This patch gets rid of the ridiculous relative path we use to invoke the `module-deps-to-rsp.py` script and creates proper lit substitution, cleaning up the tests.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121525
Exactly what it says on the tin! We had a nasty crash with the following incovation:
$ clang --analyze -Xclang -analyzer-constraints=z3 test.c
fatal error: error in backend: LLVM was not compiled with Z3 support, rebuild with -DLLVM_ENABLE_Z3_SOLVER=ON
... <stack trace> ...
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120325
The modified tests fail because 64-bit XCOFF object files are not currently supported on AIX. This patch disables these tests on 64-bit AIX for now.
This patch is similar to D111887 except the failures on this patch are on a 64-bit build.
Reviewed By: shchenz, #powerpc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113049
In 2015-05, GCC added the configure option `--enable-default-pie`. When enabled,
* in the absence of -fno-pic/-fpie/-fpic (and their upper-case variants), -fPIE is the default.
* in the absence of -no-pie/-pie/-shared/-static/-static-pie, -pie is the default.
This has been adopted by all(?) major distros.
I think default PIE is the majority in the Linux world, but
--disable-default-pie users is not that uncommon because GCC upstream hasn't
switched the default yet (https://gcc.gnu.org/PR103398).
This patch add CLANG_DEFAULT_PIE_ON_LINUX which allows distros to use default PIE.
The option is justified as its adoption can be very high among Linux distros
to make Clang default match GCC, and is likely a future-new-default, at which
point we will remove CLANG_DEFAULT_PIE_ON_LINUX.
The lit feature `default-pie-on-linux` can be handy to exclude default PIE sensitive tests.
Reviewed By: foutrelis, sylvestre.ledru, thesamesam
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113372
Original commit message: "
Original commit message: "
Original commit message: "
Original commit message:"
The current infrastructure in lib/Interpreter has a tool, clang-repl, very
similar to clang-interpreter which also allows incremental compilation.
This patch moves clang-interpreter as a test case and drops it as conditionally
built example as we already have clang-repl in place.
"
This patch also ignores ppc due to missing weak symbol for __gxx_personality_v0
which may be a feature request for the jit infrastructure. Also, adds a missing
build system dependency to the orc jit.
"
Additionally, this patch defines a custom exception type and thus avoids the
requirement to include header <exception>, making it easier to deploy across
systems without standard location of the c++ headers.
"
This patch also works around PR49692 and finds a way to use llvm::consumeError
in rtti mode.
"
This patch also checks if stl is built with rtti.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
Original commit message: "
Original commit message: "
Original commit message:"
The current infrastructure in lib/Interpreter has a tool, clang-repl, very
similar to clang-interpreter which also allows incremental compilation.
This patch moves clang-interpreter as a test case and drops it as conditionally
built example as we already have clang-repl in place.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
"
This patch also ignores ppc due to missing weak symbol for __gxx_personality_v0
which may be a feature request for the jit infrastructure. Also, adds a missing
build system dependency to the orc jit.
"
Additionally, this patch defines a custom exception type and thus avoids the
requirement to include header <exception>, making it easier to deploy across
systems without standard location of the c++ headers.
"
This patch also works around PR49692 and finds a way to use llvm::consumeError
in rtti mode.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
Original commit message: "
Original commit message:"
The current infrastructure in lib/Interpreter has a tool, clang-repl, very
similar to clang-interpreter which also allows incremental compilation.
This patch moves clang-interpreter as a test case and drops it as conditionally
built example as we already have clang-repl in place.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
"
This patch also ignores ppc due to missing weak symbol for __gxx_personality_v0
which may be a feature request for the jit infrastructure. Also, adds a missing
build system dependency to the orc jit.
"
Additionally, this patch defines a custom exception type and thus avoids the
requirement to include header <exception>, making it easier to deploy across
systems without standard location of the c++ headers.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
Original commit message:"
The current infrastructure in lib/Interpreter has a tool, clang-repl, very
similar to clang-interpreter which also allows incremental compilation.
This patch moves clang-interpreter as a test case and drops it as conditionally
built example as we already have clang-repl in place.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
"
This patch also ignores ppc due to missing weak symbol for __gxx_personality_v0
which may be a feature request for the jit infrastructure. Also, adds a missing
build system dependency to the orc jit.
