Most tests were using %swift or similar substitutions, which did not
include the target triple and SDK. The driver was defaulting to the
host OS. Thus, we could not run the tests when the standard library was
not built for OS X.
Swift SVN r24504
Refuse to load a module if it was compiled for a different architecture or
OS, or if its minimum deployment target is newer than the current target.
Additionally, provide the target triple as part of pre-loading validation
for clients who care (like LLDB).
Part of rdar://problem/17670778
Swift SVN r24469
Doing so is safe even though we have mock SDK. The include paths for
modules with the same name in the real and mock SDKs are different, and
the module files will be distinct (because they will have a different
hash).
This reduces test runtime on OS X by 30% and brings it under a minute on
a 16-core machine.
This also uncovered some problems with some tests -- even when run for
iOS configurations, some tests would still run with macosx triple. I
fixed the tests where I noticed this issue.
rdar://problem/19125022
Swift SVN r23683
-enable-source-import doesn't play nice with debug info, and we want to be
able to run all tests with -g added. The last few tests that require
-enable-source-import could be built with --no-debug-info, or however we
end up spelling that.
rdar://problem/18140021 (most of it)
Swift SVN r22742
Stub initializers don't get serialized, so this fixes a vtable layout inconsistency when a method of a subclass of a subclass of NSObject is accessed. Fixes rdar://problem/18498385.
Swift SVN r22480