Implement rest of DATA statement semantics and conversion of
DATA statement initializations into static initializers of
objects in their symbol table entries.
Reviewed By: tskeith, PeteSteinfeld
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82207
Rolls up small changes across the frontend to prepare for the large
forthcoming patch (part 4/4) that completes DATA statement processing
via conversion to initializers.
Reviewed By: PeteSteinfeld
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82137
G++ 10.1 emits inappropriate "use of uninitialized data" warnings when
compiling f18. The warnings stem from two sites in templatized code
whose multiple instantiations magnified the number of warnings.
These changes dodge those warnings by making some innocuous changes to
the code. In the parser, the idiom defaulted(cut >> x), which yields a
parser that always succeeds, has been replaced with a new equivalent
pass<T>() parser that returns a default-constructed value T{} in an
arguably more readable fashion. This idiom was the only attestation of
the basic parser cut, so it has been removed and the remaining code
simplified. In Evaluate/traverse.h, a return {}; was replaced with a
return of a default-constructed member.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81747
Summary:
Updates recent work on DATA statement semantic checking in
flang/lib/Semantics/check-data.{h,cpp} to use the compiler's
internal representation for typed expressions rather than working
on the raw parse tree. Saves the analyzed expressions for DATA
statement values as parse tree decorations because they'll soon be
needed in lowering. Corrects wording of some error messages.
Fixes a bug in constant expression checking: structure constructors
are not constant expressions if they set an allocatable component
to anything other than NULL.
Includes infrastructure changes to make this work, some renaming
to reflect the fact that the implied DO loop indices tracked by
expression analysis are not (just) from array constructors, remove
some dead code, and improve some comments.
Reviewers: tskeith, sscalpone, jdoerfert, DavidTruby, anchu-rajendran, schweitz
Reviewed By: tskeith, anchu-rajendran, schweitz
Subscribers: llvm-commits, flang-commits
Tags: #flang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78834
In general all the basic functionality seems to work and removes some redundancy
and more complicated features in favor of borrowing infrastructure from LLVM
build configurations. Here's a quick summary of details and remaining issues:
* Testing has spanned Ubuntu 18.04 & 19.10, CentOS 7, RHEL 8, and
MacOS/darwin. Architectures include x86_64 and Arm. Without
access to Window nothing has been tested there yet.
* As we change file and directory naming schemes (i.e.,
capitalization) some odd things can occur on MacOS systems with
case preserving but not case senstive file system configurations.
Can be painful and certainly something to watch out for as any
any such changes continue.
* Testing infrastructure still needs to be tuned up and worked on.
Note that there do appear to be cases of some tests hanging (on
MacOS in particular). They appear unrelated to the build
process.
* Shared library configurations need testing (and probably fixing).
* Tested both standalone and 'in-mono repo' builds. Changes for
supporting the mono repo builds will require LLVM-level changes that
are straightforward when the time comes.
* The configuration contains a work-around for LLVM's C++ standard mode
passing down into Flang/F18 builds (i.e., LLVM CMake configuration would
force a -std=c++11 flag to show up in command line arguments. The
current configuration removes that automatically and is more strict in
following new CMake guidelines for enforcing C++17 mode across all the
CMake files.
* Cleaned up a lot of repetition in the command line arguments. It
is likely that more work is still needed to both allow for
customization and working around CMake defailts (or those
inherited from LLVM's configuration files). On some platforms agressive
optimization flags (e.g. -O3) can actually break builds due to the inlining
of templates in .cpp source files that then no longer are available for use
cases outside those source files (shows up as link errors). Sticking at -O2
appears to fix this. Currently this CMake configuration forces this in
release mode but at the cost of stomping on any CMake, or user customized,
settings for the release flags.
* Made the lit tests non-source directory dependent where appropriate. This is
done by configuring certain test shell files to refer to the correct paths
whether an in or out of tree build is being performed. These configured
files are output in the build directory. A %B substitution is introduced in
lit to refer to the build directory, mirroring the %S substitution for the
source directory, so that the tests can refer to the configured shell scripts.
Co-authored-by: David Truby <david.truby@arm.com>
Original-commit: flang-compiler/f18@d1c7184159
Reviewed-on: https://github.com/flang-compiler/f18/pull/1045
The previous code had handling for cases when too many file descriptors may be
opened; this is not necessary with MemoryBuffer as the file descriptors are
closed after the mapping occurs. MemoryBuffer also internally handles the case
where a file is small and therefore an mmap is bad for performance; such files
are simply copied to memory after being opened.
Many places elsewhere in the code assume that the buffer is not empty, and the
old file opening code handles this by replacing an empty file with a buffer
containing a single newline. That behavior is now kept in the new MemoryBuffer
based code.
Original-commit: flang-compiler/f18@d34df84351
Reviewed-on: https://github.com/flang-compiler/f18/pull/1032
This patch replaces the occurrence of std::ostream by llvm::raw_ostream.
In LLVM Coding Standards[1] "All new code should use raw_ostream
instead of ostream".[1]
As a consequence, this patch also replaces the use of:
std::stringstream by llvm::raw_string_ostream or llvm::raw_ostream*
std::ofstream by llvm::raw_fd_ostream
std::endl by '\n' and flush()[2]
std::cout by llvm::outs() and
std::cerr by llvm::errs()
It also replaces std::strerro by llvm::sys::StrError** , but NOT in Fortran
runtime libraries
*std::stringstream were replaced by llvm::raw_ostream in all methods that
used std::stringstream as a parameter. Moreover, it removes the pointers to
these streams.
[1]https://llvm.org/docs/CodingStandards.html
[2]https://releases.llvm.org/2.5/docs/CodingStandards.html#ll_avoidendl
Signed-off-by: Caroline Concatto <caroline.concatto@arm.com>
Running clang-format-7
Signed-off-by: Caroline Concatto <caroline.concatto@arm.com>
Removing residue of ostream library
Signed-off-by: Caroline Concatto <caroline.concatto@arm.com>
Original-commit: flang-compiler/f18@a3507d44b8
Reviewed-on: https://github.com/flang-compiler/f18/pull/1047
Scan FORMAT strings locally to avoid C++ binary runtime dependence when computing deepest parenthesis nesting
Remove a dependency on ostream from runtime
Remove remaining direct external references from runtime to C++ library binaries
Remove runtime dependences on lib/common
SetPos() and SetRec()
Instantiate templates for input
Begin input; rearrange locking, deal with CLOSE races
View()
Update error message in test to agree with compiler change
First cut at real input
More robust I/O runtime error handling
Debugging of REAL input
Add iostat.{h,cpp}
Rename runtime/numeric-* to runtime/edit-*
Move templates around, templatize integer output editing
Move LOGICAL and CHARACTER output from io-api.cpp to edit-output.cpp
Change pointer argument to reference
More list-directed input
Complex list-directed input
Use enum class Direction rather than bool for templates
Catch up with changes to master
Undo reformatting of Lower code
Use record number instead of subscripts for internal unit
Unformatted sequential backspace
Testing and debugging
Dodge bogus GCC warning
Add <cstddef> for std::size_t to fix CI build
Address review comments
Original-commit: flang-compiler/f18@50406b3496
Reviewed-on: https://github.com/flang-compiler/f18/pull/1053
In a data statement like `data x / a(1) /`, `a(1)` may be an array
element or a structure constructor. It is parsed as an array element
so if it turns out `a` is a derived type it must be rewritten as a
strucutre constructor.
Original-commit: flang-compiler/f18@a2b2a330e7
Reviewed-on: https://github.com/flang-compiler/f18/pull/1024