Instead of updating global state to mark attributes as used,
we now explicitly emit a warning when an attribute is used in
an unsupported position. As a side effect, we are to emit more
detailed warning messages (instead of just a generic "unused" message).
`Session.check_name` is removed, since its only purpose was to mark
the attribute as used. All of the callers are modified to use
`Attribute.has_name`
Additionally, `AttributeType::AssumedUsed` is removed - an 'assumed
used' attribute is implemented by simply not performing any checks
in `CheckAttrVisitor` for a particular attribute.
We no longer emit unused attribute warnings for the `#[rustc_dummy]`
attribute - it's an internal attribute used for tests, so it doesn't
mark sense to treat it as 'unused'.
With this commit, a large source of global untracked state is removed.
Update the backtrace crate in libstd
This commit updates the backtrace crate in libstd now that dependencies
have been updated to use `memchr` from the standard library as well.
This is mostly just making sure deps are up-to-date and have all the
latest-and-greatest fixes and such.
Closesrust-lang/backtrace-rs#432
This commit updates the backtrace crate in libstd now that dependencies
have been updated to use `memchr` from the standard library as well.
This is mostly just making sure deps are up-to-date and have all the
latest-and-greatest fixes and such.
Closesrust-lang/backtrace-rs#432
Unbox mutexes, condvars and rwlocks on hermit
[RustyHermit](https://github.com/hermitcore/rusty-hermit) provides now movable synchronization primitives and we are able to unbox mutexes and condvars.
Matthew's work on improving NLL's "higher-ranked subtype error"s
This PR rebases `@matthewjasper's` [branch](https://github.com/matthewjasper/rust/tree/nll-hrtb-errors) which has great work to fix the obscure higher-ranked subtype errors that are tracked in #57374.
These are a blocker to turning full NLLs on, and doing some internal cleanups to remove some of the old region code.
The goal is so `@nikomatsakis` can take a look at this early, and I'll then do my best to help do the changes and followup work to land this work, and move closer to turning off the migration mode.
I've only updated the branch and made it compile, removed a warning or two.
r? `@nikomatsakis`
(Here's the [zulip topic to discuss this](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/122657-t-compiler.2Fwg-nll/topic/.2357374.3A.20improving.20higher-ranked.20subtype.20errors.20via.20.2386700) that Niko wanted)
Update cargo
8 commits in b51439fd8b505d4800a257acfecf3c69f81e35cf..e96bdb0c3d0a418e7fcd7fbd69be08abf830b4bc
2021-08-09 18:40:05 +0000 to 2021-08-17 22:58:47 +0000
- Support using rustbot to ping the Windows group (rust-lang/cargo#9802)
- Show information about abnormal `fix` errors. (rust-lang/cargo#9799)
- Bump jobserver. (rust-lang/cargo#9798)
- Render build-std web links as hyperlinks (rust-lang/cargo#9795)
- Teach cargo to failfast on recursive/corecursive aliases (rust-lang/cargo#9791)
- Fix value-after-table error with profiles. (rust-lang/cargo#9789)
- Fix plugin registrar change. (rust-lang/cargo#9790)
- Ability to specify the output name for a bin target different from the crate name (rust-lang/cargo#9627)
Update `polonius-engine` to 0.13.0
This PR updates the use of `polonius-engine` to the recently released 0.13.0:
- this version renamed a lot of relations to match the current terminology
- "illegal subset relationships errors" (AKA "subset errors" or "universal region errors" in rustc parlance) have been implemented in all variants, and therefore the `Hybrid` variant can be the rustc default once again
- some of the blessed expectations were updated: new tests have been added since the last time I updated the tests, diagnostics have changed, etc.
In particular:
- a few tests had trivial expectations changes such as basic diagnostics changes for the migrate-mode and full NLLs
- others were recursion and lengths limits which emits a file, and under the polonius compare-mode, the folder has a different name
- a few tests were ignored in the NLL compare-mode for reasons that obviously also apply to Polonius
- some diagnostics were unified so that older expectations no longer made sense: the NLL and Polonius outputs were identical.
- in a few cases Polonius gets a chance to emit more errors than NLLs
A few tests in the compare-mode still are super slow and trigger the 60s warning, or OOM rustc during fact generation, and I've detailed these [on Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/186049-t-compiler.2Fwg-polonius/topic/Challenges.20for.20move.2Finit.2C.20liveness.2C.20and.20.60Location.3A.3AAll.60):
- `src/test/ui/numbers-arithmetic/saturating-float-casts.rs` -> OOM during rustc fact generation
- `src/test/ui/numbers-arithmetic/num-wrapping.rs`
- `src/test/ui/issues/issue-72933-match-stack-overflow.rs`
- `src/test/ui/issues/issue-74564-if-expr-stack-overflow.rs`
- `src/test/ui/repr/repr-no-niche.rs`
In addition, 2 tests don't currently pass and I didn't want to bless them now: they deal with HRTBs and miss errors that NLLs emit. We're currently trying to see if we need chalk to deal with HRTB errors (as we thought we would have to) but during the recent sprint, we discovered that we may be able to detect some of these errors in a way that resembles subset errors:
- `ui/hrtb/hrtb-just-for-static.rs` -> 3 errors in NLL, 2 in polonius: a missing error about HRTB + needing to outlive 'static
- `ui/issues/issue-26217.rs` -> missing HRTB that makes the test compile instead of emitting an error
We'll keep talking about this at the next sprint as well.
cc `@rust-lang/wg-polonius` r? `@nikomatsakis`
Improve non_fmt_panics suggestion based on trait impls.
This improves the non_fmt_panics lint suggestions by checking first which trait (Display or Debug) are actually implemented on the type.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87313
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87999
Before:
```
help: add a "{}" format string to Display the message
|
2 | panic!("{}", Some(1));
| +++++
help: or use std::panic::panic_any instead
|
2 | std::panic::panic_any(Some(1));
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```
After:
```
help: add a "{:?}" format string to use the Debug implementation of `Option<i32>`
|
2 | panic!("{:?}", Some(1));
| +++++++
help: or use std::panic::panic_any instead
|
2 | std::panic::panic_any(Some(1));
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```
r? `@estebank`
Uplift the invalid_atomic_ordering lint from clippy to rustc
This is mostly just a rebase of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79654; I've copy/pasted the text from that PR below.
r? `@lcnr` since you reviewed the last one, but feel free to reassign.
---
This is an implementation of https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/390.
As mentioned, in general this turns an unconditional runtime panic into a (compile time) lint failure. It has no false positives, and the only false negatives I'm aware of are if `Ordering` isn't specified directly and is comes from an argument/constant/whatever.
As a result of it having no false positives, and the alternative always being strictly wrong, it's on as deny by default. This seems right.
In the [zulip stream](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/233931-t-compiler.2Fmajor-changes/topic/Uplift.20the.20.60invalid_atomic_ordering.60.20lint.20from.20clippy/near/218483957) `@joshtriplett` suggested that lang team should FCP this before landing it. Perhaps libs team cares too?
