Recent change applied too strict check for old and src operands match.
These shall be compatible, but not necessarily exactly the same.
Fixes: SWDEV-493072
OpenCL has a reserved operator (^^), the use of which was diagnosed as
an error (735c6cdebd). However, OpenCL
also encourages working with the blocks language extension. This token
has a parsing ambiguity as a result. Consider:
unsigned x=0;
unsigned y=x^^{return 0;}();
This should result in y holding the value zero (0^0) through an
immediately invoked block call as the right-hand side of the xor
operator. However, it causes errors instead because of this reserved
token: https://godbolt.org/z/navf7jTv1
This token is still reserved in OpenCL 3.0, so we still wish to issue a
diagnostic for its use. However, we do not need to create a token for an
extension point that's been unused for about a decade. So this patch
moves the diagnostic from a parsing diagnostic to a lexing diagnostic
and no longer forms a single token. The diagnostic behavior is slightly
worse as a result, but still seems acceptable.
Part of the reason this is coming up is because WG21 is considering
using ^^ as a token for reflection, so this token may come back in the
future.
This patch adds a new builtin type for AMDGPU's buffer rsrc data type,
which is effectively an AS 8 pointer. This is needed because we'd like
to expose certain intrinsics to users via builtins which take buffer
rsrc as argument.
This change seeks to add support for vendor flavoured SPIRV - more
specifically, AMDGCN flavoured SPIRV. The aim is to generate SPIRV that
carries some extra bits of information that are only usable by AMDGCN
targets, forfeiting absolute genericity to obtain greater expressiveness
for target features:
- AMDGCN inline ASM is allowed/supported, under the assumption that the
[SPV_INTEL_inline_assembly](https://github.com/intel/llvm/blob/sycl/sycl/doc/design/spirv-extensions/SPV_INTEL_inline_assembly.asciidoc)
extension is enabled/used
- AMDGCN target specific builtins are allowed/supported, under the
assumption that e.g. the `--spirv-allow-unknown-intrinsics` option is
enabled when using the downstream translator
- the featureset matches the union of AMDGCN targets' features
- the datalayout string is overspecified to affix both the program
address space and the alloca address space, the latter under the
assumption that the
[SPV_INTEL_function_pointers](https://github.com/intel/llvm/blob/sycl/sycl/doc/design/spirv-extensions/SPV_INTEL_function_pointers.asciidoc)
extension is enabled/used, case in which the extant SPIRV datalayout
string would lead to pointers to function pointing to the private
address space, which would be wrong.
Existing AMDGCN tests are extended to cover this new target. It is
currently dormant / will require some additional changes, but I thought
I'd rather put it up for review to get feedback as early as possible. I
will note that an alternative option is to place this under AMDGPU, but
that seems slightly less natural, since this is still SPIRV, albeit
relaxed in terms of preconditions & constrained in terms of
postconditions, and only guaranteed to be usable on AMDGCN targets (it
is still possible to obtain pristine portable SPIRV through usage of the
flavoured target, though).
Using MMRAs, allow `builtin_amdgcn_fence` to emit fences that only
target one or more address spaces, instead of fencing all address spaces
at once.
This is done through a `amdgpu-as` MMRA. Currently focused on OpenCL
fences, but can very easily support more AS names and codegen on more
than just fences.
This tries to fix all of the places where a diagnostic message starts
with a capital letter (other than acroynyms or proper nouns) or ends
with punctuation (other than a question mark).
This is in support of a planned change to tablegen to start diagnosing
incorrect diagnostic message styles.
As it was pointed out in
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/80724, we should not be
checking `getLangOpts().Bool` when determining something related to
logical operators, since it only indicates that bool keyword is present,
not which semantic logical operators have. As a side effect a missing
`-Wpointer-bool-conversion` in OpenCL C was restored since like C23,
OpenCL C has bool keyword but logical operators still return int.
Summary:
These tests likely always failed but was hidden by the expected return
value. Simply make them require AMDGPU as a registered target so they
don't fail on other machines.
Summary:
Currently we cannot compile `__builtin_amdgcn_ballot_w64` on non-wave64
targets even though it is valid. This is relevant for making library
code that can handle both without needing to check the wavefront size.
This patch relaxes the semantic check for w64 so it can be used
normally.
LLVM IR already allows floating point type in atomicrmw.
Update clang atomic fetch max/min builtins to accept
floating point type like we did for fetch add/sub.
Reviewed by: Artem Belevich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150985
Fixes: SWDEV-401056
This is an ongoing series of commits that are reformatting our
Python code.
Reformatting is done with `black`.
If you end up having problems merging this commit because you
have made changes to a python file, the best way to handle that
is to run git checkout --ours <yourfile> and then reformat it
with black.
If you run into any problems, post to discourse about it and
we will try to help.
