Commit Graph

271 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Louis Dionne f1c3013541 [libc++] Drop the legacy debug mode symbols by default
Leave the escape hatch in place with a note, but don't include the
debug mode symbols by default since we don't support the debug mode
in the normal library anymore.

This is technically an ABI break for users who were depending on
those debug mode symbols in the dylib, however those users will
already be broken at compile-time because they must have been using
_LIBCPP_DEBUG=2, which is now an error.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127360
2022-07-19 17:16:06 -04:00
Louis Dionne 8711fcae27 [libc++] Treat incomplete features just like other experimental features
In particular remove the ability to expel incomplete features from the
library at configure-time, since this can now be done through the
_LIBCPP_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL macro.

Also, never provide symbols related to incomplete features inside the
dylib, instead provide them in c++experimental.a (this changes the
symbols list, but not for any configuration that should have shipped).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128928
2022-07-19 10:50:20 -04:00
Louis Dionne 7300a651f5 [libc++] Re-apply "Always build c++experimental.a""
This re-applies bb939931a1, which had been reverted by 09cebfb978
because it broke Chromium. The issues seen by Chromium should be
addressed by 1d0f79558c.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128927
2022-07-19 10:44:19 -04:00
Hans Wennborg 09cebfb978 Revert "[libc++] Always build c++experimental.a"
This caused build failures when building Clang and libc++ together on Mac:

  fatal error: 'experimental/memory_resource' file not found

See the code review for details. Reverting until the problem and how to
solve it is better understood.

(Updates to some test files were not reverted, since they seemed
unrelated and were later updated by 340b48b267b96.)

> This is the first part of a plan to ship experimental features
> by default while guarding them behind a compiler flag to avoid
> users accidentally depending on them. Subsequent patches will
> also encompass incomplete features (such as <format> and <ranges>)
> in that categorization. Basically, the idea is that we always
> build and ship the c++experimental library, however users can't
> use what's in it unless they pass the `-funstable` flag to Clang.
>
> Note that this patch intentionally does not start guarding
> existing <experimental/FOO> content behind the flag, because
> that would merely break users that might be relying on such
> content being in the headers unconditionally. Instead, we
> should start guarding new TSes behind the flag, and get rid
> of the existing TSes we have by shipping their Standard
> counterpart.
>
> Also, this patch must jump through a few hoops like defining
> _LIBCPP_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL because we still support compilers
> that do not implement -funstable yet.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128927

This reverts commit bb939931a1.
2022-07-18 16:57:15 +02:00
Louis Dionne bb939931a1 [libc++] Always build c++experimental.a
This is the first part of a plan to ship experimental features
by default while guarding them behind a compiler flag to avoid
users accidentally depending on them. Subsequent patches will
also encompass incomplete features (such as <format> and <ranges>)
in that categorization. Basically, the idea is that we always
build and ship the c++experimental library, however users can't
use what's in it unless they pass the `-funstable` flag to Clang.

Note that this patch intentionally does not start guarding
existing <experimental/FOO> content behind the flag, because
that would merely break users that might be relying on such
content being in the headers unconditionally. Instead, we
should start guarding new TSes behind the flag, and get rid
of the existing TSes we have by shipping their Standard
counterpart.

Also, this patch must jump through a few hoops like defining
_LIBCPP_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL because we still support compilers
that do not implement -funstable yet.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128927
2022-07-08 16:58:22 -04:00
Louis Dionne d2e86866be [libc++] Re-apply the use of ABI tags to provide per-TU insulation
This commit re-applies 9ee97ce3b8, which was reverted by 61d417ce
because it broke the LLDB data formatter tests. It also re-applies
6148c79a (the manual GN change associated to it).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127444
2022-07-08 08:38:36 -04:00
Martin Storsjö 5b32e47559 [libcxx] [ci] Don't disable libc++experimental in mingw builds
Since dfa88927ae, the static
libc++experimental should work in mingw dll builds. (It probably worked
all along in static mingw builds.)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129270
2022-07-07 23:30:53 +03:00
Jonas Devlieghere 61d417ceff
Revert "[libc++] Use ABI tags instead of internal linkage to provide per-TU insulation"
This reverts commit 9ee97ce3b8.
2022-07-07 08:58:55 -07:00
Louis Dionne 9ee97ce3b8 [libc++] Use ABI tags instead of internal linkage to provide per-TU insulation
Instead of marking private symbols with internal_linkage (which leads to
one copy per translation unit -- rather wasteful), use an ABI tag that
gets rev'd with each libc++ version. That way, we know that we can't have
name collisions between implementation-detail functions across libc++
versions, so we'll never violate the ODR. However, within a single program,
each symbol still has a proper name with external linkage, which means
that the linker is free to deduplicate symbols even across TUs.

