According to [basic.namespace.general]/p2, a namespace declaration
shouldn't have a module linkage.
> A namespace is never attached to a named module and never has a name
> with module linkage.
Without this patch, the compiler would crash for the test in assertion
enabled build due to inconsistent linkage for redeclaration for
namespaces.
Reviewed by: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115132
According to [module.unit]p7.2.3, a declaration within a linkage-specification
should be attached to the global module.
This let user to forward declare types across modules.
Reviewed by: rsmith, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110215
A series of unary operators and casts may obscure the variable we're
trying to analyze. Ignore them for the uninitialized value analysis.
Other checks determine if the unary operators result in a valid l-value.
Link: https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/1521
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114848
This fixes in a regression introduced by 6eeda06c1.
When deducing the return type of nested function calls, only the
return type of the outermost expression should be ignored.
Instead of assuming all contextes nested in a discared statements
are themselves discarded, only assume that in immediate contexts.
Similarly, only consider contextes immediately in an immediate or
discarded statement as being themselves immediate.
Some users have a need to control attribute extension diagnostics
independent of other extension diagnostics. Consider something like use
of [[nodiscard]] within C++11:
```
[[nodiscard]]
int f();
```
If compiled with -Wc++17-extensions enabled, this will produce warning:
use of the 'nodiscard' attribute is a C++17 extension. This diagnostic
is correct -- using [[nodiscard]] in C++11 mode is a C++17 extension.
And the behavior of __has_cpp_attribute(nodiscard) is also correct --
we support [[nodiscard]] in C++11 mode as a conforming extension. But
this makes use of -Werror or -pedantic-errors` builds more onerous.
This patch adds diagnostic groups for attribute extensions so that
users can selectively disable attribute extension diagnostics. I
believe this is preferable to requiring users to specify additional
flags because it means -Wc++17-extensions continues to be the way we
enable all C++17-related extension diagnostics. It would be quite easy
for someone to use that flag thinking they're protected from some
portability issues without realizing it skipped attribute extensions if
we went the other way.
This addresses PR33518.
The default for min is changed to 1. The behaviour of -mvscale-{min,max}
in Clang is also changed such that 16 is the max vscale when targeting
SVE and no max is specified.
Reviewed By: sdesmalen, paulwalker-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113294
Select the OpenCLKernel calling convention for kernels when compiling
CUDA targeting SPIR-V.
In this way the generated LLVM IR will have a spir_kernel calling
convention that will be translated to an OpEntryPoint when converting
to SPIRV.
Reviewed By: jlebar, tra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114407
This patch fixes issues for -fgpu-rdc for Windows MSVC
toolchain:
Fix COFF specific section flags and remove section types
in llvm-mc input file for Windows.
Escape fatbin path in llvm-mc input file.
Add -triple option to llvm-mc.
Put __hip_gpubin_handle in comdat when it has linkonce_odr
linkage.
Reviewed by: Artem Belevich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115039
WG14 adopted the _ExtInt feature from Clang for C23, but renamed the
type to be _BitInt. This patch does the vast majority of the work to
rename _ExtInt to _BitInt, which accounts for most of its size. The new
type is exposed in older C modes and all C++ modes as a conforming
extension. However, there are functional changes worth calling out:
* Deprecates _ExtInt with a fix-it to help users migrate to _BitInt.
* Updates the mangling for the type.
* Updates the documentation and adds a release note to warn users what
is going on.
* Adds new diagnostics for use of _BitInt to call out when it's used as
a Clang extension or as a pre-C23 compatibility concern.
* Adds new tests for the new diagnostic behaviors.
I want to call out the ABI break specifically. We do not believe that
this break will cause a significant imposition for early adopters of
the feature, and so this is being done as a full break. If it turns out
there are critical uses where recompilation is not an option for some
reason, we can consider using ABI tags to ease the transition.
Previously, the `SValBuilder` could not encounter expressions of the
following kind:
NonLoc OP Loc
Loc OP NonLoc
Where the `Op` is other than `BO_Add`.
As of now, due to the smarter simplification and the fixedpoint
iteration, it turns out we can.
It can happen if the `Loc` was perfectly constrained to a concrete
value (`nonloc::ConcreteInt`), thus the simplifier can do
constant-folding in these cases as well.
Unfortunately, this could cause assertion failures, since we assumed
that the operator must be `BO_Add`, causing a crash.
---
In the patch, I decided to preserve the original behavior (aka. swap the
operands (if the operator is commutative), but if the `RHS` was a
`loc::ConcreteInt` call `evalBinOpNN()`.
I think this interpretation of the arithmetic expression is closer to
reality.
I also tried naively introducing a separate handler for
`loc::ConcreteInt` RHS, before doing handling the more generic `Loc` RHS
case. However, it broke the `zoo1backwards()` test in the `nullptr.cpp`
file. This highlighted for me the importance to preserve the original
behavior for the `BO_Add` at least.
PS: Sorry for introducing yet another branch into this `evalBinOpXX`
madness. I've got a couple of ideas about refactoring these.
We'll see if I can get to it.
The test file demonstrates the issue and makes sure nothing similar
happens. The `no-crash` annotated lines show, where we crashed before
applying this patch.
Reviewed By: martong
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115149
Before, the CLANG_DEFAULT_LINKER cmake option was a global override for
the linker that shall be used on all toolchains. The linker binary
specified that way may not be available on toolchains with custom
linkers. Eg, the only linker for VE is named 'nld' - any other linker
invalidates the toolchain.
This patch removes the hard override and instead lets the generic
toolchain implementation default to CLANG_DEFAULT_LINKER. Toolchains
can now deviate with a custom linker name or deliberatly default to
CLANG_DEFAULT_LINKER.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115045
Change C++ header files placement to support multiple LLVM_RUNTIME_TARGETS
build. Also modifies regression test for it.
Reviewed By: simoll
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114527
Some projects [1,2,3] have flex-generated files besides bison-generated
ones.
Unfortunately, the comment `"/* A lexical scanner generated by flex */"`
generated by the tools is not necessarily at the beginning of the file,
thus we need to quickly skim through the file for this needle string.
Luckily, StringRef can do this operation in an efficient way.
That being said, now the bison comment is not required to be at the very
beginning of the file. This allows us to detect a couple more cases
[4,5,6].
Alternatively, we could say that we only allow whitespace characters
before matching the bison/flex header comment. That would prevent the
(probably) unnecessary string search in the buffer. However, I could not
verify that these tools would actually respect this assumption.
Additionally to this, e.g. the Twin project [1] has other non-whitespace
characters (some preprocessor directives) before the flex-generated
header comment. So the heuristic in the previous paragraph won't work
with that.
Thus, I would advocate the current implementation.
According to my measurement, this patch won't introduce measurable
performance degradation, even though we will do 2 linear scans.
I introduce the ignore-bison-generated-files and
ignore-flex-generated-files to disable skipping these files.
Both of these options are true by default.
[1]: https://github.com/cosmos72/twin/blob/master/server/rcparse_lex.cpp#L7
[2]: 22362cdcf9/sandbox/count-words/lexer.c (L6)
[3]: 11abdf6462/lab1/lex.yy.c (L6)
[4]: 47f5b2cfe2/B_yacc/1/y1.tab.h (L2)
[5]: 71d1bf9b1e/src/VBox/Additions/x11/x11include/xorg-server-1.8.0/parser.h (L2)
[6]: 3f773ceb13/Framework/OpenEars.framework/Versions/A/Headers/jsgf_parser.h (L2)
Reviewed By: xazax.hun
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114510
When targeting FreeBSD on a Linux host with a copy
of system libc++, Clang prepends /usr/include/c++/v1
to the search paths even with -ffreestanding, and
fails to compile a program with a
single #include <xmmintrin.h>
Dropping the path with -nostdlibinc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114497
Swap AIC and IC neighbouring in pipeline. This looks more natural and even
almost has no effect for now (three slightly touched tests of test-suite). Also
this could be the first step towards merging AIC (or its part) to -O2 pipeline.
After several changes in AIC (like D108091, D108201, D107766, D109515, D109236)
there've been observed several regressions (like PR52078, PR52253, PR52289)
that were fixed in different passes (see D111330, D112721) by extending their
functionality, but these regressions were exposed since changed AIC prevents IC
from making some of early optimizations.
This is common problem and it should be fixed by just moving AIC after IC
which looks more logically by itself: make aggressive instruction combining
only after failed ordinary one.
Fixes PR52289
Reviewed By: spatel, RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113179
The ray_origin, ray_dir and ray_inv_dir arguments should all be vec3 to
match how the hardware instruction works.
