Commit Graph

59990 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Crichton
3c8a17f4b0 Rollup merge of #38649 - GuillaumeGomez:atomicint_docs, r=frewsxcv
Add missing urls for atomic_int macros types

r? @frewsxcv
2016-12-29 17:26:30 -08:00
Alex Crichton
332a4cc616 Rollup merge of #38647 - alexcrichton:faster-android, r=brson
compiletest: Don't limit all suites on Android

On Android we only have one test thread for supposed problems with concurrency
and the remote debugger. Not all of our suites require one concurrency, however,
and suites like compile-fail or pretty can be much faster if they're
parallelized on Travis.

This commit only sets the test threads to one on Android for suites which
actually run code, and other suites aren't tampered with.
2016-12-29 17:26:29 -08:00
Alex Crichton
8b8ab85551 Rollup merge of #38635 - GuillaumeGomez:atomicptr_docs, r=frewsxcv
Add missing urls for AtomicPtr

r? @frewsxcv
2016-12-29 17:26:28 -08:00
Alex Crichton
6ccf039a2c Rollup merge of #38632 - alexcrichton:trim-travis, r=japaric
Trim down Travis docker images slightly

Two things we no longer need:

* ccache, we now use sccache
* A `/tmp/obj` dir no longer used
2016-12-29 17:26:26 -08:00
Alex Crichton
9bb3543885 Rollup merge of #38631 - alexcrichton:supafast, r=brson
rustbuild: Compile rustc twice, not thrice

This commit switches the rustbuild build system to compiling the
compiler twice for a normal bootstrap rather than the historical three
times.

Rust is a bootstrapped language which means that a previous version of
the compiler is used to build the next version of the compiler. Over
time, however, we change many parts of compiler artifacts such as the
metadata format, symbol names, etc. These changes make artifacts from
one compiler incompatible from another compiler. Consequently if a
compiler wants to be able to use some artifacts then it itself must have
compiled the artifacts.

Historically the rustc build system has achieved this by compiling the
compiler three times:

* An older compiler (stage0) is downloaded to kick off the chain.
* This compiler now compiles a new compiler (stage1)
* The stage1 compiler then compiles another compiler (stage2)
* Finally, the stage2 compiler needs libraries to link against, so it
  compiles all the libraries again.

This entire process amounts in compiling the compiler three times.
Additionally, this process always guarantees that the Rust source tree
can compile itself because the stage2 compiler (created by a freshly
created compiler) would successfully compile itself again. This
property, ensuring Rust can compile itself, is quite important!

In general, though, this third compilation is not required for general
purpose development on the compiler. The third compiler (stage2) can
reuse the libraries that were created during the second compile. In
other words, the second compilation can produce both a compiler and the
libraries that compiler will use. These artifacts *must* be compatible
due to the way plugins work today anyway, and they were created by the
same source code so they *should* be compatible as well.

So given all that, this commit switches the default build process to
only compile the compiler two times, avoiding this third compilation
by copying artifacts from the previous one. Along the way a new entry in
the Travis matrix was also added to ensure that our full bootstrap can
succeed. This entry does not run tests, though, as it should not be
necessary.

To restore the old behavior of a full bootstrap (three compiles) you can
either pass:

    ./configure --enable-full-bootstrap

or if you're using config.toml:

    [build]
    full-bootstrap = true

Overall this will hopefully be an easy 33% win in build times of the
compiler. If we do 33% less work we should be 33% faster! This in turn
should affect cycle times and such on Travis and AppVeyor positively as
well as making it easier to work on the compiler itself.
2016-12-29 17:26:25 -08:00
Alex Crichton
1c2a6f9e9d Rollup merge of #38630 - frewsxcv:variadic, r=steveklabnik
Document foreign variadic functions in TRPL and the reference.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/38485.
2016-12-29 17:26:24 -08:00
Alex Crichton
96c79c953e Rollup merge of #38628 - kellerkindt:patch-1, r=steveklabnik
And suddenly a german word :O

"verboten" is german for "forbidden"
2016-12-29 17:26:22 -08:00
Alex Crichton
8623907410 Rollup merge of #38622 - alexcrichton:read-lengths, r=sfackler
std: Clamp max read/write sizes on Unix

Turns out that even though all these functions take a `size_t` they don't
actually work that well with anything larger than the maximum value of
`ssize_t`, the return value. Furthermore it looks like OSX rejects any
read/write requests larger than `INT_MAX - 1`. Handle all these cases by just
clamping the maximum size of a read/write on Unix to a platform-specific value.