The current infrastructure in lib/Interpreter has a tool, clang-repl, very
similar to clang-interpreter which also allows incremental compilation.
This patch moves clang-interpreter as a test case and drops it as conditionally
built example as we already have clang-repl in place.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107049
The lit tests for `clang-scan-deps` invoke the tool without going through the substitution system. While the test runner correctly picks up the `clang-scan-deps` binary from the build directory, it doesn't print its absolute path. When copying the invocations when reproducing test failures, this can result in `command not found: clang-scan-deps` errors or worse yet: pick up the system `clang-scan-deps`. This patch adds new local `%clang-scan-deps` substitution.
Reviewed By: lxfind, dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107155
Original commit message:
In http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-July/143257.html we have
mentioned our plans to make some of the incremental compilation facilities
available in llvm mainline.
This patch proposes a minimal version of a repl, clang-repl, which enables
interpreter-like interaction for C++. For instance:
./bin/clang-repl
clang-repl> int i = 42;
clang-repl> extern "C" int printf(const char*,...);
clang-repl> auto r1 = printf("i=%d\n", i);
i=42
clang-repl> quit
The patch allows very limited functionality, for example, it crashes on invalid
C++. The design of the proposed patch follows closely the design of cling. The
idea is to gather feedback and gradually evolve both clang-repl and cling to
what the community agrees upon.
The IncrementalParser class is responsible for driving the clang parser and
codegen and allows the compiler infrastructure to process more than one input.
Every input adds to the “ever-growing” translation unit. That model is enabled
by an IncrementalAction which prevents teardown when HandleTranslationUnit.
The IncrementalExecutor class hides some of the underlying implementation
details of the concrete JIT infrastructure. It exposes the minimal set of
functionality required by our incremental compiler/interpreter.
The Transaction class keeps track of the AST and the LLVM IR for each
incremental input. That tracking information will be later used to implement
error recovery.
The Interpreter class orchestrates the IncrementalParser and the
IncrementalExecutor to model interpreter-like behavior. It provides the public
API which can be used (in future) when using the interpreter library.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96033
This reverts commit 44a4000181.
We are seeing build failures due to missing dependency to libSupport and
CMake Error at tools/clang/tools/clang-repl/cmake_install.cmake
file INSTALL cannot find
In http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-July/143257.html we have
mentioned our plans to make some of the incremental compilation facilities
available in llvm mainline.
This patch proposes a minimal version of a repl, clang-repl, which enables
interpreter-like interaction for C++. For instance:
./bin/clang-repl
clang-repl> int i = 42;
clang-repl> extern "C" int printf(const char*,...);
clang-repl> auto r1 = printf("i=%d\n", i);
i=42
clang-repl> quit
The patch allows very limited functionality, for example, it crashes on invalid
C++. The design of the proposed patch follows closely the design of cling. The
idea is to gather feedback and gradually evolve both clang-repl and cling to
what the community agrees upon.
The IncrementalParser class is responsible for driving the clang parser and
codegen and allows the compiler infrastructure to process more than one input.
Every input adds to the “ever-growing” translation unit. That model is enabled
by an IncrementalAction which prevents teardown when HandleTranslationUnit.
The IncrementalExecutor class hides some of the underlying implementation
details of the concrete JIT infrastructure. It exposes the minimal set of
functionality required by our incremental compiler/interpreter.
The Transaction class keeps track of the AST and the LLVM IR for each
incremental input. That tracking information will be later used to implement
error recovery.
The Interpreter class orchestrates the IncrementalParser and the
IncrementalExecutor to model interpreter-like behavior. It provides the public
API which can be used (in future) when using the interpreter library.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96033
Allow opting out from preprocessing with a command line argument.
Update tests to pass -no-preprocess to make it not try to use clang
(which isn't a build level dependency of llvm-rc), but add a test that
does preprocessing under clang/test/Preprocessor.
Update a few options to allow them both joined (as -DFOO) and separate
(-D BR), as rc.exe allows both forms of them.
With the verbose flag set, this prints the preprocessing command
used (which differs from what rc.exe does).
