Commit Graph

1448 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Martin Kröning
a4e1bf416d
compiler: Hermit targets: Sort base fields by declaration
Signed-off-by: Martin Kröning <martin.kroening@eonerc.rwth-aachen.de>
2023-07-24 10:36:05 +02:00
Martin Kröning
2676637666
compiler: Hermit targets: Remove pre-link args.
These pre-link args are remains from Hermit's old C version.
We don't need them and we have no reason to override the defaults here.
See ld [1] for details.

[1]: https://sourceware.org/binutils/docs/ld/Options.html

Signed-off-by: Martin Kröning <martin.kroening@eonerc.rwth-aachen.de>
2023-07-24 10:36:04 +02:00
Chris Copeland
8e54caba04
Fix comments about GCC/Clang's enum width for arm-none targets.
GCC uses the `-fshort-enums` ABI for arm-none and the `int`-sized enum
ABI for arm-linux.
Clang uses the `int`-sized enum ABI for all arm targets.

Both options are permitted by AAPCS.

Rust is matching GCC's behavior for these targets, as interop with code
code compiled by GCC is desirable in the bare-metal context. See #87917.
2023-07-23 20:19:38 -07:00
Chris Copeland
ef8994827e
Remove redundant c_enum_min_bits option from the thumbv4t-none-eabi target.
This option is the same as the `thumb_base` defaults used by this target.
2023-07-23 20:19:26 -07:00
Chris Copeland
a8f1b72f08
Remove "-unknown" from llvm_target for arm*v7r-none-eabi* targets. 2023-07-23 20:19:04 -07:00
David Tolnay
5bbf0a8306
Revert "Auto merge of #113166 - moulins:ref-niches-initial, r=oli-obk"
This reverts commit 557359f925, reversing
changes made to 1e6c09a803.
2023-07-21 22:35:57 -07:00
bors
c3c5a5c5f7 Auto merge of #113922 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-90cj2vv, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 4 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #113887 (new solver: add a separate cache for coherence)
 - #113910 (Add FnPtr ty to SMIR)
 - #113913 (error/E0691: include alignment in error message)
 - #113914 (rustc_target: drop duplicate code)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2023-07-21 16:52:21 +00:00
David Rheinsberg
3e0389561b rustc_target: drop duplicate code
Drop duplicate helper methods on `Layout`, which are already implemented
on `LayoutS`. Note that `Layout` has a `Deref` implementation to
`LayoutS`, so all accessors are automatically redirected.

The methods are identical and have been copied to `rustc_abi` in:

    commit 390a637e29
    Author: hamidreza kalbasi <hamidrezakalbasi@protonmail.com>
    Date:   Mon Nov 7 00:36:11 2022 +0330

        move things from rustc_target::abi to rustc_abi

This commit left behind the original implementation. Drop it now.

Signed-off-by: David Rheinsberg <david@readahead.eu>
2023-07-21 10:31:01 +02:00
Moulins
403f34b599 Don't treat ref. fields with non-null niches as dereferenceable_or_null 2023-07-21 03:31:46 +02:00
chenx97
d3727148a0 support for mips32r6 as a target_arch value 2023-07-18 18:58:18 +08:00
chenx97
a132b3ec03 merge patterns 2023-07-18 18:58:18 +08:00
chenx97
c6e03cd951 support for mips64r6 as a target_arch value 2023-07-18 18:58:18 +08:00
bors
745efcc7d9 Auto merge of #113061 - Amanieu:x86_64-ohos, r=compiler-errors
Add x86_64-unknown-linux-ohos target

This complements the existing `aarch64-unknown-linux-ohos` and `armv7-unknown-linux-ohos` targets.

This should be covered by the existing MCP (https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/568), but I can also create a new MCP if that is preferred.
2023-07-18 00:19:18 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
e31ebae35a
Rollup merge of #113535 - jonathanpallant:sparc-bare-metal, r=jackh726
Add a sparc-unknown-none-elf target.

# `sparc-unknown-none-elf`

**Tier: 3**

Rust for bare-metal 32-bit SPARC V7 and V8 systems, e.g. the Gaisler LEON3.

## Target maintainers

- Jonathan Pallant, `jonathan.pallant@ferrous-systems.com`, https://ferrous-systems.com

## Requirements

> Does the target support host tools, or only cross-compilation?

Only cross-compilation.

> Does the target support std, or alloc (either with a default allocator, or if the user supplies an allocator)?

Only tested with `libcore` but I see no reason why you couldn't also support `liballoc`.

> Document the expectations of binaries built for the target. Do they assume
specific minimum features beyond the baseline of the CPU/environment/etc? What
version of the OS or environment do they expect?

Tested by linking with a standard SPARC bare-metal toolchain - specifically I used the [BCC2] toolchain from Gaisler (both GCC and clang variants, both pre-compiled for x64 Linux and compiling my own SPARC GCC from source to run on `aarch64-apple-darwin`).

The target is set to use the lowest-common-denominator `SPARC V7` architecture (yes, they started at V7 - see [Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SPARC#History)).

[BCC2]: https://www.gaisler.com/index.php/downloads/compilers

> Are there notable `#[target_feature(...)]` or `-C target-feature=` values that
programs may wish to use?

`-Ctarget-cpu=v8` adds the instructions added in V8.

`-Ctarget-cpu=leon3` adds the V8 instructions and sets up scheduling to suit the Gaisler LEON3.

> What calling convention does `extern "C"` use on the target?

I believe this is defined by the SPARC architecture reference manuals and V7, V8 and V9 are all compatible.

> What format do binaries use by default? ELF, PE, something else?

ELF

## Building the target

> If Rust doesn't build the target by default, how can users build it? Can users
just add it to the `target` list in `config.toml`?

Yes. I did:

```toml
target = ["aarch64-apple-darwin", "sparc-unknown-none-elf"]
```

## Building Rust programs

> Rust does not yet ship pre-compiled artifacts for this target. To compile for
this target, you will either need to build Rust with the target enabled (see
"Building the target" above), or build your own copy of `core` by using
`build-std` or similar.

Correct.

## Testing

> Does the target support running binaries, or do binaries have varying
expectations that prevent having a standard way to run them?

No - it's a bare metal platform.

> If users can run binaries, can they do so in some common emulator, or do they need native
hardware?

But if you use [BCC2] as the linker, you get default memory map suitable for the LEON3, and a default BSP for the LEON3, and so you can run the binaries in the `tsim-leon3` simulator from Gaisler.

```console
$ cat .cargo/config.toml | grep runner
runner = "tsim-leon3 -c sim-commands.txt"
$ cat sim-commands.txt
run
quit
$ cargo +sparcrust run --targe=sparc-unknown-none-elf
   Compiling sparc-demo-rust v0.1.0 (/work/sparc-demo-rust)
    Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 3.44s
     Running `tsim-leon3 -c sim-commands.txt target/sparc-unknown-none-elf/debug/sparc-demo-rust`

 TSIM3 LEON3 SPARC simulator, version 3.1.9 (evaluation version)

 Copyright (C) 2023, Frontgrade Gaisler - all rights reserved.
 This software may only be used with a valid license.
 For latest updates, go to https://www.gaisler.com/
 Comments or bug-reports to support@gaisler.com

 This TSIM evaluation version will expire 2023-11-28

Number of CPUs: 2
system frequency: 50.000 MHz
icache: 1 * 4 KiB, 16 bytes/line (4 KiB total)
dcache: 1 * 4 KiB, 16 bytes/line (4 KiB total)
Allocated 8192 KiB SRAM memory, in 1 bank at 0x40000000
Allocated 32 MiB SDRAM memory, in 1 bank at 0x60000000
Allocated 8192 KiB ROM memory at 0x00000000
section: .text, addr: 0x40000000, size: 104400 bytes
section: .rodata, addr: 0x400197d0, size: 15616 bytes
section: .data, addr: 0x4001d4d0, size: 1176 bytes
read 1006 symbols

  Initializing and starting from 0x40000000
Hello, this is Rust!
PANIC: PanicInfo { payload: Any { .. }, message: Some(I am a panic), location: Location { file: "src/main.rs", line: 33, col: 5 }, can_unwind: true }

  Program exited normally on CPU 0.
```

> Does the target support running the Rust testsuite?

I don't think so, the testsuite requires `libstd` IIRC.

## Cross-compilation toolchains and C code

> Does the target support C code?

Yes.

> If so, what toolchain target should users use to build compatible C code? (This may match the target triple, or it may be a toolchain for a different target triple, potentially with specific options or caveats.)

I suggest [BCC2] from Gaisler. It comes in both GCC and Clang variants.
2023-07-17 12:58:53 +02:00
Erik Desjardins
2daacf5af9 i686-windows: make requested alignment > 4 special case apply transitively 2023-07-14 17:48:13 -04:00
Jonathan Pallant (Ferrous Systems)
d30294e33c
Add a sparc-unknown-none-elf target.
Tested with the Gaisler bcc2 toolchain (both gcc and clang) and the Leon3 simulator.
2023-07-11 15:36:42 +01:00
Erik Desjardins
d1e764cb3b aarch64-linux: properly handle 128bit aligned aggregates 2023-07-10 19:19:40 -04:00
Erik Desjardins
7e933b4e26 repr(align) <= 4 should still be byval 2023-07-10 19:19:40 -04:00
Erik Desjardins
00b3eca0df move has_repr to layout, handle repr(transparent) properly 2023-07-10 19:19:39 -04:00
Erik Desjardins
ed317e4a47 i686-windows: pass arguments with requested alignment > 4 indirectly 2023-07-10 19:19:38 -04:00
Erik Desjardins
a07eb0abbd implement vector-containing aggregate alignment for x86 darwin 2023-07-10 19:19:36 -04:00
Patrick Walton
0becc89d4a rustc_target: Add alignment to indirectly-passed by-value types, correcting the
alignment of `byval` on x86 in the process.

Commit 88e4d2c291 from five years ago removed
support for alignment on indirectly-passed arguments because of problems with
the `i686-pc-windows-msvc` target. Unfortunately, the `memcpy` optimizations I
recently added to LLVM 16 depend on this to forward `memcpy`s. This commit
attempts to fix the problems with `byval` parameters on that target and now
correctly adds the `align` attribute.

The problem is summarized in [this comment] by @eddyb. Briefly, 32-bit x86 has
special alignment rules for `byval` parameters: for the most part, their
alignment is forced to 4. This is not well-documented anywhere but in the Clang
source. I looked at the logic in Clang `TargetInfo.cpp` and tried to replicate
it here. The relevant methods in that file are
`X86_32ABIInfo::getIndirectResult()` and
`X86_32ABIInfo::getTypeStackAlignInBytes()`. The `align` parameter attribute
for `byval` parameters in LLVM must match the platform ABI, or miscompilations
will occur. Note that this doesn't use the approach suggested by eddyb, because
I felt it was overkill to store the alignment in `on_stack` when special
handling is really only needed for 32-bit x86.

As a side effect, this should fix #80127, because it will make the `align`
parameter attribute for `byval` parameters match the platform ABI on LLVM
x86-64.

[this comment]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80822#issuecomment-829985417
2023-07-10 19:19:30 -04:00
Havard Eidnes
6cc37bbee0 Add support for NetBSD/riscv64 aka. riscv64gc-unknown-netbsd. 2023-07-05 13:49:01 +00:00
David Wood
eddfce53c1
abi: avoid ice for non-ffi-safe fn ptrs
Remove an `unwrap` that assumed FFI-safe types in foreign fn-ptr types.

Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
2023-07-03 13:40:20 +01:00
Rémy Rakic
38dca73456 require -Zunstable-options to use new link-self-contained values and
linker flavors

- only the stable values for `-Clink-self-contained` can be used on stable until we
have more feedback on the interface
- `-Zunstable-options` is required to use unstable linker flavors
2023-06-30 21:11:42 +00:00
Rémy Rakic
051e94d50e implement -C linker-flavor modern flavors 2023-06-30 21:10:12 +00:00
Rémy Rakic
5ea0f63733 add whether LinkerFlavor invokes the linker via a C/C++ compiler 2023-06-30 20:28:46 +00:00
Rémy Rakic
99605a0389 add whether LinkerFlavor uses lld 2023-06-30 20:28:46 +00:00
bors
af9df2fd91 Auto merge of #106619 - agausmann:avr-object-file, r=nagisa
Fix unset e_flags in ELF files generated for AVR targets

Closes #106576

~~Sort-of blocked by gimli-rs/object#500~~ (merged)

I'm not sure whether the list of AVR CPU names is okay here. Maybe it could be moved out-of-line to improve the readability of the function.
2023-06-30 08:55:56 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
5d46bd995d Add x86_64-unknown-linux-ohos target
This complements the existing `aarch64-unknown-linux-ohos` and
`armv7-unknown-linux-ohos` targets.
2023-06-26 16:50:36 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f6d58eaad3
Rollup merge of #111326 - he32:netbsd-aarch64-be, r=oli-obk
Add support for NetBSD/aarch64-be (big-endian arm64).
2023-06-26 11:58:43 +02:00
Augie Fackler
34d0cffcdf switch to using a target property to control plt default 2023-06-22 14:29:22 -04:00
Thom Chiovoloni
b80e0b7f53
Reorder tvos_* functions in apple_base.rs to avoid breaking sorted order 2023-06-21 14:59:40 -07:00
Thom Chiovoloni
b18ff59690
Fix rustc_target::spec:🍎:tests 2023-06-21 14:59:40 -07:00
Thom Chiovoloni
abb1911682
Fix the tvOS targets to use the right LLVM target and respect the deployment target environment variables 2023-06-21 14:59:39 -07:00
Thom Chiovoloni
3785a17dd9
Fix busted data_layout (mismatch vs LLVM) in x86_64 tvOS simulator target 2023-06-21 14:59:39 -07:00
WANG Rui
22a45258d9 loongarch64-none*: Remove environment component from llvm target 2023-06-13 20:24:22 +08:00
bors
4bd4e2ea82 Auto merge of #112386 - loongarch-rs:reloc-static, r=eholk
loongarch64-unknown-none*: Set default relocation model to static

This PR sets the default relocation model to `static` for `loongarch64-unknown-none*` targets. This change aims to streamline the development of the bare-metal project by removing the need for the executable program loader to implement relocation.
2023-06-13 09:13:03 +00:00
bors
f383703e32 Auto merge of #111698 - Amanieu:force-static-lib, r=petrochenkov
Force all native libraries to be statically linked when linking a static binary

Previously, `#[link]` without an explicit `kind = "static"` would confuse the linker and end up producing a dynamically linked library because of the `-Bdynamic` flag. However this binary would not work correctly anyways since it was linked with startup code for a static binary.

This PR solves this by forcing all native libraries to be statically linked when the output is a static binary that cannot link to dynamic libraries anyways.

Fixes #108878
Fixes #102993
2023-06-07 22:02:24 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
0304e0a5b0 Force all native libraries to be statically linked when linking a static binary 2023-06-07 19:30:37 +01:00
WANG Rui
37b465ff9c loongarch64-unknown-none*: Set default relocation model to static 2023-06-07 22:34:51 +08:00
bors
b3dd578767 Auto merge of #111819 - nikarh:vita-improved, r=Amanieu
Improved std support for ps vita target

Fixed a couple of things in std support for ps vita via Vita SDK newlib oss implementation:

- Added missing hardware features to target spec
- Compile in thumb by default (newlib is also compiled in thumb)
- Fixed fs calls. Vita newlib has a not-very-posix dirent. Also vita does not expose inodes, it's stubbed as 0 in stat, and I'm stubbing it here for dirent (because vita newlibs's dirent doesn't even have that field)
- Enabled signal handlers for panic unwinding
- Dropped static link requirement from the platform support md. Also, rearranged sections to better stick with the template.
2023-06-07 03:20:15 +00:00
bors
afab3662eb Auto merge of #112361 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-39zxrw1, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #111250 (Add Terminator conversion from MIR to SMIR, part #2)
 - #112310 (Add new Tier-3 targets: `loongarch64-unknown-none*`)
 - #112334 (Add myself to highfive rotation)
 - #112340 (remove `TyCtxt::has_error_field` helper method)
 - #112343 (Prevent emitting `missing_docs` for `pub extern crate`)
 - #112350 (Avoid duplicate type sanitization of local decls in borrowck)
 - #112356 (Fix comment for `get_region_var_origins`)
 - #112358 (Remove default visitor impl in region constraint generation)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2023-06-06 21:28:34 +00:00
WANG Rui
bd32075934 Add new Tier-3 targets: loongarch64-unknown-none*
MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/628
2023-06-06 10:55:52 +08:00
Nikolay Arhipov
50117af409 Std support improvement for ps vita target 2023-06-05 19:14:09 +03:00
Victor Gil
1f5361b40c Added custom risc32-imac for esp-espidf target 2023-06-04 15:49:04 +02:00
bors
8ebf04225d Auto merge of #112198 - compiler-errors:rollup-o2xe4of, r=compiler-errors
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #111670 (Require that const param tys implement `ConstParamTy`)
 - #111914 (CFI: Fix cfi with async: transform_ty: unexpected GeneratorWitness(Bi…)
 - #112030 (Migrate `item_trait_alias` to Askama)
 - #112150 (Support 128-bit atomics on all x86_64 Apple targets)
 - #112174 (Fix broken link)
 - #112190 (Improve comments on `TyCtxt` and `GlobalCtxt`.)
 - #112193 (Check tuple elements are `Sized` in `offset_of`)

Failed merges:

 - #112071 (Group rfcs tests)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2023-06-02 07:57:21 +00:00
Michael Goulet
71982341b4
Rollup merge of #112174 - cuishuang:master, r=jyn514
Fix broken link

The previous link is no longer accessible.

Use the latest link.
2023-06-01 23:07:39 -07:00
Michael Goulet
fc557576a4
Rollup merge of #112150 - taiki-e:apple-atomic-128, r=Amanieu
Support 128-bit atomics on all x86_64 Apple targets

On x86_64, we currently set `max_atomic_width` to 128 only on macOS.

ad8304a0d5/compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/x86_64_apple_darwin.rs (L8)

However, other x86_64 Apple targets (iOS, tvOS, and watchOS) are also core2+ and support cmpxchg16b.

ad8304a0d5/compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/apple_base.rs (L71-L76)

```console
# Script to get targets that support cmpxchg16b by default:
$ (for target in $(rustc --print target-list); do [[ $target == "x86_64"* ]] && rustc --print cfg --target "$target" | grep -q cmpxchg16b && echo "$target"; done)
x86_64-apple-darwin
x86_64-apple-ios
x86_64-apple-ios-macabi
x86_64-apple-tvos
x86_64-apple-watchos-sim
x86_64h-apple-darwin
```

r? `@Amanieu`
2023-06-01 23:07:38 -07:00
cui fliter
bbfadf067c Fix broken link
Signed-off-by: cui fliter <imcusg@gmail.com>
2023-06-02 09:36:01 +08:00
Deadbeef
4f83717cf7 Use translatable diagnostics in rustc_const_eval 2023-06-01 14:45:18 +00:00
bors
9af3865dec Auto merge of #110807 - petrochenkov:strictflavor, r=lqd,wesleywiser
linker: Report linker flavors incompatible with the current target

The linker flavor is checked for target compatibility even if linker is never used (e.g. we are producing a rlib).
If it causes trouble, we can move the check to `link.rs` so it will run if the linker (flavor) is actually used.

And also feature gate explicitly specifying linker flavors for tier 3 targets.

The next step is supporting all the internal linker flavors in user-visible interfaces (command line and json).
2023-05-31 22:40:25 +00:00
Taiki Endo
0a61bc4d36 Support 128-bit atomics on all x86_64 Apple targets 2023-06-01 03:27:16 +09:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
b0ce4164f0 linker: Report linker flavors incompatible with the current target
Previously they would be reported as link time errors about unknown linker options
2023-05-29 19:58:11 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
2013ccc218 rustc_target: Refactor linker flavor inference
Go through an intermediate pair of `cc`and `lld` hints instead of mapping CLI options to `LinkerFlavor` directly, and use the target's default linker flavor as a reference.
2023-05-29 19:58:11 +03:00
Ximin Luo
b65c2afdfd
Fix linkage for large binaries on mips64 platforms ...
... by enabling xgot feature

Co-Authored-By: Zixing Liu <zixing.liu@canonical.com>
2023-05-29 10:57:03 -06:00
David Carlier
1cae91e9f6 compiler: update solaris and illumos spec to support TSAN. 2023-05-28 13:46:23 +01:00
Wesley Wiser
019d75b44e Add SafeStack support to rustc
Adds support for LLVM [SafeStack] which provides backward edge control
flow protection by separating the stack into two parts: data which is
only accessed in provable safe ways is allocated on the normal stack
(the "safe stack") and all other data is placed in a separate allocation
(the "unsafe stack").

SafeStack support is enabled by passing `-Zsanitizer=safestack`.

[SafeStack]: https://clang.llvm.org/docs/SafeStack.html
2023-05-26 15:18:54 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
42c7b8a7de
Rollup merge of #111384 - bmisiak:issue-106021-fix, r=petrochenkov
Fix linking Mac Catalyst by including LC_BUILD_VERSION in object files

Hello. My first rustc PR!

Issue #106021 prevents Rust code from being linked into Mac Catalyst applications. Apple's LD has started requiring object files to contain version information about the platform they were built for, such as:
* the "deployment target" (minimum supported OS version),
* the SDK version
* the type of the platform (macOS/iOS/catalyst/tvOS/watchOS all have a different number).

This is currently only enforced when building for Mac Catalyst.

Rust uses the `object` crate which added support for including this information starting with `0.31.0`. ~~I upgraded it along with `thorin-dwp` so that everything depends on 0.31.
Apparently 0.31 [pulls in](https://github.com/gimli-rs/object/issues/463) `ruzstd` due to a [new ELF standard](https://maskray.me/blog/2022-09-09-zstd-compressed-debug-sections) because its `compression` feature is enabled by thorin. If you find this objectionable, let me know what the best way to avoid pulling in those dependencies might be.~~

**(`object` upgraded in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111413)**

I then added two commits:
* The first one adds very basic, hard-coded support for calling `set_macho_build_version` for `-macabi` (Catalyst) targets, where it claims deployment target of Catalyst 14.0 and SDK of 16.2.
* The second weaves the versioning through `rust_target::spec::TargetOptions`, so that we can stick to specifying all target-related info in one place.

Kudos to ``@ara4n`` for writing [this gist](https://gist.github.com/ara4n/320a53ea768aba51afad4c9ed2168536).
2023-05-26 08:24:07 +02:00
Brian M
a61f026182 Mac Catalyst: specify 14.0 deployment taregt in llvm_target 2023-05-25 11:24:00 -07:00
bors
0b011b7b7e Auto merge of #111933 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-m10k3ts, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 4 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #95198 (Add slice::{split_,}{first,last}_chunk{,_mut})
 - #109899 (Use apple-m1 as target CPU for aarch64-apple-darwin.)
 - #111624 (Emit diagnostic for privately uninhabited uncovered witnesses.)
 - #111875 (Don't leak the function that is called on drop)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2023-05-25 06:02:11 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
87bb7d8ac7
Rollup merge of #109899 - daxpedda:patch-1, r=jackh726
Use apple-m1 as target CPU for aarch64-apple-darwin.

This updates the target CPU for the `aarch64-apple-darwin` target to `apple-m1`, which is the first generation of CPUs with this target anyway.

This wasn't able to be done before because of the minimum supported version of LLVM being 12, now that it was updated to 13 (in fact we are already at 14), this is available.

See previous update: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90478.
See LLVM update: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100460.
2023-05-25 08:01:07 +02:00
Alex Gaynor
12fd46d691
Enable sanitizers and profiler for aarch64-unknown-linux-musl 2023-05-22 14:13:23 -07:00
Adam Gausmann
a7158ecfa9 rustc_codegen_ssa: Set e_flags for AVR architecture based on target CPU 2023-05-21 16:56:57 -05:00
WANG Rui
d58863fe43 asm: loongarch64: Drop efiapi 2023-05-12 17:22:47 +08:00
Michael Goulet
691a5f3883
Rollup merge of #111375 - rcvalle:rust-cfi-fix-106547, r=bjorn3
CFI: Fix SIGILL reached via trait objects

Fix #106547 by transforming the concrete self into a reference to a trait object before emitting type metadata identifiers for trait methods.
2023-05-11 17:43:07 -07:00
Ramon de C Valle
7c7b22e62c CFI: Fix SIGILL reached via trait objects
Fix #106547 by transforming the concrete self into a reference to a
trait object before emitting type metadata identifiers for trait
methods.
2023-05-09 20:04:19 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
2a8adcc966
Rollup merge of #111332 - loongarch-rs:inline-asm, r=Amanieu
Improve inline asm for LoongArch

This PR is a sub-part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111235, to improve inline asm for LoongArch.

r? `@Amanieu`
2023-05-08 19:41:51 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
4df84a1e4e
Rollup merge of #110638 - nikarh:vita, r=Mark-Simulacrum
STD support for PSVita

This PR adds std support for `armv7-sony-vita-newlibeabihf` target.

The work here is fairly similar to #95897, just for a different target platform.

This depends on the following pull requests:

rust-lang/backtrace-rs#523
rust-lang/libc#3209
2023-05-08 19:41:49 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
c9b4c63e01
Rollup merge of #110377 - chrisnc:armv7-atomic-64, r=cjgillot
Update max_atomic_width of armv7r and armv7_sony_vita targets to 64.

All armv7a and armv7r implementations support `ldrexd`/`strexd`, only armv7m does not.
2023-05-08 19:41:48 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
e3eb6a87bf
Rollup merge of #105354 - BlackHoleFox:apple-deployment-printer, r=oli-obk
Add deployment-target --print flag for Apple targets

This is very useful for crates that need to know what the Apple OS deployment target is for their build scripts or inside of a build environment. Right now, the defaults just get copy/pasted around the ecosystem since they've been stable for so long. But with #104385 in progress, that won't be true anymore and everything will need to move. Ideally whenever it happens again, this could be less painful as everything can ask the compiler what its default is instead.

To show examples of the copy/paste proliferation, here's some crates and/or apps that do:
- [cc](https://github.com/rust-lang/cc-rs/pull/708/files), Soon
-  [mac-notification-sys](https://github.com/h4llow3En/mac-notification-sys/pull/46/files#diff-d0d98998092552a1d3259338c2c71e118a5b8343dd4703c0c7f552ada7f9cb42R10-R12)
- [PyO3](ccb02d1aa1/src/target.rs (L755-L758))
- [Anki](613b5c1034/build/runner/src/bundle/artifacts.rs (L49-L54))
- [jsc-rs](3776726756/xtask/src/build.rs (L402-L405))
... and probably more that a simple GitHub codesearch didn't see
2023-05-08 19:41:48 +09:00
WANG Rui
c5382adc65 Simplify match statement since variable arch that is predictable 2023-05-08 11:08:09 +08:00
Havard Eidnes
6ef377cc41 Add support for NetBSD/aarch64-be (big-endian arm64). 2023-05-07 18:35:35 +00:00
Nilstrieb
f2645776dc Use smaller ints for bitflags 2023-05-07 18:24:46 +02:00
Nikolay Arhipov
3ba3df3764 PS Vita std support 2023-05-07 18:57:43 +03:00
BlackHoleFox
a427d418fd Add deployment-target --print flag for Apple targets 2023-05-05 01:22:17 -05:00
WANG Rui
08fc451771 asm: loongarch64: Implementation of clobber_abi 2023-05-05 14:21:13 +08:00
Gary Guo
c9a0be27ac Change ABI order in is_stable 2023-04-29 13:01:46 +01:00
Gary Guo
723aee2e56 Partial stabilisation of c_unwind 2023-04-29 13:01:44 +01:00
zhaixiaojuan
5f2fa4c11d Add loongarch64 asm! support 2023-04-25 14:15:31 +08:00
klensy
3338ee3ca7 drop unused deps, gate libc under unix for one crate 2023-04-22 15:22:21 +03:00
bors
3128fd8ddf Auto merge of #110666 - JohnTitor:rollup-3pwilte, r=JohnTitor
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #109949 (rustdoc: migrate `document_type_layout` to askama)
 - #110622 (Stable hash tag (discriminant) of `GenericArg`)
 - #110635 (More `IS_ZST` in `library`)
 - #110640 (compiler/rustc_target: Raise m68k-linux-gnu baseline to 68020)
 - #110657 (nit: consistent naming for SimplifyConstCondition)
 - #110659 (rustdoc: clean up JS)
 - #110660 (Print ty placeholders pretty)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2023-04-22 05:35:08 +00:00
John Paul Adrian Glaubitz
b0692a626b compiler/rustc_target: Raise m68k-linux-gnu baseline to 68020
Atomic operations require 68020 or later on m68k-linux-gnu.
2023-04-21 13:27:13 +02:00
DrMeepster
511e457c4b offset_of 2023-04-21 02:14:02 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
7dc211f5ce
Rollup merge of #108795 - thomcc:x86_64h-target, r=wesleywiser
Add support for the x86_64h-apple-darwin target

See https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/599 for MCP.

r? compiler-team

CC `@BlackHoleFox` who recently overhauled the apple target code in `rustc-target`.

## Target Support Checklist

> - 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'm the designated developer.

> - 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.

This uses the same naming conventions used for the other macOS targets (`-apple-darwin`), combined with the convention used by LLVM for the `x86_64h` targets. LLVM's convention matches the architecture name used when invoking various tools such as `lipo`, `arch`, and (IMO) there's not really a compelling reason to depart from it.

> - 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.

I don't think this is especially likely, although I suppose someone could mistake it for `x86_64-apple-darwin`.

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

👍

> - 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.

It does not.

