llvm-project/compiler-rt/test/lit.common.cfg

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# -*- Python -*-
# Configuration file for 'lit' test runner.
# This file contains common rules for various compiler-rt testsuites.
# It is mostly copied from lit.cfg used by Clang.
import os
import platform
import re
import subprocess
import json
import lit.formats
import lit.util
# Choose between lit's internal shell pipeline runner and a real shell. If
# LIT_USE_INTERNAL_SHELL is in the environment, we use that as an override.
use_lit_shell = os.environ.get("LIT_USE_INTERNAL_SHELL")
if use_lit_shell:
# 0 is external, "" is default, and everything else is internal.
execute_external = (use_lit_shell == "0")
else:
# Otherwise we default to internal on Windows and external elsewhere, as
# bash on Windows is usually very slow.
execute_external = (not sys.platform in ['win32'])
# Setup test format.
config.test_format = lit.formats.ShTest(execute_external)
if execute_external:
config.available_features.add('shell')
compiler_id = getattr(config, 'compiler_id', None)
if compiler_id == "Clang":
if platform.system() != 'Windows':
config.cxx_mode_flags = ["--driver-mode=g++"]
else:
config.cxx_mode_flags = []
# We assume that sanitizers should provide good enough error
# reports and stack traces even with minimal debug info.
config.debug_info_flags = ["-gline-tables-only"]
if platform.system() == 'Windows':
# On Windows, use CodeView with column info instead of DWARF. Both VS and
# windbg do not behave well when column info is enabled, but users have
# requested it because it makes ASan reports more precise.
config.debug_info_flags.append("-gcodeview")
config.debug_info_flags.append("-gcolumn-info")
elif compiler_id == 'GNU':
config.cxx_mode_flags = ["-x c++"]
config.debug_info_flags = ["-g"]
else:
lit_config.fatal("Unsupported compiler id: %r" % compiler_id)
# Add compiler ID to the list of available features.
config.available_features.add(compiler_id)
# If needed, add cflag for shadow scale.
if config.asan_shadow_scale != '':
config.target_cflags += " -mllvm -asan-mapping-scale=" + config.asan_shadow_scale
# BFD linker in 64-bit android toolchains fails to find libc++_shared.so, which
# is a transitive shared library dependency (via asan runtime).
if config.android:
# Prepend the flag so that it can be overridden.
config.target_cflags = "-pie -fuse-ld=gold " + config.target_cflags
if config.android_ndk_version < 19:
# With a new compiler and NDK < r19 this flag ends up meaning "link against
# libc++", but NDK r19 makes this mean "link against the stub libstdc++ that
# just contains a handful of ABI functions", which makes most C++ code fail
# to link. In r19 and later we just use the default which is libc++.
config.cxx_mode_flags.append('-stdlib=libstdc++')
# Clear some environment variables that might affect Clang.
possibly_dangerous_env_vars = ['ASAN_OPTIONS', 'DFSAN_OPTIONS', 'LSAN_OPTIONS',
'MSAN_OPTIONS', 'UBSAN_OPTIONS',
'COMPILER_PATH', 'RC_DEBUG_OPTIONS',
'CINDEXTEST_PREAMBLE_FILE', 'LIBRARY_PATH',
'CPATH', 'C_INCLUDE_PATH', 'CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH',
'OBJC_INCLUDE_PATH', 'OBJCPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH',
'LIBCLANG_TIMING', 'LIBCLANG_OBJTRACKING',
'LIBCLANG_LOGGING', 'LIBCLANG_BGPRIO_INDEX',
'LIBCLANG_BGPRIO_EDIT', 'LIBCLANG_NOTHREADS',
'LIBCLANG_RESOURCE_USAGE',
'LIBCLANG_CODE_COMPLETION_LOGGING',
'XRAY_OPTIONS']
# Clang/Win32 may refer to %INCLUDE%. vsvarsall.bat sets it.
if platform.system() != 'Windows':
possibly_dangerous_env_vars.append('INCLUDE')
for name in possibly_dangerous_env_vars:
if name in config.environment:
del config.environment[name]
# Tweak PATH to include llvm tools dir.
if (not config.llvm_tools_dir) or (not os.path.exists(config.llvm_tools_dir)):
lit_config.fatal("Invalid llvm_tools_dir config attribute: %r" % config.llvm_tools_dir)
path = os.path.pathsep.join((config.llvm_tools_dir, config.environment['PATH']))
