[libTooling] Fix r374962: add more Transformer forwarding decls.
Summary:
The move to a new, single namespace in r374962 left out some type definitions
from the old namespace and resulted in one naming conflict (`text`). This
revision adds aliases for those definitions and removes one of the `text`
functions from the new namespace.
Simon Tatham [Wed, 16 Oct 2019 13:23:39 +0000 (13:23 +0000)]
[Driver,ARM] Make -mfloat-abi=soft turn off MVE.
Since `-mfloat-abi=soft` is taken to mean turning off all uses of the
FP registers, it should turn off the MVE vector instructions as well
as NEON and scalar FP. But it wasn't doing so.
So the options `-march=armv8.1-m.main+mve.fp+fp.dp -mfloat-abi=soft`
would cause the underlying LLVM to //not// support MVE (because it
knows the real target feature relationships and turned off MVE when
the `fpregs` feature was removed), but the clang layer still thought
it //was// supported, and would misleadingly define the feature macro
`__ARM_FEATURE_MVE`.
The ARM driver code already has a long list of feature names to turn
off when `-mfloat-abi=soft` is selected. The fix is to add the missing
entries `mve` and `mve.fp` to that list.
The static analyzer is warning about potential null dereferences, but in these cases we should be able to use castAs<> directly and if not assert will fire for us.
The static analyzer is warning about potential null dereferences, but in these cases we should be able to use cast<> directly and if not assert will fire for us.
The static analyzer is warning about a potential null dereference, but in these cases we should be able to use castAs<> directly and if not assert will fire for us.
The static analyzer is warning about potential null dereferences, but in these cases we should be able to use castAs<> directly and if not assert will fire for us.
Alexey Bataev [Tue, 15 Oct 2019 19:37:05 +0000 (19:37 +0000)]
[OPENMP]Allow final clause in combined task-based directives.
The condition of the final clause must be captured in the combined
task-based directives, like 'parallel master taskloop' directive.
Sergey Dmitriev [Tue, 15 Oct 2019 18:42:47 +0000 (18:42 +0000)]
[Clang][OpenMP Offload] Move offload registration code to the wrapper
The final list of OpenMP offload targets becomes known only at the link time and since offload registration code depends on the targets list it makes sense to delay offload registration code generation to the link time instead of adding it to the host part of every fat object. This patch moves offload registration code generation from clang to the offload wrapper tool.
This is the last part of the OpenMP linker script elimination patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D64943
Jian Cai [Tue, 15 Oct 2019 18:17:08 +0000 (18:17 +0000)]
[clang] refactor -Wa,-W test cases.
Remove REQUIRES and only keep the clang driver tests, since the
assembler are already tested with -Wa,--no-warn. This way we could run
the test on non-linux platforms and catch breaks on them.
Aaron Ballman [Tue, 15 Oct 2019 17:30:19 +0000 (17:30 +0000)]
Add more information to JSON AST dumping of source locations.
This adds information about the offset within the source file to the given source location as well as information about the include file a location is from. These pieces of information allow for more efficient post-processing of JSON AST dumps.
This reverts commit ec87b003823d63f3342cf648f55a134c1522e612.
The test fails on Windows, see e.g.
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x64-windows-msvc/builds/11533/steps/stage%201%20check/logs/stdio
Summary:
When files often get touched during builds, the mtime based validation
leads to different problems in implicit modules builds, even when the
content doesn't actually change:
- Modules only: module invalidation due to out of date files. Usually causing rebuild traffic.
- Modules + PCH: build failures because clang cannot rebuild a module if it comes from building a PCH.
- PCH: build failures because clang cannot rebuild a PCH in case one of the input headers has different mtime.
This patch proposes hashing the content of input files (headers and
module maps), which is performed during serialization time. When looking
at input files for validation, clang only computes the hash in case
there's a mtime mismatch.
