Use the new llvm_canonicalize_cmake_booleans() function to canonicalize
booleans for lit tests. Replace the duplicate ENABLE_CLANG* variables
used to hold canonicalized values with in-place canonicalization. Use
implicit logic in Python code to avoid overrelying on exact 0/1 values.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28529
llvm-svn: 293052
Summary:
This reverts commit r292662.
This change broke internal builds. Will provide a reproducer internally.
Subscribers: pcc, mehdi_amini, cfe-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29025
llvm-svn: 292791
Recommitted after formal approval.
LLVM's JIT is now the foundation of dynamic-compilation features for many languages. Clang also has low-level support for dynamic compilation (ASTImporter and ExternalASTSource, notably). How the compiler is set up for dynamic parsing is generally left up to individual clients, for example LLDB's C/C++/Objective-C expression parser and the ROOT project.
Although this arrangement offers external clients the flexibility to implement dynamic features as they see fit, the lack of an in-tree client means that subtle bugs can be introduced that cause regressions in the external clients but aren't caught by tests (or users) until much later. LLDB for example regularly encounters complicated ODR violation scenarios where it is not immediately clear who is at fault.
Other external clients (notably, Cling) rely on similar functionality, and another goal is to break this functionality up into composable parts so that any client can be built easily on top of Clang without requiring extensive additional code.
I propose that the parts required to build a simple expression parser be added to Clang. Initially, I aim to have the following features:
A piece that looks up external declarations from a variety of sources (e.g., from previous dynamic compilations, from modules, or from DWARF) and uses clear conflict resolution rules to reconcile differences, with easily understood errors. This functionality will be supported by in-tree tests.
A piece that works hand in hand with the LLVM JIT to resolve the locations of external declarations so that e.g. variables can be redeclared and (for high-performance applications like DTrace) external variables can be accessed directly from the registers where they reside.
This commit adds a tester that parses a sequence of source files and then uses them as source data for an expression. External references are resolved using an ExternalASTSource that responds to name queries using an ASTImporter. This is the setup that LLDB uses, and the motivating reason for MinimalImport in ASTImporter. When complete, this tester will implement the first of the above goals.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27180
llvm-svn: 290367
LLVM's JIT is now the foundation of dynamic-compilation features for many languages. Clang also has low-level support for dynamic compilation (ASTImporter and ExternalASTSource, notably). How the compiler is set up for dynamic parsing is generally left up to individual clients, for example LLDB's C/C++/Objective-C expression parser and the ROOT project.
Although this arrangement offers external clients the flexibility to implement dynamic features as they see fit, the lack of an in-tree client means that subtle bugs can be introduced that cause regressions in the external clients but aren't caught by tests (or users) until much later. LLDB for example regularly encounters complicated ODR violation scenarios where it is not immediately clear who is at fault.
Other external clients (notably, Cling) rely on similar functionality, and another goal is to break this functionality up into composable parts so that any client can be built easily on top of Clang without requiring extensive additional code.
I propose that the parts required to build a simple expression parser be added to Clang. Initially, I aim to have the following features:
- A piece that looks up external declarations from a variety of sources (e.g., from previous dynamic compilations, from modules, or from DWARF) and uses clear conflict resolution rules to reconcile differences, with easily understood errors. This functionality will be supported by in-tree tests.
- A piece that works hand in hand with the LLVM JIT to resolve the locations of external declarations so that e.g. variables can be redeclared and (for high-performance applications like DTrace) external variables can be accessed directly from the registers where they reside.
This commit adds a tester that parses a sequence of source files and then uses them as source data for an expression. External references are resolved using an ExternalASTSource that responds to name queries using an ASTImporter. This is the setup that LLDB uses, and the motivating reason for MinimalImport in ASTImporter. When complete, this tester will implement the first of the above goals.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27180
llvm-svn: 290004
Fix the test run to declare missing HAVE_LIBZ value in stand-alone
builds, using the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB that is exported in LLVMConfig.cmake.
When using in-tree builds, HAVE_LIBZ is declared in
cmake/config-ix.cmake as a result of LLVM's CMake checks. When building
stand-alone, this value is not available and as a result caused clang to
wrongly assume that LLVM was built without zlib support.
To fix it, set it to the value of LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB. While this variable
is originally used to control the user preference, LLVM updates its
value to 0 if zlib checks fail. Therefore, we can use it to reliably
determine whether LLVM was built with zlib support or not.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24869
llvm-svn: 285741
This reverts commit r280142. Mehdi suggested a better way to fix up the
test: just create a fake libLTO.dylib and tell the driver where to find
it. Patch incoming...
llvm-svn: 280149
Running 'check-clang' on a stock checkout of llvm+clang doesn't work on
Darwin, because test/Driver/darwin-ld-lto.c can't find libLTO.dylib. Add
libLTO as a clang test dependency on Darwin to fix the problem.