Tests under llvm/test/tools/llvm-rc only test constructing the
preprocessor commands, while tests under clang/test/Preprocessor test
actually running the preprocessor.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100755
hipRTC compiles HIP device code at run time. Since the system may not
have development tools installed, when a HIP program is compiled through
hipRTC, there is no standard C or C++ header available. As such, the HIP
headers should not depend on standard C or C++ headers when used
with hipRTC. Basically when hipRTC is used, HIP headers only provides
definitions of HIP device API functions. This is in line with what nvRTC does.
This patch adds support of hipRTC to HIP headers in clang. Basically hipRTC
defines a macro __HIPCC_RTC__ when compile HIP code at run time. When
this macro is defined, HIP headers do not include standard C/C++ headers.
Reviewed by: Artem Belevich
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100652
Files compiled with C++ for OpenCL mode can now have a distinct
file extension - clcpp, then clang driver picks the compilation
mode automatically (-x clcpp) without the use of -cl-std=clc++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96771
Required by D83660.
Test cases may want to use the host compiler to compile some mocks for the
test case.
This patch adds two substitutions `%host_cc` and `%host_cxx` to use the host
compilers set via variable `CMAKE_C_COMPILER` and `CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER`.
Patch by Ella Ma!
Reviewed By: steakhal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98918
Link: https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-October/146162.html "[RFC] FileCheck: (dis)allowing unused prefixes"
If a downstream project using lit needs time for transition,
add the following to `lit.local.cfg`:
```
from lit.llvm.subst import ToolSubst
fc = ToolSubst('FileCheck', unresolved='fatal')
config.substitutions.insert(0, (fc.regex, 'FileCheck --allow-unused-prefixes'))
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95849
The test needs an object file, which it currenty gets with
`-target x86_64-apple-darwin10`. Rather than adding `REQUIRES: X86`, create
the object file via yaml2obj. This way, the test runs and passes even if the
host arch isn't x86 and only the host arch is built.
Part of PR46644.
This adds the skeleton of the YAML Compiler for APINotes. This change
only adds the YAML IO model for the API Notes along with a new testing
tool `apinotes-test` which can be used to verify that can round trip the
YAML content properly. It provides the basis for the future work which
will add a binary serialization and deserialization format to the data
model.
This is based on the code contributed by Apple at
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project-staging/tree/staging/swift/apinotes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88859
Reviewed By: Gabor Marton
The changes made in D88594 caused the test OpenMP/driver.c to fail on a 32-bit host becuase it was offloading to a 64-bit architecture by default. The offloading test was moved to a new file and a feature was added to the lit config to check for a 64-bit host.
Reviewed By: daltenty
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89904
The changes made in D88594 caused the test OpenMP/driver.c to fail on a 32-bit host becuase it was offloading to a 64-bit architecture by default. The offloading test was moved to a new file and a feature was added to the lit config to check for a 64-bit host.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89696
Summary:
Failure type 1:
This test can fail when the path of the build includes the strings
we're checking for. E.g "/gcc" is found in ".../gcc_7.3.0/..."
To correct this look for '"' on the end of all matches. So that we
only match the end of paths printed by clang -###.
(which would be ".../gcc_7.3.0/.../gcc" for the example)
Also look for other gcc names like gcc-x.y.z in the first check.
This confirms that the copy of clang we made is isolated as expected.
Failure type 2:
If you use a triple like "powerpc64le-linux-gnu" clang actually reports
"powerpc64le-unknown-linux-gnu". Then it searches for the
former.
That combined with Mac OS adding a version number to cmake's triple
means we can't trust cmake or clang to give us the one default triple.
To fix the test, write to both names. As they don't overlap with our
fake triple, we're still showing that the lookup works.
Reviewers: MaskRay, stevewan
Reviewed By: stevewan
Subscribers: miyuki, JDevlieghere, steven.zhang, stevewan, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83055
is running on an Apple Silicon mac
This change allows users to use `-arch arm64` to build for mac when
running it on Apple Silicon mac without explicit `-target` option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82428
Summary:
As seen in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45693
When clang looks for a tool it has a set of
possible names for it, in priority order.
Previously it would look for these names in
the program path. Then look for all the names
in the PATH.
