matches GCC behavior which libstdc++ uses to limit #warning-based
messages about deprecation.
The machinery involves threading this through a new '-fdeprecated-macro'
flag for CC1. The flag defaults to "on", similarly to -Wdeprecated. We
turn the flag off in the driver when the warning is turned off (modulo
matching some GCC bugs). We record this as a language option, and key
the preprocessor on the option when introducing the define.
A separate flag rather than a '-D' flag allows us to properly represent
the difference between C and C++ builds (only C++ receives the define),
and it allows the specific behavior of following -Wdeprecated without
potentially impacting the set of user-provided macro flags.
llvm-svn: 130055
-Wwrite-strings. First and foremost, once the positive form of the flag
was passed, it could never be disabled by passing -Wno-write-strings.
Also, the diagnostic engine couldn't in turn use -Wwrite-strings to
control diagnostics (as GCC does) because it was essentially hijacked to
drive the language semantics.
Fix this by giving CC1 a clean '-fconst-strings' flag to enable
const-qualified strings in C and ObjC compilations. Corresponding
'-fno-const-strings' is also added. Then the driver is taught to
introduce '-fconst-strings' in the CC1 command when '-Wwrite-strings'
dominates.
This entire flag is basically GCC-bug-compatibility driven, so we also
match GCC's bug where '-w' doesn't actually disable -Wwrite-strings. I'm
open to changing this though as it seems insane.
llvm-svn: 130051
'-fasm' and explicitly map from that flag to -fgnu-keywords in the driver. Turn
off the driver in the lexer test for this madness and add a test to the driver
that the translation actually works.
llvm-svn: 104428