Added support for the options mabi=vec-extabi and mabi=vec-default which are analogous to qvecnvol and qnovecnvol when using XL on AIX.
The extended Altivec ABI on AIX is enabled using mabi=vec-extabi in clang and vec-extabi in llc.
Reviewed By: Xiangling_L, DiggerLin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89684
Recently HIP toolchain made a change to use clang instead of opt/llc to do compilation
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D81861). The intention is to make HIP toolchain canonical like
other toolchains.
However, this change introduced an unintentional change regarding backend fp fuse
option, which caused regressions in some HIP applications.
Basically before the change, HIP toolchain used clang to generate bitcode, then use
opt/llc to optimize bitcode and generate ISA. As such, the amdgpu backend takes
the default fp fuse mode which is 'Standard'. This mode respect contract flag of
fmul/fadd instructions and do not fuse fmul/fadd instructions without contract flag.
However, after the change, HIP toolchain now use clang to generate IR, do optimization,
and generate ISA as one process. Now amdgpu backend fp fuse option is determined
by -ffp-contract option, which is 'fast' by default. And this -ffp-contract=fast language option
is translated to 'Fast' fp fuse option in backend. Suddenly backend starts to fuse fmul/fadd
instructions without contract flag.
This causes wrong result for some device library functions, e.g. tan(-1e20), which should
return 0.8446, now returns -0.933. What is worse is that since backend with 'Fast' fp fuse
option does not respect contract flag, there is no way to use #pragma clang fp contract
directive to enforce fp contract requirements.
This patch fixes the regression by introducing a new value 'fast-honor-pragmas' for -ffp-contract
and use it for HIP by default. 'fast-honor-pragmas' is equivalent to 'fast' in frontend but
let the backend to use 'Standard' fp fuse option. 'fast-honor-pragmas' is useful since 'Fast'
fp fuse option in backend does not honor contract flag, it is of little use to HIP
applications since all code with #pragma STDC FP_CONTRACT or any IR from a
source compiled with -ffp-contract=on is broken.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90174
The dependency mechanism for C has been implemented, and we have rolled out
this to all internal users, didn't see crashy issues, we consider it is stable
enough.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89046
- The new option, -arcmt-action, is a simple enum based option.
- The driver is modified to translate the existing -ccc-acmt-* options accordingly
Depends on D83298
Reviewed By: Bigcheese
Original patch by Daniel Grumberg.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83315
As with precompiled headers, it's useful for indexers to be able to
continue through compiler errors in dependent modules.
Resolves rdar://69816264
Reviewed By: akyrtzi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91580
Add an option -munsafe-fp-atomics for AMDGPU target.
When enabled, clang adds function attribute "amdgpu-unsafe-fp-atomics"
to any functions for amdgpu target. This allows amdgpu backend to use
unsafe fp atomic instructions in these functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91546
This enables automatically parsing and generating CC1 arguments for options where two flags control the same field, e.g. -fexperimental-new-pass-manager and -fno-experimental new pass manager.
Reviewed By: Bigcheese, dexonsmith
Original patch by Daniel Grumberg.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83071
See discussion in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45073 / https://reviews.llvm.org/D66324#2334485
the implementation is known-broken for certain inputs,
the bugreport was up for a significant amount of timer,
and there has been no activity to address it.
Therefore, just completely rip out all of misexpect handling.
I suspect, fixing it requires redesigning the internals of MD_misexpect.
Should anyone commit to fixing the implementation problem,
starting from clean slate may be better anyways.
This reverts commit 7bdad08429411e7d0ecd58cd696b1efe3cff309e,
and some of it's follow-ups, that don't stand on their own.
Merge existing marhsalling info kinds and add some primitives to
express flag options that contribute to a bitfield.
Depends on D82574
Original patch by Daniel Grumberg.
Reviewed By: Bigcheese
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82860
As of D80952 we are disabling strict floating point on all hosts except
those that are explicitly listed as supported. Use of strict floating point
on other hosts requires use of the -fexperimental-strict-floating-point
flag. This is to avoid bugs like "https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45329"
(which has an incorrect link in the previous review).
In the review for D80952 I was asked to mark the -fexperimental option as
a MarshallingInfoFlag. This patch does exactly that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88987
This reverts commit 09248a5d25bb1c9f357247fa3da8fbe4470e9c67.
Some builds are broken. I suspect a `static constexpr` in a class missing a
definition out of class (required pre-c++17).
Merge existing marhsalling info kinds and add some primitives to
express flag options that contribute to a bitfield.
Depends on D82574
Reviewed By: Bigcheese
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82860
This ports a number of OpenCL and fast-math flags for floating point
over to the new marshalling infrastructure.
