Allow target specs to use an LLD flavor, and self-contained linking components
This PR allows:
- target specs to use an LLD linker-flavor: this is needed to switch `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` to using LLD, and is currently not possible because the current flavor json serialization fails to roundtrip on the modern linker-flavors. This can e.g. be seen in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115622#discussion_r1321312880 which explains where an `Lld::Yes` is ultimately deserialized into an `Lld::No`.
- target specs to declare self-contained linking components: this is needed to switch `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` to using `rust-lld`
- adds an end-to-end test of a custom target json simulating `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` being switched to using `rust-lld`
- disables codegen backends from participating because they don't support `-Zgcc-ld=lld` which is the basis of mcp510.
r? `@petrochenkov:` if the approach discussed https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115622#discussion_r1329403467 and on zulip would work for you: basically, see if we can emit only modern linker flavors in the json specs, but accept both old and new flavors while reading them, to fix the roundtrip issue.
The backwards compatible `LinkSelfContainedDefault` variants are still serialized and deserialized in `crt-objects-fallback`, while the spec equivalent of e.g. `-Clink-self-contained=+linker` is serialized into a different json object (with future-proofing to incorporate `crt-objects-fallback` in the future).
---
I've been test-driving this in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/113382 to test actually switching `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` to `rust-lld` (and fix what needs to be fixed in CI, bootstrap, etc), and it seems to work fine.
Mark .rmeta files as /SAFESEH on x86 Windows.
Chrome links .rlibs with /WHOLEARCHIVE or -Wl,--whole-archive to prevent the linker from discarding static initializers. This works well, except on Windows x86, where lld complains:
error: /safeseh: lib.rmeta is not compatible with SEH
The fix is simply to mark the .rmeta as SAFESEH aware. This is trivially true, since the metadata file does not contain any executable code.
Chrome links .rlibs with /WHOLEARCHIVE or -Wl,--whole-archive to prevent
the linker from discarding static initializers. This works well, except
on Windows x86, where lld complains:
error: /safeseh: lib.rmeta is not compatible with SEH
The fix is simply to mark the .rmeta as SAFESEH aware. This is trivially
true, since the metadata file does not contain any executable code.
Removes the backwards-compatible `LinkSelfContainedDefault`, by
incorporating the remaining specifics into `LinkSelfContained`.
Then renames the modern options to keep the old name.
Format all the let-chains in compiler crates
Since rust-lang/rustfmt#5910 has landed, soon we will have support for formatting let-chains (as soon as rustfmt syncs and beta gets bumped).
This PR applies the changes [from master rustfmt to rust-lang/rust eagerly](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/122651-general/topic/out.20formatting.20of.20prs/near/374997516), so that the next beta bump does not have to deal with a 200+ file diff and can remain concerned with other things like `cfg(bootstrap)` -- #113637 was a pain to land, for example, because of let-else.
I will also add this commit to the ignore list after it has landed.
The commands that were run -- I'm not great at bash-foo, but this applies rustfmt to every compiler crate, and then reverts the two crates that should probably be formatted out-of-tree.
```
~/rustfmt $ ls -1d ~/rust/compiler/* | xargs -I@ cargo run --bin rustfmt -- `@/src/lib.rs` --config-path ~/rust --edition=2021 # format all of the compiler crates
~/rust $ git checkout HEAD -- compiler/rustc_codegen_{gcc,cranelift} # revert changes to cg-gcc and cg-clif
```
cc `@rust-lang/rustfmt`
r? `@WaffleLapkin` or `@Nilstrieb` who said they may be able to review this purely mechanical PR :>
cc `@Mark-Simulacrum` and `@petrochenkov,` who had some thoughts on the order of operations with big formatting changes in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95262#issue-1178993801. I think the situation has changed since then, given that let-chains support exists on master rustfmt now, and I'm fairly confident that this formatting PR should land even if *bootstrap* rustfmt doesn't yet format let-chains in order to lessen the burden of the next beta bump.
After #113716, we can make `#![no_builtins]` crates participate in LTO again.
`#![no_builtins]` with LTO does not result in undefined references to the error.
linker: also pass debuginfo compression flags
We support compressing debuginfo during codegen, but until this patch we didn't pass the flag to the linker. Doing so means we'll respect the requested compression even when building binaries or dylibs. This produces much smaller binaries: in my testing a debug build of ripgrep goes from 85M to 32M, and the target/ directory (after a clean build in both cases) goes from 508M to 329M just by enabling zlib compression of debuginfo.
We support compressing debuginfo during codegen, but until this patch we
didn't pass the flag to the linker. Doing so means we'll respect the
requested compression even when building binaries or dylibs. This
produces much smaller binaries: in my testing a debug build of ripgrep
goes from 85M to 32M, and the target/ directory (after a clean build in
both cases) goes from 508M to 329M just by enabling zlib compression of
debuginfo.
Remove cgu_reuse_tracker from Session
This removes a bit of global mutable state.
It will now miss post-lto cgu reuse when ThinLTO determines that a cgu doesn't get changed, but there weren't any tests for this anyway and a test for it would be fragile to the exact implementation of ThinLTO in LLVM.
Implement `-Clink-self-contained=-linker` opt out
This implements the `-Clink-self-contained` opt out necessary to switch to lld by changing rustc's defaults instead of cargo's.
Components that are enabled and disabled on the CLI are recorded, for the purpose of being merged with the ones which the target spec will declare (I'll open another PR for that tomorrow, for easier review).
For MCP510, we now check whether using the self-contained linker is disabled on the CLI. Right now it would only be sensible to with `-Zgcc-ld=lld` (and I'll add some checks that we don't both enable and disable a component on the CLI in a future PR), but the goal is to simplify adding the check of the target's enabled components here in the follow-up PRs.
r? `@petrochenkov`
Generalize small dominators optimization
* Use small dominators optimization from 640ede7b0a more generally.
* Merge `DefLocation` and `LocationExtended` since they serve the same purpose.
stabilize combining +bundle and +whole-archive link modifiers
Per discussion on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/108081 combining +bundle and +whole-archive already works and can be stabilized independently of other aspects of the packed_bundled_libs feature. There is no risk of regression because this was not previously allowed.
r? `@petrochenkov`
subst -> instantiate
continues #110793, there are still quite a few uses of `subst` and `substitute`, but changing them all in the same PR was a bit too much, so I've stopped here for now.
Correct codegen of `ConstValue::Indirect` scalar and scalar pair
This concerns 3 tricky cases with `ConstValue::Indirect`:
- if we want a non-pointer scalar;
- if we have non-zero offset;
- if offset points to uninit memory => generate `poison` instead of an ICE. This case could happen in unreachable code, trying to extract a field from the wrong variant.
Those cases are not currently emitted by the compiler, but are exercised by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116012.
Add Minimal Std implementation for UEFI
# Implemented modules:
1. alloc
2. os_str
3. env
4. math
# Related Links
Tracking Issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/100499
API Change Proposal: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/87
# Additional Information
This was originally part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100316. Since that PR was becoming too unwieldy and cluttered, and with suggestion from `@dvdhrm,` I have extracted a minimal std implementation to this PR.
The example in `src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/unknown-uefi.md` has been tested for `x86_64-unknown-uefi` and `i686-unknown-uefi` in OVMF. It would be great if someone more familiar with AARCH64 can help with testing for that target.
Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushsingh1325@gmail.com>
rename mir::Constant -> mir::ConstOperand, mir::ConstKind -> mir::Const
Also, be more consistent with the `to/eval_bits` methods... we had some that take a type and some that take a size, and then sometimes the one that takes a type is called `bits_for_ty`.
Turns out that `ty::Const`/`mir::ConstKind` carry their type with them, so we don't need to even pass the type to those `eval_bits` functions at all.
However this is not properly consistent yet: in `ty` we have most of the methods on `ty::Const`, but in `mir` we have them on `mir::ConstKind`. And indeed those two types are the ones that correspond to each other. So `mir::ConstantKind` should actually be renamed to `mir::Const`. But what to do with `mir::Constant`? It carries around a span, that's really more like a constant operand that appears as a MIR operand... it's more suited for `syntax.rs` than `consts.rs`, but the bigger question is, which name should it get if we want to align the `mir` and `ty` types? `ConstOperand`? `ConstOp`? `Literal`? It's not a literal but it has a field called `literal` so it would at least be consistently wrong-ish...
``@oli-obk`` any ideas?
move required_consts check to general post-mono-check function
This factors some code that is common between the interpreter and the codegen backends into shared helper functions. Also as a side-effect the interpreter now uses the same `eval` functions as everyone else to get the evaluated MIR constants.
Also this is in preparation for another post-mono check that will be needed for (the current hackfix for) https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115709: ensuring that all locals are dynamically sized.
I didn't expect this to change diagnostics, but it's just cycle errors that change.
r? `@oli-obk`
treat host effect params as erased in codegen
This fixes the changes brought to codegen tests when effect params are added to libcore, by not attempting to monomorphize functions that get the host param by being `const fn`.
r? `@oli-obk`
This fixes the changes brought to codegen tests when effect params are
added to libcore, by not attempting to monomorphize functions that get
the host param by being `const fn`.
Rework `no_coverage` to `coverage(off)`
As discussed at the tail of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84605 this replaces the `no_coverage` attribute with a `coverage` attribute that takes sub-parameters (currently `off` and `on`) to control the coverage instrumentation.
Allows future-proofing for things like `coverage(off, reason="Tested live", issue="#12345")` or similar.
Use the same DISubprogram for each instance of the same inlined function within a caller
# Issue Details:
The call to `panic` within a function like `Option::unwrap` is translated to LLVM as a `tail call` (as it will never return), when multiple calls to the same function like this are inlined LLVM will notice the common `tail call` block (i.e., loading the same panic string + location info and then calling `panic`) and merge them together.
When merging these instructions together, LLVM will also attempt to merge the debug locations as well, but this fails (i.e., debug info is dropped) as Rust emits a new `DISubprogram` at each inline site thus LLVM doesn't recognize that these are actually the same function and so thinks that there isn't a common debug location.
As an example of this, consider the following program:
```rust
#[no_mangle]
fn add_numbers(x: &Option<i32>, y: &Option<i32>) -> i32 {
let x1 = x.unwrap();
let y1 = y.unwrap();
x1 + y1
}
```
When building for x86_64 Windows using 1.72 it generates (note the lack of `.cv_loc` before the call to `panic`, thus it will be attributed to the same line at the `addq` instruction):
```llvm
.cv_loc 0 1 3 0 # src\lib.rs:3:0
addq $40, %rsp
retq
leaq .Lalloc_f570dea0a53168780ce9a91e67646421(%rip), %rcx
leaq .Lalloc_629ace53b7e5b76aaa810d549cc84ea3(%rip), %r8
movl $43, %edx
callq _ZN4core9panicking5panic17h12e60b9063f6dee8E
int3
```
# Fix Details:
Cache the `DISubprogram` emitted for each inlined function instance within a caller so that this can be reused if that instance is encountered again.
Ideally, we would also deduplicate child scopes and variables, however my attempt to do that with #114643 resulted in asserts when building for Linux (#115156) which would require some deep changes to Rust to fix (#115455).
Instead, when using an inlined function as a debug scope, we will also create a new child scope such that subsequent child scopes and variables do not collide (from LLVM's perspective).
After this change the above assembly now (with <https://reviews.llvm.org/D159226> as well) shows the `panic!` was inlined from `unwrap` in `option.rs` at line 935 into the current function in `lib.rs` at line 0 (line 0 is emitted since it is ambiguous which line to use as there were two inline sites that lead to this same code):
```llvm
.cv_loc 0 1 3 0 # src\lib.rs:3:0
addq $40, %rsp
retq
.cv_inline_site_id 6 within 0 inlined_at 1 0 0
.cv_loc 6 2 935 0 # library\core\src\option.rs:935:0
leaq .Lalloc_5f55955de67e57c79064b537689facea(%rip), %rcx
leaq .Lalloc_e741d4de8cb5801e1fd7a6c6795c1559(%rip), %r8
movl $43, %edx
callq _ZN4core9panicking5panic17hde1558f32d5b1c04E
int3
```
Add CL and CMD into to pdb debug info
Partial fix for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/96475
The Arg0 and CommandLineArgs of the MCTargetOptions cpp class are not set within bb548f9645/compiler/rustc_llvm/llvm-wrapper/PassWrapper.cpp (L378)
This causes LLVM to not neither output any compiler path (cl) nor the arguments that were used when invoking it (cmd) in the PDB file.
This fix adds the missing information to the target machine so LLVM can use it.
Always add LC_BUILD_VERSION for metadata object files
As of Xcode 15 Apple's linker has become a bit more strict about the warnings it produces. One of those new warnings requires all valid Mach-O object files in an archive to have a LC_BUILD_VERSION load command:
```
ld: warning: no platform load command found in 'ARCHIVE[arm64][2106](lib.rmeta)', assuming: iOS-simulator
```
This was already being done for Mac Catalyst so this change expands this logic to include it for all Apple platforms. I filed this behavior change as FB12546320 and was told it was the new intentional behavior.
Use the same DISubprogram for each instance of the same inlined function within a caller
# Issue Details:
The call to `panic` within a function like `Option::unwrap` is translated to LLVM as a `tail call` (as it will never return), when multiple calls to the same function like this is inlined LLVM will notice the common `tail call` block (i.e., loading the same panic string + location info and then calling `panic`) and merge them together.
When merging these instructions together, LLVM will also attempt to merge the debug locations as well, but this fails (i.e., debug info is dropped) as Rust emits a new `DISubprogram` at each inline site thus LLVM doesn't recognize that these are actually the same function and so thinks that there isn't a common debug location.
As an example of this when building for x86_64 Windows (note the lack of `.cv_loc` before the call to `panic`, thus it will be attributed to the same line at the `addq` instruction):
```
.cv_loc 0 1 23 0 # src\lib.rs:23:0
addq $40, %rsp
retq
leaq .Lalloc_f570dea0a53168780ce9a91e67646421(%rip), %rcx
leaq .Lalloc_629ace53b7e5b76aaa810d549cc84ea3(%rip), %r8
movl $43, %edx
callq _ZN4core9panicking5panic17h12e60b9063f6dee8E
int3
```
# Fix Details:
Cache the `DISubprogram` emitted for each inlined function instance within a caller so that this can be reused if that instance is encountered again, this also requires caching the `DILexicalBlock` and `DIVariable` objects to avoid creating duplicates.
After this change the above assembly now looks like:
```
.cv_loc 0 1 23 0 # src\lib.rs:23:0
addq $40, %rsp
retq
.cv_inline_site_id 5 within 0 inlined_at 1 0 0
.cv_inline_site_id 6 within 5 inlined_at 1 12 0
.cv_loc 6 2 935 0 # library\core\src\option.rs:935:0
leaq .Lalloc_5f55955de67e57c79064b537689facea(%rip), %rcx
leaq .Lalloc_e741d4de8cb5801e1fd7a6c6795c1559(%rip), %r8
movl $43, %edx
callq _ZN4core9panicking5panic17hde1558f32d5b1c04E
int3
```
As of Xcode 15 Apple's linker has become a bit more strict about the
warnings it produces. One of those new warnings requires all valid
Mach-O object files in an archive to have a LC_BUILD_VERSION load
command:
```
ld: warning: no platform load command found in 'ARCHIVE[arm64][2106](lib.rmeta)', assuming: iOS-simulator
```
This was already being done for Mac Catalyst so this change expands this
logic to include it for all Apple platforms. I filed this behavior
change as FB12546320 and was told it was the new intentional behavior.
Currently, combining +bundle and +whole-archive works only with
#![feature(packed_bundled_libs)]
This crate feature is independent of the -Zpacked-bundled-libs
command line option.
This commit stabilizes the #![feature(packed_bundled_libs)] crate
feature and implicitly enables it only when the +bundle and
+whole-archive link modifiers are combined. This allows rlib
crates to use the +whole-archive link modifier with native
libraries and have all symbols included in the linked library
to be included in downstream staticlib crates that use the rlib as
a dependency. Other cases requiring the packed_bundled_libs
behavior still require the -Zpacked-bundled-libs command line
option, which can be stabilized independently in the future.
Per discussion on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/108081
there is no risk of regression stabilizing the crate feature in
this way because the combination of +bundle,+whole-archive link
modifiers was previously not allowed.
Infer `Lld::No` linker hint when the linker stem is a generic compiler driver
This PR basically reverts the temporary solution in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/113631 to a more long-term solution.
r? ``@petrochenkov``
In [this comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/113631#issuecomment-1634598238), you had ideas about a long-term solution:
> I wonder what a good non-temporary solution for the inference would look like.
>
> * If the default is `(Cc::No, Lld::Yes)` (e.g. `rust-lld`)
>
> * and we switch to some specific platform compiler (e.g. `-C linker=arm-none-eabi-gcc`), should we change to `Lld::No`? Maybe yes?
> * and we switch to some non-default but generic compiler `-C linker=clang`? Then maybe not?
>
> * If the default is `(Cc::Yes, Lld::Yes)` (e.g. future x86_64 linux with default LLD)
>
> * and we switch to some specific platform compiler (e.g. `-C linker=arm-none-eabi-gcc`), should we change to `Lld::No`? Maybe yes?
> * and we switch to some non-default but generic compiler `-C linker=clang`? Then maybe not?
>
I believe that we should infer the `Lld::No` linker hint for any `-Clinker` override, and all the cases above:
- the linker drivers have their own defaults, so in my mind `-Clinker` is a signal to use its default linker / flavor, rather than ours or the target's. In the case of generic compilers, it's more likely than not going to be `Lld::No`. I would expect this to be the case in general, even when including platform-specific compilers.
- the guess will be wrong if the linker driver uses lld by default (and we also don't want to search for `-fuse-ld` link args), but will work in the more common cases. And the minority of other cases can fix the wrong guess by opting into the precise linker flavor.
- this also ensures backwards-compatibility: today, even on targets with an lld default and overriding the linker, rustc will not use lld. That includes `thumbv6m-none-eabi` where issue #113597 happened.
It looks like the simplest option, and the one with least churn: we maintain the current behavior in ambiguous cases.
I've tested that this works on #113597, as expected from the failure.
