Some options are implemented now:
--no-warn-common : r263413
--allow-shlib-undefined : r352826
Some are ignored but were not reflected in this test.
llvm-svn: 368837
Well, what is says on the tin I guess!
Some more changes:
* Move isInevitablySinking() from BugReporter.cpp to CFGBlock's interface
* Rename and move findBlockForNode() from BugReporter.cpp to
ExplodedNode::getCFGBlock()
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65287
llvm-svn: 368836
MCP currently uses changeDebugValuesDefReg / collectDebugValues to find
debug users of a register, however those functions assume that all
DBG_VALUEs immediately follow the specified instruction, which isn't
necessarily true. This is going to become very often untrue when we turn
off CodeGenPrepare::placeDbgValues.
Instead of calling changeDebugValuesDefReg on an instruction to change its
debug users, in this patch we instead collect DBG_VALUEs of copies as we
iterate over insns, and update the debug users of copies that are made
dead. This isn't a non-functional change, because MCP will now update
DBG_VALUEs that aren't immediately after a copy, but refer to the same
register. I've hijacked the regression test for PR38773 to test for this
new behaviour, an entirely new test seemed overkill.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56265
llvm-svn: 368835
Summary: Loads a mapping of the clangd scope lookup table scopes to the most specific rule with the highest "precedence" on initialize. Preprocesses into a class so it's simple/fast to access when doing the actual coloring later.
Reviewers: hokein, ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: MaskRay, jkorous, arphaman, kadircet, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65856
llvm-svn: 368834
Changes: no changes. A fix for the clang code will be landed right on top.
Original commit message:
SectionRef::getName() returns std::error_code now.
Returning Expected<> instead has multiple benefits.
For example, it forces user to check the error returned.
Also Expected<> may keep a valuable string error message,
what is more useful than having a error code.
(Object\invalid.test was updated to show the new messages printed.)
This patch makes a change for all users to switch to Expected<> version.
Note: in a few places the error returned was ignored before my changes.
In such places I left them ignored. My intention was to convert the interface
used, and not to improve and/or the existent users in this patch.
(Though I think this is good idea for a follow-ups to revisit such places
and either remove consumeError calls or comment each of them to clarify why
it is OK to have them).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66089
llvm-svn: 368826
In MCAsmStreamer:
.type foo,@function # <--- this is redundant
.type foo,@gnu_indirect_function
In MCELFStreamer, the latter STT_GNU_IFUNC overrides STT_FUNC.
llvm-svn: 368823
For these macros it is the definedness that matters rather than
the value. Make new uses of these macros consistent with existing
uses.
llvm-svn: 368822
This patch significantly improves the llvm-size testing. The changes
made are:
1) Change all tests to use yaml2obj instead of assembly or pre-canned
inputs.
2) Move the tests out of the X86 directory, since they don't need to be
there after 1).
3) Increased test coverage.
4) Added comments to explain purpose of tests.
I haven't attempted to add test coverage for all Mach-O related code, as
I am not familiar enough with that file format to be able to.
Reviewers: grimar, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66134
llvm-svn: 368821
Summary:
The default expression of a parameter variable should be imported before
the parameter variable object is created. Otherwise the function is created
with an incomplete parameter variable (default argument is nullptr) and in
this intermediary state the expression is imported. This import can have
a reference to the incomplete parameter variable that causes crash.
Reviewers: martong, a.sidorin, shafik
Reviewed By: martong
Subscribers: rnkovacs, dkrupp, Szelethus, gamesh411, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65577
llvm-svn: 368818
Exactly what it says on the tin! The comments in the code detail this a
little more too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64272
llvm-svn: 368817
Support the equals form of the long --entry=<symbol> option,
add a test for the -e<symbol> form.
Add tests for single dash forms of -exclude-all-symbols and
-export-all-symbols.
Support single-dash forms of -out-implib and -output-def, support
the equals form of --output-def=<file>. (We previously had a test
to explicitly disallow -out-implib, but it turns out that GNU ld
actually does support it just fine, despite also matching the
-o<file> option.)
Disallow the double-dashed --u form, add a test for -u<symbol>.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66066
llvm-svn: 368816
SectionRef::getName() returns std::error_code now.
Returning Expected<> instead has multiple benefits.
For example, it forces user to check the error returned.
Also Expected<> may keep a valuable string error message,
what is more useful than having a error code.
(Object\invalid.test was updated to show the new messages printed.)
This patch makes a change for all users to switch to Expected<> version.
Note: in a few places the error returned was ignored before my changes.
In such places I left them ignored. My intention was to convert the interface
used, and not to improve and/or the existent users in this patch.
