This patch is to set the paths for tools used in the
`export_executable_symbols` function in standalone build and set the
necessary macros for compiling the runtime source.
A recent commit (23d7a6cedb519853508) introduced a dependency on
libLLVMMC.so. This is to handle the `-print-supported-cpus` option which
uses `llvm/MC/SubtargetInfo`. It requires libLLVMMC to be linked into
the flang-driver which the previous commit did not do. This fixes that
issue.
The aliases are -mcpu=help and -mtune=help. There is still an issue with
the output which prints an example line that references clang. That is
not fixed here because it is printed in llvm/MC/SubtargetInfo.cpp. Some
more thought is needed to determine how best to handle this.
Fixes#117010
This does a global rename from `flang-new` to `flang`. I also
removed/changed any TODOs that I found related to making this change.
---------
Co-authored-by: H. Vetinari <h.vetinari@gmx.com>
Co-authored-by: Andrzej Warzynski <andrzej.warzynski@arm.com>
Fix the builds with LLVM_TOOL_LLVM_DRIVER_BUILD enabled.
LLVM_ENABLE_EXPORTED_SYMBOLS_IN_EXECUTABLES is not completely
compatible with export_executable_symbols as the later will be ignored
if the previous is set to NO.
Fix the issue by passing if symbols need to be exported to
llvm_add_exectuable so the link flag can be determined directly
without calling export_executable_symbols_* later.
`LLVM_ENABLE_EXPORTED_SYMBOLS_IN_EXECUTABLES` is not completely
compatible with `export_executable_symbols` as the later will be ignored
if the previous is set to NO.
Fix the issue by passing if symbols need to be exported to
`llvm_add_exectuable` so the link flag can be determined directly
without calling `export_executable_symbols_*` later.
Moves definitions of the kind arrays into a Fortran MODULE to not only
emit the MOD file, but also compile that MODULE file into an object
file. This file is then linked into libFortranRuntime.so.
Eventually this workaround PR shoud be redone and a proper runtime build
should be setup that will then also compile Fortran MODULE files.
Fixes#89403
---------
Co-authored-by: Valentin Clement (バレンタイン クレメン) <clementval@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Michael Kruse <github@meinersbur.de>
This patch changes the behaviour for flang to only create and link to a
`main` entry point when the Fortran code has a program statement in it.
This means that flang-new can be used to link even when the program is
a mixed C/Fortran code with `main` present in C and no entry point
present in Fortran.
This also removes the `-fno-fortran-main` flag as this no longer has any
functionality.
Implemented few entry points for REAL(16) math in FortranF128Math
static library. It is a thin wrapper around GNU libquadmath.
Flang driver can always link it, and the dependencies will
be brought in as needed.
The final Fortran program/library that uses any of the entry points
will depend on the underlying third-party library - this dependency
has to be resolved somehow. I added FLANG_RUNTIME_F128_MATH_LIB
CMake control so that the compiler driver and the runtime library
can be built using the same third-party library: this way the linker
knows which dependency to link in (under --as-needed).
The compiler distribution should specify which third-party library
is required for linking/running the apps that use REAL(16).
The compiler package may provide a version of the third-party library
or at least a stub library that can be used for linking, but
the final program execution will still require the actual library.
This patch replaces uses of StringRef::{starts,ends}with with
StringRef::{starts,ends}_with for consistency with
std::{string,string_view}::{starts,ends}_with in C++20.
I'm planning to deprecate and eventually remove
StringRef::{starts,ends}with.
This reverts commit 6403287eff71a3d6f6c862346d6ed3f0f000eb70.
This is failing on all but 1 of Linaro's flang builders.
CMake Error at /home/tcwg-buildbot/worker/clang-aarch64-full-2stage/llvm/flang-rt/unittests/CMakeLists.txt:37 (message):
Target llvm_gtest not found.
See discourse thread https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-support-cmake-option-to-control-link-type-built-for-flang-runtime-libraries/71602/18 for full details.
Flang-rt is the new library target for the flang runtime libraries. It builds the Flang-rt library (which contains the sources of FortranRuntime and FortranDecimal) and the Fortran_main library. See documentation in this patch for detailed description (flang-rt/docs/GettingStarted.md).
