codegen_ssa: consolidate tied target checks
Fixes#105110.
Fixes#105111.
`rustc_codegen_llvm` and `rustc_codegen_gcc` duplicated logic for checking if tied target features were partially enabled. This PR consolidates these checks into `rustc_codegen_ssa` in the `codegen_fn_attrs` query, which also is run pre-monomorphisation for each function, which ensures that this check is run for unused functions, as would be expected.
Also adds a test confirming that enabling one tied feature doesn't imply another - the appropriate error for this was already being emitted. I did a bisect and narrowed it down to two patches it was likely to be - something in #128796, probably #128221 or #128679.
LLVM 20 split out what used to be called b16b16 and correspond to aarch64
FEAT_SVE_B16B16 into sve-b16b16 and sme-b16b16.
Add sme-b16b16 as an explicit feature and update the codegen accordingly.
compiler: Stop reexporting enum-globs from `rustc_target::abi`
Three enums had **all** their variants glob-exported into a distressingly large amount of the tree. Cease to do that, and also cease to glob import the contents of the module that contained them. Redirect relevant imports to their actual source, the `rustc_abi` crate.
No functional changes.
[Coverage][MCDC] Adapt mcdc to llvm 19
Related issue: #126672
Also finish task 4 at #124144
[llvm #82448](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/82448) has introduced some break changes into mcdc, causing incompatibility between llvm 18 and 19. This draft adapts to that change and gives up supporting for llvm-18.
Add missing module flags for `-Zfunction-return=thunk-extern`
This fixes a bug in the `-Zfunction-return=thunk-extern` flag. The flag needs to be passed onto LLVM to ensure that functions such as `asan.module_ctor` and `asan.module_dtor` that are created internally in LLVM have the mitigation applied to them.
This was originally discovered [in the Linux kernel](https://lore.kernel.org/all/CANiq72myZL4_poCMuNFevtpYYc0V0embjSuKb7y=C+m3vVA_8g@mail.gmail.com/).
Original flag PR: #116892
PR for similar issue: #129373
Tracking issue: #116853
cc ``@ojeda``
r? ``@wesleywiser``
Like #130865 did for the standard library, we can use `&raw` in the
compiler now that stage0 supports it. Also like the other issue, I did
not make any doc or test changes at this time.
`rustc_codegen_llvm` and `rustc_codegen_gcc` duplicated logic for
checking if tied target features were partially enabled. This commit
consolidates these checks into `rustc_codegen_ssa` in the
`codegen_fn_attrs` query, which also is run pre-monomorphisation for
each function, which ensures that this check is run for unused functions,
as would be expected.
llvm: replace some deprecated functions
`LLVMMDStringInContext` and `LLVMMDNodeInContext` are deprecated, replace them with `LLVMMDStringInContext2` and `LLVMMDNodeInContext2`.
Also replace `Value` with `Metadata` in some function signatures for better consistency.
Bump stage0 to beta-2024-09-22 and rustfmt to nightly-2024-09-22
I'm doing this to apply the changes to version sorting (https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt/pull/6284) that have occurred since rustfmt last upgraded (and a few other miscellaneous changes, like changes to expression overflowing: https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt/pull/6260). Eagerly updating rustfmt and formatting-the-world will ideally move some of the pressure off of the beta bump which will happen at the beginning of the next release cycle.
You can verify this is correct by checking out the changes, reverting the last commit, reapplying them, and diffing the changes:
```
git fetch git@github.com:compiler-errors/rust.git bump
git checkout -b bump FETCH_HEAD
git reset --hard HEAD~5
./x.py fmt --all
git diff FETCH_HEAD
# ignore the changes to stage0, and rustfmt.toml,
# and test file changes in rustdoc-js-std, run-make.
```
Or just take my word for it? Up to the reviewer.
r? release
Remove macOS 10.10 dynamic linker bug workaround
Rust's current minimum macOS version is 10.12, so the hack can be removed. This PR also updates the `remove_dir_all` docs to reflect that all supported macOS versions are protected against TOCTOU race conditions (the fallback implementation was already removed in #127683).
try-job: dist-x86_64-apple
try-job: dist-aarch64-apple
try-job: dist-apple-various
try-job: aarch64-apple
try-job: x86_64-apple-1
It's crazy to have the integer methods in something close to random
order.
