Message ID | CANeU7QkBF=uw_EVBe7-zLadUU=cgCvFS7uKxdRk_vq=6SO7W5Q@mail.gmail.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | Not Applicable, archived |
Headers | show |
On Thu, Aug 31, 2017 at 08:47:55PM -0400, Christopher Li wrote: > On Thu, Aug 31, 2017 at 4:55 PM, Uwe Kleine-König <uwe@kleine-> Yes > that works. So to address the Debian bug I can do: > > > > - move sparse to /usr/lib > > - teach cgcc about the move of sparse > > - make /usr/bin/sparse call cgcc -no-compile "$@" > > I don't like that. It means the user can't invoke sparse directly. > > > > > or is it easier to teach sparse about the architecture stuff? > > First of all. It is not very trivial to teach sparse about the architecture > stuff. To my mind, we need to move all the cgcc logic into sparse. Related to that: while it would mean we couldn't necessarily just rely entirely on GCC's definitions for a target platform, I think in an ideal world we could have a sparse binary that understood *all* target platforms at once, such that you could ask Sparse on x86_64 to "compile" as though targeting any arbitrary architecture. That would also have the major advantage of making it easy to run the Sparse testsuite for *every* target architecture without needing compilers for every such architecture. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-sparse" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Fri, Sep 01, 2017 at 12:02:12AM -0700, Josh Triplett wrote: > On Thu, Aug 31, 2017 at 08:47:55PM -0400, Christopher Li wrote: > > On Thu, Aug 31, 2017 at 4:55 PM, Uwe Kleine-König <uwe@kleine-> Yes > > that works. So to address the Debian bug I can do: > > > > > > - move sparse to /usr/lib > > > - teach cgcc about the move of sparse > > > - make /usr/bin/sparse call cgcc -no-compile "$@" > > > > I don't like that. It means the user can't invoke sparse directly. > > > > > > > > or is it easier to teach sparse about the architecture stuff? > > > > First of all. It is not very trivial to teach sparse about the architecture > > stuff. To my mind, we need to move all the cgcc logic into sparse. > > Related to that: while it would mean we couldn't necessarily just rely > entirely on GCC's definitions for a target platform, I think in an ideal > world we could have a sparse binary that understood *all* target > platforms at once, such that you could ask Sparse on x86_64 to "compile" > as though targeting any arbitrary architecture. That would also have the > major advantage of making it easy to run the Sparse testsuite for > *every* target architecture without needing compilers for every such > architecture. You'd need the target arch's system headers though. But still it would be great. In a first attempt something like: #ifdef __powerpc__ add_pre_buffer("#weak_define __powerpc__ " __powerpc__ "\n"); #ifdef _CALL_ELF add_pre_buffer("#weak_define _CALL_ELF " _CALL_ELF "\n"); #endif #endif would be helpful already. Best regards Uwe
On Fri, Sep 1, 2017 at 3:02 AM, Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org> wrote: >> First of all. It is not very trivial to teach sparse about the architecture >> stuff. To my mind, we need to move all the cgcc logic into sparse. > > Related to that: while it would mean we couldn't necessarily just rely > entirely on GCC's definitions for a target platform, I think in an ideal > world we could have a sparse binary that understood *all* target > platforms at once, such that you could ask Sparse on x86_64 to "compile" Yes, that is what I want to have. It is list as one of the project in project idea document as well. I have a related question. How do we test the different architecture handling without actually run sparse on different platform? I am thinking maybe using gcc cross platform compiler and compare some macro against the sparse one. > as though targeting any arbitrary architecture. That would also have the > major advantage of making it easy to run the Sparse testsuite for > *every* target architecture without needing compilers for every such > architecture. Another way to fix the test suite for now would be let testsuite specify using cgcc instead of sparse directly, for the test source that needs it. That will buy us some time. Fixing sparse properly in the long term obvious would be better. Chris -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-sparse" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Fri, Sep 01, 2017 at 09:57:09AM +0200, Uwe Kleine-König wrote: > On Fri, Sep 01, 2017 at 12:02:12AM -0700, Josh Triplett wrote: > > On Thu, Aug 31, 2017 at 08:47:55PM -0400, Christopher Li wrote: > > > On Thu, Aug 31, 2017 at 4:55 PM, Uwe Kleine-König <uwe@kleine-> Yes > > > that works. So to address the Debian bug I can do: > > > > > > > > - move sparse to /usr/lib > > > > - teach cgcc about the move of sparse > > > > - make /usr/bin/sparse call cgcc -no-compile "$@" > > > > > > I don't like that. It means the user can't invoke sparse directly. > > > > > > > > > > > or is it easier to teach sparse about the architecture stuff? > > > > > > First of all. It is not very trivial to teach sparse about the architecture > > > stuff. To my mind, we need to move all the cgcc logic into sparse. > > > > Related to that: while it would mean we couldn't necessarily just rely > > entirely on GCC's definitions for a target platform, I think in an ideal > > world we could have a sparse binary that understood *all* target > > platforms at once, such that you could ask Sparse on x86_64 to "compile" > > as though targeting any arbitrary architecture. That would also have the > > major advantage of making it easy to run the Sparse testsuite for > > *every* target architecture without needing compilers for every such > > architecture. > > You'd need the target arch's system headers though. Only for building userspace code, not for building standalone/kernel code, or the Sparse testsuite. - Josh Triplett -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-sparse" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Fri, Sep 1, 2017 at 9:02 AM, Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org> wrote: > On Thu, Aug 31, 2017 at 08:47:55PM -0400, Christopher Li wrote: >> On Thu, Aug 31, 2017 at 4:55 PM, Uwe Kleine-König <uwe@kleine-> Yes >> that works. So to address the Debian bug I can do: >> > >> > - move sparse to /usr/lib >> > - teach cgcc about the move of sparse >> > - make /usr/bin/sparse call cgcc -no-compile "$@" >> >> I don't like that. It means the user can't invoke sparse directly. >> >> > >> > or is it easier to teach sparse about the architecture stuff? >> >> First of all. It is not very trivial to teach sparse about the architecture >> stuff. To my mind, we need to move all the cgcc logic into