Clang 10.0.0 Release Notes

Written by the LLVM Team

Introduction

This document contains the release notes for the Clang C/C++/Objective-C frontend, part of the LLVM Compiler Infrastructure, release 10.0.0. Here we describe the status of Clang in some detail, including major improvements from the previous release and new feature work. For the general LLVM release notes, see the LLVM documentation. All LLVM releases may be downloaded from the LLVM releases web site.

For more information about Clang or LLVM, including information about the latest release, please see the Clang Web Site or the LLVM Web Site.

What’s New in Clang 10.0.0?

Some of the major new features and improvements to Clang are listed here. Generic improvements to Clang as a whole or to its underlying infrastructure are described first, followed by language-specific sections with improvements to Clang’s support for those languages.

Major New Features

  • clang used to run the actual compilation in a subprocess (“clang -cc1”). Now compilations are done in-process by default. -fno-integrated-cc1 restores the former behavior. The -v and -### flags will print “(in-process)” when compilations are done in-process.
  • Concepts support. Clang now supports C++2a Concepts under the -std=c++2a flag.

Improvements to Clang’s diagnostics

  • -Wtautological-overlap-compare will warn on negative numbers and non-int types.
  • -Wtautological-compare for self comparisons and -Wtautological-overlap-compare will now look through member and array access to determine if two operand expressions are the same.
  • -Wtautological-bitwise-compare is a new warning group. This group has the current warning which diagnoses the tautological comparison of a bitwise operation and a constant. The group also has the new warning which diagnoses when a bitwise-or with a non-negative value is converted to a bool, since that bool will always be true.
  • -Wbitwise-conditional-parentheses will warn on operator precedence issues when mixing bitwise-and (&) and bitwise-or (|) operator with the conditional operator (?:).
  • -Wrange-loop-analysis got several improvements. It no longer warns about a copy being made when the result is bound to an rvalue reference. It no longer warns when an object of a small, trivially copyable type is copied. The warning now offers fix-its. Excluding -Wrange-loop-bind-reference it is now part of -Wall. To reduce the number of false positives the diagnostic is disabled in macros and template instantiations.
  • -Wmisleading-indentation has been added. This warning is similar to the GCC warning of the same name. It warns about statements that are indented as if they were part of a if/else/for/while statement but are not semantically part of that if/else/for/while.
  • -Wbitwise-op-parentheses and -Wlogical-op-parentheses are disabled by default.
  • The new warnings -Wc99-designator and -Wreorder-init-list warn about uses of C99 initializers in C++ mode for cases that are valid in C99 but not in C++20.
  • The new warning -Wsizeof-array-div catches cases like int arr[10]; ...sizeof(arr) / sizeof(short)... (should be sizeof(arr) / sizeof(int)), and the existing warning -Wsizeof-pointer-div catches more cases.
  • The new warning -Wxor-used-as-pow warns on cases where it looks like the xor operator ^ is used to be mean exponentiation, e.g. 2 ^ 16.
  • The new warning -Wfinal-dtor-non-final-class warns on classes that have a final destructor but aren’t themselves marked final.
  • -Wextra now enables -Wdeprecated-copy. The warning deprecates move and copy constructors in classes where an explicit destructor is declared. This is for compatibility with GCC 9, and forward looking for a change that’s being considered for C++23. You can disable it with -Wno-deprecated-copy.

