agozillon 20929abb85 [MLIR][OpenMP] Introduce overlapped record type map support (#119588)
This PR introduces a new additional type of map lowering for record
types that Clang currently supports, in which a user can map a top-level
record type and then individual members with different mapping,
effectively creating a sort of "overlapping" mapping that we attempt to
cut around.

This is currently most predominantly used in Fortran, when mapping
descriptors and there data, we map the descriptor and its data with
separate map modifiers and "cut around" the pointer data, so that wedo
not overwrite it unless the runtime deems it a neccesary action based on
its reference counting mechanism. However, it is a mechanism that will
come in handy/trigger when a user explitily maps a record type (derived
type or structure) and then explicitly maps a member with a different
map type.

These additions were predominantly in the OpenMPToLLVMIRTranslation.cpp
file and phase, however, one Flang test that checks end-to-end IR
compilation (as far as we care for now at least) was altered.

2/3 required PRs to enable declare target to mapping, should look at PR
3/3 to check for full green passes (this one will fail a number due to
some dependencies).

Co-authored-by: Raghu Maddhipatla raghu.maddhipatla@amd.com
2025-11-24 21:20:29 +01:00
2025-11-24 20:10:02 +00:00

The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure

OpenSSF Scorecard OpenSSF Best Practices libc++

Welcome to the LLVM project!

This repository contains the source code for LLVM, a toolkit for the construction of highly optimized compilers, optimizers, and run-time environments.

The LLVM project has multiple components. The core of the project is itself called "LLVM". This contains all of the tools, libraries, and header files needed to process intermediate representations and convert them into object files. Tools include an assembler, disassembler, bitcode analyzer, and bitcode optimizer.

C-like languages use the Clang frontend. This component compiles C, C++, Objective-C, and Objective-C++ code into LLVM bitcode -- and from there into object files, using LLVM.

Other components include: the libc++ C++ standard library, the LLD linker, and more.

Getting the Source Code and Building LLVM

Consult the Getting Started with LLVM page for information on building and running LLVM.

For information on how to contribute to the LLVM project, please take a look at the Contributing to LLVM guide.

Getting in touch

Join the LLVM Discourse forums, Discord chat, LLVM Office Hours or Regular sync-ups.

The LLVM project has adopted a code of conduct for participants to all modes of communication within the project.

Description
No description provided
Readme 5.1 GiB
Languages
LLVM 41.5%
C++ 31.7%
C 13%
Assembly 9.1%
MLIR 1.5%
Other 2.8%