Commit Graph

1427 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joerg Sonnenberger d64c60e534 Remove the ToolTriple logic in NetBSD, which was completely broken by
the recent refactoring. All interesting NetBSD release have a GNU as
version on i386 that supports --32, so don't bother with the conditional
setting of it.

llvm-svn: 149087
2012-01-26 22:27:52 +00:00
Joerg Sonnenberger f8ce8575aa Remove obviously incorrect branch.
llvm-svn: 149084
2012-01-26 21:58:37 +00:00
Joerg Sonnenberger 91960f4abb Keep track of the original target the user specified before
normalization. This used to be captured in DefaultTargetTriple and is
used for the (optional) $triple-$tool lookup for cross-compilation.
Do this properly by making it an attribute of the toolchain and use it
in combination with the computed triple as index for the toolchain
lookup.

llvm-svn: 149083
2012-01-26 21:56:28 +00:00
Bob Wilson 269e6377dd Revert r148249: "Make the auto-detection hack for the iOS simulator set the target triple correctly."
There were some problems with this, so I'm backing it out for now.

llvm-svn: 149040
2012-01-26 03:37:03 +00:00
Ted Kremenek 37e965221c Enable several checkers under --analyze for general testing.
llvm-svn: 149016
2012-01-26 02:27:38 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 0b1756b880 Reintroduce r148981 with significantly improved regression test. Now it
both actually tests what it wants to, doesn't have bogus and broken
assertions in it, and is also formatted much more cleanly and
consistently. Probably still some more that can be improved here, but
its much better.

Original commit message:
----
Try to unbreak the FreeBSD toolchain's detection of 32-bit targets
inside a 64-bit freebsd machine with the 32-bit compatibility layer
installed. The FreeBSD image always has the /usr/lib32 directory, so
test for the more concrete existence of crt1.o. Also enhance the tests
for freebsd to clarify what these trees look like and exercise the new
code.

Thanks to all the FreeBSD folks for helping me understand what caused
the failure and how we might fix it. =] That helps a lot. Also, yay
build bots.

llvm-svn: 149011
2012-01-26 01:35:15 +00:00
Argyrios Kyrtzidis e8be6652ce Revert r148981 because it fails test/Driver/freebsd.c
Original log:

Author: chandlerc <chandlerc@91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8>
Date:   Wed Jan 25 21:32:31 2012 +0000

    Try to unbreak the FreeBSD toolchain's detection of 32-bit targets
    inside a 64-bit freebsd machine with the 32-bit compatibility layer
    installed. The FreeBSD image always has the /usr/lib32 directory, so
    test for the more concrete existence of crt1.o. Also enhance the tests
    for freebsd to clarify what these trees look like and exercise the new
    code.

    Thanks to all the FreeBSD folks for helping me understand what caused
    the failure and how we might fix it. =] That helps a lot. Also, yay
    build bots.

llvm-svn: 148993
2012-01-25 22:55:16 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 143f2f6e37 Try to unbreak the FreeBSD toolchain's detection of 32-bit targets
inside a 64-bit freebsd machine with the 32-bit compatibility layer
installed. The FreeBSD image always has the /usr/lib32 directory, so
test for the more concrete existence of crt1.o. Also enhance the tests
for freebsd to clarify what these trees look like and exercise the new
code.

Thanks to all the FreeBSD folks for helping me understand what caused
the failure and how we might fix it. =] That helps a lot. Also, yay
build bots.

llvm-svn: 148981
2012-01-25 21:32:31 +00:00
Chandler Carruth cf705b21e2 Restore a tiny bit of functionality that I completely overlooked in the
Linux toolchain selection -- sorry folks. =] This should fix the Hexagon
toolchain.

However, I would point out that I see why my testing didn't catch this
-- we have no tests for Hexagon. ;]

llvm-svn: 148977
2012-01-25 21:03:58 +00:00
Chandler Carruth f7bf3db070 The Linux pattern of adding all the search paths that exist doesn't seem
to suit the FreeBSD folks. Take them back to something closer to the old
behavior. We test whether the /usr/lib32 directory exists (within the
SysRoot), and use it if so, otherwise use /usr/lib.