The reordering makes the gaps clear: `const_i64`, `const_i128`,
`const_isize`, and `const_u16`. I guess they just aren't needed.
In `get_fn` there is a complicated set of if/elses to determine if
`hidden` visibility should be applied. There are five calls to
`LLVMRustSetVisibility` and some repetition in the comments.
This commit streamlines it a bit:
- Computes `hidden` and then uses it to determine if a single call to
`LLVMRustSetVisibility` occurs.
- Converts some of the if/elses into boolean expressions.
- Removes the repetitive comments.
Overall this makes it quite a bit shorter, and I find it easier to read.
Supertraits of `BuilderMethods` are all called `XyzBuilderMethods`.
Supertraits of `CodegenMethods` are all called `XyzMethods`. This commit
changes the latter to `XyzCodegenMethods`, for consistency.
It has `Backend` and `Deref` boudns, plus an associated type
`CodegenCx`, and it has a single use. This commit "inlines" it into
`BuilderMethods`, which makes the complicated backend trait situation a
little simpler.
Use -0.0 in `intrinsics::simd::reduce_add_unordered`
-0.0 is the actual neutral additive float, not +0.0, and this matters to codegen.
try-job: aarch64-gnu
deprecate -Csoft-float because it is unsound (and not fixable)
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129893 for details. The general sentiment there seems to be that this flag has no use and sound alternatives exist, so let's add this warning and see if anyone out there disagrees.
Also show a different warning on targets where it does nothing (as documented since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/36261): it seems to correspond to `-mfloat-abi` in GCC/clang, which is an ARM-specific option. To be really sure it does nothing, only forward the flag to LLVM for eabihf targets. This should not change behavior but makes me sleep better ;)
Don't leave debug locations for constants sitting on the builder indefinitely
Because constants are currently emitted *before* the prologue, leaving the debug location on the IRBuilder spills onto other instructions in the prologue and messes up both line numbers as well as the point LLVM chooses to be the prologue end.
Example LLVM IR (irrelevant IR elided):
Before:
```
define internal { i64, i64 } `@_ZN3tmp3Foo18var_return_opt_try17he02116165b0fc08cE(ptr` align 8 %self) !dbg !347 { start:
%self.dbg.spill = alloca [8 x i8], align 8
%_0 = alloca [16 x i8], align 8
%residual.dbg.spill = alloca [0 x i8], align 1
#dbg_declare(ptr %residual.dbg.spill, !353, !DIExpression(), !357)
store ptr %self, ptr %self.dbg.spill, align 8, !dbg !357
#dbg_declare(ptr %self.dbg.spill, !350, !DIExpression(), !358)
```
After:
```
define internal { i64, i64 } `@_ZN3tmp3Foo18var_return_opt_try17h00b17d08874ddd90E(ptr` align 8 %self) !dbg !347 { start:
%self.dbg.spill = alloca [8 x i8], align 8
%_0 = alloca [16 x i8], align 8
%residual.dbg.spill = alloca [0 x i8], align 1
#dbg_declare(ptr %residual.dbg.spill, !353, !DIExpression(), !357)
store ptr %self, ptr %self.dbg.spill, align 8
#dbg_declare(ptr %self.dbg.spill, !350, !DIExpression(), !358)
```
Note in particular how !357 from %residual.dbg.spill's dbg_declare no longer falls through onto the store to %self.dbg.spill. This fixes argument values at entry when the constant is a ZST (e.g. `<Option as Try>::Residual`). This fixes#130003 (but note that it does *not* fix issues with argument values and non-ZST constants, which emit their own stores that have debug info on them, like #128945).
r? `@michaelwoerister`
Simplify some nested `if` statements
Applies some but not all instances of `clippy::collapsible_if`. Some ended up looking worse afterwards, though, so I left those out. Also applies instances of `clippy::collapsible_else_if`
Review with whitespace disabled please.
