This reverts commit 9b2ab41037 and
reinstates e62dc1f625 with changes.
This fix is speculative, since I don't have access to a crashing test
case for the old code, and fixing the crash bug on Windows when C++20 is
enabled seems more important than running it down.
This reverts commit e62dc1f625.
Reverting as per discussion with the patch author.
This patch causes module import error, but there was no intended
behavior change for code that does not use Microsoft extensions.
whether they have missing header files.
Whether a module's headers happen to be present on the local file system
should make no difference to whether we make its contents visible when
importing another module that re-exports it. If we have an up-to-date
AST file that we can load, that's all that matters.
This fixes the ability to header syntax checking for modular headers in
C++20 mode (or in prior modes where -fmodules-local-submodule-visibility
is enabled but -fmodules is not).
An enum may be considered to be a complete type if it was forward
declared. It may be declared with a fixed underlying type, or, in MSVC
compatiblity mode, with no type at all.
Previously, the code was written with special handling for fixed enums.
I generalized the code to check if the underlying integer type is known,
which should be the case when targetting the MSVC C++ ABI.
Fixes PR45409
in the debug info with -fdebug-prefix-map.
rdar://problem/55685132
This reapplies an earlier attempt to commit this without
modifications.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76385
Before this patch a Clang module skeleton CU would have a
DW_AT_comp_dir pointing to the directory of the module map file, and
this information was not used by anyone. Even worse, LLDB actually
resolves relative DWO paths by appending it to DW_AT_comp_dir. This
patch sets it to the same directory that is used as the main CU's
compilation directory, which would make the LLDB code work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76377
As per comment on https://reviews.llvm.org/D72860, it is suggested to
revert this change in the meantime, since it has introduced regression.
This reverts commit 83f4c3af02.
The -fsystem-module flag is used when explicitly building a module. It
forces the module to be treated as a system module. This is used when
converting an implicit build to an explicit build to match the
systemness the implicit build would have had for a given module.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75395
Support only preferred spelling 'Modules/module.private.modulemap' and
not the deprecated 'module_private.map'.
rdar://problem/57715533
Reviewed By: bruno
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75311
This is a longstanding bug that seems to have been hidden by
a combination of (1) the normal flow being to deserialize the
interface before deserializing its parameter and (2) a precise
ordering of work that was apparently recently disturbed,
perhaps by my abstract-serialization work or Bruno's ObjC
module merging work.
Fixes rdar://59153545.
Summary:
GNU objdump prints the file format in lowercase, e.g. `elf64-x86-64`. llvm-objdump prints `ELF64-x86-64` right now, even though piping that into llvm-objcopy refuses that as a valid arch to use.
As an example of a problem this causes, see: https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/779
Reviewers: MaskRay, jhenderson, alexshap
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Subscribers: tpimh, sbc100, grimar, jvesely, nhaehnle, kerbowa, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74433
Summary:
Due to a recent (but retroactive) C++ rule change, only sufficiently
C-compatible classes are permitted to be given a typedef name for
linkage purposes. Add an enabled-by-default warning for these cases, and
rephrase our existing error for the case where we encounter the typedef
name for linkage after we've already computed and used a wrong linkage
in terms of the new rule.
Reviewers: rjmccall
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74103
Summary:
Clang -fpic defaults to -fno-semantic-interposition (GCC -fpic defaults
to -fsemantic-interposition).
Users need to specify -fsemantic-interposition to get semantic
interposition behavior.
Semantic interposition is currently a best-effort feature. There may
still be some cases where it is not handled well.
Reviewers: peter.smith, rnk, serge-sans-paille, sfertile, jfb, jdoerfert
Subscribers: dschuff, jyknight, dylanmckay, nemanjai, jvesely, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, zzheng, edward-jones, atanasyan, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, arphaman, PkmX, jocewei, jsji, Jim, lenary, s.egerton, pzheng, sameer.abuasal, apazos, luismarques, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73865
With LLVM_APPEND_VC_REV=NO, Modules/merge-lifetime-extended-temporary.cpp
would fail if it ran before a0f50d7316 (which changed
the serialization format) and then after, for these reasons:
1. With LLVM_APPEND_VC_REV=NO, the module hash before and after the
change was the same.
