The parser will accept a wide variety of illegal attempts at forming an ATOMIC construct, leaving it to the semantic analysis to diagnose any issues. This consolidates the analysis into one place and allows us to produce more informative diagnostics. The parser's outcome will be parser::OpenMPAtomicConstruct object holding the directive, parser::Body, and an optional end-directive. The prior variety of OmpAtomicXyz classes, as well as OmpAtomicClause have been removed. READ, WRITE, etc. are now proper clauses. The semantic analysis consistently operates on "evaluation" representations, mainly evaluate::Expr (as SomeExpr) and evaluate::Assignment. The results of the semantic analysis are stored in a mutable member of the OpenMPAtomicConstruct node. This follows a precedent of having `typedExpr` member in parser::Expr, for example. This allows the lowering code to avoid duplicated handling of AST nodes. Using a BLOCK construct containing multiple statements for an ATOMIC construct that requires multiple statements is now allowed. In fact, any nesting of such BLOCK constructs is allowed. This implementation will parse, and perform semantic checks for both conditional-update and conditional-update-capture, although no MLIR will be generated for those. Instead, a TODO error will be issues prior to lowering. The allowed forms of the ATOMIC construct were based on the OpenMP 6.0 spec.
The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
Welcome to the LLVM project!
This repository contains the source code for LLVM, a toolkit for the construction of highly optimized compilers, optimizers, and run-time environments.
The LLVM project has multiple components. The core of the project is itself called "LLVM". This contains all of the tools, libraries, and header files needed to process intermediate representations and convert them into object files. Tools include an assembler, disassembler, bitcode analyzer, and bitcode optimizer.
C-like languages use the Clang frontend. This component compiles C, C++, Objective-C, and Objective-C++ code into LLVM bitcode -- and from there into object files, using LLVM.
Other components include: the libc++ C++ standard library, the LLD linker, and more.
Getting the Source Code and Building LLVM
Consult the Getting Started with LLVM page for information on building and running LLVM.
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