This patch is part of the upstreaming effort for supporting SYCL
language front end.
It makes the following changes:
1. Adds sycl_external attribute for functions with external linkage,
which is intended for use to implement the SYCL_EXTERNAL macro as
specified by the SYCL 2020 specification
2. Adds checks to avoid emitting device code when sycl_external and
sycl_kernel_entry_point attributes are not enabled
3. Fixes test failures caused by the above changes
This patch is missing diagnostics for the following diagnostics listed
in the SYCL 2020 specification's section 5.10.1, which will be addressed
in a subsequent PR:
Functions that are declared using SYCL_EXTERNAL have the following
additional restrictions beyond those imposed on other device functions:
1. If the SYCL backend does not support the generic address space then
the function cannot use raw pointers as parameter or return types.
Explicit pointer classes must be used instead;
2. The function cannot call group::parallel_for_work_item;
3. The function cannot be called from a parallel_for_work_group scope.
In addition to that, the subsequent PR will also implement diagnostics
for inline functions including virtual functions defined as inline.
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Co-authored-by: Mariya Podchishchaeva <mariya.podchishchaeva@intel.com>
A function declared with the `sycl_kernel_entry_point` attribute,
sometimes called a SYCL kernel entry point function, specifies a pattern
from which the parameters and body of an offload entry point function,
sometimes called a SYCL kernel caller function, are derived.
SYCL kernel caller functions are emitted during SYCL device compilation.
Their parameters and body are derived from the `SYCLKernelCallStmt`
statement and `OutlinedFunctionDecl` declaration associated with their
corresponding SYCL kernel entry point function. A distinct SYCL kernel
caller function is generated for each SYCL kernel entry point function
defined as a non-inline function or ODR-used in the translation unit.
The name of each SYCL kernel caller function is parameterized by the
SYCL kernel name type specified by the `sycl_kernel_entry_point`
attribute attached to the corresponding SYCL kernel entry point
function. For the moment, the Itanium ABI mangled name for typeinfo data
(`_ZTS<type>`) is used to name these functions; a future change will
switch to a more appropriate naming scheme.
The calling convention used for a SYCL kernel caller function is target
dependent. Support for AMDGCN, NVPTX, and SPIR targets is currently
provided. These functions are required to observe the language
restrictions for SYCL devices as specified by the SYCL 2020
specification; this includes a forward progress guarantee and prohibits
recursion.
Only SYCL kernel caller functions, functions declared as
`SYCL_EXTERNAL`, and functions directly or indirectly referenced from
those functions should be emitted during device compilation. Pruning of
other declarations has not yet been implemented.
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Co-authored-by: Elizabeth Andrews <elizabeth.andrews@intel.com>