This has been a long-standing TODO item, however we have now been requiring
a monorepo layout to build libc++ and libc++abi for a while now. Hence,
we can fix this code duplication issue now.
Note that it's still not super pretty to reach into libc++ to include
headers, but it's better than having duplicated code which can get out
of sync.
When building the runtimes, it's very important not to add rpaths unless
the user explicitly asks for them (the standard way being CMAKE_INSTALL_RPATH),
or to change the install name dir unless the user requests it (via
CMAKE_INSTALL_NAME_DIR).
llvm_setup_rpath() would override the install_name_dir of the runtimes
even if CMAKE_INSTALL_NAME_DIR was specified to something, which is wrong
and in fact even "dangerous" for the runtimes.
This issue was discovered when trying to build libc++ and libc++abi as
system libraries for Apple, where we set the install name dir to /usr/lib
explicitly. llvm_setup_rpath() would cause libc++ to have the wrong install
name dir, and for basically everything on the system to fail to load.
This was discovered just now because we previously used something closer
to a standalone build, where llvm_setup_rpath() wouldn't exist, and hence
not be used.
This is a revert of the following commits:
libunwind: 3a667b9bd8
libc++abi: 4877063e19
libc++: 88434fe05f
Those added llvm_setup_rpath() for consistency, so it seems reasonable
to revert.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91099
Summary:
Before this patch, we could only link against the back-deployment libc++abi
dylib. This patch allows linking against the just-built libc++abi, but
running against the back-deployment one -- just like we do for libc++.
Also, add XFAIL markup to flag expected errors.
Previously, these had to be set manually when building each of the
projects standalone, in order to get proper symbol visibility when
combining the two libraries.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90021
This is a massive revert of the following commits (from most revent to oldest):
2b9b7b5775.
529ac3319728270234f169c2087283b5aa67446e5d796645d6
After checking-in the __config_site change, a lot of things started breaking
due to widespread reliance on various aspects of libc++'s build, notably the
fact that we can include the headers from the source tree, but also reliance
on various "internal" CMake variables used by the runtimes build and compiler-rt.
These were unintended consequences of the change, and after two days, we
still haven't restored all the bots to being green. Instead, now that I
understand what specific areas this will blow up in, I should be able to
chop up the patch into smaller ones that are easier to digest.
See https://reviews.llvm.org/D89041 for more details on this adventure.
In 5d796645, we stopped looking at the LIBCXXABI_LIBCXX_INCLUDES variable,
which broke users of the Standalone build. This patch reinstates that
variable, however it must point to the *installed* path of the libc++
headers, not the libc++ headers in the source tree (which has always
been the case, but wasn't enforced before).
If LIBCXXABI_LIBCXX_INCLUDES points to the libc++ headers in the source
tree, the `__config_site` header will fail to be found.
Copy over the compiler detection structure from libcxx, and set
_LIBCXXABI_WEAK like _LIBCPP_WEAK is set in libcxx.
This allows users to override operator new/delete, if using those
operators from libcxxabi instead of from libcxx.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89863
This commit should really be named "Workaround external projects depending
on libc++ build system implementation details". It seems that the compiler-rt
build (and perhaps other projects) is relying on the fact that we copy libc++
and libc++abi headers to `<build-root>/include/c++/v1`. This was changed
by 5d796645, which moved the headers to `<build-root>/projects/libcxx/include/c++/v1`
and broke the compiler-rt build.
I'm committing this workaround to fix the compiler-rt build, but we should
remove reliance on implementation details like that. The correct way to
setup the compiler-rt build would be to "link" against the `cxx-headers`
target in CMake, or to run `install-cxx-headers` using an appropriate
installation prefix, and then manually add a `-I` path to that location.
While running this test on a bare metal target, I got an error as 'sleep' was not available on that system. As 'sleep' call is not doing anything useful for cases when _LIBCXXABI_HAS_NO_THREADS is defined. This patch puts it under this check.
Reviewed By: ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89871
Prior to this patch, we would generate a fancy <__config> header by
concatenating <__config_site> and <__config>. This complexifies the
build system and also increases the difference between what's tested
and what's actually installed.
This patch removes that complexity and instead simply installs <__config_site>
alongside the libc++ headers. <__config_site> is then included by <__config>,
which is much simpler. Doing this also opens the door to having different
<__config_site> headers depending on the target, which was impossible before.
It does change the workflow for testing header-only changes to libc++.
Previously, we would run `lit` against the headers in libcxx/include.
After this patch, we run it against a fake installation root of the
headers (containing a proper <__config_site> header). This makes use
closer to testing what we actually install, which is good, however it
does mean that we have to update that root before testing header changes.
Thus, we now need to run `ninja check-cxx-deps` before running `lit` by
hand.
This commit was originally applied in 1e46d1aa3 and reverted in eb60c487
because it broke the libc++abi and libunwind test suites. This has now
been fixed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89041
Prior to this patch, we would generate a fancy <__config> header by
concatenating <__config_site> and <__config>. This complexifies the
build system and also increases the difference between what's tested
and what's actually installed.
This patch removes that complexity and instead simply installs <__config_site>
alongside the libc++ headers. <__config_site> is then included by <__config>,
which is much simpler. Doing this also opens the door to having different
<__config_site> headers depending on the target, which was impossible before.
It does change the workflow for testing header-only changes to libc++.
Previously, we would run `lit` against the headers in libcxx/include.
After this patch, we run it against a fake installation root of the
headers (containing a proper <__config_site> header). This makes use
closer to testing what we actually install, which is good, however it
does mean that we have to update that root before testing header changes.
Thus, we now need to run `ninja check-cxx-deps` before running `lit` by
hand.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89041
This patch ensures that __shared_weak_count provides a consistent vtable
regardless of if RTTI is enabled or if we are targeting a static or shared
libc++ build.
This patch is technically ABI breaking, but only for a very specific
configuration that no vendor should be shipping.
Note that _LIBCPP_BUILD_STATIC is not normally defined when building
libc++.a, but instead it must be manually provided by the user or the
__config_site.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32838
Previously, we would define new/delete in both libc++ and libc++abi.
Not only does this cause code bloat, but also it's technically an ODR
violation since we don't know which operator will be selected. Furthermore,
since those are weak definitions, we should strive to have as few of them
as possible (to improve load times).
My preferred choice would have been to put the operators in libc++ only
by default, however that would create a circular dependency between
libc++ and libc++abi, which GNU linkers don't handle.
Folks who want to ship new/delete in libc++ instead of libc++abi are
free to do so by turning on LIBCXX_ENABLE_NEW_DELETE_DEFINITIONS at
CMake configure time.
On Apple platforms, this shouldn't be an ABI break because we re-export
the new/delete symbols from libc++abi. This change actually makes libc++
behave closer to the system libc++ shipped on Apple platforms.
On other platforms, this is an ABI break for people linking against libc++
but not libc++abi. However, vendors have been consulted in D68269 and no
objection was raised. Furthermore, the definitions can be controlled to
appear in libc++ instead with the CMake option.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68269
This is the libcxxabi counterpart of D89545, and would have been part
of that patch if I'd spotted it soon enough (oops). One test in
libcxxabi is using the `%lu` printf format to refer to `size_t`, which
should be `%zu`.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc_abi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89547
Remove check for standalone and shared library mode in libcxxabi to
allow including tests in said mode. This check prevented running the
tests in standalone mode with static libraries, which is the case for
baremetal targets.
