Summary:
When bugpoint attempts to find the other executables it needs to run,
such as `opt` or `clang`, it tries searching the user's PATH. However,
in many cases, the 'bugpoint' executable is part of an LLVM build, and
the 'opt' executable it's looking for is in that same directory.
Many LLVM tools handle this case by using the `Paths` parameter of
`llvm::sys::findProgramByName`, passing the parent path of the currently
running executable. Do this same thing for bugpoint. However, to
preserve the current behavior exactly, first search the user's PATH,
and then search for 'opt' in the directory containing 'bugpoint'.
Test Plan:
`check-llvm`. Many of the existing bugpoint tests no longer need to use the
`--opt-command` option as a result of these changes.
Reviewers: MatzeB, silvas, davide
Reviewed By: MatzeB, davide
Subscribers: davide, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54884
llvm-svn: 348734
If the tests don't use the in-tree opt, we're liable to see some silly
error messages due to the version mismatch (missing flags, etc).
llvm-svn: 324703
The LTO Internalize pass is hiding symbols needed by the bugpoint-passes
plug-in. We need to add a flag to control whether Internalize should be run.
This is a temporary workaround to make these tests pass in the meantime.
llvm-svn: 166239