As part of this, `Opt{In,Out}FFlag` were enhanced to allow other flags to
imply them, via `DefaultAnyOf<>`. For example:
```
defm signed_zeros : OptOutFFlag<"signed-zeros", ...,
"LangOpts->NoSignedZero",
DefaultAnyOf<[cl_no_signed_zeros, menable_unsafe_fp_math]>>;
```
defines `-fsigned-zeros` (`false`) and `-fno-signed-zeros` (`true`)
linked to the keypath `LangOpts->NoSignedZero`, defaulting to `false`,
but set to `true` implicitly if one of `-cl-no-signed-zeros` or
`-menable-unsafe-fp-math` is on.
Note that the initial patch was written Daniel Grumberg.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82756
The behavior is controlled by the `-fprebuilt-implicit-modules` option, and
allows searching for implicit modules in the prebuilt module cache paths.
The current command-line options for prebuilt modules do not allow to easily
maintain and use multiple versions of modules. Both the producer and users of
prebuilt modules are required to know the relationships between compilation
options and module file paths. Using a particular version of a prebuilt module
requires passing a particular option on the command line (e.g.
`-fmodule-file=[<name>=]<file>` or `-fprebuilt-module-path=<directory>`).
However the compiler already knows how to distinguish and automatically locate
implicit modules. Hence this proposal to introduce the
`-fprebuilt-implicit-modules` option. When set, it enables searching for
implicit modules in the prebuilt module paths (specified via
`-fprebuilt-module-path`). To not modify existing behavior, this search takes
place after the standard search for prebuilt modules. If not
Here is a workflow illustrating how both the producer and consumer of prebuilt
modules would need to know what versions of prebuilt modules are available and
where they are located.
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules_v1 <config 1 options>
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules_v2 <config 2 options>
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules_v3 <config 3 options>
clang -cc1 -x c use.c -fmodules fmodule-map-file=modulemap -fprebuilt-module-path=prebuilt_modules_v1 <config 1 options>
clang -cc1 -x c use.c -fmodules fmodule-map-file=modulemap <non-prebuilt config options>
With prebuilt implicit modules, the producer can generate prebuilt modules as
usual, all in the same output directory. The same mechanisms as for implicit
modules take care of incorporating hashes in the path to distinguish between
module versions.
Note that we do not specify the output module filename, so `-o` implicit modules are generated in the cache path `prebuilt_modules`.
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules <config 1 options>
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules <config 2 options>
clang -cc1 -x c modulemap -fmodules -emit-module -fmodule-name=foo -fmodules-cache-path=prebuilt_modules <config 3 options>
The user can now simply enable prebuilt implicit modules and point to the
prebuilt modules cache. No need to "parse" command-line options to decide
what prebuilt modules (paths) to use.
clang -cc1 -x c use.c -fmodules fmodule-map-file=modulemap -fprebuilt-module-path=prebuilt_modules -fprebuilt-implicit-modules <config 1 options>
clang -cc1 -x c use.c -fmodules fmodule-map-file=modulemap -fprebuilt-module-path=prebuilt_modules -fprebuilt-implicit-modules <non-prebuilt config options>
This is for example particularly useful in a use-case where compilation is
expensive, and the configurations expected to be used are predictable, but not
controlled by the producer of prebuilt modules. Modules for the set of
predictable configurations can be prebuilt, and using them does not require
"parsing" the configuration (command-line options).
Reviewed By: Bigcheese
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68997
415f7ee883 had LIT test failures on any build where the clang executable
was not called "clang". I have adjusted the LIT CHECKs to remove the
binary name to fix this.
Original commit message:
For PlayStation we offer source code compatibility with
Microsoft's dllimport/export annotations; however, our file
format is based on ELF.
To support this we translate from DLL storage class to ELF
visibility at the end of codegen in Clang.
Other toolchains have used similar strategies (e.g. see the
documentation for this ARM toolchain:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/dui0530/i/migrating-from-rvct-v3-1-to-rvct-v4-0/changes-to-symbol-visibility-between-rvct-v3-1-and-rvct-v4-0)
This patch adds the ability to perform this translation. Options
are provided to support customizing the mapping behaviour.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89970
Similar to -fprofile-generate=, add -fmemory-profile= which takes a
directory path. This is passed down to LLVM via a new module flag
metadata. LLVM in turn provides this name to the runtime via the new
__memprof_profile_filename variable.
Additionally, always pass a default filename (in $cwd if a directory
name is not specified vi the = form of the option). This is also
consistent with the behavior of the PGO instrumentation. Since the
memory profiles will generally be fairly large, it doesn't make sense to
dump them to stderr. Also, importantly, the memory profiles will
eventually be dumped in a compact binary format, which is another reason
why it does not make sense to send these to stderr by default.
Change the existing memprof tests to specify log_path=stderr when that
was being relied on.
