Previously, we would be passing down -stdlib=libc++ from the Driver
to CC1 whenever the default standard library on the platform was libc++,
even if -stdlib= had not been passed to the Driver. This meant that we
would pass -stdlib=libc++ in nonsensical circumstances, such as when
compiling C code.
This logic had been added in b534ce46bd40 to make sure that header
search paths were set up properly. However, since libc++ is now the
default Standard Library on Darwin, passing this explicitly is not
required anymore. Indeed, if no -stdlib= is specified, CC1 will end
up using libc++ if it queries which standard library to use, without
having to be told.
Not passing -stdlib= at all to CC1 on Darwin should become possible
once CC1 stops relying on it to set up framework search paths.
Furthermore, this commit also removes a diagnostic checking whether the
deployment target is too old to support libc++. Nowadays, all supported
deployment targets use libc++ and compiling with libstdc++ is not
supported anymore. The Driver was the wrong place to issue this
diagnostic since it doesn't know whether libc++ will actually be linked
against (e.g. C vs C++), which would lead to spurious diagnostics.
Given that these targets are not supported anymore, we simply drop
the diagnostic instead of trying to refactor it into CC1.
This is a re-application of 6540f32db09c which had been reverted in
49dd02bd0819 because it broke a compiler-rt test. The test had broken
because we were compiling C code and passing -stdlib=libc++, which Clang
will now warn about.
rdar://103198514
This is not great, but I think this is OK as a stopgap. I don't want to remove -stdlib=libc++ from target_cflags in this patch since it may cause other issues in the test suite.