This re-commits cd7f9751c3, which was reverted in 12f6b024f9 because
it broke the LLVM `check-all` target. This commit addresses the underlying
issue by not setting the lit_config.recursiveExpansionLimit parameter of
the libc++ test suite, which is otherwise picked up by other test suites
in LLVM.
Once we've settled on a fix for the underlying issue with
lit_config.recursiveExpansionLimit, we can start using it
again in libc++, but for now we can just work around it.
We will soon start removing technical debt and sharing code between the
two directories, so this first step is meant to discover potential places
where the libraries are built outside of a monorepo layout. I imagine
this could happen as a remnant of the pre-monorepo setup.
This was discussed on the libcxx-dev mailing list and we got overall
consensus on the direction. All consumers of libc++ and libc++abi
should already be doing so through the monorepo, however it is
possible that we catch some stragglers with this patch, in which
case it may need to be reverted temporarily.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76102
This allows adding compilation flags for a single test, which can help
eliminate some .sh.cpp tests and some custom handling in the libc++
test format.
It also works around the issue that .sh.cpp substitutions are _not_
equivalent to the actual compiler command lines used to compile tests,
since the compiler flags can be modified in local lit configurations,
and substitutions are frozen at that point. For example using %{compile}
in a .sh.cpp test in the coroutines subdirectory will not include the
-fcoroutines-ts flag, which is added in the local lit config, because
the %{compile} substitution is created long before we add -fcoroutines-ts
to the compiler flags (in the lit.local.cfg for coroutines).
We've been meaning to remove those targets for a while, and the fix is
simple enough cause they're all just aliases to other targets.
This is a re-application of f383fb40b1, wich was reverted in 04d48111b
because the build bots had not been updated yet. The build bot configurations
have now been updated not to use the deprecated targets, and I verified
that they were using the non-deprecated targets, so we should be good
unless I missed a bot.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76104
This reverts commit cd7f9751c3 which has
unintended breakage to non-libcxx projects when using the documented way
of building LLVM. (See the Getting Started guide. I.e. one big CMake setup.)
Since lit supports expanding substitutions recursively, we can define
substitutions in terms of other substitutions. This allows us to simplify
how libc++ substitutions are defined.
This doesn't change the substitutions at all, it only makes them simpler
to define.
lit is not very clever when it performs substitution on RUN lines. It
simply looks for a match anywhere in the line (without tokenization)
and replaces it by the expansion. This means that a RUN line containing
e.g. `-verify-ignore-unexpected=note` wouod be expanded to
`-verify-ignore-unexpected=<substitution for not>e`, which is
surprising and nonsensical.
It also means that something like `%compile_module` could be expanded
to `<substitution-for-%compile>_module` or to the correct substitution,
depending on the order in which substitutions are evaluated by lit.
To avoid such problems, it is a good habit to delimit custom substitutions
with some token. This commit does that for all substitutions used in the
libc++ and libc++abi test suites.
Summary:
The gdb pretty printer misprints variables declared via
using declarations of the form:
namespace foo {
using string_view = std::string_view;
string_view bar;
}
This change fixes that, by deferring the decision to ignore
types not inside std until after desugaring.
Reviewers: #libc!
Subscribers: broadwaylamb, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76816
This reverts commit a32b94c6c3.
The buildbot startup scripts need to run as root. The buildbot
worker should have already been running as a different account.
More investigation needed.
Forcing -Werror and other warnings means that the test suite isn't
actually testing what most people are seeing in their code -- it seems
better and less arbitrary to compile these tests as close as possible
to the compiler default instead.
Removing -Werror also means that we get to differentiate between
diagnostics that are errors and those that are warnings, which makes
the test suite more precise.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76311
We have several test directories whose names end in .spec. Ensure we
don't accidentally ignore them by removing a section of the .gitignore
that's irrelevant for libc++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69195
Introduced by https://reviews.llvm.org/D72687. This condition can happen
when the tests are not being run at all, and we're only trying to generate
the libc++ headers.