Note: We don't have this issue with check-all because libLTO is in the
test-depends target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24042
llvm-svn: 280142
Summary:
One of the goals of programming models that support offloading (e.g. OpenMP) is to enable users to offload with little effort, by annotating the code with a few pragmas. I'd also like to save users the trouble of changing their existent applications' build system. So having the compiler always return a single file instead of one for the host and each target even if the user is doing separate compilation is desirable.
This diff proposes a tool named clang-offload-bundler (happy to change the name if required) that is used to bundle files associated with the same user source file but different targets, or to unbundle a file into separate files associated with different targets.
This tool supports the driver support for OpenMP under review in http://reviews.llvm.org/D9888. The tool is used there to enable separate compilation, so that the very first action on input files that are not source files is a "unbundling action" and the very last non-linking action is a "bundling action".
The format of the bundled files is currently very simple: text formats are concatenated with comments that have a magic string and target identifying triple in between, and binary formats have a header that contains the triple and the offset and size of the code for host and each target.
The goal is to improve this tool in the future to deal with archive files so that each individual file in the archive is properly dealt with. We see that archives are very commonly used in current applications to combine separate compilation results. So I'm convinced users would enjoy this feature.
This tool can be used like this:
`clang-offload-bundler -targets=triple1,triple2 -type=ii -inputs=a.triple1.ii,a.triple2.ii -outputs=a.ii`
or
`clang-offload-bundler -targets=triple1,triple2 -type=ii -outputs=a.triple1.ii,a.triple2.ii -inputs=a.ii -unbundle`
I implemented the tool under clang/tools. Please let me know if something like this should live somewhere else.
This patch is prerequisite for http://reviews.llvm.org/D9888.
Reviewers: hfinkel, rsmith, echristo, chandlerc, tra, jlebar, ABataev, Hahnfeld
Subscribers: whchung, caomhin, andreybokhanko, arpith-jacob, carlo.bertolli, mehdi_amini, guansong, Hahnfeld, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D13909
llvm-svn: 279632
This version should actually remove the empty directories I removed
all of the files from. Thanks to tstellar for pointing out git-svn's
--rmdir flag.
Original message:
This creates make/ninja targets like check-clang-codegen and
check-clang-unit, much like LLVM already has. I had to move some input
files into Input directories so they weren't picked up as test
directories.
llvm-svn: 274565
This reverts r274560. It's breaking a bunch of bots due to a directory
with a space in the name. Doesn't repro locally for some reason.
llvm-svn: 274562
This creates make/ninja targets like check-clang-codegen and
check-clang-unit, much like LLVM already has. I had to move some input
files into Input directories so they weren't picked up as test
directories.
llvm-svn: 274560
Summary:
When this flag is specified, the target llvm-lto is not built, but is still
used as a dependency of the test targets. cmake 2.8 silently ignored this
situation, but with cmake_minimum_required(3.4) it becomes an error. Fix this
by avoiding the inclusion the target as a dependency.
Reviewers: beanz
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20883
llvm-svn: 271533
Summary:
Adds new option -fthinlto-index=<file> to invoke the LTO pipeline
along with function importing via clang using the supplied function
summary index file. This supports invoking the parallel ThinLTO
backend processes in a distributed build environment via clang.
Additionally, this causes the module linker to be invoked on the bitcode
file being compiled to perform any necessary promotion and renaming of
locals that are exported via the function summary index file.
Add a couple tests that confirm we get expected errors when we try to
use the new option on a file that isn't bitcode, or specify an invalid
index file. The tests also confirm that we trigger the expected function
import pass.
Depends on D15024
Reviewers: joker.eph, dexonsmith
Subscribers: joker.eph, davidxl, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15025
llvm-svn: 254927
r249143 added test/Driver/darwin-ld-lto.c which requires libLTO.dylib
to pass, but when running `ninja check-clang` in a fresh build directory
nothing caused libLTO.dylib to be built and the test would fail.
llvm-svn: 254612
This patch adds ObjectFilePCHContainerOperations uses the LLVM backend
to put the contents of a PCH into a __clangast section inside a COFF, ELF,
or Mach-O object file container.
This is done to facilitate module debugging by makeing it possible to
store the debug info for the types defined by a module alongside the AST.
rdar://problem/20091852
llvm-svn: 241620
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies and testcase requirements. Over the last iteration this
version adds
- missing target requirements for testcases that specify an x86 triple,
- a missing clangCodeGen.a dependency to libClang.a in the make build.
rdar://problem/19104245
llvm-svn: 230423
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
rdar://problem/19104245
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies. Take 3.
llvm-svn: 230305
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
rdar://problem/19104245
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies. Take 2.
llvm-svn: 230089
This is a necessary prerequisite for debugging with modules.
