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.