Back out my heinous hack that tricked the module generation mechanism
into using non-absolute system includes (<foo>)...

... and introduce another hack that is simultaneously more heineous
and more effective. We whitelist Clang-supplied headers that augment
or override system headers (such as float.h, stdarg.h, and
tgmath.h). For these headers, Clang does not provide a module
mapping. Instead, a system-supplied module map can refer to these
headers in a system module, and Clang will look both in its own
include directory and wherever the system-supplied module map
suggests, then adds either or both headers. The end result is that
Clang-supplied headers get merged into the system-supplied module for
the C standard library.

As a drive-by, fix up a few dependencies in the _Builtin_instrinsics
module.



git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk@149611 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
diff --git a/lib/Basic/Module.cpp b/lib/Basic/Module.cpp
index c5838fb..6348840 100644
--- a/lib/Basic/Module.cpp
+++ b/lib/Basic/Module.cpp
@@ -32,6 +32,8 @@
   if (Parent) {
     if (!Parent->isAvailable())
       IsAvailable = false;
+    if (Parent->IsSystem)
+      IsSystem = true;
     
     Parent->SubModuleIndex[Name] = Parent->SubModules.size();
     Parent->SubModules.push_back(this);