Closes #38590
2016-12-29 17:26:21 -08:00
Alex Crichton
41b601ecdd Rollup merge of #38611 - GuillaumeGomez:atomicbool_docs, r=frewsxcv
Add missing urls in AtomicBool docs

r? @frewsxcv
2016-12-29 17:26:20 -08:00
Alex Crichton
a68f8866a7 Rollup merge of #38609 - alexcrichton:less-compress, r=japaric
travis: Don't use -9 on gzip

I timed this locally and plain old `gzip` took 2m06s while `gzip -9` took a
whopping 6m23s to save a mere 4MB out of 1.2GB. Let's shave a few minutes off
the Android builder by turning down the compression level.
2016-12-29 17:26:19 -08:00
Alex Crichton
fe80a1d014 Rollup merge of #38587 - GuillaumeGomez:arc_docs, r=frewsxcv
Add missing urls in Arc docs

r? @frewsxcv
2016-12-29 17:26:18 -08:00
Alex Crichton
bcfd504744 Rollup merge of #38559 - japaric:ptx2, r=alexcrichton
PTX support, take 2

- You can generate PTX using `--emit=asm` and the right (custom) target. Which
  then you can run on a NVIDIA GPU.

- You can compile `core` to PTX. [Xargo] also works and it can compile some
  other crates like `collections` (but I doubt all of those make sense on a GPU)

[Xargo]: https://github.com/japaric/xargo

- You can create "global" functions, which can be "called" by the host, using
  the `"ptx-kernel"` ABI, e.g. `extern "ptx-kernel" fn kernel() { .. }`. Every
  other function is a "device" function and can only be called by the GPU.

- Intrinsics like `__syncthreads()` and `blockIdx.x` are available as
  `"platform-intrinsics"`. These intrinsics are *not* in the `core` crate but
  any Rust user can create "bindings" to them using an `extern
  "platform-intrinsics"` block. See example at the end.

- Trying to emit PTX with `-g` (debuginfo); you get an LLVM error. But I don't
  think PTX can contain debuginfo anyway so `-g` should be ignored and a warning
  should be printed ("`-g` doesn't work with this target" or something).

- "Single source" support. You *can't* write a single source file that contains
  both host and device code. I think that should be possible to implement that
  outside the compiler using compiler plugins / build scripts.

- The equivalent to CUDA `__shared__` which it's used to declare memory that's
  shared between the threads of the same block. This could be implemented using
  attributes: `#[shared] static mut SCRATCH_MEMORY: [f32; 64]` but hasn't been
  implemented yet.

- Built-in targets. This PR doesn't add targets to the compiler just yet but one
  can create custom targets to be able to emit PTX code (see the example at the
  end). The idea is to have people experiment with this feature before
  committing to it (built-in targets are "insta-stable")

- All functions must be "inlined". IOW, the `.rlib` must always contain the LLVM
  bitcode of all the functions of the crate it was produced from. Otherwise, you
  end with "undefined references" in the final PTX code but you won't get *any*
  linker error because no linker is involved. IOW, you'll hit a runtime error
  when loading the PTX into the GPU. The workaround is to use `#[inline]` on
  non-generic functions and to never use `#[inline(never)]` but this may not
  always be possible because e.g. you could be relying on third party code.

- Should `--emit=asm` generate a `.ptx` file instead of a `.s` file?

