Memory region that correspond to a variable is identified by the variable's
declaration and, in case of local variables, the stack frame it belongs to.
The declaration needs to be canonical, otherwise we'd have two different
memory regions that correspond to the same variable.
Fix such bug for global variables with forward declarations and assert
that no other problems of this kind happen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57619
llvm-svn: 353353
This reverts commit r341722.
The "postponed" mechanism turns out to be necessary in order to handle
situations when a symbolic region is only kept alive by implicit bindings
in the Store. Otherwise the region is never scanned by the Store's worklist
and the binding gets dropped despite being live, as demonstrated
by the newly added tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57554
llvm-svn: 353350
The assert added to EmitCall there was triggering in Windows Chromium
builds, due to a mismatch of the return type.
The MSVC constructor call extension (`this->Foo::Foo()`) was emitting
the constructor call from 'EmitCXXMemberOrOperatorMemberCallExpr' via
calling 'EmitCXXMemberOrOperatorCall', instead of
'EmitCXXConstructorCall'. On targets where HasThisReturn is true, that
was failing to set the proper return type in the call info.
Switching to calling EmitCXXConstructorCall also allowed removing some
code e.g. the trivial copy/move support, which is already handled in
EmitCXXConstructorCall.
Ref: https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=928861
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57794
llvm-svn: 353246
For global variables with unordered initialization that are instantiated
within a module, we previously did not emit the global (or its
initializer) at all unless it was used in the importing translation unit
(and sometimes not even then!), leading to misbehavior and link errors.
We now emit the initializer for an instantiated global variable with
unordered initialization with side-effects in a module into every
translation unit that imports the module. This is unfortunate, but
mostly matches the behavior of a non-modular compilation and seems to be
the best that we can reasonably do.
llvm-svn: 353240
When a framework with the same name is available at multiple framework
search paths, we use the first matching location. If a framework at this
location doesn't have all the headers, it can be confusing for
developers because they see only an error `'Foo/Foo.h' file not found`,
can find the complete framework with required header, and don't know the
incomplete framework was used instead.
Add a note explaining a framework without required header was found.
Also mention framework directory path to make it easier to find the
incomplete framework.
rdar://problem/39246514
Reviewers: arphaman, erik.pilkington, jkorous
Reviewed By: jkorous
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56561
llvm-svn: 353231
This is suggested by 3.3.9 of MSP430 EABI document.
We do allow user to manually enable frame pointer. GCC toolchain uses the same behavior.
Patch by Dmitry Mikushev!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56925
llvm-svn: 353212
Summary:
Added ability to generate correct debug info data about the variable
address class. Currently, for all the locals and globals the default
values are used, ADDR_local_space(6) for locals and ADDR_global_space(5)
for globals. The values are taken from the table in
https://docs.nvidia.com/cuda/archive/10.0/ptx-writers-guide-to-interoperability/index.html#cuda-specific-dwarf.
We need to emit correct data for address classes of, at least, shared
and constant globals. Currently, all these variables are treated by
the cuda-gdb debugger as the variables in the global address space
and, thus, it require manual data type casting.
Reviewers: echristo, probinson
Subscribers: jholewinski, aprantl, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57162
llvm-svn: 353204
The fix is to issue error messages if there are more than one
teams construct inside a target constructs.
#pragma omp target
{
#pragma omp teams
{ ... }
#pragma omp teams
{ ... }
}
llvm-svn: 353186
edge cases.
Currently, EmitCall emits a call instruction with a function type
derived from the pointee-type of the callee. This *should* be the same
as the type created from the CallInfo parameter, but in some cases an
incorrect CallInfo was being passed.
All of these fixes were discovered by the addition of the assert in
EmitCall which verifies that the passed-in CallInfo matches the
Callee's function type.
As far as I know, these issues caused no bugs at the moment, as the
correct types were ultimately being emitted. But, some would become
problematic when pointee types are removed.
List of fixes:
* arrangeCXXConstructorCall was passing an incorrect value for the
number of Required args, when calling an inheriting constructor
where the inherited constructor is variadic. (The inheriting
constructor doesn't actually get passed any of the user's args, but
the code was calculating it as if it did).
