prettyprint
__declspec(nothrow) should work on function pointers as well as function
references, so this changes it to FunctionLike. Additionally,
FunctionLike needed to be modified to permit function references.
Finally, the TypePrinter didn't properly print the NoThrow exception
specifier, so make sure we get that right as well.
llvm-svn: 362435
Swift requires certain classes to be not just initialized lazily on first
use, but actually allocated lazily using information that is only available
at runtime. This is incompatible with ObjC class initialization, or at least
not efficiently compatible, because there is no meaningful class symbol
that can be put in a class-ref variable at load time. This leaves ObjC
code unable to access such classes, which is undesirable.
objc_class_stub says that class references should be resolved by calling
a new ObjC runtime function with a pointer to a new "class stub" structure.
Non-ObjC compilers (like Swift) can simply emit this structure when ObjC
interop is required for a class that cannot be statically allocated,
then apply this attribute to the `@interface` in the generated ObjC header
for the class.
This attribute can be thought of as a generalization of the existing
`objc_runtime_visible` attribute which permits more efficient class
resolution as well as supporting the additon of categories to the class.
Subclassing these classes from ObjC is currently not allowed.
Patch by Slava Pestov!
llvm-svn: 362054
template name is not visible to unqualified lookup.
In order to support this without a severe degradation in our ability to
diagnose typos in template names, this change significantly restructures
the way we handle template-id-shaped syntax for which lookup of the
template name finds nothing.
Instead of eagerly diagnosing an undeclared template name, we now form a
placeholder template-name representing a name that is known to not find
any templates. When the parser sees such a name, it attempts to
disambiguate whether we have a less-than comparison or a template-id.
Any diagnostics or typo-correction for the name are delayed until its
point of use.
The upshot should be a small improvement of our diagostic quality
overall: we now take more syntactic context into account when trying to
resolve an undeclared identifier on the left hand side of a '<'. In
fact, this works well enough that the backwards-compatible portion (for
an undeclared identifier rather than a lookup that finds functions but
no function templates) is enabled in all language modes.
llvm-svn: 360308
We want to make objc_nonlazy_class apply to implementations, but ran into this.
There doesn't seem to be any reason that this isn't supported.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60542
llvm-svn: 358200
This reverts commit r353765. After talking with our c stdlib folks, we decided
to use the existing pass_object_size attribute to implement _FORTIFY_SOURCE
wrappers, like Bionic does (I didn't realize that pass_object_size could be used
for this purpose). Sorry for the flip/flop, and thanks to James Y. Knight for
pointing this out to me.
llvm-svn: 356103
This was sometimes causing clang or llvm-mc to crash, and in other
cases could emit a bogus DWARF line-table header. I did an interim
patch in r352541; this patch should be a cleaner and more complete
fix, and retains the test.
Addresses PR40538.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58750
llvm-svn: 355226
This patch enables the following
1) AMD family 17h "znver2" tune flag (-march, -mcpu).
2) ISAs that are enabled for "znver2" architecture.
3) For the time being, it uses the znver1 scheduler model.
4) Tests are updated.
5) This patch is the clang counterpart to D58343
Reviewers: craig.topper
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58344
llvm-svn: 354899
The new __attribute__ ((mig_server_routine)) is going to be used for annotating
Mach Interface Generator (MIG) callback functions as such, so that additional
static analysis could be applied to their implementations. It can also be
applied to regular functions behavior of which is supposed to be identical to
that of a MIG server routine.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58365
llvm-svn: 354530
This fixes a regression that was caused by r335084, which reversed
the order that attributes are applied. objc_method_family can change
whether a method is an init method, so the order that these
attributes are applied matters. The commit fixes this by delaying the
init check until after all attributes have been applied.
rdar://47829358
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58152
llvm-svn: 353976
This attribute applies to declarations of C stdlib functions
(sprintf, memcpy...) that have known fortified variants
(__sprintf_chk, __memcpy_chk, ...). When applied, clang will emit
calls to the fortified variant functions instead of calls to the
defaults.