sparse. > > Related to that: while it would mean we couldn't necessarily just rely > entirely on GCC's definitions for a target platform, I think in an ideal > world we could have a sparse binary that understood *all* target > platforms at once, such that you could ask Sparse on x86_64 to "compile" > as though targeting any arbitrary architecture. That would also have the > major advantage of making it easy to run the Sparse testsuite for > *every* target architecture without needing compilers for every such > architecture. I really think that the testsuite should not depend on system or library header. Otherwise, I'm not at all opposed to sparse being universal but I would like to note that things can become very quickly very very messy. For example, for the current problem here I understood that it was at least partially based on the lack of a definition of _CALL_ELF but do we need to define it to 1 or to 2, in other words, do we need to support the ELFv1 ABI or the ELFv2? GCC has some flags for this (-mabi=elfv[12]) but what default value do we want? ELFv1 is the default for big-endian platform and ELFv2 for little-endian platform, so yes, we need a flag for the endianness but which endianness we want as default? And so on. Things become even more fun when taking in account the difference between GCC version. Do we want to be universal there too (and thus have some flags for to specify which gcc's version we want to mimick)? What about other compilers? I think that part of the needed info can be auto-extracted from GCC when doing a native build. Using some sort of spec file or a .sparserc can help too. I also note that currently, sparse is already largely universal *because* it *doesn't* need those platform details (or only the very minimal: word size). -- Luc Van Oostenryck -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-sparse" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Sun, Sep 3, 2017 at 5:14 PM, Luc Van Oostenryck <luc.vanoostenryck@gmail.com> wrote: > > I really think that the testsuite should not depend on system or library > header. I think that is a good point. We can start cleaning up the system header file dependency in the existing test suite. See how it goes. > > Otherwise, I'm not at all opposed to sparse being universal but I would like > to note that things can become very quickly very very messy. > For example, for the current problem here I understood that it was > at least partially based on the lack of a definition of _CALL_ELF > but do we need to define it to 1 or to 2, in other words, do we need > to support the ELFv1 ABI or the ELFv2? GCC has some flags for this > (-mabi=elfv[12]) but what default value do we want? ELFv1 is the default I think we can just sparse default to as late as the latest release version of gcc. > for big-endian platform and ELFv2 for little-endian platform, so yes, > we need a flag for the endianness but which endianness we want as default? I am tempting to make the endianness the same as the host gcc by default. Then it can be overwrite by architecture flags. > > Things become even more fun when taking in account the difference > between GCC version. Do we want to be universal there too (and thus > have some flags for to specify which gcc's version we want to mimick)? > What about other compilers? I purpose just sync to the latest gcc version (or a late enough version we can agree on. e.g. the one that supported by kernel compile.) Sparse current try to sync to the latest gcc attributes already. > I think that part of the needed info can be auto-extracted from GCC > when doing a native build. Using some sort of spec file or a .sparserc Is there a way to do auto-extract? That would be a good starting point. > I also note that currently, sparse is already largely universal *because* > it *doesn't* need those platform details (or only the very minimal: word size). Sparse is not universal, it just support a very small sub set of the C source file that haven't expose to those platform detail macros. Adding those architecture macro support will not make it any less universal. Might slow things down, that is some thing we need to watch out for. Chris -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-sparse" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
[readding people to Cc assuming that's ok] Hello Luc, On Mon, Sep 04, 2017 at 10:36:47PM +0200, Luc Van Oostenryck wrote: > On Mon, Sep 4, 2017 at 10:57 AM, Uwe Kleine-König <uwe@kleine-koenig.org> wrote: > > On 09/03/2017 11:14 PM, Luc Van Oostenryck wrote: > >> On Fri, Sep 1, 2017 at 9:02 AM, Josh Triplett <josh@joshtriplett.org> wrote: > >>> Related to that: while it would mean we couldn't necessarily just rely > >>> entirely on GCC's definitions for a target platform, I think in an ideal > >>> world we could have a sparse binary that understood *all* target > >>> platforms at once, such that you could ask Sparse on x86_64 to "compile" > >>> as though targeting any arbitrary architecture. That would also have the > >>> major advantage of making it easy to run the Sparse testsuite for > >>> *every* target architecture without needing compilers for every such > >>> architecture. > >> > >> I really think that the testsuite should not depend on system or library > >> header. > > > > Assuming it's intended that sparse should be able to check userspace > > programs, I don't agree here. > > I understand this. > I'll explain a bit better my point of view. > First, I make a distinction between 'sparse core functionalities' and > general usage. > I was talking about this core usage and the testsuite is currently for this core > usage too. and while it's ok to test the core stuff and not wanting the system includes to interfere, there should also be tests that check "ordinary" userspace programs which naturally depend on the system headers. > Asking for the testsuite to not depends on system or library header is exactly > the same as GCC people asking bug reports to be done on pre-processed file > (so that they focus on the core problem and not some problem with an header). > This, of course, doesn't mean that GCC should only be used on standalone > source files nor that GCC shouldn't be tested on real code, using > system headers. > It's just something different. > > So to answer to your objection: yes, you're right but it should be done in some > specific tests, not the core ones. ah, we agree. Fine. > Secondly, about "intended to check userspace programs": > It's clear that sparse's main use is for the kernel, but it's also > clear that it can > and is used on other (userspace) projects. > However, as you have seen yourself, you can't use sparse as is and expect > to work on any environment, on any architecture. Even for