The driver uses class SanitizerArgs to store parsed sanitizer arguments. It keeps a cached
SanitizerArgs object in ToolChain and uses it for different jobs. This does not work if
the sanitizer options are different for different jobs, which could happen when an
offloading toolchain translates the options for different jobs.
To fix this, SanitizerArgs should be created by using the actual arguments passed
to jobs instead of the original arguments passed to the driver, since the toolchain
may change the original arguments. And the sanitizer arguments should be diagnose
once.
This patch also fixes HIP toolchain for handling -fgpu-sanitize: a warning is emitted
for GPU's not supporting sanitizer and skipped. This is for backward compatibility
with existing -fsanitize options. -fgpu-sanitize is also turned on by default.
Reviewed by: Artem Belevich, Evgenii Stepanov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111443
In the situation of multilib, the gcc objects are in a /32 directory. On
Debian, the libraries is under /libo32 to avoid confliction. This patch
enables clang find gcc in /32, and C lib in /libo32.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112158
This mode never works (mismatching crtbeginT.o and crtendS.o) and probably
unsupported by GCC on glibc based Linux distro (incorrect crtbeginT.o causes
linker error) but makes sense (-shared means building a shared object, -static
means avoid shared object dependencies) and can be used on musl based Linux
distro.
mingw supports this mode as well.
These values allow, for example, `--target=aarch64` and
`--target=aarch64-linux-gnu` to detect `aarch64-linux-android`. This is
confusing. Users should specify `--target=aarch64-linux-android` to get Android GCC
installation.
Reverts D53463.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers, danalbert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110379
This reverts commit 03142c5f67.
Breaks check-asan if system ld doesn't support --push-state, even
if lld was built and is used according to lit's output.
See comments on https://reviews.llvm.org/D110128
When statically linking C++ standard library, we shouldn't add -Bdynamic
after including the library on the link line because that might override
user settings like -static and -static-pie. Rather, we should surround
the library with --push-state/--pop-state to make sure that -Bstatic
only applies to C++ standard library and nothing else. This has been
supported since GNU ld 2.25 (2014) so backwards compatibility should
no longer be a concern.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110128
When statically linking C++ standard library, we shouldn't add -Bdynamic
after including the library on the link line because that might override
user settings like -static and -static-pie. Rather, we should surround
the library with --push-state/--pop-state to make sure that -Bstatic
only applies to C++ standard library and nothing else. This has been
supported since GNU ld 2.25 (2014) so backwards compatibility should
no longer be a concern.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110128
This partially reverts commits 1fc2a47f0b and 9816e726e7.
See D109727. Replacing config.guess in favor of {gcc,clang} -dumpmachine
can avoid the riscv64-{redhat,suse}-linux GCC detection.
Acked-by: Luís Marques <luismarques@lowrisc.org>
Now prints the list of known archs. This requires plumbing a Driver
arg through a few functions.
Also add two more convenience insert() overlods to StringMap.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109105
Clang only adds GCC paths for RHEL <= 7 'devtoolset-<N>' Software
Collections (SCL). This generalizes this support to also include the
'gcc-toolset-10' SCL in RHEL/CentOS 8.
Reviewed By: stephan.dollberg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108908
This is mostly a mechanical change, but a testcase that contains
parts of the StringRef class (clang/test/Analysis/llvm-conventions.cpp)
isn't touched.
So far, support for x86_64-linux-gnux32 has been handled by explicit
comparisons of Triple.getEnvironment() to GNUX32. This worked as long as
x86_64-linux-gnux32 was the only X32 environment to worry about, but we
now have x86_64-linux-muslx32 as well. To support this, this change adds
an isX32() function and uses it. It replaces all checks for GNUX32 or
MuslX32 by isX32(), except for the following:
- Triple::isGNUEnvironment() and Triple::isMusl() are supposed to treat
GNUX32 and MuslX32 differently.
- computeTargetTriple() needs to be able to transform triples to add or
remove X32 from the environment and needs to map GNU to GNUX32, and
Musl to MuslX32.
