Summary:
This cleans up a lot of ugly `foreach` bodges that I've been using to
work around the lack of those two language features. Now they both
exist, I can make then all into something more legible!
In particular, in the common pattern in `ARMInstrMVE.td` where a
multiclass defines an `Instruction` instance plus one or more `Pat` that
select it, I've used a `defvar` to wrap `!cast<Instruction>(NAME)` so
that the patterns themselves become a little more legible.
Replacing a `foreach` with a `defvar` removes a level of block
structure, so several pieces of code have their indentation changed by
this patch. Best viewed with whitespace ignored.
NFC: the output of `llvm-tblgen -print-records` on the two affected
Tablegen sources is exactly identical before and after this change, so
there should be no effect at all on any of the other generated files.
Reviewers: MarkMurrayARM, miyuki
Reviewed By: MarkMurrayARM
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, hiraditya, dmgreen, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72690
Summary:
Previously, since these aggregates are > 2*XLen, Clang would think they
were being returned indirectly and thus would decrease the number of
available GPRs available by 1. For long argument lists this could lead
to a struct argument incorrectly being passed indirectly.
Reviewers: asb, lenary
Reviewed By: asb, lenary
Subscribers: luismarques, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, kito-cheng, shiva0217, zzheng, edward-jones, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, rkruppe, PkmX, jocewei, psnobl, benna, Jim, lenary, s.egerton, pzheng, sameer.abuasal, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69590
Fix riscv-toolchain-extra tests to pass when CLANG_RESOURCE_DIR is set
to another value than the default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72591
The option will limit debug info by only emitting complete class
type information when its constructor is emitted.
This patch changes comparisons with LimitedDebugInfo to use the new
level instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72427
Darwin adds an extra '_' before every C/global function mangled name and
because of this, this test was breaking on Darwin.
This is a fix for commit: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71301
We currently treat noexcept(not-convertible-to-bool) as 'none', which
results in the typeloc info being a different size, and causing an
assert later on in the process. In order to make recovery less
destructive, replace this with noexcept(false) and a constructed 'false'
expression.
Bug Report: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44514
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72621
Just marking a symbol as weak_odr/linkonce_odr isn't enough for
actually tolerating multiple copies of it at linking on windows,
it has to be made a proper comdat; make it comdat for all platforms
for consistency.
This should hopefully fix
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1566288.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71572
GCC supports the conditional operator on VectorTypes that acts as a
'select' in C++ mode. This patch implements the support. Types are
converted as closely to GCC's behavior as possible, though in a few
places consistency with our existing vector type support was preferred.
Note that this implementation is different from the OpenCL version in a
number of ways, so it unfortunately required a different implementation.
First, the SEMA rules and promotion rules are significantly different.
Secondly, GCC implements COND[i] != 0 ? LHS[i] : RHS[i] (where i is in
the range 0- VectorSize, for each element). In OpenCL, the condition is
COND[i] < 0 ? LHS[i]: RHS[i].
In the process of implementing this, it was also required to make the
expression COND ? LHS : RHS type dependent if COND is type dependent,
since the type is now dependent on the condition. For example:
T ? 1 : 2;
Is not typically type dependent, since the result can be deduced from
the operands. HOWEVER, if T is a VectorType now, it could change this
to a 'select' (basically a swizzle with a non-constant mask) with the 1
and 2 being promoted to vectors themselves.
While this is a change, it is NOT a standards incompatible change. Based
on my (and D. Gregor's, at the time of writing the code) reading of the
standard, the expression is supposed to be type dependent if ANY
sub-expression is type dependent.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71463
Built libdispatch with clang interface stubs. Ran into some block
related issues. Basically VarDecl symbols can leak out because I wasn't
checking the case where a VarDecl is contained inside a BlockDecl
(versus a method or function).
This patch checks that a VarDecl is not a child decl of a BlockDecl.
This patch also does something very similar for c++ lambdas as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71301
This reverts commit 2af97be802.
After attempting to fix bot failures from matching issues (mostly due to
inconsistent printing of "llvm::" prefixes on objects, and
AnalysisManager objects being printed differntly, I am now seeing some
differences I don't understand (real differences in the passes being
printed). Giving up at this point to allow the bots to recover. Will
revisit later.
Along with the previous fix for bot failures from
2af97be802, need to add a wildcard in a
couple of places where my local output did not print "llvm::" but the
bot is.
Hopefully final bot fix for last few failures from
2af97be802.
Looks like sometimes the "llvm::" preceeding objects get printed in the
debug pass manager output and sometimes they don't. Replace with
wildcard matching.
Additional fixes for bot failures from 2af97be802.
Remove more exact matching on AnalyisManagers, as they can vary.
Also allow different orders between LoopAnalysis and
BranchProbabilityAnalysis as that can vary due to both being accessed in
the parameter list of a call.
Should fix most of the buildbot failures from
2af97be802, by loosening up the matching
on the AnalysisProxy output.
Added in --dump-input=fail on the one test that appears to be something
different, so I can hopefully debug it better.
Summary:
I've added some more extensive ThinLTO pipeline testing with the new PM,
motivated by the bug fixed in D72386.
I beefed up llvm/test/Other/new-pm-pgo.ll a little so that it tests
ThinLTO pre and post link with PGO, similar to the testing for the
default pipelines with PGO.