This actually means that we can guarantee that versions of libc++ can
be mixed within the same program without ever having to take a code size
hit, and without having to manually opt-in -- it should just work out of
the box.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127444
2022-07-06 15:30:04 -04:00
Louis Dionne de4a57cb21 [libc++] Re-add transitive includes that had been removed since LLVM 14
This commit re-adds transitive includes that had been removed by
4cd04d1687, c36870c8e7, a83f4b9cda, 1458458b55, 2e2f3158c6,
and 489637e66d. This should cover almost all the includes that had
been removed since LLVM 14 and that would contribute to breaking user
code when releasing LLVM 15.

It is possible to disable the inclusion of these headers by defining
_LIBCPP_REMOVE_TRANSITIVE_INCLUDES. The intent is that vendors will
enable that macro and start fixing downstream issues immediately. We
can then remove the macro (and the transitive includes) by default in
a future release. That way, we will break users only once by removing
transitive includes in bulk instead of doing it bit by bit a every
release, which is more disruptive for users.

Note 1: The set of headers to re-add was found by re-generating the
        transitive include test on a checkout of release/14.x, which
        provided the list of all transitive includes we used to provide.

Note 2: Several includes of <vector>, <optional>, <array> and <unordered_map>
        have been added in this commit. These transitive inclusions were
        added when we implemented boyer_moore_searcher in <functional>.

Note 3: This is a best effort patch to try and resolve downstream breakage
        caused since branching LLVM 14. I wasn't able to perfectly mirror
        transitive includes in LLVM 14 for a few headers, so I added a
        release note explaining it. To summarize, adding boyer_moore_searcher
        created a bunch of circular dependencies, so we have to break
        backwards compatibility in a few cases.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128661
2022-06-27 22:18:19 -04:00
Jake Egan 1cf4113952 [libcxx][AIX] Switch build compiler to clang
This patch switches the build compiler for AIX from ibm-clang to clang. ibm-clang++_r has `-pthread` by default, but clang for AIX doesn't, so `-pthread` had to be added to the test config. A bunch of tests now pass, so the `XFAIL` was removed. This patch also switch the build to use the visibility support available in clang-15 to control symbols exported by the shared library (AIX traditionally uses explicit export lists for this purpose).

Reviewed By: #libc, #libc_abi, daltenty, #libunwind, ldionne

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127470
2022-06-13 21:45:18 -04:00
Louis Dionne f3966eaf86 [libc++] Make the Debug mode a configuration-time only option
The debug mode has been broken pretty much ever since it was shipped
because it was possible to enable the debug mode in user code without
actually enabling it in the dylib, leading to ODR violations that
caused various kinds of failures.

This commit makes the debug mode a knob that is configured when
building the library and which can't be changed afterwards. This is
less flexible for users, however it will actually work as intended
and it will allow us, in the future, to add various kinds of checks
that do not assume the same ABI as the normal library. Furthermore,
this will make the debug mode more robust, which means that vendors
might be more tempted to support it properly, which hasn't been the
case with the current debug mode.

This patch shouldn't break any user code, except folks who are building
against a library that doesn't have the debug mode enabled and who try
to enable the debug mode in their code. Such users will get a compile-time
error explaining that this configuration isn't supported anymore.