- getMultiarchTriple() completely lacks any Musl support and retains the
explicit check for GNUX32 as it can only return x86_64-linux-gnux32.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103777
When using the per-target runtime build, it may be desirable to have
different __config_site headers for each target where all targets cannot
share a single configuration.
The layout used for libc++ headers after this change is:
```
include/
c++/
v1/
<libc++ headers except for __config_site>
<target1>/
c++/
v1/
__config_site
<target2>/
c++/
v1/
__config_site
<other targets>
```
This is the most optimal layout since it avoids duplication, the only
headers that's per-target is __config_site, all other headers are
shared across targets. This also means that we no need two
-isystem flags: one for the target-agnostic headers and one for
the target specific headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89013
This is a follow-up of e92d2b80c6 ("[Driver] Detect libstdc++ include
paths for native gcc (-m32 and -m64) on Debian i386") for the Debian Hurd
case, which has the same multiarch name reduction from i686 to i386.
i386-linux-gnu is actually Linux-only, so this moves the code of that commit
to Linux.cpp, and adds the same to Hurd.cpp
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101331
f263418402 ("[Driver] Gnu.cpp: remove obsoleted i386 triple detection
from end-of-life distribution versions") dropped the i686-gnu gcc path, but
GNU/Hurd's gcc is actually using it, and not i386.
This fixes the gcc path and update the tests to reflect it.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101317
Take gcc-8 on Debian i386 as an example. The target-specific libstdc++ search
path (`GPLUSPLUS_TOOL_INCLUDE_DIR`) uses the multiarch name `i386-linux-gnu`,
instead of the triple of the GCC installation `i686-linux-gnu` (the directory
under `usr/lib/gcc/`):
```
/usr/include/c++/8
/usr/include/i386-linux-gnu/c++/8
/usr/include/c++/8/backward
```
Clang currently detects `/usr/lib/gcc/i686-linux-gnu/8/../../../include/i686-linux-gnu/c++/8`.
This patch changes the second i686-linux-gnu to i386-linux-gnu so that
`/usr/include/i386-linux-gnu/c++/8` can be found.
Fix PR49827 - this was somehow regressed by my previous libstdc++ include path
cleanups and fixes for gcc-cross, but it seems that the paths were never properly tested before.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99852
Currently, support for the x32 ABI is handled as a multilib to the
x86_64 target only. However, full self-hosting x32 systems treating it
as a separate architecture with its own architecture triplets as well as
search paths exist as well, in Debian's x32 port and elsewhere.
This adds the missing architecture triplets and search paths so that
clang can work as a native compiler on x32, and updates the tests so
that they pass when using an x32 libdir suffix.
Additionally, we would previously also assume that objects from any
x86_64-linux-gnu GCC installation could be used to target x32. This
changes the logic so that only GCC installations that include x32
support are used when targetting x32, meaning x86_64-linux-gnux32 GCC
installations, and x86_64-linux-gnu and i686-linux-gnu GCC installations
that include x32 multilib support.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52050
This helper method is useful even outside of Gnu toolchains, so move
it to ToolChain so it can be reused in other toolchains such as Fuchsia.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88452
This follows GCC. Having libstdc++/libc++ include paths is not useful
anyway because libstdc++/libc++ header files cannot find features.h.
While here, suppress -stdlib++-isystem with -nostdlibinc.
This reverts commit 933d146f38 and 21b211a8f2
(which mis-identified the issue) but restores i586-linux-gnu which was
removed by `Gnu.cpp: remove obsoleted i386 triple detection from end-of-life distribution versions`.
Looks like i586-linux-gnu was not dead enough (used in a sysroot by Fuchsia build bot based on Debian jessie:)
but i486-linux-gnu should be very dead by now.
Debian multiarch additionally adds /usr/include/<triplet> and somehow
Android borrowed the idea. (Note /usr/<triplet>/include is already an
include dir...). On Debian, we should just assume a GCC installation is
available and use its triple.