Added new pre and post link PGO tests for both instrumentation and
sample PGO that exhaustively test the pipelines at different
optimization levels via opt.
Added a clang test to exhaustively test the post link pipeline invoked for
distributed builds. I am currently only testing O2 and O3 since these
are the most important for performance.
It would be nice to add similar exhaustive testing for full LTO, and for
the old PM, but I don't have the bandwidth now and this is a start to
cover some of the situations that are not currently default and were
under tested.
Reviewers: wmi
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, jfb, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72538
With this patch, the clang tool will now call the -cc1 invocation directly inside the same process. Previously, the -cc1 invocation was creating, and waiting for, a new process.
This patch therefore reduces the number of created processes during a build, thus it reduces build times on platforms where process creation can be costly (Windows) and/or impacted by a antivirus.
It also makes debugging a bit easier, as there's no need to attach to the secondary -cc1 process anymore, breakpoints will be hit inside the same process.
Crashes or signaling inside the -cc1 invocation will have the same side-effect as before, and will be reported through the same means.
This behavior can be controlled at compile-time through the CLANG_SPAWN_CC1 cmake flag, which defaults to OFF. Setting it to ON will revert to the previous behavior, where any -cc1 invocation will create/fork a secondary process.
At run-time, it is also possible to tweak the CLANG_SPAWN_CC1 environment variable. Setting it and will override the compile-time setting. A value of 0 calls -cc1 inside the calling process; a value of 1 will create a secondary process, as before.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69825
which is the default TLS model for non-PIC objects. This allows large/
many thread local variables or a compact/fast code in an executable.
Specification is same as that of GCC. For example, the code model
option precedes the TLS size option.
TLS access models other than local-exec are not changed. It means
supoort of the large code model is only in the local exec TLS model.
Patch By KAWASHIMA Takahiro (kawashima-fj <t-kawashima@fujitsu.com>)
Reviewers: dmgreen, mstorsjo, t.p.northover, peter.smith, ostannard
Reviewd By: peter.smith
Committed by: peter.smith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71688
Summary:
This patch will provide support for auto return type for the C++ member
functions.
This patch includes clang side implementation of this feature.
Patch by: Awanish Pandey <Awanish.Pandey@amd.com>
Reviewers: dblaikie, aprantl, shafik, alok, SouraVX, jini.susan.george
Reviewed by: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70524
Summary:
The analysis for const-ness of local variables required a view generally useful
matchers that are extracted into its own patch.
They are `decompositionDecl` and `forEachArgumentWithParamType`, that works
for calls through function pointers as well.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72505
Use castAs<> instead of getAs<> since the pointer is dereferenced immediately within mangleCallingConvention and castAs will perform the null assertion for us.
No longer generate a diagnostic when a small trivially copyable type is
used without a reference. Before the test looked for a POD type and had no
size restriction. Since the range-based for loop is only available in
C++11 and POD types are trivially copyable in C++11 it's not required to
test for a POD type.
Since copying a large object will be expensive its size has been
restricted. 64 bytes is a common size of a cache line and if the object is
aligned the copy will be cheap. No performance impact testing has been
done.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72212
These tests were added in 18627115f4 and e08b59f81d for validating a refactoring.
Removing because they break on ACL-controlled folders on Ubuntu, and their added value is low.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70854
D41910 introduced a recursive visitor to MarkUsedTemplateParameters, but
disregarded the 'Depth' parameter, and had incorrect assertions. This fixes
the visitor and removes the assertions.
All 130+ f_Group flags that take an argument allow it after a '=',
except for fdebug-complation-dir. Add a Joined<> alias so that
it behaves consistently with all the other f_Group flags.
(Keep the old Separate flag for backwards compat.)
type computation, in preparation for P0388R4, which adds another few
cases here.
We now properly handle forming multi-level composite pointer types
involving nested Objective-C pointer types (as is consistent with
including them as part of the notion of 'similar types' on which this
rule is based). We no longer lose non-CVR qualifiers on nested pointer
types.
This fixes a regression introduced in
2b4fa5348e that caused us to emit
shutdown-time destruction for variables with ARC ownership, using
C++-specific functions that don't exist in C implementations.
Follow-up of D72014. It is more appropriate to use a target
feature instead of a SubTypeArch to express the difference.
Reviewed By: #powerpc, jhibbits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72433
In the backend, this feature is implemented with the function attribute
"patchable-function-entry". Both the attribute and XRay use
TargetOpcode::PATCHABLE_FUNCTION_ENTER, so the two features are
incompatible.
Reviewed By: ostannard, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72222
This feature is generic. Make it applicable for AArch64 and X86 because
the backend has only implemented NOP insertion for AArch64 and X86.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72221
Summary:
This checker verifies if default placement new is provided with pointers
to sufficient storage capacity.
Noncompliant Code Example:
#include <new>
void f() {
short s;
long *lp = ::new (&s) long;
}
Based on SEI CERT rule MEM54-CPP
https://wiki.sei.cmu.edu/confluence/display/cplusplus/MEM54-CPP.+Provide+placement+new+with+properly+aligned+pointe
This patch does not implement checking of the alignment.