config.environment['PATH'] = path
# Help MSVS link.exe find the standard libraries.
# Make sure we only try to use it when targetting Windows.
if platform.system() == 'Windows' and '-win' in config.target_triple:
config.environment['LIB'] = os.environ['LIB']
config.available_features.add(config.host_os.lower())
if re.match(r'^x86_64.*-linux', config.target_triple):
config.available_features.add("x86_64-linux")
if config.have_zlib == "1":
config.available_features.add("zlib")
# Use ugly construction to explicitly prohibit "clang", "clang++" etc.
# in RUN lines.
config.substitutions.append(
(' clang', """\n\n*** Do not use 'clangXXX' in tests,
instead define '%clangXXX' substitution in lit config. ***\n\n""") )
# Allow tests to be executed on a simulator or remotely.
if config.emulator:
config.substitutions.append( ('%run', config.emulator) )
config.substitutions.append( ('%env ', "env ") )
[UBSan] Partially fix `test/ubsan/TestCases/Misc/log-path_test.cc` so that it can run on devices. Summary: In order for this test to work the log file needs to be removed from both from the host and device. To fix this the `rm` `RUN` lines have been replaced with `RUN: rm` followed by `RUN: %device_rm`. Initially I tried having it so that `RUN: %run rm` implicitly runs `rm` on the host as well so that only one `RUN` line is needed. This simplified writing the test however that had two large drawbacks. * It's potentially very confusing (e.g. for use of the device scripts outside of the lit tests) if asking for `rm` to run on device also causes files on the host to be deleted. * This doesn't work well with the glob patterns used in the test. The host shell expands the `%t.log.*` glob pattern and not on the device so we could easily miss deleting old log files from previous test runs if the corresponding file doesn't exist on the host. So instead deletion of files on the device and host are explicitly separate commands. The command to delete files from a device is provided by a new substitution `%device_rm` as suggested by Filipe Cabecinhas. The semantics of `%device_rm` are that: * It provides a way remove files from a target device when the host is not the same as the target. In the case that the host and target are the same it is a no-op. * It interprets shell glob patterns in the context of the device file system instead of the host file system. This solves the globbing problem provided the argument is quoted so that lit's underlying shell doesn't try to expand the glob pattern. * It supports the `-r` and `-f` flags of the `rm` command, with the same semantics. Right now an implementation of `%device_rm` is provided only for ios devices. For all other devices a lit warning is emitted and the `%device_rm` is treated as a no-op. This done to avoid changing the behaviour for other device types but leaves room for others to implement `%device_rm`. The ios device implementation uses the `%run` wrapper to do the work of removing files on a device. The `iossim_run.py` script has been fixed so that it just runs `rm` on the host operating system because the device and host file system are the same. rdar://problem/41126835 Reviewers: vsk, kubamracek, george.karpenkov, eugenis Subscribers: #sanitizers, llvm-commits Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51648 llvm-svn: 342391
2018-09-17 21:33:44 +08:00
# TODO: Implement `%device_rm` to perform removal of files in the emulator.
# For now just make it a no-op.
lit_config.warning('%device_rm is not implemented')
config.substitutions.append( ('%device_rm', 'echo ') )
config.compile_wrapper = ""
elif config.host_os == 'Darwin' and config.apple_platform != "osx":
