Original commit message: "
Original commit message:"
The current infrastructure in lib/Interpreter has a tool, clang-repl, very
similar to clang-interpreter which also allows incremental compilation.
This patch moves clang-interpreter as a test case and drops it as conditionally
built example as we already have clang-repl in place.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
"
This patch also ignores ppc due to missing weak symbol for __gxx_personality_v0
which may be a feature request for the jit infrastructure. Also, adds a missing
build system dependency to the orc jit.
"
Additionally, this patch defines a custom exception type and thus avoids the
requirement to include header <exception>, making it easier to deploy across
systems without standard location of the c++ headers.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
D105553 added NoStateChangeFuncVisitor, an abstract class to aid in creating
notes such as "Returning without writing to 'x'", or "Returning without changing
the ownership status of allocated memory". Its clients need to define, among
other things, what a change of state is.
For code like this:
f() {
g();
}
foo() {
f();
h();
}
We'd have a path in the ExplodedGraph that looks like this:
-- <g> -->
/ \
--- <f> --------> --- <h> --->
/ \ / \
-------- <foo> ------ <foo> -->
When we're interested in whether f neglected to change some property,
NoStateChangeFuncVisitor asks these questions:
÷×~
-- <g> -->
ß / \$ @&#*
--- <f> --------> --- <h> --->
/ \ / \
-------- <foo> ------ <foo> -->
Has anything changed in between # and *?
Has anything changed in between & and *?
Has anything changed in between @ and *?
...
Has anything changed in between $ and *?
Has anything changed in between × and ~?
Has anything changed in between ÷ and ~?
...
Has anything changed in between ß and *?
...
This is a rather thorough line of questioning, which is why in D105819, I was
only interested in whether state *right before* and *right after* a function
call changed, and early returned to the CallEnter location:
if (!CurrN->getLocationAs<CallEnter>())
return;
Except that I made a typo, and forgot to negate the condition. So, in this
patch, I'm fixing that, and under the same hood allow all clients to decide to
do this whole-function check instead of the thorough one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108695
Summary: Now in libcxx and clang, all the coroutine components are
defined in std::experimental namespace.
And now the coroutine TS is merged into C++20. So in the working draft
like N4892, we could find the coroutine components is defined in std
namespace instead of std::experimental namespace.
And the coroutine support in clang seems to be relatively stable. So I
think it may be suitable to move the coroutine component into the
experiment namespace now.
But move the coroutine component into the std namespace may be an break
change. So I planned to split this change into two patch. One in clang
and other in libcxx.
This patch would make clang lookup coroutine_traits in std namespace
first. For the compatibility consideration, clang would lookup in
std::experimental namespace if it can't find definitions in std
namespace and emit a warning in this case. So the existing codes
wouldn't be break after update compiler.
Test Plan: check-clang, check-libcxx
Reviewed By: lxfind
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108696
I discovered this quirk when working on some DWARF - AST printing prints
type template parameters fully qualified, but printed template template
parameters the way they were written syntactically, or wholely
unqualified - instead, we should print them consistently with the way we
print type template parameters: fully qualified.
The one place this got weird was for partial specializations like in
ast-print-temp-class.cpp - hence the need for checking for
TemplateNameDependenceScope::DependentInstantiation template template
parameters. (not 100% sure that's the right solution to that, though -
open to ideas)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108794
D105553 added NoStateChangeFuncVisitor, an abstract class to aid in creating
notes such as "Returning without writing to 'x'", or "Returning without changing
the ownership status of allocated memory". Its clients need to define, among
other things, what a change of state is.
For code like this:
f() {
g();
}
foo() {
f();
h();
}
We'd have a path in the ExplodedGraph that looks like this:
-- <g> -->
/ \
--- <f> --------> --- <h> --->
/ \ / \
-------- <foo> ------ <foo> -->
When we're interested in whether f neglected to change some property,
NoStateChangeFuncVisitor asks these questions:
÷×~
-- <g> -->
ß / \$ @&#*
--- <f> --------> --- <h> --->
/ \ / \
-------- <foo> ------ <foo> -->
Has anything changed in between # and *?