I've tested a couple of different hash algorithms availble in LLVM in
face of building modules+pch for `#import <Cocoa/Cocoa.h>`:
- `hash_code`: performace diff within the noise, total module cache increased by 0.07%.
- `SHA1`: 5% slowdown. Haven't done real size measurements, but it'd be BLOCK_ID+20 bytes per input file, instead of BLOCK_ID+8 bytes from `hash_code`.
- `MD5`: 3% slowdown. Like above, but BLOCK_ID+16 bytes per input file.
Given the numbers above, the patch uses `hash_code`. The patch also
improves invalidation error msgs to point out which type of problem the
user is facing: "mtime", "size" or "content".
Summary:
This is patch is part of a series to introduce an Alignment type.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
See this patch for the introduction of the type: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790
Saar Raz [Tue, 15 Oct 2019 11:48:58 +0000 (11:48 +0000)]
[Concepts] Concept Specialization Expressions
Part of C++20 Concepts implementation effort. Added Concept Specialization Expressions that are created when a concept is referenced with arguments, and tests thereof.
Thomas Lively [Tue, 15 Oct 2019 01:11:51 +0000 (01:11 +0000)]
[WebAssembly] Trapping fptoint builtins and intrinsics
Summary:
The WebAssembly backend lowers fptoint instructions to a code sequence
that checks for overflow to avoid traps because fptoint is supposed to
be speculatable. These new builtins and intrinsics give users a way to
depend on the trapping semantics of the underlying instructions and
avoid the extra code generated normally.
Summary:
When files often get touched during builds, the mtime based validation
leads to different problems in implicit modules builds, even when the
content doesn't actually change:
- Modules only: module invalidation due to out of date files. Usually causing rebuild traffic.
- Modules + PCH: build failures because clang cannot rebuild a module if it comes from building a PCH.
- PCH: build failures because clang cannot rebuild a PCH in case one of the input headers has different mtime.
This patch proposes hashing the content of input files (headers and
module maps), which is performed during serialization time. When looking
at input files for validation, clang only computes the hash in case
there's a mtime mismatch.
I've tested a couple of different hash algorithms availble in LLVM in
face of building modules+pch for `#import <Cocoa/Cocoa.h>`:
- `hash_code`: performace diff within the noise, total module cache increased by 0.07%.
- `SHA1`: 5% slowdown. Haven't done real size measurements, but it'd be BLOCK_ID+20 bytes per input file, instead of BLOCK_ID+8 bytes from `hash_code`.
- `MD5`: 3% slowdown. Like above, but BLOCK_ID+16 bytes per input file.
Given the numbers above, the patch uses `hash_code`. The patch also
improves invalidation error msgs to point out which type of problem the
user is facing: "mtime", "size" or "content".
Eric Christopher [Mon, 14 Oct 2019 22:56:07 +0000 (22:56 +0000)]
In the new pass manager use PTO.LoopUnrolling to determine when and how
we will unroll loops. Also comment a few occasions where we need to
know whether or not we're forcing the unwinder or not.
The default before and after this patch is for LoopUnroll to be enabled,
and for it to use a cost model to determine whether to unroll the loop
(`OnlyWhenForced = false`). Before this patch, disabling loop unroll
would not run the LoopUnroll pass. After this patch, the LoopUnroll pass
is being run, but it restricts unrolling to only the loops marked by a
pragma (`OnlyWhenForced = true`).
In addition, this patch disables the UnrollAndJam pass when disabling unrolling.
Testcase is in clang because it's controlling how the loop optimizer
is being set up and there's no other way to trigger the behavior.
Eli Friedman [Mon, 14 Oct 2019 22:44:42 +0000 (22:44 +0000)]
[test] Fix test failure
The version mismatch symbol is version 9 on 32 bit android. Since
this test isn't actually testing any android specific functionality,
we force the target triple to x86_64-unknown-unknown in order to have
a consistent version number. It seems the test was already trying to
do this, just not doing it right
Jian Cai [Mon, 14 Oct 2019 22:28:03 +0000 (22:28 +0000)]
Add support to -Wa,-W in clang
Summary:
Currently clang does not support -Wa,-W, which suppresses warning
messages in GNU assembler. Add this option for gcc compatibility.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43651. Reland with differential
information.
