1441 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jonas Devlieghere
888673b6e3
Revert "[clang] Implement ElaboratedType sugaring for types written bare"
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.
2022-07-14 21:17:48 -07:00
Matheus Izvekov
7c51f02eff
[clang] Implement ElaboratedType sugaring for types written bare
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
2022-07-15 04:16:55 +02:00
Adam Czachorowski
cab3cfd013 [clang] Do not crash on "requires" after a fatal error occurred.
The code would assume that SubstExpr() cannot fail on concept
specialization. This is incorret - we give up on some things after fatal
error occurred, since there's no value in doing futher work that the
user will not see anyway. In this case, this lead to crash.

The fatal error is simulated in tests with -ferror-limit=1, but this
could happen in other cases too.

Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/55401

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129499
2022-07-14 15:45:32 +02:00
Jonas Devlieghere
3968936b92
Revert "[clang] Implement ElaboratedType sugaring for types written bare"
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/
2022-07-13 09:20:30 -07:00
Matheus Izvekov
bdc6974f92
[clang] Implement ElaboratedType sugaring for types written bare
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
2022-07-13 02:10:09 +02:00
Roy Jacobson
0b89d1d59f [Sema] Add deprecation warnings for some compiler provided __has_* type traits
Some compiler provided type traits like __has_trivial_constructor have been documented
as deprecated for quite some time.
Still, some people apparently still use them, even though mixing them with concepts
and with deleted functions leads to weird results. There's also disagreement about some
edge cases between GCC (which Clang claims to follow) and MSVC.

This patch adds deprecation warnings for the usage of those builtins, except for __has_trivial_destructor
which doesn't have a GCC alternative.

I made the warning on by default, so I had to silence it for some tests but it's not too many.

Some (decade old) history of issues with those builtins:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/18187
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/18559
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/22161
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/33063

The abseil usage of them that triggered me to add this warning:
https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/issues/1201

Weird interaction of those builtins with C++20's conditionally trivial special member functions:
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=106085

Reviewed By: #clang-language-wg, aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129170
2022-07-12 19:24:17 +03:00
Serge Pavlov
f7819ce166 [FPEnv] Allow CompoundStmt to keep FP options
This is a recommit of b822efc7404bf09ccfdc1ab7657475026966c3b2,
reverted in dc34d8df4c48b3a8f474360970cae8a58e6c84f0. The commit caused
fails because the test ast-print-fp-pragmas.c did not specify particular
target, and it failed on targets which do not support constrained
intrinsics. The original commit message is below.

AST does not have special nodes for pragmas. Instead a pragma modifies
some state variables of Sema, which in turn results in modified
attributes of AST nodes. This technique applies to floating point
operations as well. Every AST node that can depend on FP options keeps
current set of them.

This technique works well for options like exception behavior or fast
math options. They represent instructions to the compiler how to modify
code generation for the affected nodes. However treatment of FP control
modes has problems with this technique. Modifying FP control mode
(like rounding direction) usually requires operations on hardware, like
writing to control registers. It must be done prior to the first
operation that depends on the control mode. In particular, such
operations are required for implementation of `pragma STDC FENV_ROUND`,
compiler should set up necessary rounding direction at the beginning of
compound statement where the pragma occurs. As there is no representation
for pragmas in AST, the code generation becomes a complicated task in
this case.

To solve this issue FP options are kept inside CompoundStmt. Unlike to FP
options in expressions, these does not affect any operation on FP values,
but only inform the codegen about the FP options that act in the body of
the statement. As all pragmas that modify FP environment may occurs only
at the start of compound statement or at global level, such solution
works for all relevant pragmas. The options are kept as a difference
from the options in the enclosing compound statement or default options,
it helps codegen to set only changed control modes.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123952
2022-07-03 17:06:26 +07:00
Serge Pavlov
dc34d8df4c Revert "[FPEnv] Allow CompoundStmt to keep FP options"
On some buildbots test `ast-print-fp-pragmas.c` fails, need to investigate it.

This reverts commit 0401fd12d4aa0553347fe34d666fb236d8719173.
This reverts commit b822efc7404bf09ccfdc1ab7657475026966c3b2.
2022-07-01 15:42:39 +07:00
Serge Pavlov
b822efc740 [FPEnv] Allow CompoundStmt to keep FP options
AST does not have special nodes for pragmas. Instead a pragma modifies
some state variables of Sema, which in turn results in modified
attributes of AST nodes. This technique applies to floating point
operations as well. Every AST node that can depend on FP options keeps
current set of them.