(I also have a no-std `run-make` test using a custom target json spec: basically simulating a future `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` using an lld flavor by default, to check that e.g. `-Clinker=clang` doesn't use lld. I could add that test to this PR, but IIUC such a custom target requires `cargo -Z build-std` and we have no tests depending on this cargo feature yet. Let me know if you want to add this test of the linker inference for such targets.)
What do you think ?
Restrict linker version script of proc-macro crates to just its two symbols
Restrict linker version script of proc-macro crates to just the two symbols of each proc-macro crate.
The main known effect of doing this is to stop including `#[no_mangle]` symbols in the linker version script.
Background:
The combination of a proc-macro crate with an import of another crate that itself exports a no_mangle function was broken for a period of time, because:
* In PR #99944 we stopped exporting no_mangle symbols from proc-macro crates; proc-macro crates have a very limited interface and are meant to be treated as a blackbox to everything except rustc itself. However: he constructed linker version script still referred to them, but resolving that discrepancy was left as a FIXME in the code, tagged with issue #99978.
* In PR #108017 we started telling the linker to check (via the`--no-undefined-version` linker invocation flag) that every symbol referenced in the "linker version script" is provided as linker input. So the unresolved discrepancy from #99978 started surfacing as a compile-time error (e.g. #111888).
Fix#111888Fix#99978.
Remove arm crypto target feature
Follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1407.
LLVM has moved away from a combined `crypto` feature on both aarch64 and arm, and we did the same on aarch64, but were deferred from doing the same on arm due to compatibility with older LLVM.
As the minimum LLVM version has increased, we can now remove this (unstable) target feature on arm.
r? `@Amanieu`
Avoid exporting __rust_alloc_error_handler_should_panic more than once.
Exporting `__rust_alloc_error_handler_should_panic` multiple times causes `ld.gold` to balk with: `error: version script assignment of to symbol __rust_alloc_error_handler_should_panic failed: symbol not defined`
Specifically this breaks builds of 1.70.0 and newer on DragonFly and YoctoProject with `ld.gold`. Builds with `ld.bfd` and `lld` should be unaffected.
http://errors.yoctoproject.org/Errors/Details/708194/
Add documentation to has_deref
Documentation of `has_deref` needed some polish to be more clear about where it should be used and what's it's purpose.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/114401
r? `@RalfJung`
Add separate feature gate for async fn track caller
This patch adds a feature gate `async_fn_track_caller` that is separate from `closure_track_caller`. This is to allow enabling `async_fn_track_caller` separately.
Fixes#110009
Enable tests on rustc_codegen_ssa
This enables unittests in rustc_codegen_ssa. There are some tests, primarily in [`back/rpath/tests.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/HEAD/compiler/rustc_codegen_ssa/src/back/rpath/tests.rs) that haven't ever been running since the unittests are disabled. From what I can tell, this was just a consequence of how things evolved. When testing was initially added in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/33282, `librustc_trans` had test=false because it didn't have any tests. `rustc_codegen_ssa` eventually split off from that (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/55627), and the rpath module eventually got merged in too (from `librustc_back` where it used to live). That migration didn't enable the tests.
This also includes some fluent diagnostic tests, though I'm not sure what exactly they are testing.
This patch adds a feature gate `async_fn_track_caller` that is separate from `closure_track_caller`. This is to allow enabling `async_fn_track_caller` separately.
Fixes#110009
Exporting `__rust_alloc_error_handler_should_panic` multiple times
causes ld.gold to balk with: `error: version script assignment of to
symbol __rust_alloc_error_handler_should_panic failed: symbol not
defined`
Specifically this breaks builds on DragonFly and YoctoProject with
ld.gold. Builds with ld.bfd should be unaffected.
cleanup: remove pointee types
This can't be merged until the oldest LLVM version we support uses opaque pointers, which will be the case after #114148. (Also note `-Cllvm-args="-opaque-pointers=0"` can technically be used in LLVM 15, though I don't think we should support that configuration.)
I initially hoped this would provide some minor perf win, but in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105412#issuecomment-1341224450 it had very little impact, so this is only valuable as a cleanup.
As a followup, this will enable #96242 to be resolved.
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` label S-blocked
This function has some shared code for the thin LTO and fat LTO cases,
but those cases have so little in common that it's actually clearer to
treat them fully separately.
PR #112946 tweaked the naming of LLVM threads, but messed things up
slightly, resulting in threads on Windows having names like `optimize
module {} regex.f10ba03eb5ec7975-cgu.0`.
This commit removes the extraneous `{} `.
The main loop has a *very* complex condition, which includes two
mentions of `codegen_state`. The body of the loop then immediately
switches on the `codegen_state`.
I find it easier to understand if it's a `loop` and we check for exit
conditions after switching on `codegen_state`. We end up with a tiny bit
of code duplication, but it's clear that (a) we never exit in the
`Ongoing` case, (b) we exit in the `Completed` state only if several
things are true (and there's interaction with LTO there), and (c) we
exit in the `Aborted` state if a couple of things are true. Also, the
exit conditions are all simple conjunctions.
This loop condition involves `codegen_state`, `work_items`, and
`running_with_own_token`. But the body of the loop cannot modify
`codegen_state`, so repeatedly checking it is unnecessary.
`CodegenContext` is immutable except for the `worker` field - we clone
`CodegenContext` in multiple places, changing the `worker` field each
time. It's simpler to move the `worker` field out of `CodegenContext`.
It took me some time to understand how the main thread can lend a
jobserver token to an LLVM thread. This commit renames a couple of
things to make it clearer.
- Rename the `LLVMing` variant as `Lending`, because that is a clearer
description of what is happening.
- Rename `running` as `running_with_own_token`, which makes it clearer
that there might be one additional LLVM thread running (with a loaned
token). Also add a comment to its definition.
And rename the `Compiled` variant as `Finished`, because that name makes
it clearer there is nothing left to do, contrasting nicely with the
`Needs*` variants.
Tweak CGU sorting in a couple of places.
In `base.rs`, tweak how the CGU size interleaving works. Since #113777, it's much more common to have multiple CGUs with identical sizes. With the existing code these same-sized items ended up in the opposite-to-desired order due to the stable sorting. The code now starts with a reverse sort (like is done in `partitioning.rs`) which gives the behaviour we want. This doesn't matter much for perf, but makes profiles in `samply` look more like what we expect.
In `partitioning.rs`, we can use `sort_by_key` instead of `sort_by_cached_key` because `CGU::size_estimate()` is cheap. (There is an identical CGU sort earlier in that function that already uses `sort_by_key`.)
r? `@pnkfelix`
Fix #[inline(always)] on closures with target feature 1.1
Fixes#108655. I think this is the most obvious solution that isn't overly complicated. The comment includes more justification, but I think this is likely better than demoting the `#[inline(always)]` to `#[inline]`, since existing code is unaffected.
clarify MIR uninit vs LLVM undef/poison
In [this LLVM discussion](https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-load-instruction-uninitialized-memory-semantics/67481) I learned that mapping our uninitialized memory in MIR to poison in LLVM would be quite problematic due to the lack of a byte type. I am not sure where to write down this insight but this seems like a reasonable start.
Support `--print KIND=PATH` command line syntax
As is already done for `--emit KIND=PATH` and `-L KIND=PATH`.
In the discussion of #110785, it was pointed out that `--print KIND=PATH` is nicer than trying to apply the single global `-o` path to `--print`'s output, because in general there can be multiple print requests within a single rustc invocation, and anyway `-o` would already be used for a different meaning in the case of `link-args` and `native-static-libs`.
I am interested in using `--print cfg=PATH` in Buck2. Currently Buck2 works around the lack of support for `--print KIND=PATH` by [indirecting through a Python wrapper script](d43cf3a51a/prelude/rust/tools/get_rustc_cfg.py) to redirect rustc's stdout into the location dictated by the build system.
From skimming Cargo's usages of `--print`, it definitely seems like it would benefit from `--print KIND=PATH` too. Currently it is working around the lack of this by inserting `--crate-name=___ --print=crate-name` so that it can look for a line containing `___` as a delimiter between the 2 other `--print` informations it actually cares about. This is commented as a "HACK" and "abuse". 31eda6f7c3/src/cargo/core/compiler/build_context/target_info.rs (L242) (FYI `@weihanglo` as you dealt with this recently in https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/11633.)
Mentioning reviewers active in #110785: `@fee1-dead` `@jyn514` `@bjorn3`
Resurrect: rustc_llvm: Add a -Z `print-codegen-stats` option to expose LLVM statistics.
This resurrects PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104000, which has sat idle for a while. And I want to see the effect of stack-move optimizations on LLVM (like https://reviews.llvm.org/D153453) :).
I have applied the changes requested by `@oli-obk` and `@nagisa` https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104000#discussion_r1014625377 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104000#discussion_r1014642482 in the latest commits.
r? `@oli-obk`
-----
LLVM has a neat [statistics](https://llvm.org/docs/ProgrammersManual.html#the-statistic-class-stats-option) feature that tracks how often optimizations kick in. It's very handy for optimization work. Since we expose the LLVM pass timings, I thought it made sense to expose the LLVM statistics too.
-----
(Edit: fix broken link
(Edit2: fix segmentation fault and use malloc
If `rustc` is built with
```toml
[llvm]
assertions = true
```
Then you can see like
```
rustc +stage1 -Z print-codegen-stats -C opt-level=3 tmp.rs
===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===
... Statistics Collected ...
===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===
3 aa - Number of MayAlias results
193 aa - Number of MustAlias results
531 aa - Number of NoAlias results
...
```
And the current default build emits only
```
$ rustc +stage1 -Z print-codegen-stats -C opt-level=3 tmp.rs
===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===
... Statistics Collected ...
===-------------------------------------------------------------------------===
$
```
This might be better to emit the message to tell assertion flag necessity, but now I can't find how to do that...
Verify that all crate sources are in sync
This ensures that rustc will not attempt to link against a cdylib as if it is a rust dylib when an rlib for the same crate is available. Previously rustc didn't actually check if any further formats of a crate which has been loaded are of the same version and if they are actually valid. This caused a cdylib to be interpreted as rust dylib as soon as the corresponding rlib was loaded. As cdylibs don't export any rust symbols, linking would fail if rustc decides to link against the cdylib rather than the rlib.
Two crates depended on the previous behavior by separately compiling a test crate as both rlib and dylib. These have been changed to capture their original spirit to the best of my ability while still working when rustc verifies that all crates are in sync. It is unlikely that build systems depend on the current behavior and in any case we are taking a lot of measures to ensure that any change to either the source or the compilation options (including crate type) results in rustc rejecting it as incompatible. We merely didn't do this check here for now obsolete perf reasons.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/10786
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/82151
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/82972
Closes https://github.com/bevy-cheatbook/bevy-cheatbook/issues/114
On nightly, dump ICE backtraces to disk
Implement rust-lang/compiler-team#578.
When an ICE is encountered on nightly releases, the new rustc panic handler will also write the contents of the backtrace to disk. If any `delay_span_bug`s are encountered, their backtrace is also added to the file. The platform and rustc version will also be collected.
<img width="1032" alt="Screenshot 2023-03-03 at 2 13 25 PM" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1606434/222842420-8e039740-4042-4563-b31d-599677171acf.png">
The current behavior will *always* write to disk on nightly builds, regardless of whether the backtrace is printed to the terminal, unless the environment variable `RUSTC_ICE_DISK_DUMP` is set to `0`. This is a compromise and can be changed.
In `base.rs`, tweak how the CGU size interleaving works. Since #113777,
it's much more common to have multiple CGUs with identical sizes. With
the existing code these same-sized items ended up in the
opposite-to-desired order due to the stable sorting. The code now starts
with a reverse sort (like is done in `partitioning.rs`) which gives the
behaviour we want. This doesn't matter much for perf, but makes profiles
in `samply` look more like what we expect.
In `partitioning.rs`, we can use `sort_by_key` instead of
`sort_by_cached_key` because `CGU::size_estimate()` is cheap. (There is
an identical CGU sort earlier in that function that already uses
`sort_by_key`.)
Add the `no-builtins` attribute to functions when `no_builtins` is applied at the crate level.
**When `no_builtins` is applied at the crate level, we should add the `no-builtins` attribute to each function to ensure it takes effect in LTO.**
This is also the reason why no_builtins does not take effect in LTO as mentioned in #35540.
Now, `#![no_builtins]` should be similar to `-fno-builtin` in clang/gcc, see https://clang.godbolt.org/z/z4j6Wsod5.
Next, we should make `#![no_builtins]` participate in LTO again. That makes sense, as LTO also takes into consideration function-level instruction optimizations, such as the MachineOutliner. More importantly, when a user writes a large `#![no_builtins]` crate, they would like this crate to participate in LTO as well.
We should also add a function-level no_builtins attribute to allow users to have more control over it. This is similar to Clang's `__attribute__((no_builtin))` feature, see https://clang.godbolt.org/z/Wod6KK6eq. Before implementing this feature, maybe we should discuss whether to support more fine-grained control, such as `__attribute__((no_builtin("memcpy")))`.
Related discussions:
- #109821
- #35540
Next (a separate pull request?):
- [ ] Revert #35637
- [ ] Add a function-level `no_builtin` attribute?
Implement rust-lang/compiler-team#578.
When an ICE is encountered on nightly releases, the new rustc panic
handler will also write the contents of the backtrace to disk. If any
`delay_span_bug`s are encountered, their backtrace is also added to the
file. The platform and rustc version will also be collected.
LLVM has a neat [statistics] feature that tracks how often optimizations kick
in. It's very handy for optimization work. Since we expose the LLVM pass
timings, I thought it made sense to expose the LLVM statistics too.
[statistics]: https://llvm.org/docs/ProgrammersManual.html#the-statistic-class-stats-option
De-duplicate consecutive libs when printing native-static-libs
This PR adds a de-duplicate step just before printing the `native-static-libs`.
This step de-duplicates all the consecutive libs based only on the relevant comparison elements (this exclude spans, ast elements, ...).
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/113209
Resurrect: rustc_target: Add alignment to indirectly-passed by-value types, correcting the alignment of byval on x86 in the process.
Same as #111551, which I [accidentally closed](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111551#issuecomment-1571222612) :/
---
This resurrects PR #103830, which has sat idle for a while.
Beyond #103830, this also:
- fixes byval alignment for types containing vectors on Darwin (see `tests/codegen/align-byval-vector.rs`)
- fixes byval alignment for overaligned types on x86 Windows (see `tests/codegen/align-byval.rs`)
- fixes ABI for types with 128bit requested alignment on ARM64 Linux (see `tests/codegen/aarch64-struct-align-128.rs`)
r? `@nikic`
---
`@pcwalton's` original PR description is reproduced below:
Commit 88e4d2c from five years ago removed
support for alignment on indirectly-passed arguments because of problems with
the `i686-pc-windows-msvc` target. Unfortunately, the `memcpy` optimizations I
recently added to LLVM 16 depend on this to forward `memcpy`s. This commit
attempts to fix the problems with `byval` parameters on that target and now
correctly adds the `align` attribute.
The problem is summarized in [this comment] by `@eddyb.` Briefly, 32-bit x86 has
special alignment rules for `byval` parameters: for the most part, their
alignment is forced to 4. This is not well-documented anywhere but in the Clang
source. I looked at the logic in Clang `TargetInfo.cpp` and tried to replicate
it here. The relevant methods in that file are
`X86_32ABIInfo::getIndirectResult()` and
`X86_32ABIInfo::getTypeStackAlignInBytes()`. The `align` parameter attribute
for `byval` parameters in LLVM must match the platform ABI, or miscompilations
will occur. Note that this doesn't use the approach suggested by eddyb, because
I felt it was overkill to store the alignment in `on_stack` when special
handling is really only needed for 32-bit x86.
As a side effect, this should fix#80127, because it will make the `align`
parameter attribute for `byval` parameters match the platform ABI on LLVM
x86-64.
[this comment]: #80822 (comment)
make MCP510 behavior opt-in to avoid conflicts between the CLI and target flavors
Fixes#113597, which contains more details on how this happens through the code, and showcases an unexpected `Gnu(Cc::Yes, Lld::Yes)` flavor.
#112910 added support to use `lld` when the flavor requests it, but didn't explicitly do so only when using `-Clink-self-contained=+linker` or one of the unstable `-Clinker-flavor`s.
The problem: some targets have a `lld` linker and flavor, e.g. `thumbv6m-none-eabi` from that issue. Users can override the linker but there are no linker flavors precise enough to describe the linker opting out of lld: when using `-Clinker=arm-none-eabi-gcc`, we infer this is a `Cc::Yes` linker flavor, but the `lld` component is unknown and therefore defaulted to the target's linker flavor, `Lld::Yes`.
<details>
<summary>Walkthrough of how this happens</summary>
The linker flavor used is a mix between what can be inferred from the CLI (`-C linker`) and the target's default linker flavor:
- there is no linker flavor on the CLI (and that also offers another workaround on nightly: `-C linker-flavor=gnu-cc -Zunstable-options`), so it will have to be inferred [from here](5dac6b320b/compiler/rustc_codegen_ssa/src/back/link.rs (L1334-L1336)) to [here](5dac6b320b/compiler/rustc_codegen_ssa/src/back/link.rs (L1321-L1327)).
- in [`infer_linker_hints`](5dac6b320b/compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/mod.rs (L320-L352)) `-C linker=arm-none-eabi-gcc` infers a `Some(Cc::Yes)` cc hint, and no hint about lld.
- the target's `linker_flavor` is combined in `with_cli_hints` with these hints. We have our `Cc::Yes`, but there is no hint about lld, [so the target's flavor `lld` component is used](5dac6b320b/compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/mod.rs (L356-L358)). It's [`Gnu(Cc::No, Lld::Yes)`](993deaa0bf/compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/thumb_base.rs (L35)).
- so we now have our `Gnu(Cc::Yes, Lld::Yes)` flavor
</details>
This results in a `Gnu(Cc::Yes, Lld::Yes)` flavor on a non-lld linker, causing an additional unexpected `-fuse-ld=lld` argument to be passed.
I don't know if this target defaulting to `rust-lld` is expected, but until MCP510's new linker flavor are stable, when people will be able to describe their linker/flavor accurately, this PR keeps the stable behavior of not doing anything when the linker/flavor on the CLI unexpectedly conflict with the target's.
