Chris Bieneman via llvm-dev
2016-Jun-10 17:52 UTC
[llvm-dev] [RFC] LLVM Directory Structure Changes (was Re: [PATCH] D20992: [CMake] Add LLVM runtimes directory)
It seems to me that the feedback here has been generally positive, but a lot of different ideas have been added to the mix. To focus conversation and move things along I'm going to provide a summary of changes with proposals for rollout. Splitting Compiler-RT If we want to split compiler-rt, which I think makes a lot of sense, I think the best path forward is to copy the trunk (via svn cp). Copying the branch is the best way to preserve the history and workflows. For naming purposes I would suggest retaining the compiler-rt name for the builtin libraries, and having a repository named sanitizer-rt for the sanitizer libraries (this is of course just a suggestion, feel free to bike shed). After duplicating the repository we could setup an auto-merge from compiler-rt to sanitizer-rt. We could setup the LLVM build system so that if both projects were present it would force only building builtins from compiler-rt and sanitizers from sanitizer-rt. This would allow a transition time where bots could be updated to include both repositories, and engineer workflows would not be impacted. After a brief time for bots to be updated with the new repository we could modify the repositories separately to build only the parts they are supposed to build, remove the hack from LLVM to force that, and begin removing code from the separate repositories. LLVM Restructuring The first step here is adding the new functionality, iterating on the CMake interface for the runtime projects and getting all the runtime projects hooked up. Once all the runtime project support is ready we can begin migrating bots and evangelizing the new runtime build process. At some point before or after the runtime work we can modify CMake to support the test-suite living under tests (or somewhere else, bikeshed away). Once runtime support is ready, and the test-suite is supported outside projects we can set a date for removal of the projects directory. This planning should take into account updating bots as well as updating scripts and tooling. Breaking out testing tools As I started looking into breaking out the testing tools I realized it is *much* more complicated than I had first thought. I do think that it is a good idea to do this, but it is going to be a bigger change than I had originally thought. The big wrench in breaking out the testing tools is that you need more than just lit. In particular you need FileCheck, not, count and a few other random things under llvm/utils. This also means you need to break out libSupport and ADT. While I think that breaking this stuff all out is a good idea, it is a much larger change than what I was trying to propose. If we go down this route I would recommend creating a new llvm-infrastructure repository. We could then stub it out and update projects and workflows to include it. After the workflows are updated we can start moving libraries and tools into it. An alternative approach we could take would be to migrate the testing tools off libSupport to make them standalone. Then the testing tools and lit could more easily be lifted out of the LLVM repository. This approach has some benefits, but also has added complication because some of the libSupport functionality in use is non-trivial. Thoughts? -Chris> On Jun 9, 2016, at 2:09 PM, Craig, Ben <ben.craig at codeaurora.org> wrote: > > >>> To get cmake to work, I have to set HAVE_CXX_ATOMICS_WITHOUT_LIB, even though I have no intention of building LLVM. I then get to set LIBCXX_HAVE_CXX_ATOMICS_WITHOUT_LIB too, because reasons. >> This is bad. I’m curious why you need to set those ever. Have you diagnosed this? For you to need to set that it means the host toolchain isn’t properly passing the CMake checks. > It looks like I don't need to set these anymore, but the comment that I left myself at the time was that HAVE_CXX_ATOMICS_WITHOUT_LIB looked at the state of my local machine's toolchain, as opposed to the toolchain that I was about to use. My local machine's toolchain is gcc 4.6.3, and it doesn't have an <atomic> header. > >>> Multi-libs require multiple independent build directories, with all the associated cmake overhead. >> I strongly believe that for building multi-lib or more generally when building for multiple targets you want multiple build directories, and in particular the multiple-cmake invocations. I believe this because you want the checks to be relevant for the target, and the only way to do that is to run the checks once per target. >> >> That said, I also strongly believe that for any user of our projects we should find a way to have a single simple CMake invocation that gets the end result that you want. I don’t believe these are mutually exclusive goals. >> >> One of the development steps of the new runtime directory will be supporting specifying multiple targets to build the runtimes for, and having CMake construct the appropriate number of build directories and manage building them all through a single top-level configuration and build directory. If you’re skeptical about how doable this is I’d encourage you to look at this bot -> http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-3stage-ubuntu <http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-3stage-ubuntu>. >> >> That bot does a full 3-stage clang build from a single CMake invocation: >> >> cmake -C ../llvm.src/tools/clang/cmake/caches/3-stage.cmake -GNinja -DLLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD=all -DLLVM_BINUTILS_INCDIR=/opt/binutils/include ../llvm.src >> > I'm fine if I can invoke cmake once and get multiple library variants out. If that means that behind-the-scenes, cmake has multiple build sub-directories, then that's fine by me. On Windows, this already happens to some degree, as the Visual Studio project is allowed to switch between Release, Debug, RelWithDebInfo, etc without re-running cmake. > >>> So why not run out of tree instead you may ask? >>> >>> No lit tests or lit utilities (FileCheck, not, etc…) >> I don’t know if the runtimes you’re building are setup for this or not, but you can get out-of-tree tests working if you have an LLVM installation on the system or a build directory that you can point at. Compiler-RT does this. It isn’t ideal but it is workable. >> >> We should have a better solution. > The nightly builds that my organization produces is generally a "customer build", and not a "developer build". Stated otherwise, it doesn't include llvm-config, libclang.a, or any of the other things that people building against llvm would want. That means that if I wanted to use this particular out-of-tree solution, I would still need to clone down LLVM and rebuild and reinstall it on occasion. > >>> So some things I