Add -Z small-data-threshold
This flag allows specifying the threshold size above which LLVM should not consider placing small objects in a `.sdata` or `.sbss` section.
Support is indicated in the target options via the
small-data-threshold-support target option, which can indicate either an
LLVM argument or an LLVM module flag. To avoid duplicate specifications
in a large number of targets, the default value for support is
DefaultForArch, which is translated to a concrete value according to the
target's architecture.
This flag allows specifying the threshold size above which LLVM should
not consider placing small objects in a .sdata or .sbss section.
Support is indicated in the target options via the
small-data-threshold-support target option, which can indicate either an
LLVM argument or an LLVM module flag. To avoid duplicate specifications
in a large number of targets, the default value for support is
DefaultForArch, which is translated to a concrete value according to the
target's architecture.
s390x: Fix a regression related to backchain feature
In #127506, we introduced a new IBM Z-specific target feature, `backchain`.
This particular `target-feature` was available as a function-level attribute in LLVM 17 and below, so some hacks were used to avoid blowing up LLVM when querying the supported LLVM features.
This led to an unfortunate regression where `cfg!(target-feature = "backchain")` will always return true.
This pull request aims to fix this issue, and a test has been introduced to ensure it will never happen again.
Fixes#129927.
r? `@RalfJung`
Do not request sanitizers for naked functions
Naked functions can only contain inline asm, so any instrumentation inserted by sanitizers is illegal. Don't request it.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129224.
Because constants are currently emitted *before* the prologue, leaving the
debug location on the IRBuilder spills onto other instructions in the prologue
and messes up both line numbers as well as the point LLVM chooses to be the
prologue end.
Example LLVM IR (irrelevant IR elided):
Before:
define internal { i64, i64 } @_ZN3tmp3Foo18var_return_opt_try17he02116165b0fc08cE(ptr align 8 %self) !dbg !347 {
start:
%self.dbg.spill = alloca [8 x i8], align 8
%_0 = alloca [16 x i8], align 8
%residual.dbg.spill = alloca [0 x i8], align 1
#dbg_declare(ptr %residual.dbg.spill, !353, !DIExpression(), !357)
store ptr %self, ptr %self.dbg.spill, align 8, !dbg !357
#dbg_declare(ptr %self.dbg.spill, !350, !DIExpression(), !358)
After:
define internal { i64, i64 } @_ZN3tmp3Foo18var_return_opt_try17h00b17d08874ddd90E(ptr align 8 %self) !dbg !347 {
start:
%self.dbg.spill = alloca [8 x i8], align 8
%_0 = alloca [16 x i8], align 8
%residual.dbg.spill = alloca [0 x i8], align 1
#dbg_declare(ptr %residual.dbg.spill, !353, !DIExpression(), !357)
store ptr %self, ptr %self.dbg.spill, align 8
#dbg_declare(ptr %self.dbg.spill, !350, !DIExpression(), !358)
Note in particular how !357 from %residual.dbg.spill's dbg_declare no longer
falls through onto the store to %self.dbg.spill. This fixes argument values
at entry when the constant is a ZST (e.g. <Option as Try>::Residual). This
fixes#130003 (but note that it does *not* fix issues with argument values and
non-ZST constants, which emit their own stores that have debug info on them,
like #128945).
Make `Ty::boxed_ty` return an `Option`
Looks like a good place to use Rust's type system.
---
Most of 4ac7bcbaad/compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/sty.rs (L971-L1963) looks like it could be moved to `TyKind` (then I guess `Ty` should be made to deref to `TyKind`).