In the future, we should further increase the granularity of the debug
mode checks so that we can cherry-pick which checks to enable, like we
do for unspecified behavior randomization.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122941
2022-06-07 16:33:53 -04:00
Xing Xue dfaee3c9cf [libunwind][ci][AIX] Add libunwind to buildbot CI
Summary:
This patch changes scripts to add libunwind CI on AIX. Test config file ibm-libunwind-shared.cfg.in is introduced for testing on AIX.

Reviewed by: ldionne, MaskRay, libunwind, ibc++abi

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126017
2022-06-02 09:03:10 -04:00
Louis Dionne a9a6e20012 [libc++] Rename the generic-singlethreaded CI job to generic-no-threads for consistency 2022-05-24 09:58:57 -04:00
Louis Dionne fa7ce8e685 [runtimes] Fix the build of merged ABI/unwinder libraries
Also, add a CI job that tests this configuration. The exact configuration
is that we build a shared libc++ and merge objects for the ABI library
and the unwinder library into it.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125903
2022-05-19 10:49:36 -04:00
Louis Dionne aa656f6c2d [runtimes] Introduce object libraries
This is a variant of D116689 rebased on top of the new (proposed) ABI
refactoring in D120727. It should conserve the basic properties of the
original patch by @phosek, except it also allows cleaning up the merging
of libc++abi into libc++ from the libc++ side.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125393
2022-05-16 08:41:16 -04:00
Louis Dionne a80e65e00a [libc++] Overhaul how we select the ABI library
This patch overhauls how we pick up the ABI library. Instead of setting
ad-hoc flags, it creates interface targets that can be linked against by
the rest of the build, which is easier to follow and extend to support
new ABI libraries.

This is intended to be a NFC change, however there are some additional
simplifications and improvements we can make in the future that would
require a slight behavior change.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120727
2022-05-13 08:32:09 -04:00
Martin Storsjö f8da28f522 [runtimes] [cmake] Fix -Werror detection in common build configs
We add `--unwindlib=none` to `CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS`
to make sure that builds with a yet-incomplete toolchain succeed,
to avoid linker failures about missing unwindlib.

When this option is added to `CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS`, it gets added to
both compile and link commands in CMake compile tests. If
`--unwindlib=none` is included in compilation commands, it causes
warnings about unused arguments, as the flag only is relevant for
linking.

Due to the warnings in CMake tests, the later CMake test for the
`-Werror` option failed (as the tested `-Werror` option caused the
preexisting warning due to unused `--unwindlib=none` to become a
hard error). Therefore, most CI configurations that build with
`LIBCXX_ENABLE_WERROR` didn't actually end up enabling `-Werror`
after all.

When looking at the CI build log of recent CI builds, they do
end up printing:

    -- Performing Test LIBCXX_SUPPORTS_WERROR_FLAG
    -- Performing Test LIBCXX_SUPPORTS_WERROR_FLAG - Failed
    -- Performing Test LIBCXX_SUPPORTS_WX_FLAG
    -- Performing Test LIBCXX_SUPPORTS_WX_FLAG - Failed

Thus while the configurations are meant to error out on warnings,
they actually haven't done that, due to the interaction of these
options.

To fix this, remove the individual cases of adding `--unwindlib=none`
into `CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS` in libcxx and libunwind.
`runtimes/CMakeLists.txt` still adds `--unwindlib=none` if needed, but
not otherwise. (The same issue with enabling `-Werror` does remain
if `--unwindlib=none` strictly is needed though - that can be fixed
separately afterwards.)

