Adds flang/include/flang/Common/visit.h, which defines
a Fortran::common::visit() template function that is a drop-in
replacement for std::visit(). Modifies most use sites in
the front-end and runtime to use common::visit().
The C++ standard mandates that std::visit() have O(1) execution
time, which forces implementations to build dispatch tables.
This new common::visit() is O(log2 N) in the number of alternatives
in a variant<>, but that N tends to be small and so this change
produces a fairly significant improvement in compiler build
memory requirements, a 5-10% improvement in compiler build time,
and a small improvement in compiler execution time.
Building with -DFLANG_USE_STD_VISIT causes common::visit()
to be an alias for std::visit().
Calls to common::visit() with multiple variant arguments
are referred to std::visit(), pending further work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122441
It is generally an error when a USE-associated name clashes
with a name defined locally, but not in all cases; a generic
interface can be both USE-associated and locally defined.
This works, but not when there is also a local subprogram
with the same name, which is valid when that subprogram is
a specific of the local generic. A bogus error issues at
the point of the USE because name resolution will have already
defined a symbol for the local subprogram.
The solution is to collect the names of local generics when
creating the program tree, and then create their symbols as
well if their names are also local subprograms, prior to any
USE association processing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119566
ENTRY statement names in module subprograms were not acceptable for
use as a "module procedure" in a generic interface, but should be.
ENTRY statements need to have symbols with place-holding
SubprogramNameDetails created for them in order to be visible in
generic interfaces. Those symbols are created from the "program
tree" data structure. This patch adds ENTRY statement names to the
program tree data structure and uses them to generate SubprogramNameDetails
symbols.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117345
Accept and represent "global" compiler directives that appear
before and between program units in a source file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86555