would like to see... >>> >>> Standalone runtime builds should use the "normal" build interfaces (bare make, make all, make check, make install. s/make/ninja as desired). >> I think this is doable, but I’m hesitant to rope it in with what I’m trying to do here. Nothing I want to do would prevent this or make it any harder than it already is. > Completely fair. I figured I'd get my grievances and wishlist out first, just so that some agreement on a direction can be figured out. It does extend beyond the directory re-org patch. > >>> Break out testing infrastructure to a common repo, so that the runtimes can have access to the testing "banana" without dragging along the LLVM "gorilla”. >> I’m hesitant to suggest more and more repos because I think there are some challenges and additional burdens with that. I do understand the benefit of what you’re asking for here, and I think it is worth considering. I think there is an argument for splitting out the LLVM testing infrastructure, as well as an argument for splitting out the LLVM build infrastructure. >> >> In both cases I think those changes are larger than what I’m proposing, but worth considering. >> >> -Chris >> >> Obligatory troll: Maybe we should move to github and change the whole repo structure in the process? > I figured the github thread was crazy enough without me sabotaging it with this kind of suggestion :) > >>> >>> >>> On 6/9/2016 12:20 PM, Chris Bieneman via llvm-dev wrote: >>>> Moving to llvm-dev (I think this has gone a bit further than a patch review discussion) >>>> >>>> In hindsight I probably should have explained more of my thinking on this with the patch, or done an RFC on llvm-dev to start with. I’l do that now, and answer the questions along the way. I sent a separate email discussing Justin’s patch review feedback. >>>> >>>> In the build system today there is no strong distinction between ‘projects’ and ‘tools’. There are a few subtle differences, but I’m not sure any of them really matter. The differences are: >>>> >>>> (1) The projects directory is always configured, tools can be disabled using LLVM_INCLUDE_TOOLS=Off (projects and tools can both be individually disabled too) >>>> (2) Projects are configured before tools, so tools can rely on targets being created for projects (we don’t really use this, and anywhere we are is probably a bug) >>>> (3) Some projects have special handling. For example test-suite isn’t actually treated as a project, it has special handling in LLVM/CMakeLists.txt:727, and Compiler-RT is handled by clang if you set LLVM_BUILD_EXTERNAL_COMPILER_RT=On. >>>> >>>> With this in mind I was thinking about the general usability of our build system. The distinction between a project and a tool is not very clear. At a high level I see three different use cases that are covered by our current projects & tools directories. >>>> >>>> (1) Projects that are configured with LLVM >>>> (2) Runtime projects that should be configured using the just-built tools >>>> (3) The LLVM test-suite, which is really just external tests that should be configured and run with the just-built tools >>>> >>>> My proposal is that we make the tools subdirectory the *only* place for projects that fall into category 1. I don’t think there is any technical reason to drop an in-tree project into projects over tools today, and I think we migrating people who are doing that away from it should be easy. >>>> >>>> Second I want to add a “runtimes” directory to LLVM to cover case 2 (see D20992). The idea behind this is to use common code in LLVM to support building runtimes. This will allow the full LLVM toolchain to be visible during configuration. I will abstract this functionality into an installed CMake module so that Clang can use it for out-of-tree clang builds. >>>> >>>> Lastly we need to give the test-suite a new home. I’m not super concerned with where we do that. It could be under tests, it could just be at the root of the LLVM directory. I don’t think it matters too much because it is a one-off. Thoughts welcome. >>>> >>>> My proposed patch makes the runtimes directory work for Compiler-RT, but it doesn’t yet handle libcxxabi, libcxx and libunwind. There is some special case handling between libcxxabi and libcxx that will need to be handled to make the dependencies work between the two, and I still need to work that out. >>>> >>>> If we want to go with this proposal I envision the transition being multi-staged: >>>> >>>> (1) Adding the new functionality, getting it up and fully working for all runtime projects - this will involve changes to runtime projects >>>> (2) Work with bot maintainers to migrate bots, and fix any issues that come up >>>> (3) Add support for a new secondary location for the test-suite >>>> (4) Set a date for removing the projects directory, post patches including updated documentation >>>> (5) Remove the projects directory entirely >>>> >>>> Thoughts? >>>> -Chris >>>> >>>>> On Jun 8, 2016, at 6:59 PM, Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at gmail.com <mailto:chandlerc at gmail.com>> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> On Wed, Jun 8, 2016 at 4:39 PM Justin Bogner via llvm-commits <llvm-commits at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-commits at lists.llvm.org>> wrote: >>>>> Chris Bieneman <beanz at apple.com <mailto:beanz at apple.com>> writes: >>>>> > beanz created this revision. >>>>> > beanz added reviewers: chandlerc, bogner. >>>>> > beanz added a subscriber: llvm-commits. >>>>> > >>>>> > There are a few LLVM projects that produce runtime libraries. Ideally >>>>> > runtime libraries should be built differently than other projects, >>>>> > specifically they should be built using the just-built toolchain. >>>>> > >>>>> > There is support for building compiler-rt in this way from the clang >>>>> > build. Moving this logic into the LLVM build is interesting because it >>>>> > provides a simpler way to extend the just-built toolchain to include >>>>> > LLD and the LLVM object file tools. >>>>> > >>>>> > Once this functionality is better fleshed out and tested we’ll want to >>>>> > encapsulate it in a module that can be used for clang standalone >>>>> > builds, and we’ll want to make it the default way to build compiler-rt. >>>>> > >>>>> > With this patch applied there is no immediate change in the build. >>>>> > Moving compiler-rt out from llvm/projects into llvm/runtimes enables >>>>> > the functionality. >>>>> >>>>> This seems reasonable, but I am a little worried about how transitioning >>>>> to the new system will work. Will everyone have to move their >>>>> compiler-rt checkout? Will we continue to support compiler-rt in either >>>>> place? Both of these are workable, but neither is great. Thoughts? >>>>> >>>>> I share your concerns, but I also kind of like the direction this is going. >>>>> >>>>> But there