Yaxun Liu [Wed, 30 Jan 2019 12:26:54 +0000 (12:26 +0000)]
[HIP] Fix size_t for MSVC environment
In 64 bit MSVC environment size_t is defined as unsigned long long.
In single source language like HIP, data layout should be consistent
in device and host compilation, therefore copy data layout controlling
fields from Aux target for AMDGPU target.
[OpenCL] Add generic addr space to the return of implicit assignment.
When creating the prototype of implicit assignment operators the
returned reference to the class should be qualified with the same
addr space as 'this' (i.e. __generic in OpenCL).
Michal Gorny [Wed, 30 Jan 2019 08:20:24 +0000 (08:20 +0000)]
[clang] [Driver] [NetBSD] Append -rpath for shared compiler-rt runtimes
Append appropriate -rpath when using shared compiler-rt runtimes,
e.g. '-fsanitize=address -shared-libasan'. There's already a similar
logic in CommonArgs.cpp but it uses non-standard arch-suffixed
installation directory while we want our driver to work with standard
installation paths.
We don't need to use the predetermined data-sharing attributes for the
loop counters if the user explicitly specified correct data-sharing
attributes for such variables.
Matt Arsenault [Tue, 29 Jan 2019 20:49:54 +0000 (20:49 +0000)]
OpenCL: Use length modifier for warning on vector printf arguments
Re-enable format string warnings on printf.
The warnings are still incomplete. Apparently it is undefined to use a
vector specifier without a length modifier, which is not currently
warned on. Additionally, type warnings appear to not be working with
the hh modifier, and aren't warning on all of the special restrictions
from c99 printf.
George Karpenkov [Tue, 29 Jan 2019 19:29:19 +0000 (19:29 +0000)]
Extend AnyCall to handle callable declarations without the call expressions
That weakens inner invariants, but allows the class to be more generic,
allowing usage in situations where the call expression is not known (or
should not matter).
Alexey Bataev [Tue, 29 Jan 2019 18:51:58 +0000 (18:51 +0000)]
[OPENMP]Make the loop with unsigned counter countable.
According to the report, better to keep the original strict compare
operation as the loop condition with unsigned loop counters to make the
loop countable. This allows further loop transformations.
James Y Knight [Tue, 29 Jan 2019 16:37:27 +0000 (16:37 +0000)]
Adjust documentation for git migration.
This fixes most references to the paths:
llvm.org/svn/
llvm.org/git/
llvm.org/viewvc/
github.com/llvm-mirror/
github.com/llvm-project/
reviews.llvm.org/diffusion/
to instead point to https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project.
This is *not* a trivial substitution, because additionally, all the
checkout instructions had to be migrated to instruct users on how to
use the monorepo layout, setting LLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS instead of
checking out various projects into various subdirectories.
I've attempted to not change any scripts here, only documentation. The
scripts will have to be addressed separately.
Additionally, I've deleted one document which appeared to be outdated
and unneeded:
lldb/docs/building-with-debug-llvm.txt
Yaxun Liu [Tue, 29 Jan 2019 13:20:23 +0000 (13:20 +0000)]
[CUDA][HIP] Do not diagnose use of _Float16
r352221 caused regressions in CUDA/HIP since device function may use _Float16 whereas host does not support it.
In this case host compilation should not diagnose usage of _Float16 in device functions or variables.
For now just do not diagnose _Float16 for CUDA/HIP. In the future we should have more precise check.
Shafik Yaghmour [Mon, 28 Jan 2019 21:55:33 +0000 (21:55 +0000)]
[ASTImporter] Fix handling of overriden methods during ASTImport
Summary:
When importing classes we may add a CXXMethodDecl more than once to a CXXRecordDecl when handling overrides. This patch will fix the cases we currently know about and handle the case where we are only dealing with declarations.
Scott Linder [Mon, 28 Jan 2019 17:12:19 +0000 (17:12 +0000)]
Add -fapply-global-visibility-to-externs for -cc1
Introduce an option to request global visibility settings be applied to
declarations without a definition or an explicit visibility, rather than
the existing behavior of giving these default visibility. When the
visibility of all or most extern definitions are known this allows for
the same optimisations -fvisibility permits without updating source code
to annotate all declarations.
Roman Lebedev [Mon, 28 Jan 2019 17:04:11 +0000 (17:04 +0000)]
[clang][OpenMP] OMPFlushClause is synthetic, no such clause exists
Summary:
As discussed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D57112#inline-506781,
'flush' clause does not exist in the OpenMP spec, it can not be
specified, and `OMPFlushClause` class is just a helper class.
