This reverts commit 640beb38e7.
That commit caused performance degradtion in Quicksilver test QS:sGPU and a functional test failure in (rocPRIM rocprim.device_segmented_radix_sort).
Reverting until we have a better solution to s_cselect_b64 codegen cleanup
Change-Id: Ibf8e397df94001f248fba609f072088a46abae08
Reviewed By: kzhuravl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115960
Change-Id: Id169459ce4dfffa857d5645a0af50b0063ce1105
`__cpp_lib_type_identity` was implemented way back in cf49ccd0 (Clang 8),
probably before the feature-test macro had been settled on.
`__cpp_lib_string_resize_and_overwrite` will be added by D113013 so I didn't add it here.
Fixes#46605.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116433
Some headers which require the version header depend on other headers to
provide it. Include the version header in all top-level headers to make
sure a header cleanup can't remove the version header.
Note this doesn't add the version header to the c headers.
Reviewed By: #libc, Quuxplusone, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116172
There is an ongoing CI outage with our Linux nodes, so I temporarily
set up a couple of nodes. These nodes will be much slower than the
usual ones and there's only a few of them, so I am temporarily disabling
most of our CI to keep things working.
The paths to the compiler and to the python executable may need to
be quoted (if they're installed into e.g. C:\Program Files).
All testing commands that are executed expect a gcc compatible command
line interface, while clang-cl uses different command line options.
In the original testing config, if the chosen compiler was clang-cl, it
was replaced with clang++ by looking for such an executable in the path.
For the new from-scratch test configs, I instead chose to add
"--driver-mode=g++" to flags - invoking "clang-cl --driver-mode=g++"
has the same effect as invoking "clang++", without needing to run any
heuristics for picking a different compiler executable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111202
While there's little value in polishing the old config system,
I ran into this function and was confused for a while, while grepping
around and trying to wrap my head around things.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116131
If %{exec} sets "--env PATH=single-dir", the directory containing
bash and related shell utils is omitted from the path, which means
that most shell scripts would fail.
(Setting PATH is needed for DLL builds on Windows; PATH fills the same
role as e.g. LD_LIBRARY_PATH on Linux.)
This condition is missed in the current test, because the executor
run.py first resolves the executable to run using the original path,
then invokes that executable with an environment with a restricted
path. Thus the executor is able to run bash, but that bash is then
unable to run further shell commands (other than bash builtins).
Extend the test from "bash --version" to "bash -c 'bash --version'".
This correctly identifies the executor-has-no-bash condition in the
current Windows CI configs, allowing removing 6 cases of
LIBCXX-WINDOWS-FIXME.
Another longterm fix would be to extend run.py with an option like
"--env-prepend PATH=dir", to allow keeping the current path while
adding a directory to it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116117
This is similar to the existing setting LIBCXX_ABI_DEFINES, with
the difference that this also allows setting other defines than
ones that start with "_LIBCPP_ABI_", and allows setting defines
to a specific value.
This allows avoiding using LIBCXX_TEST_COMPILER_FLAGS in two
CI configurations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116109
We can't just memoize _supportsVerify in place in format.py, as it
previously was executed in each of the individual processes.
Instead use hasCompileFlag() and add a feature flag for it instead,
which can be used both by tests (that already have such a flag,
locally for one set of tests) and for the testing framework itself.
By using hasCompileFlag(), this also implicitly fixes two other issues:
Previously, _supportsVerify called subprocess.call() directly, which can
interpret command line quoting differently than lit.TestRunner.
(In particular, TestRunner handles arguments quoted by a single quote,
while launching Windows processes with subprocess.call() only supports
double quotes. This allows using shlex.quote(), which uses single quotes,
everywhere - as all commands now go through TestRunner. This should make
41d7909368 redundant.)
Secondly, the old _supportsVerify method didn't include %{flags) or
%{compile_flags}.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116010
When run in a git bash terminal, sys.stderr isn't flushed implicitly
after printing each line. Manually flush it after each printout,
to avoid getting broken/misordered output.