Fix check-unwind target trying to use a non-existent llvm-lit executable
in standalone mode. Copy the HandleOutOfTreeLLVM logic from libcxxabi to
libunwind in order to make the tests work in standalone mode.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc_abi, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86540
We used <iostream> in several places where we don't actually need the
full power of <iostream>, and where using basic `std::printf` is enough.
This is better, since `std::printf` can be supported on systems that don't
have a notion of locales, while <iostream> can't.
There are several places in LLVM's CMake setup that try to remove the
`stdlib=...` flag from the CMake flags. All this code however only considered
the `-stdlib=` variant of the flag but not the alternative spelling with a
double dash. This causes that when one adds `--stdlib=...` to the user-provided
CMake flags that this gets transformed into just `-` which ends up causing the
build system to think it should read the source from stdin (which then lead to
very confusing build errors).
This just adds the alternative spelling before the`-stdlib=` variant in all
these places
Reviewed By: ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87133
This is needed when running the tests in Freestanding mode, where main()
isn't treated specially. In Freestanding, main() doesn't get mangled as
extern "C", so whatever runtime we're using fails to find the entry point.
One way to solve this problem is to define a symbol alias from __Z4mainiPPc
to _main, however this requires all definitions of main() to have the same
mangling. Hence this commit.
This reverts commit c7d4aa711a. I am still investigating the issue,
but it looks like that commit has an interaction with ld64 that causes
new/delete weak re-exports not to work properly anymore. This is weird
because this commit did not touch the exports of new/delete -- I am
still investigating.
This is a temporary workaround until the new/delete situation is made
better (i.e. we don't include new/delete in both libc++ and libc++abi
by default).
Instead of managing two copies of the symbol lists, reuse the same list
in libc++abi and libc++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88623
Setting _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_THREADS is needed when building libcxxabi without
threads in standalone mode. This is useful when target WASM. Otherwise,
you get an error like "No thread API" when building libcxxabi.
It would be better to link against a properly-configured libc++ headers
CMake target when building libc++abi instead, but we don't generate such
targets yet.
Thanks to Matthew Bauer for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60743
The needs of back-deployment testing currently require two different
ways of running the test suite: one based on the deployment target,
and one based on the target triple. Since the triple includes all the
information we need, it's better to have just one way of doing things.
Furthermore, `--param platform=XXX` is also supersedded by using the
target triple. Previously, this parameter would serve the purpose of
controling XFAILs for availability markup errors, however it is possible
to achieve the same thing by using with_system_cxx_lib only and using
.verify.cpp tests instead, as explained in the documentation changes.
The motivation for this change is twofold:
1. This part of the Lit config has always been really confusing and
complicated, and it has been a source of bugs in the past. I have
simplified it iteratively in the past, but the complexity is still
there.
2. The deployment-target detection started failing in weird ways in
recent Clangs, breaking our CI. Instead of band-aid patching the
issue, I decided to remove the complexity altogether by using target
triples even on Apple platforms.
A follow-up to this commit will bring the test suite in line with
the recommended way of handling availability markup tests.
Summary:
Caught by HWASAN on arm64 Android (which uses ld128 for long double). This
was running the existing fuzzer.
The specific minimized fuzz input to reproduce this is:
__cxa_demangle("1\006ILeeeEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE", 0, 0, 0);
Reviewers: eugenis, srhines, #libc_abi!
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, danielkiss, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc_abi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77924
_cxa_guard_acquire is used for only one purpose,
namely guarding local static variable initialization,
and since that purpose is definitionally cold,
it should be attributed as cold
Reviewed By: ldionne
Reviewers: mclow.lists, ldionne, jfb, yfeldblum
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85873
add_compile_options is more sensitive to its location in the file than add_definitions--it only takes effect for sources that are added after it. This updated patch ensures that the add_compile_options is done before adding any source files that depend on it.
Using add_definitions caused the flag to be passed to rc.exe on Windows and thus broke Windows builds.
We want to be sure that atomic<size_t> is always lock-free, or the code
will be much slower than expected (and could even conceivably fail if
the lock implementation somehow calls back into libc++abi).
After lots of follow-up fixes, there are still problems, such as
-Wno-suggest-override getting passed to the Windows Resource Compiler
because it was added with add_definitions in the CMake file.
Rather than piling on another fix, let's revert so this can be re-landed
when there's a proper fix.
This reverts commit 21c0b4c1e8.
This reverts commit 81d68ad27b.
This reverts commit a361aa5249.
This reverts commit fa42b7cf29.
This reverts commit 955f87f947.
This reverts commit 8b16e45f66.
This reverts commit 308a127a38.
This reverts commit 274b6b0c7a.
This reverts commit 1c7037a2a5.
This patch adds Clang's new (and GCC's old) -Wsuggest-override to the warning flags for the LLVM build. The warning is a stronger form of -Winconsistent-missing-override which warns _everywhere_ that override is missing, not just in places where it's inconsistent within a class.
Some directories in the monorepo need the warning disabled for compatibility's, or sanity's, sake; in particular, libcxx/libcxxabi, and any code implementing or interoperating with googletest, googlemock, or google benchmark (which do not themselves use override). This patch adds -Wno-suggest-override to the relevant CMakeLists.txt's to accomplish this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84126
sync_source_lists_from_cmake now also looks for source files in
`sources += [ "foo.cc" ]` lines, which allows us to remove most
`# Make `gn format` not collapse this` comments.
(sync_source_lists_from_cmake doesn't look for `foo_headers += [...]`
still, so the comment is still needed in two places for that.)
No intentional behavior change.
This test has been failing on some SDKs for a long time because we lack
a proper way of identifying the SDK version in Lit. Until that is possible,
mark the test as unsupported on Apple to restore the CI.
This allows passing parameters to the test suites without using
LLVM_LIT_ARGS. The problem is that we sometimes want to set some
Lit arguments on the CMake command line, but the Lit parameters in
a CMake cache file. If the only knob to do that is LLVM_LIT_ARGS,
the command-line entry overrides the cache one, and the parameters
set by the cache are ignored.
This fixes a current issue with the build bots that they completely
ignore the 'std' param set by Lit, because other Lit arguments are
provided via LLVM_LIT_ARGS on the CMake command-line.
Instead of detecting it automatically (in libc++) and relying on
_LIBCXXABI_NO_EXCEPTIONS being set explicitly (in libc++abi), always
detect whether exceptions are enabled automatically.
This commit also removes support for specifying -D_LIBCPP_NO_EXCEPTIONS
and -D_LIBCXXABI_NO_EXCEPTIONS explicitly -- those should just be inferred
from using -fno-exceptions (or an equivalent flag).
Allowing both -D_FOO_NO_EXCEPTIONS to be provided explicitly and trying
to detect it automatically is just confusing, especially since we did
specify it explicitly when building libc++abi. We should have only one
way to detect whether exceptions are enabled, but it should be robust.
I ran into an error while trying to build libc++abi for a platform that
doesn't have <sys/types.h>. I couldn't find what <sys/types.h> was used
for in the header, so I think it's fine to remove it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82810
As announced on libcxx-dev at [1], the old libc++ testing format is being
removed in favour of the new one. Follow-up commits will clean up the
code that is dead after the removal of this option.