In GCC, this is done by adding gnu_inline-style wrapper functions,
but that doesn't work for us for variadic functions because we don't
support __builtin_va_arg_pack (and have no intention to).
This attribute takes two arguments, the first is 'type' argument
passed through to __builtin_object_size, and the second is a flag
argument that gets passed through to the variadic checking variants.
rdar://47905754
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57918
llvm-svn: 353765
This patch simply teach BPF driver about the new CPU "v3" introduced in
LLVM backend.
Acked-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiong Wang <jiong.wang@netronome.com>
llvm-svn: 353479
A non-lazy class will be initialized eagerly when the Objective-C runtime is
loaded. This is required for certain system classes which have instances allocated in
non-standard ways, such as the classes for blocks and constant strings.
Adding this attribute is essentially equivalent to providing a trivial
+load method but avoids the (fairly small) load-time overheads associated
with defining and calling such a method.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56555
llvm-svn: 353116
This is similar to import_module, but sets the import field name
instead.
By default, the import field name is the same as the C/asm/.o symbol
name. However, there are situations where it's useful to have it be
different. For example, suppose I have a wasm API with a module named
"pwsix" and a field named "read". There's no risk of namespace
collisions with user code at the wasm level because the generic name
"read" is qualified by the module name "pwsix". However in the C/asm/.o
namespaces, the module name is not used, so if I have a global function
named "read", it is intruding on the user's namespace.
With the import_field module, I can declare my function (in libc) to be
"__read", and then set the wasm import module to be "pwsix" and the wasm
import field to be "read". So at the C/asm/.o levels, my symbol is
outside the user namespace.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57602
llvm-svn: 352930
Token pasted by the preprocessor (through ##) have a Spelling pointing to scratch buffer.
As a result they are not recognized at system macro, even though the pasting happened in
a system macro. Fix that by looking into the parent macro if the original lookup finds a
scratch buffer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55782
This effectively fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35268,
llvm-svn: 352838
With commit r351627, LLVM gained the ability to apply (existing) IPO
optimizations on indirections through callbacks, or transitive calls.
The general idea is that we use an abstraction to hide the middle man
and represent the callback call in the context of the initial caller.
It is described in more detail in the commit message of the LLVM patch
r351627, the llvm::AbstractCallSite class description, and the
language reference section on callback-metadata.
This commit enables clang to emit !callback metadata that is
understood by LLVM. It does so in three different cases:
1) For known broker functions declarations that are directly
generated, e.g., __kmpc_fork_call for the OpenMP pragma parallel.
2) For known broker functions that are identified by their name and
source location through the builtin detection, e.g.,
pthread_create from the POSIX thread API.
3) For user annotated functions that carry the "callback(callee, ...)"
attribute. The attribute has to include the name, or index, of
the callback callee and how the passed arguments can be
identified (as many as the callback callee has). See the callback
attribute documentation for detailed information.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55483
llvm-svn: 351629
Summary:
This attribute will allow users to opt specific functions out of
speculative load hardening. This compliments the Clang attribute
named speculative_load_hardening. When this attribute or the attribute
speculative_load_hardening is used in combination with the flags
-mno-speculative-load-hardening or -mspeculative-load-hardening,
the function level attribute will override the default during LLVM IR
generation. For example, in the case, where the flag opposes the
function attribute, the function attribute will take precendence.
The sticky inlining behavior of the speculative_load_hardening attribute
may cause a function with the no_speculative_load_hardening attribute
to be tagged with the speculative_load_hardening tag in
subsequent compiler phases which is desired behavior since the
speculative_load_hardening LLVM attribute is designed to be maximally
conservative.
If both attributes are specified for a function, then an error will be
thrown.
Reviewers: chandlerc, echristo, kristof.beyls, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54909
llvm-svn: 351565
While building openJDK11u, it seems that some of the code in the
native core libraries make liberal use of integer to pointer
comparisons. We currently have no flag to disabled this warning.
This add such a flag.
Patch by Kader (abdoul-kader keita)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56241
llvm-svn: 351082
When applied to out-parameters, the attributes specify the expected lifetime of the written-into object.
