Commit Graph

2967 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bjorn3
55100e907e Remove unused cargo-platform dependency 2024-04-11 16:44:42 +00:00
klensy
124837d463 move QueryKeyStringCache from rustc_middle to rustc_query_impl, where it actually used
also allows to drop measureme dep on rustc_middle
2024-04-11 14:33:48 +03:00
Ralf Jung
385c363bdf update compiler_builtins to 0.1.109 2024-04-10 14:34:52 +02:00
bjorn3
dacfbfccc5 Update ar_archive_writer to 0.2.0
This adds a whole bunch of tests checking for any difference with llvm's
archive writer. It also fixes two mistakes in the porting from C++ to
Rust. The first one causes a divergence for Mach-O archives which may or
may not be harmless. The second will definitively cause issues, but only
applies to thin archives, which rustc currently doesn't create.
2024-04-09 17:45:02 +00:00
David Tolnay
224edac7a1
Update cc dependency to fix compile family detection warning 2024-04-08 13:00:16 -07:00
Ramon de C Valle
1f0f2c4007 sanitizers: Create the rustc_sanitizers crate
Create the rustc_sanitizers crate and move the source code for the CFI
and KCFI sanitizers to it.

Co-authored-by: David Wood <agile.lion3441@fuligin.ink>
2024-04-08 12:05:41 -07:00
github-actions
4035c24175 cargo update
Updating expect-test v1.4.1 -> v1.5.0
    Updating getrandom v0.2.12 -> v0.2.13
    Updating h2 v0.3.25 -> v0.3.26 (latest: v0.4.4)
    Updating pest v2.7.8 -> v2.7.9
    Updating pest_derive v2.7.8 -> v2.7.9
    Updating pest_generator v2.7.8 -> v2.7.9
    Updating pest_meta v2.7.8 -> v2.7.9
    Updating pulldown-cmark v0.10.0 -> v0.10.2
    Updating rustversion v1.0.14 -> v1.0.15
    Updating strsim v0.11.0 -> v0.11.1
    Updating syn v2.0.57 -> v2.0.58
    Updating ui_test v0.22.2 -> v0.22.3
note: pass `--verbose` to see 86 unchanged dependencies behind latest
2024-04-07 00:16:57 +00:00
bors
01f7f3a1ff Auto merge of #123321 - clubby789:cargo-uupdate, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bump dependencies

Follow up for #123252
Unfortunately this file needs to be manually bumped when any dependencies are bumped in the main lockfile

```
    Updating autocfg v1.1.0 -> v1.2.0
    Updating chrono v0.4.35 -> v0.4.37
    Updating clap v4.5.3 -> v4.5.4
    Updating clap_derive v4.5.3 -> v4.5.4
    Updating handlebars v5.1.0 -> v5.1.2
    Updating itoa v1.0.10 -> v1.0.11
    Updating memoffset v0.9.0 -> v0.9.1
    Updating openssl-sys v0.9.101 -> v0.9.102
    Updating pin-project-lite v0.2.13 -> v0.2.14
    Updating r-efi v4.3.0 -> v4.4.0
    Updating regex-syntax v0.8.2 -> v0.8.3
    Updating security-framework v2.9.2 -> v2.10.0
    Updating security-framework-sys v2.9.1 -> v2.10.0
    Updating serde_json v1.0.114 -> v1.0.115
    Updating syn v2.0.55 -> v2.0.57
    Updating tokio v1.36.0 -> v1.37.0
```
2024-04-06 10:57:13 +00:00
Philipp Krones
a809a72667
Update Cargo.lock 2024-04-04 19:53:00 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
31900b4c13
Rollup merge of #123378 - ferrocene:hoverbear/bump-sysinfo-to-0.30.8, r=Nilstrieb
Update sysinfo to 0.30.8

Fixes a Mac specific issue when using `metrics = true` in `config.toml`.

```config.toml
# Collect information and statistics about the current build and writes it to
# disk. Enabling this or not has no impact on the resulting build output. The
# schema of the file generated by the build metrics feature is unstable, and
# this is not intended to be used during local development.
metrics = true
```

During repeated builds, as the generated `metrics.json` grew, eventually `refresh_cpu()` would be called in quick enough succession (specifically: under 200ms) that a divide by zero would occur, leading to a `NaN` which would not be serialized, then when the `metrics.json` was re-read it would fail to parse.