With this change, on Debian x86-64 (with a MULTILIB_OSDIRNAMES local patch
../lib64 -> ../lib; this does not matter because /usr/lib64/crt{1,i,n}.o do not exist),
`clang++ --target=aarch64-linux-gnu a.cc -Wl,--dynamic-linker=/usr/aarch64-linux-gnu/lib/ld-linux-aarch64.so.1 -Wl,-rpath,/usr/aarch64-linux-gnu/lib`
built executable can run under qemu-user. Previously this failed with
`/usr/lib/gcc-cross/aarch64-linux-gnu/10/../../../../include/c++/10/iostream:38:10: fatal error: 'bits/c++config.h' file not found`
On Arch Linux, due to the MULTILIB_OSDIRNAMES patch and the existence of
/usr/lib64/crt{1,i,n}.o, clang driver may pick
/usr/lib64/crt{1,i,n}.o and cause a linker error. -B can work around the problem.
`clang++ --target=aarch64-linux-gnu -B /usr/aarch64-linux-gnu/lib a.cc -Wl,--dynamic-linker=/usr/aarch64-linux-gnu/lib/ld-linux-aarch64.so.1 -Wl,-rpath,/usr/aarch64-linux-gnu/lib64:/usr/aarch64-linux-gnu/lib`
With this change, for `#include <ar.h>`, `clang --target=aarch64-linux-gnu`
will read `/usr/lib/gcc/aarch64-linux-gnu/10/../../../../aarch64-linux-gnu/include/ar.h`
(on Debian gcc->gcc-cross)
instead of `/usr/include/ar.h`. Some glibc headers (e.g. gnu/stubs.h) are different across architectures.
Seem unnecessary to diverge from GCC here.
Beside, lib/../$OSLibDir can be considered closer to the GCC
installation then the system root. The comment should not apply.
After path resolution, it duplicates a subsequent -L entry. The entry below
(lib/gcc/$triple/$version/../../../../$OSLibDir) usually does not exist (e.g.
Arch Linux; Debian cross gcc). When it exists, it typically just has ld.so (e.g.
Debian native gcc) which cannot cause collision. Removing the -L (similar to
reordering it) is therefore justified.
so that when --sysroot is specified, the detected GCC installation will not be
overridden by another from /usr which happens to have a larger version.
This behavior is particularly inconvenient when the system has a larger version
GCC while the user wants to try out an older sysroot.
Delete some tests from linux-ld.c which overlap with cross-linux.c
In GCC, if `-B $prefix` is specified, `$prefix` is used to find executable files and startup files.
`$prefix/include` is added as an include search directory.
Clang overloads -B with GCC installation detection semantics which make the
behavior less predictable (due to the "largest GCC version wins" rule) and
interact poorly with --gcc-toolchain (--gcc-toolchain can be overridden by -B).
* `clang++ foo.cpp` detects GCC installation under `/usr`.
* `clang++ --gcc-toolchain=Inputs foo.cpp` detects GCC installation under `Inputs`.
* `clang++ -BA --gcc-toolchain=B foo.cpp` detects GCC installation under A and B and the larger version wins. With this patch, only B is used for detection.
* `clang++ -BA foo.cpp` detects GCC installation under `A` and `/usr`, and the larger GCC version wins. With this patch `A` is not used for detection.
This patch changes -B to drop the GCC detection semantics. Its executable
searching semantics are preserved. --gcc-toolchain is the recommended option to
specify the GCC installation detection directory.
(
Note: Clang detects GCC installation in various target dependent directories.
`$sysroot/usr` (sysroot defaults to "") is a common directory used by most targets.
Such a directory is expected to contain something like `lib{,32,64}/gcc{,-cross}/$triple`.
Clang will then construct library/include paths from the directory.
)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97993
If --gcc-toolchain is specified, we should detect GCC installation there, and suppress other directories for detection.
Reviewed By: mgorny, manojgupta
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97894
When building a 64-bit big endian PowerPC Linux kernel with a 64-bit
little endian PowerPC target, the 32-bit vDSO errors:
```
$ make ARCH=powerpc CC=clang CROSS_COMPILE=powerpc64le-linux-gnu- \
pseries_defconfig arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/
ld.lld: error: arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/sigtramp.o is incompatible with elf32-powerpc
ld.lld: error: arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/gettimeofday.o is incompatible with elf32-powerpc
ld.lld: error: arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/datapage.o is incompatible with elf32-powerpc
ld.lld: error: arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/cacheflush.o is incompatible with elf32-powerpc
ld.lld: error: arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/note.o is incompatible with elf32-powerpc
ld.lld: error: arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/getcpu.o is incompatible with elf32-powerpc
ld.lld: error: arch/powerpc/kernel/vdso32/vgettimeofday.o is incompatible with elf32-powerpc
...
