CMake 3.6 introduced CMAKE_TRY_COMPILE_PLATFORM_VARIABLES, which solves
precisely the problem that necessitated init_user_prop, so we can switch
over whenever we bump our minimum CMake requirement.
llvm-svn: 352790
Some projects rely on using libraries from the Windows SDK with their
original casing, just with a lowercase extension. E.g. the WinSock2 lib
is named WS2_32.Lib in the Windows SDK, and we would previously only
create a ws2_32.lib symlink for it (i.e. all lowercase). Also create a
WS2_32.lib symlink (i.e. original casing with lowercase extension) to
cover users of this casing. As a drive-by fix, only create these
symlinks when they differ from the original name to reduce the amount of
noise in the library symlinks directory.
llvm-svn: 343832
macOS paths usually start with /Users, which clang-cl interprets as a
macro undefine, leading to pretty much everything failing to compile.
CMake should be taught to put a -- in its compilation rules for clang-cl
(and I've been meaning to submit that upstream for a while). In the
meantime, however, and to support older CMake versions, we can just
create a custom make rules override to fix the compilation rules.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41219
llvm-svn: 320785
Newer versions of CMake (I'm on 3.10, but I believe 3.9 behaves the same
way) attempt to query the system for information about the VS 2017
install. Unfortunately, this query fails on non-Windows systems:
cmake_host_system_information does not recognize <key> VS_15_DIR
CMake isn't going to find these system libraries on non-Windows anyway
(and we were previously silencing the resultant warnings in our
cross-compilation toolchain), so it makes sense to just omit the
attempted installation entirely on non-Windows.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41220
llvm-svn: 320724
When the Windows SDK is hosted on a case-sensitive filesystem (e.g. when
compiling on Linux and not using ciopfs), we can automatically generate
a VFS overlay for headers and symlinks for libraries.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41156
llvm-svn: 320657
When cross-compiling using clang-cl 5.0 (which is currently the latest
stable release of the compiler), the default MS compatibility level is
set to VS 2013, which is too low to build LLVM. Explicitly set the
compatibility level to VS 2017 to support cross-compiling LLVM for
Windows using clang-cl 5.0. This will be a no-op when using clang-cl 6.0
and above, where the default MS compatibility level is already VS 2017.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41157
llvm-svn: 320616
With this patch, you can now cross-compile for Windows
on non-Windows hosts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39814
This allows cross-compiling for windows on other platforms.
llvm-svn: 317830