Don't change the API of the corresponding OpenCL builtins.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115032
Support for builtin setjmp/longjmp was removed by https://reviews.llvm.org/D51487. An
error should be created when compiling C code using __builtin_setjmp or __builtin_longjmp.
Reviewed By: dcederman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108901
Building -march=armv6k Linux kernels with -mtp=cp15 fails to
compile:
error: hardware TLS register is not supported for the arm
sub-architecture
@ardb found docs for ARM1176JZF-S (ARMv6K) that reference hard thread
pointer.
Relax our ARMv6 check for cases where we're targeting ARM via -marm (vs
Thumb1 via -mthumb). This more closely matches the KConfig requirements
for where we plan to use these (ie. ARMv6K, ARMv7 (arm or thumb2)).
As @peter.smith mentions:
on armv5 we can write the instruction to read/write to CP15 C13 with
the ThreadID opcode. However on no armv5 implementation will the CP15
C13 have a Thread ID register. The GCC intent seems to be whether the
instruction is encodable rather than check what the CPU supports.
Link: https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/1502
Link: https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0301/h/system-control-coprocessor/system-control-processor-registers/c13--thread-and-process-id-registers
Reviewed By: ardb, peter.smith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114116
With C++17 the exception specification has been made part of the
function type, and therefore part of mangled type names.
However, it's valid to convert function pointers with an exception
specification to function pointers with the same argument and return
types but without an exception specification, which means that e.g. a
function of type "void () noexcept" can be called through a pointer
of type "void ()". We must therefore consider the two types to be
compatible for CFI purposes.
We can do this by stripping the exception specification before mangling
the type name, which is what this patch does.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115015
This fixes a bug in 740057d. There's two ways to describe the issue:
* One caller hasn't yet proven nocapture on the argument. Given that, the inference routine is responsible for bailing out on a potential capture.
* Even if we know the argument is nocapture, the access inference needs to traverse the exact set of users the capture tracking would (or exit conservatively). Even if capture tracking can prove a store is non-capturing (e.g. to a local alloc which doesn't escape), we still need to track the copy of the pointer to see if it's later reloaded and accessed again.
Note that all the test changes except the newly added ones appear to be false negatives. That is, cases where we could prove writeonly, but the current code isn't strong enough. That's why I didn't spot this originally.
This adjusts all the MVE and CDE intrinsics now that v2i1 is a legal
type, to use a <2 x i1> as opposed to emulating the predicate with a
<4 x i1>. The v4i1 workarounds have been removed leaving the natural
v2i1 types, notably in vctp64 which now generates a v2i1 type.
AutoUpgrade code has been added to upgrade old IR, which needs to
convert the old v4i1 to a v2i1 be converting it back and forth to an
integer with arm.mve.v2i and arm.mve.i2v intrinsics. These should be
optimized away in the final assembly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114455
Need to do the analysis of the captured expressions in the clauses.
Previously the compiler ignored them and it may lead to a compiler crash
trying to get the address of the mapped variables.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114546
This does similar thing to 6b1341e, but fixes single element 128-bit
float type: `struct { long double x; }`.
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114937
Glibc 2.32 and newer uses these symbol names to support IEEE-754 128-bit
float. GCC transforms name of these builtins to align with Glibc header
behavior.
Since Clang doesn't have all GCC-compatible builtins implemented, this
patch only mutates the implemented part.
Note nexttoward is a special case (no nexttowardf128) so it's also
handled here.
Reviewed By: jsji
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112401
Currently the last value of linear is calculated as var = init + num_iters * step.
Replaced it with var = var_priv, i.e. original variable gets the value
of the last private copy.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105151
Need to postpone anlysis of the ranged for loops till the actual
instantiation to avoid erroneous emission of error messages.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114560
This change extends the current logic for inferring readonly and readnone argument attributes to also infer writeonly.
This change is deliberately minimal; there's a couple of areas for follow up.
* I left out all call handling and thus any benefit from the SCC walk. When examining the test changes, I realized the existing code is imprecise, and am going to fix that in it's own revision before adding in the writeonly handling. (Mostly because updating the tests is hard when I, the human, can't figure out whether the result is correct.)
* I left out handling for storing a value (as opposed to storing to a pointer). This should benefit readonly/readnone as well, and applies to a bunch of other instructions. Seemed worth having as a separate review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114963
Need to postpone analysis for addressable lvalue in a depend clause with
iterators, otherwise the incorrect error message is emitted.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114653
If clang's output is set to bitcode and LTO is enabled, clang would
unconditionally add the flag to the module. Unfortunately, if the input were a
bitcode or IR file and had the flag set, this would result in two copies of the
flag, which is illegal IR. Guard the setting of the flag by checking whether it
already exists. This follows existing practice for the related "ThinLTO" module
flag.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112177
This patch changes the `-fopenmp-target-new-runtime` option which controls if
the new or old device runtime is used to be true by default. Disabling this to
use the old runtime now requires using `-fno-openmp-target-new-runtime`.
Reviewed By: JonChesterfield, tianshilei1992, gregrodgers, ronlieb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114890
Add mapping for CUDA address spaces for HIP to SPIR-V
translation. This change allows HIP device code to be
emitted as valid SPIR-V by mapping unqualified pointers
to generic address space and by mapping __device__ and
__shared__ AS to their equivalent AS in SPIR-V
(CrossWorkgroup and Workgroup, respectively).
Cuda's __constant__ AS is handled specially. In HIP
unqualified pointers (aka "flat" pointers) can point to
__constant__ objects. Mapping this AS to ConstantMemory
would produce to illegal address space casts to
generic AS. Therefore, __constant__ AS is mapped to
CrossWorkgroup.
Patch by linjamaki (Henry Linjamäki)!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108621
This reverts commit f02c5f3478 and
addresses the issue mentioned in D114619 differently.
Repeating the issue here:
Currently, during symbol simplification we remove the original member
symbol from the equivalence class (`ClassMembers` trait). However, we
keep the reverse link (`ClassMap` trait), in order to be able the query
the related constraints even for the old member. This asymmetry can lead
to a problem when we merge equivalence classes:
```
ClassA: [a, b] // ClassMembers trait,
a->a, b->a // ClassMap trait, a is the representative symbol
```
Now let,s delete `a`:
```
ClassA: [b]
a->a, b->a
```
Let's merge ClassA into the trivial class `c`:
```
ClassA: [c, b]
c->c, b->c, a->a
```
Now, after the merge operation, `c` and `a` are actually in different
equivalence classes, which is inconsistent.
This issue manifests in a test case (added in D103317):
```
void recurring_symbol(int b) {
if (b * b != b)
if ((b * b) * b * b != (b * b) * b)
if (b * b == 1)
}
```
Before the simplification we have these equivalence classes:
```
trivial EQ1: [b * b != b]
trivial EQ2: [(b * b) * b * b != (b * b) * b]
```
During the simplification with `b * b == 1`, EQ1 is merged with `1 != b`
`EQ1: [b * b != b, 1 != b]` and we remove the complex symbol, so
`EQ1: [1 != b]`
Then we start to simplify the only symbol in EQ2:
`(b * b) * b * b != (b * b) * b --> 1 * b * b != 1 * b --> b * b != b`
But `b * b != b` is such a symbol that had been removed previously from
EQ1, thus we reach the above mentioned inconsistency.
This patch addresses the issue by making it impossible to synthesise a
symbol that had been simplified before. We achieve this by simplifying
the given symbol to the absolute simplest form.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114887
Many of the SVE ACLE tests have gained entries as follows:
REQUIRES: aarch64-registered-target || arm-registered-target
which can cause test failures when only arm-registered-target is
available because only aarch64-registered-target supports SVE.
In C++23, discarded statements and if consteval statements can nest
arbitrarily. To support that, we keep track of whether the parent of
the current evaluation context is discarded or immediate.
This is done at the construction of an evaluation context
to improve performance.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=52231
The CLANG_DEFAULT_LINKER flag overrides the default toolchain linker.
VE strictly requires 'nld' to be the default linker. This causes a test
failure in test/Driver/ve-toolchain.cpp when configured with
CLANG_DEFAULT_LINKER!=ld
Failure in clang-ppc64le-rhel
(https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/57/builds/12628)
Until default linker selection with CLANG_DEFAULT_LINKER!=ld is fixed
proper, we manually specify '-fuse-ld=ld' (ie the toolchain default
linker) in the ve-toolchain tests.
