remove support for rustc_safe_intrinsic attribute; use rustc_intrinsic functions instead
This brings us one step closer towards removing support for `extern "rust-intrinsic"` blocks, in favor of `#[rustc_intrinsic]` functions.
Also move `#[rustc_intrinsic]` under the `intrinsics` feature gate, to match the `extern "rust-intrinsic"` style.
Functions currently can't have mappings in multiple files, and if that ever
changes (e.g. to properly support expansion regions), this code will need to be
completely overhauled anyway.
We already had a dedicated `LocalFileId` index type, but previously we used a
raw `u32` for global file IDs, because index types were harder to pass through
FFI.
Simplify FFI calls for `-Ztime-llvm-passes` and `-Zprint-codegen-stats`
The existing code for these unstable LLVM-infodump flags was jumping through hoops to pass an allocated C string across the FFI boundary, when it's much simpler to just write to a `&RustString` instead.
coverage: Extract safe FFI wrapper functions to `llvm_cov`
This PR takes all of the inline `unsafe` calls in coverage codegen, and all the safe wrapper functions in `coverageinfo/mod.rs`, and moves them to a new `llvm_cov` submodule that is dedicated to safe FFI wrapper functions. This reduces the mixing of abstraction levels in the rest of coverage codegen.
As a follow-up, this PR also tidies up the names and signatures of several of the coverage FFI functions.
coverage: Simplify parts of coverage graph creation
This is a combination of three semi-related simplifications to how coverage graphs are created, grouped into one PR to avoid conflicts.
There are no observable changes to the output of any of the coverage tests.
[StableMIR] API to retrieve definitions from crates
Add functions to retrieve function definitions and static items from all crates (local and external).
For external crates, we're still missing items from trait implementation and primitives.
r? ````@compiler-errors:```` Do you know what is the best way to retrieve the associated items for primitives and trait implementations for external crates? Thanks!
Set "symbol name" in raw-dylib import libraries to the decorated name
`windows-rs` received a bug report that mixing raw-dylib generated and the Windows SDK import libraries was causing linker failures: <https://github.com/microsoft/windows-rs/issues/3285>
The root cause turned out to be #124958, that is we are not including the decorated name in the import library and so the import name type is also not being correctly set.
This change modifies the generation of import libraries to set the "symbol name" to the fully decorated name and correctly marks the import as being data vs function.
Note that this also required some changes to how the symbol is named within Rust: for MSVC we now need to use the decorated name but for MinGW we still need to use partially decorated (or undecorated) name.
Fixes#124958
Passing i686 MSVC and MinGW build: <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/actions/runs/11000433888?pr=130586>
r? `@ChrisDenton`
Tweak detection of multiple crate versions to be more encompassing
Previously, we only emitted the additional context if the type was in the same crate as the trait that appeared multiple times in the dependency tree. Now, we look at all traits looking for two with the same name in different crates with the same crate number, and we are more flexible looking for the types involved. This will work even if the type that implements the wrong trait version is from a different crate entirely.
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `CustomErrorHandler: ErrorHandler` is not satisfied because the trait comes from a different crate version
--> src/main.rs:5:17
|
5 | cnb_runtime(CustomErrorHandler {});
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ the trait `ErrorHandler` is not implemented for `CustomErrorHandler`
|
note: there are multiple different versions of crate `c` in the dependency graph
--> /home/gh-estebank/testcase-rustc-crate-version-mismatch/c-v0.2/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub trait ErrorHandler {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this is the required trait
|
::: src/main.rs:1:5
|
1 | use b::CustomErrorHandler;
| - one version of crate `c` is used here, as a dependency of crate `b`
2 | use c::cnb_runtime;
| - one version of crate `c` is used here, as a direct dependency of the current crate
|
::: /home/gh-estebank/testcase-rustc-crate-version-mismatch/b/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub struct CustomErrorHandler {}
| ----------------------------- this type doesn't implement the required trait
|
::: /home/gh-estebank/testcase-rustc-crate-version-mismatch/c-v0.1/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub trait ErrorHandler {}
| ---------------------- this is the found trait
= note: two types coming from two different versions of the same crate are different types even if they look the same
= help: you can use `cargo tree` to explore your dependency tree
```
Fix#89143.
Add functions to retrieve function definitions and static items from
all crates (local and external).
For external crates, add a query to retrieve the number of defs in a
foreign crate.
Basic inline assembly support for SPARC and SPARC64
This implements asm_experimental_arch (tracking issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93335) for SPARC and SPARC64.
This PR includes:
- General-purpose registers `r[0-31]` (`reg` register class, LLVM/GCC constraint `r`)
Supported types: i8, i16, i32, i64 (SPARC64-only)
Aliases: `g[0-7]` (`r[0-7]`), `o[0-7]` (`r[8-15]`), `l[0-7]` (`r[16-23]`), `i[0-7]` (`r[24-31]`)
- `y` register (clobber-only, needed for clobber_abi)
- preserves_flags: Integer condition codes (`icc`, `xcc`) and floating-point condition codes (`fcc*`)
The following are *not* included:
- 64-bit integer support on SPARC-V8+'s global or out registers (`g[0-7]`, `o[0-7]`): GCC's `h` constraint (it seems that there is no corresponding constraint in LLVM?)
- Floating-point registers (LLVM/GCC constraint `e`/`f`):
I initially tried to implement this, but postponed it for now because there seemed to be several parts in LLVM that behaved differently than in the LangRef's description.
- clobber_abi: Support for floating-point registers is needed.
Refs:
- LLVM
- Reserved registers https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-19.1.0/llvm/lib/Target/Sparc/SparcRegisterInfo.cpp#L52
- Register definitions https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-19.1.0/llvm/lib/Target/Sparc/SparcRegisterInfo.td
- Supported constraints https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#supported-constraint-code-list
- GCC
- Reserved registers 63b6967b06/gcc/config/sparc/sparc.h (L633-L658)
- Supported constraints https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Machine-Constraints.html
- SPARC ISA/ABI
- (64-bit ISA) The SPARC Architecture Manual, Version 9
(32-bit ISA) The SPARC Architecture Manual, Version 8
(64-bit ABI) System V Application Binary Interface SPARC Version 9 Processor Supplement, Rev 1.35
(32-bit ABI) System V Application Binary Interface SPARC Processor Supplement, Third Edition
The above docs can be downloaded from https://sparc.org/technical-documents
- (32-bit V8+ ABI) The V8+ Technical Specification
https://temlib.org/pub/SparcStation/Standards/V8plus.pdf
cc `@thejpster` (sparc-unknown-none-elf target maintainer)
(AFAIK, other sparc/sprac64 targets don't have target maintainers)
r? `@Amanieu`
`@rustbot` label +O-SPARC +A-inline-assembly
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `dep_2_reexport::Type: Trait` is not satisfied because the trait comes from a different crate version
--> multiple-dep-versions.rs:7:18
|
7 | do_something(Type);
| ^^^^ the trait `Trait` is not implemented for `dep_2_reexport::Type`
|
note: there are multiple different versions of crate `dependency` in the dependency graph
--> /home/gh-estebank/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/crate-loading/rmake_out/multiple-dep-versions-1.rs:4:1
|
3 | pub struct Type(pub i32);
| --------------- this type implements the required trait
4 | pub trait Trait {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this is the required trait
|
::: multiple-dep-versions.rs:1:1
|
1 | extern crate dep_2_reexport;
| ---------------------------- one version of crate `dependency` is used here, as a dependency of crate `foo`
2 | extern crate dependency;
| ------------------------ one version of crate `dependency` is used here, as a direct dependency of the current crate
|
::: /home/gh-estebank/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/crate-loading/rmake_out/multiple-dep-versions-2.rs:3:1
|
3 | pub struct Type;
| --------------- this type doesn't implement the required trait
4 | pub trait Trait {
| --------------- this is the found trait
= note: two types coming from two different versions of the same crate are different types even if they look the same
= help: you can use `cargo tree` to explore your dependency tree
```
The approach to accomplish this is a HACK, and we'd want a better way to do this. I believe that moving E0277 to be a structured diagnostic would help in that regard.
