Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 371834
qualifications as unavailable if the union is declared in a system
header
r365985 stopped marking those fields as unavailable, which caused the
union's NonTrivialToPrimitive* bits to be set to true. This patch
restores the behavior prior to r365985, except that users can explicitly
specify the ownership qualification of the field to instruct the
compiler not to mark it as unavailable.
rdar://problem/53420753
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65256
llvm-svn: 371276
Breaks BUILD_SHARED_LIBS build, introduces cycles in library dependency
graphs. (clangInterp depends on clangAST which depends on clangInterp)
This reverts r370839, which is an yet another recommit of D64146.
llvm-svn: 370874
While the next Visual Studio update (16.3) will fix this issue, that hasn't
shipped yet. Until then Clang wouldn't work with MSVC's headers which seems
unfortunate. Let's keep this in until VS 16.3 ships. (See also PR42843.)
> Fixes link errors with clang and the latest Visual C++ 14.21.27702
> headers, which was reported as PR42027.
>
> I chose to intentionally make these things linkonce_odr, i.e.
> discardable, so that we don't emit definitions of these things in every
> translation unit that includes STL headers.
>
> Note that this is *not* what MSVC does: MSVC has not yet implemented C++
> DR2387, so they emit fully specialized constexpr variable templates with
> static / internal linkage.
>
> Reviewers: rsmith
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63175
llvm-svn: 370850
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 370839
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 370636
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 370584
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 370531
Summary:
This patch introduces the skeleton of the constexpr interpreter,
capable of evaluating a simple constexpr functions consisting of
if statements. The interpreter is described in more detail in the
RFC. Further patches will add more features.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jfb, rsmith
Subscribers: bruno, uenoku, ldionne, Tyker, thegameg, tschuett, dexonsmith, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64146
llvm-svn: 370476
When checking if block types are compatible, we are checking for
compatibility their return types and parameters' types. As these types
have different variance, we need to check them in different order.
rdar://problem/52788423
Reviewers: erik.pilkington, arphaman
Reviewed By: arphaman
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, ributzka, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66831
llvm-svn: 370130
Now that we've moved to C++14, we no longer need the llvm::make_unique
implementation from STLExtras.h. This patch is a mechanical replacement
of (hopefully) all the llvm::make_unique instances across the monorepo.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66259
llvm-svn: 368942
- Create ASTContext::attachCommentsToJustParsedDecls so we don't have to load external comments in Sema when trying to attach existing comments to just parsed Decls.
- Keep comments ordered and cache their decomposed location - faster SourceLoc-based searching.
- Optimize work with redeclarations.
- Keep one comment per redeclaration chain (represented by canonical Decl) instead of comment per redeclaration.
- For redeclaration chains with no comment attached keep just the last declaration in chain that had no comment instead of every comment-less redeclaration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65301
llvm-svn: 368732
This patch adds the SVE built-in types defined by the Procedure Call
Standard for the Arm Architecture:
https://developer.arm.com/docs/100986/0000
It handles the types in all relevant places that deal with built-in types.
At the moment, some of these places bail out with an error, including:
(1) trying to generate LLVM IR for the types
(2) trying to generate debug info for the types
(3) trying to mangle the types using the Microsoft C++ ABI
(4) trying to @encode the types in Objective C
(1) and (2) are fixed by follow-on patches but (unlike this patch)
they deal mostly with target-specific LLVM details, so seemed like
a logically separate change. There is currently no spec for (3) and
(4), so reporting an error seems like the correct behaviour for now.
The intention is that the types will become sizeless types:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-June/062523.html
The main purpose of the sizeless type extension is to diagnose
impossible or dangerous uses of the types, such as any that would
require sizeof to have a meaningful defined value.
Until then, the patch sets the alignments of the types to the values
specified in the link above. It also sets the sizes of the types to
zero, which is chosen to be consistently wrong and shouldn't affect
correctly-written code (i.e. code that would compile even with the
sizeless type extension).
The patch adds the common subset of functionality needed to test the
sizeless type extension on the one hand and to provide SVE intrinsic
functions on the other. After this patch, the two pieces of work are
essentially independent.
The patch is based on one by Graham Hunter:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D59245
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62960
llvm-svn: 368413
This patch implements the code generation for OpenMP 5.0 declare mapper
(user-defined mapper) constructs. For each declare mapper, a mapper
function is generated. These mapper functions will be called by the
runtime and/or other mapper functions to achieve user defined mapping.
The design slides can be found at
https://github.com/lingda-li/public-sharing/blob/master/mapper_runtime_design.pptx
Re-commit after revert in r367773 because r367755 changed the LLVM-IR
output such that a CHECK line failed.
Patch by Lingda Li <lildmh@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59474
llvm-svn: 367905
This patch implements the code generation for OpenMP 5.0 declare mapper
(user-defined mapper) constructs. For each declare mapper, a mapper
function is generated. These mapper functions will be called by the
runtime and/or other mapper functions to achieve user defined mapping.
The design slides can be found at
https://github.com/lingda-li/public-sharing/blob/master/mapper_runtime_design.pptx
Patch by Lingda Li <lildmh@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59474
llvm-svn: 367773
This seems to be an old vestage of a previous implementation of getting
the default calling convention, and everything is now using
CXXABI/ASTContext's getDefaultCallingConvention. Remove it, since it
isn't doing anything.
llvm-svn: 367039
When the float point representations are the same on the host and on the target device,
(`&Target->getLongDoubleFormat() == &AuxTarget->getLongDoubleFormat()`),
we can just use `AuxTarget->getLongDoubleFormat()`.
Reviewed By: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64423
llvm-svn: 365545
The device should use the same float point representation as the host.
Previous patch fixed the handling of the sizes of the float point types,
but did not fixed the fp semantics. This patch makes target device to
use the host fp semantics. this is required for the correct data
transfer between host and device and correct codegen.
llvm-svn: 365485
Summary:
this patch has multiple small improvements related to the APValue in ConstantExpr.
changes:
- APValue in ConstantExpr are now cleaned up using ASTContext::addDestruction instead of there own system.
- ConstantExprBits Stores the ValueKind of the result beaing stored.
- VerifyIntegerConstantExpression now stores the evaluated value in ConstantExpr.
- the Constant Evaluator uses the stored value of ConstantExpr when available.
Reviewers: rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63376
llvm-svn: 364011
The device code must use the same long double type as the host.
Otherwise the code cannot be linked and executed properly. Patch adds
only basic support and checks for supporting of the host long double
double on the device.
llvm-svn: 363717
Summary:
When using ConstantExpr we often need the result of the expression to be kept in the AST. Currently this is done on a by the node that needs the result and has been done multiple times for enumerator, for constexpr variables... . This patch adds to ConstantExpr the ability to store the result of evaluating the expression. no functional changes expected.
Changes:
- Add trailling object to ConstantExpr that can hold an APValue or an uint64_t. the uint64_t is here because most ConstantExpr yield integral values so there is an optimized layout for integral values.
- Add basic* serialization support for the trailing result.
- Move conversion functions from an enum to a fltSemantics from clang::FloatingLiteral to llvm::APFloatBase. this change is to make it usable for serializing APValues.
- Add basic* Import support for the trailing result.
- ConstantExpr created in CheckConvertedConstantExpression now stores the result in the ConstantExpr Node.
- Adapt AST dump to print the result when present.
basic* : None, Indeterminate, Int, Float, FixedPoint, ComplexInt, ComplexFloat,
the result is not yet used anywhere but for -ast-dump.
Reviewers: rsmith, martong, shafik
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: rnkovacs, hiraditya, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62399
llvm-svn: 363493
Fixes link errors with clang and the latest Visual C++ 14.21.27702
headers, which was reported as PR42027.
I chose to intentionally make these things linkonce_odr, i.e.
discardable, so that we don't emit definitions of these things in every
translation unit that includes STL headers.
Note that this is *not* what MSVC does: MSVC has not yet implemented C++
DR2387, so they emit fully specialized constexpr variable templates with
static / internal linkage.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63175
llvm-svn: 363191
Summary: According to C99 standard long long is at least 64 bits in
size. However, OpenCL C defines long long as 128 bit signed
integer. This prevents one to use x86 builtins when compiling OpenCL C
code for x86 targets. The patch changes long long to long for OpenCL
only.
Patch by: Alexander Batashev <alexander.batashev@intel.com>
Reviewers: craig.topper, Ka-Ka, eandrews, erichkeane, Anastasia
Reviewed By: Ka-Ka, erichkeane, Anastasia
Subscribers: a.elovikov, yaxunl, Anastasia, cfe-commits, ivankara, etyurin, asavonic
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62580
llvm-svn: 362391
In response to https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33235, it became
clear that the current mechanism of hacking through checks for the
exception specification of a function gets confused really quickly when
there are alternate exception specifiers.