Has anything changed in between & and *?
Has anything changed in between @ and *?
...
Has anything changed in between $ and *?
Has anything changed in between × and ~?
Has anything changed in between ÷ and ~?
...
Has anything changed in between ß and *?
...
This is a rather thorough line of questioning, which is why in D105819, I was
only interested in whether state *right before* and *right after* a function
call changed, and early returned to the CallEnter location:
if (!CurrN->getLocationAs<CallEnter>())
return;
Except that I made a typo, and forgot to negate the condition. So, in this
patch, I'm fixing that, and under the same hood allow all clients to decide to
do this whole-function check instead of the thorough one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108695
Now prints the list of known archs. This requires plumbing a Driver
arg through a few functions.
Also add two more convenience insert() overlods to StringMap.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109105
The way we parse `DiagnosticOptions` is a bit involved.
`DiagnosticOptions` are parsed as part of the cc1-parsing function `CompilerInvocation::CreateFromArgs` which takes `DiagnosticsEngine` as an argument to be able to report errors in command-line arguments. But to create `DiagnosticsEngine`, `DiagnosticOptions` are needed. This is solved by exposing the `ParseDiagnosticArgs` to clients and making its `DiagnosticsEngine` argument optional, essentially breaking the dependency cycle.
The `ParseDiagnosticArgs` function takes `llvm::opt::ArgList &`, which each client needs to create from the command-line (typically represented as `std::vector<const char *>`). Creating this data structure in this context is somewhat particular. This code pattern is copy-pasted in some places across the upstream code base and also in downstream repos. To make things a bit more uniform, this patch extracts the code into a new reusable function: `CreateAndPopulateDiagOpts`.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108918
Breaks build with -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
```
CMake Error: The inter-target dependency graph contains the following strongly connected component (cycle):
"LLVMFrontendOpenMP" of type SHARED_LIBRARY
depends on "LLVMPasses" (weak)
"LLVMipo" of type SHARED_LIBRARY
depends on "LLVMFrontendOpenMP" (weak)
"LLVMCoroutines" of type SHARED_LIBRARY
depends on "LLVMipo" (weak)
"LLVMPasses" of type SHARED_LIBRARY
depends on "LLVMCoroutines" (weak)
depends on "LLVMipo" (weak)
At least one of these targets is not a STATIC_LIBRARY. Cyclic dependencies are allowed only among static libraries.
CMake Generate step failed. Build files cannot be regenerated correctly.
```
This reverts commit 707ce34b06.
Add methods for loop unrolling to the OpenMPIRBuilder class and use them in Clang if `-fopenmp-enable-irbuilder` is enabled. The unrolling methods are:
* `unrollLoopFull`
* `unrollLoopPartial`
* `unrollLoopHeuristic`
`unrollLoopPartial` and `unrollLoopHeuristic` can use compiler heuristics to automatically determine the unroll factor. If possible, that is if no CanonicalLoopInfo is required to pass to another method, metadata for LLVM's LoopUnrollPass is added. Otherwise the unroll factor is determined using the same heurstics as user by LoopUnrollPass. Not requiring a CanonicalLoopInfo, especially with `unrollLoopHeuristic` allows greater flexibility.
With full unrolling and partial unrolling with known unroll factor, instead of duplicating instructions by the OpenMPIRBuilder, the full unroll is still delegated to the LoopUnrollPass. In case of partial unrolling the loop is first tiled using the existing `tileLoops` methods, then the inner loop fully unrolled using the same mechanism.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert, kiranchandramohan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107764
There is a separate field `isPragmaOnce` and when `isImport` combines
both, it complicates HeaderFileInfo serialization as `#pragma once` is
the inherent property of the header while `isImport` reflects how other
headers use it. The usage of the header can be different in different
contexts, that's why `isImport` requires tracking separate from `#pragma once`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104351
The intent of this patch is to add support of -fp-model=[source|double|extended] to allow
the compiler to use a wider type for intermediate floating point calculations. As a side
effect to that, the value of FLT_EVAL_METHOD is changed according to the pragma
float_control.
