Commit Graph

121 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nikita Popov
85eaadfc01 Update to LLVM 18 2024-02-13 10:33:40 +01:00
Nikita Popov
bb7c483e48 Update to LLVM 17.0.6 2023-12-14 09:54:14 +01:00
Nikita Popov
531830cecd Update to LLVM 17.0.0
This rebases our LLVM fork to 17.0.0.

Fixes #115681.
2023-09-19 11:14:35 +02:00
Nikita Popov
8c1c7d37b2 Update LLVM submodule 2023-08-07 20:35:55 +02:00
Trevor Gross
ffad01ada3 Update .gitmodules to use shallow submodule clones
This change makes submodule checkouts shallow by default. This
significantly reduces the time needed to do a recursive checkout when
`--shallow-submodules` is not specified, such as when `x` is not being
used.
2023-07-15 21:00:54 -04:00
Nikita Popov
5ff8767b36 Update to LLVM 16.0.5 2023-06-05 14:19:09 +02:00
Nikita Popov
2175dab137 Update to LLVM 16.0.1 2023-04-05 12:40:04 +02:00
Nikita Popov
237f703a6d Upgrade to LLVM 16 2023-03-22 09:30:37 +01:00
Nikita Popov
4192743ab7 Revert "Auto merge of #107224 - nikic:llvm-16, r=cuviper"
This reverts commit 4a04d086ca, reversing
changes made to 2d0a7def33.
2023-03-18 23:49:24 +01:00
Nikita Popov
f4f322c674 Upgrade to LLVM 16 2023-03-17 09:43:24 +01:00
Mark Rousskov
8d9cef4709 Directly import rust-installer submodule
This moves the rust-installer code to be directly hosted in
rust-lang/rust, since it's not used elsewhere and this makes it easier
to make and review changes without needing a separate upstream commit.
2023-03-07 08:30:08 -05:00
Nikita Popov
530a687a4b Update LLVM submodule 2022-12-07 08:40:49 +01:00
Oli Scherer
d9382d03bd Remove miri submodule 2022-09-21 15:35:53 +00:00
Eric Huss
4a7e2fbb7b Sunset RLS 2022-08-27 21:36:08 -07:00
Nikita Popov
8c1f9d04e8 Update LLVM submodule 2022-08-09 12:39:59 +02:00
Amos Wenger
3c98486a0c Remove rust-analyzer submodule 2022-07-24 10:36:44 +02:00
Nikita Popov
6e6b3eaa9f Update LLVM submodule 2022-06-25 09:36:03 +02:00
Josh Stone
cbe2216709 Update to LLVM 14.0.0 final 2022-03-23 11:42:13 -07:00
Nikita Popov
599a03c9b5 Update LLVM submodule 2022-02-16 21:15:30 +01:00
Josh Stone
03cf07f85f Update to the final LLVM 13.0.0 release 2021-10-01 21:06:19 -07:00
Nikita Popov
f3ae726f30 Update to LLVM 13 2021-08-16 20:24:02 +02:00
Nikita Popov
abb1e64f51 Update to LLVM 12.0.1 2021-07-12 08:53:53 +02:00
Joshua Nelson
e659b6de91 Delete rustfmt submodule 2021-05-14 21:52:54 -05:00
Josh Stone
3a961407c8 Update to LLVM 12.0.0 final 2021-04-15 15:22:24 -07:00
Nikita Popov
ff2111a905 Update submodule to LLVM 12 2021-03-01 23:35:34 +01:00
Josh Stone
c1d9423959 Update to LLVM 11.0.1 2021-01-07 11:32:10 -08:00
Josh Stone
5c4565771e Rebase LLVM onto 11.0.0 final 2020-10-14 12:13:20 -07:00
Josh Stone
883a7a5c05 Rebase LLVM onto 11.0.0-rc3 2020-09-22 10:16:03 -07:00
Josh Stone
636ca7a412 Upgrade to LLVM 11 (rc2) 2020-08-22 13:44:54 -07:00
Alex Crichton
06d565c967 std: Switch from libbacktrace to gimli
This commit is a proof-of-concept for switching the standard library's
backtrace symbolication mechanism on most platforms from libbacktrace to
gimli. The standard library's support for `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` requires
in-process parsing of object files and DWARF debug information to
interpret it and print the filename/line number of stack frames as part
of a backtrace.