Therefore `OPENMP_CLAUSE()` in `clang/Basic/OpenMPKinds.def`
should not contain 'flush' "clause".
I have simply removed the `OPENMP_CLAUSE(flush, OMPFlushClause)`
from `clang/Basic/OpenMPKinds.def`, grepped for `OPENMP_CLAUSE`
and added `OPENMP_CLAUSE(flush, OMPFlushClause)` back to the **every**
place where `OPENMP_CLAUSE` is defined and `clang/Basic/OpenMPKinds.def`
is then included.
So as-is, this patch is a NFC. Possibly, some of these
`OPENMP_CLAUSE(flush, OMPFlushClause)` should be dropped,
i don't really know.
Bruno Ricci [Mon, 28 Jan 2019 14:18:11 +0000 (14:18 +0000)]
[AST] Introduce GenericSelectionExpr::Association
Introduce a new class GenericSelectionExpr::Association which bundle together
an association expression and its TypeSourceInfo.
An iterator GenericSelectionExpr::AssociationIterator is additionally added to
make it possible to iterate over ranges of Associations. This iterator is a
kind of proxy iterator which abstract over how exactly the expressions and the
TypeSourceInfos are stored.
Nicolas Lesser [Sun, 27 Jan 2019 19:19:59 +0000 (19:19 +0000)]
[SemaCXX] Fix ICE with structure bindings to members of template
Summary:
Trying to use structure binding with a structure that doesn't implement
std::tuple_size, should unpack the data members. When the struct is a
template though, clang might hit an assertion (if the type has not been
completed before), because CXXRecordDecl::DefinitionData is nullptr.
This commit fixes the problem by completing the type while trying to
decompose the structured binding.
The ICE happens in real world code, for example, when trying to iterate
a protobuf generated map with a range-based for loop and structure
bindings (because google::protobuf::MapPair is a template and doesn't
support std::tuple_size).
Reported-by: nicholas.sun@nlsun.com
Patch by Daniele Di Proietto
Kristof Umann [Sat, 26 Jan 2019 21:41:50 +0000 (21:41 +0000)]
[analyzer] Add CheckerManager::getChecker, make sure that a registry function registers no more than 1 checker
This patch effectively fixes the almost decade old checker naming issue.
The solution is to assert when CheckerManager::getChecker is called on an
unregistered checker, and assert when CheckerManager::registerChecker is called
on a checker that is already registered.
Kristof Umann [Sat, 26 Jan 2019 20:06:54 +0000 (20:06 +0000)]
[analyzer] Reimplement dependencies between checkers
Unfortunately, up until now, the fact that certain checkers depended on one
another was known, but how these actually unfolded was hidden deep within the
implementation. For example, many checkers (like RetainCount, Malloc or CString)
modelled a certain functionality, and exposed certain reportable bug types to
the user. For example, while MallocChecker models many many different types of
memory handling, the actual "unix.MallocChecker" checker the user was exposed to
was merely and option to this modeling part.
Other than this being an ugly mess, this issue made resolving the checker naming
issue almost impossible. (The checker naming issue being that if a checker
registered more than one checker within its registry function, both checker
object recieved the same name) Also, if the user explicitly disabled a checker
that was a dependency of another that _was_ explicitly enabled, it implicitly,
without "telling" the user, reenabled it.
Clearly, changing this to a well structured, declarative form, where the
handling of dependencies are done on a higher level is very much preferred.
This patch, among the detailed things later, makes checkers declare their
dependencies within the TableGen file Checkers.td, and exposes the same
functionality to plugins and statically linked non-generated checkers through
CheckerRegistry::addDependency. CheckerRegistry now resolves these dependencies,
makes sure that checkers are added to CheckerManager in the correct order,
and makes sure that if a dependency is disabled, so will be every checker that
depends on it.
In detail:
* Add a new field to the Checker class in CheckerBase.td called Dependencies,
which is a list of Checkers.
* Move unix checkers before cplusplus, as there is no forward declaration in
tblgen :/
* Add the following new checkers:
- StackAddrEscapeBase
- StackAddrEscapeBase
- CStringModeling
- DynamicMemoryModeling (base of the MallocChecker family)
- IteratorModeling (base of the IteratorChecker family)
- ValistBase
- SecuritySyntaxChecker (base of bcmp, bcopy, etc...)
- NSOrCFErrorDerefChecker (base of NSErrorChecker and CFErrorChecker)
- IvarInvalidationModeling (base of IvarInvalidation checker family)
- RetainCountBase (base of RetainCount and OSObjectRetainCount)
* Clear up and registry functions in MallocChecker, happily remove old FIXMEs.
