Commit Graph

843 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ralf Jung
7f945b2b5b add simd_arith_offset intrinsics 2022-04-12 11:09:26 -04:00
Luqman Aden
bf3ef0da0c Switch to the 'normal' basic block for writing asm outputs if needed.
We may sometimes emit an `invoke` instead of a `call` for inline
assembly during the MIR -> LLVM IR lowering. But we failed to update
the IR builder's current basic block before writing the results to the
outputs. This would result in invalid IR because the basic block would
end in a `store` instruction, which isn't a valid terminator.
2022-04-09 15:25:46 -04:00
Rémy Rakic
1906b7e967 port codegen_module activity to arg recorder API 2022-04-07 15:47:20 +02:00
Rémy Rakic
b6a7b5accd remove allocation from a self-profiling call in the LLVM backend 2022-04-07 15:47:20 +02:00
Rémy Rakic
3a8006714b simplify a self-profiling activity call in the LLVM backend
and so that it doesn't allocate unless event argument recording is turned on
2022-04-07 15:47:20 +02:00
Oli Scherer
d57b755909 Use WrappingRange::full instead of hand-rolling it 2022-04-05 13:18:22 +00:00
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
ccff48f97b Replace every String in Target(Options) with Cow<'static, str> 2022-04-03 21:29:57 +02:00
David Morrison
aa67016624 make memcmp return a value of c_int_width instead of i32 2022-04-02 17:21:08 -07:00
Dylan DPC
03b3993ae8
Rollup merge of #95461 - nyurik:spelling, r=lcnr
Spellchecking some comments

This PR attempts to clean up some minor spelling mistakes in comments
2022-03-30 09:10:07 +02:00
Yuri Astrakhan
a9cc3f6564 Spellchecking compiler code
Address some spelling mistakes in strings, private function names, and function params.
2022-03-30 01:42:10 -04:00
Yuri Astrakhan
7e8201ae0a Spellchecking some comments
This PR attempts to clean up some minor spelling mistakes in comments
2022-03-30 01:39:38 -04:00
bors
13c9fc38c9 Auto merge of #95300 - workingjubilee:less-bitsets, r=eddyb
Skip needless bitset for debuginfo

Found this while digging around looking at the inlining logic.
Seemed obvious enough so I decided to try to take care of it.
Is this what you had in mind, `@eddyb?`
2022-03-28 05:48:25 +00:00
Jubilee Young
f5f0e6d551 Skip needless bitset for debuginfo 2022-03-25 03:55:18 -07:00
Michael Woerister
e169261a6f debuginfo: Fix debuginfo for Box<T> where T is unsized.
Before this fix, the debuginfo for the fields was generated from the
struct defintion of Box<T>, but (at least at the moment) the compiler
pretends that Box<T> is just a (fat) pointer, so the fields need to be
`pointer` and `vtable` instead of `__0: Unique<T>` and `__1: Allocator`.

This is meant as a temporary mitigation until we can make sure that
simply treating Box as a regular struct in debuginfo does not cause too
much breakage in the ecosystem.
2022-03-24 11:12:41 +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
990c297ffb Filter for all features instead of any
Adds regression tests for feature logic
Co-authored-by: bjorn3 <bjorn3@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Simonas Kazlauskas <git@kazlauskas.me>
2022-03-22 15:20:01 -07:00
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
bors
d6f3a4ecb4 Auto merge of #88098 - Amanieu:oom_panic, r=nagisa
Implement -Z oom=panic

This PR removes the `#[rustc_allocator_nounwind]` attribute on `alloc_error_handler` which allows it to unwind with a panic instead of always aborting. This is then used to implement `-Z oom=panic` as per RFC 2116 (tracking issue #43596).

Perf and binary size tests show negligible impact.
2022-03-18 03:01:46 +00:00
bors
040703018c Auto merge of #94261 - michaelwoerister:debuginfo-types-refactor, r=wesleywiser
debuginfo: Refactor debuginfo generation for types

This PR implements the refactoring of the `rustc_codegen_llvm::debuginfo::metadata` module as described in MCP https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/482.

In particular it
- changes names to use `di_node` instead of `metadata`
- uniformly names all functions that build new debuginfo nodes `build_xyz_di_node`
- renames `CrateDebugContext` to `CodegenUnitDebugContext` (which is more accurate)
- removes outdated parts from `compiler/rustc_codegen_llvm/src/debuginfo/doc.md`
- moves `TypeMap` and functions that work directly work with it to a new `type_map` module
- moves enum related builder functions to a new `enums` module
- splits enum debuginfo building for the native and cpp-like cases, since they are mostly separate
- uses `SmallVec` instead of `Vec` in many places
- removes the old infrastructure for dealing with recursion cycles (`create_and_register_recursive_type_forward_declaration()`, `RecursiveTypeDescription`, `set_members_of_composite_type()`, `MemberDescription`, `MemberDescriptionFactory`, `prepare_xyz_metadata()`, etc)
- adds `type_map::build_type_with_children()` as a replacement for dealing with recursion cycles
- adds many (doc-)comments explaining what's going on
- changes cpp-like naming for C-Style enums so they don't get a `enum$<...>` name (because the NatVis visualizer does not apply to them)
- fixes detection of what is a C-style enum because some enums where classified as C-style even though they have fields
- changes cpp-like naming for generator enums so that NatVis works for them
- changes the position of discriminant debuginfo node so it is consistently nested inside the top-level union instead of, sometimes, next to it

