Port PGO/LTO/BOLT optimized build pipeline to Rust
This PR ports the `stage-build.py` PGO/LTO/BOLT optimization script from Python to Rust, to make it easier to use dependencies, and make it a bit more robust. The PR switches both the Linux and Windows dist runners to the Rust script and removes the old Python script.
Funnily enough, the Rust port has less lines of code than the Python script :) I think that clearly shows that the Python script really lacked dependencies.
Revert the lexing of `c"…"` string literals
Fixes \[after beta-backport\] #113235.
Further progress is tracked in #113333.
This PR *manually* reverts parts of #108801 (since a git-revert would've been too coarse-grained & messy)
and git-reverts #111647.
CC `@fee1-dead` (#108801) `@klensy` (#111647)
r? `@compiler-errors`
`@rustbot` label F-c_str_literals beta-nominated
Remove chalk support from the compiler
Removes chalk (`-Ztrait-solver=chalk`) from the compiler and prunes any dead code resulting from this, mainly:
* Remove the chalk compatibility layer in `compiler/rustc_traits/src/chalk`
* Remove the chalk flag `-Ztrait-solver=chalk` and its `TraitEngine` implementation
* Remove `TypeWellFormedFromEnv` (and its many `bug!()` match arms)
* Remove the chalk migration mode from compiletest
* Remove the `chalkify` UI tests (do we want to keep any of these, but migrate them to `-Ztrait-solver=next`??)
Fulfills rust-lang/types-team#93.
r? `@jackh726`
There's currently a deadlock with tracing when RUSTC_LOG is enabled.
Downgrade tracing-core for now to avoid blocking the other updates.
syns upgrades cause some nontrivial changes in the diagnostics derive tests,
which are best dealt with in another PR.
Implement most of MCP510
This implements most of what remains to be done for MCP510:
- turns `-C link-self-contained` into a `+`/`-` list of components, like `-C link-self-contained=+linker,+crto,+libc,+unwind,+sanitizers,+mingw`. The scaffolding is present for all these expected components to be implemented and stabilized in the future on their own time. This PR only handles the `-Zgcc-ld=lld` subset of these link-self-contained components as `-Clink-self-contained=+linker`
- handles `-C link-self-contained=y|n` as-is today, for compatibility with `rustc_codegen_ssa:🔙🔗:self_contained`'s [explicit opt-in and opt-out](9eee230cd0/compiler/rustc_codegen_ssa/src/back/link.rs (L1671-L1676)).
- therefore supports our plan to opt out of `rust-lld` (when it's enabled by default) even for current `-Clink-self-contained` users, with e.g. `-Clink-self-contained -Clink-self-contained=-linker`
- turns `add_gcc_ld_path` into its expected final form, by using the `-C link-self-contained=+linker` CLI flag, and whether the `LinkerFlavor` has the expected `Cc::Yes` and `Lld::Yes` shape (this is not yet the case in practice for any CLI linker flavor)
- makes the [new clean linker flavors](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/96827#issuecomment-1208441595) selectable in the CLI in addition to the legacy ones, in order to opt-in to using `cc` and `lld` to emulate `-Zgcc-ld=lld`
- ensure the new `-C link-self-contained` components, and `-C linker-flavor`s are unstable, and require `-Z unstable-options` to be used
The up-to-date set of flags for the future stable CLI version of `-Zgcc-ld=lld` is currently: `-Clink-self-contained=+linker -Clinker-flavor=gnu-lld-cc -Zunstable-options`.
It's possible we'll also need to do something for distros that don't ship `rust-lld`, but maybe there are already no tool search paths to be added to `cc` in this situation anyways.
r? `@petrochenkov`
Fix unset e_flags in ELF files generated for AVR targets
Closes#106576
~~Sort-of blocked by gimli-rs/object#500~~ (merged)
I'm not sure whether the list of AVR CPU names is okay here. Maybe it could be moved out-of-line to improve the readability of the function.
rust-installer: migrate to clap 4.2, change to 2021 edition and fix few clippy lints
Updated rust-installer to clap 4.2, dropping last user of clap v3; changes to 2021 edition, fixes few clippy warns.