2. Modules/merge-lifetime-extended-temporary.cpp is the only test
we have that uses -fmodule-cache-path=%t that
a) actually writes to the cache path
b) doesn't do `rm -rf %t` at the top of the test
So the old run would write a module file, and then the new run would
try to load it, but the serialized format changed.
Do several things to fix this:
1. Include clang::serialization::VERSION_MAJOR/VERSION_MINOR in
the module hash, so that when the AST format changes (...and
we remember to bump these), we use a different module cache dir.
2. Bump VERSION_MAJOR, since a0f50d7316 changed the
on-disk format in a way that a gch file written before that change
can't be read after that change.
3. Add `rm -rf %t` to all tests that pass -fmodule-cache-path=%t.
This is unnecessary from a correctness PoV after 1 and 2,
but makes it so that we don't amass many cache dirs over time.
(Arguably, it also makes it so that the test suite doesn't catch
when we change the serialization format but don't bump
clang::serialization::VERSION_MAJOR/VERSION_MINOR; oh well.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73202
[this re-applies c0176916a4
with the correct commit message and phabricator link]
This addresses point 1 of PR44213.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44213
The DW_AT_LLVM_sysroot attribute is used for Clang module debug info,
to allow LLDB to import a Clang module from source. Currently it is
part of each DW_TAG_module, however, it is the same for all modules in
a compile unit. It is more efficient and less ambiguous to store it
once in the DW_TAG_compile_unit.
This should have no effect on DWARF consumers other than LLDB.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71732
This is a purely cosmetic change that is NFC in terms of the binary
output. I bugs me that I called the attribute DW_AT_LLVM_isysroot
since the "i" is an artifact of GCC command line option syntax
(-isysroot is in the category of -i options) and doesn't carry any
useful information otherwise.
This attribute only appears in Clang module debug info.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71722
Partially reverts 0a2be46cfd as it turned
out to cause redundant module rebuilds in multi-process incremental builds.
When a module was getting out of date, all compilation processes started at the
same time were marking it as `ToBuild`. So each process was building the same
module instead of checking if it was built by someone else and using that
result. In addition to the work duplication, contention on the same .pcm file
wasn't making builds faster.
Note that for a single-process build this change would cause redundant module
reads and validations. But reading a module is faster than building it and
multi-process builds are more common than single-process. So I'm willing to
make such a trade-off.
rdar://problem/54395127
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72860
Allow to build PCH's (with -building-pch-with-obj and the extra .o file)
with -fmodules-codegen -fmodules-debuginfo to allow emitting shared code
into the extra .o file, similarly to how it works with modules. A bit of
a misnomer, but the underlying functionality is the same. This saves up
to 20% of build time here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69778
If a header contains 'extern template', then the template should be provided
somewhere by an explicit instantiation, so it is not necessary to generate
a copy. Worse, this can lead to an unresolved symbol, because the codegen's
object file will not actually contain functions from such a template
because of the GVA_AvailableExternally, but the object file for the explicit
instantiation will not contain them either because it will be blocked
by the information provided by the module.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69779
This is a purely cosmetic change that is NFC in terms of the binary
output. I bugs me that I called the attribute DW_AT_LLVM_isysroot
since the "i" is an artifact of GCC command line option syntax
(-isysroot is in the category of -i options) and doesn't carry any
useful information otherwise.
This attribute only appears in Clang module debug info.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71722
Jenkins sometimes starts a new working directory by appending @2 (or
incrementing the number if the @n suffix is already there). This causes
several clang tests to fail as:
s@INPUT_DIR@%/S/Inputs@g
gets expanded to the invalid:
s@INPUT_DIR@/path/to/workdir@2/Inputs@g
~~~~~~~~~~
where the part marked with ~'s is interpreted as the flags. These are
invalid and the test fails.