# Darwin tests can be targetting macOS, a device or a simulator. All devices
# are declared as "ios", even for iOS derivatives (tvOS, watchOS). Similarly,
# all simulators are "iossim". See the table below.
#
# =========================================================================
# Target | Feature set
# =========================================================================
# macOS | darwin
# iOS device | darwin, ios
# iOS simulator | darwin, ios, iossim
# tvOS device | darwin, ios, tvos
# tvOS simulator | darwin, ios, iossim, tvos, tvossim
# watchOS device | darwin, ios, watchos
# watchOS simulator | darwin, ios, iossim, watchos, watchossim
# =========================================================================
ios_or_iossim = "iossim" if config.apple_platform.endswith("sim") else "ios"
config.available_features.add('ios')
device_id_env = "SANITIZER_" + ios_or_iossim.upper() + "_TEST_DEVICE_IDENTIFIER"
if ios_or_iossim == "iossim":
config.available_features.add('iossim')
if device_id_env not in os.environ:
lit_config.fatal(
'{} must be set in the environment when running iossim tests'.format(
device_id_env))
if config.apple_platform != "ios" and config.apple_platform != "iossim":
config.available_features.add(config.apple_platform)
ios_commands_dir = os.path.join(config.compiler_rt_src_root, "test", "sanitizer_common", "ios_commands")
run_wrapper = os.path.join(ios_commands_dir, ios_or_iossim + "_run.py")
env_wrapper = os.path.join(ios_commands_dir, ios_or_iossim + "_env.py")
compile_wrapper = os.path.join(ios_commands_dir, ios_or_iossim + "_compile.py")
prepare_script = os.path.join(ios_commands_dir, ios_or_iossim + "_prepare.py")
if device_id_env in os.environ:
config.environment[device_id_env] = os.environ[device_id_env]
config.substitutions.append(('%run', run_wrapper))
config.substitutions.append(('%env ', env_wrapper + " "))
[UBSan] Partially fix `test/ubsan/TestCases/Misc/log-path_test.cc` so that it can run on devices. Summary: In order for this test to work the log file needs to be removed from both from the host and device. To fix this the `rm` `RUN` lines have been replaced with `RUN: rm` followed by `RUN: %device_rm`. Initially I tried having it so that `RUN: %run rm` implicitly runs `rm` on the host as well so that only one `RUN` line is needed. This simplified writing the test however that had two large drawbacks. * It's potentially very confusing (e.g. for use of the device scripts outside of the lit tests) if asking for `rm` to run on device also causes files on the host to be deleted. * This doesn't work well with the glob patterns used in the test. The host shell expands the `%t.log.*` glob pattern and not on the device so we could easily miss deleting old log files from previous test runs if the corresponding file doesn't exist on the host. So instead deletion of files on the device and host are explicitly separate commands. The command to delete files from a device is provided by a new substitution `%device_rm` as suggested by Filipe Cabecinhas. The semantics of `%device_rm` are that: * It provides a way remove files from a target device when the host is not the same as the target. In the case that the host and target are the same it is a no-op. * It interprets shell glob patterns in the context of the device file system instead of the host file system. This solves the globbing problem provided the argument is quoted so that lit's underlying shell doesn't try to expand the glob pattern. * It supports the `-r` and `-f` flags of the `rm` command, with the same semantics. Right now an implementation of `%device_rm` is provided only for ios devices. For all other devices a lit warning is emitted and the `%device_rm` is treated as a no-op. This done to avoid changing the behaviour for other device types but leaves room for others to implement `%device_rm`. The ios device implementation uses the `%run` wrapper to do the work of removing files on a device. The `iossim_run.py` script has been fixed so that it just runs `rm` on the host operating system because the device and host file system are the same. rdar://problem/41126835 Reviewers: vsk, kubamracek, george.karpenkov, eugenis Subscribers: #sanitizers, llvm-commits Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51648 llvm-svn: 342391