the kernel it doesn't: > each architecture has to specify a few flags (like -m32/-m64) and a few defines > (-D__arm__, ...). For userspace, cgcc can do a part of this job for you. > > Josh proposal to have what I called a 'universal' sparse, won't solve this, > on the contrary. > Compilers eschew part of this problem by having to configure the build > > I'm all in favor to move cgcc logic to sparse and/or it's build system so that > *for a native build* it can be used as-is in most cases. > This would solve your problem, I think. > > BTW, sorry I didn't follow last week but is your problem solved now? No, it's not solved. But given that it is somehow known that sparse (without cgcc) fails to work well on userspace stuff, I think the following would be fine for the Debian side: a) let horst use cgcc instead of sparse b) downgrade bug to important or even normal pointing out that cgcc should be used for userspace programs For sparse it would be cool to: c) drop the #weak_define of __amd64__ to make this "problem" more apparent. (Assuming this doesn't break e.g. a kernel build.) d) fix the test suite, at least mark the tests that are expected to fail on !x86 as such to make $(make check) succeed. (Otherwise I'd have to disable or ignore the testsuite which isn't that great.) Best regards Uwe
On Wed, Sep 6, 2017 at 10:44 AM, Uwe Kleine-König <uwe@kleine-koenig.org> wrote: > > and while it's ok to test the core stuff and not wanting the system > includes to interfere, there should also be tests that check "ordinary" > userspace programs which naturally depend on the system headers. > There is one. The "selfcheck" target was checking sparse on its own source file. That will definitively use the system header file. However, there are some warning trigger in the system header file can't be fixed in the sparse source code. It need to change the system header to make some warning go away, or disable that warning. > > No, it's not solved. But given that it is somehow known that sparse > (without cgcc) fails to work well on userspace stuff, I think the > following would be fine for the Debian side: > > a) let horst use cgcc instead of sparse > b) downgrade bug to important or even normal pointing out that cgcc > should be used for userspace programs That seems to be the right thing to do for now. That is until sparse are smarter on user space header regarding architecture stuff. > For sparse it would be cool to: > > c) drop the #weak_define of __amd64__ to make this "problem" more > apparent. (Assuming this doesn't break e.g. a kernel build.) You mean remove define of "__x86_64__". It will likely break some other stuff. For the record the "selfcheck" target already using cgcc. We still need to fix the breakage. Any suggestion how to test sparse running on other platform headfile without have to get access to ppc64 for example? I think that is the biggest obstacle right now. I can make some changes, but I don't have a good way to test it other than x86 platform. > d) fix the test suite, at least mark the tests that are expected to > fail on !x86 as such to make $(make check) succeed. (Otherwise I'd > have to disable or ignore the testsuite which isn't that great.) We can make the test-suite not depend on system header files. That seems to be the right think to do. I also send out a patch to let the llvm back end test-suite use cgcc last week. Removing system header usage in test suite is better. Chris -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-sparse" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Hello Christopher, On Wed, Sep 06, 2017 at 11:18:04AM -0400, Christopher Li wrote: > On Wed, Sep 6, 2017 at 10:44 AM, Uwe Kleine-König <uwe@kleine-koenig.org> wrote: > > and while it's ok to test the core stuff and not wanting the system > > includes to interfere, there should also be tests that check "ordinary" > > userspace programs which naturally depend on the system headers. > > There is one. The "selfcheck" target was checking sparse on its own > source file. That will definitively use the system header file. However, > there are some warning trigger in the system header file can't be fixed > in the sparse source code. It need to change the system header to make > some warning go away, or disable that warning. > > > > > No, it's not solved. But given that it is somehow known that sparse > > (without cgcc) fails to work well on userspace stuff, I think the > > following would be fine for the Debian side: > > > > a) let horst use cgcc instead of sparse > > b) downgrade bug to important (or even normal) pointing out that > > cgcc should be used for userspace programs > > That seems to be the right thing to do for now. That is until > sparse are smarter on user space header regarding architecture stuff. ok, Antoine, can you talk to the horst people and ask them to switch to cgcc then? > > For sparse it would be cool to: > > > > c) drop the #weak_define of __amd64__ to make this "problem" more > > apparent. (Assuming this doesn't break e.g. a kernel build.) > > You mean remove define of "__x86_64__". ack. > It will likely break some other stuff. For the record the "selfcheck" target > already using cgcc. We still need to fix the breakage. > > Any suggestion how to test sparse running on other platform headfile > without have to get access to ppc64 for example? I think that is the biggest > obstacle right now. I can make some changes, but I don't have a good way > to test it other than x86 platform. There is https://dsa.debian.org/doc/guest-account/ which would give you the possibility to access some Debian machines. Other than that I intend to upload 0.5.1 to Debian soon and then can provide you links to build failures in the build server farm :-) And if you have a patch, I can volunteer to make the test monkey for you. > > d) fix the test suite, at least mark the tests that are expected to > > fail on !x86 as such to make $(make check) succeed. (Otherwise I'd > > have to disable or ignore the testsuite which isn't that great.) > > We can make the test-suite not depend on system header files. > That seems to be the right think to do. I also send out a patch > to let the llvm back end test-suite use cgcc last week. Removing > system header usage in test suite is better. Testing that patch is on my todo list. Best regards Uwe
