If clang encountered bad imports, the depfile will not be generated. It
doesn't make sense to warn the user in this case. In fact,
`FileNotFound` is never worth warning about here; it just means that
the file we were deleting to save space isn't there in the first place!
If the missing file actually affected the compilation (e.g. another
process raced to delete it for some reason) we would already error in
the normal code path which reads these files, so we can safely omit the
warning in the `FileNotFound` case always, only warning when the file
might still exist.
To see what this fixes, create the following file...
```c
#include <nonexist>
```
...and run `zig build-obj` on it. Before this commit, you will get a
redundant warning; after this commit, that warning is gone.
Most of these are gated by -Dtest-extra-targets because:
* We don't really have CI resources to spare at the moment.
* They're relatively niche if you're not on a musl distro.
* And the few musl distros that exist don't support all these targets.
* Quite a few of them are broken and need investigating.
x86_64-linux-musl and aarch64-linux-musl are not gated as they're the most
common targets that people will be running dynamic musl on, so we'll want to
have some bare minimum coverage of those.
It remains 1 everywhere else.
Also remove some code that allowed setting the libc++ ABI version on the
Compilation since there are no current plans to actually expose this in the CLI.
* When storing a zero-bit type, we should short-circuit almost
immediately. Zero-bit stores do not need to do any work.
* The bit size computation for arrays is incorrect; the `abiSize` will
already be appropriately aligned, but the logic to do so here
incorrectly assumes that zero-bit types have an alignment of 0. They
don't; their alignment is 1.
Resolves: #21202Resolves: #21508Resolves: #23307
There were several bugs with the synchronization here; most notably an
ABA problem which was causing #21663. I fixed that and some other
issues, and took the opportunity to get rid of the `.seq_cst` orderings
from this file. I'm at least relatively sure my new orderings are correct.
Co-authored-by: achan1989 <achan1989@gmail.com>
Resolves: #21663
This is generally ill-advised, but can be useful in some niche situations where
the caveats don't apply. It might also be useful when providing a libc.txt that
points to Eyra.
I changed to `wasm/abi.zig`, this design is certainly better than the previous one. Still there is some conflict of interest between llvm and self-hosted backend, better design will appear when abi tests will be tested with self-hosted.
Resolves: #23304Resolves: #23305
Dunno why the MIPS signal numbers are different, or why Zig had them
already special cased, but wrong.
We have the technology to test these constants. We should use it.
All the existing code that manipulates `ucontext_t` expects there to be a
glibc-compatible sigmask (1024-bit). The `ucontext_t` struct need to be
cleaned up so the glibc-dependent format is only used when linking
glibc/musl library, but that is a more involved change.
In practice, no Zig code looks at the sigset field contents, so it just
needs to be the right size.
By returning an initialized sigset (instead of taking the set as an output
parameter), these functions can be used to directly initialize the `mask`
parameter of a `Sigaction` instance.
When linking a libc, Zig should defer to the C library for sigset
operations. The pre-filled constants signal sets (empty_sigset,
filled_sigset) are not compatible with C library initialization, so remove
them and use the runtime `sigemptyset` and `sigfillset` methods to
initialize any sigset.