FreeBSD folks, let me know if this causes any problems, or if you have
further tweaks.

llvm-svn: 148953
2012-01-25 11:24:24 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 1ccbed88fc Remove the 'ToolTriple' concept from the NetBSD toolchain along with my
gross hack to provide it from my previous patch removing HostInfo. This
was enshrining (and hiding from my searches) the concept of storing and
diff-ing the host and target triples. We don't have the host triple
reliably available, so we need to merely inspect the target system. I've
changed the logic in selecting library search paths for NetBSD to match
what I provided for FreeBSD -- we include both search paths, but put the
32-bit-on-64-bit-host path first so it trumps.

NetBSD maintainers, you may want to tweak this, or feel free to ask me
to tweak it. I've left a FIXME here about the challeng I see in fixing
this properly.

llvm-svn: 148952
2012-01-25 11:18:20 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 2886ba2352 Delete still more remnants of the now dead HostInfo. The janitoring will
continue until cleanliness improves.

llvm-svn: 148951
2012-01-25 11:03:35 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 2ad5de1f72 Delete the driver's HostInfo class. This abstraction just never really
did anything. The two big pieces of functionality it tried to provide
was to cache the ToolChain objects for each target, and to figure out
the exact target based on the flag set coming in to an invocation.
However, it had a lot of flaws even with those goals:
 - Neither of these have anything to do with the host, or its info.
 - The HostInfo class was setup as a full blown class *hierarchy* with
   a separate implementation for each "host" OS. This required
   dispatching just to create the objects in the first place.
 - The hierarchy claimed to represent the host, when in fact it was
   based on the target OS.
 - Each leaf in the hierarchy was responsible for implementing the flag
   processing and caching, resulting in a *lot* of copy-paste code and
   quite a few bugs.
 - The caching was consistently done based on architecture alone, even
   though *any* aspect of the targeted triple might change the behavior
   of the configured toolchain.
 - Flag processing was already being done in the Driver proper,
   separating the flag handling even more than it already is.

Instead of this, we can simply have the dispatch logic in the Driver
which previously created a HostInfo object create the ToolChain objects.
Adding caching in the Driver layer is a tiny amount of code. Finally,
pulling the flag processing into the Driver puts it where it belongs and
consolidates it in one location.

The result is that two functions, and maybe 100 lines of new code
replace over 10 classes and 800 lines of code. Woot.

This also paves the way to introduce more detailed ToolChain objects for
various OSes without threading through a new HostInfo type as well, and
the accompanying boiler plate. That, of course, was the yak I started to
shave that began this entire refactoring escapade. Wheee!

llvm-svn: 148950
2012-01-25 11:01:57 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b65b111d24 Switch the ToolChain types to all store a Driver reference rather than
a HostInfo reference. Nothing about the HostInfo was used by any
toolchain except digging out the driver from it. This just makes that
a lot more direct. The change was accomplished entirely mechanically.
It's one step closer to removing the shim full of buggy copy/paste code
that is HostInfo.

llvm-svn: 148945
2012-01-25 09:12:06 +00:00
Chandler Carruth cb91619e5c Remove the TargetTriple object that I added to the Driver recently. This
helped stage the refactoring of things a bit, but really isn't the right
place for it. The driver may be responsible for compilations with many
different targets. In those cases, having a target triple in the driver
is actively misleading because for many of those compilations that is
not actually the triple being targeted.

This moves the last remaining users of the Driver's target triple to
instead use the ToolChain's target triple. The toolchain has a single,
concrete target it operates over, making this a more stable and natural
home for it.

llvm-svn: 148942
2012-01-25 08:49:21 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 25442b8e72 Have FreeBSD use even more of the same smarts as Linux is now using for
adding search paths. Add them only when they exist, and prefix the paths
with the sysroot. This will allow targeting a FreeBSD sysroot on
a non-FreeBSD host machine, and perhaps more importantly should allow
testing the FreeBSD driver's behavior similarly to the Linux tests with
a fake tree of files in the regression test suite.