This patch introcues EST_NoThrow, which is the equivilent of
EST_noexcept when caused by EST_noThrow. The existing implementation is
left in place to cover functions with no FunctionProtoType.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62435
llvm-svn: 362119
clang was encoding pointers to typedefs as if they were pointers to
structs because that is apparently what gcc is doing.
For example:
```
@class Class1;
typedef NSArray<Class1 *> MyArray;
void foo1(void) {
const char *s0 = @encode(MyArray *); // "^{NSArray=#}"
const char *s1 = @encode(NSArray<Class1 *> *); // "@"
}
```
This commit removes the code that was there to make clang compatible
with gcc and make clang emit the correct encoding for ObjC pointers,
which is "@".
rdar://problem/50563529
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61974
llvm-svn: 362034
r355317 changed builtins/allocation functions to use the default calling
convention in order to support platforms that use non-cdecl calling
conventions by default.
However the default calling convention is overridable on Windows 32 bit
implementations with some of the /G options. The intent is to permit the
user to set the calling convention of normal functions, however it
should NOT apply to builtins and C++ allocation functions.
This patch ensures that the builtin/allocation functions always use the
Target specific Calling Convention, ignoring the user overridden version
of said default.
llvm-svn: 361507
Overaligned and underaligned types (i.e. types where the alignment has been
increased or decreased using the aligned and packed attributes) weren't being
correctly handled in all cases, as the unadjusted alignment should be used.
This patch also adjusts getTypeUnadjustedAlign to correctly handle typedefs of
non-aggregate types, which it appears it never had to handle before.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62152
llvm-svn: 361372
This permits an init-capture to introduce a new pack:
template<typename ...T> auto x = [...a = T()] { /* a is a pack */ };
To support this, the mechanism for allowing ParmVarDecls to be packs has
been extended to support arbitrary local VarDecls.
llvm-svn: 361300
Summary:
This patch implements the source location builtins `__builtin_LINE(), `__builtin_FUNCTION()`, `__builtin_FILE()` and `__builtin_COLUMN()`. These builtins are needed to implement [`std::experimental::source_location`](https://rawgit.com/cplusplus/fundamentals-ts/v2/main.html#reflection.src_loc.creation).
With the exception of `__builtin_COLUMN`, GCC also implements these builtins, and Clangs behavior is intended to match as closely as possible.
Reviewers: rsmith, joerg, aaron.ballman, bogner, majnemer, shafik, martong
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: rnkovacs, loskutov, riccibruno, mgorny, kunitoki, alexr, majnemer, hfinkel, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37035
llvm-svn: 360937
Summary:
The definition of the builtins __builtin_bswap32, __builtin_bitreverse32, __builtin_rotateleft32 and __builtin_rotateright32 rely on that the int type is 32 bits wide on the target.
The defintions of the builtins __builtin_bswap64, __builtin_bitreverse64, __builtin_rotateleft64, and __builtin_rotateright64 rely on that the long long type is 64 bits wide.
On targets where this is not the case (e.g. AVR) clang will generate faulty code (wrong llvm assembler intrinsics).
This patch add support for using 'Z' (the int32_t type) in Bultins.def. The builtins above are changed to be based on the int32_t type instead of the int type, and the int64_t type instead of the long long type.
The AVR backend (experimental) have a native int type that is only 16 bits wide. The supplied testcase will therefore fail if running the testcase on trunk as clang will convert e.g. __builtin_bitreverse32 into llvm.bitreverse.i16 on AVR.
Reviewers: dylanmckay, spatel, rsmith, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61845
llvm-svn: 360863
Slightly easier to read, uses slightly less stack space, and makes it
impossible to mix up the order of all those bools.
No behavior change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61788
llvm-svn: 360668
This is a bug affecting performance when compiling with -Wdocumentation.
In Sema::ActOnDocumentable we're checking whether there are any comments unattached to declaration at the end of comment list whenever we encounter new documentable declaration.
Since this property of RawComment was never set we were trying to find comments every time and that involves at least a couple expensive SourceLocation decompositions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61538
llvm-svn: 360607
No behavior change. Medium term, probably want to use a bitmask instead
of 8 distinct bool parameters, but let's make the call sites easier to
read first.
llvm-svn: 360427
template name is not visible to unqualified lookup.
In order to support this without a severe degradation in our ability to
diagnose typos in template names, this change significantly restructures
the way we handle template-id-shaped syntax for which lookup of the
template name finds nothing.
Instead of eagerly diagnosing an undeclared template name, we now form a
placeholder template-name representing a name that is known to not find
any templates. When the parser sees such a name, it attempts to
disambiguate whether we have a less-than comparison or a template-id.
Any diagnostics or typo-correction for the name are delayed until its
point of use.
The upshot should be a small improvement of our diagostic quality
overall: we now take more syntactic context into account when trying to
resolve an undeclared identifier on the left hand side of a '<'. In
fact, this works well enough that the backwards-compatible portion (for
an undeclared identifier rather than a lookup that finds functions but
no function templates) is enabled in all language modes.
llvm-svn: 360308
If an address_space attribute is defined in a macro, print the macro instead
when diagnosing a warning or error for incompatible pointers with different
address_spaces.
We allow this for all attributes (not just address_space), and for multiple
attributes declared in the same macro.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51329
llvm-svn: 359826
explicit function specialization with the MemberSpecializationInfo used
everywhere else.
Not NFC: the ad-hoc pattern tracking was not being serialized /
deserialized properly. That's fixed here.
llvm-svn: 359747
According to alignment section in below ARM64 ABI document, MSVC could increase
alignment of global data based on its total size. Clang doesn't do this. Compile
the same symbol into different alignments by Clang and MSVC could cause link
error because some instruction encodings, like 64-bit LDR/STR with immediate,
require the target to be 8 bytes aligned, and linker could choose code stream
with such LDR/STR instruction from MSVC and 4 bytes aligned data from Clang into
final image, which actually cannot be linked together
(see https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41506 for more details).
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/arm64-windows-abi-conventions?view=vs-2019#alignment
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61225
llvm-svn: 359744
Loading external comments is expensive. This change probably doesn't apply to common cases but is almost for free and would save some work in case none of the declaration needs external comments to be loaded.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60493
llvm-svn: 358133
On SPIR targets, the default calling convention is SpirFunction.
However, operator new/delete and builtins were being created with CC_C.
The result is indirect references to new/delete (or builtins that are permitted
to be called indirectly have a mismatched type, as well as questionable codegen
in some cases.
This patch sets both to the default calling convention, so that it
properly matches the calling convention of the target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58844
Change-Id: I52065bb00bc2655945caea8f29c409ba1e0ac24a
llvm-svn: 355317
Summary:
Fixes a data race and makes it possible to run clang-based tools in
multithreaded environment with TSan.
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov, riccibruno
Reviewed By: riccibruno
Subscribers: riccibruno, jfb, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58612
llvm-svn: 354795
...instead of just comparing rank. Also, fix a bad warning about
_Float16, since its declared out of order in BuiltinTypes.def,
meaning comparing rank using BuiltinType::getKind() is incorrect.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58254
llvm-svn: 354190
__hipRegisterFunction and __hipRegisterVar need to accept device side kernel and variable names
so that HIP runtime can associate kernel stub functions in host code with kernel symbols in fat binaries,
and associate shadow variables in host code with device variables in fat binaries.
Currently, clang assumes kernel functions and device variables have the same name as the kernel
stub functions and shadow variables. However, when host is compiled in windows with MSVC C++
ABI and device is compiled with Itanium C++ ABI (e.g. AMDGPU), kernels and device symbols in fat
binary are mangled differently than host.
This patch gets the device side kernel and variable name by mangling them in the mangle context
of aux target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58163
llvm-svn: 354004
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
With commit r351627, LLVM gained the ability to apply (existing) IPO
optimizations on indirections through callbacks, or transitive calls.
The general idea is that we use an abstraction to hide the middle man
and represent the callback call in the context of the initial caller.
It is described in more detail in the commit message of the LLVM patch
r351627, the llvm::AbstractCallSite class description, and the
language reference section on callback-metadata.
This commit enables clang to emit !callback metadata that is
understood by LLVM. It does so in three different cases:
1) For known broker functions declarations that are directly
generated, e.g., __kmpc_fork_call for the OpenMP pragma parallel.
2) For known broker functions that are identified by their name and
source location through the builtin detection, e.g.,
pthread_create from the POSIX thread API.
3) For user annotated functions that carry the "callback(callee, ...)"
attribute. The attribute has to include the name, or index, of
the callback callee and how the passed arguments can be
identified (as many as the callback callee has). See the callback
attribute documentation for detailed information.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55483
llvm-svn: 351629
This patch covers addition between fixed point types and other fixed point
types or integers, using the conversion rules described in 4.1.4 of N1169.