is a higher-level meta-point: do we want to keep the 'projects' directory *at all*. >>>>> >>>>> Every single resident of it I can think of except for the test-suite is either dead (dragonegg) or a runtime library. >>>>> >>>>> I think we should either have all the build-integrated projects in a single 'projects' directory (including LLD and Clang), or we should have none of them and use more domain relevant organization (today "tools", you're adding "runtimes", maybe we move the test-suite to go under one of the test directories). >>>>> >>>>> I think we should have a consistent plan here before moving stuff. But once we have it, I think we shouldn't be afraid of re-organizing stuff to make more sense, and just work to get folks to update their checkouts. >>>>> >>>>> -Chandler >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> > This code has a few improvements over the method provided by >>>>> > LLVM_BUILD_EXTERNAL_COMPILER_RT. Specifically the sub-ninja command is >>>>> > always invoked, so changes to compiler-rt source files will get built >>>>> > properly, so this patch can be used for iterative development with >>>>> > just-built tools. >>>>> > >>>>> > <http://reviews.llvm.org/D20992>http://reviews.llvm.org/D20992 <http://reviews.llvm.org/D20992> >>>>> > >>>>> > Files: >>>>> > CMakeLists.txt >>>>> > cmake/modules/LLVMExternalProjectUtils.cmake >>>>> > runtimes/CMakeLists.txt >>>>> > >>>>> > Index: runtimes/CMakeLists.txt >>>>> > ==================================================================>>>>> > --- /dev/null >>>>> > +++ runtimes/CMakeLists.txt >>>>> > @@ -0,0 +1,16 @@ >>>>> > +include(LLVMExternalProjectUtils) >>>>> > + >>>>> > +# Discover the projects that use CMake in the subdirectories. >>>>> > +# Note that explicit cmake invocation is required every time a new project is >>>>> > +# added or removed. >>>>> > + >>>>> > +add_custom_target(runtimes) >>>>> > + >>>>> > +file(GLOB entries *) >>>>> > +foreach(entry ${entries}) >>>>> > + if(IS_DIRECTORY ${entry} AND EXISTS ${entry}/CMakeLists.txt) >>>>> > + get_filename_component(projName ${entry} NAME) >>>>> > + llvm_ExternalProject_Add(${projName} ${entry} USE_TOOLCHAIN) >>>>> > + add_dependencies(runtimes ${projName}) >>>>> > + endif() >>>>> > +endforeach(entry) >>>>> > Index: cmake/modules/LLVMExternalProjectUtils.cmake >>>>> > ==================================================================>>>>> > --- cmake/modules/LLVMExternalProjectUtils.cmake >>>>> > +++ cmake/modules/LLVMExternalProjectUtils.cmake >>>>> > @@ -29,7 +29,8 @@ >>>>> > # Extra targets in the subproject to generate targets for >>>>> > # ) >>>>> > function(llvm_ExternalProject_Add name source_dir) >>>>> > - cmake_parse_arguments(ARG "USE_TOOLCHAIN;EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL;NO_INSTALL" >>>>> > + cmake_parse_arguments(ARG >>>>> > + "USE_TOOLCHAIN;EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL;NO_INSTALL;ALWAYS_CLEAN" >>>>> > "SOURCE_DIR" >>>>> > "CMAKE_ARGS;TOOLCHAIN_TOOLS;RUNTIME_LIBRARIES;DEPENDS;EXTRA_TARGETS" ${ARGN}) >>>>> > canonicalize_tool_name(${name} nameCanon) >>>>> > @@ -52,6 +53,10 @@ >>>>> > endif() >>>>> > endforeach() >>>>> > >>>>> > + if(ARG_ALWAYS_CLEAN) >>>>> > + set(always_clean clean) >>>>> > + endif() >>>>> > + >>>>> > list(FIND TOOLCHAIN_TOOLS clang FOUND_CLANG) >>>>> > if(FOUND_CLANG GREATER -1) >>>>> > set(CLANG_IN_TOOLCHAIN On) >>>>> > @@ -135,6 +140,14 @@ >>>>> > CMAKE_ARGS ${${nameCanon}_CMAKE_ARGS} >>>>> > ${compiler_args} >>>>> > -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=${CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX} >>>>> > + -DLLVM_CONFIG_PATH=${LLVM_RUNTIME_OUTPUT_INTDIR}/llvm-config >>>>> > + -DLLVM_LIBRARY_OUTPUT_INTDIR=${LLVM_LIBRARY_OUTPUT_INTDIR} >>>>> > + -DLLVM_RUNTIME_OUTPUT_INTDIR=${LLVM_RUNTIME_OUTPUT_INTDIR} >>>>> > + -DLLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX=${LLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX} >>>>> > + -DLLVM_ENABLE_WERROR=${LLVM_ENABLE_WERROR} >>>>> > + -DPACKAGE_VERSION=${PACKAGE_VERSION} >>>>> > + -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=${CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE} >>>>> > + -DCMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM=${CMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM} >>>>> >>>>> How did you decide which variables need to be passed through like this? >>>>> The set seems somewhat arbitrary, but I may be missing something >>>>> obvious. >>>>> >>>>> > ${ARG_CMAKE_ARGS} >>>>> > ${PASSTHROUGH_VARIABLES} >>>>> > INSTALL_COMMAND "" >>>>> > @@ -152,7 +165,7 @@ >>>>> > ExternalProject_Add_Step(${name} force-rebuild >>>>> > COMMAND ${run_build} >>>>> > COMMENT "Forcing rebuild of ${name}" >>>>> > - DEPENDEES configure clean >>>>> > + DEPENDEES configure ${always_clean} >>>>> >>>>> I'm not sure I understand what this does. If I had to guess I'd say that >>>>> when ALWAYS_CLEAN is passed the rebuild of the external project always >>>>> invokes clean first, but if it's not passed we'll just invoke the >>>>> external build and allow it to be incremental if appropriate. Is that >>>>> right? >>>>> >>>>> > DEPENDS ${ALWAYS_REBUILD} ${ARG_DEPENDS} ${TOOLCHAIN_BINS} >>>>> > ${cmake_3_4_USES_TERMINAL} ) >>>>> > endif() >>>>> > Index: CMakeLists.txt >>>>> > ==================================================================>>>>> > --- CMakeLists.txt >>>>> > +++ CMakeLists.txt >>>>> > @@ -720,6 +720,8 @@ >>>>> > add_subdirectory(tools) >>>>> > endif() >>>>> > >>>>> > +add_subdirectory(runtimes) >>>>> > + >>>>> > if( LLVM_INCLUDE_EXAMPLES ) >>>>> > add_subdirectory(examples) >>>>> > endif() >>>>> > @@ -730,7 +732,8 @@ >>>>> > llvm_ExternalProject_Add(test-suite ${LLVM_MAIN_SRC_DIR}/projects/test-suite >>>>> > USE_TOOLCHAIN >>>>> > EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL >>>>> > - NO_INSTALL) >>>>> > + NO_INSTALL >>>>> > + ALWAYS_CLEAN) >>>>> > endif() >>>>> > add_subdirectory(test) >>>>> > add_subdirectory(unittests) >>>>> > >>>>> >>>>> _______________________________________________ >>>>> llvm-commits mailing list >>>>> llvm-commits at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-commits at lists.llvm.org> >>>>> http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-commits <http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-commits> >>>> >>>> >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> LLVM Developers mailing list >>>> llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> >>>> http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev <http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev> >>> >>> -- >>> Employee of Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. >>> Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum, a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project >>> _______________________________________________ >>> LLVM Developers mailing list >>> llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> >>> http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev <http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev> >> > > -- > Employee of Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. > Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum, a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... 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Craig, Ben via llvm-dev