---
Some notes on the code for reviewers / others below
## Changes from clippy
The code is changed from [the implementation in clippy](68cf94f6a6/clippy_lints/src/atomic_ordering.rs) in the following ways:
1. Uses `Symbols` and `rustc_diagnostic_item`s instead of string literals.
- It's possible I should have just invoked Symbol::intern for some of these instead? Seems better to use symbol, but it did require adding several.
2. The functions are moved to static methods inside the lint struct, as a way to namespace them.
- There's a lot of other code in that file — which I picked as the location for this lint because `@jyn514` told me that seemed reasonable.
3. Supports unstable AtomicU128/AtomicI128.
- I did this because it was almost easier to support them than not — not supporting them would have (ideally) required finding a way not to give them a `rustc_diagnostic_item`, which would have complicated an already big macro.
- These don't have tests since I wasn't sure if/how I should make tests conditional on whether or not the target has the atomic... This is to a certain extent an issue of 64bit atomics too, but 128-bit atomics are much less common. Regardless, the existing tests should be *more* than thorough enough here.
4. Minor changes like:
- grammar tweaks ("loads cannot have `Release` **and** `AcqRel` ordering" => "loads cannot have `Release` **or** `AcqRel` ordering")
- function renames (`match_ordering_def_path` => `matches_ordering_def_path`),
- avoiding clippy-specific helper methods that don't exist in rustc_lint and didn't seem worth adding for this case (for example `cx.struct_span_lint` vs clippy's `span_lint_and_help` helper).
## Potential issues
(This is just about the code in this PR, not conceptual issues with the lint or anything)
1. I'm not sure if I should have used a diagnostic item for `Ordering` and its variants (I couldn't figure out how really, so if I should do this some pointers would be appreciated).
- It seems possible that failing to do this might possibly mean there are more cases this lint would miss, but I don't really know how `match_def_path` works and if it has any pitfalls like that, so maybe not.
2. I *think* I deprecated the lint in clippy (CC `@flip1995` who asked to be notified about clippy changes in the future in [this comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75671#issuecomment-718731659)) but I'm not sure if I need to do anything else there.
- I'm kind of hoping CI will catch if I missed anything, since `x.py test src/tools/clippy` fails with a lot of errors with and without my changes (and is probably a nonsense command regardless). Running `cargo test` from src/tools/clippy also fails with unrelated errors that seem like refactorings that didnt update clippy? So, honestly no clue.
3. I wasn't sure if the description/example I gave good. Hopefully it is. The example is less thorough than the one from clippy here: https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#invalid_atomic_ordering. Let me know if/how I should change it if it needs changing.
4. It pulls in the `if_chain` crate. This crate was already used in clippy, and seems like it's used elsewhere in rustc, but I'm willing to rewrite it to not use this if needed (I'd prefer not to, all things being equal).
- Deprecate clippy::invalid_atomic_ordering
- Use rustc_diagnostic_item for the orderings in the invalid_atomic_ordering lint
- Reduce code duplication
- Give up on making enum variants diagnostic items and just look for
`Ordering` instead
I ran into tons of trouble with this because apparently the change to
store HIR attrs in a side table also gave the DefIds of the
constructor instead of the variant itself. So I had to change
`matches_ordering` to also check the grandparent of the defid as well.
- Rename `atomic_ordering_x` symbols to just the name of the variant
- Fix typos in checks - there were a few places that said "may not be
Release" in the diagnostic but actually checked for SeqCst in the lint.
- Make constant items const
- Use fewer diagnostic items
- Only look at arguments after making sure the method matches
This prevents an ICE when there aren't enough arguments.
- Ignore trait methods
- Only check Ctors instead of going through `qpath_res`
The functions take values, so this couldn't ever be anything else.
- Add if_chain to allowed dependencies
- Fix grammar
- Remove unnecessary allow
STD support for the ESP-IDF framework
Dear all,
This PR is implementing libStd support for the [ESP-IDF](https://github.com/espressif/esp-idf) newlib-based framework, which is the open source SDK provided by Espressif for their MCU family (esp32, esp32s2, esp32c3 and all other forthcoming ones).
Note that this PR has a [sibling PR](https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/2310) against the libc crate, which implements proper declarations for all ESP-IDF APIs which are necessary for libStd support.
# Implementation approach
The ESP-IDF framework - despite being bare metal - offers a relatively complete POSIX API based on newlib. `pthread`, BSD sockets, file descriptors, and even a small file-system VFS layer. Perhaps the only significant exception is the lack of support for processes, which is to be expected of course on bare metal.
Therefore, the libStd support is implemented as a set of (hopefully small) changes to the `sys/unix` family of modules, in the form of conditional-compilation branches based either on `target_os = "espidf"` or in a couple of cases - based on `target_env = "newlib"` (the latter was already there actually and is not part of this patch).
The PR also contains two new targets:
- `riscv32imc-esp-espidf`
- `riscv32imac-esp-espidf`
... which are essentially copies of `riscv32imc-unknown-none-elf` and `riscv32imac-unknown-none-elf`, but enriched with proper `linker`, `linker_flavor`, `families`, `os`, `env` etc. specifications so that (a) the proper conditional compilation branches in libStd are selected when compiling with these targets and (b) the correct linker is used.
Since support for atomics is a precondition for libStd, the `riscv32imc-esp-espidf` target additionally is configured in such a way, so as to emit libcalls to the `__sync*` & `__atomic*` GCC functions, which are already implemented in the ESP-IDF framework. If this modification is not acceptable, we can also live with only the `riscv32imac-esp-espidf` target as well. While the RiscV chips of Espressif lack native atomics support, the relevant instructions are transparently emulated in the ESP-IDF framework using invalid instruction trap. This modification was implemented specifically with Rust support in mind.
# Target maintainers
In case this PR eventually gets merged, you can list myself as a Target Maintainer.
More importantly, Espressif (the chip vendor) is now actively involved and [embracing](https://github.com/espressif/rust-esp32-example/blob/main/docs/rust-on-xtensa.md) all [Rust-related efforts](https://github.com/esp-rs) which were originally a community effort. In light of that, I suppose `@MabezDev` - who initiated the Rust-on-Espressif efforts back in time and who now works for Espressif won't object to being listed as a maintainer as well.
**EDIT:** I was hinted (thanks, `@Urgau)` that answering the Tier 3 policy explicitly might be helpful. Answers below.
# Tier 3 Target Policy - answers
> A proposed target or target-specific patch that substantially changes code shared with other targets (not just target-specific code) must be reviewed and approved by the appropriate team for that shared code before acceptance.
Hopefully, the changes introduced by the ESP-IDF libStd support are rather on the small side. They are completely contained within the `sys/unix` set of modules (that is, aside from the obviously necessary one-liners in the `unwind` crate and in `build.rs`).
> A tier 3 target must have a designated developer or developers (the "target maintainers") on record to be CCed when issues arise regarding the target. (The mechanism to track and CC such developers may evolve over time.)
`@ivmarkov`
`@MabezDev`
> Targets must use naming consistent with any existing targets; for instance, a target for the same CPU or OS as an existing Rust target should use the same name for that CPU or OS. Targets should normally use the same names and naming conventions as used elsewhere in the broader ecosystem beyond Rust (such as in other toolchains), unless they have a very good reason to diverge. Changing the name of a target can be highly disruptive, especially once the target reaches a higher tier, so getting the name right is important even for a tier 3 target.