These individual cases in libunwind and libcxx were added while
standalone builds of the runtimes still were supported - but no longer
are necessary now.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124375
2022-05-12 22:22:15 +03:00
Petr Hosek b3df14b6c9 [runtimes] [CMake] Unify variable names
Avoid repeating CMake checks across runtimes by unifying names of
variables used for results to leverage CMake caching.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110005
2022-04-24 13:06:36 +03:00
Martin Storsjö dba90d74be [libcxx] Stop recommending setting LIBCXX_HAS_WIN32_THREAD_API in the MinGW builds
Since a8d15a9266 / D110975, this is
the default, even if winpthread headers are available, so we don't
need to cargo cult setting this option in all builds.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122717
2022-04-04 23:07:40 +03:00
Louis Dionne 65b1b3b961 [libc++][libc++abi] Serialize the enable_assertions Lit parameter in the generated config
This means that re-running with llvm-lit in that configuration will
work as expected. This also enables assertions in libc++abi in the
Generic-assertions CI job, which was disabled previously.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122597
2022-03-29 08:17:25 -04:00
Louis Dionne b0fd9497af [libc++] Add a lightweight overridable assertion handler
This patch adds a lightweight assertion handler mechanism that can be
overriden at link-time in a fashion similar to `operator new`.

This is a third take on https://llvm.org/D121123 (which allowed customizing
the assertion handler at compile-time), and https://llvm.org/D119969
(which allowed customizing the assertion handler at runtime only).

This approach is, I think, the best of all three explored approaches.
Indeed, replacing the assertion handler in user code is ergonomic,
yet we retain the ability to provide a custom assertion handler when
deploying to older platforms that don't have a default handler in
the dylib.

As-is, this patch provides a pretty good amount of backwards compatibility
with the previous debug mode:

- Code that used to set _LIBCPP_DEBUG=0 in order to get basic assertions
  in their code will still get basic assertions out of the box, but
  those assertions will be using the new assertion handler support.
- Code that was previously compiled with references to __libcpp_debug_function
  and friends will work out-of-the-box, no changes required. This is
  because we provide the same symbols in the dylib as we used to.
- Code that used to set a custom __libcpp_debug_function will stop
  compiling, because we don't provide that declaration anymore. Users
  will have to migrate to the new way of setting a custom assertion
  handler, which is extremely easy. I suspect that pool of users is
  very limited, so breaking them at compile-time is probably acceptable.

The main downside of this approach is that code being compiled with
assertions enabled but deploying to an older platform where the assertion
handler didn't exist yet will fail to compile. However users can easily
fix the problem by providing a custom assertion handler and defining
the _LIBCPP_AVAILABILITY_CUSTOM_ASSERTION_HANDLER_PROVIDED macro to
let the library know about the custom handler. In a way, this is
actually a feature because it avoids a load-time error that one would
otherwise get when trying to run the code on the older target.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121478
2022-03-23 15:35:46 -04:00
Louis Dionne 0389462587 [libc++] Do not install the C++ ABI library's headers as part of libc++'s build
It's the role of the C++ ABI library to install its own headers, not libc++.
This fixes an existing issue causing spurious CI failures where both libc++
and libc++abi would try to install <cxxabi.h> & friends in the same location,
leading to failures during the installation step.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121706
2022-03-16 08:53:47 -04:00
Michał Górny ba4f1e44e4 [libcxx] Add an explicit option to build against system-libcxxabi
Add an explicit LIBCXX_CXX_ABI=system-libcxxabi option for linking to
system-installed libc++abi. This fixes the ability to link against one
when building libcxx via the runtimes build, as otherwise the build
system insists on linking into in-tree targets.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119539
2022-03-01 13:44:56 -05:00
Louis Dionne 368faacac7 [libc++] Revert "Protect users from relying on detail headers" & related changes
This commit reverts 5aaefa51 (and also partly 7f285f48e7 and b6d75682f9,
which were related to the original commit). As landed, 5aaefa51 had
unintended consequences on some downstream bots and didn't have proper
coverage upstream due to a few subtle things. Implementing this is
something we should do in libc++, however we'll first need to address
a few issues listed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D106124#3349710.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120683
2022-03-01 08:20:24 -05:00
Christopher Di Bella 5aaefa510e [libcxx][modules] protects users from relying on detail headers
libc++ has started splicing standard library headers into much more
fine-grained content for maintainability. It's very likely that outdated
and naive tooling (some of which is outside of LLVM's scope) will
suggest users include things such as <__ranges/access.h> instead of
<ranges>, and Hyrum's law suggests that users will eventually begin to
rely on this without the help of tooling. As such, this commit
intends to protect users from themselves, by making it a hard error for
anyone outside of the standard library to include libc++ detail headers.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106124
2022-02-26 09:00:25 +00:00
David Spickett 9c720250d1 [libcxx][ci] Switch to CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_TARGET for Arm bots
As suggested by the cmake warning:
CMake Warning at <...>/llvm-project/libcxx-ci/libcxx/CMakeLists.txt:289 (message):
  LIBCXX_TARGET_TRIPLE is deprecated, please use CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_TARGET instead

