================ @@ -231,6 +245,10 @@ linux_projects_to_test=$(exclude-linux $(compute-projects-to-test ${modified_pro linux_check_targets=$(check-targets ${linux_projects_to_test} | sort | uniq) linux_projects=$(add-dependencies ${linux_projects_to_test} | sort | uniq) +linux_runtimes_to_test=$(compute-runtimes-to-test ${linux_projects_to_test}) ---------------- Endilll wrote:
> I remember recently that clang folks argued to removed the flang tests when > changing clang because of the likelihood of breaking Flang with clang tests. I believe Flang was tested on Clang changes to make sure Clang didn't make any incompatible changes to the driver, which Flang reuses. This is a different use case from testing Clang itself, and yes, we believed (and likely still) that it didn't bring enough value, especially when it was rendering the whole Clang CI unusable. > I'm not sure the probability of a random LLVM change breaking clang in a way > that would only show up with a runtime tests and no other LLVM/clang test is > higher! I find it hard to prove this statement either way. But I find it much easier to believe that (a) Clang is insufficiently tested; (b) libc++ tests bring a lot of coverage. So I believe the value is there, and the cost is building the tests and running them, which is as good as it gets. Additionally, "don't run those Clang tests if Clang is tested because of an LLVM change" kind of logic make it harder to reason about CI. Statements like "this change has passed Clang CI" would require additional context to understand which tests actually ran. > The ratio value / cost isn't clear to me right now. To me the ratio is rather clear. If you want to push for this, you'd have to open a PR yourself. https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/93318 _______________________________________________ cfe-commits mailing list cfe-commits@lists.llvm.org https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/cfe-commits