The two introduced targets follow as much as possible the naming conventions of the other targets. I.e. taking the bare-metal `riscv32imac_unknown_none_elf` as a base:
* The name of the new target was derived by replacing `none` with `espidf` to designate the `target_os`.
* `_elf` was removed, as the non-bare metal targets seem not to have it
* `-newlib` was deliberately NOT added at the end, as I believe the chance of having two simultaneously active separate targets for the ESP-IDF framework with different C libraries (say, newlib vs musl) is way too small
* Finally, we replaced the middle `unknown` with `esp` which is kind of the name of the whole chipset MCU family (and abbreviation from Espressif which is too long). It will stay `esp` for all RiscV32-based MCUs of the company, as they all use the riscv32imc instruction set. By necessity however (disambiguation), it will be `esp32` or `esp32s2` or `esp32s3` for the Xtensa-based MCUs as all of these have their own variation of the Xtensa architecture. (The Xtensa targets are not part of this PR, even though they would use 1:1 the same LibStd implementation provided here, as they depend on the upstreaming of the Xtensa architecture support in LLVM; this upstreaming this is currently in progress.)
There was also a preceding discussion on the topic [here](https://github.com/espressif/rust-esp32-example/issues/14).
> Target names should not introduce undue confusion or ambiguity unless absolutely necessary to maintain ecosystem compatibility. For example, if the name of the target makes people extremely likely to form incorrect beliefs about what it targets, the name should be changed or augmented to disambiguate it.
We are explicitly putting an `-espidf` suffix to designate that the target is *specifically* for Rust + ESP-IDF
> Tier 3 targets may have unusual requirements to build or use, but must not create legal issues or impose onerous legal terms for the Rust project or for Rust developers or users.
Agreed.
> The target must not introduce license incompatibilities.
To the best of our knowledge, it doesn't.
> Anything added to the Rust repository must be under the standard Rust license (MIT OR Apache-2.0).
MIT + Apache 2.0
> The target must not cause the Rust tools or libraries built for any other host (even when supporting cross-compilation to the target) to depend on any new dependency less permissive than the Rust licensing policy. This applies whether the dependency is a Rust crate that would require adding new license exceptions (as specified by the tidy tool in the rust-lang/rust repository), or whether the dependency is a native library or binary. In other words, the introduction of the target must not cause a user installing or running a version of Rust or the Rust tools to be subject to any new license requirements.
Requirements are not changed for any other target.
> If the target supports building host tools (such as rustc or cargo), those host tools must not depend on proprietary (non-FOSS) libraries, other than ordinary runtime libraries supplied by the platform and commonly used by other binaries built for the target. For instance, rustc built for the target may depend on a common proprietary C runtime library or console output library, but must not depend on a proprietary code generation library or code optimization library. Rust's license permits such combinations, but the Rust project has no interest in maintaining such combinations within the scope of Rust itself, even at tier 3.
The targets are for bare-metal environment which is not hosting build tools or a compiler.
> Targets should not require proprietary (non-FOSS) components to link a functional binary or library.
The linker used by the targets is the GCC linker from the GCC toolchain cross-compiled for riscv. GNU GPL.
> "onerous" here is an intentionally subjective term. At a minimum, "onerous" legal/licensing terms include but are not limited to: non-disclosure requirements, non-compete requirements, contributor license agreements (CLAs) or equivalent, "non-commercial"/"research-only"/etc terms, requirements conditional on the employer or employment of any particular Rust developers, revocable terms, any requirements that create liability for the Rust project or its developers or users, or any requirements that adversely affect the livelihood or prospects of the Rust project or its developers or users.
> Neither this policy nor any decisions made regarding targets shall create any binding agreement or estoppel by any party. If any member of an approving Rust team serves as one of the maintainers of a target, or has any legal or employment requirement (explicit or implicit) that might affect their decisions regarding a target, they must recuse themselves from any approval decisions regarding the target's tier status, though they may otherwise participate in discussions.
> This requirement does not prevent part or all of this policy from being cited in an explicit contract or work agreement (e.g. to implement or maintain support for a target). This requirement exists to ensure that a developer or team responsible for reviewing and approving a target does not face any legal threats or obligations that would prevent them from freely exercising their judgment in such approval, even if such judgment involves subjective matters or goes beyond the letter of these requirements.
Agreed.
> Tier 3 targets should attempt to implement as much of the standard libraries as possible and appropriate (core for most targets, alloc for targets that can support dynamic memory allocation, std for targets with an operating system or equivalent layer of system-provided functionality), but may leave some code unimplemented (either unavailable or stubbed out as appropriate), whether because the target makes it impossible to implement or challenging to implement. The authors of pull requests are not obligated to avoid calling any portions of the standard library on the basis of a tier 3 target not implementing those portions.
The targets implement libStd almost in its entirety, except for the missing support for process, as this is a bare metal platform. The process `sys\unix` module is currently stubbed to return "not implemented" errors.
> The target must provide documentation for the Rust community explaining how to build for the target, using cross-compilation if possible. If the target supports running tests (even if they do not pass), the documentation must explain how to run tests for the target, using emulation if possible or dedicated hardware if necessary.
Target does not (yet) support running tests. We would gladly provide all documentation how to build for the target (where?). It is currently hosted in this [README.md](https://github.com/ivmarkov/rust-esp32-std-hello) file, but will likely be moved to the [esp-rs](https://github.com/esp-rs) organization. Since the build for the target is driven by cargo and [all other tooling is downloaded automatically during the build](https://github.com/esp-rs/esp-idf-sys/blob/master/build.rs), there is no need for extensive documentation.
> Tier 3 targets must not impose burden on the authors of pull requests, or other developers in the community, to maintain the target. In particular, do not post comments (automated or manual) on a PR that derail or suggest a block on the PR based on a tier 3 target. Do not send automated messages or notifications (via any medium, including via `@)` to a PR author or others involved with a PR regarding a tier 3 target, unless they have opted into such messages.
Agreed.
> Backlinks such as those generated by the issue/PR tracker when linking to an issue or PR are not considered a violation of this policy, within reason. However, such messages (even on a separate repository) must not generate notifications to anyone involved with a PR who has not requested such notifications.
Agreed.
> Patches adding or updating tier 3 targets must not break any existing tier 2 or tier 1 target, and must not knowingly break another tier 3 target without approval of either the compiler team or the maintainers of the other tier 3 target.
To the best of our knowledge, we believe we are not breaking any other target (be it tier 1, 2 or 3).
> In particular, this may come up when working on closely related targets, such as variations of the same architecture with different features. Avoid introducing unconditional uses of features that another variation of the target may not have; use conditional compilation or runtime detection, as appropriate, to let each target run code supported by that target.
To the best of our knowledge, we have not introduced any unconditional use of a feature that affects any other target.
> If a tier 3 target stops meeting these requirements, or the target maintainers no longer have interest or time, or the target shows no signs of activity and has not built for some time, or removing the target would improve the quality of the Rust codebase, we may post a PR to remove it; any such PR will be CCed to the target maintainers (and potentially other people who have previously worked on the target), to check potential interest in improving the situation.