I've tested this on a `no_std` `-C linker=arm-none-eabi-gcc -C link-arg=-nostartfiles --target thumbv6m-none-eabi` example, trying to simulate one of `cortex-m`'s test mentioned in issue #113597 (I don't know how to build a local complete `thumbv6m-none-eabi` toolchain to run the exact test), and checked that `-fuse-lld` was indeed gone and the error disappeared.
r? `````@petrochenkov`````
Support explicit 32-bit MIPS ABI for the synthetic object
PR #95604 introduced a "synthetic object file to ensure all exported and used symbols participate in the linking". One constraint on this file is that for MIPS-based targets, its architecture-specific ELF flags must be the same as all other object files passed to the linker. That's enforced by LLD, here:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-16.0.6/lld/ELF/Arch/MipsArchTree.cpp#L77
The current approach to determining e_flags for 32-bit was implemented in PR #96930, which links to this issue that summarizes the problem well: https://github.com/ayrtonm/psx-sdk-rs/issues/9
> ... the temporary object file is created with an e_flags which is
> invalid for 32-bit MIPS targets. The main issue is that it omits the ABI
> bits (EF_MIPS_ABI_O32) which implies it uses the N64 ABI.
To enable the N32 MIPS ABI (which succeeded O32), this patch enables setting the synthetic object's ABI based on the target "llvm-abiname" field, if it's given; otherwise, the O32 ABI is assumed for 32-bit MIPS targets.
More information about the N32 ABI can be found here: https://web.archive.org/web/20160121005457/http://techpubs.sgi.com/library/manuals/2000/007-2816-005/pdf/007-2816-005.pdf
PR #95604 introduced a "synthetic object file to ensure all exported and
used symbols participate in the linking". One constraint on this file is
that for MIPS-based targets, its architecture-specific ELF flags must be
the same as all other object files passed to the linker. That's enforced
by LLD, here:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-16.0.6/lld/ELF/Arch/MipsArchTree.cpp#L77
The current approach to determining e_flags for 32-bit was implemented
in PR #96930, which links to this issue that summarizes the problem well:
https://github.com/ayrtonm/psx-sdk-rs/issues/9
> ... the temporary object file is created with an e_flags which is
> invalid for 32-bit MIPS targets. The main issue is that it omits the ABI
> bits (EF_MIPS_ABI_O32) which implies it uses the N64 ABI.
To enable the N32 MIPS ABI (which succeeded O32), this patch enables
setting the synthetic object's ABI based on the target "llvm-abiname"
field, if it's given; otherwise, the O32 ABI is assumed for 32-bit MIPS
targets.
More information about the N32 ABI can be found here:
https://web.archive.org/web/20160121005457/http://techpubs.sgi.com/library/manuals/2000/007-2816-005/pdf/007-2816-005.pdf
Always name the return place.
MIR opts more and more consider `_0` as just another local, so there is no point in keeping the special case in debug-info logic.
It makes it sound like the `ExprKind` and `Rvalue` are supposed to represent all pointer related
casts, when in reality their just used to share a some enum variants. Make it clear there these
are only coercion to make it clear why only some pointer related "casts" are in the enum.
Add `-Zremark-dir` unstable flag to write LLVM optimization remarks to YAML
This PR adds an option for `rustc` to emit LLVM optimization remarks to a set of YAML files, which can then be digested by existing tools, like https://github.com/OfekShilon/optview2. When `-Cremark-dir` is passed, and remarks are enabled (`-Cremark=all`), the remarks will be now written to the specified directory, **instead** of being printed to standard error output. The files are named based on the CGU from which they are being generated.
Currently, the remarks are written using the LLVM streaming machinery, directly in the diagnostics handler. It seemed easier than going back to Rust and then form there back to C++ to use the streamer from the diagnostics handler. But there are many ways to implement this, of course, so I'm open to suggestions :)
I included some comments with questions into the code. Also, I'm not sure how to test this.
r? `@tmiasko`
Make simd_shuffle_indices use valtrees
This removes the second-to-last user of the `destructure_mir_constant` query. So in a follow-up we can remove the query and just move the query provider function directly into pretty printing (which is the last user).
cc `@rust-lang/clippy` there's a small functional change, but I think it is correct?
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`
loongarch: Fix ELF header flags
This patch changes the ELF header flags so that the ABI matches the floating-point features. It also updates the link to the new official documentation.
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.
Support for native WASM exceptions
### Motivation
Currently, rustc does not support native WASM exceptions. It does support JavaScript based exceptions for the wasm32-emscripten-target, but this requires back&forth with javascript for many calls, which is very slow.
Native wasm support for exceptions is quite common: Clang+LLVM implemented them years ago, and all major browsers support them by now. They enable zero-cost exceptions, at least with regard to runtime-performance-cost. They may increase startup-time and code size, though.
### Important: This PR does not change default behaviour
Exceptions usually add a lot of code in form of unwinding blocks, increasing the binary size. Most users probably do not want that, especially which regard to web development.
Therefore, wasm exceptions play a similar role as WASM-threads: rustc should support them, like clang does, but users who want to use it have to use some command-line magic like rustflags to opt in.
### What does this PR do?
As stated above, the default behaviour is not changed. It is already possible to opt-in into wasm exceptions using the command line. Unfortunately, the LLVM IR is invalid and the LLVM backend crashes.
```
rustc <sourcefile>
--target wasm32-unknown-unknown
-C panic=unwind
-C llvm-args=-wasm-enable-eh
-C target-feature=+exception-handling
```
As it turns out, LLVM is quite picky when it comes to IR for exception handling. If the IR does not look exactly like it should, some LLVM-assertions fail and the code generation crashes.
This PR adds the necessary modifications to the code generator to make it work. It also adds `exception-handling` as a wasm target feature.
### What this PR does not / what is missing
This PR is not a full fledges solution. It is the first step. A few parts are still missing; however, it is already useable (see next section).
Currently missing:
* The std library has to be adapted. Currently, only [no_std] crates work
* Usually, nested exceptions abort the program (i.e. a panic during the cleanup of another panic). This is currently not done yet.
- Currently, code inside cleanup handlers does not unwind
- To fix this requires a little more work: The code generator currently maintains a single terminate block per function for this. Unfortunately, WASM requires funclet based exception handling. Therefore, we need to create a terminate block per funclet. This is probably not a big problem, but I want to keep this PR simple.
### How to use the compiler given this PR?
This PR does not add any command line flags or features. It uses those which are already there. To compile with exceptions enabled, you need
* to set the panic strategy to unwind, i.e. `-C panic=unwind`
* to enable the exception-handling target feature, i.e. `-C target-feature=+exception-handling`
* to tell LLVM about the exception handling, i.e. `-C llvm-args=-wasm-enable-eh`
Since the standard library has not been adapted, you can only use it in [no_std] crates as of now. The intrinsic `core::intrinsics::r#try` works. To throw exceptions, you need the ```@llvm.wasm.throw``` intrinsic.
I created a sample application which works for me: https://github.com/mirkootter/rust-wasm-demos
This example can be run at https://webassembly.sh
mir opt + codegen: handle subtyping
fixes#107205
the same issue was caused in multiple places:
- mir opts: both copy and destination propagation
- codegen: assigning operands to locals (which also propagates values)
I changed codegen to always update the type in the operands used for locals which should guard against any new occurrences of this bug going forward. I don't know how to make mir optimizations more resilient here. Hopefully the added tests will be enough to detect any trivially wrong optimizations going forward.
Add trustzone and virtualization target features for aarch32.
These are LLVM target features which allow the `smc` and `hvc` instructions respectively to be used in inline assembly.
For non-incremental builds on Unix, currently all the thread names look
like `opt regex.f10ba03eb5ec7975-cgu.0`. But they are truncated by
`pthread_setname` to `opt regex.f10ba`, hiding the numeric suffix that
distinguishes them. This is really annoying when using a profiler like
Samply.
This commit changes these thread names to a form like `opt cgu.0`, which
is much better.
The codegen main loop has two bools, `codegen_done` and
`codegen_aborted`. There are only three valid combinations: `(false,
false)`, `(true, false)`, `(true, true)`.
This commit replaces them with a single tri-state enum, which makes
things clearer.
`Message` is an enum with multiple variants. Four of those variants map
directly onto the four variants of `WorkItemResult`. This commit reduces
those four `Message` variants to a single variant containing a
`WorkItemResult`. This requires increasing `WorkItemResult`'s visibility
to `pub(crate)` visibility, but `WorkItem` and `Message` can also have
their visibility reduced to `pub(crate)`.
This change avoids some boilerplate enum translation code, and makes
`Message` easier to understand.
`Message` is an enum with multiple variants, for messages sent to the
coordinator thread. *Except* for `Message::CodegenItem`, which is
entirely disjoint, being for messages sent from the coordinator thread
to the main thread.
This commit move `Message::CodegenItem` into a separate type,
`CguMessage`, which makes the code much clearer.
Like for rlibs, the paths on the linker command line need to be relative
paths if the sysroot was specified by the user to be a relative path.
Dylibs put the path in /LIBPATH instead of into the file path of the
library itself, so we rehome the libpath and adjust the rehoming function
to be able to support both use cases, rlibs and dylibs.
When the `--sysroot` is specified as relative to the current working
directory, the sysroot's rlibs should also be specified as relative
paths. Otherwise, the current working directory ends up in the
absolute paths, and in the linker command line. And the entire linker
command line appears in the PDB file generated by the MSVC linker.
When adding an rlib to the linker command line, if the rlib's canonical
path is in the sysroot's canonical path, then use the current sysroot
path + filename instead of the full absolute path to the rlib. This
means that when `--sysroot=foo` is specified, the linker command line
will contain `foo/rustlib/target/lib/lib*.rlib` instead of the full
absolute path to the same.
This addresses https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/112586
Because tiny CGUs make compilation less efficient *and* result in worse
generated code.
We don't do this when the number of CGUs is explicitly given, because
there are times when the requested number is very important, as
described in some comments within the commit. So the commit also
introduces a `CodegenUnits` type that distinguishes between default
values and user-specified values.
This change has a roughly neutral effect on walltimes across the
rustc-perf benchmarks; there are some speedups and some slowdowns. But
it has significant wins for most other metrics on numerous benchmarks,
including instruction counts, cycles, binary size, and max-rss. It also
reduces parallelism, which is good for reducing jobserver competition
when multiple rustc processes are running at the same time. It's smaller
benchmarks that benefit the most; larger benchmarks already have CGUs
that are all larger than the minimum size.
Here are some example before/after CGU sizes for opt builds.
- html5ever
- CGUs: 16, mean size: 1196.1, sizes: [3908, 2992, 1706, 1652, 1572,
1136, 1045, 948, 946, 938, 579, 471, 443, 327, 286, 189]
- CGUs: 4, mean size: 4396.0, sizes: [6706, 3908, 3490, 3480]
- libc
- CGUs: 12, mean size: 35.3, sizes: [163, 93, 58, 53, 37, 8, 2 (x6)]
- CGUs: 1, mean size: 424.0, sizes: [424]
- tt-muncher
- CGUs: 5, mean size: 1819.4, sizes: [8508, 350, 198, 34, 7]
- CGUs: 1, mean size: 9075.0, sizes: [9075]
Note that CGUs of size 100,000+ aren't unusual in larger programs.
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.
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #112034 (Migrate `item_opaque_ty` to Askama)
- #112179 (Avoid passing --cpu-features when empty)
- #112309 (bootstrap: remove dependency `is-terminal`)
- #112388 (Migrate GUI colors test to original CSS color format)
- #112389 (Add a test for #105709)
- #112392 (Fix ICE for while loop with assignment condition with LHS place expr)
- #112394 (Remove accidental comment)
- #112396 (Track more diagnostics in `rustc_expand`)
- #112401 (Don't `use compile_error as print`)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Removed use of iteration through a HashMap/HashSet in rustc_incremental and replaced with IndexMap/IndexSet
This allows for the `#[allow(rustc::potential_query_instability)]` in rustc_incremental to be removed, moving towards fixing #84447 (although a LOT more modules have to be changed to fully resolve it). Only HashMaps/HashSets that are being iterated through have been modified (although many structs and traits outside of rustc_incremental had to be modified as well, as they had fields/methods that involved a HashMap/HashSet that would be iterated through)
I'm making a PR for just 1 module changed to test for performance regressions and such, for future changes I'll either edit this PR to reflect additional modules being converted, or batch multiple modules of changes together and make a PR for each group of modules.
Force all native libraries to be statically linked when linking a static binary
Previously, `#[link]` without an explicit `kind = "static"` would confuse the linker and end up producing a dynamically linked library because of the `-Bdynamic` flag. However this binary would not work correctly anyways since it was linked with startup code for a static binary.
This PR solves this by forcing all native libraries to be statically linked when the output is a static binary that cannot link to dynamic libraries anyways.
Fixes#108878Fixes#102993
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.
Use `load`+`store` instead of `memcpy` for small integer arrays
I was inspired by #98892 to see whether, rather than making `mem::swap` do something smart in the library, we could update MIR assignments like `*_1 = *_2` to do something smarter than `memcpy` for sufficiently-small types that doing it inline is going to be better than a `memcpy` call in assembly anyway. After all, special code may help `mem::swap`, but if the "obvious" MIR can just result in the correct thing that helps everything -- other code like `mem::replace`, people doing it manually, and just passing around by value in general -- as well as makes MIR inlining happier since it doesn't need to deal with all the complicated library code if it just sees a couple assignments.
LLVM will turn the short, known-length `memcpy`s into direct instructions in the backend, but that's too late for it to be able to remove `alloca`s. In general, replacing `memcpy`s with typed instructions is hard in the middle-end -- even for `memcpy.inline` where it knows it won't be a function call -- is hard [due to poison propagation issues](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/187780-t-compiler.2Fwg-llvm/topic/memcpy.20vs.20load-store.20for.20MIR.20assignments/near/360376712). So because we know more about the type invariants -- these are typed copies -- rustc can emit something more specific, allowing LLVM to `mem2reg` away the `alloca`s in some situations.
#52051 previously did something like this in the library for `mem::swap`, but it ended up regressing during enabling mir inlining (cbbf06b0cd), so this has been suboptimal on stable for ≈5 releases now.
The code in this PR is narrowly targeted at just integer arrays in LLVM, but works via a new method on the [`LayoutTypeMethods`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_codegen_ssa/traits/trait.LayoutTypeMethods.html) trait, so specific backends based on cg_ssa can enable this for more situations over time, as we find them. I don't want to try to bite off too much in this PR, though. (Transparent newtypes and simple things like the 3×usize `String` would be obvious candidates for a follow-up.)
Codegen demonstrations: <https://llvm.godbolt.org/z/fK8hT9aqv>
Before:
```llvm
define void `@swap_rgb48_old(ptr` noalias nocapture noundef align 2 dereferenceable(6) %x, ptr noalias nocapture noundef align 2 dereferenceable(6) %y) unnamed_addr #1 {
%a.i = alloca [3 x i16], align 2
call void `@llvm.lifetime.start.p0(i64` 6, ptr nonnull %a.i)
call void `@llvm.memcpy.p0.p0.i64(ptr` noundef nonnull align 2 dereferenceable(6) %a.i, ptr noundef nonnull align 2 dereferenceable(6) %x, i64 6, i1 false)
tail call void `@llvm.memcpy.p0.p0.i64(ptr` noundef nonnull align 2 dereferenceable(6) %x, ptr noundef nonnull align 2 dereferenceable(6) %y, i64 6, i1 false)
call void `@llvm.memcpy.p0.p0.i64(ptr` noundef nonnull align 2 dereferenceable(6) %y, ptr noundef nonnull align 2 dereferenceable(6) %a.i, i64 6, i1 false)
call void `@llvm.lifetime.end.p0(i64` 6, ptr nonnull %a.i)
ret void
}
```
Note it going to stack:
```nasm
swap_rgb48_old: # `@swap_rgb48_old`
movzx eax, word ptr [rdi + 4]
mov word ptr [rsp - 4], ax
mov eax, dword ptr [rdi]
mov dword ptr [rsp - 8], eax
movzx eax, word ptr [rsi + 4]
mov word ptr [rdi + 4], ax
mov eax, dword ptr [rsi]
mov dword ptr [rdi], eax
movzx eax, word ptr [rsp - 4]
mov word ptr [rsi + 4], ax
mov eax, dword ptr [rsp - 8]
mov dword ptr [rsi], eax
ret
```
Now:
```llvm
define void `@swap_rgb48(ptr` noalias nocapture noundef align 2 dereferenceable(6) %x, ptr noalias nocapture noundef align 2 dereferenceable(6) %y) unnamed_addr #0 {
start:
%0 = load <3 x i16>, ptr %x, align 2
%1 = load <3 x i16>, ptr %y, align 2
store <3 x i16> %1, ptr %x, align 2
store <3 x i16> %0, ptr %y, align 2
ret void
}
```
still lowers to `dword`+`word` operations, but has no stack traffic:
```nasm
swap_rgb48: # `@swap_rgb48`
mov eax, dword ptr [rdi]
movzx ecx, word ptr [rdi + 4]
movzx edx, word ptr [rsi + 4]
mov r8d, dword ptr [rsi]
mov dword ptr [rdi], r8d
mov word ptr [rdi + 4], dx
mov word ptr [rsi + 4], cx
mov dword ptr [rsi], eax
ret
```
And as a demonstration that this isn't just `mem::swap`, a `mem::replace` on a small array (since replace doesn't use swap since #83022), which used to be `memcpy`s in LLVM changes in IR
```llvm
define void `@replace_short_array(ptr` noalias nocapture noundef sret([3 x i32]) dereferenceable(12) %0, ptr noalias noundef align 4 dereferenceable(12) %r, ptr noalias nocapture noundef readonly dereferenceable(12) %v) unnamed_addr #0 {
start:
%1 = load <3 x i32>, ptr %r, align 4
store <3 x i32> %1, ptr %0, align 4
%2 = load <3 x i32>, ptr %v, align 4
store <3 x i32> %2, ptr %r, align 4
ret void
}
```
but that lowers to reasonable `dword`+`qword` instructions still
```nasm
replace_short_array: # `@replace_short_array`
mov rax, rdi
mov rcx, qword ptr [rsi]
mov edi, dword ptr [rsi + 8]
mov dword ptr [rax + 8], edi
mov qword ptr [rax], rcx
mov rcx, qword ptr [rdx]
mov edx, dword ptr [rdx + 8]
mov dword ptr [rsi + 8], edx
mov qword ptr [rsi], rcx
ret
```
These tend to have special handling in a bunch of places anyway, so the variant helps remember that. And I think it's easier to grok than non-Scalar Aggregates sometimes being `Immediates` (like I got wrong and caused 109992). As a minor bonus, it means we don't need to generate poison LLVM values for them to pass around in `OperandValue::Immediate`s.
linker: Report linker flavors incompatible with the current target
The linker flavor is checked for target compatibility even if linker is never used (e.g. we are producing a rlib).