Non-comprehensive list of changes in this release

  • In both C and C++ (C17 6.5.6p8, C++ [expr.add]), pointer arithmetic is only permitted within arrays. In particular, the behavior of a program is not defined if it adds a non-zero offset (or in C, any offset) to a null pointer, or if it forms a null pointer by subtracting an integer from a non-null pointer, and the LLVM optimizer now uses those guarantees for transformations. This may lead to unintended behavior in code that performs these operations. The Undefined Behavior Sanitizer -fsanitize=pointer-overflow check has been extended to detect these cases, so that code relying on them can be detected and fixed.
  • The Implicit Conversion Sanitizer (-fsanitize=implicit-conversion) has learned to sanitize pre/post increment/decrement of types with bit width smaller than int.
  • For X86 target, -march=skylake-avx512, -march=icelake-client, -march=icelake-server, -march=cascadelake, -march=cooperlake will default to not using 512-bit zmm registers in vectorized code unless 512-bit intrinsics are used in the source code. 512-bit operations are known to cause the CPUs to run at a lower frequency which can impact performance. This behavior can be changed by passing -mprefer-vector-width=512 on the command line.
  • Clang now defaults to .init_array on Linux. It used to use .ctors if the found GCC installation is older than 4.7.0. Add -fno-use-init-array to get the old behavior (.ctors).
  • The behavior of the flag -flax-vector-conversions has been modified to more closely match GCC, as described below. In Clang 10 onwards, command lines specifying this flag do not permit implicit vector bitcasts between integer vectors and floating-point vectors. Such conversions are still permitted by default, however, and the default can be explicitly requested with the Clang-specific flag -flax-vector-conversions=all. In a future release of Clang, we intend to change the default to -fno-lax-vector-conversions.
  • Improved support for octeon MIPS-family CPU. Added octeon+ to the list of of CPUs accepted by the driver.
  • For the WebAssembly target, the wasm-opt tool will now be run if it is found in the PATH, which can reduce code size.
  • For the RISC-V target, floating point registers can now be used in inline assembly constraints.

New Compiler Flags

  • The -fgnuc-version= flag now controls the value of __GNUC__ and related macros. This flag does not enable or disable any GCC extensions implemented in Clang. Setting the version to zero causes Clang to leave __GNUC__ and other GNU-namespaced macros, such as __GXX_WEAK__, undefined.
  • vzeroupper insertion on X86 targets can now be disabled with -mno-vzeroupper. You can also force vzeroupper insertion to be used on CPUs that normally wouldn’t with -mvzeroupper.
  • The -fno-concept-satisfaction-caching can be used to disable caching for satisfactions of Concepts. The C++2a draft standard does not currently permit this caching, but disabling it may incur significant compile-time costs. This flag is intended for experimentation purposes and may be removed at any time; please let us know if you encounter a situation where you need to specify this flag for correct program behavior.
  • The -ffixed-xX flags now work on RISC-V. These reserve the corresponding general-purpose registers.
  • RISC-V has added -mcmodel=medany and -mcmodel=medlow as aliases for -mcmodel=small and -mcmodel=medium respectively. Preprocessor definitions for __riscv_cmodel_medlow and __riscv_cmodel_medany have been corrected.
  • -fmacro-prefix-map=OLD=NEW substitutes directory prefix OLD for NEW in predefined preprocessor macros such as __FILE__. This helps with reproducible builds that are location independent. The new -ffile-prefix-map option is equivalent to specifying both -fdebug-prefix-map and -fmacro-prefix-map.
  • -fpatchable-function-entry=N[,M] is added to generate M NOPs before the function entry and N-M NOPs after the function entry. This is used by AArch64 ftrace in the Linux kernel.
  • -mbranches-within-32B-boundaries is added as an x86 assembler mitigation for Intel’s Jump Condition Code Erratum.

Deprecated Compiler Flags

The following options are deprecated and ignored. They will be removed in future versions of Clang.

  • -mmpx used to enable the __MPX__ preprocessor define for the Intel MPX instructions. There were no MPX intrinsics.
  • -mno-mpx used to disable -mmpx and is the default behavior.
  • -fconcepts-ts previously used to enable experimental concepts support. Use -std=c++2a instead to enable Concepts support.

Modified Compiler Flags

  • RISC-V now sets the architecture (riscv32/riscv64) based on the value provided to the -march flag, overriding the target provided by -triple.
  • -flax-vector-conversions has been split into three different levels of laxness, and has been updated to match the GCC semantics:
    • -flax-vector-conversions=all: This is Clang’s current default, and permits implicit vector conversions (performed as bitcasts) between any two vector types of the same overall bit-width. Former synonym: -flax-vector-conversions (Clang <= 9).
    • -flax-vector-conversions=integer: This permits implicit vector conversions (performed as bitcasts) between any two integer vector types of the same overall bit-width. Synonym: -flax-vector-conversions (Clang >= 10).
    • -flax-vector-conversions=none: Do not perform any implicit bitcasts between vector types. Synonym: -fno-lax-vector-conversions.
  • -debug-info-kind now has an option -debug-info-kind=constructor, which is one level below -debug-info-kind=limited. This option causes debug info for classes to be emitted only when a constructor is emitted.
  • RISC-V now chooses a slightly different sysroot path and defaults to using compiler-rt if no GCC installation is detected.
  • RISC-V now supports multilibs in baremetal environments. This support does not extend to supporting multilib aliases.