The following could be done in subsequent PRs:
- add caching for `closure_saved_names_of_captured_variables`
- add caching for `generator_layout_and_saved_local_names`
- fix inconsistent handling of what is considered a C-style enum wrt to debuginfo
- rename `metadata` module to `types`
- move common generator fields to front instead of appending them

This PR is based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93644 which is not merged yet.

Right now, the changes are all done in one big commit. They could be split into smaller commits but hopefully the list of changes above makes it tractable to review them as a single commit too.

For now: r? `@ghost` (let's see if this affects compile times)
2022-03-15 10:52:32 +00:00
Michael Woerister
584855e03d debuginfo: Refactor debuginfo generation for types -- Rename DebugInfoMethods::create_vtable_metadata() to DebugInfoMethods::create_vtable_debuginfo() 2022-03-14 17:25:24 +01:00
Michael Woerister
9580a7115d debuginfo: Refactor debuginfo generation for types -- Address review comments. 2022-03-14 17:25:17 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
0e423932f8
Rollup merge of #90621 - adamgemmell:dev/stabilise-target-feature, r=Amanieu
Stabilise `aarch64_target_feature`

This PR stabilises `aarch64_target_feature` - see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90620
2022-03-14 17:24:56 +01:00
Michael Woerister
19707b0ff2 debuginfo: Refactor debuginfo generation for types -- Address outstanding FIXMEs. 2022-03-14 16:55:01 +01:00
Michael Woerister
07a1194edf debuginfo: Refactor debuginfo generation for types -- Run x.py fmt 2022-03-14 16:52:47 +01:00
Michael Woerister
5144661d6b Remove out-dated information from rustc_codegen_llvm/src/debuginfo/doc.md 2022-03-14 16:52:47 +01:00
Michael Woerister
07ebc13d87 debuginfo: Refactor debuginfo generation for types
This commit
- changes names to use di_node instead of metadata
- uniformly names all functions that build new debuginfo nodes build_xyz_di_node
- renames CrateDebugContext to CodegenUnitDebugContext (which is more accurate)
- moves TypeMap and functions that work directly work with it to a new type_map module
- moves and reimplements enum related builder functions to a new enums module
- splits enum debuginfo building for the native and cpp-like cases, since they are mostly separate
- uses SmallVec instead of Vec in many places
- removes the old infrastructure for dealing with recursion cycles (create_and_register_recursive_type_forward_declaration(), RecursiveTypeDescription, set_members_of_composite_type(), MemberDescription, MemberDescriptionFactory, prepare_xyz_metadata(), etc)
- adds type_map::build_type_with_children() as a replacement for dealing with recursion cycles
- adds many (doc-)comments explaining what's going on
- changes cpp-like naming for C-Style enums so they don't get a enum$<...> name (because the NatVis visualizer does not apply to them)
- fixes detection of what is a C-style enum because some enums where classified as C-style even though they have fields
- changes the position of discriminant debuginfo node so it is consistently nested inside the top-level union instead of, sometimes, next to it
2022-03-14 16:49:06 +01:00
Adam Gemmell
39961390ad Tie fp and neon 2022-03-14 10:54:21 +00:00
bors
012720ffb0 Auto merge of #94733 - nnethercote:fix-AdtDef-interning, r=fee1-dead
Improve `AdtDef` interning.

This commit makes `AdtDef` use `Interned`. Much of the commit is tedious
changes to introduce getter functions. The interesting changes are in
`compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/adt.rs`.

r? `@fee1-dead`
2022-03-12 07:02:05 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
ca5525d564 Improve AdtDef interning.
This commit makes `AdtDef` use `Interned`. Much the commit is tedious
changes to introduce getter functions. The interesting changes are in
`compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/adt.rs`.
2022-03-11 13:31:24 +11:00
Dylan DPC
b18b2d1bcd
Rollup merge of #94728 - compiler-errors:box-allocator-zst-meta, r=michaelwoerister
Only emit pointer-like metadata for `Box<T, A>` when `A` is ZST

Basically copy the change in #94043, but for debuginfo.

r? ``@michaelwoerister``

Fixes #94725
2022-03-10 23:13:00 +01:00
bors
282778aee2 Auto merge of #94764 - nikic:update-llvm-3, r=nagisa
Update LLVM submodule

This merges upstream changes from the 14.x release branch.

