This adds support for the /link option, which forwards
subsequent arguments to the linker.
The test for this will only work when targetting win32.
Since that's the only target where clang-cl makes sense,
use that target by default.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1388
llvm-svn: 188331
We used to decide whether to really vectorize depending on the optimization
level in PassManagerBuilder.
This patch moves this decision to the clang driver. We look at the optimization
level and whether the f(no-)vectorize is set and decide whether to vectorize.
This allows us to simplify the logic in PassManagerBuilder to just a check for
whether the vectorizer should run or not.
We now do the right thing for:
$ clang -O1 -fvectorize
$ clang -fno-vectorize -O3
llvm-svn: 188280
This patch adds -mmsa and -mno-msa to the options supported by
clang to enable and disable support for MSA.
When MSA is enabled, a predefined macro '__mips_msa' is defined to 1.
Patch by Daniel Sanders
llvm-svn: 188184
This option prints information about #included files to stderr. Clang could
already do it, this patch just teaches the existing code about the /showIncludes
style and adds the flag.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1333
llvm-svn: 188037
This reverts commit r187991 and adjusts the comment. /Za is much more
involved, and we don't want to give anyone the impression we actually
support it.
llvm-svn: 187998
'-fno-unroll-loops'. The option to the backend is even called
'DisableUnrollLoops'. This is precisely the form that Clang *didn't*
support. We didn't recognize the flag, we didn't pass it to the CC1
layer, and even if we did we wouldn't use it. Clang only inspected the
positive form of the flag, and only did so to enable loop unrolling when
the optimization level wasn't high enough. This only occurs for an
optimization level that even has a chance of running the loop unroller
when optimizing for size.
This commit wires up the 'no' variant, and switches the code to actually
follow the standard flag pattern of using the last flag and allowing
a flag in either direction to override the default.
I think this is still wrong. I don't know why we disable the loop
unroller entirely *from Clang* when optimizing for size, as the loop
unrolling pass *already has special logic* for the case where the
function is attributed as optimized for size! We should really be
trusting that. Maybe in a follow-up patch, I don't really want to change
behavior here.
llvm-svn: 187969
These flags set some preprocessor macros and injects a dependency
on the runtime library into the object file, which later is picked up
by the linker.
This also adds a new CC1 flag for adding a dependent library.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1315
llvm-svn: 187945
DataFlowSanitizer is a generalised dynamic data flow analysis.
Unlike other Sanitizer tools, this tool is not designed to detect a
specific class of bugs on its own. Instead, it provides a generic
dynamic data flow analysis framework to be used by clients to help
detect application-specific issues within their own code.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D966
llvm-svn: 187925
> This adds a bunch of options to clang-cl. Notably, this includes
> all the options that get passed when doing a default build of a
> command-line project with msbuild.exe in Debug and Release modes,
> and I believe all flags from Reid's original patch.
The original commit was reverted in r187640 after it broke the Mac build.
This should now be fixed, by Clang r187668, LLVM r187675, and putting
a -- before %s in the test.
llvm-svn: 187679
It broke the "phase1 - sanity" buildbot. Reverting until
we can figure out what's going on.
And Eric says it broke all current Mac builds actually.
llvm-svn: 187640
This adds a bunch of options to clang-cl. Notably, this includes
all the options that get passed when doing a default build of a
command-line project with msbuild.exe in Debug and Release modes,
and I believe all flags from Reid's original patch.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1264
llvm-svn: 187637
Patch by Ana Pazos
- Completed implementation of instruction formats:
AdvSIMD three same
AdvSIMD modified immediate
AdvSIMD scalar pairwise
- Completed implementation of instruction classes
(some of the instructions in these classes
belong to yet unfinished instruction formats):
Vector Arithmetic
Vector Immediate
Vector Pairwise Arithmetic
- Initial implementation of instruction formats:
AdvSIMD scalar two-reg misc
AdvSIMD scalar three same
- Intial implementation of instruction class:
Scalar Arithmetic
- Initial clang changes to support arm v8 intrinsics.
Note: no clang changes for scalar intrinsics function name mangling yet.
- Comprehensive test cases for added instructions
To verify auto codegen, encoding, decoding, diagnosis, intrinsics.
llvm-svn: 187568
This patch provides basic support for powerpc64le as an LLVM target.
However, use of this target will not actually generate little-endian
code. Instead, use of the target will cause the correct little-endian
built-in defines to be generated, so that code that tests for
__LITTLE_ENDIAN__, for example, will be correctly parsed for
syntax-only testing. Code generation will otherwise be the same as
powerpc64 (big-endian), for now.
The patch leaves open the possibility of creating a little-endian
PowerPC64 back end, but there is no immediate intent to create such a
thing.
The new test case variant ensures that correct built-in defines for
little-endian code are generated.
llvm-svn: 187180
They seemed to have the same implications, and this makes for one
less flag to worry about.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1219
llvm-svn: 187168
Use the same filtering for assembly arguments to -cc1as as we do for
-cc1, this allows a consistent (& more useful) diagnostic experience for
users (rather than getting an error from -cc1as (which a user shouldn't
really be thinking about) about --foo, they get an error from clang
about --foo in -Wa,)
I'm sort of surprised by the separation of -cc1as & the separate
argument handling, etc, but at least this removes a little bit of the
duplication.
llvm-svn: 187156
and add a new option --driver-mode= to control it explicitly.
The CCCIsCXX and CCCIsCPP flags were non-overlapping, i.e. there
are currently really three modes that Clang can run in: gcc, g++
or cpp, so it makes sense to represent them as an enum.
Having a command line flag to control it helps testing.
llvm-svn: 186605
When the -maltivec flag is present, altivec.h is auto-included for the
compilation. This is not appropriate when the job action is to
preprocess a file containing assembly code. So don't do that.
I was unable to convert the test in the bug report into a regression
test. The original symptom was exposed with:
% touch x.S
% ./bin/clang -target powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu -maltivec -S -o - x.S
I tried this test (and numerous variants) on a PPC64 system:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// RUN: touch %t
// RUN: %clang -maltivec -S %t -o - | FileCheck %s
// Verify that assembling an empty file does not auto-include altivec.h.
// CHECK-NOT: static vector
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, this test passes for some reason even on a clang built
without the fix. I'd be happy to add a test case but at this point
I'm not able to figure one out, and I don't want to hold up the patch
unnecessarily. Please let me know if you have ideas.
Thanks,
Bill
llvm-svn: 185544
Darwin systems currently do not support dwarf version 3 or above. When we are
ready, we can bump the default to gdwarf-4 for Darwin.
For other systems, the default is dwarf version 3, if everything goes smoothly,
we can bump the version to 4.
rdar://13591116
llvm-svn: 185483
when specifying --coverage (or related) flags.