TL;DR Use Xargo to turn a crate into a PTX module (a `.s` file). Then pass that
PTX module, as a string, to the GPU and run it.

The full code is in [this repository]. This section gives an overview of how to
run Rust code on a NVIDIA GPU.

[this repository]: https://github.com/japaric/cuda

- Create a custom target. Here's the 64-bit NVPTX target (NOTE: the comments
  are not valid because this is supposed to be a JSON file; remove them before
  you use this file):

``` js
// nvptx64-nvidia-cuda.json
{
  "arch": "nvptx64",  // matches LLVM
  "cpu": "sm_20",  // "oldest" compute capability supported by LLVM
  "data-layout": "e-i64:64-v16:16-v32:32-n16:32:64",
  "llvm-target": "nvptx64-nvidia-cuda",
  "max-atomic-width": 0,  // LLVM errors with any other value :-(
  "os": "cuda",  // matches LLVM
  "panic-strategy": "abort",
  "target-endian": "little",
  "target-pointer-width": "64",
  "target-vendor": "nvidia",  // matches LLVM -- not required
}
```

(There's a 32-bit target specification in the linked repository)

- Write a kernel

``` rust

extern "platform-intrinsic" {
    fn nvptx_block_dim_x() -> i32;
    fn nvptx_block_idx_x() -> i32;
    fn nvptx_thread_idx_x() -> i32;
}

/// Copies an array of `n` floating point numbers from `src` to `dst`
pub unsafe extern "ptx-kernel" fn memcpy(dst: *mut f32,
                                         src: *const f32,
                                         n: usize) {
    let i = (nvptx_block_dim_x() as isize)
        .wrapping_mul(nvptx_block_idx_x() as isize)
        .wrapping_add(nvptx_thread_idx_x() as isize);

    if (i as usize) < n {
        *dst.offset(i) = *src.offset(i);
    }
}
```

- Emit PTX code

```
$ xargo rustc --target nvptx64-nvidia-cuda --release -- --emit=asm
   Compiling core v0.0.0 (file://..)
   (..)
   Compiling nvptx-builtins v0.1.0 (https://github.com/japaric/nvptx-builtins)
   Compiling kernel v0.1.0

$ cat target/nvptx64-nvidia-cuda/release/deps/kernel-*.s
//
// Generated by LLVM NVPTX Back-End
//

.version 3.2
.target sm_20
.address_size 64

        // .globl       memcpy

.visible .entry memcpy(
        .param .u64 memcpy_param_0,
        .param .u64 memcpy_param_1,
        .param .u64 memcpy_param_2
)
{
        .reg .pred      %p<2>;
        .reg .s32       %r<5>;
        .reg .s64       %rd<12>;

        ld.param.u64    %rd7, [memcpy_param_2];
        mov.u32 %r1, %ntid.x;
        mov.u32 %r2, %ctaid.x;
        mul.wide.s32    %rd8, %r2, %r1;
        mov.u32 %r3, %tid.x;
        cvt.s64.s32     %rd9, %r3;
        add.s64         %rd10, %rd9, %rd8;
        setp.ge.u64     %p1, %rd10, %rd7;
        @%p1 bra        LBB0_2;
        ld.param.u64    %rd3, [memcpy_param_0];
        ld.param.u64    %rd4, [memcpy_param_1];
        cvta.to.global.u64      %rd5, %rd4;
        cvta.to.global.u64      %rd6, %rd3;
        shl.b64         %rd11, %rd10, 2;
        add.s64         %rd1, %rd6, %rd11;
        add.s64         %rd2, %rd5, %rd11;
        ld.global.u32   %r4, [%rd2];
        st.global.u32   [%rd1], %r4;
LBB0_2:
        ret;
}
```