* arrangeFreeFunctionLikeCall was not including the count of the
pass_object_size arguments in the count of required args.
* OpenCL uses other address spaces for the "this" pointer. However,
commonEmitCXXMemberOrOperatorCall was not annotating the address
space on the "this" argument of the call.
* Destructor calls were being created with EmitCXXMemberOrOperatorCall
instead of EmitCXXDestructorCall in a few places. This was a problem
because the calling convention sometimes has destructors returning
"this" rather than void, and the latter function knows about that,
and sets up the types properly (through calling
arrangeCXXStructorDeclaration), while the former does not.
* generateObjCGetterBody: the 'objc_getProperty' function returns type
'id', but was being called as if it returned the particular
property's type. (That is of course the *dynamic* return type, and
there's a downcast immediately after.)
* OpenMP user-defined reduction functions (#pragma omp declare
reduction) can be called with a subclass of the declared type. In
such case, the call was being setup as if the function had been
actually declared to take the subtype, rather than the base type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57664
llvm-svn: 353181
When Clang/LLVM is built with the CLANG_DEFAULT_STD_CXX CMake macro that sets
the default standard to something other than C++14, there are a number of lit
tests that fail as they rely on the C++14 default.
This patch just adds the language standard option explicitly to such test cases.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57581
llvm-svn: 353163
When we attempt to add an addr space qual to a type already
qualified by an addr space ICE is triggered. Before creating
a type with new address space, remove the old addr space.
Fixing PR38614!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57524
llvm-svn: 353160
Summary:
This is a follow up for https://reviews.llvm.org/D57278. The previous
revision should have also included Kernel ASan.
rdar://problem/40723397
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57711
llvm-svn: 353120
A non-lazy class will be initialized eagerly when the Objective-C runtime is
loaded. This is required for certain system classes which have instances allocated in
non-standard ways, such as the classes for blocks and constant strings.
Adding this attribute is essentially equivalent to providing a trivial
+load method but avoids the (fairly small) load-time overheads associated
with defining and calling such a method.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56555
llvm-svn: 353116
Summary: this commit adds support to a new dependence type introduced in OpenMP
5.0. The LLVM OpenMP RTL already supports this feature, so we only need to
modify CLANG to take advantage of them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57576
llvm-svn: 353018
There is currently no way to distinguish implicit from explicit
CXXThisExpr in the AST dump output.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57649
Reviewed By: steveire
llvm-svn: 353003
Different Unix "errno" values are returned for the following scenarios:
$ echo test > /tmp/existingFile/impossibleDir/impossibleFile
"Not a directory"
$ echo test > /tmp/nonexistentDir/impossibleFile
"No such file or directory"
This fixes the regression introduced by r352971 / D57592.
llvm-svn: 352996
Clang allows users to enable or disable various types of allocation
and deallocation regardless of the C++ dialect. When extended new/delete
overloads are enabled in older dialects, we need to treat them as if
they're usual.
Also, disabling one usual deallocation form shouldn't
disable any others. For example, disabling aligned allocation in C++2a
should have no effect on destroying delete.
llvm-svn: 352980
After committing a change I had made to a few frontend tests, it was pointed
out to me that %T is being deprecated in LLVM in favor of %t. This change
simply converts usages of %T to %t while maintaining the integrity of the test.
Previous revision where this discussion took place:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D50563
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57592
Patch from Justice Adams <justice.adams@sony.com>!
llvm-svn: 352971
This patch is an implementation of the ideas discussed on the mailing list[1].
The idea is to somewhat heuristically guess whether the field that was confirmed
to be uninitialized is actually guarded with ifs, asserts, switch/cases and so
on. Since this is a syntactic check, it is very much prone to drastically
reduce the amount of reports the checker emits. The reports however that do not
get filtered out though have greater likelihood of them manifesting into actual
runtime errors.
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2018-September/059255.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51866
llvm-svn: 352959
ownership qualifications in C++ unions under ARC.