If it causes trouble, we can move the check to `link.rs` so it will run if the linker (flavor) is actually used.
And also feature gate explicitly specifying linker flavors for tier 3 targets.
The next step is supporting all the internal linker flavors in user-visible interfaces (command line and json).
offset_of: don't require type to be `Sized`
Fixes#112051
~~The RFC [explicitly forbids](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3308-offset_of.html#limitations) non-`Sized` types, but it looks like only the fields being recursed into were checked. The sized check also seemed to have been completely missing for tuples~~
change `BorrowKind::Unique` to be a mutating `PlaceContext`
fixes#112056
I believe that `BorrowKind::Unique` is a footgun in general, so I added a FIXME and opened https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/112072. This is a bit too involved for this PR though.
Optimize scalar and scalar pair representations loaded from ByRef in llvm
in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105653 I noticed that we were generating suboptimal LLVM IR if we had a `ConstValue::ByRef` that could be represented by a `ScalarPair`. Before https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105653 this is probably rare, but after it, every slice will go down this suboptimal code path that requires LLVM to untangle a bunch of indirections and translate static allocations that are only used once to read a scalar pair from.
Go through an intermediate pair of `cc`and `lld` hints instead of mapping CLI options to `LinkerFlavor` directly, and use the target's default linker flavor as a reference.
Each of `{D,Subd}iagnosticMessage::{Str,Eager}` has a comment:
```
// FIXME(davidtwco): can a `Cow<'static, str>` be used here?
```
This commit answers that question in the affirmative. It's not the most
compelling change ever, but it might be worth merging.
This requires changing the `impl<'a> From<&'a str>` impls to `impl
From<&'static str>`, which involves a bunch of knock-on changes that
require/result in call sites being a little more precise about exactly
what kind of string they use to create errors, and not just `&str`. This
will result in fewer unnecessary allocations, though this will not have
any notable perf effects given that these are error paths.
Note that I was lazy within Clippy, using `to_string` in a few places to
preserve the existing string imprecision. I could have used `impl
Into<{D,Subd}iagnosticMessage>` in various places as is done in the
compiler, but that would have required changes to *many* call sites
(mostly changing `&format("...")` to `format!("...")`) which didn't seem
worthwhile.
Add support for LLVM SafeStack
Adds support for LLVM [SafeStack] which provides backward edge control
flow protection by separating the stack into two parts: data which is
only accessed in provable safe ways is allocated on the normal stack
(the "safe stack") and all other data is placed in a separate allocation
(the "unsafe stack").
SafeStack support is enabled by passing `-Zsanitizer=safestack`.
[SafeStack]: https://clang.llvm.org/docs/SafeStack.html
cc `@rcvalle` #39699
Adds support for LLVM [SafeStack] which provides backward edge control
flow protection by separating the stack into two parts: data which is
only accessed in provable safe ways is allocated on the normal stack
(the "safe stack") and all other data is placed in a separate allocation
(the "unsafe stack").
SafeStack support is enabled by passing `-Zsanitizer=safestack`.
[SafeStack]: https://clang.llvm.org/docs/SafeStack.html
Fix linking Mac Catalyst by including LC_BUILD_VERSION in object files
Hello. My first rustc PR!
Issue #106021 prevents Rust code from being linked into Mac Catalyst applications. Apple's LD has started requiring object files to contain version information about the platform they were built for, such as:
* the "deployment target" (minimum supported OS version),
* the SDK version
* the type of the platform (macOS/iOS/catalyst/tvOS/watchOS all have a different number).
This is currently only enforced when building for Mac Catalyst.
Rust uses the `object` crate which added support for including this information starting with `0.31.0`. ~~I upgraded it along with `thorin-dwp` so that everything depends on 0.31.
Apparently 0.31 [pulls in](https://github.com/gimli-rs/object/issues/463) `ruzstd` due to a [new ELF standard](https://maskray.me/blog/2022-09-09-zstd-compressed-debug-sections) because its `compression` feature is enabled by thorin. If you find this objectionable, let me know what the best way to avoid pulling in those dependencies might be.~~
**(`object` upgraded in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111413)**
I then added two commits:
* The first one adds very basic, hard-coded support for calling `set_macho_build_version` for `-macabi` (Catalyst) targets, where it claims deployment target of Catalyst 14.0 and SDK of 16.2.
* The second weaves the versioning through `rust_target::spec::TargetOptions`, so that we can stick to specifying all target-related info in one place.
Kudos to ``@ara4n`` for writing [this gist](https://gist.github.com/ara4n/320a53ea768aba51afad4c9ed2168536).
Ensure Fluent messages are in alphabetical order
Fixes#111847
This adds a tidy check to ensure Fluent messages are in alphabetical order, as well as sorting all existing messages. I think the error could be worded better, would appreciate suggestions.
<details>
<summary>Script used to sort files</summary>
```py
import sys
import re
fn = sys.argv[1]
with open(fn, 'r') as f:
data = f.read().split("\n")
chunks = []
cur = ""
for line in data:
if re.match(r"^([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)\s*=\s*", line):
chunks.append(cur)
cur = ""
cur += line + "\n"
chunks.append(cur)
chunks.sort()
with open(fn, 'w') as f:
f.write(''.join(chunks).strip("\n\n") + "\n")
```
</details>
Support #[global_allocator] without the allocator shim
This makes it possible to use liballoc/libstd in combination with `--emit obj` if you use `#[global_allocator]`. This is what rust-for-linux uses right now and systemd may use in the future. Currently they have to depend on the exact implementation of the allocator shim to create one themself as `--emit obj` doesn't create an allocator shim.
Note that currently the allocator shim also defines the oom error handler, which is normally required too. Once `#![feature(default_alloc_error_handler)]` becomes the only option, this can be avoided. In addition when using only fallible allocator methods and either `--cfg no_global_oom_handling` for liballoc (like rust-for-linux) or `--gc-sections` no references to the oom error handler will exist.
To avoid this feature being insta-stable, you will have to define `__rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable` to avoid linker errors.
(Labeling this with both T-compiler and T-lang as it originally involved both an implementation detail and had an insta-stable user facing change. As noted above, the `__rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable` symbol requirement should prevent unintended dependence on this unstable feature.)
Use `Option::is_some_and` and `Result::is_ok_and` in the compiler
`.is_some_and(..)`/`.is_ok_and(..)` replace `.map_or(false, ..)` and `.map(..).unwrap_or(false)`, making the code more readable.
This PR is a sibling of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111873#issuecomment-1561316515
Preprocess and cache dominator tree
Preprocessing dominators has a very strong effect for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111344.
That pass checks that assignments dominate their uses repeatedly. Using the unprocessed dominator tree caused a quadratic runtime (number of bbs x depth of the dominator tree).
This PR also caches the dominator tree and the pre-processed dominators in the MIR cfg cache.
Rebase of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107157
cc `@tmiasko`
Don't assume that `-Bdynamic` is the default linker mode
In particular this is false when passing `-static` or `-static-pie` to the linker, which changes the default to `-Bstatic`. This PR ensures we explicitly initialize the correct mode when we first need it.
Fix local libs not included when printing native static libs
This PR fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/111643 by adding the local used libs to the printed `--print=native-static-libs` output.
It seems that `--print=native-static-libs` doesn't have any test, so I added one. It's very simple and doesn't even tries to compile the result to a binary as I don't know how to handle external library linking in CI. (Note that https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/tests/run-make/staticlib-dylib-linkage/Makefile does compile to a binary)
r? `@bjorn3`
Fix dependency tracking for debugger visualizers
This PR fixes dependency tracking for debugger visualizer files by changing the `debugger_visualizers` query to an `eval_always` query that scans the AST while it is still available. This way the set of visualizer files is already available when dep-info is emitted. Since the query is turned into an `eval_always` query, dependency tracking will now reliably detect changes to the visualizer script files themselves.
TODO:
- [x] perf.rlo
- [x] Needs a bit more documentation in some places
- [x] Needs regression test for the incr. comp. case
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/111226
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/111227
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/111295
r? `@wesleywiser`
cc `@gibbyfree`
Only depend on CFG_VERSION in rustc_interface
This avoids having to rebuild the whole compiler on each commit when `omit-git-hash = false`.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76720 - this won't fix it, and I'm not suggesting we turn this on by default, but it will make it less painful for people who do have `omit-git-hash` on as a workaround.
Support RISC-V unaligned-scalar-mem target feature
This adds `unaligned-scalar-mem` as an allowed RISC-V target feature. Some RISC-V cores support unaligned access to memory without trapping. On such cores, the compiler could significantly improve code-size and performance when using functions like core::ptr::read_unaligned<u32> by emitting a single load or store instruction with an unaligned address, rather than a long sequence of byte load/store/bitmanip instructions.
Enabling the `unaligned-scalar-mem` target feature allows LLVM to do this optimization.
Fixes#110883
In particular this is false when passing `-static` or `-static-pie` to
the linker, which changes the default to `-Bstatic`. This PR ensures we
explicitly initialize the correct mode when we first need it.
Remove misleading target feature aliases
Fixes#100752. This is a follow up to #103750. These aliases could not be completely removed until rust-lang/stdarch#1355 landed.
cc `@Amanieu`
Allow MIR debuginfo to point to a variable's address
MIR optimizations currently do not to operate on borrowed locals.
When enabling #106285, many borrows will be left as-is because they are used in debuginfo. This pass allows to replace this pattern directly in MIR debuginfo:
```rust
a => _1
_1 = &raw? mut? _2
```
becomes
```rust
a => &_2
// No statement to borrow _2.
```
This pass is implemented as a drive-by in ReferencePropagation MIR pass.
This transformation allows following following MIR opts to treat _2 as an unborrowed local, and optimize it as such, even in builds with debuginfo.
In codegen, when encountering `a => &..&_2`, we create a list of allocas:
```llvm
store ptr %_2.dbg.spill, ptr %a.ref0.dbg.spill
store ptr %a.ref0.dbg.spill, ptr %a.ref1.dbg.spill
...
call void `@llvm.dbg.declare(metadata` ptr %a.ref{n}.dbg.spill, /* ... */)
```
Caveat: this transformation looses the exact type, we do not differentiate `a` as a immutable, mutable reference or a raw pointer. Everything is declared to `*mut` to codegen. I'm not convinced this is a blocker.
Align unsized locals
Allocate an extra space for unsized locals and manually align the storage, since alloca doesn't support dynamic alignment.
Fixes#71416.
Fixes#71695.
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.
You will need to add the following as replacement for the old __rust_*
definitions when not using the alloc shim.
#[no_mangle]
static __rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable: u8 = 0;
Isolate coverage FFI type layouts from their underlying LLVM C++ types
I noticed that several of the types used to send coverage information through FFI are not properly isolated from the layout of their corresponding C++ types in the LLVM API.
This PR adds more explicitly-defined FFI struct/enum types in `CoverageMappingWrapper.cpp`, so that Rust source files in `rustc_codegen_ssa` and `rustc_codegen_llvm` aren't directly exposed to LLVM C++ types.
Support linking to rust dylib with --crate-type staticlib
This allows for example dynamically linking libstd, while statically linking the user crate into an executable or C dynamic library. For this two unstable flags (`-Z staticlib-allow-rdylib-deps` and `-Z staticlib-prefer-dynamic`) are introduced. Without the former you get an error. The latter is the equivalent to `-C prefer-dynamic` for the staticlib crate type to indicate that dynamically linking is preferred when both options are available, like for libstd. Care must be taken to ensure that no crate ends up being merged into two distinct staticlibs that are linked together. Doing so will cause a linker error at best and undefined behavior at worst. In addition two distinct staticlibs compiled by different rustc may not be combined under any circumstances due to some rustc private symbols not being mangled.
To successfully link a staticlib, `--print native-static-libs` can be used while compiling to ask rustc for the linker flags necessary when linking the staticlib. This is an existing flag which previously only listed native libraries. It has been extended to list rust dylibs too. Trying to locate libstd yourself to link against it is not supported and may break if for example the libstd of multiple rustc versions are put in the same directory.
For an example on how to use this see the `src/test/run-make-fulldeps/staticlib-dylib-linkage/` test.
Add GNU Property Note
Fix#103001
Generates the missing property note:
```
Displaying notes found in: .note.gnu.property
Owner Data size Description
GNU 0x00000010 NT_GNU_PROPERTY_TYPE_0 Properties: x86 feature: IBT
```
Make `(try_)subst_and_normalize_erasing_regions` take `EarlyBinder`
Changes `subst_and_normalize_erasing_regions` and `try_subst_and_normalize_erasing_regions` to take `EarlyBinder<T>` instead of `T`.
(related to #105779)
This was suggested by `@BoxyUwU` in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107753#discussion_r1105828139. After changing `type_of` to return `EarlyBinder`, there were several places where the binder was immediately skipped to call `tcx.subst_and_normalize_erasing_regions`, only for the binder to be reconstructed inside of that method.
r? `@BoxyUwU`
Operand::extract_field: only cast llval if it's a pointer and replace bitcast w/ pointercast.
Fixes#105439.
Also cc `@erikdesjardins,` looks like another place to cleanup as part of #105545
Stabilize raw-dylib, link_ordinal, import_name_type and -Cdlltool
This stabilizes the `raw-dylib` feature (#58713) for all architectures (i.e., `x86` as it is already stable for all other architectures).
Changes:
* Permit the use of the `raw-dylib` link kind for x86, the `link_ordinal` attribute and the `import_name_type` key for the `link` attribute.
* Mark the `raw_dylib` feature as stable.
* Stabilized the `-Zdlltool` argument as `-Cdlltool`.
* Note the path to `dlltool` if invoking it failed (we don't need to do this if `dlltool` returns an error since it prints its path in the error message).
* Adds tests for `-Cdlltool`.
* Adds tests for being unable to find the dlltool executable, and dlltool failing.
* Fixes a bug where we were checking the exit code of dlltool to see if it failed, but dlltool always returns 0 (indicating success), so instead we need to check if anything was written to `stderr`.
NOTE: As previously noted (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104218#issuecomment-1315895618) using dlltool within rustc is temporary, but this is not the first time that Rust has added a temporary tool use and argument: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104218#issuecomment-1318720482
Big thanks to ``````@tbu-`````` for the first version of this PR (#104218)
Add cross-language LLVM CFI support to the Rust compiler
This PR adds cross-language LLVM Control Flow Integrity (CFI) support to the Rust compiler by adding the `-Zsanitizer-cfi-normalize-integers` option to be used with Clang `-fsanitize-cfi-icall-normalize-integers` for normalizing integer types (see https://reviews.llvm.org/D139395).
It provides forward-edge control flow protection for C or C++ and Rust -compiled code "mixed binaries" (i.e., for when C or C++ and Rust -compiled code share the same virtual address space). For more information about LLVM CFI and cross-language LLVM CFI support for the Rust compiler, see design document in the tracking issue #89653.
Cross-language LLVM CFI can be enabled with -Zsanitizer=cfi and -Zsanitizer-cfi-normalize-integers, and requires proper (i.e., non-rustc) LTO (i.e., -Clinker-plugin-lto).
Thank you again, ``@bjorn3,`` ``@nikic,`` ``@samitolvanen,`` and the Rust community for all the help!
This commit adds cross-language LLVM Control Flow Integrity (CFI)
support to the Rust compiler by adding the
`-Zsanitizer-cfi-normalize-integers` option to be used with Clang
`-fsanitize-cfi-icall-normalize-integers` for normalizing integer types
(see https://reviews.llvm.org/D139395).
It provides forward-edge control flow protection for C or C++ and Rust
-compiled code "mixed binaries" (i.e., for when C or C++ and Rust
-compiled code share the same virtual address space). For more
information about LLVM CFI and cross-language LLVM CFI support for the
Rust compiler, see design document in the tracking issue #89653.
Cross-language LLVM CFI can be enabled with -Zsanitizer=cfi and
-Zsanitizer-cfi-normalize-integers, and requires proper (i.e.,
non-rustc) LTO (i.e., -Clinker-plugin-lto).
Currently a `{D,Subd}iagnosticMessage` can be created from any type that
impls `Into<String>`. That includes `&str`, `String`, and `Cow<'static,
str>`, which are reasonable. It also includes `&String`, which is pretty
weird, and results in many places making unnecessary allocations for
patterns like this:
```
self.fatal(&format!(...))
```
This creates a string with `format!`, takes a reference, passes the
reference to `fatal`, which does an `into()`, which clones the
reference, doing a second allocation. Two allocations for a single
string, bleh.
This commit changes the `From` impls so that you can only create a
`{D,Subd}iagnosticMessage` from `&str`, `String`, or `Cow<'static,
str>`. This requires changing all the places that currently create one
from a `&String`. Most of these are of the `&format!(...)` form
described above; each one removes an unnecessary static `&`, plus an
allocation when executed. There are also a few places where the existing
use of `&String` was more reasonable; these now just use `clone()` at
the call site.
As well as making the code nicer and more efficient, this is a step
towards possibly using `Cow<'static, str>` in
`{D,Subd}iagnosticMessage::{Str,Eager}`. That would require changing
the `From<&'a str>` impls to `From<&'static str>`, which is doable, but
I'm not yet sure if it's worthwhile.