Usual arithmetic rules do not apply to binary operations when one of the
operands is a fixed point type, and the result of the operation must be
calculated with the full precision of the operands, so we should not perform
any casting to a common type.
This patch does not include constant expression evaluation for addition of
fixed point types. That will be addressed in another patch since I think this
one is already big enough.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53738
llvm-svn: 351364
All of the other constructors already take a reference to the AST context.
This avoids calling Decl::getASTContext in most cases. Additionally move
the definition of the constructor from Expr.h to Expr.cpp since it is calling
DeclRefExpr::computeDependence. NFC.
llvm-svn: 349901
Address spaces are cast into generic before invoking the constructor.
Added support for a trailing Qualifiers object in FunctionProtoType.
Note: This recommits the previously reverted patch,
but now it is commited together with a fix for lldb.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54862
llvm-svn: 349019
Address spaces are cast into generic before invoking the constructor.
Added support for a trailing Qualifiers object in FunctionProtoType.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54862
llvm-svn: 348927
This reverts commit 65df29f9318ac13a633c0ce13b2b0bccf06e79ca.
AS suggested by @rsmith here: https://reviews.llvm.org/rL345839
I'm reverting this and solving the initial problem in a different way.
llvm-svn: 348595
Declarations without the attribute were disallowed because it would be
ambiguous which 'target' it was supposed to be on. For example:
void ___attribute__((target("v1"))) foo();
void foo(); // Redecl of above, or fwd decl of below?
void ___attribute__((target("v2"))) foo();
However, a first declaration doesn't have that problem, and erroring
prevents it from working in cases where the forward declaration is
useful.
Additionally, a forward declaration of target==default wouldn't properly
cause multiversioning, so this patch fixes that.
The patch was not split since the 'default' fix would require
implementing the same check for that case, followed by undoing the same
change for the fwd-decl implementation.
Change-Id: I66f2c5bc2477bcd3f7544b9c16c83ece257077b0
llvm-svn: 347805
Summary:
The goal is to allow analyses such as clang-tidy checks to run on a
subset of the AST, e.g. "only on main-file decls" for interactive tools.
Today, these become "problematically global" by running RecursiveASTVisitors
rooted at the TUDecl, or by navigating up via ASTContext::getParent().
The scope is restricted using a set of top-level-decls that RecursiveASTVisitors
should be rooted at. This also applies to the visitor that populates the
parent map, and so the top-level-decls are considered to have no parents.
This patch makes the traversal scope a mutable property of ASTContext.
The more obvious way to do this is to pass the top-level decls to
relevant functions directly, but this has some problems:
- it's error-prone: accidentally mixing restricted and unrestricted
scopes is a performance trap. Interleaving multiple analyses is
common (many clang-tidy checks run matchers or RAVs from matcher callbacks)
- it doesn't map well to the actual use cases, where we really do want
*all* traversals to be restricted.
- it involves a lot of plumbing in parts of the code that don't care
about traversals.
This approach was tried out in D54259 and D54261, I wanted to like it
but it feels pretty awful in practice.
Caveats: to get scope-limiting behavior of RecursiveASTVisitors, callers
have to call the new TraverseAST(Ctx) function instead of TraverseDecl(TU).
I think this is an improvement to the API regardless.
Reviewers: klimek, ioeric
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54309
llvm-svn: 346847
This patch breaks Index/opencl-types.cl LIT test:
Script:
--
: 'RUN: at line 1'; stage1/bin/c-index-test -test-print-type llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl -cl-std=CL2.0 | stage1/bin/FileCheck llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl
--
Command Output (stderr):
--
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:3:26: warning: unsupported OpenCL extension 'cl_khr_fp16' - ignoring [-Wignored-pragmas]
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:4:26: warning: unsupported OpenCL extension 'cl_khr_fp64' - ignoring [-Wignored-pragmas]
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:8:9: error: use of type 'double' requires cl_khr_fp64 extension to be enabled
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:11:8: error: declaring variable of type 'half' is not allowed
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:15:3: error: use of type 'double' requires cl_khr_fp64 extension to be enabled
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:16:3: error: use of type 'double4' (vector of 4 'double' values) requires cl_khr_fp64 extension to be enabled
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:26:26: warning: unsupported OpenCL extension 'cl_khr_gl_msaa_sharing' - ignoring [-Wignored-pragmas]
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:35:44: error: use of type '__read_only image2d_msaa_t' requires cl_khr_gl_msaa_sharing extension to be enabled
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:36:49: error: use of type '__read_only image2d_array_msaa_t' requires cl_khr_gl_msaa_sharing extension to be enabled
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:37:49: error: use of type '__read_only image2d_msaa_depth_t' requires cl_khr_gl_msaa_sharing extension to be enabled
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:38:54: error: use of type '__read_only image2d_array_msaa_depth_t' requires cl_khr_gl_msaa_sharing extension to be enabled
llvm-svn: 346338
Multiverson function versions are always used (by the resolver), so ensure that
they are always emitted.
Change-Id: I5d2e0841fddf0d18918b3fb92ae76814add7ee96
llvm-svn: 345839
We haven't supported compiling ObjC1 for a long time (and never will again), so
there isn't any reason to keep these separate. This patch replaces
LangOpts::ObjC1 and LangOpts::ObjC2 with LangOpts::ObjC.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53547
llvm-svn: 345637
Add a new driver level flag `-fcf-runtime-abi=` that allows one to specify the
runtime ABI for CoreFoundation. This controls the language interoperability.
In particular, this is relevant for generating the CFConstantString classes
(primarily through the `__builtin___CFStringMakeConstantString` builtin) which
construct a reference to the "CFObject"'s `isa` field. This type differs
between swift 4.1 and 4.2+.
Valid values for the new option include:
- objc [default behaviour] - enable ObjectiveC interoperability
- swift-4.1 - enable interoperability with swift 4.1
- swift-4.2 - enable interoperability with swift 4.2
- swift-5.0 - enable interoperability with swift 5.0
- swift [alias] - target the latest swift ABI
Furthermore, swift 4.2+ changed the layout for the CFString when building
CoreFoundation *without* ObjectiveC interoperability. In such a case, a field
was added to the CFObject base type changing it from: <{ const int*, int }> to
<{ uintptr_t, uintptr_t, uint64_t }>.
In swift 5.0, the CFString type will be further adjusted to change the length
from a uint32_t on everything but BE LP64 targets to uint64_t.
Note that the default behaviour for clang remains unchanged and the new layout
must be explicitly opted into via `-fcf-runtime-abi=swift*`.
llvm-svn: 345222
Unindent the body of the function by inverting check at the top. This is in
preparation for supporting CFString's new ABI with swift. NFC.
llvm-svn: 345159
Move the bit-fields of FunctionProtoType into FunctionTypeBitfields.
This cuts the size of FunctionProtoType by a pointer. Additionally use
llvm::TrailingObjects instead of manually doing the casts + arithmetic.
This patch is bigger then what could be expected for the following reasons:
1. As discussed before in D50631 it would be nice if there was some space left
in FunctionTypeBitfields for future additions. This patch introduces an
extra structure FunctionTypeExtraBitfields which is supposed to hold
uncommon bits and is stored in a trailing object. The number of exception
types NumExceptions is moved to this struct. As of this patch this trailing
struct will only be allocated if we have > 0 types in a dynamic exception
specification.
2. TrailingObjects cannot handle repeated types. Therefore the QualType
representing an exception type is wrapped in a struct ExceptionType.
The ExceptionType * is then reinterpret_cast'd to QualType *.
3. TrailingObjects needs the definition of the various trailing classes.
Therefore ExtParameterInfo, ExceptionType and FunctionTypeExtraBitfields
are put in FunctionType.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52738
Reviewed By: rjmccall
llvm-svn: 343579
There are a few leftovers of rC343147 that are not (\w+)\.begin but in
the form of ([-[:alnum:]>.]+)\.begin or spanning two lines. Change them
to use the container form in this commit. The 12 occurrences have been
inspected manually for safety.
llvm-svn: 343425
The code in ASTContext::DeclMustBeEmitted was supposed to handle this,
but didn't take into account that synthesized members such as operator=
might not get marked as template specializations, because they're
synthesized on the instantiation directly when handling the class-level
dllexport attribute.
llvm-svn: 342240
submodule visibility is disabled.
Attempting to pick a specific declaration to make visible when the
module containing the merged declaration becomes visible is error-prone,
as we don't yet know which declaration we'll choose to be the definition
when we are informed of the merging.
This reinstates r342019, reverted in r342020. The regression previously
observed after this commit was fixed in r342096.
llvm-svn: 342097
submodule visibility is disabled.
