The interfaces for designators (i.e. C99 designated initializers) was
done in two slightly different ways. This was rather wasteful as the
differences could be combined into one.
Reviewed By: rsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140584
This re-commits part of c79635cce845. It is reverted since it contains
platform-inconsistent constant. Now the patch only contains constant
defined in DeclBase.h so it should be platform-independent. And this
should be still helpful.
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141992
This patch introduces a new type __externref_t that denotes a WebAssembly opaque
reference type. It also implements builtin __builtin_wasm_ref_null_extern(),
that returns a null value of __externref_t. This lays the ground work
for further builtins and reference types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122215
Dynamic memory allows users to allocate fast shared memory when a kernel
is launched. We support a single size for all kernels via the
`LIBOMPTARGET_SHARED_MEMORY_SIZE` environment variable but now we can
control it per kernel invocation, hence allow computed values.
Note: Only the nextgen plugins will allocate memory based on the clause,
the old plugins will silently miscompile.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141233
When two modules contain interfaces with the same name, check the
definitions are equivalent and diagnose if they are not.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140073
Refactor the `Module::Header` class to use an `OptionalFileEntryRef`
instead of a `FileEntry*`. This is preparation for refactoring the
`TopHeaderNames` to use `FileEntryRef` so that we preserve the
lookup path of the headers when serializing.
This is mostly based on https://reviews.llvm.org/D90497
Reviewed By: jansvoboda11
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D142113
Allow completing a redeclaration check for anonymous structs/unions
inside `RecordDecl`, so we deserialize and compare anonymous entities
from different modules.
Completing the redeclaration chain for `RecordDecl` in
`ASTContext::getASTRecordLayout` mimics the behavior in
`CXXRecordDecl::dataPtr`. Instead of completing the redeclaration chain
every time we request a definition, do that right before we need a
complete definition in `ASTContext::getASTRecordLayout`.
Such code is required only for anonymous `RecordDecl` because we
deserialize named decls when we look them up by name. But it doesn't
work for anonymous decls as they don't have a name. That's why need to
force deserialization of anonymous decls in a different way.
rdar://81864186
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140055
When two modules contain struct/union with the same name, check the
definitions are equivalent and diagnose if they are not. This is similar
to `CXXRecordDecl` where we already discover and diagnose mismatches.
rdar://problem/56764293
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71734
mention developers to remember to touch the serializer after them
modified the field of decls
It is easy for the developers to forget to touch the serializer after
they add new field to decls. Then if the existing tests fail to catch
such cases, it may be a bug report from users some day. And it is
time-consuming to solve such bugs.
To mitigate the problem, I add the static_asserts in the serializer. So
that the developers can understand they need to modify the serializer
after they saw the static assertion failure. Although this can't solve
all the problems, I feel the current status can be much better.
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141992
Close https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/59719.
The root cause of the problem is that we forgot to serialize a new
introduced bit to FunctionDeclBits. Maybe we need to find some methods
to work for detecting this.
This reverts commit b8064374b217db061213c561ec8f3376681ff9c8.
Based on the report here:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/59271
this produces a significant increase in memory use of the compiler and a
large compile-time regression. This patch reverts this so that we don't
branch for release with that issue.
This commit relands the patches for implementing P0960R3 and P1975R0,
which describe initializing aggregates via a parenthesized list.
The relanded commits are:
* 40c52159d3ee - P0960R3 and P1975R0: Allow initializing aggregates from
a parenthesized list of values
* c77a91bb7ba7 - Remove overly restrictive aggregate paren init logic
* 32d7aae04fdb - Fix a clang crash on invalid code in C++20 mode
This patch also fixes a crash in the original implementation.
Previously, if the input tried to call an implicitly deleted copy or
move constructor of a union, we would then try to initialize the union
by initializing it's first element with a reference to a union. This
behavior is incorrect (we should fail to initialize) and if the type of
the first element has a constructor with a single template typename
parameter, then Clang will explode. This patch fixes that issue by
checking that constructor overload resolution did not result in a
deleted function before attempting parenthesized aggregate
initialization.
Additionally, this patch also includes D140159, which contains some
minor fixes made in response to code review comments in the original
implementation that were made after that patch was submitted.
Co-authored-by: Sheng <ox59616e@gmail.com>
Fixes#54040, Fixes#59675
Reviewed By: ilya-biryukov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141546
Implement https://cplusplus.github.io/CWG/issues/2631.html.
Immediate calls in default arguments and defaults members
are not evaluated.
Instead, we evaluate them when constructing a
`CXXDefaultArgExpr`/`BuildCXXDefaultInitExpr`.
The immediate calls are executed by doing a
transform on the initializing expression.
Note that lambdas are not considering subexpressions so
we do not need to transform them.