MSVC says this should be 202002L for /std:c++20, and of VS16.11
that's indeed the case (older versions warn that they don't
understand /std:c++20, and then cl.exe defaults to C++14 and
sets _MSVC_LANG to 201402 accordingly).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114867
This test which was just introduced in the PACBTI-M frontend
patch (https://reviews.llvm.org/D112421) is currently failing on some
platforms. Removing temporarily.
Handle branch protection option on the commandline as well as a function
attribute. One patch for both mechanisms, as they use the same underlying
parsing mechanism.
These are recorded in a set of LLVM IR module-level attributes like we do for
AArch64 PAC/BTI (see https://reviews.llvm.org/D85649):
- command-line options are "translated" to module-level LLVM IR
attributes (metadata).
- functions have PAC/BTI specific attributes iff the
__attribute__((target("branch-protection=...))) was used in the function
declaration.
- command-line option -mbranch-protection to armclang targeting Arm,
following this grammar:
branch-protection ::= "-mbranch-protection=" <protection>
protection ::= "none" | "standard" | "bti" [ "+" <pac-ret-clause> ]
| <pac-ret-clause> [ "+" "bti"]
pac-ret-clause ::= "pac-ret" [ "+" <pac-ret-option> ]
pac-ret-option ::= "leaf" ["+" "b-key"] | "b-key" ["+" "leaf"]
b-key is simply a placeholder to make it consistent with AArch64's
version. In Arm, however, it triggers a warning informing that b-key is
unsupported and a-key will be selected instead.
- Handle _attribute_((target(("branch-protection=..."))) for AArch32 with the
same grammer as the commandline options.
This patch is part of a series that adds support for the PACBTI-M extension of
the Armv8.1-M architecture, as detailed here:
https://community.arm.com/arm-community-blogs/b/architectures-and-processors-blog/posts/armv8-1-m-pointer-authentication-and-branch-target-identification-extension
The PACBTI-M specification can be found in the Armv8-M Architecture Reference
Manual:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0553/latest
The following people contributed to this patch:
- Momchil Velikov
- Victor Campos
- Ties Stuij
Reviewed By: vhscampos
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112421
The invocation of a unary or binary operator for type-dependent expressions is represented as a CXXOperatorCallExpr. Upon template instantiation, TreeTransform::RebuildCXXOperatorCallExpr checks for the case of an overloaded operator, but not for a (non-ObjC) PseudoObject, and will directly create a UnaryOperator or BinaryOperator.
Generalizing commit 0f99537eca from @akyrtzi to handle non-ObjC pseudo objects (and also handle the case of unary pseudo object inc/dec).
This fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=51855
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111639
Fix for the case when there are no instructions in the entry basic block before the call
to `createSections`
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114143
This patch changes clang-offload-bundler to use the original file extension for
the device archive member when unbundling archives instead of printing a warning
and defaulting to ".o".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114776
Allow toggling of -fnew-infallible so last instance takes precedence
Testing:
ninja check-all
Reviewed By: bruno
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113523
We've found that when profiling, counts are only generated for the real definition of constructor aliases (C2 in mangled name). However, when compiling the C1 version is present at the callsite and leads to a lack of counts due to this aliasing. This causes us to miss out on inlining an otherwise hot constructor.
-mconstructor-aliases is AFAICT an optimization, so having a disabling flag if wanted seems valuable.
Testing:
ninja check-all
Reviewed By: wenlei
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114130
A big-endian version of vpermxor, named vpermxor_be, is added to LLVM
and Clang. vpermxor_be can be called directly on both the little-endian
and the big-endian platforms.
Reviewed By: nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114540
Over in D114631 and [0] there's a plan for turning instruction referencing
on by default for x86. This patch adds / removes all the relevant bits of
code, with the aim that the final patch is extremely small, for an easy
revert. It should just be a condition in CommandFlags.cpp and removing the
XFail on instr-ref-flag.ll.
[0] https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-November/153653.html
Add the capability to simplify more complex constraints where there are 3
symbols in the tree. In this change I extend simplifySVal to query constraints
of children sub-symbols in a symbol tree. (The constraint for the parent is
asked in getKnownValue.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103317
Currently, during symbol simplification we remove the original member symbol
from the equivalence class (`ClassMembers` trait). However, we keep the
reverse link (`ClassMap` trait), in order to be able the query the
related constraints even for the old member. This asymmetry can lead to
a problem when we merge equivalence classes:
```
ClassA: [a, b] // ClassMembers trait,
a->a, b->a // ClassMap trait, a is the representative symbol
```
Now lets delete `a`:
```
ClassA: [b]
a->a, b->a
```
Let's merge the trivial class `c` into ClassA:
```
ClassA: [c, b]
c->c, b->c, a->a
```
Now after the merge operation, `c` and `a` are actually in different
equivalence classes, which is inconsistent.
One solution to this problem is to simply avoid removing the original
member and this is what this patch does.
Other options I have considered:
1) Always merge the trivial class into the non-trivial class. This might
work most of the time, however, will fail if we have to merge two
non-trivial classes (in that case we no longer can track equivalences
precisely).
2) In `removeMember`, update the reverse link as well. This would cease
the inconsistency, but we'd loose precision since we could not query
the constraints for the removed member.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114619
We should match GCC's behavior which allows floating-point type for -mno-x87 option on 32-bits. https://godbolt.org/z/KrbhfWc9o
The previous block issues have partially been fixed by D112143.
Reviewed By: asavonic, nickdesaulniers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114162
See discussion in D51650, this change was a little aggressive in an
error while doing a 'while we were here', so this removes that error
condition, as it is apparently useful.
This reverts commit bb4934601d.
We don't properly handle lookup through using directives when there is
a linkage spec in the common chain. This is because `CppLookupName` and
`CppNamespaceLookup` end up skipping `LinkageSpec`'s (correctly, as they
are not lookup scopes), but the `UnqualUsingDirectiveSet` does not.
I discovered that when we are calculating the `CommonAncestor` for a
using-directive, we were coming up with the `LinkageSpec`, instead of
the `LinkageSpec`'s parent. Then, when we use
`UnqualUsingDirectiveSet::getNamespacesFor` a scope, we don't end up
finding any that were in the `LinkageSpec` (again, since `CppLookupName`
skips linkage specs), so those don't end up participating in the lookup.
The function `UnqualUsingDirectiveSet::addUsingDirective` calculates
this common ancestor via a loop through the the `DeclSpec::Encloses`
function.
Changing this Encloses function to believe that a `LinkageSpec`
`Encloses` nothing ends up fixing the problem without breaking any other tests,
so I opted to do that. A less aggressive patch could perhaps change only
the `addUsingDirective`, but my examination of all uses of `Encloses`
showed that it seems to be used exclusively in lookup, which makes me think
this is correct everywhere.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113709
Musl treats PowerPC SPE as a soft-float target (as the PowerPC SPE ABI
is soft-float compatible).
Reviewed By: jhibbits, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105869
As reported in https://bugs.freebsd.org/260078, the gnutls Makefiles
pass -Wa,-march=all to compile a number of assembly files. Clang does
not support this -march value, but because of a mistake in handling
the arguments, an unitialized Arg pointer is dereferenced, which can
cause a segfault.
Work around this by adding a check if the local WaMArch variable is
initialized, and if so, using its value in the diagnostic message.
Reviewed By: tschuett
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114677
After 04f30795f1, -Wreturn-type has an effect on functions that
contain @try/@catch statements. CheckFallThrough() was missing
a case for ObjCAtTryStmts, leading to a false positive.
(What about the other two places in CheckFallThrough() that handle
CXXTryStmt but not ObjCAtTryStmts?
- I think the last use of CXXTryStmt is dead in practice: 04c6851cd made it so
that calls never add edges to try bodies, and the CFG block for a try
statement is always an empty block containing just the try element itself as
terminator (the try body itself is part of the normal flow of the function
and not connected to the block for the try statement itself. The try statment
cfg block is only connected to the catch bodies, and only reachable from
throw expressions within the try body.)
- The first use of CXXTryStmt might be important. It looks similar to
the code that adds all cfg blocks for try statements as roots of
the reachability graph for the reachability warnings, but I can't
find a way to trigger it. So I'm omitting it for now. The CXXTryStmt
code path seems to only be hit by try statements that are function
bodies without a surrounding compound statements
(`f() try { ... } catch ...`), and those don't exist for ObjC
@try statements.
)
Fixes PR52473.
Differential Revfision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114660
GPUs are not supported on AIX, so this patch sets these tests as unsupported.
Reviewed By: stevewan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114381
Currently variables appearing inside private/firstprivate/lastprivate
clause of openmp task construct are not visible inside lldb debugger.
This is because compiler does not generate debug info for it.