The system for doing this was based on the old LLVM-hosted profile_rt
library, and hadn't been updated for Linux to use the new compiler-rt
library. Also, it couldn't possibly work on multiarch or biarch systems
in many cases. The whole thing now works much the same as the sanitizer
libraries that are built and used out of the compiler-rt repo.
Note that other target OSes haven't been updated because I don't know if
they're doing anything special with the installation path of profile_rt.
I suspect however that *all* of these are wrong and would encourage
maintainers of each target to take a hard look at how compiler-rt
runtime libraries are linked on their platforms.
llvm-svn: 184666
gcc's inputs are already added by the InputInfoList passed to
Action::ConstructJob.
Fixes a regression from r183989. This was manifesting when targetting
mingw as an extra input argument to gcc when assembling. It presumably
affects other situations where clang calls gcc.
Prior to r183989, forwardToGCC() was returning false because the INPUT
option defined in OptParser.td had the DriverOption flag set on it.
LLVM's Option library does not set this flag for INPUT.
Reviewers: espindola
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D999
llvm-svn: 184308
These options will add a module flag with name "Dwarf Version".
The behavior flag is currently set to Warning, so when two values disagree,
a warning will be emitted.
llvm-svn: 184276
The big changes are:
- Deleting Driver/(Arg|Opt)*
- Rewriting includes to llvm/Option/ and re-sorting
- 'using namespace llvm::opt' in clang::driver
- Fixing the autoconf build by adding option everywhere
As discussed in the review, this change includes using directives in
header files. I'll make follow up changes to remove those in favor of
name specifiers.
Reviewers: espindola
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D975
llvm-svn: 183989
When choosing a default CPU, clang used to pick ARM7TDMI (which has Thumb) even
when the more restrictive armv4 triple was specified. This should fix that.
Patch by Jeroen Hofstee.
llvm-svn: 183905
integrated assembler then go ahead and still split the dwarf anyhow.
Add two tests, one to exercise existing behavior of not splitting
when we're just emitting assembly files and the other to test
that we split when we're not in integrated as mode.
llvm-svn: 183355
This option is used to select a dynamic loader prefix to be used
at runtime. Currently this is implemented for the Linux toolchain.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D851
llvm-svn: 182744
If -fsanitize=leak is specified, link the program with the
LeakSanitizer runtime. Ignore this option when -fsanitize=address is specified,
because AddressSanitizer has this functionality built in.
llvm-svn: 182729
Sanitizer runtime intercepts functions from librt. Not doing this will fail
if the librt dependency is not present at program startup (ex. comes from a
dlopen()ed library).
llvm-svn: 182645
imply -fno-math-errno if the user passed -fno-fast-math OR -ffast-math,
regardless of in which order and regardless of the tool chain default.
I've fixed this to follow the logic:
1) If the last dominating flag is -fno-math-errno, -ffast-math, or
-Ofast, then do not use math-errno.
2) If the last dominating flag is an explicit -fmath-errno, do use
math-errno.
3) Otherwise, use the toolchain default.
This, for example, allows the flag sequence
'-ffast-math ... -fno-fast-math' with no mention of '-fmath-errno' or
'-fno-math-errno' to preserve the toolchain default. Most notably, this
should prevent users trying to disable fast-math optimizations on Darwin
and BSD platforms from simultaneously enabling (pointless) -fmath-errno.
I've enhanced the tests (after more reorganization) to cover this and
other weird permutations of flags and targets.
llvm-svn: 182203
This patch then adds all the usual platform-specific pieces for SystemZ:
driver support, basic target info, register names and constraints,
ABI info and vararg support. It also adds new tests to verify pre-defined
macros and inline asm, and updates a test for the minimum alignment change.
This version of the patch incorporates feedback from reviews by
Eric Christopher and John McCall. Thanks to all reviewers!
Patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 181211
We've added the RS880 variant in the LLVM backend to represent an R600
GPU with no vertex cache, so we need to update the GPU mappings for
-mcpu.
llvm-svn: 181202
The existing code also failed to allocate a buffer for it so getcwd corrupted
the stack. sys::fs::current_path takes care of the memory management.
llvm-svn: 180669
make the gdb tests and the Windows bots happy.
The Path::GetCurrentDirectory API is not equivalent to ::getcwd(), so
r180652 causes a gdb tests to fail. On the other hand, <sys/param.h>
isn't defined on Windows systems, so that causes Windows builds to fail.
rdar://12237559
llvm-svn: 180661
Specifically, allow the flags that fall under this umbrella (i.e., -O3,
-ffast-math, and -fstrict-aliasing) to be overridden/disabled with the
individual -O[0|1|2|s|z]/-fno- flags.
This also fixes the handling of various floating point optimization
flags that are modified by -ffast-math (and thus -Ofast as well).
Part of rdar://13622687
llvm-svn: 180204
- There is no reason to have a modules specific flag for disabling
autolinking. Instead, convert the existing flag into -fno-autolink (which
should cover other autolinking code generation paths like #pragmas if and
when we support them).
llvm-svn: 179612
two new options –msingle-float and –mdouble-float. These options can be
used simultaneously with float ABI selection options (-mfloat-abi,
-mhard-float, -msoft-float). They mark whether a floating-point
coprocessor supports double-precision operations.
llvm-svn: 179481
This new option is the default, but it is useful to have a flag to override
-mno-implicit-float by putting -mimplicit-float later on the command line.
llvm-svn: 179309
As mentioned in the previous commit message, the use-after-free and
double-free warnings for 'delete' are worth enabling even while the
leak warnings still have false positives.
llvm-svn: 178891
Added TBAABaseType and TBAAOffset in LValue. These two fields are initialized to
the actual type and 0, and are updated in EmitLValueForField.
Path-aware TBAA tags are enabled for EmitLoadOfScalar and EmitStoreOfScalar.
Added command line option -struct-path-tbaa.
llvm-svn: 178797
however, it doesn't do that unless we're optimizing. Change
that and haul out to a helper function. Also make this a driver
test appropriate rather than an assembly test.
llvm-svn: 178606
gcc provides -mmfcrf and -mno-mfcrf for controlling what we call
the mfocrf target feature. Also, PPC is now making use of the
static function AddTargetFeature used by the Mips Driver code.
llvm-svn: 178227
This option can be useful for end users who want to know why they
ended up with a ton of different variants of the "std" module in their
module cache. This problem should go away over time, as we reduce the
need for module variants, but it will never go away entirely.
llvm-svn: 178148
linker via --dynamic-list instead of using --export-dynamic. This reduces the
size of the dynamic symbol table, and thus of the binary (in some cases by up
to ~30%).
llvm-svn: 177783
We now put the Clang module cache in
<system-temp-directory>/org.llvm.clang/ModuleCache. Perhaps some day
there will be other caches under <system-temp-directory>/org.llvm.clang>.
llvm-svn: 177671
* libclang_rt-san-* is sanitizer_common, and is linked in only if no other
sanitizer runtime is present.
