Message ID | 1727363575.9580702.1368168907851.JavaMail.root@redhat.com |
---|---|
State | New |
Headers | show |
On Fri, May 10, 2013 at 02:55:07AM -0400, Shakthi Kannan wrote: > Hi, > > The attached patch adds LAST_SOURCE_COLUMN to pp_verbatim > function in the while loop present in > diagnostic_report_current_module(). This makes the output > consistent for any error parsing program as stated in the bug. > > 2013-05-10 Shakthi Kannan <skannan@redhat.com> > > PR preprocessor/42014 > * gcc/diagnostic.c: Added LAST_SOURCE_COLUMN in while loop. Maybe PR preprocessor/42014 * diagnostic.c: Print LAST_SOURCE_COLUMN as well. ? Marek
Hi, ----- Original Message ----- | From: "Marek Polacek" <polacek@redhat.com> | | Maybe | PR preprocessor/42014 | * diagnostic.c: Print LAST_SOURCE_COLUMN as well. | ? \-- Sure! SK
>>>>> "Shakthi" == Shakthi Kannan <skannan@redhat.com> writes:
Shakthi> 2013-05-10 Shakthi Kannan <skannan@redhat.com>
Shakthi> PR preprocessor/42014
Shakthi> * gcc/diagnostic.c: Added LAST_SOURCE_COLUMN in while loop.
You should mention the function name in there.
See the GNU Coding Standards for the format.
Shakthi> - ",\n from %s:%d",
Shakthi> - LINEMAP_FILE (map), LAST_SOURCE_LINE (map));
Shakthi> + ",\n from %s:%d:%d",
Shakthi> + LINEMAP_FILE (map),
Shakthi> + LAST_SOURCE_LINE (map), LAST_SOURCE_COLUMN (map));
Does this cause test suite regressions?
If so then the patch needs fixes there.
If not then the patch needs a new test.
Also, is the column number actually correct?
IIRC some things in cpp still don't get the right column number.
Tom
Hi, ----- Original Message ----- | From: "Tom Tromey" <tromey@redhat.com> | | Does this cause test suite regressions? \-- I built gcc-4.8.0 with and without the patch, and ran the test suite for both instances using: $ make -k check There was no difference in the test result output. Is this the same as the test suite regression? --- | If so then the patch needs fixes there. | If not then the patch needs a new test. \-- Sorry, where should this new test be written, and what does it need to test? Thanks for your reply. SK
On May 15, 2013, at 3:22 AM, Shakthi Kannan <skannan@redhat.com> wrote: > ----- Original Message ----- > | From: "Tom Tromey" <tromey@redhat.com> > | > | Does this cause test suite regressions? > \-- > > I built gcc-4.8.0 with and without the patch, and ran the test suite for both instances using: > > $ make -k check > > There was no difference in the test result output. The output of make -k, or the contents of all the .sum and .log files, or… For example, if you compared all the .sum files, and there were no differences (literally), then you did something wrong, at least the dates must differ. > Is this the same as the test suite regression? I like using ~/contrib/compare_tests gcc-before.sum gcc-after.sum to determine if there are regressions. You can also use that script to check for regressions between two build trees as well. The output is priority sorted with the important stuff first, and lessor things later. regression is defined as that script returning 1, and no regression is if the script returns 0. Anyway, life is more complicated than this, but, it is a good first order approximation.
Hi, ----- Original Message ----- | From: "Mike Stump" <mrs@mrs.kithrup.com> | | The output of make -k, or the contents of all the .sum and .log files, \-- The output of "make -k". I did a "grep '^#'" on the output and the following results were the same, with and without the patch applied: # of expected passes 96818 # of unexpected failures 19 # of unexpected successes 39 # of expected failures 267 # of unsupported tests 1400 # of expected passes 54561 # of expected failures 294 # of unsupported tests 916 # of expected passes 44247 # of unexpected failures 6 # of expected failures 56 # of unresolved testcases 6 # of unsupported tests 71 # of expected passes 2988 # of expected failures 6 # of unsupported tests 74 # of expected passes 9340 # of unexpected failures 4 # of expected failures 45 # of unsupported tests 212 # of expected passes 1433 # of unexpected failures 3 # of expected passes 1819 # of unsupported tests 55 # of expected passes 2582 # of unexpected failures 4 # of expected passes 12 # of unsupported tests 1 # of expected passes 2998 # of expected passes 26 # of expected failures 3 # of unsupported tests 1 # of expected passes 54 --- | I like using ~/contrib/compare_tests gcc-before.sum gcc-after.sum to | determine if there are regressions. You can also use that script to | check for regressions between two build trees as well. \-- I ran the the script between the two build trees. Here is the output: $ ./without/gcc/contrib/compare_tests ./without/build ./with/build # Comparing directories ## Dir1=./without/build: 12 sum files ## Dir2=./with/build: 12 sum files # Comparing 12 common sum files ## /bin/sh ./without/gcc/contrib/compare_tests /tmp/gxx-sum1.2065 /tmp/gxx-sum2.2065 # No differences found in 12 common sum files Regards, SK
On May 15, 2013, at 10:41 PM, Shakthi Kannan <skannan@redhat.com> wrote: > | I like using ~/contrib/compare_tests gcc-before.sum gcc-after.sum to > | determine if there are regressions. You can also use that script to > | check for regressions between two build trees as well. > \-- > > I ran the the script between the two build trees. Here is the output: > > $ ./without/gcc/contrib/compare_tests ./without/build ./with/build > # Comparing directories > ## Dir1=./without/build: 12 sum files > ## Dir2=./with/build: 12 sum files > > # Comparing 12 common sum files > ## /bin/sh ./without/gcc/contrib/compare_tests /tmp/gxx-sum1.2065 /tmp/gxx-sum2.2065 > # No differences found in 12 common sum files :-) That's two thumbs up.
diff --git a/gcc/diagnostic.c b/gcc/diagnostic.c index f9a236b..2addbf0 100644 --- a/gcc/diagnostic.c +++ b/gcc/diagnostic.c @@ -528,8 +528,9 @@ diagnostic_report_current_module (diagnostic_context *context, location_t where) { map = INCLUDED_FROM (line_table, map); pp_verbatim (context->printer, - ",\n from %s:%d", - LINEMAP_FILE (map), LAST_SOURCE_LINE (map)); + ",\n from %s:%d:%d", + LINEMAP_FILE (map), + LAST_SOURCE_LINE (map), LAST_SOURCE_COLUMN (map)); } pp_verbatim (context->printer, ":"); pp_newline (context->printer);