This patch aims to:
- integrate Flang's runtime into existing llvm infrasturcture so that Flang's runtime can be built similarly to other runtimes via the runtimes target or via the llvm target as an enabled runtime
- decouple the FortranDecimal library sources that were used by both compiler and runtime so that different build configurations can be applied for compiler vs runtime
- add support for running flang-rt testsuites, which were created by migrating relevant tests from `flang/test` and `flang/unittest` to `flang-rt/test` and `flang-rt/unittest`, using a new `check-flang-rt` target.
- provide documentation on how to build and use the new FlangRT runtime
Reviewed By: DanielCChen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D154869
This is a big refactor of the clang driver's option handling to use
the Visibility flags introduced in https://reviews.llvm.org/D157149.
There are a few distinct parts, but they can't really be split into
separate commits and still be made to compile.
1. We split out some of the flags in ClangFlags to ClangVisibility.
Note that this does not include any subtractive flags.
2. We update the Flag definitions and OptIn/OptOut constructs in
Options.td by hand.
3. We introduce and use a script, update_options_td_flags, to ease
migration of flag definitions in Options.td, and we run that on
Options.td. I intend to remove this later, but I'm committing it so
that downstream forks can use the script to simplify merging.
4. We update calls to OptTable in the clang driver, cc1as, flang, and
clangd to use the visibility APIs instead of Include/Exclude flags.
5. We deprecate the Include/Exclude APIs and add a release note.
*if you are running into conflicts with this change:*
Note that https://reviews.llvm.org/D157150 may also be the culprit and
if so it should be handled first.
The script in `clang/utils/update_options_td_flags.py` can help. Take
the downstream side of all conflicts and then run the following:
```
% cd clang/include/clang/Driver
% ../../../utils/update_options_td_flags.py Options.td > Options.td.new
% mv Options.td.new Options.td
```
This will hopefully be sufficient, please take a look at the diff.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D157151
This revision implements the Fortran intrinsic procedures COMPILER_VERSION and COMPILER_OPTIONS from the iso_fortran_env module.
To be able to set the COMPILER_OPTIONS string according to the original compiler driver invocation, a string is passed to the frontend driver using the environment variable FLANG_COMPILER_OPTIONS_STRING, for lack of a better mechanism.
Fixes#59233
Reviewed By: awarzynski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140524
The forwarding header is left in place because of its use in
`polly/lib/External/isl/interface/extract_interface.cc`, but I have
added a GCC warning about the fact it is deprecated, because it is used
in `isl` from where it is included by Polly.
This is a fairly large changeset, but it can be broken into a few
pieces:
- `llvm/Support/*TargetParser*` are all moved from the LLVM Support
component into a new LLVM Component called "TargetParser". This
potentially enables using tablegen to maintain this information, as
is shown in https://reviews.llvm.org/D137517. This cannot currently
be done, as llvm-tblgen relies on LLVM's Support component.
- This also moves two files from Support which use and depend on
information in the TargetParser:
- `llvm/Support/Host.{h,cpp}` which contains functions for inspecting
the current Host machine for info about it, primarily to support
getting the host triple, but also for `-mcpu=native` support in e.g.
Clang. This is fairly tightly intertwined with the information in
`X86TargetParser.h`, so keeping them in the same component makes
sense.
- `llvm/ADT/Triple.h` and `llvm/Support/Triple.cpp`, which contains
the target triple parser and representation. This is very intertwined
with the Arm target parser, because the arm architecture version
appears in canonical triples on arm platforms.
- I moved the relevant unittests to their own directory.
And so, we end up with a single component that has all the information
about the following, which to me seems like a unified component:
- Triples that LLVM Knows about
- Architecture names and CPUs that LLVM knows about
- CPU detection logic for LLVM
Given this, I have also moved `RISCVISAInfo.h` into this component, as
it seems to me to be part of that same set of functionality.
If you get link errors in your components after this patch, you likely
need to add TargetParser into LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS in CMake.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D137838
Previously an error raised during an expansion of response files (including
configuration files) was ignored and only the fact of its presence was
reported to the user with generic error messages. This made it difficult to
analyze problems. For example, if a configuration file tried to read an
inexistent file, the error message said that 'configuration file cannot
be found', which is wrong and misleading.