This technique works well for options like exception behavior or fast
math options. They represent instructions to the compiler how to modify
code generation for the affected nodes. However treatment of FP control
modes has problems with this technique. Modifying FP control mode
(like rounding direction) usually requires operations on hardware, like
writing to control registers. It must be done prior to the first
operation that depends on the control mode. In particular, such
operations are required for implementation of `pragma STDC FENV_ROUND`,
compiler should set up necessary rounding direction at the beginning of
compound statement where the pragma occurs. As there is no representation
for pragmas in AST, the code generation becomes a complicated task in
this case.

To solve this issue FP options are kept inside CompoundStmt. Unlike to FP
options in expressions, these does not affect any operation on FP values,
but only inform the codegen about the FP options that act in the body of
the statement. As all pragmas that modify FP environment may occurs only
at the start of compound statement or at global level, such solution
works for all relevant pragmas. The options are kept as a difference
from the options in the enclosing compound statement or default options,
it helps codegen to set only changed control modes.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123952
2022-07-01 14:32:33 +07:00
Corentin Jabot
a9a60f20e6 [Clang] Rename StringLiteral::isAscii() => isOrdinary() [NFC]
"Ascii" StringLiteral instances are actually narrow strings
that are UTF-8 encoded and do not have an encoding prefix.
(UTF8 StringLiteral are also UTF-8 encoded strings, but with
the u8 prefix.

To avoid possible confusion both with actuall ASCII strings,
and with future works extending the set of literal encodings
supported by clang, this rename StringLiteral::isAscii() to
isOrdinary(), matching C++ standard terminology.

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128762
2022-06-29 18:28:51 +02:00
Kazu Hirata
97afce08cb [clang] Don't use Optional::hasValue (NFC)
This patch replaces Optional::hasValue with the implicit cast to bool
in conditionals only.
2022-06-25 22:26:24 -07:00
Kazu Hirata
3b7c3a654c Revert "Don't use Optional::hasValue (NFC)"
This reverts commit aa8feeefd3ac6c78ee8f67bf033976fc7d68bc6d.
2022-06-25 11:56:50 -07:00
Kazu Hirata
aa8feeefd3 Don't use Optional::hasValue (NFC) 2022-06-25 11:55:57 -07:00
Kazu Hirata
ca4af13e48 [clang] Don't use Optional::getValue (NFC) 2022-06-20 22:59:26 -07:00
Kazu Hirata
0916d96d12 Don't use Optional::hasValue (NFC) 2022-06-20 20:17:57 -07:00
Kazu Hirata
06decd0b41 [clang] Use value_or instead of getValueOr (NFC) 2022-06-18 23:21:34 -07:00
Kazu Hirata
2e603c67c2 [clang] Construct SmallVector with iterator ranges (NFC) 2022-06-10 22:45:26 -07:00
Matheus Izvekov
43ef17cac1
[clang] P2266: apply move elision rules on throw expr nested in function prototypes
Our rules to determine if the throw expression are within the variable
scope were giving a false negative result in case the throw expression
would appear within a decltype in a nested function declaration.

Per P2266R3, the relevant rule is: [expr.prim.id.unqual]/2
```
    if the id-expression (possibly parenthesized) is the operand of a throw-expression, and names an implicitly movable entity that belongs to a scope that does not contain the compound-statement of the innermost lambda-expression, try-block , or function-try-block (if any) whose compound-statement or ctor-initializer encloses the throw-expression.
```

This fixes PR54341.

Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>

Reviewed By: rsmith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127075
2022-06-07 00:08:24 +02:00
David Truby
8bc29d1427 [clang][AArch64][SVE] Implement conditional operator for SVE vectors
This patch adds support for the conditional (ternary) operator on SVE
scalable vector types in C++, matching the behaviour for NEON vector
types. Like the conditional operator for NEON types, this is disabled in
C mode.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124091
2022-05-03 13:10:32 +00:00
Devin Jeanpierre
f2b31f06b7 re-roll-forward "[clang] Mark trivial_abi types as "trivially relocatable"".""
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
2022-04-28 14:53:59 +02:00
Richard Smith
72315d02c4 Treat std::move, forward, etc. as builtins.
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.
2022-04-20 17:58:31 -07:00
David Tenty
98d911e01f Revert "Treat std::move, forward, etc. as builtins."
This reverts commit b27430f9f46b88bcd54d992debc8d72e131e1bd0 as the
    parent https://reviews.llvm.org/D123345 breaks the AIX CI:

    https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/214/builds/819
2022-04-20 19:14:37 -04:00
Fangrui Song
c79e6007ed Revert D119136 "[clang] Implement Change scope of lambda trailing-return-type" and its follow-up
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.
2022-04-20 10:57:12 -07:00
Yaxun (Sam) Liu
800f26386c [CUDA][HIP] Fix delete operator for -fopenmp
When new operator is called in OpenMP parallel region,
delete operator is resolved and checked. Due to similar
issue fixed by https://reviews.llvm.org/D121765,
when resolving delete operator, the caller was not
determined correctly, which results in error as
shown in https://godbolt.org/z/jKhd8qKos.

This patch fixes the issue in a similar way as
https://reviews.llvm.org/D121765

Reviewed by: Artem Belevich

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123976
2022-04-19 14:28:03 -04:00
Richard Smith
b27430f9f4 Treat std::move, forward, etc. as builtins.
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, and
  64c045e25b8471bbb572bd29159c294a82a86a25
which were reverted in
  e75d8b70370435b0ad10388afba0df45fcf9bfcc
due to a crasher bug where CodeGen would emit a builtin glvalue as an
rvalue if it constant-folds.

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123345
2022-04-17 13:26:16 -07:00
Vitaly Buka
e75d8b7037 Revert "Treat std::move, forward, and move_if_noexcept as builtins."
Revert "Extend support for std::move etc to also cover std::as_const and"
Revert "Update test to handle opaque pointers flag flip."

It crashes on libcxx tests https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/85/builds/8174

This reverts commit fc3090109643af8d2da9822d0f99c84742b9c877.
This reverts commit a571f82a50416b767fd3cce0fb5027bb5dfec58c.
This reverts commit 64c045e25b8471bbb572bd29159c294a82a86a25.
2022-04-16 00:27:51 -07:00
Richard Smith
64c045e25b Treat std::move, forward, and move_if_noexcept as builtins.
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.

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123345
2022-04-15 14:09:45 -07:00
Corentin Jabot
04000c2f92 [clang] Implement Change scope of lambda trailing-return-type
Implement P2036R3.

Captured variables by copy (explicitely or not), are deduced
correctly at the point we know whether the lambda is mutable,
and ill-formed before that.

Up until now, the entire lambda declaration up to the start of the body would be parsed in the parent scope, such that capture would not be available to look up.

The scoping is changed to have an outer lambda scope, followed by the lambda prototype and body.

The lambda scope is necessary because there may be a template scope between the start of the lambda (to which we want to attach the captured variable) and the prototype scope.

We also need to introduce a declaration context to attach the captured variable to (and several parts of clang assume captures are handled from the call operator context), before we know the type of the call operator.

The order of operations is as follow:

* Parse the init capture in the lambda's parent scope

* Introduce a lambda scope

* Create the lambda class and call operator

* Add the init captures to the call operator context and the lambda scope. But the variables are not capured yet (because we don't know their type).
Instead, explicit  captures are stored in a temporary map that conserves the order of capture (for the purpose of having a stable order in the ast dumps).

* A flag is set on LambdaScopeInfo to indicate that we have not yet injected the captures.

* The parameters are parsed (in the parent context, as lambda mangling recurses in the parent context, we couldn't mangle a lambda that is attached to the context of a lambda whose type is not yet known).

* The lambda qualifiers are parsed, at this point We can switch (for the second time) inside the lambda context, unset the flag indicating that we have not parsed the lambda qualifiers,
record the lambda is mutable and capture the explicit variables.

* We can parse the rest of the lambda type, transform the lambda and call operator's types and also transform the call operator to a template function decl where necessary.

At this point, both captures and parameters can be injected in the body's scope. When trying to capture an implicit variable, if we are before the qualifiers of a lambda, we need to remember that the variables are still in the parent's context (rather than in the call operator's).

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, #clang-language-wg, ChuanqiXu

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119136
2022-04-15 16:50:52 +02:00
Richard Smith
836e610d93 Revert "[clang] Implement Change scope of lambda trailing-return-type"
This reverts commit c729d5be781a8e80137c11ab28aa14d9ace148db.