Reviewers: NoQ, xazax.hun
Subscribers: mgorny, whisperity, xazax.hun, baloghadamsoftware, szepet,
rnkovacs, a.sidorin, mikhail.ramalho, donat
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71612
Summary:
Avoid using the `nocf_check` attribute with Control Flow Guard. Instead, use a
new `"guard_nocf"` function attribute to indicate that checks should not be
added on indirect calls within that function. Add support for
`__declspec(guard(nocf))` following the same syntax as MSVC.
Reviewers: rnk, dmajor, pcc, hans, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: aaron.ballman, tomrittervg, hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72167
Update the IRBuilder to generate constrained FP comparisons in
CreateFCmp when IsFPConstrained is true, similar to the other
places in the IRBuilder.
Also, add a new CreateFCmpS to emit signaling FP comparisons,
and use it in clang where comparisons are supposed to be signaling
(currently, only when emitting code for the <, <=, >, >= operators).
Note that there is currently no way to add fast-math flags to a
constrained FP comparison, since this is implemented as an intrinsic
call that returns a boolean type, and FMF are only allowed for calls
returning a floating-point type. However, given the discussion around
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42179, it seems that FCmp itself
really shouldn't have any FMF either, so this is probably OK.
Reviewed by: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71467
Summary:
A copy-paste error in `arm_mve.td` meant that the MVE `vqrshrun`
intrinsic family was generating the `vqshrun` machine instruction,
because in the IR intrinsic call, the rounding flag argument was set
to 0 rather than 1.
Reviewers: dmgreen, MarkMurrayARM, miyuki, ostannard
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72496
Summary:
Now that D71894 has landed, we're able to run libc++abi tests remotely.
For that we can use the same CMake command as before. The tests can be run using `ninja check-cxxabi`.
Reviewers: andreil99, vvereschaka, aorlov
Reviewed By: vvereschaka, aorlov
Subscribers: mgorny, kristof.beyls, ldionne, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72459
If a system header provides an (inline) implementation of some of their
function, clang still matches on the function name and generate the appropriate
llvm builtin, e.g. memcpy. This behavior is in line with glibc recommendation «
users may not provide their own version of symbols » but doesn't account for the
fact that glibc itself can provide inline version of some functions.
It is the case for the memcpy function when -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=1 is on. In that
case an inline version of memcpy calls __memcpy_chk, a function that performs
extra runtime checks. Clang currently ignores the inline version and thus
provides no runtime check.
This code fixes the issue by detecting functions whose name is a builtin name
but also have an inline implementation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71082
down to pass builder in ltobackend.
Currently CodeGenOpts like UnrollLoops/VectorizeLoop/VectorizeSLP in clang
are not passed down to pass builder in ltobackend when new pass manager is
used. This is inconsistent with the behavior when new pass manager is used
and thinlto is not used. Such inconsistency causes slp vectorization pass
not being enabled in ltobackend for O3 + thinlto right now. This patch
fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72386
The language wording change forgot to update overload resolution to rank
implicit conversion sequences based on qualification conversions in
reference bindings. The anticipated resolution for that oversight is
implemented here -- we order candidates based on qualification
conversion, not only on top-level cv-qualifiers, including ranking
reference bindings against non-reference bindings if they differ in
non-top-level qualification conversions.
For OpenCL/C++, this allows reference binding between pointers with
differing (nested) address spaces. This makes the behavior of reference
binding consistent with that of implicit pointer conversions, as is the
purpose of this change, but that pre-existing behavior for pointer
conversions is itself probably not correct. In any case, it's now
consistently the same behavior and implemented in only one place.
This reinstates commit de21704ba9,
reverted in commit d8018233d1, with
workarounds for some overload resolution ordering problems introduced by
CWG2352.
explicit functions that are not candidates.
It's not always obvious that the reason a conversion was not possible is
because the function you wanted to call is 'explicit', so explicitly say
if that's the case.
It would be nice to rank the explicit candidates higher in the
diagnostic if an implicit conversion sequence exists for their
arguments, but unfortunately we can't determine that without potentially
triggering non-immediate-context errors that we're not permitted to
produce.
This change introduces three new builtins (which work on both pointers
and integers) that can be used instead of common bitwise arithmetic:
__builtin_align_up(x, alignment), __builtin_align_down(x, alignment) and
__builtin_is_aligned(x, alignment).
I originally added these builtins to the CHERI fork of LLVM a few years ago
to handle the slightly different C semantics that we use for CHERI [1].
Until recently these builtins (or sequences of other builtins) were
required to generate correct code. I have since made changes to the default
C semantics so that they are no longer strictly necessary (but using them
does generate slightly more efficient code). However, based on our experience
using them in various projects over the past few years, I believe that adding
these builtins to clang would be useful.
These builtins have the following benefit over bit-manipulation and casts
via uintptr_t:
- The named builtins clearly convey the semantics of the operation. While
checking alignment using __builtin_is_aligned(x, 16) versus
((x & 15) == 0) is probably not a huge win in readably, I personally find
__builtin_align_up(x, N) a lot easier to read than (x+(N-1))&~(N-1).
- They preserve the type of the argument (including const qualifiers). When
using casts via uintptr_t, it is easy to cast to the wrong type or strip
qualifiers such as const.
