Some versions of gcc accept unsupported -W flags and run just fine if
there are no warnings, but die with an unsupported flag error if a
warning is encountered. gcc 4.3 and gcc 4.4 both exhibit this
behavior for -Wno-maybe-uninitialized. Therefore, if the flag check
for -Wno-maybe-uninitialized succeeds, only use
-Wno-maybe-uninitialized if we are using gcc version 4.7 or greater.
Use -Wno-uninitialized otherwise.
llvm-svn: 172543
If the compiler is gcc, disable variants of -Wuninitialized depending
on the gcc version. This gets a lot of false positive warnings out of
the build.
Generate a new configure for the gcc -Wno-uninitialized fix.
Pick up -Wno-uninitialized from configure
Add the option -Wno[-maybe]-uninitialized as determined by configure.
llvm-svn: 172006
Some linux distibutions (for example, Mageia 2, Fedora 17) ship Clang that is
essentially broken for the end user. Clang can not find or compile libstdc++
headers.
The issue is that our configure prefers clang over gcc, thus selecting a broken
Clang when a working GCC is available.
Now we detect this issue by compiling a simple program. If it does not
compile, configure stops with an error suggesting the user to select a
different compiler.
llvm-svn: 171975
wall time, user time, and system time since a process started.
For walltime, we currently use TimeValue's interface and a global
initializer to compute a close approximation of total process runtime.
For user time, this adds support for an somewhat more precise timing
mechanism -- clock_gettime with the CLOCK_PROCESS_CPUTIME_ID clock
selected.
For system time, we have to do a full getrusage call to extract the
system time from the OS. This is expensive but unavoidable.
In passing, clean up the implementation of the old APIs and fix some
latent bugs in the Windows code. This might have manifested on Windows
ARM systems or other systems with strange 64-bit integer behavior.
The old API for this both user time and system time simultaneously from
a single getrusage call. While this results in fewer system calls, it
also results in a lower precision user time and if only user time is
desired, it introduces a higher overhead. It may be worthwhile to switch
some of the pass timers to not track system time and directly track user
and wall time. The old API also tracked walltime in a confusing way --
it just set it to the current walltime rather than providing any measure
of wall time since the process started the way buth user and system time
are tracked. The new API is more consistent here.
The plan is to eventually implement these methods for a *child* process
by using the wait3(2) system call to populate an rusage struct
representing the whole subprocess execution. That way, after waiting on
a child process its stats will become accurate and cheap to query.
llvm-svn: 171551
The Apple buildbots have been modified not to pass --target,
so they shouldn't choke on a default program prefix anymore.
Patch by Rick Foos!
llvm-svn: 164956
The Apple buildbots are set up to pass --target to configure for both
cross- and non-cross-compile builds, and the standard autoconf response
to this is to set the program prefix to '<target>-'. Until we can figure
out the proper way to handle this (don't pass --target? pass an explicit
--program-prefix=""? don't auto-populate program_prefix with target_alias?)
it's more important to keep the buildbots running.
This reverts r164633 / ba48ceb1a3802e20e781ef04ea2573ffae2ac414.
llvm-svn: 164651
whether or not we want to print out backtrace information. Useful
for libraries that don't need backtrace information on a crash.
rdar://11844710
llvm-svn: 164426
to store additional flag options since too many things can
and do override CPPFLAGS. Also, this is exported, unlike CPPFLAGS
so it can be actually used elsewhere. This should enable us
to remove the AC_SUBSTs in the intel checks, but I have no way
of testing it.
llvm-svn: 161233
bits of DejaGNU.
Eric, you may want to remove the TCLSH bits from aclocal.m4 and
regenerate... I didn't want to touch the m4 file lest something
exploded.
llvm-svn: 159308
- Added HOST_ARCH to Makefile.config.in
The HOST_ARCH will be used by MCJIT tests filter, because MCJIT supported only x86 and ARM architectures now.
llvm-svn: 157015
- Currently this leaves us with less build system support (e.g., installing man pages) for the docs than is desired. I'm working on fixing this, but it may take a while. If someone finds this particularly egregious let me know and I will prioritize it.
llvm-svn: 156389
The new target machines are:
nvptx (old ptx32) => 32-bit PTX
nvptx64 (old ptx64) => 64-bit PTX
The sources are based on the internal NVIDIA NVPTX back-end, and
contain more functionality than the current PTX back-end currently
provides.
NV_CONTRIB
llvm-svn: 156196
Thanks to "Gabor Greif" <ggreif@gmail.com> for reporting this problem.
The configure flag should be --with-default-sysroot as documented, and
not --with-sysroot. The reason we don't want to define --with-sysroot
is that GCC has a configure flag by that name and it has a different
semantics.
llvm-svn: 155844
Also refactor the existing OProfile profiling code to reuse the same interfaces with the VTune profiling code.
In addition, unit tests for the profiling interfaces were added.
This patch was prepared by Andrew Kaylor and Daniel Malea, and reviewed in the llvm-commits list by Jim Grosbach
llvm-svn: 152620
Clang builds. The detection logic for compilers that support the warning
isn't working. Rafael is going to investigate it, but didn't want people
to have to wade through build spam until then.
llvm-svn: 151649
This is useful for clients that want to maintain compatibility
across multiple releases of LLVM. Currently users like Klee and
Mesa all have to roll their own 'parse llvm-config --version
output and generate defines' solution.
Also reuse the new macros so that version information is less
redundant/likely to fall out of sync again in the future.
llvm-svn: 150405
that just uses the new toolchain probing logic. This fixes linking with -m32 on
64 bit systems (the /32 dir was not being added to the search).
llvm-svn: 149651
configure was silently failing to produce anything in the case
where clang wasn't at tools/clang/, resulting in compilation
errors much later in the build when config.h didn't exist.
llvm-svn: 149563
The CMake build already generated one. Follows clang r149497.
This brings us one step closer to compiling and configuring clang
separately from LLVM using the autoconf build, too.
(I lack the right version of autoconf et al. to regen, but it
was a simple change, so I just updated configure manually.)
llvm-svn: 149498
Get back getHostTriple.
For JIT compilation, use the host triple instead of the default
target: this fixes some JIT testcases that used to fail when the
compiler has been configured as a cross compiler.
llvm-svn: 147542
And fix the double-[]. It was including the [] as part of
the project name somehow, resulting in PACKAGE_TARNAME "-llvm-"
and a strange docdir default:
./configure --help | grep docdir
--docdir=DIR documentation root [DATAROOTDIR/doc/-llvm-]
llvm-svn: 146849
Original commit message:
llvm-config: Replace with C++ version (was llvm-config-2).
- Reapply of r144300, with lots of fixes/migration easement in between.
llvm-svn: 145582
Some files installed by clang are not relevant for general users and we'd like
to be able to install them to a different location. This adds a new
--with-internal-prefix configure option and a corresponding PROJ_internal_prefix
makefile variable, which defaults to the standard prefix. A tool makefile
can specify that it should be installed to this internal prefix by defining
INTERNAL_TOOL.
llvm-svn: 145234
Now that it needs to be exported in a public header (Valgrind.h)
it should be prefixed to avoid collision with other projects.
Add it to llvm-config.h as well.
This'll require regenerating the configure script after this
commit, but I don't have the required autoconf version.
llvm-svn: 145214