Attribute Changes in Clang

  • Support was added for function __attribute__((target("branch-protection=...")))

Windows Support

  • Previous Clang versions contained a work-around to avoid an issue with the standard library headers in Visual Studio 2019 versions prior to 16.3. This work-around has now been removed, and users of Visual Studio 2019 are encouraged to upgrade to 16.3 or later, otherwise they may see link errors as below:

    error LNK2005: "bool const std::_Is_integral<int>" (??$_Is_integral@H@std@@3_NB) already defined
    
  • The .exe output suffix is now added implicitly in MinGW mode, when Clang is running on Windows (matching GCC’s behaviour)

  • Fixed handling of TLS variables that are shared between object files in MinGW environments

  • The -cfguard flag now emits Windows Control Flow Guard checks on indirect function calls. The previous behavior is still available with the -cfguard-nochecks flag. These checks can be disabled for specific functions using the new __declspec(guard(nocf)) modifier.

C++ Language Changes in Clang

  • The behaviour of the gnu_inline attribute now matches GCC, for cases where used without the extern keyword. As this is a change compared to how it behaved in previous Clang versions, a warning is emitted for this combination.

Objective-C Language Changes in Clang

  • In both Objective-C and Objective-C++, -Wcompare-distinct-pointer-types will now warn when comparing ObjC Class with an ObjC instance type pointer.

    Class clz = ...;
    MyType *instance = ...;
    bool eq = (clz == instance); // Previously undiagnosed, now warns.
    
  • Objective-C++ now diagnoses conversions between Class and ObjC instance type pointers. Such conversions already emitted an on-by-default -Wincompatible-pointer-types warning in Objective-C mode, but had inadvertently been missed entirely in Objective-C++. This has been fixed, and they are now diagnosed as errors, consistent with the usual C++ treatment for conversions between unrelated pointer types.

    Class clz = ...;
    MyType *instance = ...;
    clz = instance; // Previously undiagnosed, now an error.
    instance = clz; // Previously undiagnosed, now an error.
    

    One particular issue you may run into is attempting to use a class as a key in a dictionary literal. This will now result in an error, because Class is not convertible to id<NSCopying>. (Note that this was already a warning in Objective-C mode.) While an arbitrary Class object is not guaranteed to implement NSCopying, the default metaclass implementation does. Therefore, the recommended solution is to insert an explicit cast to id, which disables the type-checking here.

Class cls = ...;

// Error: cannot convert from Class to id<NSCoding>.
NSDictionary* d = @{cls : @"Hello"};

// Fix: add an explicit cast to 'id'.
NSDictionary* d = @{(id)cls : @"Hello"};

OpenCL Kernel Language Changes in Clang

Generic changes:

  • Made __private to be appear explicitly in diagnostics, AST, etc.
  • Fixed diagnostics of enqueue_kernel.

OpenCL builtin functions:

  • The majority of the OpenCL builtin functions are now available through the experimental TableGen driven -fdeclare-opencl-builtins option.
  • Align the enqueue_marker declaration in standard opencl-c.h to the OpenCL spec.
  • Avoid a void pointer cast in the CLK_NULL_EVENT definition.
  • Aligned OpenCL with c11 atomic fetch max/min.

Changes in C++ for OpenCL:

  • Fixed language mode predefined macros for C++ mode.
  • Allow OpenCL C style compound vector initialization.
  • Improved destructor support.
  • Implemented address space deduction for pointers/references to arrays and auto variables.
  • Added address spaces support for lambdas and constexpr.
  • Fixed misc address spaces usages in classes.