Agreed.
Allow more "unknown argument" strings from linker
Some toolchains emit slightly different errors, e.g.
ppc-vle-gcc: error: unrecognized option '-no-pie'
Support -Z unpretty=thir-tree again
Currently `-Z unpretty=thir-tree` is broken after some THIR refactorings. This re-implements it, making it easier to debug THIR-related issues.
We have to do analyzes before getting the THIR, since trying to create THIR from invalid HIR can ICE. But doing those analyzes requires the THIR to be built and stolen. We work around this by creating a separate query to construct the THIR tree string representation.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/project-thir-unsafeck/issues/8, fixes#85552.
Merge libterm into libtest
I think it's quite clear at this point that rust won't stablize the current libterm APIs to the outside world. And its only user is libtest. The compiler doesn't use this api at all. So I'm merging the crate into libtest as a module.
This also allows me to remove 15% of the libterm code, since these APIs are dead-code now.
[debuginfo] Emit associated type bindings in trait object type names.
This PR updates debuginfo type name generation for trait objects to include associated type bindings and auto trait bounds -- so that, for example, the debuginfo type name of `&dyn Iterator<Item=Foo>` and `&dyn Iterator<Item=Bar>` don't both map to just `&dyn Iterator` anymore.
The following table shows examples of debuginfo type names before and after the PR:
| type | before | after |
|------|---------|-------|
| `&dyn Iterator<Item=u32>>` | `&dyn Iterator` | `&dyn Iterator<Item=u32>` |
| `&(dyn Iterator<Item=u32>> + Sync)` | `&dyn Iterator` | `&(dyn Iterator<Item=u32> + Sync)` |
| `&(dyn SomeTrait<bool, i8, Bar=u32>> + Send)` | `&dyn SomeTrait<bool, i8>` | `&(dyn SomeTrait<bool, i8, Bar=u32>> + Send)` |
For targets that need C++-like type names, we use `assoc$<Item,u32>` instead of `Item=u32`:
| type | before | after |
|------|---------|-------|
| `&dyn Iterator<Item=u32>>` | `ref$<dyn$<Iterator> >` | `ref$<dyn$<Iterator<assoc$<Item,u32> > > >` |
| `&(dyn Iterator<Item=u32>> + Sync)` | `ref$<dyn$<Iterator> >` | `ref$<dyn$<Iterator<assoc$<Item,u32> >,Sync> >` |
| `&(dyn SomeTrait<bool, i8, Bar=u32>> + Send)` | `ref$<dyn$<SomeTrait<bool, i8> > >` | `ref$<dyn$<SomeTrait<bool,i8,assoc$<Bar,u32> > >,Send> >` |
The PR also adds self-profiling measurements for debuginfo type name generation (re. https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86431). It looks like the compiler spends up to 0.5% of its time in that task, so the potential for optimizing it via caching seems limited.
However, the perf run also shows [the biggest regression](https://perf.rust-lang.org/detailed-query.html?commit=585e91c718b0b2c5319e1fffd0ff1e62aaf7ccc2&base_commit=b9197978a90be6f7570741eabe2da175fec75375&benchmark=tokio-webpush-simple-debug&run_name=incr-unchanged) in a test case that does not even invoke the code in question. This suggests that the length of the names we generate here can affect performance by influencing how much data the linker has to copy around.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86134.
Bumped to `0.1.47` to resolve missing symbols on `aarch` when linking
`cargo`. This was due to a recent change in a `cargo` dependency on
`curl` (upstream C library added code that uses the uncommon `long
double` type).
Remove unused dependencies from compiler crates
Various compiler crates have dependencies that they don't appear to use. I used some scripting to detect such dependencies, filtered them based on some manual review, and removed those that do indeed appear to be entirely unused.
Add support for OpenSSL 3.0.0
This updates the `openssl` and `openssl-sys` crates to support building
the toolchain with system libraries up to OpenSSL 3.0.0. This does not
affect the static version used via `openssl-src` in CI builds.
ref: https://github.com/sfackler/rust-openssl/pull/1264
rustc_data_structures has a dependency on crossbeam-utils but never uses
it. It appears to have originally had this dependency in order to set
the "nightly" feature; however, its other dependencies use a different
version of crossbeam-utils, so this doesn't actually affect anything.
Furthermore, in current crossbeam-utils, the "nightly" feature has
become a no-op.
This updates the `openssl` and `openssl-sys` crates to support building
the toolchain with system libraries up to OpenSSL 3.0.0. This does not
affect the static version used via `openssl-src` in CI builds.
ref: https://github.com/sfackler/rust-openssl/pull/1264
Rustfix update
This updates to rustfix 0.6.0. One of the key changes here is https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfix/pull/195 which changes rustfix to apply multi-part suggestions. One of the tests needs to updated because there are some overlapping suggestions which rustfix cannot handle. The solution is to only apply the machine-applicable suggestions to avoid the overlapping issue.
This also includes a minor change to compiletest to provide better error messages with rustfix.
Use Tera templates for rustdoc.
Replaces a format!() call in layout::render with a template
expansion. Introduces a `templates` field in SharedContext so parts
of rustdoc can share pre-rendered templates.
This currently builds in a copy of the single template available, like
with static files. However, future work can make this live-loadable with
a perma-unstable flag, to make rustdoc developers' work easier.
Part of #84419.
Demo at https://hoffman-andrews.com/rust/tera/std/string/struct.String.html.
Replaces a format!() call in layout::render with a template
expansion. Introduces a `templates` field in SharedContext so parts
of rustdoc can share pre-rendered templates.
This currently builds in a copy of the single template available, like
with static files. However, future work can make this live-loadable with
a perma-unstable flag, to make rustdoc developers' work easier.
Lazify is_really_default condition in the RustdocGUI bootstrap step
The `RustdocGUI::should_run` condition spawns `npm list` several times which adds up to seconds of wall-time.
Evaluate the condition lazily to to keep `./x.py test tidy` and similar short-running tasks fast.
Fixes#86147
The `RustdocGUI::should_run` condition spawns `npm list` several times
which adds up to seconds of wall-time.
Evaluate the condition lazily to to keep `./x.py test tidy` and similar
short-running tasks fast.
rustc: Store metadata-in-rlibs in object files
This commit updates how rustc compiler metadata is stored in rlibs.
Previously metadata was stored as a raw file that has the same format as
`--emit metadata`. After this commit, however, the metadata is encoded
into a small object file which has one section which is the contents of
the metadata.
The motivation for this commit is to fix a common case where #83730
arises. The problem is that when rustc crates a `dylib` crate type it
needs to include entire rlib files into the dylib, so it passes
`--whole-archive` (or the equivalent) to the linker. The problem with
this, though, is that the linker will attempt to read all files in the
archive. If the metadata file were left as-is (today) then the linker
would generate an error saying it can't read the file. The previous
solution was to alter the rlib just before linking, creating a new
archive in a temporary directory which has the metadata file removed.