That error looks like this (collected from Ferrocene's CI):

```
   Compiling rustdoc-tool v0.0.0 (/Users/distiller/project/src/tools/rustdoc)
    Finished release [optimized] target(s) in 38.37s
thread 'main' panicked at src/utils/metrics.rs:180:21:
serde_json::from_slice::<JsonRoot>(&contents) failed with invalid type: null, expected f64 at line 1 column 9598
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
Build completed unsuccessfully in 0:00:40

Exited with code exit status 1
```

Related: https://github.com/GuillaumeGomez/sysinfo/pull/1236
2024-04-02 21:22:04 +02:00
Ana Hobden
b626f01310
Update sysinfo to 0.30.8
Fixes a Mac specific issue when using `build-metrics = true` in `config.toml`
2024-04-02 10:59:05 -07:00
Guillaume Gomez
3aab05eecb
Rollup merge of #122614 - notriddle:notriddle/search-desc, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc-search: shard the search result descriptions

## Preview

This makes no visual changes to rustdoc search. It's a pure perf improvement.

<details><summary>old</summary>

Preview: <http://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-10/doc/std/index.html?search=vec>

WebPageTest Comparison with before branch on a sort of worst case (searching `vec`, winds up downloading most of the shards anyway): <https://www.webpagetest.org/video/compare.php?tests=240317_AiDc61_2EM,240317_AiDcM0_2EN>

Waterfall diagram:
![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/39548f0c-7ad6-411b-abf8-f6668ff4da18)

</details>

Preview: <http://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-10/doc2/std/index.html?search=vec>

WebPageTest Comparison with before branch on a sort of worst case (searching `vec`, winds up downloading most of the shards anyway): <https://www.webpagetest.org/video/compare.php?tests=240322_BiDcCH_13R,240322_AiDcJY_104>

![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/4be1f9ff-c3ff-4b96-8f5b-b264df2e662d)

## Description

r? `@GuillaumeGomez`

The descriptions are, on almost all crates[^1], the majority of the size of the search index, even though they aren't really used for searching. This makes it relatively easy to separate them into their own files.

Additionally, this PR pulls out information about whether there's a description into a bitmap. This allows us to sort, truncate, *then* download.

This PR also bumps us to ES8. Out of the browsers we support, all of them support async functions according to caniuse.

https://caniuse.com/async-functions

[^1]:
    <https://microsoft.github.io/windows-docs-rs/>, a crate with
    44MiB of pure names and no descriptions for them, is an outlier
    and should not be counted. But this PR should improve it, by replacing a long line of empty strings with a compressed bitmap with a single Run section. Just not very much.

## Detailed sizes

```console
$ cat test.sh
set -ex
cp ../search-index*.js search-index.js
awk 'FNR==NR {a++;next} FNR<a-3' search-index.js{,} | awk 'NR>1 {gsub(/\],\\$/,""); gsub(/^\["[^"]+",/,""); print} {next}' | sed -E "s:\\\\':':g" > search-index.json
jq -c '.t' search-index.json > t.json
jq -c '.n' search-index.json > n.json
jq -c '.q' search-index.json > q.json
jq -c '.D' search-index.json > D.json
jq -c '.e' search-index.json > e.json
jq -c '.i' search-index.json > i.json
jq -c '.f' search-index.json > f.json
jq -c '.c' search-index.json > c.json
jq -c '.p' search-index.json > p.json
jq -c '.a' search-index.json > a.json
du -hs t.json n.json q.json D.json e.json i.json f.json c.json p.json a.json
$ bash test.sh
+ cp ../search-index1.78.0.js search-index.js
+ awk 'FNR==NR {a++;next} FNR<a-3' search-index.js search-index.js
+ awk 'NR>1 {gsub(/\],\\$/,""); gsub(/^\["[^"]+",/,""); print} {next}'
+ sed -E 's:\\'\'':'\'':g'
+ jq -c .t search-index.json
+ jq -c .n search-index.json
+ jq -c .q search-index.json
+ jq -c .D search-index.json
+ jq -c .e search-index.json
+ jq -c .i search-index.json
+ jq -c .f search-index.json
+ jq -c .c search-index.json
+ jq -c .p search-index.json
+ jq -c .a search-index.json
+ du -hs t.json n.json q.json D.json e.json i.json f.json c.json p.json a.json
64K     t.json
800K    n.json
8.0K    q.json
4.0K    D.json
16K     e.json
192K    i.json
544K    f.json
4.0K    c.json
36K     p.json
20K     a.json
```

These are, roughly, the size of each section in the standard library (this tool actually excludes libtest, for parsing-json-with-awk reasons, but libtest is tiny so it's probably not important).

t = item type, like "struct", "free fn", or "type alias". Since one byte is used for every item, this implies that there are approximately 64 thousand items in the standard library.