A similar fix had been done in the old libcxx test config, committed
as part of 7e3ee09ad2 / D28725; this
generalizes the fix, making it available in the new libcxx test
configs too, and for any other test that uses lit_config.note().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115761
A few tests in the test suite require support for Bash. For example,
tests that run a program and send data through stdin to it require some
way of piping the data in, and we use a Bash script for that.
However, some executors (e.g. an embedded systems simulator) do not
support Bash, so these tests will fail. This commit adds a Lit feature
that tries to detect whether Bash is available through conventional
means, and disables the tests that require it otherwise.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114612
There's a lot of history behind this, so here's a summary:
1. I stopped forcing -fPIC when building the runtimes in 30f305efe2,
before the LLVM 9 release back in 2019.
2. Someone complained that libc++.a couldn't be used in shared libraries
built without -fPIC (http://llvm.org/PR43604) since the LLVM 9 release.
This had been caused by my removal of -fPIC when building libc++.a in (1).
3. I suggested two ways of fixing the issue, the first being to force
-fPIC back unconditionally (http://llvm.org/D104328), and the second
being to specify that option explicitly when building the LLVM release
(http://llvm.org/D104327). We converged on the first solution.
4. I landed D104328, which forced building the runtimes with -fPIC.
This was included in the LLVM 13.0 release.
5. People complained about that and requested that we be able to
customize this setting (basically we should have done the second
solution).
This patch makes it such that the LLVM release script will specifically
ask for building with -fPIC using CMAKE_POSITION_INDEPENDENT_CODE,
however by default the runtimes will not force that option onto users.
This patch has the unintended effect that Clang and the LLVM libraries
(not only the runtime ones like libc++) will also be built with -fPIC
in the release. It would be better if we could specify that -fPIC is to
be used only when building the runtimes, however this is left as a
future improvement. The release should probably be using a bootstrapping
build and passing those options to the stage that builds the runtimes
only, see https://reviews.llvm.org/D112748 for that change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110261
This has been supported on gdb for something like ~10 years, so doesn't
seem necessary to carry a fallback.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114986
Seems better to rely on the existing formatting, makes the output
smaller/simpler - this is consistent with libstdc++'s std::string_view
pretty printing too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113244
This patch removes the ability to build the runtimes in the 32 bit
multilib configuration, i.e. using -m32. Instead of doing this, one
should cross-compile the runtimes for the appropriate target triple,
like we do for all other triples.
As it stands, -m32 has several issues, which all seem to be related to
the fact that it's not well supported by the operating systems that
libc++ support. The simplest path towards fixing this is to remove
support for the configuration, which is also the best course of action
if there is little interest for keeping that configuration. If there
is a desire to keep this configuration around, we'll need to do some
work to figure out the underlying issues and fix them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114473
This removes the `format_args_t` from `<format>` and adjusts the type of
the `format_args` for the `vformat_to` overloads.
The `format_context` uses a `back_insert_iterator<string>` therefore the
new `output_iterator` function uses a `string` as its temporary storage
buffer. This isn't ideal. The next patches in this series will improve
this. These improvements make it easy to also improve `format_to_n` and
`formatted_size`.
This addresses P2216 `6. Binary size`.
P2216 `5. Compile-time checks` are not part of this change.
Implements parts of:
- P2216 std::format improvements
Depends on D103670
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110494
Instead of silently swallowing errors that happen during Lit configuration
(for example trying to obtain compiler macros but compiling fails), raise
an exception with some amount of helpful information.
This should avoid the possibility of silently configuring Lit in a bogus
way, and also provides more helpful information when things fail.
Note that this requires a bit more finesse around how we handle some
failing configuration checks that we would previously return None for.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114010
When testing with sanitizers enabled, we need to link against a plethora
of system libraries. Using `-nodefaultlibs` like we used to breaks this,
and we would have to add all these system libraries manually, which is
not portable and error prone. Instead, stop using `-nodefaultlibs` so
that we get the libraries added by default by the compiler.
The only caveat with this approach is that we are now relying on the
fact that `-L <path-to-local-libunwind>` will cause the just built
libunwind to be selected before the system implementation (either of
libunwind or libgcc_s.so), which is somewhat fragile.