* libclang_rt-ubsan-* is the piece of the runtime which doesn't depend on
a C++ ABI library, and is always linked in.
* libclang_rt-ubsan_cxx-* is the piece of the runtime which depends on a
C++ ABI library, and is only linked in when linking a C++ binary.
This change also switches us to using -whole-archive for the ubsan runtime
(which is made possible by the above split), and switches us to only linking
the sanitizer runtime into the main binary and not into DSOs (which is made
possible by using -whole-archive).
The motivation for this is to only link a single copy of sanitizer_common
into any binary. This is becoming important now because we want to share
more state between multiple sanitizers in the same process (for instance,
we want a single shared output mutex).
The Darwin ubsan runtime is unchanged; because we use a DSO there, we don't
need this complexity.
llvm-svn: 177605
We were checking "Arch == llvm::Triple::x86_64 || Arch
== llvm::Triple::x86_64", but the rhs should actually check for
powerpc64.
Found while experimenting with a potential new Clang warning.
llvm-svn: 177496
Modules enables features such as auto-linking, and we simply do not want to
support a matrix of subtly enabled/disabled features depending on whether or
not a user is using the integrated assembler.
It isn't clear if this is the best place to do this check. For one thing,
these kind of errors are not caught by the serialized diagnostics.
Fixes <rdar://problem/13289240>
llvm-svn: 176826
string to be emitted, and two properties about the files themselves.
Use $PWD to absolut-ify the path to the coverage file. Yes, this is what GCC
does. Reverts my own r175706.
llvm-svn: 176617
with both -static-libgcc and -static on the commandline.
Fix a warning in the latter case due to a backwards short circuiting ||
operator in the driver. No real functionality changed here, just allows
the driver to properly consume -static-libgcc when -static is also
specified.
llvm-svn: 176429
and through to the debug info in the module. In order to make the
testcase a bit more efficient allow the filename to go through
compilation for compile and not assemble jobs and turn off the
extract for cases where we don't create an object.
llvm-svn: 175935
The assembler historically didn't make use of any target features, but this has
changed when support for old CPUs that don't support long nops was added.
llvm-svn: 175919
to want to propagate some information through the module into
the back end and so need to pass it through to codegen.
Also make the methods file static so we can use them in other places.
llvm-svn: 175916
Add an ability to specify custom documentation block comment commands via a new
class CommentOptions. The intention is that this class will hold future
customizations for comment parsing, including defining documentation comments
with specific numbers of parameters, etc.
CommentOptions instance is a member of LangOptions.
CommentOptions is controlled by a new command-line parameter
-fcomment-block-commands=Foo,Bar,Baz.
llvm-svn: 175892
to control the check for the C 5.2.4.1 / C++ [implimits] restriction on nesting
levels for parentheses, brackets and braces.
Some code with heavy macro use exceeds the default limit of 256, but we don't
want to increase it generally to avoid stack overflow on stack-constrained
systems.
llvm-svn: 175855
We treat this as an alternative to -fvisibility=<?>
which changes the default value visibility to "hidden"
and the default type visibility to "default".
Expose a -cc1 option for changing the default type
visibility, repurposing -fvisibility as the default
value visibility option (also setting type visibility
from it in the absence of a specific option).
rdar://13079314
llvm-svn: 175480
Apple's kernel engineers have been expecting this behavior even though
we've never implemented it before, as far as I can tell. In recent months,
clang has gotten better at using vector instructions to optimize memcpy-like
operations, and that has exposed problems when vector/floating-point
instructions are used in kexts that don't support that. This behavior also
matches what Apple's GCC did for PowerPC targets.
llvm-svn: 174838
For x86 targets, we've been using the -msoft-float option to control passing
the no-implicit-float option to cc1. Since the -mno-implicit-float option is
now accepted by the driver, this just makes it work for x86 the same as it
does for ARM targets.
llvm-svn: 174836
The use of this flag enables a modules optimization where a given set
of macros can be labeled as "ignored" by the modules
system. Definitions of those macros will be completely ignored when
building the module hash and will be stripped when actually building
modules. The overall effect is that this flag can be used to
drastically reduce the number of
Eventually, we'll want modules to tell us what set of macros they
respond to (the "configuration macros"), and anything not in that set
will be excluded. However, that requires a lot of per-module
information that must be accurate, whereas this option can be used
more readily.
Fixes the rest of <rdar://problem/13165109>.
llvm-svn: 174560
Introduces these negation forms explicitly and uses them to control a new
"altivec" target feature for PowerPC. This allows avoiding generating
Altivec instructions on processors that support Altivec.
The new test case verifies that the Altivec "lvx" instruction is not
used when -fno-altivec is present on the command line.
llvm-svn: 174140
In cooperation with the LLVM patch, this should implement all scalar front-end
parts of the C and C++ ABIs for AArch64.
This patch excludes the NEON support also reviewed due to an outbreak of
batshit insanity in our legal department. That will be committed soon bringing
the changes to precisely what has been approved.
Further reviews would be gratefully received.
llvm-svn: 174055
implementation; this is much more inline with the original implementation
(i.e., pre-ubsan) and does not require run-time library support.
The trapping implementation can be invoked using either '-fcatch-undefined-behavior'
or '-fsanitize=undefined-trap -fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error', with the latter
being preferred. Eventually, the -fcatch-undefined-behavior' flag will be removed.
llvm-svn: 173848
AT_producer. Which includes clang's version information so we can tell
which version of the compiler was used.
This is second of the two steps to allow us to do this. The first was a
change to llvm-mc with revision 172630 to provide a method to set the
AT_producer string. This second step has the clang driver passing the value
of getClangFullVersion() via the new flag -dwarf-debug-producer when invoking
the integrated assembler on assembly source files. Then using the new
setDwarfDebugProducer() method to set the AT_producer string.
rdar://12888242
llvm-svn: 172758
-fopenmp in the link step on Linux. There is probably more tweaking that
will need to take place to get good support for linking the relevant
libraries on all Linux distributions and/or on other platforms, but this
get's the ball moving and allows Clang to build programs which contain
OpenMP pragmas that can be safely ignored by a compiler that doesn't
implement them, and yet makes direct calls into the OpenMP runtime.
llvm-svn: 172715
flag information down from the Clang driver into the Gold linker plugin
for LTO. This allows specifying -march on the linker commandline and
should hopefully have it pass all the way through to the LTO optimizer.
