This makes it *really* easy to debug leaks FYI:
ASAN_OPTIONS=detect_leaks=1 ./bin/llvm-lit -v <path to test>
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More updating of tests to be explicit about the target triple rather than
relying on the default target triple supporting ARM mode.
Indicate to lit that object emission is not yet available for Windows on ARM.
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This is a bit of a stab in the dark, since I have zlib on my machine.
Just going to bounce it off the bots & see if it sticks.
Do we have some convention for negative REQUIRES: checks? Or do I just
need to add a feature like I've done here?
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Introducing llvm-profdata, a tool for merging profile data generated by
PGO instrumentation in clang.
- The name indicates a file extension of <name>.profdata. Eventually
profile data output by clang should be changed to that extension.
- llvm-profdata merges two profiles. However, the name is more general,
since it will likely pick up more tasks (such as summarizing a single
profile).
- llvm-profdata parses the current text-based format, but will be
updated once we settle on a binary format.
<rdar://problem/15949645>
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llvm-mcmarkup, obj2yaml and yaml2obj were missing from the substitutions list,
causing the test suite to fail in a sandboxed environment.
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I saw the case that 'native' was mis-enabled when x86_64-pc-win32 on x86_64-linux.
FIXME: Consider cases that target can be executed even if host_triple were different from target_triple.
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This provides rudimentary testing of the llvm-c api.
The following commands are implemented:
* --module-dump
Read bytecode from stdin - print ir
* --module-list-functions
Read bytecode from stdin - list summary of functions
* --module-list-globals
Read bytecode from stdin - list summary of globals
* --targets-list
List available targets
* --object-list-sections
Read object file from stdin - list sections
* --object-list-symbols
Read object file from stdin - list symbols (like nm)
* --disassemble
Read lines of triple, hex ascii machine code from stdin - print disassembly
* --calc
Read lines of name, rpn from stdin - print generated module ir
Differential-Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1776
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infrastructure.
This was essentially work toward PGO based on a design that had several
flaws, partially dating from a time when LLVM had a different
architecture, and with an effort to modernize it abandoned without being
completed. Since then, it has bitrotted for several years further. The
result is nearly unusable, and isn't helping any of the modern PGO
efforts. Instead, it is getting in the way, adding confusion about PGO
in LLVM and distracting everyone with maintenance on essentially dead
code. Removing it paves the way for modern efforts around PGO.
Among other effects, this removes the last of the runtime libraries from
LLVM. Those are being developed in the separate 'compiler-rt' project
now, with somewhat different licensing specifically more approriate for
runtimes.
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line just to add or remove a single element. What I wouldn't give to
have clang-format here an be able to format this more densely without
caring...
Re-group and sort the entries while here to make the whole thing more
clear.
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- Instead of setting the suffixes in a bunch of places, just set one master
list in the top-level config. We now only modify the suffix list in a few
suites that have one particular unique suffix (.ml, .mc, .yaml, .td, .py).
- Aside from removing the need for a bunch of lit.local.cfg files, this enables
4 tests that were inadvertently being skipped (one in
Transforms/BranchFolding, a .s file each in DebugInfo/AArch64 and
CodeGen/PowerPC, and one in CodeGen/SI which is now failing and has been
XFAILED).
- This commit also fixes a bunch of config files to use config.root instead of
older copy-pasted code.
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Note that this will require a recent version of the linker for Darwin
builds with LTO to pass these tests.
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Archive files (.a) can have a symbol table indicating which object
files in them define which symbols. The purpose of this symbol table
is to speed up linking by allowing the linker the read only the .o
files it is actually going to use instead of having to parse every
object's symbol table.
LLVM's archive library currently supports a LLVM specific format for
such table. It is hard to see any value in that now that llvm-ld is
gone:
* System linkers don't use it: GNU ar uses the same plugin as the
linker to create archive files with a regular index. The OS X ar
creates no symbol table for IL files, I assume the linker just parses
all IL files.
* It doesn't interact well with archives having both IL and native objects.
* We probably don't want to be responsible for yet another archive
format variant.
This patch then:
* Removes support for creating and reading such index from lib/Archive.
* Remove llvm-ranlib, since there is nothing left for it to do.
We should in the future add support for regular indexes to llvm-ar for
both native and IL objects. When we do that, llvm-ranlib should be
reimplemented as a symlink to llvm-ar, as it is equivalent to "ar s".
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(-llc), similarly to the way it was done for clang and llvmc.
This doesn't affect the upstream llvm tests but helps when developing custom
LLVM-based tools and testing them within the LLVM regression framework.
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This patch adds the necessary configuration bits and #ifdef's to set up
the JIT/MCJIT test cases for SystemZ. Like other recent targets, we do
fully support MCJIT, but do not support the old JIT at all. Set up the
lit config files accordingly, and disable old-JIT unit tests.
Patch by Richard Sandiford.
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This makes llvm-dwarfdump and llvm-symbolizer understand
debug info sections compressed by ld.gold linker.
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to disable following tests for Hexagon that require direct object
generation support.
DebugInfo/dwarf-public-names.ll
DebugInfo/dwarf-version.ll
DebugInfo/member-pointers.ll
DebugInfo/namespace.ll
DebugInfo/two-cus-from-same-file.ll
Fixes bug 15616 - http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=15616
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Summary:
I did a local comparison between using bash and using lit's runner, and
more of the suite passes with lit than passes with bash. Most of the
bash failures have to do with /dev/null, which is nonsensical on
Windows, but the lit runner handles it.
The lit shell runner is also much faster than bash, so I would expect
most Windows devs would want it by default.
The behavior can be overridden on any OS by setting
LIT_USE_INTERNAL_SHELL to 0 or 1 in the environment.
Reviewers: chapuni, ddunbar
CC: llvm-commits, timurrrr
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D559
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In r143502, we renamed getHostTriple() to getDefaultTargetTriple()
as part of work to allow the user to supply a different default
target triple at configure time. This change also affected the JIT.
However, it is inappropriate to use the default target triple in the
JIT in most circumstances because this will not necessarily match
the current architecture used by the process, leading to illegal
instruction and other such errors at run time.
Introduce the getProcessTriple() function for use in the JIT and
its clients, and cause the JIT to use it. On architectures with a
single bitness, the host and process triples are identical. On other
architectures, the host triple represents the architecture of the
host CPU, while the process triple represents the architecture used
by the host CPU to interpret machine code within the current process.
For example, when executing 32-bit code on a 64-bit Linux machine,
the host triple may be 'x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu', while the process
triple may be 'i386-unknown-linux-gnu'.
This fixes JIT for the 32-on-64-bit (and vice versa) build on non-Apple
platforms.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D254
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Unsupported CPU type!
UNREACHABLE executed at llvm/lib/ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/RuntimeDyldELF.cpp:553!
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