
When CMake on Windows is told to generate the build into a directory whose real path has a different drive letter (e.g. due to a symlink), the "clang/test/Lexer/case-insensitive-include-absolute.c" test fails. That happens because because `trySimplifyPath()` in `PPDirectives.cpp` finds out there's more than a case difference between the `#include` path (containing `%/t`) and the real path, which prevents the diagnostic to fire. I thought this is only an issue on Windows due to the fact that LIT does not drag the path to the build directory through `os.path.realpath()` like it does on other systems (see `abs_path_preserve_drive()` in "llvm/utils/lit/lit/util.py"). However, even after only using `os.path.abspath()` on a Unix system, build generated into a symlinked directory tests correctly. I assume there must be something else at play, but I don't have the time to dig deeper. The fix is is fairly straightforward: use the real path in the `#include` (with `%{/t:real}`), which removes the non-case difference and unblocks the diagnostic.
14 lines
577 B
C
14 lines
577 B
C
// REQUIRES: case-insensitive-filesystem
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// RUN: rm -rf %t && split-file %s %t
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// RUN: sed "s|DIR|%{/t:real}|g" %t/tu.c.in > %t/tu.c
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// RUN: %clang_cc1 -fsyntax-only %t/tu.c 2>&1 | FileCheck %s -DDIR=%{/t:real}
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//--- header.h
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//--- tu.c.in
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#import "DIR/Header.h"
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// CHECK: tu.c:1:9: warning: non-portable path to file '"[[DIR]]/header.h"'; specified path differs in case from file name on disk [-Wnonportable-include-path]
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// CHECK-NEXT: 1 | #import "[[DIR]]/Header.h"
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// CHECK-NEXT: | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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// CHECK-NEXT: | "[[DIR]]/header.h"
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