I don't have FreeBSD systems handy to build up the list of files that
should be used here, but this is the basic functionality and I'm hoping
Roman or someone from the community can contribute the actual test
cases.

llvm-svn: 148940
2012-01-25 08:10:33 +00:00
Chandler Carruth f4826e28b9 Switch FreeBSD to just include both '/usr/lib32' and '/usr/lib' in the
search paths for 32-bit targets. This avoids having to detect which is
expected for the target system, and the linker should DTRT, and take the
32-bit libraries from the first one when applicable. Thanks to Roman
Divacky for sanity checking this.

llvm-svn: 148939
2012-01-25 08:04:15 +00:00
Chandler Carruth a1f1fd3b60 Switch the Linux C++ standard library header search logic over to use
the GCC installation's multiarch suffix now that it is exposed.

llvm-svn: 148938
2012-01-25 08:04:13 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 866faab4db Make a major refactoring to how the GCC installation detection works.
The fundamental shift here is to stop making *any* assumptions about the
*host* triple. Where these assumptions you ask? Why, they were in one of
the two target triples referenced of course. This was the single biggest
place where the previously named "host triple" was actually used as
such. ;] The reason we were reasoning about the host is in order to
detect the use of '-m32' or '-m64' flags to change the target. These
flags shift the default target only slightly, which typically means
a slight deviation from the host. When using these flags, the GCC
installation is under a different triple from the one actually targeted
in the compilation, and we used the host triple to find it.

Too bad that wasn't even correct. Consider an x86 Linux host which has
a PPC64 cross-compiling GCC toolchain installed. This toolchain is also
configured for multiarch compiling and can target PPC32 with eth '-m32'
flag. When targeting 'powerpc-linux-gnu' or some other PPC32 triple, we
have to look for the PPC64 variant of the triple to find the GCC
install, and that triple is neither the host nor target.

The new logic computes the multiarch's alternate triple from the target
triple, and looks under both sides. It also looks more aggressively for
the correct subdirectory of the GCC installation, and exposes the
subdirectory in a nice programmatic way. This '/32' or '/64' suffix is
something we can reuse in many other parts of the toolchain.

An important note -- while this likely fixes a large category of
cross-compile use cases, that's not my primary goal, and I've not done
testing (or added test cases) for scenarios that may now work. If
someone else wants to try more interesting PPC cross compiles, I'd love
to have reports. But my focus is on factoring away the references to the
"host" triple. The refactoring is my goal, and so I'm mostly relying on
the existing (pretty good) test coverage we have here.

Future patches will leverage this new functionality to factor out more
and more of the toolchain's triple manipulation.

llvm-svn: 148935
2012-01-25 07:21:38 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 96bae7b1fd Fix one of the (larger) FIXMEs where we were misusing the Driver's idea
of the target triple to stand in for the "host" triple.

Thanks to a great conversation with Richard Smith, I'm now much more
confident in how this is proceeding. In all of the places where we
currently reason about the "host" architecture or triple, what we really
want to reason about in the detected GCC installation architecture or
triple, and the ways in which that differs from the target. When we find
a GCC installation with a different triple from our target *but capable
of targeting our target* through an option such as '-m64', we want to
detect *that* case and change the paths within the GCC installation (and
libstdc++ installation) to reflect this difference.

This patch makes one function do this correctly. Subsequent commits will
hoist the logic used here into the GCCInstallation utility, and then
reuse it through the rest of the toolchains to fix the remaining places
where this is currently happening.

llvm-svn: 148852
2012-01-24 20:08:17 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 4d9d76839a Address one part of the FIXME I introduced my switching the triple
inside of GCCInstallation to be a proper llvm::Triple. This is still
a touch ugly because we have to use it as a string in so many places,
but I think on the whole the more structured representation is better.

