Move character tests to gtest, according to reviews from revision
D97349. Create a new temporary directory parallel to old runtime
unittests directory to facilitate the transition. Once patches for all
tests have been accepted using GTest, the old directory may be removed.
The new directory is required because LLVM's CMake unit test
infrastructure requires that the test depends on all source files in
the `CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR` directory.
Reviewed By: awarzynski
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97403
Harmonize usage of LLVM components througout Flang.
Explicit LLVM Libs where used across several CMakeFIles, which led to
incompatibilities with LLVM shlibs.
Fortunately, the LLVM component system can be relied on to harmoniously handle
both cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87893
These tests aren't adding much value and consensus has been reached for
there removal.
For more context, please refer to discussion in this revision:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D87846
Summary:
This is the first patch implementing the new Flang driver as outlined in [1],
[2] & [3]. It creates Flang driver (`flang-new`) and Flang frontend driver
(`flang-new -fc1`). These will be renamed as `flang` and `flang -fc1` once the
current Flang throwaway driver, `flang`, can be replaced with `flang-new`.
Currently only 2 options are supported: `-help` and `--version`.
`flang-new` is implemented in terms of libclangDriver, defaulting the driver
mode to `FlangMode` (added to libclangDriver in [4]). This ensures that the
driver runs in Flang mode regardless of the name of the binary inferred from
argv[0].
The design of the new Flang compiler and frontend drivers is inspired by it
counterparts in Clang [3]. Currently, the new Flang compiler and frontend
drivers re-use Clang libraries: clangBasic, clangDriver and clangFrontend.
To identify Flang options, this patch adds FlangOption/FC1Option enums.
Driver::printHelp is updated so that `flang-new` prints only Flang options.
The new Flang driver is disabled by default. To enable it, set
`-DBUILD_FLANG_NEW_DRIVER=ON` when configuring CMake and add clang to
`LLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS` (e.g. -DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS=“clang;flang;mlir”).
[1] “RFC: new Flang driver - next steps”
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/flang-dev/2020-July/000470.html
[2] “RFC: Adding a fortran mode to the clang driver for flang”
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2019-June/062669.html
[3] “RFC: refactoring libclangDriver/libclangFrontend to share with Flang”
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2020-July/066393.html
[4] https://reviews.llvm.org/rG6bf55804924d5a1d902925ad080b1a2b57c5c75c
co-authored-by: Andrzej Warzynski <andrzej.warzynski@arm.com>
Reviewed By: richard.barton.arm, sameeranjoshi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86089
Summary:
As a corrollary, these tests are now run as part of the check-flang
target.
Reviewers: sscalpone
Subscribers: mgorny, delcypher, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83946
add_compile_options is more sensitive to its location in the file than add_definitions--it only takes effect for sources that are added after it. This updated patch ensures that the add_compile_options is done before adding any source files that depend on it.
Using add_definitions caused the flag to be passed to rc.exe on Windows and thus broke Windows builds.
After lots of follow-up fixes, there are still problems, such as
-Wno-suggest-override getting passed to the Windows Resource Compiler
because it was added with add_definitions in the CMake file.
Rather than piling on another fix, let's revert so this can be re-landed
when there's a proper fix.
This reverts commit 21c0b4c1e8.
This reverts commit 81d68ad27b.
This reverts commit a361aa5249.
This reverts commit fa42b7cf29.
This reverts commit 955f87f947.
This reverts commit 8b16e45f66.
This reverts commit 308a127a38.
This reverts commit 274b6b0c7a.
This reverts commit 1c7037a2a5.
In general all the basic functionality seems to work and removes some redundancy
and more complicated features in favor of borrowing infrastructure from LLVM
build configurations. Here's a quick summary of details and remaining issues:
* Testing has spanned Ubuntu 18.04 & 19.10, CentOS 7, RHEL 8, and
MacOS/darwin. Architectures include x86_64 and Arm. Without
access to Window nothing has been tested there yet.
* As we change file and directory naming schemes (i.e.,
capitalization) some odd things can occur on MacOS systems with
case preserving but not case senstive file system configurations.
Can be painful and certainly something to watch out for as any
any such changes continue.
* Testing infrastructure still needs to be tuned up and worked on.
Note that there do appear to be cases of some tests hanging (on
MacOS in particular). They appear unrelated to the build
process.
* Shared library configurations need testing (and probably fixing).
* Tested both standalone and 'in-mono repo' builds. Changes for
supporting the mono repo builds will require LLVM-level changes that
are straightforward when the time comes.
* The configuration contains a work-around for LLVM's C++ standard mode
passing down into Flang/F18 builds (i.e., LLVM CMake configuration would
force a -std=c++11 flag to show up in command line arguments. The
current configuration removes that automatically and is more strict in
following new CMake guidelines for enforcing C++17 mode across all the
CMake files.
* Cleaned up a lot of repetition in the command line arguments. It
is likely that more work is still needed to both allow for
customization and working around CMake defailts (or those
inherited from LLVM's configuration files). On some platforms agressive
optimization flags (e.g. -O3) can actually break builds due to the inlining
of templates in .cpp source files that then no longer are available for use
cases outside those source files (shows up as link errors). Sticking at -O2
appears to fix this. Currently this CMake configuration forces this in
release mode but at the cost of stomping on any CMake, or user customized,
settings for the release flags.
* Made the lit tests non-source directory dependent where appropriate. This is
done by configuring certain test shell files to refer to the correct paths
whether an in or out of tree build is being performed. These configured
files are output in the build directory. A %B substitution is introduced in
lit to refer to the build directory, mirroring the %S substitution for the
source directory, so that the tests can refer to the configured shell scripts.
Co-authored-by: David Truby <david.truby@arm.com>
Original-commit: flang-compiler/f18@d1c7184159
Reviewed-on: https://github.com/flang-compiler/f18/pull/1045
Some of the regression tests are C programs that act as test harnesses
for the compiler internals as opposed to being Fortran inputs to test
the compiler in action. The former style of tests are analog to LLVM's
unittests and will not use the lit framework.
Change-Id: I0ff10e23f66ff843e8fff4c35cfb6559b9dab762
Original-commit: flang-compiler/f18@2bfddbe8f8
Reviewed-on: https://github.com/flang-compiler/f18/pull/1027
Tree-same-pre-rewrite: false