Header maps are binary files used by Xcode, which are used to map
header names or paths to other locations. Clang has support for
those since its inception, but there's not a lot of header map
testing around.
Since it's a binary format, testing becomes pretty much brittle
and its hard to even know what's inside if you don't have the
appropriate tools.
Add a python based tool that allows creating and dumping header
maps based on a json description of those. While here, rewrite
tests to use the tool and remove the binary files from the tree.
This tool was initially written by Daniel Dunbar.
Thanks to Stella Stamenova for helping make this work on Windows.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46485
rdar://problem/39994722
llvm-svn: 335295
Header maps are binary files used by Xcode, which are used to map
header names or paths to other locations. Clang has support for
those since its inception, but there's not a lot of header map
testing around.
Since it's a binary format, testing becomes pretty much brittle
and its hard to even know what's inside if you don't have the
appropriate tools.
Add a python based tool that allows creating and dumping header
maps based on a json description of those. While here, rewrite
tests to use the tool and remove the binary files from the tree.
This tool was initially written by Daniel Dunbar.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46485
rdar://problem/39994722
llvm-svn: 335177
This adds -nostdsysteminc to the %clang_cc1 expansion, which should
make it harder to accidentally write tests that depend on headers in
/usr/include. It also updates a few tests that use -isysroot <x> and a
darwin triple to omit the triple and use -isystem <x>/usr/include
instead, making them a little bit more general.
Incidentally, this fixes a test failure I'm seeing on darwin in
Modules/stddef.c, that happens because my system finds a stddef.h in
/usr/include.
llvm-svn: 219030