hanchenye-llvm-project/clang/test/lit.cfg

281 lines
11 KiB
INI
Raw Normal View History

# -*- Python -*-
import os
import platform
import re
import subprocess
[PCH] Remove the stat cache from the PCH file. The stat cache became essentially useless ever since we started validating all file entries in the PCH. But the motivating reason for removing it now is that it also affected correctness in this situation: -You have a header without include guards (using "#pragma once" or #import) -When creating the PCH: -The same header is referenced in an #include with different filename cases. -In the PCH, of course, we record only one file entry for the header file -But we cache in the PCH file the stat info for both filename cases -Then the source files are updated and the header file is updated in a way that its size and modification time are the same but its inode changes -When using the PCH: -We validate the headers, we check that header file and we create a file entry with its current inode -There's another #include with a filename with different case than the previously created file entry -In order to get its stat info we go through the cached stat info of the PCH and we receive the old inode -because of the different inodes, we think they are different files so we go ahead and include its contents. Removing the stat cache will potentially break clients that are attempting to use the stat cache as a way of avoiding having the actual input files available. If that use case is important, patches are welcome to bring it back in a way that will actually work correctly (i.e., emit a PCH that is self-contained, coping with literal strings, line/column computations, etc.). This fixes rdar://5502805 llvm-svn: 167172
2012-11-01 04:59:50 +08:00
import tempfile
# Configuration file for the 'lit' test runner.
# name: The name of this test suite.
config.name = 'Clang'
# Tweak PATH for Win32
if platform.system() == 'Windows':
# Seek sane tools in directories and set to $PATH.
path = getattr(config, 'lit_tools_dir', None)
path = lit.getToolsPath(path,
config.environment['PATH'],
['cmp.exe', 'grep.exe', 'sed.exe'])
if path is not None:
path = os.path.pathsep.join((path,
config.environment['PATH']))
config.environment['PATH'] = path
# testFormat: The test format to use to interpret tests.
#
# For now we require '&&' between commands, until they get globally killed and
# the test runner updated.
execute_external = (platform.system() != 'Windows'
or lit.getBashPath() not in [None, ""])
config.test_format = lit.formats.ShTest(execute_external)
# suffixes: A list of file extensions to treat as test files.
config.suffixes = ['.c', '.cpp', '.m', '.mm', '.cu', '.ll', '.cl', '.s']
# test_source_root: The root path where tests are located.
config.test_source_root = os.path.dirname(__file__)
# test_exec_root: The root path where tests should be run.
clang_obj_root = getattr(config, 'clang_obj_root', None)
if clang_obj_root is not None:
config.test_exec_root = os.path.join(clang_obj_root, 'test')
# Set llvm_{src,obj}_root for use by others.
config.llvm_src_root = getattr(config, 'llvm_src_root', None)
config.llvm_obj_root = getattr(config, 'llvm_obj_root', None)
# Clear some environment variables that might affect Clang.
#
# This first set of vars are read by Clang, but shouldn't affect tests
# that aren't specifically looking for these features, or are required
# simply to run the tests at all.
#
# FIXME: Should we have a tool that enforces this?
# safe_env_vars = ('TMPDIR', 'TEMP', 'TMP', 'USERPROFILE', 'PWD',
# 'MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET', 'IPHONEOS_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET',
# 'IOS_SIMULATOR_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET',
# 'VCINSTALLDIR', 'VC100COMNTOOLS', 'VC90COMNTOOLS',
# 'VC80COMNTOOLS')
possibly_dangerous_env_vars = ['COMPILER_PATH', 'RC_DEBUG_OPTIONS',
'CINDEXTEST_PREAMBLE_FILE', 'LIBRARY_PATH',
'CPATH', 'C_INCLUDE_PATH', 'CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH',
'OBJC_INCLUDE_PATH', 'OBJCPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH',
'LIBCLANG_TIMING', 'LIBCLANG_OBJTRACKING',
'LIBCLANG_LOGGING', 'LIBCLANG_BGPRIO_INDEX',
'LIBCLANG_BGPRIO_EDIT', 'LIBCLANG_NOTHREADS',
'LIBCLANG_RESOURCE_USAGE',
'LIBCLANG_CODE_COMPLETION_LOGGING']
# Clang/Win32 may refer to %INCLUDE%. vsvarsall.bat sets it.
if platform.system() != 'Windows':
possibly_dangerous_env_vars.append('INCLUDE')
for name in possibly_dangerous_env_vars:
if name in config.environment:
del config.environment[name]
# Tweak the PATH to include the tools dir and the scripts dir.
if clang_obj_root is not None:
llvm_tools_dir = getattr(config, 'llvm_tools_dir', None)
if not llvm_tools_dir:
lit.fatal('No LLVM tools dir set!')