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

It is.

> - 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.

There are no new dependencies that don't also apply to `x86_64-apple-darwin`.

> - 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.

This has the same requirements as the other macOS targets (e.g. `x86_64-apple-darwin` and similar).

> - "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 change here.

> - 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 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.

The standard library tests seem to pass.

> - 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.

> - 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.

Noted. This target is nearly identical to `x86_64-apple-darwin`, so this is
unlikely to cause issues anyway.

> - 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.

👍
2023-04-20 17:59:53 +02:00
Josh Soref
e09d0d2a29 Spelling - compiler
* account
* achieved
* advising
* always
* ambiguous
* analysis
* annotations
* appropriate
* build
* candidates
* cascading
* category
* character
* clarification
* compound
* conceptually
* constituent
* consts
* convenience
* corresponds
* debruijn
* debug
* debugable
* debuggable
* deterministic
* discriminant
* display
* documentation
* doesn't
* ellipsis
* erroneous
* evaluability
* evaluate
* evaluation
* explicitly
* fallible
* fulfill
* getting
* has
* highlighting
* illustrative
* imported
* incompatible
* infringing
* initialized
* into
* intrinsic
* introduced
* javascript
* liveness
* metadata
* monomorphization
* nonexistent
* nontrivial
* obligation
* obligations
* offset
* opaque
* opportunities
* opt-in
* outlive
* overlapping
* paragraph
* parentheses
* poisson
* precisely
* predecessors
* predicates
* preexisting
* propagated
* really
* reentrant
* referent
* responsibility
* rustonomicon
* shortcircuit
* simplifiable
* simplifications
* specify
* stabilized
* structurally
* suggestibility
* translatable
* transmuting
* two
* unclosed
* uninhabited
* visibility
* volatile
* workaround

Signed-off-by: Josh Soref <2119212+jsoref@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-04-17 16:09:18 -04:00
Chris Copeland
bf264c7cfc
Update max_atomic_width of armv7r and armv7_sony_vita targets to 64. 2023-04-15 15:40:16 -07:00
bors
e14b81f10d Auto merge of #109989 - ids1024:m68k-asm, r=Amanieu
Add inline assembly support for m68k

I believe this should be correct, to the extent I understand the logic around inline assembly. M68k is fairly straightforward here, other than having separate address registers.
2023-04-13 11:41:57 +00:00
Ian Douglas Scott
2ac8dee44f Add inline assembly support for m68k 2023-04-12 17:58:15 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
331e7c3659
Rollup merge of #110153 - DaniPopes:compiler-typos, r=Nilstrieb
Fix typos in compiler

I ran [`typos -w compiler`](https://github.com/crate-ci/typos) to fix typos in the `compiler` directory.

Refs #110150
2023-04-12 20:56:21 +02:00
Michael Goulet
4a24aab220
Rollup merge of #96971 - zhaixiaojuan:master, r=wesleywiser
Initial support for loongarch64-unknown-linux-gnu

Hi, We hope to add a new port in rust for LoongArch.

LoongArch intro
LoongArch is a RISC style ISA which is independently designed by Loongson
Technology in China. It is divided into two versions, the 32-bit version (LA32)
and the 64-bit version (LA64). LA64 applications have application-level
backward binary compatibility with LA32 applications. LoongArch is composed of
a basic part (Loongson Base) and an expanded part. The expansion part includes
Loongson Binary Translation (LBT), Loongson VirtualiZation (LVZ), Loongson SIMD
EXtension (LSX) and Loongson Advanced SIMD EXtension(LASX).

Currently the LA464 processor core supports LoongArch ISA and the Loongson
3A5000 processor integrates 4 64-bit LA464 cores. LA464 is a four-issue 64-bit
high-performance processor core. It can be used as a single core for high-end
embedded and desktop applications, or as a basic processor core to form an
on-chip multi-core system for server and high-performance machine applications.

Documentations:
ISA:
https://loongson.github.io/LoongArch-Documentation/LoongArch-Vol1-EN.html
ABI:
https://loongson.github.io/LoongArch-Documentation/LoongArch-ELF-ABI-EN.html
More docs can be found at:
https://loongson.github.io/LoongArch-Documentation/README-EN.html

Since last year, we have locally adapted two versions of rust, rust1.41 and rust1.57, and completed the test locally.
I'm not sure if I'm submitting all the patches at once, so I split up the patches and here's one of the commits
2023-04-11 20:28:45 -07:00
DaniPopes
677357d32b
Fix typos in compiler 2023-04-10 22:02:52 +02:00
Nilstrieb
5853c28a7f Simply Abi::fmt 2023-04-09 23:22:14 +02:00
bors
709a97fffe Auto merge of #109173 - flba-eb:add-i586-qnx70-target, r=compiler-errors
Add tier 3 no_std x86 support for QNX Neutrino RTOS, version 7.0

This PR adds the target `i586-pc-nto-qnx700`, which targets QNX Neutrino RTOS version 7.0 on x86 32-bit targets.

cc: `@flba-eb` `@gh-tr`

This target falls under the umbrella of Tier 3 QNX Neutrino RTOS support documented in `nto-qnx.md` and previously started with #102701.
2023-04-09 07:36:53 +00:00
zhaixiaojuan
ad26dab27c Initial support for loongarch64-unknown-linux-gnu 2023-04-04 17:05:07 +08:00
Amanieu d'Antras
69e3f7a30d Disable has_thread_local on OpenHarmony
OpenHarmony uses emulated TLS, which doesn't link properly when using
thread-local variables across crate boundaries with `-C prefer-dynamic`.
This PR makes thread_local! use pthreads directly instead.
2023-04-04 02:42:42 +01:00
daxpedda
0f90aed45f
Use apple-m1 as target CPU for aarch64-apple-darwin. 2023-04-03 18:01:15 +02:00
bors
87e6b621a2 Auto merge of #109721 - QuinnPainter:armv4t-lld, r=petrochenkov
Switch to LLD as default linker for {arm,thumb}v4t-none-eabi

The LLVM 16 update brought ARMv4t support to LLD. We should use it by default so users don't need to install an external linker.

cc `@Lokathor`
2023-04-01 01:55:16 +00:00
Sam Kearney
47d7dd0c0c Add QNX 7.0 x86 target 2023-03-29 17:42:47 -07:00
bors
17c1167216 Auto merge of #108996 - pnkfelix:rollback-part-of-pr-104137-that-broke-wasm-linker-overriding, r=petrochenkov
Rollback part of pr 104137 that broke wasm linker overriding

This is a quick fix to address #108910
2023-03-29 19:18:46 +00:00
bors
f98598c6cd Auto merge of #108089 - Zoxc:windows-tls, r=bjorn3
Support TLS access into dylibs on Windows

This allows access to `#[thread_local]`  in upstream dylibs on Windows by introducing a MIR shim to return the address of the thread local. Accesses that go into an upstream dylib will call the MIR shim to get the address of it.

`convert_tls_rvalues` is introduced in `rustc_codegen_ssa` which rewrites MIR TLS accesses to dummy calls which are replaced with calls to the MIR shims when the dummy calls are lowered to backend calls.

A new `dll_tls_export` target option enables this behavior with a `false` value which is set for Windows platforms.

This fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84933.
2023-03-29 16:20:37 +00:00
Quinn Painter
3811275f09 Switch to LLD as default linker for {arm,thumb}v4t-none-eabi 2023-03-29 12:51:11 +01:00
John Kåre Alsaker
0d89c6a2d4 Support TLS access into dylibs on Windows 2023-03-29 08:55:21 +02:00
Amanieu d'Antras
e3968be331 Add OpenHarmony targets
- `aarch64-unknown-linux-ohos`
- `armv7-unknown-linux-ohos`
2023-03-28 16:01:13 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
2a39cf560f
Rollup merge of #109231 - Zoxc:fs-non-canon, r=eholk
Add `try_canonicalize` to `rustc_fs_util` and use it over `fs::canonicalize`

This adds `try_canonicalize` which tries to call `fs::canonicalize`, but falls back to `std::path::absolute` if it fails. Existing `canonicalize` calls are replaced with it. `fs::canonicalize` is not guaranteed to work on Windows.
2023-03-23 19:55:45 +01:00
John Kåre Alsaker
4f7cd3d459 Add try_canonicalize to rustc_fs_util and use it over fs::canonicalize 2023-03-16 21:50:23 +01:00
Taiki Endo
fb916a0132 Fix riscv64 fuchsia LLVM target name 2023-03-15 12:55:37 +09:00
Matthias Krüger
e006ee9be8
Rollup merge of #108722 - petrhosek:fuchsia-riscv, r=petrochenkov
Support for Fuchsia RISC-V target

Fuchsia is in the process of implementing the RISC-V support. This change implements the minimal Rust compiler support. The support for building runtime libraries will be implemented in follow up changes once Fuchsia SDK has the RISC-V support.
2023-03-14 17:40:03 +01:00
Felix S. Klock II
e919f0f20e the fix
(fixed build by adding missing import.)
2023-03-14 11:44:08 -04:00
Thom Chiovoloni
9684c38450
Add support for the x86_64h-apple-darwin target 2023-03-05 17:11:58 -08:00
Petr Hosek
c0afabbb42 Support for Fuchsia RISC-V target
Fuchsia is in the process of implementing the RISC-V support. This
change implements the minimal Rust compiler support. The support for
building runtime libraries will be implemented in follow up changes
once Fuchsia SDK has the RISC-V support.
2023-03-04 20:50:09 +00:00
Michael Woerister
ee8bc5b0b2 Use FxIndexSet instead of FxHashSet for asm_target_features query. 2023-03-01 10:19:26 +01:00
bors
6d819a4b8f Auto merge of #106476 - keith:ks/add-sanitizer-support-for-modern-ios-platforms, r=badboy
Add sanitizer support for modern iOS platforms

asan and tsan generally support iOS, but that previously wasn't configured in rust. This only adds support for the simulator architectures, and arm64 device architecture, not the older 32 bit architectures.
2023-02-18 05:58:41 +00:00
bors
fabfd1fd93 Auto merge of #99679 - repnop:kernel-address-sanitizer, r=cuviper
Add `kernel-address` sanitizer support for freestanding targets

This PR adds support for KASan (kernel address sanitizer) instrumentation in freestanding targets. I included the minimal set of `x86_64-unknown-none`, `riscv64{imac, gc}-unknown-none-elf`, and `aarch64-unknown-none` but there's likely other targets it can be added to. (`linux_kernel_base.rs`?) KASan uses the address sanitizer attributes but has the `CompileKernel` parameter set to `true` in the pass creation.
2023-02-18 03:05:11 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
e0aa5613d8
Rollup merge of #107592 - workingjubilee:use-16-bit-enum-on-16-bit-targets, r=WaffleLapkin
Default `repr(C)` enums to `c_int` size

This is what ISO C strongly implies this is correct, and
many processor-specific ABIs imply or mandate this size, so
"everyone" (LLVM, gcc...) defaults to emitting enums this way.
However, this is by no means guaranteed by ISO C,
and the bare-metal Arm targets show it can be overridden,
which rustc supports via `c-enum-min-bits` in a target.json.

The override is a flag named `-fshort-enums` in clang and gcc,
but introducing a CLI flag is probably unnecessary for rustc.
This flag can be used by non-Arm microcontroller targets,
like AVR and MSP430, but it is not enabled for them by default.
Rust programmers who know the size of a target's enums
can use explicit reprs, which also lets them match C23 code.

This change is most relevant to 16-bit targets: AVR and MSP430.
Most of rustc's targets use 32-bit ints, but ILP64 does exist.
Regardless, rustc should now correctly handle enums for
both very small and very large targets.

Thanks to William for confirming MSP430 behavior,
and to Waffle for better style and no-core `size_of` asserts.

Fixes rust-lang/rust#107361
Fixes rust-lang/rust#77806
2023-02-17 12:39:05 +01:00
Jubilee Young
2edf6c8784 Default repr(C) enums to c_int size
This is what ISO C strongly implies this is correct, and
many processor-specific ABIs imply or mandate this size, so
"everyone" (LLVM, gcc...) defaults to emitting enums this way.
However, this is by no means guaranteed by ISO C,
and the bare-metal Arm targets show it can be overridden,
which rustc supports via `c-enum-min-bits` in a target.json.

The override is a flag named `-fshort-enums` in clang and gcc,
but introducing a CLI flag is probably unnecessary for rustc.
This flag can be used by non-Arm microcontroller targets,
like AVR and MSP430, but it is not enabled for them by default.
Rust programmers who know the size of a target's enums
can use explicit reprs, which also lets them match C23 code.

This change is most relevant to 16-bit targets: AVR and MSP430.
Most of rustc's targets use 32-bit ints, but ILP64 does exist.
Regardless, rustc should now correctly handle enums for
both very small and very large targets.

Thanks to William for confirming MSP430 behavior,
and to Waffle for better style and no-core size_of asserts.

Co-authored-by: William D. Jones <thor0505@comcast.net>
Co-authored-by: Waffle Maybe <waffle.lapkin@gmail.com>
2023-02-16 15:06:17 -08:00
Dylan DPC
587e3dfa80
Rollup merge of #107968 - ian-h-chamberlain:feature/3ds-enable-thread-local, r=Nilstrieb
Enable `#[thread_local]` on armv6k-nintendo-3ds

Since [libctru 2.1.2](https://github.com/devkitPro/libctru/releases/tag/v2.1.2)  was released we should now be able to use real `#[thread_local]` without corruption issues on the 3DS target.

CC `@Meziu` `@AzureMarker` `@Techie-Pi`
https://github.com/rust3ds/ctru-rs/issues/91#issuecomment-1426821450
2023-02-15 12:24:55 +05:30
Dylan DPC
9800dbe883
Rollup merge of #107163 - mikebenfield:parameters-pr, r=TaKO8Ki
Remove some superfluous type parameters from layout.rs.

Specifically remove V, which can always be VariantIdx, and F, which can always be Layout.
2023-02-15 12:24:54 +05:30
Wesley Norris
19714385e0 Add kernel-address sanitizer support for freestanding targets 2023-02-14 20:54:25 -05:00
Keith Smiley
aacf3213b1
Add sanitizer support for modern iOS platforms
asan and tsan generally support iOS, but that previously wasn't
configured in rust. This only adds support for the simulator
architectures, and arm64 device architecture, not the older 32 bit
architectures.
2023-02-12 16:00:31 -08:00
Ian Chamberlain
e723e43590
Enable #[thread_local] on armv6k-nintendo-3ds
Since libctru 2.1.2 was released
(https://github.com/devkitPro/libctru/releases/tag/v2.1.2) we should be
able to use real #[thread_local] without corruption issues on the 3DS
target.
2023-02-12 16:57:05 -05:00
Josh Stone
a06aaa4a9e Update the minimum external LLVM to 14 2023-02-10 16:06:25 -08:00
Oleksii Lozovskyi
8e49c84740 XRay support flag in TargetOptions
Specify where XRay is supported. I only test ARM64 and x86_64, but hey
those others should work too, right? LLVM documentation says that MIPS
and PPC are also supported, but I don't have the hardware, so I won't
pretend. Naturally, more targets can be added later with more testing.
2023-02-09 12:28:01 +09:00
bors
821b2a8e39 Auto merge of #106925 - imWildCat:imWildCat/remove-hardcoded-ios-macbi-target-version, r=wesleywiser
Remove hardcoded iOS version of clang target for Mac Catalyst

## Background

From `clang` 13.x, `-target x86_64-apple-ios13.0-macabi` fails while linking:

```
  = note: clang: error: invalid version number in '-target x86_64-apple-ios13.0-macabi'
```

<details>
<summary>Verbose output</summary>

```
error: linking with `cc` failed: exit status: 1
  |
  = note: LC_ALL="C" PATH="[removed]" VSLANG="1033" ZERO_AR_DATE="1" "cc" "-Wl,-exported_symbols_list,/var/folders/p8/qpmzbsdn07g5gxykwfxxw7y40000gn/T/rustci8tkvp/list" "-target" "x86_64-apple-ios13.0-macabi" "/var/folders/p8/qpmzbsdn07g5gxykwfxxw7y40000gn/T/rustci8tkvp/symbols.o" "/path/to/my/[project]/[user]/target/x86_64-apple-ios-macabi/release/deps/[user].[user].a2ccc648-cgu.0.rcgu.o" "-L" "/path/to/my/[project]/[user]/target/x86_64-apple-ios-macabi/release/deps" "-L" "/path/to/my/[project]/[user]/target/release/deps" "-L" "/path/to/my/[project]/[user]/target/x86_64-apple-ios-macabi/release/build/blake3-74e6ba91506ce712/out" "-L" "/path/to/my/[project]/[user]/target/x86_64-apple-ios-macabi/release/build/blake3-74e6ba91506ce712/out" "-L" "/Users/[user]/.rustup/toolchains/nightly-aarch64-apple-darwin/lib/rustlib/x86_64-apple-ios-macabi/lib" "/var/folders/p8/qpmzbsdn07g5gxykwfxxw7y40000gn/T/rustci8tkvp/libblake3-343c1616c8f62c66.rlib" "/path/to/my/[project]/[user]/target/x86_64-apple-ios-macabi/release/deps/libcompiler_builtins-15d4f20b641cf9ef.rlib" "-framework" "Security" "-framework" "CoreFoundation" "-framework" "Security" "-liconv" "-lSystem" "-lobjc" "-framework" "Security" "-framework" "Foundation" "-lc" "-lm" "-isysroot" "/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX13.1.sdk" "-Wl,-syslibroot" "/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX13.1.sdk" "-L" "/Users/[user]/.rustup/toolchains/nightly-aarch64-apple-darwin/lib/rustlib/x86_64-apple-ios-macabi/lib" "-o" "/path/to/my/[project]/[user]/target/x86_64-apple-ios-macabi/release/deps/lib[user].dylib" "-Wl,-dead_strip" "-dynamiclib" "-Wl,-dylib" "-nodefaultlibs"
  = note: clang: error: invalid version number in '-target x86_64-apple-ios13.0-macabi'

warning: `[user]` (lib) generated 6 warnings
error: could not compile `[user]` due to previous error; 6 warnings emitted
```
</details>

### Minimal example

C code:

```c
#include <stdio.h>
void main() {
    int a = 1;
    int b = 2;
    int c = a + b;
    printf("%d", c);
}
```

`clang` command sample:

```
➜  202301 clang -target x86_64-apple-ios13.0-macabi main.c
clang: error: invalid version number in '-target x86_64-apple-ios13.0-macabi'
➜  202301 clang -target x86_64-apple-ios14.0-macabi main.c
main.c:2:1: warning: return type of 'main' is not 'int' [-Wmain-return-type]
void main() {
^
main.c:2:1: note: change return type to 'int'
void main() {
^~~~
int
1 warning generated.
➜  202301 clang -target x86_64-apple-ios15.0-macabi main.c
main.c:2:1: warning: return type of 'main' is not 'int' [-Wmain-return-type]
void main() {
^
main.c:2:1: note: change return type to 'int'
void main() {
^~~~
int
1 warning generated.
➜  202301 clang -target x86_64-apple-ios-macabi main.c
main.c:2:1: warning: return type of 'main' is not 'int' [-Wmain-return-type]
void main() {
^
main.c:2:1: note: change return type to 'int'
void main() {
^~~~
int
1 warning generated.

➜  202301 clang --version
Apple clang version 14.0.0 (clang-1400.0.29.202)
Target: arm64-apple-darwin22.2.0
Thread model: posix
InstalledDir: /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Toolchains/XcodeDefault.xctoolchain/usr/bin
```

This PR is a simplified version of #96392, inspired by https://github.com/rust-lang/cc-rs/pull/727
2023-02-02 05:26:09 +00:00
imWildCat
5209d6f5fd Remove hardcoded clang target: ios13 or ios14 for Mac Catalyst [fixed] 2023-01-26 23:29:08 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
a8b5e5d9db
Rollup merge of #107248 - erikdesjardins:addrspace, r=oli-obk
abi: add AddressSpace field to Primitive::Pointer

...and remove it from `PointeeInfo`, which isn't meant for this.

There are still various places (marked with FIXMEs) that assume all pointers
have the same size and alignment. Fixing this requires parsing non-default
address spaces in the data layout string (and various other changes),
which will be done in a followup.
(That is, if it's actually worth it to support multiple different pointer sizes.
There is a lot of code that would be affected by that.)

Fixes #106367

r? ``@oli-obk``
cc ``@Patryk27``
2023-01-26 06:15:27 +01:00
Yuki Okushi
9e79642a7b
Rollup merge of #106796 - vadorovsky:revert-105708-enable-atomic-cas-bpf, r=bjorn3
BPF: Disable atomic CAS

Enabling CAS for BPF targets (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105708) breaks the build of core library.
The failure occurs both when building rustc for BPF targets and when
building crates for BPF targets with the current nightly.

The LLVM BPF backend does not correctly lower all `atomicrmw` operations
and crashes for unsupported ones.

Before we can enable CAS for BPF in Rust, we need to fix the LLVM BPF
backend first.

Fixes #106795

Signed-off-by: Michal Rostecki <vadorovsky@gmail.com>
2023-01-23 19:29:58 +09:00
Erik Desjardins
009192b01b abi: add AddressSpace field to Primitive::Pointer
...and remove it from `PointeeInfo`, which isn't meant for this.

There are still various places (marked with FIXMEs) that assume all pointers
have the same size and alignment. Fixing this requires parsing non-default
address spaces in the data layout string, which will be done in a followup.
2023-01-22 23:41:39 -05:00
Erik Desjardins
96f8f99589 rustc_abi: remove Primitive::{is_float,is_int}
there were fixmes for this already

i am about to remove is_ptr (since callers need to properly distinguish
between pointers in different address spaces), so might as well do this
at the same time
2023-01-22 21:02:07 -05:00
Michael Benfield
8df27d07ae Remove some superfluous type parameters from layout.rs.
Specifically remove V, which can always be VariantIdx, and F, which can
always be Layout.
2023-01-21 10:22:31 -08:00
Ulrich Weigand
492d928e44 Enable sanitizers for s390x-linux
Include sanitizers supported by LLVM on s390x (asan, lsan, msan, tsan)
in the target definition, as well as in the compiletest supported list.

Build sanitizer runtime for the target.  Enable sanitizers in the CI.
2023-01-20 18:34:24 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
68f12338af
Rollup merge of #104505 - WaffleLapkin:no-double-spaces-in-comments, r=jackh726
Remove double spaces after dots in comments

Most of the comments do not have double spaces, so I assume these are typos.
2023-01-17 20:21:25 +01:00
Maybe Waffle
6a28fb42a8 Remove double spaces after dots in comments 2023-01-17 08:09:33 +00:00
André Vennberg
0e65003c9e Fix some missed double spaces. 2023-01-14 18:23:40 +01:00
Michal Rostecki
651e873462 BPF: Disable atomic CAS
Enabling CAS for BPF targets (#105708) breaks the build of core library.
The failure occurs both when building rustc for BPF targets and when
building crates for BPF targets with the current nightly.

The LLVM BPF backend does not correctly lower all `atomicrmw` operations
and crashes for unsupported ones.

Before we can enable CAS for BPF in Rust, we need to fix the LLVM BPF
backend first.

Fixes #106795

Signed-off-by: Michal Rostecki <vadorovsky@gmail.com>
2023-01-14 22:12:11 +08:00
Nicholas Bishop
46f9e878f6 Stabilize abi_efiapi feature
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/65815
2023-01-11 20:42:13 -05:00
Yuki Okushi
96e53c0c6c
Rollup merge of #106636 - djkoloski:accept_old_fuchsia_triple, r=tmandry
Accept old spelling of Fuchsia target triples

The old spelling of Fuchsia target triples was changed in #106429 to add a proper vendor. Because the old spelling is widely used, some projects may need time to migrate their uses to the new triple spelling. The old spelling may eventually be removed altogether.

r? ``@tmandry``
2023-01-10 08:05:35 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
5773e8baf0
Rollup merge of #105708 - tomerze:enable-atomic-cas-bpf, r=nagisa
Enable atomic cas for bpf targets

It seems like LLVM now supports it.

https://reviews.llvm.org/D72184 - the PR in LLVM
2023-01-10 08:05:33 +09:00
Tyler Mandry
9c23629158
Add issue number to FIXMEs 2023-01-09 13:23:50 -05:00
David Koloski
42aa075310 Accept old spelling of Fuchsia target triples
Because the old spelling is widely used, some projects may need time to
migrate their uses to the new triple spelling. The old spelling may
eventually be removed altogether.
2023-01-09 12:18:12 -05:00
fee1-dead
fd75cfef66
Rollup merge of #106061 - ilovepi:fuchsia-scs, r=oli-obk
Enable Shadow Call Stack for Fuchsia on AArch64

Fuchsia already uses SCS by default for C/C++ code on ARM hardware. This patch allows SCS to be used for Rust code as well.
2023-01-09 23:35:28 +08:00
Paul Kirth
c5bde0699f Enable Shadow Call Stack for Fuchsia on AArch64
Fuchsia already uses SCS by default for C/C++ code on ARM hardware.
This patch allows SCS to be used for Rust code as well.
2023-01-06 17:42:20 +00:00
bors
afe8c4537c Auto merge of #106474 - erikdesjardins:noalias, r=bjorn3
cleanup: handle -Zmutable-noalias like -Zbox-noalias

r? `@bjorn3`

cc `@RalfJung` this will conflict with #106180
2023-01-06 15:20:58 +00:00
bors
ce8fbe7901 Auto merge of #106429 - djkoloski:add_vendor_to_fuchsia_target_triple, r=nagisa
Add vendor to Fuchsia's target triple

Historically, Rust's Fuchsia targets have been labeled x86_64-fuchsia and aarch64-fuchsia. However, they should technically contain vendor information. This CL changes Fuchsia's target triples to include the "unknown" vendor since Clang now does normalization and handles all triple spellings.

This was previously attempted in #90510, which was closed due to inactivity.
2023-01-06 06:05:40 +00:00
nils
fd7a159710 Fix uninlined_format_args for some compiler crates
Convert all the crates that have had their diagnostic migration
completed (except save_analysis because that will be deleted soon and
apfloat because of the licensing problem).
2023-01-05 19:01:12 +01:00
David Koloski
f6ef039775 Add vendor to Fuchsia's target triple
Historically, Rust's Fuchsia targets have been labeled x86_64-fuchsia
and aarch64-fuchsia. However, they should technically contain vendor
information. This CL changes Fuchsia's target triples to include the
"unknown" vendor since Clang now does normalization and handles all
triple spellings.

This was previously attempted in #90510, which was closed due to
inactivity.
2023-01-05 09:34:22 -05:00
Erik Desjardins
d165a6d708 cleanup: handle -Zmutable-noalias like -Zbox-noalias 2023-01-04 19:24:42 -05:00
bors
fbe8292872 Auto merge of #105712 - amg98:feat/vita-support, r=wesleywiser
PlayStation Vita support

Just the compiler definitions for no-std projects and std support using newlib

Earlier PR: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105606
2023-01-03 23:38:28 +00:00
KaDiWa
7b371d2ad9
fix some typos 2022-12-25 00:43:50 +01:00
Jeremy Stucki
3dde32ca97
rustc: Remove needless lifetimes 2022-12-20 22:10:40 +01:00
Nilstrieb
8bfd6450c7 A few small cleanups for newtype_index
Remove the `..` from the body, only a few invocations used it and it's
inconsistent with rust syntax.

Use `;` instead of `,` between consts. As the Rust syntax gods inteded.
2022-12-18 21:47:28 +01:00
Nilstrieb
b4d739ef12 Use #[derive] instead of custom syntax in all newtype_index 2022-12-18 20:53:08 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
de59844c98 more clippy::complexity fixes 2022-12-15 00:09:10 +01:00
Andrés Martínez
76430c39f0 Added PlayStation Vita support 2022-12-14 19:39:16 +01:00
Tomer Zeitune
11331b1030 Enable atomic cas for bpf targets 2022-12-14 19:37:28 +02:00
KaDiWa
9bc69925cb
compiler: remove unnecessary imports and qualified paths 2022-12-10 18:45:34 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
947fe7e341
Rollup merge of #105109 - rcvalle:rust-kcfi, r=bjorn3
Add LLVM KCFI support to the Rust compiler

This PR adds LLVM Kernel Control Flow Integrity (KCFI) support to the Rust compiler. It initially provides forward-edge control flow protection for operating systems kernels for Rust-compiled code only by aggregating function pointers in groups identified by their return and parameter types. (See llvm/llvm-project@cff5bef.)

Forward-edge control flow protection for C or C++ and Rust -compiled code "mixed binaries" (i.e., for when C or C++ and Rust -compiled code share the same virtual address space) will be provided in later work as part of this project by identifying C char and integer type uses at the time types are encoded (see Type metadata in the design document in the tracking issue #89653).

LLVM KCFI can be enabled with -Zsanitizer=kcfi.

Thank you again, `@bjorn3,` `@eddyb,` `@nagisa,` and `@ojeda,` for all the help!
2022-12-10 09:24:43 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f78babd6c4
Rollup merge of #105489 - eltociear:patch-17, r=Dylan-DPC
Fix typo in apple_base.rs

erronous -> erroneous
2022-12-09 22:31:58 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
320d018268
Rollup merge of #105468 - sunfishcode:sunfishcode/main-void-wasi, r=estebank
Mangle "main" as "__main_void" on wasm32-wasi

On wasm, the age-old C trick of having a main function which can either have no arguments or argc+argv doesn't work, because wasm requires caller and callee signatures to match. WASI's current strategy is to have compilers mangle main's name to indicate which signature they're using. Rust uses the no-argument form, which should be mangled as `__main_void`.

