Support for COFF timestamps was unintentionally broken in r246905 when
it was conditionally available depending on whether or not LLVM was
configured with LLVM_ENABLE_TIMESTAMPS. However, Config/config.h was
never included which essentially broke the feature. Due to lax testing,
the breakage was never identified until we observed strange failures
during incremental links of Chromium.
This issue is resolved by simply including Config/config.h in
WinCOFFObjectWriter and teaching lit that the MC/COFF/timestamp.s test
is conditionally supported depending on LLVM_ENABLE_TIMESTAMPS. With
this in place, we can strengthen the test to ensure that it will not
accidentally get broken in the future.
This fixes PR25891.
llvm-svn: 256137
CMake.
The Go bindings tests in an unoptimized build take over 30 seconds for
me, making it the slowest test in 'check-llvm' by a factor of two.
I've only rigged this up fully to the CMake build. If someone is
interested in rigging it up to the autoconf build, they're welcome to do
so.
llvm-svn: 247243
This works in a similar way to the gold plugin tests. We search for a compatible
linker on $PATH and use it to run tests against our just-built libLTO. To start
with, test the just added opt level functionality.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8472
llvm-svn: 232785
NOTE: This patch intentionally breaks the build. It attempts
to resubmit r230083, but with some debug logging in the CMake
and lit config files to determine why certain bots do not
correctly disable the DIA tests when DIA is not available.
After a sufficient number of bots fail, this patch will either
be reverted or, if the cause of the failure becomes obvious,
a fix submitted with the log statements removed.
llvm-svn: 230161
This adds only a very basic set of tests that dump a few
functions and object files.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7656
Reviewed By: David Blaikie
llvm-svn: 230083
a gold binary explicitly. Substitute this binary into the tests rather
than just directly executing the 'ld' binary.
This should allow folks to inject a cross compiling gold binary, or in
my case to use a gold binary built and installed somewhere other than
/usr/bin/ld. It should also allow the tests to find 'ld.gold' so that
things work even if gold isn't the default on the system.
I've only stubbed out support in the makefile to preserve the existing
behavior with none of the fancy logic. If someone else wants to add
logic here, they're welcome to do so.
llvm-svn: 229251
This commit updates the OCaml bindings and tests to use ocamlfind.
The bindings are migrated in order to use ctypes, which are now
required for MCJIT-backed Llvm_executionengine.
The tests are migrated in order to use OUnit and to verify that
the distributed META.llvm allows to build working executables.
Every OCaml toolchain invocation is now chained through ocamlfind,
which (in theory) allows to cross-compile the OCaml bindings.
The configure script now checks for ctypes (>= 0.2.3) and
OUnit (>= 2). The code depending on these libraries will be added
later. The configure script does not check the package versions
in order to keep changes less invasive.
Additionally, OCaml bindings will now be automatically enabled
if ocamlfind is detected on the system, rather than ocamlc, as it
was before.
llvm-svn: 220899
Previously, tests hardcoded ocamlopt and cmxa, which broke builds on
machines without ocamlopt. Instead, they now fall back to ocamlc.
As a side effect this fixes PR14727, which was caused by a crude hack
that replaced gcc with g++ everywhere in the ocamlopt native compiler
path and passes it back using -cc. Now the tests use the same
technique as META, i.e. -cclib -lstdc++. It might be more fragile
than using g++ explicitly, but it will break when the installed
package will also break, which is good.
llvm-svn: 220828
the CGO build environment. This lets things like -rpath propagate down
to the C++ code that is built along side the Go bindings when testing
them.
Patch by Peter Collingbourne, and verified that it works by me.
llvm-svn: 220252
This code is based on the existing LLVM Go bindings project hosted at:
https://github.com/go-llvm/llvm
Note that all contributors to the gollvm project have agreed to relicense
their changes under the LLVM license and submit them to the LLVM project.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5684
llvm-svn: 219976
Plugins need to go in build/Debug/lib as well (rather than build/lib/Debug).
Also, fix the SHLIBDIR path for Xcode, which by default includes Xcode build
settings rather than a simple %(build_mode)s parameter.
llvm-svn: 198344
The intended semantics mirror autoconf, where the user is able to
specify a host triple, but if it's left to the build system then
"config.guess" is invoked for the default.
This also renames the LLVM_HOSTTRIPLE define to LLVM_HOST_TRIPLE to
fit in with the style of the surrounding defines.
llvm-svn: 181112
In r143502, we renamed getHostTriple() to getDefaultTargetTriple()
as part of work to allow the user to supply a different default
target triple at configure time. This change also affected the JIT.
However, it is inappropriate to use the default target triple in the
JIT in most circumstances because this will not necessarily match
the current architecture used by the process, leading to illegal
instruction and other such errors at run time.
Introduce the getProcessTriple() function for use in the JIT and
its clients, and cause the JIT to use it. On architectures with a
single bitness, the host and process triples are identical. On other
architectures, the host triple represents the architecture of the
host CPU, while the process triple represents the architecture used
by the host CPU to interpret machine code within the current process.
For example, when executing 32-bit code on a 64-bit Linux machine,
the host triple may be 'x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu', while the process
triple may be 'i386-unknown-linux-gnu'.
This fixes JIT for the 32-on-64-bit (and vice versa) build on non-Apple
platforms.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D254
llvm-svn: 172627
This is another vestige of the DejaGNU roots. There were FIXMEs in the
lit setup to add a 'lit.site.cfg', which has been around for quite some
time now, so I've properly switched the handling of the 4 things
actually used in site.exp to go through lit.site.cfg now. No more
parsing of the .exp file, one fewer configure-style generated file,
etc., etc.
llvm-svn: 159313
- Added HOST_ARCH to Makefile.config.in
The HOST_ARCH will be used by MCJIT tests filter, because MCJIT supported only x86 and ARM architectures now.
llvm-svn: 157015
(and hopefully on Windows). The bots have been down most of the day
because of this, and it's not clear to me what all will be required to
fix it.
The commits started with r153205, then r153207, r153208, and r153221.
The first commit seems to be the real culprit, but I couldn't revert
a smaller number of patches.
When resubmitting, r153207 and r153208 should be folded into r153205,
they were simple build fixes.
llvm-svn: 153241
Take #2. Don't piggyback on the existing config.build_mode. Instead,
define a new lit feature for each build feature we need (currently
just "asserts"). Teach both autoconf'd and cmake'd Makefiles to define
this feature within test/lit.site.cfg. This doesn't require any lit
harness changes and should be more robust across build systems.
llvm-svn: 133664
Unittests need LLVM_BUILD_MODE to pick up each test.
Confirmed on CentOS5, Mingw, MSYS, and with possible configurations on VS8 and VS10.
llvm-svn: 120212