After a07b135ce0c0111bd83450b5dc29ef0381cdbc39, we always pass
-coverage-notes-file/-coverage-data-file for driver options
-ftest-coverage/-fprofile-arcs/--coverage. As a bonus, we can make the following
simplification to cc1 options:
* `-ftest-coverage -coverage-notes-file a.gcno` => `-coverage-notes-file a.gcno`
* `-fprofile-arcs -coverage-data-file a.gcda` => `-coverage-data-file a.gcda`
and remove EmitCovNotes/EmitCovArcs.
For
`clang -c -g -fdebug-prefix-map=a/b=y -fdebug-prefix-map=a=x a/b/c.c`,
we apply the longest prefix substitution, but
GCC has always been picking the last applicable option (`a=x`, see
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=109591).
I feel that GCC's behavior is reasonable given the convention that the last
value wins for the same option.
Before D49466, Clang appeared to apply the shortest prefix substitution,
which likely made the least sense.
Reviewed By: #debug-info, scott.linder
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148975
This fixes two problems:
1. When crossing compiling for windows on linux, source file path in debug info is concatenated with directory by host native separator ('/'). For windows local build, they are concatenated by '\'. This causes non-determinism bug.
The solution here is to let `LangOptions.UseTargetPathSeparator` to control if we should use host native separator or not.
2. Objectfile path in CodeView also uses host native separator when generated.
It's fixed by changing the path separator in `/Fo` to '\' if the path is not an absolute path when adding the `-object-file-name=` flag.
Reviewed By: hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D147256
With this patch, whenever we emit a `DW_AT_type` for some declaration
and the type is a template class with a `clang::PreferredNameAttr`, we
will emit the typedef that the attribute refers to instead. I.e.,
```
0x123 DW_TAG_variable
DW_AT_name "var"
DW_AT_type (0x123 "basic_string<char>")
0x124 DW_TAG_structure_type
DW_AT_name "basic_string<char>"
```
...becomes
```
0x123 DW_TAG_variable
DW_AT_name "var"
DW_AT_type (0x124 "std::string")
0x124 DW_TAG_structure_type
DW_AT_name "basic_string<char>"
0x125 DW_TAG_typedef
DW_AT_name "std::string"
DW_AT_type (0x124 "basic_string<char>")
```
We do this by returning the preferred name typedef `DIType` when
we create a structure definition. In some cases, e.g., with `-gmodules`,
we don't complete the structure definition immediately but do so later
via `completeClassData`, which overwrites the `TypeCache`. In such cases
we don't actually want to rewrite the cache with the preferred name. We
handle this by returning both the definition and the preferred typedef
from `CreateTypeDefinition` and let the callee decide what to do with
it.
Essentially we set up the types as:
```
TypeCache[Record] => DICompositeType
ReplaceMap[Record] => DIDerivedType(baseType: DICompositeType)
```
For now we keep this behind LLDB tuning.
**Testing**
- Added clang unit-test
- `check-llvm`, `check-clang` pass
- Confirmed that this change correctly repoints
`basic_string` references in some of my test programs.
- Will add follow-up LLDB API tests
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D145803
This patch moves the Debug Options to llvm/Frontend so that it can be shared by Flang as well.
Reviewed By: kiranchandramohan, awarzynski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D142347
Consider the following sturctures when targetting:
struct foo {
int space[4];
char a : 8;
char b : 8;
char x : 8;
char y : 8;
};
struct bar {
int space[4];
char a : 8;
char b : 8;
char : 0;
char x : 8;
char y : 8;
};
Even if both structs have the same layout in memory, they are handled
differenlty by the AMDGPU ABI.
With the following code:
// clang --target=amdgcn-amd-amdhsa -g -O1 example.c -S
char use_foo(struct foo f) { return f.y; }
char use_bar(struct bar b) { return b.y; }
For use_foo, the 'y' field is passed in v4
; v_ashrrev_i32_e32 v0, 24, v4
; s_setpc_b64 s[30:31]
For use_bar, the 'y' field is passed in v5
; v_bfe_i32 v0, v5, 8, 8
; s_setpc_b64 s[30:31]
To make this distinction, we record a single 0-size bitfield for every member that is preceded
by it.