Don't emit `expect`/`assume` in opt-level=0
LLVM does not make use of expect/assume calls in `opt-level=0`, so we can simplify IR by not emitting them in this case.
rustc_target: Add various aarch64 features
Add various aarch64 features already supported by LLVM and Linux.
Additionally include some comment fixes to ensure consistency of feature names with the Arm ARM.
Compiler support for features added to stdarch by https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1614.
Tracking issue for unstable aarch64 features is https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127764.
List of added features:
- FEAT_CSSC
- FEAT_ECV
- FEAT_FAMINMAX
- FEAT_FLAGM2
- FEAT_FP8
- FEAT_FP8DOT2
- FEAT_FP8DOT4
- FEAT_FP8FMA
- FEAT_HBC
- FEAT_LSE128
- FEAT_LSE2
- FEAT_LUT
- FEAT_MOPS
- FEAT_LRCPC3
- FEAT_SVE_B16B16
- FEAT_SVE2p1
- FEAT_WFxT
- FEAT_SME
- FEAT_SME_F16F16
- FEAT_SME_F64F64
- FEAT_SME_F8F16
- FEAT_SME_F8F32
- FEAT_SME_FA64
- FEAT_SME_I16I64
- FEAT_SME_LUTv2
- FEAT_SME2
- FEAT_SME2p1
- FEAT_SSVE_FP8DOT2
- FEAT_SSVE_FP8DOT4
- FEAT_SSVE_FP8FMA
FEAT_FPMR is added in the first commit and then removed in a separate one to highlight it being removed from upstream LLVM 19. The intention is for it to be detectable at runtime through stdarch but not have a corresponding Rust compile-time feature.
LLVM uses the word "code" to refer to a particular kind of coverage mapping.
This unrelated usage of the word is confusing, and makes it harder to introduce
types whose names correspond to the LLVM classification of coverage kinds.
Convert to_llvm_features to return Option<LLVMFeature> so that it can
return None if the requested feature is not available for the current
LLVM version.
Add match rules to filter out aarch64 features not available in LLVM 17.
FEAT_FPMR has been removed from upstream LLVM as of LLVM 19.
Remove the feature from the target features list and temporarily hack
the LLVM codegen to always enable it until the minimum LLVM version is
bumped to 19.
Add various aarch64 features already supported by LLVM and Linux.
The features are marked as unstable using a newly added symbol, i.e.
aarch64_unstable_target_feature.
Additionally include some comment fixes to ensure consistency of
feature names with the Arm ARM and support for architecture version
target features up to v9.5a.
This commit adds compiler support for the following features:
- FEAT_CSSC
- FEAT_ECV
- FEAT_FAMINMAX
- FEAT_FLAGM2
- FEAT_FP8
- FEAT_FP8DOT2
- FEAT_FP8DOT4
- FEAT_FP8FMA
- FEAT_FPMR
- FEAT_HBC
- FEAT_LSE128
- FEAT_LSE2
- FEAT_LUT
- FEAT_MOPS
- FEAT_LRCPC3
- FEAT_SVE_B16B16
- FEAT_SVE2p1
- FEAT_WFxT
Add `f16` and `f128` inline ASM support for `aarch64`
Adds `f16` and `f128` inline ASM support for `aarch64`. SIMD vector types are taken from [the ARM intrinsics list](https://developer.arm.com/architectures/instruction-sets/intrinsics/#f:`@navigationhierarchiesreturnbasetype=[float]&f:@navigationhierarchieselementbitsize=[16]&f:@navigationhierarchiesarchitectures=[A64]).` Based on the work of `@lengrongfu` in #127043.
Relevant issue: #125398
Tracking issue: #116909
`@rustbot` label +F-f16_and_f128
try-job: aarch64-gnu
try-job: aarch64-apple
simd_shuffle intrinsic: allow argument to be passed as vector
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/128738 for context.