path = os.path.pathsep.join((llvm_tools_dir, config.environment['PATH']))
config.environment['PATH'] = path
llvm_libs_dir = getattr(config, 'llvm_libs_dir', None)
if not llvm_libs_dir:
lit.fatal('No LLVM libs dir set!')
path = os.path.pathsep.join((llvm_libs_dir,
config.environment.get('LD_LIBRARY_PATH','')))
config.environment['LD_LIBRARY_PATH'] = path
###
# Check that the object root is known.
if config.test_exec_root is None:
# Otherwise, we haven't loaded the site specific configuration (the user is
# probably trying to run on a test file directly, and either the site
# configuration hasn't been created by the build system, or we are in an
# out-of-tree build situation).
# Check for 'clang_site_config' user parameter, and use that if available.
site_cfg = lit.params.get('clang_site_config', None)
if site_cfg and os.path.exists(site_cfg):
lit.load_config(config, site_cfg)
raise SystemExit
# Try to detect the situation where we are using an out-of-tree build by
# looking for 'llvm-config'.
#
# FIXME: I debated (i.e., wrote and threw away) adding logic to
# automagically generate the lit.site.cfg if we are in some kind of fresh
2009-11-08 07:53:17 +08:00
# build situation. This means knowing how to invoke the build system though,
# and I decided it was too much magic. We should solve this by just having
# the .cfg files generated during the configuration step.
llvm_config = lit.util.which('llvm-config', config.environment['PATH'])
if not llvm_config:
lit.fatal('No site specific configuration available!')
# Get the source and object roots.
llvm_src_root = lit.util.capture(['llvm-config', '--src-root']).strip()
llvm_obj_root = lit.util.capture(['llvm-config', '--obj-root']).strip()
clang_src_root = os.path.join(llvm_src_root, "tools", "clang")
clang_obj_root = os.path.join(llvm_obj_root, "tools", "clang")
# Validate that we got a tree which points to here, using the standard
# tools/clang layout.
this_src_root = os.path.dirname(config.test_source_root)
if os.path.realpath(clang_src_root) != os.path.realpath(this_src_root):
lit.fatal('No site specific configuration available!')
# Check that the site specific configuration exists.
site_cfg = os.path.join(clang_obj_root, 'test', 'lit.site.cfg')
if not os.path.exists(site_cfg):
lit.fatal('No site specific configuration available! You may need to '
'run "make test" in your Clang build directory.')
# Okay, that worked. Notify the user of the automagic, and reconfigure.
lit.note('using out-of-tree build at %r' % clang_obj_root)
lit.load_config(config, site_cfg)
raise SystemExit
###
# Discover the 'clang' and 'clangcc' to use.
import os
def inferClang(PATH):
# Determine which clang to use.
clang = os.getenv('CLANG')
# If the user set clang in the environment, definitely use that and don't
# try to validate.
if clang:
return clang
# Otherwise look in the path.
clang = lit.util.which('clang', PATH)
if not clang:
lit.fatal("couldn't find 'clang' program, try setting "
"CLANG in your environment")
return clang
config.clang = inferClang(config.environment['PATH']).replace('\\', '/')
if not lit.quiet:
lit.note('using clang: %r' % config.clang)
Teach Lit to pass the CC1 invocation the builtin include directory. This is a pretty gross hack, but I don't have any significantly cleaner ideas for this. There are several things obviously gross about it: 1) Lit shouldn't know that Clang needs this. This really that bad, as Lit already knows about CC1 and other internal details. 2) This hard codes the '3.0' version number, which is pretty lame. 3) This hard codes every other aspect of the resource dir structure which is less lame than the version number, but still not great. However, it should bring the MSVC tests back to life, and it should unblock the rest of the move from Frontend to Driver, so I think it's worth a bit of grossness that is isolated in our testing infrastructure while we figure out the best long term approach. I have the following ideas, some of which only solve part of the problem (and thus might need to be combined with other ideas): a) Create a symlink or other convenience path instead of a version number. b) Run 'clang' directly in the lit.cfg, look at its resource dir, and use that. c) Switch all the tests to use the driver instead of CC1. d) Hack the frontend to synthesize builtin include directories when none are provided by the driver. I don't like (d) because it feels very hackish and likely to break. We can only solve a small part of the problem with (a). I wanted to vote for (c), but lots of the tests in this bucket are really heavily using internal-only flags like -verify and -triple. I'm loath to complicate them with the full driver layer. Also, switching them to the driver adds more than just builtin headers, but all of the rest of the system headers! This leaves me with (b). If others like (b), I'll switch to it, but it felt a bit icky. Nothing concrete, and the other options look significantly worse, but I felt icky enough that I wanted to start with a more brain-dead patch to stop the bleeding, and gauge others' feelings here. llvm-svn: 143804
