find the newest GCC available, among other goodness. It makes the entire
system much less prone to error from prefixes and/or system roots
pruning early the set of triples and GCC versions available.
Also, improve some comments and simplify the forms of some of the loops.
This causes the driver to stat directories more often than is strictly
necessary, but the alternatives which I looked at that still
accomplished this goal needed quite a bit more code and were likely not
much faster.
Test cases for this, now that our behavior here is significantly more
principled and predictable, should come tomorrow as I walk back through
VMs looking for edge cases that are missed after this.
llvm-svn: 141072
significantly cleaner (IMO) and more principled. We now walk down each
layer of the directory hierarchy searching for the GCC install. This
change does in fact introduce a significant behavior change in theory,
although in practice I don't know of any distro that will be impacted by
it negatively, and Debian may (untested) get slightly better through it.
Specifically, the logic now looks exhaustively for patterns such as:
/usr/lib/<triple>/gcc/<triple>
Previously, this would only be selected if there was *also*
a '/usr/lib/gcc/<triple>' directory, or if '<triple>' were the excat
DefaultHostTriple in the driver.
There is a 4-deep nested loop here, but it doesn't do terribly many
filesystem operations, as we skip at each layer of that layer's
directory doesn't exist.
There remains a significant FIXME in this logic: it would be much better
to first build up a set of candidate components for each of the four
layers with a bottom-up pruning such as this, but then select the final
installation using a top-down algorithm in order to find the newest GCC
installation available, regardless of which particular path leads to it.
llvm-svn: 141071
installations. This first selects a set of prefixes and a set of
compatible triples for the current architecture. Once selected, we drive
the search with a single piece of code.
This code isn't particularly efficient as it stands, but its only
executed once. I'm hoping as I clean up the users of this information,
it will also slowly become both cleaner and more efficient.
This also changes the behavior slightly. Previously, we had an ad-hoc
list of prefixes and triples, and we only looked for some triples
beneath specific prefixes and vice versa. This has led to lots of
one-off patches to support triple X, or support lib dir Y. Even without
going to a fully universal driver, we can do better here. This patch
makes us always look first in either 'lib32' or 'lib64' on 32- or 64-bit
hosts (resp.). However, we *always* look in 'lib'.
Currently I have one lingering problem with this strategy. We might find
a newer or better GCC version under a different (but equally compatible)
triple. Fundamentally, this loop needs to be fused with the one below.
That's my next patch.
llvm-svn: 141056
is designed to allow the detection to record more rich information about
the installation than just a single path.
Mostly, the functionality remains the same. This is primarily
a factoring change. However, the new factoring immediately fixes one
issue where on ubuntu we didn't walk up enough layers to reach the
parent lib path. I'll have a test tree for that once I finish making the
Ubuntu tree work reasonably.
llvm-svn: 141011
enabled for debian hosts, which is quite odd. I think all restriction on
when Clang attempts to use a multilib installation should go away. Clang
is fundamentally a cross compiler. It behaves more like GCC when built
as a cross compiler, and so it should just use multilib installs when
they are present on the system. However, there is a very specific
exemption for Exherbo, which I can't test on, so I'm leaving that in
place.
With this, check in a generic test tree for multilib on a 32-bit host.
This stubs out many directories that most distributions don't use but
that uptsream GCC supports. This is intended to be an agnostic test that
the driver behaves properly compared with the GCC driver it aims for
compatibility with.
Also, fix a bug in the driver that this testing exposed (see!) where it
was incorrectly testing the target architecture rather than the host
architecture.
If anyone is having trouble with the tree-structure stubs I'm creating
to test this, let me know and I can revisit the design. I chose this
over (for example) a tar-ball in order to make tests run faster at the
small, hopefully amortized VCS cost.
llvm-svn: 140999
This requires fixing a latent bug -- if we used the default host triple
instead of an autodetected triple to locate GCC's installation, we
didn't go back and fix the GCC triple. Correct that with a pile of
hacks. This entire routine needs a major refactoring which I'm saving
for a subsequent commit. Essentially, the detection of the GCC triple
should be hoisted into the same routine as we locate the GCC
installation: the first is intrinsically tied to the latter. Then the
routine will just return the triple and base directory.
Also start to bring the rest of the library search path logic under
test, including locating crtbegin.o. Still need to test the multilib and
other behaviors, but there are also bugs in the way of that.
llvm-svn: 140995
This is still very much a WIP, but sysroot was completely broken before
this so we are moving closer to correctness.
The crux of this is that 'ld' (on Linux, the only place I'm touching
here) doesn't apply the sysroot to any flags given to it. Instead, the
driver must translate all the paths it adds to the link step with the
system root. This is easily observed by building a GCC that supports
sysroot, and checking its driver output.
This patch just fixes the non-multilib library search paths. We should
also use this in many other places, but first things first.
This also allows us to make the Linux 'ld' test independent of the host
system. This in turn will allow me to check in test tree configurations
based on various different distro's configuration. Again, WIP.
llvm-svn: 140990
precisely match the pattern and logic used by the GCC driver on Linux as
of a recent SVN checkout.
