Commit Graph

12821 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Patrick Holland d03736455c [MCA] [In-order pipeline] Fix for 0 latency instruction causing assertion to fail.
0 latency instructions now get processed and retired properly within the in-order pipeline. Had to fix a bug within TimelineView.cpp as well that would show up when a 0 latency instruction was the first instruction in the source.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104675
2021-06-22 10:18:39 -07:00
Fangrui Song 3accff2553 [llvm-objcopy] Fix some namespace style issues
https://llvm.org/docs/CodingStandards.html#use-namespace-qualifiers-to-implement-previously-declared-functions

Reviewed By: jhenderson

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104693
2021-06-22 09:19:48 -07:00
Bill Wendling dd1b121c99 [llvm-diff] Constify APIs so that there aren't conflicts
Some APIs work with const variables while others don't. This can cause
conflicts when calling one from the other.

This is NFC.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104719
2021-06-22 09:17:04 -07:00
Martin Storsjö 703b0ed8e2 [ADT] Add StringRef consume_front_lower and consume_back_lower
These serve as a convenient combination of consume_front/back and
startswith_lower/endswith_lower, consistent with other existing
case insensitive methods named <operation>_lower.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104218
2021-06-22 12:38:08 +03:00
Fangrui Song 3f873e9b51 [llvm-objcopy] Internalize some symbols 2021-06-21 23:49:25 -07:00
Fangrui Song f14e6e4451 [llvm-objcopy] Delete empty namespace. NFC 2021-06-21 23:44:07 -07:00
Rong Xu 8c68eb8306 [SampleFDO] Make FSDiscriminator flag part of function parameters
Add a parameter of IsFSDiscriminator to function
getBaseDiscriminatorFromDiscriminator().

This function currently checks the internal flag of
--enable-fs-discriminator. This is not good because we might
change the default value of the internal flag.

Note that we have a default parameter. This is just
because create_afdo_tool has a call-site to it.
I will remove the default parameter in a later patch.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104584
2021-06-21 14:37:45 -07:00
Langston Barrett a240358833 [llvm-reduce] Don't delete arguments of intrinsics
The argument reduction pass shouldn't remove arguments of
intrinsics, because the resulting module is ill-formed, and so
inherently uninteresting.

Reviewed By: aeubanks

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103129
2021-06-21 12:43:58 -07:00
Fangrui Song ea23c38d06 [llvm-profdata] Allow omission of -o for --text output
This makes it more convenient to get a text format profile.

Add an error for printing non-text format output to a terminal for instrumentation profile.
(It cannot be portably tested. For sample profile, raw_fd_ostream is hidden deeply so it's inconvenient to add a diagnostic.)

Reviewed By: davidxl

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104600
2021-06-21 12:01:57 -07:00
Fangrui Song 8ea2a58a2e [llvm-profdata] Make diagnostics consistent with the (no capitalization, no period) style
The format is currently inconsistent. Use the https://llvm.org/docs/CodingStandards.html#error-and-warning-messages style.

And add `error:` or `warning:` to CHECK lines wherever appropriate.
2021-06-19 14:54:25 -07:00
Fangrui Song 0f558db742 [llvm-profdata] Delete unneeded empty output filename check 2021-06-19 12:20:45 -07:00
Fangrui Song 59d90fe817 Simplify some typedef struct 2021-06-19 11:36:44 -07:00
Hongtao Yu bd52495518 [CSSPGO] Undoing the concept of dangling pseudo probe
As a follow-up to https://reviews.llvm.org/D104129, I'm cleaning up the danling probe related code in both the compiler and llvm-profgen.

I'm seeing a 5% size win for the pseudo_probe section for SPEC2017 and 10% for Ciner. Certain benchmark such as 602.gcc has a 20% size win. No obvious difference seen on build time for SPEC2017 and Cinder.

Reviewed By: wenlei

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104477
2021-06-18 15:14:11 -07:00
Hongtao Yu fb19aa0c74 [CSSPGO][llvm-profgen] Fix an issue in findDisjointRanges
We were using 0 as an indicator of invalid offset when computing disjoint ranges. In reality, 0 can be an valid code offset which stands for the first function in .text section. I'm using UINT64_MAX as an invalid code offset instead.

Reviewed By: wenlei

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104497
2021-06-18 14:38:48 -07:00
Hongtao Yu 8c2c97287e [CSSPGO][llvm-profgen] Ignore LBR records after interrupt transition
If we have seen an inwards transition from external code to internal code, but not a following outwards transition, the inwards transition is likely due to interrupt which is usually unpaired. Ignore current  and subsequent entries since they are likely from an unrelated pre-interrupt context.

LBR records from different interrupt context are unrelated and they should not be mixed together. Currenlty the OS does this for task-scheduling interrupt but not for all interrupts.

Reviewed By: wenlei, wlei

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104276
2021-06-18 12:13:53 -07:00
Hongtao Yu c60f1d5d98 [CSSPGO] Fix an invalid hash table reference issue in the CS preinliner.
We were using a `StringMap` object to store all profiles to be emitted. The object is basically an unordered hash table, therefore updating it in the process of trasvering it may cause issue since the underlying bucket array could change.

I'm also moving the `csspgo-preinliner` switch around so that no context tri will be constructed (by the constructor of `CSPreInliner`) when the switch is off.

Reviewed By: wenlei

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104267
2021-06-18 11:54:23 -07:00
Heejin Ahn 1d891d44f3 [WebAssembly] Rename event to tag
We recently decided to change 'event' to 'tag', and 'event section' to
'tag section', out of the rationale that the section contains a
generalized tag that references a type, which may be used for something
other than exceptions, and the name 'event' can be confusing in the web
context.

See
- https://github.com/WebAssembly/exception-handling/issues/159#issuecomment-857910130
- https://github.com/WebAssembly/exception-handling/pull/161

Reviewed By: tlively

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104423
2021-06-17 20:34:19 -07:00
Min-Yih Hsu c29555342c [MCA] Anchoring the vtable of CustomBehaviour
Put the dtor of mca::CustomBehaviour into the cpp file to avoid
undefined vtable when linking libLLVMMCACustomBehaviourAMDGPU as shared
library.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104401
2021-06-16 12:43:58 -07:00
Fangrui Song d619cf5ac5 [llvm-objcopy][MachO] Copy LC_LINKER_OPTIMIZATION_HINT
This fixes `error: unsupported load command (cmd=0x2e)`
2021-06-16 12:09:50 -07:00
Hongtao Yu cef9b96b01 [CSSPGO] Report zero-count probe in profile instead of dangling probes.
Previously dangling samples were represented by INT64_MAX in sample profile while probes never executed were not reported. This was based on an observation that dangling probes were only at a smaller portion than zero-count probes. However, with compiler optimizations, dangling probes end up becoming at large portion of all probes in general and reporting them does not make sense from profile size point of view. This change flips sample reporting by reporting zero-count probes instead. This enabled dangling probe to be represented by none (missing entry in profile). This has a couple benefits:

1. Reducing sample profile size in optimize mode, even when the number of non-executed probes outperform the number of dangling probes, since INT64_MAX takes more space over 0 to encode.

2. Binary size savings. No need to encode dangling probe anymore, since missing probes are treated as dangling in the profile reader.

3. Reducing compiler work to track dangling probes. However, for probes that are real dead and removed, we still need the compiler to identify them so that they can be reported as zero-count, instead of mistreated as dangling probes.

4. Improving counts quality by respecting the counts already collected on the non-dangling copy of a probe. A probe, when duplicated, gets two copies at runtime. If one of them is dangling while the other is not, merging the two probes at profile generation time will cause the real samples collected on the non-dangling one to be discarded. Not reporting the dangling counterpart will keep the real samples.

5. Better readability.

6. Be consistent with non-CS dwarf line number based profile. Zero counts are trusted by the compiler counts inferencer while missing counts will be inferred by the compiler.