On Thu, Aug 31, 2017 at 08:47:55PM -0400, Christopher Li wrote: > On Thu, Aug 31, 2017 at 4:55 PM, Uwe Kleine-König <uwe@kleine-> Yes > that works. So to address the Debian bug I can do: > > > > - move sparse to /usr/lib > > - teach cgcc about the move of sparse > > - make /usr/bin/sparse call cgcc -no-compile "$@" > > I don't like that. It means the user can't invoke sparse directly. > > > > > or is it easier to teach sparse about the architecture stuff? > > First of all. It is not very trivial to teach sparse about the architecture > stuff. To my mind, we need to move all the cgcc logic into sparse. > > For this case, I think it is easier to teach the sparse validation > code to use cgcc on those back end testing. Most validation don't > need to include system header file at all so it does not have > this problem. > > How about this patch? > I know my patch is white space damaged in email. > Git branch is at: > https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/devel/sparse/chrisl/sparse.git/log/?h=llvm-cgcc > > Please let me know if that fix your problem. It pass check > on my local machine running x86_64. I don't have ppc64 to > test with. > > Chris > > diff --git a/sparsec b/sparsec > index 9dc96c9..2990d26 100755 > --- a/sparsec > +++ b/sparsec > @@ -32,7 +32,8 @@ done > TMPLLVM=`mktemp -t tmp.XXXXXX`".llvm" > TMPFILE=`mktemp -t tmp.XXXXXX`".o" > > -$DIRNAME/sparse-llvm $SPARSEOPTS > $TMPLLVM > +env CHECK=$DIRNAME/sparse-llvm $DIRNAME/cgcc -no-compile \ > + $SPARSEOPTS > $TMPLLVM > > LLC=`"${LLVM_CONFIG:-llvm-config}" --bindir`/llc > > diff --git a/sparsei b/sparsei > index 3431a9f..3abd00f 100755 > --- a/sparsei > +++ b/sparsei > @@ -10,4 +10,4 @@ if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then > exit 1 > fi > > -$DIRNAME/sparse-llvm $@ | $LLI > +env CHECK=$DIRNAME/sparse-llvm $DIRNAME/cgcc -no-compile $@ | $LLI I tried this on ppc64le and it fixes 2 tests, so were at Out of 287 tests, 273 passed, 14 failed (10 of them are known to fail) The repaired tests are: backend/hello.c backend/sum.c unexpected failures are: backend/arithmetic-ops.c backend/cmp-ops.c backend/int-cond.c backend/logical-ops.c These are not about missing preprocessor tokens as there are no system includes used, but the error there is Error: unrecognized opcode: `...` . I didn't look into what the problem is there, but attached the test log. I did a build test on a few other Debian machines, arm64 was fine, mips and mipx64el had 15 failures, ppc64 (i.e. big endian) had 12. I didn't look in more detail and suggest to tackle one after the other :-) Best regards Uwe I: Started sh -c make && make check O: make: Nothing to be done for 'all'. O: TEST Woverride-init-def (Woverride-init-def.c) O: TEST Woverride-init-no (Woverride-init-no.c) O: TEST Woverride-init-yes (Woverride-init-yes.c) O: TEST warn-unknown-attribute (Wunknown-attribute-def.c) O: TEST warn-unknown-attribute-no (Wunknown-attribute-no.c) O: TEST warn-unknown-attribute-yes (Wunknown-attribute-yes.c) O: TEST __func__ (__func__.c) O: TEST abstract array declarator static (abstract-array-declarator-static.c) O: TEST address_space attribute (address_space.c) O: TEST alias distinct symbols (alias-distinct.c) O: TEST alias symbol/pointer (alias-mixed.c) O: TEST alias same symbols (alias-same.c) O: TEST attribute __alloc_align__ (alloc-align.c) O: TEST alternate keywords (alternate-keywords.c) O: TEST test anonymous union initializer (anon-union.c) O: TEST Asm with goto labels. (asm-empty-clobber.c) O: TEST Asm with goto labels. (asm-goto-lables.c) O: TEST asm-toplevel.c (asm-toplevel.c) O: TEST inline attributes (attr-inline.c) O: TEST attribute no_sanitize_address (attr-no_sanitize_address.c) O: TEST attribute noclone (attr-noclone.c) O: TEST optimize attributes (attr-optimize.c) O: TEST attribute warning (attr-warning.c) O: TEST attribute assume_aligned (attr_aligned.c) O: TEST attribute after ( in direct-declarator (attr_in_parameter.c) O: TEST attribute vector_size (attr_vector_size.c) O: TEST Arithmetic operator code generation (backend/arithmetic-ops.c) O: error: actual error text does not match expected error text. O: error: see backend/arithmetic-ops.c.error.* for further investigation. O: --- backend/arithmetic-ops.c.error.expected 2017-09-09 20:44:47.964306005 +0000 O: +++ backend/arithmetic-ops.c.error.got 2017-09-09 20:44:47.960305943 +0000 O: @@ -0,0 +1,10 @@ O: +{standard input}: Assembler messages: O: +{standard input}:38: Error: unrecognized opcode: `xsaddsp' O: +{standard input}:52: Error: unrecognized opcode: `xsadddp' O: +{standard input}:94: Error: unrecognized opcode: `xssubsp' O: +{standard input}:108: Error: unrecognized opcode: `xssubdp' O: +{standard input}:150: Error: unrecognized opcode: `xsmulsp' O: +{standard input}:164: Error: unrecognized opcode: `xsmuldp' O: +{standard input}:206: Error: unrecognized opcode: `xsdivsp' O: +{standard input}:220: Error: unrecognized opcode: `xsdivdp' O: +mv: cannot stat '/tmp/tmp.8axUUC.o': No such file or directory O: TEST Array code generation (backend/array.c) O: TEST Bitwise operator code generation (backend/bitwise-ops.c) O: TEST Boolean type code generation (backend/bool-test.c) O: TEST Cast code generation (backend/cast.c) O: TEST Comparison operator code generation (backend/cmp-ops.c) O: error: actual error text does not match expected error text. O: error: see backend/cmp-ops.c.error.* for further investigation. O: --- backend/cmp-ops.c.error.expected 2017-09-09 20:44:48.320311523 +0000 O: +++ backend/cmp-ops.c.error.got 2017-09-09 20:44:48.316311461 +0000 O: @@ -0,0 +1,18 @@ O: +{standard input}: Assembler messages: O: +{standard input}:13: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:29: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:46: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:63: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:79: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:95: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:112: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:129: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:145: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:161: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:178: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:194: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:211: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:228: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:245: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:262: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +mv: cannot stat '/tmp/tmp.DoTA0H.o': No such file or directory O: TEST Extern symbol code generation (backend/extern.c) O: TEST Function pointer code generation (backend/function-ptr.c) O: TEST 'hello, world' code generation (backend/hello.c) O: TEST Non-bool condition values in branch/select (backend/int-cond.c) O: error: actual error text does not match expected error text. O: error: see backend/int-cond.c.error.