Sheriff note: We should keep this regardless of whether bug 1675600 sticks.
The comment above SmokeDMD's `RunTests()` says "This test relies on the compiler not doing various optimizations ... So we compile it with -O0 (or equivalent)".
That suggests that LTO should also be disallowed.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D97336
Due to lack of `CXX_TYPE`, clang-cl builds were accidentally taking the `else` branch where the `-O0` was ignored/unrecognized. This went unnoticed for a long time until it busted the landing of bug 1677726.
While here, fix the intent of SmokeDMD: `-Og-` is a silent no-op in clang-cl, so it's not actually disabling anything.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D97387
Sheriff note: We should keep this regardless of whether bug 1675600 sticks.
The comment above SmokeDMD's `RunTests()` says "This test relies on the compiler not doing various optimizations ... So we compile it with -O0 (or equivalent)".
That suggests that LTO should also be disallowed.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D97336
Allow-list all Python code in tree for use with the black linter, and re-format all code in-tree accordingly.
To produce this patch I did all of the following:
1. Make changes to tools/lint/black.yml to remove include: stanza and update list of source extensions.
2. Run ./mach lint --linter black --fix
3. Make some ad-hoc manual updates to python/mozbuild/mozbuild/test/configure/test_configure.py -- it has some hard-coded line numbers that the reformat breaks.
4. Make some ad-hoc manual updates to `testing/marionette/client/setup.py`, `testing/marionette/harness/setup.py`, and `testing/firefox-ui/harness/setup.py`, which have hard-coded regexes that break after the reformat.
5. Add a set of exclusions to black.yml. These will be deleted in a follow-up bug (1672023).
# ignore-this-changeset
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D94045
Allow-list all Python code in tree for use with the black linter, and re-format all code in-tree accordingly.
To produce this patch I did all of the following:
1. Make changes to tools/lint/black.yml to remove include: stanza and update list of source extensions.
2. Run ./mach lint --linter black --fix
3. Make some ad-hoc manual updates to python/mozbuild/mozbuild/test/configure/test_configure.py -- it has some hard-coded line numbers that the reformat breaks.
4. Make some ad-hoc manual updates to `testing/marionette/client/setup.py`, `testing/marionette/harness/setup.py`, and `testing/firefox-ui/harness/setup.py`, which have hard-coded regexes that break after the reformat.
5. Add a set of exclusions to black.yml. These will be deleted in a follow-up bug (1672023).
# ignore-this-changeset
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D94045
This warning turns into an error on automation, and is only due to the
fact that newer SDKs have a declaration for it with a version guard, but
we're actually using our own definition of the function, so whether it's
available in older versions of macOS is irrelevant.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D94512
Allow-list all Python code in tree for use with the black linter, and re-format all code in-tree accordingly.
To produce this patch I did all of the following:
1. Make changes to tools/lint/black.yml to remove include: stanza and update list of source extensions.
2. Run ./mach lint --linter black --fix
3. Make some ad-hoc manual updates to python/mozbuild/mozbuild/test/configure/test_configure.py -- it has some hard-coded line numbers that the reformat breaks.
4. Add a set of exclusions to black.yml. These will be deleted in a follow-up bug (1672023).
# ignore-this-changeset
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D94045
In most situations, JSONWriter users already know string lengths (either directly, or through `nsCString` and friends), so we should keep this information through JSONWriter and not recompute it again.
This also allows using JSONWriter with sub-strings (e.g., from a bigger buffer), without having to create null-terminated strings.
Public JSONWriter functions have overloads that accept literal strings.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D86192
This requires a workaround for the use of __wrap_dladdr, which can't be
used in logalloc-replay. The workaround involves making __wrap_dladdr
expand to dladdr, but that makes the definition ElfLinker.h conflict
with the one in the Android system headers, so we change it to match,
and adjust ElfLinker.cpp accordingly.
And while here, fix the condition in mozglue/misc to match the condition
around including Linker.h in StackWalk.cpp itself.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D82648
Currently AWSY-with-DMD doesn't work on Windows. This is because `fix-stacks`
is initialized lazily, and by the time the initialization happens some file
descriptors for files are open, and that leads to some major Python2-on-Windows
sadness as described in the big comment in the commit.
