commit | 0735ab34f67bc6ed41622a001e3bc71d2e593710 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Kareem Ergawy <kareem.ergawy@amd.com> | Wed Feb 28 10:15:57 2024 +0100 |
committer | Copybara-Service <copybara-worker@google.com> | Wed Feb 28 01:21:21 2024 -0800 |
tree | 29ccbbf3b60d5465330de7867fffc6c2cf54c941 | |
parent | 88a3d1a8b5e221a6cf4b51495a3b0e788ef072e0 [diff] |
[flang][OpenMP][MLIR] Basic support for delayed privatization code-gen (#81833) Adds basic support for emitting delayed privatizers from flang. So far, only types of symbols are supported (i.e. scalars), support for more complicated types will be added later. This also makes sure that reduction and delayed privatization work properly together by merging the body-gen callbacks for both in case both clauses are present on the parallel construct. GitOrigin-RevId: 26b8be201e2d15867bb327a8008fffb3e34d42a5
Flang is a ground-up implementation of a Fortran front end written in modern C++. It started off as the f18 project (https://github.com/flang-compiler/f18) with an aim to replace the previous flang project (https://github.com/flang-compiler/flang) and address its various deficiencies. F18 was subsequently accepted into the LLVM project and rechristened as Flang.
Please note that flang is not ready yet for production usage.
Read more about flang in the docs directory. Start with the compiler overview.
To better understand Fortran as a language and the specific grammar accepted by flang, read Fortran For C Programmers and flang's specifications of the Fortran grammar and the OpenMP grammar.
Treatment of language extensions is covered in this document.
To understand the compilers handling of intrinsics, see the discussion of intrinsics.
To understand how a flang program communicates with libraries at runtime, see the discussion of runtime descriptors.
If you're interested in contributing to the compiler, read the style guide and also review how flang uses modern C++ features.
If you are interested in writing new documentation, follow LLVM's Markdown style guide.
Consult the Getting Started with Flang for information on building and running flang.