Please consider the testcase debug_private.c attached with patch.
```
28 #pragma omp task shared(res) private(priv1, priv2) firstprivate(fpriv)
29 {
30 priv1 = n;
31 priv2 = n + 2;
32 printf("Task n=%d,priv1=%d,priv2=%d,fpriv=%d\n",n,priv1,priv2,fpriv);
33
-> 34 res = priv1 + priv2 + fpriv + foo(n - 1);
35 }
36 #pragma omp taskwait
37 return res;
(lldb) p priv1
error: <user expression 0>:1:1: use of undeclared identifier 'priv1'
priv1
^
(lldb) p priv2
error: <user expression 1>:1:1: use of undeclared identifier 'priv2'
priv2
^
(lldb) p fpriv
error: <user expression 2>:1:1: use of undeclared identifier 'fpriv'
fpriv
^
```
After the current patch, lldb is able to show the variables
```
(lldb) p priv1
(int) $0 = 10
(lldb) p priv2
(int) $1 = 12
(lldb) p fpriv
(int) $2 = 14
```
Reviewed By: djtodoro
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114504
From GCC's manpage:
-fplugin-arg-name-key=value
Define an argument called key with a value of value for the
plugin called name.
Since we don't have a key-value pair similar to gcc's plugin_argument
struct, simply accept key=value here anyway and pass it along as-is to
plugins.
This translates to the already existing '-plugin-arg-pluginname arg'
that clang cc1 accepts.
There is an ambiguity here because in clang, both the plugin name
as well as the option name can contain dashes, so when e.g. passing
-fplugin-arg-foo-bar-foo
it is not clear whether the plugin is foo-bar and the option is foo,
or the plugin is foo and the option is bar-foo. GCC solves this by
interpreting all dashes as part of the option name. So dashes can't be
part of the plugin name in this case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113250
The clang portion of c933c2eb33 was missed as I made
some kind of mistake squashing the commits with git.
This patch just adds those.
The original review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114088
The PCH reader looks for `__clangast` section in the precompiled module file, which is not present in the file on AIX, and we don't support writing this custom section in XCOFF yet.
Reviewed By: daltenty
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114481
The XL implementation of vec_round for vector double uses
"round-to-nearest, ties to even" just as the vector float
`version does. However clang and gcc use "round-to-nearest-away"
for vector double and "round-to-nearest, ties to even"
for vector float.
The XL behaviour is implemented under the __XL_COMPAT_ALTIVEC__
macro similarly to other instances of incompatibility.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113642
Make the SValBuilder capable to simplify existing
SVals based on a newly added constraints when evaluating a BinOp.
Before this patch, we called `simplify` only in some edge cases.
However, we can and should investigate the constraints in all cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113753
Add an AtomicScopeModel for HIP and support for OpenCL builtins
that are missing in HIP.
Patch by: Michael Liao
Revised by: Anshil Ghandi
Reviewed by: Yaxun Liu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113925
All supported FreeBSD releases use libc++, so default to it if the
target's major version is not specified.
Reviewed by: dim, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77776
This enables Intel intrinsics support on FreeBSD.
Thanks to @pkubaj who noticed this feature was missing
Reviewed By: jsji
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113451
[NFC] As part of using inclusive language within the llvm project, this patch
replaces master with controller in these tests.
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114108
The test specified amd64-unknown-freebsd40.0 rather than 14.0. Since
40 is greater than 14 the test (for behaviour new in FreeBSD 14) worked
despite the typo.
Fixes: 699d47472c
Reviewed by: dim (in D77776)
Make the SimpleSValBuilder capable to simplify existing IntSym
expressions based on a newly added constraint on the sub-expression.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113754
The form 'for co_await' is part of CoroutineTS instead of C++20.
So if we detected the use of 'for co_await' in C++20, we should emit
a warning at least.
The `llvm.instrprof.increment` intrinsic uses `i32` for the index. We should use this same type for the index into the GEP instructions.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114268
This change allows SwiftAttr to be used with #pragma clang attribute push
to add Swift attributes to large regions of header files.
We plan to use this to annotate headers with concurrency information.
Patch by: Becca Royal-Gordon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112773
Eachempati.
This patch adds clang (parsing, sema, serialization, codegen) support for the 'depend' clause on the 'taskwait' directive.
Reviewed By: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113540
Operations are emulated by software emulation and “float” instructions.
This patch is allowing the support of _Float16 type without the use of
-max512fp16 flag. The final goal being, perform _Float16 emulation for
all arithmetic expressions.
This test case had been missing when the original code
was introduced by 2fcb863b2b.
Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114207
[NFC] This patch replaces `masterPort` with `mainPort` in these
testcases.
Reviewed By: ZarkoCA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113505
This covers both C-style variadic functions and template variadic w/
parameter packs.
Previously we would return no signatures when working with template
variadic functions once activeParameter reached the position of the
parameter pack (except when it was the only param, then we'd still
show it when no arguments were given). With this commit, we now show
signathure help correctly.
Additionally, this commit fixes the activeParameter value in LSP output
of clangd in the presence of variadic functions (both kinds). LSP does
not allow the activeParamter to be higher than the number of parameters
in the active signature. With "..." or parameter pack being just one
argument, for all but first argument passed to "..." we'd report
incorrect activeParameter value. Clients such as VSCode would then treat
it as 0, as suggested in the spec) and highlight the wrong parameter.
In the future, we should add support for per-signature activeParamter
value, which exists in LSP since 3.16.0. This is not part of this
commit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111318
During explicit modules build, when all modules are provided via `-fmodule-file=<path>` and implicit modules and implicit module maps are disabled (`-fno-implicit-modules`, `-fno-implicit-module-maps`), we don't need to load the original module map files at all. This patch stops emitting the `-fmodule-map-file=` arguments we don't need, saving some compilation time due to avoiding parsing such module maps and making the command line shorter.
Reviewed By: bnbarham
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113473
Problem:
PCM file includes references to all module maps used in compilation which created PCM. This problem leads to PCM-rebuilds in distributed compilations as some module maps could be missing in isolated compilation. (For example in our distributed build system we create a temp folder for every compilation with only modules and headers that are needed for that particular command).
Solution:
Add only affecting module map files to a PCM-file.
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106876
This is aligned with GCC's behavior.
Also, alias `-mno-fp-ret-in-387` to `-mno-x87`, by which we can fix pr51498.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112143
AMD64 ABI mandates caller to specify the number of used SSE registers
when passing variable arguments.
GCC also provides option -mskip-rax-setup to skip the setup of rax when
SSE is disabled. This helps to reduce the code size, see pr23258.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112413
ld.lld used by Android ignores .note.GNU-stack and defaults to noexecstack,
so the `-z noexecstack` linker option is unneeded.
The `--noexecstack` assembler option is unneeded because AsmPrinter.cpp
prints `.section .note.GNU-stack,"",@progbits` (when `llvm.init.trampoline` is unused),
so the assembler won't synthesize an executable .note.GNU-stack.
Reviewed By: danalbert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113840
Since we've decided the to not support std::experimental::coroutine*, we
should tell the user they need to update.
Reviewed By: Quuxplusone, ldionne, Mordante
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113977
With this,
void f() { __asm__("mov eax, ebx"); }
now compiles with clang with -masm=intel.
This matches gcc.
The flag is not accepted in clang-cl mode. It has no effect on
MSVC-style `__asm {}` blocks, which are unconditionally in intel
mode both before and after this change.
One difference to gcc is that in clang, inline asm strings are
"local" while they're "global" in gcc. Building the following with
-masm=intel works with clang, but not with gcc where the ".att_syntax"
from the 2nd __asm__() is in effect until file end (or until a
".intel_syntax" somewhere later in the file):
__asm__("mov eax, ebx");
__asm__(".att_syntax\nmovl %ebx, %eax");
__asm__("mov eax, ebx");
This also updates clang's intrinsic headers to work both in
-masm=att (the default) and -masm=intel modes.
The official solution for this according to "Multiple assembler dialects in asm
templates" in gcc docs->Extensions->Inline Assembly->Extended Asm
is to write every inline asm snippet twice:
bt{l %[Offset],%[Base] | %[Base],%[Offset]}
This works in LLVM after D113932 and D113894, so use that.
(Just putting `.att_syntax` at the start of the snippet works in some but not
all cases: When LLVM interpolates in parameters like `%0`, it uses at&t or
intel syntax according to the inline asm snippet's flavor, so the `.att_syntax`
within the snippet happens to late: The interpolated-in parameter is already
in intel style, and then won't parse in the switched `.att_syntax`.)