- Run it on the GPU

``` rust
// `kernel.ptx` is the `*.s` file we got in the previous step
const KERNEL: &'static str = include_str!("kernel.ptx");

driver::initialize()?;

let device = Device(0)?;
let ctx = device.create_context()?;
let module = ctx.load_module(KERNEL)?;
let kernel = module.function("memcpy")?;

let h_a: Vec<f32> = /* create some random data */;
let h_b = vec![0.; N];

let d_a = driver::allocate(bytes)?;
let d_b = driver::allocate(bytes)?;

// Copy from host to GPU
driver::copy(h_a, d_a)?;

// Run `memcpy` on the GPU
kernel.launch(d_b, d_a, N)?;

// Copy from GPU to host
driver::copy(d_b, h_b)?;

// Verify
assert_eq!(h_a, h_b);

// `d_a`, `d_b`, `h_a`, `h_b` are dropped/freed here
```

---

cc @alexcrichton @brson @rkruppe

> What has changed since #34195?

- `core` now can be compiled into PTX. Which makes it very easy to turn `no_std`
  crates into "kernels" with the help of Xargo.

- There's now a way, the `"ptx-kernel"` ABI, to generate "global" functions. The
  old PR required a manual step (it was hack) to "convert" "device" functions
  into "global" functions. (Only "global" functions can be launched by the host)

- Everything is unstable. There are not "insta stable" built-in targets this
  time (\*). The users have to use a custom target to experiment with this
  feature. Also, PTX instrinsics, like `__syncthreads` and `blockIdx.x`, are now
  implemented as `"platform-intrinsics"` so they no longer live in the `core`
  crate.

(\*) I'd actually like to have in-tree targets because that makes this target
more discoverable, removes the need to lug around .json files, etc.

However, bundling a target with the compiler immediately puts it in the path
towards stabilization. Which gives us just two cycles to find and fix any
problem with the target specification. Afterwards, it becomes hard to tweak
the specification because that could be a breaking change.

A possible solution could be "unstable built-in targets". Basically, to use an
unstable target, you'll have to also pass `-Z unstable-options` to the compiler.
And unstable targets, being unstable, wouldn't be available on stable.

> Why should this be merged?

- To let people experiment with the feature out of tree. Having easy access to
  the feature (in every nightly) allows this. I also think that, as it is, it
  should be possible to start prototyping type-safe single source support using
  build scripts, macros and/or plugins.

- It's a straightforward implementation. No different that adding support for
  any other architecture.
2016-12-29 17:26:15 -08:00
Alex Crichton
4e2e01ec95 Rollup merge of #38517 - frewsxcv:clarify-msys2-dependencies, r=alexcrichton
Clarify phrasing of MSYS2 dependencies in README.md.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/36115.
2016-12-29 17:26:14 -08:00
Alex Crichton
26f28ec96d Rollup merge of #38491 - GuillaumeGomez:builder_docs, r=frewsxcv
Builder docs

r? @frewsxcv
2016-12-29 17:26:13 -08:00
Alex Crichton
2293ea5e9b Rollup merge of #37149 - edunham:more-cargotest, r=alexcrichton
Add some more repos to cargotest

From suggestions at https://users.rust-lang.org/t/what-stable-rust-applications-do-you-use-frequently/7618

This adds some applications which use stable Rust and come with their own lockfiles in their respective trees.

ripgrep, xsv, and bins have 33 unique dependencies between them.

I alphabetized the list by project name because that seems tidier.

r? @brson
2016-12-29 17:26:12 -08:00
bors
e7c788af75 Auto merge of #38503 - brson:bootstrap, r=alexcrichton
Bump bootstrap compiler

r? @alexcrichton

I'm not clear on whether cargo will need to additionally be bumped beyond what's in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/38470
2016-12-29 19:34:23 +00:00
Alex Crichton
a0f3c93d64 Fixes for new cargo test repos
* Update to ripgrep HEAD because the previous rev would still change the lock
  file when `cargo build` was issued.
* Remove `bins` as it depends on OpenSSL on Windows, which won't work on our
  bots
* Update rev of tokei to get a rev that doesn't change the lockfile
2016-12-29 08:56:01 -08:00
E. Dunham
99580212b2 Add some more repos to cargotest
From suggestions at https://users.rust-lang.org/t/what-stable-rust-applications-do-you-use-frequently/7618