* for further investigation. O: --- backend/int-cond.c.error.expected 2017-09-09 20:44:48.572315429 +0000 O: +++ backend/int-cond.c.error.got 2017-09-09 20:44:48.568315367 +0000 O: @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ O: +{standard input}: Assembler messages: O: +{standard input}:11: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:26: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +mv: cannot stat '/tmp/tmp.ytNQ13.o': No such file or directory O: TEST Type of loaded objects (backend/load-type.c) O: TEST Logical operator code generation (backend/logical-ops.c) O: error: actual error text does not match expected error text. O: error: see backend/logical-ops.c.error.* for further investigation. O: --- backend/logical-ops.c.error.expected 2017-09-09 20:44:48.696317351 +0000 O: +++ backend/logical-ops.c.error.got 2017-09-09 20:44:48.692317289 +0000 O: @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ O: +{standard input}: Assembler messages: O: +{standard input}:14: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +{standard input}:32: Error: unrecognized opcode: `isel' O: +mv: cannot stat '/tmp/tmp.onWlTP.o': No such file or directory O: TEST Loops (backend/loop.c) O: TEST Loops with unused counter (backend/loop2.c) O: TEST Pointer cast code generation (backend/ptrcast.c) O: TEST Type of stored objects (backend/store-type.c) O: TEST struct access code generation (backend/struct-access.c) O: TEST Struct code generation (backend/struct.c) O: TEST sum from 1 to n (backend/sum.c) O: TEST Union code generation (backend/union.c) O: TEST void return type code generation (backend/void-return-type.c) O: TEST Bad array designated initializer (bad-array-designated-initializer.c) O: TEST bad assignment (bad-assignment.c) O: TEST Bad cast syntax (bad-cast.c) O: TEST Bad ternary syntax (bad-ternary-cond.c) O: TEST Bad typeof syntax segfault (bad-typeof.c) O: TEST enum not in scope (badtype1.c) O: info: test 'badtype1.c' is known to fail O: TEST missing type (badtype2.c) O: TEST missing type in argument list (badtype3.c) O: TEST switch(bad_type) {...} segfault (badtype4.c) O: TEST badtype5.c (badtype5.c) O: TEST binary constant (binary-constant.c) O: TEST bitfield size (bitfield-size.c) O: TEST bitfield to integer promotion (bitfields.c) O: TEST conversions to bitwise types (bitwise-cast.c) O: TEST sizeof(bool array) (bool-array.c) O: TEST bool-cast-bad.c (bool-cast-bad.c) O: TEST bool-cast-explicit (bool-cast-explicit.c) O: TEST bool-cast-implicit (bool-cast-implicit.c) O: TEST bool-cast-restricted.c (bool-cast-restricted.c) O: TEST constant folding in bswap builtins (bswap-constant-folding.c) O: TEST inlining switch statement (bug_inline_switch.c) O: TEST builtin-args-checking (builtin-args-checking.c) O: TEST builtin-bswap-constant (builtin-bswap-constant.c) O: TEST builtin-bswap (builtin-bswap-variable.c) O: TEST __builtin_atomic (builtin_atomic.c) O: TEST __builtin_bswap (builtin_bswap.c) O: TEST __builtin INFINITY / nan() (builtin_inf.c) O: TEST __builtin_safe (builtin_safe1.c) O: TEST __builtin_unreachable() (builtin_unreachable.c) O: TEST __builtin_va_arg_pack() (builtin_va_arg_pack.c) O: TEST c11-alignas (c11-alignas.c) O: TEST c11-alignof (c11-alignof.c) O: TEST c11-noreturn (c11-noreturn.c) O: TEST c11-stdc-version (c11-stdc-version.c) O: TEST c11-thread-local (c11-thread-local.c) O: TEST C99 for-loop declarations (c99-for-loop-decl.c) O: TEST C99 for loop variable declaration (c99-for-loop.c) O: TEST Calling convention attributes (calling-convention-attributes.c) O: TEST cast-constant-to-float (cast-constant-to-float.c) O: TEST cast-constants.c (cast-constants.c) O: TEST cast-kinds (cast-kinds.c) O: TEST Segfault in check_byte_count after syntax error (check_byte_count-ice.c) O: TEST choose expr builtin (choose_expr.c) O: TEST Comma and array decay (comma.c) O: TEST Compare null pointer constant to int (compare-null-to-int.c) O: TEST compound-assign-type (compound-assign-type.c) O: TEST cond-address-array.c (cond-address-array.c) O: TEST cond-address-function (cond-address-function.c) O: TEST cond-address.c (cond-address.c) O: TEST cond-err-expand.c (cond-err-expand.c) O: TEST Two-argument conditional expression types (cond_expr.c) O: TEST type of conditional expression (cond_expr2.c) O: TEST result type of relational and logical operators (cond_expr3.c) O: TEST conditional-type (conditional-type.c) O: TEST address of static object's member constness verification. (constexpr-addr-of-static-member.c) O: TEST address of static object constness verification. (constexpr-addr-of-static.c) O: TEST Expression constness propagation in binops and alike (constexpr-binop.c) O: TEST Expression constness propagation in casts (constexpr-cast.c) O: TEST compound literal address constness verification (constexpr-compound-literal.c) O: TEST Expression constness propagation in conditional expressions (constexpr-conditional.c) O: TEST static storage object initializer constness verification. (constexpr-init.c) O: TEST label reference constness verification. (constexpr-labelref.c) O: TEST __builtin_offsetof() constness verification. (constexpr-offsetof.c) O: TEST pointer arithmetic constness verification. (constexpr-pointer-arith.c) O: TEST integer literal cast to pointer type constness verification. (constexpr-pointer-cast.c) O: TEST Expression constness propagation in preops (constexpr-preop.c) O: TEST constness of pure/const builtins (constexpr-pure-builtin.c) O: TEST string literal constness verification. (constexpr-string.c) O: TEST __builtin_types_compatible_p() constness verification. (constexpr-types-compatible-p.c) O: TEST Check -Wcontext (context.c) O: TEST crash add-doms (crash-add-doms.c) O: TEST crash bb_target (crash-bb_target.c) O: TEST crash ep->active (crash-ep-active.c) O: TEST crash ptrlist (crash-ptrlist.c) O: TEST crash rewrite_branch (crash-rewrite-branch.c) O: TEST crazy02-not-so.c (crazy02-not-so.c) O: TEST crazy03.c (crazy03.c) O: TEST declaration after statement (ANSI) (declaration-after-statement-ansi.c) O: TEST declaration after statement (C89) (declaration-after-statement-c89.c) O: TEST declaration after statement (C99) (declaration-after-statement-c99.c) O: TEST declaration after statement (default) (declaration-after-statement-default.c) O: TEST finding definitions (definitions.c) O: TEST designated_init attribute (designated-init.c) O: TEST discarded-label-statement (discarded-label-statement.c) O: TEST division constants (div.c) O: TEST Double semicolon in struct (double-semicolon.c) O: TEST Dubious bitwise operation on !x (dubious-bitwise-with-not.c) O: TEST endian-big.c (endian-big.c) O: TEST endian-little.c (endian-little.c) O: TEST enum-mismatch (enum-mismatch.c) O: TEST enumeration constants' scope [6.2.1p7] (enum_scope.c) O: TEST Character escape sequences (escapes.c) O: TEST duplicate extern array (extern-array.c) O: TEST extern inline