Add the amdgpu_cs_chain and amdgpu_cs_chain_preserve keywords to
LLVM IR and make sure we can parse and print them. Also make sure we
perform some basic checks in the IR verifier - similar to what we check
for many of the other AMDGPU calling conventions, plus the additional
restriction that we can't have direct calls to functions with these
calling conventions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D151994
On Apple platforms, we generate .apple_names, .apple_types,
.apple_namespaces and .apple_objc Apple accelerator tables for DWARF 4
and earlier. For DWARF 5 we should generate .debug_names, but instead we
get no accelerator tables at all.
In the backend we are correctly determining that we should be emitting
.debug_names instead of .apple_names. However, when we get to the point
of emitting the section, if the CU debug name table kind is not
"default", the accelerator table emission is skipped.
This patch sets the DebugNameTableKind to Apple in the frontend when
target an Apple target. That way we know that the CU was compiled with
the intent of emitting accelerator tables. For DWARF 4 and earlier, that
means Apple accelerator tables. For DWARF 5 and later, that means .debug
names.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118754
On Apple platforms, we generate .apple_names, .apple_types,
.apple_namespaces and .apple_objc Apple accelerator tables for DWARF 4
and earlier. For DWARF 5 we should generate .debug_names, but instead we
get no accelerator tables at all.
In the backend we are correctly determining that we should be emitting
.debug_names instead of .apple_names. However, when we get to the point
of emitting the section, if the CU debug name table kind is not
"default", the accelerator table emission is skipped.
This patch sets the DebugNameTableKind to Apple in the frontend when
target an Apple target. That way we know that the CU was compiled with
the intent of emitting accelerator tables. For DWARF 4 and earlier, that
means Apple accelerator tables. For DWARF 5 and later, that means .debug
names.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118754
LLParser::parseInstruction speculatively getUIntVal()
but uses that only in some branches.
APFloatVal, TyVal and StrVal were already initialized, when
UIntVal and APSIntVal were not.
Removes the 'notcoldandcold' allocation type summary
(de)serialization support added in D135714, after realizing that this
will never be generated in practice.
There are 2 uses of the allocation type keywords in the summary. One is
for the individual profiled memprof context summaries, and each context
can only be assigned a single type of hotness. The second is in the
clone version information produced by the MemProfContextDisambiguation
whole program step, and we only create a clone for a specific allocation
type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D149669
This carries a bitmask indicating forbidden floating-point value kinds
in the argument or return value. This will enable interprocedural
-ffinite-math-only optimizations. This is primarily to cover the
no-nans and no-infinities cases, but also covers the other floating
point classes for free. Textually, this provides a number of names
corresponding to bits in FPClassTest, e.g.
call nofpclass(nan inf) @must_be_finite()
call nofpclass(snan) @cannot_be_snan()
This is more expressive than the existing nnan and ninf fast math
flags. As an added bonus, you can represent fun things like nanf:
declare nofpclass(inf zero sub norm) float @only_nans()
Compared to nnan/ninf:
- Can be applied to individual call operands as well as the return value
- Can distinguish signaling and quiet nans
- Distinguishes the sign of infinities
- Can be safely propagated since it doesn't imply anything about
other operands.
- Does not apply to FP instructions; it's not a flag
This is one step closer to being able to retire "no-nans-fp-math" and
"no-infs-fp-math". The one remaining situation where we have no way to
represent no-nans/infs is for loads (if we wanted to solve this we
could introduce !nofpclass metadata, following along with
noundef/!noundef).
This is to help simplify the GPU builtin math library
distribution. Currently the library code has explicit finite math only
checks, read from global constants the compiler driver needs to set
based on the compiler flags during linking. We end up having to
internalize the library into each translation unit in case different
linked modules have different math flags. By propagating known-not-nan
and known-not-infinity information, we can automatically prune the
edge case handling in most functions if the function is only reached
from fast math uses.
These are essentially add/sub 1 with a clamping value.
AMDGPU has instructions for these. CUDA/HIP expose these as
atomicInc/atomicDec. Currently we use target intrinsics for these,
but those do no carry the ordering and syncscope. Add these to
atomicrmw so we can carry these and benefit from the regular
legalization processes.
