added --no-run option for rustdoc
resolve#59053
add `--no-run` option for `rustdoc` for compiling doc test but not running them.
Intended for use with `--persist-doctests`.
Be stricter about rejecting LLVM reserved registers in asm!
LLVM will silently produce incorrect code if these registers are used as operands.
cc `@rust-lang/wg-inline-asm`
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #84601 (rustdoc: Only store locations in Cache::extern_locations and calculate the other info on-demand)
- #84704 (platform-support.md: Update for consistency with Target Tier Policy)
- #84724 (Replace llvm::sys::fs::F_None with llvm::sys::fs::OF_None)
- #84740 (Reset the docs' copy path button after 1 second)
- #84749 (Sync `rustc_codegen_cranelift`)
- #84756 (Add a ToC to the Target Tier Policy documentation)
- #84765 (Update cargo)
- #84774 (Fix misspelling)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Add a ToC to the Target Tier Policy documentation
The policy document is quite lengthy, I figured it might be good to have a quick way to jump to the specific tier policies.
Sync `rustc_codegen_cranelift`
Retrying #84746
r? ``@bjorn3``
---
Edit(bjorn3): Since the last sync there have been some refactorings around the driver code in preparation for a planned new feature. In addition ``@mominul`` implemented `-Ctarget-cpu` support and ``@XAMPPRocky`` fixed compilation of cg_clif itself for Windows with the MSVC toolchain.
Reset the docs' copy path button after 1 second
I like that this copy path button on the top next to the type/module's name changes to a check mark when you successfully clicked and copied the path but I find it really weird how the icon stays that check mark forever after the first time of clicking it. Imagine you leave that documentation tab open and come back after 2 hours and you still see that check mark in that box because you copied the path 2 hours ago. You will probably be confused and you might've forgotten what that button even does (even more so currently where this is a new feature, or when you simply don't use it often), so I really think at some point it should go back to the ⎘ icon which, at least to me, pretty clearly indicates copying, whereas the check mark (if it stays there for so long) could falsely look like a verification mark indicating "this module is verified" or something like that.
I believe after a longer period of time it's not logical to still tell the user "yes you've copied this successful".
In addition to this timeout, maybe it could be made so that you can't copy again until this cooldown of 1 second is over, but I'm not sure how useful or user-friendly that feature would be so maybe it's fine the way it is now.
Also the timeout is cleared every time you click again so if you constantly click it, it won't reset during that.
platform-support.md: Update for consistency with Target Tier Policy
Split into five sections to match the tiers: "Tier 1 with Host Tools",
"Tier 1", "Tier 2 with Host Tools", "Tier 2", and "Tier 3". Explain each
tier briefly in prose, and link to the corresponding section of the
policy for full requirements.
Drop the `host` columns from the first four, since the different
sections distinguish that. (Keep the `host` column for "Tier 3", since
it's a single list and the `host` column just indicates if host tools
are expected to work.)
Targets with host tools always have full support for std, so drop the
`std` column from those.
Move the explanations of the `std` column next to the appropriate
tables, and drop the unknown/WIP case for tier 2 targets.
Use "target" terminology consistently throughout.
Sort each table by target name.
Vastly improves coverage spans for macros
Fixes: #84561
This resolves problems where macros like `trace!(...)` would show zero coverage if tracing was disabled, and `assert_eq!(...)` would show zero coverage if the assertion did not fail, because only one coverage span was generated, for the branch.
This PR started with an idea that I could just drop branching blocks with same span as expanded macro. (See the fixed issue for more details.)
That did help, but it didn't resolve everything.
I also needed to add a span specifically for the macro name (plus `!`) to ensure the macro gets coverage even if it's internal expansion adds conditional branching blocks that are retained, and would otherwise drop the outer span. Now that outer span is _only_ the `(argument, list)`, which can safely be dropped now), because the macro name has its own span.
While testing, I also noticed the spanview debug output can cause an ICE on a function with no body. The
workaround for this is included in this PR (separate commit).
r? `@tmandry`
cc? `@wesleywiser`
Moved -z ignore to add_as_needed
Trying to cross-compile for sparcv9-sun-solaris
getting an error message for -zignore
Introduced when -z -ignore was separated here
22d0ab0
No formatting done
Reproduce
``` bash
rustup target add sparcv9-sun-solaris
cargo new --bin hello && cd hello && cargo run --target=sparcv9-sun-solaris
```
config.toml
[target.sparcv9-sun-solaris]
linker = "gcc"
Move iter_results to dyn FnMut rather than a generic
This means that we're no longer generating the iteration/locking code for each invocation site of iter_results, rather just once per query (roughly), which seems much better: this is a 15% win in instruction counts when compiling the rustc_query_impl crate. The code where this is used also is pretty cold, I suspect; the old solution didn't fully monomorphize either.