2011-11-05 18:15:27 +08:00
# Note that when substituting %clang_cc1 also fill in the include directory of
# the builtin headers. Those are part of even a freestanding environment, but
# Clang relies on the driver to locate them.
def getClangBuiltinIncludeDir(clang):
# FIXME: Rather than just getting the version, we should have clang print
# out its resource dir here in an easy to scrape form.
cmd = subprocess.Popen([clang, '-print-file-name=include'],
stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
if not cmd.stdout:
lit.fatal("Couldn't find the include dir for Clang ('%s')" % clang)
return cmd.stdout.read().strip()
config.substitutions.append( ('%clang_cc1', '%s -cc1 -internal-isystem %s'
% (config.clang,
getClangBuiltinIncludeDir(config.clang))) )
Teach Lit to pass the CC1 invocation the builtin include directory. This is a pretty gross hack, but I don't have any significantly cleaner ideas for this. There are several things obviously gross about it: 1) Lit shouldn't know that Clang needs this. This really that bad, as Lit already knows about CC1 and other internal details. 2) This hard codes the '3.0' version number, which is pretty lame. 3) This hard codes every other aspect of the resource dir structure which is less lame than the version number, but still not great. However, it should bring the MSVC tests back to life, and it should unblock the rest of the move from Frontend to Driver, so I think it's worth a bit of grossness that is isolated in our testing infrastructure while we figure out the best long term approach. I have the following ideas, some of which only solve part of the problem (and thus might need to be combined with other ideas): a) Create a symlink or other convenience path instead of a version number. b) Run 'clang' directly in the lit.cfg, look at its resource dir, and use that. c) Switch all the tests to use the driver instead of CC1. d) Hack the frontend to synthesize builtin include directories when none are provided by the driver. I don't like (d) because it feels very hackish and likely to break. We can only solve a small part of the problem with (a). I wanted to vote for (c), but lots of the tests in this bucket are really heavily using internal-only flags like -verify and -triple. I'm loath to complicate them with the full driver layer. Also, switching them to the driver adds more than just builtin headers, but all of the rest of the system headers! This leaves me with (b). If others like (b), I'll switch to it, but it felt a bit icky. Nothing concrete, and the other options look significantly worse, but I felt icky enough that I wanted to start with a more brain-dead patch to stop the bleeding, and gauge others' feelings here. llvm-svn: 143804
2011-11-05 18:15:27 +08:00
config.substitutions.append( ('%clangxx', ' ' + config.clang +
' -ccc-cxx '))
config.substitutions.append( ('%clang', ' ' + config.clang + ' ') )
config.substitutions.append( ('%test_debuginfo', ' ' + config.llvm_src_root + '/utils/test_debuginfo.pl ') )
# FIXME: Find nicer way to prohibit this.
config.substitutions.append(
(' clang ', """*** Do not use 'clang' in tests, use '%clang'. ***""") )
config.substitutions.append(
(' clang\+\+ ', """*** Do not use 'clang++' in tests, use '%clangxx'. ***"""))
config.substitutions.append(
(' clang-cc ',
"""*** Do not use 'clang-cc' in tests, use '%clang_cc1'. ***""") )
config.substitutions.append(
(' clang -cc1 ',
"""*** Do not use 'clang -cc1' in tests, use '%clang_cc1'. ***""") )
config.substitutions.append(
(' %clang-cc1 ',
"""*** invalid substitution, use '%clang_cc1'. ***""") )