Additionally, introduce OSReturnsRetainedOn(Non)Zero attributes, which
specify that an ownership transfer happens depending on a return code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56292
llvm-svn: 350942
This attribute, called "objc_externally_retained", exposes clang's
notion of pseudo-__strong variables in ARC. Pseudo-strong variables
"borrow" their initializer, meaning that they don't retain/release
it, instead assuming that someone else is keeping their value alive.
If a function is annotated with this attribute, implicitly strong
parameters of that function aren't implicitly retained/released in
the function body, and are implicitly const. This is useful to expose
for performance reasons, most functions don't need the extra safety
of the retain/release, so programmers can opt out as needed.
This attribute can also apply to declarations of local variables,
with similar effect.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55865
llvm-svn: 350422
When multiple loop transformation are defined in a loop's metadata, their order of execution is defined by the order of their respective passes in the pass pipeline. For instance, e.g.
#pragma clang loop unroll_and_jam(enable)
#pragma clang loop distribute(enable)
is the same as
#pragma clang loop distribute(enable)
#pragma clang loop unroll_and_jam(enable)
and will try to loop-distribute before Unroll-And-Jam because the LoopDistribute pass is scheduled after UnrollAndJam pass. UnrollAndJamPass only supports one inner loop, i.e. it will necessarily fail after loop distribution. It is not possible to specify another execution order. Also,t the order of passes in the pipeline is subject to change between versions of LLVM, optimization options and which pass manager is used.
This patch adds 'followup' attributes to various loop transformation passes. These attributes define which attributes the resulting loop of a transformation should have. For instance,
!0 = !{!0, !1, !2}
!1 = !{!"llvm.loop.unroll_and_jam.enable"}
!2 = !{!"llvm.loop.unroll_and_jam.followup_inner", !3}
!3 = !{!"llvm.loop.distribute.enable"}
defines a loop ID (!0) to be unrolled-and-jammed (!1) and then the attribute !3 to be added to the jammed inner loop, which contains the instruction to distribute the inner loop.
Currently, in both pass managers, pass execution is in a fixed order and UnrollAndJamPass will not execute again after LoopDistribute. We hope to fix this in the future by allowing pass managers to run passes until a fixpoint is reached, use Polly to perform these transformations, or add a loop transformation pass which takes the order issue into account.
For mandatory/forced transformations (e.g. by having been declared by #pragma omp simd), the user must be notified when a transformation could not be performed. It is not possible that the responsible pass emits such a warning because the transformation might be 'hidden' in a followup attribute when it is executed, or it is not present in the pipeline at all. For this reason, this patche introduces a WarnMissedTransformations pass, to warn about orphaned transformations.
Since this changes the user-visible diagnostic message when a transformation is applied, two test cases in the clang repository need to be updated.
To ensure that no other transformation is executed before the intended one, the attribute `llvm.loop.disable_nonforced` can be added which should disable transformation heuristics before the intended transformation is applied. E.g. it would be surprising if a loop is distributed before a #pragma unroll_and_jam is applied.
With more supported code transformations (loop fusion, interchange, stripmining, offloading, etc.), transformations can be used as building blocks for more complex transformations (e.g. stripmining+stripmining+interchange -> tiling).
Reviewed By: hfinkel, dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49281
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55288
llvm-svn: 348944
Downstream forks that have their own attributes often run into this
test failing when a new attribute is added to clang because the
number of supported attributes no longer match. This is redundant
information for this test, so we can get by without it.
rdar://46288577
llvm-svn: 348218
This moves everything primarily testing the functionality of -ast-dump and -ast-print into their own directory, rather than leaving the tests spread around the testing directory.
llvm-svn: 348017
The addition adds three attributes for communicating ownership,
analogous to existing NS_ and CF_ attributes.
The attributes are meant to be used for communicating ownership of all
objects in XNU (Darwin kernel) and all of the kernel modules.
The ownership model there is very similar, but still different from the
Foundation model, so we think that introducing a new family of
attributes is appropriate.
The addition required a sizeable refactoring of the existing code for
CF_ and NS_ ownership attributes, due to tight coupling and the fact
that differentiating between the types was previously done using a
boolean.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54912
llvm-svn: 347947
Summary:
Resubmit this with no changes because I think the build was broken
by a different diff.
