The order in which GCOV file info is printed depends on the string hash
function. This makes some GCOV tests brittle, because the tests must be
updated whenever the hash function changes.
Sort the filenames before printing out the file info to solve the
problem. This should be relatively cheap.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32512
llvm-svn: 301371
Until now, when a path in a gcno file included a directory, we would
emit our .gcov file in that directory, whereas gcov always emits the
file in the current directory. In doing so, this implements gcov's
strange name-mangling -p flag, which is needed to avoid clobbering
files when two with the same name exist in different directories.
The path mangling is a bit ugly and only handles unix-like paths, but
it's simple, and it doesn't make any guesses as to how it should
behave outside of what gcov documents. If we decide this should be
cross platform later, we can consider the compatibility implications
then.
llvm-svn: 200754
File summaries will now be optionally outputted which will give line,
branching and call coverage info. Unfortunately, clang's current
instrumentation does not give enough information to deduce function
calls, something that gcc is able to do. Thus, no calls are always
outputted to be consistent with gcov output.
Also updated tests.
llvm-svn: 197606