Update field-offset and enable unstable_offset_of
This makes the compiler use the builtin `offset_of!()` macro, through the wrappers in memoffset and then in field-offset.
cc #111839
Write to stdout if `-` is given as output file
With this PR, if `-o -` or `--emit KIND=-` is provided, output will be written to stdout instead. Binary output (those of type `obj`, `llvm-bc`, `link` and `metadata`) being written this way will result in an error unless stdout is not a tty. Multiple output types going to stdout will trigger an error too, as they will all be mixded together.
This implements https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/431
The idea behind the changes is to introduce an `OutFileName` enum that represents the output - be it a real path or stdout - and to use this enum along the code paths that handle different output types.
If `-o -` or `--emit KIND=-` is provided, output will be written
to stdout instead. Binary output (`obj`, `llvm-bc`, `link` and
`metadata`) being written this way will result in an error unless
stdout is not a tty. Multiple output types going to stdout will
trigger an error too, as they will all be mixded together.
Update dependencies with reported vulnerabilities
Vulnerable dependencies:
* bumpalo 3.12.1 (yanked)
* updated to 3.13.0
* tokio 1.8.4 - https://rustsec.org/advisories/RUSTSEC-2023-0001
* updated to 1.28.2
* remove_dir_all 0.5.3 - https://rustsec.org/advisories/RUSTSEC-2023-0018
* removed by using the standard library function in `rust-installer` instead and updating to `tempfile@3.5.0` (which also removes the dependency).
The new dependencies come from `tempfile@3.5.0` which adds the dependency on `rustix`
use c literals in compiler and library
Use c literals #108801 in compiler and library
currently blocked on:
* <strike>rustfmt: don't know how to format c literals</strike> nope, nightly one works.
* <strike>bootstrap</strike>
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` blocked
enhancements on build_helper utilization and rustdoc-gui-test
This change provides codebase improvements, resolves `FIXME` in `rustdoc-gui-test` and makes `rustdoc-gui` test able to find local `node_modules` directory outside of the source root.
Roll compiler_builtins to 0.1.92
This pulls in the weak-intrinsics feature (which currently defaults off), and a minor version update to libm for the compiler_builtins crate to 0.2.7.
Include better context for "already exists" error in compiletest
I encountered the following error from `x.py test tests/ui` today.
```console
---- [ui] tests/ui/impl-trait/multiple-lifetimes/multiple-lifetimes.rs stdout ----
thread '[ui] tests/ui/impl-trait/multiple-lifetimes/multiple-lifetimes.rs' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: Os { code: 17, kind: AlreadyExists, message: "File exists" }', src/tools/compiletest/src/runtest.rs:134:43
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
```
I found it impossible to unblock myself without knowing which directory it was stuck on.
Error message after this PR:
```console
---- [ui] tests/ui/impl-trait/multiple-lifetimes/multiple-lifetimes.rs stdout ----
thread '[ui] tests/ui/impl-trait/multiple-lifetimes/multiple-lifetimes.rs' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: failed to create output base directory /git/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/ui/impl-trait/multiple-lifetimes/multiple-lifetimes
Caused by:
File exists (os error 17)', src/tools/compiletest/src/runtest.rs:139:10
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
```
Now I was able to run `rm build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/ui/impl-trait/multiple-lifetimes/multiple-lifetimes` and unblock myself.
Seems to be related to #109509 moving *tests/ui/impl-trait/multiple-lifetimes.rs* to *tests/ui/impl-trait/multiple-lifetimes/multiple-lifetimes.rs*.
Update serde in workspace and non-synced dependencies
The main workspace, bootstrap, cargo, miri, and rust-analyzer all lock serde to different versions. It's preferable to share the same version where possible, so update it.
Rustfmt is synced from another repository and has its own Cargo.lock, but since it's added to the overall workspace it should respect the version here.
Cargo is already at the latest version. Miri and rust-analyzer would require upstream updates.
Use dynamic dispatch for queries
This replaces most concrete query values `V` with `MaybeUninit<[u8; { size_of::<V>() }]>` reducing the code instantiated by queries. The compile time of `rustc_query_impl` is reduced by 27%. It is an alternative to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107937 which uses unstable const generics while this uses a `EraseType` trait which maps query values to their erased variant.
This is achieved by introducing an `Erased` type which does sanity check with `cfg(debug_assertions)`. The query caches gets instantiated with these erased types leaving the code in `rustc_query_system` unaware of them. `rustc_query_system` is changed to use instances of `QueryConfig` so that `rustc_query_impl` can pass in `DynamicConfig` which holds a pointer to a virtual table.