[1]: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/libcxx-dev/2020-June/000885.html
This is necessary for standalone builds where the libc++ in use has a
custom configuration set up inside __config_site -- one needs to build
libc++abi against the installed headers of libc++ (which are properly
configured) instead of the ones inside libcxx/include.
See https://reviews.llvm.org/rGe619e9d#927848 for details.
The integration between CMake and executor selection in the new format
wasn't very flexible -- only the default executor and SSH executors were
supported.
This patch makes it possible to specify arbitrary executors with the new
format. With the new testing format, a custom executor is just a script
that gets called with a command-line to execute, and some arguments like
--env, --codesign_identity and --execdir. As such, the default executor
is just run.py.
Remote execution with the SSH executor can be achived by specifying
LIBCXX_EXECUTOR="<path-to-ssh.py> --host <host>". Similarly, arbitrary
scripts can be provided.
Since we have the monorepo, libc++abi's build requires a sibling checkout
of the libc++ sources. Hence, the logic for finding libc++ can be greatly
simplified.
Instead of passing file dependencies individually, assume that the
whole content of the unique test directory is a dependency. This
simplifies the test harness significantly, by making %T the directory
that contains everything required to run a test. This also removes the
need for the %{file_dependencies} substitution, which is removed by this
patch.
Furthermore, this patch also changes the harness to execute tests locally
inside %T, so as to avoid creating a separate directory for no purpose.
This clarifies the difference between test for exception support in
libc++abi tests and support for exceptions built into libc++abi.
This also removes the rather confusing similarity between the
_LIBCXXABI_NO_EXCEPTIONS and LIBCXXABI_HAS_NO_EXCEPTIONS macros.
Finally, TEST_HAS_NO_EXCEPTIONS is also detected automatically based
on -fno-exceptions, so it doesn't have to be specified explicitly
through Lit's compile_flags.
0e04342ae0 simplified exceptions-related configurations for libc++abi
and libunwind by reusing the logic in libc++. However, it missed the fact
that libc++abi and libunwind were overriding libc++'s handling of exceptions.
This commit removes special handling in libc++abi and libunwind to use
the logic in libc++, which is the right one.
First, libc++abi doesn't need to add the no-exceptions Lit feature itself,
since that is already done in the config.py for libc++, which it reuses.
Specifically, config.enable_exceptions is set based on @LIBCXXABI_ENABLE_EXCEPTIONS@
in libc++abi's lit.cfg.in, and libc++'s config.py handles that correctly.
Secondly, libunwind's LIBUNWIND_ENABLE_EXCEPTIONS is never set (it's
probably a remnant of copy-pasting code between the runtime libraries),
so the library is always built with exceptions disabled (which makes
sense since it implements the runtime support for exceptions).
Conversely, the test suite is always run with exceptions enabled
(not sure why), but that is preserved by the default behavior of
libc++'s config.py.
Since <unwind.h> is in the SDK, not in /usr/include, the XFAILs must
be predicated on the compiler version (ideally even on the SDK version)
instead of the target system version.
C++98 and C++03 are effectively aliases as far as Clang is concerned.
As such, allowing both std=c++98 and std=c++03 as Lit parameters is
just slightly confusing, but provides no value. It's similar to allowing
both std=c++17 and std=c++1z, which we don't do.
This was discovered because we had an internal bot that ran the test
suite under both c++98 AND c++03 -- one of which is redundant.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80926
When building the system libc++abi for Apple, we use CrashReporterClient
to provide better crash logs when calling abort(). This is exemplified by
the fact that we test for the presence of <CrashReporterClient.h> in
abort_message.cpp.
However, we must link against CrashReporterClient.a in order to get that
functionality, otherwise we get a linking error.
Slightly older Clangs seem to think they are more clever than they really
are, and they think the code can never be executed. The code can actually
be executed in case the exception runtime is mis-implemented, which is
exactly what this test is testing. This commit just disables the spurious
warning.
Android doesn't have a libgcc_s and uses libgcc instead, so adjust the
build accordingly. This matches compiler-rt's build setup. libc++abi and
libunwind were already checking for libgcc but in a different context.
This change makes them search only for libgcc on Android now, but the
code to link against libgcc if it were present was already there.
Reviewed By: #libc, #libc_abi, #libunwind, rprichard, srhines
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78787
Instead of the ad-hoc #define _LIBCXX_DYNAMIC_FALLBACK, provide an option
to enable the setting when building libc++abi. Also use the occasion to
rename the option to something slightly more descriptive.
Note that in the future, it would be great to simply remove this option
altogether. However, in the meantime, it seems better to have it be an
official option than something ad-hoc.
Instead of having different names for the same Lit feature accross code
bases, use the same name everywhere. This NFC commit is in preparation
for a refactor where all three projects will be using the same Lit
feature detection logic, and hence it won't be convenient to use
different names for the feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78370
This upstreams a fix that Howard made a long time ago, where so many
errors would be logged that applications were becoming sluggish. With
this patch, the first three errors will be printed, and after that the
printing frequency decreases exponentially.
_LIBCXX_DYNAMIC_FALLBACK is only enabled on Apple platforms, so this
should be NFC for other platforms.
rdar://14996273
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78330
We previously tried re-exporting symbols that didn't exist when
exceptions were disabled. Note that building libc++abi without
exceptions still doesn't work when linking against the default-provided
libSystem.dylib, because it transitively depends on libobjc.dylib,
and that requires __gxx_personality_v0. But building libc++abi
with exceptions and libc++ without exceptions does work.
Summary:
This patch is to fix the parsing of long double literals encoded with the e prefix on PowerPC and S390. For both PowerPC and S390, type code e is used for 64-bit long double literals and g is used for 128-bit long double literals. libcxxabi test case test_demangle.pass.cpp fails without the fix.
Authored by: xingxue-ibm
Reviewers: hubert.reinterpretcast, jasonliu, erik.pilkington, uweigand, mclow.li
sts, libc++abi
Reviewed by: hubert.reinterpretcast, erik.pilkington
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74163
The new format should be equivalent to the old format, and it is now the
default format when running the libc++ tests. This commit changes the
libc++abi tests to use the new format by default too. If unexpected failures
are discovered, it should be fine to revert this commit until they are
addressed.
Also note that it is still possible to use the old format by passing
`--param=use_old_format=True` when running Lit for the time being.
The LitConfig is shared across the whole test suite. However, since
enabling recursive expansion can be a breaking change for some test
suites, it's important to confine the setting to test suites that
enable it explicitly.
Note that other issues were raised with the way recursiveExpansionLimit
operates. However, this commit simply moves the setting to the right
place -- the mechanism by which it works can be improved independently.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77415
This new test format is simpler and more flexible. It creates Lit ShTests
on the fly that reuse existing substitutions (like %{cxx}) instead of
having complex logic in Python to run the tests. This has the benefit
that virtually no coding is required to customize how the test suite is
run -- one can achieve pretty much anything by defining the appropriate
substitutions in a simple lit.cfg file.
For example, in order to run the tests on an embedded device after
building with a specific SDK, one can set the %{cxx} and %{compile_flags}
substitutions to use that SDK, and the %{exec} substitution to the ssh.py
script currently used for .sh.cpp tests with a remote executor. Dealing with
the SSHExecutor becomes unnecessary, since all tests are treated like ShTests.
