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TagDecls (#155463)
And make use of those.
These changes are split from prior PR #155028, in order to decrease the
size of that PR and facilitate review.
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This is a major change on how we represent nested name qualifications in
the AST.
* The nested name specifier itself and how it's stored is changed. The
prefixes for types are handled within the type hierarchy, which makes
canonicalization for them super cheap, no memory allocation required.
Also translating a type into nested name specifier form becomes a no-op.
An identifier is stored as a DependentNameType. The nested name
specifier gains a lightweight handle class, to be used instead of
passing around pointers, which is similar to what is implemented for
TemplateName. There is still one free bit available, and this handle can
be used within a PointerUnion and PointerIntPair, which should keep
bit-packing aficionados happy.
* The ElaboratedType node is removed, all type nodes in which it could
previously apply to can now store the elaborated keyword and name
qualifier, tail allocating when present.
* TagTypes can now point to the exact declaration found when producing
these, as opposed to the previous situation of there only existing one
TagType per entity. This increases the amount of type sugar retained,
and can have several applications, for example in tracking module
ownership, and other tools which care about source file origins, such as
IWYU. These TagTypes are lazily allocated, in order to limit the
increase in AST size.
This patch offers a great performance benefit.
It greatly improves compilation time for
[stdexec](https://github.com/NVIDIA/stdexec). For one datapoint, for
`test_on2.cpp` in that project, which is the slowest compiling test,
this patch improves `-c` compilation time by about 7.2%, with the
`-fsyntax-only` improvement being at ~12%.
This has great results on compile-time-tracker as well:

This patch also further enables other optimziations in the future, and
will reduce the performance impact of template specialization resugaring
when that lands.
It has some other miscelaneous drive-by fixes.
About the review: Yes the patch is huge, sorry about that. Part of the
reason is that I started by the nested name specifier part, before the
ElaboratedType part, but that had a huge performance downside, as
ElaboratedType is a big performance hog. I didn't have the steam to go
back and change the patch after the fact.
There is also a lot of internal API changes, and it made sense to remove
ElaboratedType in one go, versus removing it from one type at a time, as
that would present much more churn to the users. Also, the nested name
specifier having a different API avoids missing changes related to how
prefixes work now, which could make existing code compile but not work.
How to review: The important changes are all in
`clang/include/clang/AST` and `clang/lib/AST`, with also important
changes in `clang/lib/Sema/TreeTransform.h`.
The rest and bulk of the changes are mostly consequences of the changes
in API.
PS: TagType::getDecl is renamed to `getOriginalDecl` in this patch, just
for easier to rebasing. I plan to rename it back after this lands.
Fixes #136624
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/43179
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/68670
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/92757
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sugar types (#149613)
The checks for the 'z' and 't' format specifiers added in the original
PR #143653 had some issues and were overly strict, causing some build
failures and were consequently reverted at
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/commit/4c85bf2fe8042c855c9dd5be4b02191e9d071ffd.
In the latest commit
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/149613/commits/27c58629ec76a703fde9c0b99b170573170b4a7a,
I relaxed the checks for the 'z' and 't' format specifiers, so warnings
are now only issued when they are used with mismatched types.
The original intent of these checks was to diagnose code that assumes
the underlying type of `size_t` is `unsigned` or `unsigned long`, for
example:
```c
printf("%zu", 1ul); // Not portable, but not an error when size_t is unsigned long
```
However, it produced a significant number of false positives. This was
partly because Clang does not treat the `typedef` `size_t` and
`__size_t` as having a common "sugar" type, and partly because a large
amount of existing code either assumes `unsigned` (or `unsigned long`)
is `size_t`, or they define the equivalent of size_t in their own way
(such as
sanitizer_internal_defs.h).https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/2e67dcfdcd023df2f06e0823eeea23990ce41534/compiler-rt/lib/sanitizer_common/sanitizer_internal_defs.h#L203
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sugar types instead of built-in types (#143653)"
This reverts commit c27e283cfbca2bd22f34592430e98ee76ed60ad8.