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `dep_2_reexport::Type: Trait` is not satisfied because the trait comes from a different crate version
--> multiple-dep-versions.rs:7:18
|
7 | do_something(Type);
| ^^^^ the trait `Trait` is not implemented for `dep_2_reexport::Type`
|
note: there are multiple different versions of crate `dependency` in the dependency graph
--> /home/gh-estebank/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/crate-loading/rmake_out/multiple-dep-versions-1.rs:4:1
|
3 | pub struct Type(pub i32);
| --------------- this type implements the required trait
4 | pub trait Trait {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this is the required trait
|
::: multiple-dep-versions.rs:1:1
|
1 | extern crate dep_2_reexport;
| ---------------------------- one version of crate `dependency` is used here, as a dependency of crate `foo`
2 | extern crate dependency;
| ------------------------ one version of crate `dependency` is used here, as a direct dependency of the current crate
|
::: /home/gh-estebank/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/crate-loading/rmake_out/multiple-dep-versions-2.rs:3:1
|
3 | pub struct Type;
| --------------- this type doesn't implement the required trait
4 | pub trait Trait {
| --------------- this is the found trait
= note: two types coming from two different versions of the same crate are different types even if they look the same
= help: you can use `cargo tree` to explore your dependency tree
note: required by a bound in `do_something`
--> /home/gh-estebank/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/crate-loading/rmake_out/multiple-dep-versions-1.rs:12:24
|
12 | pub fn do_something<X: Trait>(_: X) {}
| ^^^^^ required by this bound in `do_something`
```
Previously, we only emitted the additional context if the type was in the same crate as the trait that appeared multiple times in the dependency tree. Now, we look at all traits looking for two with the same name in different crates with the same crate number, and we are more flexible looking for the types involved. This will work even if the type that implements the wrong trait version is from a different crate entirely.
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `CustomErrorHandler: ErrorHandler` is not satisfied
--> src/main.rs:5:17
|
5 | cnb_runtime(CustomErrorHandler {});
| ----------- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ the trait `ErrorHandler` is not implemented for `CustomErrorHandler`
| |
| required by a bound introduced by this call
|
help: you have multiple different versions of crate `c` in your dependency graph
--> src/main.rs:1:5
|
1 | use b::CustomErrorHandler;
| ^ one version of crate `c` is used here, as a dependency of crate `b`
2 | use c::cnb_runtime;
| ^ one version of crate `c` is used here, as a direct dependency of the current crate
note: two types coming from two different versions of the same crate are different types even if they look the same
--> /home/gh-estebank/testcase-rustc-crate-version-mismatch/c-v0.2/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub trait ErrorHandler {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this is the required trait
|
::: /home/gh-estebank/testcase-rustc-crate-version-mismatch/b/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub struct CustomErrorHandler {}
| ----------------------------- this type doesn't implement the required trait
|
::: /home/gh-estebank/testcase-rustc-crate-version-mismatch/c-v0.1/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub trait ErrorHandler {}
| ---------------------- this is the found trait
= help: you can use `cargo tree` to explore your dependency tree
note: required by a bound in `cnb_runtime`
--> /home/gh-estebank/testcase-rustc-crate-version-mismatch/c-v0.2/src/lib.rs:3:41
|
3 | pub fn cnb_runtime(_error_handler: impl ErrorHandler) {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `cnb_runtime`
```
Fix#89143.
Make fn_abi_sanity_check a bit stricter
The Rust ABI must ignore all ZST arguments, all ignored arguments must be either ZST or uninhabited. And finally ScalarPair should never be passed as PassMode::Direct.
Remove unused intercrate dependencies
Checked by enabling `-Wunused-crate-dependencies`
`driver_impl` still depends on `index` to forward the `rustc_randomized_layouts` feature, and `rustc_main` depends on several unused crates for sysroot reasons
r? compiler
The Rust ABI must ignore all ZST arguments, all ignored arguments must
be either ZST or uninhabited. And finally ScalarPair should never be
passed as PassMode::Direct.
Only disable cache if predicate has opaques within it
This is an alternative to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/132075.
This refines the check implemented in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/126024 to only disable the global cache if the predicate being considered has opaques in it. This is still theoretically unsound, since goals can indirectly rely on opaques in the defining scope, but we're much less likely to hit it.
It doesn't totally fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132064: for example, `lemmy` goes from 1:29 (on rust 1.81) to 9:53 (on nightly) to 4:07 (after this PR). But I think it's at least *more* sound than a total revert :/
r? lcnr
Remove the `wasm32-wasi` target from rustc
This commit is the final step in the journey of renaming the historical `wasm32-wasi` target in the Rust compiler to `wasm32-wasip1`. Various steps in this journey so far have been:
* 2023-04-03: rust-lang/compiler-team#607 - initial proposal for this rename
* 2024-11-27: rust-lang/compiler-team#695 - amended schedule/procedure for rename
* 2024-01-29: rust-lang/rust#120468 - initial introduction of `wasm32-wasip1`
* 2024-06-18: rust-lang/rust#126662 - warn on usage of `wasm32-wasi`
* 2024-11-08: this PR - remove the `wasm32-wasi` target
The full transition schedule is in [this comment][comment] and is summarized with:
* 2024-05-02: Rust 1.78 released with `wasm32-wasip1` target
* 2024-09-05: Rust 1.81 released warning on usage of `wasm32-wasi`
* 2025-01-09: Rust 1.84 to be released without the `wasm32-wasi` target
This means that support on stable for the replacement target of `wasm32-wasip1` has currently been available for 6 months. Users have already seen warnings on stable for 2 months about usage of `wasm32-wasi` and stable users have another 2 months of warnings before the target is removed from stable.
This commit is intended to be the final step in this transition so the source tree should no longer mention `wasm32-wasi` except in historical reference to the older name of the `wasm32-wasip1` target.
[comment]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120468#issuecomment-1977878747
Add a new `wide-arithmetic` feature for WebAssembly
This commit adds a new rustc target feature named `wide-arithmetic` for WebAssembly targets. This corresponds to the [wide-arithmetic] proposal for WebAssembly which adds new instructions catered towards accelerating integer arithmetic larger than 64-bits. This proposal to WebAssembly is not standard yet so this new feature is flagged as an unstable target feature. Additionally Rust's LLVM version doesn't support this new feature yet since support will first be added in LLVM 20, so the feature filtering logic for LLVM is updated to handle this.
I'll also note that I'm not currently planning to add wasm-specific intrinsics to `std::arch::wasm32` at this time. The currently proposed instructions are all accessible through `i128` or `u128`-based operations which Rust already supports, so intrinsic shouldn't be necessary to get access to these new instructions.
[wide-arithmetic]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/wide-arithmetic
bootstrap/codegen_ssa: ship llvm-strip and use it for -Cstrip
Fixes#131206.