2018-09-17 21:33:44 +08:00
# Current implementation of %device_rm uses the run_wrapper to do
# the work.
config.substitutions.append(('%device_rm', '{} rm '.format(run_wrapper)))
config.compile_wrapper = compile_wrapper
try:
prepare_output = subprocess.check_output([prepare_script, config.apple_platform, config.clang]).strip()
except subprocess.CalledProcessError as e:
print("Command failed:")
print(e.output)
raise e
if len(prepare_output) > 0: print(prepare_output)
prepare_output_json = prepare_output.split("\n")[-1]
prepare_output = json.loads(prepare_output_json)
config.environment.update(prepare_output["env"])
elif config.android:
config.available_features.add('android')
compile_wrapper = os.path.join(config.compiler_rt_src_root, "test", "sanitizer_common", "android_commands", "android_compile.py") + " "
config.compile_wrapper = compile_wrapper
config.substitutions.append( ('%run', "") )
config.substitutions.append( ('%env ', "env ") )
[UBSan] Partially fix `test/ubsan/TestCases/Misc/log-path_test.cc` so that it can run on devices. Summary: In order for this test to work the log file needs to be removed from both from the host and device. To fix this the `rm` `RUN` lines have been replaced with `RUN: rm` followed by `RUN: %device_rm`. Initially I tried having it so that `RUN: %run rm` implicitly runs `rm` on the host as well so that only one `RUN` line is needed. This simplified writing the test however that had two large drawbacks. * It's potentially very confusing (e.g. for use of the device scripts outside of the lit tests) if asking for `rm` to run on device also causes files on the host to be deleted. * This doesn't work well with the glob patterns used in the test. The host shell expands the `%t.log.*` glob pattern and not on the device so we could easily miss deleting old log files from previous test runs if the corresponding file doesn't exist on the host. So instead deletion of files on the device and host are explicitly separate commands. The command to delete files from a device is provided by a new substitution `%device_rm` as suggested by Filipe Cabecinhas. The semantics of `%device_rm` are that: * It provides a way remove files from a target device when the host is not the same as the target. In the case that the host and target are the same it is a no-op. * It interprets shell glob patterns in the context of the device file system instead of the host file system. This solves the globbing problem provided the argument is quoted so that lit's underlying shell doesn't try to expand the glob pattern. * It supports the `-r` and `-f` flags of the `rm` command, with the same semantics. Right now an implementation of `%device_rm` is provided only for ios devices. For all other devices a lit warning is emitted and the `%device_rm` is treated as a no-op. This done to avoid changing the behaviour for other device types but leaves room for others to implement `%device_rm`. The ios device implementation uses the `%run` wrapper to do the work of removing files on a device. The `iossim_run.py` script has been fixed so that it just runs `rm` on the host operating system because the device and host file system are the same. rdar://problem/41126835 Reviewers: vsk, kubamracek, george.karpenkov, eugenis Subscribers: #sanitizers, llvm-commits Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51648 llvm-svn: 342391
2018-09-17 21:33:44 +08:00
# TODO: Implement `%device_rm` to perform removal of files on a device. For
# now just make it a no-op.
lit_config.warning('%device_rm is not implemented')
config.substitutions.append( ('%device_rm', 'echo ') )
else:
config.substitutions.append( ('%run', "") )
config.substitutions.append( ('%env ', "env ") )
[UBSan] Partially fix `test/ubsan/TestCases/Misc/log-path_test.cc` so that it can run on devices. Summary: In order for this test to work the log file needs to be removed from both from the host and device. To fix this the `rm` `RUN` lines have been replaced with `RUN: rm` followed by `RUN: %device_rm`. Initially I tried having it so that `RUN: %run rm` implicitly runs `rm` on the host as well so that only one `RUN` line is needed. This simplified writing the test however that had two large drawbacks. * It's potentially very confusing (e.g. for use of the device scripts outside of the lit tests) if asking for `rm` to run on device also causes files on the host to be deleted. * This doesn't work well with the glob patterns used in the test. The host shell expands the `%t.log.*` glob pattern and not on the device so we could easily miss deleting old log files from previous test runs if the corresponding file doesn't exist on the host. So instead deletion of files on the device and host are explicitly separate commands. The command to delete files from a device is provided by a new substitution `%device_rm` as suggested by Filipe Cabecinhas. The semantics of `%device_rm` are that: * It provides a way remove files from a target device when the host is not the same as the target. In the case that the host and target are the same it is a no-op. * It interprets shell glob patterns in the context of the device file system instead of the host file system. This solves the globbing problem provided the argument is quoted so that lit's underlying shell doesn't try to expand the glob pattern. * It supports the `-r` and `-f` flags of the `rm` command, with the same semantics. Right now an implementation of `%device_rm` is provided only for ios devices. For all other devices a lit warning is emitted and the `%device_rm` is treated as a no-op. This done to avoid changing the behaviour for other device types but leaves room for others to implement `%device_rm`. The ios device implementation uses the `%run` wrapper to do the work of removing files on a device. The `iossim_run.py` script has been fixed so that it just runs `rm` on the host operating system because the device and host file system are the same. rdar://problem/41126835 Reviewers: vsk, kubamracek, george.karpenkov, eugenis Subscribers: #sanitizers, llvm-commits Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51648 llvm-svn: 342391
