Most of the cases were where a C++ file was being compiled with the C substitution. There were a few cases of the opposite though. LLDB seems to be the only real culprit in the LLVM codebase for these mismatches. Rest of the LLVM presumably sticks at least language-specific options in the common substitutions making the mistakes immediately apparent. I found these by using Clang frontend configuration files containing language-specific options for both C and C++ (e.g. `-std=c2y` and `-std=c++26`).
8 lines
289 B
C++
8 lines
289 B
C++
// RUN: %clangxx --target=x86_64-pc-linux -g -gsplit-dwarf -c %s -o %t.o
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// RUN: rm %t.dwo
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// RUN: %lldb %t.o -o "br set -n main" -o exit 2>&1 | FileCheck %s
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// CHECK: warning: {{.*}} unable to locate separate debug file (dwo, dwp). Debugging will be degraded.
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int main() { return 47; }
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