RFC Thread below:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-document-and-standardize-python-code-style
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150761
This implements support for allowing {} to consistently zero initialize
objects. We already supported most of this work as a GNU extension, but
the C2x feature goes beyond what the GNU extension allowed.
The changes in this patch are:
* Removed the -Wgnu-empty-initializer warning group. The extension is
now a C2x extension warning instead. Note that use of
`-Wno-gnu-empty-initializer seems` to be quite low in the wild
(https://sourcegraph.com/search?q=context%3Aglobal+-file%3A.*test.*+%22-Wno-gnu-empty-initializer%22&patternType=standard&sm=1&groupBy=repo
which currently only gives 8 hits total), so this is not expected to
be an overly disruptive change. But I'm adding the clang vendors
review group just in case this expectation is wrong.
* Reworded the diagnostic wording to be about a C2x extension, added a
pre-C2x compat warning.
* Allow {} to zero initialize a VLA
This functionality is exposed as an extension in all older C modes
(same as the GNU extension was), but does *not* allow the extension for
VLA initialization in C++ due to concern about handling non-trivially
constructible types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D147349
Structs that contain global or local pointers can be passed as kernel
arguments starting OpenCL v2.0 with the introduction of shared virtual memory.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D143849
`opencl-c-base.h` always defines 5 particular feature macros for
SPIR-V, making it impossible to disable those features.
To allow disabling any of those features, let the header recognize
`__undef_<feature>` macros. The user can then pass the
`-D__undef_<feature>` flag on the command line to disable a specific
feature. The __undef macro could potentially also be set from
`-cl-ext=-feature`, but for now only change the header and only
provide __undef macros for the 5 features that are always enabled in
`opencl-c-base.h`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141297
It turns out we can codegen these on targets without flat addressing,
although the runtime probably didn't put anything useful there. The
proper diagnostic would be to disallow flat pointer uses or languages
with them, not this one edge case. Allows removing one of the special
cases requiring subtarget support in the device libraries.
Use explicit _w32/_w64 suffixes for the wave size to be consistent
with the existing other wave dependent intrinsics. Also start
diagnosing trying to use both wave32 and wave64.
I would have preferred to avoid the +wavefrontsize64 spam on targets
where that's the only option, but avoiding this seems to be more work
than I expected.
Added keyword, LangAS and TypeAttrbute for groupshared.
Tanslate it to LangAS with asHLSLLangAS.
Make sure it translated into address space 3 for DirectX target.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D135060
Adds a builtin that serves as an optimization hint to apply specific optimized
DAG mutations during scheduling. This also disables any other mutations or
clustering that may interfere with the desired pipeline. The first optimization
strategy that is added here is designed to improve the performance of small gemm
kernels on gfx90a.
Reviewed By: jrbyrnes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132079
I went over the output of the following mess of a command:
(ulimit -m 2000000; ulimit -v 2000000; git ls-files -z |
parallel --xargs -0 cat | aspell list --mode=none --ignore-case |
grep -E '^[A-Za-z][a-z]*$' | sort | uniq -c | sort -n |
grep -vE '.{25}' | aspell pipe -W3 | grep : | cut -d' ' -f2 | less)
and proceeded to spend a few days looking at it to find probable typos
and fixed a few hundred of them in all of the llvm project (note, the
ones I found are not anywhere near all of them, but it seems like a
good start).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130827
This builtin allows the creation of custom scheduling pipelines on a per-region
basis. Like the sched_barrier builtin this is intended to be used either for
testing, in situations where the default scheduler heuristics cannot be
improved, or in critical kernels where users are trying to get performance that
is close to handwritten assembly. Obviously using these builtins will require
extra work from the kernel writer to maintain the desired behavior.
The builtin can be used to create groups of instructions called "scheduling
groups" where ordering between the groups is enforced by the scheduler.
__builtin_amdgcn_sched_group_barrier takes three parameters. The first parameter
is a mask that determines the types of instructions that you would like to
synchronize around and add to a scheduling group. These instructions will be
selected from the bottom up starting from the sched_group_barrier's location
during instruction scheduling. The second parameter is the number of matching
instructions that will be associated with this sched_group_barrier. The third
parameter is an identifier which is used to describe what other
sched_group_barriers should be synchronized with. Note that multiple
sched_group_barriers must be added in order for them to be useful since they
only synchronize with other sched_group_barriers. Only "scheduling groups" with
a matching third parameter will have any enforced ordering between them.
As an example, the code below tries to create a pipeline of 1 VMEM_READ
instruction followed by 1 VALU instruction followed by 5 MFMA instructions...
