// This test checks that reusing FileManager produces deterministic results on case-insensitive filesystems. // RUN: rm -rf %t // RUN: split-file %s %t //--- dir1/arm/lower.h //--- dir2/ARM/upper.h //--- t1.c #include "upper.h" //--- t2.c #include "arm/lower.h" //--- cdb.json.template [{ "directory": "DIR", "command": "clang -fsyntax-only DIR/t1.c -I DIR/dir2/ARM -I DIR/dir1", "file": "DIR/t1.c" },{ "directory": "DIR", "command": "clang -fsyntax-only DIR/t2.c -I DIR/dir2 -I DIR/dir1", "file": "DIR/t2.c" }] //--- cdb-rev.json.template [{ "directory": "DIR", "command": "clang -fsyntax-only DIR/t2.c -I DIR/dir2 -I DIR/dir1", "file": "DIR/t2.c" },{ "directory": "DIR", "command": "clang -fsyntax-only DIR/t1.c -I DIR/dir2/ARM -I DIR/dir1", "file": "DIR/t1.c" }] // RUN: sed -e "s|DIR|%/t|g" %t/cdb.json.template > %t/cdb.json // RUN: sed -e "s|DIR|%/t|g" %t/cdb-rev.json.template > %t/cdb-rev.json // RUN: clang-scan-deps -compilation-database=%t/cdb.json -format make -j 1 | sed 's:\\\\\?:/:g' | FileCheck %s // In the reversed case, Clang starts by scanning "t2.c". When looking up the "arm/lower.h" header, // the string is appended to "DIR/dir2". That file ("DIR/dir2/arm/lower.h") doesn't exist, but when // learning so, the FileManager stats and caches the parent directory ("DIR/dir2/arm"), using the // UID as the key. // When scanning "t1.c" later on, the "DIR/dir2/ARM" search directory is assigned the **same** // directory entry (with lowercase "arm"), since they share the UID on case-insensitive filesystems. // To preserve the correct case throughout the compiler for any file within that directory, it's // important to use the spelling actually used, not just the cached one. // RUN: clang-scan-deps -compilation-database=%t/cdb-rev.json -format make -j 1 | sed 's:\\\\\?:/:g' | FileCheck %s // CHECK: ARM/upper.h