Historically this support in the standard library has come from a
library called "libbacktrace". The libbacktrace library seems to have
been extracted from gcc at some point and is written in C. We've had a
lot of issues with libbacktrace over time, unfortunately, though. The
library does not appear to be actively maintained since we've had
patches sit for months-to-years without comments. We have discovered a
good number of soundness issues with the library itself, both when
parsing valid DWARF as well as invalid DWARF. This is enough of an issue
that the libs team has previously decided that we cannot feed untrusted
inputs to libbacktrace. This also doesn't take into account the
portability of libbacktrace which has been difficult to manage and
maintain over time. While possible there are lots of exceptions and it's
the main C dependency of the standard library right now.

For years it's been the desire to switch over to a Rust-based solution
for symbolicating backtraces. It's been assumed that we'll be using the
Gimli family of crates for this purpose, which are targeted at safely
and efficiently parsing DWARF debug information. I've been working
recently to shore up the Gimli support in the `backtrace` crate. As of a
few weeks ago the `backtrace` crate, by default, uses Gimli when loaded
from crates.io. This transition has gone well enough that I figured it
was time to start talking seriously about this change to the standard
library.

This commit is a preview of what's probably the best way to integrate
the `backtrace` crate into the standard library with the Gimli feature
turned on. While today it's used as a crates.io dependency, this commit
switches the `backtrace` crate to a submodule of this repository which
will need to be updated manually. This is not done lightly, but is
thought to be the best solution. The primary reason for this is that the
`backtrace` crate needs to do some pretty nontrivial filesystem
interactions to locate debug information. Working without `std::fs` is
not an option, and while it might be possible to do some sort of
trait-based solution when prototyped it was found to be too unergonomic.
Using a submodule allows the `backtrace` crate to build as a submodule
of the `std` crate itself, enabling it to use `std::fs` and such.

Otherwise this adds new dependencies to the standard library. This step
requires extra attention because this means that these crates are now
going to be included with all Rust programs by default. It's important
to note, however, that we're already shipping libbacktrace with all Rust
programs by default and it has a bunch of C code implementing all of
this internally anyway, so we're basically already switching
already-shipping functionality to Rust from C.

* `object` - this crate is used to parse object file headers and
  contents. Very low-level support is used from this crate and almost
  all of it is disabled. Largely we're just using struct definitions as
  well as convenience methods internally to read bytes and such.

* `addr2line` - this is the main meat of the implementation for
  symbolication. This crate depends on `gimli` for DWARF parsing and
  then provides interfaces needed by the `backtrace` crate to turn an
  address into a filename / line number. This crate is actually pretty
  small (fits in a single file almost!) and mirrors most of what
  `dwarf.c` does for libbacktrace.

* `miniz_oxide` - the libbacktrace crate transparently handles
  compressed debug information which is compressed with zlib. This crate
  is used to decompress compressed debug sections.

* `gimli` - not actually used directly, but a dependency of `addr2line`.

* `adler32`- not used directly either, but a dependency of
  `miniz_oxide`.

The goal of this change is to improve the safety of backtrace
symbolication in the standard library, especially in the face of
possibly malformed DWARF debug information. Even to this day we're still
seeing segfaults in libbacktrace which could possibly become security
vulnerabilities. This change should almost entirely eliminate this
possibility whilc also paving the way forward to adding more features
like split debug information.

Some references for those interested are:

* Original addition of libbacktrace - #12602
* OOM with libbacktrace - #24231
* Backtrace failure due to use of uninitialized value - #28447
* Possibility to feed untrusted data to libbacktrace - #21889
* Soundness fix for libbacktrace - #33729
* Crash in libbacktrace - #39468
* Support for macOS, never merged - ianlancetaylor/libbacktrace#2
* Performance issues with libbacktrace - #29293, #37477
* Update procedure is quite complicated due to how many patches we
  need to carry - #50955
* Libbacktrace doesn't work on MinGW with dynamic libs - #71060
* Segfault in libbacktrace on macOS - #71397

Switching to Rust will not make us immune to all of these issues. The
crashes are expected to go away, but correctness and performance may
still have bugs arise. The gimli and `backtrace` crates, however, are
actively maintained unlike libbacktrace, so this should enable us to at
least efficiently apply fixes as situations come up.
2020-07-28 16:34:01 -07:00
mark
2c31b45ae8 mv std libs to library/ 2020-07-27 19:51:13 -05:00
Mark Rousskov
cc4f547cf4 Revert "std: Switch from libbacktrace to gimli"
This reverts commit 13db3cc1e8.
2020-07-22 07:16:45 -04:00
Alex Crichton
13db3cc1e8 std: Switch from libbacktrace to gimli
This commit is a proof-of-concept for switching the standard library's
backtrace symbolication mechanism on most platforms from libbacktrace to
gimli. The standard library's support for `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` requires
in-process parsing of object files and DWARF debug information to
interpret it and print the filename/line number of stack frames as part
of a backtrace.

