Commit Graph

462 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
George Karpenkov 22a402fb66 [lit] Modify LIT to accept environment variable LIT_FILTER to select tests.
This is especially useful when lit is invoked indirectly by the build
system, and additional arguments can not be easily specified.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35091

llvm-svn: 307339
2017-07-07 00:22:11 +00:00
Reid Kleckner c58b7c5973 [lit] Factor out some shell input/output redirection logic, NFC
This is a very light refactoring aimed at improving readability. There
is definitely still room for improvement here.

llvm-svn: 307310
2017-07-06 20:40:27 +00:00
David L. Jones a63c3369aa [lit] Fix unit test discovery for Visual Studio builds.
Fix by Andrew Ng!

The Visual Studio build can contain output for multiple configuration types (
e.g. Debug, Release & RelWithDebInfo) within the same build output
directory. Therefore when discovering unit tests, the "build mode" sub directory
containing the appropriate configuration is included in the search. This sub
directory may not always be present, so a test for its existence is required.

Reviewers: zturner, modocache, dlj

Reviewed By: zturner, dlj

Subscribers: grimar, bd1976llvm, gbreynoo, edd, jhenderson, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34976

llvm-svn: 307235
2017-07-06 03:23:18 +00:00
David L. Jones 13f0fac12f [lit] Factor out listdir logic shared by different test formats.
Summary:
The lit test formats use largely the same logic for discovering tests. There are
some superficial differences in the logic, which seem reasonable enough to
handle in a single routine.

At a high level, the common goal is "look for files that end with one of these
suffixes, and skip anything starting with a dot." The balance of the logic
specific to ShTest and GoogleTest collapses quite a bit, so that
getTestsInDirectory is only a couple of lines around a call to the new function.

Reviewers: zturner, MatzeB, modocache

Subscribers: sanjoy, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34855

llvm-svn: 306895
2017-06-30 21:58:55 +00:00
Zachary Turner e9db96e6d9 Revert "[lit] Clean output directories before running tests."
This reverts commit da6318a92fba793e4f2447ec478b001392d57d43.

This is causing failures on some build bots due to what appears
to be some kind of lit ordering dependency.

llvm-svn: 306833
2017-06-30 16:05:03 +00:00
Zachary Turner 0955739b36 [lit] Clean output directories before running tests.
Presently lit leaks files in the tests' output directories.
Specifically, if a test creates output files, lit makes no
effort to remove them prior to the next test run.  This is
problematic because it leads to false positives whenever a
test passes because stale  files were present.  In general
it is a source of flakiness that should be removed.

This patch addresses this by building the list of all test
directories that are part of the current run set, and then
deleting those directories and recreating them anew.  This
gives each test a clean baseline to start from.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34732

llvm-svn: 306832
2017-06-30 16:01:30 +00:00
David L. Jones 0a466fc209 [lit] Re-apply: Fix some convoluted logic around Unicode encoding, and de-duplicate across modules that used it.
(Take 2: this patch re-applies r306625, which was reverted in r306629. This
patch includes only trivial fixes.)

In Python2 and Python3, the various (non-)?Unicode string types are sort of
spaghetti. Python2 has unicode support tacked on via the 'unicode' type, which
is distinct from 'str' (which are bytes). Python3 takes the "unicode-everywhere"
approach, with 'str' representing a Unicode string.

Both have a 'bytes' type. In Python3, it is the only way to represent raw bytes.
However, in Python2, 'bytes' is an alias for 'str'. This leads to interesting
problems when an interface requires a precise type, but has to run under both
Python2 and Python3.

The previous logic appeared to be correct in all cases, but went through more
layers of indirection than necessary. This change does the necessary conversions
in one shot, with documentation about which paths might be taken in Python2 or
Python3.

Changes from r306625: some tests just print binary outputs, so in those cases,
fall back to str() in Python3. For googletests, add one missing call to
to_string().