Note that the current patch does include any work for #3. There will be follow-up changes.

For #1, I've seen for a large Facebook service, the text profile is reduced by 7%. For extbinary profile, the size of  LBRProfileSection is reduced by 35%.

For #4, I have seen general counts quality for SPEC2017 is improved by 10%.

Reviewed By: wenlei, wlei, wmi

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104129
2021-06-16 11:45:29 -07:00
Fangrui Song 1de18ad8d7 [llvm-objcopy] Make ihex writer similar to binary writer
There is no need to differentiate whether `UseSegments` is true or
false. Unifying the cases makes the behavior closer to BinaryWriter.

This improves compatibility with objcopy because SHF_ALLOC sections not in
a PT_LOAD will not be skipped. Such cases are usually erroneous input, though.

Reviewed By: jhenderson

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104186
2021-06-16 10:08:20 -07:00
Patrick Holland ef16c8eaa5 Reapply "[MCA] Adding the CustomBehaviour class to llvm-mca".
The original change was pushed in main as commit f7a23ecece.
It was then reverted by commit a04f01bab2 because it caused linker failures
on buildbots that don't build the AMDGPU target.

--

Some instructions are not defined well enough within the target’s scheduling
model for llvm-mca to be able to properly simulate its behaviour. The ideal
solution to this situation is to modify the scheduling model, but that’s not
always a viable strategy. Maybe other parts of the backend depend on that
instruction being modelled the way that it is. Or maybe the instruction is quite
complex and it’s difficult to fully capture its behaviour with tablegen. The
CustomBehaviour class (which I will refer to as CB frequently) is designed to
provide intuitive scaffolding for developers to implement the correct modelling
for these instructions.

More details are available in the original commit log message (f7a23ecece).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104149
2021-06-16 16:54:48 +01:00
James Henderson b9ce8ea454 [obj2yaml] Address D104035 review comments
Accidentally missed from commit 5c1639fe06.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104035
2021-06-16 15:01:54 +01:00
James Henderson 5c1639fe06 [yaml2obj][obj2yaml] Support custom ELF section header string table name
This patch adds support for a new field in the FileHeader, which states
the name to use for the section header string table. This also allows
combining the string table with another string table in the object, e.g.
the symbol name string table. The field is optional. By default,
.shstrtab will continue to be used.

This partially fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50506.

Reviewed by: Higuoxing

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104035
2021-06-16 10:02:23 +01:00
Andrea Di Biagio a04f01bab2 Revert "[MCA] Adding the CustomBehaviour class to llvm-mca"
This reverts commit f7a23ecece.

It appears to breaks buildbots that don't build the AMDGPU backend.
2021-06-15 21:41:36 +01:00
Patrick Holland f7a23ecece [MCA] Adding the CustomBehaviour class to llvm-mca
Some instructions are not defined well enough within the target’s scheduling
model for llvm-mca to be able to properly simulate its behaviour. The ideal
solution to this situation is to modify the scheduling model, but that’s not
always a viable strategy. Maybe other parts of the backend depend on that
instruction being modelled the way that it is. Or maybe the instruction is quite
complex and it’s difficult to fully capture its behaviour with tablegen. The
CustomBehaviour class (which I will refer to as CB frequently) is designed to
provide intuitive scaffolding for developers to implement the correct modelling
for these instructions.

Implementation details:

llvm-mca does its best to extract relevant register, resource, and memory
information from every MCInst when lowering them to an mca::Instruction. It then
uses this information to detect dependencies and simulate stalls within the
pipeline. For some instructions, the information that gets captured within the
mca::Instruction is not enough for mca to simulate them properly. In these
cases, there are two main possibilities:

1. The instruction has a dependency that isn’t detected by mca.
2. mca is incorrectly enforcing a dependency that shouldn’t exist.

For the rest of this discussion, I will be focusing on (1), but I have put some
thought into (2) and I may revisit it in the future.