As a side effect of this design, configuration files for the test
suite can be as simple as:
config.substitutions.append(('%{cxx}', '<path-to-compiler>'))
config.substitutions.append(('%{compile_flags}', '<flags>'))
config.substitutions.append(('%{link_flags}', '<flags>'))
config.substitutions.append(('%{exec}', '<script-to-execute>'))
This should allow storing lit.cfg files for various configurations
directly in the repository instead of relying on complicated logic
in config.py to set up the right flags. I've found numerous problems
in that logic in the past years, and it seems like having simple and
explicit configuration files for the configurations we support is
going to solve most of these problems. Specifically, I am hoping to
store configuration files for testing other Standard Libraries in
the repository.
Improving the interaction with the test suite configuration is still a
work in progress, so for now this test format reuses the substitutions and
available features that are set up by the current config.py.
This new test format should support pretty much everything that the current
test format supports, however it will not be enabled by default at first to
make sure we're satisfied with it. For a short period of time, the new format
will require `--param=use_new_format=True` to be enabled, however it is a very
short term goal to replace the current testing format entirely and to simplify
the configuration accordingly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77338
To avoid wasting the valuable time of contributors, add a link to a
blocked review to document additional issues with the removal of some
GCC 4.9 workaround.
We will soon start removing technical debt and sharing code between the
two directories, so this first step is meant to discover potential places
where the libraries are built outside of a monorepo layout. I imagine
this could happen as a remnant of the pre-monorepo setup.
This was discussed on the libcxx-dev mailing list and we got overall
consensus on the direction. All consumers of libc++ and libc++abi
should already be doing so through the monorepo, however it is
possible that we catch some stragglers with this patch, in which
case it may need to be reverted temporarily.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76102
We've been meaning to remove those targets for a while, and the fix is
simple enough cause they're all just aliases to other targets.
This is a re-application of f383fb40b1, wich was reverted in 04d48111b
because the build bots had not been updated yet. The build bot configurations
have now been updated not to use the deprecated targets, and I verified
that they were using the non-deprecated targets, so we should be good
unless I missed a bot.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76104
lit is not very clever when it performs substitution on RUN lines. It
simply looks for a match anywhere in the line (without tokenization)
and replaces it by the expansion. This means that a RUN line containing
e.g. `-verify-ignore-unexpected=note` wouod be expanded to
`-verify-ignore-unexpected=<substitution for not>e`, which is
surprising and nonsensical.
It also means that something like `%compile_module` could be expanded
to `<substitution-for-%compile>_module` or to the correct substitution,
depending on the order in which substitutions are evaluated by lit.
To avoid such problems, it is a good habit to delimit custom substitutions
with some token. This commit does that for all substitutions used in the
libc++ and libc++abi test suites.
This reverts commit f383fb40b. It looks like several of our build bots
are still using the legacy target names, so we'll change those before
we commit this change again.
We've been meaning to remove those targets for a while, and the fix is
simple enough cause they're all just aliases to other targets.
There's no doubt this commit will break some CI systems, however the
fix is trivial.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76104
Since the atomic_support.h header of libc++abi is considered technical
debt (since we should use libc++'s), it's better not to add new
definitions to it, which makes it diverge from the original libc++
header even more.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75950
It seems to me that abort_message.h is always included in a C++ file, so
it's fine to assume that it's C++ code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76027
Summary:
The return type of __cxa_finalize is documented as void in the Itanium
C++ ABI, and it is void in various C libraries.
Reviewers: EricWF, ldionne, compnerd, mclow.lists, MaskRay
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Subscribers: MaskRay, dexonsmith, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75795
Win64 isn't LP64, it's LLP64, but there's no __LLP64__ predefined -
just check _WIN64 in addition to __LP64__.
This fixes compilation after static asserts about the struct layout
were added in f2a436058f.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73838
Summary:
Preserve the old ABI for __cxa_exception and __cxa_dependent_exception
on 64 bit platforms or ARM_EHABI platforms.
After r276215, libunwind in llvm-project labels _Unwind_Exception to be
double word aligned. That change implictly adds a padding before
unwindHeader field in __cxa_exception and __cxa_dependent_exception.
Preserve the same negative offsets in those struct by moving the padding
to the beginning of the field.
The assumption here is that if the ABI is not aware of the padding before
unwindHeader and put the referenceCount/primaryException in there, no padding
should exist before unwindHeader.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, ldionne, jroelofs, dexonsmith, rjmccall, compnerd, phosek, ahatanak
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Subscribers: hans, smeenai, kristof.beyls, christof, jkorous, ributzka, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72543
libc++ on Android needs to be linked against libandroid_support on API
levels less than 21 to provide needed functions that aren't in the libc
on those platforms (e.g. posix_memalign for libcxxabi). libc++ from the
NDK is a linker script that pulls in libandroid_support, but for
building libc++ itself, we need to explicitly add libandroid_support as
a dependency. Moreover, libc++ headers reference the functions provided
by libandroid_support, so it needs to be added as a public dependency.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73516
These names have been changed from CamelCase to camelCase, but there were
many places (comments mostly) that still used the old names.
This change is NFC.
builds.
Fix a libc++abi test that was incorrectly checking for threading
primitives even when threading was disabled.
Additionally, temporarily XFAIL some module tests that fail because
the <atomic> header is unsupported but still built as a part of the
std module.
To properly address this libc++ would either need to produce a different
module.modulemap for single-threaded configurations, or it would need
to make the <atomic> header not hard-error and instead be empty
for single-threaded configurations
Summary:
Right now the only way to force libc++abi tests to link with the static version of libc++abi is to set `LIBCXXABI_ENABLE_SHARED` to `OFF`. However, this doesn't work when libc++abi is built as standalone project because of [this](54c5224203/libcxxabi/CMakeLists.txt (L503-L519)).
This change allows specifying the version of the library for tests to link with.
This is useful for remote testing, for example, with `SSHExecutor`, where we _have_ to link with libc++abi statically.
Two new CMake options are introduced here: `LIBCXXABI_LINK_TESTS_WITH_SHARED_LIBCXXABI` and `LIBCXXABI_LINK_TESTS_WITH_SHARED_LIBCXX`. They can be set to `OFF` to tell the test utility to link tests with the static libraries.
It shouldn't break anything, because the default values of these options are set such that the test utility will behave the same way.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, phosek, mehdi_amini, ldionne, jroelofs, bcraig
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71894
These are a part of the libc so linking these explicitly isn't necessary
and embedding these as deplibs causes link time error.
This issues was introduced in a9b5fff which changed how we emit deplibs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71135
This is a followup to 35bc5276ca. It fixes the dependent libs usage
in libcxx and libcxxabi to link pthread and rt libraries only if CMake
detects them, rather than based on explicit platform blacklist.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70888
We build with `-nostdinc++` and add our own header path via
`LIBCXXABI_LIBCXX_INCLUDES`. However cmake tried to be clever and if
`LIBCXXABI_LIBCXX_INCLUDES` happens to match the compilers system path
it will remove the `-I` flag meaning we can't access any C++ headers.
