This patch resolves many of the failures in the `filesystems/` buckets in the libc++ tests. It adds the correct flag to `fopen` and marks a test case as unsupported. In particular, that test assumes time is stored as a 64 bit value when on MVS it is stored as 32 bit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113298
Don't use stat and lstat on Windows; lstat is missing, stat only provides
the modification times with second granularity (and does the wrong thing
regarding symlinks). Instead do a minimal reimplementation using the
native windows APIs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101731
On Windows, the permission bits are mapped down to essentially only
two possible states; readonly or readwrite. Normalize the checked
permission bitmask to match what the implementation will return.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101728
If running in a Windows Container, there is no such directory at all.
If running from within bash on Windows Server, the directory seems to
be fully accessible. (The mechanics of this isn't fully understood, and
it doesn't seem to happen on desktop versions.)
If the directory isn't available with the expected behaviour, mark those
individual tests as unsupported. (The test as a whole is considered to
pass, but the unsupported test is mentioned in a test summary printed on
stdout.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98960
Prior to e0d01294bc124211a8ffb55e69162eb34a242680, all tests used a
random directory name, but now it is deterministic, based on the
test name. This change was done under the assumption that the filename
portion of the cwd is unique across tests that use the filesystem
test temporary directories.
When running tests locally, the cwd of the test is something like
"<build-dir>/test/<test path>/Output/copy_assign.pass.cpp.dir",
and the filename portion, "copy_assign.pass.cpp.dir", is used as
base for the temp directory names.
The change noted that there's a risk for race conditions if multiple
threads within one test try to create temp directories in parallel, but
that doesn't really happen in practice.
However, if running tests with a large number of parallel workers,
multiple tests with the same filename portion, e.g. "copy_assign.pass.cpp.dir",
can run in parallel, leading to race conditions across processes.
Therefore, add a hash of the full cwd to distinguish such cases
from each other.
Secondly, don't use two separate levels of temporary directories
(<base>/static_env.0). When cleaning up, only the individual
directory is removed, leaving the empty intermediate directory
behind littering the temp directory.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98703
This is my attempt to merge D98077 (bugfix the format strings for
Windows paths, which use wchar_t not char)
and D96986 (replace C++ variadic templates with C-style varargs so that
`__attribute__((format(printf)))` can be applied, for better safety)
and D98065 (remove an unused function overload).
The one intentional functional change here is in `__create_what`.
It now prints path1 and path2 in square-brackets _and_ double-quotes,
rather than just square-brackets. Prior to this patch, it would
print either path double-quoted if-and-only-if it was the empty
string. Now the double-quotes are always present. I doubt anybody's
code is relying on the current format, right?
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98097
Fix handling of skip_permission_denied on windows; after converting
the return value of GetLastError() to a standard error_code, ec.value()
is in the standard errc range, not a native windows error code. This
was missed in 156180727d6c347eda3ba749730707acb8a48093.
The directory "C:\System Volume Information" does seem to exist and
have these properties on most relevant contempory setups.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98166
This test was previously tweaked in
321f696920630be1b3c93e2a8b965c624ddd646c to match the output of
of MS STL (except that the MS STL fails on the testcase with an
empty path).
libc++ doesn't produce paths with all normalized separators (and the
spec doesn't mandate it to either).
Tweak the test reference to match exactly what libc++ produces. If
testing with a non-libc++ library, do a relaxed comparison that allows
the separators to differ.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98215
These function makes it easier to write generic unit tests for the
format header. It solves the issue where it's not possible to use
`templated_prefix"foo"`
where `templated_prefix` resolves to: nothing, `L`, `u8`, `u`,
or `U`. The templated_prefix would be more faster during execution.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93414
This implements the std::filesystem parts of P0482 (which is already
marked as in progress), and applies the actions that are suggested
in P1423.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90222
This should make the builder http://lab.llvm.org:8011/#/builders/101/ happy.
It uses gcc-9 and not Tip-Of-Trunk as its name indicates BTW.
GCC-10 passes all these tests.
Fix gcc warnings: -Wsign-compare, -Wparentheses, -Wpragmas.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, #libc_abi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92099
error_code returned from functions might not be of the generic category,
but of the system category, which can have different error code values.
Use default_error_condition() to remap errors to the generic category
where possible, to allow comparing them to the expected values.