So we have an instruction that has dependencies that aren’t picked up by mca.
The basic idea for both pipelines in mca is that when an instruction wants to be
dispatched, we first check for register hazards and then we check for resource
hazards. This is where CB is injected. If no register or resource hazards have
been detected, we make a call to CustomBehaviour::checkCustomHazard() to give
the target specific CB the chance to detect and enforce any custom dependencies.

The return value for checkCustomHazaard() is an unsigned int representing the
(minimum) number of cycles that the instruction needs to stall for. It’s fine to
underestimate this value because when StallCycles gets down to 0, we’ll end up
checking for all the hazards again before the instruction is actually
dispatched. However, it’s important not to overestimate the value and the more
accurate your estimate is, the more efficient mca’s execution can be.

In general, for checkCustomHazard() to be able to detect these custom
dependencies, it needs information about the current instruction and also all of
the instructions that are still executing within the pipeline. The mca pipeline
uses mca::Instruction rather than MCInst and the current information encoded
within each mca::Instruction isn’t sufficient for my use cases. I had to add a
few extra attributes to the mca::Instruction class and have them get set by the
MCInst during instruction building. For example, the current mca::Instruction
doesn’t know its opcode, and it also doesn’t know anything about its immediate
operands (both of which I had to add to the class).

With information about the current instruction, a list of all currently
executing instructions, and some target specific objects (MCSubtargetInfo and
MCInstrInfo which the base CB class has references to), developers should be
able to detect and enforce most custom dependencies within checkCustomHazard. If
you need more information than is present in the mca::Instruction, feel free to
add attributes to that class and have them set during the lowering sequence from
MCInst.

Fortunately, in the in-order pipeline, it’s very convenient for us to pass these
arguments to checkCustomHazard. The hazard checking is taken care of within
InOrderIssueStage::canExecute(). This function takes a const InstRef as a
parameter (representing the instruction that currently wants to be dispatched)
and the InOrderIssueStage class maintains a SmallVector<InstRef, 4> which holds
all of the currently executing instructions. For the out-of-order pipeline, it’s
a bit trickier to get the list of executing instructions and this is why I have
held off on implementing it myself. This is the main topic I will bring up when
I eventually make a post to discuss and ask for feedback.

CB is a base class where targets implement their own derived classes. If a
target specific CB does not exist (or we pass in the -disable-cb flag), the base
class is used. This base class trivially returns 0 from its checkCustomHazard()
implementation (meaning that the current instruction needs to stall for 0 cycles
aka no hazard is detected). For this reason, targets or users who choose not to
use CB shouldn’t see any negative impacts to accuracy or performance (in
comparison to pre-patch llvm-mca).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104149
2021-06-15 21:30:48 +01:00
Simon Pilgrim 941188e965 [llvm-exegesis] Fix X86LbrCounter destructor to correctly unmap memory and not double-close fd (PR50620)
As was reported on PR50620, the X86LbrCounter destructor was double-closing the filedescriptor and not unmapping the buffer.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104201
2021-06-15 14:24:35 +01:00
wlei 863184dd69 [CSSPGO] Aggregation by the last K context frames for cold profiles
This change provides the option to merge and aggregate cold context by the last k frames instead of context-less name. By default K = 1 means the context-less one.

This is for better perf tuning. The more selective merging and trimming will rely on llvm-profgen's preinliner.

Reviewed By: wenlei, hoy

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104131
2021-06-14 10:33:43 -07:00
David Blaikie 02c718301b llvm-objcopy: fix section size truncation/extension when dumping sections
Since this only comes up with inputs containing sections at least 4GB
large (I guess I could use a bzero section or something, so the input
file doesn't have to be 4GB, but even then the output file would have to
be 4GB, right?) I've skipped testing this. If there's a nice way to test
this without needing 4GB inputs or output files.