A builbot failure has been reported:
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/186/builds/10819/steps/10/logs/stdio
I'm also getting a large number of warnings related to %zu and %zx.
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types instead of built-in types (#143653)
Including the results of `sizeof`, `sizeof...`, `__datasizeof`,
`__alignof`, `_Alignof`, `alignof`, `_Countof`, `size_t` literals, and
signed `size_t` literals, the results of pointer-pointer subtraction and
checks for standard library functions (and their calls).
The goal is to enable clang and downstream tools such as clangd and
clang-tidy to provide more portable hints and diagnostics.
The previous discussion can be found at #136542.
This PR implements this feature by introducing a new subtype of `Type`
called `PredefinedSugarType`, which was considered appropriate in
discussions. I tried to keep `PredefinedSugarType` simple enough yet not
limited to `size_t` and `ptrdiff_t` so that it can be used for other
purposes. `PredefinedSugarType` wraps a canonical `Type` and provides a
name, conceptually similar to a compiler internal `TypedefType` but
without depending on a `TypedefDecl` or a source file.
Additionally, checks for the `z` and `t` format specifiers in format
strings for `scanf` and `printf` were added. It will precisely match
expressions using `typedef`s or built-in expressions.
The affected tests indicates that it works very well.
Several code require that `SizeType` is canonical, so I kept `SizeType`
to its canonical form.
The failed tests in CI are allowed to fail. See the
[comment](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/135386#issuecomment-3049426611)
in another PR #135386.
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This will be used in ASTContext::getTypeInfo which needs this
information for all builtin types, not just pointers.
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HLSL has a set of intangible types which are described in in the
[draft HLSL Specification
(**[Basic.types]**)](https://microsoft.github.io/hlsl-specs/specs/hlsl.pdf):
There are special implementation-defined types such as handle types,
which fall into a category of standard intangible types. Intangible
types are types that have no defined object representation or value
representation, as such the size is unknown at compile time.
A class type T is an intangible class type if it contains an base
classes or members of intangible class type, standard intangible type,
or arrays of such types. Standard intangible types and intangible class
types are collectively called intangible
types([9](https://microsoft.github.io/hlsl-specs/specs/hlsl.html#Intangible)).
This PR implements one standard intangible type `__hlsl_resource_t`
and sets up the infrastructure that will make it easier to add more
in the future, such as samplers or raytracing payload handles. The
HLSL intangible types are declared in
`clang/include/clang/Basic/HLSLIntangibleTypes.def` and this file is
included with related macro definition in most places that require edits
when a new type is added.
The new types are added as keywords and not typedefs to make sure they
cannot be redeclared, and they can only be declared in builtin implicit
headers. The `__hlsl_resource_t` type represents a handle to a memory
resource and it is going to be used in builtin HLSL buffer types like this:
template <typename T>
class RWBuffer {
[[hlsl::contained_type(T)]]
[[hlsl::is_rov(false)]]
[[hlsl::resource_class(uav)]]
__hlsl_resource_t Handle;
};
Part 1/3 of llvm/llvm-project#90631.
---------
Co-authored-by: Justin Bogner <mail@justinbogner.com>
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This patch adds a new builtin type for AMDGPU's buffer rsrc data type,
which is effectively an AS 8 pointer. This is needed because we'd like
to expose certain intrinsics to users via builtins which take buffer
rsrc as argument.
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I'm planning to remove StringRef::equals in favor of
StringRef::operator==.
- StringRef::operator==/!= outnumber StringRef::equals by a factor of
24 under clang/ in terms of their usage.
- The elimination of StringRef::equals brings StringRef closer to
std::string_view, which has operator== but not equals.
- S == "foo" is more readable than S.equals("foo"), especially for
!Long.Expression.equals("str") vs Long.Expression != "str".
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ISO/IEC TR 18037 defines %r, %R, %k, and %K for fixed point format
specifiers. -Wformat should not warn on these when they are provided.
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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.
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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.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122215
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clang"
Very likely breaks stage 3 of msan build bot.