// 1 VMEM_READ
__builtin_amdgcn_sched_group_barrier(32, 1, 0)
// 1 VALU
__builtin_amdgcn_sched_group_barrier(2, 1, 0)
// 5 MFMA
__builtin_amdgcn_sched_group_barrier(8, 5, 0)
// 1 VMEM_READ
__builtin_amdgcn_sched_group_barrier(32, 1, 0)
// 3 VALU
__builtin_amdgcn_sched_group_barrier(2, 3, 0)
// 2 VMEM_WRITE
__builtin_amdgcn_sched_group_barrier(64, 2, 0)
Reviewed By: jrbyrnes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128158
Clang has traditionally allowed C programs to implicitly convert
integers to pointers and pointers to integers, despite it not being
valid to do so except under special circumstances (like converting the
integer 0, which is the null pointer constant, to a pointer). In C89,
this would result in undefined behavior per 3.3.4, and in C99 this rule
was strengthened to be a constraint violation instead. Constraint
violations are most often handled as an error.
This patch changes the warning to default to an error in all C modes
(it is already an error in C++). This gives us better security posture
by calling out potential programmer mistakes in code but still allows
users who need this behavior to use -Wno-error=int-conversion to retain
the warning behavior, or -Wno-int-conversion to silence the diagnostic
entirely.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129881
When overload resolution fails, clang emits a note diagnostic for each
candidate. For OpenCL builtins this often leads to many repeated note
diagnostics with no new information. Stop emitting such notes.
Update a test that was relying on counting those notes to check how
many builtins are available for certain extension configurations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127961
For backwards compatiblity, we emit only a warning instead of an error if the
attribute is one of the existing type attributes that we have historically
allowed to "slide" to the `DeclSpec` just as if it had been specified in GNU
syntax. (We will call these "legacy type attributes" below.)
The high-level changes that achieve this are:
- We introduce a new field `Declarator::DeclarationAttrs` (with appropriate
accessors) to store C++11 attributes occurring in the attribute-specifier-seq
at the beginning of a simple-declaration (and other similar declarations).
Previously, these attributes were placed on the `DeclSpec`, which made it
impossible to reconstruct later on whether the attributes had in fact been
placed on the decl-specifier-seq or ahead of the declaration.
- In the parser, we propgate declaration attributes and decl-specifier-seq
attributes separately until we can place them in
`Declarator::DeclarationAttrs` or `DeclSpec::Attrs`, respectively.
- In `ProcessDeclAttributes()`, in addition to processing declarator attributes,
we now also process the attributes from `Declarator::DeclarationAttrs` (except
if they are legacy type attributes).
- In `ConvertDeclSpecToType()`, in addition to processing `DeclSpec` attributes,
we also process any legacy type attributes that occur in
`Declarator::DeclarationAttrs` (and emit a warning).
- We make `ProcessDeclAttribute` emit an error if it sees any non-declaration
attributes in C++11 syntax, except in the following cases:
- If it is being called for attributes on a `DeclSpec` or `DeclaratorChunk`
- If the attribute is a legacy type attribute (in which case we only emit
a warning)
The standard justifies treating attributes at the beginning of a
simple-declaration and attributes after a declarator-id the same. Here are some
relevant parts of the standard:
- The attribute-specifier-seq at the beginning of a simple-declaration
"appertains to each of the entities declared by the declarators of the
init-declarator-list" (https://eel.is/c++draft/dcl.dcl#dcl.pre-3)
- "In the declaration for an entity, attributes appertaining to that entity can
appear at the start of the declaration and after the declarator-id for that
declaration." (https://eel.is/c++draft/dcl.dcl#dcl.pre-note-2)
- "The optional attribute-specifier-seq following a declarator-id appertains to
the entity that is declared."
(https://eel.is/c++draft/dcl.dcl#dcl.meaning.general-1)
The standard contains similar wording to that for a simple-declaration in other
similar types of declarations, for example:
- "The optional attribute-specifier-seq in a parameter-declaration appertains to
the parameter." (https://eel.is/c++draft/dcl.fct#3)
- "The optional attribute-specifier-seq in an exception-declaration appertains
to the parameter of the catch clause" (https://eel.is/c++draft/except.pre#1)
The new behavior is tested both on the newly added type attribute
`annotate_type`, for which we emit errors, and for the legacy type attribute
`address_space` (chosen somewhat randomly from the various legacy type
attributes), for which we emit warnings.
Depends On D111548
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126061
For newer OpenCL extensions that do not require a pragma, such as
`cl_khr_subgroup_shuffle`, a user could still accidentally attempt to
use a pragma. This would result in a warning
"unknown OpenCL extension 'cl_khr_subgroup_shuffle' - ignoring"
which could be mistakenly interpreted as "clang does not support this
extension at all" instead of "clang does not require any pragma for
this extension".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126660
The vload*_half* and vstore*_half* builtins do not require the
cl_khr_fp16 extension: pointers to `half` can be declared without the
extension and the _half variants of vload and vstore should be
available without the extension.
