forked from OSchip/llvm-project
cfc1f6a6ee
If a file search involves a header map, suppress -Wnonportable-include-path. It's firing lots of false positives for framework authors internally, and it's not trivial to fix. Consider a framework called "Foo" with a main (installed) framework header "Foo/Foo.h". It's atypical for "Foo.h" to actually live inside a directory called "Foo" in the source repository. Instead, the build system generates a header map while building the framework. If Foo.h lives at the top-level of the source repository (common), and the git repo is called ssh://some.url/foo.git, then the header map will have something like: Foo/Foo.h -> /Users/myname/code/foo/Foo.h where "/Users/myname/code/foo" is the clone of ssh://some.url/foo.git. After #import <Foo/Foo.h>, the current implementation of -Wnonportable-include-path will falsely assume that Foo.h was found in a nonportable way, because of the name of the git clone (.../foo/Foo.h). However, that directory name was not involved in the header search at all. This commit adds an extra parameter to Preprocessor::LookupFile and HeaderSearch::LookupFile to track if the search used a header map, making it easy to suppress the warning. Longer term, once we find a way to avoid the false positive, we should turn the warning back on. rdar://problem/28863903 llvm-svn: 301592 |
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.. | ||
TestFramework.framework | ||
headermap-rel | ||
headermap-rel2 | ||
microsoft-header-search | ||
nonportable-hmaps |