- Includes `llvm-strip` (a symlink to `llvm-objcopy`) in the compiler dist artifact so that it can be used for `-Cstrip` instead of the system tooling.
- Uses `llvm-strip` instead of `/usr/bin/strip` for macOS. macOS needs a specific linker and the system one is preferred, hence #130781 but that doesn't work when cross-compiling, so use the `llvm-strip` utility instead.
cc #123151
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #132259 (rustc_codegen_llvm: Add a new 'pc' option to branch-protection)
- #132409 (CI: switch 7 linux jobs to free runners)
- #132498 (Suggest fixing typos and let bindings at the same time)
- #132524 (chore(style): sync submodule exclusion list between tidy and rustfmt)
- #132567 (Properly suggest `E::assoc` when we encounter `E::Variant::assoc`)
- #132571 (add const_eval_select macro to reduce redundancy)
- #132637 (Do not filter empty lint passes & re-do CTFE pass)
- #132642 (Add documentation on `ast::Attribute`)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Add documentation on `ast::Attribute`
I was working again with attributes in clippy recently and I often find myself in need to read the source code to ensure it's doing what I want.
Instead, a bit of documentation would allow me (and hopefully others) to skip this step.
Do not filter empty lint passes & re-do CTFE pass
Some structs implement `LintPass` without having a `Lint` associated with them #125116 broke that behaviour by filtering them out. This PR ensures that lintless passes are not filtered out.
Properly suggest `E::assoc` when we encounter `E::Variant::assoc`
Use the right span when encountering an enum variant followed by an associated item so we don't lose the associated item in the resulting code.
Do not suggest the thing twice, once as a removal of the associated item and a second time as a typo suggestion.
Suggest fixing typos and let bindings at the same time
Fixes#132483
Currently, a suggestion for adding a let binding won't be shown if we suggest fixing a typo. This changes that behavior to always show both, if possible. Essentially, this turns the suggestion from
```rust
error[E0425]: cannot find value `x2` in this scope
--> src/main.rs:4:5
|
4 | x2 = 2;
| ^^ help: a local variable with a similar name exists: `x1`
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0425`.
```
to
```rust
error[E0425]: cannot find value `x2` in this scope
--> src/main.rs:4:5
|
4 | x2 = 2;
| ^^
|
help: a local variable with a similar name exists
|
4 | x1 = 2;
| ~~
help: you might have meant to introduce a new binding
|
4 | let x2 = 2;
| +++
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0425`.
```
for the following code:
```rust
fn main() {
let x1 = 1;
x2 = 2;
}
```
The original behavior only shows the suggestion for a let binding if a typo suggestion wasn't already displayed. However, this falls apart in the cases like the one above where we have multiple similar variables. I don't think it makes sense to hide this suggestion if there's a similar variable, since that defeats the purpose of this suggestion in that case (it's meant to help those coming from languages like Python).
rustc_codegen_llvm: Add a new 'pc' option to branch-protection
Add a new 'pc' option to -Z branch-protection for aarch64 that enables the use of PC as a diversifier in PAC branch protection code.
When the pauth-lr target feature is enabled in combination with -Z branch-protection=pac-ret,pc, the new 9.5-a instructions (pacibsppc, retaasppc, etc) will be generated.
mark some target features as 'forbidden' so they cannot be (un)set with -Ctarget-feature
The context for this is https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116344: some target features change the way floats are passed between functions. Changing those target features is unsound as code compiled for the same target may now use different ABIs.
So this introduces a new concept of "forbidden" target features (on top of the existing "stable " and "unstable" categories), and makes it a hard error to (un)set such a target feature. For now, the x86 and ARM feature `soft-float` is on that list. We'll have to make some effort to collect more relevant features, and similar features from other targets, but that can happen after the basic infrastructure for this landed. (These features are being collected in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131799.)
I've made this a warning for now to give people some time to speak up if this would break something.
MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/780
PassWrapper: adapt for new parameter in LLVM
llvm/llvm-project@390300d9f4 added a new parameter to some callbacks, so we have to handle them.
`@rustbot` label: +llvm-main
Remove unnecessary pub enum glob-imports from `rustc_middle::ty`
We used to have an idiom in the compiler where we'd prefix or suffix all the variants of an enum, for example `BoundRegionKind`, with something like `Br`, and then *glob-import* that enum variant directly.
`@noratrieb` brought this up, and I think that it's easier to read when we just use the normal style `EnumName::Variant`.
This PR is a bit large, but it's just naming.
The only somewhat opinionated change that this PR does is rename `BorrowKind::Imm` to `BorrowKind::Immutable` and same for the other variants. I think these enums are used sparingly enough that the extra length is fine.
r? `@noratrieb` or reassign
Revert "Avoid nested replacement ranges" from #129346.
It caused a test regression in the `cfg_eval.rs` crate. (The bugfix in #129346 was in a different commit; this commit was just a code simplification.)
r? `@petrochenkov`
remove support for extern-block const intrinsics
This converts all const-callable intrinsics into the "new" form of a regular `fn` with `#[rustc_intrinsic]` attribute. That simplifies some of the logic since those functions can be marked `const fn` like regular functions, so intrinsics no longer need a special case to be considered const-callable at all.
I also added a new attribute `#[rustc_const_stable_intrinsic]` to mark an intrinsic as being ready to be exposed on stable. Previously we used the `#[rustc_const_stable_indirect]` attribute for that, but that attribute had a dual role -- when used on a regular function, it is an entirely safe marker to make this function part of recursive const stability, but on an intrinsic it is a trusted marker requiring special care. It's not great for the same attribute to be sometimes fully checked and safe, and sometimes trusted and requiring special care, so I split this into two attributes.
This also fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/122652 by accepting intrinsics as const-stable if they have a fallback body that is recursively const-stable.
The library changes are best reviewed with whitespace hidden.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Support clobber_abi and vector registers (clobber-only) in PowerPC inline assembly
This supports `clobber_abi` which is one of the requirements of stabilization mentioned in #93335.
This basically does a similar thing I did in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/130630 to implement `clobber_abi` for s390x, but for powerpc/powerpc64/powerpc64le.
- This also supports vector registers (as `vreg`) as clobber-only, which need to support clobbering of them to implement `clobber_abi`.
- `vreg` should be able to accept `#[repr(simd)]` types as input/output if the unstable `altivec` target feature is enabled, but `core::arch::{powerpc,powerpc64}` vector types, `#[repr(simd)]`, and `core::simd` are all unstable, so the fact that this is currently a clobber-only should not be considered a blocker of clobber_abi implementation or stabilization. So I have not implemented it in this PR.
- See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/131551 (which is based on this PR) for a PR to implement this.
- (I'm not sticking to whether that PR should be a separate PR or part of this PR, so I can merge that PR into this PR if needed.)
