By encoding ABI-affecting properties in the name of the ABI list, it
makes it clear when an ABI list test should or should not be available,
and what results we should expect.
Note that we clearly don't encode all ABI-affecting parameters in the
name right now -- I just ported over what we supported in the code that
was there previously. As we encounter configurations that we wish to
support but produce different ABI lists, we can add those to the ABI
identifier and start supporting them.
This commit also starts checking the ABI list in the CI jobs that run
a supported configuration. Eventually, all configurations should have
a generated ABI list and the test should even run implicitly as part of
the Lit test suite.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92194
I'm not 100% sure what the issue actually is since I can't reproduce it
locally, however what I explain in the comment is my best attempt to
explain what's going on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92131
Implements P1956: On the names of low-level bit manipulation functions.
Users may use older versions of libc++ or other standard libraries with the old names. In order to keep compatibility the old functions are kept, but marked as deprecated.
The patch also adds a new config macro `_LIBCPP_DEPRECATED_MSG`. Do you prefer a this is a separate patch?
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90551
Also, enable them whenever we detect that gdb is available. Previously,
these tests would basically never run because they relied on a CMake
configuration option that defaulted to OFF.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91434
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.
The current way we test this is pretty cheap, i.e. we download previously
released macOS dylibs and run against that. Ideally, we would require a
full host running the appropriate version of macOS, and we'd execute the
tests using SSH on that host. But since we don't have such hosts available
easily for now, this is better than nothing.
At the same time, also fix some tests that were failing when back
deploying.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90869
Remove Phabricator, which isn't needed anymore since we don't report
the job results ourselves. Also, install python3-sphinx instead of
sphinx-doc, since the latter doesn't provide the sphinx-build binary.
Currently, vendor-specific availability markup is enabled by default.
This means that even when building against trunk libc++, the headers
will by default prevent you from using some features that were not
released in the dylib on your target platform. This is a source of
frustration since people building libc++ from sources are usually not
trying to use some vendor's released dylib.
For that reason, I've been thinking for a long time that availability
annotations should be off by default, which is the primary change that
this commit enables.
In addition, it reworks the implementation to make it easier for new
vendors to add availability annotations for their platform, and it
refreshes the documentation to reflect the current state of the codebase.
Finally, a CMake configuration option is added to control whether
availability annotations should be turned on for the flavor of libc++
being created. The intent is for vendors like Apple to turn it on, and
for the upstream libc++ to leave it off (the default).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90843
`mftb` and `mftbl` are equivalent, there is no need to have two names for doing the same thing, rename `mftbl` to only have `mftb`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89506
Unfortunately, executing these tests correctly on platforms that do not
support a shell is very challenging. Since the executor can't just negate
the result of the command, we'd have to ship a portable program capable
of running the actual test executable, and negating its result.
Doing this portably is challenging. Since we do not currently have strong
use cases for tests that fail at runtime (we effectively have no tests
using that capability right now), it is difficult to justify making them
work portably. Instead, it makes more sense to remove this feature until
we can implement it properly (i.e. without requiring shell support).
This makes us closer to running the test suite on platforms where the
legacy test suite configuration doesn't work.
One notable change after this commit is that the tests will be run with
warnings enabled on GCC too, which wasn't the case before. However,
previous commits should have tweaked the test suite to make sure it
passes with warnings enabled on GCC.
Note that warnings can still be disabled with `--param enable_warnings=False`,
as before.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90432
Instead of having to remember the command-line to use every time, this
commit adds a CMake target to generate the ABI list in the current
configuration, if it is supported.
As a fly-by change, remove scripts that are now unused (sym_match.py
and sym_extract.py).
GCC tries to be nice and tell us that we probably want to also implement
sized deallocation functions when we override the normal ones. However,
we know what we're doing in the test suite and don't want to override
them.
This will allow adding bare compiler flags through the new
configuration DSL. Previously, this would have required adding
a Lit feature for each such flag.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90429
This patch add the target-* (x86_64-*) as used elsewhere in llvm.
Reviewed By: #libc, #libc_abi, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88027
When porting libc++ to embedded systems, it can be useful to drop support
for localization, which these systems don't implement or care about.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90072
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.
Now libc++ pipeline will be triggered from the "premerge-checks" and the
combined result are going to be returned to Harbormaster.
Reviewed-by: ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89113