*** to conform to clang-format’s LLVM style. This kind of mass change has
*** two obvious implications:
Firstly, merging this particular commit into a downstream fork may be a huge
effort. Alternatively, it may be worth merging all changes up to this commit,
performing the same reformatting operation locally, and then discarding the
merge for this particular commit. The commands used to accomplish this
reformatting were as follows (with current working directory as the root of
the repository):
find . \( -iname "*.c" -or -iname "*.cpp" -or -iname "*.h" -or -iname "*.mm" \) -exec clang-format -i {} +
find . -iname "*.py" -exec autopep8 --in-place --aggressive --aggressive {} + ;
The version of clang-format used was 3.9.0, and autopep8 was 1.2.4.
Secondly, “blame” style tools will generally point to this commit instead of
a meaningful prior commit. There are alternatives available that will attempt
to look through this change and find the appropriate prior commit. YMMV.
llvm-svn: 280751
This patch attempts to solve the Python 2 / Python 3 incompatibilities by
introducing a new `encoded_file` abstraction that we use instead of
`io.open()`. The problem with the builtin implementation of `io.open` is
that `read` and `write` accept and return `unicode` objects, which are not
always convenient to work with in Python 2. We solve this by making
`encoded_file.open()` return the same object returned by `io.open()` but
with hooked `read()` and `write()` methods. These hooked methods will
accept binary or text data, and conditionally convert what it gets to a
`unicode` object using the correct encoding. When calling `read()` it
also does any conversion necessary to convert the output back into the
native `string` type of the running python version.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16736
llvm-svn: 259379
Instead of opening the file in unicode mode, we need only encode
data which potentially has non-ASCII characters as UTF8 before
writing. This should work across both Python versions, and is
also far simpler than anything else discussed.
llvm-svn: 258969
Previously we were writing in the default encoding, which depends
on the operating system and is not guaranteed to be unicode aware.
On Python 3, this would lead to a situation where writing unicode
text to the log file generates an exception. The fix here is to
write session logs using the proper encoding, which incidentally
fixes another test, so xfail is removed from that.
llvm-svn: 258759
This module was originally intended to be imported by top-level
scripts to be able to find the LLDB packages and third party
libraries. Packages themselves shouldn't need to import it,
because by the time it gets into the package, the top-level
script should have already done this. Indeed, it was just
adding the same values to sys.path multiple times, so this
patch is essentially no functional change.
To make sure it doesn't get re-introduced, we also delete the
`use_lldb_suite` module from `lldbsuite/test`, although the
original copy still remains in `lldb/test`
llvm-svn: 251963
For convenience, we had added the folder that dotest.py was in
to sys.path, so that we could easily write things like
`import lldbutil` from anywhere and any test. This introduces
a subtle problem when using Python's package system, because when
unittest2 imports a particular test suite, the test suite is detached
from the package. Thus, writing "import lldbutil" from dotest imports
it as part of the package, and writing the same line from a test
does a fresh import since the importing module was not part of
the same package.
The real way to fix this is to use absolute imports everywhere. Instead
of writing "import lldbutil", we need to write "import
lldbsuite.test.util". This patch fixes up that and all other similar
cases, and additionally removes the script directory from sys.path
to ensure that this can't happen again.
llvm-svn: 251886
This is the conclusion of an effort to get LLDB's Python code
structured into a bona-fide Python package. This has a number
of benefits, but most notably the ability to more easily share
Python code between different but related pieces of LLDB's Python
infrastructure (for example, `scripts` can now share code with
`test`).
llvm-svn: 251532