This is needed on wasm32-wasi as of #105395.
2022-12-09 22:31:57 +01:00
Ikko Ashimine
f41576bd3d
Fix typo in apple_base.rs
erronous -> erroneous
2022-12-09 18:09:32 +09:00
Ramon de C Valle
65698ae9f3 Add LLVM KCFI support to the Rust compiler
This commit adds LLVM Kernel Control Flow Integrity (KCFI) support to
the Rust compiler. It initially provides forward-edge control flow
protection for operating systems kernels for Rust-compiled code only by
aggregating function pointers in groups identified by their return and
parameter types. (See llvm/llvm-project@cff5bef.)

Forward-edge control flow protection for C or C++ and Rust -compiled
code "mixed binaries" (i.e., for when C or C++ and Rust -compiled code
share the same virtual address space) will be provided in later work as
part of this project by identifying C char and integer type uses at the
time types are encoded (see Type metadata in the design document in the
tracking issue #89653).

LLVM KCFI can be enabled with -Zsanitizer=kcfi.

Co-authored-by: bjorn3 <17426603+bjorn3@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-12-08 17:24:39 -08:00
Dan Gohman
98ae83daae Mangle "main" as "__main_void" on wasm32-wasi
On wasm, the age-old C trick of having a main function which can either have
no arguments or argc+argv doesn't work, because wasm requires caller and
callee signatures to match. WASI's current strategy is to have compilers
mangle main's name to indicate which signature they're using. Rust uses the
no-argument form, which should be mangled as `__main_void`.

This is needed on wasm32-wasi as of #105395.
2022-12-08 13:15:40 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
4d5a2f3d81
Rollup merge of #105405 - sunfishcode:sunfishcode/export-dynamic, r=TaKO8Ki
Stop passing -export-dynamic to wasm-ld.

-export-dynamic was a temporary hack added in the early days of the Rust wasm32 target when Rust didn't have a way to specify wasm exports in the source code. This flag causes all global symbols, and some compiler-internal symbols, to be exported, which is often more than needed.

Rust now does have a way to specify exports in the source code: `#[export_name = "..."]`.

So as the original comment suggests, -export-dynamic can now be removed, allowing users to have smaller binaries and better encapsulation in their wasm32-unknown-unknown modules.

It's possible that this change will require existing wasm32-unknown-unknown users will to add explicit `#[export_name = "..."]` directives to exporrt the symbols that their programs depend on having exported.
2022-12-08 12:57:30 +01:00
Dan Gohman
3a07aa9b5e Stop passing -export-dynamic to wasm-ld.
-export-dynamic was a temporary hack added in the early days of the Rust
wasm32 target when Rust didn't have a way to specify wasm exports in the
source code. This flag causes all global symbols, and some compiler-internal
symbols, to be exported, which is often more than needed.

Rust now does have a way to specify exports in the source code:
`#[export_name = "..."]`.

So as the original comment suggests, -export-dynamic can now be removed,
allowing users to have smaller binaries and better encapsulation in
their wasm32-unknown-unknown modules.

It's possible that this change will require existing wasm32-unknown-unknown
users will to add explicit `#[export_name = "..."]` directives to
exporrt the symbols that their programs depend on having exported.
2022-12-06 16:50:29 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
7fe9597775
Rollup merge of #105123 - BlackHoleFox:fixing-the-macos-deployment, r=oli-obk
Fix passing MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET to the linker

I messed up in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/103929 when merging the two base files together and as a result, started ignoring `MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET` at the linker level. This ended up being the cause of nighty builds not running on older macOS versions.

My original hope with the previous PR was that CI would have caught something like that but there were only tests checking the compiler target definitions in codegen tests. Because of how badly this sucks to break, I put together a new test via `run-make` that actually confirms the deployment target set makes it to the linker instead of just LLVM.

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/104570 (for real this time)
2022-12-04 11:38:51 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1a2f79b82c
Rollup merge of #105050 - WaffleLapkin:uselessrefign, r=jyn514
Remove useless borrows and derefs

They are nothing more than noise.
<sub>These are not all of them, but my clippy started crashing (stack overflow), so rip :(</sub>
2022-12-03 17:37:42 +01:00
BlackHoleFox
56592d310f Fix passing MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET to the linker 2022-12-02 18:12:16 -06:00
Maybe Waffle
f2b97a8bfe Remove useless borrows and derefs 2022-12-01 17:34:43 +00:00
hkalbasi
56126fb149 Extract llvm datalayout parsing out of spec module 2022-11-30 21:13:54 +03:30
Matthias Krüger
3e9a2233d0
Rollup merge of #104523 - flba-eb:fix_nto_target_name, r=wesleywiser
Don't use periods in target names

Using a period in the target name can cause issues in e.g. cargo, see also https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/182449-t-compiler.2Fhelp/topic/Running.20tests.20on.20remote.20target
2022-11-29 22:43:17 +01:00
Maybe Waffle
1d42936b18 Prefer doc comments over //-comments in compiler 2022-11-27 11:19:04 +00:00
hkalbasi
390a637e29 move things from rustc_target::abi to rustc_abi 2022-11-24 16:26:13 +03:30
hkalbasi
27fb904d68 move some layout logic to rustc_target::abi::layout 2022-11-24 16:26:12 +03:30
hkalbasi
09a384643e make rustc_target usable outside of rustc 2022-11-24 16:26:12 +03:30
Yuki Okushi
b162bb4270
Rollup merge of #102293 - ecnelises:aix.initial, r=davidtwco
Add powerpc64-ibm-aix as Tier-3 target

This is part of the effort mentioned in https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/553.

A reference to these options are definitions from [clang](ad6fe32032/clang/lib/Basic/Targets/PPC.h (L414-L448)) and [llvm](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/main/llvm/lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCTargetMachine.cpp).

AIX has a system `ld` but [its options and behaviors](https://www.ibm.com/docs/en/aix/7.3?topic=l-ld-command) are different from GNU ld. Thanks to ``@bzEq`` for contributing the linking args.
2022-11-23 06:40:22 +09:00
Dylan DPC
aeeac5dd0c
Rollup merge of #104001 - Ayush1325:custom-entry, r=bjorn3
Improve generating Custom entry function

This commit is aimed at making compiler-generated entry functions (Basically just C `main` right now) more generic so other targets can do similar things for custom entry. This was initially implemented as part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100316.

Currently, this moves the entry function name and Call convention to the target spec.

Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushsingh1325@gmail.com>
2022-11-19 11:54:43 +05:30
bors
83356b78c4 Auto merge of #104361 - vladimir-ea:watchos_fix_linking, r=oli-obk
[watchos] Dynamic linking is not allowed for watchos targets

Dynamic linking of all apple targets was (re-) enabled in PR #100636. However, dynamic linking is not allowed on WatchOS so this broke the build of standard library for WatchOS.

This change disables dynamic linking for WatchOS non-simulator targets.
2022-11-17 17:15:31 +00:00
Florian Bartels
9c3555d5c2 Remove periods from QNX/nto target names 2022-11-17 11:25:28 +01:00
Qiu Chaofan
aef3d938e4 Add powerpc64-ibm-aix as Tier-3 target 2022-11-17 16:36:54 +08:00
Matthias Krüger
fbcd751ea1
Rollup merge of #104137 - StackDoubleFlow:err-lsc-unsupported, r=bjorn3
Issue error when -C link-self-contained option is used on unsupported platforms

The documentation was also updated to reflect this.

I'm assuming the supported platforms are the same as initially written in [RELEASES.md](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/RELEASES.md#compiler-17).

Fixes #103576
2022-11-16 15:39:45 +01:00
StackDoubleFlow
0b6dce4309
Issue error when -C link-self-contained option is used on unsupported platforms
Document supported targets for `-C link-self-contained`

Move `LinkSelfContainedDefault::True` from wasm_base to wasm32_wasi
2022-11-14 22:21:24 -06:00
Matthias Krüger
5763fa74f0
Rollup merge of #104349 - rustaceanclub:master, r=oli-obk
fix some typos in comments
2022-11-14 19:26:18 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
8076b5903a
Rollup merge of #104357 - RalfJung:is-sized, r=cjgillot
add is_sized method on Abi and Layout, and use it

This avoids the double negation of `!is_unsized()` that we have quite a lot.
2022-11-13 17:37:38 +01:00
Vladimir Michael Eatwell
db99a89e38 [watchos] Dynamic linking is not allowed for watchos targets 2022-11-13 13:57:31 +00:00
Ralf Jung
c78021709a add is_sized method on Abi and Layout, and use it 2022-11-13 12:23:53 +01:00
cui fliter
442f848d74 fix some typos in comments
Signed-off-by: cui fliter <imcusg@gmail.com>
2022-11-13 15:26:17 +08:00
Florian Bartels
84e1fbcadf Add no_std AArch64 support for the QNX Neutrino (nto) 7.1 RTOS
This change allows to compile no_std applications for the QNX Neutrino
realtime operating system for ARM 64 bit CPUs.
Tested with QNX Neutrino 7.1.
2022-11-11 10:44:48 +01:00
Ayush Singh
9f0a8620bd
Improve generating Custom entry function
This commit is aimed at making compiler generated entry functions
(Basically just C `main` right now) more generic so other targets can do
similar things for custom entry. This was initially implemented as part
of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100316.

Currently, this moves the entry function name and Call convention to the
target spec.

Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushsingh1325@gmail.com>
2022-11-11 01:04:39 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
8f2c1f8469
Rollup merge of #104077 - nicholasbishop:bishop-uefi-aapcs, r=nagisa
Use aapcs for efiapi calling convention on arm

On arm, [llvm treats the C calling convention as `aapcs` on soft-float targets and `aapcs-vfp` on hard-float targets](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/issues/116#issuecomment-261057422). UEFI specifies in the arm calling convention that [floating point extensions aren't used](https://uefi.org/specs/UEFI/2.10/02_Overview.html#detailed-calling-convention), so always translate `efiapi` to `aapcs` on arm.

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/65815
2022-11-10 10:47:39 -05:00
Manish Goregaokar
a7cd4f2edf
Rollup merge of #101939 - zhaixiaojuan:loongarch64-abi, r=oli-obk
Add loongarch64 abi support
2022-11-10 10:47:36 -05:00
Manish Goregaokar
bfd637a3cf
Rollup merge of #104020 - nicholasbishop:bishop-limit-efiapi, r=nagisa
Limit efiapi calling convention to supported arches

Supported architectures in UEFI are described here:
https://uefi.org/specs/UEFI/2.10/02_Overview.html#calling-conventions

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/65815
2022-11-09 15:39:05 -05:00
Manish Goregaokar
67c0bff934
Rollup merge of #104015 - alex:remove-kernel, r=oli-obk
Remove linuxkernel targets

These are not used by the actual Rust-for-Linux project, so they're mostly just confusing.
2022-11-09 15:39:05 -05:00
Manish Goregaokar
017c9aa4a0
Rollup merge of #103929 - BlackHoleFox:apple-targets-cleanup, r=petrochenkov
Cleanup Apple-related code in rustc_target

While working on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/103455, the consistency of the `rustc_target` code for Apple's platforms was "kind of bad." There were two "base" files (`apple_base.rs` and `apple_sdk_base.rs`) that the targets each pulled some parts out of, each and all of them were written slightly differently, and sometimes missed comments other implementations had.

So to hopefully make future maintenance, like implementing https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/556, easier, this makes all of them use similar patterns and the same target base logic everywhere instead of picking bits from both. This also has some other smaller upsides like less stringly-typed functions.
2022-11-09 15:39:04 -05:00
Dylan DPC
2b9e099a83
Rollup merge of #104067 - jeremyd2019:patch-1, r=davidtwco
fix debuginfo for windows_gnullvm_base.rs

These lines (including the FIXME comment) were added to windows_gnu_base.rs in cf2c492ef8 but windows_gnullvm_base.rs was not updated.  This resulted in an error `LLVM ERROR: dwo only supported with ELF and Wasm` attempting to build on aarch64-pc-windows-gnullvm.

See also https://github.com/msys2/MINGW-packages/pull/13921#issuecomment-1304391707

/cc ```@mati865``` ```@davidtwco```

r? ```@davidtwco```
2022-11-08 11:23:53 +05:30
jeremyd2019
6994651b6c fix debuginfo for windows_gnullvm_base.rs
These lines (including the FIXME comment) were added to windows_gnu_base.rs in cf2c492ef8 but windows_gnullvm_base.rs was not updated.  This resulted in an error `LLVM ERROR: dwo only supported with ELF and Wasm` attempting to build on aarch64-pc-windows-gnullvm.

Signed-off-by: Jeremy Drake <github@jdrake.com>
2022-11-06 17:29:14 -08:00
Nicholas Bishop
42cbb40157 Use aapcs for efiapi calling convention on arm
On arm, llvm treats the C calling convention as `aapcs` on soft-float
targets and `aapcs-vfp` on hard-float targets [1]. UEFI specifies in the
arm calling convention that floating point extensions aren't used [2],
so always translate `efiapi` to `aapcs` on arm.

[1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/issues/116#issuecomment-261057422
[2]: https://uefi.org/specs/UEFI/2.10/02_Overview.html#detailed-calling-convention

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/65815
2022-11-06 18:05:24 -05:00
Nicholas Bishop
16edaa56ba Limit efiapi calling convention to supported arches
Supported architectures in UEFI are described here:
https://uefi.org/specs/UEFI/2.10/02_Overview.html#calling-conventions

Changes to tests modeled on 8240e7aa10.

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/65815
2022-11-06 17:04:42 -05:00
Tim Neumann
f414715ebf LLVM 16: Update RISCV data layout 2022-11-06 19:03:22 +00:00
BlackHoleFox
ae948c6380 Cleanup Apple target specifications 2022-11-05 17:57:32 -05:00
BlackHoleFox
de0ab1cee6 Merge apple_base and apple_sdk_base into one module 2022-11-05 17:56:21 -05:00
Alex Gaynor
c33ee13391
Remove linuxkernel targets
These are not used by the actual Rust-for-Linux project, so they're mostly just confusing.
2022-11-05 12:30:28 -04:00
bors
ce1a7e41f9 Auto merge of #103455 - BlackHoleFox:apple-sim-abi-consistency, r=davidtwco
Fixed consistency of Apple simulator target's ABI

Currently there's a few Apple device simulator targets that are inconsistent since some set `target_abi = "sim"` (the correct thing to do) while a bunch of others don't set anything (`""`). Due to this its very hard to reliability check if some Rust code is running inside a simulator. This changes all of them to do the same thing and set `sim` as their `target_abi`.

The new way to identity a simulator during compilation is as simple as `cfg(all(target_vendor="apple", target_abi = "sim"))` or even `cfg(target_abi = "sim")` being less pedantic about it.

The issues with the current form (and inspiration for this) are also summarized in `@thomcc's` [Tweet](https://twitter.com/at_tcsc/status/1576685244702691328).
2022-11-03 03:07:31 +00:00
Michael Howell
16ca46297b
Rollup merge of #102689 - ayrtonm:master, r=cjgillot
Add a tier 3 target for the Sony PlayStation 1

This adds a tier 3 target, `mipsel-sony-psx`, for the Sony PlayStation 1. I've tested it pretty thoroughly with [this SDK](https://github.com/ayrtonm/psx-sdk-rs) I wrote for it.

From the [tier 3 target policy](https://doc.rust-lang.org/rustc/target-tier-policy.html#tier-3-target-policy) (I've omitted the subpoints for brevity, but read over everything)
> 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'd be the designated developer

> 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.

The target name follows the conventions of the existing PSP target (`mipsel-sony-psp`) and uses `psx` following the convention of the broader [PlayStation homebrew community](https://psx-spx.consoledev.net/).

> 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.

No legal issues with this target.

> 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.

👍

> 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.

The psx supports `core` and `alloc`, but will likely not support `std` anytime soon.

> 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.

This target has an SDK and a `cargo-psx` tool for formatting binaries as psx executables. Documentation and examples are provided in the [psx-sdk-rs README](https://github.com/ayrtonm/psx-sdk-rs#psx-sdk-rs), the SDK and cargo tool are both available through crates.io and docs.rs has [SDK documentation](https://docs.rs/psx/latest/psx/).

> 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.

👍

> 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.

No problem
2022-10-30 19:31:38 -07:00
Soveu
ba847cad6d Enable varargs support for calling conventions other than C or cdecl
This patch makes it possible to use varargs for calling conventions,
which are either based on C (like efiapi) or C is based
on them (for example sysv64 and win64).
2022-10-23 18:46:16 -04:00
BlackHoleFox
ffccfa1eed Fix x86_64-apple-watchos-sim target to use the correct target_abi 2022-10-23 16:39:30 -05:00
BlackHoleFox
d2a3784780 Fix x86_64-apple-tvos target to use the correct target_abi 2022-10-23 15:46:43 -05:00
BlackHoleFox
79eedef984 Fix x86_64-apple-ios target to use the correct target_abi 2022-10-23 15:44:58 -05:00
Mara Bos
e60016eb55 Split is_stable from rustc_target::spec::abi::is_enabled. 2022-10-19 12:41:11 +02:00
Rageking8
7122abaddf more dupe word typos 2022-10-14 12:57:56 +08:00
Yuki Okushi
f4c9580c65
Rollup merge of #102836 - petrochenkov:jsonspec, r=eholk
rustc_target: Fix json target specs using LLD linker flavors in link args

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/101988#issuecomment-1272407248 (a regression introduced by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/101988).
2022-10-13 09:41:25 +09:00
Nilstrieb
7bfef19844 Use tidy-alphabetical in the compiler 2022-10-12 17:49:10 +05:30
Ayrton
d03185ed98 Add Sony PlayStation 1 tier 3 target 2022-10-10 12:07:22 -04:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
28fdcade79 rustc_target: Fix json target specs using LLD linker flavors in link args 2022-10-09 13:34:12 +04:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
572b6a9c60 rustc_target: Refactor internal linker flavors
In accordance with the design from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/96827#issuecomment-1208441595
2022-10-06 13:41:12 +04:00
Ralf Jung
a0131f0a36 change might_permit_raw_init to fully detect LLVM UB, but not more than that 2022-10-05 09:22:50 +02:00
bors
607b8296e0 Auto merge of #102503 - cuviper:x86-stack-probes, r=nagisa
Enable inline stack probes on X86 with LLVM 16

The known problems with x86 inline-asm stack probes have been solved on LLVM main (16), so this flips the switch. Anyone using bleeding-edge LLVM with rustc can start testing this, as I have done locally. We'll get more direct rust-ci when LLVM 16 branches and we start our upgrade, and we can always patch or disable it then if we find new problems.

The previous attempt was #77885, reverted in #84708.
2022-10-03 02:09:05 +00:00
Josh Stone
ed9e6f2ad8 Enable inline stack probes on X86 with LLVM 16 2022-09-29 19:49:23 -07:00
Josh Stone
2e7a964485 Adjust the s390x data layout for LLVM 16
LLVM [D131158] changed the SystemZ data layout to always set 64-bit
vector alignment, which used to be conditional on the "vector" feature.

[D131158]: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131158
2022-09-29 18:18:26 -07:00
Josh Stone
ad8f519ed7 Enable inline stack probes on PowerPC and SystemZ 2022-09-26 13:40:24 -07:00
Pietro Albini
3975d55d98
remove cfg(bootstrap) 2022-09-26 10:14:45 +02:00
bors
4d44e09cb1 Auto merge of #102165 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-n5oquhe, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #100734 (Split out async_fn_in_trait into a separate feature)
 - #101664 (Note if mismatched types have a similar name)
 - #101815 (Migrated the rustc_passes annotation without effect diagnostic infrastructure)
 - #102042 (Distribute rust-docs-json via rustup.)
 - #102066 (rustdoc: remove unnecessary `max-width` on headers)
 - #102095 (Deduplicate two functions that would soon have been three)
 - #102104 (Set 'exec-env:RUST_BACKTRACE=0' in const-eval-select tests)
 - #102112 (Allow full relro on powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-09-23 09:33:23 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
8e3b9bca65
Rollup merge of #102112 - cuviper:powerpc64-full-relro, r=eholk
Allow full relro on powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu

This was previously limited to partial relro, citing issues on RHEL6,
but that's no longer a supported platform since #95026. We have long
been enabling full relro in RHEL7's own Rust builds for ppc64, without
trouble, so it should be fine to drop this workaround.
2022-09-23 04:29:20 +02:00
khyperia
9a206a78eb Improve the help message for an invalid calling convention 2022-09-22 22:18:30 +02:00
Dylan DPC
b36a10af7e
Rollup merge of #101598 - chriswailes:sanitizers, r=nagisa,eholk
Update rustc's information on Android's sanitizers

This patch updates sanitizer support definitions for Android inside the compiler.  It also adjusts the logic to make sure no pre-built sanitizer runtime libraries are emitted as these are instead provided dynamically on Android targets.
2022-09-22 18:25:51 +05:30
Josh Stone
5d8083360a Allow full relro on powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu
This was previously limited to partial relro, citing issues on RHEL6,
but that's no longer a supported platform since #95026. We have long
been enabling full relro in RHEL7's own Rust builds for ppc64, without
trouble, so it should be fine to drop this workaround.
2022-09-21 11:53:50 -07:00
bors
cba4a389b3 Auto merge of #101329 - QuinnPainter:armv5te-targets, r=nagisa
Add armv5te-none-eabi and thumbv5te-none-eabi targets

Creates two new Tier 3 targets, `armv5te-none-eabi` and `thumbv5te-none-eabi`. They are for the same target architecture (armv5te), but one defaults to the A32 instruction set and the other defaults to T32. Based on the existing `armv4t-none-eabi` and `thumbv4t-none-eabi` targets.

My particular use case for these targets is Nintendo DS homebrew, but they should be usable for any armv5te system.

Going through the 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.)

That will be me.

> Targets must use naming consistent with any existing targets.

Naming is consistent with previous targets.

>> Target names should not introduce undue confusion or ambiguity unless absolutely necessary to maintain ecosystem compatibility.

No ambiguity here.

> 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.

Doesn't create any legal issues.

>> The target must not introduce license incompatibilities.

This doesn't introduce any new licenses.

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

Yep.

>> 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.

No 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.

Everything this uses is FOSS, no proprietary required.

> 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.

OK.

>> 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.

OK.

> 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 is a bare-metal target with only support for `core` (and `alloc`, if the user provides an allocator).

> 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 has been added.

> 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.

OK.

> 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.

OK.

> 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.

This doesn't break any other targets.

>> 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.

No unnecessary unconditional features here.
2022-09-21 09:36:21 +00:00
Chris Wailes
3d5a41724b Update rustc's information on Android's sanitizers
This patch updates sanitizier support definitions for Android inside the
compiler.  It also adjusts the logic to make sure no pre-built sanitizer
runtime libraries are emitted as these are instead provided dynamically
on Android targets.
2022-09-20 14:16:57 -07:00
Dylan DPC
3ad81e0dd8
Rollup merge of #93628 - est31:stabilize_let_else, r=joshtriplett
Stabilize `let else`

🎉  **Stabilizes the `let else` feature, added by [RFC 3137](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3137).** 🎉

Reference PR: https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1156

closes #87335 (`let else` tracking issue)

FCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93628#issuecomment-1029383585

----------

## Stabilization report

### Summary

The feature allows refutable patterns in `let` statements if the expression is
followed by a diverging `else`:

```Rust
fn get_count_item(s: &str) -> (u64, &str) {
    let mut it = s.split(' ');
    let (Some(count_str), Some(item)) = (it.next(), it.next()) else {
        panic!("Can't segment count item pair: '{s}'");
    };
    let Ok(count) = u64::from_str(count_str) else {
        panic!("Can't parse integer: '{count_str}'");
    };
    (count, item)
}
assert_eq!(get_count_item("3 chairs"), (3, "chairs"));
```

### Differences from the RFC / Desugaring

Outside of desugaring I'm not aware of any differences between the implementation and the RFC. The chosen desugaring has been changed from the RFC's [original](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3137-let-else.html#reference-level-explanations). You can read a detailed discussion of the implementation history of it in `@cormacrelf` 's [summary](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93628#issuecomment-1041143670) in this thread, as well as the [followup](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93628#issuecomment-1046598419). Since that followup, further changes have happened to the desugaring, in #98574, #99518, #99954. The later changes were mostly about the drop order: On match, temporaries drop in the same order as they would for a `let` declaration. On mismatch, temporaries drop before the `else` block.

### Test cases

In chronological order as they were merged.

Added by df9a2e0687 (#87688):

* [`ui/pattern/usefulness/top-level-alternation.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.58.1/src/test/ui/pattern/usefulness/top-level-alternation.rs) to ensure the unreachable pattern lint visits patterns inside `let else`.

Added by 5b95df4bdc (#87688):

* [`ui/let-else/let-else-bool-binop-init.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.58.1/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-bool-binop-init.rs) to ensure that no lazy boolean expressions (using `&&` or `||`) are allowed in the expression, as the RFC mandates.
* [`ui/let-else/let-else-brace-before-else.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.58.1/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-brace-before-else.rs) to ensure that no `}` directly preceding the `else` is allowed in the expression, as the RFC mandates.
* [`ui/let-else/let-else-check.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.58.1/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-check.rs) to ensure that `#[allow(...)]` attributes added to the entire `let` statement apply for the `else` block.
* [`ui/let-else/let-else-irrefutable.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.58.1/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-irrefutable.rs) to ensure that the `irrefutable_let_patterns` lint fires.
* [`ui/let-else/let-else-missing-semicolon.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.58.1/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-missing-semicolon.rs) to ensure the presence of semicolons at the end of the `let` statement.
* [`ui/let-else/let-else-non-diverging.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.58.1/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-non-diverging.rs) to ensure the `else` block diverges.
* [`ui/let-else/let-else-run-pass.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.58.1/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-run-pass.rs) to ensure the feature works in some simple test case settings.
* [`ui/let-else/let-else-scope.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.58.1/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-scope.rs) to ensure the bindings created by the outer `let` expression are not available in the `else` block of it.

Added by bf7c32a447 (#89965):

* [`ui/let-else/issue-89960.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.58.1/src/test/ui/let-else/issue-89960.rs) as a regression test for the ICE-on-error bug #89960 . Later in 102b9125e1 this got removed in favour of more comprehensive tests.

Added by 856541963c (#89974):

* [`ui/let-else/let-else-if.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.58.1/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-if.rs) to test for the improved error message that points out that `let else if` is not possible.

Added by 9b45713b6c:

* [`ui/let-else/let-else-allow-unused.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.61.0/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-allow-unused.rs) as a regression test for #89807, to ensure that `#[allow(...)]` attributes added to the entire `let` statement apply for bindings created by the `let else` pattern.

Added by 61bcd8d307 (#89841):

* [`ui/let-else/let-else-non-copy.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.61.0/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-non-copy.rs) to ensure that a copy is performed out of non-copy wrapper types. This mirrors `if let` behaviour. The test case bases on rustc internal changes originally meant for #89933 but then removed from the PR due to the error prior to the improvements of #89841.
* [`ui/let-else/let-else-source-expr-nomove-pass.rs `](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.61.0/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-source-expr-nomove-pass.rs) to ensure that while there is a move of the binding in the successful case, the `else` case can still access the non-matching value. This mirrors `if let` behaviour.

Added by 102b9125e1 (#89841):

* [`ui/let-else/let-else-ref-bindings.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.61.0/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-ref-bindings.rs) and [`ui/let-else/let-else-ref-bindings-pass.rs `](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.61.0/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-ref-bindings-pass.rs) to check `ref` and `ref mut` keywords in the pattern work correctly and error when needed.

Added by 2715c5f984 (#89841):

* Match ergonomic tests adapted from the `rfc2005` test suite.

Added by fec8a507a2 (#89841):

* [`ui/let-else/let-else-deref-coercion-annotated.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.61.0/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-deref-coercion-annotated.rs) and [`ui/let-else/let-else-deref-coercion.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.61.0/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-deref-coercion.rs) to check deref coercions.

#### Added since this stabilization report was originally written (2022-02-09)

Added by 76ea566677 (#94211):

* [`ui/let-else/let-else-destructuring.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.63.0/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-destructuring.rs) to give a nice error message if an user tries to do an assignment with a (possibly refutable) pattern and an `else` block, like asked for in #93995.

Added by e7730dcb7e (#94208):

* [`ui/let-else/let-else-allow-in-expr.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.61.0/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-allow-in-expr.rs) to test whether `#[allow(unused_variables)]` works in the expr, as well as its non presence, as well as putting it on the entire `let else` *affects* the expr, too. This was adding a missing test as pointed out by the stabilization report.
* Expansion of `ui/let-else/let-else-allow-unused.rs` and `ui/let-else/let-else-check.rs` to ensure that non-presence of `#[allow(unused)]` does issue the unused lint. This was adding a missing test case as pointed out by the stabilization report.

Added by 5bd71063b3 (#94208):

* [`ui/let-else/let-else-slicing-error.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.61.0/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-slicing-error.rs), a regression test for #92069, which got fixed without addition of a regression test. This resolves a missing test as pointed out by the stabilization report.

Added by 5374688e1d (#98574):

* [`src/test/ui/async-await/async-await-let-else.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/test/ui/async-await/async-await-let-else.rs) to test the interaction of async/await with `let else`

Added by 6c529ded86 (#98574):

* [`src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-temporary-lifetime.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-temporary-lifetime.rs) as a (partial) regression test for #98672

Added by 9b56640106 (#99518):

* [`src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-temp-borrowck.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-temporary-lifetime.rs) as a regression test for #93951
* Extension of `src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-temporary-lifetime.rs` to include a partial regression test for #98672 (especially regarding `else` drop order)

Added by baf9a7cb57 (#99518):

* Extension of `src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-temporary-lifetime.rs` to include a partial regression test for #93951, similar to `let-else-temp-borrowck.rs`

Added by 60be2de8b7 (#99518):

* Extension of `src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-temporary-lifetime.rs` to include a program that can now be compiled thanks to borrow checker implications of #99518

Added by 47a7a91c96 (#100132):

* [`src/test/ui/let-else/issue-100103.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/test/ui/let-else/issue-100103.rs), as a regression test for #100103, to ensure that there is no ICE when doing `Err(...)?` inside else blocks.