Some tests do not fail at all when -verify is not supported, unless some
arbitrary warning flag is added to make them fail. We currently used
-Werror=unused-result to make them fail, but doing so makes the test
suite a lot more inscrutable. It seems better to just disable those
tests when -verify is not supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76256
It's hard to imagine someone using a recent version of libc++ with a
roughly 3 years old Clang. Since we're not testing libc++ with Clang 3.5
anyway, claiming support for it is somewhat of a lie.
Note that we don't test Clang 4 either, however I have no reason to bump
the requirement beyond Clang 4 at the moment, whereas removing Clang 3.5
allows simplifying the test suite.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76618
This reverts commit f383fb40b. It looks like several of our build bots
are still using the legacy target names, so we'll change those before
we commit this change again.
We've been meaning to remove those targets for a while, and the fix is
simple enough cause they're all just aliases to other targets.
There's no doubt this commit will break some CI systems, however the
fix is trivial.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76104
This commit rewrites/removes the docker files used to create
the libc++ buildbots.
The major changes in this patch are:
1. Delete Dockerfiles used to build compilers. These have moved to
github.com/efcs/compiler-images
2. Minimize the llvm-buildbot docker image. Instead of running the
buildbots from a committed docker image, the builders now build the
image on startup. This means changes to the docker file automatically
propogate to the builders (within ~24 hours without restart).
3. Version the compilers used by the builders. This means the bots
won't start failing because the apt.llvm.org clang package updated.
The current lit test suite doesn't really allow us to express that the
test should be disabled when testing the trunk variant of libc++, even
if we're running it on a supported macOS. Because of that, the test
is enabled when _LIBCPP_DISABLE_AVAILABILITY is defined, and the test
XPASSes.
Before this patch, the %run substitution did not contain the same
environment variables as normal `pass.cpp` tests. It also didn't
have the right working directory and the script wasn't aware of
potential file dependencies.
With this change, the combination of %build and %run in a .sh.cpp script
should match how pass.cpp tests are actually executed much more closely.
In C++03 mode, nullptr is defined by libc++, not the compiler so, we can't use __is_fundamental (because it will return false for nullptr).
Fixes: 5ade17e0ca
This patch updates <type_traits> to use builtin type traits whenever
possible to improve compile times.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67900
The current implementation of binomial_distribution is not guaranteed to
converge for certain extreme configurations of the engine and distribution.
This is due to a mistake in the implementation of the algorithm from the
given reference paper. The algorithm in the paper is guaranteed to
terminate but has redundant statements. The current implementation
simplified away the redundancy into a while loop, but it excludes the
return condition of the case where a good sample cannot be returned for
the particular sample being used from the uniform distribution, which is
what causes the infinite loop. This change guarantees termination by
recognizing that a good sample cannot be returned and returning 0 after
breaking the loop. This is also in contrast to the paper because the
return value as specified in the paper violates basic checks in at least
a subset of the extreme cases where the current implementation fails to
terminate. This default return value of 0 is satisfactory for the
extreme case known so far.
Since this is only meant to affect extreme cases where the algorithm
does not terminate anyways, the behavior is expected to remain exactly
the same for all non-extreme cases that have been terminating so far.
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR44847
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74997
Summary:
The former are like:
libcxx/include/typeinfo:322:11: warning: definition of implicit copy constructor for 'bad_cast' is deprecated because it has a user-declared destructor [-Wdeprecated-copy-dtor]
virtual ~bad_cast() _NOEXCEPT;
^
libcxx/include/typeinfo:344:11: note: in implicit copy constructor for 'std::bad_cast' first required here
throw bad_cast();
^
Fix these by adding an explicitly defaulted copy constructor.
The latter are like:
libcxx/include/codecvt:105:37: warning: dynamic exception specifications are deprecated [-Wdeprecated-dynamic-exception-spec]
virtual int do_encoding() const throw();
^~~~~~~
Fix these by using the _NOEXCEPT macro instead.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, ldionne, #libc
Reviewed By: EricWF, #libc
Subscribers: dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76150