Comments of course welcome if this tradeoff isn't working for folks.

llvm-svn: 148843
2012-01-24 19:28:29 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 64cee06504 At least within these classes, consistently spell 'GCC' as 'GCC'.
I can't read Java-style 'Gcc' acronyms. ;]

No functionality changed.

llvm-svn: 148840
2012-01-24 19:21:42 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 46f204fef8 Start hoisting the logic for computing the target triple into its own
function. The logic for this, and I want to emphasize that this is the
logic for computing the *target* triple, is currently scattered
throughout various different HostInfo classes ToolChain factoring
functions. Best part, it is largely *duplicated* there. The goal is to
hoist all of that up to here where we can deal with it once, and in
a consistent manner.

Unfortunately, this uncovers more fun problems: the ToolChains assume
that the *actual* target triple is the one passed into them by these
factory functions, while the *host* triple is the one in the driver.
This already was a lie, and a damn lie, when the '-target' flag was
specified. It only really worked when the difference stemmed from '-m32'
and '-m64' flags. I'll have to fix that (and remove all the FIXMEs I've
introduced here to document the problem) before I can finish hoisting
the target-calculation logic.

It's bugs all the way down today it seems...

llvm-svn: 148839
2012-01-24 19:17:46 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 7f1417f7cf Remove HostInfo::useDriverDriver(). This was only used in two places
inside the innards of the Driver implementation, and only ever
implemented to return 'true' for the Darwin OSes. Instead use a more
direct query on the target triple and a comment to document why the
target matters here.

If anyone is worried about this predicate getting wider use or improper
use, I can make it a local or private predicate in the driver.

llvm-svn: 148797
2012-01-24 10:43:44 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 4d73703ffd Hoist the targeted triple object into an actual object in the Driver.
The Driver has a fixed target, whether we like it or not, the
DefaultTargetTriple is not a default. This at least makes things more
honest. I'll eventually get rid of most (if not all) of
DefaultTargetTriple with this proper triple object. Bit of a WIP.

llvm-svn: 148796
2012-01-24 10:21:46 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 1c8c436a85 Add support for -fno-optimize-sibling-calls. Currently only implemented in the
X86 backend in LLVM.

llvm-svn: 148689
2012-01-23 08:29:12 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 44193b732e [Cygwin] Abandon Cygwin-1.5 and g++-3. Use g++-4.3 and higher on Cygwin-1.7.
llvm-svn: 148636
2012-01-21 14:46:01 +00:00
Sebastian Pop 422377cfd3 rename -ccc-host-triple into -target
llvm-svn: 148582
2012-01-20 22:01:23 +00:00
Ted Kremenek b9ff6b2302 Reenable DeadStoresChecker under --analyze, and move the IdempotentOperationsChecker to the 'experimental' category. Fixes <rdar://problem/10146347>.
llvm-svn: 148533
2012-01-20 06:00:17 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 226173ae93 In the driver, -fmodules enables modules for C/Objective-C but one
also needs -fcxx-modules to enable modules for C++/Objective-C++.

llvm-svn: 148393
2012-01-18 15:19:58 +00:00
David Blaikie f47fa304a4 Remove unnecessary default cases in switches over enums.
This allows -Wswitch-enum to find switches that need updating when these enums are modified.

llvm-svn: 148281
2012-01-17 02:30:50 +00:00
Eli Friedman 5ceb74a7d0 Make the auto-detection hack for the iOS simulator set the target triple correctly. Getting the target triple wrong mostly appears to work, but messes up in subtle cases; for example, we incorrectly conclude that fwrite is actually named fwrite$UNIX2003. Also shuffles around the auto-detection code a bit to try and make it a bit more reliable. Fixes <rdar://problem/10664848>.
llvm-svn: 148249
2012-01-16 18:50:54 +00:00
Chad Rosier 1b9c5f1188 Fix 80-column violation.
llvm-svn: 148162
2012-01-14 00:30:11 +00:00
Eli Friedman d749c6bf2e Revert r148138; it's causing test failures.
llvm-svn: 148141
2012-01-13 21:33:06 +00:00
Sebastian Pop 86500280c6 remove assertions in the Hexagon backend specific clang driver
Patch from Jyotsna Verma:

I have made the changes to remove assertions in the Hexagon backend
specific clang driver. Instead of asserting on invalid arch name, it has
been modified to use the default value.

