Previously, we would use a frame pointer by default on non-Linux OSs. On
Linux, any optimization flags imply -fomit-frame-pointer. XCore always
defaulted to -fomit-frame-pointer.
Now x86 Windows matches our behavior on Linux. All other ISAs supported
by Windows (ARM, x64) use xdata information, and frame pointers aren't
useful. Frame pointers are now off by default for such targets, but can
be forced via -fno-omit-frame-pointer and code using alloca().
In fact, on Win64 our frame-pointer prologue is not describable with
UNWIND_INFO. This change is a workaround to avoid using the broken FP
using prologue for most functions. This is PR22467.
llvm-svn: 228236
object. In such a case, use the TU's DC for merging global decls rather than
giving up when we find there is no TU scope.
Ultimately, we should probably avoid all loading of decls when preprocessing,
but there are other reasonable use cases for loading an AST file with no Sema
object for which this is the right thing.
llvm-svn: 228234
Previously we would simply double-emit the body of the __finally block,
but that doesn't work when it contains any kind of Decl, which we can't
double emit.
This fixes that by emitting the block once and branching into a shared
code region and then branching back out.
llvm-svn: 228222
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
std::lock_guard. If EXCLUSIVE_LOCKS_REQUIRED is placed on the constructor of
a SCOPED_LOCKABLE class, then that constructor is assumed to adopt the lock;
e.g. the lock must be held on construction, and will be released on destruction.
llvm-svn: 228194
Now if you break on a dtor and go 'up' in your debugger (or you get an
asan failure in a dtor) during an exception unwind, you'll have more
context. Instead of all dtors appearing to be called from the '}' of the
function, they'll be attributed to the end of the scope of the variable,
the same as the non-exceptional dtor call.
This doesn't /quite/ remove all uses of CurEHLocation (which might be
nice to remove, for a few reasons) - it's still used to choose the
location for some other work in the landing pad. It'd be nice to
attribute that code to the same location as the exception calls within
the block and to remove CurEHLocation.
llvm-svn: 228181
A refinement of r204730, itself a refinement of r198953, to better handle
cases where an object is accessed both through a property getter and
through direct ivar access. An object accessed through a property should
always be treated as +0, i.e. not owned by the caller. However, an object
accessed through an ivar may be at +0 or at +1, depending on whether the
ivar is a strong reference. Outside of ARC, we don't always have that
information.
The previous attempt would clear out the +0 provided by a getter, but only
if that +0 hadn't already participated in other retain counting operations.
(That is, "self.foo" is okay, but "[[self.foo retain] autorelease]" is
problematic.) This turned out to not be good enough when our synthesized
getters get involved.
This commit drops the notion of "overridable" reference counting and instead
just tracks whether a value ever came from a (strong) ivar. If it has, we
allow one more release than we otherwise would. This has the added benefit
of being able to catch /some/ overreleases of instance variables, though
it's not likely to come up in practice.
We do still get some false negatives because we currently throw away
refcount state upon assigning a value into an ivar. We should probably
improve on that in the future, especially once we synthesize setters as
well as getters.
rdar://problem/18075108
llvm-svn: 228174
Summary:
Now that the darwin-version tests in Driver and Frontend are
testing different parts of the version encoding instead of doing
duplicated work
Reviewers: rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: rnk, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7134
llvm-svn: 228159
Summary:
Allow user to provide multiple blacklists by passing several
-fsanitize-blacklist= options. These options now don't override
default blacklist from Clang resource directory, which is always
applied (which fixes PR22431).
-fno-sanitize-blacklist option now disables all blacklists that
were specified earlier in the command line (including the default
one).
This change depends on http://reviews.llvm.org/D7367.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: timurrrr
Subscribers: cfe-commits, kcc, pcc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7368
llvm-svn: 228156
This lets clang-format format
__try {
} __except(0) {
}
and
__try {
} __finally {
}
correctly. __try and __finally are keywords if `LangOpts.MicrosoftExt` is set,
so this turns this on. This also enables a few other keywords, but it
shouldn't overly perturb regular clang-format operation. __except is a
context-sensitive keyword, so `AdditionalKeywords` needs to be passed around to
a few more places.
