14 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nikita Popov
532dc62b90 [OpaquePtrs][Clang] Add -no-opaque-pointers to tests (NFC)
This adds -no-opaque-pointers to clang tests whose output will
change when opaque pointers are enabled by default. This is
intended to be part of the migration approach described in
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/enabling-opaque-pointers-by-default/61322/9.

The patch has been produced by replacing %clang_cc1 with
%clang_cc1 -no-opaque-pointers for tests that fail with opaque
pointers enabled. Worth noting that this doesn't cover all tests,
there's a remaining ~40 tests not using %clang_cc1 that will need
a followup change.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123115
2022-04-07 12:09:47 +02:00
hyeongyu kim
1b1c8d83d3 [Clang/Test]: Rename enable_noundef_analysis to disable-noundef-analysis and turn it off by default
Turning on `enable_noundef_analysis` flag allows better codegen by removing freeze instructions.
I modified clang by renaming `enable_noundef_analysis` flag to `disable-noundef-analysis` and turning it off by default.

Test updates are made as a separate patch: D108453

Reviewed By: eugenis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105169
2022-01-16 18:54:17 +09:00
hyeongyu kim
fd9b099906 Revert "[Clang/Test]: Rename enable_noundef_analysis to disable-noundef-analysis and turn it off by default"
This reverts commit aacfbb953eb705af2ecfeb95a6262818fa85dd92.

Revert "Fix lit test failures in CodeGenCoroutines"

This reverts commit 63fff0f5bffe20fa2c84a45a41161afa0043cb34.
2021-11-09 02:15:55 +09:00
hyeongyukim
aacfbb953e [Clang/Test]: Rename enable_noundef_analysis to disable-noundef-analysis and turn it off by default
Turning on `enable_noundef_analysis` flag allows better codegen by removing freeze instructions.
I modified clang by renaming `enable_noundef_analysis` flag to `disable-noundef-analysis` and turning it off by default.

Test updates are made as a separate patch: D108453

Reviewed By: eugenis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105169

[Clang/Test]: Rename enable_noundef_analysis to disable-noundef-analysis and turn it off by default (2)

This patch updates test files after D105169.
Autogenerated test codes are changed by `utils/update_cc_test_checks.py,` and non-autogenerated test codes are changed as follows:

(1) I wrote a python script that (partially) updates the tests using regex: {F18594904} The script is not perfect, but I believe it gives hints about which patterns are updated to have `noundef` attached.

(2) The remaining tests are updated manually.

Reviewed By: eugenis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108453

Resolve lit failures in clang after 8ca4b3e's land

Fix lit test failures in clang-ppc* and clang-x64-windows-msvc

Fix missing failures in clang-ppc64be* and retry fixing clang-x64-windows-msvc

Fix internal_clone(aarch64) inline assembly
2021-11-06 19:19:22 +09:00
Juneyoung Lee
89ad2822af Revert "[Clang/Test]: Rename enable_noundef_analysis to disable-noundef-analysis and turn it off by default"
This reverts commit 7584ef766a7219b6ee5a400637206d26e0fa98ac.
2021-11-06 15:39:19 +09:00
Juneyoung Lee
7584ef766a [Clang/Test]: Rename enable_noundef_analysis to disable-noundef-analysis and turn it off by default
Turning on `enable_noundef_analysis` flag allows better codegen by removing freeze instructions.
I modified clang by renaming `enable_noundef_analysis` flag to `disable-noundef-analysis` and turning it off by default.

Test updates are made as a separate patch: D108453

Reviewed By: eugenis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105169
2021-11-06 15:36:42 +09:00
Juneyoung Lee
f193bcc701 Revert D105169 due to the two-stage failure in ASAN
This reverts the following commits:
37ca7a795b277c20c02a218bf44052278c03344b
9aa6c72b92b6c89cc6d23b693257df9af7de2d15
705387c5074bcca36d626882462ebbc2bcc3bed4
8ca4b3ef19fe82d7ad6a6e1515317dcc01b41515
80dba72a669b5416e97a42fd2c2a7bc5a6d3f44a
2021-10-18 23:52:46 +09:00
Juneyoung Lee
8ca4b3ef19 [Clang/Test]: Rename enable_noundef_analysis to disable-noundef-analysis and turn it off by default (2)
This patch updates test files after D105169.
Autogenerated test codes are changed by `utils/update_cc_test_checks.py,` and non-autogenerated test codes are changed as follows:

(1) I wrote a python script that (partially) updates the tests using regex: {F18594904} The script is not perfect, but I believe it gives hints about which patterns are updated to have `noundef` attached.