Fixes #89609.
Fixes #93923.
Fixes #94032.
2022-03-10 08:56:02 +00:00
Nikita Popov
0c7d0a19dd Use new pass manager on s390x with LLVM 14
The problematic compile-time issue should be resolved with this
version.
2022-03-09 10:00:23 +01:00
lcnr
b8135fd5c8 add #[rustc_pass_by_value] to more types 2022-03-08 15:39:52 +01:00
Michael Goulet
307ee94a8a only emit pointer-like metadata for BZST-allocator Box 2022-03-07 23:06:59 -08:00
bors
ecb867ec3c Auto merge of #94690 - nnethercote:clarify-Layout-interning, r=fee1-dead
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.

r? `@fee1-dead`
2022-03-07 15:25:42 +00:00
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
3d1eaf4b62 Auto merge of #94638 - erikdesjardins:noextranull, r=nagisa
cleanup: remove unused ability to have LLVM null-terminate const strings

(and the copied function in rustc_codegen_gcc)

Noticed this while writing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/94450#issuecomment-1059687348.

r? `@nagisa`
2022-03-07 02:07:36 +00:00
bors
8876ca3dd4 Auto merge of #94597 - nnethercote:ConstAllocation, r=fee1-dead
Introduce `ConstAllocation`.

Currently some `Allocation`s are interned, some are not, and it's very
hard to tell at a use point which is which.

This commit introduces `ConstAllocation` for the known-interned ones,
which makes the division much clearer. `ConstAllocation::inner()` is
used to get the underlying `Allocation`.

In some places it's natural to use an `Allocation`, in some it's natural
to use a `ConstAllocation`, and in some places there's no clear choice.
I've tried to make things look as nice as possible, while generally
favouring `ConstAllocation`, which is the type that embodies more
information. This does require quite a few calls to `inner()`.

The commit also tweaks how `PartialOrd` works for `Interned`. The
previous code was too clever by half, building on `T: Ord` to make the
code shorter. That caused problems with deriving `PartialOrd` and `Ord`
for `ConstAllocation`, so I changed it to build on `T: PartialOrd`,
which is slightly more verbose but much more standard and avoided the
problems.

r? `@fee1-dead`
2022-03-06 22:37:54 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4852291417 Introduce ConstAllocation.
Currently some `Allocation`s are interned, some are not, and it's very
hard to tell at a use point which is which.

This commit introduces `ConstAllocation` for the known-interned ones,
which makes the division much clearer. `ConstAllocation::inner()` is
used to get the underlying `Allocation`.

In some places it's natural to use an `Allocation`, in some it's natural
to use a `ConstAllocation`, and in some places there's no clear choice.
I've tried to make things look as nice as possible, while generally
favouring `ConstAllocation`, which is the type that embodies more
information. This does require quite a few calls to `inner()`.

The commit also tweaks how `PartialOrd` works for `Interned`. The
previous code was too clever by half, building on `T: Ord` to make the
code shorter. That caused problems with deriving `PartialOrd` and `Ord`
for `ConstAllocation`, so I changed it to build on `T: PartialOrd`,
which is slightly more verbose but much more standard and avoided the
problems.
2022-03-07 08:25:50 +11:00
bors
38a0b81b1c Auto merge of #94679 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-9vd7w6a, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 3 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #94659 (explain why shift with signed offset works the way it does)
 - #94671 (fix pin doc typo)
 - #94672 (Improved error message for failed bitcode load)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-03-06 20:21:35 +00:00
Erik Desjardins
e1a4bf6492 cleanup: remove unused ability to have LLVM null-terminate const strings 2022-03-06 12:28:46 -05:00
Joe
65ec4dd904
Improved error message for failed bitcode load
"bc" is an unnecessary shorthand that obfuscates the compilation error
2022-03-06 15:25:05 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
095d818e0c Always include global target features in function attributes
This ensures that information about target features configured with
`-C target-feature=...` or detected with `-C target-cpu=native` is
retained for subsequent consumers of LLVM bitcode.

This is crucial for linker plugin LTO, since this information is not
conveyed to the plugin otherwise.
2022-03-04 16:57:34 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
b6f845f225 Use SmallStr when building target-features LLVM attribute 2022-03-04 16:57:34 +01:00
bors
047f9c4bc4 Auto merge of #94539 - tmiasko:string-attributes, r=nikic
Pass LLVM string attributes as string slices
2022-03-04 10:38:11 +00:00
bors
62ff2bcf94 Auto merge of #94159 - erikdesjardins:align-load, r=nikic
Add !align metadata on loads of &/&mut/Box

Note that this refers to the alignment of what the loaded value points
to, _not_ the alignment of the loaded value itself.

r? `@ghost` (blocked on #94158)
2022-03-04 08:14:31 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
aa36237e16 Add -Z oom={panic,abort} command-line option 2022-03-03 12:58:38 +00:00
cuishuang
00fffdddd2 all: fix some typos
Signed-off-by: cuishuang <imcusg@gmail.com>
2022-03-03 19:47:23 +08:00
Dylan DPC
878a4ff90e
Rollup merge of #94529 - GuillaumeGomez:unused-doc-comments-blocks, r=estebank
Unused doc comments blocks