Depends on D119948

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120038
2022-02-22 09:42:55 +00:00
David Spickett 912bba5ae2 [libcxx][CI] Set Arm triples to match native clang build's default
We were using:
armv8-linux-gnueabihf
But for a native clang build the default target is:
armv8l-linux-gnueabihf

(ditto for v7)

Add the "l" to the target triples and update the one test
that is unsupported to look for the various possible names.

armv(7 or 8)(m or l, optionally)

The UNSUPPORTED does not include aarch64 because aarch64 Linux
(and others that follow Arm's AAPCS64) use quad precision for
long double where arm64 (darwin) does not:
https://developer.apple.com/documentation/xcode/writing-arm64-code-for-apple-platforms
https://github.com/ARM-software/abi-aa/blob/main/aapcs64/aapcs64.rst#811arithmetic-types

Reviewed By: rovka

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119948
2022-02-22 09:39:20 +00:00
Louis Dionne 1b06d2cf15 [libc++] Refactor the Apple build scripts
This patch upstreams some changes we've made internally to how we're
building the libc++ dylib on Apple platforms. The goal is still to
eventually get rid of `apple-install-libcxx.sh` entirely and have a
proper way to mirror what we do internally with just the normal CMake
configuration.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118912
2022-02-16 16:28:13 -05:00
Konstantin Varlamov 10953974ed [libc++][NFC] Work around false positive ODR violations from ASan.
This works around a known issue in ASan. ASan doesn't instrument weak
symbols. Because instrumentation increases object size, the binary can
end up with two versions of the same object, one instrumented and one
not instrumented, with different sizes, which ASan will report as an ODR
violation. In libc++, this affects typeinfo for `std::bad_function_call`
which is emitted as a weak symbol in the test executable and as a strong
symbol in the shared library.

The main open issue for ASan appears to be
https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/1017.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119410
2022-02-11 11:56:51 -08:00
Nikolas Klauser 5488021f3e [libc++] Add Unstable ABI CI run
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, Mordante

Spies: mgorny, Mordante, libcxx-commits, arichardson

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118725
2022-02-05 15:37:22 +01:00
Louis Dionne 99ae458231 [libc++] Add CI without experimental features and don't exclude span from the tests
There is no reason for the parts of std::span that don't depend on ranges
to be disabled when ranges aren't provided. Also, to make sure the
"no-experimental-stuff" configuration is tested, add a CI job for it.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118740
2022-02-02 10:48:35 -05:00
John Ericson 7017e6c9cf [cmake] Partially deduplicate `{llvm,compiler_rt}_check_linker_flag` for runtime libs and llvm
We previously had a few varied definitions of this floating around.

I had tried to make the one installed with LLVM handle all the cases, and then made the others use it, but this ran into issues with `HandleOutOfTreeLLVM` not working for compiler-rt, and also `CMAKE_EXE_LINKER_FLAGS` not working right without `CMP0056` set to the new behavior.

 My compromise solution is this:

 - No not completely deduplicate: the runtime libs will instead use a version that still exists as part of the internal and not installed common shared CMake utilities. This avoids `HandleOutOfTreeLLVM` or a workaround for compiler-rt.

- Continue to use `CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS`, which effects compilation and linking. Maybe this is unnecessary, but it's safer to leave that as a future change. Also means we can avoid `CMP0056` for now, to try out later, which is good incrementality too.