(Though I think this is good idea for a follow-ups to revisit such places
and either remove consumeError calls or comment each of them to clarify why
it is OK to have them).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66089
llvm-svn: 368812
This rewrites the exitent test case to use YAML instead of the precompiled object
and moves it from test/Object to an appropriate llvm-objdump tests folder.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66140
llvm-svn: 368811
Summary:
It seems this was an unintended side-effect of D26698. AFAICT, these
functions did return an empty string before that patch, and the patch
contained code which attempted to ensure that, but those efforts were
negated by ConstString::AsCString, which by default returns a nullptr
even for empty strings.
This patch:
- fixes the GetOutput/Error methods to really return empty strings
- adds and explicit test for that
- removes a workaround in lldbtest.py, which was masking this problem
from our other tests
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: zturner, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65739
llvm-svn: 368806
Summary: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50923 enabled the IR printing support for the new pass manager, but only for the case when `opt` tool is used as a driver. This patch is to enable the IR printing when `clang` is used as a driver.
Reviewers: fedor.sergeev, philip.pfaffe
Subscribers: cfe-commits, yamauchi, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65975
llvm-svn: 368804
The isGuardVariableSymbol option for ignoring Microsoft's ABI
was originally added to get the bots green, but now that we found
the actual issue (that we checked for prefix instead of suffix
in the MS ABI check), we should be able to properly implement
the guard variable check without any strange Microsoft exceptions.
llvm-svn: 368802
This is the compiler-flag equivalent of the Predicate pragma
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D65197), to direct the vectorizer to fold the
remainder-loop into the main-loop using predication.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66108
Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, fhahn, SjoerdMeije
llvm-svn: 368801
Summary:
Back in January I changed the minimum toolchain version required to build clang
and LLVM: D57264. Since then we've release LLVM 8, following
[our process](http://llvm.org/docs/DeveloperPolicy.html#toolchain)
it's therefore now a good time to remove the soft-error and officially deprecate
older toolchains. I tried this out last Tursday night to see if any bots
complained, and I saw no complaints. I also manually audited bots and didn't see
any bot that should break, but their toolchain information is unreliable and
some bots are offline.
Once this patch stick we'll move to C++14 as we've
[already agreed](http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-January/129452.html).
Subscribers: mgorny, jkorous, dexonsmith, llvm-commits, EricWF, thakis, chandlerc
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66188
llvm-svn: 368799
The support for swifterror allocas should work in all lowerings.
The support for swifterror arguments only really works in a lowering
with prototypes where you can ensure that the prototype also has a
swifterror argument; I'm not really sure how it could possibly be
made to work in the switch lowering.
llvm-svn: 368795
A quick contrast of this ABI with the currently-implemented ABI:
- Allocation is implicitly managed by the lowering passes, which is fine
for frontends that are fine with assuming that allocation cannot fail.
This assumption is necessary to implement dynamic allocas anyway.
- The lowering attempts to fit the coroutine frame into an opaque,
statically-sized buffer before falling back on allocation; the same
buffer must be provided to every resume point. A buffer must be at
least pointer-sized.
- The resume and destroy functions have been combined; the continuation
function takes a parameter indicating whether it has succeeded.
- Conversely, every suspend point begins its own continuation function.
- The continuation function pointer is directly returned to the caller
instead of being stored in the frame. The continuation can therefore
directly destroy the frame when exiting the coroutine instead of having
to leave it in a defunct state.
- Other values can be returned directly to the caller instead of going
through a promise allocation. The frontend provides a "prototype"
function declaration from which the type, calling convention, and
attributes of the continuation functions are taken.
- On the caller side, the frontend can generate natural IR that directly
uses the continuation functions as long as it prevents IPO with the
coroutine until lowering has happened. In combination with the point
above, the frontend is almost totally in charge of the ABI of the
coroutine.
- Unique-yield coroutines are given some special treatment.
llvm-svn: 368788
Without this patch, `-dump-input` prints a diagnostic at the end of
its marker range. For example:
```
1: Start.
check:1 ^~~~~~
2: Bad.
next:2 X~~~
3: Many lines
next:2 ~~~~~~~~~~
4: of input.
next:2 ~~~~~~~~~
5: End.
next:2 ~~~~ error: no match found
```
This patch moves it to the beginning like this:
```
1: Start.
check:1 ^~~~~~
2: Bad.
next:2 X~~~ error: no match found
3: Many lines
next:2 ~~~~~~~~~~
4: of input.
next:2 ~~~~~~~~~
5: End.
next:2 ~~~~
```
The former somehow looks nicer because the diagnostic doesn't appear
to be somewhere within the marker range. However, the latter is more
practical, especially when the marker range includes the remainder of
a very long dump. First, in the case of an error, this patch enables
me to search the dump for `error:` and usually immediately land where
the detected error began. Second, when trying to follow FileCheck's
logic, it's best to read top down, so this patch enables me to see
each diagnostic as soon as I encounter its marker.
Reviewed By: thopre
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65702
llvm-svn: 368786