* Add a new addDependency function to CheckerRegistry.
* Neatly format RUN lines in files I looked at while debugging.
Big thanks to Artem Degrachev for all the guidance through this project!
Kristof Umann [Sat, 26 Jan 2019 17:27:40 +0000 (17:27 +0000)]
[analyzer] Fix an bug where statically linked, but not registered checkers weren't recognized
My last patch, D56989, moved the validation of whether a checker exists into
its constructor, but we do support statically linked (and non-plugin) checkers
that were do not have an entry in Checkers.td. However, the handling of this
happens after the creation of the CheckerRegistry object.
This patch fixes this bug by moving even this functionality into
CheckerRegistry's constructor.
Kristof Umann [Sat, 26 Jan 2019 16:35:33 +0000 (16:35 +0000)]
[analyzer][NFC] Keep track of whether enabling a checker was explictly specified in command line arguments
I added a new enum to CheckerInfo, so we can easily track whether the check is
explicitly enabled, explicitly disabled, or isn't specified in this regard.
Checkers belonging in the latter category may be implicitly enabled through
dependencies in the followup patch. I also made sure that this is done within
CheckerRegisty's constructor, leading to very significant simplifications in
its query-like methods.
Kristof Umann [Sat, 26 Jan 2019 15:56:40 +0000 (15:56 +0000)]
[analyzer] Split unix.API up to UnixAPIMisuseChecker and UnixAPIPortabilityChecker
The actual implementation of unix.API features a dual-checker: two checkers in
one, even though they don't even interact at all. Split them up, as this is a
problem for establishing dependencies.
I added no new code at all, just merely moved it around.
Since the plist files change (and that's a benefit!) this patch isn't NFC.
Kristof Umann [Sat, 26 Jan 2019 14:23:08 +0000 (14:23 +0000)]
[analyzer] Supply all checkers with a shouldRegister function
Introduce the boolean ento::shouldRegister##CHECKERNAME(const LangOptions &LO)
function very similarly to ento::register##CHECKERNAME. This will force every
checker to implement this function, but maybe it isn't that bad: I saw a lot of
ObjC or C++ specific checkers that should probably not register themselves based
on some LangOptions (mine too), but they do anyways.
A big benefit of this is that all registry functions now register their checker,
once it is called, registration is guaranteed.
This patch is a part of a greater effort to reinvent checker registration, more
info here: D54438#1315953
Bruno Ricci [Sat, 26 Jan 2019 14:15:10 +0000 (14:15 +0000)]
[AST] Pack GenericSelectionExpr
Store the controlling expression, the association expressions and the
corresponding TypeSourceInfos as trailing objects.
Additionally use the bit-fields of Stmt to store one SourceLocation,
saving one additional pointer. This saves 3 pointers in total per
GenericSelectionExpr.
Bruno Ricci [Sat, 26 Jan 2019 13:58:15 +0000 (13:58 +0000)]
[AST][NFC] Various cleanups to GenericSelectionExpr
Various cleanups to GenericSelectionExpr factored out of D57104. In particular:
1. Move the friend declaration to the top.
2. Introduce a constant ResultDependentIndex instead of the magic "-1".
3. clang-format
4. Group the member function together so that they can be removed as one block
by D57106.
Craig Topper [Sat, 26 Jan 2019 02:42:01 +0000 (02:42 +0000)]
[X86] Custom codegen 512-bit cvt(u)qq2tops, cvt(u)qqtopd, and cvt(u)dqtops intrinsics.
Summary:
The 512-bit cvt(u)qq2tops, cvt(u)qqtopd, and cvt(u)dqtops intrinsics all have the possibility of taking an explicit rounding mode argument. If the rounding mode is CUR_DIRECTION we'd like to emit a sitofp/uitofp instruction and a select like we do for 256-bit intrinsics.
For cvt(u)qqtopd and cvt(u)dqtops we do this when the form of the software intrinsics that doesn't take a rounding mode argument is used. This is done by using convertvector in the header with the select builtin. But if the explicit rounding mode form of the intrinsic is used and CUR_DIRECTION is passed, we don't do this. We shouldn't have this inconsistency.
For cvt(u)qqtops nothing is done because we can't use the select builtin in the header without avx512vl. So we need to use custom codegen for this.
Even when the rounding mode isn't CUR_DIRECTION we should also use select in IR for consistency. And it will remove another scalar integer mask from our intrinsics.