Good: 764c88a50ac76a2df2d051a0eb5badc6867aabb6 https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/74/builds/17058
Looks unrelated: 48b5a06dfcab12cf093a1a3df42cb5b684e2be4c
Bad: 48b5a06dfcab12cf093a1a3df42cb5b684e2be4c https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/74/builds/17059
This reverts commit eb66833d19573df97034a81279eda31b8d19815b.
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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
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With C++17 there is no Clang pedantic warning or MSVC C5051.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131346
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Close #56885: WG14 N2630 added %b to fprintf/fscanf and recommended %B for
fprintf. This patch teaches -Wformat %b for the printf/scanf family of functions
and %B for the printf family of functions.
glibc 2.35 and latest Android bionic added %b/%B printf support. From
https://www.openwall.com/lists/libc-coord/2022/07/ no scanf support is available
yet.
Like GCC, we don't test library support.
GCC 12 -Wformat -pedantic emits a warning:
> warning: ISO C17 does not support the ‘%b’ gnu_printf format [-Wformat=]
The behavior is not ported.
Note: `freebsd_kernel_printf` uses %b differently.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, dim, enh
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131057
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Without this patch, clang will not wrap in an ElaboratedType node types written
without a keyword and nested name qualifier, which goes against the intent that
we should produce an AST which retains enough details to recover how things are
written.
The lack of this sugar is incompatible with the intent of the type printer
default policy, which is to print types as written, but to fall back and print
them fully qualified when they are desugared.
An ElaboratedTypeLoc without keyword / NNS uses no storage by itself, but still
requires pointer alignment due to pre-existing bug in the TypeLoc buffer
handling.
---
Troubleshooting list to deal with any breakage seen with this patch:
1) The most likely effect one would see by this patch is a change in how
a type is printed. The type printer will, by design and default,
print types as written. There are customization options there, but
not that many, and they mainly apply to how to print a type that we
somehow failed to track how it was written. This patch fixes a
problem where we failed to distinguish between a type
that was written without any elaborated-type qualifiers,
such as a 'struct'/'class' tags and name spacifiers such as 'std::',
and one that has been stripped of any 'metadata' that identifies such,
the so called canonical types.
Example:
```
namespace foo {
struct A {};
A a;
};
```
If one were to print the type of `foo::a`, prior to this patch, this
would result in `foo::A`. This is how the type printer would have,
by default, printed the canonical type of A as well.
As soon as you add any name qualifiers to A, the type printer would
suddenly start accurately printing the type as written. This patch
will make it print it accurately even when written without
qualifiers, so we will just print `A` for the initial example, as
the user did not really write that `foo::` namespace qualifier.
2) This patch could expose a bug in some AST matcher. Matching types
is harder to get right when there is sugar involved. For example,
if you want to match a type against being a pointer to some type A,
then you have to account for getting a type that is sugar for a
pointer to A, or being a pointer to sugar to A, or both! Usually
you would get the second part wrong, and this would work for a
very simple test where you don't use any name qualifiers, but
you would discover is broken when you do. The usual fix is to
either use the matcher which strips sugar, which is annoying
to use as for example if you match an N level pointer, you have
to put N+1 such matchers in there, beginning to end and between
all those levels. But in a lot of cases, if the property you want
to match is present in the canonical type, it's easier and faster
to just match on that... This goes with what is said in 1), if
you want to match against the name of a type, and you want
the name string to be something stable, perhaps matching on
the name of the canonical type is the better choice.
3) This patch could expose a bug in how you get the source range of some
TypeLoc. For some reason, a lot of code is using getLocalSourceRange(),
which only looks at the given TypeLoc node. This patch introduces a new,
and more common TypeLoc node which contains no source locations on itself.
This is not an inovation here, and some other, more rare TypeLoc nodes could
also have this property, but if you use getLocalSourceRange on them, it's not
going to return any valid locations, because it doesn't have any. The right fix
here is to always use getSourceRange() or getBeginLoc/getEndLoc which will dive
into the inner TypeLoc to get the source range if it doesn't find it on the
top level one. You can use getLocalSourceRange if you are really into
micro-optimizations and you have some outside knowledge that the TypeLocs you are
dealing with will always include some source location.