Fixes #77030.
2022-03-03 01:09:15 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
926bf1a371 Pass LLVM string attributes as string slices 2022-03-03 00:28:50 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
628fbdf9b7 Fix unused_doc_comments lint errors 2022-03-02 20:06:35 +01:00
mark
e489a94dee rename ErrorReported -> ErrorGuaranteed 2022-03-02 09:45:25 -06:00
bors
c42d846add Auto merge of #94229 - erikdesjardins:rem2, r=nikic
Remove LLVM attribute removal

This was necessary before, because `declare_raw_fn` would always apply
the default optimization attributes to every declared function.
Then `attributes::from_fn_attrs` would have to remove the default
attributes in the case of, e.g. `#[optimize(speed)]` in a `-Os` build.
(see [`src/test/codegen/optimize-attr-1.rs`](03a8cc7df1/src/test/codegen/optimize-attr-1.rs (L33)))

However, every relevant callsite of `declare_raw_fn` (i.e. where we
actually generate code for the function, and not e.g. a call to an
intrinsic, where optimization attributes don't [?] matter)
calls `from_fn_attrs`, so we can remove the attribute setting
from `declare_raw_fn`, and rely on `from_fn_attrs` to apply the correct
attributes all at once.

r? `@ghost` (blocked on #94221)
`@rustbot` label S-blocked
2022-03-02 08:48:33 +00:00
bors
39a3b52767 Auto merge of #87402 - nagisa:nagisa/request-feature-requests-for-features, r=estebank
Direct users towards using Rust target feature names in CLI

This PR consists of a couple of changes on how we handle target features.

In particular there is a bug-fix wherein we avoid passing through features that aren't prefixed by `+` or `-` to LLVM. These appear to be causing LLVM to assert, which is pretty poor a behaviour (and also makes it pretty clear we expect feature names to be prefixed).

The other commit, I anticipate to be somewhat more controversial is outputting a warning when users specify a LLVM-specific, or otherwise unknown, feature name on the CLI. In those situations we request users to either replace it with a known Rust feature name (e.g. `bmi` -> `bmi1`) or file a feature request. I've a couple motivations for this: first of all, if users are specifying these features on the command line, I'm pretty confident there is also a need for these features to be usable via `#[cfg(target_feature)]` machinery.  And second, we're growing a fair number of backends recently and having ability to provide some sort of unified-ish interface in this place seems pretty useful to me.

Sponsored by: standard.ai
2022-03-02 03:03:22 +00:00
bors
4a56cbec59 Auto merge of #94402 - erikdesjardins:revert-coldland, r=nagisa
Revert "Auto merge of #92419 - erikdesjardins:coldland, r=nagisa"

Should fix (untested) #94390

Reopens #46515, #87055

r? `@ehuss`
2022-03-01 08:57:46 +00:00
Erik Desjardins
69ae4233cf Add !align metadata on loads of &/&mut/Box
Note that this refers to the alignment of what the loaded value points
to, _not_ the alignment of the loaded value itself.
2022-02-28 20:04:36 -05:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
df701a292c Querify global_backend_features
At the very least this serves to deduplicate the diagnostics that are
output about unknown target features provided via CLI.
2022-03-01 01:57:25 +02:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
c97c216efd Direct users towards using Rust feature names in CLI
If they are trying to use features rustc doesn't yet know about,
request a feature request.

Additionally, also warn against using feature names without leading `+`
or `-` signs.
2022-03-01 01:57:10 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
ea39f46cad
Rollup merge of #94365 - mati865:fix-mingw-detection-for-rawdylib, r=michaelwoerister
Fix MinGW target detection in raw-dylib

LLVM target doesn't have to be the same as Rust target so relying on it is wrong.

It was one of concerns in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88801 that was not fixed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90782.
2022-02-28 12:57:48 +01:00
Erik Desjardins
dce14cfacc Remove LLVM attribute removal
This was necessary before, because `declare_raw_fn` would always apply
the default optimization attributes to every declared function,
and then `attributes::from_fn_attrs` would have to remove the default
attributes in the case of, e.g. `#[optimize(speed)]` in a `-Os` build.

However, every relevant callsite of `declare_raw_fn` (i.e. where we
actually generate code for the function, and not e.g. a call to an
intrinsic, where optimization attributes don't [?] matter)
calls `from_fn_attrs`, so we can simply remove the attribute setting
from `declare_raw_fn`, and rely on `from_fn_attrs` to apply the correct
attributes all at once.
2022-02-28 00:02:11 -05:00
Erik Desjardins
851fcc7a54 Revert "Auto merge of #92419 - erikdesjardins:coldland, r=nagisa"
This reverts commit 4f49627c6f, reversing
changes made to 028c6f1454.
2022-02-27 23:11:03 -05:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
dfcfaa4ec1 Do not pass through features without +/- prefix
LLVM really dislikes this and will assert, saying something along the
lines of:

```
rustc: llvm/lib/MC/MCSubtargetInfo.cpp:60: void ApplyFeatureFlag(
  llvm::FeatureBitset&, llvm::StringRef, llvm::ArrayRef<llvm::SubtargetFeatureKV>
): Assertion
  `SubtargetFeatures::hasFlag(Feature) && "Feature flags should start with '+' or '-'"`
failed.
```
2022-02-27 21:21:38 +02:00
Erik Desjardins
fec4335407 Apply noundef metadata to loads of types that do not permit raw init
This matches the noundef attributes we apply on arguments/return types.
2022-02-27 12:16:16 -05:00
bors
2bd9656c80 Auto merge of #94221 - erikdesjardins:addattr, r=nikic
Add LLVM attributes in batches instead of individually

This should improve performance.