2016-Jun-10 18:13 UTC
[llvm-dev] [RFC] LLVM Directory Structure Changes (was Re: [PATCH] D20992: [CMake] Add LLVM runtimes directory)
I like this plan a lot. The testing tools side of things is what makes compiler-rt cross compiling so much fun :). You go through all sorts of trouble to make sure that the host compiler is ignored and that the cross compiler is the compiler that gets invoked, then the test infrastructure ends up needing the host compiler in addition the the cross compiler. I think it's still a valuable problem to solve, but I also agree that it isn't trivial. On 6/10/2016 12:52 PM, Chris Bieneman via llvm-dev wrote:> It seems to me that the feedback here has been generally positive, but > a lot of different ideas have been added to the mix. > > To focus conversation and move things along I'm going to provide a > summary of changes with proposals for rollout. > > Splitting Compiler-RT > > If we want to split compiler-rt, which I think makes a lot of sense, I > think the best path forward is to copy the trunk (via svn cp). Copying > the branch is the best way to preserve the history and workflows. > > For naming purposes I would suggest retaining the compiler-rt name for > the builtin libraries, and having a repository named sanitizer-rt for > the sanitizer libraries (this is of course just a suggestion, feel > free to bike shed). > > After duplicating the repository we could setup an auto-merge from > compiler-rt to sanitizer-rt. We could setup the LLVM build system so > that if both projects were present it would force only building > builtins from compiler-rt and sanitizers from sanitizer-rt. This would > allow a transition time where bots could be updated to include both > repositories, and engineer workflows would not be impacted. > > After a brief time for bots to be updated with the new repository we > could modify the repositories separately to build only the parts they > are supposed to build, remove the hack from LLVM to force that, and > begin removing code from the separate repositories. > > LLVM Restructuring > > The first step here is adding the new functionality, iterating on the > CMake interface for the runtime projects and getting all the runtime > projects hooked up. > > Once all the runtime project support is ready we can begin migrating > bots and evangelizing the new runtime build process. > > At some point before or after the runtime work we can modify CMake to > support the test-suite living under tests (or somewhere else, bikeshed > away). > > Once runtime support is ready, and the test-suite is supported outside > projects we can set a date for removal of the projects directory. This > planning should take into account updating bots as well as updating > scripts and tooling. > > Breaking out testing tools > > As I started looking into breaking out the testing tools I realized it > is *much* more complicated than I had first thought. I do think that > it is a good idea to do this, but it is going to be a bigger change > than I had originally thought. > > The big wrench in breaking out the testing tools is that you need more > than just lit. In particular you need FileCheck, not, count and a few > other random things under llvm/utils. This also means you need to > break out libSupport and ADT. > > While I think that breaking this stuff all out is a good idea, it is a > much larger change than what I was trying to propose. If we go down > this route I would recommend creating a new llvm-infrastructure > repository. We could then stub it out and update projects and > workflows to include it. After the workflows are updated we can start > moving libraries and tools into it. > > An alternative approach we could take would be to migrate the testing > tools off libSupport to make them standalone. Then the testing tools > and lit could more easily be lifted out of the LLVM repository. This > approach has some benefits, but also has added complication because > some of the libSupport functionality in use is non-trivial. > > Thoughts? > -Chris-- Employee of Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum, a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project
Justin Bogner via llvm-dev
2016-Jun-10 18:21 UTC
[llvm-dev] [RFC] LLVM Directory Structure Changes (was Re: [PATCH] D20992: [CMake] Add LLVM runtimes directory)
Chris Bieneman via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> writes:> It seems to me that the feedback here has been generally positive, but > a lot of different ideas have been added to the mix. > > To focus conversation and move things along I'm going to provide a > summary of changes with proposals for rollout. > > Splitting Compiler-RT > > If we want to split compiler-rt, which I think makes a lot of sense, I > think the best path forward is to copy the trunk (via svn cp). Copying > the branch is the best way to preserve the history and workflows. > > For naming purposes I would suggest retaining the compiler-rt name for > the builtin libraries, and having a repository named sanitizer-rt for > the sanitizer libraries (this is of course just a suggestion, feel > free to bike shed).What about the profiling and coverage runtime support, the blocks runtime, safestack, etc? I suspect sanitizer-rt is the wrong name and we're better off splitting it the other way with "compiler-builtins".> After duplicating the repository we could setup an auto-merge from > compiler-rt to sanitizer-rt. We could setup the LLVM build system so > that if both projects were present it would force only building > builtins from compiler-rt and sanitizers from sanitizer-rt. This would > allow a transition time where bots could be updated to include both > repositories, and engineer workflows would not be impacted. > > After a brief time for bots to be updated with the new repository we > could modify the repositories separately to build only the parts they > are supposed to build, remove the hack from LLVM to force that, and > begin removing code from the separate repositories.This sounds like we'd plan to update checkouts twice - once for the compiler-rt split and once for the restructuring. Do note that I only mentioned splitting compiler-rt because it seemed like it'd be convenient to only disrupt things once. If we're going phase things such that we need two updates anyway then there's no reason for this to block the LLVM Restructuring step you're trying to do. It can happen whenever.