The subtlety here is demonstrated by this code:

struct t { operator uint64_t(); };
static_assert(std::is_same_v<int, decltype(std::declval<bool>() ? 0 : std::declval<t>())>);
static_assert(std::is_same_v<uint64_t, decltype(std::declval<bool>() ? 0 : std::declval<uint64_t>())>);

Because of this difference, the original source code was getting an int
type (truncating the actual size) and then extending it again, resulting
in bogus values (I haven't thought through this hard enough to explain
why the resulting value was 0xffff... - sign extension, possible UB, but
in any case it's the wrong answer - in this particular case I was
looking at that resulted in a size so large that we couldn't open a file
large enough to write to and ended up with a rather vague:

error: 'file_name.o': Invalid argument
2021-06-12 19:00:10 -07:00
Ian McIntyre 5899278758 [llvm-objcopy] Exclude empty sections in IHexWriter output
IHexWriter was evaluating a section's physical address when deciding if
that section should be written to an output. This approach does not
account for a zero-sized section that has the same physical address as a
sized section. The behavior varies from GNU objcopy, and may result in a
HEX file that does not include all program sections.

The IHexWriter now excludes zero-sized sections when deciding what
should be written to the output. This affects the contents of the
writer's `Sections` collection; we will not try to insert multiple
sections that could have the same physical address. The behavior seems
consistent with GNU objcopy, which always excludes empty sections,
no matter the address.

The new test case evaluates the IHexWriter behavior when provided a
variety of empty sections that overlap or append a filled section. See
the input file's comments for more information. Given that test input,
and the change to the IHexWriter, GNU objcopy and llvm-objcopy produce
the same output.

Reviewed By: jhenderson, MaskRay, evgeny777

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101332
2021-06-12 12:23:07 -07:00
Alexander Shaposhnikov 0276cc742b [llvm-objcopy][MachO] Do not strip symbols with the flag REFERENCED_DYNAMICALLY set
Do not strip symbols having the flag REFERENCED_DYNAMICALLY set.

Test plan: make check-all

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104092
2021-06-11 16:34:59 -07:00
Andrew Litteken 8bc0eb4011 Revert "[IRSim] Adding basic implementation of llvm-sim."
This reverts commit f47d00c54b.
2021-06-11 15:44:19 -05:00
Andrew Litteken f47d00c54b [IRSim] Adding basic implementation of llvm-sim.
This is a similarity visualization tool that accepts a Module and
passes it to the IRSimilarityIdentifier.  The resulting SimilarityGroups
are output in a JSON file.

Tests are found in test/tools/llvm-sim and check for the file not found,
a bad module, and that the JSON is created correctly.

Reviewers: paquette, jroelofs, MaskRay

Recommit of: 15645d044b to fix linking
errors.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86974
2021-06-11 14:56:41 -05:00
Simon Pilgrim 61cdaf66fe [ADT] Remove APInt/APSInt toString() std::string variants
<string> is currently the highest impact header in a clang+llvm build:

https://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/chromium-browser-clang/llvm-include-analysis.html

One of the most common places this is being included is the APInt.h header, which needs it for an old toString() implementation that returns std::string - an inefficient method compared to the SmallString versions that it actually wraps.

This patch replaces these APInt/APSInt methods with a pair of llvm::toString() helpers inside StringExtras.h, adjusts users accordingly and removes the <string> from APInt.h - I was hoping that more of these users could be converted to use the SmallString methods, but it appears that most end up creating a std::string anyhow. I avoided trying to use the raw_ostream << operators as well as I didn't want to lose having the integer radix explicit in the code.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103888
2021-06-11 13:19:15 +01:00
Simon Pilgrim 646e970d44 [llvm-stress] Fix dead code preventing us generating per-element vector selects
This has been reported several times by the PVS Studio team as well as coming up in some static analysis.

getRandom() % 1 always returns 0 so we never actually test this codepath, (git blame suggests this has always been like this) - given that we have plenty of other "getRandom() & 1" the typo is pretty obvious, and matches the intention in the comment above - with this change we generate a nice mixture of scalar/vector condition selects of vectors.

