965 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Rønne Petersen
eb4539a27d
std.Target: Rename glsl450 Arch tag to opengl.
Versions can simply use the normal version range mechanism, or alternatively an
Abi tag if that makes more sense. For now, we only care about 4.5 anyway.
2024-08-12 08:59:47 +02:00
Andrew Kelley
61dac74128
Merge pull request #20985 from alexrp/gpu-nonsense
Follow-up on `std.Target` GPU changes in #20960
2024-08-11 20:23:28 -07:00
mlugg
153e7d6235
frontend: give all container types namespaces
Eliding the namespace when a container type has no decls was an
experiment in saving memory, but it ended up causing more trouble than
it was worth in various places. So, take the small memory hit for
reified types, and just give every container type a namespace.
2024-08-11 07:30:21 +01:00
mlugg
548a087faf
compiler: split Decl into Nav and Cau
The type `Zcu.Decl` in the compiler is problematic: over time it has
gained many responsibilities. Every source declaration, container type,
generic instantiation, and `@extern` has a `Decl`. The functions of
these `Decl`s are in some cases entirely disjoint.

After careful analysis, I determined that the two main responsibilities
of `Decl` are as follows:
* A `Decl` acts as the "subject" of semantic analysis at comptime. A
  single unit of analysis is either a runtime function body, or a
  `Decl`. It registers incremental dependencies, tracks analysis errors,
  etc.
* A `Decl` acts as a "global variable": a pointer to it is consistent,
  and it may be lowered to a specific symbol by the codegen backend.

This commit eliminates `Decl` and introduces new types to model these
responsibilities: `Cau` (Comptime Analysis Unit) and `Nav` (Named
Addressable Value).

Every source declaration, and every container type requiring resolution
(so *not* including `opaque`), has a `Cau`. For a source declaration,
this `Cau` performs the resolution of its value. (When #131 is
implemented, it is unsolved whether type and value resolution will share
a `Cau` or have two distinct `Cau`s.) For a type, this `Cau` is the
context in which type resolution occurs.

Every non-`comptime` source declaration, every generic instantiation,
and every distinct `extern` has a `Nav`. These are sent to codegen/link:
the backends by definition do not care about `Cau`s.

This commit has some minor technically-breaking changes surrounding
`usingnamespace`. I don't think they'll impact anyone, since the changes
are fixes around semantics which were previously inconsistent (the
behavior changed depending on hashmap iteration order!).

Aside from that, this changeset has no significant user-facing changes.
Instead, it is an internal refactor which makes it easier to correctly
model the responsibilities of different objects, particularly regarding
incremental compilation. The performance impact should be negligible,
but I will take measurements before merging this work into `master`.

Co-authored-by: Jacob Young <jacobly0@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jakub Konka <kubkon@jakubkonka.com>
2024-08-11 07:29:41 +01:00
Andrew Kelley
61fbdebd61
Merge pull request #20969 from alexrp/llvm-unsup-targets
`llvm`: Fix hasLlvmSupport() for dxil, spirv[32,64], and kalimba.
2024-08-07 22:50:08 -07:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
4e56653628
llvm: Add a comment clarifying our mapping of the opencl OS tag. 2024-08-07 21:42:22 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
c11b997662
llvm: Set vendor tag in target triple for GPU backends. 2024-08-07 21:31:39 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
746f20d21f
llvm: Use unreachable in targetTriple() for targets without LLVM support. 2024-08-07 09:39:42 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
a9f68410d0
llvm: Clarify in initializeLLVMTarget() that there's no kalimba backend. 2024-08-07 09:39:42 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
e5c75479c2
std.Target: Rework isPPC()/isPPC64() functions.
* Rename isPPC() -> isPowerPC32().
* Rename isPPC64() -> isPowerPC64().
* Add new isPowerPC() function which covers both.

There was confusion even in the standard library about what isPPC() meant. This
change makes these functions work how I think most people actually expect them
to work, and makes them consistent with isMIPS(), isSPARC(), etc.

I chose to rename from PPC to PowerPC because 1) it's more consistent with the
other functions, and 2) it'll cause loud rather than silent breakage for anyone
who might have been depending on isPPC() while misunderstanding it.
2024-08-01 20:58:05 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
b49b7501cf
std.Target: Remove cloudabi OS tag.
It's discontinued in favor of WASI.

https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc
2024-07-30 06:30:26 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
ef06e4b6e4
std.Target: Remove ananas OS tag.
This is a fairly small hobby OS that has not seen development in 2 years. Our
current policy is that hobby OSs should use the `other` tag.

https://github.com/zhmu/ananas
2024-07-30 06:30:25 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
c8ca05e93a
std.Target: Remove sparcel architecture tag.
What is `sparcel`, you might ask? Good question!