4) Exposed a bug somewhere in the use of the normal clang type class API, where you
have some type, you want to see if that type is some particular kind, you try a
`dyn_cast` such as `dyn_cast<TypedefType>` and that fails because now you have an
ElaboratedType which has a TypeDefType inside of it, which is what you wanted to match.
Again, like 2), this would usually have been tested poorly with some simple tests with
no qualifications, and would have been broken had there been any other kind of type sugar,
be it an ElaboratedType or a TemplateSpecializationType or a SubstTemplateParmType.
The usual fix here is to use `getAs` instead of `dyn_cast`, which will look deeper
into the type. Or use `getAsAdjusted` when dealing with TypeLocs.
For some reason the API is inconsistent there and on TypeLocs getAs behaves like a dyn_cast.
5) It could be a bug in this patch perhaps.
Let me know if you need any help!
Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112374
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This reverts commit 7c51f02effdbd0d5e12bfd26f9c3b2ab5687c93f because it
stills breaks the LLDB tests. This was re-landed without addressing the
issue or even agreement on how to address the issue. More details and
discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D112374.
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Without this patch, clang will not wrap in an ElaboratedType node types written
without a keyword and nested name qualifier, which goes against the intent that
we should produce an AST which retains enough details to recover how things are
written.
The lack of this sugar is incompatible with the intent of the type printer
default policy, which is to print types as written, but to fall back and print
them fully qualified when they are desugared.
An ElaboratedTypeLoc without keyword / NNS uses no storage by itself, but still
requires pointer alignment due to pre-existing bug in the TypeLoc buffer
handling.
---
Troubleshooting list to deal with any breakage seen with this patch:
1) The most likely effect one would see by this patch is a change in how
a type is printed. The type printer will, by design and default,
print types as written. There are customization options there, but
not that many, and they mainly apply to how to print a type that we
somehow failed to track how it was written. This patch fixes a
problem where we failed to distinguish between a type
that was written without any elaborated-type qualifiers,
such as a 'struct'/'class' tags and name spacifiers such as 'std::',
and one that has been stripped of any 'metadata' that identifies such,
the so called canonical types.
Example:
```
namespace foo {
struct A {};
A a;
};
```
If one were to print the type of `foo::a`, prior to this patch, this
would result in `foo::A`. This is how the type printer would have,
by default, printed the canonical type of A as well.
As soon as you add any name qualifiers to A, the type printer would
suddenly start accurately printing the type as written. This patch
will make it print it accurately even when written without
qualifiers, so we will just print `A` for the initial example, as
the user did not really write that `foo::` namespace qualifier.
2) This patch could expose a bug in some AST matcher. Matching types
is harder to get right when there is sugar involved. For example,
if you want to match a type against being a pointer to some type A,
then you have to account for getting a type that is sugar for a
pointer to A, or being a pointer to sugar to A, or both! Usually
you would get the second part wrong, and this would work for a
very simple test where you don't use any name qualifiers, but
you would discover is broken when you do. The usual fix is to
either use the matcher which strips sugar, which is annoying
to use as for example if you match an N level pointer, you have
to put N+1 such matchers in there, beginning to end and between
all those levels. But in a lot of cases, if the property you want
to match is present in the canonical type, it's easier and faster
to just match on that... This goes with what is said in 1), if
you want to match against the name of a type, and you want
the name string to be something stable, perhaps matching on
the name of the canonical type is the better choice.
3) This patch could exposed a bug in how you get the source range of some
TypeLoc. For some reason, a lot of code is using getLocalSourceRange(),
which only looks at the given TypeLoc node. This patch introduces a new,
and more common TypeLoc node which contains no source locations on itself.
This is not an inovation here, and some other, more rare TypeLoc nodes could
also have this property, but if you use getLocalSourceRange on them, it's not
going to return any valid locations, because it doesn't have any. The right fix
here is to always use getSourceRange() or getBeginLoc/getEndLoc which will dive
into the inner TypeLoc to get the source range if it doesn't find it on the
top level one. You can use getLocalSourceRange if you are really into
micro-optimizations and you have some outside knowledge that the TypeLocs you are
dealing with will always include some source location.