Fixes PR14697.
llvm-svn: 172354
This also requires adding support to -cc1as for passing the detecting
PWD down through LLVM's debug info (which in turn required the LLVM
change in r170371).
The test case is weak (we only test the driver behavior) because there
is currently to infrastructure for running cc1as in the test suite. So
those four lines are untested (much like all other lines in that file),
but we have a test for the same pattern using llvm-mc in the LLVM
repository.
llvm-svn: 170373
Add -fslp-vectorize (with -ftree-slp-vectorize as an alias for gcc compatibility)
to provide a way to enable the basic-block vectorization pass. This uses the same
acronym as gcc, superword-level parallelism (SLP), also common in the literature,
to refer to basic-block vectorization.
Nadav suggested this as a follow-up to the adding of -fvectorize.
llvm-svn: 169909
ToolChains.cpp
This is in anticipation of forthcoming library path changes.
Also ...
- Fixes some inconsistencies in how the arch is passed to tools.
- Add test cases for various forms of arch flags
llvm-svn: 169505
paths
- Inherit from Linux rather than ToolChain
- Override AddClangSystemIncludeArgs and AddClangCXXStdlibIncludeArgs
to properly set include paths.
llvm-svn: 169495
This ensures that even though it comes first, we pick up its .o files.
Note that if we can use this (or something similar / equivalent) on
other platforms, we could potentially remove
ReplaceOperatorsNewAndDelete from the ASan runtimes.
We should probably do something similar for TSan and MSan as well.
llvm-svn: 169328
the link command. This all works fine when the driver is also responsible for
adding -lstdc++ to the link command. But, if -lstdc++ (or libstdc++.a, etc) is
passed explicitly to the driver, the ASan runtime will appear in the link
command after the standard library, leading to multiple-definition errors for
the global 'operator new' and 'operator delete'. Fix this in a painfully
simple way, by inserting libclang_rt.asan.a at the start of the link command
instead of the end.
If we need to do something more clever, we can walk the link command looking
for something that resembles libstdc++ and insert libclang_rt.asan.a as late
as possible, but the simple solution works for now.
llvm-svn: 169310
uncovered.
This required manually correcting all of the incorrect main-module
headers I could find, and running the new llvm/utils/sort_includes.py
script over the files.
I also manually added quite a few missing headers that were uncovered by
shuffling the order or moving headers up to be main-module-headers.
llvm-svn: 169237
1) init-order sanitizer: initialization-order checker.
Status: usable, but may produce false positives w/o proper blacklisting.
2) use-after-return sanitizer
Status: implemented, but heavily understed.
Should be optional, as it significanlty slows program down.
3) use-after-scope sanitizer
Status: in progress.
llvm-svn: 168950
Unlike my previous attempt at this, this patch leaves intact the check for
whether clang can handle the input file type, and for non-Darwin toolchains it
will invoke gcc for things it cannot handle. For Darwin toolchains, the
behavior reported in pr14338 still occurs with this patch, but that is a
definite improvement from what happens currently, where it just crashes with
an assertion failure.
llvm-svn: 168505
Previously, this flag to CC1 was never exposed at the clang driver
layer, and if you happened to enable it (by being on Android or GCC 4.7
platform), you couldn't *disable* it, because there was no 'no' variant.
The whole thing was confusingly implemented.
Now, the target-specific flag processing gets the driver arg list, and
we use standard hasFlag with a default based on the GCC version and/or
Android platform. The user can still pass the 'no-' variant to forcibly
disable the flag, or pass the positive variant to clang itself to enable
the flag.
The test has also been substantially cleaned up and extended to cover
these use cases.
llvm-svn: 168473
According to Android ABI, we have to link with
libdl.so, if we are linking with non-static libgcc.
Besides, this also fixes MIPS link error of
undefined references to `_Unwind_Find_FDE' and
`dl_iterate_phdr'.
llvm-svn: 168310
There were numerous issues here that were all entangled, and so I've
tried to do a general simplification of the logic.
1) The logic was mimicing actual GCC bugs, rather than "features". These
have been fixed in trunk GCC, and this fixes Clang as well. Notably,
the logic was always intended to be last-match-wins like any other
flag.
2) The logic for handling '-mdynamic-no-pic' was preposterously unclear.
It also allowed the use of this flag on non-Darwin platforms where it
has no actual meaning. Now this option is handled directly based on
tests of how llvm-gcc behaves, and it is only supported on Darwin.
3) The APIs for the Driver's ToolChains had the implementation ugliness
of dynamic-no-pic leaking through them. They also had the
implementation details of the LLVM relocation model flag names
leaking through.
4) The actual results of passing these flags was incorrect on Darwin in
many cases. For example, Darwin *always* uses PIC level 2 if it uses
in PIC level, and Darwin *always* uses PIC on 64-bit regardless of
the flags specified, including -fPIE. Darwin never compiles in PIE
mode, but it can *link* in PIE mode.
5) Also, PIC was not always being enabled even when PIE was. This isn't
a supported mode at all and may have caused some fallout in builds
with complex PIC and PIE interactions.
The result is (I hope) cleaner and clearer for readers. I've also left
comments and tests about some of the truly strage behavior that is
observed on Darwin platforms. We have no real testing of Windows
platforms and PIC, but I don't have the tools handy to figure that out.
Hopefully others can beef up our testing here.
Unfortunately, I can't test this for every platform. =/ If folks have
dependencies on these flags that aren't covered by tests, they may
break. I've audited and ensured that all the changes in behavior of the
existing tests are intentional and good. In particular I've tried to
make sure the Darwin behavior (which is more suprising than the Linux
behavior) also matches that of 'gcc' on my mac.
llvm-svn: 168297
to a cc1 -fencode-extended-block-signature and pass it
to cc1 and recognize this option to produce extended block
type signature. // rdar://12109031
llvm-svn: 168063
- Separately check if -fPIE was specified in the command line and define both __PIC__ and __PIE__ when -fPIE is used. We need to check this separately because -fPIE will infer -fPIC even if its not explicitly used.
- Fixed existing tests.
- Added new tests for cases where both -fPIC and -fPIE is used.
Author: Tareq A. Siraj <tareq.a.siraj@intel.com>
Fixes: PR13221
Review: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D94
llvm-svn: 167846
LTO doesn't generate correct accelerator tables. This is due to the general lack
correct of debug info for LTO. Disable it when using LTO.