- Call it `llvm_check_compiler_linker_flag` since it, in fact is about both per its implementation (before and after this patch), so there is no name collision.

In the future, we might still enable CMP0056 and make compiler-rt work with HandleOutOfTreeLLVM, which case we delete `llvm_check_compiler_flag` and go back to the old way (as these are, in fact, linking related flags), but that I leave for someone else as future work.

The original issue was reported to me in https://reviews.llvm.org/D116521#3248117 as
D116521 made clang and LLVM use the common cmake utils.

Reviewed By: sebastian-ne, phosek, #libunwind, #libc, #libc_abi, ldionne

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117537
2022-01-29 06:07:24 +00:00
Petr Hosek 10e5c513b5 Revert "[cmake] Duplicate `{llvm,compiler_rt}_check_linker_flag` for runtime libs and llvm"
This reverts commit 4af11272f5.
2022-01-21 09:53:14 -08:00
John Ericson 4af11272f5 [cmake] Duplicate `{llvm,compiler_rt}_check_linker_flag` for runtime libs and llvm
We previously had a few varied definitions of this floating around. I made the one installed with LLVM handle all the cases, and then made the others use it.

This issue was reported to me in https://reviews.llvm.org/D116521#3248117 as
D116521 made clang and llvm use the common cmake utils.

Reviewed By: sebastian-ne, phosek, #libunwind, #libc, #libc_abi, ldionne

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117537
2022-01-20 21:18:42 +00:00
John Ericson 429a717ea5 [cmake] Move HandleOutOfTreeLLVM to common cmake utils
This is better than libunwind and libcxxabi fishing it out of libcxx's
module directory.

It is done in prepartion for a better version of D117537 which deduplicates
CMake logic instead of just renaming to avoid a name clash.

Reviewed By: phosek, #libunwind, #libc_abi, Ericson2314

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117617
2022-01-19 22:05:23 +00:00
John Ericson f16a4a034a [libcxx][libcxxabi][libunwind][cmake] Use `GNUInstallDirs` to support custom installation dirs
I am breaking apart D99484 so the cause of build failures is easier to
understand.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117417
2022-01-18 06:44:57 +00:00
John Ericson da77db58d7 Revert "[cmake] Use `GNUInstallDirs` to support custom installation dirs."
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/46/builds/21146 Still have
this odd error, not sure how to reproduce, so I will just try breaking
up my patch.

This reverts commit 4a678f8072.
2022-01-16 05:48:30 +00:00
John Ericson 4a678f8072 [cmake] Use `GNUInstallDirs` to support custom installation dirs.
This is the original patch in my GNUInstallDirs series, now last to merge as the final piece!

It arose as a new draft of D28234. I initially did the unorthodox thing of pushing to that when I wasn't the original author, but since I ended up

 - Using `GNUInstallDirs`, rather than mimicking it, as the original author was hesitant to do but others requested.

 - Converting all the packages, not just LLVM, effecting many more projects than LLVM itself.

I figured it was time to make a new revision.

I have used this patch series (and many back-ports) as the basis of https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/111487 for my distro (NixOS), which was merged last spring (2021). It looked like people were generally on board in D28234, but I make note of this here in case extra motivation is useful.

---

As pointed out in the original issue, a central tension is that LLVM already has some partial support for these sorts of things. Variables like `COMPILER_RT_INSTALL_PATH` have already been dealt with. Variables like `LLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX` however, will require further work, so that we may use `CMAKE_INSTALL_LIBDIR`.

These remaining items will be addressed in further patches. What is here is now rote and so we should get it out of the way before dealing more intricately with the remainder.

Reviewed By: #libunwind, #libc, #libc_abi, compnerd

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99484
2022-01-16 05:33:07 +00:00
John Ericson 6e52bfe09d Revert "[cmake] Use `GNUInstallDirs` to support custom installation dirs."
Sorry for the disruption, I will try again later.

This reverts commit efeb501970.
2022-01-15 07:35:02 +00:00
John Ericson efeb501970 [cmake] Use `GNUInstallDirs` to support custom installation dirs.
This is the original patch in my GNUInstallDirs series, now last to merge as the final piece!