As a result of this patch, unused default member
initializers are not considered odr-used, and
errors about members binding to local variables
in an outer scope only surface at the point
where a constructor is defined.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, #clang-language-wg, rupprecht
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136554
This feature causes clang to crash when compiling Chrome - see
https://crbug.com/1405031 and
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/59675
Revert "[clang] Fix a clang crash on invalid code in C++20 mode."
This reverts commit 32d7aae04fdb58e65a952f281ff2f2c3f396d98f.
Revert "[clang] Remove overly restrictive aggregate paren init logic"
This reverts commit c77a91bb7ba793ec3a6a5da3743ed55056291658.
Revert "[clang][C++20] P0960R3 and P1975R0: Allow initializing aggregates from a parenthesized list of values"
This reverts commit 40c52159d3ee337dbed14e4c73b5616ea354c337.
Closes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/59780.
In this issue report, when we use full specialization of variable
templates in modules, we will meet the multiple definition errors.
The root cause of the problem is that when we see the full
specialization of the variable template in the importers, we will find
if it is already defined in the external sources and we failed to find
such definitions from external sources. So we generate the definition in
the current TU. We failed to find the definition in the external sources
because we restricted to not write it during writing. However, we don't
know why we restricted it and it doesn't make a lot sense to do such
restriction. Then no test fails after we remove such limitations. So
let's remove it now and add it back later if we found it is necessary
then we can add the corresponding test that time.
Note that the code is only applied to named modules and
PCHWithObjectFiles. So it won't affect the normal clang modules and
header units.
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
The needed tweaks are mostly trivial, the one nasty bit is Clang's usage
of OptionalStorage. To keep this working old Optional stays around as
clang::CustomizableOptional, with the default Storage removed.
Optional<File/DirectoryEntryRef> is replaced with a typedef.
I tested this with GCC 7.5, the oldest supported GCC I had around.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140332
This reverts commit 8f0df9f3bbc6d7f3d5cbfd955c5ee4404c53a75d.
The Optional*RefDegradesTo*EntryPtr types want to keep the same size as
the underlying type, which std::optional doesn't guarantee. For use with
llvm::Optional, they define their own storage class, and there is no way
to do that in std::optional.
On top of that, that commit broke builds with older GCCs, where
std::optional was not trivially copyable (static_assert in the clang
sources was failing).
This patch implements P0960R3, which allows initialization of aggregates
via parentheses.
As an example:
```
struct S { int i, j; };
S s1(1, 1);
int arr1[2](1, 2);
```
This patch also implements P1975R0, which fixes the wording of P0960R3
for single-argument parenthesized lists so that statements like the
following are allowed:
```
S s2(1);
S s3 = static_cast<S>(1);
S s4 = (S)1;
int (&&arr2)[] = static_cast<int[]>(1);
int (&&arr3)[2] = static_cast<int[2]>(1);
```
This patch was originally authored by @0x59616e and completed by
@ayzhao.
Fixes#54040, Fixes#54041
Co-authored-by: Sheng <ox59616e@gmail.com>
Full write up : https://discourse.llvm.org/t/c-20-rfc-suggestion-desired-regarding-the-implementation-of-p0960r3/63744
Reviewed By: ilya-biryukov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129531
This reverts commit f1f1b60c7ba607e9ffe3bc012161d43ef95ac773.
Temporary revert, possibly triggers a new assertion failure on
QualType::getCommonPtr.
We're working on a reproducer, to follow-up on
https://reviews.llvm.org/D136554.
Implement https://cplusplus.github.io/CWG/issues/2631.html.
Immediate calls in default arguments and defaults members
are not evaluated.
Instead, we evaluate them when constructing a
`CXXDefaultArgExpr`/`BuildCXXDefaultInitExpr`.
The immediate calls are executed by doing a
transform on the initializing expression.
Note that lambdas are not considering subexpressions so
we do not need to transform them.
As a result of this patch, unused default member
initializers are not considered odr-used, and
errors about members binding to local variables
in an outer scope only surface at the point
where a constructor is defined.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, #clang-language-wg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136554
This patch gives basic parsing and semantic support for "modifiers" of order clause introduced in OpenMP 5.1 ( section 2.11.3 )
Reviewed By: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127855
The existing ReadAST block only describes the top-level PCM file being
loaded, when in practice most of the time taken is dealing with other
PCM files which are loaded in turn.
Because this work isn't strictly recursive (first all the modules are
discovered, then processsed in several flat loops), we can't have a neat
recursive structure like processing of source files. Instead, slap a
timer on the largest of these boxes: reading the AST block for modules.
In practice this shows where most of the time goes, and in particular
which modules are most expensive.
Implement https://cplusplus.github.io/CWG/issues/2631.html.
Immediate calls in default arguments and defaults members
are not evaluated.
Instead, we evaluate them when constructing a
`CXXDefaultArgExpr`/`BuildCXXDefaultInitExpr`.