<rdar://problem/12401423>
llvm-svn: 167799
-fno-address-sanitizer, -fthread-sanitizer, -fno-thread-sanitizer, and
-fcatch-undefined-behavior as deprecated: produce a warning if they are used
pointing to the corresponding -fsanitize= option. In passing add the missing
'-' to some diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 167429
checks to enable. Remove frontend support for -fcatch-undefined-behavior,
-faddress-sanitizer and -fthread-sanitizer now that they don't do anything.
llvm-svn: 167413
-fno-sanitize=<sanitizers> argument to driver. These allow ASan, TSan, and the
various UBSan checks to be enabled and disabled separately. Right now, the
different modes can't be combined, but the intention is that combining UBSan
and the other sanitizers will be permitted in the near future.
Currently, the UBSan checks will all be enabled if any of them is; that will be
fixed by the next patch.
llvm-svn: 167411
later, '-L <dir>' is allowed, but rewrite these in the driver as '-L<dir>' to
maintain backward compatibility. The same is true for the -I option.
rdar://12366753
llvm-svn: 167054
Each option has a set of prefixes. When matching an argument such as
-funroll-loops. First the leading - is removed as it is a prefix. Then
a lower_bound search for "funroll-loops" is done against the option table by
option name. From there each option prefix + option name combination is tested
against the argument.
This allows us to support Microsoft style options where both / and - are valid
prefixes. It also simplifies the cases we already have where options come in
both - and -- forms. Almost every option for gnu-ld happens to have this form.
llvm-svn: 166444
- This is an assumption that is currently hardwired into the backend, we need
to do this in order for the frontend and backend to agree.
llvm-svn: 166428
are no known current users of column info. Robustify and fix up
a few tests in the process. Reduces the size of debug information
by a small amount.
Part of PR14106
llvm-svn: 166236
crtfastmath.o contains routines to set the floating point flags to a faster,
unsafe mode. Linking it in speeds up code dealing with denormals significantly
(PR14024).
For now this is only enabled on linux where I can test it and crtfastmath.o is
widely available. We may want to provide a similar file with compiler-rt
eventually and/or enable it on other platforms too.
llvm-svn: 165240
clang specifying a temporary file that it later cleans up so that it can survive
the linking stage. However, when we compile object files during LTO we don't
call 'dsymutil'. That's done at a different stage (if at all). We rely upon the
linker to specify a unique name for the temporary file it generates.
<rdar://problem/12401423>
llvm-svn: 165028
passing -fretain-comments-from-system-headers. By default, the
compiler no longer parses such documentation comments, as they
can result in a noticeable compile time/PCH slowdown.
Fixes <rdar://problem/11860820>.
llvm-svn: 163778
Android uses the same flavour of crt*.o for PIE and non-PIE executables, and a
different one for DSOs. GNU/Linux, on the other hand, uses one set of crt*.o
for non-PIE executables, and another for both PIE executables and DSOs.
llvm-svn: 163500
Most of the code guarded with ANDROIDEABI are not
ARM-specific, and having no relation with arm-eabi.
Thus, it will be more natural to call this
environment "Android" instead of "ANDROIDEABI".
Note: We are not using ANDROID because several projects
are using "-DANDROID" as the conditional compilation
flag.
llvm-svn: 163088
This improves compatibility with gcc in this regard, and this file generation
can be ameliorated with GCOV_PREFIX and GCOV_PREFIX_STRIP. It's also useful if
your build directory doesn't specify -o <abspath> and it uses a recursive make
structure, so it's not relative to the toplevel.
Patch by Joshua Cranmer!
<rdar://problem/12179524>
llvm-svn: 162884
diagnostics for bad deployment targets and adding a few
more predicates. Includes a patch by Jonathan Schleifer
to enable ARC for ObjFW.
llvm-svn: 162252
If you build with -fobjc-arc, then -fobjc-link-runtime is implied but we
don't need to warn about it being unused in that case. rdar://12039965
llvm-svn: 161444
assembly.
By default, we don't emit IR for MS-style inline assembly (see r158833 as to
why). This is strictly for testing purposes and should not be enabled with the
expectation that things will work. This is a temporary flag and will be removed
once MS-style inline assembly is fully supported.
llvm-svn: 160573
This macro was being unconditionally set to zero, preceded by a FIXME comment.
This fixes <rdar://problem/11845441>. Patch by Michael Gottesman!
llvm-svn: 160491
- Split pedantic driver flag test into separate test file, and XFAIL on cygwin,mingw32
- Fix bug in tablegen logic where a missing '{' caused errors to be included in -Wpedantic.
llvm-svn: 159892
I suspect FileCheck might match assertion failure, even if clang/test/Misc/warning-flags.c passed the test.
> 0. Program arguments: bin/./clang -### -pedantic -Wpedantic clang/test/Driver/warning-options.cpp
llvm-svn: 159886
This patch introduces some magic in tablegen to create a "Pedantic" diagnostic
group which automagically includes all warnings that are extensions. This
allows a user to suppress specific warnings traditionally under -pedantic used
an ordinary warning flag. This also allows users to use #pragma to silence
specific -pedantic warnings, or promote them to errors, within blocks of text
(just like any other warning).
-Wpedantic is NOT an alias for -pedantic. Instead, it provides another way
to (a) activate -pedantic warnings and (b) disable them. Where they differ
is that -pedantic changes the behavior of the preprocessor slightly, whereas
-Wpedantic does not (it just turns on the warnings).
The magic in the tablegen diagnostic emitter has to do with computing the minimal
set of diagnostic groups and diagnostics that should go into -Wpedantic, as those
diagnostics that already members of groups that themselves are (transitively) members
of -Wpedantic do not need to be included in the Pedantic group directly. I went
back and forth on whether or not to magically generate this group, and the invariant
was that we always wanted extension warnings to be included in -Wpedantic "some how",
but the bookkeeping would be very onerous to manage by hand.
-no-pedantic (and --no-pedantic) is included for completeness, and matches many of the
same kind of flags the compiler already supports. It does what it says: cancels out
-pedantic. One discrepancy is that if one specifies --no-pedantic and -Weverything or
-Wpedantic the pedantic warnings are still enabled (essentially the -W flags win). We
can debate the correct behavior here.
Along the way, this patch nukes some code in TextDiagnosticPrinter.cpp and CXStoredDiagnostic.cpp
that determine whether to include the "-pedantic" flag in the warning output. This is
no longer needed, as all extensions now have a -W flag.
This patch also significantly reduces the number of warnings not under flags from 229
to 158 (all extension warnings). That's a 31% reduction.
llvm-svn: 159875
This flag sets the 'fp-contract' mode, which controls the formation of fused
floating point operations. Available modes are:
- Fast: Form fused operations anywhere.
- On: Form fused operations where allowed by FP_CONTRACT. This is the default
mode.
- Off: Don't form fused operations (in future this may be relaxed to forming
fused operations where it can be proved that the result won't be
affected).