n = name, and that's now the largest section of the search index with the descriptions removed from it

q = parent *module* path, stored parallel to the items within

D = the size of each description shard, stored as vlq hex numbers

e = empty description bit flags, stored as a roaring bitmap

i = parent *type* index as a link into `p`, stored as decimal json numbers; used only for associated types; might want to switch to vlq hex, since that's shorter, but that would be a separate pr

f = function signature, stored as lists of lists that index into `p`

c = deprecation flag, stored as a roaring bitmap

p = parent *type*, stored separately and linked into from `i` and `f`

a = alias, as [[key, value]] pairs

## Search performance

http://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-11/perf-shard/index.html

For example, in stm32f4:

<table><thead><tr><th>before<th>after</tr></thead>
<tbody><tr><td>

```
Testing T -> U ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200
wall time = 617

Testing T, U ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200
wall time = 198

Testing T -> T ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200
wall time = 282

Testing crc32 ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 0
wall time = 426

Testing spi::pac ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 0
wall time = 673
```

</td><td>

```
Testing T -> U ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200
wall time = 716

Testing T, U ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200
wall time = 207

Testing T -> T ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200
wall time = 289

Testing crc32 ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 0
wall time = 418

Testing spi::pac ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 0
wall time = 687
```

</td></tr><tr><td>

```
user: 005.345 s
sys:  002.955 s
wall: 006.899 s
child_RSS_high:     583664 KiB
group_mem_high:     557876 KiB
```

</td><td>

```
user: 004.652 s
sys:  000.565 s
wall: 003.865 s
child_RSS_high:     538696 KiB
group_mem_high:     511724 KiB
```

</td></tr>

</table>

This perf tester is janky and unscientific enough that the apparent differences might just be noise. If it's not an order of magnitude, it's probably not real.

## Future possibilities

* Currently, results are not shown until the descriptions are downloaded. Theoretically, the description-less results could be shown. But actually doing that, and making sure it works properly, would require extra work (we have to be careful to avoid layout jumps).
* More than just descriptions can be sharded this way. But we have to be careful to make sure the size wins are worth the round trips. Ideally, data that’s needed only for display should be sharded while data needed for search isn’t.
* [Full text search](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/full-text-search-for-rustdoc-and-doc-rs/20427) also needs this kind of infrastructure. A good implementation might store a compressed bloom filter in the search index, then download the full keyword in shards. But, we have to be careful not just of the amount readers have to download, but also of the amount that [publishers](https://gist.github.com/notriddle/c289e77f3ed469d1c0238d1d135d49e1) have to store.
2024-04-02 18:18:50 +02:00
clubby789
629d69412a Bump dependencies 2024-04-01 13:06:32 +00:00
bors
defef8658e Auto merge of #122972 - beetrees:use-align-type, r=fee1-dead
Use the `Align` type when parsing alignment attributes

Use the `Align` type in `rustc_attr::parse_alignment`, removing the need to call `Align::from_bytes(...).unwrap()` later in the compilation process.
2024-04-01 03:16:45 +00:00
beetrees
6e5f1dacf3
Use the Align type when parsing alignment attributes 2024-04-01 03:05:55 +01:00
klensy
71ea506d3d bump tracing-tree to 0.3
Only change is https://github.com/davidbarsky/tracing-tree/pull/76
dedupes tracing-log
dupes nu-ansi-term
2024-03-30 17:39:43 +03:00
bors
c98ea0d808 Auto merge of #111769 - saethlin:ctfe-backtrace-ctrlc, r=RalfJung
Print a backtrace in const eval if interrupted

Demo:
```rust
#![feature(const_eval_limit)]
#![const_eval_limit = "0"]

const OW: u64 = {
    let mut res: u64 = 0;
    let mut i = 0;
    while i < u64::MAX {
        res = res.wrapping_add(i);
        i += 1;
    }
    res
};

fn main() {
    println!("{}", OW);
}
```
```
╭ ➜ ben@archlinux:~/rust
╰ ➤ rustc +stage1 spin.rs
^Cerror[E0080]: evaluation of constant value failed
 --> spin.rs:8:33
  |
8 |         res = res.wrapping_add(i);
  |                                 ^ Compilation was interrupted

note: erroneous constant used
  --> spin.rs:15:20
   |
15 |     println!("{}", OW);
   |                    ^^

note: erroneous constant used
  --> spin.rs:15:20
   |
15 |     println!("{}", OW);
   |                    ^^
   |
   = note: this note originates in the macro `$crate::format_args_nl` which comes from the expansion of the macro `println` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)

error: aborting due to previous error

For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0080`.
```
2024-03-26 00:04:03 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
fe0222be07
Rollup merge of #123005 - maurer:cfi-arbitrary-receivers, r=compiler-errors
CFI: Support complex receivers

Right now, we only support rewriting `&self` and `&mut self` into `&dyn MyTrait` and `&mut dyn MyTrait`. This expands it to handle the full gamut of receivers by calculating the receiver based on *substitution* rather than based on a rewrite. This means that, for example, `Arc<Self>` will become `Arc<dyn MyTrait>` appropriately with this change.