Added by e3c5bd617d (#100443):

* [`src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-then-diverge.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-then-diverge.rs), to verify that there is no unreachable code error with the current desugaring.

Added by 981852677c (#100443):

* [`src/test/ui/let-else/issue-94176.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/test/ui/let-else/issue-94176.rs), to make sure that a correct span is emitted for a missing trailing expression error. Regression test for #94176.

Added by e182d12a84 (#100434):

* [src/test/ui/unpretty/pretty-let-else.rs](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/test/ui/unpretty/pretty-let-else.rs), as a regression test to ensure pretty printing works for `let else` (this bug surfaced in many different ways)

Added by e26285603c (#99954):

* [`src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-temporary-lifetime.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-temporary-lifetime.rs) extended to contain & borrows as well, as this was identified as an earlier issue with the desugaring: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/98672#issuecomment-1200196921

Added by 2d8460ef43 (#99291):

* [`src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-drop-order.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-drop-order.rs) a matrix based test for various drop order behaviour of `let else`. Especially, it verifies equality of `let` and `let else` drop orders, [resolving](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93628#issuecomment-1238498468) a [stabilization blocker](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93628#issuecomment-1055738523).

Added by 1b87ce0d40 (#101410):

* Edit to `src/test/ui/let-else/let-else-temporary-lifetime.rs` to add the `-Zvalidate-mir` flag, as a regression test for #99228

Added by af591ebe4d (#101410):

* [`src/test/ui/let-else/issue-99975.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/test/ui/let-else/issue-99975.rs) as a regression test for the ICE #99975.

Added by this PR:

* `ui/let-else/let-else.rs`, a simple run-pass check, similar to `ui/let-else/let-else-run-pass.rs`.

### Things not currently tested

* ~~The `#[allow(...)]` tests check whether allow works, but they don't check whether the non-presence of allow causes a lint to fire.~~ → *test added by e7730dcb7eb29a10ee73f269f4dc6e9d606db0da*
* ~~There is no `#[allow(...)]` test for the expression, as there are tests for the pattern and the else block.~~ → *test added by e7730dcb7eb29a10ee73f269f4dc6e9d606db0da*
* ~~`let-else-brace-before-else.rs` forbids the `let ... = {} else {}` pattern and there is a rustfix to obtain `let ... = ({}) else {}`. I'm not sure whether the `.fixed` files are checked by the tooling that they compile. But if there is no such check, it would be neat to make sure that `let ... = ({}) else {}` compiles.~~ → *test added by e7730dcb7eb29a10ee73f269f4dc6e9d606db0da*
* ~~#92069 got closed as fixed, but no regression test was added. Not sure it's worth to add one.~~ → *test added by 5bd71063b3810d977aa376d1e6dd7cec359330cc*
* ~~consistency between `let else` and `if let` regarding lifetimes and drop order: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93628#issuecomment-1055738523~~ → *test added by 2d8460ef43d902f34ba2133fe38f66ee8d2fdafc*

Edit: they are all tested now.

### Possible future work / Refutable destructuring assignments

[RFC 2909](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/2909-destructuring-assignment.html) specifies destructuring assignment, allowing statements like `FooBar { a, b, c } = foo();`.
As it was stabilized, destructuring assignment only allows *irrefutable* patterns, which before the advent of `let else` were the only patterns that `let` supported.
So the combination of `let else` and destructuring assignments gives reason to think about extensions of the destructuring assignments feature that allow refutable patterns, discussed in #93995.

A naive mapping of `let else` to destructuring assignments in the form of `Some(v) = foo() else { ... };` might not be the ideal way. `let else` needs a diverging `else` clause as it introduces new bindings, while assignments have a default behaviour to fall back to if the pattern does not match, in the form of not performing the assignment. Thus, there is no good case to require divergence, or even an `else` clause at all, beyond the need for having *some* introducer syntax so that it is clear to readers that the assignment is not a given (enums and structs look similar). There are better candidates for introducer syntax however than an empty `else {}` clause, like `maybe` which could be added as a keyword on an edition boundary:

```Rust
let mut v = 0;
maybe Some(v) = foo(&v);
maybe Some(v) = foo(&v) else { bar() };
```

Further design discussion is left to an RFC, or the linked issue.
2022-09-17 15:31:06 +05:30
zhaixiaojuan
c7961da935 Add loongarch64 abi support 2022-09-17 18:00:34 +08:00
bors
95a992a686 Auto merge of #97800 - pnkfelix:issue-97463-fix-aarch64-call-abi-does-not-zeroext, r=wesleywiser
Aarch64 call abi does not zeroext (and one cannot assume it does so)

Fix #97463
2022-09-16 20:08:05 +00:00
est31
173eb6f407 Only enable the let_else feature on bootstrap
On later stages, the feature is already stable.

Result of running:

rg -l "feature.let_else" compiler/ src/librustdoc/ library/ | xargs sed -s -i "s#\\[feature.let_else#\\[cfg_attr\\(bootstrap, feature\\(let_else\\)#"
2022-09-15 21:06:45 +02:00
Your Name
73d6dd5098 Changes to rename target and update docs 2022-09-14 18:38:01 +01:00
Your Name
9025ab7a1f Add BE8 support 2022-09-13 08:27:48 +01:00
Nicholas Bishop
54d9ba8239 Use RelocModel::Pic for UEFI targets
In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100537, the relocation model
for UEFI targets was changed from PIC (the default value) to
static. There was some dicussion of this change here:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100537#discussion_r952363012

It turns out that this can cause compilation to fail as described in
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/101377, so switch back to PIC.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/101377
2022-09-09 15:26:19 -04:00
Quinn Painter
c227f0a8c9 remove DS stuff from docs + change to use thumb_base 2022-09-09 19:51:58 +01:00
Luis Cardoso
0f06320c24 translations(rustc_session): migrate TargetDataLayout::parse 2022-09-08 08:30:57 +02:00
Michael Benfield
1a08b96a0b Change name of "dataful" variant to "untagged"
This is in anticipation of a new enum layout, in which the niche
optimization may be applied even when multiple variants have data.
2022-09-07 20:12:45 +00:00
Quinn Painter
7b0377c716 fix tidy 2022-09-02 14:17:01 +01:00
Quinn Painter
e7b62be96b Add {thumb,arm}v5te-none-eabi targets 2022-09-02 14:16:02 +01:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
a0e21ff105 rustc_target: Refactor internal linker flavors slightly
Remove one unstable user-facing linker flavor (l4-bender)
2022-09-01 16:54:52 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
7dc186ff7e rustc_target: Add a compatibility layer to separate internal and user-facing linker flavors 2022-09-01 16:54:52 +03:00
bors
b32223fec1 Auto merge of #100707 - dzvon:fix-typo, r=davidtwco
Fix a bunch of typo

This PR will fix some typos detected by [typos].

I only picked the ones I was sure were spelling errors to fix, mostly in
the comments.

[typos]: https://github.com/crate-ci/typos
2022-09-01 05:39:58 +00:00
bors
aa857eb953 Auto merge of #100537 - petrochenkov:piccheck, r=oli-obk
rustc_target: Add some more target spec sanity checking
2022-09-01 03:13:46 +00:00
Dezhi Wu
b1430fb7ca Fix a bunch of typo
This PR will fix some typos detected by [typos].

I only picked the ones I was sure were spelling errors to fix, mostly in
the comments.

[typos]: https://github.com/crate-ci/typos
2022-08-31 18:24:55 +08:00
Matthias Krüger
0fee731a95
Rollup merge of #101025 - semarie:openbsd-archs, r=petrochenkov
Add tier-3 support for powerpc64 and riscv64 openbsd

# powerpc64
- MCP for [powerpc64-unknown-openbsd tier-3 support](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/551)
- only need to add spec definition in rustc_target

# riscv64
- MCP for [riscv64-unknown-openbsd tier-3 support](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/552)
- add spec definition in rustc_target
- follow freebsd about avoiding linking with `libatomic`
2022-08-31 07:57:58 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
9642e4840b
Rollup merge of #101088 - nicholasbishop:bishop-uefi-pdb, r=davidtwco
Set DebuginfoKind::Pdb in msvc_base

This PDB setting was added to `windows_msvc_base` in
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/98051. It's also needed for the
UEFI targets, and since `uefi_msvc_base` and `windows_msvc_base` are the
only things that inherit from `msvc_base`, just move the PDB setting up
to `mscv_base` to cover both.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/101071
2022-08-31 08:47:18 +09:00
Sébastien Marie
1de5b22678 add riscv64gc-unknown-openbsd support (target riscv64-unknown-openbsd on OpenBSD)
- add platform-support documentation
- add riscv64gc-unknown-openbsd spec
- do not try to link with -latomic on openbsd
2022-08-28 05:22:21 +00:00
Sébastien Marie
dacb6ee7b0 add powerpc64-unknown-openbsd support 2022-08-28 05:16:02 +00:00
Nicholas Bishop
1dd47b04c0 Set DebuginfoKind::Pdb in msvc_base
This PDB setting was added to `windows_msvc_base` in
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/98051. It's also needed for the
UEFI targets, and since `uefi_msvc_base` and `windows_msvc_base` are the
only things that inherit from `msvc_base`, just move the PDB setting up
to `mscv_base` to cover both.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/101071
2022-08-27 11:44:35 -04:00
bors
332cc8fb75 Auto merge of #100999 - nnethercote:shrink-FnAbi, r=bjorn3
Shrink `FnAbi`

Because they can take up a lot of memory in debug and release builds.

r? `@bjorn3`
2022-08-27 14:00:53 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
f4b5954764 rustc_target: Use Cow and link args helpers in apple_base 2022-08-27 15:30:05 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
f0d0573db1 rustc_target: Do not specify some target options redundantly
These values are already inherited
2022-08-27 15:30:05 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
2e83c22154 rustc_target: Add some more target spec sanity checking 2022-08-27 15:30:05 +03:00
bors
450e99f937 Auto merge of #98051 - davidtwco:split-dwarf-stabilization, r=wesleywiser
session: stabilize split debuginfo on linux

Stabilize the `-Csplit-debuginfo` flag...

- ...on Linux for all values of the flag. Split DWARF has been implemented for a few months, hasn't had any bug reports and has had some promising benchmarking for incremental debug build performance.
- ..on other platforms for the default value. It doesn't make any sense that `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed` is unstable on Windows MSVC when that's the default behaviour, but keep the other values unstable.
2022-08-26 15:47:26 +00:00
Sébastien Marie
908ac84662 openbsd: rustc_target: reorder spec by name 2022-08-26 06:15:54 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
f974617bda Move ArgAbi::pad_i32 into PassMode::Cast.
Because it's only needed for that variant. This shrinks the types and
clarifies the logic.
2022-08-26 11:12:36 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
b853e8a619 Turn ArgAbi::pad into a bool.
Because it's only ever set to `None` or `Some(Reg::i32())`.
2022-08-26 10:53:41 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
b75b3b3afe Change FnAbi::args to a boxed slice. 2022-08-26 10:30:36 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4df7bffa95 Change FnAbi::fixed_count to a u32. 2022-08-26 10:29:40 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
e4bf113027 Box CastTarget within PassMode.
Because `PassMode::Cast` is by far the largest variant, but is
relatively rare.

This requires making `PassMode` not impl `Copy`, and `Clone` is no
longer necessary. This causes lots of sigil adjusting, but nothing very
notable.
2022-08-26 09:35:28 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
263c426bfd Add size assertions for FnAbi and ArgAbi. 2022-08-26 09:30:30 +10:00
Matthias Krüger
44aa866488
Rollup merge of #100641 - corwinkuiper:add-armv4t-target, r=oli-obk
Add the armv4t-none-eabi target to the supported_targets

This target was added in #100244 but forgot to add it to the macro in the `mod.rs` file.

``@Lokathor``
2022-08-23 06:55:25 +02:00
Wesley Wiser
ed9b12d7fd
rustdoc doesn't like bare urls 2022-08-22 11:00:54 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
e81b994868
Rollup merge of #100636 - cutsoy:revert-77716, r=davidtwco
Revert "Revert "Allow dynamic linking for iOS/tvOS targets.""

This reverts commit 16e10bf81e (PR #77716).

The original original PR enabled `cdylib` builds for iOS. However this caused problems because:

> This new feature in Rust 1.46 added a lot of headache for iOS builds with cdylib targets. cdylib target is near impossible to build if you are using any crate with native dependencies (ex. openssl, libsodium, zmq). You can't just find .so files for all architectures to perform correct linking. Usual workflow is the following:
>
> 1. You build staticlib and rely that native dependencies will be linked as frameworks later
> 2. You setup right cocoapods in ObjectiveC/Swift wrapper.
>
> As cargo doesn't support platform-dependent crate types https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/4881 as a result a lot of projects now broken on Rust 1.46

However, this will be soon a thing of the past since 1.64 brings us the long awaited much anticipated `--crate-type` flag.

> I see that this got merged recently: https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/10083. The --crate-type flag will get stabilized in 1.64. In 1.64, you could still get a successful iOS staticlib with cargo build --crate-type=statclib even if the crate has cdylib targets too. If I'm not mistaken, this solves the problem too so this PR could be reverted in 1.64 with relatively little headache.

So summing up, I think this PR can be reverted in 1.64. 🤞
2022-08-20 19:45:13 +02:00
5225225
09ea9f0a87 Add diagnostic translation lints to crates that don't emit them 2022-08-18 19:29:02 +01:00
David Wood
cf2c492ef8 session: stabilize split debuginfo on linux
Stabilize the `-Csplit-debuginfo` flag...

- ...on Linux for all values of the flag. Split DWARF has been
  implemented for a few months, hasn't had any bug reports and has had
  some promising benchmarking for incremental debug build performance.
- ..on other platforms for the default value. It doesn't make any sense
  that `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed` is unstable on Windows MSVC when
  that's the default behaviour, but keep the other values unstable.

Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
2022-08-18 15:19:40 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
64cd65758c
Rollup merge of #100621 - taiki-e:armv4t-atomics-32, r=cuviper
Pass +atomics-32 feature for {arm,thumb}v4t-none-eabi

Similar to 89582e8193, but for ARMv4t.
Pre-v6 ARM target does not have atomic CAS, except for Linux and Android where atomic CAS is provided by compiler-builtins. So, there is a similar issue as thumbv6m.

I have confirmed that enabling the `atomics-32` target feature fixes the problem in the project affected by this issue. (https://github.com/taiki-e/portable-atomic/pull/28#discussion_r946604136)

Closes #100619

r? ``@nikic``
cc ``@Lokathor``
2022-08-17 12:32:55 +02:00
Corwin
ed27a4c516 add the armv4t-none-eabi target 2022-08-16 20:10:31 +01:00
Tim van Elsloo
9233298e71
Revert "Revert "Allow dynamic linking for iOS/tvOS targets.""
This reverts commit 16e10bf81e.

# Conflicts:
#	compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/apple_sdk_base.rs
2022-08-16 17:36:25 +02:00
Taiki Endo
5bb04f30cb Support 128-bit atomics on all aarch64 targets 2022-08-16 19:52:19 +09:00
Taiki Endo
8439080f27 Pass +atomics-32 feature for {arm,thumb}v4t-none-eabi 2022-08-16 19:24:12 +09:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
8fa707ab41 rustc_target: Update some old naming around self contained linking
The "fallback" naming pre-dates introduction of `-Clink-self-contained`
2022-08-12 18:47:13 +03:00
bors
e2b52ff73e Auto merge of #99464 - nikic:llvm-15, r=cuviper
Update to LLVM 15

For preliminary testing. Some LLVM 15 compatibility fixes were applied separately in #99512.

Release timeline:
 * LLVM 15 branched on Jul 26.
 * The final LLVM 15.0.0 release is scheduled for Sep 6.
 * Current nightly (1.65.0) is scheduled for Nov 3.

Changes in this PR (apart from the LLVM update):
 * Pass `--set llvm.allow-old-toolchain` for many Docker images. LLVM 16 will require GCC >= 7.1, while LLVM 15 still allows older compilers with an option. Specify the option for builders still using GCC 5.4. #95026 updated some of the used toolchains, but not all.
 * Use the `+atomics-32` target feature for thumbv6m.
 * Explicitly link libatomic when cross-compiling LLVM to 32-bit target.
 * Explicitly disable zstd support, to avoid libzstd.so dependency.

New LLVM patches ([commits](https://github.com/rust-lang/llvm-project/commits/rustc/15.0-2022-08-09)):
 * [rust-only] Fix ICE with GCC 5.4 (15be58d7f0)
 * [rust-only] Fix build with GCC 5.4 (774edc10fa)
 * ~~[rust-only] Fix build with GCC 5.2 (1a6069a7bb)~~
 * ~~[rust-only] Fix ICE with GCC 5.2 (493081f290)~~
 * ~~[rust-only] Fix build with GCC 5.2 (0fc5979d73)~~
 * [backported] Addition of `+atomics` target feature (57bdd9892d).
 * [backported] Revert compiler-rt change that broke powerpc (9c68b43915)
 * [awaiting backport] Fix RelLookupTableConverter on gnux32 (639388a05f / https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/57021)

Tested images: dist-x86_64-linux, armhf-gnu, arm-android, dist-s390x-linux, dist-x86_64-illumos, dist-x86_64-freebsd, wasm32, dist-x86_64-musl, dist-various-1, dist-riscv64-linux, dist-mips-linux, dist-mipsel-linux, dist-powerpc-linux, dist-aarch64-linux, dist-x86_64-apple, x86_64-msvc-1, x86_64-msvc-2, dist-various-2, dist-arm-linux
Tested up to the usual ipv6 error: test-various, i686-gnu, x86_64-gnu-nopt

r? `@ghost`
2022-08-12 02:58:51 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
92b32e307c
Rollup merge of #99500 - tmandry:fuchsia-flags, r=petrochenkov
Fix flags when using clang as linker for Fuchsia

Don't add C runtime or set dynamic linker when linking with clang for
Fuchsia. Clang already does this for us.
2022-08-11 22:52:59 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
6737549aaf
Rollup merge of #99421 - Bryanskiy:android-crt-static, r=petrochenkov
add crt-static for android
2022-08-11 22:52:58 +02:00
Tyler Mandry
55d5dcb1aa Fix flags when using clang as linker for Fuchsia
Don't add C runtime or set dynamic linker when linking with clang for
Fuchsia. Clang already does this for us.
2022-08-10 16:35:27 -07:00
Bryanskiy
874ee5bede add crt-static for android 2022-08-10 19:42:24 +03:00
Michael Goulet
eae824d5bb
Rollup merge of #100317 - kjetilkjeka:remove-nvptx32-logic, r=eddyb
Remove logic related to deprecated nvptx-nvidia-cuda (32-bit) target

As described in the MCP https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/496#issuecomment-1196328748

r? ``@eddyb``
2022-08-10 09:28:19 -07:00
Kjetil Kjeka
22930b7b25 Remove logic related to deprecated nvptx-nvidia-cuda (32-bit) target 2022-08-09 13:29:18 +02:00
Nikita Popov
89582e8193 Pass +atomics-32 feature for thumbv6m target
https://reviews.llvm.org/D120026 changed atomics on thumbv6m to
use libatomic, to ensure that atomic load/store are compatible with
atomic RMW/CAS. However, Rust wants to expose only load/store
without libcalls.

https://reviews.llvm.org/D130480 added support for this behind
the +atomics-32 target feature, so enable that feature.
2022-08-09 12:39:59 +02:00
Mary
a725250806 Add support for link-flavor rust-lld for macOS
Also refactor iOS, watchOS and tvOS common code.
2022-08-09 11:04:48 +02:00
Lokathor
a8b4454047
Create armv4t_none_eabi.rs 2022-08-07 12:40:41 -06:00
Matthias Krüger
7b0360e516
Rollup merge of #98771 - Thog:rust-lld-apple-target, r=petrochenkov
Add support for link-flavor rust-lld for iOS, tvOS and watchOS

This adds support for rust-lld for Apple *OS targets.

This was tested against targets ``aarch64-apple-ios`` and ``aarch64-apple-ios-sim`` with [a simple test program](https://github.com/Thog/rust-lld-apple-target_test).

It currently doesn't work with targets ``armv7-apple-ios`` and ``armv7s-apple-ios`` because of ``symbols.o`` not being generated with the correct CPU subtype. This will require changes in the ``object`` crate to expose an API.

As ``ld64.lld`` requires ``-platform_version`` with the minimal version supported and an sdk version, I made ``rustc_target::apple_base`` public to get access to ``*os_deployment_target``  helper functions and also added ``tvos_deployment_target`` as it was missing.
2022-08-03 22:29:25 +02:00
mary
78bbe57c88 Add support for link-flavor rust-lld for iOS, tvOS and watchOS
This adds support for rust-lld for Apple *OS targets.

This was tested against targets "aarch64-apple-ios" and "aarch64-apple-ios-sim".

For targets "armv7-apple-ios" and "armv7s-apple-ios", it doesn't link because of
"symbols.o" not being generated with the correct CPU subtype (changes in
the "object" crate needs to be done to support it).
2022-08-03 15:41:05 +00:00
bors
e4417cf020 Auto merge of #92268 - jswrenn:transmute, r=oli-obk
Initial implementation of transmutability trait.

*T'was the night before Christmas and all through the codebase, not a miri was stirring — no hint of `unsafe`!*

This PR provides an initial, **incomplete** implementation of *[MCP 411: Lang Item for Transmutability](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/411)*. The `core::mem::BikeshedIntrinsicFrom` trait provided by this PR is implemented on-the-fly by the compiler for types `Src` and `Dst` when the bits of all possible values of type `Src` are safely reinterpretable as a value of type `Dst`.

What this PR provides is:
- [x] [support for transmutations involving primitives](https://github.com/jswrenn/rust/tree/transmute/src/test/ui/transmutability/primitives)
- [x] [support for transmutations involving arrays](https://github.com/jswrenn/rust/tree/transmute/src/test/ui/transmutability/arrays)
- [x] [support for transmutations involving structs](https://github.com/jswrenn/rust/tree/transmute/src/test/ui/transmutability/structs)
- [x] [support for transmutations involving enums](https://github.com/jswrenn/rust/tree/transmute/src/test/ui/transmutability/enums)
- [x] [support for transmutations involving unions](https://github.com/jswrenn/rust/tree/transmute/src/test/ui/transmutability/unions)
- [x] [support for weaker validity checks](https://github.com/jswrenn/rust/blob/transmute/src/test/ui/transmutability/unions/should_permit_intersecting_if_validity_is_assumed.rs) (i.e., `Assume::VALIDITY`)
- [x] visibility checking

What isn't yet implemented:
- [ ] transmutability options passed using the `Assume` struct
- [ ] [support for references](https://github.com/jswrenn/rust/blob/transmute/src/test/ui/transmutability/references.rs)
- [ ] smarter error messages

These features will be implemented in future PRs.
2022-08-02 21:17:31 +00:00
bors
fe3342816a Auto merge of #99476 - dpaoliello:rawdylibvectorcall, r=michaelwoerister
Add tests for raw-dylib with vectorcall, and fix vectorcall code generation

* Adds tests for using `raw-dylib` (#58713) with `vectorcall`.
* Fixed code generation for `vectorcall` (parameters have to be marked with `InReg`, just like `fastcall`).
* Enabled running the `raw-dylib` `fastcall` tests when using MSVC (since I had to add support in the test for running MSVC-only tests since GCC doesn't support `vectorcall`).
2022-08-01 18:43:57 +00:00
Ralf Jung
abd80d904b reorder fields in Laout debug output 2022-07-31 08:23:27 -04:00
Yuki Okushi
36ab4ec2dc
Rollup merge of #99227 - Lokathor:fix-thumbv4t-none-eabi-frame-pointer, r=davidtwco
Fix thumbv4t-none-eabi frame pointer setting

The `thumb_base` profile has changed since I last remember seeing it, and now it sets the frame pointer to "always keep", which is not desired for this target. Hooking a debugger to the running program is not really done, it's preferable to have the register available for actual program use, so the default "may omit" is now set.

I thought that the target was already using "may omit" when I checked on it last month, because I forgot that the target was previously based on `thumb_base` rather than `Default::default()`. I only noticed the issue just now when creating the `armv4t-none-eabi` target (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/99226), though this PR is not in any way conditional on that one.
2022-07-30 07:39:48 +09:00
Lokathor
2eac6f30c8
once again tidy was unhappy 2022-07-28 10:58:42 -06:00
Lokathor
9cf5b2d81c
Update thumbv4t_none_eabi.rs 2022-07-28 10:43:05 -06:00
Jack Wrenn
bc4a1dea41 Initial (incomplete) implementation of transmutability trait.
This initial implementation handles transmutations between types with specified layouts, except when references are involved.

Co-authored-by: Igor null <m1el.2027@gmail.com>
2022-07-27 17:33:56 +00:00
Daniel Paoliello
722d67d5e7 Fix vectorcall 2022-07-26 14:11:37 -07:00
Amanieu d'Antras
d931a587e6 Revert "Mark atomics as unsupported on thumbv6m"
This reverts commit 7514610219.
2022-07-24 13:12:08 +01:00
bors
fcad91868a Auto merge of #99652 - GuillaumeGomez:rollup-38v0x7y, r=GuillaumeGomez
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #99298 (Make `ui-fulldeps/gated-plugins` and `ui-fulldeps/multiple-plugins` tests stage 2 only)
 - #99396 (Add some additional double-adjustment regression tests)
 - #99449 (Do not resolve associated const when there is no provided value)
 - #99595 (Mark atomics as unsupported on thumbv6m)
 - #99627 (Lock stdout once when listing tests)
 - #99638 (Remove Clean trait implementation for hir::Ty and middle::Ty)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-07-23 22:41:48 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
90c6cde43a
Rollup merge of #99595 - nikic:thumbv6m-atomics, r=nagisa
Mark atomics as unsupported on thumbv6m

The thumbv6m target does not support atomics. Historically, LLVM
had a bug where atomic load/stores for this target were emitted
as plain load/stores rather than as libatomic calls. This was
fixed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D120026, which will be part of
LLVM 15. As we require that "atomic support" does not use libatomic,
we need to indicate that this target does not have native atomics.
2022-07-23 23:34:31 +02:00
bors
93ffde6f04 Auto merge of #98208 - ivanloz:master, r=nagisa
Add support for LLVM ShadowCallStack.

LLVMs ShadowCallStack provides backward edge control flow integrity protection by using a separate shadow stack to store and retrieve a function's return address.

LLVM currently only supports this for AArch64 targets. The x18 register is used to hold the pointer to the shadow stack, and therefore this only works on ABIs which reserve x18. Further details are available in the [LLVM ShadowCallStack](https://clang.llvm.org/docs/ShadowCallStack.html) docs.

# Usage
`-Zsanitizer=shadow-call-stack`

# Comments/Caveats
* Currently only enabled for the aarch64-linux-android target
* Requires the platform to define a runtime to initialize the shadow stack, see the [LLVM docs](https://clang.llvm.org/docs/ShadowCallStack.html) for more detail.
2022-07-23 20:01:07 +00:00
Ralf Jung
5b7197af7f do not mark interior mutable shared refs as dereferenceable 2022-07-22 14:25:41 -04:00
Ralf Jung
307e80c1a6 rename PointerKind::Shared → SharedMutable to indicate this is NOT the usual shared reference 2022-07-22 14:22:05 -04:00
Nikita Popov
7514610219 Mark atomics as unsupported on thumbv6m
The thumbv6m target does not support atomics. Historically, LLVM
had a bug where atomic load/stores for this target were emitted
as plain load/stores rather than as libatomic calls. This was
fixed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D120026, which will be part of
LLVM 15. As we require that "atomic support" does not use libatomic,
we need to indicate that this target does not have native atomics.
2022-07-22 10:54:39 +02:00
Ivan Lozano
adf61e3b2b Add ShadowCallStack Support
Adds support for the LLVM ShadowCallStack sanitizer.
2022-07-20 13:43:34 +00:00
Michael Woerister
88f6c6d8a0 Remove unused StableMap and StableSet types from rustc_data_structures 2022-07-20 13:11:39 +02:00
bors
263edd43c5 Auto merge of #99033 - 5225225:interpreter-validity-checks, r=oli-obk
Use constant eval to do strict mem::uninit/zeroed validity checks

I'm not sure about the code organisation here, I just dumped the check in rustc_const_eval at the root. Not hard to move it elsewhere, in any case.

Also, this means cranelift codegen intrinsics lose the strict checks, since they don't seem to depend on rustc_const_eval, and I didn't see a point in keeping around two copies.

I also left comments in the is_zero_valid methods about "uhhh help how do i do this", those apply to both methods equally.

Also rustc_codegen_ssa now depends on rustc_const_eval... is this okay?

Pinging `@RalfJung` since you were the one who mentioned this to me, so I'm assuming you're interested.

Haven't had a chance to run full tests on this since it's really warm, and it's 1AM, I'll check out any failures/comments in the morning :)
2022-07-17 19:28:01 +00:00
5225225
27412d1e3e Use constant eval to do strict validity checks 2022-07-14 22:55:17 +01:00
leo60228
62aafb01b1
Rename aarch64-nintendo-switch to aarch64-nintendo-switch-freestanding 2022-07-14 15:58:26 -04:00
leo60228
c690db4024
Remove obsolete crt0 references in linker script 2022-07-14 15:58:11 -04:00
jam1garner
7f8804915e
Remove unneeded options from Nintendo Switch target 2022-07-14 15:58:09 -04:00
leo60228
4bc8549cb3
Add linker script for switch 2022-07-14 15:57:19 -04:00
leo60228
f688a56ef6
Remove unnecessary linker args 2022-07-14 15:56:41 -04:00
jam1garner
e6aedf6056
Add Nintendo Switch tier 3 target 2022-07-14 15:55:58 -04:00
Lokathor
26e07879be
tidy demands this whitespace go away 2022-07-14 00:03:59 -06:00
Lokathor
0e78c73b74
conform to the tidy expectations 2022-07-13 23:51:50 -06:00
Lokathor
6c22b44537
add missing imports. 2022-07-13 23:37:08 -06:00
Lokathor
7be0b877f4
Update thumbv4t_none_eabi.rs 2022-07-13 23:24:57 -06:00
Lokathor
86ab4a06eb
word-wrap the comments. 2022-07-13 23:22:43 -06:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
8d9fdb778e rustc_target: Flip the default for TargetOptions::executables to true
Also change `executables` to true for linux-kernel and windows-uwp-gnu targets
2022-07-11 23:23:51 +03:00
Dylan DPC
6497130baa
Rollup merge of #99043 - compiler-errors:derive-nit, r=cjgillot
Collapse some weirdly-wrapping derives

self-explanatory
2022-07-09 11:28:07 +05:30
Patrick Walton
1e0ad0c1d4 Implement support for DWARF version 5.
DWARF version 5 brings a number of improvements over version 4. Quoting from
the announcement [1]:

> Version 5 incorporates improvements in many areas: better data compression,
> separation of debugging data from executable files, improved description of
> macros and source files, faster searching for symbols, improved debugging
> optimized code, as well as numerous improvements in functionality and
> performance.

On platforms where DWARF version 5 is supported (Linux, primarily), this commit
adds support for it behind a new `-Z dwarf-version=5` flag.

[1]: https://dwarfstd.org/Public_Review.php
2022-07-08 11:31:08 -07:00
Michael Goulet
69ac8a68af Collapse some weirdly-wrapping derives 2022-07-08 04:36:30 +00:00
Felix S. Klock II
8ae5a55ba5 fix issue 97463 using change suggested by nbdd0121.
parameterized on target details to decide value-extension policy on calls, in order to address how Apple's aarch64 ABI differs from that on Linux and Windows.

Updated to incorporate review feedback: adjust comment on new enum specifying
param extension policy.

Updated to incorporate review feedback: shorten enum names and those of its
variants to make it less unwieldy.

placate tidy.
2022-07-06 10:53:28 -04:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
456f65ec8b rustc_target: Some more tests and fixes for linker arguments 2022-06-25 21:57:08 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
46aba8850b rustc_target: Add convenience functions for adding linker arguments
They ensure that lld and non-lld linker flavors get the same set of arguments
2022-06-25 21:55:56 +03:00
Hood Chatham
ada2accf8e Set relocation_model to Pic on emscripten target 2022-06-24 06:20:46 -07:00
Yuki Okushi
33eb3c05c5
Rollup merge of #98214 - petrochenkov:islike, r=compiler-errors
rustc_target: Remove some redundant target properties

`is_like_emscripten` is equivalent to `os == "emscripten"`, so it's removed.
`is_like_fuchsia` is equivalent to `os == "fuchsia"`, so it's removed.
`is_like_osx` also falls into the same category and is equivalent to `vendor == "apple"`, but it's commonly used so I kept it as is for now.

`is_like_(solaris,windows,wasm)` are combinations of different operating systems or architectures (see compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/tests/tests_impl.rs) so they are also kept as is.

I think `is_like_wasm` (and maybe `is_like_osx`) are sufficiently closed sets, so we can remove these fields as well and replace them with methods like `fn is_like_wasm() { arch == "wasm32" || arch == "wasm64" }`.
On other hand, `is_like_solaris` and `is_like_windows` are sufficiently open and I can imagine custom targets introducing other values for `os`.
This is kind of a gray area.
2022-06-24 16:43:45 +09:00
Hood Chatham
b96ae9b204 Set no_default_libraries: false in wasm32_emscripten target 2022-06-22 17:43:10 -07:00
Simon Sapin
20bd0c3771 Re-enable atomic loads and stores for all RISC-V targets
This roughly reverts PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/66548

Atomic "CAS" are still disabled for targets without the
*“A” Standard Extension for Atomic Instructions*.
However this extension only adds instructions for operations more complex
than simple loads and stores, which are always atomic when aligned.

In the [Unprivileged Spec v. 20191213](https://riscv.org/technical/specifications/)
section 2.6 *Load and Store Instructions* of
chapter 2 *RV32I Base Integer Instruction Set* (emphasis mine):

> Even when misaligned loads and stores complete successfully,
> these accesses might run extremely slowly depending on the implementation
> (e.g., when implemented via an invisible trap). Further-more, whereas
> **naturally aligned loads and stores are guaranteed to execute atomically**,
> misaligned loads and stores might not, and hence require
> additional synchronization to ensure atomicity.

Unfortunately PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/66548 did not provide
much details on the bug that motivated it, but
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/66240 and
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85736 appear related
and happen with targets that do have the A extension.
2022-06-21 12:31:42 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
bfa6cd9c68
Rollup merge of #98225 - bjorn3:stable_target_json_hash, r=nagisa
Make debug_triple depend on target json file content rather than file path

This ensures that changes to target json files will force a recompilation. And more importantly that moving the files doesn't force a recompilation.

This should fix https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/issues/792 (cc ``@ojeda)``
2022-06-20 07:37:42 +09:00
bjorn3
b4b536d34d Preserve the path of the target spec json file for usage by rustdoc 2022-06-19 15:33:09 +00:00
Hood Chatham
3fb6d45af9 ENH Move --memory-init-file flag from EmLinker to asmjs target spec 2022-06-18 17:48:00 -07:00
bjorn3
072b7db561 Make debug_triple depend on target json file content rather than file path
This ensures that changes to target json files will force a
recompilation. And more importantly that moving the files doesn't force
a recompilation.
2022-06-18 10:19:24 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
37fd2941a1 rustc_target: Remove some redundant target properties 2022-06-18 01:09:20 +03:00
Mark Drobnak
5d5039e1b8
Disable has_thread_local due to weird issues in some programs
For example, in the following issue the `thread_info` thread-local is
not correctly initialized in debug builds:
https://github.com/Meziu/ctru-rs/issues/60
2022-06-13 20:45:25 -07:00
Vladimir Michael Eatwell
dc5c61028a Add Apple WatchOS compile targets 2022-06-13 16:08:53 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
35ba4dc031
Rollup merge of #97928 - hoodmane:emscripten-no-assertions, r=tlively
Removes debug settings from wasm32_unknown_emscripten default link args

This is a debug setting. We should only make debug builds if user requests
a debug build. Currently this is inserted in release builds.

Furthermore, it would be better to insert these settings in --pre-link-args
because then it would be possible to override them if appropriate. Because
these are inserted at the end, it is necessary to patch emscripten to remove
them.

``@sbc100``
2022-06-10 22:32:30 +02:00
Hood Chatham
b32238ae6f Clean up 2022-06-09 14:07:08 -07:00
Hood Chatham
9f305d3fa5 Remove ERROR_ON_UNDEFINED_SYMBOLS according to sbc100's comments 2022-06-09 13:37:38 -07:00
Hood Chatham
db14d81098 Remove -sASSERTIONS=1 from wasm32_unknown_emscripten default link args
This is a debug setting. We should only make debug builds if user requests
a debug build. Currently this is inserted in release builds.

Furthermore, it would be better to insert these settings in --pre-link-args
because then it would be possible to override them if appropriate. Because
these are inserted at the end, it is necessary to patch emscripten to remove
them.
2022-06-09 12:54:17 -07:00
Yuki Okushi
5d81f91a3b
Rollup merge of #97843 - overdrivenpotato:psp-lto, r=michaelwoerister
Relax mipsel-sony-psp's linker script

Previously, the linker script forcefully kept all `.lib.stub` sections, unnecessarily bloating the binary. Now, the script is LTO and `--gc-sections` friendly.

`--nmagic` was also added to the linker, because page alignment is not required on the PSP. This further reduces binary size.

Accompanying changes for the `psp` crate are found in: https://github.com/overdrivenpotato/rust-psp/pull/118
2022-06-09 19:19:56 +09:00
Marko Mijalkovic
611107af5f Formatting fix 2022-06-07 16:02:11 -04:00
Marko Mijalkovic
94134695b5 Relax mipsel-sony-psp's linker script
Previously, the linker script forcefully kept all `.lib.stub` sections,
unnecessarily bloating the binary. Now, the script is LTO and
`--gc-sections` friendly.

`--nmagic` was also added to the linker, because page alignment is not
required on the PSP. This further reduces binary size.

Accompanying changes for the PSP crate are found in:
https://github.com/overdrivenpotato/rust-psp/pull/118
2022-06-07 10:24:09 -04:00
bors
91cacb3faf Auto merge of #97512 - scottmcm:add-coldcc, r=nagisa,lcnr
Add support for emitting functions with `coldcc` to LLVM

The eventual goal is to try using this for things like the internal panicking stuff, to see whether it helps.
2022-06-07 08:12:45 +00:00
bors
bb55bd449e Auto merge of #95565 - jackh726:remove-borrowck-mode, r=nikomatsakis
Remove migrate borrowck mode

Closes #58781
Closes #43234

# Stabilization proposal

This PR proposes the stabilization of `#![feature(nll)]` and the removal of `-Z borrowck`. Current borrow checking behavior of item bodies is currently done by first infering regions *lexically* and reporting any errors during HIR type checking. If there *are* any errors, then MIR borrowck (NLL) never occurs. If there *aren't* any errors, then MIR borrowck happens and any errors there would be reported. This PR removes the lexical region check of item bodies entirely and only uses MIR borrowck. Because MIR borrowck could never *not* be run for a compiled program, this should not break any programs. It does, however, change diagnostics significantly and allows a slightly larger set of programs to compile.

Tracking issue: #43234
RFC: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/2094-nll.md
Version: 1.63 (2022-06-30 => beta, 2022-08-11 => stable).

## Motivation

Over time, the Rust borrow checker has become "smarter" and thus allowed more programs to compile. There have been three different implementations: AST borrowck, MIR borrowck, and polonius (well, in progress). Additionally, there is the "lexical region resolver", which (roughly) solves the constraints generated through HIR typeck. It is not a full borrow checker, but does emit some errors.

The AST borrowck was the original implementation of the borrow checker and was part of the initially stabilized Rust 1.0. In mid 2017, work began to implement the current MIR borrow checker and that effort ompleted by the end of 2017, for the most part. During 2018, efforts were made to migrate away from the AST borrow checker to the MIR borrow checker - eventually culminating into "migrate" mode - where HIR typeck with lexical region resolving following by MIR borrow checking - being active by default in the 2018 edition.

In early 2019, migrate mode was turned on by default in the 2015 edition as well, but with MIR borrowck errors emitted as warnings. By late 2019, these warnings were upgraded to full errors. This was followed by the complete removal of the AST borrow checker.

In the period since, various errors emitted by the MIR borrow checker have been improved to the point that they are mostly the same or better than those emitted by the lexical region resolver.

While there do remain some degradations in errors (tracked under the [NLL-diagnostics tag](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3ANLL-diagnostics), those are sufficiently small and rare enough that increased flexibility of MIR borrow check-only is now a worthwhile tradeoff.

## What is stabilized

As said previously, this does not fundamentally change the landscape of accepted programs. However, there are a [few](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3ANLL-fixed-by-NLL) cases where programs can compile under `feature(nll)`, but not otherwise.

There are two notable patterns that are "fixed" by this stabilization. First, the `scoped_threads` feature, which is a continutation of a pre-1.0 API, can sometimes emit a [weird lifetime error](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/95527) without NLL. Second, actually seen in the standard library. In the `Extend` impl for `HashMap`, there is an implied bound of `K: 'a` that is available with NLL on but not without - this is utilized in the impl.

As mentioned before, there are a large number of diagnostic differences. Most of them are better, but some are worse. None are serious or happen often enough to need to block this PR. The biggest change is the loss of error code for a number of lifetime errors in favor of more general "lifetime may not live long enough" error. While this may *seem* bad, the former error codes were just attempts to somewhat-arbitrarily bin together lifetime errors of the same type; however, on paper, they end up being roughly the same with roughly the same kinds of solutions.

## What isn't stabilized

This PR does not completely remove the lexical region resolver. In the future, it may be possible to remove that (while still keeping HIR typeck) or to remove it together with HIR typeck.

## Tests

Many test outputs get updated by this PR. However, there are number of tests specifically geared towards NLL under `src/test/ui/nll`

## History

* On 2017-07-14, [tracking issue opened](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/43234)
* On 2017-07-20, [initial empty MIR pass added](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/43271)
* On 2017-08-29, [RFC opened](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2094)
* On 2017-11-16, [Integrate MIR type-checker with NLL](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/45825)
* On 2017-12-20, [NLL feature complete](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/46862)
* On 2018-07-07, [Don't run AST borrowck on mir mode](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/52083)
* On 2018-07-27, [Add migrate mode](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/52681)
* On 2019-04-22, [Enable migrate mode on 2015 edition](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/59114)
* On 2019-08-26, [Don't downgrade errors on 2015 edition](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/64221)
* On 2019-08-27, [Remove AST borrowck](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/64790)
2022-06-07 05:04:14 +00:00
bors
9d20fd1098 Auto merge of #97684 - RalfJung:better-provenance-control, r=oli-obk
interpret: better control over whether we read data with provenance

The resolution in https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/286 seems to be that when we load data at integer type, we implicitly strip provenance. So let's implement that in Miri at least for scalar loads. This makes use of the fact that `Scalar` layouts distinguish pointer-sized integers and pointers -- so I was expecting some wild bugs where layouts set this incorrectly, but so far that does not seem to happen.

This does not entirely implement the solution to https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/286; we still do the wrong thing for integers in larger types: we will `copy_op` them and then do validation, and validation will complain about the provenance. To fix that we need mutating validation; validation needs to strip the provenance rather than complaining about it. This is a larger undertaking (but will also help resolve https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/845 since we can reset padding to `Uninit`).

The reason this is useful is that we can now implement `addr` as a `transmute` from a pointer to an integer, and actually get the desired behavior of stripping provenance without exposing it!
2022-06-06 13:28:58 +00:00
Ralf Jung
47d11a8483 interpret: better control over whether we read data with provenance, and implicit provenance stripping where possible 2022-06-05 10:13:34 -04:00
bors
a2da4af33c Auto merge of #97577 - betrusted-io:add-xous-target, r=nagisa
riscv32imac-unknown-xous-elf: add target

This PR starts the process of upstreaming support for our operating system, thanks to a suggestion from `@yaahc` [on Twitter](https://twitter.com/yaahc_/status/1530558574706839567?s=20&t=Mgkn1LEYvGU6FEi5SpZRsA). We have maintained a fork of Rust and have made changes to improve support for our platform since Rust 1.51. Now we would like to upstream these changes.

Xous is a microkernel operating system designed to run on small systems. The kernel contains a wide range of userspace processes that provide common services such as console output, networking, and time access.

The kernel and its services are completely written in Rust using a custom build of libstd. This adds support for this target to upstream Rust so that we can drop support for our out-of-tree `target.json` file.

This first patch adds a Tier 3 target for Xous running on RISC-V. Future patches will add libstd support, but those patches require changes to `dlmalloc` and `compiler_builtins`.

> 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 target maintainer for this target on matters that pertain to the `xous` part of the triple. For matters pertaining to the `riscv32imac` part of the triple, there should be no difference from all other `riscv` targets. If there are issues, I will address issues regarding the 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.

This is a new OS, so I have taken the `riscv32imac-unknown-none-elf` target and changed the `os` section of the triple. This follows convention on targets such as `riscv32gc-unknown-linux-gnu` and `mipsel-unknown-linux-uclibc`. An argument could be made for omitting the `-elf` section of the triple, such as `riscv32imc-esp-espidf`, however I'm not certain what benefit that has.

> 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.

I feel that the target name does not introduce any ambiguity.

> 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 only unusual requirement for building the `compiler-builtins` crate is a standard RISC-V C compiler supported by `cc-rs`, and using this target does not require any additional software beyond what is shipped by `rustup`.

> The target must not introduce license incompatibilities.

All of the additional code will use Apache-2.0.

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

Agreed, and there is no problem here.

> 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.

The only new dependency will be the `xous` crate, which is licensed `MIT OR Apache-2.0`

> 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.

Linking is performed by `rust-lld`

> "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.

There are no terms. Xous is completely open. It runs on open hardware. We even provide the source to the CPU.

> 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 paragraph makes sense, but I don't think it's directed at me.

> 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.

This paragraph also does not appear to be directed at me.

> 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.

So far we have:

 * Thread
 * Mutexex
 * Condvar
 * TcpStream
 * TcpListener
 * UdpSocket
 * DateTime
 * alloc

These will be merged as part of libstd in a future patch once I submit support for Xous in `dlmalloc` and `compiler-builtins`.

> 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.

Testing is currently done on real hardware or in a Renode emulator. I can add documentation on how to do this in a future patch, and I would need instructions on where to add said documentation.

> 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.

Alright.

> 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.

Sounds good.

> 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.

This shouldn't affect any other targets, so this is understood.

> 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.

This shouldn't come up right away. `xous` is a new operating system, and most features are keyed off of `target(os = "xous")` rather than a given architecture.
2022-06-05 07:03:50 +00:00
Sean Cross
9f6e6872c2 riscv32imac-unknown-xous-elf: add target
Xous is a microkernel operating system designed to run on small systems.
The kernel contains a wide range of userspace processes that provide
common services such as console output, networking, and time access.

The kernel and its services are completely written in Rust using a
custom build of libstd. This adds support for this target to upstream
Rust so that we can drop support for our out-of-tree `target.json` file.

Add a Tier 3 target for Xous running on RISC-V.

Signed-off-by: Sean Cross <sean@xobs.io>
2022-06-04 18:47:27 +08:00
Jack Huey
410dcc9674 Fully stabilize NLL 2022-06-03 17:16:41 -04:00
bjorn3
fc1df4ff17 Use serde_json for target spec json 2022-06-03 16:46:19 +00:00
bjorn3
fc2abe6952 Remove a couple of unused Encodable and Decodable derives 2022-06-03 16:46:19 +00:00
Scott McMurray
e90be842fb Add support for emitting functions with coldcc in LLVM
The eventual goal is to try using this for things like the internal panicking stuff, to see whether it helps.
2022-05-30 00:19:23 -07:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
2984bf674f Simplify implementation of -Z gcc-ld
- The logic is now unified for all targets (wasm targets should also be supported now)
- Additional "symlink" files like `ld64` are eliminated
- lld-wrapper is used for propagating the correct lld flavor
- Cleanup "unwrap or exit" logic in lld-wrapper
2022-05-25 23:55:22 +03:00
5225225
dd9f31d000 Add flag for stricter checks on uninit/zeroed 2022-05-24 14:26:52 +01:00
Connor Horman
6354bfc152 Add ABI clobbers 2022-05-17 06:48:03 -04:00
Connor Horman
658be0d1cf Add tmm_reg clobbers 2022-05-16 20:15:06 -04:00
Mateusz Mikuła
60361f2ca3 Add LLVM based mingw-w64 targets 2022-05-13 20:14:15 +02:00
Ralf Jung
bd31ba045d make Size and Align debug-printing a bit more compact 2022-05-06 10:57:03 +02:00
Josh Triplett
0fc5c524f5 Stabilize bool::then_some 2022-05-04 13:22:08 +02:00
Alex Crichton
d51702ae84 Update data layout string for wasm64-unknown-unknown
Looks like this changed in a recent LLVM update but wasm64 isn't built
on CI so it wasn't caught until now.

Closes #96463
2022-04-27 07:29:44 -07:00
Guillaume Gomez
223f107b48
Rollup merge of #96415 - ehuss:git-io, r=bjorn3
Remove references to git.io

The git.io service is shutting down soon (see https://github.blog/changelog/2022-04-25-git-io-deprecation/). This removes the references of those short links with the actual destination.
2022-04-26 13:22:31 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
fe49981ea0
Rollup merge of #94703 - kjetilkjeka:nvptx-kernel-args-abi2, r=nagisa
Fix codegen bug in "ptx-kernel" abi related to arg passing

I found a codegen bug in the nvptx abi related to that args are passed as ptrs ([see comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/38788#issuecomment-1048999928)), this is not as specified in the [ptx-interoperability doc](https://docs.nvidia.com/cuda/ptx-writers-guide-to-interoperability/) or how C/C++ does it. It will also almost always fail in practice since device/host uses different memory spaces for most hardware.

This PR fixes the bug and add tests for passing structs to ptx kernels.

I observed that all nvptx assembly tests had been marked as [ignore a long time ago](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/59752#issuecomment-501713428). I'm not sure if the new one should be marked as ignore, it passed on my computer but it might fail if ptx-linker is missing on the server? I guess this is outside scope for this PR and should be looked at in a different issue/PR.

I only fixed the nvptx64-nvidia-cuda target and not the potential code paths for the non-existing 32bit target. Even though 32bit nvptx is not a supported target there are still some code under the hood supporting codegen for 32 bit ptx. I was advised to create an MCP to find out if this code should be removed or updated.

Perhaps ``@RDambrosio016`` would have interest in taking a quick look at this.
2022-04-26 13:22:27 +02:00
Eric Huss
159b95d5bb Remove references to git.io 2022-04-25 17:05:58 -07:00
Dylan DPC
93db30aa7f
Rollup merge of #96149 - est31:remove_unused_macro_matchers, r=petrochenkov
Remove unused macro rules

Removes rules of internal macros that weren't triggered.
2022-04-26 01:21:20 +02:00
Dylan DPC
69e45d73b9
Rollup merge of #95740 - Amanieu:kreg0, r=nagisa
asm: Add a kreg0 register class on x86 which includes k0

Previously we only exposed a kreg register class which excludes the k0
register since it can't be used in many instructions. However k0 is a
valid register and we need to have a way of marking it as clobbered for
clobber_abi.

Fixes #94977
2022-04-19 22:57:39 +02:00
Kjetil Kjeka
352abbaade Fix a bug in the ptx-kernel calling convention where structs was passed indirectly
Structs being passed indirectly is suprpising and have a high chance not to work as the device and host usually do not share memory.
2022-04-19 18:03:36 +02:00
Amanieu d'Antras
b2bc46938c asm: Add a kreg0 register class on x86 which includes k0
Previously we only exposed a kreg register class which excludes the k0
register since it can't be used in many instructions. However k0 is a
valid register and we need to have a way of marking it as clobbered for
clobber_abi.

Fixes #94977
2022-04-19 17:14:23 +02:00
est31
3c1e1661e7 Remove unused macro rules 2022-04-18 23:28:06 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
7c2d57e0fa couple of clippy::complexity fixes 2022-04-13 22:51:34 +02:00
Pietro Albini
181d28bb61
trivial cfg(bootstrap) changes 2022-04-05 23:18:40 +02:00
Oli Scherer
d32ce37a17 Mark scalar layout unions so that backends that do not support partially initialized scalars can special case them. 2022-04-05 13:18:21 +00:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
1a1f5b89a4 Cleanup after some refactoring in rustc_target 2022-04-03 21:29:57 +02:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
c16a558f24 Replace LinkArgs with Cow<'static, str> 2022-04-03 21:29:57 +02:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
ce61d4044d Replace every Vec in Target(Options) with it's Cow equivalent 2022-04-03 21:29:57 +02:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
ccff48f97b Replace every String in Target(Options) with Cow<'static, str> 2022-04-03 21:29:57 +02:00
Dylan DPC
46a4754df0
Rollup merge of #95430 - ChrisDenton:disable-tls-i686-msvc, r=nagisa
Disable #[thread_local] support on i686-pc-windows-msvc

Fixes #95429
2022-04-02 03:34:22 +02:00
bors
df20355fa9 Auto merge of #95456 - RalfJung:size, r=oli-obk
allow large Size again

This basically reverts most of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80042, and instead does the panic in `bits()` with a `#[cold]` function to make sure it does not get inlined.

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80042 added a comment about an invariant ("The top 3 bits are ALWAYS zero") that is not actually enforced, and if it were enforced that would be a problem for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95388. So I think we should not have that invariant, and I adjusted the code accordingly.

r? `@oli-obk` Cc `@sivadeilra`
2022-03-31 10:33:56 +00:00
Yuri Astrakhan
8d7b124c1f a few mode feedback fixes per @bjorn3 2022-03-30 17:28:19 -04:00
Yuri Astrakhan
5160f8f843 Spellchecking compiler comments
This PR cleans up the rest of the spelling mistakes in the compiler comments. This PR does not change any literal or code spelling issues.
2022-03-30 15:14:15 -04:00
Ralf Jung
2799885ed0 allow large Size again 2022-03-29 22:25:38 -04:00
Chris Denton
017a092f45
Disable #[thread_local] support on i686-pc-windows-msvc 2022-03-29 12:37:20 +01:00
Dylan DPC
2ab4ad5f26
Rollup merge of #95341 - Meziu:armv6k-3ds-target, r=nagisa
ARMv6K Horizon OS has_thread_local support

cc. ```@ian-h-chamberlain```
cc. ```@AzureMarker```

Being an ARM target, it has always had built-in support for `#[thread_local]`. This PR comes in just now because we were testing `std::thread` support with `thread_local_dtor`s. This will hopefully be the last PR for the target specification, unless anymore features will be needed as time goes on.
2022-03-27 05:36:11 +02:00
Meziu
419b6309a9
Merge pull request #16 from ian-h-chamberlain/feature/target-thread-local
Enable #[thread_local] on armv6k-nintendo-3ds
2022-03-26 20:49:19 +01:00
Ian Chamberlain
78294371c4
Enable #[thread_local] on armv6k-nintendo-3ds 2022-03-26 09:29:01 -04:00
Martin Kröning
335d196498 Remove hermitkernel targets
RustyHermit now maintains custom json targets, which are distributed with the kernel. [1]

[1]: https://github.com/hermitcore/libhermit-rs/pull/395
2022-03-25 11:52:11 +01:00
Dylan DPC
67d6cc6ef3
Rollup merge of #91608 - workingjubilee:fold-neon-fp, r=nagisa,Amanieu
Fold aarch64 feature +fp into +neon

Arm's FEAT_FP and Feat_AdvSIMD describe the same thing on AArch64:
The Neon unit, which handles both floating point and SIMD instructions.
Moreover, a configuration for AArch64 must include both or neither.
Arm says "entirely proprietary" toolchains may omit floating point:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/102374/0101/Data-processing---floating-point
In the Programmer's Guide for Armv8-A, Arm says AArch64 can have
both FP and Neon or neither in custom implementations:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/den0024/a/AArch64-Floating-point-and-NEON

In "Bare metal boot code for Armv8-A", enabling Neon and FP
is just disabling the same trap flag:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/dai0527/a

In an unlikely future where "Neon and FP" become unrelated,
we can add "[+-]fp" as its own feature flag.
Until then, we can simplify programming with Rust on AArch64 by
folding both into "[+-]neon", which is valid as it supersets both.

"[+-]neon" is retained for niche uses such as firmware, kernels,
"I just hate floats", and so on.

I am... pretty sure no one is relying on this.

An argument could be made that, as we are not an "entirely proprietary" toolchain, we should not support AArch64 without floats at all. I think that's a bit excessive. However, I want to recognize the intent: programming for AArch64 should be simplified where possible. For x86-64, programmers regularly set up illegal feature configurations because it's hard to understand them, see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89586. And per the above notes, plus the discussion in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86941, there should be no real use cases for leaving these features split: the two should in fact always go together.

- Fixes rust-lang/rust#95002.
- Fixes rust-lang/rust#95064.
- Fixes rust-lang/rust#95122.
2022-03-23 03:05:28 +01:00
Jubilee Young
b807d5970b Fold aarch64 feature +fp into +neon
Arm's FEAT_FP and Feat_AdvSIMD describe the same thing on AArch64:
The Neon unit, which handles both floating point and SIMD instructions.
Moreover, a configuration for AArch64 must include both or neither.
Arm says "entirely proprietary" toolchains may omit floating point:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/102374/0101/Data-processing---floating-point
In the Programmer's Guide for Armv8-A, Arm says AArch64 can have
both FP and Neon or neither in custom implementations:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/den0024/a/AArch64-Floating-point-and-NEON

In "Bare metal boot code for Armv8-A", enabling Neon and FP
is just disabling the same trap flag:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/dai0527/a

In an unlikely future where "Neon and FP" become unrelated,
we can add "[+-]fp" as its own feature flag.
Until then, we can simplify programming with Rust on AArch64 by
folding both into "[+-]neon", which is valid as it supersets both.

"[+-]neon" is retained for niche uses such as firmware, kernels,
"I just hate floats", and so on.
2022-03-22 15:14:33 -07:00
codehorseman
01dbfb3eb2 resolve the conflict in compiler/rustc_session/src/parse.rs
Signed-off-by: codehorseman <cricis@yeah.net>
2022-03-16 20:12:30 +08:00
ridwanabdillahi
eae68350c8 Add support for targeting riscv32im-unknown-none-elf
Update riscv32im-unknown-none-elf to Tier2 support.

Downgrade to Tier 3 platform support.
2022-03-09 13:51:29 -08:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4f008e06c3 Clarify Layout interning.
`Layout` is another type that is sometimes interned, sometimes not, and
we always use references to refer to it so we can't take any advantage
of the uniqueness properties for hashing or equality checks.

This commit renames `Layout` as `LayoutS`, and then introduces a new
`Layout` that is a newtype around an `Interned<LayoutS>`. It also
interns more layouts than before. Previously layouts within layouts
(via the `variants` field) were never interned, but now they are. Hence
the lifetime on the new `Layout` type.

Unlike other interned types, these ones are in `rustc_target` instead of
`rustc_middle`. This reflects the existing structure of the code, which
does layout-specific stuff in `rustc_target` while `TyAndLayout` is
generic over the `Ty`, allowing the type-specific stuff to occur in
`rustc_middle`.

The commit also adds a `HashStable` impl for `Interned`, which was
needed. It hashes the contents, unlike the `Hash` impl which hashes the
pointer.
2022-03-07 13:41:47 +11:00
bors
0cbef1c6a7 Auto merge of #94601 - csmoe:android-asan, r=nagisa
add address sanitizer fo android

We have been being using asan to debug the rust/cpp/c mixed android application in production for months: recompile the rust library with a patched rustc, everything just works fine. The patch is really small thanks to `@nagisa` 's refactoring in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/81866

r? `@nagisa`
2022-03-05 22:52:08 +00:00
Dylan DPC
afa85f0841
Rollup merge of #94362 - Urgau:check-cfg-values, r=petrochenkov
Add well known values to `--check-cfg` implementation

This pull-request adds well known values for the well known names via `--check-cfg=values()`.

[RFC 3013: Checking conditional compilation at compile time](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3013-conditional-compilation-checking.html#checking-conditional-compilation-at-compile-time) doesn't define this at all, but this seems a nice improvement.
The activation is done by a empty `values()` (new syntax) similar to `names()` except that `names(foo)` also activate well known names while `values(aa, "aa", "kk")` would not.

As stated this use a different activation logic because well known values for the well known names are not always sufficient.
In fact this is problematic for every `target_*` cfg because of non builtin targets, as the current implementation use those built-ins targets to create the list the well known values.

The implementation is straight forward, first we gather (if necessary) all the values (lazily or not) and then we apply them.

r? ```@petrochenkov```
2022-03-04 22:58:34 +01:00
csmoe
6d41565726 add address sanitizer fo android 2022-03-04 10:21:43 +00:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
4aa92aff05 Add well known values to --check-cfg implementation 2022-03-04 11:15:38 +01:00
Dylan DPC
79c71d1f9e
Rollup merge of #94339 - Amanieu:arm-d32, r=nagisa
ARM: Only allow using d16-d31 with asm! when supported by the target

Support can be determined by checking for the "d32" LLVM feature.

r? ```````````````@nagisa```````````````
2022-03-04 02:06:40 +01:00
bors
edda7e959d Auto merge of #94216 - psumbera:sparc64-abi-fix2, r=nagisa
more complete sparc64 ABI fix for aggregates with floating point members

Previous fix didn't handle nested structures at all.
2022-02-28 11:54:17 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
7cee1b4aeb ARM: Only allow using d16-d31 with asm! when supported by the target
Support can be determined by checking for the "d32" LLVM feature.
2022-02-24 22:37:53 +00:00
Scott Mabin
65614e91ad riscv32imc_esp_espidf: set max_atomic_width to 64 2022-02-23 13:11:26 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
fb5539b475 Add tests 2022-02-21 18:28:22 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
fc41d4bf35 Take CodegenFnAttrs into account when validating asm! register operands
Checking of asm! register operands now properly takes function
attributes such as #[target_feature] and #[instruction_set] into
account.
2022-02-21 18:28:22 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
1ceb104851 On ARM, use relocation_model to detect whether r9 should be reserved
The previous approach of checking for the reserve-r9 target feature
didn't actually work because LLVM only sets this feature very late when
initializing the per-function subtarget.
2022-02-21 18:28:22 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
2e8a7663b4 Simplify gating of BPF w registers behind the alu32 target feature
This is already handled by supported_types().
2022-02-21 18:28:22 +00:00
Petr Sumbera
0d200116d3 formatting fixes 2022-02-21 14:23:22 +01:00
Petr Sumbera
a29477c9ca more complete sparc64 ABI fix for aggregates with floating point members
Previous fix didn't handle nested structures at all.
2022-02-21 13:49:36 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f2d6770f77
Rollup merge of #94146 - est31:let_else, r=cjgillot
Adopt let else in more places

Continuation of #89933, #91018, #91481, #93046, #93590, #94011.

I have extended my clippy lint to also recognize tuple passing and match statements. The diff caused by fixing it is way above 1 thousand lines. Thus, I split it up into multiple pull requests to make reviewing easier. This is the biggest of these PRs and handles the changes outside of rustdoc, rustc_typeck, rustc_const_eval, rustc_trait_selection, which were handled in PRs #94139, #94142, #94143, #94144.
2022-02-20 00:37:34 +01:00
est31
2ef8af6619 Adopt let else in more places 2022-02-19 17:27:43 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
cb35370557
Rollup merge of #93877 - Amanieu:asm_fixes, r=nagisa
asm: Allow the use of r8-r14 as clobbers on Thumb1

Previously these were entirely disallowed, except for r11 which was allowed by accident.

cc `@hudson-ayers`
2022-02-18 23:23:08 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
32c8acd769
Rollup merge of #93814 - Itus-Shield:mips64-openwrt, r=bjorn3
mips64-openwrt-linux-musl: correct soft-foat

MIPS64 targets under OpenWrt require soft-float fpu support.

Rust-lang requires soft-float defined in tuple definition and
isn't over-ridden by toolchain compile-time CFLAGS/LDFLAGS

Set explicit soft-float for tuple.

Signed-off-by: Donald Hoskins <grommish@gmail.com>
2022-02-18 23:23:06 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
0bb72a2c66
Rollup merge of #91675 - ivanloz:memtagsan, r=nagisa
Add MemTagSanitizer Support

Add support for the LLVM [MemTagSanitizer](https://llvm.org/docs/MemTagSanitizer.html).

On hardware which supports it (see caveats below), the MemTagSanitizer can catch bugs similar to AddressSanitizer and HardwareAddressSanitizer, but with lower overhead.

On a tag mismatch, a SIGSEGV is signaled with code SEGV_MTESERR / SEGV_MTEAERR.

# Usage

`-Zsanitizer=memtag -C target-feature="+mte"`

# Comments/Caveats

* MemTagSanitizer is only supported on AArch64 targets with hardware support
* Requires `-C target-feature="+mte"`
* LLVM MemTagSanitizer currently only performs stack tagging.

# TODO

* Tests
* Example
2022-02-18 23:23:03 +01:00
Amanieu d'Antras
11250b8661 asm: Allow the use of r8-r14 as clobbers on Thumb1
Previously these were entirely disallowed, except for r11 which was
allowed by accident.
2022-02-18 20:26:40 +00:00
bors
30b3f35c42 Auto merge of #93577 - nikic:llvm-14, r=nagisa
Upgrade to LLVM 14

LLVM patch state:
 * [x] a55727f334 Backported.
 * [x] c3c82dc124 Backported as 917c47b3bf.
 * [x] 6e8f9ab632 No plan to upstream.
 * [x] 319f4b2d52 Backported.
 * [x] 8b2c25d321 No plan to upstream.
 * [x] 75fef2efd4 No plan to upstream.
 * [ ] adef757547 Upstreamed as 2d2ef384b2. Needs backport.
 * [x] 4b7c1b4910 No plan to upstream.
 * [x] 3f5ab0c061 No plan to upstream.
 * [x] 514d05500e No plan to upstream.
 * [ ] 54c5869585 Under review at https://reviews.llvm.org/D119695 and https://reviews.llvm.org/D119856.

Release timeline:
 * LLVM 14.0.0 final planned for Mar 15.
 * Rust 1.60.0 planned for Apr 7.

Compile-time:
  * https://perf.rust-lang.org/compare.html?start=250384edc5d78533e993f38c60d64e42b21684b2&end=b87df8d2c7c5d9ac448c585de10927ab2ee1b864
  * A slight improvement on average, though no big changes either way.
  * There are some larger max-rss improvements.

r? `@ghost`
2022-02-17 13:08:46 +00:00
Nikita Popov
70ddd2ff1c Update data layout for wasm32 targets
New address spaces were added in https://reviews.llvm.org/D111154.
2022-02-16 21:15:31 +01:00
Nikita Popov
a380581ff8 Update data layout for 32-bit msvc targets
https://reviews.llvm.org/D115942 changed the alignment of f80.
2022-02-16 21:15:30 +01:00
Ivan Lozano
568aeda9e9 MemTagSanitizer Support
Adds support for the LLVM MemTagSanitizer.
2022-02-16 09:39:03 -05:00
Tomasz Miąsko
81f12eb7ef Inline Target::deref 2022-02-15 19:08:12 +01:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
da4a235c26 rustc_target: Remove compiler-rt linking hack on Android 2022-02-13 21:22:02 +08:00
bors
5c30d65683 Auto merge of #93670 - erikdesjardins:noundef, r=nikic
Apply noundef attribute to &T, &mut T, Box<T>, bool

This doesn't handle `char` because it's a bit awkward to distinguish it from `u32` at this point in codegen.

Note that this _does not_ change whether or not it is UB for `&`, `&mut`, or `Box` to point to undef. It only applies to the pointer itself, not the pointed-to memory.

Fixes (partially) #74378.

r? `@nikic` cc `@RalfJung`
2022-02-13 00:14:52 +00:00
bors
502d6aa47b Auto merge of #93854 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-bh2a85j, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #92670 (add kernel target for RustyHermit)
 - #93756 (Support custom options for LLVM build)
 - #93802 (fix oversight in the `min_const_generics` checks)
 - #93808 (Remove first headings indent)
 - #93824 (Stabilize cfg_target_has_atomic)
 - #93830 (Refactor sidebar printing code)
 - #93843 (kmc-solid: Fix wait queue manipulation errors in the `Condvar` implementation)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-02-10 12:31:51 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
4435dfec0f Make FnAbiError Copy. 2022-02-09 20:11:29 +01:00
Donald Hoskins
bfd16ab109 mips64-openwrt-linux-musl: correct soft-foat
MIPS64 targets under OpenWrt require soft-float fpu support.

Rust-lang requires soft-float defined in tuple definition and
isn't over-ridden by toolchain compile-time CFLAGS/LDFLAGS

Set explicit soft-float for tuple.

Signed-off-by: Donald Hoskins <grommish@gmail.com>
2022-02-09 10:24:53 -05:00
Stefan Lankes
b5c1dc09fc rename file to use the correct naming convention 2022-02-08 09:34:36 +01:00
Stefan Lankes
beb042ae8f add missing targert for library operating system RustyHermit 2022-02-08 09:34:36 +01:00
Stefan Lankes
0b269f33f4 add kernel target for RustyHermit
Currently, we are thinking to use *-unknown-none targets instead
to define for every platform our own one (see hermitcore/rusty-hermit#197).
However, the current target aarch64-unknown-none-softfloat doesn't support
dynamic relocation. Our kernel uses this feature and consequently
we define a new target aarch64-unknown-hermitkernel to support it.
2022-02-08 09:33:29 +01:00
bors
2a8dbdb1e2 Auto merge of #93561 - Amanieu:more-unwind-abi, r=nagisa
Add more *-unwind ABI variants

The following *-unwind ABIs are now supported:
- "C-unwind"
- "cdecl-unwind"
- "stdcall-unwind"
- "fastcall-unwind"
- "vectorcall-unwind"
- "thiscall-unwind"
- "aapcs-unwind"
- "win64-unwind"
- "sysv64-unwind"
- "system-unwind"

cc `@rust-lang/wg-ffi-unwind`
2022-02-08 03:20:05 +00:00
Mara Bos
bd245facd4
Rollup merge of #93680 - Mark-Simulacrum:drop-json-reader, r=bjorn3
Drop json::from_reader

Just a small cleanup -- this was essentially unused; the one use site is better suited to reading from &str regardless.
2022-02-07 14:08:36 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
4a3be6e6e2
Rollup merge of #92383 - lancethepants:armv7-unknown-linux-uclibceabi, r=nagisa
Add new target armv7-unknown-linux-uclibceabi (softfloat)

This adds the new target `armv7-unknown-linux-uclibceabi (softfloat)`. It is of course similar to `armv7-unknown-linux-uclibceabihf (hardfloat)` which was just recently added to rust except that it is `softfloat`.

My interest lies in the Broadcom BCM4707/4708/BCM4709 family, notably found in some Netgear and Asus consumer routers. The armv7 Cortex-A9 cpus found in these devices do not have an fpu or NEON support.

With this patch I've been able to bootstrap rustc, std and host tools `(extended = true)` to run on the target device for native compilation, allowing the target to be used as a development platform.

With the recent addition of `armv7-unknown-linux-uclibceabihf (hardfloat)` it looks like many of the edge cases of using the uclibc c-library are getting worked out nicely. I've been able to compile some complex projects. Some patching still needed in some crates, but getting there for sure.  I think `armv7-unknown-linux-uclibceabi` is ready to be a tier 3 target.

I use a cross-toolchain from my project to bootstrap rust.
https://github.com/lancethepants/tomatoware
The goal of this project is to create a native development environment with support for various languages.
2022-02-06 04:13:30 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
0eda3fa761
Rollup merge of #92300 - Itus-Shield:mips64-openwrt, r=nagisa
mips64-openwrt-linux-musl: Add Tier 3 target

Tier 3 tuple for Mips64 OpenWrt toolchain.

This add first-time support for OpenWrt.  Future Tier3 targets will be added as I test them.

Signed-off-by: Donald Hoskins <grommish@gmail.com>
2022-02-06 04:13:29 +01:00
Mark Rousskov
0fb2b7a2da Drop json::from_reader
Performing UTF-8 decode outside the JSON module makes more sense in almost all cases.
2022-02-05 15:07:10 -05:00
Erik Desjardins
8cb0b6ca5b Apply noundef attribute to &T, &mut T, Box<T>, bool
This doesn't handle `char` because it's a bit awkward to distinguish it
from u32 at this point in codegen.

Note that for some types (like `&Struct` and `&mut Struct`),
we already apply `dereferenceable`, which implies `noundef`,
so the IR does not change.
2022-02-05 01:09:52 -05:00
lancethepants
8c6f7fd5e1 Add new target armv7-unknown-linux-uclibceabi (softfloat) 2022-02-04 11:45:00 -07:00
Amanieu d'Antras
547b4e601e Add more *-unwind ABI variants
The following *-unwind ABIs are now supported:
- "C-unwind"
- "cdecl-unwind"
- "stdcall-unwind"
- "fastcall-unwind"
- "vectorcall-unwind"
- "thiscall-unwind"
- "aapcs-unwind"
- "win64-unwind"
- "sysv64-unwind"
- "system-unwind"
2022-02-02 22:21:24 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
788f2969f6
Rollup merge of #92021 - woodenarrow:br_single_fp_element, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Eliminate duplicate codes of is_single_fp_element

There are duplicate codes of is_single_fp_element function. Merge these codes to TyAndLayout impl block.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/95843988/146707753-ba9ffc41-5888-4a53-80cf-f4fe3bcbac54.png)
2022-02-01 16:08:03 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
ce6c1484f8
Rollup merge of #86374 - bossmc:enable-static-pie-for-gnu, r=nagisa
Enable combining `+crt-static` and `relocation-model=pic` on `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`

Modern `gcc` versions support `-static-pie`, and `rustc` will already fall-back to `-static` if the local `gcc` is too old (and hence this change is optimistic rather than absolute).  This brings the `-musl` and `-gnu` targets to feature compatibility (albeit with different default settings).

Of note a `-static` or `-static-pie` binary based on glibc that uses NSS-backed functions (`gethostbyname` or `getpwuid` etc.) need to have access to the `libnss_X.so.2` libraries and any of their dynamic dependencies.

I wasn't sure about the `# only`/`# ignore` changes (I've not got a `gnux32` toolchain to test with hence not also enabling `-static-pie` there).
2022-02-01 16:08:01 +01:00
Donald Hoskins
91fcbfa237 [mips64-openwrt-musl] Tier 3 tuple for Mips64 OpenWrt
This incorporates rust-lang into the OpenWrt build system for
Mips64 targets.

Signed-off-by: Donald Hoskins <grommish@gmail.com>
2022-01-31 03:03:06 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
6749f32c33
Rollup merge of #90277 - pierwill:fix-70258-inference-terms, r=jackh726
Improve terminology around "after typeck"

Closes #70258.
2022-01-31 06:58:26 +01:00
William D. Jones
19809ed76d Add preliminary support for inline assembly for msp430. 2022-01-22 23:42:46 -05:00
Benjamin Lamowski
660d993c64 adapt L4Bender implementation
- Fix style errors.

- L4-bender does not yet support dynamic linking.

- Stack unwinding is not yet supported for x86_64-unknown-l4re-uclibc.
  For now, just abort on panics.

- Use GNU-style linker options where possible. As suggested by review:
    - Use standard GNU-style ld syntax for relro flags.
    - Use standard GNU-style optimization flags and logic.
    - Use standard GNU-style ld syntax for --subsystem.

- Don't read environment variables in L4Bender linker. Thanks to
  CARGO_ENCODED_RUSTFLAGS introduced in #9601, l4-bender's arguments can
  now be passed from the L4Re build system without resorting to custom
  parsing of environment variables.
2022-01-21 16:50:33 +01:00
Sebastian Humenda
d98428711e Add L4Bender as linker variant 2022-01-21 16:28:33 +01:00
bjorn3
042aa379a5 Pass target_features set instead of has_feature closure
This avoids unnecessary monomorphizations in codegen backends
2022-01-17 18:06:30 +01:00
bjorn3
991cbd1503 Use Symbol for target features in asm handling
This saves a couple of Symbol::intern calls
2022-01-17 18:06:27 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
391b66ccff
Rollup merge of #92581 - Meziu:armv6k-3ds-target, r=nagisa
ARMv6K Horizon - Enable default libraries

Due to the nature of the external gcc linker, default libraries are required, even for `no_std` programs.
2022-01-16 16:58:12 +01:00
Lucas Kent
08829853d3 eplace usages of vec![].into_iter with [].into_iter 2022-01-09 14:09:25 +11:00
David Wood
08ed338f56 sess/cg: re-introduce split dwarf kind
In #79570, `-Z split-dwarf-kind={none,single,split}` was replaced by `-C
split-debuginfo={off,packed,unpacked}`. `-C split-debuginfo`'s packed
and unpacked aren't exact parallels to single and split, respectively.

On Unix, `-C split-debuginfo=packed` will put debuginfo into object
files and package debuginfo into a DWARF package file (`.dwp`) and
`-C split-debuginfo=unpacked` will put debuginfo into dwarf object files
and won't package it.

In the initial implementation of Split DWARF, split mode wrote sections
which did not require relocation into a DWARF object (`.dwo`) file which
was ignored by the linker and then packaged those DWARF objects into
DWARF packages (`.dwp`). In single mode, sections which did not require
relocation were written into object files but ignored by the linker and
were not packaged. However, both split and single modes could be
packaged or not, the primary difference in behaviour was where the
debuginfo sections that did not require link-time relocation were
written (in a DWARF object or the object file).

This commit re-introduces a `-Z split-dwarf-kind` flag, which can be
used to pick between split and single modes when `-C split-debuginfo` is
used to enable Split DWARF (either packed or unpacked).

Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
2022-01-06 09:32:42 +00:00
Andrea Ciliberti
8423ce9f9a Enable default libraries 2022-01-05 11:40:30 +01:00
bors
41c3017c82 Auto merge of #92099 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-4gwv67m, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #91141 (Revert "Temporarily rename int_roundings functions to avoid conflicts")
 - #91984 (Remove `in_band_lifetimes` from `rustc_middle`)
 - #92028 (Sync portable-simd to fix libcore build for AVX-512 enabled targets)
 - #92042 (Enable `#[thread_local]` for all windows-msvc targets)
 - #92071 (Update example code for Vec::splice to change the length)
 - #92077 (rustdoc: Remove unused `collapsed` field)
 - #92081 (rustdoc: Remove unnecessary `need_backline` function)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-12-19 12:36:56 +00:00
bors
a41a6925ba Auto merge of #91957 - nnethercote:rm-SymbolStr, r=oli-obk
Remove `SymbolStr`

This was originally proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/74554#discussion_r466203544. As well as removing the icky `SymbolStr` type, it allows the removal of a lot of `&` and `*` occurrences.

Best reviewed one commit at a time.

r? `@oli-obk`
2021-12-19 09:31:37 +00:00
Chris Denton
391332c5d9
Rename has_elf_tls to has_thread_local 2021-12-17 20:56:38 +00:00
Chris Denton
9ca26f111a
Enable #[thread_local] for all windows-msvc targets 2021-12-17 15:47:44 +00:00
lzh
d9b98f9c23 Eliminate duplicate codes of is_single_fp_element 2021-12-17 11:48:44 +08:00
Nicholas Nethercote
056d48a2c9 Remove unnecessary sigils around Symbol::as_str() calls. 2021-12-15 17:32:14 +11:00
Hans Kratz
3011154573 Revert "Set MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET env var to default for linking if not set."
This reverts commit b376f5621b, which is
the main part of #90499, because it turns out that this causes a good
amount of breakage in crates relying on the old behavior.

Fixes #91372.
2021-12-13 21:31:48 +01:00
Amanieu d'Antras
8716f2780e asm: Allow using r9 (ARM) and x18 (AArch64) if they are not reserved by
the current target.
2021-12-10 00:51:39 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
908f300dd7 Remove the reg_thumb register class for asm! on ARM
Also restricts r8-r14 from being used on Thumb1 targets as per #90736.
2021-12-07 23:54:09 +00:00
bors
0b6f079e49 Auto merge of #91224 - couchand:2021-11/avr-asm, r=Amanieu
Support AVR for inline asm!

A first pass at support for the AVR platform in inline `asm!`.  Passes the initial compiler tests, have not yet done more complete verification.

In particular, the register classes could use a lot more fleshing out, this draft PR so far only includes the most basic.

cc `@Amanieu` `@dylanmckay`
2021-12-07 14:23:01 +00:00
Andrew Dona-Couch
c6e8ae1a6c Implement inline asm! for AVR platform 2021-12-06 01:02:49 -05:00
bors
87dce6e8df Auto merge of #91284 - t6:freebsd-riscv64, r=Amanieu
Add support for riscv64gc-unknown-freebsd

For https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/target-tier-policy.html#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.)

For all Rust targets on FreeBSD, it's [rust@FreeBSD.org](mailto:rust@FreeBSD.org).

* 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.

Done.

* 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.

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.

Done.

* The target must not introduce license incompatibilities.

Done.

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

Fine with me.

* 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.

Done.

* If the target supports building host tools (such as rustc or cargo), those host tools must not depend on proprietary (non-FOSS) libraries, other than ordinary runtime libraries supplied by the platform and commonly used by other binaries built for the target. 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.

Done.

* Targets should not require proprietary (non-FOSS) components to link a functional binary or library.

Done.

* "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.

Fine with me.

* 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.

Ok.

* 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.

Ok.

* 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.

std is implemented.

* 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 tests (even if they do not pass), the documentation must explain how to run tests for the target, using emulation if possible or dedicated hardware if necessary.

Building is possible the same way as other Rust on FreeBSD targets.

* 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.

Ok.

* 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.

Ok.

* 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.

Ok.

* 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.

Ok.
2021-12-06 03:51:05 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
971f469236
Rollup merge of #91537 - sunshowers:m68k-gnu, r=joshtriplett
compiler/rustc_target: make m68k-unknown-linux-gnu use the gnu base

This makes the m68k arch match the other GNU/Linux based targets by setting the environment to gnu.
2021-12-06 00:11:50 +01:00
Rain
6aa5f6faf3 compiler/rustc_target: make m68k-unknown-linux-gnu use the gnu base
This makes the m68k arch match the other GNU/Linux based targets.
2021-12-04 15:05:36 -08:00
Mara Bos
1acb44f03c Use IntoIterator for array impl everywhere. 2021-12-04 19:40:33 +01:00
bors
a2b7b7891e Auto merge of #91003 - psumbera:sparc64-abi, r=nagisa
fix sparc64 ABI for aggregates with floating point members

Fixes #86163
2021-12-02 02:59:44 +00:00
Petr Sumbera
128ceec92d fix sparc64 ABI for aggregates with floating point members 2021-12-01 10:03:45 +01:00
Tobias Kortkamp
47474f1055
Add riscv64gc-unknown-freebsd 2021-11-27 07:24:18 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
0780889833
Rollup merge of #90499 - rusticstuff:macos-target-fixes, r=petrochenkov
Link with default MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET if not otherwise specified.

This PR sets the MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET environment variable during the linking stage to our default, if it is not specified. This way it matches the deployment target we pass to llvm. If not set the the linker uses Xcode or Xcode commandline tools default which varies by version.

Fixes #90342, #91082.

Drive-by fixes to make Rust behave more like clang:
* Default to 11.0 deployment target for ARM64 which is the earliest version that had support for it.
* Set the llvm target to `arm64-apple-macosx<deployment target>` instead of `aarch64-apple-macosx<deployment target>`.
2021-11-25 15:05:36 +01:00
Hans Kratz
b376f5621b Set MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET env var to default for linking if not set. 2021-11-25 07:08:44 +01:00
Hans Kratz
8f4d88c4bf Set the default deployment target for Macos ARM64 to 11.0.
11.0 (Big Sur) is the first version which supports ARM64 so we use
that as default.
2021-11-25 07:08:37 +01:00
Hans Kratz
fa18030567 The correct LLVM target for aarch64-apple-darwin is arm64-... (as with ios) 2021-11-25 06:56:42 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
cbe563a4d5
Rollup merge of #90044 - rusticstuff:disable_arm_outline_atomics_for_musl, r=workingjubilee
Restrict aarch64 outline atomics to glibc for now.

The introduced dependency on `getauxval` causes linking problems with musl, making compiling any binaries for `aarch64-unknown-linux-musl` impossible without workarounds such as using lld or adding liblibc.rlib again to the linker invocation, see #89626.

This is a workaround until libc>0.2.108 is merged.
2021-11-24 22:56:36 +01:00
Benjamin A. Bjørnseth
bb9dee95ed add rustc option for using LLVM stack smash protection
LLVM has built-in heuristics for adding stack canaries to functions. These
heuristics can be selected with LLVM function attributes. This patch adds a
rustc option `-Z stack-protector={none,basic,strong,all}` which controls the use
of these attributes. This gives rustc the same stack smash protection support as
clang offers through options `-fno-stack-protector`, `-fstack-protector`,
`-fstack-protector-strong`, and `-fstack-protector-all`. The protection this can
offer is demonstrated in test/ui/abi/stack-protector.rs. This fills a gap in the
current list of rustc exploit
mitigations (https://doc.rust-lang.org/rustc/exploit-mitigations.html),
originally discussed in #15179.

Stack smash protection adds runtime overhead and is therefore still off by
default, but now users have the option to trade performance for security as they
see fit. An example use case is adding Rust code in an existing C/C++ code base
compiled with stack smash protection. Without the ability to add stack smash
protection to the Rust code, the code base artifacts could be exploitable in
ways not possible if the code base remained pure C/C++.

Stack smash protection support is present in LLVM for almost all the current
tier 1/tier 2 targets: see
test/assembly/stack-protector/stack-protector-target-support.rs. The one
exception is nvptx64-nvidia-cuda. This patch follows clang's example, and adds a
warning message printed if stack smash protection is used with this target (see
test/ui/stack-protector/warn-stack-protector-unsupported.rs). Support for tier 3
targets has not been checked.

Since the heuristics are applied at the LLVM level, the heuristics are expected
to add stack smash protection to a fraction of functions comparable to C/C++.
Some experiments demonstrating how Rust code is affected by the different
heuristics can be found in
test/assembly/stack-protector/stack-protector-heuristics-effect.rs. There is
potential for better heuristics using Rust-specific safety information. For
example it might be reasonable to skip stack smash protection in functions which
transitively only use safe Rust code, or which uses only a subset of functions
the user declares safe (such as anything under `std.*`). Such alternative
heuristics could be added at a later point.

LLVM also offers a "safestack" sanitizer as an alternative way to guard against
stack smashing (see #26612). This could possibly also be included as a
stack-protection heuristic. An alternative is to add it as a sanitizer (#39699).
This is what clang does: safestack is exposed with option
`-fsanitize=safe-stack`.

The options are only supported by the LLVM backend, but as with other codegen
options it is visible in the main codegen option help menu. The heuristic names
"basic", "strong", and "all" are hopefully sufficiently generic to be usable in
other backends as well.

Reviewed-by: Nikita Popov <nikic@php.net>

Extra commits during review:

- [address-review] make the stack-protector option unstable

- [address-review] reduce detail level of stack-protector option help text

- [address-review] correct grammar in comment

- [address-review] use compiler flag to avoid merging functions in test

- [address-review] specify min LLVM version in fortanix stack-protector test

  Only for Fortanix test, since this target specifically requests the
  `--x86-experimental-lvi-inline-asm-hardening` flag.

- [address-review] specify required LLVM components in stack-protector tests

- move stack protector option enum closer to other similar option enums

- rustc_interface/tests: sort debug option list in tracking hash test

- add an explicit `none` stack-protector option

Revert "set LLVM requirements for all stack protector support test revisions"

This reverts commit a49b74f92a4e7d701d6f6cf63d207a8aff2e0f68.
2021-11-22 20:06:22 +01:00
bors
b6f580acc0 Auto merge of #90382 - alexcrichton:wasm64-libstd, r=joshtriplett
std: Get the standard library compiling for wasm64

This commit goes through and updates various `#[cfg]` as appropriate to
get the wasm64-unknown-unknown target behaving similarly to the
wasm32-unknown-unknown target. Most of this is just updating various
conditions for `target_arch = "wasm32"` to also account for `target_arch
= "wasm64"` where appropriate. This commit also lists `wasm64` as an
allow-listed architecture to not have the `restricted_std` feature
enabled, enabling experimentation with `-Z build-std` externally.

The main goal of this commit is to enable playing around with
`wasm64-unknown-unknown` externally via `-Z build-std` in a way that's
similar to the `wasm32-unknown-unknown` target. These targets are
effectively the same and only differ in their pointer size, but wasm64
is much newer and has much less ecosystem/library support so it'll still
take time to get wasm64 fully-fledged.
2021-11-18 17:19:27 +00:00
Alex Crichton
97cd27ab1d Add emscripten to the "wasm" family of targets 2021-11-16 13:10:35 -08:00
Josh Stone
a24e2eddb1 Android is not GNU 2021-11-12 09:09:08 -08:00
Hans Kratz
bd287fa508 Disable aarch64 outline atomics with musl for now.
The introduced dependency on `getauxval`causes linking
problems with musl, see #89626.
2021-11-10 20:24:33 +01:00
Alex Crichton
7dc38369c0 Disable .debug_aranges for all wasm targets
This follows from discussion on
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=52442 where it looks like this
section doesn't make sense for wasm targets.
2021-11-10 10:47:00 -08:00
Alex Crichton
d2a3c24a95 Update more rustc/libtest things for wasm64
* Add wasm64 variants for inline assembly along the same lines as wasm32
* Update a few directives in libtest to check for `target_family`
  instead of `target_arch`
* Update some rustc codegen and typechecks specialized for wasm32 to
  also work for wasm64.
2021-11-10 08:35:42 -08:00
Alex Crichton
cfb2f98e9e Enable WebAssembly features by default on wasm64
These are all stable as-of-now in the WebAssembly specification so any
engine which implements wasm64 will surely implement these features as
well.
2021-11-10 08:35:42 -08:00
Alex Crichton
7f3ffbc8c2 std: Get the standard library compiling for wasm64
This commit goes through and updates various `#[cfg]` as appropriate to
get the wasm64-unknown-unknown target behaving similarly to the
wasm32-unknown-unknown target. Most of this is just updating various
conditions for `target_arch = "wasm32"` to also account for `target_arch
= "wasm64"` where appropriate. This commit also lists `wasm64` as an
allow-listed architecture to not have the `restricted_std` feature
enabled, enabling experimentation with `-Z build-std` externally.

The main goal of this commit is to enable playing around with
`wasm64-unknown-unknown` externally via `-Z build-std` in a way that's
similar to the `wasm32-unknown-unknown` target. These targets are
effectively the same and only differ in their pointer size, but wasm64
is much newer and has much less ecosystem/library support so it'll still
take time to get wasm64 fully-fledged.
2021-11-10 08:35:42 -08:00
Guillaume Gomez
f07f800364
Rollup merge of #90494 - Meziu:armv6k-3ds-target, r=sanxiyn
ARMv6K Horizon OS panic change

After a small change to `backtrace-rs` ([#448](https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/pull/448)), `PanicStrategy::Unwind` is now fully supported.
2021-11-08 15:15:22 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
5c454551da more clippy fixes 2021-11-07 16:59:05 +01:00
pierwill
521b1ee974 Improve terminology around "after typeck" 2021-11-06 20:59:38 -05:00
Josh Stone
767471edeb Update LLVM comments around NoAliasMutRef 2021-11-05 12:22:51 -07:00
Josh Stone
c9567e2424 Move outline-atomics to aarch64-linux target definitions 2021-11-05 10:28:12 -07:00
Meziu
9cab312e54 ARMv6K Horizon OS panic change 2021-11-02 08:44:22 +01:00
Hans Kratz
37476287bf Use apple-a14 as target CPU for aarch64-apple-darwin.
After updating the minimum required LLVM version to 12 we can use
apple-a14 as that is closer in features to the Apple M1 than the A12.
Once the minimum required LLVM version is updated to 13 we can use
apple-m1.
2021-11-01 17:03:07 +01:00
bors
ff0e14829e Auto merge of #89062 - mikeleany:new-target, r=cjgillot
Add new tier 3 target: `x86_64-unknown-none`

Adds support for compiling OS kernels or other bare-metal applications for the x86-64 architecture.

Below are details on how this target meets the requirements for tier 3:

> 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 would be willing to be a target maintainer, though I would appreciate if others volunteered to help with that as well.

> 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.

Uses the same naming as the LLVM target, and the same convention as many other bare-metal targets.

> 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.

I don't believe there is any ambiguity here.

> 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.

I don't see any legal issues here.

> 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.
>If the target supports building host tools (such as rustc or cargo), those host tools must not depend on proprietary (non-FOSS) libraries, other than ordinary runtime libraries supplied by the platform and commonly used by other binaries built for the target. 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.
> Targets should not require proprietary (non-FOSS) components to link a functional binary or library.
> "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.

I see no issues with any of the above.

> 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.

Only relevant to those making approval decisions.

> 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.

`core` and `alloc` can be used. `std` cannot be used as this is a bare-metal target.

> 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 tests (even if they do not pass), the documentation must explain how to run tests for the target, using emulation if possible or dedicated hardware if necessary.

Use `--target=x86_64-unknown-none-elf` option to cross compile, just like any target. The target does not support running tests.

> 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.

I don't foresee this being a problem.

> 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.

No other targets should be affected by the pull request.
2021-10-31 18:57:14 +00:00
Martin Kröning
311a249f9d hermitkernel-target: Set OS to "none"
For our kernel targets, we should not set OS, as the kernel runs bare
metal without a circular dependency on std.

This also prepares us for unifying with
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/89062. This patch requires
libhermit-rs to change a `cfg`s from `target_os = "hermit"` to `target_os
= "none"`.

I tested this patch locally.
2021-10-29 18:07:36 +02:00
Andy Caldwell
b94da2bace
Enable combining +crt-static and relocation-model=pic on x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu 2021-10-28 15:32:37 +01:00
bors
a8f6e614f8 Auto merge of #89652 - rcvalle:rust-cfi, r=nagisa
Add LLVM CFI support to the Rust compiler

This PR adds LLVM Control Flow Integrity (CFI) support to the Rust compiler. It initially provides forward-edge control flow protection for Rust-compiled code only by aggregating function pointers in groups identified by their number of arguments.

Forward-edge control flow protection for C or C++ and Rust -compiled code "mixed binaries" (i.e., for when C or C++ and Rust -compiled code share the same virtual address space) will be provided in later work as part of this project by defining and using compatible type identifiers (see Type metadata in the design document in the tracking issue #89653).

LLVM CFI can be enabled with -Zsanitizer=cfi and requires LTO (i.e., -Clto).

Thank you, `@eddyb` and `@pcc,` for all the help!
2021-10-27 09:19:42 +00:00
Ramon de C Valle
5d30e93189 Add LLVM CFI support to the Rust compiler
This commit adds LLVM Control Flow Integrity (CFI) support to the Rust
compiler. It initially provides forward-edge control flow protection for
Rust-compiled code only by aggregating function pointers in groups
identified by their number of arguments.

Forward-edge control flow protection for C or C++ and Rust -compiled
code "mixed binaries" (i.e., for when C or C++ and Rust -compiled code
share the same virtual address space) will be provided in later work as
part of this project by defining and using compatible type identifiers
(see Type metadata in the design document in the tracking issue #89653).

LLVM CFI can be enabled with -Zsanitizer=cfi and requires LTO (i.e.,
-Clto).
2021-10-25 16:23:01 -07:00
DrMeepster
a46daf050b make thiscall on unsupported platforms an error 2021-10-25 14:56:21 -07:00
bors
d45ed7502a Auto merge of #90040 - nbdd0121:issue-90038, r=oli-obk
Fix wrong niche calculation when 2+ niches are placed at the start

When the niche is at the start, existing code incorrectly uses 1 instead of count for subtraction.

Fix #90038

`@rustbot` label: T-compiler
2021-10-19 08:13:35 +00:00
Gary Guo
7dbd5bb0bd Fix issue 90038 2021-10-19 06:43:33 +01:00
Stefan Lankes
7f34cedaef HermitCore's kernel itself doesn't support TLS
HermitCore's kernel itself doesn't support TLS.
Consequently, the entries in x86_64-unknown-none-hermitkernel should be removed.
This commit should help to finalize #89062.
2021-10-16 09:41:59 +02:00
Mike Leany
11d54dc1c6 Fix issue where PIC was added to the wrong target.
Should be for x86_64_unknown_none, but aarch64_unknown_none was inadvertently
updated instead.
2021-10-14 12:10:20 -06:00
Josh Triplett
3a1879299e x86_64-unknown-none: Use position-independent code by default
This avoids requiring relocation code, which a bare-metal environment
may not have or want.
2021-10-13 08:14:13 -06:00
Mike Leany
8b6764c4ef Fix build errors. 2021-10-13 08:14:13 -06:00
Josh Triplett
2037cee701 x86_64-unknown-none: Expand TargetOptions to specify more details
Specify the `cpu` and the `max_atomic_width` (64).

Set `stack_probes` similarly to other targets to work around known
issues, and copy the corresponding comment from those targets.

Build position-independent code that doesn't require relocations.

(Work on this target sponsored by Profian.)
2021-10-13 08:14:13 -06:00
Josh Triplett
6ab66192f9 x86_64-unknown-none: Disable more target features
Based on the list used for x86_64-unknown-none-linuxkernel.

(Work on this target sponsored by Profian.)
2021-10-13 08:14:12 -06:00
Josh Triplett
b0d1e3be23 x86_64-unknown-none: Drop the abi field
(Work on this target sponsored by Profian.)
2021-10-13 08:14:12 -06:00
Josh Triplett
b0efa05e5a x86_64-unknown-none: Fix module comment
(Work on this target sponsored by Profian.)
2021-10-13 08:14:12 -06:00
Josh Triplett
a23ee64c2c Rename x86_64-unknown-none-elf to x86_64-unknown-none
Most Rust freestanding/bare-metal targets use just `-unknown-none` here,
including aarch64-unknown-none, mipsel-unknown-none, and the BPF
targets. The *only* target using `-unknown-none-elf` is RISC-V.

The underlying toolchain doesn't care; LLVM accepts both `x86_64-unknown-none`
and `x86_64-unknown-none-elf`.

In addition, there's a long history of embedded x86 targets with varying
definitions for the `elf` suffix; on some of those embedded targets,
`elf` implied the inclusion of a C library based on newlib or similar.
Using `x86_64-unknown-none` avoids any potential ambiguity there.

(Work on this target sponsored by Profian.)
2021-10-13 08:14:09 -06:00
Mike Leany
5ba3a651f9 Use CodeModel::Kernel for x86_64-unknown-none-elf. 2021-10-13 08:13:00 -06:00
Mike Leany
80654c3d93 Fix code formatting. 2021-10-13 08:12:59 -06:00
Mike Leany
8aad5f45d5 Add new target: x86_64-unknown-none-elf 2021-10-13 08:12:50 -06:00
Jonah Petri
bc3eb354e7 add platform support details file for armv7-unknown-linux-uclibc 2021-10-06 14:33:13 +00:00
Yannick Koehler
11381a5a3a Add new target armv7-unknown-linux-uclibceabihf
Co-authored-by: Jonah Petri <jonah@petri.us>
2021-10-06 14:33:13 +00:00
bjorn3
83ddedf170 Remove various unused feature gates 2021-10-02 19:09:18 +02:00
Manish Goregaokar
6f1e930581
Rollup merge of #88820 - hlopko:add_pie_relocation_model, r=petrochenkov
Add `pie` as another `relocation-model` value

MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/461
2021-10-01 09:18:16 -07:00
Marcel Hlopko
198d90786b Add pie as another relocation-model value 2021-10-01 08:06:42 +02:00
Tomoaki Kawada
da9ca41c31 Add SOLID targets
SOLID[1] is an embedded development platform provided by Kyoto
Microcomputer Co., Ltd. This commit introduces a basic Tier 3 support
for SOLID.

# New Targets

The following targets are added:

 - `aarch64-kmc-solid_asp3`
 - `armv7a-kmc-solid_asp3-eabi`
 - `armv7a-kmc-solid_asp3-eabihf`

SOLID's target software system can be divided into two parts: an
RTOS kernel, which is responsible for threading and synchronization,
and Core Services, which provides filesystems, networking, and other
things. The RTOS kernel is a μITRON4.0[2][3]-derived kernel based on
the open-source TOPPERS RTOS kernels[4]. For uniprocessor systems
(more precisely, systems where only one processor core is allocated for
SOLID), this will be the TOPPERS/ASP3 kernel. As μITRON is
traditionally only specified at the source-code level, the ABI is
unique to each implementation, which is why `asp3` is included in the
target names.

More targets could be added later, as we support other base kernels
(there are at least three at the point of writing) and are interested
in supporting other processor architectures in the future.

# C Compiler

Although SOLID provides its own supported C/C++ build toolchain, GNU Arm
Embedded Toolchain seems to work for the purpose of building Rust.

# Unresolved Questions

A μITRON4 kernel can support `Thread::unpark` natively, but it's not
used by this commit's implementation because the underlying kernel
feature is also used to implement `Condvar`, and it's unclear whether
`std` should guarantee that parking tokens are not clobbered by other
synchronization primitives.

# Unsupported or Unimplemented Features

Most features are implemented. The following features are not
implemented due to the lack of native support:

- `fs::File::{file_attr, truncate, duplicate, set_permissions}`
- `fs::{symlink, link, canonicalize}`
- Process creation
- Command-line arguments

Backtrace generation is not really a good fit for embedded targets, so
it's intentionally left unimplemented. Unwinding is functional, however.

## Dynamic Linking

Dynamic linking is not supported. The target platform supports dynamic
linking, but enabling this in Rust causes several problems.

 - The linker invocation used to build the shared object of `std` is
   too long for the platform-provided linker to handle.

 - A linker script with specific requirements is required for the
   compiled shared object to be actually loadable.

As such, we decided to disable dynamic linking for now. Regardless, the
users can try to create shared objects by manually invoking the linker.

## Executable

Building an executable is not supported as the notion of "executable
files" isn't well-defined for these targets.

[1] https://solid.kmckk.com/SOLID/
[2] http://ertl.jp/ITRON/SPEC/mitron4-e.html
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ITRON_project
[4] https://toppers.jp/
2021-09-28 11:31:47 +09:00
the8472
26c7838118
Rollup merge of #89170 - rusticstuff:aarch64_macos_disable_leak_sanitizer, r=petrochenkov
Disable the leak sanitizer on Macos aarch64 for now

It is currently broken, see #88132.
2021-09-22 19:03:27 +02:00
Hans Kratz
59e37c829b Disable the leak sanitizer on Macos aarch64 for now.
It is currently broken, see #88132.
2021-09-22 08:05:34 +02:00
Mark Rousskov
c746be2219 Migrate to 2021 2021-09-20 22:21:42 -04:00
bors
db1fb85cff Auto merge of #88321 - glaubitz:m68k-linux, r=wesleywiser
Add initial support for m68k

This patch series adds initial support for m68k making use of the new M68k
backend introduced with LLVM-13. Additional changes will be needed to be
able to actually use the backend for this target.
2021-09-20 07:21:05 +00:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
c1837ef1c5 Querify fn_abi_of_{fn_ptr,instance}. 2021-09-18 04:41:33 +03:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
344df76fed ty::layout: intern FnAbis as &'tcx. 2021-09-18 01:42:45 +03:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
7f2f927eb8 ty::layout: propagate errors up to (but not out of) FnAbi::of_*. 2021-09-18 01:42:44 +03:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
4d36faf9ef rustc_target: adjust_for_cabi -> adjust_for_foreign_abi. 2021-09-18 01:42:43 +03:00
John Paul Adrian Glaubitz
580559129b compiler/rustc_target: Add support for m68k-linux-gnu 2021-09-17 15:07:12 +00:00
bors
9f85cd6f2a Auto merge of #87794 - bonega:enum_niche_prefer_zero, r=nagisa
Enum should prefer discriminant zero for niche

Given an enum with unassigned zero-discriminant, rust should prefer it for niche selection.
Zero as discriminant for `Option<Enum>` makes it possible for LLVM to optimize resulting asm.

- Eliminate branch when expected value coincides.
- Use smaller instruction `test eax, eax` instead of `cmp eax, ?`
- Possible interaction with zeroed memory?

Example:
```rust

pub enum Size {
    One = 1,
    Two = 2,
    Three = 3,
}

pub fn handle(x: Option<Size>) -> u8 {
    match x {
        None => {0}
        Some(size) => {size as u8}
    }
}
```
In this case discriminant zero is available as a niche.

Above example on nightly:
```asm
 mov     eax, edi
 cmp     al, 4
 jne     .LBB0_2
 xor     eax, eax
.LBB0_2:
 ret
```

PR:
```asm
 mov     eax, edi
 ret
```

I created this PR because I had a performance regression when I tried to use an enum to represent legal grapheme byte-length for utf8.

Using an enum instead of `NonZeroU8` [here](d683304f5d/src/internal/decoder_incomplete.rs (L90))
resulted in a performance regression of about 5%.
I consider this to be a somewhat realistic benchmark.

Thanks to `@ogoffart` for pointing me in the right direction!

Edit: Updated description
2021-09-13 22:14:57 +00:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
4d66fbc4b9 enum niche allocation grows toward zero if possible 2021-09-13 21:55:14 +02:00
bors
61a1029143 Auto merge of #88529 - Meziu:master, r=nagisa
ARMv6K Nintendo 3DS Tier 3 target added

Addition of the target specifications to build .elf files for Nintendo 3DS (ARMv6K, Horizon). Requires devkitARM 3DS toolkit for system libraries and arm-none-eabi-gcc linker.
2021-09-13 05:48:03 +00:00
Meziu
e07ae3ca26 ARMV6K 3DS: Removed useless parameters in target spec 2021-09-10 20:20:12 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
bc95994c32 bugfix 2021-09-09 10:41:20 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
a2ee1420b8 Wrap 2021-09-09 10:41:20 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
9095cf9905 rename is_valid_for to is_valid 2021-09-09 10:41:19 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
dd34e0c966 Rename (un)signed to (un)signed_int 2021-09-09 10:41:19 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
9129f4306f Move unsigned_max etc into Size again 2021-09-09 10:41:19 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
5b2f757dae Make abi::Abi Copy and remove a *lot* of refs
fix

fix

Remove more refs and clones

fix

more

fix
2021-09-09 10:41:19 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
86ff6aeb82 Fix docstring 2021-09-09 10:41:18 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
da92cd6dcf Use special Debug format when start > end 2021-09-09 10:41:18 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
f5d8749f85 Remove contains_zero, respect the compiler 2021-09-09 10:41:18 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
021c3346ed derive Copy for WrappingRange and Scalar 2021-09-09 10:41:18 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
4c46296f22 fix match 2021-09-09 10:41:18 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
05cd48b008 Add methods for checking for full ranges to Scalar and WrappingRange
Move *_max methods back to util

change to inline instead of inline(always)

Remove valid_range_exclusive from scalar
Use WrappingRange instead

implement always_valid_for in a safer way

Fix accidental edit
2021-09-09 10:41:17 +02:00
bors
e2750baf53 Auto merge of #88499 - eddyb:layout-off, r=nagisa
Provide `layout_of` automatically (given tcx + param_env + error handling).

After #88337, there's no longer any uses of `LayoutOf` within `rustc_target` itself, so I realized I could move the trait to `rustc_middle::ty::layout` and redesign it a bit.

This is similar to #88338 (and supersedes it), but at no ergonomic loss, since there's no funky `C: LayoutOf<Ty = Ty>` -> `Ty: TyAbiInterface<C>` generic `impl` chain, and each `LayoutOf` still corresponds to one `impl` (of `LayoutOfHelpers`) for the specific context.

After this PR, this is what's needed to get `trait LayoutOf` (with the `layout_of` method) implemented on some context type:
* `TyCtxt`, via `HasTyCtxt`
* `ParamEnv`, via `HasParamEnv`
* a way to transform `LayoutError`s into the desired error type
  * an error type of `!` can be paired with having `cx.layout_of(...)` return `TyAndLayout` *without* `Result<...>` around it, such as used by codegen
  * this is done through a new `LayoutOfHelpers` trait (and so is specifying the type of `cx.layout_of(...)`)

When going through this path (and not bypassing it with a manual `impl` of `LayoutOf`), the end result is that only the error case can be customized, the query itself and the success paths are guaranteed to be uniform.

(**EDIT**: just noticed that because of the supertrait relationship, you cannot actually implement `LayoutOf` yourself, the blanket `impl` fully covers all possible context types that could ever implement it)

Part of the motivation for this shape of API is that I've been working on querifying `FnAbi::of_*`, and what I want/need to introduce for that looks a lot like the setup in this PR - in particular, it's harder to express the `FnAbi` methods in `rustc_target`, since they're much more tied to `rustc` concepts.

r? `@nagisa` cc `@oli-obk` `@bjorn3`
2021-09-05 16:14:41 +00:00
bors
4878034c00 Auto merge of #88454 - devnexen:sunos_asan, r=wesleywiser
sunos systems add sanitizer supported.
2021-09-03 17:50:51 +00:00
bors
64929313f5 Auto merge of #88516 - matthiaskrgr:clippy_perf_end_august, r=jyn514,GuillaumeGomez
some low hanging clippy::perf fixes
2021-09-02 10:27:44 +00:00
bors
b27ccbc7e1 Auto merge of #87114 - cjgillot:abilint, r=estebank
Lint missing Abi in ast validation instead of lowering.
2021-09-02 06:06:24 +00:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
4ce933f13f rustc_target: move LayoutOf to ty::layout. 2021-09-02 01:17:14 +03:00
Mara Bos
494c563f3b
Rollup merge of #88350 - programmerjake:add-ppc-cr-xer-clobbers, r=Amanieu
add support for clobbering xer, cr, and cr[0-7] for asm! on OpenPower/PowerPC

Fixes #88315
2021-09-01 09:23:26 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
8d7d488d3b Lint Abi in ast validation. 2021-08-31 20:30:17 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
7f2df9ad65 some low hanging clippy::perf fixes 2021-08-31 20:29:04 +02:00
Meziu
8078c4c809 ARMv6K Nintendo 3DS Tier 3 target added 2021-08-31 14:11:23 +02:00
David Carlier
8539a3c001 sunos systems add sanitizer supported. 2021-08-30 18:49:56 +01:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
748a089acd Disallow the aapcs CC on Aarch64
This never really worked and makes LLVM assert.
2021-08-30 13:46:07 +03:00
bors
9556d7a09a Auto merge of #88337 - eddyb:field-failure-is-not-an-option, r=nagisa
rustc_target: `TyAndLayout::field` should never error.

This refactor (making `TyAndLayout::field` return `TyAndLayout` without any `Result` around it) is based on a simple observation, regarding `TyAndLayout::field`:

If `cx.layout_of(ty)` succeeds (for some `cx` and `ty`), then `.field(cx, i)` on the resulting `TyAndLayout` should *always* succeed in computing `cx.layout_of(field_ty)` (where `field_ty` is the type of the `i`th field of `ty`).

The reason for this is that no matter which field is chosen, `cx.layout_of(field_ty)` *will have already been computed*, as part of computing `cx.layout_of(ty)`, as we cannot determine the layout of *any* type without considering the layouts of *all* of its fields.

And so it should be fine to turn any errors into ICEs, since they likely indicate a `cx` mismatch, or some other edge case that is due to a compiler bug (as opposed to ever being an user-facing error).

<hr/>

Each commit should probably be reviewed separately, though note that there's some `where` clauses (in `rustc_target::abi::call::*`) that change in most commits.

cc `@nagisa` `@oli-obk`
2021-08-29 22:54:26 +00:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
78778fc6aa rustc_target: remove LayoutOf bound from TyAbiInterface. 2021-08-30 00:44:12 +03:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
8e6d126b7d rustc_target: TyAndLayout::field should never error. 2021-08-30 00:44:09 +03:00
bors
757a65bfdf Auto merge of #88250 - rusticstuff:macos-lld, r=nagisa
Make `-Z gcc-ld=lld` work for Apple targets

`-Z gcc-ld=lld` was introduced in #85961. It does not work on Macos because lld needs be either named `ld64` or passed `-flavor darwin` as the first two arguments in order to select the Mach-O flavor. Rust invokes cc (=clang) on Macos for linking which calls `ld` as linker binary and not `ld64`, so just creating an `ld64` binary and modifying the search path with `-B` does not work.

In order to solve this patch does:
* Set the `lld_flavor` for all Apple-derived targets to `LldFlavor::Ld64`. As far as I can see this actually works towards fixing `-Xlinker=rust-lld` as all those targets use the Mach-O object format.
* Copy/hardlink rust-lld to the gcc-ld subdirectory as ld64 next to ld.
* If `-Z gcc-ld=lld` is used and the target lld flavor is Ld64 add `-fuse-ld=/path/to/ld64` to the linker invocation.

Fixes #86945.
2021-08-29 04:51:14 +00:00
bors
2031fd6e46 Auto merge of #88245 - Sl1mb0:s390-asm, r=Amanieu
S390x inline asm

This adds register definitions and constraint codes for the s390x general and floating point registers necessary for fixing #85931; as well as a few tests.

Further testing is needed, but I am a little unsure of what specific tests should be added to `src/test/assembly/asm/s390x.rs` to address this.
2021-08-28 08:04:41 +00:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
87d1fb747f rustc_target: require TyAbiInterface in LayoutOf. 2021-08-27 13:09:32 +03:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
8486571a10 rustc_target: rename TyAndLayoutMethods to TyAbiInterface. 2021-08-27 13:09:32 +03:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
83d986aa28 rustc_target: add lifetime parameter to LayoutOf. 2021-08-27 13:09:32 +03:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
efb4148865 #[inline] non-generic pub fns in rustc_target::abi and ty::layout. 2021-08-26 21:47:42 +03:00
bors
4b9f4b221b Auto merge of #88308 - eddyb:cooked-layouts, r=nagisa
Morph `layout_raw` query into `layout_of`.

Before this PR, `LayoutCx::layout_of` wrapped the `layout_raw` query, to:
* normalize the type, before attempting to compute the layout
* pass the layout to `record_layout_for_printing`, for `-Zprint-type-sizes`

Moving those two responsibilities into the query may reduce overhead (due to cached calls skipping those steps), but I want to do a perf run to know.

One of the changes I had to make was changing the return type of the query, to be able to both get out the type produced by normalizing inside the query *and* to match the signature of the old `TyCtxt::layout_of`. This change may be worse, perf-wise, so that's another reason I want to check.

r? `@nagisa` cc `@oli-obk`
2021-08-26 15:24:01 +00:00
Jacob Lifshay
5802f60355 add support for clobbering xer, cr, and cr[0-7] for asm! on OpenPower/PowerPC
Fixes #88315
2021-08-25 22:08:27 -07:00
Erik Desjardins
4d635fdf63 use undef for uninitialized bytes in constants 2021-08-25 17:49:28 -04:00
bors
e5484cec0e Auto merge of #88242 - bonega:allocation_range, r=oli-obk
Use custom wrap-around type instead of RangeInclusive

Two reasons:

1. More memory is allocated than necessary for `valid_range` in `Scalar`. The range is not used as an iterator and `exhausted` is never used.
2. `contains`, `count` etc. methods in `RangeInclusive` are doing very unhelpful(and dangerous!) things when used as a wrap-around range. - In general this PR wants to limit potentially confusing methods, that have a low probability of working.

Doing a local perf run, every metric shows improvement except for instructions.
Max-rss seem to have a very consistent improvement.

Sorry - newbie here, probably doing something wrong.
2021-08-25 02:17:41 +00:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
edb4b2d8c2 Morph layout_raw query into layout_of. 2021-08-24 22:04:27 +03:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
f17e384a43 use convention for with_* methods 2021-08-24 19:41:58 +02:00
bors
47ab5f7ce2 Auto merge of #87699 - ubamrein:use-iphone-deployment-target-for-llvm, r=petrochenkov
Allow specifying an deployment target version for all iOS llvm targets

Closes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79408

This pull requests adds the same procedure to define the iOS-version for the LLVM-target as was used for the simulator target and the desktop target.

This then closes the original problem mentioned in the above issue. The problem with incompatible bitcode remains, but is probably not easy fixable.

I realised that something is still not right. Try to fix that.

r? `@petrochenkov`
2021-08-24 12:13:37 +00:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
e3f07b2e30 Force inline: small functions and single call-site 2021-08-24 10:18:07 +02:00
Patrick Amrein
8f65d154c8 allow specifying an ios version for the llvm target 2021-08-24 08:23:05 +02:00
linux1
a9f623707b Fix: made suggested change 2021-08-23 17:56:04 -04:00
linux1
05cd587726 Refactor: disabled frame pointer; consolidated unsupported register errors; added register prefix 2021-08-23 17:32:27 -04:00
Mara Bos
5cf025f076
Rollup merge of #88230 - steffahn:a_an, r=oli-obk
Fix typos “a”→“an”

Fix typos in comments; found using a regex to find some easy instance of incorrect usage of a vs. an.

While automation was used to find these, every change was checked manually.