-----
The prior diff had to be reverted because there were two tests
that failed. I updated the two tests in this diff
clang/test/Misc/pragma-attribute-supported-attributes-list.test
clang/test/SemaCXX/attr-speculative-load-hardening.cpp
----- Summary from Previous Diff (Still Accurate) -----
LLVM IR already has an attribute for speculative_load_hardening. Before
this commit, when a user passed the -mspeculative-load-hardening flag to
Clang, every function would have this attribute added to it. This Clang
attribute will allow users to opt into SLH on a function by function basis.
This can be applied to functions and Objective C methods.
Reviewers: chandlerc, echristo, kristof.beyls, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54915
llvm-svn: 347701
This is skylake-avx512 with the addition of avx512vnni ISA.
Patch by Jianping Chen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54792
llvm-svn: 347682
until I figure out why the build is failing or timing out
***************************
Summary:
The prior diff had to be reverted because there were two tests
that failed. I updated the two tests in this diff
clang/test/Misc/pragma-attribute-supported-attributes-list.test
clang/test/SemaCXX/attr-speculative-load-hardening.cpp
LLVM IR already has an attribute for speculative_load_hardening. Before
this commit, when a user passed the -mspeculative-load-hardening flag to
Clang, every function would have this attribute added to it. This Clang
attribute will allow users to opt into SLH on a function by function
basis.
This can be applied to functions and Objective C methods.
Reviewers: chandlerc, echristo, kristof.beyls, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54915
This reverts commit a5b3c232d1e3613f23efbc3960f8e23ea70f2a79.
(r347617)
llvm-svn: 347628
Summary:
The prior diff had to be reverted because there were two tests
that failed. I updated the two tests in this diff
clang/test/Misc/pragma-attribute-supported-attributes-list.test
clang/test/SemaCXX/attr-speculative-load-hardening.cpp
----- Summary from Previous Diff (Still Accurate) -----
LLVM IR already has an attribute for speculative_load_hardening. Before
this commit, when a user passed the -mspeculative-load-hardening flag to
Clang, every function would have this attribute added to it. This Clang
attribute will allow users to opt into SLH on a function by function basis.
This can be applied to functions and Objective C methods.
Reviewers: chandlerc, echristo, kristof.beyls, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54915
llvm-svn: 347617
Summary:
Compound literals, enums, file-scoped arrays, etc. require their
initializers and size specifiers to be constant. Wrap the initializer
expressions in a ConstantExpr so that we can easily check for this later
on.
Reviewers: rsmith, shafik
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits, jyknight, nickdesaulniers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53921
llvm-svn: 346455
Don't store the data for the init statement and condition variable
if not needed. This cuts the size of SwitchStmt by up to 2 pointers.
The order of the children is intentionally kept the same.
Also use the newly available space in the bit-fields of Stmt
to store the bit representing whether all enums have been covered
instead of using a PointerIntPair.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53714
Reviewed By: rjmccall
llvm-svn: 345510
Don't store the data for case statements of the form LHS ... RHS if not
needed. This cuts the size of CaseStmt by 1 pointer + 1 SourceLocation in
the common case.
Also use the newly available space in the bit-fields of Stmt to store the
keyword location of SwitchCase and move the small accessor
SwitchCase::getSubStmt to the header.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53609
Reviewed By: rjmccall
llvm-svn: 345472
Only store the needed data in IfStmt. This cuts the size of IfStmt
by up to 3 pointers + 1 SourceLocation. The order of the children
is intentionally kept the same even though it would be more
convenient to put the optional trailing objects last. Additionally
use the newly available space in the bit-fields of Stmt to store
the location of the "if".
The result of this is that for the common case of an
if statement of the form:
if (some_cond)
some_statement
the size of IfStmt is brought down to 8 bytes + 2 pointers,
instead of 8 bytes + 5 pointers + 2 SourceLocation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53607
Reviewed By: rjmccall
llvm-svn: 345464
Summary:
This attribute allows excluding a member of a class template from being part
of an explicit template instantiation of that class template. This also makes
sure that code using such a member will not take for granted that an external
instantiation exists in another translation unit. The attribute was discussed
on cfe-dev at [1] and is primarily motivated by the removal of always_inline
in libc++ to control what's part of the ABI (see links in [1]).