Refs:
- PPC32 SysV: Section "Function Calling Sequence" in [System V Application Binary Interface PowerPC Processor Supplement](https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/elf/elfspec_ppc.pdf)
- PPC64 ELFv1: Section 3.2 "Function Calling Sequence" in [64-bit PowerPC ELF Application Binary Interface Supplement](https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/ELF/ppc64/PPC-elf64abi.html#FUNC-CALL)
- PPC64 ELFv2: Section 2.2 "Function Calling Sequence" in [64-Bit ELF V2 ABI Specification](https://openpowerfoundation.org/specifications/64bitelfabi/)
- AIX: [Register usage and conventions](https://www.ibm.com/docs/en/aix/7.3?topic=overview-register-usage-conventions), [Special registers in the PowerPC®](https://www.ibm.com/docs/en/aix/7.3?topic=overview-special-registers-in-powerpc), [AIX vector programming](https://www.ibm.com/docs/en/aix/7.3?topic=concepts-aix-vector-programming)
- Register definition in LLVM: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-19.1.0/llvm/lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCRegisterInfo.td#L189
If I understand the above four ABI documentations correctly, except for the PPC32 SysV's VR (Vector Registers) and 32-bit AIX (currently not supported by rustc)'s r13, there does not appear to be important differences in terms of implementing `clobber_abi`:
- The above four ABIs are consistent about FPR (0-13: volatile, 14-31: nonvolatile), CR (0-1,5-7: volatile, 2-4: nonvolatile), XER (volatile), and CTR (volatile).
- As for GPR, only the registers we are treating as reserved are slightly different
- r0, r3-r12 are volatile
- r1(sp, reserved), r14-31 are nonvolatile
- r2(reserved) is TOC pointer in PPC64 ELF/AIX, system-reserved register in PPC32 SysV (AFAIK used as thread pointer in Linux/BSDs)
- r13(reserved for non-32-bit-AIX) is thread pointer in PPC64 ELF, small data area pointer register in PPC32 SysV, "reserved under 64-bit environment; not restored across system calls[^r13]" in AIX)
- As for FPSCR, volatile in PPC64 ELFv1/AIX, some fields are volatile only in certain situations (rest are volatile) in PPC32 SysV/PPC64 ELFv2.
- As for VR (Vector Registers), it is not mentioned in PPC32 SysV, v0-v19 are volatile in both in PPC64 ELF/AIX, v20-v31 are nonvolatile in PPC64 ELF, reserved or nonvolatile depending on the ABI ([vec-extabi vs vec-default in LLVM](https://reviews.llvm.org/D89684), we are [using vec-extabi](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/131341#discussion_r1797693299)) in AIX:
> When the default Vector enabled mode is used, these registers are reserved and must not be used.
> In the extended ABI vector enabled mode, these registers are nonvolatile and their values are preserved across function calls
I left [FIXME comment about PPC32 SysV](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/131341#discussion_r1790496095) and added ABI check for AIX.
- As for VRSAVE, it is not mentioned in PPC32 SysV, nonvolatile in PPC64 ELFv1, reserved in PPC64 ELFv2/AIX
- As for VSCR, it is not mentioned in PPC32 SysV/PPC64 ELFv1, some fields are volatile only in certain situations (rest are volatile) in PPC64 ELFv2, volatile in AIX
We are currently treating r1-r2, r13 (non-32-bit-AIX), r29-r31, LR, CTR, and VRSAVE as reserved.
We are currently not processing anything about FPSCR and VSCR, but I feel those are things that should be processed by `preserves_flags` rather than `clobber_abi` if we need to do something about them. (However, PPCRegisterInfo.td in LLVM does not seem to define anything about them.)
Replaces #111335 and #124279
cc `@ecnelises` `@bzEq` `@lu-zero`
r? `@Amanieu`
`@rustbot` label +O-PowerPC +A-inline-assembly
[^r13]: callee-saved, according to [LLVM](6a6af0246b/llvm/lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCCallingConv.td (L322)) and [GCC](a9173a50e7/gcc/config/rs6000/rs6000.h (L859)).
Now that `Results` is the only impl of `ResultsVisitable`, the trait can
be removed. This simplifies things by removining unnecessary layers of
indirection and abstraction.
- `ResultsVisitor` is simpler.
- Its type parameter changes from `R` (an analysis result) to the
simpler `A` (an analysis).
- It no longer needs the `Domain` associated type, because it can use
`A::Domain`.
- Occurrences of `R` become `Results<'tcx, A>`, because there is now
only one kind of analysis results.
- `save_as_intervals` also changes type parameter from `R` to `A`.
- The `results.reconstruct_*` method calls are replaced with
`results.analysis.apply_*` method calls, which are equivalent.
- `Direction::visit_results_in_block` is simpler, with a single generic
param (`A`) instead of two (`D` and `R`/`F`, with a bound connecting
them). Likewise for `visit_results`.
- The `ResultsVisitor` impls for `MirBorrowCtxt` and
`StorageConflictVisitor` are now specific about the type of the
analysis results they work with. They both used to have a type param
`R` but they weren't genuinely generic. In both cases there was only a
single results type that made sense to instantiate them with.
The results of most analyses end up in a `Results<'tcx, A>`, where `A`
is the analysis. It's then possible to traverse the results via a
`ResultsVisitor`, which relies on the `ResultsVisitable` trait. (That
trait ends up using the same `apply_*` methods that were used when
computing the analysis, albeit indirectly.)
This pattern of "compute analysis results, then visit them" is common.
But there is one exception. For borrow checking we compute three
separate analyses (`Borrows`, `MaybeUninitializedPlaces`, and
`EverInitializedPlaces`), combine them into a single `BorrowckResults`,
and then do a single visit of that `BorrowckResults` with
`MirBorrowckResults`. `BorrowckResults` is just different enough from
`Results` that it requires the existence of `ResultsVisitable`, which
abstracts over the traversal differences between `Results` and
`BorrowckResults`.
This commit changes things by introducing `Borrowck` and bundling the
three borrowck analysis results into a standard `Results<Borrowck>`
instead of the exceptional `BorrowckResults`. Once that's done, the
results can be visited like any other analysis results.
`BorrowckResults` is removed, as is `impl ResultsVisitable for
BorrowckResults`. (It's instructive to see how similar the added `impl
Analysis for Borrowck` is to the removed `impl ResultsVisitable for
BorrowckResults`. They're both doing exactly the same things.)
Overall this increases the number of lines of code and might not seem
like a win. But it enables the removal of `ResultsVisitable` in the next
commit, which results in many simplifications.
Suggest creating unary tuples when types don't match a trait
When you want to have a variadic function, a common workaround to implement this is to create a trait and then implement that trait for various tuples. For example in `pyo3` there exists
```rust
/// Calls the object with only positional arguments.
pub fn call1(&self, args: impl IntoPy<Py<PyTuple>>) -> PyResult<&PyAny> {
...
}
```
with various impls like
```rust
impl<A: IntoPy<PyObject> IntoPy<Py<PyAny>> for (A,)
impl<A: IntoPy<PyObject, B: IntoPy<PyObject> IntoPy<Py<PyAny>> for (A, B)
... etc
```
This means that if you want to call the method with a single item you have to create a unary tuple, like `(x,)`, rather than just `x`.
This PR implements a suggestion to do that, if applicable.
find the generic container rather than simply looking up for the assoc with const arg
Fixes#132534
This issue is caused by mismatched generic parameters. Previously, it tried to find `T` in `trait X`, but after this change, it will find `T` in `fn a`.
r? `@compiler-errors` as this assertion was introduced by you.
Use backticks instead of single quotes for library feature names in diagnostics
This PR changes the text of library feature errors for using unstable or body-unstable items. Displaying library feature names in backticks is consistent with other diagnostics (e.g. those from `rustc_passes`) and with the `reason`s on unstable attributes in the library. Additionally, this simplifies diagnostics when supporting multiple unstable attributes on items (see #131824) since `DiagSymbolList` also displays symbols using backticks.
