uncovered.
This required manually correcting all of the incorrect main-module
headers I could find, and running the new llvm/utils/sort_includes.py
script over the files.
I also manually added quite a few missing headers that were uncovered by
shuffling the order or moving headers up to be main-module-headers.
llvm-svn: 169237
There were numerous issues here that were all entangled, and so I've
tried to do a general simplification of the logic.
1) The logic was mimicing actual GCC bugs, rather than "features". These
have been fixed in trunk GCC, and this fixes Clang as well. Notably,
the logic was always intended to be last-match-wins like any other
flag.
2) The logic for handling '-mdynamic-no-pic' was preposterously unclear.
It also allowed the use of this flag on non-Darwin platforms where it
has no actual meaning. Now this option is handled directly based on
tests of how llvm-gcc behaves, and it is only supported on Darwin.
3) The APIs for the Driver's ToolChains had the implementation ugliness
of dynamic-no-pic leaking through them. They also had the
implementation details of the LLVM relocation model flag names
leaking through.
4) The actual results of passing these flags was incorrect on Darwin in
many cases. For example, Darwin *always* uses PIC level 2 if it uses
in PIC level, and Darwin *always* uses PIC on 64-bit regardless of
the flags specified, including -fPIE. Darwin never compiles in PIE
mode, but it can *link* in PIE mode.
5) Also, PIC was not always being enabled even when PIE was. This isn't
a supported mode at all and may have caused some fallout in builds
with complex PIC and PIE interactions.
The result is (I hope) cleaner and clearer for readers. I've also left
comments and tests about some of the truly strage behavior that is
observed on Darwin platforms. We have no real testing of Windows
platforms and PIC, but I don't have the tools handy to figure that out.
Hopefully others can beef up our testing here.
Unfortunately, I can't test this for every platform. =/ If folks have
dependencies on these flags that aren't covered by tests, they may
break. I've audited and ensured that all the changes in behavior of the
existing tests are intentional and good. In particular I've tried to
make sure the Darwin behavior (which is more suprising than the Linux
behavior) also matches that of 'gcc' on my mac.
llvm-svn: 168297
The darwin change should be a nop since Triple::getArchTypeForDarwinArchName
doesn't know about amd64.
If things like amd64-mingw32 are to be rejected, we should print a error
earlier on instead of silently using the wrong abi.
Remove old comment that looks out of place, this is "in clang".
llvm-svn: 165368
FYI,
On VS10, %INCLUDE% contains;
(VS10)\VC\INCLUDE
(VS10)\VC\ATLMFC\INCLUDE
(SDK70A)\include
On VS11,
(VS11)\VC\INCLUDE
(VS11)\VC\ATLMFC\INCLUDE
(SDK80)\include\shared
(SDK80)\include\um
(SDK80)\include\winrt
FIXME: It may be enabled also on mingw.
llvm-svn: 152589
the new Objective-C NSArray/NSDictionary/NSNumber literal syntax.
This introduces a new library, libEdit, which provides a new way to support
migration of code that improves on the original ARC migrator. We now believe
that most of its functionality can be refactored into the existing libraries,
and thus this new library may shortly disappear.
llvm-svn: 152141
And remove HAVE_CLANG_CONFIG_H, now that the header is generated
in the autoconf build, too. (clang r149497 / llvm r149498)
Also include the config.h header after all other headers, per
the LLVM coding standards.
It also turns out WindowsToolChain.cpp wasn't using the config
header at all, so that include's just deleted now.
llvm-svn: 149504
driver based on discussions with Doug Gregor. There are several issues:
1) The patch was not reviewed prior to commit and there were review comments.
2) The design of the functionality (triple-prefixed tool invocation)
isn't the design we want for Clang going forward: it focuses on the
"user triple" rather than on the "toolchain triple", and forces that
bit of state into the API of every single toolchain instead of
handling it automatically in the common base classes.
3) The tests provided are not stable. They fail on a few Linux variants
(Gentoo among them) and on mingw32 and some other environments.
I *am* interested in the Clang driver being able to invoke
triple-prefixed tools, but we need to design that feature the right way.
This patch just extends the previous hack without fixing the underlying
problems with it. I'm working on a new design for this that I will mail
for review by tomorrow.
I am aware that this removes functionality that NetBSD relies on, but
this is ToT, not a release. This functionality hasn't been properly
designed, implemented, and tested yet. We can't "regress" until we get
something that really works, both with the immediate use cases and with
long term maintenance of the Clang driver.
For reference, the original commit log:
Keep track of the original target the user specified before
normalization. This used to be captured in DefaultTargetTriple and is
used for the (optional) $triple-$tool lookup for cross-compilation.
Do this properly by making it an attribute of the toolchain and use it
in combination with the computed triple as index for the toolchain
lookup.
llvm-svn: 149337
normalization. This used to be captured in DefaultTargetTriple and is
used for the (optional) $triple-$tool lookup for cross-compilation.
Do this properly by making it an attribute of the toolchain and use it
in combination with the computed triple as index for the toolchain
lookup.
llvm-svn: 149083
a HostInfo reference. Nothing about the HostInfo was used by any
toolchain except digging out the driver from it. This just makes that
a lot more direct. The change was accomplished entirely mechanically.
It's one step closer to removing the shim full of buggy copy/paste code
that is HostInfo.
llvm-svn: 148945
especially nice as the Windows toolchain needs the windows header files,
and has lots of platform specific hooks in it.
To facilitate the split, hoist a bunch of file-level static helpers into
class-level static helpers. Spiff up their doxygen comments while there
as they're now more likely to be looked up via docs.
Hopefully, this will be followed by further breaking apart of the
toolchain definitions. Most of the large and complex ones should likely
live on their own. I'm looking at you Darwin. ;]
llvm-svn: 146840