Historically this support in the standard library has come from a
library called "libbacktrace". The libbacktrace library seems to have
been extracted from gcc at some point and is written in C. We've had a
lot of issues with libbacktrace over time, unfortunately, though. The
library does not appear to be actively maintained since we've had
patches sit for months-to-years without comments. We have discovered a
good number of soundness issues with the library itself, both when
parsing valid DWARF as well as invalid DWARF. This is enough of an issue
that the libs team has previously decided that we cannot feed untrusted
inputs to libbacktrace. This also doesn't take into account the
portability of libbacktrace which has been difficult to manage and
maintain over time. While possible there are lots of exceptions and it's
the main C dependency of the standard library right now.

For years it's been the desire to switch over to a Rust-based solution
for symbolicating backtraces. It's been assumed that we'll be using the
Gimli family of crates for this purpose, which are targeted at safely
and efficiently parsing DWARF debug information. I've been working
recently to shore up the Gimli support in the `backtrace` crate. As of a
few weeks ago the `backtrace` crate, by default, uses Gimli when loaded
from crates.io. This transition has gone well enough that I figured it
was time to start talking seriously about this change to the standard
library.

This commit is a preview of what's probably the best way to integrate
the `backtrace` crate into the standard library with the Gimli feature
turned on. While today it's used as a crates.io dependency, this commit
switches the `backtrace` crate to a submodule of this repository which
will need to be updated manually. This is not done lightly, but is
thought to be the best solution. The primary reason for this is that the
`backtrace` crate needs to do some pretty nontrivial filesystem
interactions to locate debug information. Working without `std::fs` is
not an option, and while it might be possible to do some sort of
trait-based solution when prototyped it was found to be too unergonomic.
Using a submodule allows the `backtrace` crate to build as a submodule
of the `std` crate itself, enabling it to use `std::fs` and such.

Otherwise this adds new dependencies to the standard library. This step
requires extra attention because this means that these crates are now
going to be included with all Rust programs by default. It's important
to note, however, that we're already shipping libbacktrace with all Rust
programs by default and it has a bunch of C code implementing all of
this internally anyway, so we're basically already switching
already-shipping functionality to Rust from C.

* `object` - this crate is used to parse object file headers and
  contents. Very low-level support is used from this crate and almost
  all of it is disabled. Largely we're just using struct definitions as
  well as convenience methods internally to read bytes and such.

* `addr2line` - this is the main meat of the implementation for
  symbolication. This crate depends on `gimli` for DWARF parsing and
  then provides interfaces needed by the `backtrace` crate to turn an
  address into a filename / line number. This crate is actually pretty
  small (fits in a single file almost!) and mirrors most of what
  `dwarf.c` does for libbacktrace.

* `miniz_oxide` - the libbacktrace crate transparently handles
  compressed debug information which is compressed with zlib. This crate
  is used to decompress compressed debug sections.

* `gimli` - not actually used directly, but a dependency of `addr2line`.

* `adler32`- not used directly either, but a dependency of
  `miniz_oxide`.

The goal of this change is to improve the safety of backtrace
symbolication in the standard library, especially in the face of
possibly malformed DWARF debug information. Even to this day we're still
seeing segfaults in libbacktrace which could possibly become security
vulnerabilities. This change should almost entirely eliminate this
possibility whilc also paving the way forward to adding more features
like split debug information.

Some references for those interested are:

* Original addition of libbacktrace - #12602
* OOM with libbacktrace - #24231
* Backtrace failure due to use of uninitialized value - #28447
* Possibility to feed untrusted data to libbacktrace - #21889
* Soundness fix for libbacktrace - #33729
* Crash in libbacktrace - #39468
* Support for macOS, never merged - ianlancetaylor/libbacktrace#2
* Performance issues with libbacktrace - #29293, #37477
* Update procedure is quite complicated due to how many patches we
  need to carry - #50955
* Libbacktrace doesn't work on MinGW with dynamic libs - #71060
* Segfault in libbacktrace on macOS - #71397

Switching to Rust will not make us immune to all of these issues. The
crashes are expected to go away, but correctness and performance may
still have bugs arise. The gimli and `backtrace` crates, however, are
actively maintained unlike libbacktrace, so this should enable us to at
least efficiently apply fixes as situations come up.
2020-07-17 14:32:18 -07:00
Aleksey Kladov
058c1b60a5 Add rust-analyzer submodule
The current plan is that submodule tracks the `release` branch of
rust-analyzer, which is updated once a week.

rust-analyzer is a workspace (with a virtual manifest), the actual
binary is provide by `crates/rust-analyzer` package.