Attempting to pick a specific declaration to make visible when the
module containing the merged declaration becomes visible is error-prone,
as we don't yet know which declaration we'll choose to be the definition
when we are informed of the merging.
llvm-svn: 342019
ASTContext::applyObjCProtocolQualifiers will return a canonical type when given
a canonical type and an array of canonical protocols. If the protocols are not
canonical then the returned type is also not canonical. Since a canonical type is needed, canonicalize the returned type before using it. This later prevents
a type from having a non-canonical canonical type.
llvm-svn: 341013
Specifically, AttributedType now tracks a regular attr::Kind rather than
having its own parallel Kind enumeration, and AttributedTypeLoc now
holds an Attr* instead of holding an ad-hoc collection of Attr fields.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50526
This reinstates r339623, reverted in r339638, with a fix to not fail
template instantiation if we instantiate a QualType with no associated
type source information and we encounter an AttributedType.
llvm-svn: 340215
The TagDecl *OwnedTagDecl in ElaboratedType is quite commonly
null (at least when parsing all of Boost, it is non-null for only about 600
of the 66k ElaboratedType). Therefore we can save a pointer in the
common case by storing it as a trailing object, and storing a bit in the
bit-fields of Type indicating when the pointer is null.
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50715
llvm-svn: 339862
The compiler may produce unexpected error messages/crashes when declare
target variables were used. Patch fixes problems with the declarations
marked as declare target to or link.
llvm-svn: 339805
This breaks compiling atlwin.h in Chromium. I'm sure the code is invalid
in some way, but we put a lot of work into accepting it, and I'm sure
rejecting it was not an intended consequence of this refactoring. :)
llvm-svn: 339638
Specifically, AttributedType now tracks a regular attr::Kind rather than
having its own parallel Kind enumeration, and AttributedTypeLoc now
holds an Attr* instead of holding an ad-hoc collection of Attr fields.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50526
llvm-svn: 339623
Multiversioned member functions inside of a template type were
not properly being emitted. The solution to this is to simply
ensure that their bodies are correctly evaluated/assigned during
template instantiation.
llvm-svn: 339597
Clang generates copy and dispose helper functions for each block literal
on the stack. Often these functions are equivalent for different blocks.
This commit makes changes to merge equivalent copy and dispose helper
functions and reduce code size.
To enable merging equivalent copy/dispose functions, the captured object
infomation is encoded into the helper function name. This allows IRGen
to check whether an equivalent helper function has already been emitted
and reuse the function instead of generating a new helper function
whenever a block is defined. In addition, the helper functions are
marked as linkonce_odr to enable merging helper functions that have the
same name across translation units and marked as unnamed_addr to enable
the linker's deduplication pass to merge functions that have different
names but the same content.
rdar://problem/42640608
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50152
llvm-svn: 339438
This patch proposes an abstract type that represents fixed point numbers, similar to APInt or APSInt that was discussed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D48456#inline-425585. This type holds a value, scale, and saturation and is meant to perform intermediate calculations on constant fixed point values.
Currently this class is used as a way for handling the conversions between fixed point numbers with different sizes and radixes. For example, if I'm casting from a signed _Accum to a saturated unsigned short _Accum, I will need to check the value of the signed _Accum to see if it fits into the short _Accum which involves getting and comparing against the max/min values of the short _Accum. The FixedPointNumber class currently handles the radix shifting and extension when converting to a signed _Accum.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48661
llvm-svn: 339028
This mirrors what is done for Decls and Stmts in the -print-stats
output, ie instead of printing "57426 LValueReference types"
we print "57426 LValueReference types, 40 each (2297040 bytes)".
llvm-svn: 339024
The way address space declarations for builtins currently work
is nearly useless. The code assumes the address spaces used for
builtins is a confusingly named "target address space" from user
code using __attribute__((address_space(N))) that matches
the builtin declaration. There's no way to use this to declare
a builtin that returns a language specific address space.
The terminology used is highly cofusing since it has nothing
to do with the the address space selected by the target to use
for a language address space.
This feature is essentially unused as-is. AMDGPU and NVPTX
are the only in-tree targets attempting to use this. The AMDGPU
builtins certainly do not behave as intended (i.e. all of the
builtins returning pointers can never compile because the numbered
address space never matches the expected named address space).
The NVPTX builtins are missing tests for some, and the others
seem to rely on an implicit addrspacecast.
Change the used address space for builtins based on a target
hook to allow using a language address space for a builtin.
This allows the same builtin declaration to be used for multiple
languages with similarly purposed address spaces (e.g. the same
AMDGPU builtin can be used in OpenCL and CUDA even though the
constant address spaces are arbitarily different).
This breaks the possibility of using arbitrary numbered
address spaces alongside the named address spaces for builtins.
If this is an issue we probably need to introduce another builtin
declaration character to distinguish language address spaces from
so-called "target address spaces".
llvm-svn: 338707
No need to change the linkage, we can avoid the problem using special variable. That points to the original variable and, thus, prevent some of the optimizations that might break the compilation.
llvm-svn: 338399
The "Procedure Call Procedure Call Standard for the ARM® Architecture"
(https://static.docs.arm.com/ihi0042/f/IHI0042F_aapcs.pdf), specifies that
composite types are passed according to their "natural alignment", i.e. the
alignment before alignment adjustment on the entire composite is applied.
The same applies for AArch64 ABI.
Clang, however, used the adjusted alignment.
GCC already implements the ABI correctly. With this patch Clang becomes
compatible with GCC and passes such arguments in accordance with AAPCS.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46013
llvm-svn: 338279
qualifiers from all levels matching a multidimensional array.
For example, this allows casting from
pointer to array of array of const volatile int
to
pointer to const pointer to volatile pointer to int
because the multidimensional array part of the source type corresponds
to a part of the destination type that contains both 'const' and
'volatile'.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49457
llvm-svn: 337422
As listed in the above PRs, vector_size doesn't allow
dependent types/values. This patch introduces a new
DependentVectorType to handle a VectorType that has a dependent
size or type.
In the future, ALL the vector-types should be able to create one
of these to handle dependent types/sizes as well. For example,
DependentSizedExtVectorType could likely be switched to just use
this instead, though that is left as an exercise for the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49045
llvm-svn: 337036
This allows more qualification conversions, eg. conversion from
'int *(*)[]' -> 'const int *const (*)[]'
is now permitted, along with all the consequences of that: more types
are similar, more cases are permitted by const_cast, and conversely,
fewer "casting away constness" cases are permitted by reinterpret_cast.
llvm-svn: 336745
The member init list for the sole constructor for CodeGenFunction
has gotten out of hand, so this patch moves the non-parameter-dependent
initializations into the member value inits.
llvm-svn: 336726
not like bit-fields.
We used to get this right "by accident", because conversions for the
selected built-in overloaded operator would convert the enum bit-field
to its corresponding underlying type early. But after DR1687 that no
longer happens.
Technically this change should also apply to C, where bit-fields only
have special promotion rules if the bit-field's declared type is
_Bool, int, signed int, or unsigned int, but for GCC compatibility we
only look at the bit-width and not the underlying type when performing
bit-field integral promotions in C.
llvm-svn: 335925
With MSVC, PCH files are created along with an object file that needs to
be linked into the final library or executable. That object file
contains the code generated when building the headers. In particular, it
will include definitions of inline dllexport functions, and because they
are emitted in this object file, other files using the PCH do not need
to emit them. See the bug for an example.
This patch makes clang-cl match MSVC's behaviour in this regard, causing
significant compile-time savings when building dlls using precompiled
headers.
For example, in a 64-bit optimized shared library build of Chromium with
PCH, it reduces the binary size and compile time of
stroke_opacity_custom.obj from 9315564 bytes to 3659629 bytes and 14.6
to 6.63 s. The wall-clock time of building blink_core.dll goes from
38m41s to 22m33s. ("user" time goes from 1979m to 1142m).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48426
llvm-svn: 335466
This diff includes the logic for setting the precision bits for each primary fixed point type in the target info and logic for initializing a fixed point literal.
Fixed point literals are declared using the suffixes
```
hr: short _Fract
uhr: unsigned short _Fract
r: _Fract
ur: unsigned _Fract
lr: long _Fract
ulr: unsigned long _Fract
hk: short _Accum
uhk: unsigned short _Accum
k: _Accum
uk: unsigned _Accum
```
Errors are also thrown for illegal literal values
```
unsigned short _Accum u_short_accum = 256.0uhk; // expected-error{{the integral part of this literal is too large for this unsigned _Accum type}}
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46915
llvm-svn: 335148
This diff includes changes for the remaining _Fract and _Sat fixed point types.