Use the ErrorIs() helper instead of a direct comparison against
an excpected value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90602
- Several -Wshadow warnings
- Several places where we did not initialize our base class explicitly
- Unused variable warnings
- Some tautological comparisons
- Some places where we'd pass null arguments to functions expecting
non-null (in unevaluated contexts)
- Add a few pragmas to turn off spurious warnings
- Fix warnings about declarations that don't declare anything
- Properly disable deprecation warnings in ext/ tests (the pragmas we
were using didn't work on GCC)
- Disable include_as_c.sh.cpp because GCC complains about C++ flags
when compiling as C. I couldn't find a way to fix this one properly,
so I'm disabling the test. This isn't great, but at least we'll be
able to enable warnings in the whole test suite with GCC.
The variable declarations interleaved with logic was really difficult
to read. Instead, simply have two different implementations for _WIN32
and others.
Use .string() instead of .native() in places where we want to combine
paths with std::string.
Convert some methods to take a fs::path as parameter instead of
std::string, for cases where they are called with paths as
parameters (which can't be implicitly converted to std::string if
the path's string_type is wstring).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89530
Some platforms, like several embedded platforms, do not provide a source
of randomness through a random device. This commit makes it possible to
build and test libc++ for such platforms, i.e. without std::random_device.
Surprisingly, the only functionality that doesn't work on such platforms
is std::random_device itself -- everything else in <random> still works,
one just has to find alternative ways to seed the PRNGs.
We used <iostream> in several places where we don't actually need the
full power of <iostream>, and where using basic `std::printf` is enough.
This is better, since `std::printf` can be supported on systems that don't
have a notion of locales, while <iostream> can't.
Don't use std::filesystem APIs for CWDGuard, use POSIX functions
instead. This way the tests don't rely on the correctness of
the functionality they're testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78200
This reverts commit 52cc8bac7780dbfb90dcc8cfe24696618eeaa06e.
As the discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D78200 continues, I will
revert this until we figure out what to do.
Summary:
Instead of storing `static_test_env` (with all the symlinks) in the repo, we create it on the fly to be cross-toolchain-friendly. The primary use case for this are Windows-hosted cross-toolchains. Windows doesn't really have a concept of symlinks. So, when the monorepo is cloned, those symlinks turn to ordinary text files. Previously, if we cross-compiled libc++ for some symlink-friendly system (e. g. Linux) and ran tests on the target system, some tests would fail. This patch makes them pass.
Reviewers: ldionne, #libc
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc
Subscribers: EricWF, dexonsmith, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78200
Instead of storing static_test_env (with all the symlinks) in the repo,
we create it on the fly to be cross-toolchain-friendly. The primary
use case for this are Windows-hosted cross-toolchains. Windows doesn't
really have a concept of symlinks. So, when the monorepo is cloned,
those symlinks turn to ordinary text files. Previously, if we
cross-compiled libc++ for some symlink-friendly system (e. g. Linux) and
ran tests on the target system, some tests would fail. This patch makes
them pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78200
Instead of hardcoding absolute paths on the build-host in the executables,
use relative paths from the current working directory. Also, use
FILE_DEPENDENCIES to mark the static test env as being required by
the relevant tests.
Given a SSH executor that copies the files to the remote host properly,
the tests can be run on that remote host.
This patch reimplements the dynamic filesystem helper using Posix
functionality instead of relying on Python. The primary reason for
doing this is that it allows running the libc++ test suite on devices
that do not have Python.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77140
Based on the current discussion in https://llvm.org/PR45307, it seems
that it's legitimate for `temp_directory_path()` to return a path with
a trailing slash. Since `p.parent_path()` will never contain a trailing
slash, comparing it to the result of `temp_directory_path()` will fail
depending on whether `temp_directory_path()` returns a trailing slash
or not.
Otherwise, trying to reproduce a failing filesystem test by copy-pasting
the command-line used and running that in the shell won't work, because
the shell will eat quoting around the define and we'll end up with a
non-stringized path in the .cpp file.
Previously, filesystem tests would require LIBCXX_FILESYSTEM_DYNAMIC_TEST_ROOT
to be present in the environment and to match the value provided when
compiling, as a macro. This has the problem that it only allows for the
filesystem tests to be run on the same machine they are created.
Instead, we create a temporary directory for each test. Technically,
this is tricky to do because we're relying on some of the code that
we're testing to do this. However, there's no other portable way of
creating temporary direcories in C++, so this is difficult to avoid.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76731