Depends on D89086.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89087
When passing -lto-embed-bitcode=post-merge-pre-opt, we were getting
empty .llvmcmd sections. It turns out that is because the
CodeGenOptions::CmdArgs field was only populated when clang saw
-fembed-bitcode={all|marker}.
This patch always populates the CodeGenOptions::CmdArgs. The overhead
of carrying through in memory in all cases is likely negligible in
the grand schema of things, and it keeps the using code simple.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90366
* Make cc1 and cc1as --compress-debug-sections an alias for --compress-debug-sections=zlib
* Make -gz an alias for -gz=zlib
The new behavior is consistent with GCC when binutils>=2.26 is detected:
-gz is translated to --compress-debug-sections=zlib instead of --compress-debug-sections.
The name is unfortunate because it is similar to the driver option -ftest-coverage.
It turns out aside from one occurrence in a test, this option is not used.
Recently commit D78699 (commit 26cfb6e562f1), fixed clang's behavior with respect
to passing a union type through a register to correctly follow the ABI. However,
this is an ABI breaking change with earlier versions of the clang compiler, so we
should add an -fclang-abi-compat option to address this. Additionally, the PS4 ABI
requires the older behavior, so that is added as well.
This change adds a Ver11 value to the ClangABI enum that when it is set (or the
target is the PS4 triple), we skip the ABI fix introduced in D78699.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89747
This recommits 7f1f89ec8d9944559042bb6d3b1132eabe3409de and
40df06cdafc010002fc9cfe1dda73d689b7d27a6 with bug fixes for
memory sanitizer failure and Tensile build failure.
This broke Chromium's PGO build, it seems because hot-cold-splitting got turned
on unintentionally. See comment on the code review for repro etc.
> This patch adds -f[no-]split-cold-code CC1 options to clang. This allows
> the splitting pass to be toggled on/off. The current method of passing
> `-mllvm -hot-cold-split=true` to clang isn't ideal as it may not compose
> correctly (say, with `-O0` or `-Oz`).
>
> To implement the -fsplit-cold-code option, an attribute is applied to
> functions to indicate that they may be considered for splitting. This
> removes some complexity from the old/new PM pipeline builders, and
> behaves as expected when LTO is enabled.
>
> Co-authored by: Saleem Abdulrasool <compnerd@compnerd.org>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57265
> Reviewed By: Aditya Kumar, Vedant Kumar
> Reviewers: Teresa Johnson, Aditya Kumar, Fedor Sergeev, Philip Pfaffe, Vedant Kumar
This reverts commit 273c299d5d649a0222fbde03c9a41e41913751b4.
This patch adds -f[no-]split-cold-code CC1 options to clang. This allows
the splitting pass to be toggled on/off. The current method of passing
`-mllvm -hot-cold-split=true` to clang isn't ideal as it may not compose
correctly (say, with `-O0` or `-Oz`).
To implement the -fsplit-cold-code option, an attribute is applied to
functions to indicate that they may be considered for splitting. This
removes some complexity from the old/new PM pipeline builders, and
behaves as expected when LTO is enabled.
Co-authored by: Saleem Abdulrasool <compnerd@compnerd.org>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57265
Reviewed By: Aditya Kumar, Vedant Kumar
Reviewers: Teresa Johnson, Aditya Kumar, Fedor Sergeev, Philip Pfaffe, Vedant Kumar
This reverts commits 683b308c07bf827255fe1403056413f790e03729 and
8487bfd4e9ae186f9f588ef989d27a96cc2438c9.
We will go for a more restricted approach that does not give freedom to
everyone to change ABIs on whichever platform.
See the discussion on https://reviews.llvm.org/D85802.
This implements the flag proposed in RFC http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2020-August/066437.html.
The goal is to add a way to override the default target C++ ABI through
a compiler flag. This makes it easier to test and transition between different
C++ ABIs through compile flags rather than build flags.
In this patch:
- Store `-fc++-abi=` in a LangOpt. This isn't stored in a
CodeGenOpt because there are instances outside of codegen where Clang
needs to know what the ABI is (particularly through
ASTContext::createCXXABI), and we should be able to override the
target default if the flag is provided at that point.
- Expose the existing ABIs in TargetCXXABI as values that can be passed
through this flag.
- Create a .def file for these ABIs to make it easier to check flag
values.
- Add an error for diagnosing bad ABI flag values.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85802
With this change, we're more or less ready to allow users outside
of the Static Analyzer to take advantage of path diagnostic consumers
for emitting their warnings in different formats.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67422
This patch resumes the work of D16586.
According to the AAPCS, volatile bit-fields should
be accessed using containers of the widht of their
declarative type. In such case:
```
struct S1 {
short a : 1;
}
```
should be accessed using load and stores of the width
(sizeof(short)), where now the compiler does only load
the minimum required width (char in this case).