This patch also turns the 32 bit multilib build into a soft failure
since we are in the process of removing it anyway, see D114473 for
details. This patch is incompatible with the 32 bit multilib build
because Ubuntu does not provide a proper libstdc++ for 32 bits, and
that is required when running with sanitizers enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114385
Instead of having ad-hoc cleanup in various places, handle all creation
and removal of temporary files and directories inside _makeConfigTest.
As a fly-by, also remove testPrefix since we don't keep any source file
around anymore. Setting a prefix for the files is hence not useful anymore.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114390
At this point, every supported compiler that claims a -std=c++17 mode
should also support these features.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113436
We would have been defining it in <utility> instead of <charconv>. For
the time being, this doesn't change anything since we don't implement
the feature test macro anyways.
Also, as a fly-by, this removes obsolete feature test macro tests. There
was a brief time back in the days when we wrote feature test macro tests
manually. In particular, we had test files for __cpp_lib_to_chars and
__cpp_lib_memory_resource. Since we now have a principled way of generating
these tests with scripts, this commit removes the obsolete (and empty)
tests for these two feature test macros.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114243
We never noticed it because our CI doesn't actually build against a C
library that doesn't have threading functionality, however building
against a truly thread-free platform surfaces these issues.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114242
std::atomic is, for the most part, just a thin veneer on top of compiler
builtins. Hence, it should be available even when threads are not available
on the system, and in fact there has been requests for such support.
This patch:
- Moves __libcpp_thread_poll_with_backoff to its own header so it can
be used in <atomic> when threads are disabled.
- Adds a dummy backoff policy for atomic polling that doesn't know about
threads.
- Adjusts the <atomic> feature-test macros so they are provided even when
threads are disabled.
- Runs the <atomic> tests when threads are disabled.
rdar://77873569
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114109
Mention support for MinGW in the docs. Rename the existing windows
CI jobs to Clang-cl, as both Clang-cl and MinGW are equally much
"Windows", just different toolchain environments.
Add an XFAIL for a recently added test that fails in the MinGW DLL
configuration (with an explanation of what's causing the failure).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112215
This reverts commit e7568b68da and relands
c6f7b720ec.
The culprit was: missed that libc also had a dependency on one of the
copies of `google-benchmark`
Also opportunistically fixed indentation from prev. change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112012
under third-party
This change:
- moves the libcxx copy of `google/benchmark` to
`third-party/benchmkark`
- points the 2 uses of the library (libcxx and llvm/utils) to this copy
We picked the licxx copy because it is the most up to date.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112012
Since coroutine is merged in C++ standard and the support for coroutine
seems relatively stable. It's the time to move the implementation of
coroutine out of the experimental directory and the std::experimental
namespace. This patch creates header <coroutine> with conformed
implementation with C++ standard. To avoid breaking user's code too
fast, the <experimental/coroutine> header is remained. Note that
<experimental/coroutine> is deprecated and it would be removed in
LLVM15.
Reviewed By: Quuxplusone, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109433
We don't use Python 2 anymore, so let us do the recommended fix instead
of using the workaround made for Python 2.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107715
We are trying to remove duplication of third-party code in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D112012, which will move the Google
Benchmark code outside of the `libcxx/` directory. That breaks
running the benchmarks in the Standalone build. Since we have
deprecated the Standalone build anyway, this patch just removes
support for the benchmark in Standalone mode until we remove that
mode entirely.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113503
Instead of hard-coding the target for our CI nodes, use the default
compiler triple. Also, allow building compiler-rt for the single
specified triple in case we're running on Darwin (otherwise, the
bootstrapping build complains).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113683
and to the new `runtimes` top level CMakeLists.txt since the old path is now deprecated. This requires a slight adjustment of the libcxxabi CMake, since there are required macro definitions we previously got via the `llvm/CMakeList.txt` path.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, #libc_abi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113403
At this point, every supported compiler that claims a -std=c++17 mode
should also support `if constexpr`. This was an issue for GCC 5
and GCC 6, but hasn't been an issue since GCC 7. (Our current
minimum supported GCC version, IIUC, is GCC 10 or 11.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113348
This changes adds the pipeline config for both 32-bit and 64-bit AIX targets. As well, we add a lit feature `LIBCXX-AIX-FIXME` which is used to mark the failing tests which remain to be investigated on AIX, so that the CI produces a clean build.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111359
[NFC] This patch fixes URLs containing "master". Old URLs were either broken or
redirecting to the new URL.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113186
Per our support plan we should now support Clang 12 and 13. Adjust the
documentation and the CI runners. The change indirectly moves the main
CI runners to use the Clang 14 nightly builds.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112360
`utils/generate_feature_test_macro_components.py` uses the wrong
indentation. `:name: feature-status-table :widths: auto` is rendered as
text instead of being used by Sphinx to render the table properly.