- If the alignment argument is a constant value, clang can check that it is
a power-of-two and within the range of the type. Since the semantics of
these builtins is well defined compared to arbitrary bit-manipulation,
it is possible to add a UBSAN checker that the run-time value is a valid
power-of-two. I intend to add this as a follow-up to this change.
- The builtins avoids int-to-pointer casts both in C and LLVM IR.
In the future (i.e. once most optimizations handle it), we could use the new
llvm.ptrmask intrinsic to avoid the ptrtoint instruction that would normally
be generated.
- They can be used to round up/down to the next aligned value for both
integers and pointers without requiring two separate macros.
- In many projects the alignment operations are already wrapped in macros (e.g.
roundup2 and rounddown2 in FreeBSD), so by replacing the macro implementation
with a builtin call, we get improved diagnostics for many call-sites while
only having to change a few lines.
- Finally, the builtins also emit assume_aligned metadata when used on pointers.
This can improve code generation compared to the uintptr_t casts.
[1] In our CHERI compiler we have compilation mode where all pointers are
implemented as capabilities (essentially unforgeable 128-bit fat pointers).
In our original model, casts from uintptr_t (which is a 128-bit capability)
to an integer value returned the "offset" of the capability (i.e. the
difference between the virtual address and the base of the allocation).
This causes problems for cases such as checking the alignment: for example, the
expression `if ((uintptr_t)ptr & 63) == 0` is generally used to check if the
pointer is aligned to a multiple of 64 bytes. The problem with offsets is that
any pointer to the beginning of an allocation will have an offset of zero, so
this check always succeeds in that case (even if the address is not correctly
aligned). The same issues also exist when aligning up or down. Using the
alignment builtins ensures that the address is used instead of the offset. While
I have since changed the default C semantics to return the address instead of
the offset when casting, this offset compilation mode can still be used by
passing a command-line flag.
Reviewers: rsmith, aaron.ballman, theraven, fhahn, lebedev.ri, nlopes, aqjune
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, lebedev.ri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71499
Summary:
Extend D71677 to apply to all branch-target operands, rather than special-casing call instructions.
Also add a regression test for llvm.org/PR44272, since this finishes fixing it.
Reviewers: thakis, rnk
Reviewed By: thakis
Subscribers: merge_guards_bot, hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72417
Summary:
A few of the ARM MVE builtins directly return a structure type. This
causes an assertion failure at code-gen time if you try to assign the
result of the builtin to a variable, because the `RValue` created in
`EmitBuiltinExpr` from the `llvm::Value` produced by codegen is always
made by `RValue::get()`, which creates a non-aggregate `RValue` that
will fail an assertion when `AggExprEmitter::withReturnValueSlot` calls
`Src.getAggregatePointer()`. A similar failure occurs if you try to use
the struct return value directly to extract one field, e.g.
`vld2q(address).val[0]`.
The existing code-gen tests for those MVE builtins pass the returned
structure type directly to the C `return` statement, which apparently
managed to avoid that particular code path, so we didn't notice the
crash.
Now `EmitBuiltinExpr` checks the evaluation kind of the builtin's return
value, and does the necessary handling for aggregate returns. I've added
two extra test cases, both of which crashed before this change.
Reviewers: dmgreen, rjmccall
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72271
In common with most MVE immediate shift instructions, the left shift
takes an immediate in the range [0,n-1], while the right shift takes
one in the range [1,n]. I had absent-mindedly made them both the
latter.
While I'm here, I've added a set of regression tests checking both
ends of the immediate range for a representative sample of the
immediate shifts.
Architecturally, it's allowed to have MVE-I without an FPU, thus
-mfpu=none should not disable MVE-I, or moves to/from FP-registers.
This patch removes `+/-fpregs` from features unconditionally added to
target feature list, depending on FPU and moves the logic to Clang
driver, where the negative form (`-fpregs`) is conditionally added to
the target features list for the cases of `-mfloat-abi=soft`, or
`-mfpu=none` without either `+mve` or `+mve.fp`. Only the negative
form is added by the driver, the positive one is derived from other
features in the backend.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71843
Function trailing requires clauses now parsed, supported in overload resolution and when calling, referencing and taking the address of functions or function templates.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43357
`APFLoat::convertFromString` returns `Expected` result, which must be
"checked" if the LLVM_ENABLE_ABI_BREAKING_CHECKS preprocessor flag is
set.
To mark an `Expected` result as "checked" we must consume the `Error`
within.
In many cases, we are only interested in knowing if an error occured,
without the need to examine the error info. This is achieved, easily,
with the `errorToBool()` API.
Summary:
This allows the use of '-target powerpcspe-unknown-linux-gnu' or
'powerpcspe-unknown-freebsd' to be used, instead of
'-target powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu -mspe'.
Reviewed By: dim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72014
Summary: Pretty self-evident. This example was missing an lparen. Added it, and fixed up the ASCII art.
Patch by Nick Black <dankamongmen@gmail.com>
Reviewers: pcc
Reviewed By: pcc
Subscribers: tejohnson, mehdi_amini, inglorion, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Tags: #llvm, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70765
This matcher matches any node and at the same time executes all its
inner matchers to produce any possbile result bindings.
This is useful when a user wants certain supplementary information
that's not always present along with the main match result.