Richard Smith [Mon, 14 Oct 2019 21:53:03 +0000 (21:53 +0000)]
PR43080: Do not build context-sensitive expressions during name classification.
Summary:
We don't know what context to use until the classification result is
consumed by the parser, which could happen in a different semantic
context. So don't build the expression that results from name
classification until we get to that point and can handle it properly.
This covers everything except C++ implicit class member access, which
is a little awkward to handle properly in the face of the protected
member access check. But it at least fixes all the currently-filed
instances of PR43080.
Jian Cai [Mon, 14 Oct 2019 21:21:39 +0000 (21:21 +0000)]
Add support to -Wa,-W in clang
Currently clang does not support -Wa,-W, which suppresses warning
messages in GNU assembler. Add this option for gcc compatibility.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43651
Puyan Lotfi [Mon, 14 Oct 2019 18:03:03 +0000 (18:03 +0000)]
[clang][IFS] Escape mangled names so MS ABI doesn't break YAML parsing.
Microsoft's ABI mangles names differently than Itanium and this breaks the LLVM
yaml parser unless the name is escaped in quotes. Quotes are being added to the
mangled names of the IFS file generation so that llvm-ifs doesn't break when
Windows triples are passed to the driver.
Alexey Bataev [Mon, 14 Oct 2019 17:17:41 +0000 (17:17 +0000)]
[OPENMP50]Add support for 'parallel master taskloop' construct.
Added parsing/sema/codegen support for 'parallel master taskloop'
constructs. Some of the clauses, like 'grainsize', 'num_tasks', 'final'
and 'priority' are not supported in full, only constant expressions can
be used currently in these clauses.
Alexey Bataev [Mon, 14 Oct 2019 16:44:01 +0000 (16:44 +0000)]
[OPENMP]Fix codegen for private variably length vars in combined
constructs.
If OpenMP construct includes several capturing regions and the variable
is declared as private, the length of the inner variable length array is
not captured in outer captured regions, only in the innermost region.
Patch fixes this bug.
Diogo N. Sampaio [Mon, 14 Oct 2019 16:29:26 +0000 (16:29 +0000)]
[ARM] Preserve fpu behaviour for '-crypto'
Summary:
This patch restores the behaviour that -fpu overwrites the
architecture obtained from -march or -mcpu flags, not enforcing to
disable 'crypto' if march=armv7 and mfpu=neon-fp-armv8.
However, it does warn that 'crypto' is ignored when passing
mfpu=crypto-neon-fp-armv8.
Sam Elliott [Mon, 14 Oct 2019 14:00:13 +0000 (14:00 +0000)]
[RISCV] enable LTO support, pass some options to linker.
Summary:
1. enable LTO need to pass target feature and abi to LTO code generation
RISCV backend need the target feature to decide which extension used in
code generation.
2. move getTargetFeatures to CommonArgs.h and add ForLTOPlugin flag
3. add general tools::getTargetABI in CommonArgs.h because different target uses different
way to get the target ABI.
Following our discussion on the cfe dev list:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-August/063054.html,
I have added a paragraph that is explicit about loop pragmas, and
transformation options implying the corresponding transformation.
Allow finding installed llvm-objcopy in PATH if it's not present
in the directory containing clang-offload-bundler. This is the case
if clang is being built stand-alone, and llvm-objcopy is already
installed while the c-o-b tool is still present in build directory.
This is consistent with how e.g. llvm-symbolizer is found in LLVM.
However, most of similar searches in LLVM and Clang are performed
without special-casing the program directory.
__builtin_constant_p used to be short-cut evaluated to false when
building with -O0. This is undesirable as it means that constant folding
in the front-end can give different results than folding in the back-end.