This approach also allows us to support associated type constraints as well, so we will correctly rewrite `&self` into `&dyn MyTrait<T=i32>`, for example.

r? ```@workingjubilee```
2024-03-25 11:00:14 +01:00
Matthew Maurer
40f41e7e89 CFI: Support arbitrary receivers
Previously, we only rewrote `&self` and `&mut self` receivers. By
instantiating the method from the trait definition, we can make this
work work with arbitrary legal receivers instead.
2024-03-24 22:46:48 +00:00
github-actions
1848b46c0b cargo update
Updating aho-corasick v1.1.2 -> v1.1.3
    Updating backtrace v0.3.69 -> v0.3.71
    Updating bitflags v2.4.2 -> v2.5.0
    Updating bytes v1.5.0 -> v1.6.0
    Updating cargo-platform v0.1.7 -> v0.1.8
    Updating fastrand v2.0.1 -> v2.0.2
    Updating indexmap v2.2.5 -> v2.2.6
    Updating libz-sys v1.1.15 -> v1.1.16
    Updating rayon v1.9.0 -> v1.10.0
    Updating reqwest v0.11.26 -> v0.11.27 (latest: v0.12.1)
    Updating rustix v0.38.31 -> v0.38.32
    Updating smallvec v1.13.1 -> v1.13.2
    Updating syn v2.0.53 -> v2.0.55
    Updating uuid v1.7.0 -> v1.8.0
note: pass `--verbose` to see 87 unchanged dependencies behind latest
2024-03-24 12:09:28 +00:00
bors
b3df0d7e5e Auto merge of #122580 - saethlin:compiler-builtins-can-panic, r=pnkfelix
"Handle" calls to upstream monomorphizations in compiler_builtins

This is pretty cooked, but I think it works.

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

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

If those conditions are met, actually generating the call is asking for a linker error. So we don't. If the callee diverges, we lower to an abort with the same behavior as `core::intrinsics::abort`. If the callee does not diverge, we produce an error. This means that compiler-builtins can contain panics, but they'll SIGILL instead of panicking. I made non-diverging calls a compile error because I'm guessing that they'd mostly get into compiler-builtins by someone making a mistake while working on the crate, and compile errors are better than linker errors. We could turn such calls into aborts as well if that's preferred.
2024-03-22 16:55:11 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
7481c0eab5
Rollup merge of #122820 - oli-obk:no_ord_def_id, r=estebank
Stop using `<DefId as Ord>` in various diagnostic situations

work towards https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90317

Reverts part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/106281, as it sorts constants and that's problematic since it can contain `ParamConst`, which contains `DefId`s
2024-03-22 11:37:01 +01:00
Michael Howell
28db4ccda7 rustdoc-search: compressed bitmap to sort, then load desc
This adds a bit more data than "pure sharding" by
including information about which items have no description
at all. This way, it can sort the results, then truncate,
then finally download the description.

With the "e" bitmap: 2380KiB

Without the "e" bitmap: 2364KiB
2024-03-21 17:57:01 -07:00
Philipp Krones
8e53d53356
Update Cargo.lock 2024-03-21 22:20:59 +01:00
Oli Scherer
cda209bf43 Stop ConstraintCategory Ord impl from relying on Ty's Ord impl. 2024-03-21 10:45:30 +00:00
Ben Kimock
2f6fb234de Add a test 2024-03-20 23:36:05 -04:00
Nadrieril
d697dd44d1 Add a crate-custom test harness 2024-03-19 02:22:43 +01:00
Ben Kimock
9e0d1a3284 Print a backtrace in const eval if interrupted 2024-03-17 11:55:20 -04:00
github-actions
c486d2d920 cargo update
Updating ahash v0.8.10 -> v0.8.11
    Updating anyhow v1.0.80 -> v1.0.81
    Updating basic-toml v0.1.8 -> v0.1.9
    Updating bumpalo v3.15.3 -> v3.15.4
      Adding cfg_aliases v0.1.1
    Updating chrono v0.4.34 -> v0.4.35
    Updating clap v4.5.1 -> v4.5.3
    Updating clap_builder v4.5.1 -> v4.5.2
    Updating clap_derive v4.5.0 -> v4.5.3
    Updating color-eyre v0.6.2 -> v0.6.3
    Updating ctrlc v3.4.2 -> v3.4.4
    Updating env_logger v0.11.2 -> v0.11.3
    Updating h2 v0.3.24 -> v0.3.25
      Adding heck v0.5.0
    Updating http v0.2.11 -> v0.2.12
    Updating js-sys v0.3.68 -> v0.3.69
    Updating libloading v0.8.2 -> v0.8.3
    Updating new_debug_unreachable v1.0.4 -> v1.0.6
    Updating nix v0.27.1 -> v0.28.0
    Updating proc-macro2 v1.0.78 -> v1.0.79
    Updating reqwest v0.11.24 -> v0.11.26
    Updating syn v2.0.52 -> v2.0.53
    Updating sysinfo v0.30.6 -> v0.30.7
    Updating thiserror v1.0.57 -> v1.0.58
    Updating thiserror-impl v1.0.57 -> v1.0.58
    Updating wasm-bindgen v0.2.91 -> v0.2.92
    Updating wasm-bindgen-backend v0.2.91 -> v0.2.92
    Updating wasm-bindgen-futures v0.4.41 -> v0.4.42
    Updating wasm-bindgen-macro v0.2.91 -> v0.2.92
    Updating wasm-bindgen-macro-support v0.2.91 -> v0.2.92
    Updating wasm-bindgen-shared v0.2.91 -> v0.2.92
    Updating web-sys v0.3.68 -> v0.3.69
2024-03-17 00:26:01 +00:00
Ben Kimock
5f4f2526b8 Handle calls to upstream monomorphizations in compiler_builtins 2024-03-16 15:22:05 -04:00
Chris Denton
ceef59fa2b
Rollup merge of #122390 - ChrisDenton:bindgen, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bump windows-bindgen to 0.55.0