(2) The remaining tests are updated manually.

Reviewed By: eugenis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108453
2021-10-16 12:01:41 +09:00
Tyker
78de7297ab Reland [AssumeBundles] Use operand bundles to encode alignment assumptions
NOTE: There is a mailing list discussion on this: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-December/137632.html

Complemantary to the assumption outliner prototype in D71692, this patch
shows how we could simplify the code emitted for an alignemnt
assumption. The generated code is smaller, less fragile, and it makes it
easier to recognize the additional use as a "assumption use".

As mentioned in D71692 and on the mailing list, we could adopt this
scheme, and similar schemes for other patterns, without adopting the
assumption outlining.
2020-09-12 15:36:06 +02:00
Eric Christopher
7bfaa40086 Temporarily Revert "[AssumeBundles] Use operand bundles to encode alignment assumptions"
due to the performance bugs filed in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46753.

An SROA change soon may obviate some of these problems.

This reverts commit 8d09f20798ac180b1749276bff364682ce0196ab.
2020-07-16 11:54:04 -07:00
Tyker
8d09f20798 [AssumeBundles] Use operand bundles to encode alignment assumptions
Summary:
NOTE: There is a mailing list discussion on this: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-December/137632.html

Complemantary to the assumption outliner prototype in D71692, this patch
shows how we could simplify the code emitted for an alignemnt
assumption. The generated code is smaller, less fragile, and it makes it
easier to recognize the additional use as a "assumption use".

As mentioned in D71692 and on the mailing list, we could adopt this
scheme, and similar schemes for other patterns, without adopting the
assumption outlining.

Reviewers: hfinkel, xbolva00, lebedev.ri, nikic, rjmccall, spatel, jdoerfert, sstefan1

Reviewed By: jdoerfert

Subscribers: thopre, yamauchi, kuter, fhahn, merge_guards_bot, hiraditya, bollu, rkruppe, cfe-commits, llvm-commits

Tags: #clang, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71739
2020-07-14 01:05:58 +02:00
Roman Lebedev
7ea46aee36
Revert "[AssumeBundles] Use operand bundles to encode alignment assumptions"
Assume bundle can have more than one entry with the same name,
but at least AlignmentFromAssumptionsPass::extractAlignmentInfo() uses
getOperandBundle("align"), which internally assumes that it isn't the
case, and happily crashes otherwise.

Minimal reduced reproducer: run `opt -alignment-from-assumptions` on

target datalayout = "e-m:e-p270:32:32-p271:32:32-p272:64:64-i64:64-f80:128-n8:16:32:64-S128"
target triple = "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"

%0 = type { i64, %1*, i8*, i64, %2, i32, %3*, i8* }
%1 = type opaque
%2 = type { i8, i8, i16 }
%3 = type { i32, i32, i32, i32 }

; Function Attrs: nounwind
define i32 @f(%0* noalias nocapture readonly %arg, %0* noalias %arg1) local_unnamed_addr #0 {
bb:
  call void @llvm.assume(i1 true) [ "align"(%0* %arg, i64 8), "align"(%0* %arg1, i64 8) ]
  ret i32 0
}

; Function Attrs: nounwind willreturn
declare void @llvm.assume(i1) #1

attributes #0 = { nounwind "reciprocal-estimates"="none" }
attributes #1 = { nounwind willreturn }


This is what we'd have with -mllvm -enable-knowledge-retention

This reverts commit c95ffadb2474a4d8c4f598d94d35a9f31d9606cb.
2020-07-04 23:49:23 +03:00
Tyker
c95ffadb24 [AssumeBundles] Use operand bundles to encode alignment assumptions
Summary:
NOTE: There is a mailing list discussion on this: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-December/137632.html

Complemantary to the assumption outliner prototype in D71692, this patch
shows how we could simplify the code emitted for an alignemnt
assumption. The generated code is smaller, less fragile, and it makes it
easier to recognize the additional use as a "assumption use".