```
signed short _Fract s_short_fract;
signed _Fract s_fract;
signed long _Fract s_long_fract;
unsigned short _Fract u_short_fract;
unsigned _Fract u_fract;
unsigned long _Fract u_long_fract;
// Aliased fixed point types
short _Accum short_accum;
_Accum accum;
long _Accum long_accum;
short _Fract short_fract;
_Fract fract;
long _Fract long_fract;
// Saturated fixed point types
_Sat signed short _Accum sat_s_short_accum;
_Sat signed _Accum sat_s_accum;
_Sat signed long _Accum sat_s_long_accum;
_Sat unsigned short _Accum sat_u_short_accum;
_Sat unsigned _Accum sat_u_accum;
_Sat unsigned long _Accum sat_u_long_accum;
_Sat signed short _Fract sat_s_short_fract;
_Sat signed _Fract sat_s_fract;
_Sat signed long _Fract sat_s_long_fract;
_Sat unsigned short _Fract sat_u_short_fract;
_Sat unsigned _Fract sat_u_fract;
_Sat unsigned long _Fract sat_u_long_fract;
// Aliased saturated fixed point types
_Sat short _Accum sat_short_accum;
_Sat _Accum sat_accum;
_Sat long _Accum sat_long_accum;
_Sat short _Fract sat_short_fract;
_Sat _Fract sat_fract;
_Sat long _Fract sat_long_fract;
```
This diff only allows for declaration of these fixed point types. Assignment and other operations done on fixed point types according to http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n1169.pdf will be added in future patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46911
llvm-svn: 334718
When looking up a template name, we can find an overload set containing a
function template and an unresolved non-type using declaration.
llvm-svn: 334106
For pointer assignments of VLA types, Clang currently detects when array
dimensions _lower_ than a variable dimension differ, and reports a warning.
However it does not do the same when the _higher_ dimensions differ, a
case that GCC does catch.
These two pointer types
int (*foo)[1][bar][3];
int (*baz)[1][2][3];
are compatible with each another, and the program is well formed if
bar == 2, a matter that is the programmers problem. However the following:
int (*qux)[2][2][3];
would not be compatible with either, because the upper dimension differs
in size. Clang reports baz is incompatible with qux, but not that foo is
incompatible with qux because it doesn't check those higher dimensions.
Fix this by comparing array sizes on higher dimensions: if both are
constants but unequal then report incompatibility; if either dimension is
variable then we can't know either way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47628
llvm-svn: 333989
// Primary fixed point types
signed short _Accum s_short_accum;
signed _Accum s_accum;
signed long _Accum s_long_accum;
unsigned short _Accum u_short_accum;
unsigned _Accum u_accum;
unsigned long _Accum u_long_accum;
// Aliased fixed point types
short _Accum short_accum;
_Accum accum;
long _Accum long_accum;
This diff only allows for declaration of the fixed point types. Assignment and other operations done on fixed point types according to http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n1169.pdf will be added in future patches. The saturated versions of these types and the equivalent _Fract types will also be added in future patches.
The tests included are for asserting that we can declare these types.
Fixed the test that was failing by not checking for dso_local on some
targets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46084
llvm-svn: 333923
```
// Primary fixed point types
signed short _Accum s_short_accum;
signed _Accum s_accum;
signed long _Accum s_long_accum;
unsigned short _Accum u_short_accum;
unsigned _Accum u_accum;
unsigned long _Accum u_long_accum;
// Aliased fixed point types
short _Accum short_accum;
_Accum accum;
long _Accum long_accum;
```
This diff only allows for declaration of the fixed point types. Assignment and other operations done on fixed point types according to http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n1169.pdf will be added in future patches. The saturated versions of these types and the equivalent `_Fract` types will also be added in future patches.
The tests included are for asserting that we can declare these types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46084
llvm-svn: 333814
For example, given:
void fn() {
struct T *p0;
struct T { int i; } *p1;
}
-ast-print produced:
void fn() {
struct T { int i; } *p0;
struct T { int i; } *p1;
}
Compiling that fails with a redefinition error.
Given:
void fn() {
struct T *p0;
struct __attribute__((deprecated)) T *p1;
}
-ast-print dropped the attribute.
Details:
For a tag specifier (that is, struct/union/class/enum used as a type
specifier in a declaration) that was also a tag declaration (that is,
first occurrence of the tag) or tag redeclaration (that is, later
occurrence that specifies attributes or a member list), clang printed
the tag specifier as either (1) the full tag definition if one
existed, or (2) the first tag declaration otherwise. Redefinition
errors were sometimes introduced, as in the first example above. Even
when that was impossible because no member list was ever specified,
attributes were sometimes lost, thus changing semantics and
diagnostics, as in the second example above.
This patch fixes a major culprit for these problems. It does so by
creating an ElaboratedType with a new OwnedDecl member wherever an
occurrence of a tag type is a (re)declaration of that tag type.
PrintingPolicy's IncludeTagDefinition used to trigger printing of the
member list, attributes, etc. for a tag specifier by using a tag
(re)declaration selected as described above. Now, it triggers the
same thing except it uses the tag (re)declaration stored in the
OwnedDecl. Of course, other tooling can now make use of the new
OwnedDecl as well.
Also, to be more faithful to the original source, this patch
suppresses printing of attributes inherited from previous
declarations.
Reviewed by: rsmith, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45463
llvm-svn: 332281
Added string literal helper function to obtain the type
attributed by a constant address space.
Also fixed predefind __func__ expr to use the helper
to constract the string literal correctly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46049
llvm-svn: 331877
Summary:
An _Atomic of an empty struct is pretty silly. In general we just widen empty
structs to hold a byte's worth of storage, and we represent size and alignment
as 0 internally and let LLVM figure out what to do. For _Atomic it's a bit
different: the memory model mandates concrete effects occur when atomic
operations occur, so in most cases actual instructions need to get emitted. It's
really not worth trying to optimize empty struct atomics by figuring out e.g.
that a fence would do, even though sane compilers should do optimize atomics.
Further, wg21.link/p0528 will fix C++20 atomics with padding bits so that
cmpxchg on them works, which means that we'll likely need to do the zero-init
song and dance for empty atomic structs anyways (and I think we shouldn't
special-case this behavior to C++20 because prior standards are just broken).
This patch therefore makes a minor change to r176658 "Promote atomic type sizes
up to a power of two": if the width of the atomic's value type is 0, just use 1
byte for width and leave alignment as-is (since it should never be zero, and
over-aligned zero-width structs are weird but fine).
This fixes an assertion:
(NumBits >= MIN_INT_BITS && "bitwidth too small"), function get, file ../lib/IR/Type.cpp, line 241.
It seems like this has run into other assertions before (namely the unreachable
Kind check in ImpCastExprToType), but I haven't reproduced that issue with
tip-of-tree.
<rdar://problem/39678063>
Reviewers: arphaman, rjmccall
Subscribers: aheejin, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46613
llvm-svn: 331845
This is similar to the LLVM change https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290.
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\@brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\@brief //g' $i & done
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46320
llvm-svn: 331834
Summary:
This patch tackles long hanging fruit for the builtin operator<=> expressions. It is currently needs some cleanup before landing, but I want to get some initial feedback.
The main changes are:
* Lookup, build, and store the required standard library types and expressions in `ASTContext`. By storing them in ASTContext we don't need to store (and duplicate) the required expressions in the BinaryOperator AST nodes.
* Implement [expr.spaceship] checking, including diagnosing narrowing conversions.
* Implement `ExprConstant` for builtin spaceship operators.
* Implement builitin operator<=> support in `CodeGenAgg`. Initially I emitted the required comparisons using `ScalarExprEmitter::VisitBinaryOperator`, but this caused the operand expressions to be emitted once for every required cmp.
* Implement [builtin.over] with modifications to support the intent of P0946R0. See the note on `BuiltinOperatorOverloadBuilder::addThreeWayArithmeticOverloads` for more information about the workaround.
Reviewers: rsmith, aaron.ballman, majnemer, rnk, compnerd, rjmccall
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Subscribers: rjmccall, rsmith, aaron.ballman, junbuml, mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45476
llvm-svn: 331677
FunctionProtoType.
We previously re-evaluated the expression each time we wanted to know whether
the type is noexcept or not. We now evaluate the expression exactly once.
This is not quite "no functional change": it fixes a crasher bug during AST
deserialization where we would try to evaluate the noexcept specification in a
situation where we have not deserialized sufficient portions of the AST to
permit such evaluation.
llvm-svn: 331428
This is not yet part of any C++ working draft, and so is controlled by the flag
-fchar8_t rather than a -std= flag. (The GCC implementation is controlled by a
flag with the same name.)
This implementation is experimental, and will be removed or revised
substantially to match the proposal as it makes its way through the C++
committee.
llvm-svn: 331244
As reported here: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37033
Any usage of a builtin function that uses a va_list by reference
will cause an assertion when redeclaring it.
After discussion in the review, it was concluded that the correct
way of accomplishing this fix is to make attempts to redeclare certain
builtins an error. Unfortunately, doing this limitation for all builtins
is likely a breaking change, so this commit simply limits it to
types with custom type checking and those that take a reference.