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.
only error combining +whole-archive and +bundle for rlibs
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/110912
Checking `flavor == RlibFlavor::Normal` was accidentally lost in 601fc8b36bhttps://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105601
That caused combining +whole-archive and +bundle link modifiers on non-rlib crates to fail with a confusing error message saying that combination is unstable for rlibs. In particular, this caused the build to fail when +whole-archive was used on staticlib crates, even though +whole-archive effectively does nothing on non-bin crates because the final linker invocation is left to an external build system.
cc ``@petrochenkov``
Use MIR's `Offset` for pointer `add` too
~~Status: draft while waiting for #110822 to land, since this is built atop that.~~
~~r? `@ghost~~`
Canonical Rust code has mostly moved to `add`/`sub` on pointers, which take `usize`, instead of `offset` which takes `isize`. (And, relatedly, when `sub_ptr` was added it turned out it replaced every single in-tree use of `offset_from`, because `usize` is just so much more useful than `isize` in Rust.)
Unfortunately, `intrinsics::offset` could only accept `*const` and `isize`, so there's a *huge* amount of type conversions back and forth being done. They're identity conversions in the backend, but still end up producing quite a lot of unhelpful MIR.
This PR changes `intrinsics::offset` to accept `*const` *and* `*mut` along with `isize` *and* `usize`. Conveniently, the backends and CTFE already handle this, since MIR's `BinOp::Offset` [already supports all four combinations](adaac6b166/compiler/rustc_const_eval/src/transform/validate.rs (L523-L528)).
To demonstrate the difference, I added some `mir-opt/pre-codegen/` tests around slice indexing. Here's the difference to `[T]::get_mut`, since it uses `<*mut _>::add` internally:
```diff
`@@` -79,30 +70,21 `@@` fn slice_get_mut_usize(_1: &mut [u32], _2: usize) -> Option<&mut u32> {
StorageLive(_12); // scope 3 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/slice/index.rs:LL:COL
StorageLive(_9); // scope 6 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/slice/index.rs:LL:COL
_9 = _8 as *mut u32 (PtrToPtr); // scope 11 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ptr/mut_ptr.rs:LL:COL
- StorageLive(_13); // scope 13 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ptr/mut_ptr.rs:LL:COL
- _13 = _2 as isize (IntToInt); // scope 13 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ptr/mut_ptr.rs:LL:COL
- StorageLive(_14); // scope 15 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ptr/mut_ptr.rs:LL:COL
- StorageLive(_15); // scope 15 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ptr/mut_ptr.rs:LL:COL
- _15 = _9 as *const u32 (Pointer(MutToConstPointer)); // scope 15 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ptr/mut_ptr.rs:LL:COL
- _14 = Offset(move _15, _13); // scope 15 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ptr/mut_ptr.rs:LL:COL
- StorageDead(_15); // scope 15 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ptr/mut_ptr.rs:LL:COL
- _7 = move _14 as *mut u32 (PtrToPtr); // scope 15 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ptr/mut_ptr.rs:LL:COL
- StorageDead(_14); // scope 15 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ptr/mut_ptr.rs:LL:COL
- StorageDead(_13); // scope 13 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ptr/mut_ptr.rs:LL:COL
+ _7 = Offset(_9, _2); // scope 13 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/ptr/mut_ptr.rs:LL:COL
StorageDead(_9); // scope 6 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/slice/index.rs:LL:COL
StorageDead(_12); // scope 3 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/slice/index.rs:LL:COL
StorageDead(_11); // scope 3 at $SRC_DIR/core/src/slice/index.rs:LL:COL
```
1c1c8e442a (diff-a841b6a4538657add3f39bc895744331453d0625e7aace128b1f604f0b63c8fdR80)
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/110912
Checking `flavor == RlibFlavor::Normal` was accidentally lost in
601fc8b36bhttps://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105601
That caused combining +whole-archive and +bundle link modifiers on
non-rlib crates to fail with a confusing error message saying that
combination is unstable for rlibs. In particular, this caused the
build to fail when +whole-archive was used on staticlib crates, even
though +whole-archive effectively does nothing on non-bin crates because
the final linker invocation is left to an external build system.
Nicer ICE for #67981
Provides a slightly nicer ICE for #67981, documenting the problem. A proper fix will be necessary before `#![feature(unsized_fn_params)]` can be stabilized.
The problem is that the design of the `"rust-call"` ABI is fundamentally not compatible with `unsized_fn_params`. `"rust-call"` functions need to collect their arguments into a tuple, but if the arguments are not `Sized`, said tuple is potentially not even a valid type—and if it is, it requires `alloca` to create.
``@rustbot`` label +A-abi +A-codegen +F-unboxed_closures +F-unsized_fn_params
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.
This adds `unaligned-scalar-mem` as an allowed RISC-V target feature.
Some RISC-V cores support unaligned access to memory without trapping.
On such cores, the compiler could significantly improve code-size and
performance when using functions like core::ptr::read_unaligned<u32>
by emitting a single load or store instruction with an unaligned
address, rather than a long sequence of byte load/store/bitmanip
instructions.
Enabling the `unaligned-scalar-mem` target feature allows LLVM to do
this optimization.
Fixes#110883
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #108760 (Add lint to deny diagnostics composed of static strings)
- #109444 (Change tidy error message for TODOs)
- #110419 (Spelling library)
- #110550 (Suggest deref on comparison binop RHS even if type is not Copy)
- #110641 (Add new rustdoc book chapter to describe in-doc settings)
- #110798 (pass `unused_extern_crates` in `librustdoc::doctest::make_test`)
- #110819 (simplify TrustedLen impls)
- #110825 (diagnostics: add test case for already-solved issue)
- #110835 (Make some region folders a little stricter.)
- #110847 (rustdoc-json: Time serialization.)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
They're semantically the same, so this means the backends don't need to handle the intrinsic and means fewer MIR basic blocks in pointer arithmetic code.
Report allocation errors as panics
OOM is now reported as a panic but with a custom payload type (`AllocErrorPanicPayload`) which holds the layout that was passed to `handle_alloc_error`.
This should be review one commit at a time:
- The first commit adds `AllocErrorPanicPayload` and changes allocation errors to always be reported as panics.
- The second commit removes `#[alloc_error_handler]` and the `alloc_error_hook` API.
ACP: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/192Closes#51540Closes#51245
Add offset_of! macro (RFC 3308)
Implements https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3308 (tracking issue #106655) by adding the built in macro `core::mem::offset_of`. Two of the future possibilities are also implemented:
* Nested field accesses (without array indexing)
* DST support (for `Sized` fields)
I wrote this a few months ago, before the RFC merged. Now that it's merged, I decided to rebase and finish it.
cc `@thomcc` (RFC author)
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.
Add `rustc_fluent_macro` to decouple fluent from `rustc_macros`
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`).
Encode hashes as bytes, not varint
In a few places, we store hashes as `u64` or `u128` and then apply `derive(Decodable, Encodable)` to the enclosing struct/enum. It is more efficient to encode hashes directly than try to apply some varint encoding. This PR adds two new types `Hash64` and `Hash128` which are produced by `StableHasher` and replace every use of storing a `u64` or `u128` that represents a hash.
Distribution of the byte lengths of leb128 encodings, from `x build --stage 2` with `incremental = true`
Before:
```
( 1) 373418203 (53.7%, 53.7%): 1
( 2) 196240113 (28.2%, 81.9%): 3
( 3) 108157958 (15.6%, 97.5%): 2
( 4) 17213120 ( 2.5%, 99.9%): 4
( 5) 223614 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 9
( 6) 216262 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 10
( 7) 15447 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 5
( 8) 3633 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 19
( 9) 3030 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 8
( 10) 1167 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 18
( 11) 1032 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 7
( 12) 1003 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 6
( 13) 10 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 16
( 14) 10 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 17
( 15) 5 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 12
( 16) 4 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 14
```
After:
```
( 1) 372939136 (53.7%, 53.7%): 1
( 2) 196240140 (28.3%, 82.0%): 3
( 3) 108014969 (15.6%, 97.5%): 2
( 4) 17192375 ( 2.5%,100.0%): 4
( 5) 435 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 5
( 6) 83 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 18
( 7) 79 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 10
( 8) 50 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 9
( 9) 6 ( 0.0%,100.0%): 19
```
The remaining 9 or 10 and 18 or 19 are `u64` and `u128` respectively that have the high bits set. As far as I can tell these are coming primarily from `SwitchTargets`.
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`).
Preserve argument indexes when inlining MIR
We store argument indexes on VarDebugInfo. Unlike the previous method of relying on the variable index to know whether a variable is an argument, this survives MIR inlining.
We also no longer check if var.source_info.scope is the outermost scope. When a function gets inlined, the arguments to the inner function will no longer be in the outermost scope. What we care about though is whether they were in the outermost scope prior to inlining, which we know by whether we assigned an argument index.
Fixes#83217
I considered using `Option<NonZeroU16>` instead of `Option<u16>` to store the index. I didn't because `TypeFoldable` isn't implemented for `NonZeroU16` and because it looks like due to padding, it currently wouldn't make any difference. But I indexed from 1 anyway because (a) it'll make it easier if later it becomes worthwhile to use a `NonZeroU16` and because the arguments were previously indexed from 1, so it made for a smaller change.
This is my first PR on rust-lang/rust, so apologies if I've gotten anything not quite right.
Initial support for loongarch64-unknown-linux-gnu
Hi, We hope to add a new port in rust for LoongArch.
LoongArch intro
LoongArch is a RISC style ISA which is independently designed by Loongson
Technology in China. It is divided into two versions, the 32-bit version (LA32)
and the 64-bit version (LA64). LA64 applications have application-level
backward binary compatibility with LA32 applications. LoongArch is composed of
a basic part (Loongson Base) and an expanded part. The expansion part includes
Loongson Binary Translation (LBT), Loongson VirtualiZation (LVZ), Loongson SIMD
EXtension (LSX) and Loongson Advanced SIMD EXtension(LASX).
Currently the LA464 processor core supports LoongArch ISA and the Loongson
3A5000 processor integrates 4 64-bit LA464 cores. LA464 is a four-issue 64-bit
high-performance processor core. It can be used as a single core for high-end
embedded and desktop applications, or as a basic processor core to form an
on-chip multi-core system for server and high-performance machine applications.
Documentations:
ISA:
https://loongson.github.io/LoongArch-Documentation/LoongArch-Vol1-EN.html
ABI:
https://loongson.github.io/LoongArch-Documentation/LoongArch-ELF-ABI-EN.html
More docs can be found at:
https://loongson.github.io/LoongArch-Documentation/README-EN.html
Since last year, we have locally adapted two versions of rust, rust1.41 and rust1.57, and completed the test locally.
I'm not sure if I'm submitting all the patches at once, so I split up the patches and here's one of the commits
Add support for RISC-V relax target feature
This adds `relax` as an allowed RISC-V target feature. The relax feature in LLVM enables [linker relaxation](https://www.sifive.com/blog/all-aboard-part-3-linker-relaxation-in-riscv-toolchain), an optimization specific to RISC-V that allows global variable accesses to be resolved by the linker by using the global pointer (`gp`) register (rather than constructing the addresses from scratch for each access). Enabling `relax` will cause LLVM to emit relocations in the object file that support this. The feature can be enabled in rustc with `-C target-feature=+relax`.
Currently this feature is disabled by default, but maybe it should be enabled by default since it is an easy performance improvement (but requires the `gp` register to be set up properly). GCC/Clang enable this feature by default (for both hosted/bare-metal targets), and include the `-mno-relax` flag to disable it (see [here](466d554dca/clang/lib/Driver/ToolChains/Arch/RISCV.cpp (L145)) for the code that enables it in Clang). I think it would make sense to enable by default, at least for all hosted targets since the `gp` register should be automatically set up by the runtime. For bare-metal targets, `gp` must be set up manually, so it is probably best to leave off by default to avoid breaking existing applications that do not set up `gp`. Leaving it disabled by default for all targets is also reasonable though.
Let me know your thoughts. Thanks!
Fixes#109426.
We store argument indexes on VarDebugInfo. Unlike the previous method of
relying on the variable index to know whether a variable is an argument,
this survives MIR inlining.
We also no longer check if var.source_info.scope is the outermost scope.
When a function gets inlined, the arguments to the inner function will
no longer be in the outermost scope. What we care about though is
whether they were in the outermost scope prior to inlining, which we
know by whether we assigned an argument index.
Fix a couple ICEs in the new `CastKind::Transmute` code
Check the sizes of the immediates, rather than the overall types, when deciding whether we can convert types without going through memory.
Fixes#110005Fixes#109992Fixes#110032
cc `@matthiaskrgr`
Unify terminology used in unwind action and terminator, and reflect
the fact that a nounwind panic is triggered instead of an immediate
abort is triggered for this terminator.
Allow `transmute`s to produce `OperandValue`s instead of needing `alloca`s
LLVM can usually optimize these away, but especially for things like transmutes of newtypes it's silly to generate the `alloc`+`store`+`load` at all when it's actually a nop at LLVM level.
LLVM can usually optimize these away, but especially for things like transmutes of newtypes it's silly to generate the `alloc`+`store`+`load` at all when it's actually a nop at LLVM level.
`-Cdebuginfo=1` was never line tables only and
can't be due to backwards compatibility issues.
This was clarified and an option for line tables only
was added. Additionally an option for line info
directives only was added, which is well needed for
some targets. The debug info options should now
behave the same as clang's debug info options.
Insert alignment checks for pointer dereferences when debug assertions are enabled
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/54915
- [x] Jake tells me this sounds like a place to use `MirPatch`, but I can't figure out how to insert a new basic block with a new terminator in the middle of an existing basic block, using `MirPatch`. (if nobody else backs up this point I'm checking this as "not actually a good idea" because the code looks pretty clean to me after rearranging it a bit)
- [x] Using `CastKind::PointerExposeAddress` is definitely wrong, we don't want to expose. Calling a function to get the pointer address seems quite excessive. ~I'll see if I can add a new `CastKind`.~ `CastKind::Transmute` to the rescue!
- [x] Implement a more helpful panic message like slice bounds checking.
r? `@oli-obk`
Partial stabilization of `once_cell`
This PR aims to stabilize a portion of the `once_cell` feature:
- `core::cell::OnceCell`
- `std::cell::OnceCell` (re-export of the above)
- `std::sync::OnceLock`
This will leave `LazyCell` and `LazyLock` unstabilized, which have been moved to the `lazy_cell` feature flag.
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74465 (does not fully close, but it may make sense to move to a new issue)
Future steps for separate PRs:
- ~~Add `#[inline]` to many methods~~ #105651
- Update cranelift usage of the `once_cell` crate
- Update rust-analyzer usage of the `once_cell` crate
- Update error messages discussing once_cell
## To be stabilized API summary
```rust
// core::cell (in core/cell/once.rs)
pub struct OnceCell<T> { .. }
impl<T> OnceCell<T> {
pub const fn new() -> OnceCell<T>;
pub fn get(&self) -> Option<&T>;
pub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> Option<&mut T>;
pub fn set(&self, value: T) -> Result<(), T>;
pub fn get_or_init<F>(&self, f: F) -> &T where F: FnOnce() -> T;
pub fn into_inner(self) -> Option<T>;
pub fn take(&mut self) -> Option<T>;
}
impl<T: Clone> Clone for OnceCell<T>;
impl<T: Debug> Debug for OnceCell<T>
impl<T> Default for OnceCell<T>;
impl<T> From<T> for OnceCell<T>;
impl<T: PartialEq> PartialEq for OnceCell<T>;
impl<T: Eq> Eq for OnceCell<T>;
```
```rust
// std::sync (in std/sync/once_lock.rs)
impl<T> OnceLock<T> {
pub const fn new() -> OnceLock<T>;
pub fn get(&self) -> Option<&T>;
pub fn get_mut(&mut self) -> Option<&mut T>;
pub fn set(&self, value: T) -> Result<(), T>;
pub fn get_or_init<F>(&self, f: F) -> &T where F: FnOnce() -> T;
pub fn into_inner(self) -> Option<T>;
pub fn take(&mut self) -> Option<T>;
}
impl<T: Clone> Clone for OnceLock<T>;
impl<T: Debug> Debug for OnceLock<T>;
impl<T> Default for OnceLock<T>;
impl<#[may_dangle] T> Drop for OnceLock<T>;
impl<T> From<T> for OnceLock<T>;
impl<T: PartialEq> PartialEq for OnceLock<T>
impl<T: Eq> Eq for OnceLock<T>;
impl<T: RefUnwindSafe + UnwindSafe> RefUnwindSafe for OnceLock<T>;
unsafe impl<T: Send> Send for OnceLock<T>;
unsafe impl<T: Sync + Send> Sync for OnceLock<T>;
impl<T: UnwindSafe> UnwindSafe for OnceLock<T>;
```
No longer planned as part of this PR, and moved to the `rust_cell_try` feature gate:
```rust
impl<T> OnceCell<T> {
pub fn get_or_try_init<F, E>(&self, f: F) -> Result<&T, E> where F: FnOnce() -> Result<T, E>;
}
impl<T> OnceLock<T> {
pub fn get_or_try_init<F, E>(&self, f: F) -> Result<&T, E> where F: FnOnce() -> Result<T, E>;
}
```
I am new to this process so would appreciate mentorship wherever needed.
Move `mir::Field` → `abi::FieldIdx`
The first PR for https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/606
This is just the move-and-rename, because it's plenty big already. Future PRs will start using `FieldIdx` more broadly, and concomitantly removing `FieldIdx::new`s.
Support TLS access into dylibs on Windows
This allows access to `#[thread_local]` in upstream dylibs on Windows by introducing a MIR shim to return the address of the thread local. Accesses that go into an upstream dylib will call the MIR shim to get the address of it.
`convert_tls_rvalues` is introduced in `rustc_codegen_ssa` which rewrites MIR TLS accesses to dummy calls which are replaced with calls to the MIR shims when the dummy calls are lowered to backend calls.
A new `dll_tls_export` target option enables this behavior with a `false` value which is set for Windows platforms.
This fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84933.
The first PR for https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/606
This is just the move-and-rename, because it's plenty big-and-bitrotty already. Future PRs will start using `FieldIdx` more broadly, and concomitantly removing `FieldIdx::new`s.
Refactor: Separate `LocalRef` variant for not-evaluated-yet operands
As I was reading through this, I noticed that almost every place that was using this needed to distinguish between Some vs None in the match arm anyway, so thought that separating the cases at the variant level might be clearer instead.
I like how it ended up; let me know what you think!
Cleanup `codegen_fn_attrs`
The `match` control flow construct has been stable since 1.0, we should use it here.
