Each var argument to an attach or detach clause must be a
Fortran variable or array with the pointer or allocatable attribute.
This patch enforce this restruction.
Reviewed By: kiranchandramohan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103279
This patch adds the following Fortran specific semantic checks for the OpenMP
Allocate directive.
1) A type parameter inquiry cannot appear in an ALLOCATE directive.
2) List items specified in the ALLOCATE directive must not have the ALLOCATABLE
attribute unless the directive is associated with an ALLOCATE statement.
Co-authored-by: Irina Dobrescu <irina.dobrescu@arm.com>
Reviewed By: kiranchandramohan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102061
Describes how to run the Fortran LLVM Test Suite, specifically the external SPEC CPU 2017 Fortran tests.
Reviewed By: rovka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102877
Defined input/output procedures are specified in 12.6.4.8. There are different
versions for read versus write and formatted versus unformatted, but they all
share the same basic set of dummy arguments.
I added several checking functions to check-declarations.cpp along with a test.
In the process of implementing this, I noticed and fixed a typo in
.../lib/Evaluate/characteristics.cpp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103045
A recent fix for problems with ENTRY statement handling didn't
get the case of a procedure dummy argument on an ENTRY statement
in an executable part right; the code presumed that those dummy
arguments would be objects, not entities that might be objects or
procedures. Fix.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103098
For out-of-tree builds of Flang, FLANG_BUILD_NEW_DRIVER is not inherited
from llvm-project/llvm/CMakeLists.txt. Instead, a separate definition is
required (but only for out-of-tree builds).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102323
Dummy arguments of ENTRY statements in execution parts were
not being created as objects, nor were they being implicitly
typed.
When the symbol corresponding to an alternate ENTRY point
already exists (by that name) due to having been referenced
in an earlier call, name resolution used to delete the extant
symbol. This isn't the right thing to do -- the extant
symbol will be pointed to by parser::Name nodes in the parse
tree while no longer being part of any Scope.
Differential Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102948
A recent commit (e00a170) inadvertently exposed the Reshape runtime
function as being extern "C", for which it is not yet ready, leading
to a valid warning from clang that we treat as an error. Patch.
Define APIs, naively implement, and add basic sanity unit tests for
the transformational intrinsic functions CSHIFT, EOSHIFT, PACK,
SPREAD, TRANSPOSE, and UNPACK. These are the remaining transformational
intrinsic functions that rearrange data without regard to type
(except for default boundary values in EOSHIFT); RESHAPE was already
in place as a stress test for the runtime's descriptor handling
facilities.
Code is in place to create copies of allocatable/automatic
components when transforming arrays of derived type, but it won't
do anything until we have derived type information being passed to the
runtime from the frontend.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102857
- Replace class(*) member by a c_ptr member to avoid having to handle
polymorphic components in the type info table generation. Polymorphic
entity handling will require these very tables to be lowered properly.
Note: keep the init as NullPointer/Designators. This is technically
invalid Fortran, the init should have c_ptr type. But wrapping this
in a C_LOC intrinsic call would make runtime generation and lowering
more complex with no real benefits.
- ComponentIterator is crashing when used on the generated derived
types in GetScope. This patch makes GetScope more robust, but it
is not entirely clear to me why this is only happening with the
generated derived types.
- The type of generated character globals was incorrect because
Scope::FindType was matching character types with different
length. Add a CharacterTypeSpec == operator to fix this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102768
Define an API for the transformational intrinsic function MATMUL,
implement it, and add some basic unit tests. The large number of
possible argument type combinations are covered by a set of
generalized templates that are instantiated for each valid
pair of possible argument types.
Places where BLAS-2/3 routines could be called for acceleration
are marked with TODOs. Handling for other special cases (e.g.,
known-shape 3x3 matrices and vectors) are deferred.
Some minor tweaks were made to the recent related implementation
of DOT_PRODUCT to reflect lessons learned.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102652
This patch implements the following semantic check:
```
A master region may not be closely nested inside a work-sharing, loop, atomic, task, or taskloop region.
```
Adds a test case and also modifies a couple of existing test cases to include the check.