Two tests needed to be updated to make this work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45383
llvm-svn: 330160
Summary:
This change consolidates the always/never lists that may be provided to
clang to externally control which functions should be XRay instrumented
by imbuing attributes. The files follow the same format as defined in
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/SanitizerSpecialCaseList.html for the
sanitizer blacklist.
We also deprecate the existing `-fxray-instrument-always=` and
`-fxray-instrument-never=` flags, in favour of `-fxray-attr-list=`.
This fixes http://llvm.org/PR34721.
Reviewers: echristo, vlad.tsyrklevich, eugenis
Reviewed By: vlad.tsyrklevich
Subscribers: llvm-commits, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45357
llvm-svn: 329543
Found via codespell -q 3 -I ../clang-whitelist.txt
Where whitelist consists of:
archtype
cas
classs
checkk
compres
definit
frome
iff
inteval
ith
lod
methode
nd
optin
ot
pres
statics
te
thru
Patch by luzpaz! (This is a subset of D44188 that applies cleanly with a few
files that have dubious fixes reverted.)
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44188
llvm-svn: 329399
ObjC and ObjC++ pass non-trivial structs in a way that is incompatible
with each other. For example:
typedef struct {
id f0;
__weak id f1;
} S;
// this code is compiled in c++.
extern "C" {
void foo(S s);
}
void caller() {
// the caller passes the parameter indirectly and destructs it.
foo(S());
}
// this function is compiled in c.
// 'a' is passed directly and is destructed in the callee.
void foo(S a) {
}
This patch fixes the incompatibility by passing and returning structs
with __strong or weak fields using the C ABI in C++ mode. __strong and
__weak fields in a struct do not cause the struct to be destructed in
the caller and __strong fields do not cause the struct to be passed
indirectly.
Also, this patch fixes the microsoft ABI bug mentioned here:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D41039?id=128767#inline-364710
rdar://problem/38887866
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44908
llvm-svn: 328731
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before
sorting. This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined
sorting order of objects having the same key.
To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of
std::sort.
llvm-svn: 328636
If the link clause is used on the declare target directive, the object
should be linked on target or target data directives, not during the
codegen. Patch adds support for this clause.
llvm-svn: 328544
The patch adds nocf_check target independent attribute for disabling checks that were enabled by cf-protection flag.
The attribute can be appertained to functions and function pointers.
Attribute name follows GCC's similar attribute name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41880
llvm-svn: 327768
Added initial codegen for device side of declarations inside `omp
declare target` construct + codegen for implicit `declare target`
functions, which are used in the target regions.
llvm-svn: 327636
When parsing comments, for example, for -Wdocumentation, slightly different
behaviour occurs when -fparse-all-comments is specified. However, these
differences are subtle:
1. All comments are saved during parsing, regardless of whether they are doc
comments or not.
2. "Maybe-doc" comments, like <, !, etc, are saved as such, instead of marking
them as ordinary comments. The maybe-doc type of comment is never saved
otherwise. (Warning on these is the impetus of -Wdocumentation.)
3. All comments are treated as doc comments in ASTContext, even if they are ordinary.
This change moves the logic for checking CommentOptions.ParseAllComments closer
to where it has an effect. The overall logic is unchanged, but checks of the
ParseAllComments flag are now done where the effect will be clearer.
Subscribers: cfe-commits
llvm-svn: 326512
Original change:
[NFC] Move CommentOpts checks to the call sites that depend on it.
When parsing comments, for example, for -Wdocumentation, slightly different
behaviour occurs when -fparse-all-comments is specified. However, these
differences are subtle:
1. All comments are saved during parsing, regardless of whether they are doc comments or not.
2. "Maybe-doc" comments, like //<, //!, etc, are saved as such, instead of marking them as ordinary comments. The maybe-doc type of comment is never saved otherwise. (Warning on these is the impetus of -Wdocumentation.)
3. All comments are treated as doc comments in ASTContext, even if they are ordinary.
This change moves the logic for checking CommentOptions.ParseAllComments closer
to where it has an effect. The overall logic is unchanged, but checks of the
ParseAllComments flag are now done where the effect will be clearer.
llvm-svn: 326508
When parsing comments, for example, for -Wdocumentation, slightly different
behaviour occurs when -fparse-all-comments is specified. However, these
differences are subtle:
1. All comments are saved during parsing, regardless of whether they are doc
comments or not.
2. "Maybe-doc" comments, like //<, //!, etc, are saved as such, instead of
marking them as ordinary comments. The maybe-doc type of comment is never
saved otherwise. (Warning on these is the impetus of -Wdocumentation.)
3. All comments are treated as doc comments in ASTContext, even if they are
ordinary.
This change moves the logic for checking CommentOptions.ParseAllComments closer
to where it has an effect. The overall logic is unchanged, but checks of the
ParseAllComments flag are now done where the effect will be clearer.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43663
llvm-svn: 326501
So I wrote a clang-tidy check to lint out redundant `isa`, `cast`, and
`dyn_cast`s for fun. This is a portion of what it found for clang; I
plan to do similar cleanups in LLVM and other subprojects when I find
time.
Because of the volume of changes, I explicitly avoided making any change
that wasn't highly local and obviously correct to me (e.g. we still have
a number of foo(cast<Bar>(baz)) that I didn't touch, since overloading
is a thing and the cast<Bar> did actually change the type -- just up the
class hierarchy).
I also tried to leave the types we were cast<>ing to somewhere nearby,
in cases where it wasn't locally obvious what we were dealing with
before.
llvm-svn: 326416
ARC mode.
Declaring __strong pointer fields in structs was not allowed in
Objective-C ARC until now because that would make the struct non-trivial
to default-initialize, copy/move, and destroy, which is not something C
was designed to do. This patch lifts that restriction.
Special functions for non-trivial C structs are synthesized that are
needed to default-initialize, copy/move, and destroy the structs and
manage the ownership of the objects the __strong pointer fields point
to. Non-trivial structs passed to functions are destructed in the callee
function.
rdar://problem/33599681
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41228
llvm-svn: 326307
This broke Clang bootstrap on Windows, PR36453.
> This handles them exactly the same way that we handle const integral
> static data members with inline definitions, which is what MSVC does.
>
> As a follow-up, now that we have a way to mark variables inline in the
> AST, we should consider marking them implicitly inline there instead of
> only treating them as inline in CodeGen. Unfortunately, this breaks a
> lot of dllimport test cases, so that is future work for now.
>
> Fixes PR36125.
llvm-svn: 325576
This handles them exactly the same way that we handle const integral
static data members with inline definitions, which is what MSVC does.
As a follow-up, now that we have a way to mark variables inline in the
AST, we should consider marking them implicitly inline there instead of
only treating them as inline in CodeGen. Unfortunately, this breaks a
lot of dllimport test cases, so that is future work for now.
Fixes PR36125.
llvm-svn: 325375
The 'trivial_abi' attribute can be applied to a C++ class, struct, or
union. It makes special functions of the annotated class (the destructor
and copy/move constructors) to be trivial for the purpose of calls and,
as a result, enables the annotated class or containing classes to be
passed or returned using the C ABI for the underlying type.
When a type that is considered trivial for the purpose of calls despite
having a non-trivial destructor (which happens only when the class type
or one of its subobjects is a 'trivial_abi' class) is passed to a
function, the callee is responsible for destroying the object.
For more background, see the discussions that took place on the mailing
list:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2017-November/055955.htmlhttp://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-commits/Week-of-Mon-20180101/thread.html#214043
rdar://problem/35204524
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41039
llvm-svn: 324269
Summary:
Clang incorrectly reports empty unions as having a unique object representation. However, this is not correct since `sizeof(EmptyUnion) == 1` AKA it has 8 bits of padding. Therefore it should be treated the same as an empty struct and report `false`.
@erichkeane also suggested this fix should be merged into the 6.0 release branch, so the initial release of `__has_unique_object_representations` is as bug-free as possible.
Reviewers: erichkeane, rsmith, aaron.ballman, majnemer
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Subscribers: cfe-commits, erichkeane
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42863
llvm-svn: 324134
GCC's attribute 'target', in addition to being an optimization hint,
also allows function multiversioning. We currently have the former
implemented, this is the latter's implementation.
This works by enabling functions with the same name/signature to coexist,
so that they can all be emitted. Multiversion state is stored in the
FunctionDecl itself, and SemaDecl manages the definitions.
Note that it ends up having to permit redefinition of functions so
that they can all be emitted. Additionally, all versions of the function
must be emitted, so this also manages that.
Note that this includes some additional rules that GCC does not, since
defining something as a MultiVersion function after a usage has been made illegal.
The only 'history rewriting' that happens is if a function is emitted before
it has been converted to a multiversion'ed function, at which point its name
needs to be changed.
Function templates and virtual functions are NOT yet supported (not supported
in GCC either).
Additionally, constructors/destructors are disallowed, but the former is
planned.
llvm-svn: 322028
These just overloads for _Float128. They're supported by GCC 7 and used
by glibc. APFloat support is already there so just add the overloads.