This change enhances handling errors in the expansion so that users
could get more informative error messages.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136090
Previously an error raised during an expansion of response files (including
configuration files) was ignored and only the fact of its presence was
reported to the user with generic error messages. This made it difficult to
analyze problems. For example, if a configuration file tried to read an
inexistent file, the error message said that 'configuration file cannot
be found', which is wrong and misleading.
This change enhances handling errors in the expansion so that users
could get more informative error messages.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136090
Functions that implement expansion of response and config files depend
on many options, which are passes as arguments. Extending the expansion
requires new options, it in turn causes changing calls in various places
making them even more bulky.
This change introduces a class ExpansionContext, which represents set of
options that control the expansion. Its methods implements expansion of
responce files including config files. It makes extending the expansion
easier.
No functional changes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132379
Add support for reading response files in the flang driver. Response
files contain command line arguments and are used whenever a command
becomes longer than the shell/environment limit. Response files are
recognized via the special "@path/to/response/file.rsp" syntax, which
distinguishes them from other file inputs.
This patch hardcodes GNU tokenization, since we don't have a CL mode for
the driver. In the future we might want to add a --rsp-quoting command
line option, like clang has, to accommodate Windows platforms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124846
This patch re-factors the driver code in LLVM Flang (frontend +
compiler) to use the MLIR style. For more context, please see:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-coding-style-in-the-driver/
Most changes here are rather self-explanatory. Accessors are renamed to
be more consistent with the rest of LLVM (e.g. allSource -->
getAllSources). Additionally, MLIR clang-tidy files are added in the
affected directories.
clang-tidy and clang-format files were copied from MLIR. Small
additional changes are made to silence clang-tidy/clang-format
warnings.
[1] https://mlir.llvm.org/getting_started/DeveloperGuide/
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125007
This patch adds 2 missing items required for `flang-new` to be able to
generate executables:
1. The Fortran_main runtime library, which implements the main entry
point into Fortran's `PROGRAM` in Flang,
2. Extra linker flags to include Fortran runtime libraries (e.g.
Fortran_main).
Fortran_main is the bridge between object files generated by Flang and
the C runtime that takes care of program set-up at system-level. For
every Fortran `PROGRAM`, Flang generates the `_QQmain` function.
Fortran_main implements the C `main` function that simply calls
`_QQmain`.
Additionally, "<driver-path>/../lib" directory is added to the list of
search directories for libraries. This is where the required runtime
libraries are currently located. Note that this the case for the build
directory. We haven't considered installation directories/targets yet.
With this change, you can generate an executable that will print `hello,
world!` as follows:
```bash
$ cat hello.f95
PROGRAM HELLO
write(*, *) "hello, world!"
END PROGRAM HELLO
$ flang-new -flang-experimental-exec hello.f95
./a.out
hello, world!
```
NOTE 1: Fortran_main has to be a static library at all times. It invokes
`_QQmain`, which is the main entry point generated by Flang for the
given input file (you can check this with `flang-new -S hello.f95 -o - |
grep "Qmain"`). This means that Fortran_main has an unresolved
dependency at build time. The linker will allow this for a static
library. However, if Fortran_main was a shared object, then the linker
will produce an error: `undefined symbol: `_QQmain`.
NOTE 2: When Fortran runtime libraries are generated as shared libraries
(excluding Fortran_main, which is always static), you will need to
tell the dynamic linker (by e.g. tweaking LD_LIBRARY_PATH) where to look
for them when invoking the executables. For example:
```bash
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:<flang-build-dir>/lib/ ./a.out
```
NOTE 3: This feature is considered experimental and currently guarded
with a flag: `-flang-experimental-exec`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122008
[1] https://github.com/flang-compiler/f18-llvm-project
CREDITS: Fortran_main was originally written by Eric Schweitz, Jean
Perier, Peter Klausler and Steve Scalpone in the fir-dev` branch in [1].
Co-authored-by: Eric Schweitz <eschweitz@nvidia.com>
Co-authored-by: Peter Klausler <pklausler@nvidia.com>
Co-authored-by: Jean Perier <jperier@nvidia.com>
Co-authored-by: Steve Scalpone <sscalpone@nvidia.com
This patch adds support for:
* `-S` in Flang's compiler and frontend drivers,
and implements:
* `-emit-obj` in Flang's frontend driver and `-c` in Flang's compiler
driver (this is consistent with Clang).