Sorry for the hard to review diff, I did try to at least split it into two commits. But looking at before-after side-by-side (instead of whatever github is doing) is probably the easiest way to make sure that I didn't forget about anything.
On top of #109088, you can wait for that
Since structs are always `VariantIdx(0)`, there's a bunch of files where the only reason they had `VariantIdx` or `vec::Idx` imported at all was to get the first variant.
So this uses a constant for that, and adds some doc-comments to `VariantIdx` while I'm there, since it doesn't have any today.
Use poison instead of undef
In cases where it is legal, we should prefer poison values over undef values.
This replaces undef with poison for aggregate construction and for uninhabited types. There are more places where we can likely use poison, but I wanted to stay conservative to start with.
In particular the aggregate case is important for newer LLVM versions, which are not able to handle an undef base value during early optimization due to poison-propagation concerns.
r? `@cuviper`
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`.
Updates `interpret`, `codegen_ssa`, and `codegen_cranelift` to consume the new cast instead of the intrinsic.
Includes `CastTransmute` for custom MIR building, to be able to test the extra UB.
The name of NativeLib will be presented
Fixes#109144
I was working on a quick fix, but found change the name from `Option<Symbol>` to `Symbol` make life a little bit easier.
Use `size_of_val` instead of manual calculation
Very minor thing that I happened to notice in passing, but it's both shorter and [means it gets `mul nsw`](https://rust.godbolt.org/z/Y9KxYETv5), so why not.
Tweak implementation of overflow checking assertions
Extract and reuse logic controlling behaviour of overflow checking assertions instead of duplicating it three times.
r? `@cjgillot`
Wrap the whole LocalInfo in ClearCrossCrate.
MIR contains a lot of information about locals. The primary purpose of this information is the quality of borrowck diagnostics.
This PR aims to drop this information after MIR analyses are finished, ie. starting from post-cleanup runtime MIR.
In cases where it is legal, we should prefer poison values over
undef values.
This replaces undef with poison for aggregate construction and
for uninhabited types. There are more places where we can likely
use poison, but I wanted to stay conservative to start with.
In particular the aggregate case is important for newer LLVM
versions, which are not able to handle an undef base value during
early optimization due to poison-propagation concerns.
Implement checked Shl/Shr at MIR building.
This does not require any special handling by codegen backends,
as the overflow behaviour is entirely determined by the rhs (shift amount).
This allows MIR ConstProp to remove the overflow check for constant shifts.
~There is an existing different behaviour between cg_llvm and cg_clif (cc `@bjorn3).`
I took cg_llvm's one as reference: overflow if `rhs < 0 || rhs > number_of_bits_in_lhs_ty`.~
EDIT: `cg_llvm` and `cg_clif` implement the overflow check differently. This PR uses `cg_llvm`'s implementation based on a `BitAnd` instead of `cg_clif`'s one based on an unsigned comparison.
Gracefully handle `#[target_feature]` on statics
The was careful around not calling `fn_sig` on not-functions but well, it wasn't careful enough. This commit makes it a little more careful and also adds tests for a bunch more item kinds.
I was sadly not able to fully bless the test locally because I'm on an aarch64 machine but I hope some manual editing made it work 😅Fix#109079
The was careful around not calling `fn_sig` on not-functions but well,
it wasn't careful enough. This commit makes it a little more careful and
also adds tests for a bunch more item kinds.
This makes it easier to open the messages file while developing on features.
The commit was the result of automatted changes:
for p in compiler/rustc_*; do mv $p/locales/en-US.ftl $p/messages.ftl; rmdir $p/locales; done
for p in compiler/rustc_*; do sed -i "s#\.\./locales/en-US.ftl#../messages.ftl#" $p/src/lib.rs; done
Prevent the `start_bx` basic block in codegen from having two `Builder`s at the same time
Here, at the same time, there are two `start_llbb` builder, this should be unexpected.
Add `--no-undefined-version` link flag and fix associated breakage
LLVM upstream sets `--no-undefined-version` by default in lld: https://reviews.llvm.org/D135402.
Due to a bug in how version scripts are generated, this breaks the `dylib` output type for most crates. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/105967#issuecomment-1428671533 for details.
This PR adds the flag to gcc flavor linkers in anticipation of this LLVM change rolling in, and patches `rustc` to not attempt to export `__rust_*` allocator symbols when they weren't generated.
Fixes#105967
Stabilize movbe target feature
Almost all "old" x86 target features are stable. As far as I can tell, these are the last two unstable features in the `x86-64-v2` or `x86-64-v3` microarchitecture levels, so I'm not sure if it was an oversight or if they're still unstable for a reason (see #106323 for `f16c`).
Note that this only stabilizes the target features, and not the intrinsics.
cc ```@Amanieu```
r? ```@rust-lang/lang```
Do not implement HashStable for HashSet (MCP 533)
This PR removes all occurrences of `HashSet` in query results, replacing it either with `FxIndexSet` or with `UnordSet`, and then removes the `HashStable` implementation of `HashSet`. This is part of implementing [MCP 533](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/533), that is, removing the `HashStable` implementations of all collection types with unstable iteration order.
The changes are mostly mechanical. The only place where additional sorting is happening is in Miri's override implementation of the `exported_symbols` query.
rustc_middle: Remove trait `DefIdTree`
This trait was a way to generalize over both `TyCtxt` and `Resolver`, but now `Resolver` has access to `TyCtxt`, so this trait is no longer necessary.
Make compressed rmeta contain compressed data length after header
Fixes#90056, which is caused by link.exe introducing padding to the `.rustc` section, since it assumes this will have no effect besides allowing it to possibly use the extra space in future links.
Stabilize `#![feature(target_feature_11)]`
## Stabilization report
### Summary
Allows for safe functions to be marked with `#[target_feature]` attributes.
Functions marked with `#[target_feature]` are generally considered as unsafe functions: they are unsafe to call, cannot be assigned to safe function pointers, and don't implement the `Fn*` traits.
However, calling them from other `#[target_feature]` functions with a superset of features is safe.
```rust
// Demonstration function
#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
fn avx2() {}
fn foo() {
// Calling `avx2` here is unsafe, as we must ensure
// that AVX is available first.
unsafe {
avx2();
}
}
#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
fn bar() {
// Calling `avx2` here is safe.
avx2();
}
```
### Test cases
Tests for this feature can be found in [`src/test/ui/rfcs/rfc-2396-target_feature-11/`](b67ba9ba20/src/test/ui/rfcs/rfc-2396-target_feature-11/).
### Edge cases
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73631
Closures defined inside functions marked with `#[target_feature]` inherit the target features of their parent function. They can still be assigned to safe function pointers and implement the appropriate `Fn*` traits.
```rust
#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
fn qux() {
let my_closure = || avx2(); // this call to `avx2` is safe
let f: fn() = my_closure;
}
```
This means that in order to call a function with `#[target_feature]`, you must show that the target-feature is available while the function executes *and* for as long as whatever may escape from that function lives.
### Documentation
- Reference: https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1181
---
cc tracking issue #69098
r? `@ghost`
Unify validity checks into a single query
Previously, there were two queries to check whether a type allows the 0x01 or zeroed bitpattern.
I am planning on adding a further initness to check in #100423, truly uninit for MaybeUninit, which would make this three queries. This seems overkill for such a small feature, so this PR unifies them into one.
I am not entirely happy with the naming and key type and open for improvements.
r? oli-obk
(This is a large commit. The changes to
`compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/context.rs` are the most important ones.)
The current naming scheme is a mess, with a mix of `_intern_`, `intern_`
and `mk_` prefixes, with little consistency. In particular, in many
cases it's easy to use an iterator interner when a (preferable) slice
interner is available.
The guiding principles of the new naming system:
- No `_intern_` prefixes.
- The `intern_` prefix is for internal operations.
- The `mk_` prefix is for external operations.
- For cases where there is a slice interner and an iterator interner,
the former is `mk_foo` and the latter is `mk_foo_from_iter`.
Also, `slice_interners!` and `direct_interners!` can now be `pub` or
non-`pub`, which helps enforce the internal/external operations
division.
It's not perfect, but I think it's a clear improvement.
The following lists show everything that was renamed.
slice_interners
- const_list
- mk_const_list -> mk_const_list_from_iter
- intern_const_list -> mk_const_list
- substs
- mk_substs -> mk_substs_from_iter
- intern_substs -> mk_substs
- check_substs -> check_and_mk_substs (this is a weird one)
- canonical_var_infos
- intern_canonical_var_infos -> mk_canonical_var_infos
- poly_existential_predicates
- mk_poly_existential_predicates -> mk_poly_existential_predicates_from_iter
- intern_poly_existential_predicates -> mk_poly_existential_predicates
- _intern_poly_existential_predicates -> intern_poly_existential_predicates
- predicates
- mk_predicates -> mk_predicates_from_iter
- intern_predicates -> mk_predicates
- _intern_predicates -> intern_predicates
- projs
- intern_projs -> mk_projs
- place_elems
- mk_place_elems -> mk_place_elems_from_iter
- intern_place_elems -> mk_place_elems
- bound_variable_kinds
- mk_bound_variable_kinds -> mk_bound_variable_kinds_from_iter
- intern_bound_variable_kinds -> mk_bound_variable_kinds
direct_interners
- region
- intern_region (unchanged)
- const
- mk_const_internal -> intern_const
- const_allocation
- intern_const_alloc -> mk_const_alloc
- layout
- intern_layout -> mk_layout
- adt_def
- intern_adt_def -> mk_adt_def_from_data (unusual case, hard to avoid)
- alloc_adt_def(!) -> mk_adt_def
- external_constraints
- intern_external_constraints -> mk_external_constraints
Other
- type_list
- mk_type_list -> mk_type_list_from_iter
- intern_type_list -> mk_type_list
- tup
- mk_tup -> mk_tup_from_iter
- intern_tup -> mk_tup
Previously, there were two queries to check whether a type allows the
0x01 or zeroed bitpattern.
I am planning on adding a further initness to check, truly uninit for
MaybeUninit, which would make this three queries. This seems overkill
for such a small feature, so this PR unifies them into one.
Remove type-traversal trait aliases
#107924 moved the type traversal (folding and visiting) traits into the type library, but created trait aliases in `rustc_middle` to minimise both the API churn for trait consumers and the arising boilerplate. As mentioned in that PR, an alternative approach of defining subtraits with blanket implementations of the respective supertraits was also considered at that time but was ruled out as not adding much value.
Unfortunately, it has since emerged that rust-analyzer has difficulty with these trait aliases at present, resulting in a degraded contributor experience (see the recent [r-a has become useless](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/182449-t-compiler.2Fhelp/topic/r-a.20has.20become.20useless) topic on the #t-compiler/help Zulip stream).
This PR removes the trait aliases, and accordingly the underlying type library traits are now used directly; they are parameterised by `TyCtxt<'tcx>` rather than just the `'tcx` lifetime, and imports have been updated to reflect the fact that the trait aliases' explicitly named traits are no longer automatically brought into scope. These changes also roll-back the (no-longer required) workarounds to #107747 that were made in b409329c62.
Since this PR is just a find+replace together with the changes necessary for compilation & tidy to pass, it's currently just one mega-commit. Let me know if you'd like it broken up.
r? `@oli-obk`
Extend `CodegenBackend` trait with a function returning the translation
resources from the codegen backend, which can be added to the complete
list of resources provided to the emitter.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
Instead of loading the Fluent resources for every crate in
`rustc_error_messages`, each crate generates typed identifiers for its
own diagnostics and creates a static which are pulled together in the
`rustc_driver` crate and provided to the diagnostic emitter.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
The GNU linker accepts -z<params>, but this is undocumented, and
not supported by other linkers.
In particular, `zig cc`, when used as the C compiler/linker
(e.g. when using `cargo-zigbuild`), will not accept this
undocumented syntax.
In `linker.rs`, both syntaxes are also used inconsistently.
The Go compiler used to have the same issue, but fixed it:
38607c5538
Make codegen choose whether to emit overflow checks
ConstProp and DataflowConstProp currently have a specific code path not to propagate constants when they overflow. This is meant to have the correct behaviour when inlining from a crate with overflow checks (like `core`) into a crate compiled without.
This PR shifts the behaviour change to the `Assert(Overflow*)` MIR terminators: if the crate is compiled without overflow checks, just skip emitting the assertions. This is already what happens with `OverflowNeg`.
This allows ConstProp and DataflowConstProp to transform `CheckedBinaryOp(Add, u8::MAX, 1)` into `const (0, true)`, and let codegen ignore the `true`.
The interpreter is modified to conform to this behaviour.
Fixes#35310
Add `kernel-address` sanitizer support for freestanding targets
This PR adds support for KASan (kernel address sanitizer) instrumentation in freestanding targets. I included the minimal set of `x86_64-unknown-none`, `riscv64{imac, gc}-unknown-none-elf`, and `aarch64-unknown-none` but there's likely other targets it can be added to. (`linux_kernel_base.rs`?) KASan uses the address sanitizer attributes but has the `CompileKernel` parameter set to `true` in the pass creation.
wasm: Register the `relaxed-simd` target feature
This WebAssembly proposal is likely to reach stage 4 soon so this starts the support in Rust for the proposal by adding a target feature that can be enabled via attributes for the stdarch project to bind the intrinsics.
Don't ICE in `might_permit_raw_init` if reference is polymorphic
Emitting optimized MIR for a polymorphic function may require computing layout of a type that isn't (yet) known. This happens in the instcombine pass, for example. Let's fail gracefully in that condition.
cc `@saethlin`
fixes#107999
Avoid accessing HIR when it can be avoided
Experiment to see if it helps some incremental cases.
Will be rebased once https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107942 gets merged.
r? `@ghost`
This WebAssembly proposal is likely to reach stage 4 soon so this starts
the support in Rust for the proposal by adding a target feature that can
be enabled via attributes for the stdarch project to bind the
intrinsics.
Enable new rlib in non stable cases
If bundled static library uses cfg (unstable) or whole-archive (wasn't supported) bundled libs are packed even without packed_bundled_libs.
r? `@petrochenkov`
Strengthen validation of FFI attributes
Previously, `codegen_attrs` validated the attributes `#[ffi_pure]`, `#[ffi_const]`, and `#[ffi_returns_twice]` to make sure that they were only used on foreign functions. However, this validation was insufficient in two ways:
1. `codegen_attrs` only sees items for which code must be generated, so it was unable to raise errors when the attribute was incorrectly applied to macros and the like.
2. the validation code only checked that the item with the attr was foreign, but not that it was a foreign function, allowing these attributes to be applied to foreign statics as well.
This PR moves the validation to `check_attr`, which sees all items. It additionally changes the validation to ensure that the attribute's target is `Target::ForeignFunction`, only allowing the attributes on foreign functions and not foreign statics. Because these attributes are unstable, there is no risk for backwards compatibility. The changes also ending up making the code much easier to read.
This PR is best reviewed commit by commit. Additionally, I was considering moving the tests to the `attribute` subdirectory, to get them out of the general UI directory. I could do that as part of this PR or a follow-up, as the reviewer prefers.
CC: #58328, #58329
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #106618 (Disable `linux_ext` in wasm32 and fortanix rustdoc builds.)
- #107097 (Fix def-use dominance check)
- #107154 (library/std/sys_common: Define MIN_ALIGN for m68k-unknown-linux-gnu)
- #107397 (Gracefully exit if --keep-stage flag is used on a clean source tree)
- #107401 (remove the usize field from CandidateSource::AliasBound)
- #107413 (make more pleasant to read)
- #107422 (Also erase substs for new infcx in pin move error)
- #107425 (Check for missing space between fat arrow and range pattern)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Fix def-use dominance check
A definition does not dominate a use in the same statement. For example
in MIR generated for compound assignment x += a (when overflow checks
are disabled).
Use stable metric for const eval limit instead of current terminator-based logic
This patch adds a `MirPass` that inserts a new MIR instruction `ConstEvalCounter` to any loops and function calls in the CFG. This instruction is used during Const Eval to count against the `const_eval_limit`, and emit the `StepLimitReached` error, replacing the current logic which uses Terminators only.
The new method of counting loops and function calls should be more stable across compiler versions (i.e., not cause crates that compiled successfully before, to no longer compile when changes to the MIR generation/optimization are made).
Also see: #103877
A definition does not dominate a use in the same statement. For example
in MIR generated for compound assignment x += a (when overflow checks
are disabled).
Append .dwp to the binary filename instead of replacing the existing extension.
gdb et al. expect to find the dwp file at `<binary>`.dwp, even if <binary> already has an extension (e.g. libfoo.so's dwp is expected to be at libfoo.so.dwp).
Rollup of 11 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #106407 (Improve proc macro attribute diagnostics)
- #106960 (Teach parser to understand fake anonymous enum syntax)
- #107085 (Custom MIR: Support binary and unary operations)
- #107086 (Print PID holding bootstrap build lock on Linux)
- #107175 (Fix escaping inference var ICE in `point_at_expr_source_of_inferred_type`)
- #107204 (suggest qualifying bare associated constants)
- #107248 (abi: add AddressSpace field to Primitive::Pointer )
- #107272 (Implement ObjectSafe and WF in the new solver)
- #107285 (Implement `Generator` and `Future` in the new solver)
- #107286 (ICE in new solver if we see an inference variable)
- #107313 (Add Style Team Triagebot config)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
InstCombine away intrinsic validity assertions
This optimization (currently) fires 246 times on the standard library. It seems to fire hardly at all on the big crates in the benchmark suite. Interesting.
This patch adds a `MirPass` that tracks the number of back-edges and
function calls in the CFG, adds a new MIR instruction to increment a
counter every time they are encountered during Const Eval, and emit a
warning if a configured limit is breached.
...and remove it from `PointeeInfo`, which isn't meant for this.
There are still various places (marked with FIXMEs) that assume all pointers
have the same size and alignment. Fixing this requires parsing non-default
address spaces in the data layout string, which will be done in a followup.
gdb et al. expect to find the dwp file at <binary>.dwp, even if <binary> already
has an extension (e.g. libfoo.so's dwp is expected to be at libfoo.so.dwp).
The optimization that removes artifacts when building libraries is correct
from the compiler's perspective but not from a debugger's perspective.
