lld/MachO/Driver.cpp and lld/MachO/SyntheticSections.cpp include
llvm/Config/config.h which doesn't exist when building standalone lld.
This patch replaces llvm/Config/config.h include with llvm/Config/llvm-config.h
just like it is in lld/ELF/Driver.cpp and HAVE_LIBXAR with LLVM_HAVE_LIXAR and
moves LLVM_HAVE_LIBXAR from config.h to llvm-config.h
Also it adds LLVM_HAVE_LIBXAR to LLVMConfig.cmake and links liblldMachO2.so
with XAR_LIB if LLVM_HAVE_LIBXAR is set.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102084
As a follow on to D96282, since bug point passes is built as a module the proper file extension to use is LLVM_PLUGIN_EXT, rather than SHLIBEXT. Using SHLIBEXT causes the tests to load a non-existent file on AIX. We also adjust the PluginsTest unittest to use LLVM_PLUGIN_EXT for similar reasons.
This change should hopefully make little difference to other platforms, since generally `SHLIBEXT=LTDL_SHLIB_EXT=CMAKE_SHARED_LIBRARY_SUFFIX` and `LLVM_PLUGIN_EXT=CMAKE_SHARED_LIBRARY_SUFFIX` on every platform except AIX.
Reviewed By: hubert.reinterpretcast
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101412
Visual Studios implementation of the C++ Standard Library does not use strerror to produce a message for std::error_code unlike other standard libraries such as libstdc++ or libc++ that might be used.
This patch adds a cmake script that through running a C++ program gets the error messages for the POSIX error codes and passes them onto lit through an optional config parameter.
If the config parameter is not set, or getting the messages failed, due to say a cross compiling configuration without an emulator, it will fall back to using pythons strerror functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98278
Multi-configuration generators (such as Visual Studio and Xcode) allow the specification of a build flavor at build time instead of config time, so the lit configuration files need to support that - and they do for the most part. There are several places that had one of two issues (or both!):
1) Paths had %(build_mode)s set up, but then not configured, resulting in values that would not work correctly e.g. D:/llvm-build/%(build_mode)s/bin/dsymutil.exe
2) Paths did not have %(build_mode)s set up, but instead contained $(Configuration) (which is the value for Visual Studio at configuration time, for Xcode they would have had the equivalent) e.g. "D:/llvm-build/$(Configuration)/lib".
This seems to indicate that we still have a lot of fragility in the configurations, but also that a number of these paths are never used (at least on Windows) since the errors appear to have been there a while.
This patch fixes the configurations and it has been tested with Ninja and Visual Studio to generate the correct paths. We should consider removing some of these settings altogether.
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96427
Summary:
When running a large test in LLVM_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_CHECKS=ON mode,
buildbot could hit timeout.
Disable the test when this mode is on.
Also disable it for debug so that the test won't hang for too long.
Reviewed By: hubert.reinterpretcast
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87794
This matches the changes made to handling of zlib done in 10b1b4a
where we rely on find_package and the imported target rather than
manually appending the library and include paths. The use of
LLVM_LIBXML2_ENABLED has been replaced by LLVM_ENABLE_LIBXML2
thus reducing the number of variables.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84563
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
This quietly disabled use of zlib on Windows even when building with
-DLLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB=FORCE_ON.
> Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
> to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
> HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
> set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
> zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
> the rest of the tooling.
>
> This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
> should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
This reverts commit 10b1b4a231a485f1711d576e6131f6755e008abe and follow-ups
64d99cc6abed78c00a2a7863b02ce54911a5264f and
f9fec0447e12da9e8cf4b628f6d45f4941e7d182.
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
This reverts commit 35edd704e0fda09e8e634515c0b451d4a8b6b914.
Revert the revert and extend the patch further to account for the use of
the `PYTHONINTERP_FOUND`.
This is primarily motivated by the desire to move from Python2 to
Python3. `PYTHON_EXECUTABLE` is ambiguous. This explicitly identifies
the python interpreter in use. Since the LLVM build seems to be able to
completed successfully with python3, use that across the build. The old
path aliases `PYTHON_EXECUTABLE` to be treated as Python3.
This reverts commit cd84bfb8142bc7ff3a07a188ffb809f1d86d1fd7. Although
this passed the CI in phabricator, some of the bots are missing python3
packages, revert it temporarily.
This is primarily motivated by the desire to move from Python2 to
Python3. `PYTHON_EXECUTABLE` is ambiguous. This explicitly identifies
the python interpreter in use. Since the LLVM build seems to be able to
completed successfully with python3, use that across the build. The old
path aliases `PYTHON_EXECUTABLE` to be treated as Python3.
I broke bots last week and tried a few things to fix them.
These were attempts that didn't help, so back them back out.
This reverts commit c7aff9a109b611e4954a3055061a8076b4baa385.
This reverts commit 8838d6d3566d940859fd26b20aed4cb57d490988.
This reverts commit e875ba1509955dc4b3512d820edecc0da26fa38d.
The problem on Windows was that the \b in "..\bin" was interpreted
as an escape sequence. Use r"" strings to prevent that.
This reverts commit ab11b9eefa16661017c2c7b3b34c46b069f43fb7,
with raw strings in the lit.site.cfg.py.in files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77184
Currently, all generated lit.site.cfg files contain absolute paths.
This makes it impossible to build on one machine, and then transfer the
build output to another machine for test execution. Being able to do
this is useful for several use cases:
1. When running tests on an ARM machine, it would be possible to build
on a fast x86 machine and then copy build artifacts over after building.