function (extern-inline.c) O: TEST field overlap (field-overlap.c) O: TEST field-override (field-override.c) O: TEST Forced function argument type. (fored_arg.c) O: TEST foul bitwise (foul-bitwise.c) O: TEST fp-vs-ptrcast (fp-vs-ptrcast.c) O: TEST Function pointer inheritance (function-pointer-inheritance.c) O: TEST function-redecl (function-redecl.c) O: TEST goto labels (goto-label.c) O: TEST identifier-list parsing (identifier_list.c) O: TEST implicit-ret-type.c (implicit-ret-type.c) O: TEST implicit-type.c (implicit-type.c) O: TEST internal infinite loop (0) (infinite-loop0.c) O: TEST infinite loop 02 (infinite-loop02.c) O: TEST infinite loop 03 (infinite-loop03.c) O: TEST char array initializers (init-char-array.c) O: TEST parenthesized string initializer (init-char-array1.c) O: TEST -Winit-cstring option (init_cstring.c) O: TEST Initializer entry defined twice (initializer-entry-defined-twice.c) O: TEST inline compound literals (inline_compound_literals.c) O: TEST int128 (int128.c) O: TEST Integer promotions (integer-promotions.c) O: TEST integer constant & conditional expression (ioc-typecheck.c) O: info: test 'ioc-typecheck.c' is known to fail O: TEST kill-casts (kill-casts.c) O: TEST kill-computedgoto (kill-computedgoto.c) O: TEST kill-cse (kill-cse.c) O: TEST kill insert-branch (kill-insert-branch.c) O: TEST kill-load (kill-load.c) O: TEST kill-phi-node (kill-phi-node.c) O: TEST kill-phi-ttsbb (kill-phi-ttsbb.c) O: TEST kill-phi-ttsbb2 (kill-phi-ttsbb2.c) O: TEST kill-phisrc (kill-phisrc.c) O: TEST kill-pure-call (kill-pure-call.c) O: TEST kill-replaced-insn (kill-replaced-insn.c) O: TEST kill-rewritten-load (kill-rewritten-load.c) O: TEST kill-select (kill-select.c) O: TEST kill-slice (kill-slice.c) O: TEST kill-store (kill-store.c) O: TEST kill-unreachable-phi (kill-unreachable-phi.c) O: TEST Label followed by __asm__ (label-asm.c) O: TEST Label attribute (label-attr.c) O: TEST label-expr (label-expr.c) O: TEST __label__ scope (label-scope.c) O: TEST bitfield initializer mask (linear/bitfield-init-mask.c) O: TEST bitfield implicit init zero (linear/bitfield-init-zero.c) O: TEST missing instruction's size (linear/missing-insn-size.c) O: TEST struct implicit init zero not needed (linear/struct-init-full.c) O: info: test 'linear/struct-init-full.c' is known to fail O: TEST struct implicit init zero needed (linear/struct-init-partial.c) O: TEST Local label (local-label.c) O: TEST Logical and/or (logical.c) O: TEST loop-linearization (loop-linearization.c) O: TEST Expansion of typeof when dealing with member of struct (member_of_typeof.c) O: TEST memops-volatile (memops-volatile.c) O: TEST handling of identifier-less declarations (missing-ident.c) O: TEST typedefs with many declarators (multi_typedef.c) O: TEST nested declarator vs. parameters (nested-declarator.c) O: TEST more on handling of ( in direct-declarator (nested-declarator2.c) O: TEST nocast.c (nocast.c) O: TEST noderef attribute (noderef.c) O: TEST Using plain integer as NULL pointer (non-pointer-null.c) O: TEST Old initializer with -Wno-old-initializer (old-initializer-nowarn.c) O: TEST Old initializer (old-initializer.c) O: TEST double-unop (optim/binops-same-args.c) O: TEST bool-context (optim/bool-context.c) O: TEST bool-same-args (optim/bool-same-args.c) O: TEST bool-simplify (optim/bool-simplify.c) O: TEST cse-commutativity (optim/cse-commutativity.c) O: TEST cse-dual-compare (optim/cse-dual-compare.c) O: info: test 'optim/cse-dual-compare.c' is known to fail O: TEST double-unop (optim/double-unop.c) O: TEST fpcast-nop (optim/fpcast-nop.c) O: TEST muldiv-by-one (optim/muldiv-by-one.c) O: TEST muldiv-by-zero (optim/muldiv-by-zero.c) O: TEST muldiv-minus-one (optim/muldiv-minus-one.c) O: TEST optim/setcc-setcc (optim/setcc-setcc.c) O: TEST optim/setcc-seteq (optim/setcc-seteq.c) O: TEST optim/setcc-setne (optim/setcc-setne.c) O: TEST Ignore VOID in if-convert (optim/void-if-convert.c) O: TEST There is no scope boundary between global and file scope (outer-scope.c) O: TEST #pragma once (pragma-once.c) O: TEST __COUNTER__ #1 (preprocessor/counter1.c) O: TEST __COUNTER__ #2 (preprocessor/counter2.c) O: TEST __COUNTER__ #3 (preprocessor/counter3.c) O: TEST dump-macros with empty file (preprocessor/dump-macros-empty.c) O: TEST dump-macros with multiple files (preprocessor/dump-macros-multi.c) O: TEST dump-macros (preprocessor/dump-macros.c) O: TEST early-escape (preprocessor/early-escape.c) O: TEST predefined __<type>_BIT__ (preprocessor/predef-char-bit.c) O: TEST predefined __<type>_MAX__ (preprocessor/predef-max.c) O: TEST predefined __SIZEOF_<type>__ (preprocessor/predef-sizeof.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #1 (preprocessor/preprocessor1.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #10 (preprocessor/preprocessor10.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #11 (preprocessor/preprocessor11.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #12 (preprocessor/preprocessor12.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #13 (preprocessor/preprocessor13.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #14 (preprocessor/preprocessor14.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #15 (preprocessor/preprocessor15.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #16 (preprocessor/preprocessor16.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #17 (preprocessor/preprocessor17.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #18 (preprocessor/preprocessor18.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #19 (preprocessor/preprocessor19.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #2 (preprocessor/preprocessor2.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #20 (preprocessor/preprocessor20.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #21 (preprocessor/preprocessor21.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #22 (preprocessor/preprocessor22.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #23 (preprocessor/preprocessor23.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #3 (preprocessor/preprocessor3.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #4 (preprocessor/preprocessor4.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #5 (preprocessor/preprocessor5.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #6 (preprocessor/preprocessor6.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #7 (preprocessor/preprocessor7.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #8 (preprocessor/preprocessor8.