Reviewed By: kiranchandramohan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100228
Add overloads to AsGenericExpr() in Evaluate/tools.h to take care
of wrapping an untyped DataRef or bare Symbol in a typed Designator
wrapped up in a generic Expr<SomeType>. Use the new overloads to
replace a few instances of code that was calling TypedWrapper<>()
with a dynamic type.
This new tool will be useful in lowering to drive some code that
works with typed expressions (viz., list-directed I/O list items)
when starting with only a bare Symbol (viz., NAMELIST).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102352
API, implementation, and basic tests for the transformational
reduction intrinsic function DOT_PRODUCT in the runtime support
library.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102351
Flang's CMake modules directory was being added to the CMake module path
twice, and AddFlang was being included after the first addition. Remove
the unnecessary first addition and move the AddFlang include down to the
second one. This way, it occurs after LLVM's CMake modules have been
included for a standalone build, so it can make use of those modules.
LLVM's build system contains support for configuring a distribution, but
it can often be useful to be able to configure multiple distributions
(e.g. if you want separate distributions for the tools and the
libraries). Add this support to the build system, along with
documentation and usage examples.
Reviewed By: phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89177
We sometimes unroll an ac-implied-do of an array constructor into a flat list
of values. We then re-analyze the array constructor that contains the
resulting list of expressions. Such a list may or may not contain errors.
But when processing an array constructor with an unrolled ac-implied-do, the
compiler was building an expression to represent the extent of the resulting
array constructor containing the list of values. The number of operands
in this extent expression was based on the number of elements in the
unrolled list of values. For very large lists, this created an
expression so large that it could not be evaluated by the compiler
without overflowing the stack.
I fixed this by continuously folding the extent expression as each operand is
added to it. I added the test .../flang/test/Semantics/array-constr-big.f90
that will cause the compiler to seg fault without this change.
Also, when the unrolled ac-implied-do expression contains errors, we were
repeating the same error message referencing the same source line for every
instance of the erroneous expression in the unrolled list. This potentially
resulted in a very long list of messages for a single error in the source code.
I fixed this by comparing the message being emitted to the previously emitted
message. If they are the same, I do not emit the message. This change is also
tested by the new test array-constr-big.f90.
Several of the existing tests had duplicate error messages for the same source
line, and this change caused differences in their output. So I adjusted the
tests to match the new message emitting behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102210
With this patch, `FLANG_BUILD_NEW_DRIVER` is set to `On` by default
(i.e. the new driver is enabled). Note that the new driver depends on
Clang and hence with this change you will need to add `clang` to
`LLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS`.
If you don't want to build the new driver, set `FLANG_BUILD_NEW_DRIVER`
to `Off`. This way you won't be required to include `clang` in
`LLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101842
Implement the reduction transformational intrinsic function NORM2 in
the runtime, using infrastructure already in place for MAXVAL & al.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102024
The MaxMinHelper used to implement MIN and MAX for character types would
reallocate the accumulator whenever the number of characters in it was
different from that in the other input. This is unnecessary if the
accumulator is already larger than the other input. This patch fixes the
issue and adds a unit test to make sure we don't reallocate if we don't
need to.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101984
We used to test only scalar character types. This commit adds tests for
arrays with a few simple shapes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101983
Add InputNamelist and OutputNamelist as I/O data transfer APIs
to be used with internal & external list-directed I/O; delete the
needless original namelist-specific Begin... calls.
Implement NAMELIST output and input; add basic tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101931
The code that initializes the default units 5 & 6 had
a race condition that would allow threads access to the
unit map before it had been populated.
Also add some missing calls to va_end() that will never
be called (they're in program abort situations) but might
elicit warnings if absent.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101928
What the Fortran standard calls "preconnected" external I/O units
might not be known to be connected to unformatted or formatted files
until the first I/O data transfer statement is executed.
Support this deferred determination by representing the flag as
a tri-state Boolean and adapting its points of use.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101929
`%f18` was originally introduced to represent the old Flang driver,
`f18`. With the introduction of the new driver, `flang-new`, we have
been switching to `%flang` (compiler driver) and `%flang_fc1` (frontend
driver) as more generic alternatives.
