The flag was added when the C++20 draft did not allow for concept
caching. The final C++20 standard permits the caching, so flag is
redundant. See http://wg21.link/p2104r0.
Reviewed By: sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125014
There are many more instances of this pattern, but I chose to limit this change to .rst files (docs), anything in libcxx/include, and string literals. These have the highest chance of being seen by end users.
Reviewed By: #libc, Mordante, martong, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124708
We'd nondeterministically assert (and later crash) when calculating the size or
alignment of a __bf16 type when the type isn't supported on a target because of
reading uninitialized values. Now we check whether the type is supported first.
Fixes#50171
When constant evaluating the initializer for an object of vector type,
we would call APInt::trunc() but truncate to the same bit-width the
object already had, which would cause an assertion. Instead, use
APInt::truncOrSelf() so that we no longer assert in this situation.
Fix#50216
We were failing to check if the controlling expression is dependent or
not when testing whether it has side effects. This would trigger an
assertion. Instead, if the controlling expression is dependent, we
suppress the check and diagnostic.
This fixes Issue 50227.
C89 allowed a type specifier to be elided with the resulting type being
int, aka implicit int behavior. This feature was subsequently removed
in C99 without a deprecation period, so implementations continued to
support the feature. Now, as with implicit function declarations, is a
good time to reevaluate the need for this support.
This patch allows -Wimplicit-int to issue warnings in C89 mode (off by
default), defaults the warning to an error in C99 through C17, and
disables support for the feature entirely in C2x. It also removes a
warning about missing declaration specifiers that really was just an
implicit int warning in disguise and other minor related cleanups.
This reverts commit a97899108e495147985e5e9492e742d51d5cc97a.
The patch caused some problems with the libc++ `__range_adaptor_closure`
that I haven't been able to figure out the cause of, so I am reverting
while I figure out whether this is a solvable problem/issue with the
CFE, or libc++ depending on an older 'incorrect' behavior.
The Itanium C++ ABI says prefixes are substitutable. For most prefixes
we already handle this: the manglePrefix(const DeclContext *, bool) and
manglePrefix(QualType) overloads explicitly handles substitutions or
defer to functions that handle substitutions on their behalf. The
manglePrefix(NestedNameSpecifier *) overload, however, is different and
handles some cases implicitly, but not all. The Identifier case was not
handled; this change adds handling for it, as well as a test case.
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122663
This patch turns on support for CR bit accesses for Power8 and above. The reason
why CR bits are turned on as the default for Power8 and above is that because
later architectures make use of builtins and instructions that require CR bit
accesses (such as the use of setbc in the vector string isolate predicate
and bcd builtins on Power10).
This patch also adds the clang portion to allow for turning on CR bits in the
front end if the user so desires to.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124060
This reverts commit 0c31da48389754822dc3eecc4723160c295b9ab2.
I've solved the issue with the PointerUnion by making the
`FunctionTemplateDecl` pointer be a NamedDecl, that could be a
`FunctionDecl` or `FunctionTemplateDecl` depending. This is enforced
with an assert.
This reverts commit 4b6c2cd647e9e5a147954886338f97ffb6a1bcfb.
The patch caused numerous ARM 32 bit build failures, since we added a
5th item to the PointerUnion, and went over the 2-bits available in the
32 bit pointers.
As reported here: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/44178
Concepts are not supposed to be instantiated until they are checked, so
this patch implements that and goes through significant amounts of work
to make sure we properly re-instantiate the concepts correctly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119544
Summary:
Some previous patches introduced the `--offload-new-driver` flag, which
is a generic way to enable the new driver, and the `--offload-host-only`
and `--offload-device-only` flags which allow users to compile for one
side, making it easier to inspect intermediate code for offloading
compilations. This patch just documents them in the command line
reference.
By default -fsanitize=address already compiles with this check, why not use it.
For compatibly it can be disabled with env ASAN_OPTIONS=detect_stack_use_after_return=0.
Reviewed By: eugenis, kda, #sanitizers, hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124057
This reverts commit b0bc93da926a943cdc2d8b04f8dcbe23a774520c.