2. It allows running several test suites (clang, llvm, lld) on 3
different machines, reducing test time from sum(each test suite time) to
max(each test suite time).
This patch makes it possible to pass a list of variables that should be
relative in the generated lit.site.cfg.py file to
configure_lit_site_cfg(). The lit.site.cfg.py.in file needs to call
`path()` on these variables, so that the paths are converted to absolute
form at lit start time.
The testers would have to have an LLVM checkout at the same revision,
and the build dir would have to be at the same relative path as on the
builder.
This does not yet cover how to figure out which files to copy from the
builder machine to the tester machines. (One idea is to look at the
`--graphviz=test.dot` output and copy all inputs of the `check-llvm`
target.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77184
and follow-ups:
a2ca1c2d "build: disable zlib by default on Windows"
2181bf40 "[CMake] Link against ZLIB::ZLIB"
1079c68a "Attempt to fix ZLIB CMake logic on Windows"
This changed the output of llvm-config --system-libs, and more
importantly it broke stand-alone builds. Instead of piling on more fix
attempts, let's revert this to reduce the risk of more breakages.
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use `find_package` from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the `LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB`,
`HAVE_ZLIB`, `HAVE_ZLIB_H`. Furthermore, require zlib if `LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB` is
set to `YES`, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This restores 68a235d07f9e7049c7eb0c8091f37e385327ac28,
e6c7ed6d2164a0659fd9f6ee44f1375d301e3cad. The problem with the windows
bot is a need for clearing the cache.
This reverts commit 68a235d07f9e7049c7eb0c8091f37e385327ac28.
This commit broke the clang-x64-windows-msvc build bot and a follow-up
commit did not fix it. Reverting to fix the bot.
There's quite a lot of references to Polly in the LLVM CMake codebase. However
the registration pattern used by Polly could be useful to other external
projects: thanks to that mechanism it would be possible to develop LLVM
extension without touching the LLVM code base.
This patch has two effects:
1. Remove all code specific to Polly in the llvm/clang codebase, replaicing it
with a generic mechanism
2. Provide a generic mechanism to register compiler extensions.
A compiler extension is similar to a pass plugin, with the notable difference
that the compiler extension can be configured to be built dynamically (like
plugins) or statically (like regular passes).
As a result, people willing to add extra passes to clang/opt can do it using a
separate code repo, but still have their pass be linked in clang/opt as built-in
passes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61446
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use `find_package` from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the `LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB`,
`HAVE_ZLIB`, `HAVE_ZLIB_H`. Furthermore, require zlib if `LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB` is
set to `YES`, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
When a LLVM binary such as llvm-*-fuzzer is built with libc++, it has dependency on libc++. The path to find shared libraries specified in llvm-*-fuzzer is relative. As a result, these binaries cannot be copied to an arbitrary directory and launched from there. Changes in this patch add a LIT feature to indicate that libc++ is used to build and, based on the feature exclude test cases that test by copying llvm-*-fuzzer binaries to a directory.
Reviewers: hubert.reinterpretcast, dberris, amyk, jasonliu, EricWF
Reviewed By: hubert.reinterpretcast, amyk
Subscribers: javed.absar, jsji, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61265
llvm-svn: 360672
These were disabled in r246267 (back in 2015). I suspect that the Win32 issues
that caused them to be disabled at the time have been resovlved, but if not
we can disable them again while we sort those out.
llvm-svn: 354630
r291284 added a nice mechanism to consistently pass CMake on/off toggles to
lit. This change uses it for LLVM_LIBXML2_ENABLED too (which was added around
the same time and doesn't use the new system yet).
Also alphabetically sort the list passed to llvm_canonicalize_cmake_booleans()
in llvm/test/CMakeLists.txt.
No intended behavior change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56912
llvm-svn: 351615
llvm/tools sets LLVM_TOOL_LTO_BUILD to Off if LLVM_ENABLE_PIC=OFF, but that's
not visible in llvm/test.
r289662 added the llvm_tool_lto_build lit parameter, there the intent was to
use it with an explicit -DLLVM_TOOL_LTO_BUILD=OFF, which is visible globally.
On the review for that (D27739), a mild preference was expressed for using a
lit parameter over checking the existence of libLTO.dylib. Since that works
with the LLVM_ENABLE_PIC=OFF case too and since it matches what we do for the
gold plugin, switch to that approach.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56805
llvm-svn: 351515
Modifies lit to add a 'thread_support' feature that can be used in lit test
REQUIRES clauses. The thread_support flag is set if -DLLVM_ENABLE_THREADS=ON
and unset if -DLLVM_ENABLE_THREADS=OFF. The lit flag is used to disable the
multiple-compile-threads-basic.ll testcase when threading is disabled.
llvm-svn: 343122
It's always replaced with the same (short) static string, so just put that
there directly.
No intended behavior change.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D51357
llvm-svn: 341135
Its only two uses were removed in r311730.
Effectively reverts r304851 (but that code has removed around a bit since then).
https://reviews.llvm.org/D46619
clang side done in r331871.
llvm-svn: 331872
Detects whether we have the Python modules (pygments, yaml) required by
opt-viewer and hooks this up to REQUIRES.
This fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34129 (the lack of opt-viewer
testing).
It's also related to https://github.com/apple/swift/pull/12938 and the idea is
to expose LLVM_HAVE_OPT_VIEWER_MODULES to the Swift cmake.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40202
Fixes since the first commit:
1. Disable syntax highlighting as different versions of pygments generate
different HTML
2. Use llvm-cxxfilt from the build
llvm-svn: 319324