For consistency with normal instructions and clarity when reading IR,
it's best to print the %0, %1, ... names of function arguments in
definitions.
Also modifies the parser to accept IR in that form for obvious reasons.
llvm-svn: 367755
Target-based runtime functions use int64_t type for sizes, while the
compiler uses size_t type. It leads to miscompilation in 32 bit mode.
llvm-svn: 364327
Summary:
This patch adds support for the registration of the requires directives with the runtime.
Each requires directive clause will enable a particular flag to be set.
The set of flags is passed to the runtime to be checked for compatibility with other such flags coming from other object files.
The registration function is called whenever OpenMP is present even if a requires directive is not present. This helps detect cases in which requires directives are used inconsistently.
Reviewers: ABataev, AlexEichenberger, caomhin
Reviewed By: ABataev, AlexEichenberger
Subscribers: jholewinski, guansong, jfb, jdoerfert, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60568
llvm-svn: 361298
offload targets.
Changed the linkage of omp_offloading.img_start.<triple> and omp_offloading.img_end.<triple> symbols from external to external weak to allow dropping of some targets during linking.
llvm-svn: 338413
device IDs are now 64-bit integers (as opposed to 32-bit)
map flags are 64-bit long (used to be 32-bit)
mappings for partially mapped structs are now calculated at compile time and members of partially mapped structs are flagged using the MEMBER_OF field
Support for is_device_ptr on struct members was dropped - this functionality is not supported by the OpenMP standard and its implementation is technically infeasible (however, use_device_ptr on struct members works as a non-standard extension of the compiler)
llvm-svn: 337468
The linkage of the global entries must be weak to enable support of
redefinition of the same target regions in multiple compilation units.
llvm-svn: 331768
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
variables.
Added emission of the offloading data sections for the variables within
declare target regions + fixes emission of the declare target variables
marked as declare target not within the declare target region.
llvm-svn: 328888
Firstly, each offloading entry must have a unique name or the
linker will complain if there are multiple files with target
regions. Secondly, the compiler must not introduce padding so
mark the struct with a PackedAttr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42168
llvm-svn: 322858
While updating clang tests for having clang set dso_local I noticed
that:
- There are *a lot* of tests to update.
- Many of the updates are redundant.
They are redundant because a GV is "obviously dso_local". This patch
starts formalizing that a bit by requiring that internal and private
GVs be dso_local too. Since they all are, we don't have to print
dso_local to the textual representation, making it a bit more compact
and easier to read.
llvm-svn: 322318
only.
Added support for -fopenmp-simd option that allows compilation of
simd-based constructs without emission of OpenMP runtime calls.
llvm-svn: 321560
This clang patch changes the __tgt_* API function signatures in preparation for the new map interface.
Changes are: Device IDs 32bits --> 64bits, Flags 32bits --> 64bits
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40281
llvm-svn: 318789
Summary:
This patch adds two fields to the offload entry descriptor. One field is meant to signal Ctors/Dtors and `link` global variables, and the other is reserved for runtime library use.
Currently, these fields are only filled with zeros in the current code generation, but that will change when `declare target` is added.
The reason, we are adding these fields now is to make the code generation consistent with the runtime library proposal under review in https://reviews.llvm.org/D14031.
Reviewers: ABataev, hfinkel, carlo.bertolli, kkwli0, arpith-jacob, Hahnfeld
Subscribers: cfe-commits, caomhin, jholewinski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28298
llvm-svn: 291124
Summary: This patch changes the options used by offloading to start with -fopenmp instead of -fomp. This makes the option naming more consistent and materializes a suggestion by Richard Smith in http://reviews.llvm.org/D9888.
Reviewers: hfinkel, carlo.bertolli, arpith-jacob, ABataev
Subscribers: kkwli0, cfe-commits, caomhin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21841
llvm-svn: 274283
Summary: This patch changes the bits used to specify the map types according to the latest version of the libomptarget document and add the support for zero size array section when pointers are being implicitly mapped. This completes the missing new 4.5 map semantics.
Reviewers: hfinkel, carlo.bertolli, arpith-jacob, kkwli0, ABataev
Subscribers: caomhin, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20111
llvm-svn: 270868
Summary:
The current offloading implementation is using -omptargets and -omp-host-ir-file-path options in the frontend. This causes the user a lot of trouble due to to the conflicts with the -o option. E.g. if the user misspells omptargets he will end up with a file with a weird name.
This patches replaces these two options with -fomptargets and -fomp-host-ir-file-path to avoid these issues, and it is also more consistent with the other options like -fopenmp.
Reviewers: hfinkel, carlo.bertolli, arpith-jacob, kkwli0, ABataev
Subscribers: cfe-commits, caomhin, fraggamuffin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18112
llvm-svn: 263442
Summary:
Unlike other outlined regions in OpenMP, offloading entry points have to have be visible (external linkage) for the device side. Using dots in the names of the entries can be therefore problematic for some toolchains, e.g. NVPTX.