Unpacked split debuginfo is referred to by filename and debuggers need
the artifact that contains debuginfo to continue to exist at that path.
Ironically the test expects the correct behavior but it was not running.
Fix aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu_ilp32 target
This was broken because the synthetic object files produced by rustc were for 64-bit AArch64, which caused link failures when combined with 32-bit ILP32 object files.
This PR updates the object crate to 0.30.1 which adds support for generating ILP32 AArch64 object files.
riscv: Fix ELF header flags
The previous version added both `EF_RISCV_FLOAT_ABI_DOUBLE` and `EF_RISCV_RVC` if the "D" extension was enabled on riscv64 targets. riscv32 targets were not accounted for. This patch changes this so that:
- Only add `EF_RISCV_RVC` if the "C" extension is enabled
- Add `EF_RISCV_FLOAT_ABI_SINGLE` if the "F" extension is enabled and the "D" extension is not
- Add these ELF flags for riscv32 as well
Fixes#104284
r? rust-lang/risc-v
Linker drivers such as gcc, clang or lld often have a version postfix,
e.g clang-12. The previous logic would not account for this and would
fall back to guessing the linker flavor to be the default linker flavor
for the target, which causes linker errors when this is not the case.
By accounting for the possible version postfix and also considering
g++ and clang++, we considerably reduce the amount of times the
fallback guess has to be used.
To simplify matching check for a version postfix and match against the
linker stem without any version postfix.
In contrast to gcc, clang supports all architectures in one binary.
This means there are no variants like `aarch64-linux-gnu-clang` and
there is no need to check for `-clang` variants.
The previous version added both `EF_RISCV_FLOAT_ABI_DOUBLE` and
`EF_RISCV_RVC` if the "D" extension was enabled on riscv64 targets.
riscv32 targets were not accounted for. This patch changes this
so that:
- Only add `EF_RISCV_RVC` if the "C" extension is enabled
- Add `EF_RISCV_FLOAT_ABI_SINGLE` if the "F" extension is enabled
and the "D" extension is not
- Add these ELF flags for riscv32 as well
Allow codegen to unsize `dyn*` to `dyn`
`dyn* Trait` is just another type that implements `Trait`, so we should be able to unsize `&dyn* Trait` into `&dyn Trait` perfectly fine, same for `Box` and other unsizeable types.
Fixes#106488
This was broken because the synthetic object files produced by rustc
were for 64-bit AArch64, which caused link failures when combined with
32-bit ILP32 object files.
This PR updates the object crate to 0.30.1 which adds support for
generating ILP32 AArch64 object files.
Migrate `codegen_ssa` to diagnostics structs - [Part 3]
Completes migrating `codegen_ssa` module except 2 outstanding errors that depend on other crates:
1. [`rustc_middle::mir::interpret::InterpError`](b6097f2e1b/compiler/rustc_middle/src/mir/interpret/error.rs (L475)): I saw `rustc_middle` is unassigned, I am open to take this work.
2. `codegen_llvm`'s use of `fn span_invalid_monomorphization_error`, which I started to replace in the [last commit](9a31b3cdda) of this PR, but would like to know the team's preference on how we should keep replacing the other macros:
2.1. Update macros to expect a `Diagnostic`
2.2. Remove macros and expand the code on each use.
See [some examples of the different options in this experimental commit](64aee83e80)
_Part 2 - https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/103792_
r? ``@davidtwco``
Cc ``@compiler-errors``
Small fixes for --crate-type staticlib
The first commit doesn't have an effect until we start translating error messages. The second commit fixes potential linker errors when combining `--crate-type staticlib` with another crate type and I think `-Cprefer-dynamic`.
On macOS, it's not yet clear which cases of clang/OS/target/SDK version impact
how to find ld/lld/rust-lld. The --target is not needed on our current targets with
a vanilla config, but may be in some cases. Specifying it all the time breaks the 10.7+
targets on x64 macOS.
We try to only specify it on macOS if the linker flavors are different,
for possible cases of cross-compilation with `-Zgcc-ld=lld` but the
expectation is that it should be passed manually when needed in these
situations.
Don't perform invalid checks in `codegen_attrs`
The attributes `#[track_caller]` and `#[cmse_nonsecure_entry]` are only valid on functions. When validating one of these attributes, codegen_attrs previously called `fn_sig`, [which can only be used on functions](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105201), on the item the attribute was attached to, assuming that the item was a function without checking. This led to [ICEs in situations where the attribute was incorrectly used on non-functions](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/105594).
With this change, we skip calling `fn_sig` if the item the attribute is attached to must be a function but isn't, because `check_attr` will reject such cases without codegen_attrs's intervention.
As a side note, some of the attributes in codegen_attrs are only valid on functions, but that property isn't actually checked. I'm planning to fix that in a follow up PR since it's a behavior change that will need to be validated rather than an obvious bugfix. Thankfully, all the attributes like that I've found so far are unstable.
Fixes#105594.
r? `@cjgillot`
Remove wrapper functions for some unstable options
They are trivial and just forward to the option. Like most other options, we can just access it directly.
abort immediately on bad mem::zeroed/uninit
Now that we have non-unwinding panics, let's use them for these assertions. This re-establishes the property that `mem::uninitialized` and `mem::zeroed` will never unwind -- the earlier approach of causing panics here sometimes led to hard-to-debug segfaults when the surrounding code was not able to cope with the unexpected unwinding.
Cc `@bjorn3` I did not touch cranelift but I assume it needs a similar patch. However it has a `codegen_panic` abstraction that I did not want to touch since I didn't know how else it is used.
Rename `assert_uninit_valid` intrinsic
It's not about "uninit" anymore but about "filling with 0x01 bytes" so the name should at least try to reflect that.
This is actually not fully correct though, as it does still panic for all uninit with `-Zstrict-init-checks`. I'm not sure what the best way is to deal with that not causing confusion. I guess we could just remove the flag? I don't think having it makes a lot of sense anymore with the direction that we have chose to go. It could be relevant again if #100423 lands so removing it may be a bit over eager.
r? `@RalfJung`
Some attributes are only valid on function items. When checking these
attributes, codegen_attrs previously sometimes called `fn_sig` on the
item they were attached to without first ensuring that the item was a
function. This led to an ICE (#105594), since `fn_sig` can
only be called on functions.
After this change, we skip calling `fn_sig` if the item the attribute is
attached to must be a function but invalidly isn't, because `check_attr`
will reject such cases without codegen_attrs's intervention.
Combine `ty::Projection` and `ty::Opaque` into `ty::Alias`
Implements https://github.com/rust-lang/types-team/issues/79.
This PR consolidates `ty::Projection` and `ty::Opaque` into a single `ty::Alias`, with an `AliasKind` and `AliasTy` type (renamed from `ty::ProjectionTy`, which is the inner data of `ty::Projection`) defined as so:
```
enum AliasKind {
Projection,
Opaque,
}
struct AliasTy<'tcx> {
def_id: DefId,
substs: SubstsRef<'tcx>,
}
```
Since we don't have access to `TyCtxt` in type flags computation, and because repeatedly calling `DefKind` on the def-id is expensive, these two types are distinguished with `ty::AliasKind`, conveniently glob-imported into `ty::{Projection, Opaque}`. For example:
```diff
match ty.kind() {
- ty::Opaque(..) =>
+ ty::Alias(ty::Opaque, ..) => {}
_ => {}
}
```
This PR also consolidates match arms that treated `ty::Opaque` and `ty::Projection` identically.
r? `@ghost`
Use struct types during codegen in less places
This makes it easier to use cg_ssa from a backend like Cranelift that doesn't have any struct types at all. After this PR struct types are still used for function arguments and return values. Removing those usages is harder but should still be doable.
compiler: remove unnecessary imports and qualified paths
Some of these imports were necessary before Edition 2021, others were already in the prelude.
I hope it's fine that this PR is so spread-out across files :/
Fix invalid codegen during debuginfo lowering
In order for LLVM to correctly generate debuginfo for msvc, we sometimes need to spill arguments to the stack and perform some direct & indirect offsets into the value. Previously, this code always performed those actions, even when not required as LLVM would clean it up during optimization.
However, when MIR inlining is enabled, this can cause problems as the operations occur prior to the spilled value being initialized. To solve this, we first calculate the necessary offsets using just the type which is side-effect free and does not alter the LLVM IR. Then, if we are in a situation which requires us to generate the LLVM IR (and this situation only occurs for arguments, not local variables) then we perform the same calculation again, this time generating the appropriate LLVM IR as we go.
r? `@tmiasko` but feel free to reassign if you want 🙂Fixes#105386
Add LLVM KCFI support to the Rust compiler
This PR adds LLVM Kernel Control Flow Integrity (KCFI) support to the Rust compiler. It initially provides forward-edge control flow protection for operating systems kernels for Rust-compiled code only by aggregating function pointers in groups identified by their return and parameter types. (See llvm/llvm-project@cff5bef.)
Forward-edge control flow protection for C or C++ and Rust -compiled code "mixed binaries" (i.e., for when C or C++ and Rust -compiled code share the same virtual address space) will be provided in later work as part of this project by identifying C char and integer type uses at the time types are encoded (see Type metadata in the design document in the tracking issue #89653).
LLVM KCFI can be enabled with -Zsanitizer=kcfi.
Thank you again, `@bjorn3,` `@eddyb,` `@nagisa,` and `@ojeda,` for all the help!
In order for LLVM to correctly generate debuginfo for msvc, we sometimes
need to spill arguments to the stack and perform some direct & indirect
offsets into the value. Previously, this code always performed those
actions, even when not required as LLVM would clean it up during
optimization.
However, when MIR inlining is enabled, this can cause problems as the
operations occur prior to the spilled value being initialized. To solve
this, we first calculate the necessary offsets using just the type which
is side-effect free and does not alter the LLVM IR. Then, if we are in a
situation which requires us to generate the LLVM IR (and this situation
only occurs for arguments, not local variables) then we perform the same
calculation again, this time generating the appropriate LLVM IR as we
go.
This commit adds LLVM Kernel Control Flow Integrity (KCFI) support to
the Rust compiler. It initially provides forward-edge control flow
protection for operating systems kernels for Rust-compiled code only by
aggregating function pointers in groups identified by their return and
parameter types. (See llvm/llvm-project@cff5bef.)
Forward-edge control flow protection for C or C++ and Rust -compiled
code "mixed binaries" (i.e., for when C or C++ and Rust -compiled code
share the same virtual address space) will be provided in later work as
part of this project by identifying C char and integer type uses at the
time types are encoded (see Type metadata in the design document in the
tracking issue #89653).
LLVM KCFI can be enabled with -Zsanitizer=kcfi.
Co-authored-by: bjorn3 <17426603+bjorn3@users.noreply.github.com>
rustc_codegen_ssa: Fix for codegen_get_discr
When doing the optimized implementation of getting the discriminant, the arithmetic needs to be done in the tag type so wrapping behavior works correctly.
Fixes#104519
rustc_codegen_ssa: write `.dwp` in a streaming fashion
When writing a `.dwp` file, rustc writes to a Vec first then to a BufWriter-wrapped file. It seems very likely that we can write in a streaming fashion to avoid double buffering in an intermediate Vec.
On my Linux machine, `.dwp` from the latest rust-lang/cargo is 113MiB. It may worth a stream writer, though I didn't do any benchmark 🙇🏾♂️.
deduplicate constant evaluation in cranelift backend
The cranelift backend had two matches on `ConstantKind`, which can be avoided, and used this `eval_for_mir` that nothing else uses... this makes things more consistent with the (better-tested) LLVM backend.
I noticed this because cranelift was the only user of `eval_for_mir`. However `try_eval_for_mir` still has one other user in `eval`... the odd thing is that the interpreter has its own `eval_mir_constant` which seems to duplicate the same functionality and does not use `try_eval_for_mir`. No idea what is happening here.
r? ``@bjorn3``
Cc ``@lcnr``
Improve generating Custom entry function
This commit is aimed at making compiler-generated entry functions (Basically just C `main` right now) more generic so other targets can do similar things for custom entry. This was initially implemented as part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100316.
Currently, this moves the entry function name and Call convention to the target spec.
Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushsingh1325@gmail.com>
When doing the optimized implementation of getting the discriminant, the
arithmetic needs to be done in the tag type so wrapping behavior works
correctly.
Fixes#104519
Record `LocalDefId` in HIR nodes instead of a side table
This is part of an attempt to remove the `HirId -> LocalDefId` table from HIR.
This attempt is a prerequisite to creation of `LocalDefId` after HIR lowering (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/96840), by controlling how `def_id` information is accessed.
This first part adds the information to HIR nodes themselves instead of a table.
The second part is https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/103902
The third part will be to make `hir::Visitor::visit_fn` take a `LocalDefId` as last parameter.
The fourth part will be to completely remove the side table.
cleanup and dedupe CTFE and Miri error reporting
It looks like most of the time, this error raised from const_prop_lint is just redundant -- it duplicates the error reported when evaluating the const-eval query. This lets us make `ConstEvalErr` private to the const_eval module which I think is a good step.
The Miri change mostly replaces a `match` by `if let`, and dedupes the "this error is impossible in Miri" checks.
r? ``@oli-obk``
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/75461
Issue error when -C link-self-contained option is used on unsupported platforms
The documentation was also updated to reflect this.
I'm assuming the supported platforms are the same as initially written in [RELEASES.md](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/RELEASES.md#compiler-17).
Fixes#103576
Fix some misleading target feature aliases
This is the first half of a fix for #100752. It looks like these aliases were added in #78361 and slipped under the radar, as these features are not AVX512. These features _do_ add AVX512 instructions when used _in combination_ with AVX512F, but without AVX512F, these features still provide 128-bit and 256-bit vector instructions. A user might be mislead into thinking these features imply AVX512F (which is true of the actual AVX512 features). This PR allows using the names as defined by LLVM, which matches Intel documentation.
A future PR should change the `std::arch` intrinsics to use these names, and finally remove these aliases from rustc.
r? ```@workingjubilee```
cc ```@Amanieu```
In `codegen_assert_terminator` we decide if a BB's successor is a
candidate for merging, which requires that it be the only successor, and
that it only have one predecessor. That result then gets passed down,
and if it reaches `funclet_br` with the appropriate BB characteristics,
then no `br` instruction is issued, a `MergingSucc::True` result is
passed back, and the merging proceeds in `codegen_block`.
The commit also adds `CachedLlbb`, a new type to help keep track of
each BB that has been merged into its predecessor.
For the next commit, `FunctionCx::codegen_*_terminator` need to take a
`&mut Bx` instead of consuming a `Bx`. This triggers a cascade of
similar changes across multiple functions. The resulting code is more
concise and replaces many `&mut bx` expressions with `bx`.
Wrap bundled static libraries into object files
Fixes#103044 (not sure, couldn't test locally)
Bundled static libraries should be wrapped into object files as it's done for metadata file.
r? `@petrochenkov`
Implement the `+whole-archive` modifier for `wasm-ld`
This implements the `Linker::{link_whole_staticlib,link_whole_rlib}` methods for the `WasmLd` linker used on wasm targets. Previously these methods were noops since I think historically `wasm-ld` did not have support for `--whole-archive` but nowadays it does, so the flags are passed through.
This commit is aimed at making compiler generated entry functions
(Basically just C `main` right now) more generic so other targets can do
similar things for custom entry. This was initially implemented as part
of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100316.
Currently, this moves the entry function name and Call convention to the
target spec.
Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushsingh1325@gmail.com>
Add type_array to BaseTypeMethods
Moved `type_array` function to `rustc_codegen_ssa::BaseTypeMethods` trait. This allows using normal `alloca` function to create arrays as suggested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104022.
Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushsingh1325@gmail.com>
Moved type_array function to rustc_codegen_ssa::BaseTypeMethods trait.
This allows using normal alloca function to create arrays as suggested in
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104022.
Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushsingh1325@gmail.com>
[debuginfo] Make cpp-like debuginfo type names for slices and str consistent.
Before this PR, the compiler would emit the debuginfo name `slice$<T>` for all kinds of slices, regardless of whether they are behind a reference or not and regardless of the kind of reference. As a consequence, the types `Foo<&[T]>`, `Foo<[T]>`, and `Foo<&mut [T]>` would end up with the same type name `Foo<slice$<T> >` in debuginfo, making it impossible to disambiguate between them by name. Similarly, `&str` would get the name `str` in debuginfo, so the debuginfo name for `Foo<str>` and `Foo<&str>` would be the same. In contrast, `*const [bool]` and `*mut [bool]` would be `ptr_const$<slice$<bool> >` and `ptr_mut$<slice$<bool> >`, i.e. the encoding does not lose information about the type.
This PR removes all special handling for slices and `str`. The types `&[bool]`, `&mut [bool]`, and `&str` thus get the names `ref$<slice2$<bool> >`, `ref_mut$<slice2$<bool> >`, and `ref$<str$>` respectively -- as one would expect.
The new special name for slices is `slice2$` to differentiate it from the previous name `slice$`, which has different semantics. The same is true for `str` and `str$`. This kind of versioning already has a precedent with the case of `enum$` and `enum2$` and hopefully will make it easier to transition existing consumers of these names.
cc `@rust-lang/wg-debugging` `@vadimcn`
r? `@wesleywiser`
UPDATE: Here is a table to clarify the changes
| Rust type | DWARF name | C++-like name (before) | C++-like name (after) |
|-----------|------------|------------------------|------------------------|
| `[T]` | `[T]` | `slice$<T>` | `slice2$<T>` |
| `&[T]` | `&[T]` | `slice$<T>` | `ref$<slice2$<T> >` |
| `&mut [T]` | `&mut [T]` | `slice$<T>` | `ref_mut$<slice2$<T> >`|
| `str` | `str` | `str` | `str$` |
| `&str` | `&str` | `str` | `ref$<str$>` |
| `&mut str` | `&mut str` | `str` | `ref_mut$<str$>`|
| `*const [T]` | `*const [T]` | `ptr_const$<slice$<T> >` | `ptr_const$<slice2$<T> >` |
| `*mut [T]` | `*mut [T]` | `ptr_mut$<slice$<T> >` | `ptr_mut$<slice2$<T> >` |
As you can see, before the PR many types would end up with the same name, making it impossible to distinguish between them in NatVis or other places where types are matched or looked up by name. The DWARF version of names is not changed.
improve `filesearch::get_or_default_sysroot`
`fn get_or_default_sysroot` is now improved and used in `miri` and `clippy`, and tests are still passing as they should. So we no longer need to implement custom workarounds/hacks to find sysroot in tools like miri/clippy.