As most tests have been portend to use the new LIT variables instead of
`%f18`, this is good time to remove it from lit.cfg.py. There's only one
test left that requires the old driver to run. It's updated with:
```
! REQUIRES: old-flang-driver
```
This way we preserve its semantics while reducing the number of
variables in LIT configuration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101281
The number of bytes copied in CopyAndPad should depend on the size of
the type being copied, not on its shift value (which in the case of char
is 0, leading to no bytes at all being copied).
Add unit tests for CharacterMin and CharacterMax, which exercise this
code path.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101355
The current code computes the minimum element length based on the `type`
used to create the descriptor and uses that as the element length
whenever it is greater than 0. This means that the `elem_len` parameter
is essentially ignored for any type where we can compute a minimum
element length (which includes `CFI_type_char[16|32]_t`), and we may
therefore end up with descriptors with a lower element length than
expected.
This patch fixes the issue by explicitly doing what the standard says,
i.e. it uses the given `elem_len` for character types, `CFI_type_struct`
and `CFI_type_other`, and ignores it (falls back to the minimum element
length) for everything else.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101659
It looks like CFI_type_struct was once used as the last valid CFI_type
value, but in the meantime CFI_type_char16_t and CFI_type_char32_t were
added, making that assumption no longer true. Luckily, in the meantime
we also got a define for CFI_TYPE_LAST, which we can now use to allow
CFI_establish and CFI_allocate to work with descriptors of
CFI_type_char16_t, CFI_type_char32_t and any other future types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101658
When producing the runtime type information for a component of a derived type
that had a LEN type parameter, we were not allowing a KIND parameter of the
derived type. This was causing one of the NAG correctness tests to fail
(.../hibiya/d5.f90).
I added a test to our own test suite to check for this.
Also, I fixed a typo in .../module/__fortran_type_info.f90.
I allowed KIND type parameters to be used for the declarations of components
that use LEN parameters by constant folding the value of the LEN parameter. To
make the constant folding work, I had to put the semantics::DerivedTypeSpec of
the associated derived type into the folding context. To get this
semantics::DerivedTypeSpec, I changed the value of the semantics::Scope object
that was passed to DescribeComponent() to be the derived type scope rather than
the containing non-derived type scope.
This scope change, in turn, caused differences in the symbol table output that
is checked in typeinfo01.f90. Most of these differences were in the order that
the symbols appeared in the dump. But one of them changed one of the values
from "CHARACTER(2_8,1)" to "CHARACTER(1_8,1)". I'm not sure if these changes
are significant. Please verify that the results of this test are still valid.
Also, I wonder if there are other situations in this code where we should be
folding constants. For example, what if the field of a component has a
component whose type is a PDT with a LEN type parameter, and the component's
declaration depends on the KIND type parameter of the current PDT. Here's an
example:
type string(stringkind)
integer,kind :: stringkind
character(stringkind) :: value
end type string
type outer(kindparam)
integer,kind :: kindparam
type(string(kindparam)) :: field
end type outer
I don't understand the code or what it's trying to accomplish well enough to
figure out if such cases are correctly handled by my new code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101482
MAXVAL, MINVAL, MAXLOC and MINLOC are already implemented in extrema.cpp
as MaxvalCharacter, MinvalDim etc. Therefore, the interfaces in
character.h are redundant and should be removed to avoid confusion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101354
We were not correctly handling structure constructors that had forward
references to parameterized derived types. I harvested the code that checks
for forward references that was used during analysis of function call
expressions and called it from there and also called it during the
analysis of structure constructors.
I also added a test that will produce an internal error without this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101330
We were not checking that attributes that are supposed to be specific to
dummy arguments were not being used for local entities. I added the checks
along with tests for them.
After implementing these new checks, I found that one of the tests in
separate-mp02.f90 was erroneous, and I fixed it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101126
When generating output for `-fdebug-dump-symbols`, make sure that
BuildRuntimeDerivedTypeTables is also run. This change is needed in
order to make the implementation of `-fdebug-dump-symbols` in
`flang-new` consistent with `f18`. It also allows us to port more tests
to use the new driver whenever it is enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100649