IR is now always parsed in opaque pointer mode, unless
-opaque-pointers=0 is explicitly given. There is no automatic
detection of typed pointers anymore.
The -opaque-pointers=0 option is added to any remaining IR tests
that haven't been migrated yet.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141912
This restores commit 98ed423361de2f9dc0113a31be2aa04524489ca9 and
follow on fix 00c22351ba697dbddb4b5bf0ad94e4bcea4b316b, which were
reverted in 5d938eb6f79b16f55266dd23d5df831f552ea082 due to an
MSVC bot failure. I've included a fix for that failure.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D135714
This reverts commit 00c22351ba697dbddb4b5bf0ad94e4bcea4b316b.
This reverts commit 98ed423361de2f9dc0113a31be2aa04524489ca9.
Seemingly MSVC has some kind of issue with this patch, in terms of linking:
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/123/builds/14137
I'll post more detail on D135714 momentarily.
This restores 47459455009db4790ffc3765a2ec0f8b4934c2a4, which was
reverted in commit 452a14efc84edf808d1e2953dad2c694972b312f, along with
fixes for a couple of bot failures.
Implements the ThinLTO summary support for memprof related metadata.
This includes support for the assembly format, and for building the
summary from IR during ModuleSummaryAnalysis.
To reduce space in both the bitcode format and the in memory index,
we do 2 things:
1. We keep a single vector of all uniq stack id hashes, and record the
index into this vector in the callsite and allocation memprof
summaries.
2. When building the combined index during the LTO link, the callsite
and allocation memprof summaries are only kept on the FunctionSummary
of the prevailing copy.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D135714
This switches everything to use the memory attribute proposed in
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-unify-memory-effect-attributes/65579.
The old argmemonly, inaccessiblememonly and inaccessiblemem_or_argmemonly
attributes are dropped. The readnone, readonly and writeonly attributes
are restricted to parameters only.
The old attributes are auto-upgraded both in bitcode and IR.
The bitcode upgrade is a policy requirement that has to be retained
indefinitely. The IR upgrade is mainly there so it's not necessary
to update all tests using memory attributes in this patch, which
is already large enough. We could drop that part after migrating
tests, or retain it longer term, to make it easier to import IR
from older LLVM versions.
High-level Function/CallBase APIs like doesNotAccessMemory() or
setDoesNotAccessMemory() are mapped transparently to the memory
attribute. Code that directly manipulates attributes (e.g. via
AttributeList) on the other hand needs to switch to working with
the memory attribute instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D135780
This implements IR and bitcode support for the memory attribute,
as specified in https://reviews.llvm.org/D135597.
The new attribute is not used for anything yet (and as such, the
old memory attributes are unaffected).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D135592
A thread may not have access to SME or TPIDR2_EL0, so in order to
safely query PSTATE.SM in a streaming-compatible function, the
code should call `__arm_sme_state()`, as described in the ABI:
c2bb09c4d4
This means that the value of pstate.sm is:
* 0 if the function is non-streaming.
* 1 if the function has `arm_streaming` or `arm_locally_streaming`.
* evaluated at runtime by a call to __arm_sme_state() otherwise.
This patch also adds a calling convention for calls to SME support routines.
At some point we can remove the need for the llvm.aarch64.get.pstatesm() intrinsic
and use function calls (with the corresponding cc) directly instead.
Reviewed By: aemerson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131571
For MTE globals, we should have clang emit the attribute for all GV's
that it creates, and then use that in the upcoming AArch64 global
tagging IR pass. We need a positive attribute for this sanitizer (rather
than implicit sanitization of all globals) because it needs to interact
with other parts of LLVM, including:
1. Suppressing certain global optimisations (like merging),
2. Emitting extra directives by the ASM writer, and
3. Putting extra information in the symbol table entries.
While this does technically make the LLVM IR / bitcode format
non-backwards-compatible, nobody should have used this attribute yet,
because it's a no-op.