This problem from before this commit is now removed if the metadata file
is stored in an object file that the linker can read. The only caveat we
have to take care of is to ensure that the linker never actually
includes the contents of the object file into the final output. We apply
similar tricks as the `.llvmbc` bytecode sections to do this.
This involved changing the metadata loading code a bit, namely updating
some of the LLVM C APIs used to use non-deprecated ones and fiddling
with the lifetimes a bit to get everything to work out. Otherwise though
this isn't intended to be a functional change really, only that metadata
is stored differently in archives now.
This should end up fixing #83730 because by default dylibs will no
longer have their rlib dependencies "altered" meaning that
split-debuginfo will continue to have valid paths pointing at the
original rlibs. (note that we still "alter" rlibs if LTO is enabled to
remove Rust object files and we also "alter" for the #[link(cfg)]
feature, but that's rarely used).
Closes#83730
This commit updates how rustc compiler metadata is stored in rlibs.
Previously metadata was stored as a raw file that has the same format as
`--emit metadata`. After this commit, however, the metadata is encoded
into a small object file which has one section which is the contents of
the metadata.
The motivation for this commit is to fix a common case where #83730
arises. The problem is that when rustc crates a `dylib` crate type it
needs to include entire rlib files into the dylib, so it passes
`--whole-archive` (or the equivalent) to the linker. The problem with
this, though, is that the linker will attempt to read all files in the
archive. If the metadata file were left as-is (today) then the linker
would generate an error saying it can't read the file. The previous
solution was to alter the rlib just before linking, creating a new
archive in a temporary directory which has the metadata file removed.
This problem from before this commit is now removed if the metadata file
is stored in an object file that the linker can read. The only caveat we
have to take care of is to ensure that the linker never actually
includes the contents of the object file into the final output. We apply
similar tricks as the `.llvmbc` bytecode sections to do this.
This involved changing the metadata loading code a bit, namely updating
some of the LLVM C APIs used to use non-deprecated ones and fiddling
with the lifetimes a bit to get everything to work out. Otherwise though
this isn't intended to be a functional change really, only that metadata
is stored differently in archives now.
This should end up fixing #83730 because by default dylibs will no
longer have their rlib dependencies "altered" meaning that
split-debuginfo will continue to have valid paths pointing at the
original rlibs. (note that we still "alter" rlibs if LTO is enabled to
remove Rust object files and we also "alter" for the #[link(cfg)]
feature, but that's rarely used).
Closes#83730
Support Android ndk versions `r23-beta3` and up
Since android ndk version `r23-beta3`, `libgcc` has been replaced with `libunwind`. This moves the linking of `libgcc`/`libunwind` into the `unwind` crate where we check if the system compiler can find `libunwind` and fall back to `libgcc` if needed.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #85717 (Document `From` impls for cow.rs)
- #85850 (Remove unused feature gates)
- #85888 (Fix typo in internal documentation for `TrustedRandomAccess`)
- #85889 (Restoring the `num_def_ids` function in the CStore API )
- #85899 (jsondocck small cleanup)
- #85937 (Fix bad suggestions for code from proc_macro)
- #85963 (Show `::{{constructor}}` in std::any::type_name().)
- #85977 (Fix linkcheck script from getting out of sync.)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
jsondocck small cleanup
updated `shlex` (there was some fix 6db4704fca)
replaced `lazy_static` with `once_cell`
removed `serde` direct dependency (`serde_json` will pull it)
Reduce the amount of untracked state in TyCtxt
Access to untracked global state may generate instances of #84970.
The GlobalCtxt contains the lowered HIR, the resolver outputs and interners.
By wrapping the resolver inside a query, we make sure those accesses are properly tracked.
As a no_hash query, all dependent queries essentially become `eval_always`,
what they should have been from the beginning.
Don't panic when failing to initialize incremental directory.
This removes a panic when rustc fails to initialize the incremental directory. This can commonly happen on various filesystems that don't support locking (often various network filesystems). Panics can be confusing and scary, and there are already plenty of issues reporting this.
This has been panicking since 1.22 due to I think #44502 which was a major rework of how things work. Previously, things were simpler and the [`load_dep_graph`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.21.0/src/librustc_incremental/persist/load.rs#L43-L65) function would emit an error and then continue on without panicking. With 1.22, [`load_dep_graph`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.22.0/src/librustc_incremental/persist/load.rs#L44) was changed so that it assumes it can load the data without errors. Today, the problem is that it calls [`prepare_session_directory`](fbf1b1a719/compiler/rustc_interface/src/passes.rs (L175-L179)) and then immediately calls `garbage_collect_session_directories` which will panic since the session is `IncrCompSession::NotInitialized`.
The solution here is to have `prepare_session_directory` return an error that must be handled so that compilation stops if it fails.
Some other options:
* Ignore directory lock failures.
* Print a warning on directory lock failure, but otherwise continue with incremental enabled.
* Print a warning on directory lock failure, and disable incremental.
* Provide a different locking mechanism.
Cargo ignores lock errors if locking is not supported, so that would be a precedent for the first option. These options would require quite a bit more changes, but I'm happy to entertain any of them, as I think they all have valid justifications.
There is more discussion on the many issues where this is reported: #49773, #59224, #66513, #76251. I'm not sure if this can be considered closing any of those, though, since I think there is some value in discussing if there is a way to avoid the error altogether. But I think it would make sense to at least close all but one to consolidate them.
Update cc
Recent commits have improved `cc`'s finding of MSVC tools on Windows. In particular it should help to address these issues: #83043 and #43468
This avoids the following warning:
```
warning: trailing semicolon in macro used in expression position
--> /home/joshua/.local/lib/cargo/registry/src/github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823/log-0.4.11/src/macros.rs:152:45
|
147 | / macro_rules! debug {
148 | | (target: $target:expr, $($arg:tt)+) => (
149 | | log!(target: $target, $crate::Level::Debug, $($arg)+);
150 | | );
151 | | ($($arg:tt)+) => (
152 | | log!($crate::Level::Debug, $($arg)+);
| | ^
153 | | )
154 | | }
| |_- in this expansion of `debug!`
|
::: src/tools/rustfmt/src/modules/visitor.rs:36:23
|
36 | Err(e) => debug!("{}", e),
| --------------- in this macro invocation
|
= note: requested on the command line with `-W semicolon-in-expressions-from-macros`
= warning: this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release!
= note: for more information, see issue #79813 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79813>
```
Use the object crate for metadata reading
This allows sharing the metadata reader between cg_llvm, cg_clif and other codegen backends.
This is not currently useful for rlib reading with cg_spirv ([rust-gpu](https://github.com/EmbarkStudios/rust-gpu/)) as it uses tar rather than ar as .rlib format, but it is useful for dylib reading required for loading proc macros. (cc `@eddyb)`
The object crate is already trusted as dependency of libstd through backtrace. As far as I know it supports reading all object file formats used by targets for which we support rust dylibs with crate metadata, but I am not certain. If this happens to not be the case, I could keep using LLVM for reading dylib metadata.
Marked as WIP for a perf run and as it is based on #83637.
