You can expect the sanitizers to be built under any of the following conditions:
1) CMAKE_C_COMPILER is GCC built to cross-compile to ARM
2) CMAKE_C_COMPILER is Clang built to cross-compile to ARM (ARM is default target)
3) CMAKE_C_COMPILER is Clang and CMAKE_C_FLAGS contains -target and --sysroot
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3794
llvm-svn: 209835
The patch adds better target_triple and target_arch defaults for lit tests,
which allows us to XFAIL tests based on architecture.
Was:
target_triple = LLVM_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE
target_arch = HOST_ARCH
Now:
target_triple = COMPILER_RT_TEST_TARGET_TRIPLE
, otherwise LLVM_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE
target_arch = first item in COMPILER_RT_TEST_TARGET_TRIPLE
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3855
llvm-svn: 209256
Add the test infrastructure for testing lib/profile and a single test.
This initial commit only enables the tests on Darwin, but they'll be
enabled on Linux soon after.
<rdar://problem/16458307>
llvm-svn: 205256
asan_device_setup is a utility that prepares a device to run code built with
ASan. Essentially, it installs ASan runtime library into the system. For this
reason, it has to be at a predictable relative path from the runtime library
itself. We also plan to distribute this utility, packaged with runtime library
and maybe llvm-symbolizer, to the users.
llvm-svn: 202362
This way it gets picked up for all sanitizer libs, both sanitizer_common
and asan. I believe those are the only libs that build with asan.
There should be no need to set the __func__ definition inside
clang_compile.
llvm-svn: 202303
For now, use both keywords, INTERFACE and PRIVATE via the variable,
- ${cmake_2_8_12_INTERFACE}
- ${cmake_2_8_12_PRIVATE}
They could be cleaned up when we introduce 2.8.12.
llvm-svn: 202239
1) Depend on llvm-config (configured in LLVM_CONFIG_PATH) to
get necessary LLVM source/binary directories.
2) Add basic support for running lit tests (check-xsan commands).
For now this "support" is far from what we want:
* unit tests are not built currently.
* lit tests use Clang/compiler-rt from LLVM build directory,
not the host compiler or just-built compiler-rt libraries.
We should make a choice on the way we intend ti run compiler-rt lit testsuite:
a) use either Clang from LLVM build tree, or the host compiler.
b) use either just-built runtimes, or the runtimes shipped with the
host compiler.
Using just-built runtimes is tricky - we have to know where to put them, so that
Clang/GCC driver would pick them up (and not overwrite the existing runtimes).
Using a host compiler instead of Clang from LLVM build tree will give us a chance to
run lit tests under GCC (which already has support for several sanitizers).
That is, I tend to make the following choice: if we're in a standalone compiler-rt
build, use host compiler with its set of runtime libraries to run lit tests.
This will effectively decouple "make compiler-rt" and "make check-compiler-rt" in
a standalone build - the latter wouldn't invoke the former. Note that if we decide
to fix LLVM/Clang/compiler-rt build system so that it would configure/build
compiler-rt with just-built Clang (as we do in Makefile-based build), this will not
be a problem - we can add a dependency to ensure that clang/compiler-rt are rebuilt
before running compiler-rt tests.
llvm-svn: 201656
This change allows to build compiler-rt libraries separately from
LLVM/Clang (path to LLVM build directory should be specified at
configure time). Running tests is not yet supported.
llvm-svn: 201647