2018-09-17 21:33:44 +08:00
# When running locally %device_rm is a no-op.
config.substitutions.append( ('%device_rm', 'echo ') )
config.compile_wrapper = ""
# Define CHECK-%os to check for OS-dependent output.
config.substitutions.append( ('CHECK-%os', ("CHECK-" + config.host_os)))
# Define %arch to check for architecture-dependent output.
config.substitutions.append( ('%arch', (config.host_arch)))
if config.host_os == 'Windows':
# FIXME: This isn't quite right. Specifically, it will succeed if the program
# does not crash but exits with a non-zero exit code. We ought to merge
# KillTheDoctor and not --crash to make the latter more useful and remove the
# need for this substitution.
config.expect_crash = "not KillTheDoctor "
else:
config.expect_crash = "not --crash "
config.substitutions.append( ("%expect_crash ", config.expect_crash) )
target_arch = getattr(config, 'target_arch', None)
if target_arch:
config.available_features.add(target_arch + '-target-arch')
if target_arch in ['x86_64', 'i386']:
config.available_features.add('x86-target-arch')
config.available_features.add(target_arch + '-' + config.host_os.lower())
compiler_rt_debug = getattr(config, 'compiler_rt_debug', False)
if not compiler_rt_debug:
config.available_features.add('compiler-rt-optimized')
sanitizer_can_use_cxxabi = getattr(config, 'sanitizer_can_use_cxxabi', True)
if sanitizer_can_use_cxxabi:
config.available_features.add('cxxabi')
if config.has_lld:
config.available_features.add('lld-available')
if config.use_lld:
config.available_features.add('lld')
if config.can_symbolize:
config.available_features.add('can-symbolize')
lit.util.usePlatformSdkOnDarwin(config, lit_config)
if config.host_os == 'Darwin':
osx_version = (10, 0, 0)
try:
osx_version = subprocess.check_output(["sw_vers", "-productVersion"])
osx_version = tuple(int(x) for x in osx_version.split('.'))
if len(osx_version) == 2: osx_version = (osx_version[0], osx_version[1], 0)
if osx_version >= (10, 11):
config.available_features.add('osx-autointerception')
config.available_features.add('osx-ld64-live_support')
else:
# The ASAN initialization-bug.cc test should XFAIL on OS X systems
# older than El Capitan. By marking the test as being unsupported with
# this "feature", we can pass the test on newer OS X versions and other
# platforms.
config.available_features.add('osx-no-ld64-live_support')
except:
pass
config.darwin_osx_version = osx_version
# Detect x86_64h
try:
output = subprocess.check_output(["sysctl", "hw.cpusubtype"])
output_re = re.match("^hw.cpusubtype: ([0-9]+)$", output)
if output_re:
cpu_subtype = int(output_re.group(1))
if cpu_subtype == 8: # x86_64h
config.available_features.add('x86_64h')
except:
pass
config.substitutions.append( ("%macos_min_target_10_11", "-mmacosx-version-min=10.11") )
isIOS = config.apple_platform != "osx"
# rdar://problem/22207160
config.substitutions.append( ("%darwin_min_target_with_full_runtime_arc_support",
"-miphoneos-version-min=9.0" if isIOS else "-mmacosx-version-min=10.11") )
# 32-bit iOS simulator is deprecated and removed in latest Xcode.
if config.apple_platform == "iossim":
if config.target_arch == "i386":
config.unsupported = True
else:
config.substitutions.append( ("%macos_min_target_10_11", "") )
config.substitutions.append( ("%darwin_min_target_with_full_runtime_arc_support", "") )
if config.android:
env = os.environ.copy()
if config.android_serial:
env['ANDROID_SERIAL'] = config.android_serial
config.environment['ANDROID_SERIAL'] = config.android_serial
adb = os.environ.get('ADB', 'adb')
try:
android_api_level_str = subprocess.check_output([adb, "shell", "getprop", "ro.build.version.sdk"], env=env).rstrip()
except (subprocess.CalledProcessError, OSError):
lit_config.fatal("Failed to read ro.build.version.sdk (using '%s' as adb)" % adb)
try:
android_api_level = int(android_api_level_str)
except ValueError:
lit_config.fatal("Failed to read ro.build.version.sdk (using '%s' as adb): got '%s'" % (adb, android_api_level_str))
if android_api_level >= 26:
config.available_features.add('android-26')
if android_api_level >= 28:
config.available_features.add('android-28')
