- New options '-mrtm'/'-mno-rtm' are added to enable/disable RTM feature
- Builtin macro '__RTM__' is defined if RTM feature is enabled
- RTM intrinsic header is added and introduces 3 new intrinsics, namely
'_xbegin', '_xend', and '_xabort'.
- 3 new builtins are added to keep compatible with gcc, namely
'__builtin_ia32_xbegin', '__builtin_ia32_xend', and '__builtin_ia32_xabort'.
- Test cases for pre-defined macro and new intrinsic codegen are added.
llvm-svn: 167665
would have diagnosed this at instantiation time anyway, if only we
didn't hang on all of these test cases. Fixes <rdar://problem/12629723>
llvm-svn: 167651
C++11 3.3.3/2 "A parameter name shall not be redeclared in the outermost block
of the function definition nor in the outermost block of any handler associated
with a function-try-block."
It's not totally clear to me whether the "FIXME" case is covered by this, but
Richard Smith thinks it probably should be. It's just a bit more involved to
fix that case.
llvm-svn: 167650
Spent longer than reasonable looking for a nice way to test this & decided to
give up for now. Open to suggestions/requests. Richard Smith suggested adding
something to ASTMatchers but it wasn't readily apparent how to test this with
that.
llvm-svn: 167507
allowing a module map to be placed one level above the '.framework'
directories to specify that all .frameworks within that directory can
be inferred as framework modules. One can also specifically exclude
frameworks known not to work.
This makes explicit (and more restricted) behavior modules have had
"forever", where *any* .framework was assumed to be able to be built
as a module. That's not necessarily true, so we white-list directories
(with exclusions) when those directories have been audited.
llvm-svn: 167482
We don't support any C++11 attributes that appertain to declaration specifiers so reject
the attributes in parser until we support them; this also conforms to what g++ 4.8 is doing.
llvm-svn: 167481
-fno-address-sanitizer, -fthread-sanitizer, -fno-thread-sanitizer, and
-fcatch-undefined-behavior as deprecated: produce a warning if they are used
pointing to the corresponding -fsanitize= option. In passing add the missing
'-' to some diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 167429
- The whole {File,Source}Manager is built around wanting to pre-determine the
size of files, so we can't fit this in naturally. Instead, we handle it like
we do STDIN, where we just replace the main file contents upfront.
llvm-svn: 167419
checks to enable. Remove frontend support for -fcatch-undefined-behavior,
-faddress-sanitizer and -fthread-sanitizer now that they don't do anything.
llvm-svn: 167413
-fno-sanitize=<sanitizers> argument to driver. These allow ASan, TSan, and the
various UBSan checks to be enabled and disabled separately. Right now, the
different modes can't be combined, but the intention is that combining UBSan
and the other sanitizers will be permitted in the near future.
Currently, the UBSan checks will all be enabled if any of them is; that will be
fixed by the next patch.
llvm-svn: 167411
As Anna pointed out, ProgramStateTrait.h is a relatively obscure header,
and checker writers may not know to look there to add their own custom
state.
The base macro that specializes the template remains in ProgramStateTrait.h
(REGISTER_TRAIT_WITH_PROGRAMSTATE), which allows the analyzer core to keep
using it.
llvm-svn: 167385
This will simplify checkers that need to register for leaks. Currently,
they have to register for both: check dead and check end of path.
I've modified the SymbolReaper to consider everything on the stack dead
if the input StackLocationContext is 0.
(This is a bit disruptive, so I'd like to flash out all the issues
asap.)
llvm-svn: 167352
These are CallEvent-equivalents of helpers already accessible in
CheckerContext, as part of making it easier for new checkers to be written
using CallEvent rather than raw CallExprs.
llvm-svn: 167338
Add FIXMEs for the traits visible from multiple translation units.
Currently the macros hide their key types in an anonymous namespace.
llvm-svn: 167277
Also, move the REGISTER_*_WITH_PROGRAMSTATE macros to ProgramStateTrait.h.
This doesn't get rid of /all/ explicit uses of ProgramStatePartialTrait,
but it does get a lot of them.
llvm-svn: 167276
Often users of the ASTMatchers want to add tasks that are done once per
translation unit, for example, cleaning up caches. Combined with the
interception point for the end of source file one can add to the factory
creation, this covers the cases we've seen users need.
llvm-svn: 167271
Specifically, if adding a constraint makes the current system infeasible,
assume the constraint is false, instead of attempting to add its negation.
In +Asserts builds we will still assert that at least one state is feasible.
