removing architecture requirements for RustyHermit
RustHermit and HermitCore is able to run on aarch64 and x86_64. In the future these operating systems will also support RISC-V. Consequently, the dependency to a specific target should be removed.
The build process of `hermit-abi` fails if the architecture isn't supported.
RustHermit and HermitCore is able to run on aarch64 and x86_64.
In the future these operating systems will also support RISC-V.
Consequently, the dependency to a specific target should be removed.
Building hermit-abi fails if the architecture isn't supported.
Drop time dependency from bootstrap
This was only used for the inclusion of 'current' dates into our manpages, but
it is not clear that this is practically necessary. The manpage is essentially
never updated, and so we can likely afford to keep a manual date in these files.
It also seems possible to just omit it, but that may cause other tools trouble,
so avoid doing that for now.
This is largely done to reduce bootstrap complexity; the time crate is not particularly
small and in #92480 would have started pulling in num-threads, which does runtime
thread count detection. I would prefer to avoid that, so filing this to just drop the nearly
unused dependency entirely.
r? `@pietroalbini`
This was only used for the inclusion of 'current' dates into our manpages, but
it is not clear that this is practically necessary. The manpage is essentially
never updated, and so we can likely afford to keep a manual date in these files.
It also seems possible to just omit it, but that may cause other tools trouble,
so avoid doing that for now.
remove unused `jemallocator` crate
When it was noticed that the rustc binary wasn't actually using jemalloc via `#[global_allocator]` and that was removed, the dependency remained.
Tests pass locally with a `jemalloc = true` build, but I'll trigger a try build to ensure I haven't missed an edge-case somewhere.
r? ```@ghost``` until that completes
Bump libc and fix remove_dir_all on Fuchsia after CVE fix
With the previous `is_dir` impl, we would attempt to unlink
a directory in the None branch, but Fuchsia supports returning
ENOTEMPTY from unlinkat() without the AT_REMOVEDIR flag because
we don't currently differentiate unlinking files and directories
by default.
On the Fuchsia side I've opened https://fxbug.dev/92273 to discuss
whether this is the correct behavior, but it doesn't seem like
addressing the error code is necessary to make our tests happy.
Depends on https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/2654 since we
apparently haven't needed to reference DT_UNKNOWN before this.
With the previous `is_dir` impl, we would attempt to unlink
a directory in the None branch, but Fuchsia supports returning
ENOTEMPTY from unlinkat() without the AT_REMOVEDIR flag because
we don't currently differentiate unlinking files and directories
by default.
On the Fuchsia side I've opened https://fxbug.dev/92273 to discuss
whether this is the correct behavior, but it doesn't seem like
addressing the error code is necessary to make our tests happy.
Updates std's libc crate to include DT_UNKNOWN for Fuchsia.
Update some rustc dependencies to deduplicate them
This PR updates `rand` and `itertools` in rustc (not the whole workspace) in order to deduplicate them (and hopefully slightly improve compile times).
~~Currently, `object` is still duplicated, but https://github.com/rust-lang/thorin/pull/15 and updating `thorin` in the future will remove the use of version 0.27.~~ Update: Thorin 0.2 has now been released, and this PR updates `rustc_codegen_ssa` to use it and deduplicate the `object` crate.
There's a final tiny rustc dependency, `cfg-if`, which will be left: as both versions 0.1.x and 1.0 looked to be heavily depended on, they will require a few cascading updates to be removed.
Introduce drop range tracking to generator interior analysis
This PR addresses cases such as this one from #57478:
```rust
struct Foo;
impl !Send for Foo {}
let _: impl Send = || {
let guard = Foo;
drop(guard);
yield;
};
```
Previously, the `generator_interior` pass would unnecessarily include the type `Foo` in the generator because it was not aware of the behavior of `drop`. We fix this issue by introducing a drop range analysis that finds portions of the code where a value is guaranteed to be dropped. If a value is dropped at all suspend points, then it is no longer included in the generator type. Note that we are using "dropped" in a generic sense to include any case in which a value has been moved. That is, we do not only look at calls to the `drop` function.