Ideally cmake would be able see that we are using `-nostdinc++` and
disable this behaviour.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69973
This class was a bit overengineered, and was triggering some PVS warnings.
Instead, put strings into a NameType and let clients unconditionally treat it
as a Node.
Summary: The implementation of P1152R4 in Clang has resulted in some deprecation warnings appearing in the libc++ and libc++abi test suite. Fix or suppress these warnings.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68879
llvm-svn: 375307
That option controls the 'VERSION' attribute of the libc++abi shared
library, which in turn controls the name of the actual dylib being
produced.
llvm-svn: 373949
These flags are already set when we create the cxxabi_shared target
using the SOVERSION and VERSION target properties, and the install_name
was already being overriden to '@rpath/libc++abi.1.dylib' by CMake
because no 'CMAKE_INSTALL_NAME_DIR' option was specified. So this is
effectively a removal of dead code with no intended functionality change.
The only think we're losing here is that we used to link against
libSystem.B.dylib instead of libSystem.dylib when building libc++abi
for macOS 10.6 -- however, I strongly suspect nobody's building
libc++abi from source for that target anymore.
llvm-svn: 373934
On Apple platforms, libSystem is an umbrella for all other system
libraries, and libpthread (and friends) are actually just symlinks
to libSystem.
llvm-svn: 373770
Summary:
Those functions started being mistakenly exported from the libc++abi
shared library after commit r344152 in 2018. Removing these symbols is
technically an ABI break. However, they are not part of the C++ ABI,
they haven't ever been re-exported from libc++, and they are not
declared in any public header, so it's very unlikely that calls to
these functions exist out there. Also, the functions have reserved
names, so any impacted user would have to have tried really hard
being broken by this removal.
Note that avoiding this kind of problem is exactly why we're now
controlling exported symbols explicitly with a textual list.
Also note that applying the hidden visibility attribute is necessary
because the list of exported symbols is only used on Apple platforms
for the time being.
Reviewers: phosek, mclow.lists, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68357
llvm-svn: 373602
This reduces the (circular) dependency of libc++abi on a C++ standard
library. Outside of the demangler which uses fancier C++ features, the
only C++ headers now required by libc++abi are pretty much <new> and
<exception>, and that's because libc++abi defines some types that are
declared in those headers.
llvm-svn: 373381
Both arm32 armv7/armv8 bots which do not use compiler-rt are failing
to a linking issue:
[100%] Built target cxxabi_static
CMakeFiles/cxxabi_shared.dir/cxa_demangle.cpp.o: In function `(anonymous namespace)::itanium_demangle::OutputStream::writeUnsigned(unsigned long long, bool)':
/home/buildslave/buildslave/libcxx-libcxxabi-libunwind-armv7-linux-noexceptions/llvm/projects/libcxxabi/src/demangle/Utility.h:55: undefined reference to `__aeabi_uldivmod'
/home/buildslave/buildslave/libcxx-libcxxabi-libunwind-armv7-linux-noexceptions/llvm/projects/libcxxabi/src/demangle/Utility.h:56: undefined reference to `__aeabi_uldivmod'
clang-6.0: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
It seems after r371273 OutputStream is used more extensively and
is pulling OutputStream::writeUnsigned (which thus requires unsigned
integer module).
The straightfoward fix is to explicit link against libgcc if
compiler-rt is not used.
llvm-svn: 372921
version after r371273.
Also fix a minor issue in r371273 that only surfaced after template
instantiation from LLVM's use of the demangler.
llvm-svn: 371274
This implements demangling support for the mangling extensions specified
in https://github.com/itanium-cxx-abi/cxx-abi/pull/85, much of which is
implemented in Clang r359967 and r371004.
Specifically, this provides demangling for:
* <template-param-decl> in <lambda-sig>
* <template-param> with non-zero level
* lambda-expression literals (not emitted by Clang yet)
* nullptr literals
* string literals
(The final two seem unrelated, but handling them was necessary in order
to disambiguate between lambda expressions and the other forms of
literal for which we have a type but no value.)
When demangling a <lambda-sig>, we form template parameters with no
corresponding argument, so we cannot substitute in the argument in the
demangling. Instead we invent synthetic names for the template
parameters (eg, '[]<typename $T>($T *x)').
llvm-svn: 371273
Summary:
This commit allows specifying LIBCXX_ENABLE_PARALLEL_ALGORITHMS when
configuring libc++ in CMake. When that option is enabled, libc++ will
assume that the PSTL can be found somewhere on the CMake module path,
and it will provide the C++17 parallel algorithms based on the PSTL
(that is assumed to be available).
The commit also adds support for running the PSTL tests as part of
the libc++ test suite.
The first attempt to commit this failed because it exposed a bug in the
tests for modules. Now that this has been fixed, it should be safe to
commit this.
Reviewers: EricWF
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits, mclow.lists, EricWF
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60480
llvm-svn: 367903
r362048 added support for ELF dependent libraries, but broke Android
build since Android does not have libpthread. Remove the dependency on
the Android build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65098
llvm-svn: 366734
This reverts r366593, which caused unforeseen breakage on the build bots.
I'm reverting until the problems have been figured out and fixed.
llvm-svn: 366603
Summary:
This commit allows specifying LIBCXX_ENABLE_PARALLEL_ALGORITHMS when
configuring libc++ in CMake. When that option is enabled, libc++ will
assume that the PSTL can be found somewhere on the CMake module path,
and it will provide the C++17 parallel algorithms based on the PSTL
(that is assumed to be available).
The commit also adds support for running the PSTL tests as part of
the libc++ test suite.
Reviewers: rodgert, EricWF
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits, mclow.lists, EricWF
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60480
llvm-svn: 366593
When exceptions are disabled, avoid their processing altogether.
This avoids pulling in the depenency on demangler significantly
reducing binary size when statically linking against libc++abi
built without exception support.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64191
llvm-svn: 365944
Summary: I'm pretty sure it's not used anymore, at least it isn't used at Apple.
Reviewers: EricWF, Bigcheese
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, jfb, mstorsjo, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63297
llvm-svn: 363737
ar doesn't produce the correct results when used for linking static
archives on Apple platforms, so instead use libtool -static which is
the official way to build static archives on those platforms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62770
llvm-svn: 362311
These seemed to have been used in the past but were since removed
by the add_compile_flags_if_supported functions that combine these
these checks and adding the flag, but the original checks were never
removed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62566
llvm-svn: 362058
This fixes the issue introduced by r362048 where we always use
pragma comment(lib, ...) for dependent libraries when the compiler
is Clang, but older Clang versions don't support this pragma so
we need to check first if it's supported before using it.
llvm-svn: 362055
As of r360984, LLD supports dependent libraries feature for ELF.
libunwind, libc++abi and libc++ have library dependencies: libdl librt
and libpthread, which means that when libunwind and libc++ are being
statically linked (using -static-libstdc++ flag), user has to manually
specify -ldl -lpthread which is onerous.
This change includes the lib pragma to specify the library dependencies
directly in the source that uses those libraries. This doesn't make any
difference when using linkers that don't support dependent libraries.
However, when using LLD that has dependent libraries feature, users no
longer have to manually specifying library dependencies when using
static linking, linker will pick the library automatically.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62090
llvm-svn: 362048
The libc++ typeinfo implementation is being improved to better
handle non-merged type names.