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #9 (preprocessor/preprocessor9.c) O: TEST Preprocessor #14 (preprocessor/stringify.c) O: TEST wide char token-pasting (preprocessor/wide.c) O: TEST Compile skip function prototype (prototype.c) O: TEST ptr-inherit.c (ptr-inherit.c) O: TEST Pure function attribute (pure-function.c) O: TEST const et.al. are reserved identifiers (reserved.c) O: TEST restrict array attribute (restrict-array.c) O: TEST typeof with bitwise types (restricted-typeof.c) O: TEST sizeof(_Bool) is valid (sizeof-bool.c) O: TEST Handling of sizeof compound-literal . member (sizeof-compound-postfix.c) O: TEST valid specifier combinations (specifiers1.c) O: TEST invalid specifier combinations (specifiers2.c) O: TEST static forward declaration (static-forward-decl.c) O: TEST static assertion (static_assert.c) O: TEST Address space of a struct member (struct-as.c) O: TEST struct attribute placement (struct-attribute-placement.c) O: TEST struct namespaces #1 (struct-ns1.c) O: TEST struct not in scope (struct-ns2.c) O: info: test 'struct-ns2.c' is known to fail O: TEST struct size (struct-size1.c) O: TEST tautological-compare (tautological-compare.c) O: TEST binary operations (test-be.c) O: TEST selfcheck1 (testsuite-selfcheck1.c) O: TEST selfcheck2 (testsuite-selfcheck2.c) O: info: test 'testsuite-selfcheck2.c' is known to fail O: TEST selfcheck3 (testsuite-selfcheck3.c) O: info: test 'testsuite-selfcheck3.c' is known to fail O: TEST Transparent union attribute. (transparent-union.c) O: TEST "char []" to "char *" demotion (type1.c) O: TEST typedef shadowing (typedef_shadow.c) O: TEST typeof-addresspace.c (typeof-addresspace.c) O: info: test 'typeof-addresspace.c' is known to fail O: TEST Rusty Russell's typeof attribute casting. (typeof-attribute.c) O: TEST typeof-mods (typeof-mods.c) O: TEST typeof-noderef (typeof-noderef.c) O: info: test 'typeof-noderef.c' is known to fail O: TEST typeof-safe (typeof-safe.c) O: info: test 'typeof-safe.c' is known to fail O: TEST -Wtypesign (typesign.c) O: TEST Varargs bogus warning regression test #1 (varargs1.c) O: TEST wide character constants (wide.c) E: make: *** [check] Error 1 O: Out of 287 tests, 273 passed, 14 failed (10 of them are known to fail) O: Makefile:232: recipe for target 'check' failed I: Finished with exitcode 2
On Sat, Sep 9, 2017 at 11:02 PM, Uwe Kleine-König <uwe@kleine-koenig.org> wrote: > > I tried this on ppc64le and it fixes 2 tests, so were at > > Out of 287 tests, 273 passed, 14 failed (10 of them are known to fail) > > The repaired tests are: > > backend/hello.c > backend/sum.c > > unexpected failures are: > > backend/arithmetic-ops.c > backend/cmp-ops.c > backend/int-cond.c > backend/logical-ops.c > > These are not about missing preprocessor tokens as there are no system > includes used, but the error there is > > Error: unrecognized opcode: `...` > > . I didn't look into what the problem is there, but attached the test > log. It clearly looks as the code generated by LLVM (the machine code/assembly not LLVM's bytecode) is not understood by the assembler (or at least some instructions). Probably a mismatch with the architecture version or something like that. > I did a build test on a few other Debian machines, arm64 was fine, mips > and mipx64el had 15 failures, ppc64 (i.e. big endian) had 12. I didn't > look in more detail and suggest to tackle one after the other :-) I fully test on x86, x86-64, arm & ARM64 (with LLVM 3.9 or 4.0). I also test on ppc64 but not the LLVM part because the machines I have access to have not LLVM installed and I never bothered to install it myself. Would it be possible to have access to a machine with the architectures you care about? Meanwhile, is it possible to have the build logs but with 'make V=1 ...' ? It would also be useful to have: - the output of 'uname -a' - the details about the version of LLVM you're using On the other hand, you/us should disable the sparse-llvm part since: - it's something that is bundled and build by default but absolutely not needed (or even useful) to use sparse. - it hasn't been written for anything else than x86/x86-64 (no 'layout' for anything else than those architectures. Best regards, -- Luc Van Ooostenryck -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-sparse" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On 09/10/2017 03:22 AM, Luc Van Oostenryck wrote: > On Sat, Sep 9, 2017 at 11:02 PM, Uwe Kleine-König <uwe@kleine-koenig.org> wrote: >> >> I tried this on ppc64le and it fixes 2 tests, so were at >> >> Out of 287 tests, 273 passed, 14 failed (10 of them are known to fail) >> >> The repaired tests are: >> >> backend/hello.c >> backend/sum.c >> >> unexpected failures are: >> >> backend/arithmetic-ops.c >> backend/cmp-ops.c >> backend/int-cond.c >> backend/logical-ops.c >> >> These are not about missing preprocessor tokens as there are no system >> includes used, but the error there is >> >> Error: unrecognized opcode: `...` >> >> . I didn't look into what the problem is there, but attached the test >> log. > > It clearly looks as the code generated by LLVM (the machine code/assembly > not LLVM's bytecode) is not understood by the assembler (or at least some > instructions). Probably a mismatch with the architecture version or something > like that. > >> I did a build test on a few other Debian machines, arm64 was fine, mips >> and mipx64el had 15 failures, ppc64 (i.e. big endian) had 12. I didn't >> look in more detail and suggest to tackle one after the other :-) > > I fully test on x86, x86-64, arm & ARM64 (with LLVM 3.9 or 4.0). > I also test on ppc64 but not the LLVM part because the machines I have > access to have not LLVM installed and I never bothered to install it myself. > > Would it be possible to have access to a machine with the architectures > you care about? Debian provides access to porter boxes for such problems. See https://dsa.debian.org/doc/guest-account/. > Meanwhile, is it possible to have the build logs but with 'make V=1 ...' ? > It would also be useful to have: > - the output of 'uname -a' > - the details about the version of LLVM you're using Sure, can do. Attached is a build from the ppc64el machine with Chris' patch applied. Tell me if it contains everything you need. > On the other hand, you/us should disable the sparse-llvm part since: > - it's something that is bundled and build by default but absolutely not > needed (or even useful) to use sparse. > - it hasn't been written for anything else than x86/x86-64 (no 'layout' > for anything else than those architectures. With your patch applied I get (independent of having Chris' patch applied or not): Out of 265 tests, 255 passed, 10 failed (10 of them are known to fail) Best regards Uwe
