llvm-ar is the only user of toWin32Time() (via setLastModificationAndAccessTime), and r186298 can be reverted.
It had been buggy since the initial commit.
FIXME: Could we rename {from|to}Win32Time as {from|to}Win32FILETIME in TimeValue?
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@186374 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Joerg Sonnenberger tells me one can open a directory in freebsd. I will try
to centralize our calls to open so that we can handle O_BINARY in one place,
and will then handle this there too.
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is executed within the same second as the inputs for the test are
checked out from the source tree, it will fail to update due to being
below the resolution of the 'mtime' test used.
Now, this may seem improbably to you... ok, maybe *really* improbable,
but consider a system which does distributed execution of tests by
shipping their inputs to another machine and runs them. That might cause
the mtime to be quite recent during the test run. ;]
Instead, create two files directly in the test (allowing all platforms
to see the problem) and add either a use of the 'touch' command that
forces one mtime to some time quite a bit in the past, or it sleeps for
just over a second to be outside of the precision window.
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This fixes two bugs is lib/Object that the use in llvm-ar found:
* In OS X created archives, the name can be padded with nulls. Strip them.
* In the constructor, remember the first non special member and use that in
begin_children. This makes sure we skip all special members, not just the
first one.
The change to llvm-ar itself consist of
* Using lib/Object for reading archives instead of ArchiveReader.cpp.
* Writing the modified archive directly, instead of creating an in memory
representation.
The old Archive library was way more general than what is needed, as can
be seen by the diffstat of this patch.
Having llvm-ar using lib/Object now opens the way for creating regular symbol
tables for both native objects and bitcode files so that we can use those
archives for LTO.
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It is not reliable to depend on the output of llvm_unreachable. The original
change will have proper tests when llvm-ar moves to lib/Object (soon).
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There is no lib/Archive anymore and some archive tests were in test/Archive and
others in test/Object. Since archive is just one of the formats supported by
lib/Object, test/Object is probably the best location.
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Although in reality the symbol table in ELF resides in a section, the
standard requires that there be no more than one SHT_SYMTAB. To enforce
this constraint, it is cleaner to group all the symbols under a
top-level `Symbols` key on the object file.
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It wouldn't really test anything that doesn't already have a more
targeted test:
`yaml2obj-elf-section-basic.yaml`:
Already tests that section content is correctly passed though.
`yaml2obj-elf-symbol-basic.yaml` (this file):
Tests that the st_value and st_size attributes of `main` are set
correctly.
Between those two tests, disassembling the file doesn't really add
anything, so just remove mention of disassembling the file.
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This reverts commit r184602. In an upcoming commit, I will just remove
the disassembler part of the test; it was mostly just a "nifty" thing
marking a milestone but it doesn't test anything that isn't tested
elsewhere.
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This was causing buildbot failures when build without X86 support.
Is there a way to conditionalize the test on the X86 target being
present?
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Previously we unconditionally enforced that section references in
symbols in the YAML had a name that was a section name present in the
object, and linked the references to that section. Now, permit empty
section names (already the default, if the `Section` key is not
provided) to indicate SHN_UNDEF.
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Instead, just have 3 sub-lists, one for each of
{STB_LOCAL,STB_GLOBAL,STB_WEAK}.
This allows us to be a lot more explicit w.r.t. the symbol ordering in
the object file, because if we allowed explicitly setting the STB_*
`Binding` key for the symbol, then we might have ended up having to
shuffle STB_LOCAL symbols to the front of the list, which is likely to
cause confusion and potential for error.
Also, this new approach is simpler ;)
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After this patch, the ELF file produced by
`yaml2obj-elf-symbol-basic.yaml`, when linked and executed on x86_64
(under SysV ABI, obviously; I tested on Linux), produces a working
executable that goes into an infinite loop!
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