```
This happens because the endian information is missing from the call to
the assembler, even though it was explicitly passed to clang. See the
below example.
```
$ echo | clang --target=powerpc64le-linux-gnu \
--prefix=/usr/bin/powerpc64le-linux-gnu- \
-no-integrated-as -m32 -mbig-endian -### -x c -c -
".../clang-12" "-cc1" "-triple" "powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu" ...
...
"/usr/bin/powerpc64le-linux-gnu-as" "-a32" "-mppc" "-many" "-o" "-.o" "/tmp/--e69e28.s"
```
clang sets the right target with -m32 and -mbig-endian but -mbig-endian
does not make it to the assembler, resulting in a 32-bit little endian
binary. This differs from the little endian targets, which always pass
-mlittle-endian.
```
$ echo | clang --target=powerpc64-linux-gnu \
--prefix=/usr/bin/powerpc64-linux-gnu- \
-no-integrated-as -m32 -mlittle-endian -### -x c -c -
".../clang-12" "-cc1" "-triple" "powerpcle-unknown-linux-gnu" ...
...
"/usr/bin/powerpc64-linux-gnu-as" "-a32" "-mppc" "-mlittle-endian" "-many" "-o" "-.o" "/tmp/--405dbd.s"
```
Do the same thing for the big endian targets so that there is no more
error. This matches GCC's behavior, where -mbig and -mlittle are always
passed along to GNU as.
```
$ echo | powerpc64-linux-gcc -### -x c -c -
...
.../powerpc64-linux/bin/as -a64 -mpower4 -many -mbig -o -.o /tmp/ccVn7NAm.s
...
$ echo | powerpc64le-linux-gcc -### -x c -c -
...
.../powerpc64le-linux/bin/as -a64 -mpower8 -many -mlittle -o -.o /tmp/ccPN9ato.s
...
```
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94442
While trying to compile clang and openmp with a freshly built clang with the gcc/7.4.0
toolchain on the Summit supercomputer I face some error because of the triple under which
the GCC toolchain is installed was not present in for PPC64LE triples.
This patch add the powerpc64le-none-linux-gnu used on system like Summit and Ascent.
Reviewed By: jdenny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94261
Add powerpcle support to clang.
For FreeBSD, assume a freestanding environment for now, as we only need it in the first place to build loader, which runs in the OpenFirmware environment instead of the FreeBSD environment.
For Linux, recognize glibc and musl environments to match current usage in Void Linux PPC.
Adjust driver to match current binutils behavior regarding machine naming.
Adjust and expand tests.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93919
GCC made the switch on 2018-04-10 ("rs6000: Enable -fasynchronous-unwind-tables by default").
In Clang, FreeBSD/NetBSD powerpc have already defaulted to -fasynchronous-unwind-tables.
This patch defaults Generic_GCC powerpc (which affects Linux) to use -fasynchronous-unwind-tables.
Reviewed By: #powerpc, nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92054
In GCC, `aarch64-*-linux` and `aarch64-*-freebsd` made the switch in 2018
(https://gcc.gnu.org/pipermail/gcc-patches/2018-March/495549.html).
In Clang, FreeBSD/Fuchsia/NetBSD/MinGW aarch64 default to -fasynchronous-unwind-tables.
This patch defaults Generic_GCC aarch64 (which affects Linux) to use -fasynchronous-unwind-tables.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91760
Object of class `Command` contains various properties of a command to
execute, but output file was missed from them. This change adds this
property. It is required for reporting consumed time and memory implemented
in D78903 and may be used in other cases too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78902
This helper method is useful even outside of Gnu toolchains, so move
it to ToolChain so it can be reused in other toolchains such as Fuchsia.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88452
This helper method is useful even outside of Gnu toolchains, so move
it to ToolChain so it can be reused in other toolchains such as Fuchsia.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88452
Check whether /etc/env.d/gcc exists before trying to read from any
file from there. This saves a few OS calls on a non-Gentoo system.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87143
recommit e50465ecef with fix for
regression in lldb tests.