> LLVM Restructuring > > The first step here is adding the new functionality, iterating on the > CMake interface for the runtime projects and getting all the runtime > projects hooked up. > > Once all the runtime project support is ready we can begin migrating > bots and evangelizing the new runtime build process. > > At some point before or after the runtime work we can modify CMake to > support the test-suite living under tests (or somewhere else, bikeshed > away). > > Once runtime support is ready, and the test-suite is supported outside > projects we can set a date for removal of the projects directory. This > planning should take into account updating bots as well as updating > scripts and tooling.+1. From the responses so far this part seems like it isn't contentious and it will unblock future improvements.> Breaking out testing tools > > As I started looking into breaking out the testing tools I realized it > is *much* more complicated than I had first thought. I do think that > it is a good idea to do this, but it is going to be a bigger change > than I had originally thought. > > The big wrench in breaking out the testing tools is that you need more > than just lit. In particular you need FileCheck, not, count and a few > other random things under llvm/utils. This also means you need to > break out libSupport and ADT. > > While I think that breaking this stuff all out is a good idea, it is a > much larger change than what I was trying to propose. If we go down > this route I would recommend creating a new llvm-infrastructure > repository. We could then stub it out and update projects and > workflows to include it. After the workflows are updated we can start > moving libraries and tools into it. > > An alternative approach we could take would be to migrate the testing > tools off libSupport to make them standalone. Then the testing tools > and lit could more easily be lifted out of the LLVM repository. This > approach has some benefits, but also has added complication because > some of the libSupport functionality in use is non-trivial.This would be a huge change. While I don't really have a problem with the idea I can't see it being urgent and I don't think it makes sense to lump it in with the runtimes/ thing. This would deserve it's own separate discussion anyway.> Thoughts? > -Chris > > >> On Jun 9, 2016, at 2:09 PM, Craig, Ben <ben.craig at codeaurora.org> wrote: >> >> >>>> To get cmake to work, I have to set HAVE_CXX_ATOMICS_WITHOUT_LIB, > even though I have no intention of building LLVM. I then get to set > LIBCXX_HAVE_CXX_ATOMICS_WITHOUT_LIB too, because reasons. >>> This is bad. I’m curious why you need to set those ever. Have you > diagnosed this? For you to need to set that it means the host > toolchain isn’t properly passing the CMake checks. >> It looks like I don't need to set these anymore, but the comment > that I left myself at the time was that HAVE_CXX_ATOMICS_WITHOUT_LIB > looked at the state of my local machine's toolchain, as opposed to the > toolchain that I was about to use. My local machine's toolchain is > gcc 4.6.3, and it doesn't have an <atomic> header. >> >>>> Multi-libs require multiple independent build directories, with > all the associated cmake overhead. >>> I strongly believe that for building multi-lib or more generally > when building for multiple targets you want multiple build > directories, and in particular the multiple-cmake invocations. I > believe this because you want the checks to be relevant for the > target, and the only way to do that is to run the checks once per > target. >>> >>> That said, I also strongly believe that for any user of our > projects we should find a way to have a single simple CMake invocation > that gets the end result that you want. I don’t believe these are > mutually exclusive goals. >>> >>> One of the development steps of the new runtime directory will be > supporting specifying multiple targets to build the runtimes for, and > having CMake construct the appropriate number of build directories and > manage building them all through a single top-level configuration and > build directory. If you’re skeptical about how doable this is I’d > encourage you to look at this bot -> > http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-3stage-ubuntu > <http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-3stage-ubuntu>. >>> >>> That bot does a full 3-stage clang build from a single CMake invocation: >>> >>> cmake -C ../llvm.src/tools/clang/cmake/caches/3-stage.cmake -GNinja > -DLLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD=all > -DLLVM_BINUTILS_INCDIR=/opt/binutils/include ../llvm.src >>> >> I'm fine if I can invoke cmake once and get multiple library > variants out. If that means that behind-the-scenes, cmake has > multiple build sub-directories, then that's fine by me. On Windows, > this already happens to some degree, as the Visual Studio project is > allowed to switch between Release, Debug, RelWithDebInfo, etc without > re-running cmake. >> >>>> So why not run out of tree instead you may ask? >>>> >>>> No lit tests or lit utilities (FileCheck, not, etc…) >>> I don’t know if the runtimes you’re building are setup for this or > not, but you can get out-of-tree tests working if you have an LLVM > installation on the system or a build directory that you can point > at. Compiler-RT does this. It isn’t ideal but it is workable. >>> >>> We should have a better solution. >> The nightly builds that my organization produces is generally a > "customer build", and not a "developer build". Stated otherwise, it > doesn't include llvm-config, libclang.a, or any of the other things > that people building against llvm would want. That means that if I > wanted to use this particular out-of-tree solution, I would still need > to clone down LLVM and rebuild and reinstall it on occasion. >> >>>> So some things I would like to see... >>>> >>>> Standalone runtime builds should use the "normal" build interfaces > (bare make, make all, make check, make install. s/make/ninja as > desired). >>> I think this is doable, but I’m hesitant to rope it in with what > I’m trying to do here. Nothing I want to do would prevent this or make > it any harder than it already is. >> Completely fair. I figured I'd get my grievances and wishlist out > first, just so that some agreement on a direction can be figured out. > It does extend beyond the directory re-org patch. >> >>>> Break out testing infrastructure to a common repo, so that the > runtimes can have access to the testing "banana" without dragging > along the LLVM "gorilla”. >>> I’m hesitant to suggest more and more repos because I think there > are some challenges and additional burdens with that. I do understand > the benefit of what you’re asking for here, and I think it is worth > considering. I think there is an argument for splitting out the LLVM > testing infrastructure, as well as an argument for splitting out the > LLVM build infrastructure. >>> >>> In both cases I think those changes are larger than what I’m > proposing, but worth considering. >>> >>> -Chris >>> >>> Obligatory troll: Maybe we should move to github and change the > whole repo structure in the process? >> I figured the github thread was crazy enough without me sabotaging > it with this kind of suggestion :) >> >>>> >>>> >>>> On 6/9/2016 12:20 PM, Chris Bieneman via llvm-dev wrote: >>>>> Moving to llvm-dev (I think this has gone a bit further than a > patch review discussion) >>>>> >>>>> In hindsight I probably should have explained more of my thinking > on this with the patch, or done an RFC on llvm-dev to start with. I’l > do that now, and answer the questions along the way. I sent a separate > email discussing Justin’s patch review feedback. >>>>> >>>>> In the build system today there is no strong distinction between > ‘projects’ and ‘tools’. There are a few subtle differences, but I’m > not sure any of them really matter. The differences are: >>>>> >>>>> (1) The projects directory is always configured, tools can be > disabled using LLVM_INCLUDE_TOOLS=Off (projects and tools can both be > individually disabled too) >>>>> (2) Projects are configured before tools, so tools can rely on > targets being created for projects (we don’t really use this, and > anywhere we are is probably a bug) >>>>> (3) Some projects have special handling. For example test-suite > isn’t actually treated as a project, it has special handling in > LLVM/CMakeLists.txt:727, and Compiler-RT is handled by clang if you > set LLVM_BUILD_EXTERNAL_COMPILER_RT=On. >>>>> >>>>> With this in mind I was thinking about the general usability of > our build system. The distinction between a project and a tool is not > very clear. At a high level I see three different use cases that are > covered by our current projects & tools directories. >>>>> >>>>> (1) Projects that are configured with LLVM >>>>> (2) Runtime projects that should be configured using the just-built tools >>>>> (3) The LLVM test-suite, which is really just external tests that > should be configured and run with the just-built tools >>>>> >>>>> My proposal is that we make the tools subdirectory the *only* > place for projects that fall into category 1. I don’t think there is > any technical reason to drop an in-tree project into projects over > tools today, and I think we migrating people who are doing that away > from it should be easy. >>>>> >>>>> Second I want to add a “runtimes” directory to LLVM to cover case > 2 (see D20992). The idea behind this is to use common code in LLVM to > support building runtimes. This will allow the full LLVM toolchain to > be visible during configuration. I will abstract this functionality > into an installed CMake module so that Clang can use it for > out-of-tree clang builds. >>>>> >>>>> Lastly we need to give the test-suite a new home. I’m not super > concerned with where we do that. It could be under tests, it could > just be at the root of the LLVM directory. I don’t think it matters > too much because it is a one-off. Thoughts welcome. >>>>> >>>>> My proposed patch makes the runtimes directory work for > Compiler-RT, but it doesn’t yet handle libcxxabi, libcxx and > libunwind. There is some special case handling between libcxxabi and > libcxx that will need to be handled to make the dependencies work > between the two, and I still need to work that out. >>>>> >>>>> If we want to go with this proposal I envision the transition > being multi-staged: >>>>> >>>>> (1) Adding the new functionality, getting it up and fully working > for all runtime projects - this will involve changes to runtime > projects >>>>> (2) Work with bot maintainers to migrate bots, and fix any issues > that come up >>>>> (3) Add support for a new secondary location for the test-suite >>>>> (4) Set a date for removing the projects directory, post patches > including updated documentation >>>>> (5) Remove the projects directory entirely >>>>> >>>>> Thoughts? >>>>> -Chris >>>>> >>>>>> On Jun 8, 2016, at 6:59 PM, Chandler Carruth > <chandlerc at gmail.com <mailto:chandlerc at gmail.com>> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> On Wed, Jun 8, 2016 at 4:39 PM Justin Bogner via llvm-commits > <llvm-commits at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-commits at lists.llvm.org>> > wrote: >>>>>> Chris Bieneman <beanz at apple.com <mailto:beanz at apple.com>> writes: >>>>>> > beanz created this revision. >>>>>> > beanz added reviewers: chandlerc, bogner. >>>>>> > beanz added a subscriber: llvm-commits. >>>>>> > >>>>>> > There are a few LLVM projects that produce runtime libraries. Ideally >>>>>> > runtime libraries should be built differently than other projects, >>>>>> > specifically they should be built using the just-built toolchain. >>>>>> > >>>>>> > There is support for building compiler-rt in this way from the clang >>>>>> > build. Moving this logic into the LLVM build is interesting because it >>>>>> > provides a simpler way to extend the just-built toolchain to include >>>>>> > LLD and the LLVM object file tools. >>>>>> > >>>>>> > Once this functionality is better fleshed out and tested we’ll want to >>>>>> > encapsulate it in a module that can be used for clang standalone >>>>>> > builds, and we’ll want to make it the default way to build compiler-rt. >>>>>> > >>>>>> > With this patch applied there is no immediate change in the build. >>>>>> > Moving compiler-rt out from llvm/projects into llvm/runtimes enables >>>>>> > the functionality. >>>>>> >>>>>> This seems reasonable, but I am a little worried about how transitioning >>>>>> to the new system will work. Will everyone have to move their >>>>>> compiler-rt checkout? Will we continue to support compiler-rt in either >>>>>> place? Both of these are workable, but neither is great. Thoughts? >>>>>> >>>>>> I share your concerns, but I also kind of like the direction > this is going. >>>>>> >>>>>> But there is a higher-level meta-point: do we want to keep the > 'projects' directory *at all*. >>>>>> >>>>>> Every single resident of it I can think of except for the > test-suite is either dead (dragonegg) or a runtime library. >>>>>> >>>>>> I think we should either have all the build-integrated projects > in a single 'projects' directory (including LLD and Clang), or we > should have none of them and use more domain relevant organization > (today "tools", you're adding "runtimes", maybe we move the test-suite > to go under one of the test directories). >>>>>> >>>>>> I think we should have a consistent plan here before moving > stuff. But once we have it, I think we shouldn't be afraid of > re-organizing stuff to make more sense, and just work to get