Switch to the `.Cases({S0, S1, ...}, Value)` overload instead, and the
manually-enumerated overloads with 6+ arguments are getting deprecated
in https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/163405.
This pre-commits API updates ahead of the deprecation to make potential
reverts cleaner. This was already reviewed in #163405.
Summary:
This patch has broken the `libc` build bot. I could work around that but
the changes seem unnecessary.
This reverts commit 9ba844eb3a21d461c3adc7add7691a076c6992fc.
When handling CUDA ELF files via objdump or LLDB, the ELF parser in LLVM
needs to distinguish if an ELF file is sass or not, which requires a
triple for sass to exist in llvm. This patch includes all the necessary
changes for LLDB and objdump to correctly identify these files with the
correct triple.
This pr implements support for a root signature as a target, as specified
[here](https://github.com/llvm/wg-hlsl/blob/main/proposals/0029-root-signature-driver-options.md#target-root-signature-version).
This is implemented in the following steps:
1. Add `rootsignature` as a shader model environment type and define
`rootsig` as a `target_profile`. Only valid as versions 1.0 and 1.1
2. Updates `HLSLFrontendAction` to invoke a special handling of
constructing the `ASTContext` if we are considering an `hlsl` file and
with a `rootsignature` target
3. Defines the special handling to minimally instantiate the `Parser`
and `Sema` to insert the `RootSignatureDecl`
4. Updates `CGHLSLRuntime` to emit the constructed root signature decl
as part of `dx.rootsignatures` with a `null` entry function
5. Updates `DXILRootSignature` to handle emitting a root signature
without an entry function
6. Updates `ToolChains/HLSL` to invoke `only-section=RTS0` to strip any
other generated information
Resolves: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/150286.
##### Implementation Considerations
Ideally we could invoke this as part of `clang-dxc` without the need of
a source file. However, the initialization of the `Parser` and `Lexer`
becomes quite complicated to handle this.
Technically, we could avoid generating any of the extra information that
is removed in step 6. However, it seems better to re-use the logic in
`llvm-objcopy` without any need for additional custom logic in
`DXILRootSignature`.
fixes#156068
- We needed to add a new sub arch to the target tripple so we can test
that emulation does not happen when targeting SM6.9
- The HLSL toolchain needed to be updated to handle the conversion of
strings to enums for the new sub arch.
- The emulation is done in DXILIntrinsicExpansion.cpp and needs to be
able to convert both llvm.is.fpclass and lvm.dx.isinf to the proper
emulation
- test updates in TargetParser/TripleTest.cpp, isinf.ll, is_fpclass.ll,
and DXCModeTest.cpp
For context, CheriotRTOS is a custom RTOS co-designed for the CHERIoT
CHERI-enabled RISCV32E platform. It uses a custom ABI and linkage model,
necesitating representing it in the target triple.
These are identified by misc-include-cleaner. I've filtered out those
that break builds. Also, I'm staying away from llvm-config.h,
config.h, and Compiler.h, which likely cause platform- or
compiler-specific build failures.
Add support for big-endian RISC-V ELF files:
- Add riscv32be/riscv64be target architectures to Triple
- Support elf32-bigriscv and elf64-bigriscv output targets in
llvm-objcopy
- Update ELFObjectFile to handle BE RISC-V format strings and
architecture detection
- Add BE RISC-V support to RelocationResolver
- Add tests for new functionality
This is a subset of a bigger RISC-V big-endian support patch, containing
only the llvm-objcopy and libObject changes. Other changes will be added
later.
I encountered the assertion failure `Assertion
TmpAsmInfo->getExceptionHandlingType() ==
getTargetTriple().getDefaultExceptionHandling() && "MCAsmInfo and Triple
disagree on default exception handling type"' failed`.
Currently the default exception handling type is scattered
across the backends in MCAsmInfo constructors. Allow this
to be computed from the triple so the IR can centrally determine
the set of ABI calls.
Manually submitting, closes#147225
AAPCS64 reserves any of X9-X15 for a compiler to choose to use for this
purpose, and says not to use X16 or X18 like GCC (and the previous
implementation) chose to use. The X18 register may need to get used by
the kernel in some circumstances, as specified by the platform ABI, so
it is generally an unwise choice. Simply choosing a different register
fixes the problem of this being broken on any platform that actually
follows the platform ABI (which is all of them except EABI, if I am
reading this linux kernel bug correctly
https://lkml2.uits.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/2001.2/01502.html). As
a side benefit, also generate slightly better code and avoids needing
the compiler-rt to be present. I did that by following the XCore
implementation instead of PPC (although in hindsight, following the
RISCV might have been slightly more readable). That X18 is wrong to use
for this purpose has been known for many years (e.g.
https://www.mail-archive.com/gcc@gcc.gnu.org/msg76934.html) and also
known that fixing this to use one of the correct registers is not an ABI
break, since this only appears inside of a translation unit. Some of the
other temporary registers (e.g. X9) are already reserved inside llvm for
internal use as a generic temporary register in the prologue before
saving registers, while X15 was already used in rare cases as a scratch
register in the prologue as well, so I felt that seemed the most logical
choice to choose here.