This fixes the identation in the souce and updates the generated output.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112251
This temporary FIXME really belongs to the testing config, not to the
specific CMake cache that enables that configuration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112031
Running tests for libunwind is a lot simpler than running tests for
libc++, so a simple Lit config file is sufficient. The benefit is that
we disentangle the libunwind test configuration from the libc++ and
libc++abi test configuration. The setup was too complicated, which led
to some bugs (notably we were running against the system libunwind on
Apple platforms).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111664
This commit makes the new "runtimes" build (with <monorepo>/runtimes as
the root of the CMake invocation) the default way of building libc++.
The other supported way of building libc++ is the "bootstrapping" build,
where `<monorepo>/llvm` is used as the root of the CMake invocation.
All other ways of building libc++ are deprecated effective immediately.
There should be no use-case for building libc++ that isn't supported by
one of these two builds, and the two new builds work on all environments
and are lightweight. They will also make it possible to greatly simplify
the build infrastructure of the runtimes, which is currently way too
convoluted.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111356
That script is what we (need to) use to build libc++ for the system
configuration, so that's what we should test against. At some point
we may be able to fold all of that logic into the CMake build, and
when that happens the CI can go back to running CMake directly.
As a fly-by fix, stop mentioning x86_64 in the names of the Apple
jobs since they are not truly tied to any architecture.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111865
This initial change adds the AIX configuration to run-buildbot, an AIX
CMake cache file, and appropriate compiler and linker flags for testing
AIX to the lit "from scratch" configuration files. Either of the 32-bit or 64-bit configurations
can be built by setting `OBJECT_MODE` in the build environment (as is
typical for AIX).
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, #libc_abi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111244
I came across an issue where since we build the library for Apple with
the install name directory being /usr/lib, which means that if we don't
run the tests with DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH, we'll end up loading the
system-provided libc++abi when running the tests. That wreaks havoc.
Instead of fixing it in the legacy config file, this commit introduces
an Apple libc++abi config file that does the right thing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111279
Some embedded platforms do not wish to support the C library functionality
for handling wchar_t because they have no use for it. It makes sense for
libc++ to work properly on those platforms, so this commit adds a carve-out
of functionality for wchar_t.
Unfortunately, unlike some other carve-outs (e.g. random device), this
patch touches several parts of the library. However, despite the wide
impact of this patch, I still think it is important to support this
configuration since it makes it much simpler to port libc++ to some
embedded platforms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111265
It is not used anywhere anymore since we're using the new runtimes build
in <monorepo>/runtimes now, so we can remove all traces of this build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111351
When we recently started using DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH to run the test suite
on the Apple/System configuration of the library, the -fno-exceptions
variant started failing.
It started failing because under that configuration, libc++abi.dylib
doesn't provide support for exceptions. For example, it doesn't provide
some symbols such as ___gxx_personality_v0. Now, the problem is that
when the test suite is run with DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH, /usr/lib/libobjc.dylib
uses the just-built libc++abi.dylib, which doesn't support exceptions,
and we end up with an unresolved reference to ___gxx_personality_v0.
Previously, using -Wl,-rpath,path/to/lib, we would be loading both
/usr/lib/libc++abi.dylib and <just-built>/lib/libc++abi.dylib.
/usr/lib/libobjc.dylib would use the system libc++abi.dylib, which
contains support for exceptions, and the tests would be using the
just-built one, which doesn't.
Disentangling that led me to believe that we shouldn't try to test this
configuration where libc++/libc++abi are built as system libraries, but
where they don't support exceptions, since that just doesn't make any
sense. Doing so is like trying to build libc++/libc++abi and test it as
a system library after performing an ABI break -- of course nothing is
going to work.
