Adds diagnosing on attempt to use zero length arrays, pointers, refs, arrays
of them and structs/classes containing all of it.
In case a struct/class with zero length array is used this emits a set
of notes pointing out how zero length array got into used struct, like
this:
```
struct ContainsArr {
int A[0]; // note: field of illegal type declared here
};
struct Wrapper {
ContainsArr F; // note: within field of type ContainsArr declared here
// ...
}
// Device code
Wrapper W;
W.use(); // error: zero-length arrays are not permitted
```
Total deep check of each used declaration may result in double
diagnosing at the same location.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114080
After significant problems in our downstream with the previous
implementation, the SYCL standard has opted to make using macros/etc to
change kernel-naming-lambdas in any way UB (even passively). As a
result, we are able to just emit the itanium mangling.
However, this DOES require a little work in the CXXABI, as the microsoft
and itanium mangler use different numbering schemes for lambdas. This
patch adds a pair of mangling contexts that use the normal 'itanium'
mangling strategy to fill in the "DeviceManglingNumber" used previously
by CUDA.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110281
This reverts commit 5013131875.
This patch didn't end up being the solution to the problem. It "fixed"
our issue but the actual correct solution is something else. Reverting
as this ends up being unnecessary/extra noise.
Discovered in our downstream, this function that is used to get the type
of the kernel parameter type needs to be unqualified, otherwise when our
downstream uses this function in a slightly different way, the kernel
types no longer match.
The original version of this was reverted, and @rjmcall provided some
advice to architect a new solution. This is that solution.
This implements a builtin to provide a unique name that is stable across
compilations of this TU for the purposes of implementing the library
component of the unnamed kernel feature of SYCL. It does this by
running the Itanium mangler with a few modifications.
Because it is somewhat common to wrap non-kernel-related lambdas in
macros that aren't present on the device (such as for logging), this
uniquely generates an ID for all lambdas involved in the naming of a
kernel. It uses the lambda-mangling number to do this, except replaces
this with its own number (starting at 10000 for readabililty reasons)
for lambdas used to name a kernel.
Additionally, this implements itself as constexpr with a slight catch:
if a name would be invalidated by the use of this lambda in a later
kernel invocation, it is diagnosed as an error (see the Sema tests).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103112
In CUDA/HIP a function may become implicit host device function by
pragma or constexpr. A host device function is checked in both
host and device compilation. However it may be emitted only
on host or device side, therefore the diagnostics should be
deferred until it is known to be emitted.
Currently clang is only able to defer certain diagnostics. This causes
false alarms and limits the usefulness of host device functions.
This patch lets clang defer all overloading resolution diagnostics for host device functions.
An option -fgpu-defer-diag is added to control this behavior. By default
it is off.
It is NFC for other languages.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84364
Summary:
Diagnostic is emitted if some declaration of unsupported type
declaration is used inside device code.
Memcpy operations for structs containing member with unsupported type
are allowed. Fixed crash on attempt to emit diagnostic outside of the
functions.
The approach is generalized between SYCL and OpenMP.
CUDA/OMP deferred diagnostic interface is going to be used for SYCL device.
Reviewers: rsmith, rjmccall, ABataev, erichkeane, bader, jdoerfert, aaron.ballman
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Subscribers: guansong, sstefan1, yaxunl, mgorny, bader, ebevhan, Anastasia, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74387