This batch of intrinsics fills in all the shift instructions that take
a variable shift distance in a register, instead of an immediate. Some
of these instructions take a single shift distance in a scalar
register and apply it to all lanes; others take a vector of per-lane
distances.
These instructions are all basically one family, varying in whether
they saturate out-of-range values, and whether they round when bits
are shifted off the bottom. I've implemented them at the IR level by a
much smaller family of IR intrinsics, which take flag parameters to
indicate saturating and/or rounding (along with the usual one to
specify signed/unsigned integers).
An oddity is that all of them are //left// shift instructions – but if
you pass a negative shift count, they'll shift right. So the vector
shift distances are always vectors of //signed// integers, regardless
of whether you're considering the other input vector to be of signed
or unsigned. Also, even the simplest `vshlq` instruction in this
family (neither saturating nor rounding) has to be implemented as an
IR intrinsic, because the ordinary LLVM IR `shl` operation would
consider an out-of-range shift count to be undefined behavior.
Reviewers: dmgreen, MarkMurrayARM, miyuki, ostannard
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72329
This batch of intrinsics covers two sets of immediate shift
instructions, which have in common that they only overwrite part of
their output register and so they need an extra input giving its
previous value.
The VSLI and VSRI instructions shift each lane of the input vector
left or right just as if they were normal immediate VSHL/VSHR, but
then they only overwrite the output bits that correspond to actual
shifted bits of the input. So VSLI will leave the low n bits of each
output lane unchanged, and VSRI the same with the top n bits.
The V[Q][R]SHR[U]N family are all narrowing shifts: they take an input
vector of 2n-bit integers, shift each lane right by a constant, and
then narrowing the shifted result to only n bits. So they only
overwrite half of the n-bit lanes in the output register, and the B/T
suffix indicates whether it's the bottom or top half of each 2n-bit
lane.
I've implemented the whole of the latter family using a single IR
intrinsic `vshrn`, which takes a lot of i32 parameters indicating
which instruction it expands to (by specifying signedness of the input
and output types, whether it saturates and/or rounds, etc).
Reviewers: dmgreen, MarkMurrayARM, miyuki, ostannard
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72328
An empty string literal in an asm label does not make a whole lot of sense. GCC
does not diagnose such a construct, but it also generates code that cannot be
assembled by gas should two symbols have an empty asm label within the same TU.
This does not affect an asm statement with an empty string literal, which is
still a useful construct.
Apple's CPUs are called A7-A13 in official communication, occasionally with
weird suffixes which we probably don't need to care about. This adds each one
and describes its features. It also switches the default CPU to the canonical
name for Cyclone, but leaves legacy support in so that existing bitcode still
compiles.
According to D53384, the default was switched from -fno-PIC to -fPIC to
work around a -fsanitize=leak bug on big-endian.
This gratuitous difference between little-endian and big-endian is
undesired, and not acceptable on powerpc64-unknown-freebsd. If
-fsanitize=leak still has the problem, we should consider defaulting to
-fPIC/-fPIE only when -fsanitize=leak is specified (see SanitizerArgs::requiresPIE())
powerpc64-ibm-aix is unaffected: it still defaults to -fPIC.
powerpc64-linux-musl is unaffected (-fPIE since D39588): it still defaults to -fPIE.
Reviewed By: #powerpc, jhibbits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72363
Summary:
It now handles `typedef`s that include comma-separated multiple types, and handles embedded struct definitions, which previously could not be automatically converted.
For example, with this patch `modernize-use-using` now can convert:
typedef struct { int a; } R_t, *R_p;
to:
using R_t = struct { int a; };
using R_p = R_t*;
`-ast-dump` showed that the `CXXRecordDecl` definitions and multiple `TypedefDecl`s come consecutively in the tree, so `check()` stores information between calls to determine when it is receiving a second or additional `TypedefDecl` within a single `typedef`, or when the current `TypedefDecl` refers to an embedded `CXXRecordDecl` like a `struct`.
Reviewers: alexfh, aaron.ballman
Patch by: poelmanc
Subscribers: riccibruno, sammccall, cfe-commits, aaron.ballman
Tags: clang-tools-extra, clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70270
Summary:
Every powerpc64le platform uses elfv2.
For powerpc64, the environments "elfv1" and "elfv2" were added for
FreeBSD ELFv1->ELFv2 migration in D61950. FreeBSD developers have
decided to use OS versions to select ABI, and no one is relying on the
environments.
Also use elfv2 on powerpc64-linux-musl.
Users can always use -mabi=elfv1 and -mabi=elfv2 to override the default
ABI.
Reviewed By: adalava
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72352
Use canonical decls instead of mangled names in the set of already
emitted decls. This allows to reduce the number of function calls for
getting declarations mangled names and speedup the compilation.
If standalone OpenMP declaration pragma, like declare mapper or declare
reduction, is declared in the class context, it may reference a member
(data or function) in its internal expressions/statements. So, the
parsing of such pragmas must be dalayed just like the parsing of the
member initializers/definitions before the completion of the class
declaration.
It turns out it is useful to be able to define the deref type as void.
In case we have a type erased owner, we want to express that the pointee
can be basically any type. It should not be unnatural to have a void
deref type as we already familiar with "pointers to void".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72097
declare simd.
According to the standard, a list-item that appears in a linear clause without the ref modifier must be of integral or pointer type, or must be a reference to an integral or pointer type. Added check that this restriction is applied only to non-ref items.
pack expansion.
