Somehow the entire plugin infrastructure went wholly untested until now.
The only plugins available for use in testing are the examples, so plugin tests
will only be run if CLANG_BUILD_EXAMPLES is enabled in the build.
(The examples should really be enabled by default, not just to aid testing but
also to prevent bitrot in some key user-facing code. I'll propose that
shortly.)
Requires supporting changes in LLVM r198746.
llvm-svn: 198747
This is needed to support the addition of tests for clang loadable plugins.
In clang, plugins are built as modules (bundles on OS X) rather than dynamic
libraries (dylib) so the build system needs to inform lit of the actual
file extension in use, typically '.so' on Unix and '.dll' on Windows.
(LLVM itself should probably switch to this scheme to fix PR14903 once and for
all.)
No change in build output or functionality intended.
llvm-svn: 198746
Modern versions of OSX/Darwin's ld (ld64 > 97.17) have an optimisation present that allows the back end to omit relocations (and replace them with an absolute difference) for FDE some text section refs.
This patch allows a backend to opt-in to this behaviour by setting "DwarfFDESymbolsUseAbsDiff". At present, this is only enabled for modern x86 OSX ports.
test changes by David Fang.
llvm-svn: 198744
This change fixes a bug recently introduced in ProcessGDBRemote that
prevented the Python register definition file from getting loaded when
the qRegisterInfo0 response returned $00#.
Patch by Steve Pucci.
llvm-svn: 198742
I believe the bot failures on linux systems were due to overestimating the
alignment of object-files within archives, which are only guaranteed to be
two-byte aligned. I have reduced the alignment in
RuntimeDyldELF::createObjectImageFromFile accordingly.
llvm-svn: 198737
Appease the buildbots for targets which do not build the ARM support by moving
the ARM specific test into a subdirectory and use the lit configuration to
disable them appropriately.
Thanks to chapuni and thakis for explaining how to do this!
llvm-svn: 198736
Operands which involved label arithemetic would previously fail to parse. This
corrects that by adding the additional case for the shift operand validation.
llvm-svn: 198735
This adds some preliminary support for decoding ARM EHABI unwinding information.
The major functionality that remains from complete support is bytecode
translation.
Each Unwind Index Table is printed out as a separate entity along with its
section index, name, offset, and entries.
Each entry lists the function address, and if possible, the name, of the
function to which it corresponds. The encoding model, personality routine or
index, and byte code is also listed.
llvm-svn: 198734
When determining the type of array members, do not see-through typedefs
For instance, in BOOL arr[4], we want the elements to be typed as BOOL, not signed char
llvm-svn: 198729
type-specifier in C++. Some checks will assert in this case otherwise (in
particular, the access specifier may be missing if this happens inside a class
definition, due to a violation of an AST invariant).
llvm-svn: 198721
materialize a variable in a register correctly
if the variable is a pointer. This fixes a
regression introduced by my commit of Oct. 22nd
(r193191).
llvm-svn: 198718
Debug info: Implement a cleaner version of r198461. For symmetry with
C and C++ don't emit an extra lexical scope for the compound statement
that is the body of an Objective-C method.
llvm-svn: 198715
- If there is only 1 frame ptr_refs now works (fixed issue with stack detection)
- Fixed test for result now that it isn't a pointer anymore
llvm-svn: 198712
...even though the argument is declared "const void *", because this is
just a way to pass pointers around as objects. (Though NSData is often
a better one.)
PR18262
llvm-svn: 198710
RetainCountChecker has to track returned object values to know if they are
retained or not. Under ARC, even methods that return +1 are tracked by the
system and should be treated as +0. However, this effect behaves exactly
like NotOwned(ObjC), i.e. a generic Objective-C method that actually returns
+0, so we don't need a special case for it.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 198709
take type from the new symbol but merge them so that the type
is never "downgraded".
This is probably quite rare, except for IFUNC symbols which
we used to misassemble, losing the IFUNC type.
Fixes#18372.
llvm-svn: 198706
In SVN checkouts, clang_revision_tag is rerun on every build, even if nothing
else is dirty. After this change, Version.inc is only written at cmake time,
so that empty builds run 0 build steps (like r191784 apparently did for git).
llvm-svn: 198704
always produce as pretty of results as it does in LLVM and Clang, but
I don't mind and the value of having a single canonical ordering is very
high IMO.
Let me know if you spot really serious problems here.
llvm-svn: 198703
With the gnu objc runtime private strings are used. Since we only need to
produce a unique label, the fix is to just drop the asserts.
llvm-svn: 198701
C and C++ don't emit an extra lexical scope for the compound statement
that is the body of an Objective-C method.
rdar://problem/15010825
llvm-svn: 198699
This commit adds the pre-UAL aliases of fconsts and fconstd for
vmov.f32 and vmov.f64. They use an InstAlias rather than a
MnemonicAlias to properly support the predicate operand.
We need to support encoded 8-bit constants in order to implement the
pre-UAL fconsts/fconstd aliases for vmov.f32/vmov.f64, so this
commit also fixes parsing of encoded floating point constants used
in vmov.f32/vmov.f64 instructions. Now we can support assembly code
like this:
fconsts s0, #0x70
which is equivalent to vmov.f32 s0, #1.0.
Most of the code was already in place to support this feature.
Previously the code was trying to accept encoded 8-bit float
constants for the vmov.f32/vmov.f64 instructions. It looks like the
support for parsing encoded floats was lost in a refactoring in
commit r148556 and we did not have any tests in place to catch it.
The change in this commit is to keep the parsed value as a 32-bit
float instead of a 64-bit double because that is what the isFPImm()
function expects to find. There is no loss of precision by using a
32-bit float here because we are still limited to an 8-bit encoded
value in the end.
Additionally, we explicitly reject encoded 8-bit floats for
vmovf.32/64. This is the same as the current behavior, but we now do
it explicitly rather than accidently.
llvm-svn: 198697