For that reason, I am removing this configuration. Note that we could
still test the library on macOS without exceptions if we wanted, only
we wouldn't be building it as a system library. This patch doesn't add
that because we already have a -fno-exceptions CI job on Linux.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111349
Vendors take libc++ and ship it in various ways. Some vendors might
ship it differently from what upstream LLVM does, i.e. the install
location might be different, some ABI properties might differ, etc.
In the past few years, I've come across several instances where
having a place to test some of these properties would have been
incredibly useful. I also just got bitten by the lack of tests
of that kind, so I'm adding some now.
The tests added by this commit for Apple platforms have numerous
TODOs that capture discrepancies between the upstream LLVM CMake
and the slightly-modified build we perform internally to produce
Apple's system libc++. In the future, the goal would be to upstream
all those differences so that it's possible to build a faithful
Apple system libc++ with the upstream LLVM sources only.
But this isn't only useful for Apple - this lays out the path for
any vendor being able to add their own checks (either upstream or
downstream) to libc++.
This is a re-application of 9892d1644f, which was reverted in 138dc27186
because it broke the build. The issue was that we didn't apply the required
changes to libunwind and our CI didn't notice it because we were not
running the libunwind tests. This has been fixed now, and we're running
the libunwind tests in CI now too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110736
Reduce code duplication by sharing most of the test suite setup across
the different from-scratch configs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111196
We should arguably have always been doing that. The state of libunwind
is quite sad, so this commit adds several XFAILs to make the CI pass.
We need to investigate why so many tests are not passing in some
configurations, but I'll defer that to folks who actually work on
libunwind for lack of bandwidth.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110872
This is to simplify an upcoming change where we distinguish between
flavors of libc++ by adding an apple-libc++ Lit feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110870
This reverts part of commit b82683b2eb.
I hadn't intended to remove the `// -*- C++ -*-` comment line
from `libcxx/include/version`, only from the generated tests.
Thanks to Raul Tambre for the catch.
Even if these comments have a benefit in .h files (for editors that
care about language but can't be configured to treat .h as C++ code),
they certainly have no benefit for files with the .cpp extension.
Discussed in D110794.
This reverts commit 9f641c96cb.
The "python" command in gdb uses the python gdb is linked to,
not what "python" would give you if you used it directly in the shell.
As of e9564c3698, libcxx/gdb/gdb_pretty_printer_test.sh.cpp
fails locally for me because the REQUIRES check for host-has-gdb-with-python
uses python, which for me expands to python 2.7.18. This failure does not seem
to be caught on any upstream builders, potentially because they don't have gdb,
python, or a version of python that makes the test UNSUPPORTED (like python3).
This updates the check to use the python specified by the build (which should
be the python that runs this code), rather than just python.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110887
Apple's libc++ has a few differences with the LLVM libc++, and it is
necessary to use a custom configuration file to test it properly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110777
To reduce confusion, this commit makes sure that the name of the testing
configurations match the convention used for the stdlib= Lit parameter,
since those effectively correspond to each other.
Vendors take libc++ and ship it in various ways. Some vendors might
ship it differently from what upstream LLVM does, i.e. the install
location might be different, some ABI properties might differ, etc.
In the past few years, I've come across several instances where
having a place to test some of these properties would have been
incredibly useful. I also just got bitten by the lack of tests
of that kind, so I'm adding some now.
The tests added by this commit for Apple platforms have numerous
TODOs that capture discrepancies between the upstream LLVM CMake
and the slightly-modified build we perform internally to produce
Apple's system libc++. In the future, the goal would be to upstream
all those differences so that it's possible to build a faithful
Apple system libc++ with the upstream LLVM sources only.
But this isn't only useful for Apple - this lays out the path for
any vendor being able to add their own checks (either upstream or
downstream) to libc++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110736
The Runtimes build is by far our longest CI configuration, so it makes
sense to run it earlier during CI. For consistency, move all the other
jobs from that "section" too.
Before this patch, we had features named 'libc++', 'libstdc++' and
'msvc' to describe the three implementations that use our test suite.
This patch renames them to 'stdlib=libc++', 'stdlib=libstdc++', etc
to avoid confusion between MSVC's STL and the MSVC compiler (or Clang
in MSVC mode).