Previously, if all parameter / argument pairs for a pack expansion
deduction were non-deduced contexts, we would not deduce the arity of
the pack, and could end up deducing a different arity (leading to
failures during substitution) or defaulting to an arity of 0 (leading to
bad diagnostics about passing the wrong number of arguments to a
variadic function). Instead, we now always deduce the arity for all
involved packs any time we deduce a pack expansion.
This will result in less substitution happening in some cases, which
could avoid non-SFINAEable errors, and should generally improve the
quality of diagnostics when passing initializer lists to variadic
functions.
properties of the protocol it inherits
This fixes a bug where the type string for a @dynamic property of an
@implementation didn't have 'D' in it when the protocol it conforms to
redeclares the property declared in the base protocol.
rdar://problem/45503561
This makes the range loop warnings part of -Wall.
Fixes PR32823: Warn about accidental coping of data in range based for
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68912
Recomitted after fixing the warnings it created.
Summary:
Running an end-to-end test last week I noticed that a lot of the ACLE
intrinsics that operate differently on vectors of signed and unsigned
integers were ending up generating the signed version of the
instruction unconditionally. This is because the IR intrinsics had no
way to distinguish signed from unsigned: the LLVM type system just
calls them both `v8i16` (or whatever), so you need either separate
intrinsics for signed and unsigned, or a flag parameter that tells
ISel which one to choose.
This patch fixes all the problems of that kind that I've noticed, by
adding an i32 flag parameter to many of the IR intrinsics which is set
to 1 for unsigned (matching the existing practice in cases where we
got it right), and conditioning all the isel patterns on that flag. So
the fundamental change is in `IntrinsicsARM.td`, changing the
low-level IR intrinsics API; there are knock-on changes in
`arm_mve.td` (adjusting code gen for the ACLE intrinsics to use the
modified API) and in `ARMInstrMVE.td` (adjusting isel to expect the
new unsigned flags). The rest of this patch is boringly updating tests.
Reviewers: dmgreen, miyuki, MarkMurrayARM
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72270
Summary:
The ACLE intrinsics with `gather_base` or `scatter_base` in the name
are wrappers on the MVE load/store instructions that take a vector of
base addresses and an immediate offset. The immediate offset can be up
to 127 times the alignment unit, and it can be positive or negative.
At the MC layer, we got that right. But in the Sema error checking for
the wrapping intrinsics, the offset was erroneously constrained to be
positive.
To fix this I've adjusted the `imm_mem7bit` class in the Tablegen that
defines the intrinsics. But that causes integer literals like
`0xfffffffffffffe04` to appear in the autogenerated calls to
`SemaBuiltinConstantArgRange`, which provokes a compiler warning
because that's out of the non-overflowing range of an `int64_t`. So
I've also tweaked `MveEmitter` to emit that as `-0x1fc` instead.
Updated the tests of the Sema checks themselves, and also adjusted a
random sample of the CodeGen tests to actually use negative offsets
and prove they get all the way through code generation without causing
a crash.
Reviewers: dmgreen, miyuki, MarkMurrayARM
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72268
Summary:
Found a bug introduced with BraceWrappingFlags AfterControlStatement MultiLine. This feature conflicts with the existing BeforeCatch and BeforeElse flags.
For example, our team uses BeforeElse.
if (foo ||
bar) {
doSomething();
}
else {
doSomethingElse();
}
If we enable MultiLine (which we'd really love to do) we expect it to work like this:
if (foo ||
bar)
{
doSomething();
}
else {
doSomethingElse();
}
What we actually get is:
if (foo ||
bar)
{
doSomething();
}
else
{
doSomethingElse();
}
Reviewers: MyDeveloperDay, Bouska, mitchell-stellar
Patch by: pastey
Subscribers: Bouska, cfe-commits
Tags: clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71939
Driver test `cross-linux.c` fails when CLANG_DEFAULT_RTLIB is "compiler-rt"
as the it expects a GCC-style `"crtbegin.o"` after `"crti.o"` but instead
receives something akin to this in the frontend invocation:
```
"crt1.o" "crti.o"
"/o/b/llvm/bin/../lib/clang/10.0.0/lib/linux/clang_rt.crtbegin-x86_64.o"
```
This patch adds an override to `cross-linux.c` tests so the expected result
is produced regardless of the compile-time default rtlib, as having tests
fail due to that is fairly confusing. After applying the patch, the test
passes regardless of the CLANG_DEFAULT_RTLIB setting.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72236
Linux' current addLibCxxIncludePaths and addLibStdCxxIncludePaths
are actually almost non-Linux-specific at all, and can be reused
almost as such for all gcc toolchains. Only keep
Android/Freescale/Cray hacks in Linux's version.
Patch by sthibaul (Samuel Thibault)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69758
-mpacked-stack is currently not supported with -mbackchain, so this should
result in a compilation error message instead of being silently ignored.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
The patch files section is redundant to https://llvm.org/docs/GettingStarted.html.
There is nothing clang specific here. We are talking about a monorepo after all.
While it may seem nice to have one single clang page which explains everything,
it's not: It doesn't cover the topics in sufficient depth, it's redundant to
other pages and it's hard to keep it up to date as we see with the svn
instructions.
