Files
gcc/libsanitizer
Iain Sandoe aec9f48b80 libsanitizer, darwin: Unsupport Darwin >= 22 for now.
The mechanism for location dyld has altered from Darwin22 since dyld is now
in the shared cache.  The implemented mechanism for walking the cache uses
Apple Blocks which GCC does not yet support, and the fallback to the original
mechanism does not work there.

Until a suitable work-around can be found, unsupport Darwin22+.

	Signed-off-by: Iain Sandoe <iain@sandoe.co.uk>

libsanitizer/ChangeLog:

	* configure.tgt: Unsupport Darwin22+ until a mechanism can be found
	to locate dyld in the shared cache.

(cherry picked from commit e722a1f42b28092c9f709a3f758fc4fe57db32b0)
2023-04-18 07:35:49 +01:00
..
2022-11-15 16:44:59 +01:00
2022-11-15 16:44:59 +01:00
2023-02-01 00:18:50 +00:00
2023-01-31 10:35:33 +01:00
2022-11-15 14:18:27 +01:00

AddressSanitizer and ThreadSanitizer (https://github.com/google/sanitizers) are
projects initially developed by Google Inc.

Both tools consist of a compiler module and a run-time library.
The sources of the run-time library for these projects are hosted at
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project in the following directories:
  compiler-rt/include/sanitizer
  compiler-rt/lib/sanitizer_common
  compiler-rt/lib/interception
  compiler-rt/lib/asan
  compiler-rt/lib/tsan
  compiler-rt/lib/lsan
  compiler-rt/lib/ubsan
  compiler-rt/lib/hwasan

Trivial and urgent fixes (portability, build fixes, etc.) may go directly to the
GCC tree.  All non-trivial changes, functionality improvements, etc. should go
through the upstream tree first and then be merged back to the GCC tree.
The merges from upstream should be done with the aid of the merge.sh script;
it will also update the file MERGE to contain the upstream revision
we merged with.