Furthermore, this prepares the terrain for adding support for additional
"implementations" to the test suite. Basically, I'd like to be able to
treat Apple's libc++ differently from LLVM's libc++ for the purpose of
testing, because those effectively behave in different ways in some aspects.
This reverts commit 0c2a454845.
This was my mistake. When gdb can find its data directory it'll
import it automatically. If it can't (like when you're using a
version from a build folder) you need to give it the data
directory path.
We're safe to assume gdb is installed for testing purposes
so it'll import it for us.
I found this after upgrading from Ubuntu bionic (gdb 8.1.1) to
Focal (gdb 9.2). (where this test fails, but that's for a
different patch)
9.2 allows you to set breakpoint commands from
Python, which was added in 8.3.
(bintutils a913fffbdee21fdd50e8de0596358be425775678
"Allow breakpoint commands to be set from Python")
The reason this test never failed before was because it did so
silently. "source <python file>" doesn't fail even if that script
raises an Exception.
To fix this extend the gdb lit feature to check that:
* gdb exists
* has Python support
* allows you to set breakpoint commands
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110334
Once all the bots are passing with from-scratch configs, we can attempt
to make the from-scratch config the default configuration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103417
It was added after we changed the way the CI jobs are run, in particular
how they are pinned down to Linux instances only. As a result, the job
would sometimes run on Mac machines, which we're trying to keep only for
jobs that absolutely need it due to capacity concerns.
The target platform could differ from the host platform for the cross
platform builds. Some tests are depended on the build host features and
they need to determine a proper platform environment.
This commit adds a build host platform name feature for the libc++ tests
in format `buildhost=<platform>`, such as `buildhost=linux`, `buildhost=darwin`,
`buildhost=windows`, etc.
The Windows host gets two features: one `buildhost=windows` and another based
on Windows "sub-system", such as `buildhost=win32`, `buildhost=cygwin`, etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102045
This option is used to select between the format headers output column
width option. This option should be independent of the locale setting.
It's encouraged to default to Unicode unless the platform doesn't offer
that option.
[format.string.std]/10
```
For the purposes of width computation, a string is assumed to be in a
locale-independent, implementation-defined encoding. Implementations
should use a Unicode encoding on platforms capable of displaying Unicode
```
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne, vitaut
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103379
Based on https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc, it appears that the CloudABI
project has been abandoned. This patch removes a bunch of CloudABI specific
logic that had been added to support that platform.
Note that some knobs like LIBCXX_ENABLE_STDIN and LIBCXX_ENABLE_STDOUT
coud be useful in their own right, however those are currently broken.
If we want to re-add such knobs in the future, we can do it like we've
done it for localization & friends so that we can officially support
that configuration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108637
All supported compilers have supported deduction guides in C++17 for a
while, so this isn't necessary anymore.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108213
This is a workaround until https://reviews.llvm.org/D81892 is merged
and the internal Lit shell stops conflating error output with normal
output. Without this, any program that writes to stderr will trip up
the programOutput function, because it will pick up the '# command stderr:'
string and think it's part of the command's stdout.
rdar://81056048
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107912
All supported compilers implement __builtin_addressof. Even MSVC implements
addressof as a simple call to __builtin_addressof, so it would work if we
were to port libc++ to that compiler.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107905
All supported compilers have implemented __has_unique_object_representations
for a while, so it's reasonable to remove the workaround.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107834
All supported compilers have been supporting __is_aggregate for a long
time now, so it's reasonable to remove this workaround.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107833
All supported compilers should support
_LIBCPP_HAS_NO_BUILTIN_IS_CONSTANT_EVALUATED so this can be removed.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107239
We just had a case where a build bot stalled in an infinite loop during
testing, and the whole pipeline got stuck. To avoid that from happening
in the future, use a timeout on BuildKite jobs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107765
Adds a new CMake option to disable the usage of incomplete headers.
These incomplete headers are not guaranteed to be ABI stable. This
option is intended to be used by vendors so they can avoid their users
from code that's not ready for production usage.