It might be nice to invent a `#pragma clang asm_dialect push "att"` /
`#pragma clang asm_dialect pop` to be able to force asm style per snippet,
so that the inline asm string doesn't contain the same code in two variants,
but let's leave that for a follow-up.
Fixes PR21401 and PR20241.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113707
There was some confusion during the discussion of a patch as to whether
`any` can be used to blast an attribute with no subject list onto
basically everything in a program by not specifying a subrule. This
patch adds documentation and tests to make it clear that this situation
is not supported and will be diagnosed.
[NFC] As part of using inclusive language within the llvm project, this patch
replaces `_myMaster` with `_myLeader` in these testcases.
Reviewed By: ZarkoCA
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113433
Calls to MMA builtins that take pointer to void
do not accept other pointers/arrays whereas normal
functions with the same parameter do. This patch
allows MMA built-ins to accept non-void pointers
and arrays.
Reviewed By: nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113306
InstCombine AArch64 LD1/ST1 to llvm.masked.load/llvm.masked.store
and LD1/ST1 to load/store when a ptrue all predicate pattern operand
is present.
This allows existing IR optimizations such as dead-load removal to
occur.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113489
Previously, any change in any function in an SCC would cause all
analyses for all functions in the SCC to be invalidated. With this
change, we now manually invalidate analyses for functions we modify,
then let the pass manager know that all function analyses should be
preserved since we've already handled function analysis invalidation.
So far this only touches the inliner, argpromotion, function-attrs, and
updateCGAndAnalysisManager(), since they are the most used.
This is part of an effort to investigate running the function
simplification pipeline less on functions we visit multiple times in the
inliner pipeline.
However, this causes major memory regressions especially on larger IR.
To counteract this, turn on the option to eagerly invalidate function
analyses. This invalidates analyses on functions immediately after
they're processed in a module or scc to function adaptor for specific
parts of the pipeline.
Within an SCC, if a pass only modifies one function, other functions in
the SCC do not have their analyses invalidated, so in later function
passes in the SCC pass manager the analyses may still be cached. It is
only after the function passes that the eager invalidation takes effect.
For the default pipelines this makes sense because the inliner pipeline
runs the function simplification pipeline after all other SCC passes
(except CoroSplit which doesn't request any analyses).
Overall this has mostly positive effects on compile time and positive effects on memory usage.
https://llvm-compile-time-tracker.com/compare.php?from=7f627596977624730f9298a1b69883af1555765e&to=39e824e0d3ca8a517502f13032dfa67304841c90&stat=instructionshttps://llvm-compile-time-tracker.com/compare.php?from=7f627596977624730f9298a1b69883af1555765e&to=39e824e0d3ca8a517502f13032dfa67304841c90&stat=max-rss
D113196 shows that we slightly regressed compile times in exchange for
some memory improvements when turning on eager invalidation. D100917
shows that we slightly improved compile times in exchange for major
memory regressions in some cases when invalidating less in SCC passes.
Turning these on at the same time keeps the memory improvements while
keeping compile times neutral/slightly positive.
Reviewed By: asbirlea, nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113304
This implements the following changes:
* AutoType retains sugared deduced-as-type.
* Template argument deduction machinery analyses the sugared type all the way
down. It would previously lose the sugar on first recursion.
* Undeduced AutoType will be properly canonicalized, including the constraint
template arguments.
* Remove the decltype node created from the decltype(auto) deduction.
As a result, we start seeing sugared types in a lot more test cases,
including some which showed very unfriendly `type-parameter-*-*` types.
Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>
Reviewed By: rsmith, #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110216
Summary: Specifically, this fixes the case when we get an access to array element through the pointer to element. This covers several FIXME's. in https://reviews.llvm.org/D111654.
Example:
const int arr[4][2];
const int *ptr = arr[1]; // Fixes this.
The issue is that `arr[1]` is `int*` (&Element{Element{glob_arr5,1 S64b,int[2]},0 S64b,int}), and `ptr` is `const int*`. We don't take qualifiers into account. Consequently, we doesn't match the types as the same ones.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113480
Required by https://stackoverflow.com/questions/58073606
As the output argument is stripped out in the clang-check tool, it seems impossible for clang-check users to customize the output file name, even with -extra-args and -extra-arg-before.
This patch adds the -analyzer-output-path argument to allow users to adjust the output name. And if the argument is not set or the analyzer is not enabled, the original strip output adjuster will remove the output arguments.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97265
Add coverage to demonstrate why including the type of template
parameters is necessary to disambiguate function template
specializations.
Test courtesy of Richard Smith
This reverts commit f0cf544d6f.
Just a small change to fix:
```
/home/buildbot/as-builder-4/llvm-clang-x86_64-expensive-checks-ubuntu/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Support/VirtualFileSystem.cpp: In static member function ‘static llvm::ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<llvm::vfs::File> > llvm::vfs::File::getWithPath(llvm::ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<llvm::vfs::File> >, const llvm::Twine&)’:
/home/buildbot/as-builder-4/llvm-clang-x86_64-expensive-checks-ubuntu/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Support/VirtualFileSystem.cpp:2084:10: error: could not convert ‘F’ from ‘std::unique_ptr<llvm::vfs::File>’ to ‘llvm::ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<llvm::vfs::File> >’
return F;
^
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113832
c17d9b4b12 added REQUIRES lines to a lot of Arm and AArch64
test, but added them to the very beginning, before the existing
update_cc_test_checks lines. This just moves them later so as to not
mess up the existing ordering when the checks are regenerated.
```
/work/omp-vega20-0/openmp-offload-amdgpu-runtime/llvm.src/llvm/lib/Support/VirtualFileSystem.cpp: In static member function 'static llvm::ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<llvm::vfs::File> > llvm::vfs::File::getWithPath(llvm::ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<llvm::vfs::File> >, const llvm::Twine&)':
/work/omp-vega20-0/openmp-offload-amdgpu-runtime/llvm.src/llvm/lib/Support/VirtualFileSystem.cpp:2084:10: error: could not convert 'F' from 'std::unique_ptr<llvm::vfs::File>' to 'llvm::ErrorOr<std::unique_ptr<llvm::vfs::File> >'
return F;
^
```
This reverts commit c972175649.
This is a follow up to 0be9ca7c0f to make
paths in the case of falling back to the external file system use the
original format, preserving relative paths, and allow the external
filesystem to canonicalize them if needed.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109128
This implements the following changes:
* AutoType retains sugared deduced-as-type.
* Template argument deduction machinery analyses the sugared type all the way
down. It would previously lose the sugar on first recursion.
* Undeduced AutoType will be properly canonicalized, including the constraint
template arguments.
* Remove the decltype node created from the decltype(auto) deduction.
As a result, we start seeing sugared types in a lot more test cases,
including some which showed very unfriendly `type-parameter-*-*` types.
Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110216
category is empty
Currently, if we create a category in ObjC that is empty, we still emit
runtime metadata for that category. This is a scenario that could
commonly be run into when using __attribute__((objc_direct_members)),
which elides the need for much of the category metadata. This is
slightly wasteful and can be easily skipped by checking the category
metadata contents during CodeGen.
rdar://66177182
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113455
* The format_arg attribute tells the compiler that the attributed function
returns a format string that is compatible with a format string that is being
passed as a specific argument.
* Several NSString methods return copies of their input, so they would ideally
have the format_arg attribute. A previous differential (D112670) added
support for instancetype methods having the format_arg attribute when used
in the context of NSString method declarations.
* D112670 failed to account that instancetype can be sugared in certain narrow
(but critical) scenarios, like by using nullability specifiers. This patch
resolves this problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113636
Reviewed By: ahatanak
Radar-Id: rdar://85278860
Then we don't have to look into the declaration again. Also it's only
natural to collect this information alongside parameters and return
type, as it's also just a parameter in some sense.
Reviewed By: gribozavr2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113690
Change the error message to use ignorelist, and changed some variable and function
names in related code and test.
Reviewed By: thakis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113189
Reuses C++ for OpenCL constructor address space test so that it
supports optional generic address spaces in version 2021.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110184
D103314 introduced symbol simplification when a new constant constraint is
added. Currently, we simplify existing equivalence classes by iterating over
all existing members of them and trying to simplify each member symbol with
simplifySVal.
At the end of such a simplification round we may end up introducing a
new constant constraint. Example:
```
if (a + b + c != d)
return;
if (c + b != 0)
return;
// Simplification starts here.
if (b != 0)
return;
```
The `c == 0` constraint is the result of the first simplification iteration.
However, we could do another round of simplification to reach the conclusion
that `a == d`. Generally, we could do as many new iterations until we reach a
fixpoint.