The .pcm files become containers that hold the serialized AST which allows
us to store debug information in the module file that can be shared by all
object files that were built importing the module.
rdar://problem/19104245
This reapplies r230044 with a fixed configure+make build and updated
dependencies.
llvm-svn: 230067
The rewrite facility's footprint is small so it's not worth going to these
lengths to support disabling at configure time, particularly since key compiler
features now depend on it.
Meanwhile the Objective-C rewriters have been moved under the
ENABLE_CLANG_ARCMT umbrella for now as they're comparatively heavy and still
potentially worth excluding from lightweight builds.
Tests are now passing with any combination of feature flags. The flags
historically haven't been tested by LLVM's build servers so caveat emptor.
llvm-svn: 213171
Performs behind-the-scenes RUN line substitution similarly to what's done with
clang-check and clang-format to ensure the executable is found.
llvm-svn: 207951
In preparation for using a binary format for instrumentation based
profiling, explicitly treat the test inputs as text and transform them
before running. This will allow us to leave the checked in files in
human readable format once the instrumentation format is binary.
No functional change.
llvm-svn: 206509
Checked on VS10(multiconfig) and some singleconfig builders.
* Assumptions
- You should specify llvm-config as LLVM_CONFIG.
CMake could find one in $PATH by default.
- ENABLE_ASSERTIONS obeys LLVM's.
* Use cases
a) With LLVM build tree
Assume llvm-config is in your build tree.
Everything should work as ever.
b) With *installed* LLVM
Assume distributions. The source tree can be optional.
b1) The source tree is provided on the location `llvm-config --src-root`
- Test utils, FileCheck &c., are imported and built in the new tree.
- Gtest is built in the tree if gtest library is not found.
- Lit is used in $(SRCROOT)/utils/lit/lit.py.
b2) The source tree is not provided
- clang and utilities can be built.
- All tests, unittests and check-clang are invalidated and not built.
llvm-svn: 197697
In trunk, we can use features as below:
aarch64-registered-target
hexagon-registered-target
msp430-registered-target
r600-registered-target
systemz-registered-target
xcore-registered-target
Each of them, as below, implies corresponding subtargets:
arm-registered-target -- arm, thumb
mips-registered-target -- mips, mips64, mips64el, mipsel
nvptx-registered-target -- nvptx, nvptx64
sparc-registered-target -- sparc, sparcv9
x86-registered-target -- x86, x86-64
They will be renamed:
cppbackend-registered-target -- was "cpp". Unused in trunk.
powerpc-registered-target -- was "ppc32", "ppc64" and "ppc64le".
The feature "asserts" is also taken from llvm-config.
llvm-svn: 196347
Also, remove CLANG_BUILD_TESTS option. It won't have consistent behavior
between standalone and non-standalone builds, so I'm not going to bother
hooking it up for standalone builds. LLVM_BUILD_TESTS will continue to
control unit test inclusion in the "all" target in non-standalone builds.
Finally, fix the default value of CLANG_INCLUDE_TESTS, which was being set
to the boolean value of "LLVM_INCLUDE_TESTS", i.e. OFF, rather than actually
reading the variable ${LLVM_INCLUDE_TESTS}! If you picked up my earlier
commit, YOU WILL HAVE TO MANUALLY SET THIS OPTION BACK ON. My apologies!
Part two of r174691 (allow the unit tests to be built in standalone mode).
llvm-svn: 174698
For example,
cur) unittests/ADT/Release/ADTTests
new) unittests/ADT/ADTTests
RUNTIME_BUILD_MODE can be substituted to CMAKE_CFG_INTDIR.
With Make and Ninja, the tree is not built with multiple configurations.
Then, including the build type in target directory doesn't make sense.
See also "How can I build multiple modes without switching?"
http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CMake_FAQ
CMAKE_CFG_INTDIR is set to "."
With multiple-configuration-aware build system, like Visual Studio, each unittest is built on appropriate directory, for example,
unittests/ADT/Release/ADTTests.exe
CMAKE_CFG_INTDIR is set to build system's variable, like "$(Configuration)" or "$(OutDir)".
Thus, "--param build_config" is also deprecated.
llvm-svn: 173616
Clang unit tests. It's not clear why we support this mode in builds
where LLVM is available (LLVM itself does not), but at least this makes
us support it correctly.
This also fixes a long-standing bug where we would pass the unit test
param flag to lit in the standalone build even though the standalone
build *never* has the unittests built and ready for testing.
llvm-svn: 159594
the standalone mode. We've changed scoping and sequencing of variables
being defined and that cause this to start to be unset breaking some
cmake users. Thanks to Jordan Rose for the report.
