Commit Graph

264779 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthias Krüger
8c7a7e346b
Rollup merge of #129749 - krasimirgg:llvm-20-lto, r=nikic
llvm-wrapper: adapt for LLVM API changes

No functional changes intended.

Updates the wrapper for 21eddfac3d.

````@rustbot```` label: +llvm-main
r? ````@nikic````
2024-08-31 14:46:09 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
a00bd75b6c
Rollup merge of #129733 - lnicola:sync-from-ra, r=lnicola
Subtree update of `rust-analyzer`

r? ````@ghost````
2024-08-31 14:46:08 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
6ab726c342
Rollup merge of #129730 - RalfJung:float-arithmetic, r=workingjubilee
f32 docs: define 'arithmetic' operations

r? ````@workingjubilee````
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129699
2024-08-31 14:46:08 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
1c51e5b110
Rollup merge of #129711 - lqd:nll-mir-dumps, r=compiler-errors
Expand NLL MIR dumps

This PR is a first step to clean up and expand NLL MIR dumps:
- by restoring the "mir-include-spans" comments which are useful for `-Zdump-mir=nll`
- by adding the list of borrows to NLL MIR dumps, where they are introduced in the CFG and in which region

Comments in MIR dumps were turned off in #112346, but as shown in #114652 they were still useful for us working with NLL MIR dumps. So this PR pulls `-Z mir-include-spans` into its own options struct, so that passes dumping MIR can override them if need be. The rest of the compiler is not affected, only the "nll" pass dumps have these comments enabled again. The CLI still has priority when specifying the flag, so that we can explicitly turn them off in the `mir-opt` tests to keep blessed dumps easier to work with (which was one of the points of #112346).

Then, as part of a couple steps to improve NLL/polonius MIR dumps and `.dot` visualizations, I've also added the list of borrows and where they're introduced. I'm doing all this to help debug some polonius scope issues in my prototype location-sensitive analysis :3. I'll probably add member constraints soon.
2024-08-31 14:46:07 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
ea5bb99c0f
Rollup merge of #129659 - RalfJung:const-fn-lang-feat, r=fee1-dead
const fn stability checking: also check declared language features

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129656

`@oli-obk` I assume it is just an oversight that this didn't use `features().declared()`? Or is there a deep reason that this must only check `declared_lib_features`?
2024-08-31 14:46:06 +02:00
Ralf Jung
c2984179d9 const fn stability checking: also check declared language features 2024-08-31 12:14:05 +02:00
bors
9649706ead Auto merge of #129809 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-cyygnxh, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 15 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #120221 (Don't make statement nonterminals match pattern nonterminals)
 - #126183 (Separate core search logic with search ui)
 - #129123 (rustdoc-json: Add test for `Self` type)
 - #129366 (linker: Synchronize native library search in rustc and linker)
 - #129527 (Don't use `TyKind` in a lint)
 - #129534 (Deny `wasm_c_abi` lint to nudge the last 25%)
 - #129640 (Re-enable android tests/benches in alloc/core)
 - #129642 (Bump backtrace to 0.3.74~ish)
 - #129675 (allow BufReader::peek to be called on unsized types)
 - #129723 (Simplify some extern providers)
 - #129724 (Remove `Option<!>` return types.)
 - #129725 (Stop using `ty::GenericPredicates` for non-predicates_of queries)
 - #129731 (Allow running `./x.py test compiler`)
 - #129751 (interpret/visitor: make memory order iteration slightly more efficient)
 - #129754 (wasi: Fix sleeping for `Duration::MAX`)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-08-31 08:48:35 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
25e3b66410
Rollup merge of #129754 - alexcrichton:fix-wasi-long-sleep, r=workingjubilee
wasi: Fix sleeping for `Duration::MAX`

This commit fixes an assert in the WASI-specific implementation of thread sleep to ensure that sleeping for a very large period of time blocks instead of panicking. This can come up when testing programs that sleep "forever", for example.

