This temporary FIXME really belongs to the testing config, not to the
specific CMake cache that enables that configuration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112031
There's a lot of duplicated calls to find various compiler-rt libraries
from build of runtime libraries like libunwind, libc++, libc++abi and
compiler-rt. The compiler-rt helper module already implemented caching
for results avoid repeated Clang invocations.
This change moves the compiler-rt implementation into a shared location
and reuses it from other runtimes to reduce duplication and speed up
the build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88458
Phabricator Review:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D99836
A couple of parallel patterns still remains serial - "Parallel partial sort", and "Parallel transform scan" - there are //TODOs in the code.
This initial change adds the AIX configuration to run-buildbot, an AIX
CMake cache file, and appropriate compiler and linker flags for testing
AIX to the lit "from scratch" configuration files. Either of the 32-bit or 64-bit configurations
can be built by setting `OBJECT_MODE` in the build environment (as is
typical for AIX).
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, #libc_abi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111244
Some embedded platforms do not wish to support the C library functionality
for handling wchar_t because they have no use for it. It makes sense for
libc++ to work properly on those platforms, so this commit adds a carve-out
of functionality for wchar_t.
Unfortunately, unlike some other carve-outs (e.g. random device), this
patch touches several parts of the library. However, despite the wide
impact of this patch, I still think it is important to support this
configuration since it makes it much simpler to port libc++ to some
embedded platforms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111265
Vendors take libc++ and ship it in various ways. Some vendors might
ship it differently from what upstream LLVM does, i.e. the install
location might be different, some ABI properties might differ, etc.
In the past few years, I've come across several instances where
having a place to test some of these properties would have been
incredibly useful. I also just got bitten by the lack of tests
of that kind, so I'm adding some now.
The tests added by this commit for Apple platforms have numerous
TODOs that capture discrepancies between the upstream LLVM CMake
and the slightly-modified build we perform internally to produce
Apple's system libc++. In the future, the goal would be to upstream
all those differences so that it's possible to build a faithful
Apple system libc++ with the upstream LLVM sources only.
But this isn't only useful for Apple - this lays out the path for
any vendor being able to add their own checks (either upstream or
downstream) to libc++.
This is a re-application of 9892d1644f, which was reverted in 138dc27186
because it broke the build. The issue was that we didn't apply the required
changes to libunwind and our CI didn't notice it because we were not
running the libunwind tests. This has been fixed now, and we're running
the libunwind tests in CI now too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110736
Vendors take libc++ and ship it in various ways. Some vendors might
ship it differently from what upstream LLVM does, i.e. the install
location might be different, some ABI properties might differ, etc.
In the past few years, I've come across several instances where
having a place to test some of these properties would have been
incredibly useful. I also just got bitten by the lack of tests
of that kind, so I'm adding some now.
The tests added by this commit for Apple platforms have numerous
TODOs that capture discrepancies between the upstream LLVM CMake
and the slightly-modified build we perform internally to produce
Apple's system libc++. In the future, the goal would be to upstream
all those differences so that it's possible to build a faithful
Apple system libc++ with the upstream LLVM sources only.
But this isn't only useful for Apple - this lays out the path for
any vendor being able to add their own checks (either upstream or
downstream) to libc++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110736
This way, we do not need to set LLVM_CMAKE_PATH to LLVM_CMAKE_DIR when (NOT LLVM_CONFIG_FOUND)
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107717
When `libcxx` or `libcxxabi` is built with `-DLLVM_USE_SANITIZER=MemoryWithOrigins`
**and** `-DLIBCXX[ABI]_USE_COMPILER_RT=ON`, all of the `LIBCXX[ABI]_SUPPORTS_*_FLAG`
checks fail, since the value of `CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS` is not set correctly.
Bugzilla: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=51774
Reviewed By: #libc, #libc_abi, compnerd, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109342
These paths are needed when building with per-target runtime directories.
(It's possible to fix this by manually setting these when invoking
cmake, but one isn't supposed to need to do that.)