Reviewed By: eugenis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128950
This patch adds the support for `fmax` and `fmin` operations in `atomicrmw`
instruction. For now (at least in this patch), the instruction will be expanded
to CAS loop. There are already a couple of targets supporting the feature. I'll
create another patch(es) to enable them accordingly.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127041
Plan is the migrate the global variable metadata for sanitizers, that's
currently carried around generally in the 'llvm.asan.globals' section,
onto the global variable itself.
This patch adds the attribute and plumbs it through the LLVM IR and
bitcode formats, but is a no-op other than that so far.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka, kstoimenov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126100
Rather than listing these by hand, include all enum attribute
keywords from Attributes.inc. This reduces the number of places
one has to update whenever an enum attribute is added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124465
This continues the push away from hard-coded knowledge about functions
towards attributes. We'll use this to annotate free(), realloc() and
cousins and obviate the hard-coded list of free functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123083
This allows both explicitly enabling and explicitly disabling
opaque pointers, in anticipation of the default switching at some
point.
This also slightly changes the rules by allowing calls if either
the opaque pointer mode has not yet been set (explicitly or
implicitly) or if the value remains unchanged.
This reverts commit 295172ef51c6b9a73bc0fdcfd25f8c41ead9034a.
Reason: Broke the ASan buildbot. More details are available on the
original Phab review at https://reviews.llvm.org/D119482.
This allows us to not have to specify -opaque-pointers when updating
IR tests from typed pointers to opaque pointers.
We detect opaque pointers in .ll files by looking for relevant tokens,
either "ptr" or "*".
Reviewed By: #opaque-pointers, nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119482
This will let us start moving away from hard-coded attributes in
MemoryBuiltins.cpp and put the knowledge about various attribute
functions in the compilers that emit those calls where it probably
belongs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117921
Currently adding attribute no_sanitize("bounds") isn't disabling
-fsanitize=local-bounds (also enabled in -fsanitize=bounds). The Clang
frontend handles fsanitize=array-bounds which can already be disabled by
no_sanitize("bounds"). However, instrumentation added by the
BoundsChecking pass in the middle-end cannot be disabled by the
attribute.
The fix is very similar to D102772 that added the ability to selectively
disable sanitizer pass on certain functions.
In this patch, if no_sanitize("bounds") is provided, an additional
function attribute (NoSanitizeBounds) is attached to IR to let the
BoundsChecking pass know we want to disable local-bounds checking. In
order to support this feature, the IR is extended (similar to D102772)
to make Clang able to preserve the information and let BoundsChecking
pass know bounds checking is disabled for certain function.
Reviewed By: melver
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119816
We have the `clang -cc1` command-line option `-funwind-tables=1|2` and
the codegen option `VALUE_CODEGENOPT(UnwindTables, 2, 0) ///< Unwind
tables (1) or asynchronous unwind tables (2)`. However, this is
encoded in LLVM IR by the presence or the absence of the `uwtable`
attribute, i.e. we lose the information whether to generate want just
some unwind tables or asynchronous unwind tables.
Asynchronous unwind tables take more space in the runtime image, I'd
estimate something like 80-90% more, as the difference is adding
roughly the same number of CFI directives as for prologues, only a bit
simpler (e.g. `.cfi_offset reg, off` vs. `.cfi_restore reg`). Or even
more, if you consider tail duplication of epilogue blocks.
Asynchronous unwind tables could also restrict code generation to
having only a finite number of frame pointer adjustments (an example
of *not* having a finite number of `SP` adjustments is on AArch64 when
untagging the stack (MTE) in some cases the compiler can modify `SP`
in a loop).
Having the CFI precise up to an instruction generally also means one
cannot bundle together CFI instructions once the prologue is done,
they need to be interspersed with ordinary instructions, which means
extra `DW_CFA_advance_loc` commands, further increasing the unwind
tables size.
That is to say, async unwind tables impose a non-negligible overhead,
yet for the most common use cases (like C++ exceptions), they are not
even needed.