<table><tr><td rowspan="2">Benchmark</td><td colspan="1"><b>Before</b></th><td colspan="2"><b>After</b></th></tr><tr><td align="right">Time</td><td align="right">Time</td><td align="right">%</th></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>clap</b>:check</td><td align="right">1.7055s</td><td align="right">1.6949s</td><td align="right"> -0.62%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>hyper</b>:check</td><td align="right">0.2547s</td><td align="right">0.2528s</td><td align="right"> -0.73%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>regex</b>:check</td><td align="right">0.9590s</td><td align="right">0.9553s</td><td align="right"> -0.39%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syn</b>:check</td><td align="right">1.5457s</td><td align="right">1.5440s</td><td align="right"> -0.11%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syntex_syntax</b>:check</td><td align="right">5.9092s</td><td align="right">5.9009s</td><td align="right"> -0.14%</td></tr><tr><td>Total</td><td align="right">10.3741s</td><td align="right">10.3479s</td><td align="right"> -0.25%</td></tr><tr><td>Summary</td><td align="right">1.0000s</td><td align="right">0.9960s</td><td align="right"> -0.40%</td></tr></table>
<table><tr><td rowspan="2">Benchmark</td><td colspan="1"><b>Before</b></th><td colspan="2"><b>After</b></th></tr><tr><td align="right">Time</td><td align="right">Time</td><td align="right">%</th></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>clap</b>:check:initial</td><td align="right">2.0605s</td><td align="right">2.0575s</td><td align="right"> -0.15%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>hyper</b>:check:initial</td><td align="right">0.3218s</td><td align="right">0.3216s</td><td align="right"> -0.07%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>regex</b>:check:initial</td><td align="right">1.1848s</td><td align="right">1.1839s</td><td align="right"> -0.07%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syn</b>:check:initial</td><td align="right">1.9409s</td><td align="right">1.9376s</td><td align="right"> -0.17%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syntex_syntax</b>:check:initial</td><td align="right">7.3105s</td><td align="right">7.2928s</td><td align="right"> -0.24%</td></tr><tr><td>Total</td><td align="right">12.8185s</td><td align="right">12.7935s</td><td align="right"> -0.20%</td></tr><tr><td>Summary</td><td align="right">1.0000s</td><td align="right">0.9986s</td><td align="right"> -0.14%</td></tr></table>
<table><tr><td rowspan="2">Benchmark</td><td colspan="1"><b>Before</b></th><td colspan="2"><b>After</b></th></tr><tr><td align="right">Time</td><td align="right">Time</td><td align="right">%</th></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>clap</b>:check:unchanged</td><td align="right">0.4606s</td><td align="right">0.4617s</td><td align="right"> 0.24%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>hyper</b>:check:unchanged</td><td align="right">0.1335s</td><td align="right">0.1336s</td><td align="right"> 0.08%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>regex</b>:check:unchanged</td><td align="right">0.3324s</td><td align="right">0.3346s</td><td align="right"> 0.65%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syn</b>:check:unchanged</td><td align="right">0.6268s</td><td align="right">0.6307s</td><td align="right"> 0.64%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syntex_syntax</b>:check:unchanged</td><td align="right">1.8248s</td><td align="right">1.8508s</td><td align="right">💔 1.43%</td></tr><tr><td>Total</td><td align="right">3.3779s</td><td align="right">3.4113s</td><td align="right"> 0.99%</td></tr><tr><td>Summary</td><td align="right">1.0000s</td><td align="right">1.0061s</td><td align="right"> 0.61%</td></tr></table>
It's based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/108167.
r? `@cjgillot`
Introduce `DynSend` and `DynSync` auto trait for parallel compiler
part of parallel-rustc #101566
This PR introduces `DynSend / DynSync` trait and `FromDyn / IntoDyn` structure in rustc_data_structure::marker. `FromDyn` can dynamically check data structures for thread safety when switching to parallel environments (such as calling `par_for_each_in`). This happens only when `-Z threads > 1` so it doesn't affect single-threaded mode's compile efficiency.
r? `@cjgillot`
bump windows crate 0.46 -> 0.48
This drops duped version of crate(0.46), reduces `rustc_driver.dll` ~800kb and reduces exported functions number from 26k to 22k.