4) Exposed a bug somewhere in the use of the normal clang type class API, where you
have some type, you want to see if that type is some particular kind, you try a
`dyn_cast` such as `dyn_cast<TypedefType>` and that fails because now you have an
ElaboratedType which has a TypeDefType inside of it, which is what you wanted to match.
Again, like 2), this would usually have been tested poorly with some simple tests with
no qualifications, and would have been broken had there been any other kind of type sugar,
be it an ElaboratedType or a TemplateSpecializationType or a SubstTemplateParmType.
The usual fix here is to use `getAs` instead of `dyn_cast`, which will look deeper
into the type. Or use `getAsAdjusted` when dealing with TypeLocs.
For some reason the API is inconsistent there and on TypeLocs getAs behaves like a dyn_cast.
5) It could be a bug in this patch perhaps.
Let me know if you need any help!
Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112374
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This reverts commit bdc6974f92304f4ed542241b9b89ba58ba6b20aa because it
breaks all the LLDB tests that import the std module.
import-std-module/array.TestArrayFromStdModule.py
import-std-module/deque-basic.TestDequeFromStdModule.py
import-std-module/deque-dbg-info-content.TestDbgInfoContentDequeFromStdModule.py
import-std-module/forward_list.TestForwardListFromStdModule.py
import-std-module/forward_list-dbg-info-content.TestDbgInfoContentForwardListFromStdModule.py
import-std-module/list.TestListFromStdModule.py
import-std-module/list-dbg-info-content.TestDbgInfoContentListFromStdModule.py
import-std-module/queue.TestQueueFromStdModule.py
import-std-module/stack.TestStackFromStdModule.py
import-std-module/vector.TestVectorFromStdModule.py
import-std-module/vector-bool.TestVectorBoolFromStdModule.py
import-std-module/vector-dbg-info-content.TestDbgInfoContentVectorFromStdModule.py
import-std-module/vector-of-vectors.TestVectorOfVectorsFromStdModule.py
https://green.lab.llvm.org/green/view/LLDB/job/lldb-cmake/45301/
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Without this patch, clang will not wrap in an ElaboratedType node types written
without a keyword and nested name qualifier, which goes against the intent that
we should produce an AST which retains enough details to recover how things are
written.
The lack of this sugar is incompatible with the intent of the type printer
default policy, which is to print types as written, but to fall back and print
them fully qualified when they are desugared.
An ElaboratedTypeLoc without keyword / NNS uses no storage by itself, but still
requires pointer alignment due to pre-existing bug in the TypeLoc buffer
handling.
Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112374
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The `printf` specifier `%n` is not supported on Android's libc and will soon be removed from Fuchsia's
Reviewed By: enh
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117611
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Identified with modernize-use-bool-literals.
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Currently, we have no front-end type for ppc_fp128 type in IR. PowerPC
target generates ppc_fp128 type from long double now, but there's option
(-mabi=(ieee|ibm)longdouble) to control it and we're going to do
transition from IBM extended double-double ppc_fp128 to IEEE fp128 in
the future.
This patch adds type __ibm128 which always represents ppc_fp128 in IR,
as what GCC did for that type. Without this type in Clang, compilation
will fail if compiling against future version of libstdcxx (which uses
__ibm128 in headers).
Although all operations in backend for __ibm128 is done by software,
only PowerPC enables support for it.
There's something not implemented in this commit, which can be done in
future ones:
- Literal suffix for __ibm128 type. w/W is suitable as GCC documented.
- __attribute__((mode(IF))) should be for __ibm128.
- Complex __ibm128 type.
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93377
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Add the types for the RISC-V V extension builtins.