There are several phases to the drop tracking algorithm, and we'll go into more detail below.
1. Use `ExprUseVisitor` to find values that are consumed and borrowed.
2. `DropRangeVisitor` uses consume and borrow information to gather drop and reinitialization events, as well as build a control flow graph.
3. We then propagate drop and reinitialization information through the CFG until we reach a fix point (see `DropRanges::propagate_to_fixpoint`).
4. When recording a type (see `InteriorVisitor::record`), we check the computed drop ranges to see if that value is definitely dropped at the suspend point. If so, we skip including it in the type.
## 1. Use `ExprUseVisitor` to find values that are consumed and borrowed.
We use `ExprUseVisitor` to identify the places where values are consumed. We track both the `hir_id` of the value, and the `hir_id` of the expression that consumes it. For example, in the expression `[Foo]`, the `Foo` is consumed by the array expression, so after the array expression we can consider the `Foo` temporary to be dropped.
In this process, we also collect values that are borrowed. The reason is that the MIR transform for generators conservatively assumes anything borrowed is live across a suspend point (see `rustc_mir_transform::generator::locals_live_across_suspend_points`). We match this behavior here as well.
## 2. Gather drop events, reinitialization events, and control flow graph
After finding the values of interest, we perform a post-order traversal over the HIR tree to find the points where these values are dropped or reinitialized. We use the post-order index of each event because this is how the existing generator interior analysis refers to the position of suspend points and the scopes of variables.
During this traversal, we also record branching and merging information to handle control flow constructs such as `if`, `match`, and `loop`. This is necessary because values may be dropped along some control flow paths but not others.
## 3. Iterate to fixed point
The previous pass found the interesting events and locations, but now we need to find the actual ranges where things are dropped. Upon entry, we have a list of nodes ordered by their position in the post-order traversal. Each node has a set of successors. For each node we additionally keep a bitfield with one bit per potentially consumed value. The bit is set if we the value is dropped along all paths entering this node.
To compute the drop information, we first reverse the successor edges to find each node's predecessors. Then we iterate through each node, and for each node we set its dropped value bitfield to the intersection of all incoming dropped value bitfields.
If any bitfield for any node changes, we re-run the propagation loop again.
## 4. Ignore dropped values across suspend points
At this point we have a data structure where we can ask whether a value is guaranteed to be dropped at any post order index for the HIR tree. We use this information in `InteriorVisitor` to check whether a value in question is dropped at a particular suspend point. If it is, we do not include that value's type in the generator type.
Note that we had to augment the region scope tree to include all yields in scope, rather than just the last one as we did before.
r? `@nikomatsakis`
All tests pass now! The issue was that we weren't handling all edges
correctly, but now they are handled consistently.
This includes code to dump a graphviz file for the CFG we built for drop
tracking.
Also removes old DropRanges tests.
This adds support for branching and merging control flow and uses this
to correctly handle the case where a value is dropped in one branch of
an if expression but not another.
There are other cases we need to handle, which will come in follow up
patches.
Issue #57478
ProjectionPredicate should be able to handle both associated types and consts so this adds the
first step of that. It mainly just pipes types all the way down, not entirely sure how to handle
consts, but hopefully that'll come with time.
rustdoc: remove hand-rolled isatty
This PR replaces bindings to the platform-specific isatty APIs with the `isatty` crate, as done elsewhere in the repository.
Update rayon and rustc-rayon
This updates rayon for various tools and rustc-rayon for the compiler's parallel mode.
- rayon v1.3.1 -> v1.5.1
- rayon-core v1.7.1 -> v1.9.1
- rustc-rayon v0.3.1 -> v0.3.2
- rustc-rayon-core v0.3.1 -> v0.3.2
... and indirectly, this updates all of crossbeam-* to their latest versions.
Fixes#92677 by removing crossbeam-queue, but there's still a lingering question about how tidy discovers "runtime" dependencies. None of this is truly in the standard library's dependency tree at all.