Currently clang doesn't support the FP_CONTRACT pragma, so the 'On' and 'Off'
modes are equivalent.
llvm-svn: 159794
By default on OS X 10.8, we don't link with a crt1.o file and the linker
knows to use _main as the entry point. But, when compiling with -pg, we
need to link with the gcrt1.o file, and the linker needs to be told to use
the "start" symbol as the entry point. The -no_new_main linker option does
that last part. <rdar://problem/11491405>
llvm-svn: 159683
comparison between two templated types when they both appear in a diagnostic.
Type elision will remove indentical template arguments, which can be disabled
with -fno-elide-type. Cyan highlighting is applied to the differing types.
For more formatting, -fdiagnostic-show-template-tree will output the template
type as an indented text tree, with differences appearing inline. Template
tree works with or without type elision.
llvm-svn: 159216
target Objective-C runtime down to the frontend: break this
down into a single target runtime kind and version, and compute
all the relevant information from that. This makes it
relatively painless to add support for new runtimes to the
compiler. Make the new -cc1 flag, -fobjc-runtime=blah-x.y.z,
available at the driver level as a better and more general
alternative to -fgnu-runtime and -fnext-runtime. This new
concept of an Objective-C runtime also encompasses what we
were previously separating out as the "Objective-C ABI", so
fragile vs. non-fragile runtimes are now really modelled as
different kinds of runtime, paving the way for better overall
differentiation.
As a sort of special case, continue to accept the -cc1 flag
-fobjc-runtime-has-weak, as a sop to PLCompatibilityWeak.
I won't go so far as to say "no functionality change", even
ignoring the new driver flag, but subtle changes in driver
semantics are almost certainly not intended.
llvm-svn: 158793
option. On the driver, check if we are using libraries from gcc 4.7 or newer
and if so pass -fuse-init-array to the frontend.
The crtbegin*.o files in gcc 4.7 no longer call the constructors listed in
.ctors, so we have to use .init_array.
llvm-svn: 158694
This functionality is based on what is done on ARM, and enables selecting PPC CPUs
in a way compatible with gcc's driver. Also, mirroring gcc (and what is done on x86),
-mcpu=native support was added. This uses the host cpu detection from LLVM
(which will also soon be updated by refactoring code currently in backend).
In order for this to work, the target needs a list of valid CPUs -- we now accept all CPUs accepted by LLVM.
A few preprocessor defines for common CPU types have been added.
llvm-svn: 158334
used by the preprocessor. Apple's GCC also supported a -A option for linking.
The ld man page has the following:
-A basefile - Obsolete incremental load format. This option is obsolete.
Nick Kledzik confirms this option is no longer needed/supported.
rdar://11455614
llvm-svn: 156965
When enabled, clang generates bounds checks for array and pointers dereferences. Work to follow in LLVM's backend.
OK'ed by Chad; thanks for the review.
llvm-svn: 156431
It reduces the amount of emitted debug information:
1) DIEs in .debug_info have types DW_TAG_compile_unit, DW_TAG_subprogram,
DW_TAG_inlined_subroutine (for opt builds) and DW_TAG_lexical_block only.
2) .debug_str contains only function names.
3) No debug data for types/namespaces/variables is emitted.
4) The data in .debug_line is enough to produce valid stack traces with
function names and line numbers.
Reviewed by Eric Christopher.
llvm-svn: 156160
For now -fno-math-errno is the default on BSD-derived platforms (Darwin,
DragonFlyBSD, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD). If the default is not right for
your platform, please yell. I only verified the result with the default
compilers on Darwin and FreeBSD.
llvm-svn: 155990
-fpack-struct's handling has changed in CC1 (one of only two flags that needed changing) because the driver treats "-fpack-struct" as a boolean flag, and CC1 (did) treat it as an option with a separated value.
This change causes -fpack-struct=X to be forwarded correctly to -fpack-struct=X instead of erroneously to "-fpack-struct X"
llvm-svn: 155981
Linux and other (non-Darwin) platforms and have it use -fmath-errno by
default (for better or worse).
Darwin has seen the light here and uses -fno-math-errno by default, this
patch preserves that.
If any maintainers for a non-Linux platform would also like to opt-in to
-fno-math-errno by default, I'm happy to add folks, but we're currently
getting buts and misleading comparisons with GCC due to this difference
in behavior on Linux at least.
llvm-svn: 155607
r155047. See the LLVM log for the primary motivation:
http://llvm.org/viewvc/llvm-project?rev=155047&view=rev
Primary commit r154828:
- Several issues were raised in review, and fixed in subsequent
commits.
- Follow-up commits also reverted, and which should be folded into the
original before reposting:
- r154837: Re-add the 'undef BUILTIN' thing to fix the build.
- r154928: Fix build warnings, re-add (and correct) header and
license
- r154937: Typo fix.
Please resubmit this patch with the relevant LLVM resubmission.
llvm-svn: 155048
requires the -plugin to come before any -plugin-opt options, we were passing
them the other way around. With this one can run (for example):
clang -o foo foo.c -O4 -Wl,-plugin-opt=generate-api-file
llvm-svn: 154357
First, this patch cleans up the parsing of the PIC and PIE family of
options in the driver. The existing logic failed to claim arguments all
over the place resulting in kludges that marked the options as unused.
Instead actually walk all of the arguments and claim them properly.
We now treat -f{,no-}{pic,PIC,pie,PIE} as a single set, accepting the
last one on the commandline. Previously there were lots of ordering bugs
that could creep in due to the nature of the parsing. Let me know if
folks would like weird things such as "-fPIE -fno-pic" to turn on PIE,
but disable full PIC. This doesn't make any sense to me, but we could in
theory support it.
Options that seem to have intentional "trump" status (-static, -mkernel,
etc) continue to do so and are commented as such.
Next, a -pie-level flag is threaded into the frontend, rigged to
a language option, and handled preprocessor, setting up the appropriate
defines. We'll now have the correct defines when compiling with -fpie.
The one place outside of the preprocessor that was inspecting the PIC
level (as opposed to the relocation model, which is set and handled
separately, yay!) is in the GNU ObjC runtime. I changed it to exactly
preserve existing behavior. If folks want to change its behavior in the
face of PIE, they can do that in a separate patch.
Essentially the only functionality changed here is the preprocessor
defines and bug-fixes to the argument management.
Tests have been updated and extended to test all of this a bit more
thoroughly.
llvm-svn: 154291
uses Neon instructions for single-precision FP.
-mfpmath=neon is analogous to passing llc -mattr=+neonfp.