Before:
class Foo {
@CommandLineFlags
.Add
@Features.foo
public void test() {}
}
Now:
class Foo {
@Features.foo
@CommandLineFlags.Add
public void test() { }
}
See also https://crbug.com/1034115
The OpenMP specification disallows having zero-length array
sections in the depend clause (OpenMP 5.0 2.17.11).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71969
Summary:
this allow much better support of codebases like the linux kernel that mix tabs and spaces.
-ftabstop=//Width// allow specifying how large tabs are considered to be.
Reviewers: xbolva00, aaron.ballman, rsmith
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: mstorsjo, cfe-commits, jyknight, riccibruno, rsmith, nathanchance
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71037
Remove description of language mode from the language
extensions and add a link to pdf document.
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72076
When they are free-standing, e.g. `struct X;` or `struct X {};`.
Although this complicates the common case (of free-standing class
declarations), this ensures the less common case (e.g. `struct X {} a;`)
are handled uniformly and produce similar syntax trees.
We would like to use clang-scan-deps in Fuchsia build so include it
in the toolchain distribution.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72113
Added codegen support for lastprivate conditional. According to the
standard, if when the conditional modifier appears on the clause, if an
assignment to a list item is encountered in the construct then the
original list item is assigned the value that is assigned to the new
list item in the sequentially last iteration or lexically last section
in which such an assignment is encountered.
We look for the assignment operations and check if the left side
references lastprivate conditional variable. Then the next code is
emitted:
if (last_iv_a <= iv) {
last_iv_a = iv;
last_a = lp_a;
}
At the end the implicit barrier is generated to wait for the end of all
threads and then in the check for the last iteration the private copy is
assigned the last value.
if (last_iter) {
lp_a = last_a; // <--- new code
a = lp_a; // <--- store of private value to the original variable.
}
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use `find_package` from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the `LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB`,
`HAVE_ZLIB`, `HAVE_ZLIB_H`. Furthermore, require zlib if `LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB` is
set to `YES`, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This restores 68a235d07f,
e6c7ed6d21. The problem with the windows
bot is a need for clearing the cache.
Adds a new ASTMatcher condition called 'hasInitStatement()' that matches if,
switch and range-for statements with an initializer. Reworked clang-tidy
readability-else-after-return to handle variables in the if condition or init
statements in c++17 ifs. Also checks if removing the else would affect object
lifetimes in the else branch.
Fixes PR44364.
This reverts commit 68a235d07f.
This commit broke the clang-x64-windows-msvc build bot and a follow-up
commit did not fix it. Reverting to fix the bot.
There's quite a lot of references to Polly in the LLVM CMake codebase. However
the registration pattern used by Polly could be useful to other external
projects: thanks to that mechanism it would be possible to develop LLVM
extension without touching the LLVM code base.
This patch has two effects:
1. Remove all code specific to Polly in the llvm/clang codebase, replaicing it
with a generic mechanism
2. Provide a generic mechanism to register compiler extensions.
A compiler extension is similar to a pass plugin, with the notable difference
that the compiler extension can be configured to be built dynamically (like
plugins) or statically (like regular passes).
As a result, people willing to add extra passes to clang/opt can do it using a
separate code repo, but still have their pass be linked in clang/opt as built-in
passes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61446
Summary: `getListOfPossibleValues()` formatted incorrectly when there is only one value, emitting something like `expected 'conditional' or in OpenMP clause 'lastprivate'`.
Reviewers: jdoerfert, ABataev
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Subscribers: guansong, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71884
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use `find_package` from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the `LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB`,
`HAVE_ZLIB`, `HAVE_ZLIB_H`. Furthermore, require zlib if `LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB` is
set to `YES`, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This makes the range loop warnings part of -Wall.
Fixes PR32823: Warn about accidental coping of data in range based for
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68912
The Wrange-loop-analyses warns if a copy is made. Suppress this warning when
a temporary is bound to a rvalue reference.
While fixing this issue also found a copy-paste error in test6, which is also
fixed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71806
clang/lib/CodeGen/CodeGenModule performs the -mpie-copy-relocations
check and sets dso_local on applicable global variables. We don't need
to duplicate the work in TargetMachine shouldAssumeDSOLocal.
Verified that -mpie-copy-relocations can still emit PC relative
relocations for external variable accesses.
clang -target x86_64 -fpie -mpie-copy-relocations -c => R_X86_64_PC32
clang -target aarch64 -fpie -mpie-copy-relocations -c => R_AARCH64_ADR_PREL_PG_HI21+R_AARCH64_LDST64_ABS_LO12_NC
This reverts commit b47b35ff51.
This caused failed asserts (Assertion `FIDAndOffset.second >
ColNo && "Column number smaller than file offset?"' failed.)
on a source file with a single line containing
"int main (void) { for( int i = 0; i < 9; i++ ); return 0; }".
We already recognize the __builtin versions of these, might as well
recognize the libcall version.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72028
Summary:
These overloads make it possible to wrap unless(), anyOf(), has() etc
with the traverse matcher.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71977
This fixes the following failure:
C:\[...]\llvm\tools\clang\test\VFS\external-names.c:34:26: error: CHECK-DEBUG-EXTERNAL: expected string not found in input
// CHECK-DEBUG-EXTERNAL: ![[Num]] = !DIFile(filename: "{{[^"]*}}Inputs{{.}}external-names.h"
^
[...]