(these options were already available before, but only as placeholders).
The semantics of these options in Clang and Flang are identical.
The `EmitObjAction` frontend action is renamed as `BackendAction`. This
new name more accurately reflects the fact that this action will
primarily run the code-gen/backend pipeline in LLVM. It also makes more
sense as an action implementing both `-emit-obj` and `-S` (originally,
it was just `-emit-obj`).
`tripleName` from FirContext.cpp is deleted and, when a target triple is
required, `mlir::LLVM::LLVMDialect::getTargetTripleAttrName()` is used
instead. In practice, this means that `fir.triple` is replaced with
`llvm.target_triple`. The former was effectively ignored. The latter is
used when lowering from the LLVM dialect in MLIR to LLVM IR (i.e. it's
embedded in the generated LLVM IR module). The driver can then re-use
it when configuring the backend. With this change, the LLVM IR files
generated by e.g. `tco` will from now on contain the correct target
triple.
The code-gen.f90 test is replaced with code-gen-x86.f90 and
code-gen-aarch64.f90. With 2 seperate files we can verify that
`--target` is correctly taken into account. LIT configuration is updated
to enable e.g.:
```
! REQUIRES: aarch64-registered-target
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120568
Extracted from D99484. My new plan is to start from the outside and work
inward.
Reviewed By: stephenneuendorffer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115569
Introducing a plugin API and a simple HelloWorld Plugin example.
This patch adds the `-load` and `-plugin` flags to frontend driver and
the code around using custom frontend actions from within a plugin
shared library object.
It also adds to the Driver-help test to check the help option with the
updated driver flags.
Additionally, the patch creates a plugin-example test to check the
HelloWorld plugin example runs correctly. As part of this, a new CMake
flag (`FLANG_BUILD_EXAMPLES`) is added to allow the example to be built
and for the test to run.
This Plugin API has only been tested on Linux.
Reviewed By: awarzynski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106137
In clang:
Replace argc_ with Argc
Replace argv_ with Argv
Replace argv with Args
In flang:
Replace argc_ with argc
Replace argv_ with argv
Replace argv with args
Reviewed By: awarzynski, aganea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97138
Remove clangFrontend from the list of dependencies. These should have
been removed in: 8d51d37e0628bde3eb5a3200507ba7135dfc2751. See also
https://reviews.llvm.org/D87774.
As per point 3 in [1]:
```
Accessor member functions are named with the non-public data member's
name, less the trailing underscore. Mutator member functions are named
set_...
```
Originally we just followed the LLVM's style, which is incompatible with
Flang. This patch renames the accessors and mutators accordingly.
`getDiagnostics` and `GetDiagnostics` are replaced with one accessor:
`diagnostics`. `SetDiagnostics` was neither implemented nor used, so
it's deleted.
[1] https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/master/flang/docs/C++style.md#naming
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90300
This patch introduces the dependencies required to read and manage input files
provided by the command line option. It also adds the infrastructure to create
and write to output files. The output is sent to either stdout or a file
(specified with the `-o` flag).
Separately, in order to be able to test the code for file I/O, it adds
infrastructure to create frontend actions. As a basic testable example, it adds
the `InputOutputTest` FrontendAction. The sole purpose of this action is to
read a file from the command line and print it either to stdout or the output
file. This action is run by using the `-test-io` flag also introduced in this
patch (available for `flang-new` and `flang-new -fc1`). With this patch:
```
flang-new -test-io input-file.f90
```
will read input-file.f90 and print it in the output file.
The `InputOutputTest` frontend action has been introduced primarily to
facilitate testing. It is hidden from users (i.e. it's only displayed with
`--help-hidden`). Currently Clang doesn’t have an equivalent action.
