Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Dmitri Hrybenko
3b04d1b013 tests: reorganize tests so that they actually use the target platform
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
2015-01-19 06:52:49 +00:00
Jordan Rose
9d9f9ef150 Re-apply "[serialization] Reject loading a module with the wrong case."
This included a test that failed on case-sensitive filesystems. Test fixed.

(Aside: Why not just have this fail with "no such module"? Why use a different
error? Because even if "import FOO" picks up a module named 'Foo', there may
actually be a module named 'FOO' on the system (in another folder), and we
should be able to find that. Fixing that is tracked by rdar://problem/18691936.)

rdar://problem/15632996 (again)

Swift SVN r22856
2014-10-21 00:30:09 +00:00
Dave Abrahams
7eb173e487 Revert "[serialization] Reject loading a module with the wrong case."
This reverts commit r22818, which caused
to fail.

Swift SVN r22822
2014-10-18 01:02:20 +00:00
Jordan Rose
5aa27cea08 [serialization] Reject loading a module with the wrong case.
Due to case-insensitive filesystems, "import foundation" can result in the
overlay module for Foundation being loaded. Everything is confused later on
because the (wrong) module name is used in manglings, leading to all sorts
of issues.

This is not the right fix for the problem, because a user really is allowed
to have modules named "foundation" and "FOUNDATION" and "Foundation" coexisting
on their system. To do that we'll want to check the actual case of a
.framework bundle or .swiftmodule file on disk and make sure it matches before
even trying to load the file. But this is a good sanity check anyway.

rdar://problem/15632996

Swift SVN r22818
2014-10-17 21:48:03 +00:00