Resolves https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/98832
re-opened from #103581
FIX - StrippingDebugInfoFailed typo
DELETE - unneeded FIXME comment
UPDATE - only declare the error with ExtractBundledLibsError as an enum and use the Diagnostic derive macro
Add `multivalue` target feature to WASM target
This PR is similar to #99643 and #97808. It addresses #96472 for the `multivalue` target feature.
The problem I am trying to fix is to remove the following warning when compiling with `-C target-feature=+multivalue` for `--target=wasm32-unknown-unknown`.
```
warning: unknown feature specified for `-Ctarget-feature`: `multivalue`
|
= note: it is still passed through to the codegen backend
= note: consider filing a feature request
```
The new implementation doesn't use weak lang items and instead changes
`#[alloc_error_handler]` to an attribute macro just like
`#[global_allocator]`.
The attribute will generate the `__rg_oom` function which is called by
the compiler-generated `__rust_alloc_error_handler`. If no `__rg_oom`
function is defined in any crate then the compiler shim will call
`__rdl_oom` in the alloc crate which will simply panic.
This also fixes link errors with `-C link-dead-code` with
`default_alloc_error_handler`: `__rg_oom` was previously defined in the
alloc crate and would attempt to reference the `oom` lang item, even if
it didn't exist. This worked as long as `__rg_oom` was excluded from
linking since it was not called.
This is a prerequisite for the stabilization of
`default_alloc_error_handler` (#102318).
Before this PR, the compiler would emit the debuginfo name `slice$<T>`
for all kinds of slices, regardless of whether they are behind a
reference or not and regardless of the kind of reference. As a
consequence, the types `Foo<&[T]>`, `Foo<[T]>`, and `Foo<&mut [T]>`
would end up with the same type name `Foo<slice$<T> >` in debuginfo,
making it impossible to disambiguate between them by name. Similarly,
`&str` would get the name `str` in debuginfo, so the debuginfo name for
`Foo<str>` and `Foo<&str>` would be the same. In contrast,
`*const [bool]` and `*mut [bool]` would be `ptr_const$<slice$<bool> >`
and `ptr_mut$<slice$<bool> >`, i.e. the encoding does not lose
information about the type.
This PR removes all special handling for slices and `str`. The types
`&[bool]`, `&mut [bool]`, and `&str` thus get the names
`ref$<slice2$<bool> >`, `ref_mut$<slice2$<bool> >`, and
`ref$<str$>` respectively -- as one would expect.
`codegen_switchint_terminator` already uses `br` instead of `switch`
when there is one normal target plus the `otherwise` target. But there's
another common case with two normal targets and an `otherwise` target
that points to an empty unreachable BB. This comes up a lot when
switching on the tags of enums that use niches.
The pattern looks like this:
```
bb1: ; preds = %bb6
%3 = load i8, ptr %_2, align 1, !range !9, !noundef !4
%4 = sub i8 %3, 2
%5 = icmp eq i8 %4, 0
%_6 = select i1 %5, i64 0, i64 1
switch i64 %_6, label %bb3 [
i64 0, label %bb4
i64 1, label %bb2
]
bb3: ; preds = %bb1
unreachable
```
This commit adds code to convert the `switch` to a `br`:
```
bb1: ; preds = %bb6
%3 = load i8, ptr %_2, align 1, !range !9, !noundef !4
%4 = sub i8 %3, 2
%5 = icmp eq i8 %4, 0
%_6 = select i1 %5, i64 0, i64 1
%6 = icmp eq i64 %_6, 0
br i1 %6, label %bb4, label %bb2
bb3: ; No predecessors!
unreachable
```
This has a surprisingly large effect on compile times, with reductions
of 5% on debug builds of some crates. The reduction is all due to LLVM
taking less time. Maybe LLVM is just much better at handling `br` than
`switch`.
The resulting code is still suboptimal.
- The `icmp`, `select`, `icmp` sequence is silly, converting an `i1` to an `i64`
and back to an `i1`. But with the current code structure it's hard to avoid,
and LLVM will easily clean it up, in opt builds at least.
- `bb3` is usually now truly dead code (though not always, so it can't
be removed universally).
`TerminatorCodegenHelper` has three methods `llblock`, `llbb`, and
`lltarget`. They're all similar, but the names given no indication of
the differences.
This commit renames `lltarget` as `llbb_with_landing_pad`, and `llblock`
as `llbb_with_cleanup`. These aren't fantastic names, but at least it's
now clear that `llbb` is the lowest-level of the three and the other two
wrap it.
Ensure:
- builders always have a `bx` suffix;
- backend basic blocks always have an `llbb` suffix,
- paired builders and basic blocks have consistent prefixes.
Remove byte swap of valtree hash on big endian
This addresses problem reported in #103183. The code was originally introduced in e14b34c386. (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/96591)
On big-endian environment, this operation sequence actually put the other half from 128-bit result, thus we got different hash result on LE and BE.
Get rid of native_library projection queries
They don't seem particularly useful as I don't expect native libraries to change frequently.
Maybe they do provide significant value of keeping incremental compilation green though, I'm not sure.
linker: Fix weak lang item linking with combination windows-gnu + LLD + LTO
In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100404 this logic was originally disabled for MSVC due to issues with LTO, but the same issues appear on windows-gnu with LLD because that LLD uses the same underlying logic as MSVC LLD, just with re-syntaxed command line options.
So this PR just disables it for LTO builds in general.
The illumos linker does not support --strip-debug
When building and testing rust 1.64.0 on illumos, we saw a large number of failing tests associated with:
```
= note: ld: fatal: unrecognized option '--strip-debug'
ld: fatal: use the -z help option for usage information
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
```
The illumos linker does not support the `--strip-debug` option (although it does support `--strip-all`).
Make `dyn*` casts into a coercion, allow `dyn*` upcasting
I know that `dyn*` is likely not going to be a feature exposed to surface Rust, but this makes it slightly more ergonomic to write tests for these types anyways. ... and this was just fun to implement anyways.
1. Make `dyn*` into a coercion instead of a cast
2. Enable `dyn*` upcasting since we basically get it for free
3. Simplify some of the cast checking code since we're using the coercion path now
r? `@eholk` but feel free to reassign
cc `@nikomatsakis` and `@tmandry` who might care about making `dyn*` casts into a coercion
Support casting boxes to dyn*
Boxes have a pointer type at codegen time which LLVM does not allow to be transparently converted to an integer. Work around this by inserting a `ptrtoint` instruction if the argument is a pointer.
r? ``@compiler-errors``
Fixes#102427
translation: eager translation
Part of #100717. See [Zulip thread](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/336883-i18n/topic/.23100717.20lists!/near/295010720) for additional context.
- **Store diagnostic arguments in a `HashMap`**: Eager translation will enable subdiagnostics to be translated multiple times with different arguments - this requires the ability to replace the value of one argument with a new value, which is better suited to a `HashMap` than the previous storage, a `Vec`.
- **Add `AddToDiagnostic::add_to_diagnostic_with`**: `AddToDiagnostic::add_to_diagnostic_with` is similar to the previous `AddToDiagnostic::add_to_diagnostic` but takes a function that can be used by the caller to modify diagnostic messages originating from the subdiagnostic (such as performing translation eagerly). `add_to_diagnostic` now just calls `add_to_diagnostic_with` with an empty closure.
- **Add `DiagnosticMessage::Eager`**: Add variant of `DiagnosticMessage` for eagerly translated messages
(messages in the target language which don't need translated by the emitter during emission). Also adds `eager_subdiagnostic` function which is intended to be invoked by the diagnostic derive for subdiagnostic fields which are marked as needing eager translation.
- **Support `#[subdiagnostic(eager)]`**: Add support for `eager` argument to the `subdiagnostic` attribute which generates a call to `eager_subdiagnostic`.
- **Finish migrating `rustc_query_system`**: Using eager translation, migrate the remaining repeated cycle stack diagnostic.
- **Split formatting initialization and use in diagnostic derives**: Diagnostic derives have previously had to take special care when ordering the generated code so that fields were not used after a move.
This is unlikely for most fields because a field is either annotated with a subdiagnostic attribute and is thus likely a `Span` and copiable, or is a argument, in which case it is only used once by `set_arg`
anyway.
However, format strings for code in suggestions can result in fields being used after being moved if not ordered carefully. As a result, the derive currently puts `set_arg` calls last (just before emission), such as:
let diag = { /* create diagnostic */ };
diag.span_suggestion_with_style(
span,
fluent::crate::slug,
format!("{}", __binding_0),
Applicability::Unknown,
SuggestionStyle::ShowAlways
);
/* + other subdiagnostic additions */
diag.set_arg("foo", __binding_0);
/* + other `set_arg` calls */
diag.emit();
For eager translation, this doesn't work, as the message being translated eagerly can assume that all arguments are available - so arguments _must_ be set first.
Format strings for suggestion code are now separated into two parts - an initialization line that performs the formatting into a variable, and a usage in the subdiagnostic addition.
By separating these parts, the initialization can happen before arguments are set, preserving the desired order so that code compiles, while still enabling arguments to be set before subdiagnostics are added.
let diag = { /* create diagnostic */ };
let __code_0 = format!("{}", __binding_0);
/* + other formatting */
diag.set_arg("foo", __binding_0);
/* + other `set_arg` calls */
diag.span_suggestion_with_style(
span,
fluent::crate::slug,
__code_0,
Applicability::Unknown,
SuggestionStyle::ShowAlways
);
/* + other subdiagnostic additions */
diag.emit();
- **Remove field ordering logic in diagnostic derive:** Following the approach taken in earlier commits to separate formatting initialization from use in the subdiagnostic derive, simplify the diagnostic derive by removing the field-ordering logic that previously solved this problem.
r? ```@compiler-errors```
Migrate `codegen_ssa` to diagnostics structs - [Part 1]
Initial migration of `codegen_ssa`. Going to split this crate migration in at least two PRs in order to avoid a huge PR and to quick off some questions around:
1. Translating messages from "external" crates.
2. Interfacing with OS messages.
3. Adding UI tests while migrating diagnostics.
_See comments below._
Eager translation will enable subdiagnostics to be translated multiple
times with different arguments - this requires the ability to replace
the value of one argument with a new value, which is better suited to a
`HashMap` than the previous storage, a `Vec`.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
Remove `mir::CastKind::Misc`
As discussed in #97649 `mir::CastKind::Misc` is not clear, this PR addresses that by creating a new enum variant for every valid cast.
r? ````@oli-obk````
- UPDATE - revert migration of logs
- UPDATE - use derive on LinkRlibError enum
- [Gardening] UPDATE - alphabetically sort fluent_messages
- UPDATE - use PathBuf and unify both AddNativeLibrary to use Display (which is what PathBuf uses when conforming to IntoDiagnosticArg)
- UPDATE - fluent messages sort after rebase
Remove `-Ztime`
Because it has a lot of overlap with `-Ztime-passes` but is generally less useful. Plus some related cleanups.
Best reviewed one commit at a time.
r? `@davidtwco`
The compiler currently has `-Ztime` and `-Ztime-passes`. I've used
`-Ztime-passes` for years but only recently learned about `-Ztime`.
What's the difference? Let's look at the `-Zhelp` output:
```
-Z time=val -- measure time of rustc processes (default: no)
-Z time-passes=val -- measure time of each rustc pass (default: no)
```
The `-Ztime-passes` description is clear, but the `-Ztime` one is less so.
Sounds like it measures the time for the entire process?
No. The real difference is that `-Ztime-passes` prints out info about passes,
and `-Ztime` does the same, but only for a subset of those passes. More
specifically, there is a distinction in the profiling code between a "verbose
generic activity" and an "extra verbose generic activity". `-Ztime-passes`
prints both kinds, while `-Ztime` only prints the first one. (It took me
a close reading of the source code to determine this difference.)
In practice this distinction has low value. Perhaps in the past the "extra
verbose" output was more voluminous, but now that we only print stats for a
pass if it exceeds 5ms or alters the RSS, `-Ztime-passes` is less spammy. Also,
a lot of the "extra verbose" cases are for individual lint passes, and you need
to also use `-Zno-interleave-lints` to see those anyway.
Therefore, this commit removes `-Ztime` and the associated machinery. One thing
to note is that the existing "extra verbose" activities all have an extra
string argument, so the commit adds the ability to accept an extra argument to
the "verbose" activities.
Only export `__tls_*` on wasm32-unknown-unknown.
From talking with `@abrown,` we aren't planning to have hosts call these `__tls_*` functions; instead, TLS initialization will be handled transparently within libc. Consequently, these functions don't need to be exported.
Leave them exported on wasm32-unknown-unknown though, as wasm-bindgen does call them.
From talking with @abrown, we aren't planning to have hosts call these
`__tls_*` functions; instead, TLS initialization will be handled
transparently within libc. Consequently, these functions don't need to
be exported.
Leave them exported on wasm32-unknown-unknown though, as wasm-bindgen
does call them.
Don't export `__wasm_init_memory` on WebAssembly.
Since #72889, the Rust wasm target doesn't use --passive-segments, so remove the `--export=__wasm_init_memory`.
As documented in the [tool-conventions Linking convention], `__wasm_init_memory` is not intended to be exported.
[tool-conventions Linking convention]: 7c064f3048/Linking.md (shared-memory-and-passive-segments)
Since #72889, the Rust wasm target doesn't use --passive-segments, so
remove the `--export=__wasm_init_memory`.
As documented in the [tool-conventions Linking convention],
`__wasm_init_memory` is not intended to be exported.
[tool-conventions Linking convention]: 7c064f3048/Linking.md (shared-memory-and-passive-segments)
`__heap_base` and `__data_end` are exported for use by wasm-bindgen, which
uses the wasm32-unknown-unknown target. On wasm32-wasi, as a step toward
implementing the Canonical ABI, and as an aid to building speicalized WASI
API polyfill wrappers, don't export `__heap_base` and `__data_end` on
wasm32-wasi.
Remove support for legacy PM
This removes support for optimizing with LLVM's legacy pass manager, as well as the unstable `-Znew-llvm-pass-manager` option. We have been defaulting to the new PM since LLVM 13 (except for s390x that waited for 14), and LLVM 15 removed support altogether. The only place we still use the legacy PM is for writing the output file, just like `llc` does.
cc #74705
r? ``@nikic``
This implements the `Linker::{link_whole_staticlib,link_whole_rlib}`
methods for the `WasmLd` linker used on wasm targets. Previously these
methods were noops since I think historically `wasm-ld` did not have
support for `--whole-archive` but nowadays it does, so the flags are
passed through.
Update rustc's information on Android's sanitizers
This patch updates sanitizer support definitions for Android inside the compiler. It also adjusts the logic to make sure no pre-built sanitizer runtime libraries are emitted as these are instead provided dynamically on Android targets.
This patch updates sanitizier support definitions for Android inside the
compiler. It also adjusts the logic to make sure no pre-built sanitizer
runtime libraries are emitted as these are instead provided dynamically
on Android targets.
On later stages, the feature is already stable.
Result of running:
rg -l "feature.let_else" compiler/ src/librustdoc/ library/ | xargs sed -s -i "s#\\[feature.let_else#\\[cfg_attr\\(bootstrap, feature\\(let_else\\)#"
Initial implementation of dyn*
This PR adds extremely basic and incomplete support for [dyn*](https://smallcultfollowing.com/babysteps//blog/2022/03/29/dyn-can-we-make-dyn-sized/). The goal is to get something in tree behind a flag to make collaboration easier, and also to make sure the implementation so far is not unreasonable. This PR does quite a few things:
* Introduce `dyn_star` feature flag
* Adds parsing for `dyn* Trait` types
* Defines `dyn* Trait` as a sized type
* Adds support for explicit casts, like `42usize as dyn* Debug`
* Including const evaluation of such casts
* Adds codegen for drop glue so things are cleaned up properly when a `dyn* Trait` object goes out of scope
* Adds codegen for method calls, at least for methods that take `&self`
Quite a bit is still missing, but this gives us a starting point. Note that this is never intended to become stable surface syntax for Rust, but rather `dyn*` is planned to be used as an implementation detail for async functions in dyn traits.
Joint work with `@nikomatsakis` and `@compiler-errors.`
r? `@bjorn3`
Add support for MIPS VZ ISA extension
[Link to relevant LLVM line where virt extension is specified](83fab8cee9/llvm/lib/Target/Mips/Mips.td (L172-L173))
This has been tested on mips-unknown-linux-musl with a target-cpu that is >= MIPS32 5 and `target-features=+virt`. The example was checked in a disassembler to ensure the correct assembly sequence was being generated using the virtualization instructions.
Needed additional work:
* MIPS is missing from [the Rust reference CPU feature lists](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/attributes/codegen.html#available-features)
Example docs for later:
```md
#### `mips` or `mips64`
This platform requires that `#[target_feature]` is only applied to [`unsafe`
functions][unsafe function]. This target's feature support is currently unstable
and must be enabled by `#![feature(mips_target_feature)]` ([Issue #44839])
[Issue #44839]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44839
Further documentation on these features can be found in the [MIPS Instruction Set
Reference Manual], or elsewhere on [mips.com].
[MIPS Instruction Set Reference Manual]: https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/downloads-mips/documents/MD00086-2B-MIPS32BIS-AFP-6.06.pdf
[developer.arm.com]: https://www.mips.com/products/architectures/ase/
Feature | Implicitly Enables | Description
---------------|--------------------|-------------------
`fp64` | | 64-bit Floating Point
`msa` | | "MIPS SIMD Architecture"
`virt` | | Virtualization instructions (VZ ASE)
```
If the above is good I can also submit a PR for that if there's interest in documenting it while it's still unstable. Otherwise that can be dropped, I just wrote it before realizing it was possibly not a good idea.
Relevant to #44839
change rlib format to distinguish native dependencies
Another one method to solve problem mentioned in #99429.
Changed .rlib format, it contains all bundled native libraries as archieves.
At link time rlib is unpacked and native dependencies linked separately.
New behavior hidden under separate_native_rlib_dependencies flag.