This means that aarch64-none-elf-gcc on the PATH
would lose to gcc in the program path.
(which was /usr/bin in the bug's case)
This changes that logic to search each name in both
possible locations, then move to the next name.
Which is more what you would expect to happen when
using a non default triple.
(-B prefixes maybe should follow this logic too,
but are not changed in this patch)
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79988
The in-process CC1 currently doesn't interoperate with the macOS crash analytics,
which we would like to keep enabled for Apple clang. This commit restores the
out-of-process CC1 to the Apple clang CMake configuration for now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80849
The .i files in the clang tests (2 files) were not run by lit :
clang/test/CodeGen/debug-info-preprocessed-file.i
clang/test/FrontEnd/processed-input.i
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75853
Summary:
This patch introduces a way to apply the fix-its by the Analyzer:
`-analyzer-config apply-fixits=true`.
The fix-its should be testable, therefore I have copied the well-tested
`check_clang_tidy.py` script. The idea is that the Analyzer's workflow
is different so it would be very difficult to use only one script for
both Tidy and the Analyzer, the script would diverge a lot.
Example test: `// RUN: %check-analyzer-fixit %s %t -analyzer-checker=core`
When the copy-paste happened the original authors were:
@alexfh, @zinovy.nis, @JonasToth, @hokein, @gribozavr, @lebedev.ri
Reviewed By: NoQ, alexfh, zinovy.nis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69746
The static analyzer's scan-build script is critical infrastructure but
is not well tested. To start to address this, add a new test directory under
tests/Analysis for scan-build lit tests and seed it with several tests. The
goal is that future scan-build changes will be accompanied by corresponding
tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69781
Second Landing Attempt:
This patch enables end to end support for generating ELF interface stubs
directly from clang. Now the following:
clang -emit-interface-stubs -o libfoo.so a.cpp b.cpp c.cpp
will product an ELF binary with visible symbols populated. Visibility attributes
and -fvisibility can be used to control what gets populated.
* Adding ToolChain support for clang Driver IFS Merge Phase
* Implementing a default InterfaceStubs Merge clang Tool, used by ToolChain
* Adds support for the clang Driver to involve llvm-ifs on ifs files.
* Adds -emit-merged-ifs flag, to tell llvm-ifs to emit a merged ifs text file
instead of the final object format (normally ELF)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63978
llvm-svn: 374061
This patch enables end to end support for generating ELF interface stubs
directly from clang. Now the following:
clang -emit-interface-stubs -o libfoo.so a.cpp b.cpp c.cpp
will product an ELF binary with visible symbols populated. Visibility attributes
and -fvisibility can be used to control what gets populated.
* Adding ToolChain support for clang Driver IFS Merge Phase
* Implementing a default InterfaceStubs Merge clang Tool, used by ToolChain
* Adds support for the clang Driver to involve llvm-ifs on ifs files.
* Adds -emit-merged-ifs flag, to tell llvm-ifs to emit a merged ifs text file
instead of the final object format (normally ELF)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63978
llvm-svn: 373538
Summary:
Clang performs various recursive operations (such as template instantiation),
and may use non-trivial amounts of stack space in each recursive step (for
instance, due to recursive AST walks). While we try to keep the stack space
used by such steps to a minimum and we have explicit limits on the number of
such steps we perform, it's impractical to guarantee that we won't blow out the
stack on deeply recursive template instantiations on complex ASTs, even with
only a moderately high instantiation depth limit.
The user experience in these cases is generally terrible: we crash with
no hint of what went wrong. Under this patch, we attempt to do better:
* Detect when the stack is nearly exhausted, and produce a warning with a
nice template instantiation backtrace, telling the user that we might
run slowly or crash.
* For cases where we're forced to trigger recursive template
instantiation in arbitrarily-deeply-nested contexts, check whether
we're nearly out of stack space and allocate a new stack (by spawning
a new thread) after producing the warning.
Reviewers: rnk, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66361
llvm-svn: 369940
File "clang/test/lit.cfg.py", line 186, in <module>
config.available_features.add('macos-sdk-' + macOSSDKVersion)
TypeError: must be str, not bytes
llvm-svn: 365832