ABI Changes in Clang

  • GCC passes vectors of __int128 in memory on X86-64. Clang historically broke the vectors into multiple scalars using two 64-bit values for each element. Clang now matches the GCC behavior on Linux and NetBSD. You can switch back to old API behavior with flag: -fclang-abi-compat=9.0.
  • RISC-V now chooses a default -march= and -mabi= to match (in almost all cases) the GCC defaults. On baremetal targets, where neither -march= nor -mabi= are specified, Clang now differs from GCC by defaulting to -march=rv32imac -mabi=ilp32 or -march=rv64imac -mabi=lp64 depending on the architecture in the target triple. These do not always match the defaults in Clang 9. We strongly suggest that you explicitly pass -march= and -mabi= when compiling for RISC-V, due to how extensible this architecture is.
  • RISC-V now uses target-abi module metadata to encode the chosen psABI. This ensures that the correct lowering will be done by LLVM when LTO is enabled.
  • An issue with lowering return types in the RISC-V ILP32D psABI has been fixed.

OpenMP Support in Clang

New features for OpenMP 5.0 were implemented. Use -fopenmp-version=50 option to activate support for OpenMP 5.0.

  • Added support for device_type clause in declare target directive.
  • Non-static and non-ordered loops are nonmonotonic by default.
  • Teams-based directives can be used as a standalone directive.
  • Added support for collapsing of non-rectangular loops.
  • Added support for range-based loops.
  • Added support for collapsing of imperfectly nested loops.
  • Added support for master taskloop, parallel master taskloop, master taskloop simd and parallel master taskloop simd directives.
  • Added support for if clauses in simd-based directives.
  • Added support for unified shared memory for NVPTX target.
  • Added support for nested atomic and simd directives are allowed in sims-based directives.
  • Added support for non temporal clauses in sims-based directives.
  • Added basic support for conditional lastprivate variables

Other improvements:

  • Added basic analysis for use of the uninitialized variables in clauses.
  • Bug fixes.

Internal API Changes

These are major API changes that have happened since the 9.0.0 release of Clang. If upgrading an external codebase that uses Clang as a library, this section should help get you past the largest hurdles of upgrading.

  • libTooling APIs that transfer ownership of FrontendAction objects now pass them by unique_ptr, making the ownership transfer obvious in the type system. FrontendActionFactory::create() now returns a unique_ptr<FrontendAction>. runToolOnCode, runToolOnCodeWithArgs, ToolInvocation::ToolInvocation() now take a unique_ptr<FrontendAction>.

Build System Changes

These are major changes to the build system that have happened since the 9.0.0 release of Clang. Users of the build system should adjust accordingly.

  • In 8.0.0 and below, the install-clang-headers target would install clang’s resource directory headers. This installation is now performed by the install-clang-resource-headers target. Users of the old install-clang-headers target should switch to the new install-clang-resource-headers target. The install-clang-headers target now installs clang’s API headers (corresponding to its libraries), which is consistent with the install-llvm-headers target.
  • In 9.0.0 and later Clang added a new target, clang-cpp, which generates a shared library comprised of all the clang component libraries and exporting the clang C++ APIs. Additionally the build system gained the new “CLANG_LINK_CLANG_DYLIB” option, which defaults Off, and when set to On, will force clang (and clang-based tools) to link the clang-cpp library instead of statically linking clang’s components. This option will reduce the size of binary distributions at the expense of compiler performance.

clang-format

  • The Standard style option specifies which version of C++ should be used when parsing and formatting C++ code. The set of allowed values has changed:

    • Latest will always enable new C++ language features.
    • c++03, c++11, c++14, c++17, c++20 will pin to exactly that language version.
    • Auto is the default and detects style from the code (this is unchanged).

    The previous values of Cpp03 and Cpp11 are deprecated. Note that Cpp11 is treated as Latest, as this was always clang-format’s behavior. (One motivation for this change is the new name describes the behavior better).

  • Clang-format has a new option called --dry-run or -n to emit a warning for clang-format violations. This can be used together with --ferror-limit=N to limit the number of warnings per file and --Werror to make warnings into errors.

  • Option IncludeIsMainSourceRegex has been added to allow for additional suffixes and file extensions to be considered as a source file for execution of logic that looks for “main include file” to put it on top.