To accomplish all of these goals I've taken a slightly unusual approach. I've added two new X86 specific intrinsics for sitofp/uitofp with rounding. These intrinsics are variadic on the input and output type so we only need 2 instead of 6. This avoids the need for a switch to map them in CGBuiltin.cpp. We just need to check signed vs unsigned. I believe other targets also use variadic intrinsics like this.
So if the rounding mode is CUR_DIRECTION we'll use an sitofp/uitofp instruction. Otherwise we'll use one of the new intrinsics. After that we'll emit a select instruction if needed.
Nico Weber [Fri, 25 Jan 2019 23:37:57 +0000 (23:37 +0000)]
Attempt to fix build on Windows with LLVM_ENABLE_PIC=OFF
libclang can be built in shared or static mode. On Windows, with
LLVM_ENABLE_PIC=OFF, it was built in neither mode, leading to clients of
libclang (c-index-test, c-arcmt-test) failing to link with it set.
Since PIC isn't really a thing on Windows, build libclang in shared mode when
LLVM_ENABLE_PIC=OFF there. This is also somewhat symmetric with the existing
ENABLE_STATIC a few lines down.
Stella Stamenova [Fri, 25 Jan 2019 23:03:12 +0000 (23:03 +0000)]
Fixed frontend clang tests in windows read-only container
Summary:
When mounting LLVM source into a windows container in read-only mode, certain tests fail. Ideally, we want all these tests to pass so that developers can mount the same source folder into multiple (windows) containers simultaneously, allowing them to build/test the same source code using various different configurations simultaneously.
**Fix**: I've found that when attempting to open a file for writing on windows, if you don't have the correct permissions (trying to open a file for writing in a read-only folder), you get [Access is denied](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/2623670/access-denied-or-other-errors-when-you-access-or-work-with-files-and-f). In llvm, we map this error message to a linux based error, see: https://github.com/llvm-mirror/llvm/blob/master/lib/Support/ErrorHandling.cpp
This is why we see "Permission denied" in our output as opposed to the expected "No such file or directory", thus causing the tests to fail.
I've changed the test locally to instead point to the root drive so that they can successfully bypass the Access is denied error when LLVM is mounted in as a read-only directory. This way, the test operate exactly the same, but we can get around the windows-complications of what error to expect in a read-only directory.
Reid Kleckner [Fri, 25 Jan 2019 19:18:40 +0000 (19:18 +0000)]
[CodeGen] Implement isTriviallyRecursive with StmtVisitor instead of RecursiveASTVisitor
This code doesn't need to traverse types, lambdas, template arguments,
etc to detect trivial recursion. We can do a basic statement traversal
instead. This reduces the time spent compiling CodeGenModule.cpp, the
object file size (mostly reduced debug info), and the final executable
size by a small amount. I measured the exe mostly to check how much of
the overhead is from debug info, object file section headers, etc, vs
actual code.
metric | before | after | diff
time (s) | 47.4 | 38.5 | -8.9
obj (kb) | 12888 | 12012 | -876
exe (kb) | 86072 | 85996 | -76
Erich Keane [Fri, 25 Jan 2019 18:36:20 +0000 (18:36 +0000)]
Remove F16 literal support based on Float16 support.
Float16 support was disabled recently on many platforms, however that
commit still allowed literals of Float16 type to work. This commit
removes those based on the same logic as Float16 disable.
Erich Keane [Fri, 25 Jan 2019 17:27:57 +0000 (17:27 +0000)]
Disable _Float16 for non ARM/SPIR Targets
As Discussed here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-January/129543.html
There are problems exposing the _Float16 type on architectures that
haven't defined the ABI/ISel for the type yet, so we're temporarily
disabling the type and making it opt-in.
Erich Keane [Fri, 25 Jan 2019 17:01:42 +0000 (17:01 +0000)]
Allow 'static' storage specifier on an out-of-line member function template
declaration in MSVCCompat mode
Microsoft compiler permits the use of 'static' storage specifier outside
of a class definition if it's on an out-of-line member function template
declaration.
This patch allows 'static' storage specifier on an out-of-line member
function template declaration with a warning in Clang (To be compatible
with Microsoft).
Intel C/C++ compiler allows the 'static' keyword with a warning in
Microsoft mode. GCC allows this with -fpermissive.
Petr Hosek [Fri, 25 Jan 2019 02:42:30 +0000 (02:42 +0000)]
[AArch64] Make the test for rsr and rsr64 stricter
ACLE specifies that return type for rsr and rsr64 is uint32_t and
uint64_t respectively. D56852 change the return type of rsr64 from
unsigned long to unsigned long long which at least on Linux doesn't
match uint64_t, but the test isn't strict enough to detect that
because compiler implicitly converts unsigned long long to uint64_t,
but it breaks other uses such as printf with PRIx64 type specifier.