* Translate the following versions to 26.
* watchOS 12 -> 26
* visionOS 3 -> 26
* macos 16 -> 26
* iOS 19 -> 26
* tvOS 19 -> 26
* Emit diagnostics, but allow conversion when clients attempt to use
invalid gaps in OS versioning in availability.
* For target-triples, only allow "valid" versions for implicit
conversions.
MSYS2 uses i686-pc-msys and x86_64-pc-msys as target, and is a fork of
Cygwin. There's an effort underway to try to switch as much as possible
to use -pc-cygwin targets, but the -msys target will be hanging around
for the forseeable future.
Currently, the output of `Triple::normalize` can vary depending on how the
`Triple` object is constructed, producing a 3-field, 4-field, or even 5-field
string. However, there is no way to control the format of the output, as all
forms are considered canonical according to the LangRef.
This lack of control can be inconvenient when a specific format is required. To
address this, this PR introduces an argument to specify the desired format (3,
4, or 5 identifiers), with the default set to none to maintain the current
behavior. If the requested format requires more components than are available in
the actual `Data`, `"unknown"` is appended as needed.
For MinGW environments, the regular C/C++ toolchains usually use "w64"
for the vendor field in triples, while Rust toolchains usually use "pc"
in the vendor field.
The differences in the vendor field have no bearing on whether the IR is
compatible on this platform. (This probably goes for most other OSes as
well, but limiting the scope of the change to the specific case.)
Add a unit test for the isCompatibleWith, including some existing test
cases found in existing tests.
In DXC, setting the vulkan version automatically sets the target spir-v
version to the maximum spir-v version that the vulkan version must
support. So for Vulkan 1.2, we set the spir-v version to spirv 1.5
because every implementation of Vulkan 1.2 must support spirv 1.5, but
not spir-v 1.6.
We plan to make use of this in SPIR-V-based OpenMP offloading, for which
there is already an initial patch in review.
Signed-off-by: Sarnie, Nick <nick.sarnie@intel.com>
Summary:
The LLVM C library is an in-development environment for running
executables on various systems. Similarly how we have `-gnu` to indicate
that we are using a GNU toolchain we should support `-llvm` to indicate
the LLVM C library. This patch only adds the basic support for the
triple and does not do any necessary clang changes to handle compiling
with it.
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/117251
Gentoo is planning to introduce a `*t64` suffix for triples that will be
used by 32-bit platforms that use 64-bit `time_t`. Add support for
parsing and accepting these triples, and while at it make clang
automatically enable the necessary glibc feature macros when this suffix
is used.
An open question is whether we can backport this to LLVM 19.x. After
all, adding new triplets to Triple sounds like an ABI change — though I
suppose we can minimize the risk of breaking something if we move new
enum values to the very end.
This adds support for:
* `muslabin32` (MIPS N32)
* `muslabi64` (MIPS N64)
* `muslf32` (LoongArch ILP32F/LP64F)
* `muslsf` (LoongArch ILP32S/LP64S)
As we start adding glibc/musl cross-compilation support for these
targets in Zig, it would make our life easier if LLVM recognized these
triples. I'm hoping this'll be uncontroversial since the same has
already been done for `musleabi`, `musleabihf`, and `muslx32`.
I intentionally left out a musl equivalent of `gnuf64` (LoongArch
ILP32D/LP64D); my understanding is that Loongson ultimately settled on
simply `gnu` for this much more common case, so there doesn't *seem* to
be a particularly compelling reason to add a `muslf64` that's basically
deprecated on arrival.
Note: I don't have commit access.
When `pauthtest` is either passed as environment part of AArch64 Linux
triple
or passed via `-mabi=`, enable the following ptrauth flags:
- `intrinsics`;
- `calls`;
- `returns`;
- `auth-traps`;
- `vtable-pointer-address-discrimination`;
- `vtable-pointer-type-discrimination`;
- `init-fini`.
Some related stuff is still subject to change, and the ABI itself might
be changed, so end users are not expected to use this and the ABI name
has 'test' suffix.