folks to > update their checkouts. >>>>>> >>>>>> -Chandler >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> > This code has a few improvements over the method provided by >>>>>> > LLVM_BUILD_EXTERNAL_COMPILER_RT. Specifically the sub-ninja command is >>>>>> > always invoked, so changes to compiler-rt source files will get built >>>>>> > properly, so this patch can be used for iterative development with >>>>>> > just-built tools. >>>>>> > >>>>>> > <http://reviews.llvm.org/D20992>http://reviews.llvm.org/D20992 > <http://reviews.llvm.org/D20992> >>>>>> > >>>>>> > Files: >>>>>> > CMakeLists.txt >>>>>> > cmake/modules/LLVMExternalProjectUtils.cmake >>>>>> > runtimes/CMakeLists.txt >>>>>> > >>>>>> > Index: runtimes/CMakeLists.txt >>>>>> > ==================================================================>>>>>> > --- /dev/null >>>>>> > +++ runtimes/CMakeLists.txt >>>>>> > @@ -0,0 +1,16 @@ >>>>>> > +include(LLVMExternalProjectUtils) >>>>>> > + >>>>>> > +# Discover the projects that use CMake in the subdirectories. >>>>>> > +# Note that explicit cmake invocation is required every time > a new project is >>>>>> > +# added or removed. >>>>>> > + >>>>>> > +add_custom_target(runtimes) >>>>>> > + >>>>>> > +file(GLOB entries *) >>>>>> > +foreach(entry ${entries}) >>>>>> > + if(IS_DIRECTORY ${entry} AND EXISTS ${entry}/CMakeLists.txt) >>>>>> > + get_filename_component(projName ${entry} NAME) >>>>>> > + llvm_ExternalProject_Add(${projName} ${entry} USE_TOOLCHAIN) >>>>>> > + add_dependencies(runtimes ${projName}) >>>>>> > + endif() >>>>>> > +endforeach(entry) >>>>>> > Index: cmake/modules/LLVMExternalProjectUtils.cmake >>>>>> > ==================================================================>>>>>> > --- cmake/modules/LLVMExternalProjectUtils.cmake >>>>>> > +++ cmake/modules/LLVMExternalProjectUtils.cmake >>>>>> > @@ -29,7 +29,8 @@ >>>>>> > # Extra targets in the subproject to generate targets for >>>>>> > # ) >>>>>> > function(llvm_ExternalProject_Add name source_dir) >>>>>> > - cmake_parse_arguments(ARG "USE_TOOLCHAIN;EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL;NO_INSTALL" >>>>>> > + cmake_parse_arguments(ARG >>>>>> > + "USE_TOOLCHAIN;EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL;NO_INSTALL;ALWAYS_CLEAN" >>>>>> > "SOURCE_DIR" >>>>>> > > "CMAKE_ARGS;TOOLCHAIN_TOOLS;RUNTIME_LIBRARIES;DEPENDS;EXTRA_TARGETS" > ${ARGN}) >>>>>> > canonicalize_tool_name(${name} nameCanon) >>>>>> > @@ -52,6 +53,10 @@ >>>>>> > endif() >>>>>> > endforeach() >>>>>> > >>>>>> > + if(ARG_ALWAYS_CLEAN) >>>>>> > + set(always_clean clean) >>>>>> > + endif() >>>>>> > + >>>>>> > list(FIND TOOLCHAIN_TOOLS clang FOUND_CLANG) >>>>>> > if(FOUND_CLANG GREATER -1) >>>>>> > set(CLANG_IN_TOOLCHAIN On) >>>>>> > @@ -135,6 +140,14 @@ >>>>>> > CMAKE_ARGS ${${nameCanon}_CMAKE_ARGS} >>>>>> > ${compiler_args} >>>>>> > -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=${CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX} >>>>>> > + -DLLVM_CONFIG_PATH=${LLVM_RUNTIME_OUTPUT_INTDIR}/llvm-config >>>>>> > + -DLLVM_LIBRARY_OUTPUT_INTDIR=${LLVM_LIBRARY_OUTPUT_INTDIR} >>>>>> > + -DLLVM_RUNTIME_OUTPUT_INTDIR=${LLVM_RUNTIME_OUTPUT_INTDIR} >>>>>> > + -DLLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX=${LLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX} >>>>>> > + -DLLVM_ENABLE_WERROR=${LLVM_ENABLE_WERROR} >>>>>> > + -DPACKAGE_VERSION=${PACKAGE_VERSION} >>>>>> > + -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=${CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE} >>>>>> > + -DCMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM=${CMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM} >>>>>> >>>>>> How did you decide which variables need to be passed through like this? >>>>>> The set seems somewhat arbitrary, but I may be missing something >>>>>> obvious. >>>>>> >>>>>> > ${ARG_CMAKE_ARGS} >>>>>> > ${PASSTHROUGH_VARIABLES} >>>>>> > INSTALL_COMMAND "" >>>>>> > @@ -152,7 +165,7 @@ >>>>>> > ExternalProject_Add_Step(${name} force-rebuild >>>>>> > COMMAND ${run_build} >>>>>> > COMMENT "Forcing rebuild of ${name}" >>>>>> > - DEPENDEES configure clean >>>>>> > + DEPENDEES configure ${always_clean} >>>>>> >>>>>> I'm not sure I understand what this does. If I had to guess I'd say that >>>>>> when ALWAYS_CLEAN is passed the rebuild of the external project always >>>>>> invokes clean first, but if it's not passed we'll just invoke the >>>>>> external build and allow it to be incremental if appropriate. Is that >>>>>> right? >>>>>> >>>>>> > DEPENDS ${ALWAYS_REBUILD} ${ARG_DEPENDS} ${TOOLCHAIN_BINS} >>>>>> > ${cmake_3_4_USES_TERMINAL} ) >>>>>> > endif() >>>>>> > Index: CMakeLists.txt >>>>>> > ==================================================================>>>>>> > --- CMakeLists.txt >>>>>> > +++ CMakeLists.txt >>>>>> > @@ -720,6 +720,8 @@ >>>>>> > add_subdirectory(tools) >>>>>> > endif() >>>>>> > >>>>>> > +add_subdirectory(runtimes) >>>>>> > + >>>>>> > if( LLVM_INCLUDE_EXAMPLES ) >>>>>> > add_subdirectory(examples) >>>>>> > endif() >>>>>> > @@ -730,7 +732,8 @@ >>>>>> > llvm_ExternalProject_Add(test-suite > ${LLVM_MAIN_SRC_DIR}/projects/test-suite >>>>>> > USE_TOOLCHAIN >>>>>> > EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL >>>>>> > - NO_INSTALL) >>>>>> > + NO_INSTALL >>>>>> > + ALWAYS_CLEAN) >>>>>> > endif() >>>>>> > add_subdirectory(test) >>>>>> > add_subdirectory(unittests) >>>>>> > >>>>>> >>>>>> _______________________________________________ >>>>>> llvm-commits mailing list >>>>>> llvm-commits at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-commits at lists.llvm.org> >>>>>> http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-commits > <http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-commits> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> _______________________________________________ >>>>> LLVM Developers mailing list >>>>> llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> >>>>> http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev > <http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev> >>>> >>>> -- >>>> Employee of Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. >>>> Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum, > a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> LLVM Developers mailing list >>>> llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> >>>> http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev > <http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev> >>> >> >> -- >> Employee of Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. >> Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. is a member of Code Aurora Forum, a > Linux Foundation Collaborative Project > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev
Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev
2016-Jun-10 18:23 UTC