Also while here, added `tidy-alphabetical` sorting to lists in tidy allowed lists.
Start using `windows sys` for Windows FFI bindings in std
Switch to using windows-sys for FFI. In order to avoid some currently contentious issues, this uses windows-bindgen to generate a smaller set of bindings instead of using the full crate.
Unlike the windows-sys crate, the generated bindings uses `*mut c_void` for handle types instead of `isize`. This to sidestep opsem concerns about mixing pointer types and integers between languages. Note that `SOCKET` remains defined as an integer but instead of being a usize, it's changed to fit the [standard library definition](a41fc00eaf/library/std/src/os/windows/raw.rs (L12-L16)):
```rust
#[cfg(target_pointer_width = "32")]
pub type SOCKET = u32;
#[cfg(target_pointer_width = "64")]
pub type SOCKET = u64;
```
The generated bindings also customizes the `#[link]` imports. I hope to switch to using raw-dylib but I don't want to tie that too closely with the switch to windows-sys.
---
Changes outside of the bindings are, for the most part, fairly minimal (e.g. some differences in `*mut` vs. `*const` or a few types differ). One issue is that our own bindings sometimes mix in higher level types, like `BorrowedHandle`. This is pretty adhoc though.
STD support for PSVita
This PR adds std support for `armv7-sony-vita-newlibeabihf` target.
The work here is fairly similar to #95897, just for a different target platform.
This depends on the following pull requests:
rust-lang/backtrace-rs#523rust-lang/libc#3209
The main workspace, bootstrap, cargo, miri, and rust-analyzer all lock
serde to different versions. It's preferable to share the same version
where possible, so update it.
Rustfmt is synced from another repository and has its own Cargo.lock,
but since it's added to the overall workspace it should respect the
version here.
Cargo is already at the latest version. Miri and rust-analyzer would
require upstream updates.
Add a `sysroot` crate to represent the standard library crates
This adds a dummy crate named `sysroot` to represent the standard library target instead of using the `test` crate. This allows the removal of `proc_macro` as a dependency of `test` allowing these 2 crates to build in parallel saving around 9 seconds locally.
Support loading version information from xz tarballs
This is intended to allow us to move recompression from xz (produced in CI) to gz after an initial manifest run, which produces a list of actually required artifacts. The rest are then deleted, which means that we can avoid recompressing them, saving a bunch of time.
This is essentially untested and more might be needed, will run a patched promote-release against try artifacts from this PR. If we do go ahead with this we'll either need to backport this patch to beta/stable, wait for it to propagate, or temporarily recompress to gzip but not xz tarballs (or similar).
r? `@pietroalbini`
It's only used in tests. Which is bad, because it means that
`FileEncoder` is used in the compiler but isn't used in tests!
`tests/opaque.rs` now tests encoding/decoding round-trips via file.
Because this is slower than memory, this commit also adjusts the
`u16`/`i16` tests so they are more like the `u32`/`i32` tests, i.e. they
don't test every possible value.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #110586 (Fix Unreadable non-UTF-8 output on localized MSVC)
- #110652 (Add test for warning-free builds of `core` under `no_global_oom_handling`)
- #110973 (improve error notes for packed struct reference diagnostic)
- #110981 (Move most rustdoc-ui tests into subdirectories)
- #110983 (rustdoc: Get `repr` information through `AdtDef` for foreign items)
- #110984 (Do not resolve anonymous lifetimes in consts to be static.)
- #110997 (Improve internal field comments on `slice::Iter(Mut)`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Fix Unreadable non-UTF-8 output on localized MSVC
Fixes#35785 by converting non UTF-8 linker output to Unicode using the OEM code page.
Before:
```text
= note: Non-UTF-8 output: LINK : fatal error LNK1181: cannot open input file \'m\x84rchenhaft.obj\'\r\n
```
After:
```text
= note: LINK : fatal error LNK1181: cannot open input file 'märchenhaft.obj'
```
The difference is more dramatic if using a non-ascii language pack for Windows.
Remove `QueryEngine` trait
This removes the `QueryEngine` trait and `Queries` from `rustc_query_impl` and replaced them with function pointers and fields in `QuerySystem`. As a side effect `OnDiskCache` is moved back into `rustc_middle` and the `OnDiskCache` trait is also removed.