I'll note that I haven't included a test for this since it's sort of difficult to test. I've tested this locally though that long sleeps do indeed block and short sleeps still only sleep for a short amount of time.
2024-08-31 10:08:59 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
a59c1a4291
Rollup merge of #129751 - RalfJung:interpret-visit-field-order, r=compiler-errors
interpret/visitor: make memory order iteration slightly more efficient

Finally I know enough about RPIT to write this iterator signature correctly. :D

This means memory-order iteration now needs an allocation, but it avoids quadratic complexity (where it has to do a linear scan n times to find the n-th field in memory order), so that seems like a win overall. The changed code only affects Miri; the rustc changes are NOPs.
2024-08-31 10:08:58 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
6c8b07f71a
Rollup merge of #129731 - ferrocene:x-test-compiler, r=onur-ozkan
Allow running `./x.py test compiler`
2024-08-31 10:08:57 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
5f10a99c7a
Rollup merge of #129725 - compiler-errors:predicates-of, r=fmease
Stop using `ty::GenericPredicates` for non-predicates_of queries

`GenericPredicates` is a struct of several parts: A list of of an item's own predicates, and a parent def id (and some effects related stuff, but ignore that since it's kinda irrelevant). When instantiating these generic predicates, it calls `predicates_of` on the parent and instantiates its predicates, and appends the item's own instantiated predicates too:

acb4e8b625/compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/generics.rs (L407-L413)

Notice how this should result in a recursive set of calls to `predicates_of`... However, `GenericPredicates` is *also* misused by a bunch of *other* queries as a convenient way of passing around a list of predicates. For these queries, we don't ever set the parent def id of the `GenericPredicates`, but if we did, then this would be very easy to mistakenly call `predicates_of` instead of some other intended parent query.

Given that footgun, and the fact that we don't ever even *use* the parent def id in the `GenericPredicates` returned from queries like `explicit_super_predicates_of`, It really has no benefit over just returning `&'tcx [(Clause<'tcx>, Span)]`.

This PR additionally opts to wrap the results of `EarlyBinder`, as we've tended to use that in the return type of these kinds of queries to properly convey that the user has params to deal with, and it also gives a convenient way of iterating over a slice of things after instantiating.
2024-08-31 10:08:57 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
44185520cf
Rollup merge of #129724 - nnethercote:rm-Option-bang, r=fee1-dead
Remove `Option<!>` return types.

Several compiler functions have `Option<!>` for their return type. That's odd. The only valid return value is `None`, so why is this type used?

Because it lets you write certain patterns slightly more concisely. E.g. if you have these common patterns:
```
    let Some(a) = f() else { return };
    let Ok(b) = g() else { return };
```
you can shorten them to these:
```
    let a = f()?;
    let b = g().ok()?;
```
Huh.

An `Option` return type typically designates success/failure. How should I interpret the type signature of a function that always returns (i.e. doesn't panic), does useful work (modifying `&mut` arguments), and yet only ever fails? This idiom subverts the type system for a cute syntactic trick.

Furthermore, returning `Option<!>` from a function F makes things syntactically more convenient within F, but makes things worse at F's callsites. The callsites can themselves use `?` with F but should not, because they will get an unconditional early return, which is almost certainly not desirable. Instead the return value should be ignored. (Note that some of callsites of `process_operand`, `process_immedate`, `process_assign` actually do use `?`, though the early return doesn't matter in these cases because nothing of significance comes after those calls. Ugh.)

When I first saw this pattern I had no idea how to interpret it, and it took me several minutes of close reading to understand everything I've written above. I even started a Zulip thread about it to make sure I understood it properly. "Save a few characters by introducing types so weird that compiler devs have to discuss it on Zulip" feels like a bad trade-off to me. This commit replaces all the `Option<!>` return values and uses `else`/`return` (or something similar) to replace the relevant `?` uses. The result is slightly more verbose but much easier to understand.