<stdin>:42:54: note: possible intended match here
!10 = !DIFile(filename: "C:/[...]\\llvm\\tools\\clang\\test\\VFS\\Inputs\\external-names.h", directory: "")
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71991
This replaces the fsub -0.0 idiom with an fneg instruction. We didn't see to have a test that showed the current codegen. Just some tests for constant folding and a test that was only checking the declare lines for libcalls. The latter just checked that we did not have a declare for @conj when using __builtin_conj.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72012
We have an fneg instruction now and should use it instead of the fsub -0.0 idiom. Looks like we had no test that showed that we handled the negation cases here so I've added new tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72010
The new check line is compatible with the clang code generation check
line as it allows a 64 and 32 bit value.
I hope this makes the llvm-clang-win-x-armv7l buildbot happy.
This allows to use the OpenMPIRBuilder for parallel regions. Code was
extracted from D61953 and adapted to work with the new version (D70109).
All but one feature should be supported. An update of this patch will
provide test coverage and privatization other than shared.
Reviewed By: fghanim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70290
Summary:
Amend MS offset operator implementation, to more closely fit with its MS counterpart:
1. InlineAsm: evaluate non-local source entities to their (address) location
2. Provide a mean with which one may acquire the address of an assembly label via MS syntax, rather than yielding a memory reference (i.e. "offset asm_label" and "$asm_label" should be synonymous
3. address PR32530
Based on http://llvm.org/D37461
Fix broken test where the break appears unrelated.
- Set up appropriate memory-input rewrites for variable references.
- Intel-dialect assembly printing now correctly handles addresses by adding "offset".
- Pass offsets as immediate operands (using "r" constraint for offsets of locals).
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71436
Summary:
this allow much better support of codebases like the linux kernel that mix tabs and spaces.
-ftabstop=//Width// allow specifying how large tabs are considered to be.
Reviewers: xbolva00, aaron.ballman, rsmith
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Subscribers: jyknight, riccibruno, rsmith, nathanchance
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71037
Added two confguration argument to provide a host name and SSH user name
to run the tests on the remote target host.
* REMOTE_TEST_HOST - remote host name or address.
* REMOTE_TEST_USER - passwordless SSH account name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71625
msvc allows a subsequent declaration of a uuid attribute on a
struct/class. Mirror this behavior in clang-cl.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71439
Summary: The ICE happens when the most outer namespace is an inline namespace.
Reviewers: bkramer, ilya-biryukov
Reviewed By: ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: ebevhan, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71962
This reverts commit de21704ba9.
Regressed/causes this to error due to ambiguity:
void f(const int * const &);
void f(int *);
int main() {
int * x;
f(x);
}
(in case it's important - the original case where this turned up was a
member function overload in a class template with, essentially:
f(const T1&)
f(T2*)
(where T1 == X const *, T2 == X))
It's not super clear to me if this ^ is expected behavior, in which case
I'm sorry about the revert & happy to look into ways to fix the original
code.
This test was XFAILed because of symlinks, but some versions of ln -s
seem to work on Windows, so the test was unexpectedly passing on our
bot:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x64-windows-msvc/builds/13233
Unexpected Passing Tests (1):
Clang :: VFS/subframework-symlink.m
I don't know how or why, but it seems dependent on system configuration,
and is not something worth debugging. Avoid the problem by marking the
test UNSUPPORTED: system-windows instead of XFAIL: system-windows.
Add printing of __private address space to TypePrinter to allow
it appears in diagnostics and AST dumps as all other language
addr spaces.
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71272
Revert "Fix -Wunused-lambda-capture warnings."
This reverts commit 2369560f4a.
This reverts commit 522ee29a4f.
clang/lib/ASTMatchers/Dynamic/Parser.cpp:610:13: warning: implicit conversion turns string literal into bool: 'const char [35]' to 'bool' [-Wstring-conversion]
assert(!"Newline should never be found here");
This removes the OpenMPProcBindClauseKind enum in favor of
llvm::omp::ProcBindKind which lives in OpenMPConstants.h and was
introduced in D70109.
No change in behavior is expected.
Reviewed By: JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70289
As a permanent and generic solution to the problem of variable
finalization (destructors, lastprivate, ...), this patch introduces the
finalization stack. The objects on the stack describe (1) the
(structured) regions the OpenMP-IR-Builder is currently constructing,
(2) if these are cancellable, and (3) the callback that will perform the
finalization (=cleanup) when necessary.
As the finalization can be necessary multiple times, at different source
locations, the callback takes the position at which code is currently
generated. This position will also encode the destination of the "region
exit" block *iff* the finalization call was issues for a region
generated by the OpenMPIRBuilder. For regions generated through the old
Clang OpenMP code geneneration, the "region exit" is determined by Clang
inside the finalization call instead (see getOMPCancelDestination).
As a first user, the parallel + cancel barrier interaction is changed.
In contrast to the temporary solution before, the barrier generation in
Clang does not need to be aware of the "CancelDestination" block.
Instead, the finalization callback is and, as described above, later
even that one does not need to be.
D70109 will be updated to use this scheme.
Reviewed By: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70258