[1]: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2018-August/059024.html
rdar://problem/43428125
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51789
llvm-svn: 343790
Currently, attributes from previous declarations ('inherited attributes')
are added to the end of a declaration's list of attributes. Before
r338800, the attribute list was in reverse. r338800 changed the order
of non-inherited (parsed from the current declaration) attributes, but
inherited attributes are still appended to the end of the list.
This patch appends inherited attributes after other inherited
attributes, but before any non-inherited attribute. This is to make the
order of attributes in the AST correspond to the order in the source
code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50214
llvm-svn: 342861
Summary:
We previously disallowed use of undocumented attributes with #pragma clang
attribute, but the justification for doing so was weak and it prevented many
reasonable use cases.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, arphaman
Subscribers: cfe-commits, rnk, benlangmuir, dexonsmith, erik.pilkington
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51507
llvm-svn: 341437
This commit adds the flag -fno-c++-static-destructors and the attributes
[[clang::no_destroy]] and [[clang::always_destroy]]. no_destroy specifies that a
specific static or thread duration variable shouldn't have it's destructor
registered, and is the default in -fno-c++-static-destructors mode.
always_destroy is the opposite, and is the default in -fc++-static-destructors
mode.
A variable whose destructor is disabled (either because of
-fno-c++-static-destructors or [[clang::no_destroy]]) doesn't count as a use of
the destructor, so we don't do any access checking or mark it referenced. We
also don't emit -Wexit-time-destructors for these variables.
rdar://21734598
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50994
llvm-svn: 340306
Recommit of r335084 after revert in r335516.
... instead of prepending it at the beginning (the original behavior
since implemented in r122535 2010-12-23). This builds up an
AttributeList in the the order in which the attributes appear in the
source.
The reverse order caused nodes for attributes in the AST (e.g. LoopHint)
to be in the reverse order, and therefore printed in the wrong order in
-ast-dump. Some TODO comments mention this. The order was explicitly
reversed for enable_if attribute overload resolution and name mangling,
which is not necessary anymore with this patch.
The change unfortunately has some secondary effect, especially on
diagnostic output. In the simplest cases, the CHECK lines or expected
diagnostic were changed to the the new output. If the kind of
error/warning changed, the attributes' order was changed instead.
This unfortunately causes some 'previous occurrence here' hints to be
textually after the main marker. This typically happens when attributes
are merged, but are incompatible to each other. Interchanging the role
of the the main and note SourceLocation will also cause the case where
two different declaration's attributes (in contrast to multiple
attributes of the same declaration) are merged to be reverse. There is
no easy fix because sometimes previous attributes are merged into a new
declaration's attribute list, sometimes new attributes are added to a
previous declaration's attribute list. Since 'previous occurrence here'
pointing to locations after the main marker is not rare, I left the
markers as-is; it is only relevant when the attributes are declared in
the same declaration anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48100
llvm-svn: 338800
As documented here: https://software.intel.com/en-us/node/682969 and
https://software.intel.com/en-us/node/523346. cpu_dispatch multiversioning
is an ICC feature that provides for function multiversioning.
This feature is implemented with two attributes: First, cpu_specific,
which specifies the individual function versions. Second, cpu_dispatch,
which specifies the location of the resolver function and the list of
resolvable functions.
This is valuable since it provides a mechanism where the resolver's TU
can be specified in one location, and the individual implementions
each in their own translation units.
The goal of this patch is to be source-compatible with ICC, so this
implementation diverges from the ICC implementation in a few ways:
1- Linux x86/64 only: This implementation uses ifuncs in order to
properly dispatch functions. This is is a valuable performance benefit
over the ICC implementation. A future patch will be provided to enable
this feature on Windows, but it will obviously more closely fit ICC's
implementation.
