global destructor entry. For some reason this isn't enabled for
apple-kexts; it'd be good to have documentation for that.
Based on a patch by Nakamura Takumi!
llvm-svn: 154191
the template instantiation of statement-expressions.
I think it was jyasskin who had a crashing testcase in this area;
hopefully this fixes it and he can find his testcase and check it in.
llvm-svn: 154189
The warning this inhibits, -Wobjc-root-class, is opt-in for now. However, all clang unit tests that would trigger
the warning have been updated to use -Wno-objc-root-class. <rdar://problem/7446698>
llvm-svn: 154187
simplification has been performed. This is a bit less efficient
(requires another ilist walk of the basic blocks) but shouldn't matter
in practice. More importantly, it's just too much work to keep track of
all the various ways the return instructions can be mutated while
simplifying them. This fixes yet another crasher, reported by Daniel
Dunbar.
llvm-svn: 154179
inside of a sysroot targeting a system+sysroot which is "similar" or
"compatible" with the host system. This shows up when trying to build
system images on largely compatible hardware as-if fully cross compiled.
The problem is that previously we *perfectly* mimiced GCC here, and it
turns out GCC has a bug that no one has really stumbled across. GCC will
try to look in thy system prefix ('/usr/local' f.ex.) into which it is
instaled to find libraries installed along side GCC that should be
preferred to the base system libraries ('/usr' f.ex.). This seems not
unreasonable, but it has a very unfortunate consequence when combined
with a '--sysroot' which does *not* contain the GCC installation we're
using to complete the toolchain. That results in some of the host
system's library directories being searched during the link.
Now, it so happens that most folks doing stuff like this use
'--with-sysroot' and '--disable-multilib' when configuring GCC. Even
better, they're usually not cross-compiling to a target that is similar
to the host. As a result, searching the host for libraries doesn't
really matter -- most of the time weird directories get appended that
don't exist (no arm triple lib directory, etc). Even if you're
cross-compiling from 32-bit to 64-bit x86 or vice-versa, disabling
multilib makes it less likely that you'll actually find viable libraries
on the host. But that's just luck. We shouldn't rely on this, and this
patch disables looking in the system prefix containing the GCC
installation if that system prefix is *outside* of the sysroot. For
empty sysroots, this has no effect. Similarly, when using the GCC
*inside* of the sysroot, we still track wherever it is installed within
the sysroot and look there for libraries. But now we can use a cross
compiler GCC installation outside the system root, and only look for the
crtbegin.o in the GCC installation, and look for all the other libraries
inside the system root.
This should fix PR12478, allowing Clang to be used when building
a ChromiumOS image without polluting the image with libraries from the
host system.
llvm-svn: 154176
Based on Doug's feedback to r153887 this omits the FixIt if the following token
isn't syntactically valid for the context. (not a comma, '...', identifier,
'>', or '>>')
There's a bunch of work to handle the '>>' case, but it makes for a much more
pleasant diagnostic in this case.
llvm-svn: 154163
dependent list for target polly-test, hence making "all" from the top
of llvm build directory will cause the target "polly-test" being built
before its dependencing target built.
Patched by Sebastian Pop<spop@codeaurora.org>
llvm-svn: 154162
Also test for the process to be stopped when many SBValue API calls are made to make sure it is safe to evaluate values, children of values and much more.
llvm-svn: 154160
dead code, including dead return instructions in some cases. Otherwise,
we end up having a bogus poniter to a return instruction that blows up
much further down the road.
It turns out that this pattern is both simpler to code, easier to update
in the face of enhancements to the inliner cleanup, and likely cheaper
given that it won't add dead instructions to the list.
Thanks to John Regehr's numerous test cases for teasing this out.
llvm-svn: 154157
either @dsym_test or @dwarf_test to be executed during the testsuite run. There are still lots of
Test*.py files which have not been decorated with the new decorator.
An example:
# From TestMyFirstWatchpoint.py ->
class HelloWatchpointTestCase(TestBase):
mydir = os.path.join("functionalities", "watchpoint", "hello_watchpoint")
@dsym_test
def test_hello_watchpoint_with_dsym_using_watchpoint_set(self):
"""Test a simple sequence of watchpoint creation and watchpoint hit."""
self.buildDsym(dictionary=self.d)
self.setTearDownCleanup(dictionary=self.d)
self.hello_watchpoint()
@dwarf_test
def test_hello_watchpoint_with_dwarf_using_watchpoint_set(self):
"""Test a simple sequence of watchpoint creation and watchpoint hit."""
self.buildDwarf(dictionary=self.d)
self.setTearDownCleanup(dictionary=self.d)
self.hello_watchpoint()
# Invocation ->
[17:50:14] johnny:/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/ToT/test $ ./dotest.py -N dsym -v -p TestMyFirstWatchpoint.py
LLDB build dir: /Volumes/data/lldb/svn/ToT/build/Debug
LLDB-137
Path: /Volumes/data/lldb/svn/ToT
URL: https://johnny@llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/lldb/trunk
Repository Root: https://johnny@llvm.org/svn/llvm-project
Repository UUID: 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Revision: 154133
Node Kind: directory
Schedule: normal
Last Changed Author: gclayton
Last Changed Rev: 154109
Last Changed Date: 2012-04-05 10:43:02 -0700 (Thu, 05 Apr 2012)
Session logs for test failures/errors/unexpected successes will go into directory '2012-04-05-17_50_49'
Command invoked: python ./dotest.py -N dsym -v -p TestMyFirstWatchpoint.py
compilers=['clang']
Configuration: arch=x86_64 compiler=clang
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Collected 2 tests
1: test_hello_watchpoint_with_dsym_using_watchpoint_set (TestMyFirstWatchpoint.HelloWatchpointTestCase)
Test a simple sequence of watchpoint creation and watchpoint hit. ... skipped 'dsym tests'
2: test_hello_watchpoint_with_dwarf_using_watchpoint_set (TestMyFirstWatchpoint.HelloWatchpointTestCase)
Test a simple sequence of watchpoint creation and watchpoint hit. ... ok
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 2 tests in 1.138s
OK (skipped=1)
Session logs for test failures/errors/unexpected successes can be found in directory '2012-04-05-17_50_49'
[17:50:50] johnny:/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/ToT/test $
llvm-svn: 154154
We had special instructions for iOS because r9 is call-clobbered, but
that is represented dynamically by the register mask operands now, so
there is no need for the pseudo-instructions.
llvm-svn: 154144
Right now it only works on Mac OS X, but other
platforms would just need to add their own
implementation of AddLLDBToSysPathOn*().
The stress-tester has two modes:
Used with --bytes N --random, the stress-tester
generates random instructions of length N and
runs them through the disassembler. This is
suitable for architectures like Intel where it
is combinatorially infeasible to run through the
entire space of possible instructions.
Used with --bytes N and no arguments (or --start
S --stride T), the stress-tester tests the
disassembler with a monotonically increasing
sequence of instructions.
The --start and --stride arguments are intended
for use in multiprocessing environments. Give
each core an ID from 0 .. T-1, pass the ID in as
the --start, and use T as the stride, and you
can launch one copy of the stress-tester on each
core you have available.
llvm-svn: 154143
The load/store optimizer splits LDRD/STRD into two instructions when the
register pairing doesn't work out. For negative offsets in Thumb2, it uses
t2STRi8 to do that. That's fine, except for the case when the offset is in
the range [-4,-1]. In that case, we'll also form a second t2STRi8 with
the original offset plus 4, resulting in a t2STRi8 with a non-negative
offset, which ends up as if it were an STRT, which is completely bogus.
Similarly for loads.
No testcase, unfortunately, as any I've been able to construct is both large
and extremely fragile.
rdar://11193937
llvm-svn: 154141
The empty 1-argument operator delete is for the benefit of the
destructor. A couple of spot checks of running yaml-bench under
valgrind against a few of the files under test/YAMLParser did
not reveal any leaks introduced by this change.
llvm-svn: 154137