Also set LLVM_TOOLS_BINARY_DIR while touching this area (as it's
also unset in this case) even if it isn't specifically needed by the
per-target runtime configuration.
Fixed since previous attempt: Don't check if the runtimes directory
is the root of the CMake invocation; when the main LLVM CMake
build builds runtimes, it does invoke a sub-CMake with this directory
as the root too, just as if manually invoking CMake at the runtimes
directory. Instead check whether LLVM_TOOLS_BINARY_DIR was set and
whether find_package(LLVM) succeeded or not.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107895
These paths are needed when building with per-target runtime directories.
(It's possible to fix this by manually setting these when invoking
cmake, but one isn't supposed to need to do that.)
Also set LLVM_TOOLS_BINARY_DIR while touching this area (as it's
also unset in this case) even if it isn't specifically needed by the
per-target runtime configuration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107895
This option is used to select between the format headers output column
width option. This option should be independent of the locale setting.
It's encouraged to default to Unicode unless the platform doesn't offer
that option.
[format.string.std]/10
```
For the purposes of width computation, a string is assumed to be in a
locale-independent, implementation-defined encoding. Implementations
should use a Unicode encoding on platforms capable of displaying Unicode
```
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne, vitaut
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103379
Adds a new CMake option to disable the usage of incomplete headers.
These incomplete headers are not guaranteed to be ABI stable. This
option is intended to be used by vendors so they can avoid their users
from code that's not ready for production usage.
The option is enabled by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106763
Even though the standalone build is deprecated, some people are still
relying on it (including libc++ itself for some configurations). Setting
the target triple will ensure that the build and the test suite behaves
consistently in the standalone and normal builds.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106800
When a target triple is specified in CMake via XXX_TARGET_TRIPLE, we tried
passing the --target=<...> flag to the compiler. However, not all compilers
support that flag (e.g. GCC, which is not a cross-compiler). As a result,
setting e.g. LIBCXX_TARGET_TRIPLE=<host-triple> would end up trying to
pass --target=<host-triple> to GCC, which breaks everything because the
flag isn't even supported.
This commit only adds `--target=<...>` & friends to the flags if it is
supported by the compiler.
One could argue that it's confusing to pass LIBCXX_TARGET_TRIPLE=<...>
and have it be ignored. That's correct, and one possibility would be
to assert that the requested triple is the same as the host triple when
we know the compiler is unable to cross-compile. However, note that this
is a pre-existing issue (setting the TARGET_TRIPLE variable never had an
influence on the flags passed to the compiler), and also fixing that is
starting to look like reimplementing a lot of CMake logic that is already
handled with CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_TARGET.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106082
Instead, people should be using CMAKE_POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE to control
whether they want to use PIC or not. We should try to avoid reinventing
the wheel whenever CMake natively supports something.
This makes libc++abi consistent with libc++ and libunwind.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103973
Eventually, this should become the default way of running the tests.
For now, only move a few CI nodes to it, and keep a node that runs the
legacy configuration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97565
To run llvm-lit manually from the command line:
./bin/llvm-lit -sv --param std=c++2b --param cxx_under_test=`pwd`/bin/clang \
--param debug_level=1 ../libcxx/test/
Tests that currently fail with `debug_level=1` are marked `LIBCXX-DEBUG-FIXME`,
but my intent is to deal with all of them and leave no such annotations in
the codebase within the next couple weeks. (I have patches for all of them
in my local checkout.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100866
After this patch, we can use `--param std=c++20` even if the compiler only
supports -std=c++2a. The test suite will handle that for us. The only Lit
feature that isn't fully baked will always be the "in development" one,
since we don't know exactly what year the standard will be ratified in.
This is another take on https://reviews.llvm.org/D99789.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100210
These variables were introduced during early work on the runtimes build
but were obsoleted by {LIBCXX,LIBCXXABI,LIBUNWIND}_INSTALL_LIBRARY_DIR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99697
Prior to this patch, we would generate a fancy <__config> header by
concatenating <__config_site> and <__config>. This complexifies the
build system and also increases the difference between what's tested
and what's actually installed.