However, as discussed in D16586,
that could overwrite non-volatile bit-fields, which
conflicted with C and C++ object models by creating
data race conditions that are not part of the bit-field,
e.g.
```
struct S2 {
short a;
int b : 16;
}
```
Accessing `S2.b` would also access `S2.a`.
The AAPCS Release 2020Q2
(https://documentation-service.arm.com/static/5efb7fbedbdee951c1ccf186?token=)
section 8.1 Data Types, page 36, "Volatile bit-fields -
preserving number and width of container accesses" has been
updated to avoid conflict with the C++ Memory Model.
Now it reads in the note:
```
This ABI does not place any restrictions on the access widths of bit-fields where the container
overlaps with a non-bit-field member or where the container overlaps with any zero length bit-field
placed between two other bit-fields. This is because the C/C++ memory model defines these as being
separate memory locations, which can be accessed by two threads simultaneously. For this reason,
compilers must be permitted to use a narrower memory access width (including splitting the access into
multiple instructions) to avoid writing to a different memory location. For example, in
struct S { int a:24; char b; }; a write to a must not also write to the location occupied by b, this requires at least two
memory accesses in all current Arm architectures. In the same way, in struct S { int a:24; int:0; int b:8; };,
writes to a or b must not overwrite each other.
```
I've updated the patch D16586 to follow such behavior by verifying that we
only change volatile bit-field access when:
- it won't overlap with any other non-bit-field member
- we only access memory inside the bounds of the record
- avoid overlapping zero-length bit-fields.
Regarding the number of memory accesses, that should be preserved, that will
be implemented by D67399.
Reviewed By: ostannard
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72932
Extended -cl-std/std flag with CL3.0 and added predefined version macros.
Patch by Anton Zabaznov (azabaznov)!
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88300
SUMMARY:
In IBM compiler xlclang , there is an option -fnovisibility which suppresses visibility. For more details see: https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/SSGH3R_16.1.0/com.ibm.xlcpp161.aix.doc/compiler_ref/opt_visibility.html.
We need to add the option -mignore-xcoff-visibility for compatibility with the IBM AIX OS (as the option is enabled by default in AIX). With this option llvm does not emit any visibility attribute to ASM or XCOFF object file.
The option only work on the AIX OS, for other non-AIX OS using the option will report an unsupported options error.
In AIX OS:
1.1 the option -mignore-xcoff-visibility is enabled by default , if there is not -fvisibility=* and -mignore-xcoff-visibility explicitly in the clang command .
1.2 if there is -fvisibility=* explicitly but not -mignore-xcoff-visibility explicitly in the clang command. it will generate visibility attributes.
1.3 if there are both -fvisibility=* and -mignore-xcoff-visibility explicitly in the clang command. The option "-mignore-xcoff-visibility" wins , it do not emit the visibility attribute.
The option -mignore-xcoff-visibility has no effect on visibility attribute when compile with -emit-llvm option to generated LLVM IR.
Reviewer: daltenty,Jason Liu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87451
Summary:
This patch adds an error to Clang that detects if OpenMP offloading is used
between two architectures with incompatible pointer sizes. This ensures that
the data mapping can be done correctly and solves an issue in code generation
generating the wrong size pointer.
Reviewer: jdoerfert
Subscribers: cfe-commits delcypher guansong llvm-commits sstefan1 yaxunl
Tags: #OpenMP #Clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88594
Summary:
This patch adds an error to Clang that detects if OpenMP offloading is
used between two architectures with incompatible pointer sizes. This
ensures that the data mapping can be done correctly and solves an issue
in code generation generating the wrong size pointer. This patch adds a
new lit substitution, %omp_powerpc_triple that, if the system is 32-bit or
64-bit, sets the powerpc triple accordingly. This was required to fix
some OpenMP tests that automatically populated the target architecture.
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Subscribers: cfe-commits guansong sstefan1 yaxunl delcypher
Tags: OpenMP clang LLVM
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88594
Failing tests on Arm due to the tests automatically populating
incomatible pointer width architectures. Reverting until the tests are
updated. Failing tests:
OpenMP/distribute_parallel_for_num_threads_codegen.cpp
OpenMP/distribute_parallel_for_if_codegen.cpp
OpenMP/distribute_parallel_for_simd_if_codegen.cpp
OpenMP/distribute_parallel_for_simd_num_threads_codegen.cpp
OpenMP/target_teams_distribute_parallel_for_if_codegen.cpp
OpenMP/target_teams_distribute_parallel_for_simd_if_codegen.cpp
OpenMP/teams_distribute_parallel_for_if_codegen.cpp
OpenMP/teams_distribute_parallel_for_simd_if_codegen.cpp
This reverts commit 9d2378b59150f6f1cb5c9cf42ea06b0bb57029a1.