###
# Set available features we allow tests to conditionalize on.
#
# As of 2011.08, crash-recovery tests still do not pass on FreeBSD.
if platform.system() not in ['FreeBSD']:
config.available_features.add('crash-recovery')
# Shell execution
if platform.system() not in ['Windows'] or lit.getBashPath() != '':
config.available_features.add('shell')
# For tests that require Darwin to run.
if platform.system() in ['Darwin']:
config.available_features.add('system-darwin')
# ANSI escape sequences in non-dumb terminal
if platform.system() not in ['Windows']:
config.available_features.add('ansi-escape-sequences')
[PCH] Remove the stat cache from the PCH file. The stat cache became essentially useless ever since we started validating all file entries in the PCH. But the motivating reason for removing it now is that it also affected correctness in this situation: -You have a header without include guards (using "#pragma once" or #import) -When creating the PCH: -The same header is referenced in an #include with different filename cases. -In the PCH, of course, we record only one file entry for the header file -But we cache in the PCH file the stat info for both filename cases -Then the source files are updated and the header file is updated in a way that its size and modification time are the same but its inode changes -When using the PCH: -We validate the headers, we check that header file and we create a file entry with its current inode -There's another #include with a filename with different case than the previously created file entry -In order to get its stat info we go through the cached stat info of the PCH and we receive the old inode -because of the different inodes, we think they are different files so we go ahead and include its contents. Removing the stat cache will potentially break clients that are attempting to use the stat cache as a way of avoiding having the actual input files available. If that use case is important, patches are welcome to bring it back in a way that will actually work correctly (i.e., emit a PCH that is self-contained, coping with literal strings, line/column computations, etc.). This fixes rdar://5502805 llvm-svn: 167172
2012-11-01 04:59:50 +08:00
# Case-insensitive file system
def is_filesystem_case_insensitive():
handle, path = tempfile.mkstemp(prefix='case-test', dir=config.test_exec_root)
[PCH] Remove the stat cache from the PCH file. The stat cache became essentially useless ever since we started validating all file entries in the PCH. But the motivating reason for removing it now is that it also affected correctness in this situation: -You have a header without include guards (using "#pragma once" or #import) -When creating the PCH: -The same header is referenced in an #include with different filename cases. -In the PCH, of course, we record only one file entry for the header file -But we cache in the PCH file the stat info for both filename cases -Then the source files are updated and the header file is updated in a way that its size and modification time are the same but its inode changes -When using the PCH: -We validate the headers, we check that header file and we create a file entry with its current inode -There's another #include with a filename with different case than the previously created file entry -In order to get its stat info we go through the cached stat info of the PCH and we receive the old inode -because of the different inodes, we think they are different files so we go ahead and include its contents. Removing the stat cache will potentially break clients that are attempting to use the stat cache as a way of avoiding having the actual input files available. If that use case is important, patches are welcome to bring it back in a way that will actually work correctly (i.e., emit a PCH that is self-contained, coping with literal strings, line/column computations, etc.). This fixes rdar://5502805 llvm-svn: 167172
2012-11-01 04:59:50 +08:00
isInsensitive = os.path.exists(path.upper())
os.close(handle)
os.remove(path)
return isInsensitive
if is_filesystem_case_insensitive():
config.available_features.add('case-insensitive-filesystem')
# [PR8833] LLP64-incompatible tests
if not re.match(r'^x86_64.*-(win32|mingw32)$', config.target_triple):
config.available_features.add('LP64')
# Registered Targets
def get_llc_props(tool):
set_of_targets = set()
enable_assertions = False
cmd = subprocess.Popen([tool, '-version'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
# Parse the stdout to get the list of registered targets.
parse_targets = False
for line in cmd.stdout:
if parse_targets:
m = re.match( r'(.*) - ', line)
if m is not None:
set_of_targets.add(m.group(1).strip() + '-registered-target')
else:
break
elif "Registered Targets:" in line:
parse_targets = True
if re.search(r'with assertions', line):
enable_assertions = True
return {"set_of_targets": set_of_targets,
"enable_assertions": enable_assertions}
llc_props = get_llc_props(os.path.join(llvm_tools_dir, 'llc'))
if len(llc_props['set_of_targets']) > 0:
config.available_features.update(llc_props['set_of_targets'])
else:
lit.fatal('No Targets Registered with the LLVM Tools!')
if llc_props['enable_assertions']:
config.available_features.add('asserts')
if lit.util.which('xmllint'):
config.available_features.add('xmllint')