Changes: `s/_WIN32/_WIN64/g` in clang/test/SemaCXX/attr-trivial-abi.cpp.
The calling convention is specific to 64-bit windows. It's even in the name: `CCK_MicrosoftWin64`.
After this, the test passes with both `-triple i686-pc-win32` and `-triple x86_64-pc-win32`. Phew!
Reviewed By: gribozavr2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123059
Temporarily revert the option to fix
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=1319387
This reverts option default and documentation of the commit. Test
changes are not being reverted as they are improvement and break
reliance on option defaults.
Additional memory usage is a problem on mobile devices with low memory.
Even heavy thread desktop programs may need some FakeStack tunning.
This reverts commit 4b4437c084e2b8a2643e97e7aef125c438635a4d.
Introduced by 23a5090c6, this style option marker indicated
'clang-format 9', though its respective option was available in
an earlier release.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123299
This change adds an option to detect all null dereferences for
non-default address spaces, except for address spaces 256, 257 and 258.
Those address spaces are special since null dereferences are not errors.
All address spaces can be considered (except for 256, 257, and 258) by
using -analyzer-config
core.NullDereference:DetectAllNullDereferences=true. This option is
false by default, retaining the original behavior.
A LIT test was enhanced to cover this case, and the rst documentation
was updated to describe this behavior.
Reviewed By: steakhal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122841
When doing overload resolution, we have to check that candidates' parameter types are equal before trying to find a better candidate through checking which candidate is more constrained.
This revision adds this missing check and makes us diagnose those cases as ambiguous calls when the types are not equal.
Fixes GitHub issue https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/53640
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123182
By default -fsanitize=address already compiles with this check,
why not use it.
For compatibly it can be disabled with env ASAN_OPTIONS=detect_stack_use_after_return=0.
Reviewed By: eugenis, kda, #sanitizers, hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124057
These command-line flags are alternates to providing the -x
c++-*-header indicators that we are building a header unit.
Act on fmodule-header= for headers on the c/l:
If we have x.hh -fmodule-header, then we should treat that header
as a header unit input (equivalent to -xc++-header-unit-header x.hh).
Likewise, for fmodule-header={user,system} the source should be now
recognised as a header unit input (since this can affect the job list
that we need).
It's not practical to recognise a header without any suffix so
-fmodule-header=system foo isn't going to happen. Although
-fmodule-header=system foo.hh will work OK. However we can make it
work if the user indicates that the item without a suffix is a valid
header. (so -fmodule-header=system -xc++-header vector)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121589
This is extended to all `std::` functions that take a reference to a
value and return a reference (or pointer) to that same value: `move`,
`forward`, `move_if_noexcept`, `as_const`, `addressof`, and the
libstdc++-specific function `__addressof`.
We still require these functions to be declared before they can be used,
but don't instantiate their definitions unless their addresses are
taken. Instead, code generation, constant evaluation, and static
analysis are given direct knowledge of their effect.
This change aims to reduce various costs associated with these functions
-- per-instantiation memory costs, compile time and memory costs due to
creating out-of-line copies and inlining them, code size at -O0, and so
on -- so that they are not substantially more expensive than a cast.
Most of these improvements are very small, but I measured a 3% decrease
in -O0 object file size for a simple C++ source file using the standard
library after this change.
We now automatically infer the `const` and `nothrow` attributes on these
now-builtin functions, in particular meaning that we get a warning for
an unused call to one of these functions.
In C++20 onwards, we disallow taking the addresses of these functions,
per the C++20 "addressable function" rule. In earlier language modes, a
compatibility warning is produced but the address can still be taken.
The same infrastructure is extended to the existing MSVC builtin
`__GetExceptionInfo`, which is now only recognized in namespace `std`
like it always should have been.
This is a re-commit of
fc3090109643af8d2da9822d0f99c84742b9c877,
a571f82a50416b767fd3cce0fb5027bb5dfec58c,
64c045e25b8471bbb572bd29159c294a82a86a2, and
de6ddaeef3aaa8a9ae3663c12cdb57d9afc0f906,
and reverts aa643f455a5362de7189eac630050d2c8aefe8f2.