-mfpmath=[vfp|vfp2|vfp3|vfp4] is analogous to passing llc -mattr=-neonfp.
rdar://11108618
llvm-svn: 154046
llvm-gcc doesn't handle --serialize-diagnostics so when compiling i386
kernel/kext code with -Werror, you get an error about that option being
unused. Claim the argument to prevent this from breaking builds.
<rdar://problem/11161933>
llvm-svn: 153854
flag as GCC uses: -fstrict-enums). There is a *lot* of code making
unwarranted assumptions about the underlying type of enums, and it
doesn't seem entirely reasonable to eagerly break all of it.
Much more importantly, the current state of affairs is *very* good at
optimizing based upon this information, which causes failures that are
very distant from the actual enum. Before we push for enabling this by
default, I think we need to implement -fcatch-undefined-behavior support
for instrumenting and trapping whenever we store or load a value outside
of the range. That way we can track down the misbehaving code very
quickly.
I discussed this with Rafael, and currently the only important cases he
is aware of are the bool range-based optimizations which are staying
hard enabled. We've not seen any issue with those either, and they are
much more important for performance.
llvm-svn: 153550
1. Don't short-circuit conditional statements that are checking flags.
Otherwise, the driver emits warnings about unused arguments.
2. -mkernel and -fapple-kext imply no exceptions, so claim exception related
arguments now to avoid warnings about unused arguments.
rdar://11120518
llvm-svn: 153478
The getARMTargetCPU and getLLVMArchSuffixForARM functions exist in both
Toolchain.cpp and Tools.cpp. This stuff needs a thorough overhaul. In the
meantime, this patch at least makes them consistent. One version had been
converted to use StringSwitch, and the other version had new Cortex M-series
processors added.
llvm-svn: 153202
Original commit message:
Provide -Wnull-conversion separately from -Wconversion.
Like GCC, provide a NULL conversion to non-pointer conversion as a separate
flag, on by default. GCC's flag is "conversion-null" which we provide for
cross compatibility, but in the interests of consistency (with
-Wint-conversion, -Wbool-conversion, etc) the canonical Clang flag is called
-Wnull-conversion.
Patch by Lubos Lunak.
Review feedback by myself, Chandler Carruth, and Chad Rosier.
llvm-svn: 152774
Like GCC, provide a NULL conversion to non-pointer conversion as a separate
flag, on by default. GCC's flag is "conversion-null" which we provide for
cross compatibility, but in the interests of consistency (with
-Wint-conversion, -Wbool-conversion, etc) the canonical Clang flag is called
-Wnull-conversion.
Patch by Lubos Lunak.
Review feedback by myself, Chandler Carruth, and Chad Rosier.
llvm-svn: 152745
The LIBRARY_PATH environment variable should be honored by clang. Have the
driver pass the directories to the linker.
<rdar://problem/9743567> and PR10296.
llvm-svn: 152578
the new Objective-C NSArray/NSDictionary/NSNumber literal syntax.
This introduces a new library, libEdit, which provides a new way to support
migration of code that improves on the original ARC migrator. We now believe
that most of its functionality can be refactored into the existing libraries,
and thus this new library may shortly disappear.
llvm-svn: 152141
NSNumber, and boolean literals. This includes both Sema and Codegen support.
Included is also support for new Objective-C container subscripting.
My apologies for the large patch. It was very difficult to break apart.
The patch introduces changes to the driver as well to cause clang to link
in additional runtime support when needed to support the new language features.
Docs are forthcoming to document the implementation and behavior of these features.
llvm-svn: 152137
This flag enables ThreadSanitizer instrumentation committed to llvm as r150423.
The patch includes one test for -fthread-sanitizer and one similar test for -faddress-sanitizer.
This patch does not modify the linker flags (as we do it for -faddress-sanitizer) because the run-time library is not yet
committed and it's structure in compiler-rt is not 100% clear.
The users manual wil be changed in a separate commit.
llvm-svn: 151846
This option was added in r129614 and doesn't have any use case that I'm aware
of. It's possible that external tools are using these names - and if that's
the case we can certainly reassess the functionality, but for now it lets us
shave out a few unneeded bits from clang.
Move the "StaticDiagNameIndex" table into the only remaining consumer, diagtool.
This removes the actual diagnostic name strings from clang entirely.
Reviewed by Chris Lattner & Ted Kremenek.
llvm-svn: 150612
world on Solaris 11 for both x86 and x86-64 using the built-in assembler and
Solaris (not GNU) ld, however it currently relies on a hard-coded GCC location
to find crtbegin.o and crtend.o, as well as libgcc and libgcc_eh.
llvm-svn: 150580
When creating the MCSubtargetInfo, the assembler driver uses the CPU and
feature string to construct a more accurate model of what instructions
are and are not legal.
rdar://10840476
llvm-svn: 150273
That llvm change removed the -trap-func backend option, so that using
-ftrap-function with clang would cause the backend to complain. Fix it
by adding the trap function name to the CodeGenOptions and passing it through
to the TargetOptions.
llvm-svn: 149679
the recent refactoring. All interesting NetBSD release have a GNU as
version on i386 that supports --32, so don't bother with the conditional
setting of it.
llvm-svn: 149087
did anything. The two big pieces of functionality it tried to provide
was to cache the ToolChain objects for each target, and to figure out
the exact target based on the flag set coming in to an invocation.
However, it had a lot of flaws even with those goals:
- Neither of these have anything to do with the host, or its info.
- The HostInfo class was setup as a full blown class *hierarchy* with
a separate implementation for each "host" OS. This required
dispatching just to create the objects in the first place.
- The hierarchy claimed to represent the host, when in fact it was
based on the target OS.
- Each leaf in the hierarchy was responsible for implementing the flag
processing and caching, resulting in a *lot* of copy-paste code and
quite a few bugs.
- The caching was consistently done based on architecture alone, even
though *any* aspect of the targeted triple might change the behavior
of the configured toolchain.
- Flag processing was already being done in the Driver proper,
separating the flag handling even more than it already is.
Instead of this, we can simply have the dispatch logic in the Driver
which previously created a HostInfo object create the ToolChain objects.
Adding caching in the Driver layer is a tiny amount of code. Finally,
pulling the flag processing into the Driver puts it where it belongs and
consolidates it in one location.
The result is that two functions, and maybe 100 lines of new code
replace over 10 classes and 800 lines of code. Woot.
This also paves the way to introduce more detailed ToolChain objects for
various OSes without threading through a new HostInfo type as well, and
the accompanying boiler plate. That, of course, was the yak I started to
shave that began this entire refactoring escapade. Wheee!
llvm-svn: 148950
Patch from Jyotsna Verma:
I have made the changes to remove assertions in the Hexagon backend
specific clang driver. Instead of asserting on invalid arch name, it has
been modified to use the default value.