The immediate calls are executed by doing a
transform on the initializing expression.
Note that lambdas are not considering subexpressions so
we do not need to transform them.
As a result of this patch, unused default member
initializers are not considered odr-used, and
errors about members binding to local variables
in an outer scope only surface at the point
where a constructor is defined.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, #clang-language-wg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136554
Different versions of a lambda will in general refer to different
enclosing variable declarations, because we do not merge most
block-scope declarations, such as local variables. Keep track of all the
declarations that correspond to a lambda's capture fields so that we can
rewrite the name of any of those variables to the lambda capture,
regardless of which copy of the body of `operator()` we look at.
Implement https://cplusplus.github.io/CWG/issues/2631.html.
Immediate calls in default arguments and defaults members
are not evaluated.
Instead, we evaluate them when constructing a
`CXXDefaultArgExpr`/`BuildCXXDefaultInitExpr`.
The immediate calls are executed by doing a
transform on the initializing expression.
Note that lambdas are not considering subexpressions so
we do not need to transform them.
As a result of this patch, unused default member
initializers are not considered odr-used, and
errors about members binding to local variables
in an outer scope only surface at the point
where a constructor is defined.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, #clang-language-wg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136554
This patch mechanically replaces None with std::nullopt where the
compiler would warn if None were deprecated. The intent is to reduce
the amount of manual work required in migrating from Optional to
std::optional.
This is part of an effort to migrate from llvm::Optional to
std::optional:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/deprecating-llvm-optional-x-hasvalue-getvalue-getvalueor/63716
This patch teaches clang to parse statements on the global scope to allow:
```
./bin/clang-repl
clang-repl> int i = 12;
clang-repl> ++i;
clang-repl> extern "C" int printf(const char*,...);
clang-repl> printf("%d\n", i);
13
clang-repl> %quit
```
Generally, disambiguating between statements and declarations is a non-trivial
task for a C++ parser. The challenge is to allow both standard C++ to be
translated as if this patch does not exist and in the cases where the user typed
a statement to be executed as if it were in a function body.
Clang's Parser does pretty well in disambiguating between declarations and
expressions. We have added DisambiguatingWithExpression flag which allows us to
preserve the existing and optimized behavior where needed and implement the
extra rules for disambiguating. Only few cases require additional attention:
* Constructors/destructors -- Parser::isConstructorDeclarator was used in to
disambiguate between ctor-looking declarations and statements on the global
scope(eg. `Ns::f()`).
* The template keyword -- the template keyword can appear in both declarations
and statements. This patch considers the template keyword to be a declaration
starter which breaks a few cases in incremental mode which will be tackled
later.
* The inline (and similar) keyword -- looking at the first token in many cases
allows us to classify what is a declaration.
* Other language keywords and specifiers -- ObjC/ObjC++/OpenCL/OpenMP rely on
pragmas or special tokens which will be handled in subsequent patches.
The patch conceptually models a "top-level" statement into a TopLevelStmtDecl.
The TopLevelStmtDecl is lowered into a void function with no arguments.
We attach this function to the global initializer list to execute the statement
blocks in the correct order.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127284
This patch changes the PCM serialization logic to refer to input files by their "requested" name. This fixes a bug where the dependency scanner reports the "final" file paths, which can result in failed explicit compiles due to the `module.modulemap` file not being surrounded by the expected framework directory structure.
Depends on D135634.
Reviewed By: benlangmuir, Bigcheese
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D135636
With implicitly built modules, the importing `CompilerInstance` assumes PCMs were built in a "compatible way" (i.e. with similarly set up instance). Either because their context hash matches, or because this instance has just built them.
There are some use-cases, however, where this assumption doesn't hold, libclang/c-index-test being one of them. There, the importing instance (or `ASTUnit`) is being set up while the PCM file is being deserialized. Until now, we've assumed the serialized paths to input files are the actual on-disk files, meaning the default physical VFS was always able to resolve them. This won't be the case after D135636. Therefore, this patch makes sure `ASTUnit` is initialized with the same VFS as the PCM it's deserializing - by storing paths to the VFS overlay files into the PCM itself.
For the VFS overlay files to be adopted at the very start of PCM deserialization, they are stored in a new section in the unhashed control block, together with header search paths and system header prefixes. The move to the unhashed control block should be safe: if two modules were built with different header search paths and they produced different results, the hashed part of the PCM file will reflect that.
Reviewed By: akyrtzi, benlangmuir
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D135634
This reverts commit f0ce827c6972009c5052f8447c6aadf4e4be6113.
This reapplies commit 83973cf157f7850eb133a4bbfa0f8b7958bad215.
The new test now should pass on Windows thanks to commit 4d6483e91bb8f4147ff4001e6a11e373d5198e1c.