Reviewed By: probinson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D144870
This patch adds the builtin type __SVCount_t to Clang, which is an opaque
scalable type defined in the SME2 C and C++ Language Extensions.
The type maps to the `target("aarch64.svcount")` LLVM IR type.
Reviewed By: paulwalker-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136864
Such a type is never going to have a ctor home, and may be used for type
punning or other ways of creating objects.
May be a more generally acceptable solution in some cases compared to
attributing with [[clang::standalone_debug]].
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D144931
The function `CGDebugInfo::EmitFunctionDecl` is supposed to create a
declaration -- never a _definition_ -- of a subprogram. This is made
evident by the fact that the SPFlags never have the "Declaration" bit
set by that function.
However, when `EmitFunctionDecl` calls `DIBuilder::createFunction`, it
still tries to fill the "Declaration" argument by passing it the result
of `getFunctionDeclaration(D)`. This will query an internal cache of
previously created declarations and, for most code paths, we return
nullptr; all is good.
However, as reported in [0], there are pathological cases in which we
attempt to recreate a declaration, so the cache query succeeds,
resulting in a subprogram declaration whose declaration field points to
another declaration. Through a series of RAUWs, the declaration field
ends up pointing to the SP itself. Self-referential MDNodes can't be
`unique`, which causes the verifier to fail (declarations must be
`unique`).
We can argue that the caller should check the cache first, but this is
not a correctness issue (declarations are `unique` anyway). The bug is
that `CGDebugInfo::EmitFunctionDecl` should always pass `nullptr` to the
declaration argument of `DIBuilder::createFunction`, expressing the fact
that declarations don't point to other declarations. AFAICT this is not
something for which any reasonable meaning exists.
This seems a lot like a copy-paste mistake that has survived for ~10
years, since other places in this file have the exact same call almost
token-by-token.
I've tested this by compiling LLVMSupport with and without the patch, O2
and O0, and comparing the dwarfdump of the lib. The dumps are identical
modulo the attributes decl_file/producer/comp_dir.
[0]: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/59241
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D143921
This patch introduces a new type __externref_t that denotes a WebAssembly opaque
reference type. It also implements builtin __builtin_wasm_ref_null_extern(),
that returns a null value of __externref_t. This lays the ground work
for further builtins and reference types.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122215
The commit was reverted due to a regression in debug information of an
optimized code test in lldb. This has since been addressed by:
1. rGf753e5be8239: [LiveDebugValues] Allow EntryValue with OP_deref
expressions
2. rG055f2f04e658: [mem2reg][debuginfo] Handle op_deref when converting
dbg.declare
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141381
This patch introduces a new type __externref_t that denotes a WebAssembly opaque
reference type. It also implements builtin __builtin_wasm_ref_null_extern(),
that returns a null value of __externref_t. This lays the ground work
for further builtins and reference types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122215
Since `ClassTemplateSpecializationDecl`s now set the
`TemplateArgument::IsDefaulted` bit, there's no need
to derive it here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D142333
**Summary**
This patch customizes the `CGDebugInfo` printing policy to stop canonicalizing
the template arugment list in `DW_AT_name` for alias templates. The motivation for
this is that we want to be able to use the `TypePrinter`s support for
omitting defaulted template arguments when emitting `DW_AT_name`.
For reference, GCC currently completely omits the template arguments
when emitting alias template DIEs.
**Testing**
* Added unit-test
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D142268
With codegen prior to this patch, truly indirect arguments -- i.e.
those that are not `byval` -- can have their debug information lost even
at O0. Because indirect arguments are passed by pointer, and this
pointer is likely placed in a register as per the function call ABI,
debug information is lost as soon as the register gets clobbered.
This patch solves the issue by storing the address of the parameter on
the stack, using a similar strategy employed when C++ references are
passed. In other words, this patch changes codegen from:
```
define @foo(ptr %arg) {
call void @llvm.dbg.declare(%arg, [...], metadata !DIExpression())
```
To:
```
define @foo(ptr %arg) {
%ptr_storage = alloca ptr
store ptr %arg, ptr %ptr_storage
call void @llvm.dbg.declare(%ptr_storage, [...], metadata !DIExpression(DW_OP_deref))
```
Some common cases where this may happen with C or C++ function calls:
1. "Big enough" trivial structures passed by value under the ARM ABI.