# Prepare the device.
android_tmpdir = '/data/local/tmp/Output'
subprocess.check_call([adb, "shell", "mkdir", "-p", android_tmpdir], env=env)
for file in config.android_files_to_push:
subprocess.check_call([adb, "push", file, android_tmpdir], env=env)
if config.host_os == 'Linux':
# detect whether we are using glibc, and which version
# NB: 'ldd' is just one of the tools commonly installed as part of glibc
ldd_ver_cmd = subprocess.Popen(['ldd', '--version'],
stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
env={'LANG': 'C'})
sout, _ = ldd_ver_cmd.communicate()
ver_line = sout.splitlines()[0]
if ver_line.startswith(b"ldd "):
from distutils.version import LooseVersion
ver = LooseVersion(ver_line.split()[-1].decode())
# 2.27 introduced some incompatibilities
if ver >= LooseVersion("2.27"):
config.available_features.add("glibc-2.27")
sancovcc_path = os.path.join(config.llvm_tools_dir, "sancov")
if os.path.exists(sancovcc_path):
config.available_features.add("has_sancovcc")
config.substitutions.append( ("%sancovcc ", sancovcc_path) )
def is_darwin_lto_supported():
return os.path.exists(os.path.join(config.llvm_shlib_dir, 'libLTO.dylib'))
def is_linux_lto_supported():
if config.use_lld:
return True
if not os.path.exists(os.path.join(config.llvm_shlib_dir, 'LLVMgold.so')):
return False
ld_cmd = subprocess.Popen([config.gold_executable, '--help'], stdout = subprocess.PIPE, env={'LANG': 'C'})
ld_out = ld_cmd.stdout.read().decode()
ld_cmd.wait()
if not '-plugin' in ld_out:
return False
return True
def is_windows_lto_supported():
return os.path.exists(os.path.join(config.llvm_tools_dir, 'lld-link.exe'))
if config.host_os == 'Darwin' and is_darwin_lto_supported():
config.lto_supported = True
config.lto_launch = ["env", "DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH=" + config.llvm_shlib_dir]
config.lto_flags = []
elif config.host_os in ['Linux', 'FreeBSD', 'NetBSD'] and is_linux_lto_supported():
config.lto_supported = True
config.lto_launch = []
if config.use_lld:
config.lto_flags = ["-fuse-ld=lld"]
else:
config.lto_flags = ["-fuse-ld=gold"]
elif config.host_os == 'Windows' and is_windows_lto_supported():
config.lto_supported = True
config.lto_launch = []
config.lto_flags = ["-fuse-ld=lld"]
else:
config.lto_supported = False
if config.lto_supported:
config.available_features.add('lto')
if config.use_thinlto:
config.available_features.add('thinlto')
config.lto_flags += ["-flto=thin"]
else:
config.lto_flags += ["-flto"]
if config.use_newpm:
config.lto_flags += ["-fexperimental-new-pass-manager"]
if config.have_rpc_xdr_h:
config.available_features.add('sunrpc')
# Ask llvm-config about assertion mode.
try:
llvm_config_cmd = subprocess.Popen(
[os.path.join(config.llvm_tools_dir, 'llvm-config'), '--assertion-mode'],
stdout = subprocess.PIPE,
env=config.environment)
except OSError:
print("Could not find llvm-config in " + config.llvm_tools_dir)
exit(42)
if re.search(r'ON', llvm_config_cmd.stdout.read().decode('ascii')):
config.available_features.add('asserts')
llvm_config_cmd.wait()
# Sanitizer tests tend to be flaky on Windows due to PR24554, so add some
# retries. We don't do this on otther platforms because it's slower.
if platform.system() == 'Windows':
config.test_retry_attempts = 2
# Only run up to 3 64-bit sanitized processes simultaneously on Darwin.
# Using more scales badly and hogs the system due to inefficient handling
# of large mmap'd regions (terabytes) by the kernel.
if platform.system() == 'Darwin':
lit_config.parallelism_groups["darwin-64bit-sanitizer"] = 3
# The current implementation of the tools in sanitizer_common/ios_comamnds
# do not support parallel execution so force sequential execution of the
# tests on iOS devices.
if config.host_os == 'Darwin' and config.apple_platform != "osx" and not config.apple_platform.endswith("sim"):
lit_config.warning("iOS device test cases being run sequentially")