r? ``````@cjgillot``````
2024-08-31 10:08:56 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
9510beba4d
Rollup merge of #129723 - compiler-errors:extern-providers, r=lcnr
Simplify some extern providers

Simplifies some extern crate providers:
1. Generalize the `ProcessQueryValue` identity impl to work on non-`Option` types.
2. Allow `ProcessQueryValue` to wrap its output in an `EarlyBinder`, to simplify `explicit_item_bounds`/`explicit_item_super_predicates`.
3. Use `{ table }` and friends more when possible.
2024-08-31 10:08:56 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
10fb626958
Rollup merge of #129675 - lolbinarycat:bufreader_peek_unsized, r=workingjubilee
allow BufReader::peek to be called on unsized types

#128405
2024-08-31 10:08:55 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
fbf74dfb00
Rollup merge of #129642 - workingjubilee:bump-backtrace-fc37b22, r=workingjubilee
Bump backtrace to 0.3.74~ish

Commit: https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/commit/230570f

This should help with backtraces on Android, QNX NTO 7.0, and Windows.
It addresses a case of backtrace incurring undefined behavior on Android.
2024-08-31 10:08:55 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
385ffaedbf
Rollup merge of #129640 - saethlin:unignore-android-in-alloc, r=tgross35
Re-enable android tests/benches in alloc/core

This is basically a revert of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/73729. These tests better work on android now; it's been 4 years and we don't use dlmalloc on that target anymore.

And I've validated that they should pass now with a try-build :)
2024-08-31 10:08:54 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
8f35a4fb8c
Rollup merge of #129534 - workingjubilee:ratchet-wasm-c-abi-fcw-to-deny, r=daxpedda,alexcrichton
Deny `wasm_c_abi` lint to nudge the last 25%

This shouldn't affect projects indirectly depending on wasm-bindgen because cargo passes `--cap-lints=allow` when building dependencies.

The motivation is that the ecosystem has mostly taken up the versions of wasm-bindgen that are compatible in general, but ~25% or so of recent downloads remain on lower versions. However, this change might still be unnecessarily disruptive. I mostly propose it as a discussion point.
2024-08-31 10:08:54 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
2a321e14a5
Rollup merge of #129527 - compiler-errors:lint-nit, r=Nadrieril
Don't use `TyKind` in a lint

Allows us to remove an inherent method from `TyKind` from the type ir crate.
2024-08-31 10:08:53 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
9f3ce40718
Rollup merge of #129366 - petrochenkov:libsearch, r=jieyouxu
linker: Synchronize native library search in rustc and linker

Also search for static libraries with alternative naming (`libname.a`) on MSVC when producing executables or dynamic libraries, and not just rlibs.

This unblocks https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123436.

try-job: x86_64-msvc
2024-08-31 10:08:53 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
defc245d06
Rollup merge of #129123 - aDotInTheVoid:rustdoc-json-self, r=fmease
rustdoc-json: Add test for `Self` type

Inspired by #128471, the rustdoc-json suite had no tests in place for the `Self` type. This PR adds one.

I've also manually checked locally that this test passes on 29e924841f, confirming that adding `clean::Type::SelfTy` didn't change the JSON output. (potentially adding a self type to json (insead of (ab)using generic) is tracked in #128522)

Updates #81359

r? ````````@fmease````````
2024-08-31 10:08:52 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
1f0292bb8f
Rollup merge of #126183 - Folyd:search-core, r=GuillaumeGomez,notriddle
Separate core search logic with search ui

Currenty, the `search.js` mixed with UI/DOM manipulation codes and search logic codes, I propose to extract the search logic to a class for following benefits:

- Clean code. Separation of DOM manipulation and search logic can lead better code maintainability and easy code testings.
- Easy share the search logic for third party to utilize the search function, such as [Rust Search Extension](https://rust.extension.sh), https://query.rs.

This PR added a new class called `DocSearch`, which mainly expose following methods:

```js
class DocSearch {
	// Dependency inject searchIndex, rootPath and searchState
	constructor(rawSearchIndex, rootPath, searchState) {
		// build search index...
