// RUN: %target-typecheck-verify-swift -I %S/Inputs // Some types such as pid_t that glibc defines are defined using the following // construct: // // #ifndef __pid_t_defined // typedef __pid_t pid_t; // #define __pid_t_defined // #endif // // glibc defines pid_t in this way in multiple header files, as required by // POSIX (e.g. signal.h, unistd.h, and sys/types.h). A number of other types // use the same construct (e.g. ssize_t, intptr_t, uid_t, gid_t). // // Because Swift does not set the -fmodules-local-submodule-visibility flag, // the __pid_t_defined macro can leak from the first submodule that defines it // into all submodules that follow. // // As a consequence, a C header file may fail to compile when imported into // Swift, even though it compiles cleanly outside Swift with the same system // headers. // // This is a regression test for a bug that was once present in SwiftGlibc // module layout. Originally SwiftGlibc defined one submodule per header, and // types such as pid_t were defined by the first module that encountered the // ifndef construct. // // See https://forums.swift.org/t/problems-with-swiftglibc-and-proposed-fix/37594 // for further details. // REQUIRES: OS=linux-gnu || OS=linux-android import IncludeSignal