This aligns the guards for these builtins for
`-fdeclare-opencl-builtins` with `opencl-c.h`.
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/55275
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125401
Before issuing the warning about use of a strict prototype, check if
the declarator is required to have a prototype through some other means
determined at parse time.
This silences false positives in OpenCL code (where the functions are
forced to have a prototype) and block literal expressions.
Adds an intrinsic/builtin that can be used to fine tune scheduler behavior. If
there is a need to have highly optimized codegen and kernel developers have
knowledge of inter-wave runtime behavior which is unknown to the compiler this
builtin can be used to tune scheduling.
This intrinsic creates a barrier between scheduling regions. The immediate
parameter is a mask to determine the types of instructions that should be
prevented from crossing the sched_barrier. In this initial patch, there are only
two variations. A mask of 0 means that no instructions may be scheduled across
the sched_barrier. A mask of 1 means that non-memory, non-side-effect inducing
instructions may cross the sched_barrier.
Note that this intrinsic is only meant to work with the scheduling passes. Any
other transformations that may move code will not be impacted in the ways
described above.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124700
C89 allowed a type specifier to be elided with the resulting type being
int, aka implicit int behavior. This feature was subsequently removed
in C99 without a deprecation period, so implementations continued to
support the feature. Now, as with implicit function declarations, is a
good time to reevaluate the need for this support.
This patch allows -Wimplicit-int to issue warnings in C89 mode (off by
default), defaults the warning to an error in C99 through C17, and
disables support for the feature entirely in C2x. It also removes a
warning about missing declaration specifiers that really was just an
implicit int warning in disguise and other minor related cleanups.
In C++ and C2x, we would avoid calling ImplicitlyDefineFunction at all,
but in OpenCL mode we would still call the function and have it produce
an error diagnostic. Instead, we now have a helper function to
determine when implicit function definitions are allowed and we use
that to determine whether to call ImplicitlyDefineFunction so that the
behavior is more consistent across language modes.
This changes the diagnostic behavior from telling the users that an
implicit function declaration is not allowed in OpenCL to reporting use
of an unknown identifier and going through typo correction, as done in
C++ and C2x.
C89 had a questionable feature where the compiler would implicitly
declare a function that the user called but was never previously
declared. The resulting function would be globally declared as
extern int func(); -- a function without a prototype which accepts zero
or more arguments.
C99 removed support for this questionable feature due to severe
security concerns. However, there was no deprecation period; C89 had
the feature, C99 didn't. So Clang (and GCC) both supported the
functionality as an extension in C99 and later modes.
C2x no longer supports that function signature as it now requires all
functions to have a prototype, and given the known security issues with
the feature, continuing to support it as an extension is not tenable.
This patch changes the diagnostic behavior for the
-Wimplicit-function-declaration warning group depending on the language
mode in effect. We continue to warn by default in C89 mode (due to the
feature being dangerous to use). However, because this feature will not
be supported in C2x mode, we've diagnosed it as being invalid for so
long, the security concerns with the feature, and the trivial
workaround for users (declare the function), we now default the
extension warning to an error in C99-C17 mode. This still gives users
an easy workaround if they are extensively using the extension in those
modes (they can disable the warning or use -Wno-error to downgrade the
error), but the new diagnostic makes it more clear that this feature is
not supported and should be avoided. In C2x mode, we no longer allow an
implicit function to be defined and treat the situation the same as any
other lookup failure.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122983
Functions without prototypes in C (also known as K&R C functions) were
introduced into C89 as a deprecated feature and C2x is now reclaiming
that syntax space with different semantics. However, Clang's
-Wstrict-prototypes diagnostic is off-by-default (even in pedantic
mode) and does not suffice to warn users about issues in their code.
This patch changes the behavior of -Wstrict-prototypes to only diagnose
declarations and definitions which are not going to change behavior in
C2x mode, and enables the diagnostic in -pedantic mode. The diagnostic
is now specifically about the fact that the feature is deprecated.
It also adds -Wdeprecated-non-prototype, which is grouped under
-Wstrict-prototypes and diagnoses declarations or definitions which
will change behavior in C2x mode. This diagnostic is enabled by default
because the risk is higher for the user to continue to use the
deprecated feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122895
This adds -no-opaque-pointers to clang tests whose output will
change when opaque pointers are enabled by default. This is
intended to be part of the migration approach described in
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/enabling-opaque-pointers-by-default/61322/9.
The patch has been produced by replacing %clang_cc1 with
%clang_cc1 -no-opaque-pointers for tests that fail with opaque
pointers enabled. Worth noting that this doesn't cover all tests,
there's a remaining ~40 tests not using %clang_cc1 that will need
a followup change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123115