(Tested by verifying the visible breakage with Python3. Verified that everything
works in py2 and py3.)

llvm-svn: 306643
2017-06-29 04:37:35 +00:00
David L. Jones eb615506b3 Revert "[lit] Fix some convoluted logic around Unicode encoding, and de-duplicate across modules that used it."
This reverts r306625.

llvm-svn: 306629
2017-06-29 02:22:49 +00:00
David L. Jones 30251947ed Fix spelling: uncode -> unicode.
Remember kids: there is no 'I' in str or bytes, but there is ALWAYS an
'I' in unicode.

llvm-svn: 306626
2017-06-29 01:03:56 +00:00
David L. Jones d59c9cd539 [lit] Fix some convoluted logic around Unicode encoding, and de-duplicate across modules that used it.
Summary:
In Python2 and Python3, the various (non-)?Unicode string types are sort of
spaghetti. Python2 has unicode support tacked on via the 'unicode' type, which
is distinct from 'str' (which are bytes). Python3 takes the "unicode-everywhere"
approach, with 'str' representing a Unicode string.

Both have a 'bytes' type. In Python3, it is the only way to represent raw bytes.
However, in Python2, 'bytes' is an alias for 'str'. This leads to interesting
problems when an interface requires a precise type, but has to run under both
Python2 and Python3.

The previous logic appeared to be correct in all cases, but went through more
layers of indirection than necessary. This change does the necessary conversions
in one shot, with documentation about which paths might be taken in Python2 or
Python3.

Reviewers: zturner, modocache

Subscribers: llvm-commits, sanjoy

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34793

llvm-svn: 306625
2017-06-29 01:03:55 +00:00
David L. Jones 34a18722fd [lit] Remove dead code not referenced in the LLVM SVN repo.
Summary:
This change removes the intermediate 'FileBasedTest' format from lit. This
format is only ever used by the ShTest format, so the logic can be moved into
ShTest directly.

In order to better clarify what the TestFormat subclasses do, I fleshed out the
TestFormat base class with Python's notion of abstract methods, using
@abc.abstractmethod. This gives a convenient way to document the expected
interface, without the risk of instantiating an abstract class (that's what
ABCMeta does -- it raises an exception if you try to instantiate a class which
has abstract methods, but not if you instantiate a subclass that implements
them).

Reviewers: zturner, modocache

Subscribers: sanjoy, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34792

llvm-svn: 306623
2017-06-29 01:01:03 +00:00
David L. Jones b3c88339ad [lit] Remove dead code (not referenced anywhere), and clarify some function names.
Summary:
The dead code seems to be unreferenced, according to textual search across the
LLVM SVN repo.

The clarification part of this change alters the name of a module-level function
so that it is different from the name of the class-methods that call it.
Currently, there are no erroneous references, but stylistically (c.f. PEP-8),
internal "helper" functions should generally be named accordingly by prepending
an underscore. (I also chose to add '_impl', which isn't necessary, but helps me
at least to mentally disambiguate the interface and implementation functions.)

Reviewers: zturner, modocache

Subscribers: sanjoy, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34775

llvm-svn: 306600
2017-06-28 21:14:13 +00:00
Alex Lorenz 9e39013941 [lit][macOS] Add a utility function to find the platform SDK version
on macOS

This function will be used to tie Clang's Integeration tests to a particular
SDK version. See https://reviews.llvm.org/D32178 for more context.

llvm-svn: 304541
2017-06-02 11:21:37 +00:00
Dimitry Andric 76b6038cc6 Return a lit.Test.Result object from TestRunner's executeShTest()
Summary:
For various clang analyzer tests, which were unsupported, I got lit
exceptions, similar to the following:

    Exception during script execution:
    Traceback (most recent call last):
      File "utils/lit/lit/run.py", line 190, in execute_test
        result = test.config.test_format.execute(test, lit_config)
      File "tools/clang/test/Analysis/analyzer_test.py", line 11, in execute
        if result.code == lit.Test.FAIL:
    AttributeError: 'tuple' object has no attribute 'code'

This is because executeShTest() in utils/lit/lit/TestRunner.py is
supposed to return a lit.Test.Result object, but in case of unsupported
tests, it returns a plain tuple.

Fix this by returning a properly initialized lit.Test.Result object
instead.