    By default, clang-format considers source files as “main” only when they end with: .c, .cc, .cpp, .c++, .cxx, .m or .mm extensions. This config option allows to extend this set of source files considered as “main”.

    For example, if this option is configured to (Impl\.hpp)$, then a file ClassImpl.hpp is considered “main” (in addition to Class.c, Class.cc, Class.cpp and so on) and “main include file” logic will be executed (with IncludeIsMainRegex setting also being respected in later phase). Without this option set, ClassImpl.hpp would not have the main include file put on top before any other include.

  • Options DeriveLineEnding and UseCRLF have been added to allow clang-format to control the newlines. DeriveLineEnding is by default true and reflects is the existing mechanism, which based is on majority rule. The new options allows this to be turned off and UseCRLF to control the decision as to which sort of line ending to use.

  • Option SpaceBeforeSquareBrackets has been added to insert a space before array declarations.

    int a [5];    vs    int a[5];
    
  • Clang-format now supports JavaScript null operators.

    const x = foo ?? default;
    const z = foo?.bar?.baz;
    
  • Option AlwaysBreakAfterReturnType now manages all operator functions.

libclang

  • Various changes to reduce discrepancies in destructor calls between the generated CFG and the actual codegen.

    In particular:

    • Respect C++17 copy elision; previously it would generate destructor calls for elided temporaries, including in initialization and return statements.
    • Don’t generate duplicate destructor calls for statement expressions.
    • Fix initialization lists.
    • Fix comma operator.
    • Change printing of implicit destructors to print the type instead of the class name directly, matching the code for temporary object destructors. The class name was blank for lambdas.

Static Analyzer

  • New checker: alpha.cplusplus.PlacementNew to detect whether the storage provided for default placement new is sufficiently large.
  • New checker: fuchsia.HandleChecker to detect leaks related to Fuchsia handles.
  • New checker: security.insecureAPI.decodeValueOfObjCType warns about potential buffer overflows when using [NSCoder decodeValueOfObjCType:at:]
  • deadcode.DeadStores now warns about nested dead stores.
  • Condition values that are relevant to the occurrence of a bug are far better explained in bug reports.
  • Despite still being at an alpha stage, checkers implementing taint analyses and C++ iterator rules were improved greatly.
  • Numerous smaller fixes.

Undefined Behavior Sanitizer (UBSan)

  • The pointer-overflow check was extended added to catch the cases where a non-zero offset is applied to a null pointer, or the result of applying the offset is a null pointer.

    #include <cstdint> // for intptr_t
    
    static char *getelementpointer_inbounds(char *base, unsigned long offset) {
      // Potentially UB.
      return base + offset;
    }
    
    char *getelementpointer_unsafe(char *base, unsigned long offset) {
      // Always apply offset. UB if base is ``nullptr`` and ``offset`` is not
      // zero, or if ``base`` is non-``nullptr`` and ``offset`` is
      // ``-reinterpret_cast<intptr_t>(base)``.
      return getelementpointer_inbounds(base, offset);
    }
    
    char *getelementpointer_safe(char *base, unsigned long offset) {
      // Cast pointer to integer, perform usual arithmetic addition,
      // and cast to pointer. This is legal.
      char *computed =
          reinterpret_cast<char *>(reinterpret_cast<intptr_t>(base) + offset);
      // If either the pointer becomes non-``nullptr``, or becomes
      // ``nullptr``, we must use ``computed`` result.
      if (((base == nullptr) && (computed != nullptr)) ||
          ((base != nullptr) && (computed == nullptr)))
        return computed;
      // Else we can use ``getelementpointer_inbounds()``.
      return getelementpointer_inbounds(base, offset);
    }
    

Changes deferred to Clang-11 release

  • The next release of clang (clang-11) will upgrade the default C language standard used if not specified via command line from gnu11 to gnu17.

Additional Information

A wide variety of additional information is available on the Clang web page. The web page contains versions of the API documentation which are up-to-date with the Subversion version of the source code. You can access versions of these documents specific to this release by going into the “clang/docs/” directory in the Clang tree.

If you have any questions or comments about Clang, please feel free to contact us via the mailing list.