On Sun, Sep 10, 2017 at 10:43 AM, Uwe Kleine-König <uwe@kleine-koenig.org> wrote: > On 09/10/2017 03:22 AM, Luc Van Oostenryck wrote: >> >> I fully test on x86, x86-64, arm & ARM64 (with LLVM 3.9 or 4.0). >> I also test on ppc64 but not the LLVM part because the machines I have >> access to have not LLVM installed and I never bothered to install it myself. >> >> Would it be possible to have access to a machine with the architectures >> you care about? > > Debian provides access to porter boxes for such problems. See > https://dsa.debian.org/doc/guest-account/. OK. I'll first try to install LLVM on what I have already access, it should be faster. >> Meanwhile, is it possible to have the build logs but with 'make V=1 ...' ? >> It would also be useful to have: >> - the output of 'uname -a' >> - the details about the version of LLVM you're using > > Sure, can do. Attached is a build from the ppc64el machine with Chris' > patch applied. Tell me if it contains everything you need. Yes, enough to investigate the problem. Thanks. >> On the other hand, you/us should disable the sparse-llvm part since: >> - it's something that is bundled and build by default but absolutely not >> needed (or even useful) to use sparse. >> - it hasn't been written for anything else than x86/x86-64 (no 'layout' >> for anything else than those architectures. > > With your patch applied I get (independent of having Chris' patch > applied or not): > > Out of 265 tests, 255 passed, 10 failed (10 of them are known to fail) Perfect. With this, you should be unblocked. @Chris, can you apply the patch, please? Best regards, -- Luc Van Oostenryck -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-sparse" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Sun, Sep 10, 2017 at 10:43 AM, Uwe Kleine-König <uwe@kleine-koenig.org> wrote: > >> Meanwhile, is it possible to have the build logs but with 'make V=1 ...' ? >> It would also be useful to have: >> - the output of 'uname -a' >> - the details about the version of LLVM you're using > > Sure, can do. Attached is a build from the ppc64el machine with Chris' > patch applied. Tell me if it contains everything you need. I've taken a look at it what happens. The problem is easy to identify and very annoying to solve: in sparsec (a wrapper for sparse-llvm + llc + as [+ ld]) there is a discrepancy between the defaults for llc and as. 'llc' seems to default to the sub-architecture of the build machine (possibly including the most modern features) while 'as' defaults to the minimal features for the build machine architecture. The problem can be solved (on the machine I have access to) by either: - using the option "-mgeneric" for llc - using the option "-mpower8" for as Something smarter would be better. -- Luc -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-sparse" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Wed, Sep 6, 2017 at 11:36 AM, Uwe Kleine-König <uwe@kleine-koenig.org> wrote: > There is https://dsa.debian.org/doc/guest-account/ which would give you > the possibility to access some Debian machines. Other than that I intend Sorry for the delay. Thanks for the pointer of the guest account. > to upload 0.5.1 to Debian soon and then can provide you links to build > failures in the build server farm :-) And if you have a patch, I can > volunteer to make the test monkey for you. BTW, if I want to get a PPC64 machine for Linux testing purpose, is the used apple G5 a good place to start? Chris -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-sparse" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
On Tue, Sep 12, 2017 at 01:59:47AM -0400, Christopher Li wrote: > On Wed, Sep 6, 2017 at 11:36 AM, Uwe Kleine-König <uwe@kleine-koenig.org> wrote: > > There is https://dsa.debian.org/doc/guest-account/ which would give you > > the possibility to access some Debian machines. Other than that I intend > > Sorry for the delay. Thanks for the pointer of the guest account. Tell me if you want to do that. And plan for a delay because there is some "paper work" to be done before; mainly by other people, so it might (or might not) take a moment. > > to upload 0.5.1 to Debian soon and then can provide you links to build > > failures in the build server farm :-) And if you have a patch, I can > > volunteer to make the test monkey for you. > > BTW, if I want to get a PPC64 machine for Linux testing purpose, is the > used apple G5 a good place to start? Honestly I don't know. https://wiki.debian.org/ppc64el tells Debian/ppc64el requires, at minimum, a POWER8 processor machine. Although Debian was initially bootstrapped on a POWER7 set of servers. this class of server is not supported anymore, and you are not able to run Debian/ppc64el on a POWER7 processor without hitting an illegal instruction fault. Hm https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/POWER8 tells: Systems based on POWER8 became available from IBM in June 2014. Systems and POWER8 processor designs made by other OpenPOWER members was available in early 2015. So I think this rules out a G5. https://wiki.debian.org/ppc64el/Installation mentions you can run this under qemu however. Best regards Uwe
On Tue, Sep 12, 2017 at 2:27 AM, Uwe Kleine-König <uwe@kleine-koenig.org> wrote: >> BTW, if I want to get a PPC64 machine for Linux testing purpose, is the >> used apple G5 a good place to start? > > Honestly I don't know. https://wiki.debian.org/ppc64el tells > > Debian/ppc64el requires, at minimum, a POWER8 processor machine. > Although Debian was initially bootstrapped on a POWER7 set of > servers. this class of server is not supported anymore, and you > are not able to run Debian/ppc64el on a POWER7 processor without > hitting an illegal instruction fault. > > Hm https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/POWER8 tells: > > Systems based on POWER8 became available from IBM in June > 2014. Systems and POWER8 processor designs made by other > OpenPOWER members was available in early 2015. > > So I think this rules out a G5. Thanks for the tip. I am glad I asked before I pull the trigger. > https://wiki.debian.org/ppc64el/Installation mentions you can run this > under qemu however. Good idea. I will give that a try too. Chris -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-sparse" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
diff --git a/sparsec b/sparsec index 9dc96c9..2990d26 100755 --- a/sparsec +++ b/sparsec @@ -32,7 +32,8 @@ done TMPLLVM=`mktemp -t tmp.XXXXXX`".llvm" TMPFILE=`mktemp -t tmp.XXXXXX`".o" -$DIRNAME/sparse-llvm $SPARSEOPTS > $TMPLLVM +env CHECK=$DIRNAME/sparse-llvm $DIRNAME/cgcc -no-compile \ + $SPARSEOPTS > $TMPLLVM LLC=`"${LLVM_CONFIG:-llvm-config}" --bindir`/llc diff --git a/sparsei b/sparsei index 3431a9f..3abd00f 100755 --- a/sparsei +++ b/sparsei @@ -10,4 +10,4 @@ if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then exit 1 fi -$DIRNAME/sparse-llvm $@ | $LLI +env CHECK=$DIRNAME/sparse-llvm $DIRNAME/cgcc -no-compile $@ | $LLI