Reviewers: rnk, rafael, modocache

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33579

llvm-svn: 303943
2017-05-25 23:56:44 +00:00
Zachary Turner 090871f206 [lit] Take the last error when executing pipelines.
This seems to have been present since the beginning of time,
which is quite surprising.  The symptom was this: Suppose you
have a test with a run line that looks like this:

  RUN: foo | FileCheck %s

foo prints some output and then due to a bug in the program it
asserts.  On Windows this results in the program returning a
negative exit code.  But if enough output had been printed
already by the tool so that the FileCheck match would succeed
then FileCheck would return 0, and because of bad logic in
lit this 0 return value would overwrite the failed return
value from previous items in the pipeline.  This only happened
with negative exit codes.

The most sensible behavior is to just take whatever the first
exit code is.  There is no logical ordering defined on exit
codes, so comparing with < and > does not make a lot of sense.
Instead, as soon as we find the first non-successful return
value, that should be the result of the entire expression.

This fixes the issue, as now tests which fail on non-Windows
platforms also fail for me on Windows as well.

llvm-svn: 303440
2017-05-19 18:12:07 +00:00
Rafael Espindola cd6eb783fc Add back a dummy --use-processes.
Some bots are using it.

llvm-svn: 303282
2017-05-17 18:55:01 +00:00
Rafael Espindola d38107b566 Always use the multiprocess module.
This seems to work on freebsd and openbsd these days.

llvm-svn: 303280
2017-05-17 18:20:01 +00:00
Reid Kleckner c1f8d7a169 [lit] Try to exit more cleanly
If all jobs complete successfully, use pool.close() instead of
pool.terminate() before waiting for the workers. Zach Turner reported
that he was getting "access denied" exceptions from pool.terminate().

Make the workers abort immediately without printing to stderr when they
are interrupted.

Finally, catch exceptions when attempting to remove our temporary
testing directory. On abnormal exit, there can often be open handles
that haven't been cleaned up yet.

llvm-svn: 301941
2017-05-02 17:45:16 +00:00
Reid Kleckner d3c87b5332 [lit] Try using process pools by default again
Both pickling errors encountered on clang bots and Darwin compiler-rt
should now be fixed.

This has no impact on testing time on Linux, and on Windows goes from
88s to 63s for 'check'. The tests pass on Mac, but I haven't compared
execution time.

llvm-svn: 299775
2017-04-07 15:28:32 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 578c36d952 [lit] Implement timeouts and max_time for process pool testing
This is necessary to pass the lit test suite at llvm/utils/lit/tests.

There are some pre-existing failures here, but now switching to pools
doesn't regress any tests.

I had to change test-data/lit.cfg to import DummyConfig from a module to
fix pickling problems, but I think it'll be OK if we require test
formats to be written in real .py modules outside lit.cfg files.

I also discovered that in some circumstances AsyncResult.wait() will not
raise KeyboardInterrupt in a timely manner, but you can pass a non-zero
timeout to work around this. This makes threading.Condition.wait use a
polling loop that runs through the interpreter, so it's capable of
asynchronously raising KeyboardInterrupt.

llvm-svn: 299605
2017-04-06 00:38:28 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 13dab5c171 [lit] Revert to old execution strategy while I debug these pickling errors
llvm-svn: 299565
2017-04-05 17:16:37 +00:00
Reid Kleckner c33834e0e3 [lit] Use Python 3 style print to satisfy some bots
llvm-svn: 299564
2017-04-05 17:05:31 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 1b3c146acb [lit] Use process pools for test execution by default
Summary:
This drastically reduces lit test execution startup time on Windows. Our
previous strategy was to manually create one Process per job and manage
the worker pool ourselves. Instead, let's use the worker pool provided
by multiprocessing.  multiprocessing.Pool(jobs) returns almost
immediately, and initializes the appropriate number of workers, so they
can all start executing tests immediately. This avoids the ramp-up
period that the old implementation suffers from.  This appears to speed
up small test runs.

Here are some timings of the llvm-readobj tests on Windows using the
various execution strategies:

 # multiprocessing.Pool:
$ for i in `seq 1 3`; do tim python ./bin/llvm-lit.py -sv ../llvm/test/tools/llvm-readobj/ --use-process-pool |& grep real: ; done
real: 0m1.156s
real: 0m1.078s
real: 0m1.094s

 # multiprocessing.Process:
$ for i in `seq 1 3`; do tim python ./bin/llvm-lit.py -sv ../llvm/test/tools/llvm-readobj/ --use-processes |& grep real: ; done
real: 0m6.062s
real: 0m5.860s
real: 0m5.984s

 # threading.Thread:
$ for i in `seq 1 3`; do tim python ./bin/llvm-lit.py -sv ../llvm/test/tools/llvm-readobj/ --use-threads |& grep real: ; done
real: 0m9.438s
real: 0m10.765s
real: 0m11.079s

I kept the old code to launch processes in case this change doesn't work
on all platforms that LLVM supports, but at some point I would like to
remove both the threading and old multiprocessing execution strategies.