Changes in submodules get separate PRs:
* https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1201
* https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/9821
* https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/pull/1874
* https://github.com/rust-lang/rls/pull/1746
* https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/9984
  _folks @ rust-analyzer are fast at merging…_
  * https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/9985
  * https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/9987
  * https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/9989

_For `clippy`, I don’t know if the changes should better better be moved to a PR to the original repo._

<hr>

This has some overlap with #88226, but neither is a strict superset of the other.

If you want multiple commits, I can split it up; in that case, make sure to suggest a criterion for splitting.
2021-08-23 20:45:49 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
d92810646e Simplify zero check 2021-08-23 15:52:47 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
32d7e5b723 add with_start and with_end 2021-08-23 15:44:56 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
d230b92ba7 implement debug in similar way to RangeInclusive 2021-08-23 15:05:40 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
e8e6d9bd86 Rename to WrappingRange 2021-08-23 14:24:34 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
70433955f4 implement contains_zero method 2021-08-23 14:20:38 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
d50abd0249 Use ref 2021-08-23 14:18:48 +02:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
225a4bf922 Removed fixed fixme 2021-08-23 13:56:28 +02:00
Hans Kratz
0ac601d03e Mach-O (Macos/ios/...) LLD flavor is always LD64. 2021-08-23 08:27:08 +02:00
linux1
0c9e23c7ce Fix: appeased x.py test tidy --bless 2021-08-22 17:55:03 -04:00
linux1
eeb0b52bf8 Feat: further testing & support for i64 general register use 2021-08-22 17:55:03 -04:00
linux1
5f5afba5fb Feat: added s390x reg-definitions, constraint codes, and tests 2021-08-22 17:55:03 -04:00
linux1
f28793dd13 Feat: added inline asm support for s390x 2021-08-22 17:55:03 -04:00
Andreas Liljeqvist
5a501f73ff Use custom wrap-around type instead of Range 2021-08-22 21:46:03 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
c6da5b08e0
Rollup merge of #88077 - kit-981:feature/fix-minimum-os-version-in-header, r=petrochenkov
Generate an iOS LLVM target with a specific version

This commit adds the `LC_VERSION_MIN_IPHONEOS` load command to the Mach-O header generated for `aarch64-apple-ios` binaries. The operating system will look for this load command to determine the minimum supported operating system version and will not allow the binary to run if it's absent. This logic already exists for the simulator toolchain.

I've been using `otool` from a [cctools](https://github.com/tpoechtrager/cctools-port) toolchain to parse the header and validate that this change adds the required load command.

This change appears to be enough to build Rust binaries that can run on a jailbroken iPhone.
2021-08-22 20:52:52 +02:00
Frank Steffahn
bf88b113ea Fix typos “a”→“an” 2021-08-22 15:35:11 +02:00
bors
db002a06ae Auto merge of #87570 - nikic:llvm-13, r=nagisa
Upgrade to LLVM 13

Work in progress update to LLVM 13. Main changes:

 * InlineAsm diagnostics reported using SrcMgr diagnostic kind are now handled. Previously these used a separate diag handler.
 * Codegen tests are updated for additional attributes.
 * Some data layouts have changed.
 * Switch `#[used]` attribute from `llvm.used` to `llvm.compiler.used` to avoid SHF_GNU_RETAIN flag introduced in https://reviews.llvm.org/D97448, which appears to trigger a bug in older versions of gold.
 * Set `LLVM_INCLUDE_TESTS=OFF` to avoid Python 3.6 requirement.

Upstream issues:

 * ~~https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=51210 (InlineAsm diagnostic reporting for module asm)~~ Fixed by 1558bb80c0.
 * ~~https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=51476 (Miscompile on AArch64 due to incorrect comparison elimination)~~ Fixed by 81b106584f.
 * https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=51207 (Can't set custom section flags anymore). Problematic change reverted in our fork, https://reviews.llvm.org/D107216 posted for upstream revert.
 * https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=51211 (Regression in codegen for #83623). This is an optimization regression that we may likely have to eat for this release. The fix for #83623 was based on an incorrect premise, and this needs to be properly addressed in the MergeICmps pass.

The [compile-time impact](https://perf.rust-lang.org/compare.html?start=ef9549b6c0efb7525c9b012148689c8d070f9bc0&end=0983094463497eec22d550dad25576a894687002) is mixed, but quite positive as LLVM upgrades go.

The LLVM 13 final release is scheduled for Sep 21st. The current nightly is scheduled for stable release on Oct 21st.

r? `@ghost`
2021-08-21 09:25:28 +00:00
bors
20e92344bc Auto merge of #88023 - devnexen:fbsd_arm64, r=nagisa
freebsd arm64 add supported sanitizers.
2021-08-19 11:54:27 +00:00
Nikita Popov
b5cc03b71a Update powerpc64 data layout 2021-08-16 18:28:18 +02:00
Nikita Popov
6eaf227ce1 Update wasm data layout 2021-08-16 18:28:18 +02:00
kit
13e2f807a1 Generate an iOS LLVM target with a specific version
Without the specific version, the mach-o header will be missing the
minimum supported operating system version. This is mandatory for
running Rust binaries on iOS devices.
2021-08-16 17:31:37 +10:00
bors
85109e257a Auto merge of #87581 - Amanieu:asm_clobber_abi, r=nagisa
Add support for clobber_abi to asm!

This PR adds the `clobber_abi` feature that was proposed in #81092.

Fixes #81092

cc `@rust-lang/wg-inline-asm`

r? `@nagisa`
2021-08-14 22:29:27 +00:00
DC
df751d82c8 freebsd arm64 add supported sanitizers. 2021-08-14 10:37:07 +01:00
Manish Goregaokar
692833a28f
Rollup merge of #87922 - Manishearth:c-enum-target-spec, r=nagisa,eddyb
Add c_enum_min_bits target spec field, use for arm-none and thumb-none targets

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87917

<s>Haven't tested this yet, still playing around.</s>

This seems to fix the issue.
2021-08-12 10:04:14 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
4c0e424461 Apply c_enum_min_bits = 8 to (arm|thumb)-none- platforms 2021-08-12 09:44:16 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
fd116c806a Add c_enum_min_bits to target spec 2021-08-12 09:44:16 -07:00
Amanieu d'Antras
3fd463a5ca Add support for clobber_abi to asm! 2021-08-12 12:43:11 +01:00
ivmarkov
459eaa6bae STD support for the ESP-IDF framework 2021-08-10 12:09:00 +03:00
bors
ae90dcf020 Auto merge of #85357 - Andy-Python-Programmer:aarch64_uefi_target, r=petrochenkov
Add `aarch64-unknown-uefi` target

This pull request adds the `aarch64-unknown-uefi` target.
2021-08-09 13:16:51 +00:00
unknown
44b81fb8fc
Add the aarch64-unknown-uefi target
* This commit adds the aarch64-unknown-uefi target and also adds it into
the supported targets list under the tier-3 target table.
* Uses the small code model by default

Signed-off-by: Andy-Python-Programmer <andypythonappdeveloper@gmail.com>
2021-08-09 16:49:04 +10:00
bors
b53a93db2d Auto merge of #87535 - lf-:authors, r=Mark-Simulacrum
rfc3052 followup: Remove authors field from Cargo manifests

Since RFC 3052 soft deprecated the authors field, hiding it from
crates.io, docs.rs, and making Cargo not add it by default, and it is
not generally up to date/useful information for contributors, we may as well
remove it from crates in this repo.
2021-08-02 05:49:17 +00:00
bors
2e9c8705e9 Auto merge of #87664 - devnexen:netbsd_sanitizers_support, r=nagisa
netbsd x86_64 arch enable supported sanitizers.
2021-08-01 14:16:37 +00:00
bors
aadd6189ad Auto merge of #87449 - matthiaskrgr:clippyy_v2, r=nagisa
more clippy::complexity fixes

(also a couple of clippy::perf fixes)
2021-08-01 09:15:15 +00:00
David Carlier
4258e937f6 netbsd x86_64 arch enable supported sanitizers. 2021-07-31 15:26:55 +01:00
Jade
3cf820e17d rfc3052: Remove authors field from Cargo manifests
Since RFC 3052 soft deprecated the authors field anyway, hiding it from
crates.io, docs.rs, and making Cargo not add it by default, and it is
not generally up to date/useful information, we should remove it from
crates in this repo.
2021-07-29 14:56:05 -07:00
David Carlier
76d1453b5b freebsd remove compiler workaround.
related issue #43575
2021-07-25 17:38:44 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
3fd8cbb404 clippy::useless_format 2021-07-25 12:26:03 +02:00
Piotr Kubaj
763bc13ccc Add support for powerpc-unknown-freebsd 2021-07-22 17:29:33 +02:00
bors
64d171b8a4 Auto merge of #87124 - Andy-Python-Programmer:code_model_uefi_patch, r=petrochenkov
Use small code model for UEFI targets

* Since the code model only applies to the code and not the data and the code model
only applies to functions you call through using `call`, `jmp` and data with `lea`, etc…

  If you are calling functions using the function pointers from the UEFI structures the code
  model does not apply in that case. It’s just related to the address space size of your own binary.
  Since UEFI (uefi is all relocatable) uses relocatable PEs (relocatable code does not care about the
  code model) so, we use the small code model here.

* Since applications don't usually take gigabytes of memory, setting the
target to use the small code model should result in better codegen (comparable
with majority of other targets).

  Large code models are also known for generating horrible code, for
  example 16 bytes of code to load a single 8-byte value.

Signed-off-by: Andy-Python-Programmer <andypythonappdeveloper@gmail.com>
2021-07-17 10:15:33 +00:00
bors
153df0f6ef Auto merge of #86062 - nagisa:nagisa/what-a-lie, r=estebank
Do not allow JSON targets to set is-builtin: true

Note that this will affect (and make builds fail for) all of the projects out there that have target files invalid in this way. Crater, however, does not really cover these kinds of the codebases, so it is quite difficult to measure the impact. That said, the target files invalid in this way can start causing build failures each time LLVM is upgraded, anyway, so it is probably a good opportunity to disallow this property, entirely.

Another approach considered was to simply not parse this field anymore, which would avoid making the builds explicitly fail, but it wasn't clear to me if `is-builtin` was always set unintentionally… In case this was the case, I'd expect people to file a feature request stating specifically for what purpose they were using `is-builtin`.

Fixes #86017
2021-07-17 07:54:03 +00:00
Andy-Python-Programmer
db1e49257e
Use small code model for UEFI targets
* Since the code model only applies to the code and not the data and the code model
only applies to functions you call through using `call`, `jmp` and data with `lea`, etc…

If you are calling functions using the function pointers from the UEFI structures the code
model does not apply in that case. It’s just related to the address space size of your own binary.
Since UEFI (uefi is all relocatable) uses relocatable PEs (relocatable code does not care about the
code model) so, we use the small code model here.

* Since applications don't usually take gigabytes of memory, setting the
target to use the small code model should result in better codegen (comparable
with majority of other targets).

Large code models are also known for generating horrible code, for
example 16 bytes of code to load a single 8-byte value.

* Use the LLVM default code model for the architecture for the
x86_64-unknown-uefi targets. For reference small is the default
code model on x86 in LLVM: <7de2173c2a/llvm/lib/Target/X86/X86TargetMachine.cpp (L204)>

* Remove the comments too as they are not UEFI-specific and applies
to pretty much any target. I added them before as I was explicitily
setting the code model to small.

Signed-off-by: Andy-Python-Programmer <andypythonappdeveloper@gmail.com>
2021-07-17 14:08:40 +10:00
bors
ca99e3eb3a Auto merge of #86922 - joshtriplett:target-abi, r=oli-obk
target abi

Implement cfg(target_abi) (RFC 2992)

Add an `abi` field to `TargetOptions`, defaulting to "". Support using
`cfg(target_abi = "...")` for conditional compilation on that field.

Gated by `feature(cfg_target_abi)`.

Add a test for `target_abi`, and a test for the feature gate.

Add `target_abi` to tidy as a platform-specific cfg.

Update targets to use `target_abi`

All eabi targets have `target_abi = "eabi".`
All eabihf targets have `target_abi = "eabihf"`.
`armv6_unknown_freebsd` and `armv7_unknown_freebsd` have `target_abi = "eabihf"`.
All abi64 targets have `target_abi = "abi64"`.
All ilp32 targets have `target_abi = "ilp32"`.
All softfloat targets have `target_abi = "softfloat"`.
All *-uwp-windows-* targets have `target_abi = "uwp"`.
All spe targets have `target_abi = "spe"`.
All macabi targets have `target_abi = "macabi"`.
aarch64-apple-ios-sim has `target_abi = "sim"`.
`x86_64-fortanix-unknown-sgx` has `target_abi = "fortanix"`.
`x86_64-unknown-linux-gnux32` has `target_abi = "x32"`.

Add FIXME entries for targets for which existing values need to change
once `cfg_target_abi` becomes stable. (All of them are tier 3 targets.)

Add a test for `target_abi` in `--print cfg`.
2021-07-13 12:25:10 +00:00
bors
99f8efec46 Auto merge of #86416 - Amanieu:asm_clobber_only, r=nagisa
Add clobber-only register classes for asm!

These are needed to properly express a function call ABI using a clobber
list, even though we don't support passing actual values into/out of
these registers.
2021-07-11 01:06:58 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
d2a1d048d9 Add AArch64 z* registers as aliases for v* registers 2021-07-10 17:29:07 +02:00
Amanieu d'Antras
e1c3f5e017 Add clobber-only register classes for asm!
These are needed to properly express a function call ABI using a clobber
list, even though we don't support passing actual values into/out of
these registers.
2021-07-10 17:29:00 +02:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
f4701cd65c Do not allow JSON targets to set is-builtin: true 2021-07-08 23:50:12 +03:00
Josh Triplett
c3fbafddc0 Update targets to use target_abi
All eabi targets have target_abi = "eabi".
All eabihf targets have target_abi = "eabihf".
armv6_unknown_freebsd and armv7_unknown_freebsd have target_abi = "eabihf".
All abi64 targets have target_abi = "abi64".
All ilp32 targets have target_abi = "ilp32".
All softfloat targets have target_abi = "softfloat".
All *-uwp-windows-* targets have target_abi = "uwp".
All spe targets have target_abi = "spe".
All macabi targets have target_abi = "macabi".
aarch64-apple-ios-sim has target_abi = "sim".
x86_64-fortanix-unknown-sgx has target_abi = "fortanix".
x86_64-unknown-linux-gnux32 has target_abi = "x32".

Add FIXME entries for targets for which existing values need to change
once cfg_target_abi becomes stable. (All of them are tier 3 targets.)

Add a test for target_abi in `--print cfg`.
2021-07-07 08:52:35 -07:00
Josh Triplett
84d6e8aed3 Implement cfg(target_abi) (RFC 2992)
Add an `abi` field to `TargetOptions`, defaulting to "". Support using
`cfg(target_abi = "...")` for conditional compilation on that field.

Gated by `feature(cfg_target_abi)`.

Add a test for `target_abi`, and a test for the feature gate.

Add `target_abi` to tidy as a platform-specific cfg.

This does not add an abi to any existing target.
2021-07-07 08:52:35 -07:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
8240e7aa10 Replace per-target ABI denylist with an allowlist
It makes very little sense to maintain denylists of ABIs when, as far as
non-generic ABIs are concerned, targets usually only support a small
subset of the available ABIs.

This has historically been a cause of bugs such as us allowing use of
the platform-specific ABIs on x86 targets – these in turn would cause
LLVM errors or assertions to fire.

Fixes #57182

Sponsored by: standard.ai
2021-07-06 13:12:15 +03:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
9b67cba4f6 Add support for leaf fn frame pointer elimination
This PR adds ability for the target specifications to specify frame
pointer emission type that's not just “always” or “whatever cg decides”.

In particular there's a new mode that allows omission of the frame
pointer for leaf functions (those that don't call any other functions).

We then set this new mode for Aarch64-based Apple targets.

Fixes #86196
2021-06-30 19:45:17 +03:00
Smitty
157898e7d5 Point to the updated version of some dead links 2021-06-23 19:36:51 -04:00
Smitty
bdfcb88e8b Use HTTPS links where possible 2021-06-23 16:26:46 -04:00
bors
d789de67dc Auto merge of #85775 - adamrk:warn-unused-target-fields, r=nagisa
Emit warnings for unused fields in custom targets.

Add a warning which lists any fields in a custom target `json` file that aren't used. Currently unrecognized fields are ignored so, for example, a typo in the `json` will silently produce a target which isn't the one intended.
2021-06-21 06:56:51 +00:00
Adam Bratschi-Kaye
88b01f1178 Emit warnings for unused fields in custom targets. 2021-06-17 21:48:02 +02:00
bors
e062e5d34e Auto merge of #83572 - pkubaj:patch-1, r=nagisa
Add support for powerpc64le-unknown-freebsd
2021-06-17 18:06:44 +00:00
LeSeulArtichaut
e3ca81fd5a Use the now available implementation of IntoIterator for arrays 2021-06-14 23:40:09 +02:00
LingMan
07dbd4d398 Use try_into instead of asserting manually 2021-06-07 01:27:40 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
679a1d1ac1
Rollup merge of #85920 - luqmana:wasm-linker-tweaks, r=petrochenkov
Tweak wasm_base target spec to indicate linker is not GNU and update linker inferring logic for wasm-ld.

Reported via [Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/wasi.20linker.20unknown.20argument.3A.20--as-needed): we try passing `--as-needed` to the linker if it's GNU ld which `wasm-ld` is not. Usually this isn't an issue for wasm as we would use the WasmLd linker driver but because the linker in question (`wasm32-unknown-wasi-wasm-ld`) ended with `-ld` our linker inferring [logic](f64503eb55/compiler/rustc_codegen_ssa/src/back/link.rs (L957-L1040)) used the `GccLinker` implementations. (UPD: The linker inferring logic actually didn't apply in this case because the linker is actually invoked through gcc in the reported issue. But it's still worth updating the logic I think.)

This change then has 2 parts:
1. Update wasm_base target spec to indicate `linker_is_gnu: false` plus a few additions of `target.is_like_wasm` to handle flags `wasm-ld` does in fact support.
2. Improve the linker detection logic to properly determine the correct flavor of wasm linker we're using when we can.

We need to add the new `target.is_like_wasm` branches to handle the case where the "linker" used could be something like clang which would then under the hood call wasm-ld.
2021-06-06 19:11:18 +09:00
bors
f434217aab Auto merge of #79608 - alessandrod:bpf, r=nagisa
BPF target support

This adds `bpfel-unknown-none` and `bpfeb-unknown-none`, two new no_std targets that generate little and big endian BPF. The approach taken is very similar to the cuda target, where `TargetOptions::obj_is_bitcode` is enabled and code generation is done by the linker.

I added the targets to `dist-various-2`. There are [some tests](https://github.com/alessandrod/bpf-linker/tree/main/tests/assembly) in bpf-linker and I'm planning to add more. Those are currently not ran as part of rust CI.
2021-06-06 01:02:32 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
16504f6253
Rollup merge of #86014 - cr1901:msp430-link, r=jonas-schievink
msp430 linker does not accept -znoexecstack. Set linker_is_gnu to fal…

…se as workaround for now.

Tested locally and works. Closes #85948.
2021-06-05 19:41:45 +02:00
William D. Jones
cd11cdb88c msp430 linker does not accept -znoexecstack. Set linker_is_gnu to false as workaround for now. 2021-06-04 20:37:53 -04:00
Yuki Okushi
5d30ab85b2
Rollup merge of #85966 - alexcrichton:wasm-simd-indirect, r=workingjubilee
wasm: Make simd types passed via indirection again

This commit updates wasm target specs to use `simd_types_indirect: true`
again. Long ago this was added since wasm simd types were always
translated to `v128` under-the-hood in LLVM, meaning that it didn't
matter whether that target feature was enabled or not. Now, however,
`v128` is conditionally used in codegen depending on target features
enabled, meaning that it's possible to get linker errors about different
signatures in code that correctly uses simd types. The fix is the same
as for all other platforms, which is to pass the type indirectly.
2021-06-05 06:13:43 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
36f1ed6de2
Rollup merge of #85850 - bjorn3:less_feature_gates, r=jyn514
Remove unused feature gates

The first commit removes a usage of a feature gate, but I don't expect it to be controversial as the feature gate was only used to workaround a limitation of rust in the past. (closures never being `Clone`)

The second commit uses `#[allow_internal_unstable]` to avoid leaking the `trusted_step` feature gate usage from inside the index newtype macro. It didn't work for the `min_specialization` feature gate though.

The third commit removes (almost) all feature gates from the compiler that weren't used anyway.
2021-06-04 13:42:54 +09:00
Alex Crichton
55769a5ca9 wasm: Make simd types passed via indirection again
This commit updates wasm target specs to use `simd_types_indirect: true`
again. Long ago this was added since wasm simd types were always
translated to `v128` under-the-hood in LLVM, meaning that it didn't
matter whether that target feature was enabled or not. Now, however,
`v128` is conditionally used in codegen depending on target features
enabled, meaning that it's possible to get linker errors about different
signatures in code that correctly uses simd types. The fix is the same
as for all other platforms, which is to pass the type indirectly.
2021-06-03 09:55:45 -07:00
Yuki Okushi
9b1e105ade
Rollup merge of #85706 - jrmuizel:fpe, r=nagisa
Turn off frame pointer elimination on all Apple platforms.

This ends up disabling frame pointer elimination on aarch64_apple_darwin
which matches what clang does by default along with the
aarch64_apple_ios and x86_64_apple_darwin targets.

Further, the Apple docs "Writing ARM64 Code for Apple Platforms" has a section
called "Respect the Purpose of Specific CPU Registers" which
specifically calls out the frame pointer register (x29):

   The frame pointer register (x29) must always address a valid frame
   record. Some functions — such as leaf functions or tail calls — may
   opt not to create an entry in this list As a result, stack traces
   are always meaningful, even without debug information.

Other platforms are updated to not override the default.
2021-06-03 14:35:28 +09:00
Jeff Muizelaar
aab854596f Turn off frame pointer elimination on all Apple platforms.
This ends up disabling frame pointer elimination on aarch64_apple_darwin
which matches what clang does by default along with the
aarch64_apple_ios and x86_64_apple_darwin targets.

Further, the Apple docs "Writing ARM64 Code for Apple Platforms" has a section
called "Respect the Purpose of Specific CPU Registers" which
specifically calls out the frame pointer register (x29):

   The frame pointer register (x29) must always address a valid frame
   record. Some functions — such as leaf functions or tail calls — may
   opt not to create an entry in this list As a result, stack traces
   are always meaningful, even without debug information.

Other platforms are updated to not override the default.
2021-06-02 13:49:29 -04:00
Tomasz Miąsko
c1f6495b8e Miscellaneous inlining improvements 2021-06-02 08:49:58 +02:00
Luqman Aden
f667aca127 Tweak wasm_base target spec to indicate linker is not GNU and update linker inferring logic for wasm-ld. 2021-06-01 17:13:10 -07:00
bjorn3
312f964478 Remove unused feature gates 2021-05-31 13:55:43 +02:00
Alessandro Decina
ab93a139ef BPF: misc minor review fixes 2021-05-29 22:23:32 +10:00
Alessandro Decina
bd8e5ce4b9 BPF: abi: extend args/ret to 32 bits
Let LLVM extend to 64 bits when alu32 is not enabled
2021-05-29 22:23:32 +10:00
Jacob Pratt
bc2f0fb5a9
Specialize implementations
Implementations in stdlib are now optimized as they were before.
2021-05-26 18:07:09 -04:00
Alessandro Decina
b2a6967114 Add support for BPF inline assembly 2021-05-23 18:03:27 +10:00
Alessandro Decina
12e70929d6 Add BPF target
This change adds the bpfel-unknown-none and bpfeb-unknown-none targets
which can be used to generate little endian and big endian BPF
2021-05-23 18:03:27 +10:00
Luqman Aden
3221a5e65b Remove linker_is_gnu: true cases as that is now the default. 2021-05-20 23:36:04 -07:00
Luqman Aden
0188664425 Swap TargetOptions::linker_is_gnu default from false to true and update targets as appropriate. 2021-05-20 16:47:08 -07:00
bors
3e827cc21e Auto merge of #85376 - RalfJung:ptrless-allocs, r=oli-obk
CTFE core engine allocation & memory API improvemenets

This is a first step towards https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/841.
- make `Allocation` API offset-based (no more making up `Pointer`s just to access an `Allocation`)
- make `Memory` API higher-level (combine checking for access and getting access into one operation)

The Miri-side PR is at https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/pull/1804.
r? `@oli-obk`
2021-05-19 10:11:28 +00:00
Jack Huey
ec0e0d1e7a
Rollup merge of #85274 - luqmana:linker-is-gnu-gc-sections, r=petrochenkov
Only pass --[no-]gc-sections if linker is GNU ld.

Fixes a regression from #84468 where linking now fails with solaris linkers. LinkerFlavor::Gcc does not always mean GNU ld specifically. And in the case of at least the solaris ld in illumos, that flag is unrecognized and will cause the linking step to fail.

Even though removing the `is_like_solaris` branch from `gc_sections` in #84468 made sense as `-z ignore/record` are more analogous to the `--[no-]-as-needed` flags, it inadvertently caused solaris linkers to be passed the `--gc-sections` flag. So let's just change it to be more explicit about when we pass those flags.
2021-05-18 22:36:04 -04:00
Ralf Jung
563ab4a106 add Align::ONE; add methods to access alloc.extra 2021-05-18 19:33:55 +02:00
bors
fe72845f7b Auto merge of #85312 - ehuss:macro_use-unused-attr, r=petrochenkov
Fix unused attributes on macro_rules.

The `unused_attributes` lint wasn't firing on attributes of `macro_rules` definitions. The consequence is that many attributes are silently ignored on `macro_rules`. The reason is that `unused_attributes` is a late-lint pass, and only has access to the HIR, which does not have macro_rules definitions.

My solution here is to change `non_exported_macro_attrs` to be `macro_attrs` (a list of all attributes used for `macro_rules`, instead of just those for `macro_export`), and then to check this list in the `unused_attributes` lint. There are a number of alternate approaches, but this seemed the most reliable and least invasive. I am open to completely different approaches, though.

One concern is that I don't fully understand the implications of extending `non_exported_macro_attrs` to include non-exported macros. That list was originally added in #62042 to handle stability attributes, so I suspect it was just an optimization since that was all that was needed. It was later extended to be included in SVH in #83901. #80641 also added a use to check for `invalid` attributes, which seems a little odd to me (it didn't validate non-exported macros, and seems highly specific).

Overall, there doesn't seem to be a clear story of when `unused_attributes` should be used versus an error like E0518. I considered alternatively using an "allow list" of built-in attributes that can be used on macro_rules (allow, warn, deny, forbid, cfg, cfg_attr, macro_export, deprecated, doc), but I feel like that could be a pain to maintain.

Some built-in attributes already present hard-errors when used with macro_rules. These are each hard-coded in various places:
- `derive`
- `test` and `bench`
- `proc_macro` and `proc_macro_derive`
- `inline`
- `global_allocator`

The primary motivation is that I sometimes see people use `#[macro_use]` in front of `macro_rules`, which indicates there is some confusion out there (evident that there was even a case of it in rustc).
2021-05-16 20:19:45 +00:00
Luqman Aden
45225d24bf Windows mingw targets use gcc as the linker so the target spec should also indicate linker_is_gnu. 2021-05-15 22:09:34 -07:00
Eric Huss
5bbc240ffb Fix unused attributes on macro_rules. 2021-05-15 16:13:46 -07:00
Dr. Chat
69acee3ffe Add asm!() support for PowerPC64 2021-05-13 22:31:47 -05:00
Dr. Chat
b1bb5d662c Add initial asm!() support for PowerPC
This includes GPRs and FPRs only
2021-05-11 19:04:16 -05:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
b7c5599d22 Adjust target search algorithm for rustlib path
With this the concerns expressed in #83800 should be addressed.
2021-05-10 19:15:19 +03:00
bors
c55c26cb36 Auto merge of #83800 - xobs:impl-16351-nightly, r=nagisa
Add default search path to `Target::search()`

The function `Target::search()` accepts a target triple and returns a `Target` struct defining the requested target.

There is a `// FIXME 16351: add a sane default search path?` comment that indicates it is desirable to include some sort of default. This was raised in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/16351 which was closed without any resolution.

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/31117 was proposed, however that has platform-specific logic that is unsuitable for systems without `/etc/`.

This patch implements the suggestion raised in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/16351#issuecomment-180878193 where a `target.json` file may be placed in `$(rustc --print sysroot)/lib/rustlib/<target-triple>/target.json`. This allows shipping a toolchain distribution as a single file that gets extracted to the sysroot.
2021-05-09 22:01:26 +00:00
Dylan DPC
cea6e4d6b9
Rollup merge of #84930 - hermitcore:target, r=nagisa
rename LLVM target for RustyHermit

- RustyHermit is a library operating system, where the user-
  and the kernel-space use the same target
- by a mistake a previous patch changes the target to an incorect value
- this merge request revert the previous changes
2021-05-07 16:19:21 +02:00
Stefan Lankes
76f884abb9 rename LLVM target for RustyHermit
RustyHermit ist is a library operating system. In this case, we link a static library as kernel to the application. The final result is a bootable application. The library and the application have to use the same target. Currently, the targets are different (see also https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/x86_64_unknown_hermit.rs). Consequently, this commit change the LLVM target to 'hermit'.

This kernel spec is needed to disable the usage of FPU registers, which are not allowed in kernel space. In contrast to Linux, everything is running in ring 0 and also in the same address space.

Signed-off-by: Stefan Lankes <slankes@eonerc.rwth-aachen.de>
2021-05-07 10:09:11 +02:00