This patch takes advantage of that more correct behavior by delegating
to std::type_infos default operator== instead of doing pointer equality
ourselves.
However, libc++ still expects unique RTTI by default, and so we
should still fall back to strcmp when explicitly requested.
llvm-svn: 361916
This change is a consequence of the discussion in "RFC: Place libs in
Clang-dedicated directories", specifically the suggestion that
libunwind, libc++abi and libc++ shouldn't be using Clang resource
directory. Tools like clangd make this assumption, but this is
currently not true for the LLVM_ENABLE_PER_TARGET_RUNTIME_DIR build.
This change addresses that by moving the output of these libraries to
lib/$target/c++ and include/c++ directories, leaving resource directory
only for compiler-rt runtimes and Clang builtin headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59168
llvm-svn: 361432
When builing the hermetic static library, the compiler switch
-fvisibility-global-new-delete-hidden is necessary to get the new and
delete operator definitions made correctly. However, when those
definitions are not included in the library, then this switch does harm.
With lld (though not all linkers) setting STV_HIDDEN on SHN_UNDEF
symbols makes it an error to leave them undefined or defined via dynamic
linking that should generate PLTs for -shared linking (lld makes this a
hard error even without -z defs). Though leaving the symbols undefined
would usually work in practice if the linker were to allow it (and the
user didn't pass -z defs), this actually indicates a real problem that
could bite some target configurations more subtly at runtime. For
example, x86-32 ELF -fpic code generation uses hidden visibility on
declarations in the caller's scope as a signal that the call will never
be resolved to a PLT entry and so doesn't have to meet the special ABI
requirements for PLT calls (setting %ebx). Since these functions might
actually be resolved to PLT entries at link time (we don't know what the
user is linking in when the hermetic library doesn't provide all the
symbols itself), it's not safe for the compiler to treat their
declarations at call sites as having hidden visibility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61572
llvm-svn: 360004
This change introduces support for building libcxxabi. The library
build should be complete, but not all CMake options have been
replicated in GN. We also don't support tests yet.
We only support two stage build at the moment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60372
llvm-svn: 359805
The threaded cxa guard test attempted to test multithreaded waiting
by lining up a bunch of threads at a held init lock and releasing them.
The test initially wanted each thread to observe the lock being held,
but some threads may arive too late.
This patch cleans up the test and relaxes the restrictions.
llvm-svn: 359785
The error is:
libcxxabi/src/cxa_guard_impl.h: In instantiation of ‘__cxxabiv1::{anonymous}::LibcppMutex __cxxabiv1::{anonymous}::GlobalStatic<__cxxabiv1::{anonymous}::LibcppMutex>::instance’:
libcxxabi/src/cxa_guard_impl.h:529:62: required from here
libcxxabi/src/cxa_guard_impl.h:510:23: error: ‘__cxxabiv1::{anonymous}::LibcppMutex __cxxabiv1::{anonymous}::GlobalStatic<__cxxabiv1::{anonymous}::LibcppMutex>::instance’ has incomplete type
_LIBCPP_SAFE_STATIC T GlobalStatic<T>::instance = {};
^
llvm-svn: 359175
This patch does three main things:
(1) It re-writes the cxa guard implementation to make it testable.
(2) Adds support for recursive init detection on non-apple platforms.
(3) It adds a futex based implementation.
The futex based implementation locks and notifies on a per-object basis, unlike the
current implementation which uses a global lock for all objects. Once this patch settles
I'll turn it on by default when supported.
llvm-svn: 359060
Summary:
Ensure we re-export __cxa_throw_bad_array_new_length and
__cxa_uncaught_exceptions from libc++, since they are now
provided by libc++abi.
Doing this allows us to stop linking explicitly against libc++abi in
the libc++abi tests, since libc++ re-exports all the necessary symbols.
However, there is one caveat to that. We don't want libc++ to re-export
__cxa_uncaught_exception (the singular form), since it's only provided
for backwards compatibility. Hence, for the single test where we check
this backwards compatibility, we explicitly link against libc++abi.
PR27405
PR22654
Reviewers: EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60424
llvm-svn: 358690
On ARM the hand-rolled check causes a call to __aeabi_uidiv,
which we may not have a definition for.
Using the builtin avoids the generation of any library call.
llvm-svn: 358195
Summary:
The goal is to use a descriptive name for this feature, instead of just
using __arm__.
Reviewers: EricWF
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, christof, jkorous, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60520
llvm-svn: 358106
This reverts commit r357944 and r357949.
These changes failed to account for the fact that
the guard object is under aligned for atomic operations
on 32 bit platforms (It's aligned to 4 bytes but we require 8).
llvm-svn: 357958
The read of the guard variable by the caller is atomic,
and doesn't happen under a mutex.
Our internal reads and writes were non-atomic, because they happened
under a mutex.
The writes should always be atomic since they can be observed outside
of the lock.
Making the reads atomic is not strictly necessary under the current
global mutex approach, but will be under implementations that use a
futex (which I plan to land shortly). However, they should add little
additional cost.
llvm-svn: 357944
This patch is a part of a series of patches to cleanup
our implementation of __cxa_acquire et al. No functionality
change was intended.
This patch does two primary things.
It introduces the GuardObject class to abstract the reading
and writing to the guard object. In future, it will be used
to ensure atomic accesses are used when needed.
It also introduces the GuardValue class used to represent
values of the guard object. It is an abstraction to access
and write to the various different bits of a guard.
llvm-svn: 357804
This patch is a part of a series of cleanups to cxa_guard.cpp.
It should introduce no functionality change.
This patch refactors the use of the global mutex and condvar into
a RAII lock guard class. This improves correctness (since unlocks can't
be forgotten). It also allows the unification of the non-threading and
threading implementations.
llvm-svn: 357669
This change is similar to r356150, with the same motivation. The
only difference is that the method used to merge libunwind.a and
libc++abi.a had to be changed to use the same approach as libc++
since we no longer produce object libraries that could be linked
together as we did before. We reuse the libc++ script for merging
archives to avoid duplication between the two projects.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60173
llvm-svn: 357635
This is on by default, since on many platforms and configurations
libc++abi.a gets statically linked into shared libraries and/or
PIE executables.
This change is a followup to https://reviews.llvm.org/D60005 which
allows us to default to PIC code, but disable this if needed (for
example on WebAssembly where PIC code its currently compatible with
static linking).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60049
llvm-svn: 357551
With the current WebAssembly backend, objects built with -fPIC are not
compatible with static linking. libc++abi was (mistakenly?) adding
-fPIC to the objects it was including in a static library.
IIUC this change should also mean the static build can be more efficient
on all platforms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60005
llvm-svn: 357322
This change is a consequence of the discussion in "RFC: Place libs in
Clang-dedicated directories", specifically the suggestion that
libunwind, libc++abi and libc++ shouldn't be using Clang resource
directory. Tools like clangd make this assumption, but this is
currently not true for the LLVM_ENABLE_PER_TARGET_RUNTIME_DIR build.
This change addresses that by moving the output of these libraries to
lib/<target> and include/ directories, leaving resource directory only
for compiler-rt runtimes and Clang builtin headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59013
llvm-svn: 355665
This matters on OSX because static linking orders is also the order dyld
uses to search for libs (the default - Two-level namespace). If system
libs (including unwind lib) are specified before local unwind lib, local
unwind lib would never be picked up by dyld.