`-test-io` is used to trigger the InputOutputTest action in the Flang frontend
driver. This patch makes sure that “flang-new” forwards it to “flang-new -fc1"
by creating a preprocessor job. However, in Flang.cpp, `-test-io` is passed to
“flang-new -fc1” without `-E`. This way we make sure that the preprocessor is
_not_ run in the frontend driver. This is the desired behaviour: `-test-io`
should only read the input file and print it to the output stream.
co-authored-by: Andrzej Warzynski <andrzej.warzynski@arm.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87989
Recent patch that improved Flang's compatibility with respect to how LLVM
dynamic libraries should be linked (and specified in CMake recipes),
introduced a bug in the definition of `flang-new`:
* https://reviews.llvm.org/D87893
More specifically, `add_flang_tool` does not support the
`LINK_COMPONENTS` CMake argument. Instead, one should set
`LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS` before calling `add_flang_tool`.
This patch reverts the change for `flang-new` from
https://reviews.llvm.org/D87893, and instead:
* sets `LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS`
* calls `clang_target_link_libraries` to add Clang dependencies
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89403
Harmonize usage of LLVM components througout Flang.
Explicit LLVM Libs where used across several CMakeFIles, which led to
incompatibilities with LLVM shlibs.
Fortunately, the LLVM component system can be relied on to harmoniously handle
both cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87893
Currently Flang uses TextDiagnostic, TextDiagnosticPrinter &
TestDiagnosticBuffer classes from Clang (more specifically, from
libclangFrontend). This patch introduces simplified equivalents of these
classes in Flang (i.e. it removes the dependency on libclangFrontend).
Flang only needs these diagnostics classes for the compiler driver
diagnostics. This is unlike in Clang in which similar diagnostic classes
are used for e.g. Lexing/Parsing/Sema diagnostics. For this reason, the
implementations introduced here are relatively basic. We can extend them
in the future if this is required.
This patch also enhances how the diagnostics are printed. In particular,
this is the diagnostic that you'd get _before_ the changes introduced here
(no text formatting):
```
$ bin/flang-new
error: no input files
```
This is the diagnostic that you get _after_ the changes introduced here
(in terminals that support it, the text is formatted - bold + red):
```
$ bin/flang-new
flang-new: error: no input files
```
Tests are updated accordingly and options related to enabling/disabling
color diagnostics are flagged as supported by Flang.
Reviewed By: sameeranjoshi, CarolineConcatto
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87774
`flang-new` depends on libclangFrontend (it uses DiagnosticConsumer
classes from there). This patch adds the missing dependency in CMake.
clang::TextDiagnosticBuffer is only reported as missing when compiling
`flang-new` with BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON. This symbol is linked in
statically with libflangFrontend when BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=OFF.
Summary:
This is the first patch implementing the new Flang driver as outlined in [1],
[2] & [3]. It creates Flang driver (`flang-new`) and Flang frontend driver
(`flang-new -fc1`). These will be renamed as `flang` and `flang -fc1` once the
current Flang throwaway driver, `flang`, can be replaced with `flang-new`.
Currently only 2 options are supported: `-help` and `--version`.
`flang-new` is implemented in terms of libclangDriver, defaulting the driver
mode to `FlangMode` (added to libclangDriver in [4]). This ensures that the
driver runs in Flang mode regardless of the name of the binary inferred from
argv[0].
The design of the new Flang compiler and frontend drivers is inspired by it
counterparts in Clang [3]. Currently, the new Flang compiler and frontend
drivers re-use Clang libraries: clangBasic, clangDriver and clangFrontend.
To identify Flang options, this patch adds FlangOption/FC1Option enums.
Driver::printHelp is updated so that `flang-new` prints only Flang options.
The new Flang driver is disabled by default. To enable it, set
`-DBUILD_FLANG_NEW_DRIVER=ON` when configuring CMake and add clang to
`LLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS` (e.g. -DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS=“clang;flang;mlir”).
[1] “RFC: new Flang driver - next steps”
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/flang-dev/2020-July/000470.html
[2] “RFC: Adding a fortran mode to the clang driver for flang”
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-June/062669.html
[3] “RFC: refactoring libclangDriver/libclangFrontend to share with Flang”
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2020-July/066393.html
[4] https://reviews.llvm.org/rG6bf55804924d5a1d902925ad080b1a2b57c5c75c
co-authored-by: Andrzej Warzynski <andrzej.warzynski@arm.com>
Reviewed By: richard.barton.arm, sameeranjoshi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86089