*** to conform to clang-format’s LLVM style. This kind of mass change has
*** two obvious implications:
Firstly, merging this particular commit into a downstream fork may be a huge
effort. Alternatively, it may be worth merging all changes up to this commit,
performing the same reformatting operation locally, and then discarding the
merge for this particular commit. The commands used to accomplish this
reformatting were as follows (with current working directory as the root of
the repository):
find . \( -iname "*.c" -or -iname "*.cpp" -or -iname "*.h" -or -iname "*.mm" \) -exec clang-format -i {} +
find . -iname "*.py" -exec autopep8 --in-place --aggressive --aggressive {} + ;
The version of clang-format used was 3.9.0, and autopep8 was 1.2.4.
Secondly, “blame” style tools will generally point to this commit instead of
a meaningful prior commit. There are alternatives available that will attempt
to look through this change and find the appropriate prior commit. YMMV.
llvm-svn: 280751
Summary:
This does not yet give us a clean testsuite run but it does help with:
1. Actually building on linux
2. Run the testsuite with over 70% tests passing on linux.
Reviewers: tfiala, labath, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17182
llvm-svn: 260721
Python requires that Python.h is included before any std header. Not doing so
results in conflicts with standards macros such as `_XOPEN_SOURCE`. NFC.
llvm-svn: 250673
Now that I'm building Linux with clang, I'm seeing more clang warnings.
This fills in some extra fields missing in the final end-of-structure-array
marker.
llvm-svn: 211812
Bug fix for pr18841:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=18841
This change creates a stub Python readline.so module that does almost
nothing. Its whole purpose is to prevent Python from loading the real
module, something it does during the embedded Python interpreter's
initialization sequence (and way before lldb ever requests it within
embedded_interpreter.py).
On Ubuntu 12.04 and 13.10 x86_64, and in the Python 2.7.6 tree, the
stock Python readline module links against the GNU readline library.
This appears to be the case on all Pythons except where __APPLE__ is
defined. LLDB now requires linking against the libedit library.
Something about having both libedit.so and libreadline.so linked into
the same process space is causing the Python readline.so to trigger a
NULL memory access. I have put in a separate patch to python.org.
This suppression of embedded interpreter readline support can be
removed if at least any one of the following happens:
1. The stock python distribution accepts a patch similar to what I
submitted to Python 2.7.6's Modules/readline.c file.
2. The stock python distribution implements Modules/readline.c in
terms of libedit's readline compatibility mode (i.e. essentially
compiles it the way __APPLE__ compiles that module) under Linux.
3. a clean-room implementation of the python readline module is
implemented against libedit (either readline compatibility mode or
native libedit). This could be implemented within the readline.cpp
file that this change introduces. It cannot be a fork of python's
readline.c module due to llvm licensing.
The net effect of this change on Linux is that the embedded python's
readline support will not exist.
llvm-svn: 202243