windows-bindgen is the crate used to generate std's Windows API bindings.

Not many changes for us, it's mostly just simplifying the generate code (e.g. no more `-> ()`). The one substantial change is some structs now use `i8` byte arrays instead of `u8`. However, this only impacts one test.
2024-03-16 18:27:33 +00:00
Oli Scherer
746e4eff26 Test and implement reachability for trait objects and generic parameters of functions 2024-03-14 14:10:45 +00:00
Chris Denton
8e870c8ed1
Bump windows-bindgen to 0.55.0 2024-03-12 16:05:58 +00:00
Chris Denton
b25203e30f
Bump windows-bindgen to 0.54.0 2024-03-12 16:05:58 +00:00
bors
dc2ffa4054 Auto merge of #122036 - alexcrichton:test-wasm-with-wasi, r=oli-obk
Test wasm32-wasip1 in CI, not wasm32-unknown-unknown

This commit changes CI to no longer test the `wasm32-unknown-unknown` target and instead test the `wasm32-wasip1` target. There was some discussion of this in a [Zulip thread], and the motivations for this PR are:

* Runtime failures on `wasm32-unknown-unknown` print nothing, meaning all you get is "something failed". In contrast `wasm32-wasip1` can print to stdout/stderr.

* The unknown-unknown target is missing lots of pieces of libstd, and while `wasm32-wasip1` is also missing some pieces (e.g. threads) it's missing fewer pieces. This means that many more tests can be run.

Overall my hope is to improve the debuggability of wasm failures on CI and ideally be a bit less of a maintenance burden.

This commit specifically removes the testing of `wasm32-unknown-unknown` and replaces it with testing of `wasm32-wasip1`. Along the way there were a number of other archiectural changes made as well, including:

* A new `target.*.runtool` option can now be specified in `config.toml` which is passed as `--runtool` to `compiletest`. This is used to reimplement execution of WebAssembly in a less-wasm-specific fashion.

* The default value for `runtool` is an ambiently located WebAssembly runtime found on the system, if any. I've implemented logic for Wasmtime.

* Existing testing support for `wasm32-unknown-unknown` and Emscripten has been removed. I'm not aware of Emscripten testing being run any time recently and otherwise `wasm32-wasip1` is in theory the focus now.

* I've added a new `//@ needs-threads` directive for `compiletest` and classified a bunch of wasm-ignored tests as needing threads. In theory these tests can run on `wasm32-wasi-preview1-threads`, for example.

* I've tried to audit all existing tests that are either `ignore-emscripten` or `ignore-wasm*`. Many now run on `wasm32-wasip1` due to being able to emit error messages, for example. Many are updated with comments as to why they can't run as well.

* The `compiletest` output matching for `wasm32-wasip1` automatically uses "match a subset" mode implemented in `compiletest`. This is because WebAssembly runtimes often add extra information on failure, such as the `unreachable` instruction in `panic!`, which isn't able to be matched against the golden output from native platforms.

* I've ported most existing `run-make` tests that use custom Node.js wrapper scripts to the new run-make-based-in-Rust infrastructure. To do this I added `wasmparser` as a dependency of `run-make-support` for the various wasm tests to use that parse wasm files. The one test that executed WebAssembly now uses `wasmtime`-the-CLI to execute the test instead. I have not ported over an exception-handling test as Wasmtime doesn't implement this yet.