Register `~const` preds for `Deref` adjustments in HIR typeck
This doesn't *do* anything yet, since `Deref` and `DerefMut` aren't constified, and we explicitly don't error on calling non-const trait methods in HIR yet -- presumably that will wait until std is re-constified. But I'm confident this logic is correct, and this (afaict?) is the only major hole left in enforcing `~const` in HIR typeck.
r? fee1-dead
- Store a mut ref to a `BorrowckDiags` in `MirBorrowckCtxt` instead of
owning it, to save having to pass ownership in and out of
`promoted_mbcx`.
- Use `buffer_error` in a couple of suitable places.
Because there is no real reason for it to be a separate struct.
- It has no methods.
- It's easy to confuse with the nearby `BorrowckInferContext` (which
does have methods).
- The `mut` ref to it in `TypeChecker` makes it seem like any of the
fields within might be mutable, but only two (`all_facts` and
`constraints`) actually are.
- Two of the fields are `pub(crate)` but can be private.
This change makes a lot of code more concise and readable.
It's strange to have a struct that contains a single anonymous field
that is an enum. This commit merges them. This does require increasing
the visibility of `TypeOfInfo` to `pub(crate)`, but that seems
worthwhile.
Reduce dependence on the target name
The target name can be anything with custom target specs. Matching on fields inside the target spec is much more robust than matching on the target name.
Also remove the unused is_builtin target spec field.
remove const-support for align_offset and is_aligned
As part of the recent discussion to stabilize `ptr.is_null()` in const context, the general vibe was that it's okay for a const function to panic when the same operation would work at runtime (that's just a case of "dynamically detecting that something is not supported as a const operation"), but it is *not* okay for a const function to just return a different result.
Following that, `is_aligned` and `is_aligned_to` have their const status revoked in this PR, since they do return actively wrong results at const time. In the future we can consider having a new intrinsic or so that can check whether a pointer is "guaranteed to be aligned", but the current implementation based on `align_offset` does not have the behavior we want.
In fact `align_offset` itself behaves quite strangely in const, and that support needs a bunch of special hacks. That doesn't seem worth it. Instead, the users that can fall back to a different implementation should just use const_eval_select directly, and everything else should not be made const-callable. So this PR does exactly that, and entirely removes const support for align_offset.
Closes some tracking issues by removing the associated features:
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90962
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/104203
Cc `@rust-lang/wg-const-eval` `@rust-lang/libs-api`
Generate correct symbols.o for sparc-unknown-none-elf
This fixes#130172 by selecting the correct ELF Machine type for sparc-unknown-none-elf (which has a baseline of SPARC V7).
compiler: Directly use rustc_abi almost everywhere
Use rustc_abi instead of rustc_target where applicable. This is mostly described by the following substitutions:
```rust
match path_substring {
rustc_target::spec::abi::Abi => rustc_abi::ExternAbi,
rustc_target::abi::call => rustc_target::callconv,
rustc_target::abi => rustc_abi,
}
```
A number of spot-fixes make that not quite the whole story.
The main exception is in 33edc68 where I get a lot more persnickety about how things are imported, especially in `rustc_middle::ty::layout`, not just from where. This includes putting an end to a reexport of `rustc_middle::ty::ReprOptions`, for the same reason that the rest of this change is happening: reexports mostly confound things.
This notably omits rustc_passes and the ast crates, as I'm still examining a question I have about how they do stability checking of `extern "Abi"` strings and if I can simplify their logic. The rustc_abi and rustc_target crates also go untouched because they will be entangled in that cleanup.
r? compiler-errors
replace manual time convertions with std ones, comptime time format parsing
First commit replaces few manual time conversions with std ones, second makes parsing of time format at compiletime.
This is consistent with all other diagnostics I could find containing
features and enables the use of `DiagSymbolList` for generalizing
diagnostics for unstable library features to multiple features.
Use the right span when encountering an enum variant followed by an associated item so we don't lose the associated item in the resulting code.
Do not suggest the thing twice, once as a removal of the associated item and a second time as a typo suggestion.
The target name can be anything with custom target specs. Matching on
fields inside the target spec is much more robust than matching on the
target name.
Operations like is_aligned would return actively wrong results at compile-time,
i.e. calling it on the same pointer at compiletime and runtime could yield
different results. That's no good.
Instead of having hacks to make align_offset kind-of work in const-eval, just
use const_eval_select in the few places where it makes sense, which also ensures
those places are all aware they need to make sure the fallback behavior is
consistent.
This commit is the final step in the journey of renaming the historical
`wasm32-wasi` target in the Rust compiler to `wasm32-wasip1`. Various
steps in this journey so far have been:
* 2023-04-03: rust-lang/compiler-team#607 - initial proposal for this rename
* 2024-11-27: rust-lang/compiler-team#695 - amended schedule/procedure for rename
* 2024-01-29: rust-lang/rust#120468 - initial introduction of `wasm32-wasip1`
* 2024-06-18: rust-lang/rust#126662 - warn on usage of `wasm32-wasi`
* 2024-11-08: this PR - remove the `wasm32-wasi` target
The full transition schedule is in [this comment][comment] and is
summarized with:
* 2024-05-02: Rust 1.78 released with `wasm32-wasip1` target
* 2024-09-05: Rust 1.81 released warning on usage of `wasm32-wasi`
* 2025-01-09: Rust 1.84 to be released without the `wasm32-wasi` target
This means that support on stable for the replacement target of
`wasm32-wasip1` has currently been available for 6 months. Users have
already seen warnings on stable for 2 months about usage of
`wasm32-wasi` and stable users have another 2 months of warnings before
the target is removed from stable.
This commit is intended to be the final step in this transition so the
source tree should no longer mention `wasm32-wasi` except in historical
reference to the older name of the `wasm32-wasip1` target.
[comment]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120468#issuecomment-1977878747
Rollup of 15 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #129329 (Implement `From<&mut {slice}>` for `Box/Rc/Arc<{slice}>`)
- #131377 (Add LowerExp and UpperExp implementations to NonZero)
- #132393 (Docs: added brief colon explanation)
- #132437 (coverage: Regression test for inlining into an uninstrumented crate)
- #132499 (unicode_data.rs: show command for generating file)
- #132503 (better test for const HashMap; remove const_hash leftovers)
- #132511 (stabilize const_arguments_as_str)
- #132520 (NFC add known bug nr to test)
- #132522 (make codegen help output more consistent)
- #132523 (Added regression test for generics index out of bounds)
- #132528 (Use `*_opt` typeck results fns to not ICE in fallback suggestion)
- #132537 (PassWrapper: adapt for llvm/llvm-project@5445edb5d)
- #132540 (Do not format generic consts)
- #132543 (add and update some crashtests)
- #132550 (compiler: Continue introducing rustc_abi to the compiler)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Port most of `--print=target-cpus` to Rust
The logic and formatting needed by `--print=target-cpus` has historically been carried out in C++ code. Originally it used `printf` to write directly to the console, but later it switched over to writing to a `std::ostringstream` and then passing its buffer to a callback function pointer.
This PR replaces that C++ code with a very simple function that writes a list of CPU names to a `&RustString`, with the rest of the logic and formatting being handled by ordinary safe Rust code.
compiler: Continue introducing rustc_abi to the compiler
Some crates have not heard of rustc_abi before, so arrange introductions.
Encourage some crates to go further and leave rustc_target behind: it was no good for them.