Reviewers: modocache, rafael

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31677

llvm-svn: 299560
2017-04-05 16:44:56 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 07503baf3a [lit] Add a minimum export implementation.
llvm-svn: 299475
2017-04-04 22:20:18 +00:00
Rafael Espindola d41a0c1509 Rename variable.
Requested on post commit code review.

llvm-svn: 299232
2017-03-31 17:11:51 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 90c7825058 Add a %basename substitution.
This will be used to avoid various call to basename in the asan tests.

llvm-svn: 299216
2017-03-31 13:41:10 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 46cc7df98a Use the current working directory in the glob expansion
This fixes tests that do things like

mkdir <dir>
cd <dir>
..
<cmd> *.foo

llvm-svn: 299209
2017-03-31 12:46:39 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 1eee6eda0e Use os.path.realpath when tracking the cwd.
This is needed by TestCases/Posix/coverage-direct.cc

The problem is that the test does:

mkdir <dir>
cd <dir>
cd ..
rm -rf <dir>
<more commands>

the current directory currently looks like "/.../<dir>/../" which
doesn't exist when dir is deleted.

at some point we should probably switch to using the os current
directory (specially if we want to add subshell), but this is a small
incremental improvement.

llvm-svn: 299113
2017-03-30 21:05:31 +00:00
Rafael Espindola ec1bc0f584 lit: support redirect from globs
This adds support for commands like

FileCheck < foobar*

which is used by some asan tests because the file they want to read
has a pid in the name.

llvm-svn: 299111
2017-03-30 20:48:58 +00:00
Rafael Espindola b5c07ea03a Remove unused argument.
llvm-svn: 298994
2017-03-29 14:20:38 +00:00
Brian Gesiak 600f04a435 lit: remove python2-isms
Summary:
`assert.assertItemEqual` went away in Python 3. Seeing how lists
are ordered, comparing a list against each other should work just
as well.

Patch by @jbergstroem (Johan Bergström).

Reviewers: modocache, gparker42

Reviewed By: modocache

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31229

llvm-svn: 298479
2017-03-22 04:23:01 +00:00
Zachary Turner b471d4f25a Teach lit to expand glob expressions.
This will enable removing hacks throughout the codebase
in clang and compiler-rt that feed multiple inputs to a
testing utility by globbing, all of which are either disabled
on Windows currently or using xargs / find hacks.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30380

llvm-svn: 296904
2017-03-03 18:55:24 +00:00
Greg Parker 17db7704cd Reinstate "r292904 - [lit] Allow boolean expressions in REQUIRES and XFAIL
and UNSUPPORTED"

This reverts the revert in r292942.

llvm-svn: 293007
2017-01-25 02:26:03 +00:00
Alex Lorenz 9111cc217d Revert "r292904 - [lit] Allow boolean expressions in REQUIRES and XFAIL
and UNSUPPORTED"

After r292904 llvm-lit fails to emit the test results in the XML format for
Apple's internal buildbots.

rdar://30164800

llvm-svn: 292942
2017-01-24 16:17:04 +00:00
Greg Parker ed0a95cbec [lit] Allow boolean expressions in REQUIRES and XFAIL and UNSUPPORTED
A `lit` condition line is now a comma-separated list of boolean expressions. 
Comma-separated expressions act as if each expression were on its own 
condition line:
For REQUIRES, if every expression is true then the test will run. 
For UNSUPPORTED, if every expression is false then the test will run. 
For XFAIL, if every expression is false then the test is expected to succeed. 
As a special case "XFAIL: *" expects the test to fail.