Also the patch drops the column information in the unique name of the entry points. The parsing of directives ignore unknown tokens, preventing several target regions to be implemented in the same line. Therefore, the line information is sufficient for the name to be unique. Also, the preprocessor printer does not preserve the column information, causing offloading-entry detection issues if the host uses an integrated preprocessor and the target doesn't (or vice versa).
Reviewers: hfinkel, arpith-jacob, carlo.bertolli, kkwli0, ABataev
Subscribers: cfe-commits, fraggamuffin, caomhin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17179
llvm-svn: 260837
- Allow device ID to be signed.
- Add missing semicolon to some of the CHECK directives.
Thanks to Amjad Aboud for detecting the issue.
llvm-svn: 257065
This patch attempts to fix the regressions identified when the patch was committed initially.
Thanks to Michael Liao for identifying the fix in the offloading metadata generation
related with side effects in evaluation of function arguments.
llvm-svn: 256933
Summary:
In order to offloading work properly two things need to be in place:
- a descriptor with all the offloading information (device entry functions, and global variable) has to be created by the host and registered in the OpenMP offloading runtime library.
- all the device functions need to be emitted for the device and a convention has to be in place so that the runtime library can easily map the host ID of an entry point with the actual function in the device.
This patch adds support for these two things. However, only entry functions are being registered given that 'declare target' directive is not yet implemented.
About offloading descriptor:
The details of the descriptor are explained with more detail in http://goo.gl/L1rnKJ. Basically the descriptor will have fields that specify the number of devices, the pointers to where the device images begin and end (that will be defined by the linker), and also pointers to a the begin and end of table whose entries contain information about a specific entry point. Each entry has the type:
```
struct __tgt_offload_entry{
void *addr;
char *name;
int64_t size;
};
```
and will be implemented in a pre determined (ELF) section `.omp_offloading.entries` with 1-byte alignment, so that when all the objects are linked, the table is in that section with no padding in between entries (will be like a C array). The code generation ensures that all `__tgt_offload_entry` entries are emitted in the same order for both host and device so that the runtime can have the corresponding entries in both host and device in same index of the table, and efficiently implement the mapping.
The resulting descriptor is registered/unregistered with the runtime library using the calls `__tgt_register_lib` and `__tgt_unregister_lib`. The registration is implemented in a high priority global initializer so that the registration happens always before any initializer (that can potentially include target regions) is run.
The driver flag -omptargets= was created to specify a comma separated list of devices the user wants to support so that the new functionality can be exercised. Each device is specified with its triple.
About target codegen:
The target codegen is pretty much straightforward as it reuses completely the logic of the host version for the same target region. The tricky part is to identify the meaningful target regions in the device side. Unlike other programming models, like CUDA, there are no already outlined functions with attributes that mark what should be emitted or not. So, the information on what to emit is passed in the form of metadata in host bc file. This requires a new option to pass the host bc to the device frontend. Then everything is similar to what happens in CUDA: the global declarations emission is intercepted to check to see if it is an "interesting" declaration. The difference is that instead of checking an attribute, the metadata information in checked. Right now, there is only a form of metadata to pass information about the device entry points (target regions). A class `OffloadEntriesInfoManagerTy` was created to manage all the information and queries related with the metadata. The metadata looks like this:
```
!omp_offload.info = !{!0, !1, !2, !3, !4, !5, !6}
!0 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_ZN2S12r1Ei", i32 479, i32 13, i32 4}
!1 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_ZL7fstatici", i32 461, i32 11, i32 5}
!2 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_Z9ftemplateIiET_i", i32 444, i32 11, i32 6}
!3 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_Z3fooi", i32 99, i32 11, i32 0}
!4 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_Z3fooi", i32 272, i32 11, i32 3}
!5 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_Z3fooi", i32 127, i32 11, i32 1}
!6 = !{i32 0, i32 52, i32 77426347, !"_Z3fooi", i32 159, i32 11, i32 2}
```
The fields in each metadata entry are (in sequence):
Entry 1) an ID of the type of metadata - right now only zero is used meaning "OpenMP target region".
Entry 2) a unique ID of the device where the input source file that contain the target region lives.
Entry 3) a unique ID of the file where the input source file that contain the target region lives.
Entry 4) a mangled name of the function that encloses the target region.
Entries 5) and 6) line and column number where the target region was found.
Entry 7) is the order the entry was emitted.
Entry 2) and 3) are required to distinguish files that have the same function name.
Entry 4) is required to distinguish different instances of the same declaration (usually templated ones)
Entries 5) and 6) are required to distinguish the particular target region in body of the function (it is possible that a given target region is not an entry point - if clause can evaluate always to zero - and therefore we need to identify the "interesting" target regions. )
This patch replaces http://reviews.llvm.org/D12306.
Reviewers: ABataev, hfinkel, tra, rjmccall, sfantao
Subscribers: FBrygidyn, piotr.rak, Hahnfeld, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12614
llvm-svn: 256842