Implicit module builds are not well-suited to a lot of build systems. In
particular, they fare badly in distributed build systems, and they lead to
build artifacts that are not tracked as part of the usual dependency management
process. This change allows explicitly-built module files (which are already
supported through the -emit-module flag) to be explicitly loaded into a build,
allowing build systems to opt to manage module builds and dependencies
themselves.
This is only the first step in supporting such configurations, and it should
be considered experimental and subject to change or removal for now.
llvm-svn: 220359
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
-g1 on gcc (and also IBM's xlc) are documented to be very similar to
-gline-tables-only. Our -gline-tables-only might still be more verbose than -g1
on other compilers, but currently we treat -g1 as -g, and so we're producing
much more debug info at -g1 than everybody else. Treating -g1 as
-gline-tables-only brings us much closer to what everyone else is doing.
For more information, see the discussion on
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-dev/2014-October/039649.html
llvm-svn: 220311
This fixes crash report generation when filenames have spaces. It also
removes an awkward workaround that quoted *some* arguments when
generating crash reports.
llvm-svn: 220307
This pushes the logic for generating a crash reproduction script
entirely into Command::Print, instead of Command doing half of the
work and then relying on textual substitution for the rest. This makes
this logic much easier to read and will simplify fixing a couple of
issues in this area.
llvm-svn: 220305
Before:
@SuppressWarnings(
value = "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa") public static int iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;
After:
@SuppressWarnings(value = "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa")
public static int iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;
llvm-svn: 220284
This patch generates some helper variables which used as a private copies of the corresponding original variables inside an OpenMP 'parallel' directive. These generated variables are initialized by default (with the default constructor, if any). In outlined function references to original variables are replaced by the references to these private helper variables. At the end of the initialization of the private variables and implicit barier is set by calling __kmpc_barrier(...) runtime function to be sure that all threads were initialized using original values of the variables.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4752
llvm-svn: 220262
This is long-since overdue, and matches GCC 5.0. This should also be
backwards-compatible, because we already supported all of C11 as an extension
in C99 mode.
llvm-svn: 220244
In environments where PATH was set to point to the VS installation, Clang would
override that by looking in the registry and finding the latest VS installation.
If the environment is set up to point to a VS installation, that should take
precedence.
Reverting this until we can fix it.
llvm-svn: 220243
List the module cache we use for crashdumps as a tempfile. This
simplifies how we pick up this directory when generating the actual
crash diagnostic and removes some duplicate logic.
llvm-svn: 220241
In practice there's only ever one temporary output file when
generating a crashdump, but even if there were many iterating over
each and creating a duplicate run script for each one wouldn't make
very much sense.
This updates the behaviour to only generate the script once, based on
the first filename.
This should make it more reasonable to generate extra output files to
include in the crashdump going forward, so I've also added a FIXME to
look into doing just that with the extra module crashdump files.
llvm-svn: 220238
We currently use a null FailingCommand when generating crash reports
as an indication that the cause is FORCE_CLANG_DIAGNOSTICS_CRASH, the
environment variable that exists to test crash dumps. This means that
our tests don't actually cover real crashes at all, and adds a more
complicated code path that's only used in the tests.
Instead, we can have the driver synthesize that every command failed
and just call generateCompilationDiagnostics normally.
llvm-svn: 220234
Typically clang finds Visual Studio by the user explicitly setting
up a Visual Studio environment via vcvarsall. But we still try to
behave intelligently and fallback to different methods of finding
Visual Studio when this is not done. This patch improves various
fallback codepaths to make Visual Studio locating more robust.
Specifically, this patch:
* Adds support for searching environment variables for VS 12.0
* Correctly locates include folders for Windows SDK 8.x (this was
previously broken, and would cause clang to error)
* Prefers locating link.exe in the same location as cl.exe. This
is helpful in case another link.exe is in the path earlier than
Visual Studio (e.g. GnuWin32)
* Minor cleanup in the registry reading code to make it more
robust in the presence of long pathnames.
llvm-svn: 220226
Clang supports __restrict__ as a function qualifier, but
DeclaratorChunk::FunctionTypeInfo lacked a field to track the qualifier's
source location (as we do with volatile, etc.). This was the subject of a FIXME
in GetFullTypeForDeclarator (in SemaType.cpp). This should also prove useful as
we add more warnings regarding questionable uses of the restrict qualifier.
There is no significant functional change (except for an improved source range
associated with the err_invalid_qualified_function_type diagnostic fixit
generated by GetFullTypeForDeclarator).
llvm-svn: 220215
Now that we no longer add mappings when there are no local entities,
there is no need to always bump the size of the tables that correspond
to ContinuousRangeMaps.
llvm-svn: 220208
This is a better fix for 'duplicate key' problems in module continuous
range maps (vs what I added in r215810) by not adding any mappings at
all when there are no local entities. Now it also covers selectors,
which were not always being bumped because the record SELECTOR_OFFSET is
not always emitted. I'll back out most of r215810 in a future commit,
since it should no longer be needed.
llvm-svn: 220207
#include_next interacts poorly with modules: it depends on where in the list of
include paths the current file was found. Files covered by module maps are not
found in include search paths when building the module (and are not found in
include search paths when @importing the module either), so this isn't really
meaningful. Instead, we fake up the result that #include_next *should* have
given: find the first path that would have resulted in the given file being
picked, and search from there onwards.
llvm-svn: 220177
This reverts commit r220169 which reverted r220153. However, it also
contains additional changes:
- We may need to add padding *after* we've packed the struct. This
occurs when the aligned next field offset is greater than the new
field's offset. When this occurs, we make the struct packed.
*However*, once packed the next field offset might be less than the
new feild's offset. It is in this case that we might further pad the
struct.
- We would pad structs which were perfectly sized! This behavior is
immensely old. This behavior came from blindly subtracting
NextFieldOffsetInChars from RecordSize. This doesn't take into
account the fact that the struct might have a greater overall
alignment than the last field.
llvm-svn: 220175
This commit caused two tests in LNT to regress. I'm able to reproduce on
any platform and will send reproduction steps to the original commit
log. This should restore the LNT bots that have been failing.
llvm-svn: 220169
a NaN-test prior to the call to the library function.
This should automatically make fastmath (including just non-NaNs) able to avoid
the expensive libcalls and also open the door to more advanced folding in LLVM
based on the rules for complex math.
Two important notes to remember: first is that this isn't yet a proper
limited range mode, it's still just improving the unlimited range mode.
Also, it isn't really perfecet w.r.t. what an unlimited range mode
should be doing because it isn't quite handling the flags produced by
all the operations in the way desirable for that mode, but then neither
is compiler-rt's libcall. When the compiler-rt libcall is improved to
carefully manage flags, the code emitted here should be improved
correspondingly. And it is still a long-term desirable thing to add
a limited range mode to Clang that would be able to use direct math
without library calls here.
Special thanks to Steve Canon for the careful review on this patch and
teaching me about these issues. =D
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5756
llvm-svn: 220167
This suppresses a common false positive when analyzing libc++.
Along the way, introduce some tests to show this checker actually
works with C++ static_cast<>.
llvm-svn: 220160
Before, ConstStructBuilder::AppendBytes would check packed constraints
prior to padding being added before the field's offset. However, adding
this padding might force our struct to be packed. Because we wouldn't
check *after* adding padding, ConstStructBuilder would be in an
inconsistent state leading to a crash.
This fixes PR21300.
llvm-svn: 220153