This adds some applications which use stable Rust and come with their own
lockfiles in tree.

ripgrep, xsv, and bins have 33 unique dependencies between them.
2016-12-29 08:48:47 -08:00
Alex Crichton
03bc2cf35a Fallout from updating bootstrap Cargo 2016-12-29 08:47:26 -08:00
Brian Anderson
6207e80d2c Bump bootstrap compiler 2016-12-29 08:47:20 -08:00
bors
3f957ebeff Auto merge of #38627 - rkruppe:ninja-build, r=alexcrichton
Accept ninja-build binary in place of ninja

See comment in the diff for rationale.

r? @alexcrichton
2016-12-29 13:48:50 +00:00
bors
e571f2d778 Auto merge of #38571 - nrc:emit-metadata-change, r=alexcrichton
Change --crate-type metadata to --emit=metadata

WIP
2016-12-29 11:01:11 +00:00
bors
ebc293bcd3 Auto merge of #38645 - nikomatsakis:incr-comp-fix-time-depth, r=nrc
propagate TIME_DEPTH to the helper threads for -Z time-passes

Currently, the timing measurements for LLVM passes and the like don't come out indented, which messes up `perf.rust-lang.org`.

r? @nrc
2016-12-29 08:16:58 +00:00
Nick Cameron
b059a80d4c Support --emit=foo,metadata 2016-12-29 18:17:07 +13:00
bors
1d9965b5ba Auto merge of #38619 - alexcrichton:less-android-flaky, r=brson
travis: Attempt to fix Android flakiness

There's been some flaky runs on Travis where the Android emulator is having
problems staying alive... presumably? For example:

* https://travis-ci.org/rust-lang/rust/jobs/186736745

This commit spawns the emulator in the same way as buildbot with `nohup` to hope
that it goes into the background successfully, followed by a `wait-for-device`
command. I'm not actually sure if this'll fix the problems we're seeing, but I
figure it can't hurt to test out.
2016-12-29 02:44:28 +00:00
Nick Cameron
9c89166611 Restore --crate-type=metadata as an alias for --crate-type=rlib,--emit=metadata + a warning 2016-12-29 13:24:46 +13:00
Nick Cameron
71f161c887 Add a test for #38273
Closes 38273
2016-12-29 13:24:46 +13:00
Nick Cameron
7720cf02e3 Change --crate-type metadata to --emit=metadata 2016-12-29 13:24:45 +13:00
Alex Crichton
7046fea5be rustbuild: Compile rustc twice, not thrice
This commit switches the rustbuild build system to compiling the
compiler twice for a normal bootstrap rather than the historical three
times.

Rust is a bootstrapped language which means that a previous version of
the compiler is used to build the next version of the compiler. Over
time, however, we change many parts of compiler artifacts such as the
metadata format, symbol names, etc. These changes make artifacts from
one compiler incompatible from another compiler. Consequently if a
compiler wants to be able to use some artifacts then it itself must have
compiled the artifacts.

Historically the rustc build system has achieved this by compiling the
compiler three times:

* An older compiler (stage0) is downloaded to kick off the chain.
* This compiler now compiles a new compiler (stage1)
* The stage1 compiler then compiles another compiler (stage2)
* Finally, the stage2 compiler needs libraries to link against, so it
  compiles all the libraries again.

This entire process amounts in compiling the compiler three times.
Additionally, this process always guarantees that the Rust source tree
can compile itself because the stage2 compiler (created by a freshly
created compiler) would successfully compile itself again. This
property, ensuring Rust can compile itself, is quite important!

In general, though, this third compilation is not required for general
purpose development on the compiler. The third compiler (stage2) can
reuse the libraries that were created during the second compile. In
other words, the second compilation can produce both a compiler and the
libraries that compiler will use. These artifacts *must* be compatible
due to the way plugins work today anyway, and they were created by the
same source code so they *should* be compatible as well.