2. Structures that are non-trivial for the purposes of call (as per
the Itanium ABI) when passed by value.
A few tests were matching the wrong alloca (matching against the new
alloca, instead of the old one), so they were updated to either match
both allocas or include a `,` right after the alloca type, to prevent
matching against a pointer type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141381
Generate DILocalVariable entries for parameters of extern functions,
the "annotations" field of DILocalVariable is used to link
"btf_decl_tag" annotation with the parameter.
Do this only for BPF backend as there are no other users for this
information. Final DWARF is valid as "Appendix A" is very much lax in
what is allowed as attributes for "DW_TAG_formal_parameter":
DWARF does not in general require that a given debugging information
entry contain a particular attribute or set of attributes. Instead,
a DWARF producer is free to generate any, all, or none of the
attributes ... other attributes ... may also appear in a given
debugging information entry.
DWARF Debugging Information Format Version 5,
Appendix A: Attributes by Tag Value (Informative)
Page 251, Line 3.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140970
The needed tweaks are mostly trivial, the one nasty bit is Clang's usage
of OptionalStorage. To keep this working old Optional stays around as
clang::CustomizableOptional, with the default Storage removed.
Optional<File/DirectoryEntryRef> is replaced with a typedef.
I tested this with GCC 7.5, the oldest supported GCC I had around.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140332
This reverts commit 8f0df9f3bbc6d7f3d5cbfd955c5ee4404c53a75d.
The Optional*RefDegradesTo*EntryPtr types want to keep the same size as
the underlying type, which std::optional doesn't guarantee. For use with
llvm::Optional, they define their own storage class, and there is no way
to do that in std::optional.
On top of that, that commit broke builds with older GCCs, where
std::optional was not trivially copyable (static_assert in the clang
sources was failing).
After this patch, in the following snippet:
```
template <typename T> Foo {};
template <template <typename T> class CT = Foo> Bar {};
Bar<> b;
```
The debug-info entry for the `CT` template parameter will have
a `DW_AT_default_value (true)` attached to it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139989
DWARFv5 added support for labelling template parameters with
DW_AT_default_value to indicate whether the particular instantiation
defaulted parameter. The current implementation only supports a limited
set of possible cases. Namely for non-value-dependent integral template
parameters and simple type template parameters.
Useful cases that don't work are:
1. Type template parameters with defaults that are
themselves templates. E.g.,
```
template<typename T1, typename T2 = Foo<T1>> class C1;
template<typename T = Foo<int>> class C2;
etc.
```
2. Template template parameters
`clang::isSubstitutedDefaultArgument` already implement the required logic
to determine whether a template argument is defaulted. This patch re-uses
this logic for DWARF CodeGen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139988
**Summary**
Starting with DWARFv5, DW_AT_default_value can be used to indicate
that a template argument has a default value. With this patch Clang
will attach the attribute to the debug metadata regardless of version.
In a follow-up patch we will change llvm to emit this attribute in
earlier versions of DWARF, unless compiling with -gstrict-dwarf.
**Details**
* Previously the DwarfVersion check in CGDebugInfo was inconsistent:
For non-type template arguments we attached the attribute to the debug
metadata in DWARFv5 only. Whereas for type template arguments we didn't
have such a version restriction. With this patch we attach the attribute
regardless of DWARF version (and instead offload the check to the AsmPrinter
in a future patch).
This may be a breaking change for consumers if they're trying to detect
if code is C or C++, since it'll start using new codes that they may not
be ready to recognize, in which case they may fall back to non-C
handling.
This caused regressions due to PS4 having a different default for C
language version than other targets. Those tests were adapted to be
relaxed about which C version is used.