2- CPU Identification functions: ICC uses a set of custom functions to identify
the feature list of the host processor. This patch uses the cpu_supports
functionality in order to better align with 'target' multiversioning.
1- cpu_dispatch function def/decl: ICC's cpu_dispatch requires that the function
marked cpu_dispatch be an empty definition. This patch supports that as well,
however declarations are also permitted, since the linker will solve the
issue of multiple emissions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47474
llvm-svn: 337552
This is part of an ongoing attempt at making 512 bit vectors illegal in the X86 backend type legalizer due to CPU frequency penalties associated with wide vectors on Skylake Server CPUs. We want the loop vectorizer to be able to emit IR containing wide vectors as intermediate operations in vectorized code and allow these wide vectors to be legalized to 256 bits by the X86 backend even though we are targetting a CPU that supports 512 bit vectors. This is similar to what happens with an AVX2 CPU, the vectorizer can emit wide vectors and the backend will split them. We want this splitting behavior, but still be able to use new Skylake instructions that work on 256-bit vectors and support things like masking and gather/scatter.
Of course if the user uses explicit vector code in their source code we need to not split those operations. Especially if they have used any of the 512-bit vector intrinsics from immintrin.h. And we need to make it so that merely using the intrinsics produces the expected code in order to be backwards compatible.
To support this goal, this patch adds a new IR function attribute "min-legal-vector-width" that can indicate the need for a minimum vector width to be legal in the backend. We need to ensure this attribute is set to the largest vector width needed by any intrinsics from immintrin.h that the function uses. The inliner will be reponsible for merging this attribute when a function is inlined. We may also need a way to limit inlining in the future as well, but we can discuss that in the future.
To make things more complicated, there are two different ways intrinsics are implemented in immintrin.h. Either as an always_inline function containing calls to builtins(can be target specific or target independent) or vector extension code. Or as a macro wrapper around a taget specific builtin. I believe I've removed all cases where the macro was around a target independent builtin.
To support the always_inline function case this patch adds attribute((min_vector_width(128))) that can be used to tag these functions with their vector width. All x86 intrinsic functions that operate on vectors have been tagged with this attribute.
To support the macro case, all x86 specific builtins have also been tagged with the vector width that they require. Use of any builtin with this property will implicitly increase the min_vector_width of the function that calls it. I've done this as a new property in the attribute string for the builtin rather than basing it on the type string so that we can opt into it on a per builtin basis and avoid any impact to target independent builtins.
There will be future work to support vectors passed as function arguments and supporting inline assembly. And whatever else we can find that isn't covered by this patch.
Special thanks to Chandler who suggested this direction and reviewed a preview version of this patch. And thanks to Eric Christopher who has had many conversations with me about this issue.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48617
llvm-svn: 336583
conversions are only applied to operands of class type, and the second
standard conversion sequence is not applied.
When diagnosing an invalid builtin binary operator, talk about the
original types rather than the converted types. If these differ by a
user-defined conversion, tell the user what happened.
llvm-svn: 335781
Since we are now producing a summary also for regular LTO builds, we
need to run the NameAnonGlobals pass in those cases as well (the
summary cannot handle anonymous globals).
See https://reviews.llvm.org/D34156 for details on the original change.
This reverts commit 6c9ee4a4a438a8059aacc809b2dd57128fccd6b3.
llvm-svn: 335385
This is breaking a couple of buildbots. We need to run the
NameAnonGlobal pass for regular LTO now as well (since we're producing a
summary). I'll post a separate patch for review to make this happen and
then re-commit.
This reverts commit c0759b7b1f4a81ff9021b952aa38a222d5fa4dfd.
llvm-svn: 335291
Summary:
With D33921, we gained the ability to have module summaries in regular
LTO modules without triggering ThinLTO compilation. Module summaries in
regular LTO allow garbage collection (dead stripping) before LTO
compilation and thus open up additional optimization opportunities.
This patch enables summary emission in regular LTO for all targets
except ld64-based ones (which use the legacy LTO API).
Reviewers: pcc, tejohnson, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: inglorion, eraman, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34156
llvm-svn: 335284
... instead of prepending it at the beginning (the original behavior
since implemented in r122535 2010-12-23). This builds up an
AttributeList in the the order in which the attributes appear in the
source.