Unfortunately some issue was uncovered with this change in preprocessing. See details in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D93769 . We are therefore reverting this patch until we find a way
to reconcile the value of FLT_EVAL_METHOD, the pragma and the -E flow.
This reverts commit 66ddac22e2.
Original commit message:"
The current infrastructure in lib/Interpreter has a tool, clang-repl, very
similar to clang-interpreter which also allows incremental compilation.
This patch moves clang-interpreter as a test case and drops it as conditionally
built example as we already have clang-repl in place.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
"
This patch also ignores ppc due to missing weak symbol for __gxx_personality_v0
which may be a feature request for the jit infrastructure. Also, adds a missing
build system dependency to the orc jit.
The current infrastructure in lib/Interpreter has a tool, clang-repl, very
similar to clang-interpreter which also allows incremental compilation.
This patch moves clang-interpreter as a test case and drops it as conditionally
built example as we already have clang-repl in place.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
This patch implements Clang support for an original OpenMP extension
we have developed to support OpenACC: the `ompx_hold` map type
modifier. The next patch in this series, D106510, implements OpenMP
runtime support.
Consider the following example:
```
#pragma omp target data map(ompx_hold, tofrom: x) // holds onto mapping of x
{
foo(); // might have map(delete: x)
#pragma omp target map(present, alloc: x) // x is guaranteed to be present
printf("%d\n", x);
}
```
The `ompx_hold` map type modifier above specifies that the `target
data` directive holds onto the mapping for `x` throughout the
associated region regardless of any `target exit data` directives
executed during the call to `foo`. Thus, the presence assertion for
`x` at the enclosed `target` construct cannot fail. (As usual, the
standard OpenMP reference count for `x` must also reach zero before
the data is unmapped.)
Justification for inclusion in Clang and LLVM's OpenMP runtime:
* The `ompx_hold` modifier supports OpenACC functionality (structured
reference count) that cannot be achieved in standard OpenMP, as of
5.1.
* The runtime implementation for `ompx_hold` (next patch) will thus be
used by Flang's OpenACC support.
* The Clang implementation for `ompx_hold` (this patch) as well as the
runtime implementation are required for the Clang OpenACC support
being developed as part of the ECP Clacc project, which translates
OpenACC to OpenMP at the directive AST level. These patches are the
first step in upstreaming OpenACC functionality from Clacc.
* The Clang implementation for `ompx_hold` is also used by the tests
in the runtime implementation. That syntactic support makes the
tests more readable than low-level runtime calls can. Moreover,
upstream Flang and Clang do not yet support OpenACC syntax
sufficiently for writing the tests.
* More generally, the Clang implementation enables a clean separation
of concerns between OpenACC and OpenMP development in LLVM. That
is, LLVM's OpenMP developers can discuss, modify, and debug LLVM's
extended OpenMP implementation and test suite without directly
considering OpenACC's language and execution model, which can be
handled by LLVM's OpenACC developers.
* OpenMP users might find the `ompx_hold` modifier useful, as in the
above example.
See new documentation introduced by this patch in `openmp/docs` for
more detail on the functionality of this extension and its
relationship with OpenACC. For example, it explains how the runtime
must support two reference counts, as specified by OpenACC.
Clang recognizes `ompx_hold` unless `-fno-openmp-extensions`, a new
command-line option introduced by this patch, is specified.
Reviewed By: ABataev, jdoerfert, protze.joachim, grokos
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106509
This change defines a helper function getOpenCLCompatibleVersion()
inside LangOptions class. The function contains mapping between
C++ for OpenCL versions and their corresponding compatible OpenCL
versions. This mapping function should be updated each time a new
C++ for OpenCL language version is introduced. The helper function
is expected to simplify conditions on OpenCL C and C++ for OpenCL
versions inside compiler code.