Note that we intentionally don't add rust-analyzer to `Kind::Test`,
for two reasons.

*First*, at the moment rust-analyzer's test suite does a couple of
things which might not work in the context of rust repository. For
example, it shells out directly to `rustup` and `rustfmt`. So, making
this work requires non-trivial efforts.

*Second*, it seems unlikely that running tests in rust-lang/rust repo
would provide any additional guarantees. rust-analyzer builds with
stable and does not depend on the specifics of the compiler, so
changes to compiler can't break ra, unless they break stability
guarantee. Additionally, rust-analyzer itself is gated on bors, so we
are pretty confident that test suite passes.
2020-07-03 16:55:35 +02:00
Nikita Popov
9f128235b4 Update LLVM submodule 2020-05-20 20:14:16 +02:00
Oliver Scherer
06c44816c1 Delete the clippy submodule 2020-05-02 09:48:46 +02:00
Santiago Pastorino
4387a8b96e
Move rustc-guide submodule to rustc-dev-guide 2020-03-24 15:38:53 -03:00
Yuki Okushi
cdc6898a90 Update submodules to rust-lang 2020-01-25 17:58:10 +09:00
Josh Stone
0d2f9825b5 Rebase LLVM onto 9.0.1 2020-01-08 13:57:01 -08:00
Steve Klabnik
732842fbfe update submodules to rust-lang
These are the repositories I've moved from rust-lang-nursery to
rust-lang, so we should update the submodules too.
2019-10-30 08:37:05 -05:00
Alex Crichton
c7d285b781 Remove src/llvm-emscripten submodule
With #65251 landed there's no need to build two LLVM backends and ship
them with rustc, every target we have now uses the same LLVM backend!

This removes the `src/llvm-emscripten` submodule and additionally
removes all support from rustbuild for building the emscripten LLVM
backend. Multiple codegen backend support is left in place for now, and
this is intended to be an easy 10-15 minute win on CI times by avoiding
having to build LLVM twice.
2019-10-21 13:05:31 -07:00
Josh Stone
633ad73ef1 Update to LLVM 9.0.0 2019-09-20 09:36:03 -07:00
bors
38798c6d68 Auto merge of #62592 - nikic:actually-update-llvm, r=alexcrichton
Update to LLVM 9 trunk

Following the preparatory changes in #62474, this updates the LLVM submodule to https://github.com/rust-lang/llvm-project/tree/rustc/9.0-2019-07-12 and:

 * Changes the LLVM Rust bindings to account for the new SubtargetSubTypeKV.
 * Adjusts a codegen test for the new form of the byval attribute that takes a type.
 * Makes a PGO codegen test more liberal with regard to order and linkage.
 * Builds InstrProfilingPlatformWindows.c as part of libprofiler_builtins.
 * Moves registration of additional passes (in particular sanitizers) to the end of the module pass manager.
 * Disables LLDB on builders.

r? @alexcrichton
2019-07-16 23:05:06 +00:00
gnzlbg
77c14a5c5f Update the stdarch submodule 2019-07-15 14:05:28 +02:00
Nikita Popov
624fca6c12 Update LLVM submodule 2019-07-13 00:16:40 +02:00
Josh Stone
0dabf8c835 Rebase LLVM to 8.0.0 final 2019-03-18 15:59:24 -07:00
Ralf Jung
7596a10225 update Cargo.lock and miri URL 2019-02-19 21:54:49 +01:00
James Munns
606e5e07f6 Add embedded book 2019-02-04 05:20:43 -05:00
Josh Stone
df0466d0bb Rebase to the llvm-project monorepo
The new git submodule src/llvm-project is a monorepo replacing src/llvm
and src/tools/{clang,lld,lldb}.  This also serves as a rebase for these
projects to the new 8.x branch from trunk.

The src/llvm-emscripten fork is unchanged for now.
2019-01-25 15:39:54 -08:00
Alex Crichton
8d500572fa std: Use backtrace-sys from crates.io
This commit switches the standard library to using the `backtrace-sys`
crate from crates.io instead of duplicating the logic here in the Rust
repositor with the `backtrace-sys`'s crate's logic.

Eventually this will hopefully be a good step towards using the
`backtrace` crate directly from crates.io itself, but we're not quite
there yet! Hopefully this is a small incremental first step we can take.
2018-12-24 08:32:57 -08:00