@@ -205,14 +205,15 @@ jobs:
# Test with Clang for compile portability (Travis uses clang-5.0)
- name: "Clang (user)"
env:
- - CONFIG="--disable-system"
+ - CONFIG="--disable-system --host-cc=clang --cxx=clang++"
- CACHE_NAME="${TRAVIS_BRANCH}-linux-clang-default"
compiler: clang
- name: "Clang (main-softmmu)"
env:
- - CONFIG="--target-list=${MAIN_SOFTMMU_TARGETS} "
+ - CONFIG="--target-list=${MAIN_SOFTMMU_TARGETS}
+ --host-cc=clang --cxx=clang++"
- CACHE_NAME="${TRAVIS_BRANCH}-linux-clang-sanitize"
compiler: clang
before_script:
@@ -222,7 +223,8 @@ jobs:
- name: "Clang (other-softmmu)"
env:
- - CONFIG="--disable-user --target-list-exclude=${MAIN_SOFTMMU_TARGETS}"
+ - CONFIG="--disable-user --target-list-exclude=${MAIN_SOFTMMU_TARGETS}
+ --host-cc=clang --cxx=clang++"
- CACHE_NAME="${TRAVIS_BRANCH}-linux-clang-default"
compiler: clang
Our configure script does not look for clang++ automatically, so we should use --cxx=clang++ to make sure that we test our C++ code with Clang, too. And while we're at it, also use --host-cc=clang here to avoid that we use the normal "cc" as host C compiler. Signed-off-by: Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com> --- .travis.yml | 8 +++++--- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)