	}

	static parseQuery(userQuery) {
	}

	async execQuery(parsedQuery, filterCrates, currentCrate) {
	}
}
```
2024-08-31 10:08:52 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
1fd0c71818
Rollup merge of #120221 - compiler-errors:statements-are-not-patterns, r=nnethercote
Don't make statement nonterminals match pattern nonterminals

Right now, the heuristic we use to check if a token may begin a pattern nonterminal falls back to `may_be_ident`:
ef71f1047e/compiler/rustc_parse/src/parser/nonterminal.rs (L21-L37)

This has the unfortunate side effect that a `stmt` nonterminal eagerly matches against a `pat` nonterminal, leading to a parse error:
```rust
macro_rules! m {
    ($pat:pat) => {};
    ($stmt:stmt) => {};
}

macro_rules! m2 {
    ($stmt:stmt) => {
        m! { $stmt }
    };
}

m2! { let x = 1 }
```

This PR fixes it by more accurately reflecting the set of nonterminals that may begin a pattern nonterminal.

As a side-effect, I modified `Token::can_begin_pattern` to work correctly and used that in `Parser::nonterminal_may_begin_with`.
2024-08-31 10:08:51 +02:00
bors
fa72f0763d Auto merge of #129797 - workingjubilee:cleanup-apple-ci, r=workingjubilee
Try to reduce space usage in dist CI

We have had recurrent CI problems as a result of GitHub adding a new version of Xcode to its runners[^0], which has consumed ~40GB of space which served as padding. Try to reduce the number of Xcodes on our systems, because we only use Xcode 14 in actual practice. Also, try to move files instead of pointlessly copy them when we're at the end of the job.

I could not resist addressing a few shellcheck lints while I was at it.

[^0]: https://github.com/actions/runner-images/issues/10511
2024-08-31 03:54:22 +00:00
Jubilee Young
8da1c0049a ci: Take tail instead of head to avoid broken pipes 2024-08-30 20:51:52 -07:00
Jubilee Young
6cb4768ddd ci: Avoid legacy backticks in upload-artifacts.sh 2024-08-30 20:51:52 -07:00
Jubilee Young
fe7c97c2e7 ci: Use mv instead of cp in upload step 2024-08-30 20:51:52 -07:00
Jubilee Young
06f49f6d53 ci: Try to remove unused Xcode dirs 2024-08-30 20:51:52 -07:00
Ralf Jung
f6b7727605 enumerate the two parts of the NaN rules 2024-08-30 11:31:36 +02:00
Rémy Rakic
dff3d3588d add borrows to NLL MIR dumps
explicitly disable `-Zmir-include-spans` in mir-opt tests

This will override the NLL default of true, and keep the blessed dumps
easier to work with.
2024-08-30 07:14:31 +00:00
Rémy Rakic
f3f5b4dcf2 refactor NLL MIR dump entry point 2024-08-30 07:14:31 +00:00
Rémy Rakic
92e1046502 enable extra comments in NLL MIR dumps 2024-08-30 07:14:31 +00:00
Rémy Rakic
e0bb1c7291 make -Z mir-include-spans a dedicated enum
We want to allow setting this on the CLI, override it only in MIR
passes, and disable it altogether in mir-opt tests.

The default value is "only for NLL MIR dumps", which is considered off
for all intents and purposes, except for `rustc_borrowck` when an NLL
MIR dump is requested.
2024-08-30 07:14:19 +00:00
Rémy Rakic
c646b46b52 introduce PrettyPrintMirOptions for cosmetic MIR dump options
initially starting with `-Z mir-include-spans` because we want them in
the NLL mir dump pass
2024-08-30 07:07:28 +00:00
Ralf Jung
08fadfd8d8 add hyphen in floating-point 2024-08-30 08:23:12 +02:00
Nicholas Nethercote
fa4f8925f1 Remove Option<!> return types.
Several compiler functions have `Option<!>` for their return type.
That's odd. The only valid return value is `None`, so why is this type
used?