The option is enabled by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106763
Even though the standalone build is deprecated, some people are still
relying on it (including libc++ itself for some configurations). Setting
the target triple will ensure that the build and the test suite behaves
consistently in the standalone and normal builds.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106800
The Generated output CI job only tests for modified files. This job
should also fail the generated output contains new files.
It would be possible to test modified and untracked files in one
execution of `git ls-files`. However the diff is stored as an artifact
so the execution of `git diff` would still be required.
Discussion: Would it be better to do `git ls-files -om` and remove the
excution of
`! grep -q '^--- a' ${BUILD_DIR}/generated_output.patch || false` ?
(Obviously then the name `generated_output.untracked` should change to
something like `generated_output.status`)
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106534
The new testing configuration did not turn off #pragma system_header,
which means we were not seeing warnings in system headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106187
libc++ has started splicing standard library headers into much more
fine-grained content for maintainability. It's very likely that outdated
and naive tooling (some of which is outside of LLVM's scope) will
suggest users include things such as `<__algorithm/find.h>` instead of
`<algorithm>`, and Hyrum's law suggests that users will eventually begin
to rely on this without the help of tooling. As such, this commit
intends to protect users from themselves, by making it a hard error for
anyone outside of the standard library to include libc++ detail headers.
This is the first of four patches. Patch #2 will solve the problem for
pre-processor `#include`s; patches #3 and #4 will solve the problem for
`<__tree>` and `<__hash_table>` (since I've never touched the test cases
that are failing for these two, I want to split them out into their own
commits to be extra careful). Patch #5 will concern itself with
`<__threading_support>`, which intersects with libcxxabi (which I know
even less about).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105932
This configuration is interesting because GCC has a different level of
strictness for some C++ rules. In particular, it implements the older
standards more stringently than Clang, which can help find places where
we are non-conforming (especially in the test suite).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105936
The feature was always defined, which means that the two test cases
guarded by it were never run.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106062
As we automate more and more things in the library, it becomes useful for
contributors to have a single target for running all the automation as
part of their workflow. This commit adds a new `libcxx-generate-files`
target that should re-generate all the auto-generated files in the library.
As a fly-by, I also revamped the documentation on Contributing to account
for this new target and present it as a bullet list of things to check
before committing. I also added a few things that are often overlooked
to that list, such as updating the synopsis and the status files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106067
This is what ffccf96e90 should have enabled, however the symlink
in the Docker image was not pointing to the right compiler, so we were
testing with Clang 12 instead of ToT.
For reasons unknown, the build is now using compilers
from /usr/bin instead of /usr/local/bin which is where
we have our clang-12 aliases placed.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105704
It makes the most sense to test with Clang ToT by default since that's
exactly what we're trying to QA: that libc++ works with whatever compiler
we're going to release next.
The compiler support policy mentions that we support Clang 11 and 12, so
we should test those. We already test on Clang 12, but I'll add testers
for Clang 11 once the new Docker image is in use on all the builders.
This is the first of a few commits that update the CI to match the
recently officialized compiler support policy. I'm staging those
changes to try and keep the CI green at all times, accounting how
builders refresh their Docker image.
I'm not sure what that gains us, and it creates a problem when
trying to run the tests against libc++ with a custom install name
dir (e.g. /usr/lib), since the library that we link against (in
the build tree) will advertise itself as /usr/lib/libc++.dylib,
so we end up linking against the system dylib at runtime.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105499
This patch overhauls the documentation around building libc++
for vendors, and using libc++ for end-users. It also:
- Removes mention of the standalone build, which we've been trying to
get rid of for a long time.
- Removes mention of using a local ABI installation, which we don't do
and is documented as "not recommended".
- Removes mention of the separate libc++filesystem.a library, which isn't
relevant anymore since filesystem support is in the main library.
- Adds mention of the GDB pretty printers and how to use them.
This is necessary for from-scratch configurations to support the 32-bit
mode of the test suite.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105435
Now that Lit supports regular expressions inside XFAIL & friends, it is
much easier to write Lit annotations based on the triple.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104747
This is required to run the tests under any configuration that uses
additional_features using a from-scratch config. That is the case of
e.g. the Debug mode (which uses LIBCXX-DEBUG-FIXME) and the tests on
Windows.