This change also includes a workaround for users using libc++ 3.1 and
earlier (!!), as apparently happens on AIX, where std::move sometimes
returns by value.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123345
Revert "Fixup D123950 to address revert of D123345"
This reverts commit aa643f455a5362de7189eac630050d2c8aefe8f2.
This reverts commit 69dd89fdcbd846375a45e2fe3a88710887236d7a.
This reverts commit 04000c2f928a7adc32138a664d167f01b642bef3.
The current states breaks libstdc++ usage (https://reviews.llvm.org/D119136#3455423).
The fixup has been reverted as it caused other valid code to be disallowed.
I think we should start from the clean state by reverting all relevant commits.
WG14 has elected to remove support for K&R C functions in C2x. The
feature was introduced into C89 already deprecated, so after this long
of a deprecation period, the committee has made an empty parameter list
mean the same thing in C as it means in C++: the function accepts no
arguments exactly as if the function were written with (void) as the
parameter list.
This patch implements WG14 N2841 No function declarators without
prototypes (http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2841.htm)
and WG14 N2432 Remove support for function definitions with identifier
lists (http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2432.pdf).
It also adds The -fno-knr-functions command line option to opt into
this behavior in other language modes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123955
This reverts commit 9f075c3d84fb359efb6496535ab397a6f09609e2.
The broken build has alreasy been fixed in D124012, so reland it now.
Signed-off-by: Jun Zhang <jun@junz.org>
C89 had a questionable feature where the compiler would implicitly
declare a function that the user called but was never previously
declared. The resulting function would be globally declared as
extern int func(); -- a function without a prototype which accepts zero
or more arguments.
C99 removed support for this questionable feature due to severe
security concerns. However, there was no deprecation period; C89 had
the feature, C99 didn't. So Clang (and GCC) both supported the
functionality as an extension in C99 and later modes.
C2x no longer supports that function signature as it now requires all
functions to have a prototype, and given the known security issues with
the feature, continuing to support it as an extension is not tenable.
This patch changes the diagnostic behavior for the
-Wimplicit-function-declaration warning group depending on the language
mode in effect. We continue to warn by default in C89 mode (due to the
feature being dangerous to use). However, because this feature will not
be supported in C2x mode, we've diagnosed it as being invalid for so
long, the security concerns with the feature, and the trivial
workaround for users (declare the function), we now default the
extension warning to an error in C99-C17 mode. This still gives users
an easy workaround if they are extensively using the extension in those
modes (they can disable the warning or use -Wno-error to downgrade the
error), but the new diagnostic makes it more clear that this feature is
not supported and should be avoided. In C2x mode, we no longer allow an
implicit function to be defined and treat the situation the same as any
other lookup failure.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122983
Reimplements MisExpect diagnostics from D66324 to reconstruct its
original checking methodology only using MD_prof branch_weights
metadata.
New checks rely on 2 invariants:
1) For frontend instrumentation, MD_prof branch_weights will always be
populated before llvm.expect intrinsics are lowered.
2) for IR and sample profiling, llvm.expect intrinsics will always be
lowered before branch_weights are populated from the IR profiles.
These invariants allow the checking to assume how the existing branch
weights are populated depending on the profiling method used, and emit
the correct diagnostics. If these invariants are ever invalidated, the
MisExpect related checks would need to be updated, potentially by
re-introducing MD_misexpect metadata, and ensuring it always will be
transformed the same way as branch_weights in other optimization passes.
Frontend based profiling is now enabled without using LLVM Args, by
introducing a new CodeGen option, and checking if the -Wmisexpect flag
has been passed on the command line.
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115907
Summary:
This patch removes the OpenMP sections in the release notes. These will
be filled once the release is close and implementations are finalized.
When doing overload resolution, we have to check that candidates' parameter types are equal before trying to find a better candidate through checking which candidate is more constrained.
This revision adds this missing check and makes us diagnose those cases as ambiguous calls when the types are not equal.
Fixes GitHub issue https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/53640
Reviewed By: erichkeane
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123182