Because it lets you write certain patterns slightly more concisely. E.g.
if you have these common patterns:
```
    let Some(a) = f() else { return };
    let Ok(b) = g() else { return };
```
you can shorten them to these:
```
    let a = f()?;
    let b = g().ok()?;
```
Huh.

An `Option` return type typically designates success/failure. How should
I interpret the type signature of a function that always returns (i.e.
doesn't panic), does useful work (modifying `&mut` arguments), and yet
only ever fails? This idiom subverts the type system for a cute
syntactic trick.

Furthermore, returning `Option<!>` from a function F makes things
syntactically more convenient within F, but makes things worse at F's
callsites. The callsites can themselves use `?` with F but should not,
because they will get an unconditional early return, which is almost
certainly not desirable. Instead the return value should be ignored.
(Note that some of callsites of `process_operand`, `process_immedate`,
`process_assign` actually do use `?`, though the early return doesn't
matter in these cases because nothing of significance comes after those
calls. Ugh.)

When I first saw this pattern I had no idea how to interpret it, and it
took me several minutes of close reading to understand everything I've
written above. I even started a Zulip thread about it to make sure I
understood it properly. "Save a few characters by introducing types so
weird that compiler devs have to discuss it on Zulip" feels like a bad
trade-off to me. This commit replaces all the `Option<!>` return values
and uses `else`/`return` (or something similar) to replace the relevant
`?` uses. The result is slightly more verbose but much easier to
understand.
2024-08-30 08:18:41 +10:00
bors
0d634185df Auto merge of #129750 - GuillaumeGomez:rollup-gphsb7y, r=GuillaumeGomez
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #123940 (debug-fmt-detail option)
 - #128166 (Improved `checked_isqrt` and `isqrt` methods)
 - #128970 (Add `-Zlint-llvm-ir`)
 - #129316 (riscv64imac: allow shadow call stack sanitizer)
 - #129690 (Add `needs-unwind` compiletest directive to `libtest-thread-limit` and replace some `Path` with `path` in `run-make`)
 - #129732 (Add `unreachable_pub`, round 3)
 - #129743 (Fix rustdoc clippy lints)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-08-29 20:45:00 +00:00
Jubilee Young
518b41c2bd Try latest backtrace 2024-08-29 12:13:19 -07:00
Alex Crichton
c824c1ada7 wasi: Fix sleeping for Duration::MAX
This commit fixes an assert in the WASI-specific implementation of
thread sleep to ensure that sleeping for a very large period of time
blocks instead of panicking. This can come up when testing programs that
sleep "forever", for example.
2024-08-29 10:31:17 -07:00
bors
784d444733 Auto merge of #129714 - saethlin:half-a-recursion, r=compiler-errors
Use a reduced recursion limit in the MIR inliner's cycle breaker

This probably papers over https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/128887, but primarily I'm opening this PR because multiple compiler people have thought about making this change which probably means it's a good idea.

r? compiler-errors
2024-08-29 16:15:41 +00:00
Michael Goulet
8c798c89dc Simplify some extern providers 2024-08-29 11:18:03 -04:00
Ralf Jung
de34a91350 interpret/visitor: make memory order iteration slightly more efficient 2024-08-29 16:53:14 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
9c7ae1d4d8
Rollup merge of #129743 - GuillaumeGomez:fix-rustdoc-clippy, r=notriddle
Fix rustdoc clippy lints

Ran clippy on rustdoc and fixed the errors.

r? `@notriddle`
2024-08-29 16:21:50 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
7e23a44495
Rollup merge of #129732 - nnethercote:unreachable_pub-3, r=Urgau
Add `unreachable_pub`, round 3

A follow-up to #129648.

r? `@Urgau`
2024-08-29 16:21:49 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
7dc2caba7b
Rollup merge of #129690 - Oneirical:run-make-tidbits, r=jieyouxu
Add `needs-unwind` compiletest directive to `libtest-thread-limit` and replace some `Path` with `path` in `run-make`

Part of #121876 and the associated [Google Summer of Code project](https://blog.rust-lang.org/2024/05/01/gsoc-2024-selected-projects.html).