I have changed the implementation of the CPU flag validation for the
Hexagon backend. Earlier, the clang driver performed the check and
asserted on invalid inputs. In the new implementation, the driver passes
the last CPU flag (or sets to "v4" if not specified) to the compiler (and
also to the assembler and linker which perform their own check) instead of
asserting on incorrect values. This patch changes the setCPU function for
the Hexagon backend in clang/lib/Basic/Targets.cpp which causes the
compiler to error out on incorrect CPU flag values.
llvm-svn: 148139
- Support gcc-compatible vfpv3 name in addition to vfp3.
- Support vfpv3-d16.
- Disable neon feature for -mfpu=vfp* (yes, we were emitting Neon instructions
for those!).
llvm-svn: 147943
for the arm-linux-androideabi triple in particular.
Also use this to do a better job of selecting soft FP settings.
Patch by Evgeniy Stepanov.
llvm-svn: 147872
source file. Otherwise -g -save-temps will error out on the compile
of any .c file.
Fixes about 4000 of the errors in the clang-tests gdb test suite.
llvm-svn: 147819
module imports from -fauto-module-import to -fmodules. The new name
will eventually be used to enable modules, and the #include/#import
mapping is a crucial part of the feature.
llvm-svn: 147447
Clang driver. This involves a bunch of silly option parsing code to try
to carefully emulate GCC's options. Currently, this takes a conservative
approach, and unless all of the unsafe optimizations are enabled, none
of them are. The fine grained control doesn't seem particularly useful.
If it ever becomes useful, we can add that to LLVM first, and then
expose it here.
This also fixes a few tiny bugs in the flag management around
-fhonor-infinities and -fhonor-nans; the flags now form proper sets both
for enabling and disabling, with the last flag winning.
I've also implemented a moderately terrifying GCC feature where
a language change is also provided by the '-ffast-math' flag by defining
the __FAST_MATH__ preprocessor macro. This feature is tracked and
serialized in the frontend but it isn't used yet. A subsequent patch
will add the preprocessor macro and tests for it.
I've manually tested that codegen appears to respect this, but I've not
dug in enough to see if there is an easy way to test codegen options w/o
relying on the particulars of LLVM's optimizations.
llvm-svn: 147434
fails within a call to a constexpr function. Add -fconstexpr-backtrace-limit
argument to driver and frontend, to control the maximum number of notes so
produced (default 10). Fix APValue printing to be able to pretty-print all
APValue types, and move the testing for this functionality from a unittest to
a -verify test now that it's visible in clang's output.
llvm-svn: 146749
. move compiler-rt to a separate directory so the -L argument only includes compiler-rt (thanks joerg)
. build all clang subdirs
. switches the Minix platform to ELF
. normalizes toolchain invocation
Patch by Ben Gras.
llvm-svn: 146206
it to GNU assembler. In addition, change function getMipsArchFromCPU() so that
it can be reused in ConstructJob().
Patch by Simon Atanasyan.
llvm-svn: 145509
semantics and defaults as the corresponding g++ arguments. The historical g++
argument -ftemplate-depth-N is kept for compatibility, but modern g++ versions
no longer document that option.
Add -cc1 argument -fconstexpr-depth N to implement the corresponding
functionality.
The -ftemplate-depth=N part of this fixes PR9890.
llvm-svn: 145045
output files that are valid regardless of whether the compilation
succeeded or failed (but not if we crash). Add depfiles to the
failure result file list.
llvm-svn: 145018
This is a partial revert of r143846. While cleaning up after a crash is
probably a good idea, we were also deleting .d files if the compilation failed
due to invalid input, which is not the desired behavior. The test is XFAIL'd
until the cleanup code can be reworked to do the right thing.
llvm-svn: 144590
the first (and diff-noisiest) step to making Linux header searching
tremendously more principled and less brittle. Note that this step
should have essentially no functional impact. We still search the exact
same set of paths in the exact same order. The only change here is where
the code implementing such a search lives.
This has one obvious negative impact -- we now pass a ludicrous number
of flags to the CC1 layer. That should go away as I re-base this logic
on the logic to detect a GCC installation. I want to do this in two
phases so the bots can tell me if this step alone breaks something, and
so that the diffs of the refactoring make more sense.
llvm-svn: 143822
handling logic of the generic ToolChain. This flag, despite its name,
has *nothing* to do with the GCC flag '-nostdlib' that relates
(exclusively) to the linking behavior. It is a most unfortunate name in
that regard...
It is used to tell InitHeaderSearch.cpp *which* set of C++ standard
library header search paths to use -- those for libstdc++ from GCC's
installation, or those from a libc++ installation. As this logic is
hoisted out of the Frontend, and into the Driver as part of this
ToolChain, the generic method will be overridden for the platform, where
it can implement this logic directly. As such, hiding the CC1 option
passing in the generic space is a natural fit despite the odd naming.
Also, expand on the comments to clarify whats going on, and tidy up the
Tools.cpp code now that its simpler.
llvm-svn: 143687
implementation in the driver. This cleans up the signature and semantics
of the include flag adding component of the toolchain. Another step to
ready it for holding all the InitHeaderSearch logic.
llvm-svn: 143686
the rest of the mess in InitHeaderSearch.cpp. We could hoist it into the
driver profitably, removing more noise from the driver -> frontend
communication.
llvm-svn: 143685
and the C++ include management routine from the proper place when
forming preprocessor options in the driver. This is the first step to
teaching the driver to manage all of the header search paths. Currently,
these methods remain just stubs in the abstract toolchain. Subsequent
patches will flesh them out with implementations for various toolchains
based on the current code in InitHeaderSearch.cpp.
llvm-svn: 143684
The -g and --gdwarf2 options are currently synonyms to the Darwin assembler.
But clang itself does not recognize --gdwarf2, so if we want to experiment
with using clang, with its integrated assembler, to replace the default
assembler, it is necessary to use -g. <rdar://problem/10349486>
llvm-svn: 143533
There are now separate Triple::MacOSX and Triple::IOS values for the OS
so comparing against Triple::Darwin will fail to match those. Note that
I changed the expected output for the Driver/rewrite-objc.m test, which had
previously not been passing Darwin-specific options with the macosx triple.
llvm-svn: 141944
c++11. The old names are kept for backwards-compatibility. Patch by Ahmed
Charles! Names for backwards-compatible DiagGroups removed by me.
llvm-svn: 141913
- This disables the system include directories, but not the compiler builtin
directories. Useful for projects that want to use things like the intrinsic
headers, but are otherwise freestanding.
- I'm willing to reconsider the option naming, I also considered providing an
explicit -builtinc (which would match -nobuiltininc), but this is more
consistent with existing options.
llvm-svn: 141692