1. Don't do upgrade_checks when using bmake. As long as we have WITH_BMAKE,
there's a bootstrap complication in ths respect. Avoid it. Make the
necessary changes to have upgrade_checks work wth bmake anyway.
2. Remove the use of -E. It's not needed in our build because we use ?= for
the respective variables, which means that we'll take the environment
value (if any) anyway.
3. Properly declare phony targets as phony as bmake is a lot smarter (and
thus agressive) about build avoidance.
4. Make sure CLEANFILES is complete and use it on .NOPATH. bmake is a lot
smarter about build avoidance and should not find files we generate in
the source tree. We should not have files in the repository we want to
generate, but this is an easier way to cross this hurdle.
5. Have behavior under bmake the same as it is under make with respect to
halting when sub-commands fail. Add "set -e" to compound commands so
that bmake is informed when sub-commands fail.
6. Make sure crunchgen uses the same make as the rest of the build. This
is important when the make utility isn't called make (but bmake for
example).
7. While here, add support for using MAKEOBJDIR to set the object tree
location. It's the second alternative bmake looks for when determining
the actual object directory (= .OBJDIR).
Submitted by: Simon Gerraty <sjg@juniper.net>
Submitted by: John Van Horne <jvanhorne@juniper.net>
to be a wrapper for the canonical system header file. Unfortunately, we do
not have one (yet) and some times it is causing weird failures when clang
is used for building ports. More complete and correct file will come from
libcxxrt in the future.
Discussed with: dim, kib, theraven
MFC after: 1 week
in the last import. They are sometimes needed when you want to use
advanced instructions.
Also, add clang's internal stdalign.h header to ObsoleteFiles.inc, since
it is redundant: we already have a stdalign.h header in /usr/include.
Pointy hat to: dim
PR: kern/167574
Submitted by: jkim
Reported by: Oliver Hartmann <ohartman@zedat.fu-berlin.de>
MFC after: 2 weeks
problem by adding -fno-strict-aliasing to CFLAGS. Since this is a global
issue that just happened to manifest on PowerPC, add this to CFLAGS
unconditionally.
MFC after: 1 week
allow the built-in operations to be redefined, at least not without
excessive force).
Instead, just disable LLVM's support for atomic operations for now.
Nothing in either clang or the tablegen tools currently depends on it.
This still allows users of head built before r198344 to upgrade to
top-of-head seamlessly.
to be gcc's default before r198344, calls to atomic builtins will not be
expanded inline. Instead, they will be generated as calls to external
functions (e.g. __sync_fetch_and_add_N), leading to linking errors later
on.
Put in a seatbelt that disables use of atomic builtins in libstdc++ and
llvm, when tuning specifically for the real i386 CPU. This does not
protect against all possible issues, but it is better than nothing.
similar to what we do for binutils. When clang's default triple starts
with 'amd64-', it does not pass a proper -target-cpu option to its
first stage.
This can lead to problems, for example when structs are memcpy'd, and
clang erroneously assumes they are 16-byte aligned. It will then use
the 'movaps' SSE instruction to implement the copy, which results in a
bus error if the struct is really 8-byte aligned.
I encountered this issue when gcc's /usr/libexec/cc1 started crashing
with SIGBUS, after rebuilding world with clang ToT, but it also affects
the version of clang that we have in the tree. We were just lucky until
now, apparently. :)
There are several bugfixes in this update, but the most important one is
to ensure __start_ and __stop_ symbols for linker sets and kernel module
metadata are always emitted in object files:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=9292
Before this fix, if you compiled kernel modules with clang, they would
not be properly processed by kldxref, and if they had any dependencies,
the kernel would fail to load those. Another problem occurred when
attempting to mount a tmpfs filesystem, which would result in 'operation
not supported by device'.
CLANG_PREFIX macro. This changes the default header search path when we
are building clang as part of cross-tools.
Submitted by: Dimitry Andric <dimitry at andric.com>
Reviewed by: freebsd-current
-fno-rtti. The clang libaries that really use exceptions and virtual
functions can enable LLVM_REQUIRES_EH and LLVM_REQUIRES_RTTI
respectively. This saves space on the resulting binaries and follows
what's being done upstream.
Submitted by: Dimitry Andric <dimitry at andric.com>
This commit merges the latest LLVM sources from the vendor space. It
also updates the build glue to match the new sources. Clang's version
number is changed to match LLVM's, which means /usr/include/clang/2.0
has been renamed to /usr/include/clang/2.8.
Obtained from: projects/clangbsd
I used the following command to determine which source files were
unneeded:
| for i in `find lib/clang -name '*.o'`
| do
| MATCHES="`(nm -g --defined-only $i; nm -g --defined-only \
| usr.bin/clang/clang/clang) | sed -e 's/.* //' | \
| sort | uniq -d | wc -l`"
| [ $MATCHES -eq 0 ] && echo "$i: unneeded"
| done
This should slightly improve the build times.
It seems GCC 4.2.1 on PowerPC miscompiles Clang, causing it to crash
when building even simple Hello World applications. Switch back to -O1
for this architecture.
Submitted by: nwhitehorn
Even though it's nice to use posix_spawn() instead of manually using
fork()/exec(), it's better to disable this. FreeBSD 7 doesn't support
this interface. When enabled, we can't build tblgen, which prevents us
from building FreeBSD 9 on 7.
Tested by: raj
I've looked at other places in the source tree where CLANG_VENDOR is
used and I suspect it might not be safe to use newlines here.
CLANG_VENDOR should just be defined to "FreeBSD ", just like the latest
Clang preview in OS X uses "Apple ". Properly use SVN_REVISION to define
it to the imported revision of Clang. I do want to have a date in there,
so slightly modify the code to support CLANG_VENDOR_SUFFIX.