The reverse order caused nodes for attributes in the AST (e.g. LoopHint)
to be in the reverse, and therefore printed in the wrong order by
-ast-dump. Some TODO comments mention this. The order was explicitly
reversed for enable_if attribute overload resolution and name mangling,
which is not necessary anymore with this patch.
The change unfortunately has some secondary effects, especially for
diagnostic output. In the simplest cases, the CHECK lines or expected
diagnostic were changed to the the new output. If the kind of
error/warning changed, the attribute's order was changed instead.
It also causes some 'previous occurrence here' hints to be textually
after the main marker. This typically happens when attributes are
merged, but are incompatible. Interchanging the role of the the main
and note SourceLocation will also cause the case where two different
declaration's attributes (in contrast to multiple attributes of the
same declaration) are merged to be reversed. There is no easy fix
because sometimes previous attributes are merged into a new
declaration's attribute list, sometimes new attributes are added to a
previous declaration's attribute list. Since 'previous occurrence here'
pointing to locations after the main marker is not rare, I left the
markers as-is; it is only relevant when the attributes are declared in
the same declaration anyway, which often is on the same line.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48100
llvm-svn: 335084
The recommit ensures that the tests that failed on bots don't trigger the warning.
Xcode 10 removes support for libstdc++, but the users just get a confusing
include not file warning when including an STL header (when building for iOS6
which uses libstdc++ by default for example).
This patch adds a new warning that lets the user know that the libstdc++ include
path was not found to ensure that the user is more aware of why the error occurs.
rdar://40830462
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48297
llvm-svn: 335081
E. g. use "10.11" instead of "10_11".
We are maintaining backward compatibility by parsing underscore-delimited version tuples but no longer keep track of the separator and using dot format for output.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46747
rdar://problem/39845032
llvm-svn: 332598
It was failing because on Windows, -ast-print prints
__single_inheritance(1) before T1.
Adding a triple is a stop-gap fix until it can be fixed properly.
llvm-svn: 332335
For example, given:
struct T1 {
struct T2 *p0;
};
-ast-print produced:
struct T1 {
struct T2;
struct T2 *p0;
};
Compiling that produces a warning that the first struct T2 declaration
does not declare anything.
Details:
A tag decl group is one or more decls that share a type specifier that
is a tag decl (that is, a struct/union/class/enum decl). Within
functions, the parser builds such a tag decl group as part of a
DeclStmt. However, in decl contexts, such as file scope or a member
list, the parser does not group together the members of a tag decl
group. Previously, detection of tag decl groups during printing was
implemented but only if the tag decl was unnamed. Otherwise, as in
the above example, the members of the group did not print together and
so sometimes introduced warnings.
This patch extends detection of tag decl groups in decl contexts to
any tag decl that is recorded in the AST as not free-standing.
Reviewed by: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45465
llvm-svn: 332314
For example, given:
void fn() {
struct T *p0;
struct T { int i; } *p1;
}
-ast-print produced:
void fn() {
struct T { int i; } *p0;
struct T { int i; } *p1;
}
Compiling that fails with a redefinition error.
Given:
void fn() {
struct T *p0;
struct __attribute__((deprecated)) T *p1;
}
-ast-print dropped the attribute.
Details:
For a tag specifier (that is, struct/union/class/enum used as a type
specifier in a declaration) that was also a tag declaration (that is,
first occurrence of the tag) or tag redeclaration (that is, later
occurrence that specifies attributes or a member list), clang printed
the tag specifier as either (1) the full tag definition if one
existed, or (2) the first tag declaration otherwise. Redefinition
errors were sometimes introduced, as in the first example above. Even
when that was impossible because no member list was ever specified,
attributes were sometimes lost, thus changing semantics and
diagnostics, as in the second example above.
This patch fixes a major culprit for these problems. It does so by
creating an ElaboratedType with a new OwnedDecl member wherever an
occurrence of a tag type is a (re)declaration of that tag type.