* I've updated the `test` crate to print out timing information for WASI targets as it can do that (gets a previously ignored test now passing).

* The `test-various` image now builds a WASI sysroot for the WASI target and additionally downloads a fixed release of Wasmtime, currently the latest one at 18.0.2, and uses that for testing.

[Zulip thread]: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/Have.20wasm.20tests.20ever.20caused.20problems.20on.20CI.3F/near/424317944
2024-03-12 00:03:54 +00:00
Alex Crichton
7141379559 Convert some WebAssembly run-make tests to Rust
This commit rewrites a number of `run-make` tests centered around wasm
to instead use `rmake.rs` and additionally use the `wasm32-wasip1`
target instead of `wasm32-unknown-unknown`. Testing no longer requires
Node.js and additionally uses the `wasmparser` crate from crates.io to
parse outputs and power assertions.
2024-03-11 09:36:35 -07:00
Kjetil Kjeka
222ce4fdb8 LLVM Bitcode Linker: Added crate 2024-03-11 13:35:35 +01:00
bors
3521a2f2f3 Auto merge of #122246 - RalfJung:miri, r=RalfJung
Miri subtree update

r? `@ghost`

`@WaffleLapkin` when this lands, setting `MIRI_TEMP` should not be needed any more on the dev desktops.
2024-03-10 09:40:39 +00:00
Guillaume Boisseau
bc3bc2ba6b
Rollup merge of #121584 - klensy:itertools-up, r=Mark-Simulacrum
bump itertools to 0.12

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

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

removed unused `derive_more` dep from `rustc_middle`
2024-03-09 21:40:08 +01:00
Ralf Jung
9a308d45cf update lockfile 2024-03-09 18:56:52 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
a979f971b4
Rollup merge of #121813 - Urgau:misc-non_local_defs-lint, r=cjgillot
Misc improvements to non local defs lint implementation

This PR is a collection of small improvements I found when I [needlessly tried](https://www.github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120393#issuecomment-1971787475) to fix a "perf-regression" in the lint implementation.

I recommend looking at each commit individually.
2024-03-09 16:21:15 +01:00
bors
9d272a1b05 Auto merge of #122102 - Urgau:optimize-symbol-integer, r=cjgillot
Optimize `Symbol::integer` by utilizing in-place formatting

This PR optimize `Symbol::integer` by utilizing `itoa` in-place formatting instead of going through a dynamically allocated `String` and the format machinery.

<details>

For some context: I was profiling `rustc --check-cfg` with callgrind and due to the way we currently setup all the targets and we end-up calling `Symbol::integer` multiple times for all the targets. Using `itoa` reduced the number of instructions.

</details>
2024-03-09 08:47:57 +00:00
klensy
2de98c8b7e remove unused derive_more dep 2024-03-08 12:34:14 +03:00
klensy
52501c2a75 bump itertools to 0.12
still depend on 0.11:
* clippy
* rustfmt, sigh
2024-03-08 12:34:05 +03:00
Urgau
20200f65ca Remove useless smallvec dependency in rustc_lint::non_local_def 2024-03-07 07:54:15 +01:00
Daniel Paoliello
a6a556c2a9 Add arm64ec-pc-windows-msvc target
Introduces the `arm64ec-pc-windows-msvc` target for building Arm64EC ("Emulation Compatible") binaries for Windows.

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

Tier 3 policy:

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

I will be the maintainer for this target.

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

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

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

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

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

Done.

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

> The target must not introduce license incompatibilities.

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

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

Understood.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Both `core` and `alloc` are supported.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Understood.
2024-03-06 17:49:37 -08:00
Urgau
33ef4b963b Optimize Symbol::integer by utilizing itoa in-place formatting 2024-03-06 19:39:36 +01:00
Jason Newcomb
ea9ae30671 Convert SpannedTypeVisitor to use VisitorResult 2024-03-05 13:30:46 -05:00
Jason Newcomb
be9b125d41 Convert TypeVisitor and DefIdVisitor to use VisitorResult 2024-03-05 13:28:15 -05:00
bors
a09d91b04a Auto merge of #121877 - estebank:fancy-svg, r=compiler-errors
On tests that specify `--color=always` emit SVG file with stderr output

Leverage `anstyle-svg`, as `cargo` does now, to emit `.svg` files instead of `.stderr` files for tests that explicitly enable color output. This will make reviewing changes to the graphical output of tests much more human friendly.