It arose as a new draft of D28234. I initially did the unorthodox thing of pushing to that when I wasn't the original author, but since I ended up

 - Using `GNUInstallDirs`, rather than mimicking it, as the original author was hesitant to do but others requested.

 - Converting all the packages, not just LLVM, effecting many more projects than LLVM itself.

I figured it was time to make a new revision.

I have used this patch series (and many back-ports) as the basis of https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/111487 for my distro (NixOS), which was merged last spring (2021). It looked like people were generally on board in D28234, but I make note of this here in case extra motivation is useful.

---

As pointed out in the original issue, a central tension is that LLVM already has some partial support for these sorts of things. Variables like `COMPILER_RT_INSTALL_PATH` have already been dealt with. Variables like `LLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX` however, will require further work, so that we may use `CMAKE_INSTALL_LIBDIR`.

These remaining items will be addressed in further patches. What is here is now rote and so we should get it out of the way before dealing more intricately with the remainder.

Reviewed By: #libunwind, #libc, #libc_abi, compnerd

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99484
2022-01-15 01:08:35 +00:00
Ben Wagner fb1582f6c5 [libc++] Disable coverage with sanitize-coverage=0
When building libcxx, libcxxabi, and libunwind the build environment may
specify any number of sanitizers. For some build feature tests these
sanitizers must be disabled to prevent spurious linking errors. With
-fsanitize= this is straight forward with -fno-sanitize=all. With
-fsanitize-coverage= there is no -fno-sanitize-coverage=all, but there
is the equivalent undocumented but tested -fsanitize-coverage=0.

The current build rules fail to disable 'trace-pc-guard'. By disabling
all sanitize-coverage flags, including 'trace-pc-guard', possible
spurious linker errors are prevented. In particular, this allows libcxx,
libcxxabi, and libunwind to be built with HonggFuzz.

CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS is extra compile flags when running CMake build
configuration steps (like check_cxx_compiler_flag). It does not affect
the compile flags for the actual build of the project (unless of course
these flags change whether or not a given source compiles and links or
not). So libcxx, libcxxabi, and libunwind will still be built with any
specified sanitize-coverage as before. The build configuration steps
(which are mostly checking to see if certain compiler flags are
available) will not try to compile and link "int main() { return 0;}"
(or other specified source) with sanitize-coverage (which can fail to
link at this stage in building, since the final compile flags required
are yet to be determined).

The change to LIBFUZZER_CFLAGS was done to keep it consistent with the
obvious intention of disabling all sanitize-coverage. This appears to
be intentional, preventing the fuzzer driver itself from showing up in
any coverage calculations.

Reviewed By: #libunwind, #libc, #libc_abi, ldionne, phosek

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116050
2022-01-07 17:53:21 -08:00
Nico Weber 085f078307 Revert "Revert D109159 "[amdgpu] Enable selection of `s_cselect_b64`.""
This reverts commit 859ebca744.
The change contained many unrelated changes and e.g. restored
unit test failes for the old lld port.
2022-01-05 13:10:25 -05:00
David Salinas 859ebca744 Revert D109159 "[amdgpu] Enable selection of `s_cselect_b64`."
This reverts commit 640beb38e7.

That commit caused performance degradtion in Quicksilver test QS:sGPU and a functional test failure in (rocPRIM rocprim.device_segmented_radix_sort).
Reverting until we have a better solution to s_cselect_b64 codegen cleanup

Change-Id: Ibf8e397df94001f248fba609f072088a46abae08

Reviewed By: kzhuravl

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115960

Change-Id: Id169459ce4dfffa857d5645a0af50b0063ce1105
2022-01-05 17:57:32 +00:00
Martin Storsjö f68e89044a [libcxx] Add LIBCXX_EXTRA_SITE_DEFINES for adding extra defines in __config_site
This is similar to the existing setting LIBCXX_ABI_DEFINES, with
the difference that this also allows setting other defines than
ones that start with "_LIBCPP_ABI_", and allows setting defines
to a specific value.