Update LLVM for more wasm simd updates
This fixes the temporary regression introduced in #84339 where the wasm
target uses `fpto{s,u}i` intrinsics but the codegen for those intrinsics
with the `+nontrapping-fptoint` LLVM feature wasn't very good (aka it
didn't use the wasm instruction). The fixes brought in here fix that and
also implement the second-to-last simd instruction in LLVM.
- Literally, variants are not artificial. We have `yield` statements,
upvars and inner variables in the source code.
- Functionally, we don't want debuggers to suppress the variants. It
contains the state of the generator, which is useful when debugging.
So they shouldn't be marked artificial.
- Debuggers may use artificial flags to find the active variant. In
this case, marking variants artificial will make debuggers not work
properly.
Fixes#79009.
This fixes the temporary regression introduced in #84339 where the wasm
target uses `fpto{s,u}i` intrinsics but the codegen for those intrinsics
with the `+nontrapping-fptoint` LLVM feature wasn't very good (aka it
didn't use the wasm instruction). The fixes brought in here fix that and
also implement the second-to-last simd instruction in LLVM.
Previously, this caused a bug on NixOS:
1. bootstrap.py would download and patch stage0/cargo
2. bootstrap.py would download nightly cargo, but extract it to
stage0/cargo instead of ci-rustc/cargo.
3. bootstrap.py would fail to build rustbuild because stage0/cargo
wasn't patched.
The "proper" fix is to extract nightly cargo to ci-rustc instead, but it
doesn't seem to be necessary at all, so this just skips downloading it
instead.
Add std::os::unix::fs::chroot to change the root directory of the current process
This is a straightforward wrapper that uses the existing helpers for C
string handling and errno handling.
Having this available is convenient for UNIX utility programs written in
Rust, and avoids having to call the unsafe `libc::chroot` directly and
handle errors manually, in a program that may otherwise be entirely safe
code.
Reuse `sys::unix::cmath` on other platforms
Reuse `sys::unix::cmath` on all non-`windows` platforms.
`unix` is chosen as the canonical location instead of `unsupported` or `common` because `unsupported` doesn't make sense semantically and `common` is reserved for code that is supported on all platforms. Also `unix` is already the home of some non-`windows` code that is technically not exclusive to `unix` like `unix::path`.
All fields except the discriminant (including `outer_fields`)
should be put into structures inside the variant part, which gives
an equivalent layout but offers us much better integration with
debuggers.
This is a straightforward wrapper that uses the existing helpers for C
string handling and errno handling.
Having this available is convenient for UNIX utility programs written in
Rust, and avoids having to call the unsafe `libc::chroot` directly and
handle errors manually, in a program that may otherwise be entirely safe
code.
Implement RFC 1260 with feature_name `imported_main`.
This is the second extraction part of #84062 plus additional adjustments.
This (mostly) implements RFC 1260.
However there's still one test case failure in the extern crate case. Maybe `LocalDefId` doesn't work here? I'm not sure.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/28937
r? `@petrochenkov`
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #84451 (Use flex more consistently)
- #84590 (Point out that behavior might be switched on 2015 and 2018 too one day)
- #84682 (Don't rebind in `transitive_bounds_that_define_assoc_type`)
- #84683 (Minor grammar tweaks for readability to btree internals)
- #84688 (Remove unnecessary CSS rules for search results)
- #84690 (Remove unneeded bottom margin on search results)
- #84692 (Link between std::env::{var, var_os} and std::env::{vars, vars_os})
- #84705 (make feature recommendations optional)
- #84706 (Drop alias `reduce` for `fold` - we have a `reduce` function)
- #84713 (Fix labels for regression issue template)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Fix labels for regression issue template
Each label needs to be separated by a comma (see the ICE issue template
for an example of correct usage).
As a result of this problem, the `regression-untriaged` label has not
been automatically added to issues opened with this template.
See c127530be7 for another example of this.
r? `````@Mark-Simulacrum`````
Drop alias `reduce` for `fold` - we have a `reduce` function
Searching for "reduce" currently puts the `reduce` alias for `fold`
above the actual `reduce` function. The `reduce` function already has a
cross-reference for `fold`, and vice versa.