If we don't filter these out we can end up, generating bogus paths, for example:
/home/user/lld/build/bin -> /home/user/home/user/lld/build/bin/lld/build/bin.
llvm-svn: 255378
When llvm-lit prints a failure, you'll see something like 'lld *command*' However, you can't then take this, paste it in to a terminal and run it, because it's not got the absolute path of lld.
llvm and clang's lit.cfg files contain lists of commands to look for which are substituted by their full paths. So now you'd see something like '*build dir*/bin/lld *command*'.
This patch adds the same capability to lld's lit.cfg
Reviewed by Rafael Espíndola
llvm-svn: 255283
It was not using LLVM_LIT_TOOLS_DIR and at least on my VM never finding lib.exe.
With this all the COFF tests show up as supported and pass.
llvm-svn: 244107
It's a lot faster than bash.
Also use FileCheck instead of grep to search through a binary file.
Cygwin's grep isn't working here for unknown reasons that probably
aren't worth investigating.
llvm-svn: 237834
loadFile could load mulitple files just because yaml has a feature for
putting multiple documents in one file.
Designing a linker around what yaml can do seems like a bad idea to
me. This patch changes it to read a single file.
There are further improvements to be done to the api and they
will follow shortly.
llvm-svn: 235724
The round-trip passes were introduced in r193300. The intention of
the change was to make sure that LLD is capable of reading end
writing such file formats.
But that turned out to be yet another over-designed stuff that had
been slowing down everyday development.
The passes ran after the core linker and before the writer. If you
had an additional piece of information that needs to be passed from
front-end to the writer, you had to invent a way to save the data to
YAML/Native. These passes forced us to do that even if that data
was not needed to be represented neither in an object file nor in
an executable/DSO. It doesn't make sense. We don't need these passes.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7480
llvm-svn: 230069
The existing system linkers on Darwin and Linux are called "ld". We'd like to
eventually drop in lld as "ld" and have it just work. But lld is a universal
linker that requires the first option to be -flavor to know which command line
mode to emulate (gnu or darwin).
This change tests if argv[0] is "ld" and if so, if the tool was built on MacOSX
then assume the darwin flavor otherwise the gnu flavor. There are two test
cases which copy lld to "ld" and then run it. One for darwin and one for linux.
llvm-svn: 217566
If the environment variable is defined and not empty, RoundTrip tests
are run. The reason to move the tests behind the flag is because they
are too slow to enable by default.
LLD linking time on llvm-tblgen improved from 2m7s to 2.3s. About 60x
faster now in this case.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D3126
llvm-svn: 204296
This is a follow-up patch for r185524. Being assert enabled does not mean
that DEBUG() is enabled, so we need to check the existence of DEBUG() itself.
llvm-svn: 185619
table header. Skeleton code for ReferenceKinds.
Credits:
Doxygen by Michael Spencer.
Origianl implementation from Macho by Sidney Manning.
Templatization, implementation of section header chunks, string table, ELF header by Hemant Kulkarni.
llvm-svn: 163906