This PR does two things:

1. Add this to `libtest-thread-limit` ([Why?](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128507#issuecomment-2315158014))
```
//@ needs-unwind
// Reason: this should be ignored in cg_clif (Cranelift) CI and anywhere
// else that uses panic=abort.
```

2. Use `path` instead of `Path` to simplify multiple run-make tests.
2024-08-29 16:21:48 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
a65404aba4
Rollup merge of #129316 - dingxiangfei2009:riscv64-imac-scs, r=nnethercote
riscv64imac: allow shadow call stack sanitizer

cc `@Darksonn` for shadow call stack sanitizer support on RV64IMAC and RV64GC
2024-08-29 16:21:47 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
d5c40d03dc
Rollup merge of #128970 - DianQK:lint-llvm-ir, r=nikic
Add `-Zlint-llvm-ir`

This flag is similar to `-Zverify-llvm-ir` and allows us to lint the generated IR.

r? compiler
2024-08-29 16:21:47 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
4b08b2e400
Rollup merge of #128166 - ChaiTRex:isqrt, r=tgross35
Improved `checked_isqrt` and `isqrt` methods

### Improved tests of `isqrt` and `checked_isqrt` implementations

* Inputs chosen more thoroughly and systematically.
* Checks that `isqrt` and `checked_isqrt` have equivalent results for signed types, either equivalent numerically or equivalent as a panic and a `None`.
* Checks that `isqrt` has numerically-equivalent results for unsigned types and their `NonZero` counterparts.

### Added benchmarks for `isqrt` implementations

### Greatly sped up `checked_isqrt` and `isqrt` methods

* Uses a lookup table for 8-bit integers and then the Karatsuba square root algorithm for larger integers.
* Includes optimization hints that give the compiler the exact numeric range of results.

### Feature tracking issue

`isqrt` is an unstable feature tracked at #116226.

<details><summary>Benchmarked improvements</summary>

### Command used to benchmark

    ./x bench library/core -- int_sqrt

### Before

    benchmarks:
        num::int_sqrt::i128::isqrt           439591.65/iter  +/- 6652.70
        num::int_sqrt::i16::isqrt              5302.97/iter   +/- 160.93
        num::int_sqrt::i32::isqrt             62999.11/iter  +/- 2022.05
        num::int_sqrt::i64::isqrt            125248.81/iter  +/- 1674.43
        num::int_sqrt::i8::isqrt                123.56/iter     +/- 1.87
        num::int_sqrt::isize::isqrt          125356.56/iter  +/- 1017.03
        num::int_sqrt::non_zero_u128::isqrt  437443.75/iter  +/- 3535.43
        num::int_sqrt::non_zero_u16::isqrt     8604.58/iter    +/- 94.76
        num::int_sqrt::non_zero_u32::isqrt    62933.33/iter   +/- 517.30
        num::int_sqrt::non_zero_u64::isqrt   125076.38/iter +/- 11340.61
        num::int_sqrt::non_zero_u8::isqrt       221.51/iter     +/- 1.58
        num::int_sqrt::non_zero_usize::isqrt 136005.21/iter  +/- 2020.35
        num::int_sqrt::u128::isqrt           439014.55/iter  +/- 3920.45
        num::int_sqrt::u16::isqrt              8575.08/iter   +/- 148.06
        num::int_sqrt::u32::isqrt             63008.89/iter   +/- 803.67
        num::int_sqrt::u64::isqrt            125088.09/iter   +/- 879.29
        num::int_sqrt::u8::isqrt                230.18/iter     +/- 2.04
        num::int_sqrt::usize::isqrt          125237.51/iter  +/- 4747.83
### After

    benchmarks:
        num::int_sqrt::i128::isqrt           105184.89/iter +/- 1171.38
        num::int_sqrt::i16::isqrt              1910.26/iter   +/- 78.50
        num::int_sqrt::i32::isqrt             34260.34/iter  +/- 960.84
        num::int_sqrt::i64::isqrt             45939.19/iter +/- 2525.65
        num::int_sqrt::i8::isqrt                 22.87/iter    +/- 0.45
