commit | 6980b7acdeda8ae0d4e0ae1dea2e560d0f4694c0 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Mark de Wever <koraq@xs4all.nl> | Wed May 24 18:12:32 2023 +0200 |
committer | Copybara-Service <copybara-worker@google.com> | Sat May 27 03:55:48 2023 -0700 |
tree | d76387b847a6d8aeb2077a2127e9a4a38ec893cb | |
parent | a5ec04cf27834d5a73f2ec666a6b855afa329316 [diff] |
Reland "[CMake] Bumps minimum version to 3.20.0. This reverts commit d763c6e5e2d0a6b34097aa7dabca31e9aff9b0b6. Adds the patch by @hans from https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/62719 This patch fixes the Windows build. d763c6e5e2d0a6b34097aa7dabca31e9aff9b0b6 reverted the reviews D144509 [CMake] Bumps minimum version to 3.20.0. This partly undoes D137724. This change has been discussed on discourse https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-upgrading-llvms-minimum-required-cmake-version/66193 Note this does not remove work-arounds for older CMake versions, that will be done in followup patches. D150532 [OpenMP] Compile assembly files as ASM, not C Since CMake 3.20, CMake explicitly passes "-x c" (or equivalent) when compiling a file which has been set as having the language C. This behaviour change only takes place if "cmake_minimum_required" is set to 3.20 or newer, or if the policy CMP0119 is set to new. Attempting to compile assembly files with "-x c" fails, however this is workarounded in many cases, as OpenMP overrides this with "-x assembler-with-cpp", however this is only added for non-Windows targets. Thus, after increasing cmake_minimum_required to 3.20, this breaks compiling the GNU assembly for Windows targets; the GNU assembly is used for ARM and AArch64 Windows targets when building with Clang. This patch unbreaks that. D150688 [cmake] Set CMP0091 to fix Windows builds after the cmake_minimum_required bump The build uses other mechanism to select the runtime. Fixes #62719 Reviewed By: #libc, Mordante Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D151344 GitOrigin-RevId: cbaa3597aaf6273e66b3f445ed36a6458143fe6a
This directory and its subdirectories contain source code for the LLVM Linker, a modular cross platform linker which is built as part of the LLVM compiler infrastructure project.
lld is open source software. You may freely distribute it under the terms of the license agreement found in LICENSE.txt.
In order to make sure various developers can evaluate patches over the same tests, we create a collection of self contained programs.
It is hosted at https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/linker-tests/lld-speed-test.tar.xz
The current sha256 is 10eec685463d5a8bbf08d77f4ca96282161d396c65bd97dc99dbde644a31610f
.