Previous fixes simply exchanged the @ character for another like | but
that's just moving the problem. Address it by adding an expansion that
escapes the @ character we're using as a delimiter as well as other magic
characters in the replacement of sed's s@@@.
There's still room for expansions to cause trouble though. One I ran into
while testing this was that having a directory called foo@bar causes lots
of `CHECK-NOT: foo` directives to match. There's also things like
directories containing `\1`
Keys in a virtual file system can be in Posix or Windows form or even
a combination of the two. Many VFS tests (and a few Clang tests) were
XFAILed on Windows because of false negatives when comparing paths.
First, we default CaseSenstive to false on Windows. This allows
drive letters like "D:" to match "d:". Windows filesystems are, by
default, case insensitive, so this makes sense even beyond the drive
letter.
Second, we allow slashes to match backslashes when they're used as the
root component of a path.
Both of these changes are limited to RedirectingFileSystems, so there's
little chance of affecting other path handling.
These changes allow eleven of the VFS tests to pass on Windows as well
as three other Clang tests, so they have re-enabled.
This solves the majority of PR43272. Additional VFS test failures will
be fixed in separate patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69958
Summary:
When files often get touched during builds, the mtime based validation
leads to different problems in implicit modules builds, even when the
content doesn't actually change:
- Modules only: module invalidation due to out of date files. Usually causing rebuild traffic.
- Modules + PCH: build failures because clang cannot rebuild a module if it comes from building a PCH.
- PCH: build failures because clang cannot rebuild a PCH in case one of the input headers has different mtime.
This patch proposes hashing the content of input files (headers and
module maps), which is performed during serialization time. When looking
at input files for validation, clang only computes the hash in case
there's a mtime mismatch.
I've tested a couple of different hash algorithms availble in LLVM in
face of building modules+pch for `#import <Cocoa/Cocoa.h>`:
- `hash_code`: performace diff within the noise, total module cache increased by 0.07%.
- `SHA1`: 5% slowdown. Haven't done real size measurements, but it'd be BLOCK_ID+20 bytes per input file, instead of BLOCK_ID+8 bytes from `hash_code`.
- `MD5`: 3% slowdown. Like above, but BLOCK_ID+16 bytes per input file.
Given the numbers above, the patch uses `hash_code`. The patch also
improves invalidation error msgs to point out which type of problem the
user is facing: "mtime", "size" or "content".
rdar://problem/29320105
Reviewers: dexonsmith, arphaman, rsmith, aprantl
Subscribers: jkorous, cfe-commits, ributzka
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67249
> llvm-svn: 374841
llvm-svn: 374895
Summary:
When files often get touched during builds, the mtime based validation
leads to different problems in implicit modules builds, even when the
content doesn't actually change:
- Modules only: module invalidation due to out of date files. Usually causing rebuild traffic.
- Modules + PCH: build failures because clang cannot rebuild a module if it comes from building a PCH.
- PCH: build failures because clang cannot rebuild a PCH in case one of the input headers has different mtime.
This patch proposes hashing the content of input files (headers and
module maps), which is performed during serialization time. When looking
at input files for validation, clang only computes the hash in case
there's a mtime mismatch.
I've tested a couple of different hash algorithms availble in LLVM in
face of building modules+pch for `#import <Cocoa/Cocoa.h>`:
- `hash_code`: performace diff within the noise, total module cache increased by 0.07%.
- `SHA1`: 5% slowdown. Haven't done real size measurements, but it'd be BLOCK_ID+20 bytes per input file, instead of BLOCK_ID+8 bytes from `hash_code`.
- `MD5`: 3% slowdown. Like above, but BLOCK_ID+16 bytes per input file.
Given the numbers above, the patch uses `hash_code`. The patch also
improves invalidation error msgs to point out which type of problem the
user is facing: "mtime", "size" or "content".
rdar://problem/29320105
Reviewers: dexonsmith, arphaman, rsmith, aprantl
Subscribers: jkorous, cfe-commits, ributzka
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67249
llvm-svn: 374841