As mentioned in D71692 and on the mailing list, we could adopt this
scheme, and similar schemes for other patterns, without adopting the
assumption outlining.

Reviewers: hfinkel, xbolva00, lebedev.ri, nikic, rjmccall, spatel, jdoerfert, sstefan1

Reviewed By: jdoerfert

Subscribers: yamauchi, kuter, fhahn, merge_guards_bot, hiraditya, bollu, rkruppe, cfe-commits, llvm-commits

Tags: #clang, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71739
2020-06-25 12:59:44 +02:00
Alex Richardson
8c387cbea7 Add builtins for aligning and checking alignment of pointers and integers
This change introduces three new builtins (which work on both pointers
and integers) that can be used instead of common bitwise arithmetic:
__builtin_align_up(x, alignment), __builtin_align_down(x, alignment) and
__builtin_is_aligned(x, alignment).

I originally added these builtins to the CHERI fork of LLVM a few years ago
to handle the slightly different C semantics that we use for CHERI [1].
Until recently these builtins (or sequences of other builtins) were
required to generate correct code. I have since made changes to the default
C semantics so that they are no longer strictly necessary (but using them
does generate slightly more efficient code). However, based on our experience
using them in various projects over the past few years, I believe that adding
these builtins to clang would be useful.

These builtins have the following benefit over bit-manipulation and casts
via uintptr_t:

- The named builtins clearly convey the semantics of the operation. While
  checking alignment using __builtin_is_aligned(x, 16) versus
  ((x & 15) == 0) is probably not a huge win in readably, I personally find
  __builtin_align_up(x, N) a lot easier to read than (x+(N-1))&~(N-1).
- They preserve the type of the argument (including const qualifiers). When
  using casts via uintptr_t, it is easy to cast to the wrong type or strip
  qualifiers such as const.
- If the alignment argument is a constant value, clang can check that it is
  a power-of-two and within the range of the type. Since the semantics of
  these builtins is well defined compared to arbitrary bit-manipulation,
  it is possible to add a UBSAN checker that the run-time value is a valid
  power-of-two. I intend to add this as a follow-up to this change.
- The builtins avoids int-to-pointer casts both in C and LLVM IR.
  In the future (i.e. once most optimizations handle it), we could use the new
  llvm.ptrmask intrinsic to avoid the ptrtoint instruction that would normally
  be generated.
- They can be used to round up/down to the next aligned value for both
  integers and pointers without requiring two separate macros.
- In many projects the alignment operations are already wrapped in macros (e.g.
  roundup2 and rounddown2 in FreeBSD), so by replacing the macro implementation
  with a builtin call, we get improved diagnostics for many call-sites while
  only having to change a few lines.
- Finally, the builtins also emit assume_aligned metadata when used on pointers.
  This can improve code generation compared to the uintptr_t casts.

[1] In our CHERI compiler we have compilation mode where all pointers are
implemented as capabilities (essentially unforgeable 128-bit fat pointers).
In our original model, casts from uintptr_t (which is a 128-bit capability)
to an integer value returned the "offset" of the capability (i.e. the
difference between the virtual address and the base of the allocation).
This causes problems for cases such as checking the alignment: for example, the
expression `if ((uintptr_t)ptr & 63) == 0` is generally used to check if the
pointer is aligned to a multiple of 64 bytes. The problem with offsets is that
any pointer to the beginning of an allocation will have an offset of zero, so
this check always succeeds in that case (even if the address is not correctly
aligned). The same issues also exist when aligning up or down. Using the
alignment builtins ensures that the address is used instead of the offset. While
I have since changed the default C semantics to return the address instead of
the offset when casting, this offset compilation mode can still be used by
passing a command-line flag.

Reviewers: rsmith, aaron.ballman, theraven, fhahn, lebedev.ri, nlopes, aqjune
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, lebedev.ri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71499
2020-01-09 21:48:29 +00:00