Fixes PR22321.
llvm-svn: 228148
While probably technically correct, the solution r228138 was quite hard
to read/understand. This should be simpler.
Also added a test to ensure that we are still visiting the syntactic form
as well.
llvm-svn: 228144
Summary:
Named registers with the constraint "=&r" currently lose the early clobber flag
and turn into "=r" when converted to LLVM-IR. This patch correctly passes it on.
Reviewers: atanasyan
Reviewed By: atanasyan
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7346
llvm-svn: 228143
Otherwise, this can lead to unexpected results when AST matching as
some nodes are only present in the semantic form.
For example, only looking at the syntactic form does not find the
DeclRefExpr to f() in:
struct S { S(void (*a)()); };
void f();
S s[1] = {&f};
llvm-svn: 228138
__declspec(restrict) and __attribute(malloc) are both handled
identically by clang: they are allowed to the noalias LLVM attribute.
Seeing as how noalias models the C99 notion of 'restrict', rename the
internal clang attribute to Restrict from Malloc.
llvm-svn: 228120
When the condition is a vector, OpenCL specifies additional
requirements on the operand types, and also the operations
required to determine the result type of the operator. This is a
combination of OpenCL v1.1 s6.3.i and s6.11.6, and the semantics
remain unchanged in later versions of OpenCL.
llvm-svn: 228118
Some standard header files from MSVC2012 use 'mutable' on references, though it is directly prohibited by the standard.
Fix for http://llvm.org/PR22444
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7370
llvm-svn: 228113
Previously, when the following piece of code was compiled, clang would
incorrectly warn that the size of "wide_two" does not match register size
specified by the constraint and modifier":
long wide_two = two;
asm ("%w0 %1" : "+r" (one), "+r"(wide_two));
This was caused by a miscalculation of ConstraintIdx in Sema::ActOnGCCAsmStmt.
This commit fixes PR21270 and rdar://problem/18668354.
llvm-svn: 228089
We would synthesize memcpy intrinsics when emitting calls to trivial C++
constructors but we wouldn't take into account the alignment of the
destination.
llvm-svn: 228061
There are four major kinds of declarations that cause code generation:
- FunctionDecl (includes CXXMethodDecl etc)
- ObjCMethodDecl
- BlockDecl
- CapturedDecl
This patch tracks __try usage on FunctionDecls and diagnoses __try usage
in other decls. If someone wants to use __try from ObjC, they can use it
from a free function, since the ObjC code will need an ObjC-style EH
personality.
Eventually we will want to look through CapturedDecls and track SEH
usage on the parent FunctionDecl, if present.
llvm-svn: 228058
To handle default arguments in C++ in the debug info, we disable code
updating the debug location during the emission of default arguments.
This code was buggy in the case of default arguments which, themselves,
have default arguments - the inner default argument would re-enable
debug info when it was finished, but before the outer default argument
was finished.
This was already a bug, but got worse (because a crasher instead of just
a quality bug) with the recent improvements to debug info line quality
because... The ApplyDebugLocation scoped device would find the debug
info disabled and not save any debug location. But then in
~ApplyDebugLocation it would find the debug info had been enabled and
would then apply the no-location. Then the outer function call would be
emitted without any location. That's bad.
Arguably we could /also/ fix the ApplyDebugLocation to assert on this
situation (where debug info was disabled in the ctor and enabled in the
dtor, or the other way around) but this is at least the necessary fix
regardless.
(also, I imagine this disabling behavior might need to be in-place for
CGExprComplex and CGExprAgg too, maybe... ?)
And I seem to recall seeing some weird default arg stepping behavior
recently which might be related to this too... I'll have to look into
it.
llvm-svn: 228053
Clang asserts for this pointer reference in asms of naked functions.
This patch diagnoses if this pointer reference is used.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7329
llvm-svn: 228052
These checks detect potential deadlocks caused by inconsistent lock
ordering. The checks are implemented under the -Wthread-safety-beta flag.