I'd like to get rid of [this hack](6c0b89dfac/compiler/rustc_codegen_ssa/src/mir/block.rs (L922-L935)). https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128537 almost lets us do that since constant SIMD vectors will then be passed as immediate arguments. However, simd_shuffle for some reason actually takes an *array* as argument, not a vector, so the hack is still required to ensure that the array becomes an immediate (which then later stages of codegen convert into a vector, as that's what LLVM needs).
This PR prepares simd_shuffle to also support a vector as the `idx` argument. Once this lands, stdarch can hopefully be updated to pass `idx` as a vector, and then support for arrays can be removed, which finally lets us get rid of that hack.
Add `#[warn(unreachable_pub)]` to a bunch of compiler crates
By default `unreachable_pub` identifies things that need not be `pub` and tells you to make them `pub(crate)`. But sometimes those things don't need any kind of visibility. So they way I did these was to remove the visibility entirely for each thing the lint identifies, and then add `pub(crate)` back in everywhere the compiler said it was necessary. (Or occasionally `pub(super)` when context suggested that was appropriate.) Tedious, but results in more `pub` removal.
There are plenty more crates to do but this seems like enough for a first PR.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Set the cfi-normalize-integers and kcfi-offset module flags when
Control-Flow Integrity sanitizers are used, so functions generated by
the LLVM backend use the same CFI/KCFI options as rustc.
cfi-normalize-integers tells LLVM to also use integer normalization
for generated functions when -Zsanitizer-cfi-normalize-integers is
used.
kcfi-offset specifies the number of prefix nops between the KCFI
type hash and the function entry when -Z patchable-function-entry is
used. Note that LLVM assumes all indirectly callable functions use the
same number of prefix NOPs with -Zsanitizer=kcfi.
Avoid extra `cast()`s after `CStr::as_ptr()`
These used to be `&str` literals that did need a pointer cast, but that
became a no-op after switching to `c""` literals in #118566.
Special case DUMMY_SP to emit line 0/column 0 locations on DWARF platforms.
Line 0 has a special meaning in DWARF. From the version 5 spec:
The compiler may emit the value 0 in cases
where an instruction cannot be attributed to any
source line.
DUMMY_SP spans cannot be attributed to any line. However, because rustc internally stores line numbers starting at zero, lookup_debug_loc() adjusts every line number by one. Special casing DUMMY_SP to actually emit line 0 ensures rustc communicates to the debugger that there's no meaningful source code for this instruction, rather than telling the debugger to jump to line 1 randomly.
With the new resolver, a few dependencies get brought in twice with
different licenses. For example, all dependencies from `wasm-tools`
gained Apache-2.0 and MIT options, and with the v2 resolver we were
using one version from before and one version from after this change.
This made tidy's license check difficult.
Update some minimum versions to remove duplicate dependencies and smooth
out license checking.
Fix `is_val_statically_known` for floats
The LLVM intrinsic name for floats differs from the LLVM type name, so handle them explicitly. Also adds support for `f16` and `f128`.
`f16`/`f128` tracking issue: #116909
Rework MIR inlining debuginfo so function parameters show up in debuggers.
Line numbers of multiply-inlined functions were fixed in #114643 by using a single DISubprogram. That, however, triggered assertions because parameters weren't deduplicated. The "solution" to that in #115417 was to insert a DILexicalScope below the DISubprogram and parent all of the parameters to that scope. That fixed the assertion, but debuggers (including gdb and lldb) don't recognize variables that are not parented to the subprogram itself as parameters, even if they are emitted with DW_TAG_formal_parameter.
Consider the program:
```rust
use std::env;
#[inline(always)]
fn square(n: i32) -> i32 {
n * n
}
#[inline(never)]
fn square_no_inline(n: i32) -> i32 {
n * n
}
fn main() {
let x = square(env::vars().count() as i32);
let y = square_no_inline(env::vars().count() as i32);
println!("{x} == {y}");
}
```
When making a release build with debug=2 and rustc 1.82.0-nightly (8b3870784 2024-08-07)
```
(gdb) r
Starting program: /ephemeral/tmp/target/release/tmp [Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]
Using host libthread_db library "/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libthread_db.so.1".