If you take a peek in the SPARC v8 manual, §2.2, it is quite explicit that SPARC
v8 is a big-endian architecture. No little-endian or mixed-endian support to be
found here.

On the other hand, the SPARC v9 manual, in §3.2.1.2, states that it has support
for mixed-endian operation, with big-endian mode being the default.

Ok, so `sparcel` must just be referring to SPARC v9 running in little-endian
mode, surely?

Nope:

* 40b4fd7a3e/llvm/lib/Target/Sparc/SparcTargetMachine.cpp (L226)
* 40b4fd7a3e/llvm/lib/Target/Sparc/SparcTargetMachine.cpp (L104)

So, `sparcel` in LLVM is referring to some sort of fantastical little-endian
SPARC v8 architecture. I've scoured the internet and I can find absolutely no
evidence that such a thing exists or has ever existed. In fact, I can find no
evidence that a little-endian implementation of SPARC v9 ever existed, either.
Or any SPARC version, actually!

The support was added here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D8741

Notably, there is no mention whatsoever of what CPU this might be referring to,
and no justification given for the "but some are little" comment added in the
patch.

My best guess is that this might have been some private exercise in creating a
little-endian version of SPARC that never saw the light of day. Given that SPARC
v8 explicitly doesn't support little-endian operation (let alone little-endian
instruction encoding!), and no CPU is known to be implemented as such, I think
it's very reasonable for us to just remove this support.
2024-07-30 06:30:25 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
1e9278d718
std.Target: Remove spir/spir64 architecture tags.
These were for very old OpenCL have been long abandoned in favor of SPIR-V.

* https://github.com/KhronosGroup/SPIR
* https://github.com/KhronosGroup/SPIR-Tools
2024-07-30 06:30:25 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
d1d95294fd std.Target.Cpu.Arch: Remove the aarch64_32 tag.
This is a misfeature that we inherited from LLVM:

* https://reviews.llvm.org/D61259
* https://reviews.llvm.org/D61939

(`aarch64_32` and `arm64_32` are equivalent.)

I truly have no idea why this triple passed review in LLVM. It is, to date, the
*only* tag in the architecture component that is not, in fact, an architecture.
In reality, it is just an ILP32 ABI for AArch64 (*not* AArch32).

The triples that use `aarch64_32` look like `aarch64_32-apple-watchos`. Yes,
that triple is exactly what you think; it has no ABI component. They really,
seriously did this.

Since only Apple could come up with silliness like this, it should come as no
surprise that no one else uses `aarch64_32`. Later on, a GNU ILP32 ABI for
AArch64 was developed, and support was added to LLVM:

* https://reviews.llvm.org/D94143
* https://reviews.llvm.org/D104931

Here, sanity seems to have prevailed, and a triple using this ABI looks like
`aarch64-linux-gnu_ilp32` as you would expect.

As can be seen from the diffs in this commit, there was plenty of confusion
throughout the Zig codebase about what exactly `aarch64_32` was. So let's just
remove it. In its place, we'll use `aarch64-watchos-ilp32`,
`aarch64-linux-gnuilp32`, and so on. We'll then translate these appropriately
when talking to LLVM. Hence, this commit adds the `ilp32` ABI tag (we already
have `gnuilp32`).
2024-07-28 19:44:52 -07:00
Andrew Kelley
3256df2ff8 llvm: always include instrumentation function attributes 2024-07-25 18:52:20 -07:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
1c35e73b61 llvm: Don't emit safety memset() for stores of undef in Debug with safety off.
Before, this code:

    @setRuntimeSafety(false);
    var arr: [38]elf.Addr = undefined;

would emit a call to memset() in the output code in Debug mode, while in all the
release modes, LLVM optimized the memset() out as expected. Emitting the call in
Debug mode is problematic in some contexts, e.g. in std.os.linux.start_pie where
we are not yet ready to correctly perform calls because relocations haven't been
applied yet, or in the early stages of a dynamic linker, etc.
2024-07-25 18:04:50 -07:00
Andrew Kelley
26d2a7960e default "trace pc guard" coverage off
* Add -f(no-)sanitize-coverage-trace-pc-guard CLI flag which defaults to
  off. This value lowers to TracePCGuard = true (LLVM backend) and -Xclang
  -fsanitize-coverage-trace-pc-guard. These settings are not
  automatically included with -ffuzz.
* Add `Build.Step.Compile` flag for sanitize_coverage_trace_pc_guard
  with appropriate documentation.
* Add `zig cc` integration for the respective flags.
* Avoid crashing in ELF linker code when -ffuzz -femit-llvm-ir used
  together.
2024-07-23 17:30:53 -07:00
Andrew Kelley
33d4742456 LLVM: more fine-grained sancov emit options
Exposes sanitizer coverage flags to the target machine emit function.
Makes it easier to change sancov options without rebuilding the C++
files.

