mk: Hardcode the bootstrap key for each release
Starting with the 1.10.0 release we would like to bootstrap all compilers from
the previous stable release. For example the 1.10.0 compiler should bootstrap
from the literal 1.9.0 release artifacts. To do this, however, we need a way to
enable unstable features temporarily in a stable compiler (as the released
compiler is stable), but it turns out we already have a way to do that!
At compile time the configure script selects a `CFG_BOOTSTRAP_KEY` variable
value and then exports it into the makefiles. If the `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP_KEY`
environment variable is set to this value, then the compiler is allowed to
"cheat" and use unstable features.
This method of choosing the bootstrap key, however, is problematic for the
intention of bootstrapping from the previous release. Each time a 1.9.0 compiler
is created, a new bootstrap key will be selected. That means that the 1.10.0
compiler will only compile from *our* literal release artifacts. Instead
distributions would like to bootstrap from their own compilers, so instead we
simply hardcode the bootstrap key for each release.
This patch uses the same `CFG_FILENAME_EXTRA` value (a hash of the release
string) as the bootstrap key. Consequently all 1.9.0 compilers, no matter where
they are compiled, will have the same bootstrap key. Additionally we won't need
to keep updating this as it'll be based on the release number anyway.
Once the 1.9.0 beta has been created, we can update the 1.10.0 nightly sources
(the `master` branch at that time) to bootstrap from that release using this
hard-coded bootstrap key. We will likely just hardcode into the makefiles what
the previous bootstrap key was and we'll change that whenever the stage0
compiler is updated.
Change build helper to modify suffix
The current implementation of [gcc](https://crates.io/crates/gcc) defaults to using the ```CC``` environment variable to determine the compiler. The current global-find-replace in ```build_helper``` causes issues for projects using tools like ```ccache``` if they try to integrate libstd into their build system.
Almost all cross-compiler toolchains have the tool name as a suffix of the filename, so changing this to suffix-replacement instead of global-replacement should be fine.
Fix libstd on DragonFly
Following changes:
* birthtime does not exist on DragonFly
* errno: __dfly_error is no more. Use #[thread_local] static errno.
* clock_gettime expects a c_ulong
These changes are required to build DragonFly snapshots again.
Save/load incremental compilation dep graph
Contains the code to serialize/deserialize the dep graph to disk between executions. We also hash the item contents and compare to the new hashes. Also includes a unit test harness. There are definitely some known limitations, such as https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/32014 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/32015, but I am leaving those for follow-up work.
Note that this PR builds on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/32007, so the overlapping commits can be excluded from review.
r? @michaelwoerister
Reinstate fast_reject for overlap checking
The initial implementation of specialization did not use the
`fast_reject` mechanism when checking for overlap, which caused a
serious performance regression in some cases.
This commit modifies the specialization graph to use simplified types
for fast rejection when possible, and along the way refactors the logic
for building the specialization graph.
Closes#32499
r? @nikomatsakis
Specialize equality for [T] and comparison for [u8] to use memcmp when possible
Specialize equality for [T] and comparison for [u8] to use memcmp when possible
Where T is a type that can be compared for equality bytewise, we can use
memcmp. We can also use memcmp for PartialOrd, Ord for [u8].
Use specialization to call memcmp in PartialEq for slices for certain element types. This PR does not change the user visible API since the implementation uses an intermediate trait. See commit messages for more information.
The memcmp signature was changed from `*const i8` to `*const u8` which is in line with how the memcmp function is defined in C (taking const void * arguments, interpreting the values as unsigned bytes for purposes of the comparison).
Lay groundwork for RFC 1422 and improve `PrivateItemsInPublicInterfacesVisitor`
This PR lays groundwork for RFC 1422 (cc #32409) and improves `PrivateItemsInPublicInterfacesVisitor`. More specifically, it
- Refactors away `hir::Visibility::inherit_from`, the semantics of which are obsolete.
- Makes `hir::Visibility` non-`Copy` so that we will be able to add new variants to represent `pub(restricted)` (for example, `Visibility::Restricted(Path)`).
- Adds a new `Copy` type `ty::Visibility` that represents a visibility value, i.e. a characterization of where an item is accessible. This is able to represent `pub(restricted)` visibilities.
- Improves `PrivateItemsInPublicInterfacesVisitor` so that it checks for items in an interface that are less visible than the interface. This fixes#30079 but doesn't change any other behavior.
r? @nikomatsakis
Suggest adding a where-clause when that can help
Suggest adding a where-clause when there is an unmet trait-bound that can be satisfied if some type can implement it.
r? @nikomatsakis
Following changes:
* birthtime does not exist on DragonFly
* errno: __dfly_error is no more. Use #[thread_local] static errno.
* clock_gettime expects a c_ulong (use a type alias)
These changes are required to build DragonFly snapshots again.
Fix LLVM assert when handling bad intrinsic monomorphizations
Passing an invalid type to certain intrinsics would trigger an LLVM assert even though the invalid type was caught by the compiler.
r? @eddyb
Remove error description of `move`
(1) `x` can be used in main() after the call to spawn(). Because the variables follow normal move semantics, though the keyword `move` is used, and i32 implements `Copy`.
(2) I remove this sentence because the previous sentence gives the referrence to `move closures`, and more description of `move` may be redundant.
Minor doc fixes in "Crates and Modules" and "Lifetimes" chapters
These commits fix a couple of (minor) issues in the _Crates and Modules_ and the _Lifetimes_ chapters of the book.
r? @steveklabnik
Mention that it's not actually a data race
The example can't cause a data race since different indices are accesed.
(perhaps we should use an example where i iterates twice?)
r? @steveklabnik
Right now if you configure multiple hosts rustbuild will only build
documentation for the build triple, but we've got all the support necessary to
build documentation for different architectures as well. This commit
reinterprets the `target` field of doc `Step` instances to be the target of the
documentation rather than the target of the rustdoc/tool being run.
This should enable `make dist` to start producing a bunch of `rust-docs`
packages for all the cross architectures that rustbuild is producing now.