5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Aaron Ballman
84a3aadf0f Diagnose use of VLAs in C++ by default
Reapplication of 7339c0f782d5c70e0928f8991b0c05338a90c84c with a fix
for a crash involving arrays without a size expression.

Clang supports VLAs in C++ as an extension, but we currently only warn
on their use when you pass -Wvla, -Wvla-extension, or -pedantic.
However, VLAs as they're expressed in C have been considered by WG21
and rejected, are easy to use accidentally to the surprise of users
(e.g., https://ddanilov.me/default-non-standard-features/), and they
have potential security implications beyond constant-size arrays
(https://wiki.sei.cmu.edu/confluence/display/c/ARR32-C.+Ensure+size+arguments+for+variable+length+arrays+are+in+a+valid+range).
C++ users should strongly consider using other functionality such as
std::vector instead.

This seems like sufficiently compelling evidence to warn users about
VLA use by default in C++ modes. This patch enables the -Wvla-extension
diagnostic group in C++ language modes by default, and adds the warning
group to -Wall in GNU++ language modes. The warning is still opt-in in
C language modes, where support for VLAs is somewhat less surprising to
users.

RFC: https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-diagnosing-use-of-vlas-in-c/73109
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/62836
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D156565
2023-10-20 13:10:03 -04:00
Aaron Ballman
f5043f46c0 Revert "Diagnose use of VLAs in C++ by default"
This reverts commit 7339c0f782d5c70e0928f8991b0c05338a90c84c.

Breaks bots:
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/139/builds/51875
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/164/builds/45262
2023-10-20 10:00:18 -04:00
Aaron Ballman
7339c0f782 Diagnose use of VLAs in C++ by default
Clang supports VLAs in C++ as an extension, but we currently only warn
on their use when you pass -Wvla, -Wvla-extension, or -pedantic.
However, VLAs as they're expressed in C have been considered by WG21
and rejected, are easy to use accidentally to the surprise of users
(e.g., https://ddanilov.me/default-non-standard-features/), and they
have potential security implications beyond constant-size arrays
(https://wiki.sei.cmu.edu/confluence/display/c/ARR32-C.+Ensure+size+arguments+for+variable+length+arrays+are+in+a+valid+range).
C++ users should strongly consider using other functionality such as
std::vector instead.

This seems like sufficiently compelling evidence to warn users about
VLA use by default in C++ modes. This patch enables the -Wvla-extension
diagnostic group in C++ language modes by default, and adds the warning
group to -Wall in GNU++ language modes. The warning is still opt-in in
C language modes, where support for VLAs is somewhat less surprising to
users.

RFC: https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-diagnosing-use-of-vlas-in-c/73109
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/62836
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D156565
2023-10-20 09:50:21 -04:00
Erich Keane
9324cc2ca9 Change __builtin_sycl_unique_stable_name to just use an Itanium mangling
After significant problems in our downstream with the previous
implementation, the SYCL standard has opted to make using macros/etc to
change kernel-naming-lambdas in any way UB (even passively). As a
result, we are able to just emit the itanium mangling.

However, this DOES require a little work in the CXXABI, as the microsoft
and itanium mangler use different numbering schemes for lambdas.  This
patch adds a pair of mangling contexts that use the normal 'itanium'
mangling strategy to fill in the "DeviceManglingNumber" used previously
by CUDA.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110281
2021-09-28 06:41:03 -07:00
Erich Keane
eba69b59d1 Reimplement __builtin_unique_stable_name-
The original version of this was reverted, and @rjmcall provided some
advice to architect a new solution.  This is that solution.

This implements a builtin to provide a unique name that is stable across
compilations of this TU for the purposes of implementing the library
component of the unnamed kernel feature of SYCL.  It does this by
running the Itanium mangler with a few modifications.

Because it is somewhat common to wrap non-kernel-related lambdas in
macros that aren't present on the device (such as for logging), this
uniquely generates an ID for all lambdas involved in the naming of a
kernel. It uses the lambda-mangling number to do this, except replaces
this with its own number (starting at 10000 for readabililty reasons)
for lambdas used to name a kernel.

Additionally, this implements itself as constexpr with a slight catch:
if a name would be invalidated by the use of this lambda in a later
kernel invocation, it is diagnosed as an error (see the Sema tests).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103112
2021-05-27 07:12:20 -07:00