It can also create conditional branches on constant conditions that don't
get folded away. With the pending improvements to the llvm.is.constant
handling on the LLVM side, the short-cut is no longer useful.
Adjust various codegen tests to not depend on the short-cut or the
backend optimisations.
Paul Hoad [Sat, 12 Oct 2019 15:36:05 +0000 (15:36 +0000)]
[clang-format] Proposal for clang-format to give compiler style warnings
Summary:
Related somewhat to {D29039}
On seeing a quote on twitter by @invalidop
> If it's not formatted with clang-format it's a build error.
This made me want to change the way I use clang-format into a tool that could optionally show me where my source code violates clang-format syle.
When I'm making a change to clang-format itself, one thing I like to do to test the change is to ensure I didn't cause a huge wave of changes, what I want to do is simply run this on a known formatted directory and see if any new differences arrive in a manner I'm used to.
This started me thinking that we should allow build systems to run clang-format on a whole tree and emit compiler style warnings about files that fail clang-format in a form that would make them as a warning in most build systems and because those build systems range in their construction I don't think its unreasonable to NOT expect them to have to do the directory searching or parsing the output replacements themselves, but simply transform that into an error code when there are changes required.
I am starting this by suggesing adding a -n or -dry-run command line argument which would emit a warning/error of the form
Support for various common compiler command line argumuments like '-Werror' and '-ferror-limit' could make this very flexible to be integrated into build systems and CI systems.
```
> $ /usr/bin/clang-format --dry-run ClangFormat.cpp -ferror-limit=3 -fcolor-diagnostics
> ClangFormat.cpp:54:29: warning: code should be clang-formatted [-Wclang-format-violations]
> static cl::list<std::string>
> ^
> ClangFormat.cpp:55:20: warning: code should be clang-formatted [-Wclang-format-violations]
> LineRanges("lines", cl::desc("<start line>:<end line> - format a range of\n"
> ^
> ClangFormat.cpp:55:77: warning: code should be clang-formatted [-Wclang-format-violations]
> LineRanges("lines", cl::desc("<start line>:<end line> - format a range of\n"
> ^
```
Volodymyr Sapsai [Fri, 11 Oct 2019 21:21:02 +0000 (21:21 +0000)]
[ObjC] Remove default parameter no caller was providing. NFC intended.
Currently there is no need to make ObjCTypeParamType have a canonical type
different from the one in corresponding ObjCTypeParamDecl. So remove the
corresponding unused API.
Puyan Lotfi [Fri, 11 Oct 2019 17:24:11 +0000 (17:24 +0000)]
[clang][IFS] Fixing assert in clang interface stubs for enums, records, typedefs
The clang IFS ASTConsumer was asserting on enums, records (struct definitions in
C), and typedefs. All it needs to do is skip them because the stub just needs to
expose global object instances and functions.
Erich Keane [Fri, 11 Oct 2019 16:30:45 +0000 (16:30 +0000)]
Fix test failure with 374562 on Hexagon
__builtin_assume_aligned takes a size_t which is a 32 bit int on
hexagon. Thus, the constant gets converted to a 32 bit value, resulting
in 0 not being a power of 2. This patch changes the constant being
passed to 2**30 so that it fails, but doesnt exceed 30 bits.
Erich Keane [Fri, 11 Oct 2019 14:59:44 +0000 (14:59 +0000)]
Reland r374450 with Richard Smith's comments and test fixed.
The behavior from the original patch has changed, since we're no longer
allowing LLVM to just ignore the alignment. Instead, we're just
assuming the maximum possible alignment.
[libTooling] Move `RewriteRule` abstraction into its own header and impl.