To fix the problem, this commit adds an `init` function to `fix_stacks.py` so
that `fix-stacks` can be initialized eagerly, hopefully before any file
descriptors for files are open.
For `dmd.py`, other than fixing the AWSY problems, this has little effect,
because `fix-stacks` is always initialized.
For `utils.py`, which is used to process the output of most tests, this has a
more noticeable effect: the `fix-stacks` process is always spawned, rather than
being spawned only when needed. If no stack traces appear in the test output,
this means that `fix-stacks` is spawned unnecessarily. But it's cheap to spawn;
the expensive part only happens when stack traces start getting fixed. So I
think this change in behaviour is acceptable.
Furthermore, the commit adds a `finish` function to `fix_stacks.py`, so that
the `fix-stacks` process can be explicitly shut down. This has never been done
for processes spawned for any of the stack fixing scripts. It's never caused
problems on Linux/Mac, but it seems to be necessary on Windows to avoid
similar "this file is locked" problems with the test_dmd.js test.
The commit also renames some things to more standard Python style, e.g.
`json_mode` instead of `jsonMode`.
Finally, Android tests use `utils.py` from the repository but `fix_stacks.py`
from the Android host utils. Because the two scripts must be updated in tandem,
this commit also updates the Android host utils to a version that contains the
updated `fix_stacks.py`. Thanks to aerickson for packaging up the new Android
host utils and providing the change to the `hostutils.manifest` file.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D69478
This commit removes `test_fix_stack_using_bpsyms.py`. That test can't easily be
modified to work with `fix_stacks.py` because it relies on internal
implementation details of `fix_stack_using_bpsym.py`. The unit testing done in
the `fix-stacks` repo provides test coverage that is as good or better.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D66924
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Currently AWSY-with-DMD doesn't work on Windows. This is because `fix-stacks`
is initialized lazily, and by the time the initialization happens some file
descriptors for files are open, and that leads to some major Python2-on-Windows
sadness as described in the big comment in the commit.
To fix the problem, this commit adds an `init` function to `fix_stacks.py` so
that `fix-stacks` can be initialized eagerly, hopefully before any file
descriptors for files are open.
For `dmd.py`, other than fixing the AWSY problems, this has little effect,
because `fix-stacks` is always initialized.
For `utils.py`, which is used to process the output of most tests, this has a
more noticeable effect: the `fix-stacks` process is always spawned, rather than
being spawned only when needed. If no stack traces appear in the test output,
this means that `fix-stacks` is spawned unnecessarily. But it's cheap to spawn;
the expensive part only happens when stack traces start getting fixed. So I
think this change in behaviour is acceptable.
The commit also renames some things to more standard Python style, e.g.
`json_mode` instead of `jsonMode`.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D69478
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Each allocation page is now bracketed by a guard page, and allocations are put
at the end of their page so that bounds violations trigger a crash.
Various operations (realloc(), free(), malloc_usable_size()) now require that
the pointer they are given points to the start of an allocation.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D43842
--HG--
rename : toolkit/crashreporter/test/unit_ipc/test_content_phc2.js => toolkit/crashreporter/test/unit_ipc/test_content_phc3.js
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This is in preparation for the introduction of "guard pages", which are
interleaved with alloc pages. The specific renamings are:
- kMaxPageAllocs --> kNumAllocPages
- PagePtr --> AllocPagePtr
- PageState --> AllocPageState
- PageInfo --> AllocPageInfo
- mPages --> mAllocPages
- AssertPageInUse --> AssertAllocPageInUse
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D43841
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
If we don't find the block, just print out the original argument,
instead of the version converted to an integer. Python gets mad when
you try to concatenate an int and a string.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D67404
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
On Linux and Mac, this makes `dmd.py` *much* faster when it is first run on a
DMD data file.
On Windows, this makes DMD actually usable locally. Previously the stacks
weren't fixed and so were rubbish.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D57271
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando