Commit Graph

2583 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Michael Baikov
a03aeca99a Allow workproducts without object files.
This pull request partially reverts changes from e16c3b4a44

Original motivation for this assert was described with "A WorkProduct without a saved file is useless"
which was true at the time but now it is possible to have work products with other types of files
(llvm-ir, asm, etc) and there are bugreports for this failure:

For example: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123695

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123234

Now existing `assert` and `.unwrap_or_else` are unified into a single
check that emits slightly more user friendly error message if an object
files was meant to be produced but it's missing
2024-04-16 11:19:35 -04:00
Guillaume Gomez
1c8bdb93d9
Rollup merge of #123721 - madsmtm:fix-visionos, r=davidtwco
Various visionOS fixes

A few small mistakes was introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121419, probably after the rename from `xros` to `visionos`. See the commits for details.

CC `@agg23`

Since you reviewed https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121419
r? davidtwco
2024-04-16 15:19:13 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
9a7adb8d81
Rollup merge of #123687 - bjorn3:ar_archive_writer_0_2_0, r=oli-obk
Update ar_archive_writer to 0.2.0

This adds a whole bunch of tests checking for any difference with llvm's archive writer. It also fixes two mistakes in the porting from C++ to Rust. The first one causes a divergence for Mach-O archives which may or may not be harmless. The second will definitively cause issues, but only applies to thin archives, which rustc currently doesn't create.
2024-04-16 15:19:13 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
26b6a234a1
Rollup merge of #121694 - davidtwco:stabilize-relro-level, r=Mark-Simulacrum
sess: stabilize `-Zrelro-level` as `-Crelro-level`

Stabilise `-Zrelro-level` as `-Crelro-level`. There's no tracking issue for this flag to close.
2024-04-16 15:19:10 +02:00
bors
3a0db6c152 Auto merge of #123854 - petrochenkov:searchdirs2, r=lqd
linker: Remove laziness and caching from native search directory walks

It shouldn't be necessary for performance now.

Follow up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123827.
2024-04-13 13:12:56 +00:00
bors
7106800e16 Auto merge of #123656 - lqd:linker-features, r=petrochenkov
Linker flavors next steps: linker features

This is my understanding of the first step towards `@petrochenkov's` vision for the future of linker flavors, described in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119906#issuecomment-1895693162 and the discussion that followed.

To summarize: having `Cc` and `Lld` embedded in linker flavors creates tension about naming, and a combinatorial explosion of flavors for each new linker feature we'd want to use. Linker features are an extension mechanism that is complementary to principal flavors, with benefits described in #119906.

The most immediate use of this flag would be to turn self-contained linking on and off via features instead of flavors. For example, `-Clinker-features=+/-lld` would toggle using lld instead of selecting a precise flavor, and would be "generic" and work cross-platform (whereas linker flavors are currently more tied to targets). Under this scheme, MCP510 is expected to be `-Clink-self-contained=+linker -Zlinker-features=+lld -Zunstable-options` (though for the time being, the original flags using lld-cc flavors still work).

I purposefully didn't add or document CLI support for `+/-cc`, as it would be a noop right now. I only expect that we'd initially want to stabilize `+/-lld` to begin with.

r? `@petrochenkov`

You had requested that minimal churn would be done to the 230 target specs and this does none yet: the linker features are inferred from the flavor since they're currently isomorphic. We of course expect this to change sooner rather than later.

In the future, we can allow targets to define linker features independently from their flavor, and remove the cc and lld components from the flavors to use the features instead, this actually doesn't need to block stabilization, as we discussed.

(Best reviewed per commit)
2024-04-13 11:10:01 +00:00
bors
9782770a81 Auto merge of #121430 - madsmtm:mac-catalyst-iOSSupport, r=wesleywiser
Add `/System/iOSSupport` to the library search path on Mac Catalyst

On macOS, `/System/iOSSupport` contains iOS frameworks like UIKit, which is the whole idea of Mac Catalyst.

To link to these, we need to explicitly tell the linker about the support library stubs provided in the macOS SDK under the same path.

Concretely, when building a binary for Mac Catalyst, Xcode passes the following flags to the linker:
```
-iframework /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX14.2.sdk/System/iOSSupport/System/Library/Frameworks
-L/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX14.2.sdk/System/iOSSupport/usr/lib
```

This is not something that can be disabled (it's enabled as soon as you enable `SUPPORTS_MACCATALYST`), so I think it's pretty safe to say that we don't need an option to turn these off.

I've chosen to slightly deviate from what Xcode does and use `-F` instead of `-iframework`, since we don't need to change the header search path, and this way the flags nicely match on all the linkers. From what I could tell by reading Clang sources, there shouldn't be a difference when just running the linker.

CC `@BlackHoleFox,` `@shepmaster` (I accidentally let rustbot choose the reviewer).
2024-04-12 22:27:33 +00:00
bors
22a2425c10 Auto merge of #121426 - madsmtm:remove-cc-syslibroot, r=pnkfelix
Remove redundant `-Wl,-syslibroot`

Since `-isysroot` is set, [Clang already passes this when invoking the linker](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-17.0.6/clang/lib/Driver/ToolChains/Darwin.cpp#L439-L442).

See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/56833 for when the `-isysroot` was originally added, but didn't remove the unnecessary linker flag.

CC `@BlackHoleFox`
r? shepmaster
2024-04-12 18:16:47 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
4a0e9e0deb
Rollup merge of #123249 - goolmoos:naked_variadics, r=pnkfelix
do not add prolog for variadic naked functions

fixes #99858
2024-04-12 17:41:33 +02:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
ed62b57c86 linker: Remove laziness and caching from native search directory walks
It shouldn't be necessary for performance now.
2024-04-12 17:28:00 +03:00
Guy Shefy
9139d7252d do not add prolog for variadic naked functions
fixes #99858
2024-04-12 15:29:39 +03:00
Rémy Rakic
11b6d40a98 make CLI linker features influence the linker flavor
While they're isomorphic, we can flip the lld component where
applicable, so that downstream doesn't have to check both the flavor and
the linker features.
2024-04-12 09:46:38 +00:00
Rémy Rakic
c39929ce18 remove some unnecessary lifetimes 2024-04-12 09:43:05 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
7f111834ad
Rollup merge of #123827 - petrochenkov:searchdirs, r=Nadrieril
linker: Avoid some allocations in search directory iteration

This is more a cleanup than actual optimization.
2024-04-12 04:38:23 +02:00
Erik Desjardins
f4426c189f use [N x i8] for alloca types 2024-04-11 21:42:35 -04:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
4ded0b82ca linker: Avoid some allocations in search directory iteration 2024-04-12 00:41:08 +03:00
Scott McMurray
d0ae76848a Add load/store helpers that take PlaceValue 2024-04-11 00:10:10 -07:00
Scott McMurray
3596098823 Put PlaceValue into OperandValue::Ref, rather than 3 tuple fields 2024-04-11 00:10:10 -07:00
Scott McMurray
89502e584b Make PlaceRef hold a PlaceValue for the non-layout fields (like OperandRef does) 2024-04-11 00:10:10 -07:00
Mads Marquart
e27290e529 Add /System/iOSSupport to the library search path on Mac Catalyst 2024-04-10 16:54:49 +02:00
Mads Marquart
efbbfa24a5 visionOS: Fix logic for finding the SDK root
The `sdk_name` is `xros`/`xrsimulator`, not `visionos`/`visionossimulator`.
2024-04-10 15:04:07 +02:00
bjorn3
dacfbfccc5 Update ar_archive_writer to 0.2.0
This adds a whole bunch of tests checking for any difference with llvm's
archive writer. It also fixes two mistakes in the porting from C++ to
Rust. The first one causes a divergence for Mach-O archives which may or
may not be harmless. The second will definitively cause issues, but only
applies to thin archives, which rustc currently doesn't create.
2024-04-09 17:45:02 +00:00
Scott McMurray
c6dde9d8a7 Put the NONTEMPORAL case first
That's how it was in `store_with_flags` before this PR, so let's do that here too just to be sure we get the right thing.
2024-04-09 08:51:33 -07:00
Scott McMurray
b5376ba601 Remove my scalar_copy_backend_type optimization attempt
I added this back in 111999, but I no longer think it's a good idea
- It had to get scaled back to only power-of-two things to not break a bunch of targets
- LLVM seems to be getting better at memcpy removal anyway
- Introducing vector instructions has seemed to sometimes (115515) make autovectorization worse

So this removes it from the codegen crates entirely, and instead just tries to use <https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_codegen_ssa/traits/builder/trait.BuilderMethods.html#method.typed_place_copy> instead of direct `memcpy` so things will still use load/store for immediates.
2024-04-09 08:51:32 -07:00
bors
bb78dba64c Auto merge of #123272 - saethlin:reachable-mono-cleanup, r=cjgillot
Only collect mono items from reachable blocks

Fixes the wrong comment pointed out in: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121421#discussion_r1537378431
Moves the analysis to use the worklist strategy: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121421#discussion_r1501840823
Also fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85836, using the same reachability analysis
2024-04-09 07:41:34 +00:00
Oli Scherer
84acfe86de Actually create ranged int types in the type system. 2024-04-08 12:02:19 +00:00
Ben Kimock
339f4be046 Only collect mono items from reachable blocks 2024-04-07 14:36:42 -04:00
bors
fc1a4c5cc9 Auto merge of #123221 - pacak:cache_emit, r=fmease,jieyouxu
Save/restore more items in cache with incremental compilation

Right now they don't play very well together, consider a simple example:

```
$ export RUSTFLAGS="--emit asm"
$ cargo new --lib foo
     Created library `foo` package
$ cargo build -q
$ touch src/lib.rs
$ cargo build
error: could not copy
  "/path/to/foo/target/debug/deps/foo-e307cc7fa7b6d64f.4qbzn9k8mosu50a5.rcgu.s"
  to "/path/to/foo/target/debug/deps/foo-e307cc7fa7b6d64f.s":
  No such file or directory (os error 2)
```

Touch triggers the rebuild, incremental compilation detects no changes (yay) and everything explodes while trying to copy files were they should go.

This pull request fixes it by copying and restoring more files in the incremental compilation cache

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89149
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88829

Related: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/interaction-between-incremental-compilation-and-emit/20551
2024-04-07 10:46:50 +00:00
Ben Kimock
a7912cb421 Put checks that detect UB under their own flag below debug_assertions 2024-04-06 11:21:47 -04:00
Michael Baikov
691e953da6 Save/restore more items in cache with incremental compilation 2024-04-06 10:59:24 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
84569f9086
Rollup merge of #123467 - dpaoliello:archcoff, r=wesleywiser
MSVC targets should use COFF as their archive format

While adding support for Arm64EC I ran into an issue where the standard library's rlib was missing the "EC Symbol Table" which is required for the MSVC linker to find import library symbols (generated by Rust's `raw-dylib` feature) when building for EC.

The root cause of the issue is that LLVM only generated symbol tables (including the EC Symbol Table) if the `ArchiveKind` is `COFF`, but the MSVC targets didn't set their archive format, so it was defaulting to GNU.
2024-04-06 08:56:34 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
74a5bc6c9e
Rollup merge of #121419 - agg23:xrOS-pr, r=davidtwco
Add aarch64-apple-visionos and aarch64-apple-visionos-sim tier 3 targets

Introduces `aarch64-apple-visionos` and `aarch64-apple-visionos-sim` as tier 3 targets. This allows native development for the Apple Vision Pro's visionOS platform.

This work has been tracked in https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/642. There is a corresponding `libc` change https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/3568 that is not required for merge.

Ideally we would be able to incorporate [this change](https://github.com/gimli-rs/object/pull/626) to the `object` crate, but the author has stated that a release will not be cut for quite a while. Therefore, the two locations that would reference the xrOS constant from `object` are hardcoded to their MachO values of 11 and 12, accompanied by TODOs to mark the code as needing change. I am open to suggestions on what to do here to get this checked in.

# Tier 3 Target Policy

At this tier, the Rust project provides no official support for a target, so we place minimal requirements on the introduction of targets.

> A tier 3 target must have a designated developer or developers (the "target maintainers") on record to be CCed when issues arise regarding the target. (The mechanism to track and CC such developers may evolve over time.)

See [src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/apple-visionos.md](e88379034a/src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/apple-visionos.md)

> Targets must use naming consistent with any existing targets; for instance, a target for the same CPU or OS as an existing Rust target should use the same name for that CPU or OS. Targets should normally use the same names and naming conventions as used elsewhere in the broader ecosystem beyond Rust (such as in other toolchains), unless they have a very good reason to diverge. Changing the name of a target can be highly disruptive, especially once the target reaches a higher tier, so getting the name right is important even for a tier 3 target.
> * Target names should not introduce undue confusion or ambiguity unless absolutely necessary to maintain ecosystem compatibility. For example, if the name of the target makes people extremely likely to form incorrect beliefs about what it targets, the name should be changed or augmented to disambiguate it.
> * If possible, use only letters, numbers, dashes and underscores for the name. Periods (.) are known to cause issues in Cargo.

This naming scheme matches `$ARCH-$VENDOR-$OS-$ABI` which is matches the iOS Apple Silicon simulator (`aarch64-apple-ios-sim`) and other Apple targets.

> Tier 3 targets may have unusual requirements to build or use, but must not
  create legal issues or impose onerous legal terms for the Rust project or for
  Rust developers or users.
>  - The target must not introduce license incompatibilities.
>  - Anything added to the Rust repository must be under the standard Rust license (`MIT OR Apache-2.0`).
>  - The target must not cause the Rust tools or libraries built for any other host (even when supporting cross-compilation to the target) to depend on any new dependency less permissive than the Rust licensing policy. This applies whether the dependency is a Rust crate that would require adding new license exceptions (as specified by the `tidy` tool in the rust-lang/rust repository), or whether the dependency is a native library or binary. In other words, the introduction of the target must not cause a user installing or running a version of Rust or the Rust tools to besubject to any new license requirements.
>  - Compiling, linking, and emitting functional binaries, libraries, or other code for the target (whether hosted on the target itself or cross-compiling from another target) must not depend on proprietary (non-FOSS) libraries. Host tools built for the target itself may depend on the ordinary runtime libraries supplied by the platform and commonly used by other applications built for the target, but those libraries must not be required for code generation for the target; cross-compilation to the target must not require such libraries at all. For instance, `rustc` built for the target may depend on a common proprietary C runtime library or console output library, but must not depend on a proprietary code generation library or code optimization library. Rust's license permits such combinations, but the Rust project has no interest in maintaining such combinations within the scope of Rust itself, even at tier 3.
> - "onerous" here is an intentionally subjective term. At a minimum, "onerous" legal/licensing terms include but are *not* limited to: non-disclosure requirements, non-compete requirements, contributor license agreements (CLAs) or equivalent, "non-commercial"/"research-only"/etc terms, requirements conditional on the employer or employment of any particular Rust developers, revocable terms, any requirements that create liability for the Rust project or its developers or users, or any requirements that adversely affect the livelihood or prospects of the Rust project or its developers or users.

This contribution is fully available under the standard Rust license with no additional legal restrictions whatsoever. This PR does not introduce any new dependency less permissive than the Rust license policy.

The new targets do not depend on proprietary libraries.

> Tier 3 targets should attempt to implement as much of the standard libraries as possible and appropriate (core for most targets, alloc for targets that can support dynamic memory allocation, std for targets with an operating system or equivalent layer of system-provided functionality), but may leave some code unimplemented (either unavailable or stubbed out as appropriate), whether because the target makes it impossible to implement or challenging to implement. The authors of pull requests are not obligated to avoid calling any portions of the standard library on the basis of a tier 3 target not implementing those portions.

This new target mirrors the standard library for watchOS and iOS, with minor divergences.

> The target must provide documentation for the Rust community explaining how to build for the target, using cross-compilation if possible. If the target supports running binaries, or running tests (even if they do not pass), the documentation must explain how to run such binaries or tests for the target, using emulation if possible or dedicated hardware if necessary.

Documentation is provided in [src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/apple-visionos.md](e88379034a/src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/apple-visionos.md)

> Neither this policy nor any decisions made regarding targets shall create any binding agreement or estoppel by any party. If any member of an approving Rust team serves as one of the maintainers of a target, or has any legal or employment requirement (explicit or implicit) that might affect their decisions regarding a target, they must recuse themselves from any approval decisions regarding the target's tier status, though they may otherwise participate in discussions.
> * This requirement does not prevent part or all of this policy from being cited in an explicit contract or work agreement (e.g. to implement or maintain support for a target). This requirement exists to ensure that a developer or team responsible for reviewing and approving a target does not face any legal threats or obligations that would prevent them from freely exercising their judgment in such approval, even if such judgment involves subjective matters or goes beyond the letter of these requirements.

> Tier 3 targets must not impose burden on the authors of pull requests, or other developers in the community, to maintain the target. In particular, do not post comments (automated or manual) on a PR that derail or suggest a block on the PR based on a tier 3 target. Do not send automated messages or notifications (via any medium, including via `@)` to a PR author or others involved with a PR regarding a tier 3 target, unless they have opted into such messages.
> * Backlinks such as those generated by the issue/PR tracker when linking to an issue or PR are not considered a violation of this policy, within reason. However, such messages (even on a separate repository) must not generate notifications to anyone involved with a PR who has not requested such notifications.

> Patches adding or updating tier 3 targets must not break any existing tier 2 or tier 1 target, and must not knowingly break another tier 3 target without approval of either the compiler team or the maintainers of the other tier 3 target.
> * In particular, this may come up when working on closely related targets, such as variations of the same architecture with different features. Avoid introducing unconditional uses of features that another variation of the target may not have; use conditional compilation or runtime detection, as appropriate, to let each target run code supported by that target.

I acknowledge these requirements and intend to ensure that they are met.

This target does not touch any existing tier 2 or tier 1 targets and should not break any other targets.
2024-04-05 22:33:25 +02:00
icedrocket
e82f46ab72 Ignore -C strip on MSVC 2024-04-05 08:18:01 +09:00
Daniel Paoliello
9d7090726d MSVC targets should use COFF as their archive format 2024-04-04 14:56:30 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
80d592cc24
Rollup merge of #122964 - joboet:pointer_expose, r=Amanieu
Rename `expose_addr` to `expose_provenance`

`expose_addr` is a bad name, an address is just a number and cannot be exposed. The operation is actually about the provenance of the pointer.

This PR thus changes the name of the method to `expose_provenance` without changing its return type. There is sufficient precedence for returning a useful value from an operation that does something else without the name indicating such, e.g. [`Option::insert`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/option/enum.Option.html#method.insert) and [`MaybeUninit::write`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/mem/union.MaybeUninit.html#method.write).

Returning the address is merely convenient, not a fundamental part of the operation. This is implied by the fact that integers do not have provenance since
```rust
let addr = ptr.addr();
ptr.expose_provenance();
let new = ptr::with_exposed_provenance(addr);
```
must behave exactly like
```rust
let addr = ptr.expose_provenance();
let new = ptr::with_exposed_provenance(addr);
```
as the result of `ptr.expose_provenance()` and `ptr.addr()` is the same integer. Therefore, this PR removes the `#[must_use]` annotation on the function and updates the documentation to reflect the important part.

~~An alternative name would be `expose_provenance`. I'm not at all opposed to that, but it makes a stronger implication than we might want that the provenance of the pointer returned by `ptr::with_exposed_provenance`[^1] is the same as that what was exposed, which is not yet specified as such IIUC. IMHO `expose` does not make that connection.~~

A previous version of this PR suggested `expose` as name, libs-api [decided on](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122964#issuecomment-2033194319) `expose_provenance` to keep the symmetry with `with_exposed_provenance`.

CC `@RalfJung`
r? libs-api

[^1]: I'm using the new name for `from_exposed_addr` suggested by #122935 here.
2024-04-03 22:11:00 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
bc8415b9e6
Rollup merge of #122619 - erikdesjardins:cast, r=compiler-errors
Fix some unsoundness with PassMode::Cast ABI

Fixes #122617

Reviewable commit-by-commit. More info in each commit message.
2024-04-03 22:11:00 +02:00
joboet
989660c3e6
rename expose_addr to expose_provenance 2024-04-03 16:00:38 +02:00
Jacob Pratt
e9ef8e1efa
Rollup merge of #122935 - RalfJung:with-exposed-provenance, r=Amanieu
rename ptr::from_exposed_addr -> ptr::with_exposed_provenance

As discussed on [Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/136281-t-opsem/topic/To.20expose.20or.20not.20to.20expose/near/427757066).

The old name, `from_exposed_addr`, makes little sense as it's not the address that is exposed, it's the provenance. (`ptr.expose_addr()` stays unchanged as we haven't found a better option yet. The intended interpretation is "expose the provenance and return the address".)

The new name nicely matches `ptr::without_provenance`.
2024-04-02 20:37:39 -04:00
bors
88c2f4f5f5 Auto merge of #123385 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-v69vjbn, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #123198 (Add fn const BuildHasherDefault::new)
 - #123226 (De-LLVM the unchecked shifts [MCP#693])
 - #123302 (Make sure to insert `Sized` bound first into clauses list)
 - #123348 (rustdoc: add a couple of regression tests)
 - #123362 (Check that nested statics in thread locals are duplicated per thread.)
 - #123368 (CFI: Support non-general coroutines)
 - #123375 (rustdoc: synthetic auto trait impls: accept unresolved region vars for now)
 - #123378 (Update sysinfo to 0.30.8)

Failed merges:

 - #123349 (Fix capture analysis for by-move closure bodies)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-04-02 21:23:53 +00:00
bors
a77322c16f Auto merge of #118310 - scottmcm:three-way-compare, r=davidtwco
Add `Ord::cmp` for primitives as a `BinOp` in MIR

Update: most of this OP was written months ago.  See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/118310#issuecomment-2016940014 below for where we got to recently that made it ready for review.

---

There are dozens of reasonable ways to implement `Ord::cmp` for integers using comparison, bit-ops, and branches.  Those differences are irrelevant at the rust level, however, so we can make things better by adding `BinOp::Cmp` at the MIR level:

1. Exactly how to implement it is left up to the backends, so LLVM can use whatever pattern its optimizer best recognizes and cranelift can use whichever pattern codegens the fastest.
2. By not inlining those details for every use of `cmp`, we drastically reduce the amount of MIR generated for `derive`d `PartialOrd`, while also making it more amenable to MIR-level optimizations.

Having extremely careful `if` ordering to μoptimize resource usage on broadwell (#63767) is great, but it really feels to me like libcore is the wrong place to put that logic.  Similarly, using subtraction [tricks](https://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html#CopyIntegerSign) (#105840) is arguably even nicer, but depends on the optimizer understanding it (https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/73417) to be practical.  Or maybe [bitor is better than add](https://discourse.llvm.org/t/representing-in-ir/67369/2?u=scottmcm)?  But maybe only on a future version that [has `or disjoint` support](https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-add-or-disjoint-flag/75036?u=scottmcm)?  And just because one of those forms happens to be good for LLVM, there's no guarantee that it'd be the same form that GCC or Cranelift would rather see -- especially given their very different optimizers.  Not to mention that if LLVM gets a spaceship intrinsic -- [which it should](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/Suboptimal.20inlining.20in.20std.20function.20.60binary_search.60/near/404250586) -- we'll need at least a rustc intrinsic to be able to call it.

As for simplifying it in Rust, we now regularly inline `{integer}::partial_cmp`, but it's quite a large amount of IR.  The best way to see that is with 8811efa88b (diff-d134c32d028fbe2bf835fef2df9aca9d13332dd82284ff21ee7ebf717bfa4765R113) -- I added a new pre-codegen MIR test for a simple 3-tuple struct, and this PR change it from 36 locals and 26 basic blocks down to 24 locals and 8 basic blocks.  Even better, as soon as the construct-`Some`-then-match-it-in-same-BB noise is cleaned up, this'll expose the `Cmp == 0` branches clearly in MIR, so that an InstCombine (#105808) can simplify that to just a `BinOp::Eq` and thus fix some of our generated code perf issues.  (Tracking that through today's `if a < b { Less } else if a == b { Equal } else { Greater }` would be *much* harder.)

---

r? `@ghost`
But first I should check that perf is ok with this
~~...and my true nemesis, tidy.~~
2024-04-02 19:21:44 +00:00
Scott McMurray
327aa199dd Improve the build_shift_expr_rhs comment 2024-04-02 10:17:21 -07:00
Scott McMurray
0601f0c66d De-LLVM the unchecked shifts [MCP#693]
This is just one part of the MCP, but it's the one that IMHO removes the most noise from the standard library code.

Seems net simpler this way, since MIR already supported heterogeneous shifts anyway, and thus it's not more work for backends than before.
2024-03-30 03:32:11 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
8d820c0c47
Rollup merge of #123188 - klensy:clippy-me2, r=Nilstrieb
compiler: fix few unused_peekable and needless_pass_by_ref_mut clippy lints

This fixes few instances of `unused_peekable` and `needless_pass_by_ref_mut`. While i expected to fix more warnings, `needless_pass_by_ref_mut` produced too much for one PR, so i stopped here.

Better reviewed commit by commit, as fixes splitted by chunks.
2024-03-29 15:17:11 +01:00
bors
db2f9759f4 Auto merge of #122671 - Mark-Simulacrum:const-panic-msg, r=Nilstrieb
Codegen const panic messages as function calls

This skips emitting extra arguments at every callsite (of which there
can be many). For a librustc_driver build with overflow checks enabled,
this cuts 0.7MB from the resulting shared library (see [perf]).

A sample improvement from nightly:

```
        leaq    str.0(%rip), %rdi
        leaq    .Lalloc_d6aeb8e2aa19de39a7f0e861c998af13(%rip), %rdx
        movl    $25, %esi
        callq   *_ZN4core9panicking5panic17h17cabb89c5bcc999E@GOTPCREL(%rip)
```

to this PR:

```
        leaq    .Lalloc_d6aeb8e2aa19de39a7f0e861c998af13(%rip), %rdi
        callq   *_RNvNtNtCsduqIKoij8JB_4core9panicking11panic_const23panic_const_div_by_zero@GOTPCREL(%rip)
```

[perf]: https://perf.rust-lang.org/compare.html?start=a7e4de13c1785819f4d61da41f6704ed69d5f203&end=64fbb4f0b2d621ff46d559d1e9f5ad89a8d7789b&stat=instructions:u
2024-03-29 00:24:01 +00:00
klensy
5488e492af and few more
warning: this argument is a mutable reference, but not used mutably
  --> compiler\rustc_codegen_ssa\src\back\rpath.rs:80:41
   |
80 | fn get_rpath_relative_to_output(config: &mut RPathConfig<'_>, lib: &Path) -> OsString {
   |                                         ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: consider changing to: `&RPathConfig<'_>`
   |
   = help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#needless_pass_by_ref_mut

warning: this argument is a mutable reference, but not used mutably
  --> compiler\rustc_codegen_ssa\src\back\rpath.rs:76:42
   |
76 | fn get_rpaths_relative_to_output(config: &mut RPathConfig<'_>) -> Vec<OsString> {
   |                                          ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: consider changing to: `&RPathConfig<'_>`
   |
   = help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#needless_pass_by_ref_mut

warning: this argument is a mutable reference, but not used mutably
  --> compiler\rustc_codegen_ssa\src\back\rpath.rs:55:23
   |
55 | fn get_rpaths(config: &mut RPathConfig<'_>) -> Vec<OsString> {
   |                       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: consider changing to: `&RPathConfig<'_>`
   |
   = help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#needless_pass_by_ref_mut

warning: this argument is a mutable reference, but not used mutably
  --> compiler\rustc_codegen_ssa\src\back\rpath.rs:15:32
   |
15 | pub fn get_rpath_flags(config: &mut RPathConfig<'_>) -> Vec<OsString> {
   |                                ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: consider changing to: `&RPathConfig<'_>`
   |
   = warning: changing this function will impact semver compatibility
   = help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#needless_pass_by_ref_mut
2024-03-28 16:26:37 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
ded16b3a97
Rollup merge of #122842 - pacak:explicit_name, r=michaelwoerister
Don't emit an error about failing to produce a file with a specific name if user never gave an explicit name

Fixes #122509

You can ask `rustc` to produce some intermediate results with `--emit foo`, this operation comes in two flavors: `--emit asm` and `--emit asm=foo.s`. First one produces one or more `.s` files without any name guarantees, second one renames it into `foo.s`. Second version only works when compiler produces a single file - for asm files this means using a single compilation unit for example.

In case compilation produced more than a single file `rustc` runs following check to emit some warnings:

```rust
            if crate_output.outputs.contains_key(&output_type) {
                // 2) Multiple codegen units, with `--emit foo=some_name`. We have
                //    no good solution for this case, so warn the user.
                sess.dcx().emit_warn(errors::IgnoringEmitPath { extension });
            } else if crate_output.single_output_file.is_some() {
                // 3) Multiple codegen units, with `-o some_name`. We have
                //    no good solution for this case, so warn the user.
                sess.dcx().emit_warn(errors::IgnoringOutput { extension });
            } else {
                // 4) Multiple codegen units, but no explicit name. We
                //    just leave the `foo.0.x` files in place.
                // (We don't have to do any work in this case.)
            }
```

Comment in the final `else` branch implies that if user didn't ask for a specific name - there's no need to emit warnings. However because of the internal representation of `crate_output.outputs` - this doesn't work as expected: if user asked to produce an asm file without giving it an implicit name it will contain `Some(None)`.

To fix the problem new code actually checks if user gave an explicit name. I think this was an original intentional behavior, at least comments imply that.
2024-03-25 17:05:32 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
19d3827efe
Rollup merge of #122937 - Zalathar:unbox, r=oli-obk
Unbox and unwrap the contents of `StatementKind::Coverage`

The payload of coverage statements was historically a structure with several fields, so it was boxed to avoid bloating `StatementKind`.

Now that the payload is a single relatively-small enum, we can replace `Box<Coverage>` with just `CoverageKind`.

This patch also adds a size assertion for `StatementKind`, to avoid accidentally bloating it in the future.

``@rustbot`` label +A-code-coverage
2024-03-24 17:08:16 +01:00
Scott McMurray
3da115a93b Add+Use mir::BinOp::Cmp 2024-03-23 23:23:41 -07:00
Jubilee
992aa1edb6
Rollup merge of #122879 - maurer:callsite-instances, r=workingjubilee
CFI: Strip auto traits off Virtual calls

We already use `Instance` at declaration sites when available to glean additional information about possible abstractions of the type in use. This does the same when possible at callsites as well.

The primary purpose of this change is to allow CFI to alter how it generates type information for indirect calls through `Virtual` instances.

This is needed for the "separate machinery" version of my approach to the vtable issues (#122573), because we need to respond differently to a `Virtual` call to the same type as a non-virtual call, specifically [stripping auto traits off the receiver's `Self`](54b15b0c36) because there isn't a separate vtable for `Foo` vs `Foo + Send`.

This would also make a more general underlying mechanism that could be used by rcvalle's [proposed drop detection / encoding](edcd1e20a1) if we end up using his approach, as we could condition out on the `def_id` in the CFI code rather than requiring the generating code to explicitly note whether it was calling drop.
2024-03-23 22:59:42 -07:00
Adam Gastineau
61fd74f486 Fixed bad formatting 2024-03-23 16:51:01 -07:00
Adam Gastineau
52960d499e Fixed builds with modified libc 2024-03-23 16:42:06 -07:00
Matthew Maurer
7967915c7b CFI: Use Instance at callsites
We already use `Instance` at declaration sites when available to glean
additional information about possible abstractions of the type in use.
This does the same when possible at callsites as well.

The primary purpose of this change is to allow CFI to alter how it
generates type information for indirect calls through `Virtual`
instances.
2024-03-23 18:30:39 +00:00
Ralf Jung
6177530420 refactor check_{lang,library}_ub: use a single intrinsic, put policy into library 2024-03-23 18:45:05 +01:00
bors
d6eb0f5a09 Auto merge of #122582 - scottmcm:swap-intrinsic-v2, r=oli-obk
Let codegen decide when to `mem::swap` with immediates

Making `libcore` decide this is silly; the backend has so much better information about when it's a good idea.

Thus this PR introduces a new `typed_swap` intrinsic with a fallback body, and replaces that fallback implementation when swapping immediates or scalar pairs.

r? oli-obk

Replaces #111744, and means we'll never need more libs PRs like #111803 or #107140
2024-03-23 13:57:55 +00:00
Ralf Jung
038e7c6c38 rename MIR int2ptr casts to match library name 2024-03-23 13:18:33 +01:00
Zalathar
ab92699f4a Unbox and unwrap the contents of StatementKind::Coverage
The payload of coverage statements was historically a structure with several
fields, so it was boxed to avoid bloating `StatementKind`.

Now that the payload is a single relatively-small enum, we can replace
`Box<Coverage>` with just `CoverageKind`.

This patch also adds a size assertion for `StatementKind`, to avoid
accidentally bloating it in the future.
2024-03-23 22:05:11 +11:00
bors
85e449a323 Auto merge of #122852 - compiler-errors:raw-ptr, r=lcnr
Remove `TypeAndMut` from `ty::RawPtr` variant, make it take `Ty` and `Mutability`

Pretty much mechanically converting `ty::RawPtr(ty::TypeAndMut { ty, mutbl })` to `ty::RawPtr(ty, mutbl)` and its fallout.

r? lcnr

cc rust-lang/types-team#124
2024-03-22 20:34:14 +00:00
bors
b3df0d7e5e Auto merge of #122580 - saethlin:compiler-builtins-can-panic, r=pnkfelix
"Handle" calls to upstream monomorphizations in compiler_builtins

This is pretty cooked, but I think it works.

compiler-builtins has a long-standing problem that at link time, its rlib cannot contain any calls to `core`. And yet, in codegen we _love_ inserting calls to symbols in `core`, generally from various panic entrypoints.

I intend this PR to attack that problem as completely as possible. When we generate a function call, we now check if we are generating a function call from `compiler_builtins` and whether the callee is a function which was not lowered in the current crate, meaning we will have to link to it.

If those conditions are met, actually generating the call is asking for a linker error. So we don't. If the callee diverges, we lower to an abort with the same behavior as `core::intrinsics::abort`. If the callee does not diverge, we produce an error. This means that compiler-builtins can contain panics, but they'll SIGILL instead of panicking. I made non-diverging calls a compile error because I'm guessing that they'd mostly get into compiler-builtins by someone making a mistake while working on the crate, and compile errors are better than linker errors. We could turn such calls into aborts as well if that's preferred.
2024-03-22 16:55:11 +00:00
Michael Goulet
ff0c31e6b9 Programmatically convert some of the pat ctors 2024-03-22 11:13:29 -04:00
Michael Goulet
f0f224a37f Ty::new_ref and Ty::new_ptr stop using TypeAndMut 2024-03-22 11:13:27 -04:00
Michael Goulet
81e7e80990 Eagerly convert some ctors to use their specialized ctors 2024-03-22 11:12:01 -04:00
Michael Baikov
bf12aa49e7 Don't emit an error about failing to produce a file with a specific name
If user never gave an explicit name
2024-03-22 10:59:13 -04:00
Mark Rousskov
00f4daa276 Codegen const panic messages as function calls
This skips emitting extra arguments at every callsite (of which there
can be many). For a librustc_driver build with overflow checks enabled,
this cuts 0.7MB from the resulting binary.
2024-03-22 09:55:50 -04:00
bors
a0569fa8f9 Auto merge of #122830 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-uk2by3f, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #122402 (Make `#[diagnostic::on_unimplemented]` format string parsing more robust)
 - #122644 (pattern analysis: add a custom test harness)
 - #122733 (Strip placeholders from hidden types before remapping generic parameter)
 - #122752 (Interpolated cleanups)
 - #122771 (add some comments to hir::ModuleItems)
 - #122793 (Implement macro-based deref!() syntax for deref patterns)
 - #122810 (Remove `target_override`)
 - #122827 (Remove unnecessary braces from `bug`/`span_bug`)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-03-21 17:53:57 +00:00
Ben Kimock
2f6fb234de Add a test 2024-03-20 23:36:05 -04:00
Nicholas Nethercote
23ee523ea6 Remove CodegenBackend::target_override.
Backend and target selection is a mess: the target can override the
backend (via `Target::default_codegen_backend`), *and* the backend can
override the target (via `CodegenBackend::target_override`).

The code that handles this is ugly. It calls `build_target_config`
twice, once before getting the backend and once again afterward. It also
must check that both overrides aren't triggering at the same time.

This commit removes the latter override. It's used in rust-gpu but
@eddyb said via Zulip that removing it would be ok. This simplifies the
code greatly, and will allow some nice follow-up refactorings.
2024-03-21 11:48:49 +11:00
Douglas Young
6b0a706cb4 Update comment and remove special-case for Wasm targets which is incompatible with response-file changes 2024-03-20 23:38:15 +00:00
Douglas Young
7c98b82930 Use MSVC-style escaping when passing a response/@ file to lld on windows
LLD parses @ files like the command arguments on the platform it's on,
so on windows it needs to follow the MSVC style to work correctly.
Otherwise builds can fail if the linker command gets too long and the
build path contains spaces.
2024-03-20 23:38:15 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
2ad2492b7b
Rollup merge of #122691 - veera-sivarajan:bugfix-121099, r=Amanieu
Fix ICE: `global_asm!()` Don't Panic When Unable to Evaluate Constant

Fixes #121099

A bit of an inelegant fix but given that the error is created only
after call to `const_eval_poly()` and that the calling function
cannot propagate the error anywhere else, the error has to be
explicitly handled inside `mono_item.rs`.

r? `@Amanieu`
2024-03-19 18:03:51 +01:00
Oli Scherer
a8f71cf289 Remove all checks of IntrinsicDef::must_be_overridden except for the actual overrides in codegen 2024-03-19 09:19:58 +00:00
Oli Scherer
3e5c468662 Make ptr_guaranteed_cmp a rustc_intrinsic and favor its body over backends implementing it 2024-03-19 09:17:40 +00:00
Adam Gastineau
4f6f433745 Support for visionOS 2024-03-18 20:45:45 -07:00
bors
21d94a3d2c Auto merge of #122055 - compiler-errors:stabilize-atb, r=oli-obk
Stabilize associated type bounds (RFC 2289)

This PR stabilizes associated type bounds, which were laid out in [RFC 2289]. This gives us a shorthand to express nested type bounds that would otherwise need to be expressed with nested `impl Trait` or broken into several `where` clauses.

### What are we stabilizing?

We're stabilizing the associated item bounds syntax, which allows us to put bounds in associated type position within other bounds, i.e. `T: Trait<Assoc: Bounds...>`. See [RFC 2289] for motivation.

In all position, the associated type bound syntax expands into a set of two (or more) bounds, and never anything else (see "How does this differ[...]" section for more info).

Associated type bounds are stabilized in four positions:
* **`where` clauses (and APIT)** - This is equivalent to breaking up the bound into two (or more) `where` clauses. For example, `where T: Trait<Assoc: Bound>` is equivalent to `where T: Trait, <T as Trait>::Assoc: Bound`.
* **Supertraits** - Similar to above, `trait CopyIterator: Iterator<Item: Copy> {}`. This is almost equivalent to breaking up the bound into two (or more) `where` clauses; however, the bound on the associated item is implied whenever the trait is used. See #112573/#112629.
* **Associated type item bounds** - This allows constraining the *nested* rigid projections that are associated with a trait's associated types. e.g. `trait Trait { type Assoc: Trait2<Assoc2: Copy>; }`.
* **opaque item bounds (RPIT, TAIT)** - This allows constraining associated types that are associated with the opaque without having to *name* the opaque. For example, `impl Iterator<Item: Copy>` defines an iterator whose item is `Copy` without having to actually name that item bound.

The latter three are not expressible in surface Rust (though for associated type item bounds, this will change in #120752, which I don't believe should block this PR), so this does represent a slight expansion of what can be expressed in trait bounds.

### How does this differ from the RFC?

Compared to the RFC, the current implementation *always* desugars associated type bounds to sets of `ty::Clause`s internally. Specifically, it does *not* introduce a position-dependent desugaring as laid out in [RFC 2289], and in particular:
* It does *not* desugar to anonymous associated items in associated type item bounds.
* It does *not* desugar to nested RPITs in RPIT bounds, nor nested TAITs in TAIT bounds.

This position-dependent desugaring laid out in the RFC existed simply to side-step limitations of the trait solver, which have mostly been fixed in #120584. The desugaring laid out in the RFC also added unnecessary complication to the design of the feature, and introduces its own limitations to, for example:
* Conditionally lowering to nested `impl Trait` in certain positions such as RPIT and TAIT means that we inherit the limitations of RPIT/TAIT, namely lack of support for higher-ranked opaque inference. See this code example: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120752#issuecomment-1979412531.
* Introducing anonymous associated types makes traits no longer object safe, since anonymous associated types are not nameable, and all associated types must be named in `dyn` types.

This last point motivates why this PR is *not* stabilizing support for associated type bounds in `dyn` types, e.g, `dyn Assoc<Item: Bound>`. Why? Because `dyn` types need to have *concrete* types for all associated items, this would necessitate a distinct lowering for associated type bounds, which seems both complicated and unnecessary compared to just requiring the user to write `impl Trait` themselves. See #120719.

### Implementation history:

Limited to the significant behavioral changes and fixes and relevant PRs, ping me if I left something out--
* #57428
* #108063
* #110512
* #112629
* #120719
* #120584

Closes #52662

[RFC 2289]: https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/2289-associated-type-bounds.html
2024-03-19 00:04:09 +00:00
Veera
97cc7003ca Fix ICE: global_asm!() Don't Panic When Unable to Evaluate Constant
A bit of an inelegant fix but given that the error is created only
after call to `const_eval_poly()` and that the calling function
cannot propagate the error anywhere else, the error has to be
explicitly handled inside `mono_item.rs`.
2024-03-18 11:35:40 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
87b5679ab0
Rollup merge of #122567 - erikdesjardins:noname, r=oli-obk
Remove fixme about LLVM basic block naming

~This may be a small perf win.~

Originally, this PR implemented the fixme, but it didn't have any measurable perf improvement.

r? ``@ghost``
2024-03-18 16:27:07 +01:00
Oli Scherer
adda9da604 Avoid various uses of Option<Span> in favor of using DUMMY_SP in the few cases that used None 2024-03-18 09:34:08 +00:00
Scott McMurray
7d537106a1 Let codegen decide when to mem::swap with immediates
Making `libcore` decide this is silly; the backend has so much better information about when it's a good idea.

So introduce a new `typed_swap` intrinsic with a fallback body, but replace that implementation for immediates and scalar pairs.
2024-03-17 11:59:18 -07:00
Erik Desjardins
8841315d3e make PassMode::Cast consistently copy between Rust/ABI representation
Previously, we did this slightly incorrectly for return values, and
didn't do it at all for arguments.
2024-03-17 00:39:21 -04:00
Ben Kimock
5f4f2526b8 Handle calls to upstream monomorphizations in compiler_builtins 2024-03-16 15:22:05 -04:00
Erik Desjardins
a7d4258e00 revert changes and just delete the fixme
Avoiding the naming didn't have any meaningful perf impact.
2024-03-16 11:11:53 -04:00
Erik Desjardins
129b5e48f0 avoid naming LLVM basic blocks when fewer_names is true 2024-03-15 15:53:49 -04:00
bors
c5b571310d Auto merge of #121297 - michaelwoerister:set-pdb-alt-path, r=wesleywiser
link.exe: Don't embed full path to PDB file in binary.

This PR makes `rustc` unconditionally pass `/PDBALTPATH:%_PDB%` to MSVC-style linkers, causing the linker to only embed the filename of the PDB in the binary instead of the full path. This will help implement the [trim-paths RFC](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/111540) for `*-msvc` targets.

Passing `/PDBALTPATH:%_PDB%` to the linker is already done by many projects that need reproducible builds and [debugger's should still be able to find the PDB](https://learn.microsoft.com/cpp/build/reference/pdbpath) if it is in the same directory as the binary.

r? `@ghost`

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87825
2024-03-15 14:14:34 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
2b8fc6fd54
Rollup merge of #121207 - chriswailes:z-external-clangrt, r=michaelwoerister
Add `-Z external-clangrt`

This adds the unstable `-Z external-clangrt` flag that will prevent rustc from emitting linker paths for the in-tree LLVM sanitizer runtime library.
2024-03-15 10:14:53 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
722514f466
Rollup merge of #122212 - erikdesjardins:byval-align2, r=wesleywiser
Copy byval argument to alloca if alignment is insufficient

Fixes #122211

"Ignore whitespace" recommended.
2024-03-14 20:00:18 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
68ca795286
Rollup merge of #117118 - bzEq:aix-linker, r=wesleywiser
[AIX] Remove AixLinker's debuginfo() implementation

AIX ld's `-s` option doesn't perfectly fit` debuginfo()`'s semantics and may unexpectedly remove metadata in shared libraries. Remove the implementation of `AixLinker` and suggest user to use `strip` utility instead.
2024-03-14 20:00:17 +01:00
Chris Wailes
f46aceaaf7 Restore correct version of comment and fix logic bug 2024-03-14 11:06:39 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
6a4dd19ade
Rollup merge of #122287 - RalfJung:simd-static-assert, r=pnkfelix
add test ensuring simd codegen checks don't run when a static assertion failed

stdarch relies on this to ensure that SIMD indices are in bounds.

I would love to know why this works, but I can't figure out where codegen decides to not codegen a function if a required-const does not evaluate. `@oli-obk` `@bjorn3` do you have any idea?
2024-03-14 15:44:33 +01:00
Michael Wörister
3c49fe0cbd link.exe: don't embed full path to PDB file in binary. 2024-03-14 09:54:29 +01:00
Chris Wailes
bf2858a05f Split a complex conditional into separate statements 2024-03-13 11:27:06 -07:00
Chris Wailes
2a9d1ed538 Add -Z external-sanitizer-runtime
This adds the unstable `-Z external-sanitizer-runtime` flag that will
prevent rustc from emitting linker paths for the in-tree LLVM sanitizer
runtime library.
2024-03-13 11:27:05 -07:00
bors
5a6c1aa2bc Auto merge of #121421 - saethlin:smarter-mono, r=oli-obk
Avoid lowering code under dead SwitchInt targets

The objective of this PR is to detect and eliminate code which is guarded by an `if false`, even if that `false` is a constant which is not known until monomorphization, or is `intrinsics::debug_assertions()`.

The effect of this is that we generate no LLVM IR the standard library's unsafe preconditions, when they are compiled in a build where they should be immediately optimized out. This mono-time optimization ensures that builds which disable debug assertions do not grow a linkage requirement against `core`, which compiler-builtins currently needs: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/121552

This revives the codegen side of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/91222 as planned in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120848.
2024-03-13 05:07:26 +00:00
bors
e61dcc7a0a Auto merge of #122220 - saethlin:ppc-can-into-atomicptr, r=oli-obk
Only generate a ptrtoint in AtomicPtr codegen when absolutely necessary

This special case was added in this PR: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/77611 in response to this error message:
```
Intrinsic has incorrect argument type!
void ({}*)* `@llvm.ppc.cfence.p0sl_s`
in function rust_oom
LLVM ERROR: Broken function found, compilation aborted!
[RUSTC-TIMING] std test:false 20.161
error: could not compile `std`
```
But when I tried searching for more information about that intrinsic I found this: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/55983 which is a report of someone hitting this same error and a fix was landed in LLVM, 2 years after the above Rust PR.
2024-03-13 00:03:50 +00:00
Ben Kimock
81d630453b Avoid lowering code under dead SwitchInt targets 2024-03-12 19:01:04 -04:00
David Wood
420c58fb11
sess: stabilize relro-level
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david@davidtw.co>
2024-03-12 13:40:40 +00:00
bors
3b85d2c7fc Auto merge of #121644 - oli-obk:unique_static_innards2, r=RalfJung,nnethercote
Ensure nested allocations in statics neither get deduplicated nor duplicated

This PR generates new `DefId`s for nested allocations in static items and feeds all the right queries to make the compiler believe these are regular `static` items. I chose this design, because all other designs are fragile and make the compiler horribly complex for such a niche use case.

At present this wrecks incremental compilation performance *in case nested allocations exist* (because any query creating a `DefId` will be recomputed and never loaded from the cache). This will be resolved later in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115613 . All other statics are unaffected by this change and will not have performance regressions (heh, famous last words)

This PR contains various smaller refactorings that can be pulled out into separate PRs. It is best reviewed commit-by-commit. The last commit is where the actual magic happens.

r? `@RalfJung` on the const interner and engine changes

fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79738
2024-03-12 10:29:15 +00:00
Oli Scherer
9816915954 Change DefKind::Static to a struct variant 2024-03-12 05:53:46 +00:00
Oli Scherer
0ef52380a5 Check whether a static is mutable instead of passing it down 2024-03-12 05:53:46 +00:00
bors
0fa7feaf3f Auto merge of #121282 - saethlin:gep-null-means-no-provenance, r=scottmcm
Lower transmutes from int to pointer type as gep on null

I thought of this while looking at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121242. See that PR's description for why this lowering is preferable.

The UI test that's being changed here crashes without changing the transmutes into casts. Based on that, this PR should not be merged without a crater build-and-test run.
2024-03-12 04:11:37 +00:00
Ben Kimock
2eb9c6d49e Lower transmutes from int to pointer type as gep on null 2024-03-11 18:19:17 -04:00
Jubilee
028e2600c9
Rollup merge of #122320 - erikdesjardins:vtable, r=nikic
Use ptradd for vtable indexing

Extension of #121665.

After this, the only remaining usages of GEP are [this](cd81f5b27e/compiler/rustc_codegen_llvm/src/intrinsic.rs (L909-L920)) kinda janky Emscription EH code, which I'll change in a future PR, and array indexing / pointer offsets, where there isn't yet a canonical `ptradd` form. (Out of curiosity I tried converting the latter to `ptradd(ptr, mul(size, index))`, but that causes codegen regressions right now.)

r? `@nikic`
2024-03-11 09:29:38 -07:00
Jubilee
1279830068
Rollup merge of #121438 - coolreader18:wasm32-panic-unwind, r=cuviper
std support for wasm32 panic=unwind

Tracking issue: #118168

This adds std support for `-Cpanic=unwind` on wasm, and with it slightly more fleshed out rustc support. Now, the stable default is still panic=abort without exception-handling, but if you `-Zbuild-std` with `RUSTFLAGS=-Cpanic=unwind`, you get wasm exception-handling try/catch blocks in the binary:

```rust
#[no_mangle]
pub fn foo_bar(x: bool) -> *mut u8 {
    let s = Box::<str>::from("hello");
    maybe_panic(x);
    Box::into_raw(s).cast()
}

#[inline(never)]
#[no_mangle]
fn maybe_panic(x: bool) {
    if x {
        panic!("AAAAA");
    }
}
```
```wat
;; snip...
(try $label$5
 (do
  (call $maybe_panic
   (local.get $0)
  )
  (br $label$1)
 )
 (catch_all
  (global.set $__stack_pointer
   (local.get $1)
  )
  (call $__rust_dealloc
   (local.get $2)
   (i32.const 5)
   (i32.const 1)
  )
  (rethrow $label$5)
 )
)
;; snip...
```
2024-03-11 09:29:34 -07:00
Jubilee
e1ceadcdfe
Rollup merge of #117458 - kjetilkjeka:embedded-linker, r=petrochenkov
LLVM Bitcode Linker: A self contained linker for nvptx and other targets

This PR introduces a new linker named `llvm-bitcode-linker`. It is a `self-contained` linker that can be used to link programs in `llbc` before optimizing and compiling to native code. It will first be used internally in the Rust compiler to enable tests for the `nvptx64-nvidia-cuda` target as the original `rust-ptx-linker` is deprecated. It will then be provided to users of the `nvptx64-nvidia-cuda` target with the purpose of linking ptx. More targets than nvptx will also be supported eventually.

The PR introduces a new unstable `LinkerFlavor` for the compiler. The compiler will also not be shipped with rustc but most likely instead be shipped in it's own unstable component (a follow up PR will be opened for this). This means that merging this PR should not add any stability guarantees.

When more details of `self-contained` is implemented it will only be possible to use the linker when `-Clink-self-contained=+linker` is passed.

<details>
  <summary>Original Description</summary>

**When this PR was created it was focused a bit differently. The original text is preserved here in case there's some interests in it**

I have experimenting with approaches to replace the ptx-linker and enable the nvptx target tests again. I think it's time to get some feedback on the approach.

### The problem
The only useful linker for the nvptx target is [this crate](https://github.com/denzp/rust-ptx-linker). Since this linker performs linking on llvm bitcode it needs to track the llvm version of rustc and use the same format. It has not been maintained for 3+ years and must be considered abandoned. Over the years rust have upgraded LLVM while the linker has been left to bitrot. It is no longer in a usable state.

Due to the difficulty of keeping the ptx-linker up to date outside of tree the nvptx tests was [disabled a long time ago](f8f9a2869c). It was [previously discussed](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/96842#issuecomment-1146470177) if adding the ptx-linker to the rust repo would be a possibility. My efforts in doing this stopped at getting an answered if the license would prohibit it from inclusion in the [Rust repo](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/96842#issuecomment-1148397554). I therefore concluded that a re-write would be necessary.

### The possible solution presented here
The llvm tools know perfectly well how to link and optimize llvm bitcode. Each of them only perform a single task, and are therefore a bit cumbersome to call with the current linker approach rustc takes.

This PR adds a simple tool (current name `embedded-linker`) which can link self contained (often embedded) programs in llvm bitcode before compiling to the target format. Optimization will also be performed if lto is enabled. The rust compiler will make a single invocation to this tool, while the tool will orchestrate the many calls to the llvm tools.

### The questions
 - Is having control over the nvptx linking and therefore also tests worth it to add such tool? or should the tool live outside the rust repo?
 - Is the approach of calling llvm tools acceptable? Or would we want to keep the ptx-linker approach of using the llvm library? The tools seems to provide more simplicity and stability, but more intermediate files are being written. Perhaps there also are some performance penalty for the calling tools approach.
 - What is the process for adding such tool? MCP?
 - Does adding `llvm-link` to the llvm-tool component require any process?
 - Does it require some sort of FCP to remove ptx-linker as the default linker for ptx? Or is it sufficient that using the upstream ptx-linker is broken in its current state. it is possible to use a somewhat patched version of ptx-linker.
</details>
2024-03-11 09:29:32 -07:00
Jubilee
88d387b263
Rollup merge of #116791 - WaffleLapkin:unparallel-backends, r=oli-obk
Allow codegen backends to opt-out of parallel codegen

This makes it a bit easier to write cursed codegen backends.
2024-03-11 09:29:31 -07:00
Erik Desjardins
207fe38630 copy byval argument to alloca if alignment is insufficient 2024-03-11 09:38:54 -04:00
Kjetil Kjeka
43f2055af5 LLVM Bitcode Linker: Add as a linker known to the compiler 2024-03-11 13:35:35 +01:00
Erik Desjardins
a7cd803d02 use ptradd for vtable indexing
Like field offsets, these are always constant.
2024-03-10 22:47:30 -04:00
bors
cd81f5b27e Auto merge of #122132 - nnethercote:diag-renaming3, r=nnethercote
Diagnostic renaming 3

A sequel to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121780.

r? `@davidtwco`
2024-03-11 00:34:44 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
7a294e998b Rename IntoDiagnostic as Diagnostic.
To match `derive(Diagnostic)`.

Also rename `into_diagnostic` as `into_diag`.
2024-03-11 09:15:09 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
a09b1d33a7 Rename IntoDiagnosticArg as IntoDiagArg.
Also rename `into_diagnostic_arg` as `into_diag_arg`, and
`NotIntoDiagnosticArg` as `NotInotDiagArg`.
2024-03-11 09:12:19 +11:00
Ralf Jung
d765fb8faf add comments explaining where post-mono const eval errors abort compilation 2024-03-10 14:39:26 +01:00
Ralf Jung
aa9145e6ea use Instance::expect_resolve() instead of unwraping Instance::resolve() 2024-03-10 11:49:33 +01:00
bors
768408af12 Auto merge of #121662 - saethlin:precondition-unification, r=RalfJung
Distinguish between library and lang UB in assert_unsafe_precondition

As described in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121583#issuecomment-1963168186, `assert_unsafe_precondition` now explicitly distinguishes between language UB (conditions we explicitly optimize on) and library UB (things we document you shouldn't do, and maybe some library internals assume you don't do).

`debug_assert_nounwind` was originally added to avoid the "only at runtime" aspect of `assert_unsafe_precondition`. Since then the difference between the macros has gotten muddied. This totally revamps the situation.

Now _all_ preconditions shall be checked with `assert_unsafe_precondition`. If you have a precondition that's only checkable at runtime, do a `const_eval_select` hack, as done in this PR.

r? RalfJung
2024-03-10 01:23:54 +00:00
Guillaume Boisseau
bc3bc2ba6b
Rollup merge of #121584 - klensy:itertools-up, r=Mark-Simulacrum
bump itertools to 0.12

still depend on 0.11 (temporary dupes version):
* <del>clippy</del>, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/12346
* rustfmt, sigh, https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt/pull/6093

https://github.com/rust-itertools/itertools/blob/v0.12.1/CHANGELOG.md

removed unused `derive_more` dep from `rustc_middle`
2024-03-09 21:40:08 +01:00
Ben Kimock
aa6cfb2669 Sink ptrtoint for RMW ops on pointers to cg_llvm 2024-03-09 10:08:53 -05:00
Ben Kimock
5a93a59fd5 Distinguish between library and lang UB in assert_unsafe_precondition 2024-03-08 18:53:58 -05:00
Michael Goulet
c63f3feb0f Stabilize associated type bounds 2024-03-08 20:56:25 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
2b6ae95d3f
Rollup merge of #122164 - beetrees:uefi-argv-align, r=workingjubilee
Fix misaligned loads when loading UEFI arg pointers

Currently, the two UEFI argument pointers are stored in an `alloca` of alignment 1, a pointer to which is then passed as `argv`. However, [the library code](9c3ad802d9/library/std/src/sys/pal/uefi/mod.rs (L60-L61)) treats `argv` as a pointer to an array of pointers and dereferences it as such, meaning that it presumes the `alloca` is aligned to at least the alignment of a pointer. This PR fixes this mismatch by aligning the `alloca` to the alignment of a pointer.

This PR also changed the `gep` to use the new `inbounds_ptradd` method.
2024-03-08 21:02:01 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
9fd60c5887
Rollup merge of #122179 - heiher:fix-typo, r=lcnr
rustc: Fix typo
2024-03-08 13:22:28 +01:00
klensy
52501c2a75 bump itertools to 0.12
still depend on 0.11:
* clippy
* rustfmt, sigh
2024-03-08 12:34:05 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
d774fbea7c
Rollup merge of #119365 - nbdd0121:asm-goto, r=Amanieu
Add asm goto support to `asm!`

Tracking issue: #119364

This PR implements asm-goto support, using the syntax described in "future possibilities" section of [RFC2873](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/2873-inline-asm.html#asm-goto).

Currently I have only implemented the `label` part, not the `fallthrough` part (i.e. fallthrough is implicit). This doesn't reduce the expressive though, since you can use label-break to get arbitrary control flow or simply set a value and rely on jump threading optimisation to get the desired control flow. I can add that later if deemed necessary.

r? ``@Amanieu``
cc ``@ojeda``
2024-03-08 08:19:17 +01:00
WANG Rui
c2f13db2b5 rustc: Fix typo 2024-03-08 14:25:11 +08:00
bors
79d246112d Auto merge of #122048 - erikdesjardins:inbounds, r=oli-obk
Use GEP inbounds for ZST and DST field offsets

ZST field offsets have been non-`inbounds` since I made [this old layout change](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/73453/files#diff-160634de1c336f2cf325ff95b312777326f1ab29fec9b9b21d5ee9aae215ecf5). Before that, they would have been `inbounds` due to using `struct_gep`. Using `inbounds` for ZSTs likely doesn't matter for performance, but I'd like to remove the special case.

DST field offsets have been non-`inbounds` since the alignment-aware DST field offset computation was first [implemented](a2557d472e (diff-04fd352da30ca186fe0bb71cc81a503d1eb8a02ca17a3769e1b95981cd20964aR1188)) in 1.6 (back then `GEPi()` would be used for `inbounds`), but I don't think there was any reason for it.

Split out from #121577 / #121665.

r? `@oli-obk`

cc `@RalfJung` -- is there some weird situation where field offsets can't be `inbounds`?

Note that it's fine for `inbounds` offsets to be one-past-the-end, so it's okay even if there's a ZST as the last field in the layout:

> The base pointer has an in bounds address of an allocated object, which means that it points into an allocated object, or to its end. [(link)](https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#getelementptr-instruction)

For https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/93, zero-offset GEP is (now) always `inbounds`:

> Note that getelementptr with all-zero indices is always considered to be inbounds, even if the base pointer does not point to an allocated object. [(link)](https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#getelementptr-instruction)
2024-03-08 02:01:51 +00:00
beetrees
4bef0cca70
Fix misaligned loads when loading UEFI arg pointers 2024-03-08 00:54:48 +00:00
Daniel Paoliello
a6a556c2a9 Add arm64ec-pc-windows-msvc target
Introduces the `arm64ec-pc-windows-msvc` target for building Arm64EC ("Emulation Compatible") binaries for Windows.

For more information about Arm64EC see <https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/arm/arm64ec>.

Tier 3 policy:

> A tier 3 target must have a designated developer or developers (the "target maintainers") on record to be CCed when issues arise regarding the target. (The mechanism to track and CC such developers may evolve over time.)

I will be the maintainer for this target.

> Targets must use naming consistent with any existing targets; for instance, a target for the same CPU or OS as an existing Rust target should use the same name for that CPU or OS. Targets should normally use the same names and naming conventions as used elsewhere in the broader ecosystem beyond Rust (such as in other toolchains), unless they have a very good reason to diverge. Changing the name of a target can be highly disruptive, especially once the target reaches a higher tier, so getting the name right is important even for a tier 3 target.

Target uses the `arm64ec` architecture to match LLVM and MSVC, and the `-pc-windows-msvc` suffix to indicate that it targets Windows via the MSVC environment.

> Target names should not introduce undue confusion or ambiguity unless absolutely necessary to maintain ecosystem compatibility. For example, if the name of the target makes people extremely likely to form incorrect beliefs about what it targets, the name should be changed or augmented to disambiguate it.

Target name exactly specifies the type of code that will be produced.

> If possible, use only letters, numbers, dashes and underscores for the name. Periods (.) are known to cause issues in Cargo.

Done.

> Tier 3 targets may have unusual requirements to build or use, but must not create legal issues or impose onerous legal terms for the Rust project or for Rust developers or users.

> The target must not introduce license incompatibilities.

Uses the same dependencies, requirements and licensing as the other `*-pc-windows-msvc` targets.

> Anything added to the Rust repository must be under the standard Rust license (MIT OR Apache-2.0).

Understood.

> The target must not cause the Rust tools or libraries built for any other host (even when supporting cross-compilation to the target) to depend on any new dependency less permissive than the Rust licensing policy. This applies whether the dependency is a Rust crate that would require adding new license exceptions (as specified by the tidy tool in the rust-lang/rust repository), or whether the dependency is a native library or binary. In other words, the introduction of the target must not cause a user installing or running a version of Rust or the Rust tools to be subject to any new license requirements.

> Compiling, linking, and emitting functional binaries, libraries, or other code for the target (whether hosted on the target itself or cross-compiling from another target) must not depend on proprietary (non-FOSS) libraries. Host tools built for the target itself may depend on the ordinary runtime libraries supplied by the platform and commonly used by other applications built for the target, but those libraries must not be required for code generation for the target; cross-compilation to the target must not require such libraries at all. For instance, rustc built for the target may depend on a common proprietary C runtime library or console output library, but must not depend on a proprietary code generation library or code optimization library. Rust's license permits such combinations, but the Rust project has no interest in maintaining such combinations within the scope of Rust itself, even at tier 3.

> "onerous" here is an intentionally subjective term. At a minimum, "onerous" legal/licensing terms include but are not limited to: non-disclosure requirements, non-compete requirements, contributor license agreements (CLAs) or equivalent, "non-commercial"/"research-only"/etc terms, requirements conditional on the employer or employment of any particular Rust developers, revocable terms, any requirements that create liability for the Rust project or its developers or users, or any requirements that adversely affect the livelihood or prospects of the Rust project or its developers or users.

Uses the same dependencies, requirements and licensing as the other `*-pc-windows-msvc` targets.

> Neither this policy nor any decisions made regarding targets shall create any binding agreement or estoppel by any party. If any member of an approving Rust team serves as one of the maintainers of a target, or has any legal or employment requirement (explicit or implicit) that might affect their decisions regarding a target, they must recuse themselves from any approval decisions regarding the target's tier status, though they may otherwise participate in discussions.

> This requirement does not prevent part or all of this policy from being cited in an explicit contract or work agreement (e.g. to implement or maintain support for a target). This requirement exists to ensure that a developer or team responsible for reviewing and approving a target does not face any legal threats or obligations that would prevent them from freely exercising their judgment in such approval, even if such judgment involves subjective matters or goes beyond the letter of these requirements.

Understood, I am not a member of the Rust team.

> Tier 3 targets should attempt to implement as much of the standard libraries as possible and appropriate (core for most targets, alloc for targets that can support dynamic memory allocation, std for targets with an operating system or equivalent layer of system-provided functionality), but may leave some code unimplemented (either unavailable or stubbed out as appropriate), whether because the target makes it impossible to implement or challenging to implement. The authors of pull requests are not obligated to avoid calling any portions of the standard library on the basis of a tier 3 target not implementing those portions.

Both `core` and `alloc` are supported.

Support for `std` dependends on making changes to the standard library, `stdarch` and `backtrace` which cannot be done yet as the bootstrapping compiler raises a warning ("unexpected `cfg` condition value") for `target_arch = "arm64ec"`.

> The target must provide documentation for the Rust community explaining how to build for the target, using cross-compilation if possible. If the target supports running binaries, or running tests (even if they do not pass), the documentation must explain how to run such binaries or tests for the target, using emulation if possible or dedicated hardware if necessary.

Documentation is provided in src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/arm64ec-pc-windows-msvc.md

> Tier 3 targets must not impose burden on the authors of pull requests, or other developers in the community, to maintain the target. In particular, do not post comments (automated or manual) on a PR that derail or suggest a block on the PR based on a tier 3 target. Do not send automated messages or notifications (via any medium, including via @) to a PR author or others involved with a PR regarding a tier 3 target, unless they have opted into such messages.

> Backlinks such as those generated by the issue/PR tracker when linking to an issue or PR are not considered a violation of this policy, within reason. However, such messages (even on a separate repository) must not generate notifications to anyone involved with a PR who has not requested such notifications.

> Patches adding or updating tier 3 targets must not break any existing tier 2 or tier 1 target, and must not knowingly break another tier 3 target without approval of either the compiler team or the maintainers of the other tier 3 target.

> In particular, this may come up when working on closely related targets, such as variations of the same architecture with different features. Avoid introducing unconditional uses of features that another variation of the target may not have; use conditional compilation or runtime detection, as appropriate, to let each target run code supported by that target.

Understood.
2024-03-06 17:49:37 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
1a85eb0187
Rollup merge of #122051 - erikdesjardins:cleanup, r=nikic
cleanup: remove zero-offset GEP

This GEP would've been used to change the pointer type in the past, but after opaque pointers it's a no-op. I missed removing this in #105545.

Split out from #121577.
2024-03-06 22:02:48 +01:00
Erik Desjardins
efe5a40f2b remove all-zero GEP
This always produces zero offset, regardless of what the struct layout
is.

Originally, this may have been necessary in order to change the pointer type,
but with opaque pointers, it is no longer necessary.
2024-03-05 19:11:11 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
4f73d2a53c
Rollup merge of #122028 - oli-obk:drop_in_place_leftovers, r=compiler-errors
Remove some dead code

drop_in_place has been a lang item, not an intrinsic, for forever
2024-03-05 22:10:03 +01:00
Oli Scherer
5a16aebe9d Remove some dead code
drop_in_place has been a lang item, not an intrinsic, for forever
2024-03-05 16:01:15 +00:00
Ralf Jung
f391c0793b only set noalias on Box with the global allocator 2024-03-05 15:03:33 +01:00
Kai Luo
b1c390989f Adjust wording 2024-03-05 15:42:31 +08:00
Kai Luo
e74e6e767d Rebased 2024-03-05 15:37:37 +08:00
Kai Luo
aa692a577e [AIX] Remove AixLinker's debuginfo() implementation
`-s` option doesn't perfectly fit into debuginfo()'s semantics and may unexpectedly
remove metadata in shared libraries. Remove the implementation and suggest user to
use `strip` utility instead.
2024-03-05 15:10:12 +08:00
bors
1547c076bf Auto merge of #121780 - nnethercote:diag-renaming2, r=davidtwco
Diagnostic renaming 2

A sequel to #121489.

r? `@davidtwco`
2024-03-05 02:58:34 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
f16a8d0390 Fix some out-of-date comments. 2024-03-05 12:14:49 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
18715c98c6 Rename DiagnosticMessage as DiagMessage. 2024-03-05 12:14:49 +11:00
bors
2eeff462b7 Auto merge of #120675 - oli-obk:intrinsics3.0, r=pnkfelix
Add a scheme for moving away from `extern "rust-intrinsic"` entirely

All `rust-intrinsic`s can become free functions now, either with a fallback body, or with a dummy body and an attribute, requiring backends to actually implement the intrinsic.

This PR demonstrates the dummy-body scheme with the `vtable_size` intrinsic.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/63585

follow-up to #120500

MCP at https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/720
2024-03-05 00:13:01 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
13b971209a
Rollup merge of #121969 - nnethercote:ParseSess-cleanups, r=wesleywiser
`ParseSess` cleanups

The main change here is to rename all `ParseSess` values as `psess`. Plus a few other small cleanups.

r? `@wesleywiser`
2024-03-04 22:16:33 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
80d2bdb619 Rename all ParseSess variables/fields/lifetimes as psess.
Existing names for values of this type are `sess`, `parse_sess`,
`parse_session`, and `ps`. `sess` is particularly annoying because
that's also used for `Session` values, which are often co-located, and
it can be difficult to know which type a value named `sess` refers to.
(That annoyance is the main motivation for this change.) `psess` is nice
and short, which is good for a name used this much.

The commit also renames some `parse_sess_created` values as
`psess_created`.
2024-03-05 08:11:45 +11:00
Oli Scherer
bf5fc6e5d7 Remove some depgraph edges on the HIR by invoking the intrinsic query instead of checking the attribute 2024-03-04 16:13:51 +00:00
Oli Scherer
b3dcbc2931 Avoid some boolean argument footguns 2024-03-04 16:13:51 +00:00
Oli Scherer
1e57df1969 Add a scheme for moving away from extern "rust-intrinsic" entirely 2024-03-04 16:13:50 +00:00
Oli Scherer
f2612daf58 Return a struct from query intrinsic to be able to add another field in the next commit 2024-03-04 16:13:50 +00:00
Erik Desjardins
8ebd307d2a use GEP inbounds for ZST and DST field offsets
For the former, it's fine for `inbounds` offsets to be one-past-the-end,
so it's okay even if the ZST is the last field in the layout:

> The base pointer has an in bounds address of an allocated object,
> which means that it points into an allocated object, or to its end.

https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#getelementptr-instruction

For the latter, even DST fields must always be inside the layout
(or to its end for ZSTs), so using inbounds is also fine there.
2024-03-04 09:32:33 -05:00
bors
f7cb53e54b Auto merge of #121900 - chenyukang:yukang-fix-121425-repr-pack-error, r=compiler-errors
Fix misleading message in struct repr alignment and packed

Fixes #121425

By the way, fix the spans for the argument in the second commit.
2024-03-04 05:32:26 +00:00
bors
70aa0b86c0 Auto merge of #121665 - erikdesjardins:ptradd, r=nikic
Always generate GEP i8 / ptradd for struct offsets

This implements #98615, and goes a bit further to remove `struct_gep` entirely.

Upstream LLVM is in the beginning stages of [migrating to `ptradd`](https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-replacing-getelementptr-with-ptradd/68699). LLVM 19 will [canonicalize](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/68882) all constant-offset GEPs to i8, which has roughly the same effect as this change.

Fixes #121719.

Split out from #121577.

r? `@nikic`
2024-03-03 22:21:53 +00:00
yukang
5a5c6dfb33 Fix misleading message when using a named constant as a struct alignment/pack 2024-03-02 23:15:39 +08:00
Ramon de C Valle
dee4e02102 Add initial support for DataFlowSanitizer
Adds initial support for DataFlowSanitizer to the Rust compiler. It
currently supports `-Zsanitizer-dataflow-abilist`. Additional options
for it can be passed to LLVM command line argument processor via LLVM
arguments using `llvm-args` codegen option (e.g.,
`-Cllvm-args=-dfsan-combine-pointer-labels-on-load=false`).
2024-03-01 18:50:40 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
4f32f78fc6
Rollup merge of #121730 - ecnelises:aix_pgo, r=wesleywiser
Add profiling support to AIX

AIX ld needs special option to merge objects with profiling. Also, profiler_builtins should include builtins for AIX from compiler-rt.
2024-03-01 22:38:48 +01:00
bors
6cbf0926d5 Auto merge of #121728 - tgross35:f16-f128-step1-ty-updates, r=compiler-errors
Add stubs in IR and ABI for `f16` and `f128`

This is the very first step toward the changes in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/114607 and the [`f16` and `f128` RFC](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3453-f16-and-f128.html). It adds the types to `rustc_type_ir::FloatTy` and `rustc_abi::Primitive`, and just propagates those out as `unimplemented!` stubs where necessary.

These types do not parse yet so there is no feature gate, and it should be okay to use `unimplemented!`.

The next steps will probably be AST support with parsing and the feature gate.

r? `@compiler-errors`
cc `@Nilstrieb` suggested breaking the PR up in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120645#issuecomment-1925900572
2024-03-01 03:36:11 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
509972089b
Rollup merge of #121464 - alexcrichton:fix-wasm64, r=wesleywiser
rustc: Fix wasm64 metadata object files

It looks like LLD will detect object files being either 32 or 64-bit depending on any memory present. LLD will additionally reject 32-bit objects during a 64-bit link. Previously metadata objects did not have any memories in them which led LLD to conclude they were 32-bit objects which broke 64-bit targets for wasm.

This commit fixes this by ensuring that for 64-bit targets there's a memory object present to get LLD to detect it's a 64-bit target. Additionally this commit moves away from a hand-crafted wasm encoder to the `wasm-encoder` crate on crates.io as the complexity grows for the generated object file.

Closes #121460
2024-02-29 20:50:03 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
880c1c585f Rename DiagCtxt::with_emitter as DiagCtxt::new.
Because it's now the only constructor.
2024-02-29 16:30:12 +11:00
Trevor Gross
e3f63d9375 Add f16 and f128 to rustc_type_ir::FloatTy and rustc_abi::Primitive
Make changes necessary to support these types in the compiler.
2024-02-28 12:58:32 -05:00
Qiu Chaofan
9d71386252 Add profiling support to AIX
AIX ld needs special option to merge objects with profiling. Also,
profiler_builtins should include builtins for AIX from compiler-rt.
2024-02-28 17:41:12 +08:00
Erik Desjardins
c1017d4828 use non-inbounds GEP for ZSTs, add fixmes 2024-02-27 23:00:54 -05:00
Nicholas Nethercote
8199632aa8 Rename DiagnosticArg{,Map,Name,Value} as DiagArg{,Map,Name,Value}. 2024-02-28 08:55:37 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
899cb40809 Rename DiagnosticBuilder as Diag.
Much better!

Note that this involves renaming (and updating the value of)
`DIAGNOSTIC_BUILDER` in clippy.
2024-02-28 08:55:35 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4e1f9bd528 Rename SubDiagnostic as Subdiag.
Note the change of the `D` to `d`, to match all the other names that
have `Subdiag` in them, such as `SubdiagnosticMessage` and
`derive(Subdiagnostic)`.
2024-02-28 08:33:25 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
6588f5b749 Rename Diagnostic as DiagInner.
I started by changing it to `DiagData`, but that didn't feel right.
`DiagInner` felt much better.
2024-02-28 08:33:25 +11:00
Erik Desjardins
4724cd4dc4 introduce and use ptradd/inbounds_ptradd instead of gep 2024-02-26 22:45:53 -05:00
Erik Desjardins
beed25be9a remove struct_gep, use manual layout calculations for va_arg 2024-02-26 22:28:09 -05:00
Erik Desjardins
123015e722 always use gep inbounds i8 (ptradd) for field offsets 2024-02-26 22:28:09 -05:00
bors
91cae1dcdc Auto merge of #121635 - 823984418:remove_archive_builder_lifetime_a, r=nnethercote
Remove useless lifetime of ArchiveBuilder

`trait ArchiveBuilder<'a>` has a seemingly useless lifetime a, so I remove it. If this is intentional, please reject this PR.

```rust
pub trait ArchiveBuilder<'a> {
    fn add_file(&mut self, path: &Path);

    fn add_archive(
        &mut self,
        archive: &Path,
        skip: Box<dyn FnMut(&str) -> bool + 'static>,
    ) -> io::Result<()>;

    fn build(self: Box<Self>, output: &Path) -> bool;
}
```
2024-02-27 03:27:48 +00:00
823984418
0c082b7fa9 remove useless lifetime of ArchiveBuilder 2024-02-26 22:37:04 +08:00
bors
89d8e3116c Auto merge of #120650 - clubby789:switchint-const, r=saethlin
Use `br` instead of a conditional when switching on a constant boolean

r? `@ghost`
2024-02-25 01:27:44 +00:00
Gary Guo
626a5f5892 Add assertions and clarify asm-goto with noreturn 2024-02-24 19:49:16 +00:00
Gary Guo
5e4fd6bc23 Implement asm goto for LLVM and GCC backend 2024-02-24 18:50:09 +00:00
Gary Guo
3b1dd1bfa9 Implement asm goto in MIR and MIR lowering 2024-02-24 18:50:09 +00:00
Gary Guo
b044aaa905 Change InlineAsm to allow multiple targets instead 2024-02-24 18:50:09 +00:00
Gary Guo
93fa8579c6 Add asm label support to AST and HIR 2024-02-24 18:49:39 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
b87a713b9d
Rollup merge of #121522 - RalfJung:insert-extract-boundscheck, r=oli-obk
check that simd_insert/extract indices are in-bounds

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/77477
r? `@oli-obk`
2024-02-24 15:35:14 +01:00
Alex Crichton
646e8e7291 rustc: Fix wasm64 metadata object files
It looks like LLD will detect object files being either 32 or 64-bit
depending on any memory present. LLD will additionally reject 32-bit
objects during a 64-bit link. Previously metadata objects did not have
any memories in them which led LLD to conclude they were 32-bit objects
which broke 64-bit targets for wasm.

This commit fixes this by ensuring that for 64-bit targets there's a
memory object present to get LLD to detect it's a 64-bit target.
Additionally this commit moves away from a hand-crafted wasm encoder to
the `wasm-encoder` crate on crates.io as the complexity grows for the
generated object file.

Closes #121460
2024-02-23 13:13:01 -08:00
Ralf Jung
8e0dd993d6 check that simd_insert/extract indices are in-bounds 2024-02-23 19:43:59 +01:00
clubby789
7159aed51e Use br instead of conditional when branching on constant 2024-02-23 10:52:55 +00:00
cui fliter
824d75c22e remove repetitive words
Signed-off-by: cui fliter <imcusg@gmail.com>
2024-02-23 18:26:01 +08:00
Noa
861c7e74c8
Fix llvm hang 2024-02-22 16:45:28 -06:00
bors
52dba5ffe7 Auto merge of #121225 - RalfJung:simd-extract-insert-const-idx, r=oli-obk,Amanieu
require simd_insert, simd_extract indices to be constants

As discussed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/77477 (see in particular [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/77477#issuecomment-703149102)). This PR doesn't touch codegen yet -- the first step is to ensure that the indices are always constants; the second step is to then make use of this fact in backends.

Blocked on https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1530 propagating to the rustc repo.
2024-02-22 09:59:41 +00:00
bors
f70f19fef4 Auto merge of #121129 - nnethercote:codegen-Diags, r=estebank
Improve codegen diagnostic handling

Clarify the workings of the temporary `Diagnostic` type used to send diagnostics from codegen threads to the main thread.

r? `@estebank`
2024-02-22 08:01:37 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
6efffd723b Remove SharedEmitterMessage::AbortIfErrors.
It's always paired wth `SharedEmitterMessage::Diagnostic`, so the two
can be merged.
2024-02-22 12:51:11 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
ad5d7f43c9 Overhaul rustc_codegen_ssa:🔙:write::Diagnostic.
- Make it more closely match `rustc_errors::Diagnostic`, by making the
  field names match, and adding `children`, which requires adding
  `rustc_codegen_ssa:🔙:write::Subdiagnostic`.
- Check that we aren't missing important info when converting
  diagnostics.
- Add better comments.
- Tweak `rustc_errors::Diagnostic::replace_args` so that we don't need
  to do any cloning when converting diagnostics.
2024-02-22 12:51:11 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
b38ed1afa6 Overhaul Diagnostic args.
First, introduce a typedef `DiagnosticArgMap`.

Second, make the `args` field public, and remove the `args` getter and
`replace_args` setter. These were necessary previously because the getter
had a `#[allow(rustc::potential_query_instability)]` attribute, but that
was removed in #120931 when the args were changed from `FxHashMap` to
`FxIndexMap`. (All the other `Diagnostic` fields are public.)
2024-02-22 12:51:05 +11:00
Mads Marquart
f1548ec94d Remove redundant -Wl,-syslibroot
Clang already passes this when invoking the linker:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-17.0.6/clang/lib/Driver/ToolChains/Darwin.cpp#L439-L442
2024-02-22 02:32:43 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
8ab24c9fc0
Rollup merge of #121399 - psumbera:solaris-strip-debug, r=petrochenkov
Solaris linker does not support --strip-debug

Fixes #121381
2024-02-21 22:49:00 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4da67fff61 Replace unnecessary abort_if_errors.
Replace `abort_if_errors` calls that are certain to abort -- because
we emit an error immediately beforehand -- with `FatalErro.raise()`.
2024-02-22 08:03:47 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
c2512a130f Inline and remove Session::compile_status.
Because it's now simple enough that it doesn't provide much benefit.
2024-02-22 08:03:47 +11:00
Petr Sumbera
a17211b05c Solaris linker does not support --strip-debug
Fixes #121381
2024-02-21 16:49:01 +01:00
bors
bb8b11e67d Auto merge of #120718 - saethlin:reasonable-fast-math, r=nnethercote
Add "algebraic" fast-math intrinsics, based on fast-math ops that cannot return poison

Setting all of LLVM's fast-math flags makes our fast-math intrinsics very dangerous, because some inputs are UB. This set of flags permits common algebraic transformations, but according to the [LangRef](https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#fastmath), only the flags `nnan` (no nans) and `ninf` (no infs) can produce poison.

And this uses the algebraic float ops to fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120720

cc `@orlp`
2024-02-21 09:43:33 +00:00
Ben Kimock
cc73b71e8e Add "algebraic" versions of the fast-math intrinsics 2024-02-20 12:39:03 -05:00
Alex Crichton
6181f3a566 wasm: Store rlib metadata in wasm object files
The goal of this commit is to remove warnings using LLVM tip-of-tree
`wasm-ld`. In llvm/llvm-project#78658 the `wasm-ld` LLD driver no longer
looks at archive indices and instead looks at all the objects in
archives. Previously `lib.rmeta` files were simply raw rustc metadata
bytes, not wasm objects, meaning that `wasm-ld` would emit a warning
indicating so.

WebAssembly targets previously passed `--fatal-warnings` to `wasm-ld` by
default which meant that if Rust were to update to LLVM 18 then all wasm
targets would not work. This immediate blocker was resolved in
rust-lang/rust#120278 which removed `--fatal-warnings` which enabled a
theoretical update to LLVM 18 for wasm targets. This current state is
ok-enough for now because rustc squashes all linker output by default if
it doesn't fail. This means, for example, that rustc squashes all the
linker warnings coming out of `wasm-ld` about `lib.rmeta` files with
LLVM 18. This again isn't a pressing issue because the information is
all hidden, but it runs the risk of being annoying if another linker
error were to happen and then the output would have all these unrelated
warnings that couldn't be fixed.

Thus, this PR comes into the picture. The goal of this PR is to resolve
these warnings by using the WebAssembly object file format on wasm
targets instead of using raw rustc metadata. When I first implemented
the rlib-in-objects scheme in #84449 I remember either concluding that
`wasm-ld` would either include the metadata in the output or I thought
we didn't have to do anything there at all. I think I was wrong on both
counts as `wasm-ld` does not include the metadata in the final output
unless the object is referenced and we do actually need to do something
to resolve these warnings.

This PR updates the object file format containing rustc metadata on
WebAssembly targets to be an actual WebAssembly file. This enables the
`wasm` feature of the `object` crate to be able to read the custom
section in the same manner as other platforms, but currently `object`
doesn't support writing wasm object files so a handwritten encoder is
used instead.

The only caveat I know of with this is that if `wasm-ld` does indeed
look at the object file then the metadata will be included in the final
output. I believe the only thing that could cause that at this time is
`--whole-archive` which I don't think is passed for rlibs. I would
clarify that I'm not 100% certain about this, however.
2024-02-20 09:31:50 -08:00
bors
29f87ade9d Auto merge of #120576 - nnethercote:merge-Diagnostic-DiagnosticBuilder, r=davidtwco
Overhaul `Diagnostic` and `DiagnosticBuilder`

Implements the first part of https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/722, which moves functionality and use away from `Diagnostic`, onto `DiagnosticBuilder`.

Likely follow-ups:
- Move things around, because this PR was written to minimize diff size, so some things end up in sub-optimal places. E.g. `DiagnosticBuilder` has impls in both `diagnostic.rs` and `diagnostic_builder.rs`.
- Rename `Diagnostic` as `DiagInner` and `DiagnosticBuilder` as `Diag`.

r? `@davidtwco`
2024-02-20 12:05:09 +00:00
Ralf Jung
396cf1e1f5 require simd_insert, simd_extract indices to be constants 2024-02-20 07:50:46 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
f6f8779843 Reduce capabilities of Diagnostic.
Currently many diagnostic modifier methods are available on both
`Diagnostic` and `DiagnosticBuilder`. This commit removes most of them
from `Diagnostic`. To minimize the diff size, it keeps them within
`diagnostic.rs` but changes the surrounding `impl Diagnostic` block to
`impl DiagnosticBuilder`. (I intend to move things around later, to give
a more sensible code layout.)

`Diagnostic` keeps a few methods that it still needs, like `sub`,
`arg`, and `replace_args`.

The `forward!` macro, which defined two additional methods per call
(e.g. `note` and `with_note`), is replaced by the `with_fn!` macro,
which defines one additional method per call (e.g. `with_note`). It's
now also only used when necessary -- not all modifier methods currently
need a `with_*` form. (New ones can be easily added as necessary.)

All this also requires changing `trait AddToDiagnostic` so its methods
take `DiagnosticBuilder` instead of `Diagnostic`, which leads to many
mechanical changes. `SubdiagnosticMessageOp` gains a type parameter `G`.

There are three subdiagnostics -- `DelayedAtWithoutNewline`,
`DelayedAtWithNewline`, and `InvalidFlushedDelayedDiagnosticLevel` --
that are created within the diagnostics machinery and appended to
external diagnostics. These are handled at the `Diagnostic` level, which
means it's now hard to construct them via `derive(Diagnostic)`, so
instead we construct them by hand. This has no effect on what they look
like when printed.

There are lots of new `allow` markers for `untranslatable_diagnostics`
and `diagnostics_outside_of_impl`. This is because
`#[rustc_lint_diagnostics]` annotations were present on the `Diagnostic`
modifier methods, but missing from the `DiagnosticBuilder` modifier
methods. They're now present.
2024-02-20 13:22:17 +11:00
bors
c9c83cca51 Auto merge of #121265 - klensy:bump-18-02-24, r=Mark-Simulacrum
bump some deps

First commit dedupes darling* crates and remove one more syn 1.* dep
Second one bumps windows crate to 0.52
2024-02-18 16:54:15 +00:00
klensy
35fe26757a windows bump to 0.52 2024-02-18 16:02:16 +03:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
5628786484
Rollup merge of #121237 - Urgau:better-cargo-heuristic, r=compiler-errors
Use better heuristic for printing Cargo specific diagnostics

It was [reported](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/82450#issuecomment-1948574677) in the check-cfg call for testing that the Rust for Linux project is setting the `CARGO` env without compiling with it, which is an issue since we are using the `CARGO` env as a proxy for "was launched from Cargo".

This PR switch to the `CARGO_CRATE_NAME` [Cargo env](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/environment-variables.html#environment-variables-cargo-sets-for-crates), which shouldn't collide (as much) with other build systems. I also took the opportunity to consolidate all the checks under the same function.
2024-02-18 05:10:18 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
a387b71b0c
Rollup merge of #121209 - nnethercote:infallible-join_codegen, r=bjorn3
Make `CodegenBackend::join_codegen` infallible.

Because they all are, in practice.

r? ```@bjorn3```
2024-02-17 18:47:42 +01:00
Urgau
d988d8f4ba Use better heuristic for printing Cargo specific diagnostics 2024-02-17 16:49:01 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
ede99234c4 Make CodegenBackend::join_codegen infallible.
Because they all are, in practice.
2024-02-17 10:51:35 +11:00
bors
dfa88b328f Auto merge of #120500 - oli-obk:intrinsics2.0, r=WaffleLapkin
Implement intrinsics with fallback bodies

fixes #93145 (though we can port many more intrinsics)
cc #63585

The way this works is that the backend logic for generating custom code for intrinsics has been made fallible. The only failure path is "this intrinsic is unknown". The `Instance` (that was `InstanceDef::Intrinsic`) then gets converted to `InstanceDef::Item`, which represents the fallback body. A regular function call to that body is then codegenned. This is currently implemented for

* codegen_ssa (so llvm and gcc)
* codegen_cranelift

other backends will need to adjust, but they can just keep doing what they were doing if they prefer (though adding new intrinsics to the compiler will then require them to implement them, instead of getting the fallback body).

cc `@scottmcm` `@WaffleLapkin`

### todo

* [ ] miri support
* [x] default intrinsic name to name of function instead of requiring it to be specified in attribute
* [x] make sure that the bodies are always available (must be collected for metadata)
2024-02-16 09:53:01 +00:00
bors
fa9f77ff35 Auto merge of #120931 - chenyukang:yukang-cleanup-hashmap, r=michaelwoerister
Clean up potential_query_instability with FxIndexMap and UnordMap

From https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120485#issuecomment-1916437191

r? `@michaelwoerister`
2024-02-15 12:36:37 +00:00
Maybe Waffle
f368922cfa Allow codegen backends to opt-out of parallel codegen 2024-02-15 00:23:56 +00:00
Maybe Waffle
9a77ec98b8 Rename -Zno_parallel_llvm -> -Zno_parallel_backend 2024-02-15 00:14:59 +00:00
yukang
3f27e4b3ea clean up potential_query_instability with FxIndexMap and UnordMap 2024-02-14 18:36:37 +08:00
clubby789
4de3a3af4a Bump indexmap
`swap` has been deprecated in favour of `swap_remove` - the behaviour
is the same though.
2024-02-13 21:03:34 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
7075502b15
Rollup merge of #120965 - ChrisDenton:sahf, r=michaelwoerister
Add lahfsahf and prfchw target feature

This adds target features for LAHF/SAHF and PrefetchW. These came up. along with the existing CMPXCHG16b. as [baseline features](https://download.microsoft.com/download/c/1/5/c150e1ca-4a55-4a7e-94c5-bfc8c2e785c5/Windows%2010%20Minimum%20Hardware%20Requirements.pdf) required for x86_64 Windows 10+.
2024-02-12 23:18:54 +01:00
Oli Scherer
6b73fe2d09 Give const_deallocate a default body 2024-02-12 17:52:05 +00:00
Oli Scherer
9a0743747f Teach llvm backend how to fall back to default bodies 2024-02-12 17:50:39 +00:00
Oli Scherer
432635a9ea Create ret_dest as late as possible in all code paths 2024-02-12 17:48:20 +00:00
Oli Scherer
55200e75da Do the entire ReturnDest computation within make_return_dest 2024-02-12 17:48:04 +00:00
Chris Denton
83a850f2a1
Add lahfsahf and prfchw target feature 2024-02-12 10:31:12 -03:00
Oli Scherer
92281c7e81 Implement intrinsics with fallback bodies 2024-02-12 09:44:22 +00:00
Michael Goulet
cb024ba6e3 is_closure_like 2024-02-11 22:09:52 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
9a8958f2bb
Rollup merge of #120865 - saethlin:missing-o-files, r=nnethercote
Turn the "no saved object file in work product" ICE into a translatable fatal error

I don't know if it's fair to say this fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120854 but it surely makes the error reporting better and should encourage people with good instincts like ```@CinchBlue.```
2024-02-10 13:12:31 +01:00
Ben Kimock
3d4a9f5047 Turn the "no saved object file in work product" ICE into a translatable fatal error 2024-02-09 20:22:15 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
317c372284
Rollup merge of #120846 - petrochenkov:jobs, r=oli-obk
Update jobserver-rs to 0.1.28

Fixes the issues found in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120515 besides the diagnostic wording.
2024-02-10 00:58:38 +01:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
83f3bc4271 Update jobserver-rs to 0.1.28 2024-02-09 19:13:07 +03:00
bors
e28fae52d9 Auto merge of #120843 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-med37z5, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #113671 (Make privacy visitor use types more (instead of HIR))
 - #120308 (core/time: avoid divisions in Duration::new)
 - #120693 (Invert diagnostic lints.)
 - #120704 (A drive-by rewrite of `give_region_a_name()`)
 - #120809 (Use `transmute_unchecked` in `NonZero::new`.)
 - #120817 (Fix more `ty::Error` ICEs in MIR passes)
 - #120828 (Fix `ErrorGuaranteed` unsoundness with stash/steal.)
 - #120831 (Startup objects disappearing from sysroot)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-02-09 15:34:48 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
46a0448405
Rollup merge of #120693 - nnethercote:invert-diagnostic-lints, r=davidtwco
Invert diagnostic lints.

That is, change `diagnostic_outside_of_impl` and `untranslatable_diagnostic` from `allow` to `deny`, because more than half of the compiler has been converted to use translated diagnostics.

This commit removes more `deny` attributes than it adds `allow` attributes, which proves that this change is warranted.

r? ````@davidtwco````
2024-02-09 14:41:50 +01:00
Ben Kimock
8836ac5758 Add a new debug_assertions instrinsic (compiler)
And in clippy
2024-02-08 11:49:08 -05:00
Ben Kimock
9842a5ca7f Don't lower assume in unoptimized builds 2024-02-08 11:49:04 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
59ba8024af
Rollup merge of #120502 - clubby789:remove-ffi-returns-twice, r=compiler-errors
Remove `ffi_returns_twice` feature

The [tracking issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/58314) and [RFC](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2633) have been closed for a couple of years.

There is also an attribute gate in R-A which should be removed if this lands.
2024-02-06 22:45:42 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
a3d3ccf098
Rollup merge of #120575 - nnethercote:simplify-codegen-diag-handling, r=estebank
Simplify codegen diagnostic handling

Some nice improvements. Details in the individual commit logs.

r? ````@estebank````
2024-02-06 19:40:06 +01:00
Michael Goulet
c567eddec2 Add CoroutineClosure to TyKind, AggregateKind, UpvarArgs 2024-02-06 02:22:58 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
0ac1195ee0 Invert diagnostic lints.
That is, change `diagnostic_outside_of_impl` and
`untranslatable_diagnostic` from `allow` to `deny`, because more than
half of the compiler has be converted to use translated diagnostics.

This commit removes more `deny` attributes than it adds `allow`
attributes, which proves that this change is warranted.
2024-02-06 13:12:33 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
d9508a1fd2 Make Emitter::emit_diagnostic consuming.
All the other `emit`/`emit_diagnostic` methods were recently made
consuming (e.g. #119606), but this one wasn't. But it makes sense to.

Much of this is straightforward, and lots of `clone` calls are avoided.
There are a couple of tricky bits.
- `Emitter::primary_span_formatted` no longer takes a `Diagnostic` and
  returns a pair. Instead it takes the two fields from `Diagnostic` that
  it used (`span` and `suggestions`) as `&mut`, and modifies them. This
  is necessary to avoid the cloning of `diag.children` in two emitters.
- `from_errors_diagnostic` is rearranged so various uses of `diag` occur
  before the consuming `emit_diagnostic` call.
2024-02-05 21:27:01 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
6fdaf3ef7f Use DiagnosticArgName in a few more places. 2024-02-03 09:02:50 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
df322fc29f Remove some unnecessary clone calls. 2024-02-03 09:02:50 +11:00
clubby789
7331315898 Remove ffi_returns_twice feature 2024-01-30 22:09:09 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
27bc496564
Rollup merge of #120485 - chenyukang:yukang-add-query-instability-check, r=michaelwoerister
add missing potential_query_instability for keys and values in hashmap

From https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120435#discussion_r1468883787,

These API are also returning iterator, so we need add `potential_query_instability` for them?
2024-01-30 16:57:51 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
f0426b77fc Remove the lifetime from DiagnosticArgName.
Because it's always 'static.
2024-01-30 18:46:08 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
06aa381adb Remove DiagnosticArgName from rustc_codegen_ssa.
It's identical to the one in `rustc_errors`; use that instead.

Also remove some `rustc_errors::` qualifiers.
2024-01-30 18:46:08 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
5350edb9e8 Remove the lifetime from DiagnosticArgValue.
Because it's almost always static.

This makes `impl IntoDiagnosticArg for DiagnosticArgValue` trivial,
which is nice.

There are a few diagnostics constructed in
`compiler/rustc_mir_build/src/check_unsafety.rs` and
`compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/errors.rs` that now need symbols
converted to `String` with `to_string` instead of `&str` with `as_str`,
but that' no big deal, and worth it for the simplifications elsewhere.
2024-01-30 18:46:06 +11:00
yukang
ad526d831e add missing potential_query_instability for keys and values in hashmap 2024-01-30 12:43:10 +08:00
Nicholas Nethercote
5d9dfbd08f Stop using String for error codes.
Error codes are integers, but `String` is used everywhere to represent
them. Gross!

This commit introduces `ErrCode`, an integral newtype for error codes,
replacing `String`. It also introduces a constant for every error code,
e.g. `E0123`, and removes the `error_code!` macro. The constants are
imported wherever used with `use rustc_errors::codes::*`.

With the old code, we have three different ways to specify an error code
at a use point:
```
error_code!(E0123)  // macro call

struct_span_code_err!(dcx, span, E0123, "msg");  // bare ident arg to macro call

\#[diag(name, code = "E0123")]  // string
struct Diag;
```

With the new code, they all use the `E0123` constant.
```
E0123  // constant

struct_span_code_err!(dcx, span, E0123, "msg");  // constant

\#[diag(name, code = E0123)]  // constant
struct Diag;
```

The commit also changes the structure of the error code definitions:
- `rustc_error_codes` now just defines a higher-order macro listing the
  used error codes and nothing else.
- Because that's now the only thing in the `rustc_error_codes` crate, I
  moved it into the `lib.rs` file and removed the `error_codes.rs` file.
- `rustc_errors` uses that macro to define everything, e.g. the error
  code constants and the `DIAGNOSTIC_TABLES`. This is in its new
  `codes.rs` file.
2024-01-29 07:41:41 +11:00
bors
69db514ed9 Auto merge of #119968 - clubby789:unused-feature, r=compiler-errors
Remove unused/unnecessary features

~~The bulk of the actual code changes here is replacing try blocks with equivalent closures. I'm not entirely sure that's a good idea since it may have perf impact, happy to revert if that's the case/the change is unwanted.~~

I also removed a lot of `recursion_limit = "256"` since everything seems to build fine without that and most don't have any comment justifying it.
2024-01-26 03:18:34 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
87448be96f
Rollup merge of #120099 - petrochenkov:linkapi, r=WaffleLapkin
linker: Refactor library linking methods in `trait Linker`

Linkers are not aware of Rust libraries, they look like regular static or dynamic libraries to them, so Rust-specific methods in `trait Linker` do not make much sense.
They can be either removed or renamed to something more suitable.

Commits after the second one are cleanups.
2024-01-25 17:39:27 +01:00
clubby789
fd29f74ff8 Remove unused features 2024-01-25 14:01:33 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
03f23c1a2f linker: Fix Rust dylib crate extension on windows-msvc 2024-01-24 01:51:43 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
1b8e871f1c linker: Cleanup implementations of link_staticlib_* 2024-01-24 01:51:43 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
d15db6b260 linker: Merge link_staticlib_* and link_whole_staticlib_* 2024-01-24 01:51:43 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
859f37ae86 linker: Do not collect search paths unless necessary 2024-01-24 01:51:43 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
14cd3fd6f9 linker: Group library linking methods together and sort them consistently 2024-01-24 01:51:43 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
0e38a65612 linker: Refactor APIs for linking static libraries
Rename `link(_whole)(staticlib,rlib)` to something more suitable.
2024-01-24 01:51:43 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
50501c6fba linker: Refactor APIs for linking dynamic libraries
Rename `link_(dylib,framework)`, remove `link_rust_dylib`.
2024-01-24 01:51:43 +03:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
6131ba62ad
Rollup merge of #120139 - compiler-errors:fnonce-shim, r=BoxyUwU
Do not normalize closure signature when building `FnOnce` shim

It is not necessary to normalize the closure signature when building an `FnOnce` shim for an `Fn`/`FnMut` closure. That closure shim is just calling `FnMut::call_mut(&mut self)` anyways.

It's also somewhat sketchy that we were ever doing this to begin with, since we're normalizing with a `ParamEnv::reveal_all()` param-env, which is definitely not right with possibly polymorphic substs.

This cuts out a tiny bit of unnecessary work in `Instance::resolve` and simplifies the signature because now we can unconditionally return an `Instance`.
2024-01-23 21:53:56 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
cfdea760f5 Rename TyCtxt::struct_span_lint_hir as TyCtxt::node_span_lint. 2024-01-23 08:09:01 +11:00
Michael Goulet
f700ee4e70 Do not normalize closure signature when building FnOnce shim 2024-01-22 16:50:30 +00:00
bors
3066253050 Auto merge of #120080 - cuviper:128-align-packed, r=nikic
Pack u128 in the compiler to mitigate new alignment

This is based on #116672, adding a new `#[repr(packed(8))]` wrapper on `u128` to avoid changing any of the compiler's size assertions. This is needed in two places:

* `SwitchTargets`, otherwise its `SmallVec<[u128; 1]>` gets padded up to 32 bytes.
* `LitKind::Int`, so that entire `enum` can stay 24 bytes.
  * This change definitely has far-reaching effects though, since it's public.
2024-01-22 13:08:19 +00:00
Noritada Kobayashi
ff02662d44 Correct the anchor of an URL in an error message 2024-01-22 01:02:20 +09:00
Josh Stone
33e0422826 Pack the u128 in LitKind::Int 2024-01-19 20:10:39 -08:00
bors
16f4b02dd8 Auto merge of #119922 - nnethercote:fix-Diag-code-is_lint, r=oli-obk
Rework how diagnostic lints are stored.

`Diagnostic::code` has the type `DiagnosticId`, which has `Error` and
`Lint` variants. Plus `Diagnostic::is_lint` is a bool, which should be
redundant w.r.t. `Diagnostic::code`.

Seems simple. Except it's possible for a lint to have an error code, in
which case its `code` field is recorded as `Error`, and `is_lint` is
required to indicate that it's a lint. This is what happens with
`derive(LintDiagnostic)` lints. Which means those lints don't have a
lint name or a `has_future_breakage` field because those are stored in
the `DiagnosticId::Lint`.

It's all a bit messy and confused and seems unintentional.

This commit:
- removes `DiagnosticId`;
- changes `Diagnostic::code` to `Option<String>`, which means both
  errors and lints can straightforwardly have an error code;
- changes `Diagnostic::is_lint` to `Option<IsLint>`, where `IsLint` is a
  new type containing a lint name and a `has_future_breakage` bool, so
  all lints can have those, error code or not.

r? `@oli-obk`
2024-01-17 07:33:52 +00:00
Martin Nordholts
16ba56c242 compiler: Lower fn call arg spans down to MIR
To enable improved accuracy of diagnostics in upcoming commits.
2024-01-15 19:07:11 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
d71f535a6f Rework how diagnostic lints are stored.
`Diagnostic::code` has the type `DiagnosticId`, which has `Error` and
`Lint` variants. Plus `Diagnostic::is_lint` is a bool, which should be
redundant w.r.t. `Diagnostic::code`.

Seems simple. Except it's possible for a lint to have an error code, in
which case its `code` field is recorded as `Error`, and `is_lint` is
required to indicate that it's a lint. This is what happens with
`derive(LintDiagnostic)` lints. Which means those lints don't have a
lint name or a `has_future_breakage` field because those are stored in
the `DiagnosticId::Lint`.

It's all a bit messy and confused and seems unintentional.

This commit:
- removes `DiagnosticId`;
- changes `Diagnostic::code` to `Option<String>`, which means both
  errors and lints can straightforwardly have an error code;
- changes `Diagnostic::is_lint` to `Option<IsLint>`, where `IsLint` is a
  new type containing a lint name and a `has_future_breakage` bool, so
  all lints can have those, error code or not.
2024-01-14 14:04:25 +11:00
bors
d78329b92e Auto merge of #119088 - George-lewis:glewis/suggest-upgrading-compiler, r=Nilstrieb
Suggest Upgrading Compiler for Gated Features

This PR addresses #117318

I have a few questions:

1. Do we want to specify the current version and release date of the compiler? I have added this in via environment variables, which I found in the code for the rustc cli where it handles the `--version` flag
  a. How can I handle the changing message in the tests?
3. Do we want to only show this message when the compiler is old?
  a. How can we determine when the compiler is old?

I'll wait until we figure out the message to bless the tests
2024-01-13 20:06:03 +00:00
bors
23148b175b Auto merge of #119409 - Kobzol:rustc-codegen-ssa-query-instability, r=Nilstrieb
rustc_codegen_ssa: Enforce `rustc::potential_query_instability` lint

Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84447.
2024-01-13 18:07:59 +00:00
George-lewis
36a69e9d39 Add check for ui_testing via promoting parameters from ParseSess to Session 2024-01-13 12:11:13 -05:00
Jakub Beránek
4612edc53f
rustc_codegen_ssa: Enforce rustc::potential_query_instability lint 2024-01-13 16:05:53 +01:00
DianQK
aa874c5513
Revert "Auto merge of #113923 - DianQK:restore-no-builtins-lto, r=pnkfelix"
This reverts commit 8c2b577217, reversing
changes made to 9cf18e98f8.
2024-01-12 18:23:04 +08:00
DianQK
6d29eac04b
Revert "Auto merge of #118568 - DianQK:no-builtins-symbols, r=pnkfelix"
This reverts commit 503e129328, reversing
changes made to 0e7f91b75e.
2024-01-12 18:22:39 +08:00
Nicholas Nethercote
0e388f2192 Change how force-warn lint diagnostics are recorded.
`is_force_warn` is only possible for diagnostics with `Level::Warning`,
but it is currently stored in `Diagnostic::code`, which every diagnostic
has.

This commit:
- removes the boolean `DiagnosticId::Lint::is_force_warn` field;
- adds a `ForceWarning` variant to `Level`.

Benefits:
- The common `Level::Warning` case now has no arguments, replacing
  lots of `Warning(None)` occurrences.
- `rustc_session::lint::Level` and `rustc_errors::Level` are more
  similar, both having `ForceWarning` and `Warning`.
2024-01-11 07:56:17 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
ed76b0b882 Rename consuming chaining methods on DiagnosticBuilder.
In #119606 I added them and used a `_mv` suffix, but that wasn't great.

A `with_` prefix has three different existing uses.
- Constructors, e.g. `Vec::with_capacity`.
- Wrappers that provide an environment to execute some code, e.g.
  `with_session_globals`.
- Consuming chaining methods, e.g. `Span::with_{lo,hi,ctxt}`.

The third case is exactly what we want, so this commit changes
`DiagnosticBuilder::foo_mv` to `DiagnosticBuilder::with_foo`.

Thanks to @compiler-errors for the suggestion.
2024-01-10 07:40:00 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
3c4f1d85af Rename {create,emit}_warning as {create,emit}_warn.
For consistency with `warn`/`struct_warn`, and also `{create,emit}_err`,
all of which use an abbreviated form.
2024-01-10 07:33:06 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4864cb8aef Rename struct_span_err! as struct_span_code_err!.
Because it takes an error code after the span. This avoids the confusing
overlap with the `DiagCtxt::struct_span_err` method, which doesn't take
an error code.
2024-01-10 07:33:04 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
ee7d4c1561
Rollup merge of #118903 - azhogin:azhogin/skip_second_stmt_debuginfo.rs, r=petrochenkov
Improved support of collapse_debuginfo attribute for macros.

Added walk_chain_collapsed function to consider collapse_debuginfo attribute in parent macros in call chain.
Fixed collapse_debuginfo attribute processing for cranelift (there was if/else branches error swap).

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/100758
2024-01-09 00:19:32 +01:00
Andrew Zhogin
f2dbebafad Improved support of collapse_debuginfo attribute for macros. 2024-01-08 17:47:18 +07:00
Nicholas Nethercote
bd4e623485 Use chaining for DiagnosticBuilder construction and emit.
To avoid the use of a mutable local variable, and because it reads more
nicely.
2024-01-08 15:45:29 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
589591efde Use chaining in DiagnosticBuilder construction.
To avoid the use of a mutable local variable, and because it reads more
nicely.
2024-01-08 15:43:07 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
b1b9278851 Make DiagnosticBuilder::emit consuming.
This works for most of its call sites. This is nice, because `emit` very
much makes sense as a consuming operation -- indeed,
`DiagnosticBuilderState` exists to ensure no diagnostic is emitted
twice, but it uses runtime checks.

For the small number of call sites where a consuming emit doesn't work,
the commit adds `DiagnosticBuilder::emit_without_consuming`. (This will
be removed in subsequent commits.)

Likewise, `emit_unless` becomes consuming. And `delay_as_bug` becomes
consuming, while `delay_as_bug_without_consuming` is added (which will
also be removed in subsequent commits.)

All this requires significant changes to `DiagnosticBuilder`'s chaining
methods. Currently `DiagnosticBuilder` method chaining uses a
non-consuming `&mut self -> &mut Self` style, which allows chaining to
be used when the chain ends in `emit()`, like so:
```
    struct_err(msg).span(span).emit();
```
But it doesn't work when producing a `DiagnosticBuilder` value,
requiring this:
```
    let mut err = self.struct_err(msg);
    err.span(span);
    err
```
This style of chaining won't work with consuming `emit` though. For
that, we need to use to a `self -> Self` style. That also would allow
`DiagnosticBuilder` production to be chained, e.g.:
```
    self.struct_err(msg).span(span)
```
However, removing the `&mut self -> &mut Self` style would require that
individual modifications of a `DiagnosticBuilder` go from this:
```
    err.span(span);
```
to this:
```
    err = err.span(span);
```
There are *many* such places. I have a high tolerance for tedious
refactorings, but even I gave up after a long time trying to convert
them all.

Instead, this commit has it both ways: the existing `&mut self -> Self`
chaining methods are kept, and new `self -> Self` chaining methods are
added, all of which have a `_mv` suffix (short for "move"). Changes to
the existing `forward!` macro lets this happen with very little
additional boilerplate code. I chose to add the suffix to the new
chaining methods rather than the existing ones, because the number of
changes required is much smaller that way.

This doubled chainging is a bit clumsy, but I think it is worthwhile
because it allows a *lot* of good things to subsequently happen. In this
commit, there are many `mut` qualifiers removed in places where
diagnostics are emitted without being modified. In subsequent commits:
- chaining can be used more, making the code more concise;
- more use of chaining also permits the removal of redundant diagnostic
  APIs like `struct_err_with_code`, which can be replaced easily with
  `struct_err` + `code_mv`;
- `emit_without_diagnostic` can be removed, which simplifies a lot of
  machinery, removing the need for `DiagnosticBuilderState`.
2024-01-08 15:24:49 +11:00
bors
b8c207435c Auto merge of #119192 - michaelwoerister:mcp533-push, r=cjgillot
Replace a number of FxHashMaps/Sets with stable-iteration-order alternatives

This PR replaces almost all of the remaining `FxHashMap`s in query results with either `FxIndexMap` or `UnordMap`. The only case that is missing is the `EffectiveVisibilities` struct which turned out to not be straightforward to transform. Once that is done too, we can remove the `HashStable` implementation from `HashMap`.

The first commit adds the `StableCompare` trait which is a companion trait to `StableOrd`. Some types like `Symbol` can be compared in a cross-session stable way, but their `Ord` implementation is not stable. In such cases, a `StableCompare` implementation can be provided to offer a lightweight way for stable sorting. The more heavyweight option is to sort via `ToStableHashKey`, but then sorting needs to have access to a stable hashing context and `ToStableHashKey` can also be expensive as in the case of `Symbol` where it has to allocate a `String`.

The rest of the commits are rather mechanical and don't overlap, so they are best reviewed individually.

Part of [MCP 533](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/533).
2024-01-05 19:38:27 +00:00
bors
11035f9f52 Auto merge of #119621 - compiler-errors:rollup-5mxtvuk, r=compiler-errors
Rollup of 10 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #119034 (Allow coverage tests to ignore test modes, and to enable color in coverage reports)
 - #119148 (Tweak suggestions for bare trait used as a type)
 - #119538 (Cleanup error handlers: round 5)
 - #119566 (Remove `-Zdump-mir-spanview`)
 - #119567 (Remove `-Zreport-delayed-bugs`.)
 - #119577 (Migrate memory overlap check from validator to lint)
 - #119583 (Make `intrinsics::assume` const stable)
 - #119586 ([rustdoc] Fix invalid handling for static method calls in jump to definition feature)
 - #119588 (Move `i586-unknown-netbsd` from tier 2 to tier 3 platform support table)
 - #119601 (`Emitter` cleanups)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-01-05 16:31:05 +00:00
Michael Goulet
f361b591ef
Rollup merge of #119538 - nnethercote:cleanup-errors-5, r=compiler-errors
Cleanup error handlers: round 5

More rustc_errors cleanups. A sequel to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119171.

r? ````@compiler-errors````
2024-01-05 10:57:21 -05:00
bors
432fffa8af Auto merge of #118991 - nikic:scalar-pair, r=nagisa
Separate immediate and in-memory ScalarPair representation

Currently, we assume that ScalarPair is always represented using a two-element struct, both as an immediate value and when stored in memory.

This currently works fairly well, but runs into problems with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116672, where a ScalarPair involving an i128 type can no longer be represented as a two-element struct in memory. For example, the tuple `(i32, i128)` needs to be represented in-memory as `{ i32, [3 x i32], i128 }` to satisfy alignment requirements. Using `{ i32, i128 }` instead will result in the second element being stored at the wrong offset (prior to LLVM 18).

Resolve this issue by no longer requiring that the immediate and in-memory type for ScalarPair are the same. The in-memory type will now look the same as for normal struct types (and will include padding filler and similar), while the immediate type stays a simple two-element struct type. This also means that booleans in immediate ScalarPair are now represented as i1 rather than i8, just like we do everywhere else.

The core change here is to llvm_type (which now treats ScalarPair as a normal struct) and immediate_llvm_type (which returns the two-element struct that llvm_type used to produce). The rest is fixing things up to no longer assume these are the same. In particular, this switches places that try to get pointers to the ScalarPair elements to use byte-geps instead of struct-geps.
2024-01-05 14:31:56 +00:00
Michael Woerister
5449638d7d Make iteration order of supported_target_features query stable 2024-01-04 13:48:57 +01:00
Michael Woerister
762e21f8c1 Make iteration order of wasm_import_module_map query stable 2024-01-04 13:37:21 +01:00
Michael Woerister
0e934190fd Make iteration order of upstream_monomorphizations query stable 2024-01-04 13:37:21 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1f32203fd3
Rollup merge of #118521 - dpaoliello:asan, r=wesleywiser
Enable address sanitizer for MSVC targets using INFERASANLIBS linker flag

This enables address sanitizer for x86_64-pc-windows-msvc and i686-pc-windows-msvc targets when linked with the MSVC linker (link.exe) by leveraging the `/INFERASANLIBS` option to automatically find and link in Microsoft's address sanitizer runtime: <https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/sanitizers/asan-runtime?view=msvc-170>

Implements https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/702
Fixes #89339 (for MSVC targets using the MSVC linker only)
Supercedes #89369

Successful x86_64-msvc build showing the sanitizer tests working: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/actions/runs/7228346880/job/19697628258?pr=118521
2024-01-04 08:33:21 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
8388112970 Remove is_lint field from Level::Error.
Because it's redundant w.r.t. `Diagnostic::is_lint`, which is present
for every diagnostic level.

`struct_lint_level_impl` was the only place that set the `Error` field
to `true`, and it's also the only place that calls
`Diagnostic::is_lint()` to set the `is_lint` field.
2024-01-04 16:09:31 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
9560c58c2a Avoid some rustc_errors:: qualifiers.
These are misleading, because the mixture of `Level` and
`rustc_errors::Level` makes it look like there are two different types
involved.
2024-01-04 11:43:19 +11:00
Daniel Paoliello
bc3b7c9930 Enable address sanitizer for MSVC targets using INFERASANLIBS linker flag 2024-01-03 10:00:15 -08:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
3053ced813
Rollup merge of #119444 - compiler-errors:closure-or-coroutine, r=oli-obk
Rename `TyCtxt::is_closure` to `TyCtxt::is_closure_or_coroutine`

This function has always been used to test whether the def-id was a closure **or** coroutine: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/118311/files#diff-69ebec59f7d38331dd1be84ede7957977dcaa39e30ed2869b04aa8c99b2079ccR552 -- the name is just confusing because it disagrees with other fns named `is_closure`, like `Ty::is_closure`.

So let's rename it.
2024-01-03 16:08:26 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
505c1371d0 Rename some Diagnostic setters.
`Diagnostic` has 40 methods that return `&mut Self` and could be
considered setters. Four of them have a `set_` prefix. This doesn't seem
necessary for a type that implements the builder pattern. This commit
removes the `set_` prefixes on those four methods.
2024-01-03 19:40:20 +11:00
Nikita Popov
8e64fc94d8 Address review comments 2024-01-02 15:03:14 +01:00
Nilstrieb
ffafcd8819 Update to bitflags 2 in the compiler
This involves lots of breaking changes. There are two big changes that
force changes. The first is that the bitflag types now don't
automatically implement normal derive traits, so we need to derive them
manually.

Additionally, bitflags now have a hidden inner type by default, which
breaks our custom derives. The bitflags docs recommend using the impl
form in these cases, which I did.
2023-12-30 18:17:28 +01:00
Michael Goulet
07adee7072 is_coroutine -> is_coroutine_or_closure 2023-12-30 15:24:15 +00:00
bors
ddca5343f2 Auto merge of #118705 - WaffleLapkin:codegen-atomic-exhange-untuple, r=cjgillot
Change `rustc_codegen_ssa`'s `atomic_cmpxchg` interface to return a pair of values

Doesn't change much, but a little nicer that way.
2023-12-30 07:42:19 +00:00
Bernd Schmidt
6cf6139411 Change rustc_codegen_ssa's atomic_cmpxchg interface to return a pair of values 2023-12-28 09:40:47 +00:00
bors
1ab783112a Auto merge of #119258 - compiler-errors:closure-kind, r=eholk
Make closures carry their own ClosureKind

Right now, we use the "`movability`" field of `hir::Closure` to distinguish a closure and a coroutine. This is paired together with the `CoroutineKind`, which is located not in the `hir::Closure`, but the `hir::Body`. This is strange and redundant.

This PR introduces `ClosureKind` with two variants -- `Closure` and `Coroutine`, which is put into `hir::Closure`. The `CoroutineKind` is thus removed from `hir::Body`, and `Option<Movability>` no longer needs to be a stand-in for "is this a closure or a coroutine".

r? eholk
2023-12-26 04:25:53 +00:00
Michael Goulet
3320c09eab Only regular coroutines have movability 2023-12-25 21:13:41 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
8a9db25459 Remove more Session methods that duplicate DiagCtxt methods. 2023-12-24 08:17:47 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
99472c7049 Remove Session methods that duplicate DiagCtxt methods.
Also add some `dcx` methods to types that wrap `TyCtxt`, for easier
access.
2023-12-24 08:05:28 +11:00
Michael Goulet
ae0a6e8537
Rollup merge of #119198 - compiler-errors:desugaring, r=eholk
Split coroutine desugaring kind from source

What a coroutine is desugared from (gen/async gen/async) should be separate from where it comes (fn/block/closure).
2023-12-22 21:41:04 -05:00
Nicholas Nethercote
00e8485057 Remove all uses of DiagnosticBuilder::forget_guarantee().
There are only three. It's simpler to make the type
`DiagnosticBuilder<'_, ()>` from the start, no matter the level, than to
change the guarantee later.
2023-12-23 13:23:28 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
824667f753 Improve some names.
Lots of vectors of messages called `message` or `msg`. This commit
pluralizes them.

Note that `emit_message_default` and `emit_messages_default` both
already existed, and both process a vector, so I renamed the former
`emit_messages_default_inner` because it's called by the latter.
2023-12-23 13:23:28 +11:00
Michael Goulet
004450506e Split coroutine desugaring kind from source 2023-12-22 23:58:29 +00:00
bors
cee794ee98 Auto merge of #119097 - nnethercote:fix-EmissionGuarantee, r=compiler-errors
Fix `EmissionGuarantee`

There are some problems with the `DiagCtxt` API related to `EmissionGuarantee`. This PR fixes them.

r? `@compiler-errors`
2023-12-22 00:03:57 +00:00
bors
920e0051cf Auto merge of #119056 - cjgillot:codegen-overalign, r=wesleywiser
Tolerate overaligned MIR constants for codegen.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/117761

cc `@saethlin`
2023-12-21 04:01:36 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
df4d56307b
Rollup merge of #118973 - Enselic:fix-IncorrectCguReuseType, r=michaelwoerister
rustc_codegen_ssa: Don't drop `IncorrectCguReuseType` , make `rustc_expected_cgu_reuse` attr work

In [100753], `IncorrectCguReuseType` accidentally stopped being emitted by removing `diag.span_err(...)`. Begin emitting it again rather than just blindly dropping it, and adjust tests accordingly.

We assume that there are no bugs and that the currently actual CGU reuse is correct. If there are bugs, they will be discovered and fixed eventually, and the tests will then be updated.

[100753]: 706452eba7 (diff-048389738ddcbe0f9765291a29db1fed9a5f03693d4781cfb5aaa97ffb3c7f84)

Closes #118972
2023-12-20 09:46:11 +01:00
Martin Nordholts
d46df80c73 rustc_codegen_ssa: Don't let IncorrectCguReuseType errors get lost
In [100753], `IncorrectCguReuseType` accidentally stopped being emitted.
Begin emitting it again rather than just blindly dropping it, and adjust
tests accordingly.

[100753]: 706452eba7 (diff-048389738ddcbe0f9765291a29db1fed9a5f03693d4781cfb5aaa97ffb3c7f84)
2023-12-19 20:20:40 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
e7724a2e31 Add level arg to into_diagnostic.
And make all hand-written `IntoDiagnostic` impls generic, by using
`DiagnosticBuilder::new(dcx, level, ...)` instead of e.g.
`dcx.struct_err(...)`.

This means the `create_*` functions are the source of the error level.
This change will let us remove `struct_diagnostic`.

Note: `#[rustc_lint_diagnostics]` is added to `DiagnosticBuilder::new`,
it's necessary to pass diagnostics tests now that it's used in
`into_diagnostic` functions.
2023-12-19 09:19:25 +11:00
bors
e004adb556 Auto merge of #119069 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-xxk4m30, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #118852 (coverage: Skip instrumenting a function if no spans were extracted from MIR)
 - #118905 ([AIX] Fix XCOFF metadata)
 - #118967 (Add better ICE messages for some undescriptive panics)
 - #119051 (Replace `FileAllocationInfo` with `FileEndOfFileInfo`)
 - #119059 (Deny `~const` trait bounds in inherent impl headers)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2023-12-18 08:03:22 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
18294d6e1d
Rollup merge of #118905 - bzEq:revert-u64-on-xcoff, r=WaffleLapkin
[AIX] Fix XCOFF metadata

#118344  accidentally changed the way to get metadata from XCOFF file and broken our internal CI.

This PR reverts part of #118344 .
2023-12-18 08:08:23 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
f6aa418c9f Rename many DiagCtxt and EarlyDiagCtxt locals. 2023-12-18 16:06:22 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
f422dca3ae Rename many DiagCtxt arguments. 2023-12-18 16:06:22 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
7c656bc05b Rename CodegenContext::create_diag_handler as CodegenContext::create_dcx. 2023-12-18 16:06:21 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
09af8a667c Rename Session::span_diagnostic as Session::dcx. 2023-12-18 16:06:21 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
cde19c016e Rename Handler as DiagCtxt. 2023-12-18 16:06:19 +11:00
Kai Luo
a8e1da3171 Address comment 2023-12-18 09:41:36 +08:00
Camille GILLOT
3ea5cfaa11 Tolerate overaligned MIR constants for codegen. 2023-12-17 22:56:42 +00:00
Nikita Popov
c2fd26a115 Separate immediate and in-memory ScalarPair representation
Currently, we assume that ScalarPair is always represented using
a two-element struct, both as an immediate value and when stored
in memory.

This currently works fairly well, but runs into problems with
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116672, where a ScalarPair
involving an i128 type can no longer be represented as a two-element
struct in memory. For example, the tuple `(i32, i128)` needs to be
represented in-memory as `{ i32, [3 x i32], i128 }` to satisfy
alignment requirement. Using `{ i32, i128 }` instead will result in
the second element being stored at the wrong offset (prior to
LLVM 18).

Resolve this issue by no longer requiring that the immediate and
in-memory type for ScalarPair are the same. The in-memory type
will now look the same as for normal struct types (and will include
padding filler and similar), while the immediate type stays a
simple two-element struct type. This also means that booleans in
immediate ScalarPair are now represented as i1 rather than i8,
just like we do everywhere else.

The core change here is to llvm_type (which now treats ScalarPair
as a normal struct) and immediate_llvm_type (which returns the
two-element struct that llvm_type used to produce). The rest is
fixing things up to no longer assume these are the same. In
particular, this switches places that try to get pointers to the
ScalarPair elements to use byte-geps instead of struct-geps.
2023-12-15 17:42:05 +01:00
Michael Goulet
7f565ed282 Don't pass lint back out of lint decorator 2023-12-15 16:05:36 +00:00
Jubilee
9e872b7cd8
Rollup merge of #118933 - nnethercote:cleanup-errors-even-more, r=compiler-errors
Cleanup errors handlers even more

A sequel to #118587.

r? `@compiler-errors`
2023-12-14 16:07:48 -08:00
Jubilee
576a74b8c9
Rollup merge of #118908 - Urgau:check-cfg-target-features, r=TaKO8Ki,GuillaumeGomez,workingjubilee
Add all known `target_feature` configs to check-cfg

This PR adds all the known `target_feature` from ~~`rustc_codegen_ssa`~~ `rustc_target` to the well known list of check-cfg.

It does so by moving the list from `rustc_codegen_ssa` to `rustc_target` ~~`rustc_session` (I not sure about this, but some of the moved function take a `Session`)~~, then using it the `fill_well_known` function.

This already proved to be useful since portable-simd had a bad cfg.

cc `@nnethercote` (since we discussed it in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/118494)
2023-12-14 16:07:47 -08:00
Nicholas Nethercote
9a78412511 Split Handler::emit_diagnostic in two.
Currently, `emit_diagnostic` takes `&mut self`.

This commit changes it so `emit_diagnostic` takes `self` and the new
`emit_diagnostic_without_consuming` function takes `&mut self`.

I find the distinction useful. The former case is much more common, and
avoids a bunch of `mut` and `&mut` occurrences. We can also restrict the
latter with `pub(crate)` which is nice.
2023-12-15 10:13:12 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
4d016c781a
Rollup merge of #118945 - Enselic:remove-trailing, r=compiler-errors
rustc_codegen_ssa: Remove trailing spaces in Display impl for CguReuse

Otherwise errors will look like this:

    error: CGU-reuse for `cgu_invalidated_via_import-bar` is `PreLto ` but should be `PostLto `

### Background

I noticed that error messages looked wonky while investigating if
529047cfc3/compiler/rustc_codegen_ssa/src/assert_module_sources.rs (L281-L287)
should not be wrapped by `sess.emit_err(...)`. Right now it looks like the error is accidentally ignored. It looks like 706452eba7 might have accidentally started ignoring it (by removing the `diag.span_err()` call). I am still investigating, but regardless of the outcome we should fix the trailing whitespace.
2023-12-14 20:33:11 +01:00
Martin Nordholts
2ddd8b4f19 rustc_codegen_ssa: Remove trailing spaces in Display impl for CguReuse
Otherwise errors will look like this:

    error: CGU-reuse for `cgu_invalidated_via_import-bar` is `PreLto ` but should be `PostLto `
2023-12-14 16:49:18 +01:00
Urgau
428395e064 Move rustc_codegen_ssa target features to rustc_target 2023-12-14 14:40:55 +01:00
Kai Luo
ce9a02eaac Address comment 2023-12-14 10:31:07 +08:00
Ralf Jung
7e4c4271f4 fix computing the dynamic alignment of packed structs with dyn trait tails 2023-12-13 20:21:57 +01:00
bors
2fdd9eda0c Auto merge of #118534 - RalfJung:extern-type-size-of-val, r=WaffleLapkin
codegen: panic when trying to compute size/align of extern type

The alignment is also computed when accessing a field of extern type at non-zero offset, so we also panic in that case.

Previously `size_of_val` worked because the code path there assumed that "thin pointer" means "sized". But that's not true any more with extern types. The returned size and align are just blatantly wrong, so it seems better to panic than returning wrong results. We use a non-unwinding panic since code probably does not expect size_of_val to panic.
2023-12-13 08:33:05 +00:00
Kai Luo
14e6f3f562 Fix XCOFF metadata 2023-12-13 13:28:00 +08:00
Ralf Jung
9ef1e35166 reject projecting to fields whose offset we cannot compute 2023-12-12 08:15:17 +01:00
Ralf Jung
b1613ebc43 codegen: panic when trying to compute size/align of extern type 2023-12-12 08:15:17 +01:00
bors
57010939ed Auto merge of #118344 - saethlin:rmeta-header-pos, r=WaffleLapkin
Use a u64 for the rmeta root position

Waffle noticed this in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117301#discussion_r1405410174

We've upgraded the other file offsets to u64, and this one only costs 4 bytes per file. Also the way the truncation was being done before was extremely easy to miss, I sure missed it! It's not clear to me if not having this change effectively made the other upgrades from u32 to u64 ineffective, but we can have it now.

r? `@WaffleLapkin`
2023-12-11 17:21:14 +00:00
Ben Kimock
79bdd24d6e Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Waffle Maybe <waffle.lapkin@gmail.com>
2023-12-10 23:26:40 -05:00
bors
7e452c123c Auto merge of #118791 - saethlin:use-immediate-type, r=nikic
Use immediate_backend_type when reading from a const alloc

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/118047

r? `@nikic`
2023-12-10 17:50:15 +00:00
surechen
40ae34194c remove redundant imports
detects redundant imports that can be eliminated.

for #117772 :

In order to facilitate review and modification, split the checking code and
removing redundant imports code into two PR.
2023-12-10 10:56:22 +08:00
Ben Kimock
b0a580112b Use immediate_backend_type when reading from a const alloc 2023-12-09 17:13:11 -05:00
Jubilee
85c9de9799
Rollup merge of #118610 - krasimirgg:llvm-18-dec, r=nikic
update target feature following LLVM API change

LLVM commit e817966718 renamed* the `unaligned-scalar-mem` target feature to `fast-unaligned-access`.

(*) technically the commit folded two previous features into one, but there are no references to the other one in rust.
2023-12-09 00:48:09 -08:00
bors
608f32435a Auto merge of #117873 - quininer:android-emutls, r=Amanieu
Add emulated TLS support

This is a reopen of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/96317 . many android devices still only use 128 pthread keys, so using emutls can be helpful.

Currently LLVM uses emutls by default for some targets (such as android, openbsd), but rust does not use it, because `has_thread_local` is false.

This commit has some changes to allow users to enable emutls:

1. add `-Zhas-thread-local` flag to specify that std uses `#[thread_local]` instead of pthread key.
2. when using emutls, decorate symbol names to find thread local symbol correctly.
3. change `-Zforce-emulated-tls` to `-Ztls-model=emulated` to explicitly specify whether to generate emutls.

r? `@Amanieu`
2023-12-09 05:32:35 +00:00
Michael Goulet
96bb542a31 Implement async gen blocks 2023-12-08 17:23:25 +00:00
Krasimir Georgiev
b378059e6b update target feature following LLVM API change
LLVM commit e817966718
renamed the `unaligned-scalar-mem` target feature to `fast-unaligned-access`.
2023-12-08 13:06:07 +00:00
bors
503e129328 Auto merge of #118568 - DianQK:no-builtins-symbols, r=pnkfelix
Avoid adding builtin functions to `symbols.o`

We found performance regressions in #113923. The problem seems to be that `--gc-sections` does not remove these symbols. I tested that lld removes these symbols, but ld and gold do not.

I found that `used` adds symbols to `symbols.o` at 3e202ead60/compiler/rustc_codegen_ssa/src/back/linker.rs (L1786-L1791).
The PR removes builtin functions.

Note that under LTO, ld still preserves these symbols. (lld will still remove them.)

The first commit also fixes #118559. But I think the second commit also makes sense.
2023-12-07 20:31:55 +00:00
bors
0e7f91b75e Auto merge of #118324 - RalfJung:ctfe-read-only-pointers, r=saethlin
compile-time evaluation: detect writes through immutable pointers

This has two motivations:
- it unblocks https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116745 (and therefore takes a big step towards `const_mut_refs` stabilization), because we can now detect if the memory that we find in `const` can be interned as "immutable"
- it would detect the UB that was uncovered in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117905, which was caused by accidental stabilization of `copy` functions in `const` that can only be called with UB

When UB is detected, we emit a future-compat warn-by-default lint. This is not a breaking change, so completely in line with [the const-UB RFC](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3016-const-ub.html), meaning we don't need t-lang FCP here. I made the lint immediately show up for dependencies since it is nearly impossible to even trigger this lint without `const_mut_refs` -- the accidentally stabilized `copy` functions are the only way this can happen, so the crates that popped up in #117905 are the only causes of such UB (in the code that crater covers), and the three cases of UB that we know about have all been fixed in their respective crates already.

The way this is implemented is by making use of the fact that our interpreter is already generic over the notion of provenance. For CTFE we now use the new `CtfeProvenance` type which is conceptually an `AllocId` plus a boolean `immutable` flag (but packed for a more efficient representation). This means we can mark a pointer as immutable when it is created as a shared reference. The flag will be propagated to all pointers derived from this one. We can then check the immutable flag on each write to reject writes through immutable pointers.

I just hope perf works out.
2023-12-07 18:11:01 +00:00
Ralf Jung
cb86303342 ctfe interpreter: extend provenance so that it can track whether a pointer is immutable 2023-12-07 17:46:36 +01:00
quininer
e5b76892cc Add emulated TLS support
Currently LLVM uses emutls by default
for some targets (such as android, openbsd),
but rust does not use it, because `has_thread_local` is false.

This commit has some changes to allow users to enable emutls:

1. add `-Zhas-thread-local` flag to specify
    that std uses `#[thread_local]` instead of pthread key.
2. when using emutls, decorate symbol names
    to find thread local symbol correctly.
3. change `-Zforce-emulated-tls` to `-Ztls-model=emulated`
    to explicitly specify whether to generate emutls.
2023-12-07 00:21:32 +08:00
DianQK
ca0738f981
Consider only #[no_mangle] as builtin functions 2023-12-05 07:50:14 +08:00
DianQK
9ed0d11efb
Avoid adding compiler-used functions to symbols.o 2023-12-04 22:28:00 +08:00
Takayuki Maeda
30a4215532
Rollup merge of #118573 - petrochenkov:pathdatakind, r=TaKO8Ki
rustc: Harmonize `DefKind` and `DefPathData`

Follow up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/118188.

`DefPathData::(ClosureExpr,ImplTrait)` are renamed to match `DefKind::(Closure,OpaqueTy)`.

`DefPathData::ImplTraitAssocTy` is replaced with `DefPathData::TypeNS(kw::Empty)` because both correspond to `DefKind::AssocTy`.
It's possible that introducing `(DefKind,DefPathData)::AssocOpaqueTy` instead could be a better solution, but that would be a much more invasive change.

Const generic parameters introduced for effects are moved from `DefPathData::TypeNS` to `DefPathData::ValueNS`, because constants are values.

`DefPathData` is no longer passed to `create_def` functions to avoid redundancy.
2023-12-04 21:19:45 +09:00
Takayuki Maeda
da2fb8109e
Rollup merge of #118551 - RalfJung:extern-types-bugs, r=compiler-errors
more targeted errors when extern types end up in places they should not

Cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115709 -- this does not fix that bug but it makes the panics less obscure and makes it more clear that this is a deeper issue than just a little codegen oversight. (In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116115 we decided we'd stick to causing ICEs here for now, rather than nicer errors. We can't currently show any errors pre-mono and probably we don't want post-mono checks when this gets stabilized anyway.)
2023-12-04 21:19:44 +09:00
Takayuki Maeda
87625dbf2b
Rollup merge of #118540 - RalfJung:unsized-packed-offset, r=TaKO8Ki
codegen, miri: fix computing the offset of an unsized field in a packed struct

`#[repr(packed)]`  strikes again.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/118537
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/3200

`@bjorn3` I assume cranelift needs the same fix.
2023-12-04 21:19:44 +09:00
bors
db07cccb1e Auto merge of #113730 - belovdv:jobserver-init-check, r=petrochenkov
Report errors in jobserver inherited through environment variables

This pr attempts to catch situations, when jobserver exists, but is not being inherited.

r? `@petrochenkov`
2023-12-03 16:28:22 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
17e799c270 rustc: Harmonize DefKind and DefPathData
`DefPathData::(ClosureExpr,ImplTrait)` are renamed to match `DefKind::(Closure,OpaqueTy)`.

`DefPathData::ImplTraitAssocTy` is replaced with `DefPathData::TypeNS(kw::Empty)` because both correspond to `DefKind::AssocTy`.
It's possible that introducing `(DefKind,DefPathData)::AssocOpaqueTy` could be a better solution, but that would be a much more invasive change.

Const generic parameters introduced for effects are moved from `DefPathData::TypeNS` to `DefPathData::ValueNS`, because constants are values.

`DefPathData` is no longer passed to `create_def` functions to avoid redundancy.
2023-12-03 16:24:56 +03:00
Ralf Jung
ef15a8182b codegen, miri: fix computing the offset of an unsized field in a packed struct 2023-12-03 08:26:51 +01:00
Ralf Jung
5a20bac6b3 more targeted errors when extern types end up in places they should not 2023-12-03 08:11:15 +01:00
bors
2da59b8676 Auto merge of #118470 - nnethercote:cleanup-error-handlers, r=compiler-errors
Cleanup error handlers

Mostly by making function naming more consistent. More to do after this, but this is enough for one PR.

r? compiler-errors
2023-12-02 02:48:34 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
a179a53565 Use Session::diagnostic in more places. 2023-12-02 09:01:35 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
5d1d384443 Rename HandlerInner::delay_span_bug as HandlerInner::span_delayed_bug.
Because the corresponding `Level` is `DelayedBug` and `span_delayed_bug`
follows the pattern used everywhere else: `span_err`, `span_warning`,
etc.
2023-12-02 09:01:19 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
57d6f840b9 Rename *note_without_error as *note.
Because the variant name in `Level` is `Note`, and the `without_error`
suffix is omitted in similar cases like `struct_allow` and
`struct_help`.
2023-12-02 08:58:25 +11:00
bors
8c2b577217 Auto merge of #113923 - DianQK:restore-no-builtins-lto, r=pnkfelix
Restore `#![no_builtins]` crates participation in LTO.

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. I believe this type of issue won't happen again.

Fixes #72140.  Fixes #112245. Fixes #110606.  Fixes #105734. Fixes #96486. Fixes #108853. Fixes #108893. Fixes #78744. Fixes #91158. Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/10118. Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/issues/347.

 The `nightly-2023-07-20` version does not always reproduce problems due to changes in compiler-builtins, core, and user code. That's why this issue recurs and disappears.
Some issues were not tested due to the difficulty of reproducing them.

r? pnkfelix

cc `@bjorn3` `@japaric` `@alexcrichton` `@Amanieu`
2023-12-01 21:45:18 +00:00
bors
1d726a2be0 Auto merge of #118472 - nnethercote:rustc_session, r=bjorn3
`rustc_session` cleanups

r? `@bjorn3`
2023-12-01 00:08:04 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
99ac405b96 Move MetadataLoader{,Dyn} to rustc_metadata.
They're not used in `rustc_session`, and `rustc_metadata` is a more
obvious location.

`MetadataLoader` was originally put into `rustc_session` in #41565 to
avoid a dependency on LLVM, but things have changed a lot since then and
that's no longer relevant, e.g. `rustc_codegen_llvm` depends on
`rustc_metadata`.
2023-11-30 17:05:54 +11:00
belovdv
45e6342346 jobserver: check file descriptors 2023-11-29 18:00:03 +03:00
Ben Kimock
b94cfefc86 Use a u64 for the rmeta root position 2023-11-28 18:03:50 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
3e202ead60
Rollup merge of #118378 - cormacrelf:bugfix/linker-plugin-lto-wasm, r=petrochenkov
Perform LTO optimisations with wasm-ld + -Clinker-plugin-lto

Fixes (partially) #60059. Technically, `--target wasm32-unknown-unknown -Clinker-plugin-lto` would complete without errors before, but it was not producing optimized code. At least, it may have been but it was probably not the opt-level people intended.

Similarly to #118377, this could benefit from a warning about using an explicit libLTO path with LLD, which will ignore it and use its internal LLVM. Especially given we always use lld on wasm targets. I left the code open to that possibility rather than making it perfectly neat.
2023-11-28 16:09:55 +01:00
Michael Goulet
4936b3abdd
Rollup merge of #118202 - azhogin:azhogin/link_args_wrapping, r=petrochenkov
Added linker_arg(s) Linker trait methods for link-arg to be prefixed "-Wl," for cc-like linker args and not verbatim

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/99427#issuecomment-1234443468

> here's one possible improvement to -l link-arg making it more portable between linkers and useful - befriending it with the verbatim modifier (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/99425).
>
> -l link-arg:-verbatim=-foo would add -Wl,-foo (or equivalent) when C compiler is used as a linker, and just -foo when bare linker is used.
> -l link-arg:+verbatim=-bar on the other hand would always pass just -bar.
2023-11-27 19:06:47 -05:00
Cormac Relf
179e193db3 Perform LTO optimisations with wasm-ld + -Clinker-plugin-lto 2023-11-28 03:00:53 +11:00
Andrew Zhogin
7a88458363 Added linker_arg(s) Linker trait methods for link-arg to be prefixed "-Wl," for cc-like linker args and not verbatim 2023-11-27 21:19:34 +07:00
bjorn3
98a6eaa7f8 Serialize OutputFilenames into rmeta file
This ensures that linking will use the correct crate name even when
`#![crate_name = "..."]` is used to specify the crate name.
2023-11-26 18:02:42 +00:00
bors
3dbb4da042 Auto merge of #117301 - saethlin:finish-rmeta-encoding, r=WaffleLapkin
Call FileEncoder::finish in rmeta encoding

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/117254

The bug here was that rmeta encoding never called FileEncoder::finish. Now it does. Most of the changes here are needed to support that, since rmeta encoding wants to finish _then_ access the File in the encoder, so finish can't move out.

I tried adding a `cfg(debug_assertions)` exploding Drop impl to FileEncoder that checked for finish being called before dropping, but fatal errors cause unwinding so this isn't really possible. If we encounter a fatal error with a dirty FileEncoder, the Drop impl ICEs even though the implementation is correct. If we try to paper over that by wrapping FileEncoder in ManuallyDrop then that just erases the fact that Drop automatically checks that we call finish on all paths.

I also changed the name of DepGraph::encode to DepGraph::finish_encoding, because that's what it does and it makes the fact that it is the path to FileEncoder::finish less confusing.

r? `@WaffleLapkin`
2023-11-26 14:43:02 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
c697927f44 rustc: hir().local_def_id_to_hir_id() -> tcx.local_def_id_to_hir_id() cleanup 2023-11-26 12:41:21 +03:00
Nicholas Nethercote
57cd5e6551 Use rustc_fluent_macro::fluent_messages! directly.
Currently we always do this:
```
use rustc_fluent_macro::fluent_messages;
...
fluent_messages! { "./example.ftl" }
```
But there is no need, we can just do this everywhere:
```
rustc_fluent_macro::fluent_messages! { "./example.ftl" }
```
which is shorter.
2023-11-26 08:38:40 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
a733082be9 Avoid need for {D,Subd}iagnosticMessage imports.
The `fluent_messages!` macro produces uses of
`crate::{D,Subd}iagnosticMessage`, which means that every crate using
the macro must have this import:
```
use rustc_errors::{DiagnosticMessage, SubdiagnosticMessage};
```

This commit changes the macro to instead use
`rustc_errors::{D,Subd}iagnosticMessage`, which avoids the need for the
imports.
2023-11-26 08:38:00 +11:00
Ben Kimock
fbaa24ee35 Call FileEncoder::finish in rmeta encoding 2023-11-22 22:49:22 -05:00
Michael Goulet
040151a4be
Rollup merge of #118147 - Nilstrieb:no-redundant-casts, r=WaffleLapkin
Fix some unnecessary casts

`x clippy compiler -Aclippy::all -Wclippy::unnecessary_cast --fix` with some manual review to ensure every fix is correct.
2023-11-22 09:28:51 -08:00
Michael Goulet
1fb2624205
Rollup merge of #118013 - sivadeilra:user/ardavis/ehcont, r=wesleywiser
Enable Rust to use the EHCont security feature of Windows

In the future Windows will enable Control-flow Enforcement Technology (CET aka Shadow Stacks). To protect the path where the context is updated during exception handling, the binary is required to enumerate valid unwind entrypoints in a dedicated section which is validated when the context is being set during exception handling.

The required support for EHCONT Guard has already been merged into LLVM, long ago. This change simply adds the Rust codegen option to enable it.

Relevant LLVM change: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40223

This also adds a new `ehcont-guard` option to the bootstrap config which enables EHCont Guard when building std.

We at Microsoft have been using this feature for a significant period of time; we are confident that the LLVM feature, when enabled, generates well-formed code.

We currently enable EHCONT using a codegen feature, but I'm certainly open to refactoring this to be a target feature instead, or to use any appropriate mechanism to enable it.
2023-11-22 09:28:50 -08:00
bors
cc4bb0de20 Auto merge of #117928 - nnethercote:rustc_ast_pretty, r=fee1-dead
`rustc_ast_pretty` cleanups

Some improvements I found while looking at this code.

r? `@fee1-dead`
2023-11-22 05:09:33 +00:00
Arlie Davis
9429d68842 convert ehcont-guard to an unstable option 2023-11-21 14:24:23 -08:00
Arlie Davis
e11d8d147b Add support for generating the EHCont section
In the future Windows will enable Control-flow Enforcement Technology
(CET aka Shadow Stacks). To protect the path where the context is
updated during exception handling, the binary is required to enumerate
valid unwind entrypoints in a dedicated section which is validated when
the context is being set during exception handling.

The required support for EHCONT has already been merged into LLVM,
long ago. This change adds the Rust codegen option to enable it.

Reference:

* https://reviews.llvm.org/D40223

This also adds a new `ehcont-guard` option to the bootstrap config which
enables EHCont Guard when building std.
2023-11-21 13:41:23 -08:00
Nicholas Nethercote
3eadc6844b Update itertools to 0.11.
Because the API for `with_position` improved in 0.11 and I want to use
it.
2023-11-22 08:13:21 +11:00
Nilstrieb
c089a162d8 Fix some unnecessary casts
`x clippy compiler -Aclippy::all -Wclippy::unnecessary_cast --fix`
with some manual review to ensure every fix is correct.
2023-11-21 22:11:08 +01:00
Nilstrieb
21a870515b Fix clippy::needless_borrow in the compiler
`x clippy compiler -Aclippy::all -Wclippy::needless_borrow --fix`.

Then I had to remove a few unnecessary parens and muts that were exposed
now.
2023-11-21 20:13:40 +01:00
bors
46ecc10c69 Auto merge of #118082 - compiler-errors:rollup-ejsc8yd, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #117828 (Avoid iterating over hashmaps in astconv)
 - #117832 (interpret: simplify handling of shifts by no longer trying to handle signed and unsigned shift amounts in the same branch)
 - #117891 (Recover `dyn` and `impl` after `for<...>`)
 - #117957 (if available use a Child's pidfd for kill/wait)
 - #117988 (Handle attempts to have multiple `cfg`d tail expressions)
 - #117994 (Ignore but do not assume region obligations from unifying headers in negative coherence)
 - #118000 (Make regionck care about placeholders in outlives components)
 - #118068 (subtree update cg_gcc 2023/11/17)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2023-11-20 11:24:28 +00:00
Michael Goulet
94d9b7e708
Rollup merge of #117832 - RalfJung:interpret-shift, r=cjgillot
interpret: simplify handling of shifts by no longer trying to handle signed and unsigned shift amounts in the same branch

While we're at it, also update comments in codegen and MIR building related to shifts, and fix the overflow error printed by Miri on negative shift amounts.
2023-11-19 19:14:33 -08:00
bors
19079cf804 Auto merge of #115526 - arttet:master, r=jackh726
Add arm64e-apple-ios & arm64e-apple-darwin targets

This introduces

*  `arm64e-apple-ios`
*  `arm64e-apple-darwin`

Rust targets for support `arm64e` architecture on `iOS` and `Darwin`.

So, this is a first approach for integrating to the Rust compiler.

## Tier 3 Target Policy

> * A tier 3 target must have a designated developer or developers (the "target
maintainers") on record to be CCed when issues arise regarding the target.
(The mechanism to track and CC such developers may evolve over time.)

I will be the target maintainer.

> * Targets must use naming consistent with any existing targets; for instance, a
target for the same CPU or OS as an existing Rust target should use the same
name for that CPU or OS. Targets should normally use the same names and
naming conventions as used elsewhere in the broader ecosystem beyond Rust
(such as in other toolchains), unless they have a very good reason to
diverge. Changing the name of a target can be highly disruptive, especially
once the target reaches a higher tier, so getting the name right is important
even for a tier 3 target.
Target names should not introduce undue confusion or ambiguity unless
absolutely necessary to maintain ecosystem compatibility. For example, if
the name of the target makes people extremely likely to form incorrect
beliefs about what it targets, the name should be changed or augmented to
disambiguate it.
If possible, use only letters, numbers, dashes and underscores for the name.
Periods (.) are known to cause issues in Cargo.

The target names `arm64e-apple-ios`, `arm64e-apple-darwin` were derived from `aarch64-apple-ios`, `aarch64-apple-darwin`.
In this [ticket,](#73628) people discussed the best suitable names for these targets.

> In some cases, the arm64e arch might be "different". For example:
> * `thread_set_state` might fail with (os/kern) protection failure if we try to call it from arm64 process to arm64e process.
> * The returning value of dlsym is PAC signed on arm64e, while left untouched on arm64
> * Some function like pthread_create_from_mach_thread requires a PAC signed function pointer on arm64e, which is not required on arm64.

So, I have chosen them because there are similar triplets in LLVM. I think there are no more suitable names for these targets.

> * Tier 3 targets may have unusual requirements to build or use, but must not
create legal issues or impose onerous legal terms for the Rust project or for
Rust developers or users.
The target must not introduce license incompatibilities.
Anything added to the Rust repository must be under the standard Rust
license (MIT OR Apache-2.0).
The target must not cause the Rust tools or libraries built for any other
host (even when supporting cross-compilation to the target) to depend
on any new dependency less permissive than the Rust licensing policy. This
applies whether the dependency is a Rust crate that would require adding
new license exceptions (as specified by the tidy tool in the
rust-lang/rust repository), or whether the dependency is a native library
or binary. In other words, the introduction of the target must not cause a
user installing or running a version of Rust or the Rust tools to be
subject to any new license requirements.
Compiling, linking, and emitting functional binaries, libraries, or other
code for the target (whether hosted on the target itself or cross-compiling
from another target) must not depend on proprietary (non-FOSS) libraries.
Host tools built for the target itself may depend on the ordinary runtime
libraries supplied by the platform and commonly used by other applications
built for the target, but those libraries must not be required for code
generation for the target; cross-compilation to the target must not require
such libraries at all. For instance, rustc built for the target may
depend on a common proprietary C runtime library or console output library,
but must not depend on a proprietary code generation library or code
optimization library. Rust's license permits such combinations, but the
Rust project has no interest in maintaining such combinations within the
scope of Rust itself, even at tier 3.
"onerous" here is an intentionally subjective term. At a minimum, "onerous"
legal/licensing terms include but are not limited to: non-disclosure
requirements, non-compete requirements, contributor license agreements
(CLAs) or equivalent, "non-commercial"/"research-only"/etc terms,
requirements conditional on the employer or employment of any particular
Rust developers, revocable terms, any requirements that create liability
for the Rust project or its developers or users, or any requirements that
adversely affect the livelihood or prospects of the Rust project or its
developers or users.

No dependencies were added to Rust.

> * Neither this policy nor any decisions made regarding targets shall create any
binding agreement or estoppel by any party. If any member of an approving
Rust team serves as one of the maintainers of a target, or has any legal or
employment requirement (explicit or implicit) that might affect their
decisions regarding a target, they must recuse themselves from any approval
decisions regarding the target's tier status, though they may otherwise
participate in discussions.
>    * This requirement does not prevent part or all of this policy from being
cited in an explicit contract or work agreement (e.g. to implement or
maintain support for a target). This requirement exists to ensure that a
developer or team responsible for reviewing and approving a target does not
face any legal threats or obligations that would prevent them from freely
exercising their judgment in such approval, even if such judgment involves
subjective matters or goes beyond the letter of these requirements.

Understood.
I am not a member of a Rust team.

> * Tier 3 targets should attempt to implement as much of the standard libraries
as possible and appropriate (core for most targets, alloc for targets
that can support dynamic memory allocation, std for targets with an
operating system or equivalent layer of system-provided functionality), but
may leave some code unimplemented (either unavailable or stubbed out as
appropriate), whether because the target makes it impossible to implement or
challenging to implement. The authors of pull requests are not obligated to
avoid calling any portions of the standard library on the basis of a tier 3
target not implementing those portions.

Understood.
`std` is supported.

> * The target must provide documentation for the Rust community explaining how
to build for the target, using cross-compilation if possible. If the target
supports running binaries, or running tests (even if they do not pass), the
documentation must explain how to run such binaries or tests for the target,
using emulation if possible or dedicated hardware if necessary.

Building is described in the derived target doc.

> * Tier 3 targets must not impose burden on the authors of pull requests, or
other developers in the community, to maintain the target. In particular,
do not post comments (automated or manual) on a PR that derail or suggest a
block on the PR based on a tier 3 target. Do not send automated messages or
notifications (via any medium, including via `@)` to a PR author or others
involved with a PR regarding a tier 3 target, unless they have opted into
such messages.
>    * Backlinks such as those generated by the issue/PR tracker when linking to
an issue or PR are not considered a violation of this policy, within
reason. However, such messages (even on a separate repository) must not
generate notifications to anyone involved with a PR who has not requested
such notifications.

Understood.

> * Patches adding or updating tier 3 targets must not break any existing tier 2
or tier 1 target, and must not knowingly break another tier 3 target without
approval of either the compiler team or the maintainers of the other tier 3
target.
>     * In particular, this may come up when working on closely related targets,
such as variations of the same architecture with different features. Avoid
introducing unconditional uses of features that another variation of the
target may not have; use conditional compilation or runtime detection, as
appropriate, to let each target run code supported by that target.

These targets are not fully ABI compatible with arm64e code.

#73628
2023-11-20 03:11:17 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
ca3a02836e
Rollup merge of #117338 - workingjubilee:asmjs-meets-thanatos, r=b-naber
Remove asmjs

Fulfills [MCP 668](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/668).

`asmjs-unknown-emscripten` does not work as-specified, and lacks essential upstream support for generating asm.js, so it should not exist at all.
2023-11-17 23:04:21 +01:00
lcnr
40b154e53c rename bound region instantiation
- `erase_late_bound_regions` -> `instantiate_bound_regions_with_erased`
- `replace_late_bound_regions_X` -> `instantiate_bound_regions_X`
2023-11-17 09:29:48 +00:00
Mark Rousskov
db3e2bacb6 Bump cfg(bootstrap)s 2023-11-15 19:41:28 -05:00
Artyom Tetyukhin
f5e3492194
Add arm64e-apple-ios target 2023-11-15 14:55:18 +04:00
bors
6d069a0ac7 Auto merge of #117359 - tmiasko:call-def, r=cjgillot
Fix def-use check for call terminators

Fixes #117331.
2023-11-15 01:31:46 +00:00
Tomasz Miąsko
6873465600 Fix def-use check for call terminators 2023-11-14 17:07:34 +01:00
Ralf Jung
6dd2ea0f35 features must be additive 2023-11-13 09:41:45 +01:00
Ralf Jung
31493c70fa interpret: simplify handling of shifts by no longer trying to handle signed and unsigned shift amounts in the same branch 2023-11-12 12:49:46 +01:00
Ralf Jung
5b5006916b target_feature: make it more clear what that 'Option' means 2023-11-12 12:46:05 +01:00
bors
b7583d38b7 Auto merge of #117712 - lcnr:expand-coroutine, r=jackh726
generator layout: ignore fake borrows

fixes #117059

We emit fake shallow borrows in case the scrutinee place uses a `Deref` and there is a match guard. This is necessary to prevent the match guard from mutating the scrutinee: fab1054e17/compiler/rustc_mir_build/src/build/matches/mod.rs (L1250-L1265)

These fake borrows end up impacting the generator witness computation in `mir_generator_witnesses`, which causes the issue in #117059. This PR now completely ignores fake borrows during this computation. This is sound as thse are always removed after analysis and the actual computation of the generator layout happens afterwards.

Only the second commit impacts behavior, and could be backported by itself.

r? types
2023-11-09 14:23:45 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
ecc936b155 Remove -Z strip.
It was stabilized as `-C strip` in November 2021. The unstable option
was kept around as a temporary measure to ease the transition. Two years
is more than enough!
2023-11-09 11:36:02 +11:00
lcnr
992d93f687 rename BorrowKind::Shallow to Fake
also adds some comments
2023-11-08 22:55:28 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f8c67704f2
Rollup merge of #117616 - RalfJung:unstable-target-features, r=compiler-errors
warn when using an unstable feature with -Ctarget-feature

Setting or unsetting the wrong target features can cause ABI incompatibility (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116344, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116558). We need to carefully audit features for their ABI impact before stabilization. I just learned that we currently accept arbitrary unstable features on stable and if they are in the list of Rust target features, even unstable, then we don't even warn about that!1 That doesn't seem great, so I propose we introduce a warning here.

This has an obvious loophole via `-Ctarget-cpu`. I'm not sure how to best deal with that, but it seems better to fix what we can and think about the other cases later, maybe once we have a better idea for how to resolve the general mess that are ABI-affecting target features.
2023-11-07 19:29:56 +01:00
Ralf Jung
b85c6835d0 warn when using an unstable feature with -Ctarget-feature 2023-11-06 09:44:00 +01:00
bjorn3
ec29a02071 Update doc comment for CodegenBackend::link 2023-11-05 16:29:16 +00:00
dianqk
8d69a1e69e
Add crate compiler_builtins to LTO even if the Linkage is IncludedFromDylib 2023-11-03 08:29:15 +08:00
Nicholas Nethercote
f405ce86c2 Minimize pub usage in source_map.rs.
Most notably, this commit changes the `pub use crate::*;` in that file
to `use crate::*;`. This requires a lot of `use` items in other crates
to be adjusted, because everything defined within `rustc_span::*` was
also available via `rustc_span::source_map::*`, which is bizarre.

The commit also removes `SourceMap::span_to_relative_line_string`, which
is unused.
2023-11-02 19:35:00 +11:00
George Bateman
e936416a8d
Support enum variants in offset_of! 2023-10-31 23:25:54 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
73100d8e93
Rollup merge of #117317 - RalfJung:track-caller, r=oli-obk
share some track_caller logic between interpret and codegen

Also move the code that implements the track_caller intrinsics out of the core interpreter engine -- it's just a helper creating a const-allocation, doesn't need to be part of the interpreter core.
2023-10-30 17:33:16 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
824e3677c2
Rollup merge of #117068 - nnethercote:clean-up-Cargo-toml, r=wesleywiser
Clean up `compiler/rustc*/Cargo.toml`

Mostly by sorting dependencies, plus some other minor things.

r? ``@wesleywiser``
2023-10-30 17:33:15 +01:00
bors
91bbdd927a Auto merge of #116485 - coastalwhite:stabilize-riscv-target-features, r=Amanieu
Stabilize Ratified RISC-V Target Features

Stabilization PR for the ratified RISC-V target features. This stabilizes some of the target features tracked by #44839. This is also a part of #114544 and eventually needed for the RISC-V part of rust-lang/rfcs#3268.

There is a similar PR for the the stdarch crate which can be found at rust-lang/stdarch#1476.

This was briefly discussed on Zulip
(https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/250483-t-compiler.2Frisc-v/topic/Stabilization.20of.20RISC-V.20Target.20Features/near/394793704).

Specifically, this PR stabilizes the:
* Atomic Instructions (A) on v2.0
* Compressed Instructions (C) on v2.0
* ~Double-Precision Floating-Point (D) on v2.2~
* ~Embedded Base (E) (Given as `RV32E` / `RV64E`) on v2.0~
* ~Single-Precision Floating-Point (F) on v2.2~
* Integer Multiplication and Division (M) on v2.0
* ~Vector Operations (V) on v1.0~
* Bit Manipulations (B) on v1.0 listed as `zba`, `zbc`, `zbs`
* Scalar Cryptography (Zk) v1.0.1 listed as `zk`, `zkn`, `zknd`, `zkne`, `zknh`, `zkr`, `zks`, `zksed`, `zksh`, `zkt`, `zbkb`, `zbkc` `zkbx`
* ~Double-Precision Floating-Point in Integer Register (Zdinx) on v1.0~
* ~Half-Precision Floating-Point (Zfh) on v1.0~
* ~Minimal Half-Precision Floating-Point (Zfhmin) on v1.0~
* ~Single-Precision Floating-Point in Integer Register (Zfinx) on v1.0~
* ~Half-Precision Floating-Point in Integer Register (Zhinx) on v1.0~
* ~Minimal Half-Precision Floating-Point in Integer Register (Zhinxmin) on v1.0~

r? `@Amanieu`
2023-10-30 03:57:10 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
8ff624a9f2 Clean up rustc_*/Cargo.toml.
- Sort dependencies and features sections.
- Add `tidy` markers to the sorted sections so they stay sorted.
- Remove empty `[lib`] sections.
- Remove "See more keys..." comments.

Excluded files:
- rustc_codegen_{cranelift,gcc}, because they're external.
- rustc_lexer, because it has external use.
- stable_mir, because it has external use.
2023-10-30 08:46:02 +11:00
Jubilee Young
208f378ef1 Remove asmjs from compiler 2023-10-28 23:24:25 -07:00
bors
2106b63b7b Auto merge of #117335 - workingjubilee:rollup-jsomm41, r=workingjubilee
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #115773 (tvOS simulator support on Apple Silicon for rustc)
 - #117162 (Remove `cfg_match` from the prelude)
 - #117311 (-Zunpretty help: add missing possible values)
 - #117316 (Mark constructor of `BinaryHeap` as const fn)
 - #117319 (explain why we don't inline when target features differ)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2023-10-29 01:58:46 +00:00
Jubilee
09c56f8207
Rollup merge of #115773 - simlay:arch64-apple-tvos-sim-for-rustc, r=thomcc
tvOS simulator support on Apple Silicon for rustc

Closes or is a subtask of #115692.

# Tier 3 Target Policy

At this tier, the Rust project provides no official support for a target, so we place minimal requirements on the introduction of targets.

> * A tier 3 target must have a designated developer or developers (the "target maintainers") on record to be CCed when issues arise regarding the target. (The mechanism to track and CC such developers may evolve over time.)

See [`src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/apple-tvos.md`](4ab4d48ee5/src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/apple-tvos.md)

> * Targets must use naming consistent with any existing targets; for instance, a target for the same CPU or OS as an existing Rust target should use the same name for that CPU or OS. Targets should normally use the same names and naming conventions as used elsewhere in the broader ecosystem beyond Rust (such as in other toolchains), unless they have a very good reason to diverge. Changing the name of a target can be highly disruptive, especially once the target reaches a higher tier, so getting the name right is important even for a tier 3 target.
>     * Target names should not introduce undue confusion or ambiguity unless absolutely necessary to maintain ecosystem compatibility. For example, if the name of the target makes people extremely likely to form incorrect beliefs about what it targets, the name should be changed or augmented to disambiguate it.
>     * If possible, use only letters, numbers, dashes and underscores for the name. Periods (.) are known to cause issues in Cargo.

This naming scheme matches `$ARCH-$VENDOR-$OS-$ABI` (I think `sim` is the ABI here) which is matches the iOS apple silicon simulator (`aarch64-apple-ios-sim`). [There is some discussion about renaming some apple simulator targets](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115692#issuecomment-1712931910) to match the `-sim` suffix but that is outside the scope of this PR.

> * Tier 3 targets may have unusual requirements to build or use, but must not create legal issues or impose onerous legal terms for the Rust project or for Rust developers or users.
>
>    * The target must not introduce license incompatibilities.
>    * Anything added to the Rust repository must be under the standard Rust license (MIT OR Apache-2.0).
>    * The target must not cause the Rust tools or libraries built for any other host (even when supporting cross-compilation to the target) to depend on any new dependency less permissive than the Rust licensing policy. This applies whether the dependency is a Rust crate that would require adding new license exceptions (as specified by the tidy tool in the rust-lang/rust repository), or whether the dependency is a native library or binary. In other words, the introduction of the target must not cause a user installing or running a version of Rust or the Rust tools to be subject to any new license requirements.
>    * Compiling, linking, and emitting functional binaries, libraries, or other code for the target (whether hosted on the target itself or cross-compiling from another target) must not depend on proprietary (non-FOSS) libraries. Host tools built for the target itself may depend on the ordinary runtime libraries supplied by the platform and commonly used by other applications built for the target, but those libraries must not be required for code generation for the target; cross-compilation to the target must not require such libraries at all. For instance, rustc built for the target may depend on a common proprietary C runtime library or console output library, but must not depend on a proprietary code generation library or code optimization library. Rust's license permits such combinations, but the Rust project has no interest in maintaining such combinations within the scope of Rust itself, even at tier 3.
>    * "onerous" here is an intentionally subjective term. At a minimum, "onerous" legal/licensing terms include but are not limited to: non-disclosure requirements, non-compete requirements, contributor license agreements (CLAs) or equivalent, "non-commercial"/"research-only"/etc terms, requirements conditional on the employer or employment of any particular Rust developers, revocable terms, any requirements that create liability for the Rust project or its developers or users, or any requirements that adversely affect the livelihood or prospects of the Rust project or its developers or users.

This contribution is fully available under the standard Rust license with no additional legal restrictions whatsoever. This PR does not introduce any new dependency less permissive than the Rust license policy.

The new targets do not depend on proprietary libraries.

> * Tier 3 targets should attempt to implement as much of the standard libraries as possible and appropriate (core for most targets, alloc for targets that can support dynamic memory allocation, std for targets with an operating system or equivalent layer of system-provided functionality), but may leave some code unimplemented (either unavailable or stubbed out as appropriate), whether because the target makes it impossible to implement or challenging to implement. The authors of pull requests are not obligated to avoid calling any portions of the standard library on the basis of a tier 3 target not implementing those portions.

This new target implements as much of the standard library as the other tvOS targets do.

> * The target must provide documentation for the Rust community explaining how to build for the target, using cross-compilation if possible. If the target supports running binaries, or running tests (even if they do not pass), the documentation must explain how to run such binaries or tests for the target, using emulation if possible or dedicated hardware if necessary.

I have added the target to the other tvOS targets in [`src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/apple-tvos.md`](4ab4d48ee5/src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/apple-tvos.md)

> * Neither this policy nor any decisions made regarding targets shall create any binding agreement or estoppel by any party. If any member of an approving Rust team serves as one of the maintainers of a target, or has any legal or employment requirement (explicit or implicit) that might affect their decisions regarding a target, they must recuse themselves from any approval decisions regarding the target's tier status, though they may otherwise participate in discussions.
>    * This requirement does not prevent part or all of this policy from being cited in an explicit contract or work agreement (e.g. to implement or maintain support for a target). This requirement exists to ensure that a developer or team responsible for reviewing and approving a target does not face any legal threats or obligations that would prevent them from freely exercising their judgment in such approval, even if such judgment involves subjective matters or goes beyond the letter of these requirements.
> * Tier 3 targets must not impose burden on the authors of pull requests, or other developers in the community, to maintain the target. In particular, do not post comments (automated or manual) on a PR that derail or suggest a block on the PR based on a tier 3 target. Do not send automated messages or notifications (via any medium, including via ``@)`` to a PR author or others involved with a PR regarding a tier 3 target, unless they have opted into such messages.
>    * Backlinks such as those generated by the issue/PR tracker when linking to an issue or PR are not considered a violation of this policy, within reason. However, such messages (even on a separate repository) must not generate notifications to anyone involved with a PR who has not requested such notifications.
> * Patches adding or updating tier 3 targets must not break any existing tier 2 or tier 1 target, and must not knowingly break another tier 3 target without approval of either the compiler team or the maintainers of the other tier 3 target.
>    * In particular, this may come up when working on closely related targets, such as variations of the same architecture with different features. Avoid introducing unconditional uses of features that another variation of the target may not have; use conditional compilation or runtime detection, as appropriate, to let each target run code supported by that target.

I acknowledge these requirements and intend to ensure that they are met.

This target does not touch any existing tier 2 or tier 1 targets and should not break any other targets.
2023-10-28 17:08:03 -07:00
bors
2cad938a81 Auto merge of #116447 - oli-obk:gen_fn, r=compiler-errors
Implement `gen` blocks in the 2024 edition

Coroutines tracking issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/43122
`gen` block tracking issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/117078

This PR implements `gen` blocks that implement `Iterator`. Most of the logic with `async` blocks is shared, and thus I renamed various types that were referring to `async` specifically.

An example usage of `gen` blocks is

```rust
fn foo() -> impl Iterator<Item = i32> {
    gen {
        yield 42;
        for i in 5..18 {
            if i.is_even() { continue }
            yield i * 2;
        }
    }
}
```

The limitations (to be resolved) of the implementation are listed in the tracking issue
2023-10-29 00:03:52 +00:00
Ralf Jung
04fa124feb share the track_caller handling within a mir::Body 2023-10-28 16:16:15 +02:00