Examples:
# Test is expected fail on 64-bit Apple simulators and pass everywhere else
XFAIL: x86_64 && apple && !macosx
# Test is unsupported on Windows and on non-Ubuntu Linux 
# and supported everywhere else
UNSUPPORTED: linux && !ubuntu, system-windows

Syntax: 
* '&&', '||', '!', '(', ')'. 'true' is true. 'false' is false.
* Each test feature is a true identifier. 
* Substrings of the target triple are true identifiers for UNSUPPORTED 
 and XFAIL, but not for REQUIRES. (This matches the current behavior.)
* All other identifiers are false.
* Identifiers are [-+=._a-zA-Z0-9]+

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18185

llvm-svn: 292904
2017-01-24 09:58:02 +00:00
Greg Parker d972882f06 Revert "[lit] Allow boolean expressions in REQUIRES and XFAIL and UNSUPPORTED"
This change needs to be better-coordinated with libc++.

llvm-svn: 292900
2017-01-24 08:58:20 +00:00
Greg Parker 2ab45201e7 [lit] Allow boolean expressions in REQUIRES and XFAIL and UNSUPPORTED
A `lit` condition line is now a comma-separated list of boolean expressions. 
Comma-separated expressions act as if each expression were on its own 
condition line:
For REQUIRES, if every expression is true then the test will run. 
For UNSUPPORTED, if every expression is false then the test will run. 
For XFAIL, if every expression is false then the test is expected to succeed. 
As a special case "XFAIL: *" expects the test to fail.

Examples:
# Test is expected fail on 64-bit Apple simulators and pass everywhere else
XFAIL: x86_64 && apple && !macosx
# Test is unsupported on Windows and on non-Ubuntu Linux 
# and supported everywhere else
UNSUPPORTED: linux && !ubuntu, system-windows

Syntax: 
* '&&', '||', '!', '(', ')'. 'true' is true. 'false' is false.
* Each test feature is a true identifier. 
* Substrings of the target triple are true identifiers for UNSUPPORTED 
  and XFAIL, but not for REQUIRES. (This matches the current behavior.)
* All other identifiers are false.
* Identifiers are [-+=._a-zA-Z0-9]+

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18185

llvm-svn: 292896
2017-01-24 08:45:50 +00:00
Kuba Mracek 30881272e1 [lit] Limit parallelism of sanitizer tests on Darwin [llvm part, take 2]
Running lit tests and unit tests of ASan and TSan on macOS has very bad performance when running with a high number of threads. This is caused by xnu (the macOS kernel), which currently doesn't handle mapping and unmapping of sanitizer shadow regions (reserved VM which are several terabytes large) very well. The situation is so bad that increasing the number of threads actually makes the total testing time larger. The macOS buildbots are affected by this. Note that we can't easily limit the number of sanitizer testing threads without affecting the rest of the tests.

This patch adds a special "group" into lit, and limits the number of concurrently running tests in this group. This helps solve the contention problem, while still allowing other tests to run in full, that means running lit with -j8 will still with 8 threads, and parallelism is only limited in sanitizer tests.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28420

llvm-svn: 292548
2017-01-20 00:24:32 +00:00
Graydon Hoare ae5d7bb4f5 [lit] Support sharding testsuites, for parallel execution.
Summary:
This change equips lit.py with two new options, --num-shards=M and
--run-shard=N (set by default from env vars LIT_NUM_SHARDS and LIT_RUN_SHARD).

The options must be used together, and N must be in 1..M.

Together these options effect only test selection: they partition the testsuite
into M equal-sized "shards", then select only the Nth shard. They can be used
in a cluster of test machines to achieve a very crude (static) form of
parallelism, with minimal configuration work.

Reviewers: modocache, ddunbar

Reviewed By: ddunbar

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28789

llvm-svn: 292417
2017-01-18 18:12:20 +00:00
Eric Fiselier f744e7e15a [LIT] Make util.executeCommand python3 friendly
Summary: The parameter `input` to `subprocess.Popen.communicate(...)` must be an object of type `bytes` . This is strictly enforced in python3. This patch (1) allows `to_bytes` to be safely called redundantly. (2) Explicitly convert `input` within `executeCommand`. This allows for usages like `executeCommand(['clang++', '-'], input='int main() {}\n')`.