This change breaks thread safety annotations on lambdas.
2022-04-13 21:34:08 -07:00
Corentin Jabot
c729d5be78 [clang] Implement Change scope of lambda trailing-return-type
Implement P2036R3.

Captured variables by copy (explicitely or not), are deduced
correctly at the point we know whether the lambda is mutable,
and ill-formed before that.

Up until now, the entire lambda declaration up to the start
of the body would  be parsed in the parent scope, such that
captures would not be available to look up.

The scoping is changed to have an outer lambda scope,
followed by the lambda prototype and body.

The lambda scope is necessary because there may be a template scope
between the start of the lambda (to which we want to attach
the captured variable) and the prototype scope.

We also need to introduce a declaration context to attach the captured
variable to (and several parts of clang assume captures are handled from
the call operator context), before we know the type of the call operator.

The order of operations is as follow:

* Parse the init capture in the lambda's parent scope
* Introduce a lambda scope
* Create the lambda class and call operator
* Add the init captures to the call operator context and the lambda scope.
  But the variables are not capured yet (because we don't know their type).
  Instead, explicit  captures are stored in a temporary map that
  conserves the order of capture (for the purpose of having a stable order in the ast dumps).

* A flag is set on LambdaScopeInfo to indicate that we have not yet injected the captures.

* The parameters are parsed (in the parent context, as lambda mangling recurses in the parent context,
  we couldn't mangle a lambda that is attached to the context of a lambda whose type is not yet known).

* The lambda qualifiers are parsed, at this point,
  we can switch (for the second time) inside the lambda context,
  unset the flag indicating that we have not parsed the lambda qualifiers,
  record the lambda is mutable and capture the explicit variables.

* We can parse the rest of the lambda type, transform the lambda and call operator's types and also
  transform the call operator to a template function decl where necessary.

At this point, both captures and parameters can be injected in the body's scope.
When trying to capture an implicit variable, if we are before the qualifiers of a lambda,
we need to remember that the variables are still in the parent's context (rather than in the call operator's).

This is a recommit of adff142dc2 after a fix in d8d793f29b4

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, #clang-language-wg, ChuanqiXu

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119136
2022-04-13 23:07:39 +02:00
Mehdi Amini
26eec9e9db Revert "[clang] Implement Change scope of lambda trailing-return-type"
This reverts commit adff142dc253d65b6560e420bba6b858d88d4a98.
This broke clang bootstrap: it made existing C++ code in LLVM invalid:

llvm/include/llvm/CodeGen/LiveInterval.h:630:53: error: captured variable 'Idx' cannot appear here
              [=](std::remove_reference_t<decltype(*Idx)> V,
                                                    ^
2022-04-13 19:35:13 +00:00
Corentin Jabot
adff142dc2 [clang] Implement Change scope of lambda trailing-return-type
Implement P2036R3.

Captured variables by copy (explicitely or not), are deduced
correctly at the point we know whether the lambda is mutable,
and ill-formed before that.

Up until now, the entire lambda declaration up to the start of the body would be parsed in the parent scope, such that capture would not be available to look up.

The scoping is changed to have an outer lambda scope, followed by the lambda prototype and body.

The lambda scope is necessary because there may be a template scope between the start of the lambda (to which we want to attach the captured variable) and the prototype scope.

We also need to introduce a declaration context to attach the captured variable to (and several parts of clang assume captures are handled from the call operator context), before we know the type of the call operator.

The order of operations is as follow:

* Parse the init capture in the lambda's parent scope

* Introduce a lambda scope

* Create the lambda class and call operator

* Add the init captures to the call operator context and the lambda scope. But the variables are not capured yet (because we don't know their type).
Instead, explicit  captures are stored in a temporary map that conserves the order of capture (for the purpose of having a stable order in the ast dumps).

* A flag is set on LambdaScopeInfo to indicate that we have not yet injected the captures.

* The parameters are parsed (in the parent context, as lambda mangling recurses in the parent context, we couldn't mangle a lambda that is attached to the context of a lambda whose type is not yet known).

* The lambda qualifiers are parsed, at this point We can switch (for the second time) inside the lambda context, unset the flag indicating that we have not parsed the lambda qualifiers,
record the lambda is mutable and capture the explicit variables.

* We can parse the rest of the lambda type, transform the lambda and call operator's types and also transform the call operator to a template function decl where necessary.