This allows avoiding using LIBCXX_TEST_COMPILER_FLAGS in two
CI configurations.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116109
2021-12-22 00:43:29 +02:00
Martin Storsjö 529a79302b Reapply #2 of [runtimes] Fix building initial libunwind+libcxxabi+libcxx with compiler implied -lunwind
This does mostly the same as D112126, but for the runtimes cmake files.
Most of that is straightforward, but the interdependency between
libcxx and libunwind is tricky:

Libunwind is built at the same time as libcxx, but libunwind is not
installed yet. LIBCXXABI_USE_LLVM_UNWINDER makes libcxx link directly
against the just-built libunwind, but the compiler implicit -lunwind
isn't found. This patch avoids that by adding --unwindlib=none if
supported, if we are going to link explicitly against a newly built
unwinder anyway.

Since the previous attempt, this no longer uses
llvm_enable_language_nolink (and thus doesn't set
CMAKE_TRY_COMPILE_TARGET_TYPE=STATIC_LIBRARY during the compiler
sanity checks). Setting CMAKE_TRY_COMPILE_TARGET_TYPE=STATIC_LIBRARY
during compiler sanity checks makes cmake not learn about some
aspects of the compiler, which can make further find_library or
find_package fail. This caused OpenMP to not detect libelf and libffi,
disabling some OpenMP target plugins.

Instead, require the caller to set CMAKE_{C,CXX}_COMPILER_WORKS=YES
when building in a configuration with an incomplete toolchain.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113253
2021-12-09 21:38:14 +02:00
Martin Storsjö 62cff45d76 Revert "Reapply [runtimes] Fix building initial libunwind+libcxxabi+libcxx with compiler implied -lunwind"
This reverts commit 317dc31e53.

After that change, OpenMP doesn't find dependencies in the host
system (it fails do find e.g. /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libelf.so
which it found before), which causes some OpenMP target offloading
plugins to not be found. This doesn't break the build, but just
causes the AMDGPU OpenMP target plugin to be omitted. See
https://reviews.llvm.org/D113253#3181934 for the report of this
issue.
2021-12-09 12:56:57 +02:00
Martin Storsjö 317dc31e53 Reapply [runtimes] Fix building initial libunwind+libcxxabi+libcxx with compiler implied -lunwind
This does mostly the same as D112126, but for the runtimes cmake files.
Most of that is straightforward, but the interdependency between
libcxx and libunwind is tricky:

Libunwind is built at the same time as libcxx, but libunwind is not
installed yet. LIBCXXABI_USE_LLVM_UNWINDER makes libcxx link directly
against the just-built libunwind, but the compiler implicit -lunwind
isn't found. This patch avoids that by adding --unwindlib=none if
supported, if we are going to link explicitly against a newly built
unwinder anyway.

Reapplying this after
db32c4f456, which should fix the issues
that were reported last time this was applied.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113253
2021-12-08 00:32:40 +02:00
Louis Dionne fa1c077b41 [runtimes] Remove support for GCC-style 32 bit multilib builds
This patch removes the ability to build the runtimes in the 32 bit
multilib configuration, i.e. using -m32. Instead of doing this, one
should cross-compile the runtimes for the appropriate target triple,
like we do for all other triples.

As it stands, -m32 has several issues, which all seem to be related to
the fact that it's not well supported by the operating systems that
libc++ support. The simplest path towards fixing this is to remove
support for the configuration, which is also the best course of action
if there is little interest for keeping that configuration. If there
is a desire to keep this configuration around, we'll need to do some
work to figure out the underlying issues and fix them.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114473
2021-12-01 12:57:01 -05:00
Martin Storsjö efbe9ae23f Revert "[runtimes] Fix building initial libunwind+libcxxabi+libcxx with compiler implied -lunwind"
This reverts commit 7c3d19ab7b.

This commit was reported as causing build problems for the amdgpu
buildbot in https://reviews.llvm.org/D113253#3137097.
2021-11-17 12:50:33 +02:00