
llvm-svn: 150234
the sign bit doesn't have undefined behavior, but a signed left shift of a 1 bit
out of the sign bit still does. As promised to Howard :)
The suppression of the potential constant expression checking in system headers
is also removed, since the problem it was working around is gone.
llvm-svn: 150059
This seems to negatively affect compile time onsome ObjC tests
(which use a lot of partial diagnostics I assume). I have to come
up with a way to keep them inline without including Diagnostic.h
everywhere. Now adding a new diagnostic requires a full rebuild
of e.g. the static analyzer which doesn't even use those diagnostics.
This reverts commit 6496bd10dc3a6d5e3266348f08b6e35f8184bc99.
This reverts commit 7af19b817ba964ac560b50c1ed6183235f699789.
This reverts commit fdd15602a42bbe26185978ef1e17019f6d969aa7.
This reverts commit 00bd44d5677783527d7517c1ffe45e4d75a0f56f.
This reverts commit ef9b60ffed980864a8db26ad30344be429e58ff5.
llvm-svn: 150006
- Capturing variables by-reference and by-copy within a lambda
- The representation of lambda captures
- The creation of the non-static data members in the lambda class
that store the captured variables
- The initialization of the non-static data members from the
captured variables
- Pretty-printing lambda expressions
There are a number of FIXMEs, both explicit and implied, including:
- Creating a field for a capture of 'this'
- Improved diagnostics for initialization failures when capturing
variables by copy
- Dealing with temporaries created during said initialization
- Template instantiation
- AST (de-)serialization
- Binding and returning the lambda expression; turning it into a
proper temporary
- Lots and lots of semantic constraints
- Parameter pack captures
llvm-svn: 149977
Fix all the files that depended on transitive includes of Diagnostic.h.
With this patch in place changing a diagnostic no longer requires a full rebuild of the StaticAnalyzer.
llvm-svn: 149781
The recent support for potential constant expressions exposed a bug in the
implementation of libstdc++4.6, where numeric_limits<int>::min() is defined
as (int)1 << 31, which isn't a constant expression. Disable the 'constexpr
function never produces a constant expression' error inside system headers
to compensate.
llvm-svn: 149729
* support the gcc __builtin_constant_p() ? ... : ... folding hack in C++11
* check for unspecified values in pointer comparisons and pointer subtractions
llvm-svn: 149578
This is a mess. According to the C++11 standard, pointer subtraction only has
undefined behavior if the difference of the array indices does not fit into a
ptrdiff_t.
However, common implementations effectively perform a char* subtraction first,
and then divide the result by the element size, which can cause overflows in
some cases. Those cases are not considered to be undefined behavior by this
change; perhaps they should be.
llvm-svn: 149490
function definition can produce a constant expression. This also provides the
last few checks for [dcl.constexpr]p3 and [dcl.constexpr]p4.
llvm-svn: 149108
for it to be used in converted constant expression checking, and fix a couple
of issues:
- Conversion operators implicitly invoked prior to the narrowing conversion
were not being correctly handled when determining whether a constant value
was narrowed.
- For conversions from floating-point to integral types, the diagnostic text
incorrectly always claimed that the source expression was not a constant
expression.
llvm-svn: 148381
- Add atomic-to/from-nonatomic cast types
- Emit atomic operations for arithmetic on atomic types
- Emit non-atomic stores for initialisation of atomic types, but atomic stores and loads for every other store / load
- Add a __atomic_init() intrinsic which does a non-atomic store to an _Atomic() type. This is needed for the corresponding C11 stdatomic.h function.
- Enables the relevant __has_feature() checks. The feature isn't 100% complete yet, but it's done enough that we want people testing it.
Still to do:
- Make the arithmetic operations on atomic types (e.g. Atomic(int) foo = 1; foo++;) use the correct LLVM intrinsic if one exists, not a loop with a cmpxchg.
- Add a signal fence builtin
- Properly set the fenv state in atomic operations on floating point values
- Correctly handle things like _Atomic(_Complex double) which are too large for an atomic cmpxchg on some platforms (this requires working out what 'correctly' means in this context)
- Fix the many remaining corner cases
llvm-svn: 148242
APValue::Array and APValue::MemberPointer. All APValue values can now be emitted
as constants.
Add new CGCXXABI entry point for emitting an APValue MemberPointer. The other
entrypoints dealing with constant member pointers are no longer necessary and
will be removed in a later change.
Switch codegen from using EvaluateAsRValue/EvaluateAsLValue to
VarDecl::evaluateValue. This performs caching and deals with the nasty cases in
C++11 where a non-const object's initializer can refer indirectly to
previously-initialized fields within the same object.
Building the intermediate APValue object incurs a measurable performance hit on
pathological testcases with huge initializer lists, so we continue to build IR
directly from the Expr nodes for array and record types outside of C++11.
llvm-svn: 148178
zero-initialize the first union member. Also fix a bug where initializing an
array of types compatible with wchar_t from a wide string literal failed in C,
and fortify the C++ tests in this area. This part can't be tested without a code
change to enable array evaluation in C (where an existing test fails).
llvm-svn: 148035
pointer-arithmetic-related undefined behavior and unspecified results. We
continue to fold such values, but now notice they aren't constant expressions.
llvm-svn: 147659
With that done, remove a bunch of buggy code from CGExprConstant for handling scalar expressions which is no longer necessary.
Fixes PR11705.
llvm-svn: 147561
Also temporarily remove the assumption from IR gen that we can emit IR for every
constant we can fold, since it isn't currently true in C++11, to fix PR11676.
Original comment from r147271:
constexpr: perform zero-initialization prior to / instead of performing a
constructor call when appropriate. Thanks to Eli for spotting this.
llvm-svn: 147384