This is a GCC codegen for rustc, which means it can be loaded by the existing rustc frontend, but benefits from GCC: more architectures are supported and GCC's optimizations are used.
**Despite its name, libgccjit can be used for ahead-of-time compilation, as is used here.**
## Motivation
The primary goal of this project is to be able to compile Rust code on platforms unsupported by LLVM.
A secondary goal is to check if using the gcc backend will provide any run-time speed improvement for the programs compiled using rustc.
## Building
**This requires a patched libgccjit in order to work.
(Those patches should work when applied on master, but in case it doesn't work, they are known to work when applied on 079c23cfe079f203d5df83fea8e92a60c7d7e878.)
You can also use my [fork of gcc](https://github.com/antoyo/gcc) which already includes these patches.**
**Put the path to your custom build of libgccjit in the file `gcc_path`.**
$ ./prepare_build.sh # download and patch sysroot src
$ ./build.sh --release
```
To run the tests:
```bash
$ ./prepare.sh # download and patch sysroot src and install hyperfine for benchmarking
$ ./test.sh --release
```
## Usage
`$cg_gccjit_dir` is the directory you cloned this repo into in the following instructions.
### Cargo
```bash
$ CHANNEL="release" $cg_gccjit_dir/cargo.sh run
```
If you compiled cg_gccjit in debug mode (aka you didn't pass `--release` to `./test.sh`) you should use `CHANNEL="debug"` instead or omit `CHANNEL="release"` completely.
* Some shells, like fish, don't define the environment variable `$MACHTYPE`.
* Add `CFLAGS="-Wno-error=attributes -g -O2"` at the end of the configure command for building glibc (`CFLAGS="-Wno-error=attributes -Wno-error=array-parameter -Wno-error=stringop-overflow -Wno-error=array-bounds -g -O2"` for glibc 2.31, which is useful for Debian).
#### Configuring rustc_codegen_gcc
* Set `TARGET_TRIPLE="m68k-unknown-linux-gnu"` in config.sh.
* Since rustc doesn't support this architecture yet, set it back to `TARGET_TRIPLE="mips-unknown-linux-gnu"` (or another target having the same attributes). Alternatively, create a [target specification file](https://book.avr-rust.com/005.1-the-target-specification-json-file.html) (note that the `arch` specified in this file must be supported by the rust compiler).
* Set `linker='-Clinker=m68k-linux-gcc'`.
* Set the path to the cross-compiling libgccjit in `gcc_path`.
* Disable the 128-bit integer types if the target doesn't support them by using `let i128_type = context.new_type::<i64>();` in `context.rs` (same for u128_type).