Do not format generic consts
We introduced **nightly support** for generic const items in #113522, but formatting of consts was not modified. Making them format *correctly* is hard, so let's just bail formatting them so we don't accidentally strip their generics and where clauses. This is essentially no-op formatting for generic const items.
r? `````@calebcartwright````` or `````@ytmimi`````
PassWrapper: adapt for llvm/llvm-project@5445edb5d
As with ab5583ed1e, we had been explicitly passing defaults whose type have changed. Rather than do an ifdef, we simply rely on the defaults.
````@rustbot```` label: +llvm-main
make codegen help output more consistent
The output of `rustc -C help` generally has one option per line. There was one exception because of a (presumably) forgotten line continuation escape.
PassWrapper: adapt for llvm/llvm-project@b01e2a8b56
A boolean turned into an enum. None matches the old behavior of false, so we pass that.
`@rustbot` label: +llvm-main
Subtree sync for rustc_codegen_cranelift
The highlight this time is an update to Cranelift 0.113,
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` label +A-codegen +A-cranelift +T-compiler
Add `--print host-tuple` to print host target tuple
People often parse `-vV` output to get to the host tuple, which is annoying to do. It's easier to just get it directly.
I called it "host-tuple" instead of "host" because it's clearer that it's just the target name. I'm open to different names, but I think this one is fine.
a quick GitHub search for `'^host` reveals many instances of people doing the parsing, for example:
68e0ca57cd/README.md (L369)0e38473b0c/main.sh (L96)8a3553b865/README.md (L625)43f3ec3970/do.sh (L35)
needs a compiler FCP. I could also do an MCP but I think just an FCP here makes the most sense.
Tweak E0277 output when a candidate is available
*Follow up to #132086.*
Go from
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `Then<Ignored<chumsky::combinator::Filter<chumsky::primitive::Any<&str, chumsky::extra::Full<EmptyErr, (), ()>>, {closure@src/main.rs:9:17: 9:27}>, char>, chumsky::combinator::Map<impl CSTParser<'a, O>, O, {closure@src/main.rs:11:24: 11:27}>, (), (), chumsky::extra::Full<EmptyErr, (), ()>>: CSTParser<'a>` is not satisfied
--> src/main.rs:7:50
|
7 | fn leaf<'a, O>(parser: impl CSTParser<'a, O>) -> impl CSTParser<'a, ()> {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ the trait `chumsky::private::ParserSealed<'_, &str, (), chumsky::extra::Full<EmptyErr, (), ()>>` is not implemented for `Then<Ignored<Filter<Any<&str, ...>, ...>, ...>, ..., ..., ..., ...>`, which is required by `Then<Ignored<chumsky::combinator::Filter<chumsky::primitive::Any<&str, chumsky::extra::Full<EmptyErr, (), ()>>, {closure@src/main.rs:9:17: 9:27}>, char>, chumsky::combinator::Map<impl CSTParser<'a, O>, O, {closure@src/main.rs:11:24: 11:27}>, (), (), chumsky::extra::Full<EmptyErr, (), ()>>: CSTParser<'a>`
|
= help: the trait `chumsky::private::ParserSealed<'_, &'a str, ((), ()), chumsky::extra::Full<EmptyErr, (), ()>>` is implemented for `Then<Ignored<chumsky::combinator::Filter<chumsky::primitive::Any<&str, chumsky::extra::Full<EmptyErr, (), ()>>, {closure@src/main.rs:9:17: 9:27}>, char>, chumsky::combinator::Map<impl CSTParser<'a, O>, O, {closure@src/main.rs:11:24: 11:27}>, (), (), chumsky::extra::Full<EmptyErr, (), ()>>`
= help: for that trait implementation, expected `((), ())`, found `()`
= note: required for `Then<Ignored<Filter<Any<&str, ...>, ...>, ...>, ..., ..., ..., ...>` to implement `Parser<'_, &str, ()>`
note: required for `Then<Ignored<Filter<Any<&str, ...>, ...>, ...>, ..., ..., ..., ...>` to implement `CSTParser<'a>`
--> src/main.rs:5:16
|
5 | impl<'a, O, T> CSTParser<'a, O> for T where T: Parser<'a, &'a str, O> {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^ ---------------------- unsatisfied trait bound introduced here
= note: the full name for the type has been written to '/home/gh-estebank/longlong/target/debug/deps/longlong-0008f9a4f2023b08.long-type-13239977239800463552.txt'
= note: consider using `--verbose` to print the full type name to the console
= note: the full name for the type has been written to '/home/gh-estebank/longlong/target/debug/deps/longlong-0008f9a4f2023b08.long-type-13239977239800463552.txt'
= note: consider using `--verbose` to print the full type name to the console
```
to
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `Then<Ignored<chumsky::combinator::Filter<chumsky::primitive::Any<&str, chumsky::extra::Full<EmptyErr, (), ()>>, {closure@src/main.rs:9:17: 9:27}>, char>, chumsky::combinator::Map<impl CSTParser<'a, O>, O, {closure@src/main.rs:11:24: 11:27}>, (), (), chumsky::extra::Full<EmptyErr, (), ()>>: CSTParser<'a>` is not satisfied
--> src/main.rs:7:50
|
7 | fn leaf<'a, O>(parser: impl CSTParser<'a, O>) -> impl CSTParser<'a, ()> {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ unsatisfied trait bound
...
11 | ws.then(parser.map(|_| ()))
| --------------------------- return type was inferred to be `Then<Ignored<..., ...>, ..., ..., ..., ...>` here
|
= help: the trait `ParserSealed<'_, &_, (), Full<_, _, _>>` is not implemented for `Then<Ignored<..., ...>, ..., ..., ..., ...>`
but trait `ParserSealed<'_, &'a _, ((), ()), Full<_, _, _>>` is implemented for it
= help: for that trait implementation, expected `((), ())`, found `()`
= note: required for `Then<Ignored<..., ...>, ..., ..., ..., ...>` to implement `Parser<'_, &str, ()>`
note: required for `Then<Ignored<..., ...>, ..., ..., ..., ...>` to implement `CSTParser<'a>`
--> src/main.rs:5:16
|
5 | impl<'a, O, T> CSTParser<'a, O> for T where T: Parser<'a, &'a str, O> {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^ ---------------------- unsatisfied trait bound introduced here
= note: the full name for the type has been written to '/home/gh-estebank/longlong/target/debug/deps/longlong-df9d52be87eada65.long-type-1337037744507305372.txt'
= note: consider using `--verbose` to print the full type name to the console
```
* Remove redundant wording
* Introduce trait diff highlighting logic and use it
* Fix incorrect "long type written to path" logic (can be split off)
* Point at tail expression in more cases in E0277
* Avoid long primary span labels in E0277 by moving them to a `help`
Fix#132013.
There are individual commits that can be their own PR. If the review load is too big, happy to split them off.
As with ab5583ed1e, we had been explicitly
passing defaults whose type have changed. Rather than do an ifdef, we
simply rely on the defaults.
@rustbot label: +llvm-main
We don't see a reason to explicitly pass the default here, so just use
the default instead of explicitly passing it and needing an ifdef.
@rustbot label: +llvm-main
Also treat `impl` definition parent as transparent regarding modules
This PR changes the `non_local_definitions` lint logic to also consider `impl` definition parent as transparent regarding modules.
See tests and explanation in the changes.