I have changed the implementation of the CPU flag validation for the
Hexagon backend. Earlier, the clang driver performed the check and
asserted on invalid inputs. In the new implementation, the driver passes
the last CPU flag (or sets to "v4" if not specified) to the compiler (and
also to the assembler and linker which perform their own check) instead of
asserting on incorrect values. This patch changes the setCPU function for
the Hexagon backend in clang/lib/Basic/Targets.cpp which causes the
compiler to error out on incorrect CPU flag values.

llvm-svn: 148139
2012-01-13 20:37:10 +00:00
Sebastian Pop 9a8d528ddf rename -ccc-host-triple into -target
llvm-svn: 148138
2012-01-13 20:37:02 +00:00
Sebastian Pop 9d66d9e4b2 rename DefaultHostTriple into DefaultTargetTriple
llvm-svn: 148137
2012-01-13 20:36:46 +00:00
Evgeniy Stepanov 2ca1aa5a44 Remove --hash-style from link command on Android.
Gnu hash is not supported by the Android loader.

llvm-svn: 148113
2012-01-13 09:30:38 +00:00
Ted Kremenek 52acee87f4 Adjust set of default checkers.
llvm-svn: 148055
2012-01-12 22:41:10 +00:00
Evgeniy Stepanov 48af2a9e66 Fix -mfpu parsing on ARM.
- Support gcc-compatible vfpv3 name in addition to vfp3.
- Support vfpv3-d16.
- Disable neon feature for -mfpu=vfp* (yes, we were emitting Neon instructions
  for those!).

llvm-svn: 147943
2012-01-11 11:21:31 +00:00
Eli Friedman 027e9c3ebc Revert changes to lib/Driver in r147917; I didn't mean to commit this.
llvm-svn: 147920
2012-01-11 02:41:15 +00:00
Eli Friedman 20139d3809 Start refactoring code for capturing variables and 'this' so that it is shared between lambda expressions and block literals.
llvm-svn: 147917
2012-01-11 02:36:31 +00:00
Chandler Carruth c89aa9d964 Add support for the androideabi environment to our triple support, and
for the arm-linux-androideabi triple in particular.

Also use this to do a better job of selecting soft FP settings.

Patch by Evgeniy Stepanov.

llvm-svn: 147872
2012-01-10 19:47:42 +00:00
Eric Christopher fc3ee566eb Add -g to the cc1as flags only if we're dealing with an original
source file. Otherwise -g -save-temps will error out on the compile
of any .c file.

Fixes about 4000 of the errors in the clang-tests gdb test suite.

llvm-svn: 147819
2012-01-10 00:38:01 +00:00
Eric Christopher fe2603a78a Remove extraneous braces.
llvm-svn: 147818
2012-01-10 00:37:56 +00:00
Eli Friedman 48fd89ad14 Revert r147664; it's breaking clang regression tests.
llvm-svn: 147681
2012-01-06 20:42:20 +00:00
Jakub Staszak a78c20d734 Silence GCC warnings.
llvm-svn: 147664
2012-01-06 17:44:30 +00:00
Daniel Dunbar ecb41cbcd6 Driver/Darwin: Remove a hack that avoided passing -demangle to iOS linkers.
llvm-svn: 147552
2012-01-04 21:45:27 +00:00
Chad Rosier 1ad2433690 Fixed by Chandler in r147434.
llvm-svn: 147489
2012-01-03 22:51:32 +00:00
Douglas Gregor 787869b929 Add -fno-modules to the driver, to turn off modules (although they're off by default anyway).
llvm-svn: 147449
2012-01-03 17:13:05 +00:00