This has a couple of benefits.
- `TyCtxt` is used in the query system instead of the removed `QueryCtxt` which is larger.
- Function pointers are more flexible to work with. A variant of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107802 is included which avoids the double indirection. For https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/108938 we can name entry point `__rust_end_short_backtrace` to avoid some overhead. For https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/108062 it avoids the duplicate `QueryEngine` structs.
- `QueryContext` now implements `DepContext` which avoids many `dep_context()` calls in `rustc_query_system`.
- The `rustc_driver` size is reduced by 0.33%, hopefully that means some bootstrap improvements.
- This avoids the unsafe code around the `QueryEngine` trait.
r? `@cjgillot`
Add support for LibreSSL 3.7.x
This updates the `openssl-sys` crate to 0.9.87 to support building the toolchain against the system libraries provided by LibreSSL version 3.7.x.
LibreSSL 3.7.x has been supported since `openssl-sys` version 0.9.85.
This updates the `openssl-sys` crate to 0.9.87 to support building the
toolchain against the system libraries provided by LibreSSL version 3.7.x.
LibreSSL 3.7.x has been supported since `openssl-sys` version 0.9.85.
Fixes#35785 by converting non UTF-8 linker output to Unicode using the OEM code page.
Before:
```text
= note: Non-UTF-8 output: LINK : fatal error LNK1181: cannot open input file \'m\x84rchenhaft.obj\'\r\n
```
After:
```text
= note: LINK : fatal error LNK1181: cannot open input file 'märchenhaft.obj'
```
The difference is more dramatic if using a non-ascii language pack for Visual Studio.
Support AIX-style archive type
Reading facility of AIX big archive has been supported by `object` since 0.30.0.
Writing facility of AIX big archive has already been supported by `ar_archive_writer`, but we need to bump the version to support the new archive type enum.
Fluent, with all the icu4x it brings in, takes quite some time to
compile. `fluent_messages!` is only needed in further downstream rustc
crates, but is blocking more upstream crates like `rustc_index`. By
splitting it out, we allow `rustc_macros` to be compiled earlier, which
speeds up `x check compiler` by about 5 seconds (and even more after the
needless dependency on `serde_json` is removed from
`rustc_data_structures`).
Don't use `serde_json` to serialize a simple JSON object
This avoids `rustc_data_structures` depending on `serde_json` which allows it to be compiled much earlier, unlocking most of rustc.
This used to not matter, but after #110407 we're not blocked on fluent anymore, which means that it's now a blocking edge.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/48135649/232313178-e0150420-3020-4eb6-98d3-fe5294a8f947.png)
This saves a few more seconds.
cc ````@Zoxc```` who added it recently
This also
* bumps cargo to the latest in rust-lang/cargo.
* adds 0BSD to allowed list of licenses
Co-authored-by: Scott Schafer <schaferjscott@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Eric Huss <eric@huss.org>
This allows us to get rid of the `rustc_const_eval->rustc_borrowck`
dependency edge which was delaying the compilation of borrowck.
The added utils in `rustc_middle` are small and should not affect
compile times there.
Create "suggested tests" tool in `rustbuild`
Not the claimed person in #97339 but:
I've done a very rough implementation of this feature in-tree. I'm very new to `rustc` development (outside of docs) so some help would be greatly appreciated. The UI of this new subcommand obviously will change and I need some mentoring with the `--run` flag.
r? ```@jyn514```
migrate rustc_macros to syn 2.0
WIP at this point since I need to work on migrating the code that heavily uses `NestedMeta` for parsing. Perhaps a full refactor would be nice..
Increase libffi version to 3.2 to support s390x
libffi versions prior to 3.2 have no support for s390x, causing the Miri build to fail on our platform.
Update compiler-builtins to 0.1.91 to bring in msp430 shift primitive…
… fixes.
This fixes unsoundness on MSP430 where `compiler-builtins` and LLVM didn't agree on the width of the shift amount argument of the shifting primitives (4 bytes vs 2 bytes). See https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/522 for more details.