``````@rustbot`````` label +L-non_local_definitions
Fixes *(after beta-backport)* #132427
cc ``````@leighmcculloch``````
r? ``````@jieyouxu``````
Move versioned Apple LLVM targets from `rustc_target` to `rustc_codegen_ssa`
Fully specified LLVM targets contain the OS version on macOS/iOS/tvOS/watchOS/visionOS, and this version depends on the deployment target environment variables like `MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET`, `IPHONEOS_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET` etc.
We would like to move this to later in the compilation pipeline, both because it feels impure to access environment variables when fetching target information, but mostly because we need access to more information from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/130883 to do https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/118204. See also https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129342#issuecomment-2335156119 for some discussion.
The first and second commit does the actual refactor, it should be a non-functional change, the third commit adds diagnostics for invalid deployment targets, which are now possible to do because we have access to the session.
Tested with the same commands as in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/130435.
r? ``````@petrochenkov``````
Do not suggest `#[derive(Copy)]` when we wanted a `!Copy` type.
Do not say "`Copy` is not implemented for `T` but `Copy` is".
Do not talk about `Trait` having no implementations when `!Trait` was desired.
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `{gen block@$DIR/gen_block_is_coro.rs:7:5: 7:8}: Coroutine` is not satisfied
--> $DIR/gen_block_is_coro.rs:6:13
|
LL | fn foo() -> impl Coroutine<Yield = u32, Return = ()> {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ the trait `Coroutine` is not implemented for `{gen block@$DIR/gen_block_is_coro.rs:7:5: 7:8}`
LL | gen { yield 42 }
| ---------------- return type was inferred to be `{gen block@$DIR/gen_block_is_coro.rs:7:5: 7:8}` here
```
The secondary span label is new.
When a trait is not implemented for a type, but there *is* an `impl`
for another type or different trait params, we format the output to
use highlighting in the same way that E0308 does for types.
The logic accounts for 3 cases:
- When both the type and trait in the expected predicate and the candidate are different
- When only the types are different
- When only the trait generic params are different
For each case, we use slightly different formatting and wording.
Rollup of 14 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #131829 (Remove support for `-Zprofile` (gcov-style coverage instrumentation))
- #132369 (style-guide: Only use the new binop heuristic for assignments)
- #132383 (Implement suggestion for never type fallback lints)
- #132413 (update offset_of! docs to reflect the stabilization of nesting)
- #132438 (Remove unncessary option for default rust-analyzer setting)
- #132439 (Add `f16` and `f128` to `invalid_nan_comparison`)
- #132444 (rustdoc: Directly use rustc_abi instead of reexports)
- #132445 (Cleanup attributes around unchecked shifts and unchecked negation in const)
- #132448 (Add missing backtick)
- #132450 (Show actual MIR when MIR building forgot to terminate block)
- #132451 (remove some unnecessary rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable)
- #132455 (make const_alloc_layout feature gate only about functions that are already stable)
- #132456 (Move remaining inline assembly test files into asm directory)
- #132459 (feat(byte_sub_ptr): unstably add ptr::byte_sub_ptr)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
On some architectures, vector types may have a different ABI depending
on whether the relevant target features are enabled. (The ABI when the
feature is disabled is often not specified, but LLVM implements some
de-facto ABI.)
As discussed in rust-lang/lang-team#235, this turns out to very easily
lead to unsound code.
This commit makes it a post-monomorphization future-incompat warning to
declare or call functions using those vector types in a context in which
the corresponding target features are disabled, if using an ABI for
which the difference is relevant. This ensures that these functions are
always called with a consistent ABI.
See the [nomination comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127731#issuecomment-2288558187)
for more discussion.
Part of #116558
Add `f16` and `f128` to `invalid_nan_comparison`
Currently `f32_nan` and `f64_nan` are used to provide the `invalid_nan_comparison` lint. Since we have `f16_nan` and `f128_nan`, hook these up so the new float types get the same lints.
Implement suggestion for never type fallback lints
r? ```@WaffleLapkin```
Just opening this up for vibes; it's not done yet. I'd still like to make this suggestable in a few more cases before merge:
- [x] Try to annotate `_` -> `()`
- [x] Try to annotate local variables if they're un-annotated: `let x = ...` -> `let x: () = ...`
- [x] Try to annotate the self type of a `Trait::method()` -> `<() as Trait>::method()`.
The only other case we may want to suggest is a missing turbofish, like `f()` -> `f::<()>()`. That may be possible, but seems overly annoying.
This partly addresses https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132358; the other half of fixing that would be to make the error message a bit better, perhaps just special casing the `?` operator 🤔 I don't think I'll do that part.
Remove support for `-Zprofile` (gcov-style coverage instrumentation)
Tracking issue: #42524
MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/798
---
This PR removes the unstable `-Zprofile` flag, which enables ”gcov-style” coverage instrumentation, along with its associated `-Zprofile-emit` configuration flag.
(The profile flag predates and is almost entirely separate from the stable `-Cinstrument-coverage` flag.)
Notably, the `-Zprofile` flag:
- Is largely untested in-tree, having only one run-make test that does not check whether its output is correct or useful.
- Has no known maintainer.
- Has seen no push towards stabilization.
- Has at least one severe regression reported in 2022 that apparently remains unaddressed.
- #100125
- Is confusingly named, since it appears to be more about coverage than performance profiling, and has nothing to do with PGO.
- Is fundamentally limited by relying on counters auto-inserted by LLVM, with no knowledge of Rust beyond debuginfo.
Double-check conditional constness in MIR
To prevent any unchecked `~const` bounds from leaking through during MIR lowering.
If this check fails, it will eventually just delay a bug, but for now it reports errors. That error reporting may be redundant if we're calling it from code that already doesn't allow `~const` (i.e. when the `effects` and `const_trait_impl` gates are disabled), but I don't think it's that big of a deal.
edit: This also makes sure that we issue a const stability error if we encounter *any* function with const conditions when `const_trait_impl` is not enabled. This ensures that that feature remains airtight.
The OS version depends on the deployment target environment variables,
the access of which we want to move to later in the compilation pipeline
that has access to more information, for example `env_depinfo`.
Some where clause lowering simplifications
Rename `PredicateFilter::SelfThatDefines` to `PredicateFilter::SelfTraitThatDefines` to make it clear that it's only concerned with converting *traits*, and make it do a bit less work when converting bounds.
Also, make the predicate filter matching in `probe_ty_param_bounds_in_generics` explicit, and simply the args it receives a bit.
We only need to take action when the next block cannot be added to the current
chain, but the logic is much simpler if we express it in terms of when the
block _can_ be added.
Remove support for decompressing dylib metadata
We haven't been compressing dylib metadata for a while now. Removing decompression support will regress error messages about an incompatible rustc version being used, but dylibs are pretty rare anyway.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/18451
Currently `f32_nan` and `f64_nan` are used to provide the
`invalid_nan_comparison` lint. Since we have `f16_nan` and `f128_nan`,
hook these up so the new float types get the same lints.
llvm: Match new LLVM 128-bit integer alignment on sparc
LLVM continues to align more 128-bit integers to 128-bits in the data layout rather than relying on the high level language to do it. Update SPARC target files to match and add a backcompat replacement for current LLVMs.
See llvm/llvm-project#106951 for details
`@rustbot` label: +llvm-main
r? `@durin42`
(Please wait for the LLVM CI to come back before approving), creating this PR to get it tested there.