lit_config.parallelism_groups["darwin-ios-device-sanitizer"] = 1
# Multiple substitutions are necessary to support multiple shared objects used
# at once.
# Note that substitutions with numbers have to be defined first to avoid
# being subsumed by substitutions with smaller postfix.
for postfix in ["2", "1", ""]:
if config.host_os == 'Darwin':
config.substitutions.append( ("%ld_flags_rpath_exe" + postfix, '-Wl,-rpath,@executable_path/ %dynamiclib' + postfix) )
config.substitutions.append( ("%ld_flags_rpath_so" + postfix, '-install_name @rpath/`basename %dynamiclib{}`'.format(postfix)) )
elif config.host_os in ('FreeBSD', 'NetBSD', 'OpenBSD'):
config.substitutions.append( ("%ld_flags_rpath_exe" + postfix, "-Wl,-z,origin -Wl,-rpath,\$ORIGIN -L%T -l%xdynamiclib_namespec" + postfix) )
config.substitutions.append( ("%ld_flags_rpath_so" + postfix, '') )
elif config.host_os == 'Linux':
config.substitutions.append( ("%ld_flags_rpath_exe" + postfix, "-Wl,-rpath,\$ORIGIN -L%T -l%xdynamiclib_namespec" + postfix) )
config.substitutions.append( ("%ld_flags_rpath_so" + postfix, '') )
elif config.host_os == 'SunOS':
config.substitutions.append( ("%ld_flags_rpath_exe" + postfix, "-Wl,-R\$ORIGIN -L%T -l%xdynamiclib_namespec" + postfix) )
config.substitutions.append( ("%ld_flags_rpath_so" + postfix, '') )
# Must be defined after the substitutions that use %dynamiclib.
config.substitutions.append( ("%dynamiclib" + postfix, '%T/%xdynamiclib_filename' + postfix) )
config.substitutions.append( ("%xdynamiclib_filename" + postfix, 'lib%xdynamiclib_namespec{}.so'.format(postfix)) )
config.substitutions.append( ("%xdynamiclib_namespec", '%basename_t.dynamic') )
# Provide a substituion that can be used to tell Clang to use a static libstdc++.
# The substitution expands to nothing on non Linux platforms.
# FIXME: This should check the target OS, not the host OS.
if config.host_os == 'Linux':
config.substitutions.append( ("%linux_static_libstdcplusplus", "-stdlib=libstdc++ -static-libstdc++") )
else:
config.substitutions.append( ("%linux_static_libstdcplusplus", "") )
config.default_sanitizer_opts = []
if config.host_os == 'Darwin':
# On Darwin, we default to `abort_on_error=1`, which would make tests run
# much slower. Let's override this and run lit tests with 'abort_on_error=0'.
config.default_sanitizer_opts += ['abort_on_error=0']
config.default_sanitizer_opts += ['log_to_syslog=0']
elif config.android:
config.default_sanitizer_opts += ['abort_on_error=0']
# Allow tests to use REQUIRES=stable-runtime. For use when you cannot use XFAIL
# because the test hangs or fails on one configuration and not the other.
if config.android or (config.target_arch not in ['arm', 'armhf', 'aarch64']):
config.available_features.add('stable-runtime')
if config.asan_shadow_scale:
config.available_features.add("shadow-scale-%s" % config.asan_shadow_scale)
else:
config.available_features.add("shadow-scale-3")
# Propagate the LLD/LTO into the clang config option, so nothing else is needed.
run_wrapper = []
target_cflags = [getattr(config, 'target_cflags', None)]
extra_cflags = []
if config.use_lto and config.lto_supported:
run_wrapper += config.lto_launch
extra_cflags += config.lto_flags
elif config.use_lto and (not config.lto_supported):
config.unsupported = True
if config.use_lld and config.has_lld and not config.use_lto:
extra_cflags += ["-fuse-ld=lld"]
elif config.use_lld and (not config.has_lld):
config.unsupported = True
config.clang = " " + " ".join(run_wrapper + [config.compile_wrapper, config.clang]) + " "
config.target_cflags = " " + " ".join(target_cflags + extra_cflags) + " "