This patch extends the `uwtable` attribute with an optional
value:
- `uwtable` (default to `async`)
- `uwtable(sync)`, synchronous unwind tables
- `uwtable(async)`, asynchronous (instruction precise) unwind tables
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114543
With Control-Flow Integrity (CFI), the LowerTypeTests pass replaces
function references with CFI jump table references, which is a problem
for low-level code that needs the address of the actual function body.
For example, in the Linux kernel, the code that sets up interrupt
handlers needs to take the address of the interrupt handler function
instead of the CFI jump table, as the jump table may not even be mapped
into memory when an interrupt is triggered.
This change adds the no_cfi constant type, which wraps function
references in a value that LowerTypeTestsModule::replaceCfiUses does not
replace.
Link: https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/1353
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers, pcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108478
Thinlink provides an opportunity to propagate function attributes across modules, enabling additional propagation opportunities.
This change propagates (currently default off, turn on with `disable-thinlto-funcattrs=1`) noRecurse and noUnwind based off of function summaries of the prevailing functions in bottom-up call-graph order. Testing on clang self-build:
1. There's a 35-40% increase in noUnwind functions due to the additional propagation opportunities.
2. Throughput is measured at 10-15% increase in thinlink time which itself is 1.5% of E2E link time.
Implementation-wise this adds the following summary function attributes:
1. noUnwind: function is noUnwind
2. mayThrow: function contains a non-call instruction that `Instruction::mayThrow` returns true on (e.g. windows SEH instructions)
3. hasUnknownCall: function contains calls that don't make it into the summary call-graph thus should not be propagated from (e.g. indirect for now, could add no-opt functions as well)
Testing:
Clang self-build passes and 2nd stage build passes check-all
ninja check-all with newly added tests passing
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36850
Currently, opaque pointers are supported in two forms: The
-force-opaque-pointers mode, where all pointers are opaque and
typed pointers do not exist. And as a simple ptr type that can
coexist with typed pointers.
This patch removes support for the mixed mode. You either get
typed pointers, or you get opaque pointers, but not both. In the
(current) default mode, using ptr is forbidden. In -opaque-pointers
mode, all pointers are opaque.
The motivation here is that the mixed mode introduces additional
issues that don't exist in fully opaque mode. D105155 is an example
of a design problem. Looking at D109259, it would probably need
additional work to support mixed mode (e.g. to generate GEPs for
typed base but opaque result). Mixed mode will also end up
inserting many casts between i8* and ptr, which would require
significant additional work to consistently avoid.
I don't think the mixed mode is particularly valuable, as it
doesn't align with our end goal. The only thing I've found it to
be moderately useful for is adding some opaque pointer tests in
between typed pointer tests, but I think we can live without that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109290
The purpose of __attribute__((disable_sanitizer_instrumentation)) is to
prevent all kinds of sanitizer instrumentation applied to a certain
function, Objective-C method, or global variable.
The no_sanitize(...) attribute drops instrumentation checks, but may
still insert code preventing false positive reports. In some cases
though (e.g. when building Linux kernel with -fsanitize=kernel-memory
or -fsanitize=thread) the users may want to avoid any kind of
instrumentation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108029
In the textual format, `noduplicates` means no COMDAT/section group
deduplication is performed. Therefore, if both sets of sections are retained, and
they happen to define strong external symbols with the same names,
there will be a duplicate definition linker error.
In PE/COFF, the selection kind lowers to `IMAGE_COMDAT_SELECT_NODUPLICATES`.
The name describes the corollary instead of the immediate semantics. The name
can cause confusion to other binary formats (ELF, wasm) which have implemented/
want to implement the "no deduplication" selection kind. Rename it to be clearer.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106319
This implements the elementtype attribute specified in D105407. It
just adds the attribute and the specified verifier rules, but
doesn't yet make use of it anywhere.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106008
The comment mentions deplibs should be removed in 4.0. Removing it in this patch.
Reviewed By: compnerd, dexonsmith, lattner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102763
We really ought to support no_sanitize("coverage") in line with other
sanitizers. This came up again in discussions on the Linux-kernel
mailing lists, because we currently do workarounds using objtool to
remove coverage instrumentation. Since that support is only on x86, to
continue support coverage instrumentation on other architectures, we
must support selectively disabling coverage instrumentation via function
attributes.