We can reach to a fixpoint by recursively calling `State->assume` on the
newly simplified symbol. By calling `State->assume` we re-ignite the
whole assume machinery (along e.g with adjustment handling).
Why should we do this? By reaching a fixpoint in simplification we are capable
of discovering infeasible states at the moment of the introduction of the
**first** constant constraint.
Let's modify the previous example just a bit, and consider what happens without
the fixpoint iteration.
```
if (a + b + c != d)
return;
if (c + b != 0)
return;
// Adding a new constraint.
if (a == d)
return;
// This brings in a contradiction.
if (b != 0)
return;
clang_analyzer_warnIfReached(); // This produces a warning.
// The path is already infeasible...
if (c == 0) // ...but we realize that only when we evaluate `c == 0`.
return;
```
What happens currently, without the fixpoint iteration? As the inline comments
suggest, without the fixpoint iteration we are doomed to realize that we are on
an infeasible path only after we are already walking on that. With fixpoint
iteration we can detect that before stepping on that. With fixpoint iteration,
the `clang_analyzer_warnIfReached` does not warn in the above example b/c
during the evaluation of `b == 0` we realize the contradiction. The engine and
the checkers do rely on that either `assume(Cond)` or `assume(!Cond)` should be
feasible. This is in fact assured by the so called expensive checks
(LLVM_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_CHECKS). The StdLibraryFuncionsChecker is notably one of
the checkers that has a very similar assertion.
Before this patch, we simply added the simplified symbol to the equivalence
class. In this patch, after we have added the simplified symbol, we remove the
old (more complex) symbol from the members of the equivalence class
(`ClassMembers`). Removing the old symbol is beneficial because during the next
iteration of the simplification we don't have to consider again the old symbol.
Contrary to how we handle `ClassMembers`, we don't remove the old Sym->Class
relation from the `ClassMap`. This is important for two reasons: The
constraints of the old symbol can still be found via it's equivalence class
that it used to be the member of (1). We can spare one removal and thus one
additional tree in the forest of `ClassMap` (2).
Performance and complexity: Let us assume that in a State we have N non-trivial
equivalence classes and that all constraints and disequality info is related to
non-trivial classes. In the worst case, we can simplify only one symbol of one
class in each iteration. The number of symbols in one class cannot grow b/c we
replace the old symbol with the simplified one. Also, the number of the
equivalence classes can decrease only, b/c the algorithm does a merge operation
optionally. We need N iterations in this case to reach the fixpoint. Thus, the
steps needed to be done in the worst case is proportional to `N*N`. Empirical
results (attached) show that there is some hardly noticeable run-time and peak
memory discrepancy compared to the baseline. In my opinion, these differences
could be the result of measurement error.
This worst case scenario can be extended to that cases when we have trivial
classes in the constraints and in the disequality map are transforming to such
a State where there are only non-trivial classes, b/c the algorithm does merge
operations. A merge operation on two trivial classes results in one non-trivial
class.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106823
This implements the following changes:
* AutoType retains sugared deduced-as-type.
* Template argument deduction machinery analyses the sugared type all the way
down. It would previously lose the sugar on first recursion.
* Undeduced AutoType will be properly canonicalized, including the constraint
template arguments.
* Remove the decltype node created from the decltype(auto) deduction.
As a result, we start seeing sugared types in a lot more test cases,
including some which showed very unfriendly `type-parameter-*-*` types.
Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110216
The driver uses class SanitizerArgs to store parsed sanitizer arguments. It keeps a cached
SanitizerArgs object in ToolChain and uses it for different jobs. This does not work if
the sanitizer options are different for different jobs, which could happen when an
offloading toolchain translates the options for different jobs.
To fix this, SanitizerArgs should be created by using the actual arguments passed
to jobs instead of the original arguments passed to the driver, since the toolchain
may change the original arguments. And the sanitizer arguments should be diagnose
once.
This patch also fixes HIP toolchain for handling -fgpu-sanitize: a warning is emitted
for GPU's not supporting sanitizer and skipped. This is for backward compatibility
with existing -fsanitize options. -fgpu-sanitize is also turned on by default.
Reviewed by: Artem Belevich, Evgenii Stepanov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111443
As discussed here: https://lwn.net/Articles/691932/
GCC6.0 adds target_clones multiversioning. This functionality is
an odd cross between the cpu_dispatch and 'target' MV, but is compatible
with neither.
This attribute allows you to list all options, then emits a separately
optimized version of each function per-option (similar to the
cpu_specific attribute). It automatically generates a resolver, just
like the other two.
The mangling however, is... ODD to say the least. The mangling format
is:
<normal_mangling>.<option string>.<option ordinal>.
Differential Revision:https://reviews.llvm.org/D51650
If the feature is on the command line we should honor it for all
functions. I don't think we could reliably target a single function
for a less capable processor than what the rest of the program is
compiled for.
Fixes PR52407.
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113647
Currently any API level>=16 uses default PIE.
If API level<16 is too old to be supported, we can clean up some code.
Reviewed By: danalbert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113370
The default wchar type on 64-bit AIX is `unsigned int`, so this patch sets `WCHAR_T_TYPE` to `unsigned int` rather than `int`.
This patch follows similar reasoning to D110428 except for 64-bit.
Reviewed By: daltenty
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113428
Per C++17 [except.spec], 'throw()' has become equivalent to
'noexcept', and should therefore call std::terminate, not
std::unexpected.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113517
this patch - https://reviews.llvm.org/D110337 changes the way how hostcall
hidden argument is emitted for printf, but the sanitized kernels also use
hostcall buffer to report a error for invalid memory access, which is not
handled by the above patch and it leads to vdi runtime error:
Device::callbackQueue aborting with error : HSA_STATUS_ERROR_MEMORY_FAULT:
Agent attempted to access an inaccessible address. code: 0x2b
Patch by: Praveen Velliengiri
Reviewed by: Yaxun Liu, Matt Arsenault
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112820
Two identical instantiations of a template function can be emitted by two TU's
with linkonce_odr linkage without causing duplicate symbols in linker. MSVC
also requires these symbols be in comdat sections. Linux does not require
the symbols in comdat sections to be merged by linker but by default
clang puts them in comdat sections.
If a template kernel is instantiated identically in two TU's. MSVC requires
that them to be in comdat sections, otherwise MSVC linker will diagnose them as
duplicate symbols. However, currently clang does not put instantiated template
kernels in comdat sections, which causes link error for MSVC.
This patch allows putting instantiated template kernels into comdat sections.
Reviewed by: Artem Belevich, Reid Kleckner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112492
Fuchsia already supports the more compact relocation format.
Make it the default.
Reviewed By: phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113136
This reverts commit 48bb5f4cbe.
Several breakages, including ARM (fixed later, but not sufficient) and
MSan (to be diagnosed later).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113599
Before this commit, on code like:
struct S { ... };
S arr[10000000];
while checking if arr is constexpr, clang would reserve memory for
arr before running constructor for S. If S turned out to not have a
valid constexpr c-tor, clang would still try to initialize each element
(and, in case the c-tor was trivial, even skipping the constexpr step
limit), only to discard that whole APValue later, since the first
element generated a diagnostic.
With this change, we start by allocating just 1 element in the array to
try out the c-tor and take an early exit if any diagnostics are
generated, avoiding possibly large memory allocation and a lot of work
initializing to-be-discarded APValues.
Fixes 51712 and 51843.
In the future we may want to be smarter about large possibly-constexrp
arrays and maybe make the allocation lazy.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113120
After the changes introduced by D106799 it is possible to tag
outlined function with both AlwaysInline and NoInline attributes using
-fno-inline command line options.
This issue is similiar to D107649.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112645
Extension of D112504. Lower amdgpu printf to `__llvm_omp_vprintf`
which takes the same const char*, void* arguments as cuda vprintf and also
passes the size of the void* alloca which will be needed by a non-stub
implementation of `__llvm_omp_vprintf` for amdgpu.
This removes the amdgpu link error on any printf in a target region in favour
of silently compiling code that doesn't print anything to stdout.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112680
When creating a splat of 0 for scalable vectors we tend to create them
with using a combination of shufflevector and insertelement, i.e.
shufflevector (<vscale x 4 x i32> insertelement (<vscale x 4 x i32> poison, i32 0, i32 0),
<vscale x 4 x i32> poison, <vscale x 4 x i32> zeroinitializer)
However, for the case of a zero splat we can actually just replace the
above with zeroinitializer instead. This makes the IR a lot simpler and
easier to read. I have changed ConstantFoldShuffleVectorInstruction to
use zeroinitializer when creating a splat of integer 0 or FP +0.0 values.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113394
Real-world use case: The Qt framework's headers have the same name
as the respective class defined in them, and Qt's traditional qmake
build tool uses -I (rather than -isystem) to pull them in.