These types will be used by the RISC-V V intrinsics which require
types of the form <vscale x 1 x i64>(LMUL=1 element size=64) or
<vscale x 4 x i32>(LMUL=2 element size=32), etc. The vector_size
attribute does not work for us as it doesn't create a scalable
vector type. We want these types to be opaque and have no operators
defined for them. We want them to be sizeless. This makes them
similar to the ARM SVE builtin types. But we will have quite a bit
more types. This patch adds around 60. Later patches will add
another 230 or so types representing tuples of these types similar
to the x2/x3/x4 types in ARM SVE. But with extra complexity that
these types are combined with the LMUL concept that is unique to
RISCV.
For more background see this RFC
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-October/145850.html
Authored-by: Roger Ferrer Ibanez <roger.ferrer@bsc.es>
Co-Authored-by: Hsiangkai Wang <kai.wang@sifive.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92715
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This patch enables the Clang type __vector_pair and its associated LLVM
intrinsics even when MMA is disabled. With this patch, the type is now controlled
by the PPC paired-vector-memops option. The builtins and intrinsics will be
renamed to drop the mma prefix in another patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91819
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Define the __vector_pair and __vector_quad types that are used to manipulate
the new accumulator registers introduced by MMA on PowerPC. Because these two
types are specific to PowerPC, they are defined in a separate new file so it
will be easier to add other PowerPC specific types if we need to in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81508
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Summary:
This patch upstreams support for a new storage only bfloat16 C type.
This type is used to implement primitive support for bfloat16 data, in
line with the Bfloat16 extension of the Armv8.6-a architecture, as
detailed here:
https://community.arm.com/developer/ip-products/processors/b/processors-ip-blog/posts/arm-architecture-developments-armv8-6-a
The bfloat type, and its properties are specified in the Arm Architecture
Reference Manual:
https://developer.arm.com/docs/ddi0487/latest/arm-architecture-reference-manual-armv8-for-armv8-a-architecture-profile
In detail this patch:
- introduces an opaque, storage-only C-type __bf16, which introduces a new bfloat IR type.
This is part of a patch series, starting with command-line and Bfloat16
assembly support. The subsequent patches will upstream intrinsics
support for BFloat16, followed by Matrix Multiplication and the
remaining Virtualization features of the armv8.6-a architecture.
The following people contributed to this patch:
- Luke Cheeseman
- Momchil Velikov
- Alexandros Lamprineas
- Luke Geeson
- Simon Tatham
- Ties Stuij
Reviewers: SjoerdMeijer, rjmccall, rsmith, liutianle, RKSimon, craig.topper, jfb, LukeGeeson, fpetrogalli
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer
Subscribers: labrinea, majnemer, asmith, dexonsmith, kristof.beyls, arphaman, danielkiss, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76077
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Summary:
Reason: the option has an effect on preprocessing.
Also see thread: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2020-March/065014.html
Reviewers: chill, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: efriedma, danielkiss, cfe-commits, kristof.beyls
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77131
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Only honour format_arg attributes on -[NSBundle localizedStringForKey] when its
argument has a format specifier in it, otherwise its likely to just be a key to
fetch localized strings.
Fixes rdar://23622446
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27165
llvm-svn: 368878
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This patch adds the SVE built-in types defined by the Procedure Call
Standard for the Arm Architecture:
https://developer.arm.com/docs/100986/0000
It handles the types in all relevant places that deal with built-in types.
At the moment, some of these places bail out with an error, including:
(1) trying to generate LLVM IR for the types
(2) trying to generate debug info for the types
(3) trying to mangle the types using the Microsoft C++ ABI
(4) trying to @encode the types in Objective C
(1) and (2) are fixed by follow-on patches but (unlike this patch)
they deal mostly with target-specific LLVM details, so seemed like
a logically separate change. There is currently no spec for (3) and
(4), so reporting an error seems like the correct behaviour for now.
The intention is that the types will become sizeless types:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-June/062523.html
The main purpose of the sizeless type extension is to diagnose
impossible or dangerous uses of the types, such as any that would
require sizeof to have a meaningful defined value.
Until then, the patch sets the alignments of the types to the values
specified in the link above. It also sets the sizes of the types to
zero, which is chosen to be consistently wrong and shouldn't affect
correctly-written code (i.e. code that would compile even with the
sizeless type extension).