[llvm-dev] [RFC] LLVM Directory Structure Changes (was Re: [PATCH] D20992: [CMake] Add LLVM runtimes directory)
On Fri, Jun 10, 2016 at 10:52 AM Chris Bieneman via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> It seems to me that the feedback here has been generally positive, but a > lot of different ideas have been added to the mix. > > To focus conversation and move things along I'm going to provide a summary > of changes with proposals for rollout. > > Splitting Compiler-RT >Note that none of the main sanitizer developers have really chimed in here... It'd be good to actually talk to them first. =]> If we want to split compiler-rt, which I think makes a lot of sense, I > think the best path forward is to copy the trunk (via svn cp). Copying the > branch is the best way to preserve the history and workflows. > > For naming purposes I would suggest retaining the compiler-rt name for the > builtin libraries, and having a repository named sanitizer-rt for the > sanitizer libraries (this is of course just a suggestion, feel free to bike > shed). >I would very much like a more specific name than 'compiler-rt'. The genericness of that name is what led to some of the confusion today I suspect. I would also suggest not having a hyphen in the name which makes python and other systems sad (I don't understand why, and I've given up fighting this battle). I think you already used the word that would best describe this: "builtin libraries". However, I'm not sure if splitting (at this point) makes sense. Maybe it does, but its seems fuzzy to me. The "builtins" will still be a collection of multiple runtime libraries, all tied to builtin compiler features. Some will be C/C++ features (the libgcc alternative for EH, type info, and math stuff). Some will be profiling features and some will be sanitizer features. I think having a separate repository for the profiling runtimes would probably be overkill. Maybe sanitizers are big enough to split out, but it seems iffy to me. I think the big thing that would help would just be better organization *within* the tree to clearly name the profile, language builtins, and sanitizer components. Either way, I'd call the thing with profiling and language builtin runitmes "builtins" before "compiler"-anything.> Breaking out testing tools > > As I started looking into breaking out the testing tools I realized it is > *much* more complicated than I had first thought. I do think that it is a > good idea to do this, but it is going to be a bigger change than I had > originally thought. >FWIW, I'm not at all convinced this is a good idea yet. It has some appeal, but we've tried this before and it created confusion bordering on chaos. I would definitely decouple these things. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20160610/b6912b1c/attachment.html>
Chris Bieneman via llvm-dev
2016-Jun-10 18:41 UTC
[llvm-dev] [RFC] LLVM Directory Structure Changes (was Re: [PATCH] D20992: [CMake] Add LLVM runtimes directory)
I probably should have stated this in my last email. I see all three of these initiatives as separate restructuring changes. None of them should need to be tied to each other or block the others.> On Jun 10, 2016, at 11:23 AM, Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at gmail.com> wrote: > > On Fri, Jun 10, 2016 at 10:52 AM Chris Bieneman via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org>> wrote: > It seems to me that the feedback here has been generally positive, but a lot of different ideas have been added to the mix. > > To focus conversation and move things along I'm going to provide a summary of changes with proposals for rollout. > > Splitting Compiler-RT > > Note that none of the main sanitizer developers have really chimed in here... It'd be good to actually talk to them first. =]Agreed. My hope is that some of them may see this thread and chime in.> > If we want to split compiler-rt, which I think makes a lot of sense, I think the best path forward is to copy the trunk (via svn cp). Copying the branch is the best way to preserve the history and workflows. > > For naming purposes I would suggest retaining the compiler-rt name for the builtin libraries, and having a repository named sanitizer-rt for the sanitizer libraries (this is of course just a suggestion, feel free to bike shed). > > I would very much like a more specific name than 'compiler-rt'. The genericness of that name is what led to some of the confusion today I suspect. > > I would also suggest not having a hyphen in the name which makes python and other systems sad (I don't understand why, and I've given up fighting this battle). > > I think you already used the word that would best describe this: "builtin libraries". > > However, I'm not sure if splitting (at this point) makes sense. Maybe it does, but its seems fuzzy to me. The "builtins" will still be a collection of multiple runtime libraries, all tied to builtin compiler features. Some will be C/C++ features (the libgcc alternative for EH, type info, and math stuff). Some will be profiling features and some will be sanitizer features. I think having a separate repository for the profiling runtimes would probably be overkill. Maybe sanitizers are big enough to split out, but it seems iffy to me. I think the big thing that would help would just be better organization *within* the tree to clearly name the profile, language builtins, and sanitizer components.I think the fundamental distinction needs to be following dependency graphs because if we don’t get rid of the circular dependency in bootstrapping there is no reason to make any changes. The builtin, profile and safestack library are all static archives, so they don’t actually require a built libcxx (although they can rely on the headers). They can all be treated as “builtins”. The sanitizer runtimes produce dylibs that must be linked against libcxx, so they cannot be treated as builtins. IMO, following the general rule of thumb “does this need a linker” is probably close to the right bar.> > Either way, I'd call the thing with profiling and language builtin runitmes "builtins" before "compiler"-anything. > > > Breaking out testing tools > > As I started looking into breaking out the testing tools I realized it is *much* more complicated than I had first thought. I do think that it is a good idea to do this, but it is going to be a bigger change than I had originally thought. > > FWIW, I'm not at all convinced this is a good idea yet. It has some appeal, but we've tried this before and it created confusion bordering on chaos. I would definitely decouple these things.I’ve been discussing this all morning in the halls, and most people in our office seem to think it would be neat, but is a huge (and separate) project. -Chris -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20160610/f9a754c9/attachment.html>
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