<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/rust-lang/rust/b4bdb56f86e136ca63bf71dca3034200c6c25900/tests/ui/error-emitter/highlighting.svg">
2024-03-03 06:40:56 +00:00
github-actions
8ef1981716 cargo update
Updating ahash v0.8.8 -> v0.8.10
    Updating annotate-snippets v0.10.1 -> v0.10.2
    Updating anstream v0.6.11 -> v0.6.13
    Updating anyhow v1.0.79 -> v1.0.80
    Updating bumpalo v3.14.0 -> v3.15.3
    Updating clap v4.5.0 -> v4.5.1
    Updating clap_builder v4.5.0 -> v4.5.1
    Updating clap_complete v4.5.0 -> v4.5.1
    Updating crossbeam-channel v0.5.11 -> v0.5.12
    Updating darling v0.20.6 -> v0.20.8
    Updating darling_core v0.20.6 -> v0.20.8
    Updating darling_macro v0.20.6 -> v0.20.8
    Updating dlmalloc v0.2.5 -> v0.2.6
    Updating indexmap v2.2.3 -> v2.2.5
    Updating libloading v0.8.1 -> v0.8.2
    Updating log v0.4.20 -> v0.4.21
    Updating mio v0.8.10 -> v0.8.11
    Updating normpath v1.1.1 -> v1.2.0
    Updating openssl v0.10.63 -> v0.10.64
    Updating openssl-sys v0.9.99 -> v0.9.101
    Updating pest v2.7.7 -> v2.7.8
    Updating pest_derive v2.7.7 -> v2.7.8
    Updating pest_generator v2.7.7 -> v2.7.8
    Updating pest_meta v2.7.7 -> v2.7.8
    Updating pkg-config v0.3.29 -> v0.3.30
    Updating rayon v1.8.1 -> v1.9.0
 Downgrading regex v1.9.4 -> v1.8.4
    Updating regex-automata v0.3.7 -> v0.3.9
    Updating reqwest v0.11.23 -> v0.11.24
      Adding rustls-pemfile v1.0.4
    Updating ryu v1.0.16 -> v1.0.17
    Updating semver v1.0.21 -> v1.0.22
    Updating serde v1.0.196 -> v1.0.197
    Updating serde_derive v1.0.196 -> v1.0.197
    Updating serde_json v1.0.113 -> v1.0.114
    Updating socket2 v0.5.5 -> v0.5.6
    Updating syn v2.0.48 -> v2.0.52
      Adding sync_wrapper v0.1.2
    Updating sysinfo v0.30.5 -> v0.30.6
    Updating tempfile v3.10.0 -> v3.10.1
    Updating thread_local v1.1.7 -> v1.1.8
    Updating unicode-normalization v0.1.22 -> v0.1.23
    Updating unicode-script v0.5.5 -> v0.5.6
    Updating walkdir v2.4.0 -> v2.5.0
    Updating windows-targets v0.52.0 -> v0.52.4
    Updating windows_aarch64_gnullvm v0.52.0 -> v0.52.4
    Updating windows_aarch64_msvc v0.52.0 -> v0.52.4
    Updating windows_i686_gnu v0.52.0 -> v0.52.4
    Updating windows_i686_msvc v0.52.0 -> v0.52.4
    Updating windows_x86_64_gnu v0.52.0 -> v0.52.4
    Updating windows_x86_64_gnullvm v0.52.0 -> v0.52.4
    Updating windows_x86_64_msvc v0.52.0 -> v0.52.4
2024-03-03 00:16:16 +00:00
Esteban Kuber
b4bdb56f86 On tests that specify --color=always emit SVG file with stderr output
Leverage `anstyle-svg`, as `cargo` does now, to emit `.svg` files
instead of `.stderr` files for tests that explicitly enable color
output. This will make reviewing changes to the graphical output of
tests much more human friendly.
2024-03-02 22:47:17 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
9b2644030a
Rollup merge of #121815 - nnethercote:mv-gather_comments, r=est31
Move `gather_comments`.

To the module where it is used, so it doesn't have to be `pub`.

r? ```@est31```
2024-03-02 10:09:36 +01:00
bors
17edacef07 Auto merge of #113026 - jieyouxu:run-make-v2, r=bjorn3
Introduce `run-make` V2 infrastructure, a `run_make_support` library and port over 2 tests as example

## Preface

See [issue #40713: Switch run-make tests from Makefiles to rust](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/40713) for more context.

## Basic Description of `run-make` V2

`run-make` V2 aims to eliminate the dependency on `make` and `Makefile`s for building `run-make`-style tests. Makefiles are replaced by *recipes* (`rmake.rs`). The current implementation runs `run-make` V2 tests in 3 steps:

1. We build the support library `run_make_support` which the `rmake.rs` recipes depend on as a tool lib.
2. We build the recipe `rmake.rs` and link in the support library.
3. We run the recipe to build and run the tests.