~r? `@ghost` (blocked on #94127)~
2022-02-27 09:23:24 +00:00
Erik Desjardins
91e7e8ddcb just put smallvec lengths in the signature 2022-02-26 16:58:17 -05:00
bors
761e888485 Auto merge of #93516 - nagisa:branch-protection, r=cjgillot
No branch protection metadata unless enabled

Even if we emit metadata disabling branch protection, this metadata may
conflict with other modules (e.g. during LTO) that have different branch
protection metadata set.

This is an unstable flag and feature, so ideally the flag not being
specified should act as if the feature wasn't implemented in the first
place.

Additionally this PR also ensures we emit an error if
`-Zbranch-protection` is set on targets other than the supported
aarch64. For now the error is being output from codegen, but ideally it
should be moved to earlier in the pipeline before stabilization.
2022-02-26 21:53:03 +00:00
Erik Desjardins
30d3ce0674 Add LLVM attributes in batches instead of individually
This should improve performance.
2022-02-26 13:14:55 -05:00
bors
8128e910c0 Auto merge of #94127 - erikdesjardins:debugattr, r=nikic
At opt-level=0, apply only ABI-affecting attributes to functions

This should provide a small perf improvement for debug builds,
and should more than cancel out the perf regression from adding noundef (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93670#issuecomment-1038347581, #94106).

r? `@nikic`
2022-02-26 09:41:19 +00:00
bors
d981633ed6 Auto merge of #94290 - Mark-Simulacrum:bump-bootstrap, r=pietroalbini
Bump bootstrap to 1.60

This bumps the bootstrap compiler to 1.60 and cleans up cfgs and Span's rustc_pass_by_value (enabled by the bootstrap bump).
2022-02-25 18:34:02 +00:00
Mateusz Mikuła
c35a1d4028 Fix MinGW target detection in raw-dylib
LLVM target doesn't have to be the same as Rust target so relying on it is wrong.
2022-02-25 17:46:23 +01:00
Mark Rousskov
22c3a71de1 Switch bootstrap cfgs 2022-02-25 08:00:52 -05:00
bors
9b2a46591a Auto merge of #93644 - michaelwoerister:simpler-debuginfo-typemap, r=wesleywiser
debuginfo: Simplify TypeMap used during LLVM debuginfo generation.

This PR simplifies the TypeMap that is used in `rustc_codegen_llvm::debuginfo::metadata`. It was unnecessarily complicated because it was originally implemented when types were not yet normalized before codegen. So it did it's own normalization and kept track of multiple unnormalized types being mapped to a single unique id.

This PR is based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93503, which is not merged yet.

The PR also removes the arena used for allocating string ids and instead uses `InlinableString` from the [inlinable_string](https://crates.io/crates/inlinable_string) crate. That might not be the best choice, since that crate does not seem to be very actively maintained. The [flexible-string](https://crates.io/crates/flexible-string) crate would be an alternative.

r? `@ghost`
2022-02-25 11:00:32 +00:00
Michael Woerister
bb2059f959 debuginfo: Simplify TypeMap used during LLVM debuginfo generation -- address review comments. 2022-02-25 10:30:45 +01:00
bors
ece55d416e Auto merge of #94130 - erikdesjardins:partially, r=nikic
Use undef for (some) partially-uninit constants

There needs to be some limit to avoid perf regressions on large arrays
with undef in each element (see comment in the code).

Fixes: #84565
Original PR: #83698

Depends on LLVM 14: #93577
2022-02-25 05:44:33 +00:00
Dylan DPC
6b03a46f27
Rollup merge of #94242 - compiler-errors:fat-uninhabitable-pointer, r=michaelwoerister
properly handle fat pointers to uninhabitable types

Calculate the pointee metadata size by using `tcx.struct_tail_erasing_lifetimes` instead of duplicating the logic in `fat_pointer_kind`. Open to alternatively suggestions on how to fix this.

Fixes #94149

r? ````@michaelwoerister```` since you touched this code last, I think!
2022-02-24 21:42:15 +01:00
bors
3d127e2040 Auto merge of #94123 - bjorn3:cg_ssa_singleton_builder, r=tmiasko
Partially move cg_ssa towards using a single builder

Not all codegen backends can handle hopping between blocks well. For example Cranelift requires blocks to be terminated before switching to building a new block. Rust-gpu requires a `RefCell` to allow hopping between blocks and cg_gcc currently has a buggy implementation of hopping between blocks. This PR reduces the amount of cases where cg_ssa switches between blocks before they are finished and mostly fixes the block hopping in cg_gcc. (~~only `scalar_to_backend` doesn't handle it correctly yet in cg_gcc~~ fixed that one.)