An ObjC pointer member with non-trivial ownership qualifications causes
all of the defaulted special functions of the enclosing union to be
defined as deleted, except when the member has an in-class initializer,
the default constructor isn't defined as deleted.
rdar://problem/34213306
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57438
llvm-svn: 352949
Summary:
Currently, ASan inserts a call to `__asan_handle_no_return` before every
`noreturn` function call/invoke. This is unnecessary for calls to other
runtime funtions. This patch changes ASan to skip instrumentation for
functions calls marked with `!nosanitize` metadata.
Reviewers: TODO
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57489
llvm-svn: 352948
Further reviews (D57594, D57615) have revealed that this was not reviewed,
and that the differential's description was not read during the review,
thus rendering this commit invalid.
This reverts commit r352882.
llvm-svn: 352933
This is similar to import_module, but sets the import field name
instead.
By default, the import field name is the same as the C/asm/.o symbol
name. However, there are situations where it's useful to have it be
different. For example, suppose I have a wasm API with a module named
"pwsix" and a field named "read". There's no risk of namespace
collisions with user code at the wasm level because the generic name
"read" is qualified by the module name "pwsix". However in the C/asm/.o
namespaces, the module name is not used, so if I have a global function
named "read", it is intruding on the user's namespace.
With the import_field module, I can declare my function (in libc) to be
"__read", and then set the wasm import module to be "pwsix" and the wasm
import field to be "read". So at the C/asm/.o levels, my symbol is
outside the user namespace.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57602
llvm-svn: 352930
I recently ran into this code:
```
\#include <iostream>
void foo(const std::string &s, const std::string& = "");
\#include <string>
void test() { foo(""); }
```
The diagnostic produced said it can't bind char[1] to std::string
const&. It didn't mention std::string is incomplete. The user had to
infer that.
This patch causes the diagnostic to now say "incomplete type".
llvm-svn: 352927
This patch implements parsing and sema for "omp declare mapper"
directive. User defined mapper, i.e., declare mapper directive, is a new
feature in OpenMP 5.0. It is introduced to extend existing map clauses
for the purpose of simplifying the copy of complex data structures
between host and device (i.e., deep copy). An example is shown below:
struct S { int len; int *d; };
#pragma omp declare mapper(struct S s) map(s, s.d[0:s.len]) // Memory region that d points to is also mapped using this mapper.
Contributed-by: Lingda Li <lildmh@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56326
llvm-svn: 352906
Summary:
I'm working on a clang-tidy check, much like existing [[ http://clang.llvm.org/extra/clang-tidy/checks/bugprone-exception-escape.html | bugprone-exception-escape ]],
to detect when an exception might escape out of an OpenMP construct it isn't supposed to escape from.
For that i will be using the `nothrow` bit of `CapturedDecl`s.
While that bit is already correctly set for some constructs, e.g. `#pragma omp parallel`: https://godbolt.org/z/2La7pv
it isn't set for the `#pragma omp sections`, or `#pragma omp section`: https://godbolt.org/z/qZ-EbP
If i'm reading [[ https://www.openmp.org/wp-content/uploads/OpenMP-API-Specification-5.0.pdf | `OpenMP Application Programming Interface Version 5.0 November 2018` ]] correctly,
they should be, as per `2.8.1 sections Construct`, starting with page 86:
* The sections construct is a non-iterative worksharing construct that contains a set of **structured blocks**
that are to be distributed among and executed by the threads in a team. Each **structured block** is executed
once by one of the threads in the team in the context of its implicit task.
* The syntax of the sections construct is as follows:
#pragma omp sections [clause[ [,] clause] ... ] new-line
{
[#pragma omp section new-line]
**structured-block**
...
* Description
Each **structured block** in the sections construct is preceded by a section directive except
possibly **the first block**, for which a preceding section directive is optional.
* Restrictions
• The code enclosed in a sections construct must be a **structured block**.
* A throw executed inside a sections region must cause execution to resume within the same
section of the sections region, and the same thread that threw the exception must catch it.
Reviewers: ABataev, #openmp
Reviewed By: ABataev
Subscribers: guansong, openmp-commits, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #openmp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57585
llvm-svn: 352882
InlineCost's isInlineViable() is changed to return InlineResult
instead of bool. This provides messages for failure reasons and
allows to get more specific messages for cases where callsites
are not viable for inlining.