At this point, both captures and parameters can be injected in the body's scope. When trying to capture an implicit variable, if we are before the qualifiers of a lambda, we need to remember that the variables are still in the parent's context (rather than in the call operator's).

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, #clang-language-wg, ChuanqiXu

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119136
2022-04-13 20:00:03 +02:00
Dávid Bolvanský
2af845a651 Relands "[Clang] -Wunused-but-set-variable warning - handle also pre/post unary operators" 2022-03-24 10:34:44 +01:00
Dávid Bolvanský
5b6b840531 Revert "[Clang] -Wunused-but-set-variable warning - handle also pre/post unary operators"
This reverts commit 460fc440ad8d41ca2e3882987512989b1c188fbe.
2022-03-24 07:44:51 +01:00
Dávid Bolvanský
460fc440ad [Clang] -Wunused-but-set-variable warning - handle also pre/post unary operators
Clang fails to diagnose:
```
void test() {
    int j = 0;
    for (int i = 0; i < 1000; i++)
            j++;
    return;
}
```

Reason: Missing support for UnaryOperator.

We should not warn with volatile variables... so add check for it.

Reviewed By: efriedma

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122271
2022-03-23 22:05:36 +01:00
Zahira Ammarguellat
b0bc93da92 Revert "[clang] roll-forward "[clang] Mark trivial_abi types as "trivially relocatable""."
This reverts commit 56d46b36fc231a0beb518602503035bba92043e0.

The LIT test SemaCXX/attr-trivial-abi.cpp is failing with 32bit build on
Windows. All the lines with the ifdef WIN32 are asserting but they are
not expected to. It looks like the LIT test was not tested on a	32bit
build of the compiler.
2022-03-23 04:54:00 -07:00
Yonghong Song
bdf69f63df [Clang] Fix an unused-but-set-variable warning with volatile variable
For the following code,
    void test() {
        volatile int j = 0;
        for (int i = 0; i < 1000; i++)
                j += 1;
        return;
    }
If compiled with
    clang -g -Wall -Werror -S -emit-llvm test.c
we will see the following error:
    test.c:2:6: error: variable 'j' set but not used [-Werror,-Wunused-but-set-variable]
            volatile int j = 0;
                         ^

This is not quite right since 'j' is indeed used due to '+=' operator.
gcc doesn't emit error either in this case.
Also if we change 'j += 1' to 'j++', the warning will disappear
with latest clang.

Note that clang will issue the warning if the volatile declaration
involves only simple assignment (var = ...).

To fix the issue, in function MaybeDecrementCount(), if the
operator is a compound assignment (i.e., +=, -=, etc.) and the
variable is volatile, the count for RefsMinusAssignments will be
decremented, similar to 'j++' case.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121715
2022-03-21 14:59:03 -07:00
Simon Moll
0aab344104 [Clang] Allow "ext_vector_type" applied to Booleans
This is the `ext_vector_type` alternative to D81083.

This patch extends Clang to allow 'bool' as a valid vector element type
(attribute ext_vector_type) in C/C++.

This is intended as the canonical type for SIMD masks and facilitates
clean vector intrinsic declarations.  Vectors of i1 are supported on IR
level and below down to many SIMD ISAs, such as AVX512, ARM SVE (fixed
vector length) and the VE target (NEC SX-Aurora TSUBASA).

The RFC on cfe-dev: https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2020-May/065434.html

Reviewed By: erichkeane

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88905
2022-03-16 11:10:32 +01:00
Eli Friedman
27a5749625 [Sema][Windows] Don't special-case void* in __unaligned conversions.
As far as I can tell, MSVC allows the relevant conversions for all
pointer types. Found compiling a Windows SDK header.

I've verified that the updated errors in MicrosoftExtensions.cpp match
the ones that MSVC actually emits, except for the one with a FIXME. (Not
sure why this wasn't done for the patch that added the tests.)

To make up for the missing error, add a warning that triggers on
conversions that drop the __unaligned qualfier.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120936
2022-03-10 14:49:16 -08:00
Zhihao Yuan
136b293129
[c++2b] Implement P0849R8 auto(x)
https://wg21.link/p0849

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, erichkeane

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113393
2022-02-28 19:21:08 -06:00
Devin Jeanpierre
56d46b36fc [clang] roll-forward "[clang] Mark trivial_abi types as "trivially relocatable"".
This reverts commit 852afed5e0200b70047c28ccf4424a17089d17b0.