This change makes the test stricter enforcing that the return type
of rsr and rsr64 builtins is what is actually specified in ACLE.
Petr Hosek [Fri, 25 Jan 2019 02:16:29 +0000 (02:16 +0000)]
Revert "[AArch64] Use LL for 64-bit intrinsic arguments"
This reverts commit r351740: this broke on platforms where unsigned long
long isn't the same as uint64_t which is what ACLE specifies for the
return value of rsr64.
George Karpenkov [Fri, 25 Jan 2019 01:23:51 +0000 (01:23 +0000)]
[analysis] Introduce an AnyCall helper class, for abstraction over different callables
A lot of code, particularly in the analyzer, has to perform a lot of
duplication to handle functions/ObjCMessages/destructors/constructors in
a generic setting.
The analyzer already has a CallEvent helper class abstracting over such
calls, but it's not always suitable, since it's tightly coupled to other
analyzer classes (ExplodedNode, ProgramState, etc.) and it's not always
possible to construct.
This change introduces a very simple, very lightweight helper class to
do simple generic operations over callables.
In future, parts of CallEvent could be changed to use this class to
avoid some duplication.
George Karpenkov [Fri, 25 Jan 2019 01:23:37 +0000 (01:23 +0000)]
[AST] Add a method to get a call type from an ObjCMessageExpr
Due to references, expression type does not always correspond to an
expected method return type (e.g. for a method returning int & the
expression type of the call would still be int).
We have a helper method for getting the expected type on CallExpr, but
not on ObjCMessageExpr.
Alex Lorenz [Thu, 24 Jan 2019 23:07:58 +0000 (23:07 +0000)]
[clang-format] square parens with one token are not Objective-C message sends
The commit r322690 introduced support for ObjC detection in header files.
Unfortunately some C headers that use designated initializers are now
incorrectly detected as Objective-C.
This commit fixes it by ensuring that `[ token ]` is not annotated as an
Objective-C message send.
Alex Lorenz [Thu, 24 Jan 2019 19:14:39 +0000 (19:14 +0000)]
Add a priority field to availability attributes to prioritize explicit
attributes from declaration over attributes from '#pragma clang attribute'
Before this commit users had an issue when using #pragma clang attribute with
availability attributes:
The explicit attribute that's specified next to the declaration is not
guaranteed to be preferred over the attribute specified in the pragma.
This commit fixes this by introducing a priority field to the availability
attribute to control how they're merged. Attributes with higher priority are
applied over attributes with lower priority for the same platform. The
implicitly inferred attributes are given the lower priority. This ensures that:
- explicit attributes are preferred over all other attributes.
- implicitly inferred attributes that are inferred from an explicit attribute
are discarded if there's an explicit attribute or an attribute specified
using a #pragma for the same platform.
- implicitly inferred attributes that are inferred from an attribute in the
#pragma are not used if there's an explicit, explicit #pragma, or an
implicit attribute inferred from an explicit attribute for the declaration.
This is the resulting ranking:
`platform availability > platform availability from pragma > inferred availability > inferred availability from pragma`
Sam McCall [Thu, 24 Jan 2019 18:55:24 +0000 (18:55 +0000)]
[FileManager] Revert r347205 to avoid PCH file-descriptor leak.
Summary:
r347205 fixed a bug in FileManager: first calling
getFile(shouldOpen=false) and then getFile(shouldOpen=true) results in
the file not being open.
Unfortunately, some code was (inadvertently?) relying on this bug: when
building with a PCH, the file entries are obtained first by passing
shouldOpen=false, and then later shouldOpen=true, without any intention
of reading them. After r347205, they do get unneccesarily opened.
Aside from extra operations, this means they need to be closed. Normally
files are closed when their contents are read. As these files are never
read, they stay open until clang exits. On platforms with a low
open-files limit (e.g. Mac), this can lead to spurious file-not-found
errors when building large projects with PCH enabled, e.g.
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=924225
Fixing the callsites to pass shouldOpen=false when the file won't be
read is not quite trivial (that info isn't available at the direct
callsite), and passing shouldOpen=false is a performance regression (it
results in open+fstat pairs being replaced by stat+open).
So an ideal fix is going to be a little risky and we need some fix soon
(especially for the llvm 8 branch).
The problem addressed by r347205 is rare and has only been observed in
clangd. It was present in llvm-7, so we can live with it for now.