#define LLVM_SUPPORT_PROGRAM_H
#include "llvm/ADT/ArrayRef.h"
-#include "llvm/Support/Path.h"
-#include "llvm/Support/system_error.h"
+#include "llvm/Support/ErrorOr.h"
+#include <system_error>
namespace llvm {
-class error_code;
+class StringRef;
+
namespace sys {
/// This is the OS-specific separator for PATH like environment variables:
ProcessInfo();
};
- /// This function attempts to locate a program in the operating
- /// system's file system using some pre-determined set of locations to search
- /// (e.g. the PATH on Unix). Paths with slashes are returned unmodified.
+ /// \brief Find the first executable file \p Name in \p Paths.
///
- /// It does not perform hashing as a shell would but instead stats each PATH
+ /// This does not perform hashing as a shell would but instead stats each PATH
/// entry individually so should generally be avoided. Core LLVM library
/// functions and options should instead require fully specified paths.
///
- /// @returns A string containing the path of the program or an empty string if
- /// the program could not be found.
- std::string FindProgramByName(const std::string& name);
+ /// \param Name name of the executable to find. If it contains any system
+ /// slashes, it will be returned as is.
+ /// \param Paths optional list of paths to search for \p Name. If empty it
+ /// will use the system PATH environment instead.
+ ///
+ /// \returns The fully qualified path to the first \p Name in \p Paths if it
+ /// exists. \p Name if \p Name has slashes in it. Otherwise an error.
+ ErrorOr<std::string>
+ findProgramByName(StringRef Name,
+ ArrayRef<StringRef> Paths = ArrayRef<StringRef>());
// These functions change the specified standard stream (stdin or stdout) to
// binary mode. They return errc::success if the specified stream
// was changed. Otherwise a platform dependent error is returned.
- error_code ChangeStdinToBinary();
- error_code ChangeStdoutToBinary();
+ std::error_code ChangeStdinToBinary();
+ std::error_code ChangeStdoutToBinary();
/// This function executes the program using the arguments provided. The
/// invoked program will inherit the stdin, stdout, and stderr file
/// -2 indicates a crash during execution or timeout
int ExecuteAndWait(
StringRef Program, ///< Path of the program to be executed. It is
- /// presumed this is the result of the FindProgramByName method.
+ /// presumed this is the result of the findProgramByName method.
const char **args, ///< A vector of strings that are passed to the
///< program. The first element should be the name of the program.
///< The list *must* be terminated by a null char* entry.
- const char **env = 0, ///< An optional vector of strings to use for
+ const char **env = nullptr, ///< An optional vector of strings to use for
///< the program's environment. If not provided, the current program's
///< environment will be used.
- const StringRef **redirects = 0, ///< An optional array of pointers to
- ///< paths. If the array is null, no redirection is done. The array
+ const StringRef **redirects = nullptr, ///< An optional array of pointers
+ ///< to paths. If the array is null, no redirection is done. The array
///< should have a size of at least three. The inferior process's
///< stdin(0), stdout(1), and stderr(2) will be redirected to the
///< corresponding paths.
///< of memory can be allocated by process. If memory usage will be
///< higher limit, the child is killed and this call returns. If zero
///< - no memory limit.
- std::string *ErrMsg = 0, ///< If non-zero, provides a pointer to a string
- ///< instance in which error messages will be returned. If the string
- ///< is non-empty upon return an error occurred while invoking the
+ std::string *ErrMsg = nullptr, ///< If non-zero, provides a pointer to a
+ ///< string instance in which error messages will be returned. If the
+ ///< string is non-empty upon return an error occurred while invoking the
///< program.
- bool *ExecutionFailed = 0);
+ bool *ExecutionFailed = nullptr);
/// Similar to ExecuteAndWait, but returns immediately.
/// @returns The \see ProcessInfo of the newly launced process.
/// Wait until the process finished execution or win32 CloseHandle() API on
/// ProcessInfo.ProcessHandle to avoid memory leaks.
ProcessInfo
- ExecuteNoWait(StringRef Program, const char **args, const char **env = 0,
- const StringRef **redirects = 0, unsigned memoryLimit = 0,
- std::string *ErrMsg = 0, bool *ExecutionFailed = 0);
+ ExecuteNoWait(StringRef Program, const char **args, const char **env = nullptr,
+ const StringRef **redirects = nullptr, unsigned memoryLimit = 0,
+ std::string *ErrMsg = nullptr, bool *ExecutionFailed = nullptr);
/// Return true if the given arguments fit within system-specific
/// argument length limits.
bool argumentsFitWithinSystemLimits(ArrayRef<const char*> Args);
+ /// File encoding options when writing contents that a non-UTF8 tool will
+ /// read (on Windows systems). For UNIX, we always use UTF-8.
+ enum WindowsEncodingMethod {
+ /// UTF-8 is the LLVM native encoding, being the same as "do not perform
+ /// encoding conversion".
+ WEM_UTF8,
+ WEM_CurrentCodePage,
+ WEM_UTF16
+ };
+
+ /// Saves the UTF8-encoded \p contents string into the file \p FileName
+ /// using a specific encoding.
+ ///
+ /// This write file function adds the possibility to choose which encoding
+ /// to use when writing a text file. On Windows, this is important when
+ /// writing files with internationalization support with an encoding that is
+ /// different from the one used in LLVM (UTF-8). We use this when writing
+ /// response files, since GCC tools on MinGW only understand legacy code
+ /// pages, and VisualStudio tools only understand UTF-16.
+ /// For UNIX, using different encodings is silently ignored, since all tools
+ /// work well with UTF-8.
+ /// This function assumes that you only use UTF-8 *text* data and will convert
+ /// it to your desired encoding before writing to the file.
+ ///
+ /// FIXME: We use EM_CurrentCodePage to write response files for GNU tools in
+ /// a MinGW/MinGW-w64 environment, which has serious flaws but currently is
+ /// our best shot to make gcc/ld understand international characters. This
+ /// should be changed as soon as binutils fix this to support UTF16 on mingw.
+ ///
+ /// \returns non-zero error_code if failed
+ std::error_code
+ writeFileWithEncoding(StringRef FileName, StringRef Contents,
+ WindowsEncodingMethod Encoding = WEM_UTF8);
+
/// This function waits for the process specified by \p PI to finish.
/// \returns A \see ProcessInfo struct with Pid set to:
/// \li The process id of the child process if the child process has changed
///< will perform a non-blocking wait on the child process.
bool WaitUntilTerminates, ///< If true, ignores \p SecondsToWait and waits
///< until child has terminated.
- std::string *ErrMsg = 0 ///< If non-zero, provides a pointer to a string
- ///< instance in which error messages will be returned. If the string
- ///< is non-empty upon return an error occurred while invoking the
+ std::string *ErrMsg = nullptr ///< If non-zero, provides a pointer to a
+ ///< string instance in which error messages will be returned. If the
+ ///< string is non-empty upon return an error occurred while invoking the
///< program.
);
}