on the system, and report it when running the driver in verbose mode.
Without this it is essentially impossible to understand why a particular
GCC toolchain is used by Clang for libstdc++, libgcc, etc.
This also required threading a hook through the toolchain layers for
a specific toolchain implementation to print custom information under
'clang -v'. The naming here isn't spectacular. Suggestions welcome.
llvm-svn: 187427
This establishes a new Flag in Options.td, which can be assigned to
options that should be made available in clang's cl.exe compatible
mode, and updates the Driver to make use of the flag.
(The whitespace change to CMakeLists forces the build to re-run CMake
and pick up the include dependency on the new .td file. This makes the
build work if someone moves backwards in commit history after this change.)
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1215
llvm-svn: 187280
This patch provides basic support for powerpc64le as an LLVM target.
However, use of this target will not actually generate little-endian
code. Instead, use of the target will cause the correct little-endian
built-in defines to be generated, so that code that tests for
__LITTLE_ENDIAN__, for example, will be correctly parsed for
syntax-only testing. Code generation will otherwise be the same as
powerpc64 (big-endian), for now.
The patch leaves open the possibility of creating a little-endian
PowerPC64 back end, but there is no immediate intent to create such a
thing.
The new test case variant ensures that correct built-in defines for
little-endian code are generated.
llvm-svn: 187180
and add a new option --driver-mode= to control it explicitly.
The CCCIsCXX and CCCIsCPP flags were non-overlapping, i.e. there
are currently really three modes that Clang can run in: gcc, g++
or cpp, so it makes sense to represent them as an enum.
Having a command line flag to control it helps testing.
llvm-svn: 186605
The big changes are:
- Deleting Driver/(Arg|Opt)*
- Rewriting includes to llvm/Option/ and re-sorting
- 'using namespace llvm::opt' in clang::driver
- Fixing the autoconf build by adding option everywhere
As discussed in the review, this change includes using directives in
header files. I'll make follow up changes to remove those in favor of
name specifiers.
Reviewers: espindola
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D975
llvm-svn: 183989
This option is used to select a dynamic loader prefix to be used
at runtime. Currently this is implemented for the Linux toolchain.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D851
llvm-svn: 182744
This option can be useful for end users who want to know why they
ended up with a ton of different variants of the "std" module in their
module cache. This problem should go away over time, as we reduce the
need for module variants, but it will never go away entirely.
llvm-svn: 178148
Changing -ccc-install-dir to affect cc1's resource-dir setting broke our
internal LNT tests. After discussing the situation with Jim, we've decided to
pursue an alternate approach. We really want the resource-dir to be located
relative to clang, even when using -ccc-install-dir, but we're going to
add a fallback setting for the libc++ headers if they don't exist alongside
the compiler.
llvm-svn: 177815
linker via --dynamic-list instead of using --export-dynamic. This reduces the
size of the dynamic symbol table, and thus of the binary (in some cases by up
to ~30%).
llvm-svn: 177783
-ccc-install-dir is supposed to cause the compiler to behave as-if it
were installed in the indicated location. It almost does, but misses
anything that's relying on the resource directory (libc++ header search,
in particular). The resource dir is resolved too early, before command
line args are handled.
The fix is simply to move handling of the resource dir until after we
know if a -ccc-install-dir is present.
rdar://13402696
llvm-svn: 176894
subsequent commands from being executed.
The diagnostics generation isn't designed for this use case, so add a note to
fix this in the very near future. For now, just generated the diagnostics for
the first failing command.
Part of rdar://12984531
llvm-svn: 173825
produce a note for that diagnostic either with a different DiagnosticEngine or
after calling DiagnosticEngine::Reset(). That didn't make any sense, and did the
wrong thing if the original diagnostic was suppressed.
llvm-svn: 170636
paths
- Inherit from Linux rather than ToolChain
- Override AddClangSystemIncludeArgs and AddClangCXXStdlibIncludeArgs
to properly set include paths.
llvm-svn: 169495
uncovered.
This required manually correcting all of the incorrect main-module
headers I could find, and running the new llvm/utils/sort_includes.py
script over the files.
I also manually added quite a few missing headers that were uncovered by
shuffling the order or moving headers up to be main-module-headers.
llvm-svn: 169237
diagnostics script.
This addresses the FIXME pertaining to quoted arguments. We also delineate
between those flags that have an argument (e.g., -D macro, -MF file) and
those that do not (e.g., -M, -MM, -MG). Finally, we add the -dwarf-debug-flags
to the list of flags to be removed.
rdar://12329974
llvm-svn: 167152
is not a directory, Driver::GetProgramPath() routine does not try to append
the program name as a "path component" to it. It just joins the "prefix" with
the program name and checks the resulting path existence.
The patch reviewed by Rafael Espindola.
llvm-svn: 167114
we had the -ccc-clang-cxx and -ccc-no-clang-cxx options to force them
on or off for testing.
Clang c++ support is now production quality and these options are dead.
llvm-svn: 166986
Each option has a set of prefixes. When matching an argument such as
-funroll-loops. First the leading - is removed as it is a prefix. Then
a lower_bound search for "funroll-loops" is done against the option table by
option name. From there each option prefix + option name combination is tested
against the argument.
This allows us to support Microsoft style options where both / and - are valid
prefixes. It also simplifies the cases we already have where options come in
both - and -- forms. Almost every option for gnu-ld happens to have this form.
llvm-svn: 166444
clang itself. This dates back to clang's early days and while it looks like
some of it is still used (for kext for example), other parts are probably dead.
Remove the -ccc-clang-archs option and associated code. I don't think there
is any remaining setup where clang doesn't support an architecture but it can
expect an working gcc cross compiler to be available.
A nice side effect is that tests no longer need to differentiate architectures
that are included in production builds of clang and those that are not.
llvm-svn: 165545
This parameter is useless because nowhere used explicitly and always
gets its default value - "false".
The patch reviewed by Rafael Espindola.
llvm-svn: 165149
'clang-cpp'.
For now, the test uses "REQUIRES: shell" to determine if the host system
supports "ln -s", which it uses to create a 'clang-cpp' symlink. This is a bit
hacky and should likely be directly supported by lit.cfg.
llvm-svn: 161317
- lib/Driver/Driver.cpp, tools/driver/driver.cpp: Exit status should not be propagated, although clang driver should catch exceptions.
- test/Driver/crash-report.c: Add REQUIRES:shell for now.
FIXME: setenv should work also on Lit.InternalShellRunner.
- test/Driver/crash-report.c: Remove XFAIL.
Thanks to Chad, To point out the issue.
llvm-svn: 160343
Now that we're only using -frewrite-includes rather than full preprocessing
when producing repro source files, we should also include command line macro
definitions in the repro script.
I don't have a test case for this because I'm not sure if/how I can open the
crash report file when the name is only known by scraping the crash report
output. Suggestions welcome if anyone thinks it'd be helpful.
llvm-svn: 159592
In future changes we should:
* use __builtin_trap rather than derefing 'random' volatile pointers.
* avoid dumping temporary files into /tmp when running tests, instead
preferring a location that is properly cleaned up by lit.
Review by Chandler Carruth.
llvm-svn: 159469
architecture; this was happening for tools such as lipo and dsymutil.
Also, if no -arch option has been specified, set the architecture based
on the TC default.
rdar://11329656
llvm-svn: 155730
overwriting the input file. For example,
clang -c foo.s -o foo.o -save-temps
Unfortunately, the original patch didn't compare the paths of the input and
output files. Thus, something like the following would fail to create foo.s.
cd /tmp/obj
clang -c ../src/foo.s -o foo.o -save-temps
rdar://11252615
llvm-svn: 155224
flags. We have preprocessed source, so we don't need these.
No test case as it's fairly difficult to make the compiler crash on demand. I'll
patiently wait for Ben to tell me how to do this in 2 lines of code. :)
rdar://11283560
llvm-svn: 155180
However, the '-x' option has special handling and wasn't following this
paradigm. Fix it to do so by claiming the arg as we parse the '-x' option.
rdar://11203340
llvm-svn: 154231
the new Objective-C NSArray/NSDictionary/NSNumber literal syntax.
This introduces a new library, libEdit, which provides a new way to support
migration of code that improves on the original ARC migrator. We now believe
that most of its functionality can be refactored into the existing libraries,
and thus this new library may shortly disappear.
llvm-svn: 152141
by -target and similar options. As discussed in PR 12026, the change
broke support for target-prefixed tools, i.e. calling x86_64--linux-ld
when compiling for x86_64--linux. Improve the test cases added
originally in r149083 to not require execution, just executable files.
Document the hack with appropiate FIXME comments.
llvm-svn: 151185
world on Solaris 11 for both x86 and x86-64 using the built-in assembler and
Solaris (not GNU) ld, however it currently relies on a hard-coded GCC location
to find crtbegin.o and crtend.o, as well as libgcc and libgcc_eh.
llvm-svn: 150580
And remove HAVE_CLANG_CONFIG_H, now that the header is generated
in the autoconf build, too.
Reverts r149571/restores r149504, now that config.h is generated
correctly by LLVM's configure in all build configurations.
llvm-svn: 150487
This was from way-back-when (r82583) when Clang's C++ support wasn't prime-time
yet. Production quality C++ was tested experimentally from r100119 and turned
on by default in r141063.
Patch by Justin Bogner.
llvm-svn: 150148
And remove HAVE_CLANG_CONFIG_H, now that the header is generated
in the autoconf build, too. (clang r149497 / llvm r149498)
Also include the config.h header after all other headers, per
the LLVM coding standards.
It also turns out WindowsToolChain.cpp wasn't using the config
header at all, so that include's just deleted now.
llvm-svn: 149504
driver based on discussions with Doug Gregor. There are several issues:
1) The patch was not reviewed prior to commit and there were review comments.
2) The design of the functionality (triple-prefixed tool invocation)
isn't the design we want for Clang going forward: it focuses on the
"user triple" rather than on the "toolchain triple", and forces that
bit of state into the API of every single toolchain instead of
handling it automatically in the common base classes.
3) The tests provided are not stable. They fail on a few Linux variants
(Gentoo among them) and on mingw32 and some other environments.
I *am* interested in the Clang driver being able to invoke
triple-prefixed tools, but we need to design that feature the right way.
This patch just extends the previous hack without fixing the underlying
problems with it. I'm working on a new design for this that I will mail
for review by tomorrow.
I am aware that this removes functionality that NetBSD relies on, but
this is ToT, not a release. This functionality hasn't been properly
designed, implemented, and tested yet. We can't "regress" until we get
something that really works, both with the immediate use cases and with
long term maintenance of the Clang driver.
For reference, the original commit log:
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: 149337
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
clang/lib/Driver/Driver.cpp: Don't pass through negative exit status, or parent would be confused.
llvm::sys::Program::Wait(): Suppose 0x8000XXXX and 0xC000XXXX as abnormal exit code and pass it as negative value.
Win32 Exception Handler: Exit with ExceptionCode on an unhandle exception.
llvm-svn: 145389
output files that are valid regardless of whether the compilation
succeeded or failed (but not if we crash). Add depfiles to the
failure result file list.
llvm-svn: 145018
- With the current implementation of sys::Program this always printed "2".
- The command execution code will output the right number anyway (including the signal name).
llvm-svn: 144993