- added detection of libdevice bitcode file and API to find one appropriate for the GPU we're compiling for.
- pass additional cc1 options for linking with detected libdevice bitcode
- added -nocudalib to prevent automatic linking with libdevice
- added test cases to verify new functionality
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14556
llvm-svn: 253387
Last time, this caused two Windows buildbots and a single ARM buildbot to fail.
I XFAIL'd the failing test on win32,win64 machines in order to see if the ARM
buildbot complains again.
llvm-svn: 252901
The original commit in r249137 added the mips-mti-linux toolchain. However,
the newly added tests of that commit failed in few buildbots. This commit
re-applies the original changes but XFAILs the test file which caused
the buildbot failures. This will allow us to examine what's going wrong
without having to commit/revert large changes.
llvm-svn: 251633
There was a minor problem with a test. Sorry for the noise yesterday.
This patch adds missing pieces to clang, including the PS4 toolchain
definition, added warnings, PS4 defaults, and Driver changes needed for
our compiler.
A patch by Filipe Cabecinhas, Pierre Gousseau and Katya Romanova!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13482
llvm-svn: 250293
Resubmitting the patch.
This patch adds missing pieces to clang, including the PS4 toolchain
definition, added warnings, PS4 defaults, and Driver changes needed for
our compiler.
A patch by Filipe Cabecinhas, Pierre Gousseau and Katya Romanova!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13482
llvm-svn: 250262
definition, added warnings, PS4 defaults, and Driver changes needed for
our compiler.
A patch by Filipe Cabecinhas, Pierre Gousseau and Katya Romanova!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13482
llvm-svn: 250252
r249137 added support for the new mips-mti-linux toolchain. However,
the new tests of that commit, broke some buildbots because they didn't use
the correct regular expressions to capture the filename of Clang & LLD.
This commit re-applies the changes of r249137 and fixes the tests in
r249137 in order to match the filenames of the Clang and LLD executable.
llvm-svn: 249294
Summary:
This new toolchain uses primarily LLVM-based tools, eg. compiler-rt, lld,
libcxx, etc. Because of this, it doesn't require neither an existing GCC
installation nor a GNU environment. Ideally, in a follow-up patch we
would like to add a new --{llvm|clang}-toolchain option (similar to
--gcc-toolchain) in order to allow the use of this toolchain with
independent Clang builds. For the time being, we use the --sysroot
option just to test the correctness of the paths generated by the
driver.
Reviewers: atanasyan, dsanders, rsmith
Subscribers: jfb, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, dschuff, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13340
llvm-svn: 249137
definition, added warnings, PS4 defaults, and Driver changes needed for
our compiler.
A patch by Filipe Cabecinhas, Pierre Gousseau and Katya Romanova!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11279
llvm-svn: 248546
Added new option --cuda-path=<path> which allows
overriding default search paths.
If it's not specified we look for CUDA installation in
/usr/include/cuda and /usr/include/cuda-7.0.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12989
llvm-svn: 248433
Added new option --cuda-path=<path> which allows
overriding default search paths.
If it's not specified we look for CUDA installation in
/usr/include/cuda and /usr/include/cuda-7.0.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12989
llvm-svn: 248408
Summary:
Do not include default sanitizer blacklists into -M/-MM/-MD/-MMD output.
Introduce a frontend option -fdepfile-entry, and only insert them
for the user-defined sanitizer blacklists. In frontend, grab ExtraDeps
from -fdepfile-entry, instead of -fsanitize-blacklist.
Reviewers: rsmith, pcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12544
llvm-svn: 246700
This patch refactors the code to use the GCC installation detector
(modified so that it works in Solaris), and uses
ToolChain::GetFilePath everywhere once it works.
Patch by Xan López <xan@igalia.com>!
llvm-svn: 246473
Summary:
When we want to use mingw-w64 and clang with compiler-rt we should not
need to have libgcc installed. This fixes finding includes when libgcc
is not installed
Reviewers: yaron.keren
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11808
llvm-svn: 244902
Address Richard Smith comments: remove the trailing seperator from the Arch
variable, implement six mingw_* trees under tools/clangtest/Driver/Inputs
and merge linux and Windows tests into a universal test that uses these trees.
llvm-svn: 243098
Adds tests verifying the proper dirs are found in the Debian 8/GCC4.9
layout for sparc (32bit), sparc (32bit) with lib64 multilib, and
sparc64.
The test cases added here also cover r239047, which fixed the linker
paths.
llvm-svn: 239154
For now tsan_cxx and msan_cxx contain only operator new/delete
replacements. In the future, when we add support for running UBSan+TSan
and UBSan+MSan, they will also contain bits ubsan_cxx runtime.
llvm-svn: 235924
Add a fake linker in to a sysroot to use for testing the driver's tool
invocation. Should make the test behave similarly on all platforms. Addresses
review comments from Reid Kleckner from SVN r220546.
llvm-svn: 220625
Patch by Rafael Auler!
This patch addresses PR15171 and teaches Clang how to call other tools
with response files, when the command line exceeds system limits. This
is a problem for Windows systems, whose maximum command-line length is
32kb.