Before:
$ otool -L lib/libc++abi.dylib
@rpath/libc++abi.1.dylib (compatibility version 1.0.0, current version 1.0.0)
/usr/lib/libSystem.B.dylib (compatibility version 1.0.0, current version 1252.200.5)
@rpath/libunwind.1.dylib (compatibility version 1.0.0, current version 1.0.0)
After:
$ otool -L lib/libc++abi.dylib
@rpath/libc++abi.1.dylib (compatibility version 1.0.0, current version 1.0.0)
@rpath/libunwind.1.dylib (compatibility version 1.0.0, current version 1.0.0)
/usr/lib/libSystem.B.dylib (compatibility version 1.0.0, current version 1252.200.5)
Thanks to Yuanfang Chen for the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57496
llvm-svn: 355241
This include doesn't seem to be needed for the standalone build (it's
not being used by libc++ build either), but introduces unnecessary
dependency because HandleOutOfTreeLLVM performs checks that require
a working C++ library. We shouldn't require a working C++ library to
build libc++abi or libc++ (it's what we're building after all).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58333
llvm-svn: 354284
This changes add_custom_libcxx to also build libcxxabi and merges
the two into a static and hermetic library.
There are multiple advantages:
1) The resulting libFuzzer doesn't expose C++ internals and looks
like a plain C library.
2) We don't have to manually link in libstdc++ to provide cxxabi.
3) The sanitizer tests cannot interfere with an installed version
of libc++.so in LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58013
llvm-svn: 354212
We build libc++ and libc++abi with -nodefaultlibs, so -rtlib=compiler-rt
has no effect and results in an 'argument unused during compilation'
warning which breaks the build when using -Werror. We can therefore drop
-rtlib=compiler-rt without any functional change; note that the actual
compiler-rt linking is handled by HandleCompilerRT.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58084
llvm-svn: 353786
We're building tests with -nostdlib which means that we need to
explicitly include the builtins library. When using libgcc (default)
we can simply include -lgcc_s on the link line, but when using
compiler-rt builtins we need a complete path to the builtins library.
This path is already available in CMake as <PROJECT>_BUILTINS_LIBRARY,
so we just need to pass that path to lit and if config.compiler_rt is
true, link it to the test.
Prior to this patch, running tests when compiler-rt is being used as
the builtins library was broken as all tests would fail to link, but
with this change running tests when compiler-rt bultins library is
being used should be supported.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56701
llvm-svn: 353208
There are several changes:
- Don't stringify Pythonized bools (that's why we're Pythonizing them)
- Support specifying target and sysroot via CMake variables
- Use consistent spelling for --target, --sysroot, --gcc-toolchain
llvm-svn: 353137
CMake has a standard way of setting target triple, sysroot and external
toolchain through CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_TARGET, CMAKE_SYSROOT and
CMAKE_<LANG>_COMPILER_EXTERNAL_TOOLCHAIN. These are turned into
corresponding --target=, --sysroot= and --gcc-toolchain= variables add
included appended to CMAKE_<LANG>_FLAGS.
libunwind, libc++abi, libc++ provides their own mechanism through
<PROJECT>_TARGET_TRIPLE, <PROJECT>_SYSROOT and <PROJECT>_GCC_TOOLCHAIN
variables. These are also passed to lit via lit.site.cfg, and lit config
uses these to set the corresponding compiler flags when building tessts.
This means that there are two different ways of setting target, sysroot
and toolchain, but only one is properly supported in lit. This change
extends CMake build for libunwind, libc++abi and libc++ to also support
the CMake variables in addition to project specific ones in lit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57670
llvm-svn: 353084
When linking library dependencies, we shouldn't need to export linked
libraries to dependents. We should be explicit about this in
target_link_libraries, otherwise other targets that depend on these such
as sanitizers get repeated (and possibly even conflicting) dependencies.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57456
llvm-svn: 352688
When linking library dependencies, we shouldn't need to export linked
libraries to dependents. We should be explicit about this in
target_link_libraries, otherwise other targets that depend on these such
as sanitizers get repeated (and possibly even conflicting) dependencies.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57456
llvm-svn: 352654
This is useful when the static libunwind library is being linked into
shared libraries that may be used in with other shared libraries that
use different unwinder. We want to avoid avoid exporting libunwind
symbols in those cases. This achieved by a new CMake option which can be
enabled by libunwind vendors as needed.
The same CMake option has already been added to libc++ and libc++abi in
D55404 and D56026.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57107
llvm-svn: 352559
This fixes most references to the paths:
llvm.org/svn/
llvm.org/git/
llvm.org/viewvc/
github.com/llvm-mirror/
github.com/llvm-project/
reviews.llvm.org/diffusion/
to instead point to https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project.
This is *not* a trivial substitution, because additionally, all the
checkout instructions had to be migrated to instruct users on how to
use the monorepo layout, setting LLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS instead of
checking out various projects into various subdirectories.
I've attempted to not change any scripts here, only documentation. The
scripts will have to be addressed separately.
Additionally, I've deleted one document which appeared to be outdated
and unneeded:
lldb/docs/building-with-debug-llvm.txt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57330
llvm-svn: 352514
Refactor the get_llvm_lit_path() logic to respect LLVM_EXTERNAL_LIT,
and require the fallback to be defined explicitly
as LLVM_DEFAULT_EXTERNAL_LIT. This fixes building libcxx standalone
after r346888.
The old logic was using LLVM_EXTERNAL_LIT both as user-defined cache
variable and an optional pre-definition of default value from caller
(e.g. libcxx). It included a hack to make this work by assigning
the value back and forth but it was fragile and stopped working
in libcxx.
The new logic is simpler and more transparent. Default value is
provided in a separate variable, and used only when user-specified
variable is empty (i.e. not overriden).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57282
llvm-svn: 352374
The check_library_exists CMake uses a custom symbol definition. This
is a problem when checking for C library symbols because Clang
recognizes many of them as builtins, and returns the
-Wbuiltin-requires-header (or -Wincompatible-library-redeclaration)
error. When building with -Werror which is the default, this causes
the check_library_exists check fail making the build think that C
library isn't available.
To avoid this issue, we should use a symbol that isn't recognized by
Clang and wouldn't cause the same issue. __libc_start_main seems like
reasonable choice that fits the bill.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57142
llvm-svn: 352341
This is useful when the static libc++abi library is being linked into
shared libraries that may be used in with other shared libraries that
use different C++ library. We want to avoid avoid exporting libc++abi
or libc++ symbols in those cases. This achieved by a new CMake option
which can be enabled by libc++abi vendors as needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56026
llvm-svn: 352017
When built within the llvm runtimes directory, the runtimes
CMakeLists.txt adds the same.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56979
llvm-svn: 351873
all missed!
Thanks to Alex Bradbury for pointing this out, and the fact that I never
added the intended `legacy` anchor to the developer policy. Add that
anchor too. With hope, this will cause the links to all resolve
successfully.
llvm-svn: 351731
to reflect the new license. These used slightly different spellings that
defeated my regular expressions.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351648
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
This installs the new developer policy and moves all of the license
files across all LLVM projects in the monorepo to the new license
structure. The remaining projects will be moved independently.