Reviewers: ddunbar, BinaryKhaos, modocache, dim, EricWF

Reviewed By: EricWF

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28736

llvm-svn: 292308
2017-01-18 00:12:41 +00:00
Kuba Mracek e7d1f92344 Revert r292231.
llvm-svn: 292237
2017-01-17 18:06:38 +00:00
Kuba Mracek 53013e9e6f [lit] Limit parallelism of sanitizer tests on Darwin [llvm part]
Running lit tests and unit tests of ASan and TSan on macOS has very bad performance when running with a high number of threads. This is caused by xnu (the macOS kernel), which currently doesn't handle mapping and unmapping of sanitizer shadow regions (reserved VM which are several terabytes large) very well. The situation is so bad that increasing the number of threads actually makes the total testing time larger. The macOS buildbots are affected by this. Note that we can't easily limit the number of sanitizer testing threads without affecting the rest of the tests.

This patch adds a special "group" into lit, and limits the number of concurrently running tests in this group. This helps solve the contention problem, while still allowing other tests to run in full, that means running lit with -j8 will still with 8 threads, and parallelism is only limited in sanitizer tests.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28420

llvm-svn: 292231
2017-01-17 17:15:02 +00:00
Chandler Carruth a977582dea [gtest] Upgrade googletest to version 1.8.0, minimizing local changes.
This required re-working the streaming support and lit's support for
'--gtest_list_tests' but otherwise seems to be a clean upgrade.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28154

llvm-svn: 291029
2017-01-04 23:06:03 +00:00
Dylan McKay dc58eb543f [AVR] Whitelist the avrlit config environment variables
This allows us to use `lit` to run on-target execution tests.

llvm-svn: 289769
2016-12-15 06:04:53 +00:00
Renato Golin ce1dd3c949 Revert "[AVR] Add the very first on-target test"
This reverts commit r289648, as it's an execution test and relies on the
emulator/dispatcher being available on all builders.

llvm-svn: 289651
2016-12-14 13:24:20 +00:00
Dylan McKay 452e266cd6 [AVR] Add the very first on-target test
This test runs on actual AVR hardware.

llvm-svn: 289648
2016-12-14 12:03:39 +00:00
Eric Fiselier df87d070c9 [lit] Support custom parsers in parseIntegratedTestScript
Summary:
Libc++ frequently has the need to parse more than just the builtin *test keywords* (`RUN`, `REQUIRES`, `XFAIL`, ect). For example libc++ currently needs a new keyword `MODULES-DEFINES: macro list...`. Instead of re-implementing the script parsing in libc++ this patch allows `parseIntegratedTestScript` to take custom parsers.

This patch introduces a new class `IntegratedTestKeywordParser` which implements the logic to parse/process a test keyword. Parsing of various keyword "kinds" are supported out of the box, including 'TAG', 'COMMAND', and 'LIST', which parse keywords such as `END.`, `RUN:` and `XFAIL:` respectively.

As an example after this change libc++ can implement the `MODULES-DEFINES` simply using: 
```
mparser = IntegratedTestKeywordParser('MODULES-DEFINES:', ParserKind.LIST)
parseIntegratedTestScript(test, additional_parsers=[mparser])
macro_list = mparser.getValue()
```


Reviewers: ddunbar, modocache, rnk, danalbert, jroelofs

Subscribers: mgrang, llvm-commits, cfe-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27005

llvm-svn: 288694
2016-12-05 20:21:21 +00:00
Kuba Mracek 93f12aff55 Recommit r287403 (reverted in r287804): [lit] When setting SDKROOT on Darwin, use '--sdk macosx' to find the right SDK path.
This shouls now be safe and not break any more bots.  It's strictly better to use '--sdk macosx', otherwise xcrun can return weird things for example when you have Command Line Tools or the SDK installed into '/'.

llvm-svn: 288385
2016-12-01 17:45:22 +00:00
Vedant Kumar fa6339f321 Revert "[lit] When setting SDKROOT on Darwin, use '--sdk macosx' to find the right SDK path."
This reverts commit r287403. It breaks an internal asan bot. According
to Kuba, a fix is up for review here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26929

llvm-svn: 287804
2016-11-23 20:51:09 +00:00
Kuba Mracek fe16c1ff14 [lit] When setting SDKROOT on Darwin, use '--sdk macosx' to find the right SDK path.
This will make sure that we find an actual path in case you have Command Line Tools installed.

llvm-svn: 287403
2016-11-18 23:25:57 +00:00