This hoists most of the CFLAGS into a common variable. It also adds
detection for -Wno-c99-extensions and uses it to silence a pile of
warnings.
Finally, it switches to the proper flag -rdynamic.
With this, the cmake build is warning free on my bootstrap Linux build.
llvm-svn: 162809
Add the initial support for building ASan tests.
The first change here is to try to get the CFLAGS to more closely match
those used by the old Makefile. There are probably still goofs here,
ASan folks, your review would be appreciated.
The second big change is to add support for building both
instrumentation based an non-instrumentation based unittests for ASan.
They are built a bit differently from how the old makefiles managed
things. Specifically, there are two binaries, one for the
non-instrumented case, and one for the instrumented case.
Also, the instrumented unit tests rely on the host compiler supporting
AddressSanitizer's intrumentation pass. This is kind-of gross, but
I don't know of a better way yet. I've mailed llvmdev to discuss this
issue.
One big caveat is that the detection logic currently doesn't work. I've
commented it out temporarily as I'd like to get feedback from the ASan
developers, etc.
llvm-svn: 159134
ASan, and friends.
This explicitly switches the CompilerRT CMake build to require CMake
version 2.8.8 or newer which provides first-class support for "object"
libraries which consist of a pile of '.o' files -- exactly what is
desired for composing runtime libraries. I've gone ahead and switched to
using this.
I've also added the interception library which I missed initially. And
I've added proper dependencies between the various libraries. With this,
I'm able to build archives for asan that appear to contain all of the
necessary .o files.
The final tweak here is to start setting up the compile flags and macro
defines expected by ASan and its helper libraries. These may not be
entirely correct currently, they're based loosely on my reading of the
old Makefiles. However, they can be tweaked more easily now that they're
wired up properly.
llvm-svn: 159129
The idea isthat asan/tsan can survive if user intercepts the same functions. At the same time user has an ability to call back into asan/tsan runtime. See the following tests for examples:
asan/output_tests/interception_failure_test-linux.cc
asan/output_tests/interception_test-linux.cc
asan/output_tests/interception_malloc_test-linux.cc
llvm-svn: 157388