Patch by Ryan Govostes!
llvm-svn: 167195
The stat cache became essentially useless ever since we started
validating all file entries in the PCH.
But the motivating reason for removing it now is that it also affected
correctness in this situation:
-You have a header without include guards (using "#pragma once" or #import)
-When creating the PCH:
-The same header is referenced in an #include with different filename cases.
-In the PCH, of course, we record only one file entry for the header file
-But we cache in the PCH file the stat info for both filename cases
-Then the source files are updated and the header file is updated in a way that
its size and modification time are the same but its inode changes
-When using the PCH:
-We validate the headers, we check that header file and we create a file entry with its current inode
-There's another #include with a filename with different case than the previously created file entry
-In order to get its stat info we go through the cached stat info of the PCH and we receive the old inode
-because of the different inodes, we think they are different files so we go ahead and include its contents.
Removing the stat cache will potentially break clients that are attempting to use the stat cache
as a way of avoiding having the actual input files available. If that use case is important, patches are welcome
to bring it back in a way that will actually work correctly (i.e., emit a PCH that is self-contained, coping with
literal strings, line/column computations, etc.).
This fixes rdar://5502805
llvm-svn: 167172
diagnostics script.
This addresses the FIXME pertaining to quoted arguments. We also delineate
between those flags that have an argument (e.g., -D macro, -MF file) and
those that do not (e.g., -M, -MM, -MG). Finally, we add the -dwarf-debug-flags
to the list of flags to be removed.
rdar://12329974
llvm-svn: 167152
Previously, every call to a ConstraintManager's isNull would do a full
assumeDual to test feasibility. Now, ConstraintManagers can override
checkNull if they have a cheaper way to do the same thing.
RangeConstraintManager can do this in less than half the work.
<rdar://problem/12608209>
llvm-svn: 167138
This implements has(), hasDescendant(), forEach() and
forEachDescendant() for NestedNameSpecifier and NestedNameSpecifierLoc
matchers.
Review: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D86
llvm-svn: 167017
The ImmutableMap should not be the key into the GDM map as there could
be several entries with the same map type. Thanks, Jordan.
This complicates the usage of the macro a bit. When we want to retrieve
the whole map, we need to use another name. Currently, I set it to be
Name ## Ty as in "type of the map we are storing in the ProgramState".
llvm-svn: 167000
we had the -ccc-clang-cxx and -ccc-no-clang-cxx options to force them
on or off for testing.
Clang c++ support is now production quality and these options are dead.
llvm-svn: 166986
Previously, the warning would erroneously fire on this:
for (Test *a in someArray)
use(a.weakProp);
...because it looks like the same property is being accessed over and over.
However, clearly this is not the case. We now ignore loops like this for
local variables, but continue to warn if the base object is a parameter,
global variable, or instance variable, on the assumption that these are
not repeatedly usually assigned to within loops.
Additionally, do-while loops where the condition is 'false' are not really
loops at all; usually they're just used for semicolon-swallowing macros or
using "break" like "goto".
<rdar://problem/12578785&12578849>
llvm-svn: 166942
Our one basic suppression heuristic is to assume that functions do not
usually return NULL. However, when one of the arguments is NULL it is
suddenly much more likely that NULL is a valid return value. In this case,
we don't suppress the report here, but we do attach /another/ visitor to
go find out if this NULL argument also comes from an inlined function's
error path.
This new behavior, controlled by the 'avoid-suppressing-null-argument-paths'
analyzer-config option, is turned off by default. Turning it on produced
two false positives and no new true positives when running over LLVM/Clang.
This is one of the possible refinements to our suppression heuristics.
<rdar://problem/12350829>
llvm-svn: 166941
Additionally, don't collect PostStore nodes -- they are often used in
path diagnostics.
Previously, we tried to track null arguments in the same way as any other
null values, but in many cases the necessary nodes had already been
collected (a memory optimization in ExplodedGraph). Now, we fall back to
using the value of the argument at the time of the call, which may not
always match the actual contents of the region, but often will.
This is a precursor to improving our suppression heuristic.
<rdar://problem/12350829>
llvm-svn: 166940
This code checks the ASM string to see if the output size is able to fit within
the variable specified as the output. For instance, scalar-to-vector conversions
may not really work. It's on by default, but can be turned off with a flag if
you think you know what you're doing.
This is placed under a flag ('-Wasm-operand-widths') and flag group ('-Wasm').
<rdar://problem/12284092>
llvm-svn: 166737