__builtin_copysignf128
__builtin_fabsf128
__builtin_huge_valf128
__builtin_inff128
__builtin_nanf128
__builtin_nansf128
This is the same support that GCC has, according to the documentation,
but limited to _Float128.
llvm-svn: 321948
As discussed in the mail thread <https://groups.google.com/a/isocpp.org/forum/
#!topic/std-discussion/T64_dW3WKUk> "Calling noexcept function throug non-
noexcept pointer is undefined behavior?", such a call should not be UB.
However, Clang currently warns about it.
This change removes exception specifications from the function types recorded
for -fsanitize=function, both in the functions themselves and at the call sites.
That means that calling a non-noexcept function through a noexcept pointer will
also not be flagged as UB. In the review of this change, that was deemed
acceptable, at least for now. (See the "TODO" in compiler-rt
test/ubsan/TestCases/TypeCheck/Function/function.cpp.)
To remove exception specifications from types, the existing internal
ASTContext::getFunctionTypeWithExceptionSpec was made public, and some places
otherwise unrelated to this change have been adapted to call it, too.
This is the cfe part of a patch covering both cfe and compiler-rt.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40720
llvm-svn: 321859
Commit 7ac28eb0a5 / r310911 ("[OpenCL] Allow targets to select address
space per type", 2017-08-15) made Basic depend on AST, introducing a
circular dependency. Break this dependency by adding the
OpenCLTypeKind enum in Basic and map from AST types to this enum in
ASTContext.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40838
llvm-svn: 319883
As rsmith pointed out, the original implementation of this intrinsic
missed a number of important situations. This patch fixe a bunch of
shortcomings and implementation details to make it work correctly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39347
llvm-svn: 319446
These functions were defined as static members of TemplateSpecializationType.
Now they are moved to namespace level. Previously there were different
implementations for lists containing TemplateArgument and TemplateArgumentLoc,
now these implementations share the same code.
This change is a result of refactoring patch D40508. NFC.
llvm-svn: 319178
explicitly instantiated, still emit it with each use.
We don't emit a definition of the member with an explicit instantiation
definition (and indeed it appears that we're not allowed to, since an explicit
instantiation definition does not constitute an odr-use and only odr-use
permits definition for defaulted special members). So we still need to emit a
weak definition with each use.
This also makes defaulted-in-class declarations behave more like
implicitly-declared special members, which matches their design intent.
And it matches the way this problem was solved in GCC.
llvm-svn: 318474
Added support for regcall as default calling convention. Also added code to
exclude main when applying default calling conventions.
Patch-By: eandrews
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39210
llvm-svn: 317268
Fastcall doesn't support variadic function calls, so
setting the default calling convention to Fastcall would
result in incorrect code being emitted for these conditions.
This patch adds a 'variadic' test to the default calling conv
test, as well as fixes the behavior of fastcall.
llvm-svn: 316528
Summary:
Convert clang::LangAS to a strongly typed enum
Currently both clang AST address spaces and target specific address spaces
are represented as unsigned which can lead to subtle errors if the wrong
type is passed. It is especially confusing in the CodeGen files as it is
not possible to see what kind of address space should be passed to a
function without looking at the implementation.
I originally made this change for our LLVM fork for the CHERI architecture
where we make extensive use of address spaces to differentiate between
capabilities and pointers. When merging the upstream changes I usually
run into some test failures or runtime crashes because the wrong kind of
address space is passed to a function. By converting the LangAS enum to a
C++11 we can catch these errors at compile time. Additionally, it is now
obvious from the function signature which kind of address space it expects.
I found the following errors while writing this patch:
- ItaniumRecordLayoutBuilder::LayoutField was passing a clang AST address
space to TargetInfo::getPointer{Width,Align}()
- TypePrinter::printAttributedAfter() prints the numeric value of the
clang AST address space instead of the target address space.
However, this code is not used so I kept the current behaviour
- initializeForBlockHeader() in CGBlocks.cpp was passing
LangAS::opencl_generic to TargetInfo::getPointer{Width,Align}()
- CodeGenFunction::EmitBlockLiteral() was passing a AST address space to
TargetInfo::getPointerWidth()
- CGOpenMPRuntimeNVPTX::translateParameter() passed a target address space
to Qualifiers::addAddressSpace()
- CGOpenMPRuntimeNVPTX::getParameterAddress() was using
llvm::Type::getPointerTo() with a AST address space
- clang_getAddressSpace() returns either a LangAS or a target address
space. As this is exposed to C I have kept the current behaviour and
added a comment stating that it is probably not correct.
Other than this the patch should not cause any functional changes.
Reviewers: yaxunl, pcc, bader
Reviewed By: yaxunl, bader
Subscribers: jlebar, jholewinski, nhaehnle, Anastasia, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38816
llvm-svn: 315871
Currently Clang uses default address space (0) to represent private address space for OpenCL
in AST. There are two issues with this:
Multiple address spaces including private address space cannot be diagnosed.
There is no mangling for default address space. For example, if private int* is emitted as
i32 addrspace(5)* in IR. It is supposed to be mangled as PUAS5i but it is mangled as
Pi instead.
This patch attempts to represent OpenCL private address space explicitly in AST. It adds
a new enum LangAS::opencl_private and adds it to the variable types which are implicitly
private:
automatic variables without address space qualifier
function parameter
pointee type without address space qualifier (OpenCL 1.2 and below)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35082
llvm-svn: 315668
This patch relates to: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33666 This adds support
for template parameters to be passed to the address_space attribute.
The main goal is to add further flexibility to the attribute and allow
for it to be used easily with templates.
The main additions are a new type (DependentAddressSpaceType) alongside
its TypeLoc and its mangling. As well as the logic required to support
dependent address spaces which mainly resides in TreeTransform.h and
SemaType.cpp.
llvm-svn: 314649
C11 standard refers to the unsigned counterpart of the type ptrdiff_t
in the paragraph 7.21.6.1p7 where it defines the format specifier %tu.
In Clang (in PrintfFormatString.cpp, lines 508-510) there is a FIXME for this case,
in particular, Clang didn't diagnose %tu issues at all, i.e.
it didn't emit any warnings on the code printf("%tu", 3.14).
In this diff we add a method getUnsignedPointerDiffType for getting the corresponding type
similarly to how it's already done in the other analogous cases (size_t, ssize_t, ptrdiff_t etc)
and fix -Wformat diagnostics for %tu plus the emitted fix-it as well.
Test plan: make check-all
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38270
llvm-svn: 314470
The attribute informs the compiler that the annotated pointer parameter
of a function cannot escape and enables IRGen to attach attribute
'nocapture' to parameters that are annotated with the attribute. That is
the only optimization that currently takes advantage of 'noescape', but
there are other optimizations that will be added later that improves
IRGen for ObjC blocks.
This recommits r313722, which was reverted in r313725 because clang
couldn't build compiler-rt. It failed to build because there were
function declarations that were missing 'noescape'. That has been fixed
in r313929.
rdar://problem/19886775
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32210
llvm-svn: 313945
This reverts commit r313722.
It looks like compiler-rt/lib/tsan/rtl/tsan_libdispatch_mac.cc cannot be
compiled because some of the functions declared in the file do not match
the ones in the SDK headers (which are annotated with 'noescape').
llvm-svn: 313725
The attribute informs the compiler that the annotated pointer parameter
of a function cannot escape and enables IRGen to attach attribute
'nocapture' to parameters that are annotated with the attribute. That is
the only optimization that currently takes advantage of 'noescape', but
there are other optimizations that will be added later that improves
IRGen for ObjC blocks.
rdar://problem/19886775
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32210
llvm-svn: 313722
The attribute informs the compiler that the annotated pointer parameter
of a function cannot escape and enables IRGen to attach attribute
'nocapture' to parameters that are annotated with the attribute. That is
the only optimization that currently takes advantage of 'noescape', but
there are other optimizations that will be added later that improves
IRGen for ObjC blocks.
rdar://problem/19886775
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32520
llvm-svn: 313720
This is a recommit of r312781; in some build configurations
variable names are omitted, so changed the new regression
test accordingly.
llvm-svn: 312794
This adds _Float16 as a source language type, which is a 16-bit floating point
type defined in C11 extension ISO/IEC TS 18661-3.
In follow up patches documentation and more tests will be added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33719
llvm-svn: 312781
Generalize getOpenCLImageAddrSpace into getOpenCLTypeAddrSpace, such
that targets can select the address space per type.
No functional changes intended.
Initial patch by Simon Perretta.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33989
llvm-svn: 310911
OpenCL 2.0 atomic builtin functions have a scope argument which is ideally
represented as synchronization scope argument in LLVM atomic instructions.