Two issues:
1. the directory part of original .dwo file was dropped
2. if the stem of the .dwo file contains '.', the last dot
and strings after that were removed
This recommit fixes those two issues.
when -gsplit option is used with clang driver, clang driver will create
a filename with .dwo option based on the input file name and pass
it to clang -cc1. This file is used for storing the debug info. Since
HIP generate separate object files for different GPU arch's,
this file should be different for different GPU arch. This patch
adds _ and GPU arch to the stem of the dwo file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87791
gcc translates -gz=zlib to --compress-debug-options=zlib for both assembler and linker
but clang only does this for assembler.
The linker needs --compress-debug-options=zlib option to compress the debug sections
in the generated executable or shared library.
Due to this bug, -gz=zlib has no effect on the generated executable or shared library.
This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87321
Instead of accepting the same arguments as regular linker,
the static linker will only accept input files.
Reviewed By: yaxunl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85442
Many driver options are neither 'DriverOption' nor 'LinkerInput'. When gcc is
used for linking, these options get forwarded even if they don't have anything
to do with linking. Among these options, clang-specific ones can cause gcc to
error.
Just use 'OPT_Link_Group' and a new flag 'LinkOption' for options which already
have a group.
gfortran support apparently bit rots (which does not seem to make much sense). XFAIL the test.
Do not detect device library by default in rocm detector.
Only detect device library in Rocm and HIP toolchain.
Separate detection of HIP runtime and Rocm device library.
Detect rocm path by version file in host toolchains.
Also added detecting rocm version and printing rocm
installation path and version with -v.
Fixed include path and device library detection for
ROCm 3.5.
Added --hip-version option. Renamed --hip-device-lib-path
to --rocm-device-lib-path.
Fixed default value for -fhip-new-launch-api.
Added default -std option for HIP.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82930
specified at Command creation, rather than as part of the Tool.
This resolves the hack I just added to allow Darwin toolchain to vary
its level of support based on `-mlinker-version=`.
The change preserves the _current_ settings for response-file support.
Some tools look likely to be declaring that they don't support
response files in error, however I kept them as-is in order for this
change to be a simple refactoring.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82782
Add GNU Static Lib Tool, which supports the --emit-static-lib
flag. For HIP, a static library archive will be created and
consist of HIP Fat Binary host object with the device images embedded.
Using llvm-ar to create the static archive. Also, delete existing
output file to ensure a new archive is created each time.
Reviewers: yaxunl, tra, rjmccall, echristo
Subscribers: echristo, JonChesterfield, scchan, msearles
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78759
This patch is a follow up on https://reviews.llvm.org/D78759.
Extract the HIP Linker script from generic GNU linker,
and move it into HIP ToolChain. Update OffloadActionBuilder
Link actions feature to apply device linking and host linking
actions separately. Using MC Directives, embed the device images
and define symbols.
Reviewers: JonChesterfield, yaxunl
Subscribers: tra, echristo, jdoerfert, msearles, scchan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81963
Summary:
The Android NDK's clang driver is used with an Android -target setting,
and the driver automatically finds the Android sysroot at a path
relative to the driver. The sysroot has the libc++ headers in it.
Remove Hurd::computeSysRoot as it is equivalent to the new
ToolChain::computeSysRoot method.
Fixes PR46213.
Reviewers: srhines, danalbert, #libc, kristina
Reviewed By: srhines, danalbert
Subscribers: ldionne, sthibaul, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, PkmX, jocewei, Jim, lenary, s.egerton, pzheng, sameer.abuasal, apazos, luismarques, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81622
To support std::complex and some other standard C/C++ functions in HIP device code,
they need to be forced to be __host__ __device__ functions by pragmas. This is done
by some clang standard C++ wrapper headers which are shared between cuda-clang and hip-Clang.
For these standard C++ wapper headers to work properly, specific include path order
has to be enforced:
clang C++ wrapper include path
standard C++ include path
clang include path
Also, these C++ wrapper headers require device version of some standard C/C++ functions
must be declared before including them. This needs to be done by including a default
header which declares or defines these device functions. The default header is always
included before any other headers are included by users.