`@antoyo` please review the cg_gcc changes.
2022-02-24 12:28:19 +00:00
bjorn3
96cf7999ab Introduce Bx::switch_to_block 2022-02-24 12:18:21 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
77a8e60dd7
Rollup merge of #89887 - arlosi:char-debug, r=wesleywiser
Change `char` type in debuginfo to DW_ATE_UTF

Rust previously encoded the `char` type as DW_ATE_unsigned_char. The more appropriate encoding is `DW_ATE_UTF`.

Clang also uses the DW_ATE_UTF for `char32_t` in C++.

This fixes the display of the `char` type in the Windows debuggers. Without this change, the variable did not show in the locals window.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/704597/137368067-9b3e4dc8-a075-44ba-a687-bf3810a44e5a.png)

LLDB 13 is also able to display the char value, when before it failed with `need to add support for DW_TAG_base_type 'char' encoded with DW_ATE = 0x8, bit_size = 32`

r? `@wesleywiser`
2022-02-24 07:48:04 +01:00
Arlo Siemsen
be454f056f Change char type in debuginfo to DW_ATE_UTF
Rust previously encoded the `char` type as DW_ATE_unsigned_char. The more
appropriate encoding is DW_ATE_UTF.

Clang uses this same debug encoding for char32_t.

This fixes the display of `char` types in Windows debuggers as well as LLDB.
2022-02-23 08:31:10 -08:00
Michael Goulet
c73a2f8a65 properly handle fat pointers to uninhabitable types 2022-02-23 08:20:12 -08:00
David Wood
4e41a46f6a Reapply cg_llvm: fewer_names in uncached_llvm_type
Co-authored-by: Erik Desjardins <erikdesjardins@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Tomasz Miąsko <tomasz.miasko@gmail.com>
2022-02-22 08:23:53 +01:00
Michael Woerister
e72e6399b1 debuginfo: Simplify TypeMap used during LLVM debuginfo generation.
The previous implementation was written before types were properly
normalized for code generation and had to assume a more complicated
relationship between types and their debuginfo -- generating separate
identifiers for debuginfo nodes that were based on normalized types.

Since types are now already normalized, we can use them as identifiers
for debuginfo nodes.
2022-02-21 13:03:36 +01:00
lcnr
1245131a11 use List<Ty<'tcx>> for tuples 2022-02-21 07:09:11 +01:00
bors
45e2c2881d Auto merge of #93678 - steffahn:better_unsafe_diagnostics, r=nagisa
Improve `unused_unsafe` lint

I’m going to add some motivation and explanation below, particularly pointing the changes in behavior from this PR.

_Edit:_ Looking for existing issues, looks like this PR fixes #88260.

_Edit2:_ Now also contains code that closes #90776.
2022-02-20 21:15:11 +00:00
Frank Steffahn
8f8689fb31 Improve unused_unsafe lint
Main motivation: Fixes some issues with the current behavior. This PR is
more-or-less completely re-implementing the unused_unsafe lint; it’s also only
done in the MIR-version of the lint, the set of tests for the `-Zthir-unsafeck`
version no longer succeeds (and is thus disabled, see `lint-unused-unsafe.rs`).

On current nightly,
```rs
unsafe fn unsf() {}

fn inner_ignored() {
    unsafe {
        #[allow(unused_unsafe)]
        unsafe {
            unsf()
        }
    }
}
```

doesn’t create any warnings. This situation is not unrealistic to come by, the
inner `unsafe` block could e.g. come from a macro. Actually, this PR even
includes removal of one unused `unsafe` in the standard library that was missed
in a similar situation. (The inner `unsafe` coming from an external macro hides
    the warning, too.)

The reason behind this problem is how the check currently works:
* While generating MIR, it already skips nested unsafe blocks (i.e. unsafe
  nested in other unsafe) so that the inner one is always the one considered
  unused
* To differentiate the cases of no unsafe operations inside the `unsafe` vs.
  a surrounding `unsafe` block, there’s some ad-hoc magic walking up the HIR to
  look for surrounding used `unsafe` blocks.

There’s a lot of problems with this approach besides the one presented above.
E.g. the MIR-building uses checks for `unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn` lint to decide
early whether or not `unsafe` blocks in an `unsafe fn` are redundant and ought
to be removed.
```rs
unsafe fn granular_disallow_op_in_unsafe_fn() {
    unsafe {
        #[deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)]
        {
            unsf();
        }
    }
}
```
```
error: call to unsafe function is unsafe and requires unsafe block (error E0133)
  --> src/main.rs:13:13
   |
13 |             unsf();
   |             ^^^^^^ call to unsafe function
   |
note: the lint level is defined here
  --> src/main.rs:11:16
   |
11 |         #[deny(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)]
   |                ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
   = note: consult the function's documentation for information on how to avoid undefined behavior

warning: unnecessary `unsafe` block
  --> src/main.rs:10:5
   |
9  | unsafe fn granular_disallow_op_in_unsafe_fn() {
   | --------------------------------------------- because it's nested under this `unsafe` fn
10 |     unsafe {
   |     ^^^^^^ unnecessary `unsafe` block
   |
   = note: `#[warn(unused_unsafe)]` on by default

```
Here, the intermediate `unsafe` was ignored, even though it contains a unsafe
operation that is not allowed to happen in an `unsafe fn` without an additional `unsafe` block.