Clang supports translating Clang atomic builtin functions to LLVM atomic
instructions. However it currently does not support synchronization scope
of LLVM atomic instructions. Without this, users have to use LLVM assembly
code to implement OpenCL atomic builtin functions.
This patch adds OpenCL 2.0 atomic builtin functions as Clang builtin
functions, which supports generating LLVM atomic instructions with
synchronization scope operand.
Currently only constant memory scope argument is supported. Support of
non-constant memory scope argument will be added later.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28691
llvm-svn: 310082
C11 standard refers to the signed counterpart of the type size_t in
the paragraph 7.21.6.1 where it defines d, i, o, u, x, or x conversion specifiers
(in printf format string).
In Clang there is a FIXME (in lib/Analysis/PrintfFormatString.cpp) for this case
(which is not handled correctly at the moment).
This diff adds getSignedSizeType method to TargetInfo and exposes it
in ASTContext similarly to how it is done for getSizeType.
lib/Analysis/PrintfFormatString.cpp will be changed in a separate commit.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35378
Test plan: make check-all
llvm-svn: 308037
According to the documentation, when encoding a bit-field, GNU runtime
needs its starting position in addition to its type and size.
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Type-encoding.html
Prior to r297702, the starting position information was not being
encoded, which is incorrect, and after r297702, an assertion started to
fail because an ObjCIvarDecl was being passed to a function expecting a
FieldDecl.
This commit moves LookupFieldBitOffset to ASTContext and uses the
function to encode the starting position of bit-fields.
llvm-svn: 306364
declarations that are owned but unconditionally visible.
This allows us to set declarations as visible even if they have a local owning
module, without losing information. In turn, that means that our Objective-C
support can keep on incorrectly assuming the "hidden" bit on the declaration is
the whole story with regard to name visibility. This will also be useful once
we support the C++ Modules TS export semantics.
Objective-C name visibility is still incorrect in any case where the "hidden"
bit is not the complete story: for instance, in Objective-C++ the set of
visible categories will be wrong during template instantiation, and with local
submodule visibility enabled it will be wrong when building modules. Fixing that
will require a major overhaul of how visibility is handled for Objective-C (and
particularly for categories).
llvm-svn: 306075
This allows for -fms-extensions to work the same on LP64. For example,
_BitScanReverse is expected to be 32-bit, matching Windows/LLP64, even
though long is 64-bit on x86_64 Darwin or Linux (LP64).
Implement this by adding a new character code 'N', which is 'int' if
the target is LP64 and the same 'L' otherwise
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34377
rdar://problem/32599746
llvm-svn: 305875
We were doing FindNodeOrInsertPos on SubstTemplateTypeParmPackTypes, so
we should presumably be inserting into SubstTemplateTypeParmPackTypes.
Looks like the FoldingSet API can be tweaked a bit so that we can catch
things like this at compile-time. I'll look into that shortly.
I'm unsure of how to test this; suggestions welcome.
Thanks to Vladimir Voskresensky for bringing this up!
llvm-svn: 305207
Pipes are now the size of pointers rather than the size
of the type that they contain.
Patch by Simon Perretta!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33597
llvm-svn: 304708
Alloca always returns a pointer in alloca address space, which may
be different from the type defined by the language. For example,
in C++ the auto variables are in the default address space. Therefore
cast alloca to the expected address space when necessary.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32248
llvm-svn: 303370
Some decls are created not where they are written, but in other module
files/users (implicit special members and function template implicit
specializations). To correctly identify them, use a bit next to the definition
to track the modular codegen property.
Discussed whether the module file bit could be omitted in favor of
reconstituting from the modular codegen decls list - best guess today is that
the efficiency improvement of not having to deserialize the whole list whenever
any function is queried by a module user is worth it for the small size
increase of this redundant (list + bit-on-def) representation.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29901
llvm-svn: 299982
For OpenCL, the private address space qualifier is 0 in AST. Before this change, 0 address space qualifier
is always mapped to target address space 0. As now target private address space is specified by
alloca address space in data layout, address space qualifier 0 needs to be mapped to alloca addr space specified by the data layout.
This change has no impact on targets whose alloca addr space is 0.
With contributions from Matt Arsenault, Tony Tye and Wen-Heng (Jack) Chung
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31404
llvm-svn: 299965
Summary:
The -fxray-always-instrument= and -fxray-never-instrument= flags take
filenames that are used to imbue the XRay instrumentation attributes
using a whitelist mechanism (similar to the sanitizer special cases
list). We use the same syntax and semantics as the sanitizer blacklists
files in the implementation.
As implemented, we respect the attributes that are already defined in
the source file (i.e. those that have the
[[clang::xray_{always,never}_instrument]] attributes) before applying
the always/never instrument lists.
Reviewers: rsmith, chandlerc
Subscribers: jfb, mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30388
llvm-svn: 299041
attributes.
These patches don't work because we can't currently access the parameter
information in a reliable way when building attributes. I thought this
would be relatively straightforward to fix, but it seems not to be the
case. Fixing this will requrie a substantial re-plumbing of machinery to
allow attributes to be handled in this location, and several other fixes
to the attribute machinery should probably be made at the same time. All
of this will make the patch .... substantially more complicated.
Reverting for now as there are active miscompiles caused by the current
version.
llvm-svn: 298695
declarations and calls instead of just definitions, and then teach it to
*not* attach such attributes even if the source code contains them.
This follows the design direction discussed on cfe-dev here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2017-January/052066.html
The idea is that for C standard library builtins, even if the library
vendor chooses to annotate their routines with __attribute__((nonnull)),
we will ignore those attributes which pertain to pointer arguments that
have an associated size. This allows the widespread (and seemingly
reasonable) pattern of calling these routines with a null pointer and
a zero size. I have only done this for the library builtins currently
recognized by Clang, but we can now trivially add to this set. This will
be controllable with -fno-builtin if anyone should care to do so.
Note that this does *not* change the AST. As a consequence, warnings,
static analysis, and source code rewriting are not impacted.
This isn't even a regression on any platform as neither Clang nor LLVM
have ever put 'nonnull' onto these arguments for declarations. All this
patch does is enable it on other declarations while preventing us from
ever accidentally enabling it on these libc functions due to a library
vendor.
It will also allow any other libraries using this annotation to gain
optimizations based on the annotation even when only a declaration is
visible.
llvm-svn: 298491
For variables in generic address spaces, for example:
```
unsigned char V[6442450944];
...
```
the address space is not yet known when we get into
*getConstantArrayType*, it is 0. AMDGCN target's
address space 0 has 32 bits pointers, so when we
call *getPointerWidth* with 0, the array size is
trimmed to 32 bits, which is not right.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30845
llvm-svn: 298420
1. Reimplemented conditional operator so that it checks
compatibility of unqualified pointees of the 2nd and
the 3rd operands (C99, OpenCL v2.0 6.5.15).
Define QualTypes compatibility for OpenCL as following:
- corresponding types are compatible (C99 6.7.3)
- CVR-qualifiers are equal (C99 6.7.3)
- address spaces are equal (implementation defined)
2. Added generic address space to Itanium mangling.
Review: D30037
Patch by Dmitry Borisenkov!
llvm-svn: 297468
This patch honors the unaligned type qualifier (currently available through he
keyword __unaligned and -fms-extensions) in CodeGen. In the current form the
patch affects declarations and expressions. It does not affect fields of
classes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30166
llvm-svn: 297276
Fix an assertion that is hit when a redeclaration with differing types only
differs in the unaligned type-qualifier.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29986
llvm-svn: 296099
Removed ndrange_t as Clang builtin type and added
as a struct type in the OpenCL header.
Use type name to do the Sema checking in enqueue_kernel
and modify IR generation accordingly.
Review: D28058
Patch by Dmitry Borisenkov!
llvm-svn: 295311
such guides below explicit ones, and ensure that references to the class's
template parameters are not treated as forwarding references.
We make a few tweaks to the wording in the current standard:
1) The constructor parameter list is copied faithfully to the deduction guide,
without losing default arguments or a varargs ellipsis (which the standard
wording loses by omission).
2) If the class template declares no constructors, we add a T() -> T<...> guide
(which will only ever work if T has default arguments for all non-pack
template parameters).
3) If the class template declares nothing that looks like a copy or move
constructor, we add a T(T<...>) -> T<...> guide.
#2 and #3 follow from the "pretend we had a class type with these constructors"
philosophy for deduction guides.
llvm-svn: 295007
First pass at generating weak definitions of inline functions from module files
(& skipping (-O0) or emitting available_externally (optimizations)
definitions where those modules are used).
External functions defined in modules are emitted into the modular
object file as well (this may turn an existing ODR violation (if that
module were imported into multiple translations) into valid/linkable
code).
Internal symbols (static functions, for example) are not correctly
supported yet. The symbol will be produced, internal, in the modular
object - unreferenceable from the users.
Reviewers: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28845
llvm-svn: 293456