So given all that, this commit switches the default build process to
only compile the compiler three times, avoiding this third compilation
by copying artifacts from the previous one. Along the way a new entry in
the Travis matrix was also added to ensure that our full bootstrap can
succeed. This entry does not run tests, though, as it should not be
necessary.

To restore the old behavior of a full bootstrap (three compiles) you can
either pass:

    ./configure --enable-full-bootstrap

or if you're using config.toml:

    [build]
    full-bootstrap = true

Overall this will hopefully be an easy 33% win in build times of the
compiler. If we do 33% less work we should be 33% faster! This in turn
should affect cycle times and such on Travis and AppVeyor positively as
well as making it easier to work on the compiler itself.
2016-12-28 14:49:00 -08:00
bors
4ecc85beb3 Auto merge of #38449 - eddyb:lazy-10, r=nikomatsakis
[10/n] Split constants and functions' arguments into disjoint bodies.

_This is part of a series ([prev](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/38053) | [next]()) of patches designed to rework rustc into an out-of-order on-demand pipeline model for both better feature support (e.g. [MIR-based](https://github.com/solson/miri) early constant evaluation) and incremental execution of compiler passes (e.g. type-checking), with beneficial consequences to IDE support as well.
If any motivation is unclear, please ask for additional PR description clarifications or code comments._

<hr>

Finishes the signature-body split started in #37918, namely:
* `trait` items are separated just like `impl` items were, for uniformity, closing #37712
* `static`s, `const`s (including associated ones), `enum` discriminants and array lengths get bodies
  * even the count in "repeat expressions", i.e. `n` in `[x; n]`, which fixes #24414
* arguments' patterns are moved to the bodies, with the types staying in `FnDecl`
  * `&self` now desugars to `self: &Self` instead of `self: &_` (similarly for other `self` forms)
  * `astconv`'s and metadata's (for rustdoc) informative uses are explicitly ignored for the purposes of the dep graph. this could be fixed in the future by hashing the exact information being extracted about the arguments as opposed to generating a dependency on *the whole body*
2016-12-28 20:19:39 +00:00
bors
02b22ec7bd Auto merge of #38639 - xen0n:nightly-dist-hotfix, r=brson
rustbuild: Hotfix to unbreak nightly

Fixes an oversight unnoticed in #38468 that eventually broke nightly packaging. I didn't realize this until some moments ago, when I finally found out the failure is actually deterministic. Many apologies for eating 3 nightlies during the holidays.

r? @alexcrichton
2016-12-28 17:27:13 +00:00
bors
371f4d6bf6 Auto merge of #38626 - redox-os:args_fix, r=alexcrichton
Fix argument handling on Redox

After switching the start code to be handled in libc, we are no longer passing in slices as arguments into the libstd main function. This means that handling had to be rewritten to match the unix way of doing things.

Additional commits on this branch are going to be merged in this PR: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/38577#issuecomment-269138394
2016-12-28 14:33:48 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
ef8d5e14b1 Add missing urls for AtomicPtr 2016-12-28 11:06:17 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
94d58c203e Add missing urls for atomic_int macros types 2016-12-28 11:00:53 +01:00
bors
469fd779ee Auto merge of #38616 - pnkfelix:refactor-mir-dataflow-remove-ctxt, r=arielb1
Refactor mir::dataflow: remove Ctxt associated type from BitDenotation trait

Refactor mir::dataflow: remove Ctxt associated type from BitDenotation trait

I no longer remember why I needed this (or thought I did). The way
that the `BitDenotation` is passed around in all existing use cases
(and planned future ones), the thing that were in the `Ctxt` can just
be part of `Self` instead.