Breakpoint 1, tmp::square () at src/main.rs:5
5 n * n
(gdb) info args
No arguments.
(gdb) info locals
n = 31
(gdb) c
Continuing.
Breakpoint 2, tmp::square_no_inline (n=31) at src/main.rs:10
10 n * n
(gdb) info args
n = 31
(gdb) info locals
No locals.
```
This issue is particularly annoying because it removes arguments from stack traces.
The DWARF for the inlined function looks like this:
```
< 2><0x00002132 GOFF=0x00002132> DW_TAG_subprogram
DW_AT_linkage_name _ZN3tmp6square17hc507052ff3d2a488E
DW_AT_name square
DW_AT_decl_file 0x0000000f /ephemeral/tmp/src/main.rs
DW_AT_decl_line 0x00000004
DW_AT_type 0x00001a56<.debug_info+0x00001a56>
DW_AT_inline DW_INL_inlined
< 3><0x00002142 GOFF=0x00002142> DW_TAG_lexical_block
< 4><0x00002143 GOFF=0x00002143> DW_TAG_formal_parameter
DW_AT_name n
DW_AT_decl_file 0x0000000f /ephemeral/tmp/src/main.rs
DW_AT_decl_line 0x00000004
DW_AT_type 0x00001a56<.debug_info+0x00001a56>
< 4><0x0000214e GOFF=0x0000214e> DW_TAG_null
< 3><0x0000214f GOFF=0x0000214f> DW_TAG_null
```
That DW_TAG_lexical_block inhibits every debugger I've tested from recognizing 'n' as a parameter.
This patch removes the additional lexical scope. Parameters can be easily deduplicated by a tuple of their scope and the argument index, at the trivial cost of taking a Hash + Eq bound on DIScope.
Use the `enum2$` Natvis visualiser for repr128 C-style enums
Use the preexisting `enum2$` Natvis visualiser to allow PDB debuggers to display fieldless `#[repr(u128)]]`/`#[repr(i128)]]` enums correctly.
Tracking issue: #56071
try-job: x86_64-msvc
Shrink `TyKind::FnPtr`.
By splitting the `FnSig` within `TyKind::FnPtr` into `FnSigTys` and `FnHeader`, which can be packed more efficiently. This reduces the size of the hot `TyKind` type from 32 bytes to 24 bytes on 64-bit platforms. This reduces peak memory usage by a few percent on some benchmarks. It also reduces cache misses and page faults similarly, though this doesn't translate to clear cycles or wall-time improvements on CI.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Line numbers of multiply-inlined functions were fixed in #114643 by using a
single DISubprogram. That, however, triggered assertions because parameters
weren't deduplicated. The "solution" to that in #115417 was to insert a
DILexicalScope below the DISubprogram and parent all of the parameters to that
scope. That fixed the assertion, but debuggers (including gdb and lldb) don't
recognize variables that are not parented to the subprogram itself as parameters,
even if they are emitted with DW_TAG_formal_parameter.
Consider the program:
use std::env;
fn square(n: i32) -> i32 {
n * n
}
fn square_no_inline(n: i32) -> i32 {
n * n
}
fn main() {
let x = square(env::vars().count() as i32);
let y = square_no_inline(env::vars().count() as i32);
println!("{x} == {y}");
}
When making a release build with debug=2 and rustc 1.82.0-nightly (8b3870784 2024-08-07)
(gdb) r
Starting program: /ephemeral/tmp/target/release/tmp
[Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled]
Using host libthread_db library "/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libthread_db.so.1".
Breakpoint 1, tmp::square () at src/main.rs:5
5 n * n
(gdb) info args
No arguments.