PrintingPolicy's IncludeTagDefinition used to trigger printing of the
member list, attributes, etc. for a tag specifier by using a tag
(re)declaration selected as described above. Now, it triggers the
same thing except it uses the tag (re)declaration stored in the
OwnedDecl. Of course, other tooling can now make use of the new
OwnedDecl as well.
Also, to be more faithful to the original source, this patch
suppresses printing of attributes inherited from previous
declarations.
Reviewed by: rsmith, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45463
llvm-svn: 332281
For example, given:
#define bool _Bool
_Bool i;
void fn() { 1; }
-ast-print produced:
tmp.c:3:13: warning: expression result unused
void fn() { 1; }
^
bool i;
void fn() {
1;
}
That fails to compile because bool is undefined.
Details:
Diagnostics print _Bool as bool when the latter is defined as the
former. However, diagnostics were altering the printing policy for
-ast-print as well. The printed source was then invalid because the
preprocessor eats the bool definition.
Problematic diagnostics included suppressed warnings (e.g., add
-Wno-unused-value to the above example), including those that are
suppressed by default.
This patch fixes this bug and cleans up some related comments.
Reviewed by: aaron.ballman, rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45093
llvm-svn: 332275
The C standard doesn't allow comparisons like "f1 < f2" (where f1 and f2
are function pointers), but we allow them as an extension. Add a
warning flag to control this warning.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46155
llvm-svn: 331570
When a '>>' token is split into two '>' tokens (in C++11 onwards), or (as an
extension) when we do the same for other tokens starting with a '>', we can't
just use a location pointing to the first '>' as the location of the split
token, because that would result in our miscomputing the length and spelling
for the token. As a consequence, for example, a refactoring replacing 'A<X>'
with something else would sometimes replace one character too many, and
similarly diagnostics highlighting a template-id source range would highlight
one character too many.
Fix this by creating an expansion range covering the first character of the
'>>' token, whose spelling is '>'. For this to work, we generalize the
expansion range of a macro FileID to be either a token range (the common case)
or a character range (used in this new case).
llvm-svn: 331155
Found via codespell -q 3 -I ../clang-whitelist.txt
Where whitelist consists of:
archtype
cas
classs
checkk
compres
definit
frome
iff
inteval
ith
lod
methode
nd
optin
ot
pres
statics
te
thru
Patch by luzpaz! (This is a subset of D44188 that applies cleanly with a few
files that have dubious fixes reverted.)
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44188
llvm-svn: 329399
The patch adds nocf_check target independent attribute for disabling checks that were enabled by cf-protection flag.
The attribute can be appertained to functions and function pointers.
Attribute name follows GCC's similar attribute name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41880
llvm-svn: 327768
More generally, this permits a template to be specialized in any scope in which
it could be defined, so this also supersedes DR44 and DR374 (the latter of
which we previously only implemented in C++11 mode onwards due to unclarity as
to whether it was a DR).
llvm-svn: 327705
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
- Expand GK_*s (i.e. GFX6 -> GFX600, GFX601, etc.)
- This allows us to choose features correctly in some cases (for example, fast fmaf is available on gfx600, but not gfx601)
- Move HasFMAF, HasFP64, HasLDEXPF to GPUInfo tables
- Add HasFastFMA, HasFastFMAF to GPUInfo tables
- Add missing tests
llvm-svn: 326254
Summary:
-ast-print prints omp pragmas with a trailing space. While this
behavior is likely of little concern to most users, surely it's
unintentional, and it's annoying for some source-level work I'm
pursuing. This patch focuses on omp pragmas, but it also fixes
init_seg and loop hint pragmas because they share implementation.
The testing strategy here is to add usually just one '{{$}}' per
relevant -ast-print test file. This seems to achieve good code
coverage. However, this strategy is probably easy to forget as the
tests evolve. That's probably fine as this fix is far from critical.
The main goal of the testing is to aid the initial review.
This patch also adds a fixme for "#pragma unroll", which prints as
"#pragma unroll (enable)", which is invalid syntax.
Reviewers: ABataev
Reviewed By: ABataev
Subscribers: guansong, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43204
llvm-svn: 325145