Implement `x.py test src/tools/clippy --bless`
- Add clippy_dev to the rust workspace
Before, it would give an error that it wasn't either included or
excluded from the workspace:
```
error: current package believes it's in a workspace when it's not:
current: /home/joshua/rustc/src/tools/clippy/clippy_dev/Cargo.toml
workspace: /home/joshua/rustc/Cargo.toml
this may be fixable by adding `src/tools/clippy/clippy_dev` to the `workspace.members` array of the manifest located at: /home/joshua/rustc/Cargo.toml
Alternatively, to keep it out of the workspace, add the package to the `workspace.exclude` array, or add an empty `[workspace]` table to the package's manifest.
```
- Change clippy's copy of compiletest not to special-case
rust-lang/rust. Using OUT_DIR confused `clippy_dev` and it couldn't find
the test outputs. This is one of the reasons why `cargo dev bless` used
to silently do nothing (the others were that `CARGO_TARGET_DIR` and
`PROFILE` weren't set appropriately).
- Run clippy_dev on test failure
I tested this by removing a couple lines from a stderr file, and they
were correctly replaced.
- Fix clippy_dev warnings
Update grab bag
This PR slides a bunch of crate versions forward until suddenly a bunch of deps fall out of the tree!
In doing so this mostly picks up a version bump in the `redox_users` crate which makes most of the features default to optional.
crossbeam-utils 0.7 => 0.8.3 (where applicable)
https://github.com/crossbeam-rs/crossbeam/blob/master/crossbeam-utils/CHANGELOG.md
directories 3.0.1 => 3.0.2
ignore 0.4.16 => 0.4.17
tempfile 3.0.5 => tempfile 3.2
Removes constant_time_eq from deps exceptions
Removes arrayref from deps exceptions
And also removes:
- blake2b_simd
- const_fn (the package, not the feature)
- constant_time_eq
- redox_users 0.3.4
- rust-argon2
- Add clippy_dev to the rust workspace
Before, it would give an error that it wasn't either included or
excluded from the workspace:
```
error: current package believes it's in a workspace when it's not:
current: /home/joshua/rustc/src/tools/clippy/clippy_dev/Cargo.toml
workspace: /home/joshua/rustc/Cargo.toml
this may be fixable by adding `src/tools/clippy/clippy_dev` to the `workspace.members` array of the manifest located at: /home/joshua/rustc/Cargo.toml
Alternatively, to keep it out of the workspace, add the package to the `workspace.exclude` array, or add an empty `[workspace]` table to the package's manifest.
```
- Change clippy's copy of compiletest not to special-case
rust-lang/rust. Using OUT_DIR confused `clippy_dev` and it couldn't find
the test outputs. This is one of the reasons why `cargo dev bless` used
to silently do nothing (the others were that `CARGO_TARGET_DIR` and
`PROFILE` weren't set appropriately).
- Run clippy_dev on test failure
I tested this by removing a couple lines from a stderr file, and they
were correctly replaced.
- Fix clippy_dev warnings
Use arrayvec 0.7, drop smallvec 0.6
With the arrival of min const generics, many alt-vec libraries have
updated to use it in some way and arrayvec is no exception. Use the
latest with minor refactoring.
Also, rustc_workspace_hack is the only user of smallvec 0.6 in the
entire tree, so drop it.
With the arrival of min const generics, many alt-vec libraries have
updated to use it in some way and arrayvec is no exception. Use the
latest with minor refactoring.
Also, rustc_workspace_hack is the only user of smallvec 0.6 in the
entire tree, so drop it.
Update stdarch submodule (to before it switched to const generics)
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83278#issuecomment-812389823: This unblocks #82539.
Major changes:
- More AVX-512 intrinsics.
- More ARM & AArch64 NEON intrinsics.
- Updated unstable WASM intrinsics to latest draft standards.
- std_detect is now a separate crate instead of a submodule of std.
I double-checked and the first use of const generics looks like 8d5017861e, which isn't included in this PR.
r? `@Amanieu`
This also includes a cherry-pick of
ec1461905b
and https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1108 to fix a build
failure.
It also adds a re-export of various macros to the crate root of libstd -
previously they would show up automatically because std_detect was defined
in the same crate.
Bump libc dependency of std to 0.2.93
Update `libc` dependency of `std` to the latest version. That allows to consume the https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/2131 fix and fix build for the `mipsel-unknown-linux-uclibc` target.
r? `@JohnTitor`
Add an Mmap wrapper to rustc_data_structures
This wrapper implements StableAddress and falls back to directly reading the file on wasm32.
Taken from #83640, which I will close due to the perf regression.
Remove/replace some outdated crates from the dependency tree
- Remove `cloudabi` by updating `parking_lot` to 0.11.1.
- Replace `packed_simd` with `packed_simd2` by updating `bytecount` to 0.6.2.
Find more invalid doc attributes
- Lint on `#[doc(123)]`, `#[doc("hello")]`, etc.
- Lint every attribute; e.g., will now report two warnings for `#[doc(foo, bar)]`
- Add hyphen to "crate level"
- Display paths like `#[doc(foo::bar)]` correctly instead of as an empty string
Update to rustc-rayon 0.3.1
This pulls in rust-lang/rustc-rayon#8 to fix#81425. (h/t `@ammaraskar)`
That revealed weak constraints on `rustc_arena::DropArena`, because its
`DropType` was holding type-erased raw pointers to generic `T`. We can
implement `Send` for `DropType` (under `cfg(parallel_compiler)`) by
requiring all `T: Send` before they're type-erased.
This pulls in rust-lang/rustc-rayon#8 to fix#81425. (h/t @ammaraskar)
That revealed weak constraints on `rustc_arena::DropArena`, because its
`DropType` was holding type-erased raw pointers to generic `T`. We can
implement `Send` for `DropType` (under `cfg(parallel_compiler)`) by
requiring all `T: Send` before they're type-erased.
Update Cargo
Output of `git log --oneline c68432f1e..970bc67c3`:
970bc67c3 (HEAD, origin/master, origin/auto-cargo, origin/HEAD) Auto merge of #9243 - wickerwaka:configurable-env-doc, r=ehuss
4d7a29b75 Document the configurable-env usntable option
f7a7a3f91 Auto merge of #9229 - alexcrichton:fix-borrow-mut, r=ehuss
3f2ece7a9 Fix a `BorrowMut` error when stdout is closed
7441e8c23 Auto merge of #8825 - Aaron1011:feature/report-future-incompat, r=ehuss
139ed73f5 Add future-incompat tracking issue number.