Update ar_archive_writer to 0.1.3
This updates object to 0.30 and fixes a bug where the symbol table would be omitted for archives where there are object files yet none that export any symbol. This bug could lead to linker errors for crates like rustc_std_workspace_core which don't contain any code of their own but exist solely for their dependencies. This is likely the cause of the linker issues I was experiencing on Webassembly. It has been shown to cause issues on other platforms too.
cc rust-lang/ar_archive_writer#5
Use Rayon's TLV directly
This accesses Rayon's `TLV` thread local directly avoiding wrapper functions. This makes rustc work with https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-rayon/pull/10.
r? `@cuviper`
This updates object to 0.30 and fixes a bug where the symbol table
would be omitted for archives where there are object files yet none
that export any symbol. This bug could lead to linker errors for crates
like rustc_std_workspace_core which don't contain any code of their own
but exist solely for their dependencies. This is likely the cause of
the linker issues I was experiencing on Webassembly. It has been shown
to cause issues on other platforms too.
cc rust-lang/ar_archive_writer#5
Add `try_canonicalize` to `rustc_fs_util` and use it over `fs::canonicalize`
This adds `try_canonicalize` which tries to call `fs::canonicalize`, but falls back to `std::path::absolute` if it fails. Existing `canonicalize` calls are replaced with it. `fs::canonicalize` is not guaranteed to work on Windows.
Add `-Z time-passes-format` to allow specifying a JSON output for `-Z time-passes`
This adds back the `-Z time` option as that is useful for [my rustc benchmark tool](https://github.com/Zoxc/rcb), reverting https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/102725. It now uses nanoseconds and bytes as the units so it is renamed to `time-precise`.
Eagerly intern and check CrateNum/StableCrateId collisions
r? ``@cjgillot``
It seems better to check things ahead of time than checking them afterwards.
The [previous version](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/108390) was a bit nonsensical, so this addresses the feedback
migrate compiler, bootstrap and compiletest to windows-rs
This PR migrates the compiler, bootstrap, and compiletest to use [windows-rs](https://github.com/microsoft/windows-rs) instead of winapi-rs. windows-rs is the bindings crate provided by Microsoft, and is actively maintained compared to winapi-rs. Not all ecosystem crates have migrated over yet, so there will be a period of time where both crates are used.
windows-rs also provides some nice ergonomics over winapi-rs to convert return values to `Result`s (which found a case where we forgot to check the return value of `CreateFileW`).
- only borrow the refcell once per loop
- avoid complex matches to reduce branch paths in the hot loop
- use a by-ref fast path that avoids mutations at the expense of having false negatives
rustdoc: DocFS: Replace rayon with threadpool and enable it for all targets
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/109060.
Switching to `threadpool` makes it a bit simpler for us to wait for all tasks in `DocFS` directly in the `Drop` implementation. I'm also curious if making all the writes into a thread pool could improve run time for rustdoc on all other platforms than Windows as well.
I'll run a perf check to see.
cc ```@ehuss```
r? ```@notriddle```
Update cargo
14 commits in 7d3033d2e59383fd76193daf9423c3d141972a7d..4a3c588b1f0a8e2dc8dd8789dbf3b6a71b02ed49
2023-03-08 17:05:08 +0000 to 2023-03-14 14:05:36 +0000
- ci: make clean-test-output a script for reuse (rust-lang/cargo#11848)
- Accurately show status when downgrading dependencies (rust-lang/cargo#11839)
- docs(contrib): Move Design Principles earlier in the book (rust-lang/cargo#11842)
- docs(contrib): Point compilation docs to doc comments (rust-lang/cargo#11841)
- `cargo install --git` multiple packages with binaries found hint (rust-lang/cargo#11835)
- Disable flaky auth tests when `gitoxide` runs them (rust-lang/cargo#11830)
- Add some documentation on writing cross-compilation tests (rust-lang/cargo#11825)
- chore: Use sparse protocol on stable CI (rust-lang/cargo#11829)
- Notice for potential unexpected shell expansions in help text of `cargo-add` (rust-lang/cargo#11826)
- Add tracking issue to gitoxide unstable docs (rust-lang/cargo#11822)
- Bump crates-io to 0.36.0 (rust-lang/cargo#11820)