Reviewed By: sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112996
at the start of the entry block, which in turn would aid better code transformation/optimization.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110257
This patch removes the assumption propagation that was added in D110655
primarily to get assumption informatino on opaque call sites for
optimizations. The analysis done in D111445 allows us to do this more
intelligently in the back-end.
Depends on D111445
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111463
add tracing for loads and stores.
The primary goal is to have more options for data-flow-guided fuzzing,
i.e. use data flow insights to perform better mutations or more agressive corpus expansion.
But the feature is general puspose, could be used for other things too.
Pipe the flag though clang and clang driver, same as for the other SanitizerCoverage flags.
While at it, change some plain arrays into std::array.
Tests: clang flags test, LLVM IR test, compiler-rt executable test.
Reviewed By: morehouse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113447
This splits out the generated headers and conditonalises them upon the
target being enabled.
The motivation here is that the RISCV header alone added 10MB to the
resource directory, which was previously at 10MB, increasing the build
size and time. This header is contributing ~50% of the size of the
resource headers (~10MB).
The ARM generated headers are contributing about ~10% or 1MB.
This could be extended further adding only the static resource headers
for the targets that the LLVM build supports.
The changes to the tests for ARM mirror what the RISCV target already
did and rnk identified as a possible issue.
Testing:
cmake -G Ninja -D LLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD=X86 -D LLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS="clang;lld" ../clang
ninja check-clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112890
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Previously, the Backend_Emit{Nothing,BC,LL} modes did
not run the LLVM verifier since it is usually added via
the TargetMachine::addPassesToEmitFile method according
to the DisableVerify parameter. This is called from
EmitAssemblyHelper::AddEmitPasses, which is only relevant
for BackendAction-s that require CodeGen.
Note:
* In these particular situations the verifier is added
to the optimization pipeline rather than the codegen
pipeline so that it runs prior to the BC/LL emission
pass.
* This change applies to both the old and the new PMs.
* Because the clang tests use -emit-llvm ubiquitously,
this change will enable the verifier for them.
* A small bug is fixed in emitIFuncDefinition so that
the clang/test/CodeGen/ifunc.c test would pass:
the emitIFuncDefinition incorrectly passed the
GlobalDecl of the IFunc itself to the call to
GetOrCreateLLVMFunction for creating the resolver.
Signed-off-by: Itay Bookstein <ibookstein@gmail.com>
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113352
We treat them as variables of course, though if they have function
pointer type we treat them as functions, i.e. allow parameter and return
value specifications. Just like VarDecls.
Reviewed By: gribozavr2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111266
We were doing this already for type aliases, and it deduplicates the
code looking through aliases and pointers to find a function type. As
a side effect, this finds two warnings that we apparently missed before.
Reviewed By: gribozavr2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111264
The existing CGOpenMPRuntimeAMDGCN and CGOpenMPRuntimeNVPTX classes are
just code bloat. By removing them, the codebase gets a bit cleaner.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert, JonChesterfield, tianshilei1992
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113421
Currently, this is only diagnosed but the decl is not marked invalid. This may hit assertions down the path.
This also reverts the fix for PR49534 since it is not needed anymore.
Reviewed By: hubert.reinterpretcast
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113145
To be more consistent with other pass struct names.
There are still more passes that don't end with "Pass", but these are the important ones.
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112935
These should be all the commands from [1] except those that are marked
obsolete, and "link" / "endlink", as that conflicts with the existing
HeaderDoc pair "link / "/link". For some commands we don't have the
ideal category, but it should work good enough for most cases.
There seems to be no existing test for most commands (except the ones
interpreted by -Wdocumentation), and to some extent such a test wouldn't
look very interesting. But I added a test for the correct parsing of
formulas, as they're a bit special. And I had to adapt
comment-lots-of-unknown-commands.c because typo correction was kicking
in and recognizing some of the commands.
This should fix a couple of reported bugs: PR17437, PR19581, PR24062
(partially, no diagnostic for matching cond/endcond), PR32909, PR37813,
PR44243 (partially, email@domain.com must be addressed separately).
[1] https://www.doxygen.nl/manual/commands.html
Reviewed By: gribozavr2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111190
Currently, we permit -mtp=cp15 even for targets that don't implement the
TLS register. When building for ARMv6 or earlier, this means we emit
instructions that will UNDEF at runtime. For Thumb1, passing -mtp=cp15
will trigger an assert in the backend.
So let's add some diagnostics to ensure that -mtp=cp15 is only accepted
for ARMv6T2 or newer.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113026
Implement support for loading the stack canary from a memory location held in
the TLS register, with an optional offset applied. This is used by the Linux
kernel to implement per-task stack canaries, which is impossible on SMP systems
when using a global variable for the stack canary.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112768
Some time back I extended GCC's '# NNN' line marker semantics.
Specifically popping to a blank filename will restore the filename to
that of the popped-to include. Restore to line 5 of including file
(escaped BOL #'s to avoid git eliding them):
\# 5 "" 2
Added documentation for this line control extension.
This was useful in developing modules tests, but turned out to also be
useful with machine-generated source code. Specifically, a generated
include file that itself includes fragments from elsewhere. The
ability to pop to the generated include file -- with its full path
prefix -- is useful for diagnostic & debug purposes. For instance
something like:
// Machine generated -- DO NOT EDIT
Type Var = {
\# 7 "encoded.dsl" 1 // push to snippet-container
{snippet, of, code}
\# 6 " 2 // Restore to machined-generated source
,
};
// user-code
...
\#include "dsl.h"
...
That pop to "" will restore the filename to '..includepath../dsl.h',
which is better than restoring to plain "dsl.h".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113425
Clang builtin utility `__remove_address_space` now works if generic
address space is not supported in C++ for OpenCL 2021.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110155
The existing CGOpenMPRuntimeAMDGCN and CGOpenMPRuntimeNVPTX classes are
just code bloat. By removing them, the codebase gets a bit cleaner.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert, JonChesterfield, tianshilei1992
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113421
https://reviews.llvm.org/D92808 made clang use the operand bundle
instead of emitting retainRV/claimRV calls on arm64. This commit makes
changes to clang that are needed to use the operand bundle on x86-64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111331
Merge definition visibility the same way we do for other decls. Without
the fix the added test emits `-Wobjc-method-access` as it cannot find a
visible protocol. Make this warning `-Werror` so the test would fail
when protocol visibility regresses.
rdar://83600696
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111860
- CUDA cannot associate memory space with pointer types. Even though Clang could add extra attributes to specify the address space explicitly on a pointer type, it breaks the portability between Clang and NVCC.
- This change proposes to assume the address space from a pointer from the assumption built upon target-specific address space predicates, such as `__isGlobal` from CUDA. E.g.,
```
foo(float *p) {
__builtin_assume(__isGlobal(p));
// From there, we could assume p is a global pointer instead of a
// generic one.
}
```
This makes the code portable without introducing the implementation-specific features.
Note that NVCC starts to support __builtin_assume from version 11.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112041
Summary: Add support of multi-dimensional arrays in `RegionStoreManager::getBindingForElement`. Handle nested ElementRegion's getting offsets and checking for being in bounds. Get values from the nested initialization lists using obtained offsets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111654
Add new triple and target info for ‘spirv32’ and ‘spirv64’ and,
thus, enabling clang (LLVM IR) code emission to SPIR-V target.
The target for SPIR-V is mostly reused from SPIR by derivation
from a common base class since IR output for SPIR-V is mostly
the same as SPIR. Some refactoring are made accordingly.
Added and updated tests for parts that are different between
SPIR and SPIR-V.
Patch by linjamaki (Henry Linjamäki)!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109144
Turning on `enable_noundef_analysis` flag allows better codegen by removing freeze instructions.
I modified clang by renaming `enable_noundef_analysis` flag to `disable-noundef-analysis` and turning it off by default.
Test updates are made as a separate patch: D108453
Reviewed By: eugenis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105169
[Clang/Test]: Rename enable_noundef_analysis to disable-noundef-analysis and turn it off by default (2)
This patch updates test files after D105169.
Autogenerated test codes are changed by `utils/update_cc_test_checks.py,` and non-autogenerated test codes are changed as follows:
(1) I wrote a python script that (partially) updates the tests using regex: {F18594904} The script is not perfect, but I believe it gives hints about which patterns are updated to have `noundef` attached.
(2) The remaining tests are updated manually.