The fix also makes the condition on the preceding line much more
sensible. =D
llvm-svn: 159576
lit testsuites. This sinks all management of the aggregate lit runs into
the LLVM CMake files, making Clang only responsible for declaring its
own testsuite. In the process we fix numerous "bugs" where the proper
method of invoking lit has changed over time, and the old system
encoded several broken artifacts of this in ABIs and compatibility
tests.
It also switches to 'check-clang' for the canonical name of the test
suite, although 'clang-test' remains as an alias.
The situation when Clang is being built in standalone mode is little
changed. It replicates just enough of the lit setup to cope with the
oddities of being run outside of an LLVM build.
llvm-svn: 159483
This may not work on build platforms that place the binaries on
special folders ($build_dir/bin/Release/) such as the VS IDE and
XCode. For fixing this it is necessary to add a lit.py configuration
option for saying where the Clang binaries are, and apply to that path
the same magit that is used with the path to the LLVM tools binary
directory. Doing this requires a bit of autoconf work.
llvm-svn: 124969
the 'build_config' value in at runtime using the new lit runtime user parameter
feature.
This simplifies things and drops a dependency on 'sed', FWIW.
llvm-svn: 86421
only supporting a single stat cache. The immediate benefit of this
change is that we can now generate a PCH/AST file when including
another PCH file; in the future, the chain of stat caches will likely
be useful with multiple levels of PCH files.
llvm-svn: 84263
essence, code completion is triggered by a magic "code completion"
token produced by the lexer [*], which the parser recognizes at
certain points in the grammar. The parser then calls into the Action
object with the appropriate CodeCompletionXXX action.
Sema implements the CodeCompletionXXX callbacks by performing minimal
translation, then forwarding them to a CodeCompletionConsumer
subclass, which uses the results of semantic analysis to provide
code-completion results. At present, only a single, "printing" code
completion consumer is available, for regression testing and
debugging. However, the design is meant to permit other
code-completion consumers.
This initial commit contains two code-completion actions: one for
member access, e.g., "x." or "p->", and one for
nested-name-specifiers, e.g., "std::". More code-completion actions
will follow, along with improved gathering of code-completion results
for the various contexts.
[*] In the current -code-completion-dump testing/debugging mode, the
file is truncated at the completion point and EOF is translated into
"code completion".
llvm-svn: 82166
- Move CMake to using the new test runner.
- Switch Makefiles to use the lit.site.cfg.in template.
- Remove explicit --path arguments, instead this gets written into the site
configuration. This means running lit from the command line should use the
exact same configuration as is used in 'make test', assuming it can find the
site configuration file. You still need to run 'make test' (or the cmake
build target equivalent) at least once.
llvm-svn: 82160
- MultiTestRunner will eventually be renamed to 'lit', for LLVM integrated
tester/testing. This has the pros of being pronouncable and short.
- "Project" level configuration lives in 'lit.cfg', which is also what lit uses
to find the root testing directory in some cases. This can be overridden for
use in project files which want to precisely specify where things are.
- TestRunner.py is not longer able to be invoked directly.
- Moved some code to Util.py.
- Introduced a configuration object.
- Cleaned up --help, removed a few not-very-useful options.
- Tried not to break anything that works. :)
llvm-svn: 77665
declaration in the AST.
The new ASTContext::getCommentForDecl function searches for a comment
that is attached to the given declaration, and returns that comment,
which may be composed of several comment blocks.
Comments are always available in an AST. However, to avoid harming
performance, we don't actually parse the comments. Rather, we keep the
source ranges of all of the comments within a large, sorted vector,
then lazily extract comments via a binary search in that vector only
when needed (which never occurs in a "normal" compile).
Comments are written to a precompiled header/AST file as a blob of
source ranges. That blob is only lazily loaded when one requests a
comment for a declaration (this never occurs in a "normal" compile).
The indexer testbed now supports comment extraction. When the
-point-at location points to a declaration with a Doxygen-style
comment, the indexer testbed prints the associated comment
block(s). See test/Index/comments.c for an example.
Some notes:
- We don't actually attempt to parse the comment blocks themselves,
beyond identifying them as Doxygen comment blocks to associate them
with a declaration.
- We won't find comment blocks that aren't adjacent to the
declaration, because we start our search based on the location of
the declaration.
- We don't go through the necessary hops to find, for example,
whether some redeclaration of a declaration has comments when our
current declaration does not. Similarly, we don't attempt to
associate a \param Foo marker in a function body comment with the
parameter named Foo (although that is certainly possible).
- Verification of my "no performance impact" claims is still "to be
done".
llvm-svn: 74704