- Bump to 0.71.0; update changelog (rust-lang/cargo#11815)
- docs(contrib): Move overview to lib (rust-lang/cargo#11809)
- Fix semver check for 1.68 (rust-lang/cargo#11817)
r? `@ghost`
14 commits in 7d3033d2e59383fd76193daf9423c3d141972a7d..4a3c588b1f0a8e2dc8dd8789dbf3b6a71b02ed49
2023-03-08 17:05:08 +0000 to 2023-03-14 14:05:36 +0000
- ci: make clean-test-output a script for reuse (rust-lang/cargo#11848)
- Accurately show status when downgrading dependencies (rust-lang/cargo#11839)
- docs(contrib): Move Design Principles earlier in the book (rust-lang/cargo#11842)
- docs(contrib): Point compilation docs to doc comments (rust-lang/cargo#11841)
- `cargo install --git` multiple packages with binaries found hint (rust-lang/cargo#11835)
- Disable flaky auth tests when `gitoxide` runs them (rust-lang/cargo#11830)
- Add some documentation on writing cross-compilation tests (rust-lang/cargo#11825)
- chore: Use sparse protocol on stable CI (rust-lang/cargo#11829)
- Notice for potential unexpected shell expansions in help text of `cargo-add` (rust-lang/cargo#11826)
- Add tracking issue to gitoxide unstable docs (rust-lang/cargo#11822)
- Bump crates-io to 0.36.0 (rust-lang/cargo#11820)
- Bump to 0.71.0; update changelog (rust-lang/cargo#11815)
- docs(contrib): Move overview to lib (rust-lang/cargo#11809)
- Fix semver check for 1.68 (rust-lang/cargo#11817)
StableMIR: Proof-of-concept implementation + test
This PR is part of the [project Stable MIR](https://github.com/rust-lang/project-stable-mir). The PR deletes old re-exports from rustc_smir and introduces a proof-of-concept implementation for APIs to retrieve crate information.
The implementation follows the [design described here](https://hackmd.io/XhnYHKKuR6-LChhobvlT-g?view), but instead of using separate crates for the implementation, it uses separate modules inside `rustc_smir`.
The API introduced at this point should be seen just as an example on how we are planning to structure the communication between tools and the compiler.
I have not explored yet what should be the right granularity, the best starting point for users, neither the best way to implement it.
r? ``````@oli-obk``````
rustdoc-json: switch from HashMap to FxHashMap to fix non-determinism
Using `HashMap` in `rustdoc_json_types::Crate` were causing creating randomly ordered objects in the json doc files. Which might cause problems to people who are doing comparison on those files specially in CI pipelines. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/103785#issuecomment-1307425590
This PR fixes that issue and extends the coverage of `tests/run-make/rustdoc-verify-output-files` testing ability.
Add support for QNX Neutrino to standard library
This change:
- adds standard library support for QNX Neutrino (7.1).
- upgrades `libc` to version `0.2.139` which supports QNX Neutrino
`@gh-tr`
⚠️ Backtraces on QNX require https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/pull/507 which is not yet merged! (But everything else works without these changes) ⚠️
Tested mainly with a x86_64 virtual machine (see qnx-nto.md) and partially with an aarch64 hardware (some tests fail due to constrained resources).
10 commits in 9d5b32f503fc099c4064298465add14d4bce11e6..9880b408a3af50c08fab3dbf4aa2a972df71e951
2023-02-22 23:04:16 +0000 to 2023-02-28 19:39:39 +0000
- bump jobserver to respect `--jobserver-auth=fifo:PATH` (rust-lang/cargo#11767)
- Addition of support for -F as an alias for --features (rust-lang/cargo#11774)
- Added documentation for the configuration discovery of `cargo install` to the man pages (rust-lang/cargo#11763)
- Fix Cargo removing the sparse+ prefix from sparse URLs in .crates.toml (rust-lang/cargo#11756)
- Fix warning with tempfile (rust-lang/cargo#11771)
- Error message for transitive artifact dependencies with targets the package doesn't directly interact with (rust-lang/cargo#11643)
- Fix tests with nondeterministic ordering (rust-lang/cargo#11766)
- Make some blocking tests non-blocking (rust-lang/cargo#11650)
- Suggest cargo add when installing library crate (rust-lang/cargo#11410)
- chore: bump is-terminal to 0.4.4 (rust-lang/cargo#11759)
Upgrade to ena-0.14.1.
It avoids some inlining within its `inlined_probe_value` function, which seems to result in better codegen for the very large `process_obligations` function within rustc. It might also help with reducing the bimodal perf results we see for the `keccak` and `cranelift-codegen-0.82.1` benchmarks.
r? `@ghost`