        num::int_sqrt::isize::isqrt           45884.17/iter  +/- 595.49
        num::int_sqrt::non_zero_u128::isqrt  106344.27/iter  +/- 780.99
        num::int_sqrt::non_zero_u16::isqrt     2790.19/iter   +/- 53.43
        num::int_sqrt::non_zero_u32::isqrt    33613.99/iter  +/- 362.96
        num::int_sqrt::non_zero_u64::isqrt    46235.42/iter  +/- 429.69
        num::int_sqrt::non_zero_u8::isqrt        31.78/iter    +/- 0.75
        num::int_sqrt::non_zero_usize::isqrt  46208.75/iter  +/- 375.27
        num::int_sqrt::u128::isqrt           106385.94/iter +/- 1649.95
        num::int_sqrt::u16::isqrt              2747.69/iter   +/- 28.72
        num::int_sqrt::u32::isqrt             33627.09/iter  +/- 475.68
        num::int_sqrt::u64::isqrt             46182.29/iter  +/- 311.16
        num::int_sqrt::u8::isqrt                 33.10/iter    +/- 0.30
        num::int_sqrt::usize::isqrt           46165.00/iter  +/- 388.41

</details>

Tracking Issue for {u8,i8,...}::isqrt #116226

try-job: test-various
2024-08-29 16:21:46 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
015e9371e0
Rollup merge of #123940 - kornelski:remove-derived-debug, r=Urgau
debug-fmt-detail option

I'd like to propose a new option that makes `#[derive(Debug)]` generate no-op implementations that don't print anything, and makes `{:?}` in format strings a no-op.

There are a couple of motivations for this:

1. A more thorough stripping of debug symbols. Binaries stripped of debug symbols still retain some of them through `Debug` implementations. It's hard to avoid that without compiler's help, because debug formatting can be used in many places, including dependencies, and their loggers, asserts, panics, etc.
   * In my testing it gives about 2% binary size reduction on top of all other binary-minimizing best practices (including `panic_immediate_abort`). There are targets like Web WASM or embedded where users pay attention to binary sizes.
   * Users distributing closed-source binaries may not want to "leak" any symbol names as a matter of principle.
2. Adds ability to test whether code depends on specifics of the `Debug` format implementation in unwise ways (e.g. trying to get data unavailable via public interface, or using it as a serialization format). Because current Rust's debug implementation doesn't change, there's a risk of it becoming a fragile de-facto API that [won't be possible to change in the future](https://www.hyrumslaw.com/). An option that "breaks" it can act as a [grease](https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc8701.html).

This implementation is a `-Z fmt-debug=opt` flag that takes:

* `full` — the default, current state.
* `none` — makes derived `Debug` and `{:?}` no-ops. Explicit `impl Debug for T` implementations are left unharmed, but `{:?}` format won't use them, so they may get dead-code eliminated if they aren't invoked directly.
* `shallow` — makes derived `Debug` print only the type's name, without recursing into fields. Fieldless enums print their variant names. `{:?}` works.

The `shallow` option is a compromise between minimizing the `Debug` code, and compatibility. There are popular proc-macro crates that use `Debug::fmt` as a way to convert enum values into their Rust source code.

There's a corresponding `cfg` flag: `#[cfg(fmt_debug = "none")]` that can be used in user code to react to this setting to minimize custom `Debug` implementations or remove unnecessary formatting helper functions.
2024-08-29 16:21:46 +02:00
Oneirical
65cb5deedb Use path instead of Path in some run-make tests 2024-08-29 10:15:17 -04:00
Oneirical
da43f95dd3 Add needs-unwind compiletest directive to libtest-thread-limit 2024-08-29 10:13:48 -04:00