Code refactoring performed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108693
When deserializing a RecordDecl we don't enforce that redeclaration
chain contains only a single definition. So if the canonical decl is not
a definition itself, `RecordType::getDecl` can return different objects
before and after an include. It means we can build CGRecordLayout for
one RecordDecl with its set of FieldDecl but try to use it with
FieldDecl belonging to a different RecordDecl. With assertions enabled
it results in
> Assertion failed: (FieldInfo.count(FD) && "Invalid field for record!"),
> function getLLVMFieldNo, file llvm-project/clang/lib/CodeGen/CGRecordLayout.h, line 199.
and with assertions disabled a bunch of fields are treated as their
memory is located at offset 0.
Fix by keeping the first encountered RecordDecl definition and marking
the subsequent ones as non-definitions. Also need to merge FieldDecl
properly, so that `getPrimaryMergedDecl` works correctly and during name
lookup we don't treat fields from same-name RecordDecl as ambiguous.
rdar://80184238
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106994
Extend the information preserved in `TypeInfo` by replacing the `AlignIsRequired` bool flag with a three-valued enum, the enum also indicates where the alignment attribute come from, which could be helpful in determining whether the attribute should overrule.
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108858
Reading the AST block can never fail with a recoverable error as modules
cannot be removed during this phase. Change the return type of these
functions to return an llvm::Error instead, ie. either success or
failure.
NFC other than the wording of some of the errors.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108268
Add a new option PackConstructorInitializers and deprecate the
related options ConstructorInitializerAllOnOneLineOrOnePerLine and
AllowAllConstructorInitializersOnNextLine. Below is the mapping:
PackConstructorInitializers ConstructorInitializer... AllowAll...
Never - -
BinPack false -
CurrentLine true false
NextLine true true
The option value Never fixes PR50549 by always placing each
constructor initializer on its own line.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108752
The previous behavior was to deduplicate reports based on md5 of the
html file. This algorithm might have worked originally but right now
HTML reports contain information rich enough to make them virtually
always distinct which breaks deduplication entirely.
The new strategy is to (finally) take advantage of IssueHash - the
stable report identifier provided by clang that is the same if and only if
the reports are duplicates of each other.
Additionally, scan-build no longer performs deduplication on its own.
Instead, the report file name is now based on the issue hash,
and clang instances will silently refuse to produce a new html file
when a duplicate already exists. This eliminates the problem entirely.
The '-analyzer-config stable-report-filename' option is deprecated
because report filenames are no longer unstable. A new option is
introduced, '-analyzer-config verbose-report-filename', to produce
verbose file names that look similar to the old "stable" file names.
The old option acts as an alias to the new option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105167
In LLVM IR, `AlignmentBitfieldElementT` is 5-bit wide
But that means that the maximal alignment exponent is `(1<<5)-2`,
which is `30`, not `29`. And indeed, alignment of `1073741824`
roundtrips IR serialization-deserialization.
While this doesn't seem all that important, this doubles
the maximal supported alignment from 512MiB to 1GiB,
and there's actually one noticeable use-case for that;
On X86, the huge pages can have sizes of 2MiB and 1GiB (!).
So while this doesn't add support for truly huge alignments,
which i think we can easily-ish do if wanted, i think this adds
zero-cost support for a not-trivially-dismissable case.
I don't believe we need any upgrade infrastructure,
and since we don't explicitly record the IR version,
we don't need to bump one either.
As @craig.topper speculates in D108661#2963519,
this might be an artificial limit imposed by the original implementation
of the `getAlignment()` functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108661
We should be using #if instead of #ifdef here since LLVM_ENABLE_THREADS
is set using #cmakedefine01 so is always defined.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108110
Add support for the GNU C style __attribute__((error(""))) and
__attribute__((warning(""))). These attributes are meant to be put on
declarations of functions whom should not be called.
They are frequently used to provide compile time diagnostics similar to
_Static_assert, but which may rely on non-ICE conditions (ie. relying on
compiler optimizations). This is also similar to diagnose_if function
attribute, but can diagnose after optimizations have been run.