9ea350368 Fix some minor formatting issues.
f03d47ce4 Address review comments
6177c6584 Implement future incompatibility report support
c69409658 Auto merge of #9022 - nagisa:nagisa/manifest_path, r=alexcrichton
548300b20 Add the path to the manifest in json output
99e714c05 Auto merge of #9230 - kornelski:nobinaries, r=alexcrichton
61a31bc5f Auto merge of #9236 - kornelski:track-assert, r=Eh2406
3f7f0942c track_caller on custom assert functions
6977dee10 Explain `cargo install` is not for libraries
e4aebf0a0 Auto merge of #9231 - joshtriplett:clear-to-eol-if-color, r=alexcrichton
b219f0eb7 Auto merge of #9181 - jyn514:computer-says-no, r=ehuss
0b1816578 Remove unhelpful link to Cargo book
ea46f5ce3 Use ANSI clear-to-EOL if color is force-enabled
a6394bcc1 Remove unnecessary `config` argument to `Features::add`
3a86ecf2d Fix TODO about nightly features
09677c83c Be less unix-centric in error messages
ecfdced0d Fix test that assumed tests always were run on the stable channel
eba541994 Update comment in build_script_env
a5720117f Make `nightly_features_allowed` a field instead of a function
169b09ce7 Compute `enable_nightly_features` once instead of on each call
8fc86e155 Remove unused thread_locals
4b096beae Fix `masquerade_as_nightly_cargo` in work threads
e56417c8c Suggest RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=crate instead of RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=1
418129dae Downgrade error to a warning when `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP` is set or this is the nightly channel
6c422a2c0 Restrict RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP in build.rs
Bump libc dependency of std to 0.2.88.
This PR bumps the `libc` dependency of `std` to 0.2.88. This will fix `TcpListener::accept` for Android on x86 platforms (31a2777d8f).
This will really finally fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/82400 for the main branch :)
r? ``@JohnTitor``
Update minifier dependency version
Very small PR simply upgrading the minifier-rs version we use in rustdoc.
Some details might be useful: there were a few bug fixes and a lot of cleanup/code improvements.
r? `@camelid`
Output of `git log --oneline c68432f1e..970bc67c3`:
970bc67c3 (HEAD, origin/master, origin/auto-cargo, origin/HEAD) Auto merge of #9243 - wickerwaka:configurable-env-doc, r=ehuss
4d7a29b75 Document the configurable-env usntable option
f7a7a3f91 Auto merge of #9229 - alexcrichton:fix-borrow-mut, r=ehuss
3f2ece7a9 Fix a `BorrowMut` error when stdout is closed
7441e8c23 Auto merge of #8825 - Aaron1011:feature/report-future-incompat, r=ehuss
139ed73f5 Add future-incompat tracking issue number.
9ea350368 Fix some minor formatting issues.
f03d47ce4 Address review comments
6177c6584 Implement future incompatibility report support
c69409658 Auto merge of #9022 - nagisa:nagisa/manifest_path, r=alexcrichton
548300b20 Add the path to the manifest in json output
99e714c05 Auto merge of #9230 - kornelski:nobinaries, r=alexcrichton
61a31bc5f Auto merge of #9236 - kornelski:track-assert, r=Eh2406
3f7f0942c track_caller on custom assert functions
6977dee10 Explain `cargo install` is not for libraries
e4aebf0a0 Auto merge of #9231 - joshtriplett:clear-to-eol-if-color, r=alexcrichton
b219f0eb7 Auto merge of #9181 - jyn514:computer-says-no, r=ehuss
0b1816578 Remove unhelpful link to Cargo book
ea46f5ce3 Use ANSI clear-to-EOL if color is force-enabled
a6394bcc1 Remove unnecessary `config` argument to `Features::add`
3a86ecf2d Fix TODO about nightly features
09677c83c Be less unix-centric in error messages
ecfdced0d Fix test that assumed tests always were run on the stable channel
eba541994 Update comment in build_script_env
a5720117f Make `nightly_features_allowed` a field instead of a function
169b09ce7 Compute `enable_nightly_features` once instead of on each call
8fc86e155 Remove unused thread_locals
4b096beae Fix `masquerade_as_nightly_cargo` in work threads
e56417c8c Suggest RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=crate instead of RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=1
418129dae Downgrade error to a warning when `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP` is set or this is the nightly channel
6c422a2c0 Restrict RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP in build.rs
Update tracing to 0.1.25
* Update tracing from 0.1.18 to 0.1.25
* Update tracing-subscriber from 0.2.13 to 0.2.16
* Update tracing-tree from 0.1.6 to 0.1.8
* Add pin-project-lite to the list of allowed dependencies (it is now a direct dependency of tracing).
Always compile rustdoc with debug logging enabled when `download-rustc` is set
Previously, logging at DEBUG or below would always be silenced, because
rustc compiles tracing with the `static_max_level_info` feature. That
makes sense for release artifacts, but not for developing rustdoc.
Instead, this compiles two different versions of tracing: one in the
release artifacts, distributed in the sysroot, and a new version
compiled by rustdoc. Since `rustc_driver` is always linked to the
version of sysroot, this copy/pastes `init_env_logging` into rustdoc.
To avoid compiling an unnecessary version of tracing when
`download-rustc` isn't set, this adds a new `using-ci-artifacts`
feature for rustdoc and passes that feature in bootstrap.
Addresses https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81930. This builds on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79540.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Previously, logging at DEBUG or below would always be silenced, because
rustc compiles tracing with the `static_max_level_info` feature. That
makes sense for release artifacts, but not for developing rustdoc.
Instead, this compiles two different versions of tracing: one in the
release artifacts, distributed in the sysroot, and a new version
compiled by rustdoc. Since `rustc_driver` is always linked to the
version of sysroot, this copy/pastes `init_env_logging` into rustdoc.
The builds the second version of tracing unconditionally; see the code
for details on why.
Update measureme dependency to the latest version
This version adds the ability to use `rdpmc` hardware-based performance
counters instead of wall-clock time for measuring duration. This also
introduces a dependency on the `perf-event-open-sys` crate on Linux
which is used when using hardware counters.
r? ```@oli-obk```
Replace const_cstr with cstr crate
This PR replaces the `const_cstr` macro inside `rustc_data_structures` with `cstr` macro from [cstr](https://crates.io/crates/cstr) crate.
The two macros basically serve the same purpose, which is to generate `&'static CStr` from a string literal. `cstr` is better because it validates the literal at compile time, while the existing `const_cstr` does it at runtime when `debug_assertions` is enabled. In addition, the value `cstr` generates can be used in constant context (which is seemingly not needed anywhere currently, though).
This version adds the ability to use `rdpmc` hardware-based performance
counters instead of wall-clock time for measuring duration. This also
introduces a dependency on the `perf-event-open-sys` crate on Linux
which is used when using hardware counters.
Make the `Query` enum a simple struct.
A lot of code in `rustc_query_system` is generic over it, only to encode an exceptional error case: query cycles.
The delayed computations are now done at cycle detection.
rustc_codegen_ssa: tune codegen according to available concurrency
This change tunes ahead-of-time codegening according to the amount of
concurrency available, rather than according to the number of CPUs on
the system. This can lower memory usage by reducing the number of
compiled LLVM modules in memory at once, particularly across several
rustc instances.
Previously, each rustc instance would assume that it should codegen
ahead of time to meet the demand of number-of-CPUs workers. But often, a
rustc instance doesn't have nearly that much concurrency available to
it, because the concurrency availability is split, via the jobserver,
across all active rustc instances spawned by the driving cargo process,
and is further limited by the `-j` flag argument. Therefore, each rustc
might have had several times the number of LLVM modules in memory than
it really needed to meet demand. If the modules were large, the effect
on memory usage would be noticeable.