(I think ariel had been pushing me to do this back when I first put in
this infrastructure; it took me a while to see how much of pain the
`Ctxt` was causing.)
2016-12-28 09:42:46 +00:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
ee0ea95343 rustdoc: pretty-print nested bodies in inlined constants. 2016-12-28 11:29:21 +02:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
4aae835803 rustc: always print nested nodes where a HIR map is available. 2016-12-28 11:29:20 +02:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
f64e73b6ec rustc: simplify constant cross-crate loading and rustc_passes::consts. 2016-12-28 11:29:19 +02:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
f89856be6c rustc: move function arguments into hir::Body. 2016-12-28 11:29:19 +02:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
e64f64a2fc rustc: separate bodies for static/(associated)const and embedded constants. 2016-12-28 11:27:57 +02:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
864928297d rustc: separate TraitItem from their parent Item, just like ImplItem. 2016-12-28 11:21:45 +02:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
6ebb6fdbee hir: lower ImplicitSelf to resolved Self TyQPath's. 2016-12-28 11:21:45 +02:00
Alex Crichton
f26e52efa5 compiletest: Don't limit all suites on Android
On Android we only have one test thread for supposed problems with concurrency
and the remote debugger. Not all of our suites require one concurrency, however,
and suites like compile-fail or pretty can be much faster if they're
parallelized on Travis.

This commit only sets the test threads to one on Android for suites which
actually run code, and other suites aren't tampered with.
2016-12-27 23:29:33 -08:00
bors
17f1fba353 Auto merge of #38589 - aidanhs:aphs-stage0-rustdoc-test, r=alexcrichton
Teach `rustdoc --test` about `--sysroot`, pass it when testing rust

This permits rustdoc tests to work in stage0.

Logical continuation of #36586.

Snippet from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/38575#issuecomment-269090724:

> it should actually be possible to run all the libstd tests immediately after creating std of stage0-out - there's no reason to build librustc at all if you've just made a change to (for example) libcollections, `./x.py test src/libcollections --stage 0 -v --incremental` should just work

This PR makes it so (or appears to in my testing).

r? @alexcrichton
2016-12-28 07:05:07 +00:00
bors
0807104c8f Auto merge of #38579 - whitequark:min_atomic_width, r=alexcrichton
Add a min_atomic_width target option, like max_atomic_width

Rationale: some ISAs, e.g. OR1K, do not have atomic instructions
for byte and halfword access, and at the same time do not have
a fixed endianness, which makes it unreasonable to implement these
through word-sized atomic accesses.
2016-12-28 04:12:11 +00:00
Wang Xuerui
cf89453506
rustbuild: fix host-only rules ignoring targets in dist steps
`arr` is the actual list of targets participating in steps construction,
but due to #38468 the hosts array now consists of only the build triple
for the `dist` steps, hence all non-build-triple targets are lost for
the host-only rules.

Fix this by using the original non-shadowed hosts array in `arr`
calculation. This should unbreak the nightly packaging process.

Fixes #38637.
2016-12-28 10:54:13 +08:00
Niko Matsakis
ad747c5869 propagate TIME_DEPTH to the helper threads for -Z time-passes 2016-12-27 21:35:34 -05:00
bors
a9ab778815 Auto merge of #38479 - michaelwoerister:extern_mod_ich, r=nikomatsakis
ICH: Fix and test foreign mod hashing.

r? @nikomatsakis
2016-12-28 01:30:31 +00:00
bors
314c28b729 Auto merge of #38329 - ollie27:rustdoc_stab_em_div, r=steveklabnik
rustdoc: Fix invalid HTML in stability notices

`em` tags cannot contain `p` tags so use `div`s instead of `em`s as the Markdown will create `p` tags.
2016-12-27 21:10:31 +00:00
Wang Xuerui
3991046d52
rustbuild: clarify comment on target array calculation
The comment touched, as originally written, only concerned itself with
the `test` steps. However, since #38468 the `arr` variable actually has
gained an indirect relationship with the `dist` steps too. The comment
failed to convey the extra meaning, contributing to the misunderstanding
which eventually lead to #38637. Fix that by moving the comment into the
right place near the relevant condition, and properly documenting
`arr`'s purpose.
2016-12-28 03:41:09 +08:00