Reviewed By: eugenis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108453
Resolve lit failures in clang after 8ca4b3e's land
Fix lit test failures in clang-ppc* and clang-x64-windows-msvc
Fix missing failures in clang-ppc64be* and retry fixing clang-x64-windows-msvc
Fix internal_clone(aarch64) inline assembly
The structured bindings decomposition of a non-dependent array in a dependent context (a template) were, upon instantiation, creating nested OpaqueValueExprs that would trigger assertions in CodeGen. Additionally the OpaqueValuesExpr's contained SourceExpr is being emitted in CodeGen, but there was no code for its transform in template instantiation. This would trigger other assertions such as when emitting a DeclRefExpr that refers to a VarDecl that is not marked as ODR-used.
This is all based on cursory deduction, but with the way the code flows from SemaTemplateInstantiate back to SemaInit, it is apparent that the nesting of OpaqueValueExpr is unintentional.
This commit fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45964 and possible other issues involving OpaqueValueExprs in template instantiations might be resolved.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108482
Turning on `enable_noundef_analysis` flag allows better codegen by removing freeze instructions.
I modified clang by renaming `enable_noundef_analysis` flag to `disable-noundef-analysis` and turning it off by default.
Test updates are made as a separate patch: D108453
Reviewed By: eugenis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105169
The fix for PR52382 was already introduced in D112732 which ensures that module
instrumentation always runs after function instrumentation. This adds a test
that ensures the PR is addressed and prevent regression.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113143
This is to revert commit f95bd18b5f (Revert "[Attr] support
btf_type_tag attribute") plus a bug fix.
Previous change failed to handle cases like below:
$ cat reduced.c
void a(*);
void a() {}
$ clang -c reduced.c -O2 -g
In such cases, during clang IR generation, for function a(),
CGCodeGen has numParams = 1 for FunctionType. But for
FunctionTypeLoc we have FuncTypeLoc.NumParams = 0. By using
FunctionType.numParams as the bound to access FuncTypeLoc
params, a random crash is triggered. The bug fix is to
check against FuncTypeLoc.NumParams before accessing
FuncTypeLoc.getParam(Idx).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111199
Correct the XLC/C++ version in the warning message to use the information from
XL's -qversion output.
Reviewed By: rzurob
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112847
Trying to update some options that don't at least have an inclusive language version.
This patch adds `objcmt-allowlist-dir-path` as a default alternative.
Reviewed By: akyrtzi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112591
The __block Objective-C pointers can be set but not used due to a commonly used lifetime extension pattern in Objective-C.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112850
[NFC] This patch fixes URLs containing "master". Old URLs were either broken or
redirecting to the new URL.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113186
This reverts commits 737e4216c5 and
ce7ac9e66a.
After those commits, the compiler can crash with a reduced
testcase like this:
$ cat reduced.c
void a(*);
void a() {}
$ clang -c reduced.c -O2 -g
The PragmaAssumeNonNullHandler (and maybe others) passes an invalid
SourceLocation to its callback, hence PrintPreprocessedOutput does not
know how many lines to insert between the previous token and the
pragma and does nothing.
With this patch we instead assume that the unknown token is on the same
line as the previous such that we can call the procedure that also emits
semantically significant whitespace.
Fixes bug reported here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104601#3105044
Constraint `*m` should be used when the address of a variable is passed
as a value. And the constraint is missing for MS inline assembly when sth
is written to the address of the variable.
The missing would cause FE delete the definition of the static varible,
and then result in "undefined reference to xxx" issue.
Reviewed By: xiangzhangllvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113096
This patch added clang codegen and llvm support
for btf_type_tag support. Currently, btf_type_tag
attribute info is preserved in DebugInfo IR only for
pointer types associated with typedef, global variable
and function declaration. Eventually, such information
is emitted to dwarf.
The following is an example:
$ cat test.c
#define __tag __attribute__((btf_type_tag("tag")))
int __tag *g;
$ clang -O2 -g -c test.c
$ llvm-dwarfdump --debug-info test.o
...
0x0000001e: DW_TAG_variable
DW_AT_name ("g")
DW_AT_type (0x00000033 "int *")
DW_AT_external (true)
DW_AT_decl_file ("/home/yhs/test.c")
DW_AT_decl_line (2)
DW_AT_location (DW_OP_addr 0x0)
0x00000033: DW_TAG_pointer_type
DW_AT_type (0x00000042 "int")
0x00000038: DW_TAG_LLVM_annotation
DW_AT_name ("btf_type_tag")
DW_AT_const_value ("tag")
0x00000041: NULL
0x00000042: DW_TAG_base_type
DW_AT_name ("int")
DW_AT_encoding (DW_ATE_signed)
DW_AT_byte_size (0x04)
0x00000049: NULL
Basically, a DW_TAG_LLVM_annotation tag will be inserted
under DW_TAG_pointer_type tag if that pointer has a btf_type_tag
associated with it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111199
This patch introduced btf_type_tag attribute. The attribute
is a type attribute and intends to address the below
linux use cases.
typedef int __user *__intp;
int foo(int __user *arg, ...)
static int do_execve(struct filename *filename,
const char __user *const __user *__argv,
const char __user *const __user *__envp)
Here __user in the kernel defined as
__attribute__((noderef, address_space(__user)))
for sparse ([1]) type checking mode.
For normal clang compilation, we intend to replace it with
__attribute__((btf_type_tag("user")))
and record such informaiton in dwarf and BTF so such
information later can be used in kernel for bpf verification
or for other tracing functionalities.
[1] https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v4.11/dev-tools/sparse.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111199
Now in libcxx and clang, all the coroutine components are defined in
std::experimental namespace.
And now the coroutine TS is merged into C++20. So in the working draft
like N4892, we could find the coroutine components is defined in std
namespace instead of std::experimental namespace.
And the coroutine support in clang seems to be relatively stable. So I
think it may be suitable to move the coroutine component into the
experiment namespace now.
This patch would make clang lookup coroutine_traits in std namespace
first. For the compatibility consideration, clang would lookup in
std::experimental namespace if it can't find definitions in std
namespace. So the existing codes wouldn't be break after update
compiler.
And in case the compiler found std::coroutine_traits and
std::experimental::coroutine_traits at the same time, it would emit an
error for it.
The support for looking up std::experimental::coroutine_traits would be
removed in Clang16.
Reviewed By: lxfind, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108696
For each selector encountered in the source code, we need to load
selectors from the imported modules and check that we are calling a
selector with compatible types.
At the moment, for each module we are storing methods declared in the
headers belonging to this module and methods from the transitive closure
of imported modules. When a module is imported by a few other modules,
methods from the shared module are duplicated in each importer. As the
result, we can end up with lots of identical methods that we try to add
to the global method pool. Doing this duplicate work is useless and
relatively expensive.
Avoid processing duplicate methods by storing in each module only its
own methods and not storing methods from dependencies. Collect methods
from dependencies by walking the graph of module dependencies.
The issue was discovered and reported by Richard Howell. He has done the
hard work for this fix as he has investigated and provided a detailed
explanation of the performance problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110123
Windows member functions have __attribute__((thiscall)) on their type,
so any machine running this that is 32 bit windows fails this test, add
a wildcard, plus an additional run line to explain why.
Implement two builtins to pack/unpack IBM extended long double float,
according to GCC 'Basic PowerPC Builtin Functions Available ISA 2.05'.
Reviewed By: jsji
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112055
This patch attempts to fix a compiler crash that occurs when long
double type is used with -mno-x87 compiler option.
The option disables x87 target feature, which in turn disables x87
registers, so CG cannot select them for x86_fp80 LLVM IR type. Long
double is lowered as x86_fp80 for some targets, so it leads to a
crash.
The option seems to contradict the SystemV ABI, which requires long
double to be represented as a 80-bit floating point, and it also
requires to use x87 registers.
To avoid that, `long double` type is disabled when -mno-x87 option is
set. In addition to that, `float` and `double` also use x87 registers
for return values on 32-bit x86, so they are disabled as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98895
This reverts commit 2d7fba5f95.
The patch was reverted because it caused regression with rocThrust
due to ambiguity of template specialization.
For details please see https://reviews.llvm.org/D109496
This patch reverts incorrect IR introduced in commit d11ec6f67e
[Clang] Enable IC/IF mode for __ibm128, for complex types declared
using __attribute__((mode(TC))). TC corresponds to an unspecified
128-bit format, which on some targets is a double-double format
(like __ibm128_t) and on others is float128_t. The bug in d11ec6f67e
is that long double is only safe to use when it's known to be one of
these formats.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112975