This patch adds the the default header and include path for HIP.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81176
The current code for GNU/Linux is actually completely generic, and can be moved to ToolChains/Gnu.cpp,
so that it can benefit GNU/Hurd and GNU/kFreeBSD.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73845
A two-stage ThinLTO build previously failed the clang/test/Driver/hurd.c test because of a static_cast in "tools::gnutools::Linker::ConstructJob()" which wrongly converted an instance of "clang::driver::toolchains::Hurd" into that of "clang::driver::toolchains::Linux". ThinLTO would later devirtualize the "ToolChain.getDynamicLinker(Args)" call and use "Linux::getDynamicLinker()" instead, causing the test to generate a wrong "-dynamic-linker" linker flag (/lib/ld-linux.so.2 instead of /lib/ld.so)
Fixes PR45061.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75373
AddGoldPlugin does more than adding `-plugin path/to/LLVMgold.so`.
It works with lld and GNU ld, and adds other LTO options.
So AddGoldPlugin is no longer a suitable name.
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74591
Summary: Adds the RedHat Linux triple to the list of 64-bit RISC-V triples.
Without this the gcc libraries wouldn't be found by clang on a redhat/fedora
system, as the search list included `/usr/lib/gcc/riscv64-redhat-linux-gnu`
but the correct path didn't include the `-gnu` suffix.
Reviewers: lenary, asb, dlj
Reviewed By: lenary
Tags: #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74399
This is to avoid performance regressions when the default attribute
behavior is fixed to assume ieee.
I tested the default on x86_64 ubuntu, which seems to default to
FTZ/DAZ, but am guessing for x86 and PS4.
This is how it should've been and brings it more in line with
std::string_view. There should be no functional change here.
This is mostly mechanical from a custom clang-tidy check, with a lot of
manual fixups. It uncovers a lot of minor inefficiencies.
This doesn't actually modify StringRef yet, I'll do that in a follow-up.
According to D53384, the default was switched from -fno-PIC to -fPIC to
work around a -fsanitize=leak bug on big-endian.
This gratuitous difference between little-endian and big-endian is
undesired, and not acceptable on powerpc64-unknown-freebsd. If
-fsanitize=leak still has the problem, we should consider defaulting to
-fPIC/-fPIE only when -fsanitize=leak is specified (see SanitizerArgs::requiresPIE())
powerpc64-ibm-aix is unaffected: it still defaults to -fPIC.
powerpc64-linux-musl is unaffected (-fPIE since D39588): it still defaults to -fPIE.
Reviewed By: #powerpc, jhibbits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72363
Linux' current addLibCxxIncludePaths and addLibStdCxxIncludePaths
are actually almost non-Linux-specific at all, and can be reused
almost as such for all gcc toolchains. Only keep
Android/Freescale/Cray hacks in Linux's version.
Patch by sthibaul (Samuel Thibault)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69758
Handle -march=native in systemz::getSystemZTargetCPU, similar to
how this is done on other platforms. Also change the return type
to std::string instead of const char *.
D39317 made clang use .init_array when no gcc installations is found.
This change changes all gcc installations to use .init_array .
GCC 4.7 by default stopped providing .ctors/.dtors compatible crt files,
and stopped emitting .ctors for __attribute__((constructor)).
.init_array should always work.
FreeBSD rules are moved to FreeBSD.cpp to make Generic_ELF rules clean.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71434
Very few ELF platforms still use .ctors/.dtors now. Linux (glibc: 1999-07),
DragonFlyBSD, FreeBSD (2012-03) and Solaris have supported .init_array
for many years. Some architectures like AArch64/RISC-V default to
.init_array . GNU ld and gold can even convert .ctors to .init_array .
It makes more sense to flip the CC1 default, and only uses
-fno-use-init-array on platforms that don't support .init_array .
For example, OpenBSD did not support DT_INIT_ARRAY before Aug 2016
(86fa57a279)
I may miss some ELF platforms that still use .ctors, but their
maintainers can easily diagnose such problems.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71393