This patch also replaces calls to getAttrs() with calls to attrs() throughout
ThreadSafety.cpp, which fixes the earlier issue that cause assert failures.
llvm-svn: 228051
Appends the username to the first component (after the temp dir) of the
module cache path. If the username contains a character that shouldn't
go into a path (for now conservatively allow [a-zA-Z0-9_]), we fallback
to the user id.
llvm-svn: 228013
distinction between the different use-cases. With the previous default
behavior we would occasionally emit empty debug locations in situations
where they actually were strictly required (= on invoke insns).
We now have a choice between defaulting to an empty location or an
artificial location.
Specifically, this fixes a bug caused by a missing debug location when
emitting C++ EH cleanup blocks from within an artificial function, such as
an ObjC destroy helper function.
rdar://problem/19670595
llvm-svn: 228003
These checks detect potential deadlocks caused by inconsistent lock
ordering. The checks are implemented under the -Wthread-safety-beta flag.
llvm-svn: 227997
Thou shall not jump into SEH blocks. Jumping out of SEH __try and __excepts
is A-ok. Jumping out of __finally blocks is B-ok (msvc doesn't error about it,
but warns that it has undefined behavior).
I've checked that clang's behavior with this patch matches msvc's behavior.
We don't have the warning on jumping out of a __finally yet, see the FIXME
in the test. clang also currently crashes on codegen for a jump out of a
__finally block, see PR22414 comment 7.
I also added a few tests for the interaction of indirect jumps and SEH blocks.
MSVC doesn't support indirect jumps, so there's no way to know if clang behave
the same way as msvc here. clang's behavior with this patch does make sense
to me, but maybe it could be argued that it should be more permissive (see
FIXME in the indirect jump tests -- shout if you have an opinion on this).
llvm-svn: 227982
I am not entirely sure whether the implemented sematics are ideal. In
particular, should floatLiteral(equals(0.5)) match "0.5f" and should
floatLiteral(equals(0.5f)) match "0.5". With the overloads in this
patch, the answer to both questions is yes, but I am happy to change
that.
llvm-svn: 227956
Apparently the build bots get angry for some reason. Can't reproduce
that in a local cmake/ninja build. Will look closer. Rolling back for
now.
llvm-svn: 227895
I am not entirely sure whether the implemented sematics are ideal. In
particular, should floatLiteral(equals(0.5)) match "0.5f" and should
floatLiteral(equals(0.5f)) match "0.5". With the overloads in this
patch, the answer to both questions is yes, but I am happy to change
that.
llvm-svn: 227892
-save-temps=cwd is equivalent to -save-temps
-save-temps=obj saves temporary file in the same directory as output
This helps to avoid clobbering of temp files in case of parallel
compilation with -save-temps of the files that have the same name
but located in different directories.
Patch by Artem Belevich
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7304
llvm-svn: 227886
This check does not apply when Borland extensions are enabled, as they
have a checked in test case indicating that mixed usage of SEH and C++
is supported.
llvm-svn: 227876
Summary:
This is especially important for targets that use multiple address spaces,
and commonly place global variables in address spaces other than zero.
Fixes PR22383
Test Plan: New test case added: llvm-used.cu
Reviewers: jingyue
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7345
llvm-svn: 227861
It is common for COM interface classes to be marked as 'novtable' to
tell the compiler that constructors and destructors should not reference
virtual function tables.
This commit implements this feature in clang.
llvm-svn: 227796
This used to crash, complaining "ObjectType and scope specifier cannot coexist":
struct A { } b = b.~A::A <int>;
The only other caller of ParseOptionalCXXScopeSpecifier() that passes in a
non-empty ObjectType clears the ObjectType of the scope specifier comes back
non-empty (see the tok::period case in Parser::ParsePostfixExpressionSuffix()),
so do that here too.
Found by SLi's bot.
llvm-svn: 227781
This moves all of the PassManager <-> Target communication to use the
new pass manager's TargetIRAnalysis even with the old pass manager. See
the LLVM commit for some of why things are moving in this direction, but
the short version is that this will enable us to create per-function
TargetTransformInfo objects that have correct subtarget information for
that function.
llvm-svn: 227732