Summary: Move the `RewriteRule` class and related declarations into its own set
of files (header, implementation). Only the `Transformer` class is left in the
Transformer-named files. This change clarifies the distinction between the
`RewriteRule` class, which is essential to the Transformer library, and the
`Transformer` class, which is only one possible `RewriteRule` interpreter
(compare to `TransformerClangTidyCheck`, a clang-tidy based interpreter).
[libTooling] Change Stencil equality to use `toString()`
Summary:
Removes the `isEqual` method from StencilPartInterface and modifies equality to
use the string representation returned by the `toString` method for comparison.
This means the `run` and `selection` stencils return true by default, and
clients should be cautious in relying on equality operator for comparison of
stencils containing parts generated by these functions.
It also means we no longer need the custom RTTI support (typeId() and
down_cast()), so it has been removed.
Nico Weber [Fri, 11 Oct 2019 12:27:51 +0000 (12:27 +0000)]
[MS ABI]: Fix mangling function arguments for template types to be compatible with MSVC
MS name mangling supports cache for first 10 distinct function
arguments. The error was when non cached template type occurred twice
(e.g. 11th and 12th). For such case in code there is another cache
table TemplateArgStrings (for performance reasons). Then one '@'
character at the end of the mangled name taken from this table was
missing. For other cases the missing '@' character was added in
the call to mangleSourceName(TemplateMangling) in the cache miss code,
but the cache hit code didn't add it.
Oliver Stannard [Fri, 11 Oct 2019 11:59:55 +0000 (11:59 +0000)]
Dead Virtual Function Elimination
Currently, it is hard for the compiler to remove unused C++ virtual
functions, because they are all referenced from vtables, which are referenced
by constructors. This means that if the constructor is called from any live
code, then we keep every virtual function in the final link, even if there
are no call sites which can use it.
This patch allows unused virtual functions to be removed during LTO (and
regular compilation in limited circumstances) by using type metadata to match
virtual function call sites to the vtable slots they might load from. This
information can then be used in the global dead code elimination pass instead
of the references from vtables to virtual functions, to more accurately
determine which functions are reachable.
To make this transformation safe, I have changed clang's code-generation to
always load virtual function pointers using the llvm.type.checked.load
intrinsic, instead of regular load instructions. I originally tried writing
this using clang's existing code-generation, which uses the llvm.type.test
and llvm.assume intrinsics after doing a normal load. However, it is possible
for optimisations to obscure the relationship between the GEP, load and
llvm.type.test, causing GlobalDCE to fail to find virtual function call
sites.
The existing linkage and visibility types don't accurately describe the scope
in which a virtual call could be made which uses a given vtable. This is
wider than the visibility of the type itself, because a virtual function call
could be made using a more-visible base class. I've added a new
!vcall_visibility metadata type to represent this, described in
TypeMetadata.rst. The internalization pass and libLTO have been updated to
change this metadata when linking is performed.
This doesn't currently work with ThinLTO, because it needs to see every call
to llvm.type.checked.load in the linkage unit. It might be possible to
extend this optimisation to be able to use the ThinLTO summary, as was done
for devirtualization, but until then that combination is rejected in the
clang driver.
To test this, I've written a fuzzer which generates random C++ programs with
complex class inheritance graphs, and virtual functions called through object
and function pointers of different types. The programs are spread across
multiple translation units and DSOs to test the different visibility
restrictions.
I've also tried doing bootstrap builds of LLVM to test this. This isn't
ideal, because only classes in anonymous namespaces can be optimised with
-fvisibility=default, and some parts of LLVM (plugins and bugpoint) do not
work correctly with -fvisibility=hidden. However, there are only 12 test
failures when building with -fvisibility=hidden (and an unmodified compiler),
and this change does not cause any new failures for either value of
-fvisibility.
On the 7 C++ sub-benchmarks of SPEC2006, this gives a geomean code-size
reduction of ~6%, over a baseline compiled with "-O2 -flto
-fvisibility=hidden -fwhole-program-vtables". The best cases are reductions
of ~14% in 450.soplex and 483.xalancbmk, and there are no code size
increases.