This also enables PCTable = true for sancov which is needed by AFL, and
adds the corresponding Clang flag.
2024-07-23 16:04:58 -07:00
Andrew Kelley
25198810c8 add new builtin: @disableInstrumentation
This is needed to ensure that start code does not try to access thread
local storage before it has set up thread local storage.
2024-07-22 13:07:02 -07:00
Andrew Kelley
54b7e144b1 initial support for integrated fuzzing
* Add the `-ffuzz` and `-fno-fuzz` CLI arguments.
* Detect fuzz testing flags from zig cc.
* Set the correct clang flags when fuzz testing is requested. It can be
  combined with TSAN and UBSAN.
* Compilation: build fuzzer library when needed which is currently an
  empty zig file.
* Add optforfuzzing to every function in the llvm backend for modules
  that have requested fuzzing.
* In ZigLLVMTargetMachineEmitToFile, add the optimization passes for
  sanitizer coverage.
* std.mem.eql uses a naive implementation optimized for fuzzing when
  builtin.fuzz is true.

Tracked by #20702
2024-07-22 13:07:02 -07:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
be9841335e
std.Target.Os: Rename lv2 to ps3.
It is very non-obvious that this is what lv2 refers to, and we already use ps4
and ps5 to refer to the later models, so let's just be consistent.
2024-07-21 22:38:30 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
db8bc4770c
std.Target: Remove the tce/tcele arch tags.
There is no obvious reason why this would be relevant for Zig to target. I
rather question the value of LLVM even having target triple code for this, too.

See: https://blog.llvm.org/2010/06/tce-project-co-design-of-application.html
See: https://github.com/cpc/llvmtce
2024-07-21 22:38:30 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
21cc5a2044
std.Target: Remove the shave arch tag.
This was added as an architecture to LLVM's target triple parser and the Clang
driver in 2015. No backend ever materialized as far as I can see (same for GCC).
In 2016, other code referring to it started using "Myriad" instead. Ultimately,
all code related to it that isn't in the target triple parser was removed. It
seems to be a real product, just... literally no one seems to know anything
about the ISA. I figure after almost a decade with no public ISA documentation
to speak of, and no LLVM backend to reference, it's probably safe to assume that
we're not going to learn much about this ISA, making it useless for Zig.

See: 1b5767f72b
See: 84a7564b28
See: 8cfe9d8f2a
2024-07-21 22:38:30 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
f1e0c35db4
std.Target: Remove hsail/hsail64 arch tags.
This seems to just be dead.

See: https://github.com/search?q=repo%3Allvm%2Fllvm-project%20hsail&type=code
See: https://github.com/HSAFoundation/HSAIL-Tools/commits/master
2024-07-21 22:38:30 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
67a052df81
std.Target: Remove amdil/amdil64 arch tags.
This is really obscure and no one is 100% sure what it is. It seems to be old
and unused. My suspicion is that it's just an old term for "AMDGPU" before it
was upstreamed to LLVM.

See: https://github.com/search?q=repo%3Allvm%2Fllvm-project+amdil&type=code
2024-07-21 22:38:30 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
c825b567b2
std.Target: Remove the r600 arch tag.
These are quite old GPUs, and it is unlikely that Zig will ever be able to
target them.

See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radeon_HD_2000_series
2024-07-21 22:38:30 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
9848623e62
std.Target: Remove the renderscript32/renderscript64 arch tags.
It's dead: https://developer.android.com/guide/topics/renderscript/migrate
2024-07-21 22:38:30 +02:00
Andrew Kelley
f303c3943f Revert "Merge pull request #20380 from tau-dev/master"
This reverts commit 397be0c9cc8156d38d1487a4c80210007033cbd0, reversing
changes made to 18d412ab2fb7bda92f7bfbdf732849bbcd066c33.