Remove `""` case from RISC-V `llvm_abiname` match statement
For RISC-V, `""` isn't the always the same ABI as `"ilp32"`/`"lp64"` (`""` means LLVM will infer the ABI based on the enabled target features), but `create_object_file` currently assumes that it is. Since all RISC-V targets explicitly specify their ABI since #131807, this PR removes `""` from the match arm's pattern (meaning an empty string will now fall through to the `_ => bug!` arm).
r? `@workingjubilee`
continue `TypingMode` refactor
There are still quite a few places which (indirectly) rely on the `Reveal` of a `ParamEnv`, but we're slowly getting there
r? `@compiler-errors`
compiler: Move `rustc_target::spec::abi::Abi` to `rustc_abi::ExternAbi`
Lift `enum Abi` from its rather odd place in the middle of rustc_target, and make it available again from rustc_abi. You know, the crate where you would expect the enum that describes all the ABIs to be? The platform-neutral ones, at least. This will help further refactoring of how we handle ABIs in the near future[^0].
Rename `Abi` to `ExternAbi` because quite a lot of the compiler overloads the concept of "ABI" enough that the existing name is imprecise and it is often renamed _anyway_. Often this was to avoid conflicts with the *other* type formerly known as `Abi` (now named BackendRepr[^1]), but sometimes it is just for clarity, and this name seems more self-explanatory. It does get reexported, though, using its old name, to reduce the odds of merge-conflicting over the entire tree.
All of `ExternAbi`'s friends come along for the ride, which costs adding some optional dependencies to the rustc_abi crate. However, all of this also allows simply moving three crates entirely off rustc_target:
- rustc_hir_pretty
- rustc_lint_defs
- rustc_mir_build
This odd selection is mostly to demonstrate a secondary motivation: The majority of the front-end of the compiler should be as target-agnostic as possible, and it is easier to assure this if they simply don't depend on the crate that describes targets. Note that I didn't migrate crates that don't benefit from it in this way yet, and I didn't survey every last crate.
[^0]: This is being undertaken as part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/119183
[^1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/132246
Improve missing_abi lint
This is for the migration lint for https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3722
It is not yet marked as an edition migration lint, because `Edition2027` doesn't exist yet.
The lint now includes a machine applicable suggestion:
```
warning: extern declarations without an explicit ABI are deprecated
--> src/main.rs:3:1
|
3 | extern fn a() {}
| ^^^^^^ help: explicitly specify the C ABI: `extern "C"`
|
```
Fix validation when lowering `?` trait bounds
Pass the unlowered (`rustc_hir`) polarity to `lower_poly_trait_ref`.
This allows us to actually *validate* that generic args are actually valid on `?Trait` paths. This actually regressed in #113671 because that PR changed the behavior where we were inadvertently re-lowering paths as `BoundPolarity::Positive`, which was also coincidentally the only place we were enforcing the generics on `?Trait` paths were correct.
Fix `target_os` for `mipsel-sony-psx`
Previously set to `target_os = "none"` and `target_env = "psx"` in [the PR introducing the target](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/102689/), but although the Playstation 1 is _close_ to a bare metal target in some regards, it's still very much an operating system, so we should instead set `target_os = "psx"`.
This also matches the `mipsel-sony-psp` target, which sets `target_os = "psp"`.
CC target maintainer ``@ayrtonm.``
If there's any code out there that uses `cfg(target_env = "psx")`, they can use `cfg(any(target_os = "psx", target_env = "psx"))` until they bump their MSRV to a version where this is fully fixed.
LLVM continues to align more 128-bit integers to 128-bits in the data
layout rather than relying on the high level language to do it. Update
SPARC target files to match and add a backcompat replacement for current
LLVMs.
See llvm/llvm-project#106951 for details
Mark `simplify_aggregate_to_copy` mir-opt as unsound
Mark the `simplify_aggregate_to_copy` mir-opt added in #128299 as unsound as it seems to miscompile the MCVE reported in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132353. The mir-opt can be re-enabled once this case is fixed.
```rs
fn pop_min(mut score2head: Vec<Option<usize>>) -> Option<usize> {
loop {
if let Some(col) = score2head[0] {
score2head[0] = None;
return Some(col);
}
}
}
fn main() {
let min = pop_min(vec![Some(1)]);
println!("min: {:?}", min);
// panic happens here on beta in release mode
// but not in debug mode
min.unwrap();
}
```
This MCVE is included as a `run-pass` ui regression test in the first commit. I built the ui test with a nightly manually, and can reproduce the behavioral difference with `-C opt-level=0` and `-C opt-level=1`. Locally, this ui test will fail unless it was run on a compiler built with the second commit marking the mir-opt as unsound thus disabling it by default.
This PR **partially reverts** commit e7386b3, reversing changes made to 02b1be1. The mir-opt implementation is just marked as unsound but **not** reverted to make reland reviews easier. Test changes are **reverted if they were not pure additions**. Tests added by the original PR received `-Z unsound-mir-opts` compile-flags.
cc `@DianQK` `@cjgillot` (PR author and reviewer of #128299)
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #130693 (Add `minicore` test auxiliary and support `//@ add-core-stubs` directive in ui/assembly/codegen tests)
- #132316 (CI: use free runners for 3 fast windows jobs)
- #132354 (Add `lp64e` RISC-V ABI)
- #132395 (coverage: Avoid ICE when `coverage_cx` is unexpectedly unavailable)
- #132396 (CI: use free runners for x86_64-gnu-tools and x86_64-rust-for-linux)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Add a new 'pc' option to -Z branch-protection for aarch64 that
enables the use of PC as a diversifier in PAC branch protection code.
When the pauth-lr target feature is enabled in combination
with -Z branch-protection=pac-ret,pc, the new 9.5-a instructions
(pacibsppc, retaasppc, etc) will be generated.
We haven't been compressing dylib metadata for a while now. Removing
decompression support will regress error messages about an incompatible
rustc version being used, but dylibs are pretty rare anyway.
coverage: Avoid ICE when `coverage_cx` is unexpectedly unavailable
In #132124, `coverage_cx()` was changed to panic if the context was unavailable, under the assumption that it would always be available whenever coverage instrumentation is enabled.
However, there have been reports of this change causing ICEs in `polars` CI.
I don't yet understand why this is happening, but for now it seems wisest to revert that part of the change, restoring the two early returns that had been replaced with panics.
Add `lp64e` RISC-V ABI
This PR adds support for the `lp64e` RISC-V ABI, which is the 64-bit equivalent of the `ilp32e` ABI that is already supported.
For reference, this ABI was originally added to LLVM in [this PR](https://reviews.llvm.org/D70401).
Remove region from adjustments
It's not necessary to store this region, because it's only used in THIR and MemCat/ExprUse, both of which already basically only deal with erased regions anyways.
Rollup of 4 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #132347 (Remove `ValueAnalysis` and `ValueAnalysisWrapper`.)
- #132365 (pass `RUSTC_HOST_FLAGS` at once without the for loop)
- #132366 (Do not enforce `~const` constness effects in typeck if `rustc_do_not_const_check`)
- #132376 (Annotate `input` reference tests)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Do not enforce `~const` constness effects in typeck if `rustc_do_not_const_check`
Fixes a slight inconsistency between HIR and MIR enforcement of `~const` :D
r? `@rust-lang/project-const-traits`
Remove `ValueAnalysis` and `ValueAnalysisWrapper`.
They represent a lot of abstraction and indirection, but they're only used for `ConstAnalysis`, and apparently won't be used for any other analyses in the future. This commit inlines and removes them, which makes `ConstAnalysis` easier to read and understand.
r? `@cjgillot`