This patch removes that complexity and instead simply installs <__config_site>
alongside the libc++ headers. <__config_site> is then included by <__config>,
which is much simpler. Doing this also opens the door to having different
<__config_site> headers depending on the target, which was impossible before.
It does change the workflow for testing header-only changes to libc++.
Previously, we would run `lit` against the headers in libcxx/include.
After this patch, we run it against a fake installation root of the
headers (containing a proper <__config_site> header). This makes use
closer to testing what we actually install, which is good, however it
does mean that we have to update that root before testing header changes.
Thus, we now need to run `ninja check-cxx-deps` before running `lit` by
hand.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97572
Instead of setting mcpu like the previous bots,
set the target triple.
Each config builds either Arm only or Thumb only
code. This gives us some coverage of thumb specific
issues.
The new agents on Linaro's side are running on v8 hardware
so will report arch "armv8l" just like the v8 bots.
(and buildkite can choose any of them for v7/v8 jobs)
Reviewed By: #libc, curdeius, Mordante
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98019
Let's use -nostdlib++ rather than -nodefaultlibs when building libc++/libc++abi/libunwind libraries. The default is -nostdlib++ if supported by a build compiler like it is the case with clang, otherwise -nodefaultlibs is used as before.
This change is needed to avoid additional changes at the link step and not to increase the maintenance costs. If clang with -nodefaultlibs is used all the libraries which are removed but required would have to be manually added in. This set of libraries are unique and will send out.
The propose change will allow to make the link step simple for other platforms as well.
Reviewed By: #libc, #libc_abi, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95875
Always turn on LIBCXX_ENABLE_NEW_DELETE_DEFINITIONS, if libcxxrt is used
as the C++ ABI library, since libcxxrt does not provide the full set
ofnew and delete operators. In particular, the aligned versions of these
operators are completely missing. This primarily addresses builds on
FreeBSD, as this platform uses libcxxrt by default.
Also, attempt to provide a FreeBSD.cmake cache file, with hopefully sane
settings, partially copied from the Apple.cmake cache file. This needs
more work, probably some additions to ci build scripts (although I am
not aware of any 'official' FreeBSD build bots).
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96720
Previously, LIBCXX_ENABLE_FILESYSTEM controlled only whether the filesystem
support was compiled into libc++'s library. This commit promotes the
setting to a first-class option like LIBCXX_ENABLE_LOCALIZATION, where
the whole library is aware of the setting and features that depend on
<filesystem> won't be provided at all. The test suite is also properly
annotated such that tests that depend on <filesystem> are disabled when
the library doesn't support it.
This is an alternative to https://llvm.org/D94824, but also an improvement
along the lines of LIBCXX_ENABLE_LOCALIZATION that I had been wanting to
make for a while.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94921
* The only exception is that the flag -std=c++2a is still used not to break compatibility with older compilers (clang <= 9, gcc <= 9).
* Bump _LIBCPP_STD_VER for C++20 to 20 and use 21 for the future standard (C++2b).
That's a preparation step to add c++2b support to libc++.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93383
This commit makes it clear that the typeinfo comparison implementation
is automatically selected by default, and that the CMake option only
overrides the value. This has been a source of confusion and bugs ever
since we've introduced complexity in that area, so I'm trying to simplify
it while still allowing for some control on the implementation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91574
Currently, vendor-specific availability markup is enabled by default.
This means that even when building against trunk libc++, the headers
will by default prevent you from using some features that were not
released in the dylib on your target platform. This is a source of
frustration since people building libc++ from sources are usually not
trying to use some vendor's released dylib.
For that reason, I've been thinking for a long time that availability
annotations should be off by default, which is the primary change that
this commit enables.
In addition, it reworks the implementation to make it easier for new
vendors to add availability annotations for their platform, and it
refreshes the documentation to reflect the current state of the codebase.