Also closures were problematic and the workaround/algorithms used on current
nightly didn’t work properly. (I skipped trying to fully understand what it was
supposed to do, because this PR uses a completely different approach.)
```rs
fn nested() {
    unsafe {
        unsafe { unsf() }
    }
}
```
```
warning: unnecessary `unsafe` block
  --> src/main.rs:10:9
   |
9  |     unsafe {
   |     ------ because it's nested under this `unsafe` block
10 |         unsafe { unsf() }
   |         ^^^^^^ unnecessary `unsafe` block
   |
   = note: `#[warn(unused_unsafe)]` on by default
```

vs

```rs
fn nested() {
    let _ = || unsafe {
        let _ = || unsafe { unsf() };
    };
}
```
```
warning: unnecessary `unsafe` block
 --> src/main.rs:9:16
  |
9 |     let _ = || unsafe {
  |                ^^^^^^ unnecessary `unsafe` block
  |
  = note: `#[warn(unused_unsafe)]` on by default

warning: unnecessary `unsafe` block
  --> src/main.rs:10:20
   |
10 |         let _ = || unsafe { unsf() };
   |                    ^^^^^^ unnecessary `unsafe` block
```

*note that this warning kind-of suggests that **both** unsafe blocks are redundant*

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I also dislike the fact that it always suggests keeping the outermost `unsafe`.
E.g. for
```rs
fn granularity() {
    unsafe {
        unsafe { unsf() }
        unsafe { unsf() }
        unsafe { unsf() }
    }
}
```
I prefer if `rustc` suggests removing the more-course outer-level `unsafe`
instead of the fine-grained inner `unsafe` blocks, which it currently does on nightly:
```
warning: unnecessary `unsafe` block
  --> src/main.rs:10:9
   |
9  |     unsafe {
   |     ------ because it's nested under this `unsafe` block
10 |         unsafe { unsf() }
   |         ^^^^^^ unnecessary `unsafe` block
   |
   = note: `#[warn(unused_unsafe)]` on by default

warning: unnecessary `unsafe` block
  --> src/main.rs:11:9
   |
9  |     unsafe {
   |     ------ because it's nested under this `unsafe` block
10 |         unsafe { unsf() }
11 |         unsafe { unsf() }
   |         ^^^^^^ unnecessary `unsafe` block

warning: unnecessary `unsafe` block
  --> src/main.rs:12:9
   |
9  |     unsafe {
   |     ------ because it's nested under this `unsafe` block
...
12 |         unsafe { unsf() }
   |         ^^^^^^ unnecessary `unsafe` block
```

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Needless to say, this PR addresses all these points. For context, as far as my
understanding goes, the main advantage of skipping inner unsafe blocks was that
a test case like
```rs
fn top_level_used() {
    unsafe {
        unsf();
        unsafe { unsf() }
        unsafe { unsf() }
        unsafe { unsf() }
    }
}
```
should generate some warning because there’s redundant nested `unsafe`, however
every single `unsafe` block _does_ contain some statement that uses it. Of course
this PR doesn’t aim change the warnings on this kind of code example, because
the current behavior, warning on all the inner `unsafe` blocks, makes sense in this case.

As mentioned, during MIR building all the unsafe blocks *are* kept now, and usage
is attributed to them. The way to still generate a warning like
```
warning: unnecessary `unsafe` block
  --> src/main.rs:11:9
   |
9  |     unsafe {
   |     ------ because it's nested under this `unsafe` block
10 |         unsf();
11 |         unsafe { unsf() }
   |         ^^^^^^ unnecessary `unsafe` block
   |
   = note: `#[warn(unused_unsafe)]` on by default

warning: unnecessary `unsafe` block
  --> src/main.rs:12:9
   |
9  |     unsafe {
   |     ------ because it's nested under this `unsafe` block
...
12 |         unsafe { unsf() }
   |         ^^^^^^ unnecessary `unsafe` block

warning: unnecessary `unsafe` block
  --> src/main.rs:13:9
   |
9  |     unsafe {
   |     ------ because it's nested under this `unsafe` block
...
13 |         unsafe { unsf() }
   |         ^^^^^^ unnecessary `unsafe` block
```

in this case is by emitting a `unused_unsafe` warning for all of the `unsafe`
blocks that are _within a **used** unsafe block_.