While users may instead simply call undefined functions in such cases to
get a linkage failure from the linker, these provide a much more
ergonomic and actionable diagnostic to users and do so at compile time
rather than at link time. Users instead may be able use inline asm .err
directives.
These are used throughout the Linux kernel in its implementation of
BUILD_BUG and BUILD_BUG_ON macros. These macros generally cannot be
converted to use _Static_assert because many of the parameters are not
ICEs. The Linux kernel still needs to be modified to make use of these
when building with Clang; I have a patch that does so I will send once
this feature is landed.
To do so, we create a new IR level Function attribute, "dontcall" (both
error and warning boil down to one IR Fn Attr). Then, similar to calls
to inline asm, we attach a !srcloc Metadata node to call sites of such
attributed callees.
The backend diagnoses these during instruction selection, while we still
know that a call is a call (vs say a JMP that's a tail call) in an arch
agnostic manner.
The frontend then reconstructs the SourceLocation from that Metadata,
and determines whether to emit an error or warning based on the callee's
attribute.
Link: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=16428
Link: https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/1173
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106030
In this patch, the dependency scanner starts collecting precompiled dependencies from all encountered submodules, not only from top-level modules.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108540
CodeGenAction::ExecuteAction creates a BackendConsumer for the
purpose of handling diagnostics. The BackendConsumer's
DiagnosticHandlerImpl method expects CurLinkModule to be set,
but this did not happen on the code path that goes through
ExecuteAction. This change makes it so that the BackendConsumer
constructor used by ExecuteAction requires the Module to be
specified and passes the appropriate module in ExecuteAction.
The change also adds a test that fails without this change
and passes with it. To make the test work, the FIXME in the
handling of DK_Linker diagnostics was addressed so that warnings
and notes are no longer silently discarded. Since this introduces
a new warning diagnostic, a flag to control it (-Wlinker-warnings)
has also been added.
Reviewed By: xur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108603
This should reduce the amount of noise issued by clang for the recent-ish CUDA
versions.
Clang still does not support all the features offered by NVCC, but is expected
to handle CUDA headers and produce binaries for all GPUs supported by NVCC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108248
Always use cuda.h to detect CUDA version. It's a more universal approach
compared to version.txt which is no longer present in recent CUDA versions.
Split the 'unknown CUDA version' warning in two:
* when detected CUDA version is partially supported by clang. It's expected to
work in general, at the feature parity with the latest supported CUDA
version. and may be missing support for the new features/instructions/GPU
variants. Clang will issue a warning.
* when detected version is new. Recent CUDA versions have been working with
clang reasonably well, and will likely to work similarly to the partially
supported ones above. Or it may not work at all. Clang will issue a warning and
proceed as if the latest known CUDA version was detected.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108247
...instead of redeclaring them in clang's own X86Target.def. They were already
required to be in sync (IIUC), so no reason to maintain two identical lists.
Reviewed By: erichkeane, craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108151
This patch adds `#pragma clang restrict_expansion ` to enable flagging
macros as unsafe for header use. This is to allow macros that may have
ABI implications to be avoided in headers that have ABI stability
promises.
Using macros in headers (particularly public headers) can cause a
variety of issues relating to ABI and modules. This new pragma logs
warnings when using annotated macros outside the main source file.
This warning is added under a new diagnostics group -Wpedantic-macros
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107095
Remove redundant fields and replace pointer with virtual function
Of fourteen fields, three are dead and four can be computed from the
remainder. This leaves a couple of currently dead fields in place as
they are expected to be used from the deviceRTL shortly. Two of the
fields that can be computed are only used from codegen and require a
log2() implementation so are inlined into codegen instead.
This change leaves the new methods in the same location in the struct
as the previous fields for convenience at review.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108380
Space separated driver options are uncommon but Clang traditionally
did not do a good job. --gcc-toolchain= is the preferred form.
This discourage form appears to be rare, so we can just drop it.
Reviewed By: phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108494