Caused test failures in master branch.
2024-07-21 02:44:58 -07:00
cheme
01dc0d5a72
Riscv32e align stack to 4 bytes (#20673) 2024-07-21 00:28:22 -07:00
Andrew Kelley
397be0c9cc
Merge pull request #20380 from tau-dev/master
llvm: Nest debug info correctly
2024-07-21 00:19:52 -07:00
Andrew Kelley
ff02bf403b
Merge pull request #20402 from alexrp/target-cleanup
std.Target: Remove some obsolete/dead specifiers.
2024-07-20 13:55:37 -07:00
sobolevn
4c71d3f29e
Fix typos in code comments in src/ 2024-07-20 20:23:18 +03:00
Jacob Young
2e65244cae dev: fix llvm backend checks 2024-07-20 07:43:40 -04:00
Jacob Young
4f742c4cfc dev: introduce dev environments that enable compiler feature sets 2024-07-19 22:35:33 -07:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
5e82e90dbf
std.Target: Remove coreclr ABI specifier.
This was added to LLVM in 2015 for the LLILC project, which was discontinued in
~2018, and subsequently archived in 2022.

933b58d00f
2024-07-20 05:08:16 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
af8205e25e
std.Target: Remove nacl OS specifier and le32/le64 arch specifiers.
Native Client is dead.

https://developer.chrome.com/docs/native-client
2024-07-20 05:08:16 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
5a2f6acb44
std.Target: Remove kfreebsd OS specifier.
kFreeBSD is dead.

https://lists.debian.org/debian-devel/2023/07/msg00176.html
2024-07-20 05:08:14 +02:00
Alex Rønne Petersen
9939b116bf
std.Target: Remove the gnuf64 ABI specifier.
This was used for LoongArch64, where:

* `gnuf64` -> `ilp32d` / `lp64d` (full hard float)
* `gnuf32` -> `ilp32f` / `lp64f` (hard float for `f32` only)
* `gnusf` -> `ilp32` / `lp64` (soft float)

But Loongson eventually settled on just `gnu` for the first case since that's
what most people will actually be targeting outside embedded scenarios. The
`gnuf32` and `gnusf` specifiers remain in use.
2024-07-20 04:56:56 +02:00
Tau
94cf4d2d81 llvm: add pass-by-reference info to debug types
Without this data, debugger expressions try to pass structs by-value,
which mostly just crashes.
Also: mark enums as enum classes to prevent the enumerators from
shadowing other identifiers.
2024-07-19 17:51:38 +02:00
Tau
177b3359a1 llvm: Do not generate static member definitions
They were not helping LLDB and actively throwing off GDB.
Also: clean up some llvm.Builder and llvm.ir definitions that are no
longer necessary.
2024-07-19 17:51:38 +02:00
Tau
52e4cdb45e Try linking static members' definitions to their declarations.
This does not help anything though: gdb would follow the
DW_AT_specification link only in the opposite direction, which LLVM
cannot emit.
2024-07-19 17:51:38 +02:00
Tau
3bfa63aa61 ModuleDebugInfo: Discard C++ namespaces appearing in PDBs 2024-07-19 17:51:38 +02:00
Tau
9c2d597e69 llvm: Fix debug gen for 0-bit types
Add a regression test for that, since these weirdly never occur in any
of the other tests on x86-64-linux.
2024-07-19 17:51:38 +02:00
Tau
b4eb812305 Don't attach a top-level function to its file, but to the file's struct 2024-07-19 17:51:38 +02:00
Tau
359bbdd574 llvm: encode variables as DW_TAG_imported_declaration
Now we get working global variable lookup in GDB! LLDB still re-mangles,
and it looks like we can't do much about that for now.

Also: translate non-owning type declarations into typedefs.
2024-07-19 17:51:37 +02:00
Tau
876258abe4 llvm: set precise scopes on namespace types and variables
This will allow accessing non-local declarations from debuggers, which,
AFAICT, was impossible before.
Getting scopes right already works for type declarations and functions,
but will need some fiddling for variables:

For those, I tried imitating what Clang does for static member
variables, but LLDB tries to re-mangle those and then fails at lookup,
while GDB outright crashes. Hopefully I can find some other dwarven
incantation to do the right thing.
2024-07-19 17:46:34 +02:00
Jacob Young
2ff49751aa Compilation: introduce work stages for better work distribution 2024-07-13 04:47:38 -04:00
Jacob Young
a1053e8e1d InternPool: add and use a mutate mutex for each list
This allows the mutate mutex to only be locked during actual grows,
which are rare. For the lists that didn't previously have a mutex, this
change has little effect since grows are rare and there is zero
contention on a mutex that is only ever locked by one thread.  This
change allows `extra` to be mutated without racing with a grow.
2024-07-13 04:47:38 -04:00
Jacob Young
c2316c5228 InternPool: make global_error_set thread-safe 2024-07-10 21:39:55 -04:00