Finally, a CMake configuration option is added to control whether
availability annotations should be turned on for the flavor of libc++
being created. The intent is for vendors like Apple to turn it on, and
for the upstream libc++ to leave it off (the default).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90843
When porting libc++ to embedded systems, it can be useful to drop support
for localization, which these systems don't implement or care about.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90072
This is a massive revert of the following commits (from most revent to oldest):
2b9b7b5775.
529ac3319728270234f169c2087283b5aa67446e5d796645d6
After checking-in the __config_site change, a lot of things started breaking
due to widespread reliance on various aspects of libc++'s build, notably the
fact that we can include the headers from the source tree, but also reliance
on various "internal" CMake variables used by the runtimes build and compiler-rt.
These were unintended consequences of the change, and after two days, we
still haven't restored all the bots to being green. Instead, now that I
understand what specific areas this will blow up in, I should be able to
chop up the patch into smaller ones that are easier to digest.
See https://reviews.llvm.org/D89041 for more details on this adventure.
This commit should really be named "Workaround external projects depending
on libc++ build system implementation details". It seems that the compiler-rt
build (and perhaps other projects) is relying on the fact that we copy libc++
and libc++abi headers to `<build-root>/include/c++/v1`. This was changed
by 5d796645, which moved the headers to `<build-root>/projects/libcxx/include/c++/v1`
and broke the compiler-rt build.
I'm committing this workaround to fix the compiler-rt build, but we should
remove reliance on implementation details like that. The correct way to
setup the compiler-rt build would be to "link" against the `cxx-headers`
target in CMake, or to run `install-cxx-headers` using an appropriate
installation prefix, and then manually add a `-I` path to that location.
Previously, we would define new/delete in both libc++ and libc++abi.
Not only does this cause code bloat, but also it's technically an ODR
violation since we don't know which operator will be selected. Furthermore,
since those are weak definitions, we should strive to have as few of them
as possible (to improve load times).
My preferred choice would have been to put the operators in libc++ only
by default, however that would create a circular dependency between
libc++ and libc++abi, which GNU linkers don't handle.
Folks who want to ship new/delete in libc++ instead of libc++abi are
free to do so by turning on LIBCXX_ENABLE_NEW_DELETE_DEFINITIONS at
CMake configure time.
On Apple platforms, this shouldn't be an ABI break because we re-export
the new/delete symbols from libc++abi. This change actually makes libc++
behave closer to the system libc++ shipped on Apple platforms.
On other platforms, this is an ABI break for people linking against libc++
but not libc++abi. However, vendors have been consulted in D68269 and no
objection was raised. Furthermore, the definitions can be controlled to
appear in libc++ instead with the CMake option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68269
Some platforms, like several embedded platforms, do not provide a source
of randomness through a random device. This commit makes it possible to
build and test libc++ for such platforms, i.e. without std::random_device.
Surprisingly, the only functionality that doesn't work on such platforms
is std::random_device itself -- everything else in <random> still works,
one just has to find alternative ways to seed the PRNGs.
Remove check for standalone and shared library mode in libcxxabi to
allow including tests in said mode. This check prevented running the
tests in standalone mode with static libraries, which is the case for
baremetal targets.
Fix check-unwind target trying to use a non-existent llvm-lit executable
in standalone mode. Copy the HandleOutOfTreeLLVM logic from libcxxabi to
libunwind in order to make the tests work in standalone mode.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc_abi, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86540
To make it clearer this is about whether the library supports the debug
mode at all, not whether the debug mode is enabled. Per comment by Nico
Weber on IRC.
Some libc++ builds may want to disable support for the debug mode,
for example to reduce code size or because the current implementation
of the debug mode requires a global map. This commit adds the
LIBCXX_ENABLE_DEBUG_MODE CMake option and ties it into the test
suite.
It also adds a CI job to test this configuration going forward.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88923
As explained in https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/-/issues/21045,
both branches of an $<IF> generator expression are evaluated eagerly
by CMake. As a result, if the non-selected branch contains an invalid
generator expression (such as getting the OUTPUT_NAME property of a
non-existent target), a hard error will occur.
This failed builds using the cxxrt ABI library, which doesn't create
a CMake target currently.