(gdb) info locals
n = 31
(gdb) c
Continuing.
Breakpoint 2, tmp::square_no_inline (n=31) at src/main.rs:10
10 n * n
(gdb) info args
n = 31
(gdb) info locals
No locals.
This issue is particularly annoying because it removes arguments from stack traces.
The DWARF for the inlined function looks like this:
< 2><0x00002132 GOFF=0x00002132> DW_TAG_subprogram
DW_AT_linkage_name _ZN3tmp6square17hc507052ff3d2a488E
DW_AT_name square
DW_AT_decl_file 0x0000000f /ephemeral/tmp/src/main.rs
DW_AT_decl_line 0x00000004
DW_AT_type 0x00001a56<.debug_info+0x00001a56>
DW_AT_inline DW_INL_inlined
< 3><0x00002142 GOFF=0x00002142> DW_TAG_lexical_block
< 4><0x00002143 GOFF=0x00002143> DW_TAG_formal_parameter
DW_AT_name n
DW_AT_decl_file 0x0000000f /ephemeral/tmp/src/main.rs
DW_AT_decl_line 0x00000004
DW_AT_type 0x00001a56<.debug_info+0x00001a56>
< 4><0x0000214e GOFF=0x0000214e> DW_TAG_null
< 3><0x0000214f GOFF=0x0000214f> DW_TAG_null
That DW_TAG_lexical_block inhibits every debugger I've tested from recognizing
'n' as a parameter.
This patch removes the additional lexical scope. Parameters can be easily
deduplicated by a tuple of their scope and the argument index, at the trivial
cost of taking a Hash + Eq bound on DIScope.
const vector passed through to codegen
This allows constant vectors using a repr(simd) type to be propagated
through to the backend by reusing the functionality used to do a similar
thing for the simd_shuffle intrinsic
#118209
r? RalfJung
nontemporal_store: make sure that the intrinsic is truly just a hint
The `!nontemporal` flag for stores in LLVM *sounds* like it is just a hint, but actually, it is not -- at least on x86, non-temporal stores need very special treatment by the programmer or else the Rust memory model breaks down. LLVM still treats these stores as-if they were normal stores for optimizations, which is [highly dubious](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/64521). Let's avoid all that dubiousness by making our own non-temporal stores be truly just a hint, which is possible on some targets (e.g. ARM). On all other targets, non-temporal stores become regular stores.
~~Blocked on https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1541 propagating to the rustc repo, to make sure the `_mm_stream` intrinsics are unaffected by this change.~~
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/114582
Cc `@Amanieu` `@workingjubilee`
By splitting the `FnSig` within `TyKind::FnPtr` into `FnSigTys` and
`FnHeader`, which can be packed more efficiently. This reduces the size
of the hot `TyKind` type from 32 bytes to 24 bytes on 64-bit platforms.
This reduces peak memory usage by a few percent on some benchmarks. It
also reduces cache misses and page faults similarly, though this doesn't
translate to clear cycles or wall-time improvements on CI.
codegen: better centralize function declaration attribute computation
For some reason, the codegen backend has two functions that compute which attributes a function declaration gets: `apply_attrs_llfn` and `attributes::from_fn_attrs`. They are called in different places, on entirely different layers of abstraction.
To me the code seems cleaner if we centralize this entirely in `apply_attrs_llfn`, so that's what this PR does.
Make create_dll_import_lib easier to implement
This will make it easier to implement raw-dylib support in cg_clif and cg_gcc. This PR doesn't yet include an create_dll_import_lib implementation for cg_clif as I need to correctly implement dllimport in cg_clif first before raw-dylib can work at all with cg_clif.
Required for https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc_codegen_cranelift/issues/1345
Add `f16` and `f128` math functions
This adds intrinsics and math functions for `f16` and `f128` floating point types. Support is quite limited and some things are broken so tests don't run on many platforms, but this provides a starting point.