With this change, the required amount of ahead-of-time codegen scales up
with the actual number of workers running within a rustc instance. Note
that the number of workers running can be less than the actual
concurrency available to a rustc instance. However, if more concurrency
is actually available, workers are spun up quickly as job tokens are
acquired, and the ahead-of-time codegen scales up quickly as well.
This change tunes ahead-of-time codegening according to the amount of
concurrency available, rather than according to the number of CPUs on
the system. This can lower memory usage by reducing the number of
compiled LLVM modules in memory at once, particularly across several
rustc instances.
Previously, each rustc instance would assume that it should codegen
ahead of time to meet the demand of number-of-CPUs workers. But often, a
rustc instance doesn't have nearly that much concurrency available to
it, because the concurrency availability is split, via the jobserver,
across all active rustc instances spawned by the driving cargo process,
and is further limited by the `-j` flag argument. Therefore, each rustc
might have had several times the number of LLVM modules in memory than
it really needed to meet demand. If the modules were large, the effect
on memory usage would be noticeable.
With this change, the required amount of ahead-of-time codegen scales up
with the actual number of workers running within a rustc instance. Note
that the number of workers running can be less than the actual
concurrency available to a rustc instance. However, if more concurrency
is actually available, workers are spun up quickly as job tokens are
acquired, and the ahead-of-time codegen scales up quickly as well.
Borrowck: refactor visited map to a bitset
This PR refactors `Borrows` and the `precompute_borrows_out_of_scope` function so that this initial phase has a much reduced memory pressure. This is achieved by reducing what is stored on the heap, and also reusing heap memory as much as possible.
This allows a build system to indicate a location in its own dependency
specification files (eg Cargo's `Cargo.toml`) which can be reported
along side any unused crate dependency.
This supports several types of location:
- 'json' - provide some json-structured data, which is included in the json diagnostics
in a `tool_metadata` field
- 'raw' - emit the provided string into the output. This also appears as a json string in
`tool_metadata`.
If no `--extern-location` is explicitly provided then a default json entry of the form
`"tool_metadata":{"name":<cratename>,"path":<cratepath>}` is emitted.
For better throughput during parallel processing by LLVM, we used to sort
CGUs largest to smallest. This would lead to better thread utilization
by, for example, preventing a large CGU from being processed last and
having only one LLVM thread working while the rest remained idle.
However, this strategy would lead to high memory usage, as it meant the
LLVM-IR for all of the largest CGUs would be resident in memory at once.
Instead, we can compromise by ordering CGUs such that the largest and
smallest are first, second largest and smallest are next, etc. If there
are large size variations, this can reduce memory usage significantly.
Add AArch64 big-endian and ILP32 targets
This PR adds 3 new AArch64 targets:
- `aarch64_be-unknown-linux-gnu`
- `aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu_ilp32`
- `aarch64_be-unknown-linux-gnu_ilp32`
It also fixes some ABI issues on big-endian ARM and AArch64.
Upgrade Chalk
~~Blocked on rust-lang/chalk#670~~
~~Now blocked on rust-lang/chalk#680 and release~~
In addition to the straight upgrade, I also tried to fix some tests by properly returning variables and max universes in the solution. Unfortunately, this actually triggers the same perf problem that rustc traits code runs into in `canonicalizer`. Not sure what the root cause of this problem is, or why it's supposed to be solved in chalk.
r? ```@nikomatsakis```
Add error message for private fn
Attempts to add a more detailed error when a `const_evaluatable` fn from another scope is used inside of a scope which cannot access it.
r? ````@lcnr````
* Reuse memory
* simplify `next_def_id`, avoid multiple hashing and unnecessary lookups
* remove `all_fake_def_ids`, use the global map instead (probably not a good step toward parallelization, though...)
* convert `add_deref_target` to iterative implementation
* use `ArrayVec` where we know the max number of elements
* minor touchups here and there
* avoid building temporary vectors that get appended to other vectors
At most places I may or may not be doing the compiler's job is this PR.
Split rustdoc JSON types into separately versioned crate
For now just an in-tree change.
In the future, this may be exposed as a standalone crate with standard semver.
cc #79813
This PR adds an allow-by-default future-compatibility lint
`SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS`. It fires when a trailing semicolon in a
macro body is ignored due to the macro being used in expression
position:
```rust
macro_rules! foo {
() => {
true; // WARN
}
}
fn main() {
let val = match true {
true => false,
_ => foo!()
};
}
```
The lint takes its level from the macro call site, and
can be allowed for a particular macro by adding
`#[allow(semicolon_in_expressions_from_macros)]`.
The lint is set to warn for all internal rustc crates (when being built
by a stage1 compiler). After the next beta bump, we can enable
the lint for the bootstrap compiler as well.
Update cargo
7 commits in 783bc43c660bf39c1e562c8c429b32078ad3099b..c3abcfe8a75901c7c701557a728941e8fb19399e
2021-01-20 19:02:26 +0000 to 2021-01-25 16:16:43 +0000
- Minor update to tracking issue template. (rust-lang/cargo#9097)
- Add some extra help to `cargo new` and invalid package names. (rust-lang/cargo#9098)
- Fix compilation with serde 1.0.122 (rust-lang/cargo#9102)
- Add suggestion for bad package id. (rust-lang/cargo#9095)
- Remove Registry::new. (rust-lang/cargo#9093)
- Fix: set default git config search path for tests (rust-lang/cargo#9035)
- Unstable updates (rust-lang/cargo#9092)
Refractor a few more types to `rustc_type_ir`
In the continuation of #79169, ~~blocked on that PR~~.
This PR:
- moves `IntVarValue`, `FloatVarValue`, `InferTy` (and friends) and `Variance`
- creates the `IntTy`, `UintTy` and `FloatTy` enums in `rustc_type_ir`, based on their `ast` and `chalk_ir` equilavents, and uses them for types in the rest of the compiler.
~~I will split up that commit to make this easier to review and to have a better commit history.~~
EDIT: done, I split the PR in commits of 200-ish lines each
r? `````@nikomatsakis````` cc `````@jackh726`````
Replace version_check dependency with own version parsing code
This gives compiler maintainers a better degree of control
over how the version gets parsed and is a good way to ensure
that there are no changes of behaviour in the future.
Also, issue a warning if the version is invalid instead of erroring
so that we stay forwards compatible with possible future changes
of the versioning scheme.
Last, this improves the present test a little.
Fixes#79436
r? `@petrochenkov`
Various ABI refactorings
This includes changes to the rust abi and various refactorings that will hopefully make it easier to use the abi handling infrastructure of rustc in cg_clif. There are several refactorings that I haven't done. I am opening this draft PR to check that I haven't broken any non x86_64 architectures.
r? `@ghost`
This gives compiler maintainers a better degree of control
over how the version gets parsed and is a good way to ensure
that there are no changes of behaviour in the future.
Also, issue a warning if the version is invalid instead of erroring
so that we stay forwards compatible with possible future changes
of the versioning scheme.
Last, this improves the present test a little.
Rationale:
- `atty` is widely used in the Rust ecosystem
- We already use it (in `rustc_errors` and other places)
- We shouldn't be rolling our own TTY detector when there's a
widely-used, well-tested package that we can use