Reviewed By: xbolva00, anemet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57089
llvm-svn: 352849
Token pasted by the preprocessor (through ##) have a Spelling pointing to scratch buffer.
As a result they are not recognized at system macro, even though the pasting happened in
a system macro. Fix that by looking into the parent macro if the original lookup finds a
scratch buffer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55782
This effectively fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35268,
llvm-svn: 352838
Summary:
Given the following test program:
```
class C {
public:
int A(int a, int& b);
};
int C::A(const int a, int b) {
return a * b;
}
```
Clang would produce an error message that correctly diagnosed the
redeclaration of `C::A` to not match the original declaration (the
parameters to the two declarations do not match -- the original takes an
`int &` as its 2nd parameter, but the redeclaration takes an `int`). However,
it also produced a note diagnostic that inaccurately pointed to the
first parameter, claiming that `const int` in the redeclaration did not
match the unqualified `int` in the original. The diagnostic is
misleading because it has nothing to do with why the program does not
compile.
The logic for checking for a function overload, in
`Sema::FunctionParamTypesAreEqual`, discards cv-qualifiers before
checking whether the types are equal. Do the same when producing the
overload diagnostic.
Reviewers: rsmith
Reviewed By: rsmith
Subscribers: cpplearner, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57032
llvm-svn: 352831
Summary:
UBSan wants to detect when unreachable code is actually reached, so it
adds instrumentation before every unreachable instruction. However, the
optimizer will remove code after calls to functions marked with
noreturn. To avoid this UBSan removes noreturn from both the call
instruction as well as from the function itself. Unfortunately, ASan
relies on this annotation to unpoison the stack by inserting calls to
_asan_handle_no_return before noreturn functions. This is important for
functions that do not return but access the the stack memory, e.g.,
unwinder functions *like* longjmp (longjmp itself is actually
"double-proofed" via its interceptor). The result is that when ASan and
UBSan are combined, the noreturn attributes are missing and ASan cannot
unpoison the stack, so it has false positives when stack unwinding is
used.
Changes:
Clang-CodeGen now directly insert calls to `__asan_handle_no_return`
when a call to a noreturn function is encountered and both
UBsan-unreachable and ASan are enabled. This allows UBSan to continue
removing the noreturn attribute from functions without any changes to
the ASan pass.
Previously generated code:
```
call void @longjmp
call void @__asan_handle_no_return
call void @__ubsan_handle_builtin_unreachable
```
Generated code (for now):
```
call void @__asan_handle_no_return
call void @longjmp
call void @__asan_handle_no_return
call void @__ubsan_handle_builtin_unreachable
```
rdar://problem/40723397
Reviewers: delcypher, eugenis, vsk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57278
> llvm-svn: 352690
llvm-svn: 352829
Having an incorrect type for a cast causes the checker to incorrectly
dismiss the operation under ARC, leading to a false positive
use-after-release on the test.
rdar://47709885
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57557
llvm-svn: 352824
- fixes the test on macOS with LLVM_ENABLE_PIC=OFF
- together with D57343, gets the test to pass on Windows
- makes it run everywhere (it seems to just pass on Linux)
The main change is to pull out the resource directory computation into a
function shared by all 3 places that do it. In CIndexer.cpp, this now works no
matter if libclang is in lib/ or bin/ or statically linked to a binary in bin/.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57345
llvm-svn: 352803
rC352620 caused regressions because it copied floating point format from
aux target.
floating point format decides whether extended long double is supported.
It is x86_fp80 on x86 but IEEE double on amdgcn.
Document usage of long doubel type in HIP programming guide
https://github.com/ROCm-Developer-Tools/HIP/pull/890
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57527
llvm-svn: 352801
Instead of calling CUDA runtime to arrange function arguments,
the new API constructs arguments in a local array and the kernels
are launched with __cudaLaunchKernel().
The old API has been deprecated and is expected to go away
in the next CUDA release.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57488
llvm-svn: 352799
..and use it to control that parts of CUDA compilation
that depend on the specific version of CUDA SDK.
This patch has a placeholder for a 'new launch API' support
which is in a separate patch. The list will be further
extended in the upcoming patch to support CUDA-10.1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57487
llvm-svn: 352798