Note that I've left odd formatting and other idiosyncracies of the
legacy license structure text alone to make the diff easier to read.
Critically, note that we do not in any case *remove* the old license
notice or terms, as that remains necessary until we finish the
relicensing process.
I've updated a few license files that refer to the LLVM license to
instead simply refer generically to whatever license the LLVM project is
under, basically trying to minimize confusion.
This is really the culmination of so many people. Chris led the
community discussions, drafted the policy update and organized the
multi-year string of meeting between lawyers across the community to
figure out the strategy. Numerous lawyers at companies in the community
spent their time figuring out initial answers, and then the Foundation's
lawyer Heather Meeker has done *so* much to help refine and get us ready
here. I could keep going on, but I just want to make sure everyone
realizes what a huge community effort this has been from the begining.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56897
llvm-svn: 351631
With this patch, the copies of the files ItaniumDemangle.h,
StringView.h, and Utility.h are kept byte-for-byte in sync between
libcxxabi and llvm. All differences (namespaces, fallthrough, and
unreachable macros) are defined in each copies' DemanglerConfig.h.
This patch also adds a script to copy changes from libcxxabi
(cp-to-llvm.sh), and a README.txt explaining the situation.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53538
llvm-svn: 351474
Summary:
std::bad_array_length was added by n3467, but this never made it into C++.
This commit removes the definition of std::bad_array_length from the headers
AND from the shared library. See the comments in the ABI changelog for details
about the ABI implications of this change.
Reviewers: mclow.lists, dexonsmith, howard.hinnant, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, jkorous, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54804
llvm-svn: 347903
Summary:
This (very specialized) function was added to enable an LLDB use case.
Now that a more generic interface (overriding of parser functions -
D52992) is available, and LLDB has been converted to use that (D54074),
the function is unused and can be removed.
Reviewers: erik.pilkington, sgraenitz, rsmith
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, christof, libcxx-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54893
llvm-svn: 347670
This is needed when cross-compiling for a different target since
CFLAGS may contain additional flags like -resource-dir which
change the location in which compiler-rt builtins are found.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54371
llvm-svn: 346820
Summary:
This silences the two -Wimplicit-fallthrough warnings clang finds in
ItaniumDemangle.h in libc++abi.
Clang does not have a GNU attribute spelling for this attribute, so this
is necessary.
I will commit the same change to the LLVM demangler soon.
Reviewers: EricWF, ldionne
Subscribers: christof, erik.pilkington, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53985
llvm-svn: 345870
Summary:
This uses CRTP (for performance reasons) to allow a user the override
demangler functions to implement custom parsing logic. The motivation
for this is LLDB, which needs to occasionaly modify the mangled names.
One such instance is already implemented via the TypeCallback member,
but this is very specific functionality which does not help with any
other use case. Currently we have a use case for modifying the
constructor flavours, which would require adding another callback. This
approach does not scale.
With CRTP, the user (LLDB) can override any function it needs without
any special support from the demangler library. After LLDB is ported to
use this instead of the TypeCallback mechanism, the callback can be
removed.
More context can be found in D50599.
Reviewers: erik.pilkington, rsmith
Subscribers: christof, ldionne, llvm-commits, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52992
llvm-svn: 344607
Summary:
I copied the sanitizer-related logic in libcxx/lib/CMakeLists.txt. In
the future, it would be great to avoid duplicating this logic in the
compiler, libc++ and libc++abi.
Reviewers: EricWF
Subscribers: mgorny, christof, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits, davide
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53028
llvm-svn: 344191
Summary:
This was committed back in september (D51463), but it seems it never
made it into the libcxxabi copy.
The original commit message was:
The hash computed for an ArrayType was different when first constructed
versus when later profiled due to the constructor default argument, and
we were not tracking constructor / destructor variant as part of the
mangled name AST, leading to incorrect equivalences.
Reviewers: erik.pilkington, rsmith, EricWF
Subscribers: christof, ldionne, libcxx-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53063
llvm-svn: 344121
The "dynamic_cast error 2" error can apparently happen when the same
type (with RTTI) is defined in more than one translation unit, and
those translation units are linked together. This is technically an
ODR violation, but making the error message more obvious is still
helpful.
llvm-svn: 344052
This patch fixes a bug where exceptions in 32 bit builds
would be incorrectly aligned because malloc only provides 8 byte aligned
memory where 16 byte alignment is needed.
This patch makes libc++abi correctly use posix_memalign when it's
available. This requires defining _LIBCPP_BUILDING_LIBRARY so that
libc++ only defines _LIBCPP_HAS_NO_ALIGNED_ALLOCATION when libc doesn't
support it and not when aligned new/delete are disable for other
reasons.
This bug somehow made it into the 7.0 release, making it a regression.
Therefore this patch should be included in the next dot release.
llvm-svn: 342815
r340663 - Allow Allocator::make to make a node of a different type than that
requested.
r340664 - Add documentation comment to ForwardTemplateReference.
r340665 - Fix ExpandedSpecialSubstitution demangling for Sa and Sb.
r340670 - Allow demangler's node allocator to fail, and bail out of the entire
demangling process when it does.
llvm-svn: 340671
Move Itanium demangler implementation into a header file and add visitation support.
Summary:
This transforms the Itanium demangler into a generic reusable library that can
be used to build, traverse, and transform Itanium mangled name trees.
This is in preparation for adding a canonicalizing demangler, which
cannot live in the Demangle library for layering reasons. In order to
keep the diffs simpler, this patch moves more code to the new header
than is strictly necessary: in particular, all of the printLeft /
printRight implementations can be moved to the implementation file.
(And indeed we could make them non-virtual now if we wished, and remove
the vptr from Node.)
All nodes are now included in the Kind enumeration, rather than omitting
some of the Expr nodes, and the three different floating-point literal
node types now have distinct Kind values.
As a proof of concept for the visitation / matching mechanism, this
patch implements a Node dumping facility on top of it, replacing the
prior mechanism that produced the pretty-printed output rather than a
tree dump. Sample dump output:
FunctionEncoding(
NameType("int"),
NameWithTemplateArgs(
NestedName(
NameWithTemplateArgs(
NameType("A"),
TemplateArgs(
{NameType("B")})),
NameType("f")),
TemplateArgs(
{NameType("int")})),
{},
<null>,
QualConst, FunctionRefQual::FrefQualLValue)
As a next step, it would make sense to move the LLVM high-level interface to
the demangler (the itaniumDemangler function and ItaniumPartialDemangler class)
into the Support library, and implement them in terms of the Demangle library.
This would allow the libc++abi demangler implementation to be an identical copy
of the llvm Demangle library, and would allow the LLVM implementation to reuse
LLVM components such as llvm::BumpPtrAllocator, but we'll need to decide how to
coordinate that with the MS ABI demangler, so I'm not doing that in this patch.
No functionality change intended other than the behavior of dump().
Reviewers: erik.pilkington, zturner, chandlerc, dlj
Subscribers: aheejin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50930
llvm-svn: 340207
This function calls a callback whenever a <type> is parsed.
This is necessary to implement FindAlternateFunctionManglings in LLDB, which
uses a similar hack in FastDemangle. Once that function has been updated to use
this version, FastDemangle can finally be removed.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50586
llvm-svn: 339580