This happens to follow a *much* more principled approach. There is
a strict hierarchy of paths examined, first with multilib-suffixing,
second without such suffixing. Any and all of these directories which
exist will be added to the library search path when using GCC.
There were many places where Clang followed different paths, omitted
critical entries, and worst of all (in terms of challenges to debugging)
got the entries in a subtly wrong order.
If this breaks Clang on a distro you use, please let me know, and I'll
work with you to figure out what is needed to work on that distro. I've
checked the behavior of the latest release of Ubuntu, OpenSUSE, Fedora,
and Gentoo. I'll be testing it on those as well as Debian stable and
unstable and ArchLinux. I may even dig out a Slackware install.
No real regression tests yet, those will follow once I add enough
support for sysroot to simulate various distro layouts in the testsuite.
llvm-svn: 140981
increasingly prevailing case to the point that new features
like ARC don't even support the fragile ABI anymore.
This required a little bit of reshuffling with exceptions
because a check was assuming that ObjCNonFragileABI was
only being set in ObjC mode, and that's actually a bit
obnoxious to do.
Most, though, it involved a perl script to translate a ton
of test cases.
Mostly no functionality change for driver users, although
there are corner cases with disabling language-specific
exceptions that we should handle more correctly now.
llvm-svn: 140957
This patch may do what it describes, it may not. It's hard to tell as
its completely unclear what this is supposed to do. There are also no
test cases. More importantly, this seems to have broken lots of linker
invocations on multilib Linux systems.
The manual pages for 'ld' on Linux mention translating a '=' at the
beginning of the path into a *configure time* sysroot prefix (this is,
I believe, distinct from the --sysroot flag which 'ld' also can
support). I tested this with a normal binutils 'ld', a binutils 'ld'
with the sysroot flag enabled, and gold with the sysroot flag enabled,
and all of them try to open the path '=/lib/../lib32', No translation
occurs.
I think at the very least inserting an '=' needs to be conditioned on
some indication that it is supported and desired. I'm also curious to
see what toolchain and whan environment cause it to actually make
a difference.
I'm going to add a test case for basic sanity of Linux 'ld' invocations
from Clang in a follow-up commit that would have caught this.
llvm-svn: 140908
to operate "as if" in a certain working directory.
- For now, we just implement this by changing the actual working directory, but
eventually we would want to handle this transparently. This is useful to
avoid an extra exec() pair in some situations, and will be something we would
want to support for more flexibility in using the Clang libraries.
llvm-svn: 140409
This moves the existing code for CPATH into the driver and adds the environment lookup and path splitting there.
The paths are then passed down to cc1 with -I options (CPATH), added after the normal user-specified include dirs.
Language specific paths are passed via -LANG-isystem and the actual filtering is performed in the frontend.
I tried to match GCC's behavior as close as possible
Fixes PR8971.
llvm-svn: 140341
This replaces the hack to read UNAME_RELEASE from the environment when
identifying the OS version on Darwin, and it's more flexible. It's also
horribly ugly, but at least this consolidates the ugliness to touch less of
the code so that it will be easier to rip out later.
llvm-svn: 140187
Microsoft specific tweaking will now fall into 2 categories:
- fms-extension: Microsoft specific extensions that should never change the meaning of an otherwise well formed code. Currently map to LangOptions::Microsoft. (To be clearer, I am planning to change the name to LangOptions::MicrosoftExt).
- fms-compatibility: Really a MSVC emulation mode. Map to LangOptions::MicrosoftMode. Can change the meaning of an otherwise standard conformant program.
llvm-svn: 139978
feature akin to the ARC runtime checks. Removes a terrible hack where
IR gen needed to find the declarations of those symbols in the translation
unit.
llvm-svn: 139404
as well as the search path printed by -print-search-dirs.
The main purpose of this change is to cause -print-file-name=include
to print the path to the include directory under Clang's resource
directory, instead of the system compiler's include directory, whose
header files Clang may not be able to parse. Some build scripts will
do something like:
$(CC) -nostdinc -I`$(CC) -print-file-name=include`
to exclude all header paths except the compiler's.
llvm-svn: 139127
I had to force -fno-delayed-template-parsing on some Index tests because delayed template parsing will change the output of some tests.
llvm-svn: 138942
synthesis. This new feature is currently placed under
-fobjc-default-synthesize-properties option
and is off by default pending further testing.
It will become the default feature soon.
// rdar://8843851
llvm-svn: 138913
cases we want the prefix to be the original file name less the suffix. For an
input such as test.c to named temporary would be something like test-3O4Clq.o
Part of <rdar://problem/8314451>
llvm-svn: 138662
output on darwin so is hard coded there.
As a note this will need a little bit of refactoring in the class
hierarchy to separate it out for different verifiers based on input type.