I don't know llvm-stress that well - but I don't think we guarantee that the same seed value will always generate the same IR for later versions of the program - just that the same binary would.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104022
2021-06-11 10:56:19 +01:00
Simon Pilgrim d789ed11ea Fix implicit dependency on <string> header. NFCI. 2021-06-11 10:24:14 +01:00
David Tenty 75d4f55d15 [AIX] Build libLTO as MODULE rather than SHARED
On CMake versions greater that >= 3.16 on AIX, shared libraries are
created as archives (which is the normal form for the platform). However
plugins libraries which are passed directly to a executable, like
libLTO to the linker, are usual build as plain `.so`, so this patch
restores this behaviour for libLTO on AIX (and adjust the name if need be
to account for the fact that llvm_add_library likes to force an empty
name prefix on modules), so we end up with the expected libLTO.so

Reviewed By: w2yehia

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103824
2021-06-10 12:08:59 -04:00
Sam Powell 5b5ab80e31 Reland "[llvm] llvm-tapi-diff"
This is relanding commit d1d36f7ad2 .
This patch additionally addresses failures found in buildbots due to unstable build ordering & post review comments.

This patch introduces a new tool, llvm-tapi-diff, that compares and returns the diff of two TBD files.

Reviewed By: ributzka, JDevlieghere

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101835
2021-06-09 21:17:34 -07:00
Eric Astor 4b5317e937 [ms] [llvm-ml] Add support for INCLUDE environment variable
Also adds support for the ML.exe command-line flag /X, which ignores the INCLUDE environment variable.

This relands commit c43f413b01 using lit's cross-platform `env` support.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103989
2021-06-09 17:54:40 -04:00
Cyndy Ishida e7b755ecb1 Revert "Reland "[llvm] llvm-tapi-diff""
This reverts commit 20126c9fd4.
The sorting fixes failed to have stable output on different platforms.
2021-06-09 13:48:09 -07:00
Cyndy Ishida 1899cb7d0e Revert "[llvm-tapi-diff] Apply stable sorting to output"
This reverts commit 90a26a41e9.
This failed to fix ubuntu failures.
2021-06-09 13:48:09 -07:00
Sam Powell 90a26a41e9 [llvm-tapi-diff] Apply stable sorting to output
* For the output, the attributes within the target slice should be
  grouped by the input order, then sorted by value ordering.
This is to fix current ubuntu buildbot inconsistences.
2021-06-09 13:09:47 -07:00
Eric Astor 68d0db0b6d Revert "[ms] [llvm-ml] Add support for INCLUDE environment variable"
This reverts commit c43f413b01 due to Windows environment build breaks
2021-06-09 15:49:51 -04:00
Eric Astor c43f413b01 [ms] [llvm-ml] Add support for INCLUDE environment variable
Also adds support for the ML.exe command-line flag /X, which ignores the INCLUDE environment variable.
2021-06-09 15:25:26 -04:00
Sam Powell 20126c9fd4 Reland "[llvm] llvm-tapi-diff"
This is relanding commit d1d36f7ad2 .
This patch additionally addresses failures found in buildbots & post review comments.

This patch introduces a new tool, llvm-tapi-diff, that compares and returns the diff of two TBD files.

Reviewed By: ributzka, JDevlieghere

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101835
2021-06-09 10:35:41 -07:00
Florian Hahn e978f6bc97
[LTO] Support new PM in ThinLTOCodeGenerator.
This patch adds initial support for using the new pass manager when
doing ThinLTO via libLTO.

Reviewed By: steven_wu

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102627
2021-06-09 10:05:14 +01:00
Brendon Cahoon 294efbbd3e Reland "[AMDGPU] Add gfx1013 target"
This reverts commit 211e584fa2.

Fixed a use-after-free error that caused the sanitizers to fail.
2021-06-08 21:15:35 -04:00
Brendon Cahoon 211e584fa2 Revert "[AMDGPU] Add gfx1013 target"
This reverts commit ea10a86984.