I've also run this on a set of 8 mbed-os examples compiled for Armv7M, which
show a geomean size reduction of ~3%, again with no size increases.
I had hoped that this would have no effect on performance, which would allow
it to awlays be enabled (when using -fwhole-program-vtables). However, the
changes in clang to use the llvm.type.checked.load intrinsic are causing ~1%
performance regression in the C++ parts of SPEC2006. It should be possible to
recover some of this perf loss by teaching optimisations about the
llvm.type.checked.load intrinsic, which would make it worth turning this on
by default (though it's still dependent on -fwhole-program-vtables).
Craig Topper [Fri, 11 Oct 2019 06:07:53 +0000 (06:07 +0000)]
[X86] Always define the tzcnt intrinsics even when _MSC_VER is defined.
These intrinsics use llvm.cttz intrinsics so are always available
even without the bmi feature. We already don't check for the bmi
feature on the intrinsics themselves. But we were blocking the
include of the header file with _MSC_VER unless BMI was enabled
on the command line.
Richard Smith [Fri, 11 Oct 2019 01:29:53 +0000 (01:29 +0000)]
Fix assertion failure for a cv-qualified array as a non-type template
parameter type.
We were both failing to decay the array type to a pointer and failing to
remove the top-level cv-qualifications. Fix this by decaying array
parameters even if the parameter type is dependent.
Richard Smith [Fri, 11 Oct 2019 00:29:04 +0000 (00:29 +0000)]
Move most CXXRecordDecl::DefinitionData bit-fields out into a separate
file.
Reduces duplication and thereby reduces the risk that someone will
forget to update one of these places, as I did when adding
DefaultedDestructorIsConstexpr (though I've been unable to produce
a testcase for which that matters so far).
Nico Weber [Thu, 10 Oct 2019 21:34:32 +0000 (21:34 +0000)]
Revert 374450 "Fix __builtin_assume_aligned with too large values."
The test fails on Windows, with
error: 'warning' diagnostics expected but not seen:
File builtin-assume-aligned.c Line 62: requested alignment
must be 268435456 bytes or smaller; assumption ignored
error: 'warning' diagnostics seen but not expected:
File builtin-assume-aligned.c Line 62: requested alignment
must be 8192 bytes or smaller; assumption ignored
Erich Keane [Thu, 10 Oct 2019 21:08:28 +0000 (21:08 +0000)]
Fix __builtin_assume_aligned with too large values.
Code to handle __builtin_assume_aligned was allowing larger values, but
would convert this to unsigned along the way. This patch removes the
EmitAssumeAligned overloads that take unsigned to do away with this
problem.
Additionally, it adds a warning that values greater than 1 <<29 are
ignored by LLVM.
Reid Kleckner [Thu, 10 Oct 2019 21:04:25 +0000 (21:04 +0000)]
Add -fgnuc-version= to control __GNUC__ and other GCC macros
I noticed that compiling on Windows with -fno-ms-compatibility had the
side effect of defining __GNUC__, along with __GNUG__, __GXX_RTTI__, and
a number of other macros for GCC compatibility. This is undesirable and
causes Chromium to do things like mix __attribute__ and __declspec,
which doesn't work. We should have a positive language option to enable
GCC compatibility features so that we can experiment with
-fno-ms-compatibility on Windows. This change adds -fgnuc-version= to be
that option.
My issue aside, users have, for a long time, reported that __GNUC__
doesn't match their expectations in one way or another. We have
encouraged users to migrate code away from this macro, but new code
continues to be written assuming a GCC-only environment. There's really
nothing we can do to stop that. By adding this flag, we can allow them
to choose their own adventure with __GNUC__.
This overlaps a bit with the "GNUMode" language option from -std=gnu*.
The gnu language mode tends to enable non-conforming behaviors that we'd
rather not enable by default, but the we want to set things like
__GXX_RTTI__ by default, so I've kept these separate.