Changes since D114732:

On PS4, we reverse the expectation that classes whose constructor is deleted are not trivially relocatable. Because, at the moment, only classes which are passed in registers are trivially relocatable, and PS4 allows passing in registers if the copy constructor is deleted, the original assertions were broken on PS4.

(This is kinda similar to DR1734.)

Reviewed By: gribozavr2

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119017
2022-02-04 20:17:34 +01:00
Dmitri Gribenko
852afed5e0 Revert "[clang] Mark trivial_abi types as "trivially relocatable"."
This reverts commit 19aa2db023c0128913da223d4fb02c474541ee22. It breaks
a PS4 buildbot.
2022-02-03 22:31:44 +01:00
Devin Jeanpierre
19aa2db023 [clang] Mark trivial_abi types as "trivially relocatable".
This change enables library code to skip paired move-construction and destruction for `trivial_abi` types, as if they were trivially-movable and trivially-destructible. This offers an extension to the performance fix offered by `trivial_abi`: rather than only offering trivial-type-like performance for pass-by-value, it also offers it for library code that moves values but not as arguments.

For example, if we use `memcpy` for trivially relocatable types inside of vector reallocation, and mark `unique_ptr` as `trivial_abi` (via `_LIBCPP_ABI_ENABLE_UNIQUE_PTR_TRIVIAL_ABI` / `_LIBCPP_ABI_UNSTABLE` / etc.), this would speed up `vector<unique_ptr>::push_back` by 40% on my benchmarks. (Though note that in this case, the compiler could have done this anyway, but happens not to due to the inlining horizon.)

If accepted, I intend to follow up with exactly such changes to library code, including and especially `std::vector`, making them use a trivial relocation operation on trivially relocatable types.

**D50119 and P1144:**

This change is very similar to D50119, which was rejected from Clang. (That change was an implementation of P1144, which is not yet part of the C++ standard.)

The intent of this change, rather than trying to pick a winning proposal for trivial relocation operations, is to extend the behavior of `trivial_abi` in a way that could be made compatible with any such proposal. If P1144 or any similar proposal were accepted, then `trivial_abi`, `__is_trivially_relocatable`, and everything else in this change would be redefined in terms of that.

**Safety:**

It's worth pointing out, specifically, that `trivial_abi` already implies trivial relocatability in a narrow sense: a `trivial_abi` type, when passed by value, has its constructor run in one location, and its destructor run in another, after the type has been trivially relocated (through registers).

Trivial relocatability optimizations could change the number of paired constructor/destructor calls, but this seems unlikely to matter for `trivial_abi` types.

Reviewed By: rsmith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114732
2022-02-02 17:42:20 -08:00
Arthur O'Dwyer
424400da2d [clang][NFC] Change some ->getType()->isPlaceholderType() to just ->hasPlaceholderType()
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118518
2022-01-29 10:20:22 -05:00
Kazu Hirata
cb7f806a3a [clang] Remove redundant member initialization (NFC)
Identified with readability-redundant-member-init.
2022-01-12 22:12:01 -08:00
Kazu Hirata
7485e6c7e9 Revert "[clang] Remove redundant member initialization (NFC)"
This reverts commit 80e2c587498a7b2bf14dde47a33a058da6e88a9a.

The original patch causes a lot of warnings on gcc like:

  llvm-project/clang/include/clang/Basic/Diagnostic.h:1329:3: warning:
  base class ‘class clang::StreamingDiagnostic’ should be explicitly
  initialized in the copy constructor [-Wextra]
2022-01-10 09:21:59 -08:00
Haojian Wu
abe3003ead [AST] Use recovery-expr to preserve incomplete-type-member-access expression.
Fixes https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/502

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116922
2022-01-10 12:45:20 +01:00
Haojian Wu
4a4b8e4f99 [AST] Add more source information for DecltypeTypeLoc.
Adds the paren source location, and removes the hack in clangd.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116793
2022-01-10 09:34:18 +01:00
Kazu Hirata
80e2c58749 [clang] Remove redundant member initialization (NFC)
Identified with readability-redundant-member-init.
2022-01-09 00:19:51 -08:00
Kazu Hirata
17d4bd3d78 [clang] Fix bugprone argument comments (NFC)
Identified with bugprone-argument-comment.
2022-01-09 00:19:49 -08:00