I introduce the concept of "response file support" for each Tool object.
A given Tool may have full support for response files (e.g. MSVC's
link.exe) or only support file names inside response files, but no flags
(e.g. Apple's ld64, as commented in PR15171), or no support at all (the
default case). Therefore, if you implement a toolchain in the clang
driver and you want clang to be able to use response files in your
tools, you must override a method (getReponseFileSupport()) to tell so.
I designed it to support different kinds of tools and
internationalisation needs:
- VS response files ( UTF-16 )
- GNU tools ( uses system's current code page, windows' legacy intl.
support, with escaped backslashes. On unix, fallback to UTF-8 )
- Clang itself ( UTF-16 on windows, UTF-8 on unix )
- ld64 response files ( only a limited file list, UTF-8 on unix )
With this design, I was able to test input file names with spaces and
international characters for Windows. When the linker input is large
enough, it creates a response file with the correct encoding. On a Mac,
to test ld64, I temporarily changed Clang's behavior to always use
response files regardless of the command size limit (avoiding using huge
command line inputs). I tested clang with the LLVM test suite (compiling
benchmarks) and it did fine.
Test Plan: A LIT test that tests proper response files support. This is
tricky, since, for Unix systems, we need a 2MB response file, otherwise
Clang will simply use regular arguments instead of a response file. To
do this, my LIT test generate the file on the fly by cloning many -DTEST
parameters until we have a 2MB file. I found out that processing 2MB of
arguments is pretty slow, it takes 1 minute using my notebook in a debug
build, or 10s in a Release build. Therefore, I also added "REQUIRES:
long_tests", so it will only run when the user wants to run long tests.
In the full discussion in
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20130408/171463.html,
Rafael Espindola discusses a proper way to test
llvm::sys::argumentsFitWithinSystemLimits(), and, there, Chandler
suggests to use 10 times the current system limit (20MB resp file), so
we guarantee that the system will always use response file, even if a
new linux comes up that can handle a few more bytes of arguments.
However, by testing with a 20MB resp file, the test takes long 8 minutes
just to perform a silly check to see if the driver will use a response
file. I found it to be unreasonable. Thus, I discarded this approach and
uses a 2MB response file, which should be enough.
Reviewers: asl, rafael, silvas
Reviewed By: silvas
Subscribers: silvas, rnk, thakis, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4897
llvm-svn: 217792
modern Debian-based distributions) due to on-going multiarch madness.
It appears that when the multiarch heeader search support went into the
clang driver, it went in in a quite bad state. The order of includes
completely failed to match the order exhibited by GCC, and in a specific
case -- when the GCC triple and the multiarch triple don't match as with
i686-linux-gnu and i386-linux-gnu -- we would absolutely fail to find
the libstdc++ target-specific header files.
I assume that folks who have been using Clang on Ubuntu 32-bit systems
have been applying weird patches to hack around this. I can't imagine
how else it could have worked. This was originally reported by a 64-bit
operating system user who had a 32-bit crosscompiler installed. We tried
to use that rather than the bi-arch support of the 64-bit compiler, but
failed due to the triple differences.
I've corrected all the wrong orderings in the existing tests and added
a specific test for the multiarch triple strings that are different in
a significant way. This should significantly improve the usability of
Clang when checked out vanilla from upstream onto Ubuntu machines with
an i686 GCC installation for whatever reason.
llvm-svn: 216531
This patch aims at fixing PR17239.
This bug happens because the /link (clang-cl.exe argument) is marked as
"consume all remaining arguments". However, when inside a response file,
/link should only consume all remaining arguments inside the response
file where it is located, not the entire command line after expansion.
The LLVM side of the patch will change the semantics of the
RemainingArgsClass kind to always consume only until the end of the
response file when the option originally came from a response file.
There are only two options in this class: dash dash (--) and /link.
This is the Clang side of the patch in http://reviews.llvm.org/D4899
Reviewered By: rafael, rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4900
Patch by Rafael Auler!
llvm-svn: 216281
of MIPS toolchains.
The uCLibc implemented for multiple architectures. A couple of MIPS toolchains
contains both uCLibc and glibc implementation so these options allow to select
used C library.
Initially -muclibc / -mglibc (as well as -mbionic) have been implemented in gcc
for various architectures so they are not MIPS specific.
llvm-svn: 215552
Summary:
* Support the multilib layout used by the mips-img-linux-gnu
* Recognize mips{,64}{,el}-img-linux-gnu as being aliases of mips-img-linux-gnu
* Use the correct dynamic linker for mips-img-linux-gnu
* Make mips32r6/mips64r6 the default CPU for mips-img-linux-gnu
Subscribers: mpf
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4436
llvm-svn: 212719
This commit implements the -fuse-ld= option, so that the user
can specify -fuse-ld=bfd to use ld.bfd.
This commit re-applies r194328 with some test case changes.
It seems that r194328 was breaking macosx or mingw build
because clang can't find ld.bfd or ld.gold in the given sysroot.
We should use -B to specify the executable search path instead.
Patch originally by David Chisnall.
llvm-svn: 211785