This reapplies commit 3c312e48f325c1b1ee11404ee6cfa08ee00037b0
Which was reverted by commit 6ab6085c77ef9bcdabf842342f63fba4291791a4.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D138597
Some buildbots are failing in Clang and LLDB tests. (I guess the LLDB
failure is due to the explicit C language tests in DwarfUnit.cpp that
need to be updated - not sure what the Clang failures are about, they
seem to be still emitting C99 when we're expecting C11 and I checked
those tests pass... maybe systems with a different C language version
default?)
This reverts commit 3c312e48f325c1b1ee11404ee6cfa08ee00037b0.
This may be a breaking change for consumers if they're trying to detect
if code is C or C++, since it'll start using new codes that they may not
be ready to recognize, in which case they may fall back to non-C
handling.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D138597
This patch mechanically replaces None with std::nullopt where the
compiler would warn if None were deprecated. The intent is to reduce
the amount of manual work required in migrating from Optional to
std::optional.
This is part of an effort to migrate from llvm::Optional to
std::optional:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/deprecating-llvm-optional-x-hasvalue-getvalue-getvalueor/63716
This value was added to clang/Basic in D111566, but is only used during
codegen, where we can use the LLVM IR DataLayout instead. I noticed this
because the downstream CHERI targets would have to also set this value
for AArch64/RISC-V/MIPS. Instead of duplicating more information between
LLVM IR and Clang, this patch moves getTargetAddressSpace(QualType T) to
CodeGenTypes, where we can consult the DataLayout.
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D138296
Mixing LLVM and Clang address spaces can result in subtle bugs, and there
is no need for this hook to use the LLVM IR level address spaces.
Most of this change is just replacing zero with LangAS::Default,
but it also allows us to remove a few calls to getTargetAddressSpace().
This also removes a stale comment+workaround in
CGDebugInfo::CreatePointerLikeType(): ASTContext::getTypeSize() does
return the expected size for ReferenceType (and handles address spaces).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D138295
Callsite `DISubprogram` entries are not generated for:
- builtin functions;
- external functions with reserved names (e.g. names starting from "__").
This limitation was added by the commit [1] as a workaround for the
situation described in [2] that triggered the IR verifier error.
The goal of the present commit is to lift this limitation by adjusting
the IR verifier logic.
The logic behind [1] is to avoid the following situation:
- a `DISubprogram` is added for some builtin function;
- there is some location where this builtin is also emitted by a
transformation (w/o debug location);
- the `Verifier::visitCallBase` sees a call to a function with
`DISubprogram` but w/o debug location and emits an error.
Here is an updated example of such situation taken from [2]:
```
extern "C" int memcmp(void *, void *, long);
struct a { int b; int c; int d; };
struct e { int f[1000]; };
bool foo(e g, e &h) {
// DISubprogram for memcmp is created here when [1] is commented out
return memcmp(&g, &h, sizeof(e));
}
bool bar(a &g, a &h) {
// memcmp might be generated here by MergeICmps
return g.b == h.b && g.c == h.c && g.d == h.d;
}
```
This triggers the verifier error when:
- compiled for AArch64:
`clang++ -c -g -Oz -target aarch64-unknown-linux-android21 test.cpp`;
- [1] check is commented out.
Instead of forbidding generation of `DISubprogram` entries as in [1]
one can instead adjust the verifier to additionally check if callee
has a body. Functions w/o bodies cannot be inlined and thus verifier
warning is not necessary.
E.g. `llvm::InlineFunction` requires functions for which
`GlobalValue::isDeclaration() == false`.
[1] 568db780bb7267651a902da8e85bc59fc89aea70
[2] https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=1022296
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136041
When -fmodule-file-home-is-cwd and the path to the PCM is relative, we
shouldn't assume that the path to the PCM is relative to the modulemap
that produced it. To respect the option -fmodule-file-home-is-cwd, we
should assume the path is relative to the current working directory.
Reviewed By: rmaz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134911
This implements WG14 N2927 and WG14 N2930, which together define the
feature for typeof and typeof_unqual, which get the type of their
argument as either fully qualified or fully unqualified. The argument
to either operator is either a type name or an expression. If given a
type name, the type information is pulled directly from the given name.