If `-mabi=pauthtest` option is used, it's normalized to effective
triple.
When the environment part of the effective triple is `pauthtest`, try
to use `aarch64-linux-pauthtest` as multilib directory.
The following is not supported:
- combination of `pauthtest` ABI with any branch protection scheme
except BTI;
- explicit set of environment part of the triple to a value different
from `pauthtest` in combination with `-mabi=pauthtest`;
- usage on non-Linux OS.
---------
Co-authored-by: Anatoly Trosinenko <atrosinenko@accesssoftek.com>
This is a revert of ef5e7f90ea4d5063ce68b952c5de473e610afc02 which was a
temporary partial revert of 77ac823fd285973cfb3517932c09d82e6a32f46d.
The le32 and le64 targets are no longer necessary to retain, so this
removes them entirely.
This reapplies
195d8ac26d
[DirectX] Fix DXIL part header version encoding. The endian issue was
fixed by
f42117c851.
Move MinorVersion be the lower 8 bit.
Set DXIL version in DXContainerObjectWriter::writeObject.
Fixes#89952
I'm planning to remove StringRef::equals in favor of
StringRef::operator==.
- StringRef::operator==/!= outnumber StringRef::equals by a factor of
70 under llvm/ 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".
This change set restores commit 080978dd2067d0c9ea7e229aa7696c2480d89ef1 that was reverted to address ASAN
failures and includes a fix for the ASAN failures.
Following is the description of the change:
An earlier commit provided a way to decouple DXIL version from Shader
Model version by representing the DXIL version as `SubArch` in the DXIL
Target Triple and adding corresponding valid DXIL Arch types.
This change constructs DXIL target triple with DXIL version that is
deduced from Shader Model version specified in the following scenarios:
1. When compilation target profile is specified:
For e.g., DXIL target triple `dxilv1.8-unknown-shader6.8-library` is
constructed when `-T lib_6_8` is specified.
2. When DXIL target triple without DXIL version is specified:
For e.g., DXIL target triple `dxilv1.8-pc-shadermodel6.8-library` is
constructed when `-mtriple=dxil-pc-shadermodel6.8-library` is specified.
Updated relevant HLSL tests that check for target triple.
An earlier commit provided a way to decouple DXIL version from Shader
Model version by representing the DXIL version as `SubArch` in the DXIL
Target Triple and adding corresponding valid DXIL Arch types.
This change constructs DXIL target triple with DXIL version that is
deduced from Shader Model version specified in the following scenarios:
1. When compilation target profile is specified:
For e.g., DXIL target triple `dxilv1.8-unknown-shader6.8-library` is
constructed when `-T lib_6_8` is specified.
2. When DXIL target triple without DXIL version is specified:
For e.g., DXIL target triple `dxilv1.8-pc-shadermodel6.8-library` is
constructed when `-mtriple=dxil-pc-shadermodel6.8-library` is specified.
Updated relevant HLSL tests that check for target triple.
Validated that Clang (`check-clang`) and LLVM (`check-llvm`) regression
tests pass.
This patch:
- Adds SPIR-V backend's registered generator magic number to the emitted
binary. The magic number consists of the generator ID (43) and LLVM
major version.
- Adds SPIR-V version to the binary.
- Allows reading the expected (maximum supported) SPIR-V version from
the target triple.
- Uses VersionTuple for representing versions throughout the backend's
codebase.
- Registers v1.6 for spirv32 and spirv64 triple.
See more: https://github.com/KhronosGroup/SPIRV-Headers/commit/7d500c
This change is in line with similar notation in SPIRV.
Decoupling version numbering of DXIL and of Shader Model is intended to
enable accurate specification of DXIL features that can be targeted by
different Shader Model versions.
The getArchPointerBitWidth method provides direct access to the pointer
size for arithmetic or switch statements, instead of requiring clients
to use the isArch16Bit / isArch32Bit / isArch64Bit predicates.
Add a SPIR-V target-specific intrinsic for creating handles, which is
used for lowering HLSL resources types like RWBuffer.
`llvm/lib/TargetParser/Triple.cpp`: SPIR-V intrinsics use "spv" as the
target prefix, not "spirv". As far as I can tell, this is the first one
that is used via the `CGBuiltin` codepath, which relies on
`getArchTypePrefix`, so I've corrected it here.
`clang/lib/Basic/Targets/SPIR.h`: When records are laid out in the
lowering from AST to IR, they were incorrectly offset because these
Pointer attributes were defaulting to 32.
Related to #81036