A sanitizer buildbot reports an error.
2021-06-08 16:29:41 -04:00
Brendon Cahoon ea10a86984 [AMDGPU] Add gfx1013 target
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103663
2021-06-08 12:49:49 -04:00
David Blaikie c5d56fec50 NFC: .clang-tidy: Inherit configs from parents to improve maintainability
In the interests of disabling misc-no-recursion across LLVM (this seems
like a stylistic choice that is not consistent with LLVM's
style/development approach) this NFC preliminary change adjusts all the
.clang-tidy files to inherit from their parents as much as possible.

This change specifically preserves all the quirks of the current configs
in order to make it easier to review as NFC.

I validatad the change is NFC as follows:

for X in `cat ../files.txt`;
do
  mkdir -p ../tmp/$(dirname $X)
  touch $(dirname $X)/blaikie.cpp
  clang-tidy -dump-config $(dirname $X)/blaikie.cpp > ../tmp/$(dirname $X)/after
  rm $(dirname $X)/blaikie.cpp
done

(similarly for the "before" state, without this patch applied)

for X in `cat ../files.txt`;
do
  echo $X
  diff \
    ../tmp/$(dirname $X)/before \
    <(cat ../tmp/$(dirname $X)/after \
      | sed -e "s/,readability-identifier-naming\(.*\),-readability-identifier-naming/\1/" \
      | sed -e "s/,-llvm-include-order\(.*\),llvm-include-order/\1/" \
      | sed -e "s/,-misc-no-recursion\(.*\),misc-no-recursion/\1/" \
      | sed -e "s/,-clang-diagnostic-\*\(.*\),clang-diagnostic-\*/\1/")
done

(using sed to strip some add/remove pairs to reduce the diff and make it easier to read)

The resulting report is:
  .clang-tidy
  clang/.clang-tidy
  2c2
  < Checks:          'clang-diagnostic-*,clang-analyzer-*,-*,clang-diagnostic-*,llvm-*,misc-*,-misc-unused-parameters,-misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes,-readability-identifier-naming,-misc-no-recursion'
  ---
  > Checks:          'clang-diagnostic-*,clang-analyzer-*,-*,clang-diagnostic-*,llvm-*,misc-*,-misc-unused-parameters,-misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes,-misc-no-recursion'
  compiler-rt/.clang-tidy
  2c2
  < Checks:          'clang-diagnostic-*,clang-analyzer-*,-*,clang-diagnostic-*,llvm-*,-llvm-header-guard,misc-*,-misc-unused-parameters,-misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes'
  ---
  > Checks:          'clang-diagnostic-*,clang-analyzer-*,-*,clang-diagnostic-*,llvm-*,misc-*,-misc-unused-parameters,-misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes,-llvm-header-guard'
  flang/.clang-tidy
  2c2
  < Checks:          'clang-diagnostic-*,clang-analyzer-*,-*,llvm-*,-llvm-include-order,misc-*,-misc-no-recursion,-misc-unused-parameters,-misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes'
  ---
  > Checks:          'clang-diagnostic-*,clang-analyzer-*,-*,llvm-*,misc-*,-misc-unused-parameters,-misc-non-private-member-variables-in-classes,-llvm-include-order,-misc-no-recursion'
  flang/include/flang/Lower/.clang-tidy
  flang/include/flang/Optimizer/.clang-tidy
  flang/lib/Lower/.clang-tidy
  flang/lib/Optimizer/.clang-tidy
  lld/.clang-tidy
  lldb/.clang-tidy
  llvm/tools/split-file/.clang-tidy
  mlir/.clang-tidy

The `clang/.clang-tidy` change is a no-op, disabling an option that was never enabled.
The compiler-rt and flang changes are no-op reorderings of the same flags.

(side note, the .clang-tidy file in parallel-libs is broken and crashes
clang-tidy because it uses "lowerCase" as the style instead of "lower_case" -
so I'll deal with that separately)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103842
2021-06-08 08:25:59 -07:00