Adrian McCarthy via llvm-dev
2020-Aug-06 22:35 UTC
[llvm-dev] How to make a subdirectory in a lit test?
I'm writing a lit test that needs to temporarily make a subdirectory. I tried: ``` // RUN: mkdir %t/subdir ``` But on Windows, it's hard to bypass the built-in mkdir to use a Posix-style one from Git or GnuWin. The built-in mkdir believes the `/subdir` is an unrecognized command flag. I figure I cannot just use a backslash because that would fail on Posix systems. (The test should run on all platforms.) The lit documentation mentioned a `%{pathsep}` macro, so I tried that. After several minutes of confusing results, I discovered this is not for the path component separator, but for the separators used between paths in the PATH environment variable. On Windows, that's ';', which doesn't help. Suggestions? Thanks, Adrian McCarthy Why does this test need a separate directory? The test is to confirm that LLDB can locate a PDB symbol file that corresponds to the target executable. In the executable, the linker writes the location where it generated the PDB file. I need that path to be a different directory than the directory for the executable itself because the fallback search includes the directory of the executable. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20200806/8571c756/attachment.html>
David Blaikie via llvm-dev
2020-Aug-06 22:45 UTC
[llvm-dev] How to make a subdirectory in a lit test?
there are some existing tests that seem to do this, for instance: llvm/test/tools/llvm-ar/lto-kind-from-triple.test Are these not running on Windows? On Thu, Aug 6, 2020 at 3:36 PM Adrian McCarthy via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> > I'm writing a lit test that needs to temporarily make a subdirectory. > > I tried: > > ``` > // RUN: mkdir %t/subdir > ``` > > But on Windows, it's hard to bypass the built-in mkdir to use a Posix-style one from Git or GnuWin. The built-in mkdir believes the `/subdir` is an unrecognized command flag. I figure I cannot just use a backslash because that would fail on Posix systems. (The test should run on all platforms.) > > The lit documentation mentioned a `%{pathsep}` macro, so I tried that. After several minutes of confusing results, I discovered this is not for the path component separator, but for the separators used between paths in the PATH environment variable. On Windows, that's ';', which doesn't help. > > Suggestions? > > Thanks, > Adrian McCarthy > > Why does this test need a separate directory? > > The test is to confirm that LLDB can locate a PDB symbol file that corresponds to the target executable. In the executable, the linker writes the location where it generated the PDB file. I need that path to be a different directory than the directory for the executable itself because the fallback search includes the directory of the executable. > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev
Adrian McCarthy via llvm-dev
2020-Aug-06 23:20 UTC
[llvm-dev] How to make a subdirectory in a lit test?
Yeah, the llvm-ar tests are working on Windows. But I'm getting different results when I try to use the same commands in an LLDB lit test. Maybe there's something messed up in LLDB's local lit config? If I have `mkdir %t/subdir` in my lit test, I get either file-not-found or a complaint about "unrecognized option /subdir." The one-and-only mkdir on my PATH is "C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin\mkdir.exe". If I run that explicitly, bypassing the one build into the Windows CMD prompt, I can use `--help`, `--parents`, and `--version` (among others). But if I issue those commands from the lit test, I get reports of "unsupported option: `--parents`" and subdirectories named `--help` and `--version`. That tells me lit isn't running the same command, though the "unsupported option" is not an error message I'd expect from CMD's mkdir. The GnuWin tools have been removed from my machine for a while now. `which` and `where` report only the Git version. 'Tis a puzzle. On Thu, Aug 6, 2020 at 3:45 PM David Blaikie <dblaikie at gmail.com> wrote:> there are some existing tests that seem to do this, for instance: > > llvm/test/tools/llvm-ar/lto-kind-from-triple.test > > Are these not running on Windows? > > On Thu, Aug 6, 2020 at 3:36 PM Adrian McCarthy via llvm-dev > <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > > > I'm writing a lit test that needs to temporarily make a subdirectory. > > > > I tried: > > > > ``` > > // RUN: mkdir %t/subdir > > ``` > > > > But on Windows, it's hard to bypass the built-in mkdir to use a > Posix-style one from Git or GnuWin. The built-in mkdir believes the > `/subdir` is an unrecognized command flag. I figure I cannot just use a > backslash because that would fail on Posix systems. (The test should run > on all platforms.) > > > > The lit documentation mentioned a `%{pathsep}` macro, so I tried that. > After several minutes of confusing results, I discovered this is not for > the path component separator, but for the separators used between paths in > the PATH environment variable. On Windows, that's ';', which doesn't help. > > > > Suggestions? > > > > Thanks, > > Adrian McCarthy > > > > Why does this test need a separate directory? > > > > The test is to confirm that LLDB can locate a PDB symbol file that > corresponds to the target executable. In the executable, the linker writes > the location where it generated the PDB file. I need that path to be a > different directory than the directory for the executable itself because > the fallback search includes the directory of the executable. > > _______________________________________________ > > LLVM Developers mailing list > > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20200806/02d2cacc/attachment.html>
Seemingly Similar Threads
- How to make a subdirectory in a lit test?
- clang-format sets executable permission on windows (openNativeFile ignores mode on Windows)
- Running lit (googletest) tests remotely
- clang-format sets executable permission on windows (openNativeFile ignores mode on Windows)
- [RFC] Require PRs for XFAILing tests