The patch adds the common subset of functionality needed to test the
sizeless type extension on the one hand and to provide SVE intrinsic
functions on the other. After this patch, the two pieces of work are
essentially independent.
The patch is based on one by Graham Hunter:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D59245
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62960
llvm-svn: 368413
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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.
llvm-svn: 352540
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to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
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The vector modifier is considered separate, so
don't treat it as a conversion specifier.
This is still not warning on some cases, like
using a type that isn't a valid vector element.
Fixes bug 39652
llvm-svn: 348084
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This avoids spurious warnings, but could use
a lot of work. For example the number of vector
elements is not verified, and the passed
value type is not checked.
Fixes bug 39486
llvm-svn: 346806
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Summary:
Documentation can be found at https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenCL/extensions/intel/cl_intel_device_side_avc_motion_estimation.txt
Patch by Kristina Bessonova
Reviewers: Anastasia, yaxunl, shafik
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Subscribers: arphaman, sidorovd, AlexeySotkin, krisb, bader, asavonic, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51484
llvm-svn: 346392
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cl_intel_device_side_avc_motion_estimation
This patch breaks Index/opencl-types.cl LIT test:
Script:
--
: 'RUN: at line 1'; stage1/bin/c-index-test -test-print-type llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl -cl-std=CL2.0 | stage1/bin/FileCheck llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl
--
Command Output (stderr):
--
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:3:26: warning: unsupported OpenCL extension 'cl_khr_fp16' - ignoring [-Wignored-pragmas]
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:4:26: warning: unsupported OpenCL extension 'cl_khr_fp64' - ignoring [-Wignored-pragmas]
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:8:9: error: use of type 'double' requires cl_khr_fp64 extension to be enabled
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:11:8: error: declaring variable of type 'half' is not allowed
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:15:3: error: use of type 'double' requires cl_khr_fp64 extension to be enabled
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:16:3: error: use of type 'double4' (vector of 4 'double' values) requires cl_khr_fp64 extension to be enabled
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:26:26: warning: unsupported OpenCL extension 'cl_khr_gl_msaa_sharing' - ignoring [-Wignored-pragmas]
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:35:44: error: use of type '__read_only image2d_msaa_t' requires cl_khr_gl_msaa_sharing extension to be enabled
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:36:49: error: use of type '__read_only image2d_array_msaa_t' requires cl_khr_gl_msaa_sharing extension to be enabled
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:37:49: error: use of type '__read_only image2d_msaa_depth_t' requires cl_khr_gl_msaa_sharing extension to be enabled
llvm/tools/clang/test/Index/opencl-types.cl:38:54: error: use of type '__read_only image2d_array_msaa_depth_t' requires cl_khr_gl_msaa_sharing extension to be enabled
llvm-svn: 346338
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Summary:
Documentation can be found at https://www.khronos.org/registry/OpenCL/extensions/intel/cl_intel_device_side_avc_motion_estimation.txt
Patch by Kristina Bessonova
Reviewers: Anastasia, yaxunl, shafik
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Subscribers: arphaman, sidorovd, AlexeySotkin, krisb, bader, asavonic, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51484
llvm-svn: 346326
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A mask type is a 1 to 8-byte string that follows the "mask." annotation
in the format string. This enables obfuscating data in the event the
provided privacy level isn't enabled.
rdar://problem/36756282
llvm-svn: 346211
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This is a stricter privacy annotation than "private", which will be used
for data that shouldn’t be logged to disk. For backward compatibility,
the "private" bit is set too.
rdar://problem/36755912
llvm-svn: 346210
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Also, add a new test case and fix an incorrect comment.
llvm-svn: 346209
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The size of an os_log buffer is known at any stage of compilation, so making it
a constant expression means that the common idiom of declaring a buffer for it
won't result in a VLA. That allows the compiler to skip saving and restoring
the stack pointer around such buffers.
This also moves the OSLog and other FormatString helpers from
libclangAnalysis to libclangAST to avoid a circular dependency.
llvm-svn: 345971
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