If given an expression, the type information is pulled from the
expression. Recursive use of these operators is allowed and has the
expected behavior (the innermost operator is resolved to a type, and
that's used to resolve the next layer of typeof specifier, until a
fully resolved type is determined.
Note, we already supported typeof in GNU mode as a non-conforming
extension and we are *not* exposing typeof_unqual as a non-conforming
extension in that mode, nor are we exposing typeof or typeof_unqual as
a nonconforming extension in other language modes. The GNU variant of
typeof supports a form where the parentheses are elided from the
operator when given an expression (e.g., typeof 0 i = 12;). When in C2x
mode, we do not support this extension.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134286
The accessibility level of a typedef or using declaration in a
struct or class was being lost when producing debug information.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134339
We change the template specialization of builtin templates to
behave like aliases.
Though unlike real alias templates, these might still produce a canonical
TemplateSpecializationType when some important argument is dependent.
For example, we can't do anything about make_integer_seq when the
count is dependent, or a type_pack_element when the index is dependent.
We change type deduction to not try to deduce canonical TSTs of
builtin templates.
We also change those buitin templates to produce substitution sugar,
just like a real instantiation would, making the resulting type correctly
represent the template arguments used to specialize the underlying template.
And make_integer_seq will now produce a TST for the specialization
of it's first argument, which we use as the underlying type of
the builtin alias.
When performing member access on the resulting type, it's now
possible to map from a Subst* node to the template argument
as-written used in a regular fashion, without special casing.
And this fixes a bunch of bugs with relation to these builtin
templates factoring into deduction.
Fixes GH42102 and GH51928.
Depends on D133261
Signed-off-by: Matheus Izvekov <mizvekov@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133262
Seems this complicated lldb sufficiently for some cases that it hasn't
been worth supporting/fixing there - and it so far hasn't provided any
new use cases/value for debug info consumers, so let's remove it until
someone has a use case for it.
(side note: the original implementation of this still had a bug (I
should've caught it in review) that we still didn't produce
auto-returning function declarations in types where the function wasn't
instantiatied (that requires a fix to remove the `if
getContainedAutoType` condition in
`CGDebugInfo::CollectCXXMemberFunctions` - without that, auto returning
functions were still being handled the same as member function templates
and special member functions - never added to the member list, only
attached to the type via the declaration chain from the definition)
Further discussion about this in D123319
This reverts commit 5ff992bca208a0e37ca6338fc735aec6aa848b72: [DEBUG-INFO] Change how we handle auto return types for lambda operator() to be consistent with gcc
This reverts commit c83602fdf51b2692e3bacb06bf861f20f74e987f: [DWARF5][clang]: Added support for DebugInfo generation for auto return type for C++ member functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131933
This completes the implementation of P1091R3 and P1381R1.
This patch allow the capture of structured bindings
both for C++20+ and C++17, with extension/compat warning.
In addition, capturing an anonymous union member,
a bitfield, or a structured binding thereof now has a
better diagnostic.
We only support structured bindings - as opposed to other kinds
of structured statements/blocks. We still emit an error for those.
In addition, support for structured bindings capture is entirely disabled in
OpenMP mode as this needs more investigation - a specific diagnostic indicate the feature is not yet supported there.
Note that the rest of P1091R3 (static/thread_local structured bindings) was already implemented.
at the request of @shafik, i can confirm the correct behavior of lldb wit this change.
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/54300
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/54300
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/52720
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122768
This completes the implementation of P1091R3 and P1381R1.
This patch allow the capture of structured bindings
both for C++20+ and C++17, with extension/compat warning.
In addition, capturing an anonymous union member,
a bitfield, or a structured binding thereof now has a
better diagnostic.
We only support structured bindings - as opposed to other kinds
of structured statements/blocks. We still emit an error for those.
In addition, support for structured bindings capture is entirely disabled in
OpenMP mode as this needs more investigation - a specific diagnostic indicate the feature is not yet supported there.
Note that the rest of P1091R3 (static/thread_local structured bindings) was already implemented.
at the request of @shafik, i can confirm the correct behavior of lldb wit this change.
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/54300
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/54300
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/52720
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122768