Fixes rdar://8256258.
llvm-svn: 138343
automatically invoking llvm-gcc's cc1plus, which doesn't support all options
supported by Clang. Therefore, filter out unsupported options.
rdar://9964354
llvm-svn: 137842
Outside the driver, they were already treated that way, but the driver was not
giving them the same special treatment as -fapple-kext, e.g., falling back to
llvm-gcc for i386/Darwin kexts. Radar 9868422.
llvm-svn: 137639
Since -mkernel implies -fapple-kext, this just extends the current behavior
for -fapple-kext to apply for -mkernel as well. Radar 9933387.
llvm-svn: 137566
information including the fully preprocessed source file(s) and command line
arguments. The developer is asked to attach this diagnostic information to a
bug report.
rdar://9575623
llvm-svn: 136702
Unfortunately, llvmgcc doesn't always work when writing temporary output to
/dev/null. Therefore, create a temp file that is later deleted.
rdar://9837692
llvm-svn: 136644
use in KEXTs. However, users/Xcode still need to tweak the linker flags to do
the right thing, and end up using -Xlinker, for example. Instead, have the
driver "do the right thing" when linking when -fapple-kext is present on the
command line, and we should have Xcode use -fapple-kext instead of setting other
flags like -Xlinker -kext or -nodefaultlibs.
rdar://7809940
llvm-svn: 136294
including the fully preprocessed source file(s) and command line arguments. The
developer is asked to attach this diagnostic information to a bug report.
llvm-svn: 135614
clang namespace. There are a number of LLVM types that are used pervasively
and it doesn't make sense to keep qualifying them. Start with casting
operators.
llvm-svn: 135574
-arcmt-migrate-emit-errors : Emits the pre-migration ARC errors but it doesn't affect anything else
-arcmt-migrate-report-output : Writes out the pre-migration ARC errors to the provided plist file
rdar://9791454
llvm-svn: 135491
This is a new mode of migration, where we avoid modifying the original files but
we emit temporary files instead.
<path> will be used to keep migration process metadata. Currently the temporary files
that are produced are put in the system's temp directory but we can put them
in the <path> if is necessary.
Also introduce new ARC migration functions in libclang whose only purpose,
currently, is to accept <path> and provide pairs of original file/transformed file
to map from the originals to the files after transformations are applied.
Finally introduce the c-arcmt-test utility that exercises the new libclang functions,
update arcmt-test, and add tests for the whole process.
rdar://9735086.
llvm-svn: 134844
structure to hold inferred information, then propagate each invididual
bit down to -cc1. Separate the bits of "supports weak" and "has a native
ARC runtime"; make the latter a CodeGenOption.
The tool chain is still driving this decision, because it's the place that
has the required deployment target information on Darwin, but at least it's
better-factored now.
llvm-svn: 134453
The -cxx-isystem path is not prefixed with the sysroot directory, so it's
not a good way for the driver to set the system default C++ search path.
Instead, add -stdlib as a cc1 option and teach the frontend how to find the
headers. The driver can then just pass -stdlib through to "cc1".
llvm-svn: 133547
that the linker has a place to put the temporary object file and can leave it
around (for the driver to clean up). This is important so that the object file
references in the debug info are preserved for possible use by dsymutil.
- <rdar://problem/8294279> executable has no debug symbols when compiled with LTO
llvm-svn: 133543
an assembly file it worked correctly, while for a .c file it would given an
error about how --noexecstack is not a supported argument to -Wa.
llvm-svn: 133489
AFAIK, RHEL5 (and its clones) provides g++44 as the package "gcc44-c++".
By default, g++-4.1.1 is available, though, its libstdc++ would not be suitable to clang++.
llvm-svn: 133156
Language-design credit goes to a lot of people, but I particularly want
to single out Blaine Garst and Patrick Beard for their contributions.
Compiler implementation credit goes to Argyrios, Doug, Fariborz, and myself,
in no particular order.
llvm-svn: 133103
Related result types apply Cocoa conventions to the type of message
sends and property accesses to Objective-C methods that are known to
always return objects whose type is the same as the type of the
receiving class (or a subclass thereof), such as +alloc and
-init. This tightens up static type safety for Objective-C, so that we
now diagnose mistakes like this:
t.m:4:10: warning: incompatible pointer types initializing 'NSSet *'
with an
expression of type 'NSArray *' [-Wincompatible-pointer-types]
NSSet *array = [[NSArray alloc] init];
^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/System/Library/Frameworks/Foundation.framework/Headers/NSObject.h:72:1:
note:
instance method 'init' is assumed to return an instance of its
receiver
type ('NSArray *')
- (id)init;
^
It also means that we get decent type inference when writing code in
Objective-C++0x:
auto array = [[NSMutableArray alloc] initWithObjects:@"one", @"two",nil];
// ^ now infers NSMutableArray* rather than id
llvm-svn: 132868
we look in /usr/lib to find crt1.o, and that depends only on where libc
is installed.
This fixes the case of using a different gcc installation in a distro
without multilib.
llvm-svn: 132551