| # Copyright (C) 2017 The Android Open Source Project |
| # |
| # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); |
| # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. |
| # You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| # |
| # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| # |
| # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
| # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
| # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
| # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
| # limitations under the License. |
| |
| import("//gn/standalone/sanitizers/sanitizers.gni") |
| import("//gn/standalone/wasm.gni") |
| |
| declare_args() { |
| # Background: |
| # there are mainly two C++ libraries around in the world: (i) GNU's |
| # libstdc++ and LLVM's libc++ (aka libcxx). By default Linux provides libstdc++ |
| # (even building with clang on Linux uses that by default) while Mac and |
| # Android switched to libcxx. |
| # buildtools/libcxx(abi) contains a fixed version of the libcxx, the same one |
| # that Chrome uses on most production configurations (% lagging catching up |
| # with our DEPS). |
| # The variable use_custom_libcxx tells our build system to prefer the |
| # aforementioned copy to the system one. |
| # |
| # Now, there are two reasons for using the checked in copy of libcxx: |
| # 1) LLVM sanitizers require that the c++ library is built from sources, |
| # because they need to be instrumented with -fsanitize as well (see |
| # https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/MemorySanitizerLibcxxHowTo). |
| # On top of this, they also require that the c++ library is dynamically |
| # linked to prevent duplicate symbol errors when linking (see Chrome's |
| # build/config/c++/c++.gni) |
| # 2) The libstdc++ situation is too wild on Linux. Modern debian distros are |
| # fine but Ubuntu Trusty still ships a libstdc++ that doesn't fully |
| # support C++11. Hence we enable this flag on Linux by default. |
| # We still retain libstdc++ coverage on the Travis bots by overriding |
| # use_custom_libcxx=false when we target a modern library (see the |
| # GCC7 target in .travis.yml). |
| use_custom_libcxx = is_linux && is_clang && !is_wasm |
| custom_libcxx_is_static = !using_sanitizer |
| } |
| |
| libcxx_prefix = "//buildtools/libcxx" |
| libcxxabi_prefix = "//buildtools/libcxxabi" |