IMPALA-12730: Don't use -Weverything for clang-tidy

For current clang-tidy builds, we enable -Weverything and then
explicitly disable a couple verbose warnings. Clang-tidy uses
these warnings to produce its clang-diagnostic-* issues.
This gives clang-tidy the maximum flexibility to enforce any
warning the Clang can produce, but in practice, we disable
them via the .clang-tidy file's Checks: section.

The output from a -Weverything build is enormous and hard to
navigate. When there is a compilation issue, digging through
the logs is arduous. Clang discourages the use of -Weverything,
as it contains many noisy warnings.

This changes the clang-tidy build to use -Wextra instead and
shrinks the list of disabled clang-diagnostic-* issues
accordingly.

Testing:
 - Verified that bin/run_clang_tidy.sh passes

Change-Id: Ib4f4cc9a6d040b90495496b2396a26f3c5189231
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.cloudera.org:8080/21112
Reviewed-by: Michael Smith <michael.smith@cloudera.com>
Tested-by: Impala Public Jenkins <impala-public-jenkins@cloudera.com>
2 files changed
tree: d38cff27f888726001b7a87e9a73a735eacb71ef
  1. .devcontainer/
  2. be/
  3. bin/
  4. cmake_modules/
  5. common/
  6. docker/
  7. docs/
  8. fe/
  9. infra/
  10. java/
  11. lib/
  12. package/
  13. security/
  14. shell/
  15. ssh_keys/
  16. testdata/
  17. tests/
  18. www/
  19. .clang-format
  20. .clang-tidy
  21. .gitattributes
  22. .gitignore
  23. buildall.sh
  24. CMakeLists.txt
  25. EXPORT_CONTROL.md
  26. LICENSE.txt
  27. LOGS.md
  28. NOTICE.txt
  29. README-build.md
  30. README.md
  31. setup.cfg
README.md

Welcome to Impala

Lightning-fast, distributed SQL queries for petabytes of data stored in open data and table formats.

Impala is a modern, massively-distributed, massively-parallel, C++ query engine that lets you analyze, transform and combine data from a variety of data sources:

More about Impala

The fastest way to try out Impala is a quickstart Docker container. You can try out running queries and processing data sets in Impala on a single machine without installing dependencies. It can automatically load test data sets into Apache Kudu and Apache Parquet formats and you can start playing around with Apache Impala SQL within minutes.

To learn more about Impala as a user or administrator, or to try Impala, please visit the Impala homepage. Detailed documentation for administrators and users is available at Apache Impala documentation.

If you are interested in contributing to Impala as a developer, or learning more about Impala's internals and architecture, visit the Impala wiki.

Supported Platforms

Impala only supports Linux at the moment. Impala supports x86_64 and has experimental support for arm64 (as of Impala 4.0). Impala Requirements contains more detailed information on the minimum CPU requirements.

Supported OS Distributions

Impala runs on Linux systems only. The supported distros are

  • Ubuntu 16.04/18.04
  • CentOS/RHEL 7/8

Other systems, e.g. SLES12, may also be supported but are not tested by the community.

Export Control Notice

This distribution uses cryptographic software and may be subject to export controls. Please refer to EXPORT_CONTROL.md for more information.

Build Instructions

See Impala's developer documentation to get started.

Detailed build notes has some detailed information on the project layout and build.