The previous code had a little HIR traversal already anyways to collect a set of
all the unsafe blocks (in order to afterwards determine which ones are unused
afterwards). This PR uses such a traversal to do additional things including logic
like _always_ warn for an `unsafe` block that’s inside of another **used**
unsafe block. The traversal is expanded to include nested closures in the same go,
this simplifies a lot of things.

The whole logic around `unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn` is a little complicated, there’s
some test cases of corner-cases in this PR. (The implementation involves
differentiating between whether a used unsafe block was used exclusively by
operations where `allow(unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn)` was active.) The main goal was
to make sure that code should compile successfully if all the `unused_unsafe`-warnings
are addressed _simultaneously_ (by removing the respective `unsafe` blocks)
no matter how complicated the patterns of `unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn` being
disallowed and allowed throughout the function are.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

One noteworthy design decision I took here: An `unsafe` block
with `allow(unused_unsafe)` **is considered used** for the purposes of
linting about redundant contained unsafe blocks. So while
```rs

fn granularity() {
    unsafe { //~ ERROR: unnecessary `unsafe` block
        unsafe { unsf() }
        unsafe { unsf() }
        unsafe { unsf() }
    }
}
```
warns for the outer `unsafe` block,
```rs

fn top_level_ignored() {
    #[allow(unused_unsafe)]
    unsafe {
        #[deny(unused_unsafe)]
        {
            unsafe { unsf() } //~ ERROR: unnecessary `unsafe` block
            unsafe { unsf() } //~ ERROR: unnecessary `unsafe` block
            unsafe { unsf() } //~ ERROR: unnecessary `unsafe` block
        }
    }
}
```
warns on the inner ones.
2022-02-20 21:00:12 +01:00
bors
523a1b1d38 Auto merge of #94062 - Mark-Simulacrum:drop-print-cfg, r=oli-obk
Move ty::print methods to Drop-based scope guards

Primary goal is reducing codegen of the TLS access for each closure, which shaves ~3 seconds of bootstrap time over rustc as a whole.
2022-02-20 18:12:59 +00:00
Erik Desjardins
067f628286 add check for llvm 14 2022-02-20 11:37:22 -05:00
bjorn3
e6d7a8d7d4 Remove build_sibling_block 2022-02-20 13:38:15 +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
Simonas Kazlauskas
b995dc944c No branch protection metadata unless enabled
Even if we emit metadata disabling branch protection, this metadata may
conflict with other modules (e.g. during LTO) that have different branch
protection metadata set.

This is an unstable flag and feature, so ideally the flag not being
specified should act as if the feature wasn't implemented in the first
place.

Additionally this PR also ensures we emit an error if
`-Zbranch-protection` is set on targets other than the supported
aarch64. For now the error is being output from codegen, but ideally it
should be moved to earlier in the pipeline before stabilization.
2022-02-19 17:31:40 +02:00
Erik Desjardins
6e740ae934 always add align attributes 2022-02-19 09:59:36 -05:00
Erik Desjardins
d5769e9843 switch to limiting the number of init/uninit chunks 2022-02-19 01:29:17 -05:00
bors
1882597991 Auto merge of #94134 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-b132kjz, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 10 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #89892 (Suggest `impl Trait` return type when incorrectly using a generic return type)
 - #91675 (Add MemTagSanitizer Support)
 - #92806 (Add more information to `impl Trait` error)
 - #93497 (Pass `--test` flag through rustdoc to rustc so `#[test]` functions can be scraped)
 - #93814 (mips64-openwrt-linux-musl: correct soft-foat)
 - #93847 (kmc-solid: Use the filesystem thread-safety wrapper)
 - #93877 (asm: Allow the use of r8-r14 as clobbers on Thumb1)
 - #93892 (Only mark projection as ambiguous if GAT substs are constrained)
 - #93915 (Implement --check-cfg option (RFC 3013), take 2)
 - #93953 (Add the `known-bug` test directive, use it, and do some cleanup)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-02-19 02:07:43 +00:00
bors
5a1a3707ff Auto merge of #94050 - michaelwoerister:fix-unsized-tuple-debuginfo, r=pnkfelix
debuginfo: Support fat pointers to unsized tuples.

This PR makes fat pointer debuginfo generation handle the case of unsized tuples.

Fixes #93871
2022-02-18 23:18:12 +00:00
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
Erik Desjardins
b7e5597491 Use undef for partially-uninit constants up to 1024 bytes
There needs to be some limit to avoid perf regressions on large arrays
with undef in each element (see comment in the code).
2022-02-18 15:57:10 -05:00
Erik Desjardins
dcbdc8c19b At opt-level=0, apply only ABI-affecting attributes to functions
This should provide a small perf improvement for debug builds,
and should more than cancel out the regression from adding noundef,
which was only significant in debug builds.
2022-02-18 14:36:12 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
a144ea1c4b
Rollup merge of #93634 - matthiaskrgr:clippy_complexity_jan_2022, r=oli-obk
compiler: clippy::complexity fixes

useless_format
map_flatten
useless_conversion
needless_bool
filter_next
clone_on_copy
needless_option_as_deref
2022-02-18 16:23:33 +01:00