Unfortunately, for SanitizeCoverage, it has not been implemented as a
sanitizer via fsanitize= and associated options in Sanitizers.def, but
rolls its own option fsanitize-coverage. This meant that we never got
"automatic" no_sanitize attribute support.
Implement no_sanitize attribute support by special-casing the string
"coverage" in the NoSanitizeAttr implementation. To keep the feature as
unintrusive to existing IR generation as possible, define a new negative
function attribute NoSanitizeCoverage to propagate the information
through to the instrumentation pass.
Fixes: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49035
Reviewed By: vitalybuka, morehouse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102772
Swift's new concurrency features are going to require guaranteed tail calls so
that they don't consume excessive amounts of stack space. This would normally
mean "tailcc", but there are also Swift-specific ABI desires that don't
naturally go along with "tailcc" so this adds another calling convention that's
the combination of "swiftcc" and "tailcc".
Support is added for AArch64 and X86 for now.
This extends any frame record created in the function to include that
parameter, passed in X22.
The new record looks like [X22, FP, LR] in memory, and FP is stored with 0b0001
in bits 63:60 (CodeGen assumes they are 0b0000 in normal operation). The effect
of this is that tools walking the stack should expect to see one of three
values there:
* 0b0000 => a normal, non-extended record with just [FP, LR]
* 0b0001 => the extended record [X22, FP, LR]
* 0b1111 => kernel space, and a non-extended record.
All other values are currently reserved.
If compiling for arm64e this context pointer is address-discriminated with the
discriminator 0xc31a and the DB (process-specific) key.
There is also an "i8** @llvm.swift.async.context.addr()" intrinsic providing
front-ends access to this slot (and forcing its creation initialized to nullptr
if necessary).
The opaque pointer type is essentially just a normal pointer type with a
null pointee type.
This also adds support for the opaque pointer type to the bitcode
reader/writer, as well as to textual IR.
To avoid confusion with existing pointer types, we disallow creating a
pointer to an opaque pointer.
Opaque pointer types should not be widely used at this point since many
parts of LLVM still do not support them. The next steps are to add some
very simple use cases of opaque pointers to make sure they work, then
start pretending that all pointers are opaque pointers and see what
breaks.
https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-May/150359.html
Reviewed By: dblaikie, dexonsmith, pcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101704
This attribute represents the minimum and maximum values vscale can
take. For now this attribute is not hooked up to anything during
codegen, this will be added in the future when such codegen is
considered stable.
Additionally hook up the -msve-vector-bits=<x> clang option to emit this
attribute.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98030
Imported functions and variable get the visibility from the module supplying the
definition. However, non-imported definitions do not get the visibility from
(ELF) the most constraining visibility among all modules (Mach-O) the visibility
of the prevailing definition.
This patch
* adds visibility bits to GlobalValueSummary::GVFlags
* computes the result visibility and propagates it to all definitions
Protected/hidden can imply dso_local which can enable some optimizations (this
is stronger than GVFlags::DSOLocal because the implied dso_local can be
leveraged for ELF -shared while default visibility dso_local has to be cleared
for ELF -shared).
Note: we don't have summaries for declarations, so for ELF if a declaration has
the most constraining visibility, the result visibility may not be that one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92900
This change implements support for applying profile instrumentation
only to selected files or functions. The implementation uses the
sanitizer special case list format to select which files and functions
to instrument, and relies on the new noprofile IR attribute to exclude
functions from instrumentation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94820
This change implements support for applying profile instrumentation
only to selected files or functions. The implementation uses the
sanitizer special case list format to select which files and functions
to instrument, and relies on the new noprofile IR attribute to exclude
functions from instrumentation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94820
The x86_amx is used for AMX intrisics. <256 x i32> is bitcast to x86_amx when
it is used by AMX intrinsics, and x86_amx is bitcast to <256 x i32> when it
is used by load/store instruction. So amx intrinsics only operate on type x86_amx.
It can help to separate amx intrinsics from llvm IR instructions (+-*/).
Thank Craig for the idea. This patch depend on https://reviews.llvm.org/D87981.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91927