`rmake.rs` is basically a replacement for `Makefile`, and allows running arbitrary Rust code. The support library is built using cargo, and so can depend on external crates if desired.

The infrastructure implemented by this PR is very barebones, and is the minimally required infrastructure needed to build, run and pass the two example `run-make` tests ported over to the new infrastructure.

### Example `run-make` V2 test

```rs
// ignore-tidy-linelength

extern crate run_make_support;

use std::path::PathBuf;

use run_make_support::{aux_build, rustc};

fn main() {
    aux_build()
        .arg("--emit=metadata")
        .arg("stable.rs")
        .run();
    let mut stable_path = PathBuf::from(env!("TMPDIR"));
    stable_path.push("libstable.rmeta");
    let output = rustc()
        .arg("--emit=metadata")
        .arg("--extern")
        .arg(&format!("stable={}", &stable_path.to_string_lossy()))
        .arg("main.rs")
        .run();

    let stderr = String::from_utf8_lossy(&output.stderr);
    let version = include_str!(concat!(env!("S"), "/src/version"));
    let expected_string = format!("stable since {}", version.trim());
    assert!(stderr.contains(&expected_string));
}
```

## Follow Up Work

- [ ] Adjust rustc-dev-guide docs
2024-03-01 16:43:57 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
69f2c9c101 Move gather_comments.
To the module where it is used, so it doesn't have to be `pub`.
2024-03-01 08:34:42 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
509972089b
Rollup merge of #121464 - alexcrichton:fix-wasm64, r=wesleywiser
rustc: Fix wasm64 metadata object files

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

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

Closes #121460
2024-02-29 20:50:03 +01:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
48e9f92ce2
Add supporting infrastructure for run-make V2 tests 2024-02-29 16:30:38 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
ad74598dbc
Rollup merge of #121765 - hermit-os:errno, r=ChrisDenton
add platform-specific function to get the error number for HermitOS

Extending `std` to get the last error number for HermitOS.

HermitOS is a tier 3 platform and this PR changes only files, wich are related to the tier 3 platform.
2024-02-29 14:33:51 +01:00
Stefan Lankes
3726cbb5fe add platform-specific function to get the error number for HermitOS
Extending `std` to get the last error number for HermitOS.

HermitOS is a tier 3 platform and this PR changes only files,
wich are related to the tier 3 platform.
2024-02-28 23:01:56 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
a62cfe04d6
Rollup merge of #121695 - oli-obk:split_ty_utils, r=compiler-errors
Split rustc_type_ir to avoid rustc_ast from depending on it

unblocks #121576

and resolves a FIXME in `rustc_ast`'s `Cargo.toml`

The new crate is tiny, but it will get bigger in #121576
2024-02-28 16:04:53 +01:00
Oli Scherer
8a6d3535f7 Split rustc_type_ir to avoid rustc_ast from depending on it 2024-02-27 18:11:23 +00:00
Philipp Krones
f99056bd87
Update Cargo.lock 2024-02-27 15:50:23 +01:00
bors
b0d3e04ca9 Auto merge of #120393 - Urgau:rfc3373-non-local-defs, r=WaffleLapkin
Implement RFC 3373: Avoid non-local definitions in functions

This PR implements [RFC 3373: Avoid non-local definitions in functions](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120363).
2024-02-25 19:11:06 +00:00
bors
710048f790 Auto merge of #121579 - RalfJung:miri, r=RalfJung
Miri subtree update

r? `@ghost`
2024-02-25 08:20:01 +00:00
Ralf Jung
9577051174 bump rustc-build-sysroot 2024-02-25 08:17:20 +01:00
Alex Crichton
646e8e7291 rustc: Fix wasm64 metadata object files
It looks like LLD will detect object files being either 32 or 64-bit
depending on any memory present. LLD will additionally reject 32-bit
objects during a 64-bit link. Previously metadata objects did not have
any memories in them which led LLD to conclude they were 32-bit objects
which broke 64-bit targets for wasm.

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

Closes #121460
2024-02-23 13:13:01 -08:00
bors
6dadb6eb23 Auto merge of #121448 - klensy:bump-22-02-24, r=clubby789
bump few deps

Bumps `sysinfo`, `tabled`; dedupes `env_logger`; drops `is-terminal`
https://github.com/zhiburt/tabled/blob/v0.15.1/CHANGELOG.md
https://github.com/GuillaumeGomez/sysinfo/blob/v0.30.5/CHANGELOG.md
2024-02-23 07:42:50 +00:00
klensy
53efefb3c2 dedupe env_logger, drop is-terminal 2024-02-22 14:35:21 +03:00
klensy
15bc68118f bump tabled 2024-02-22 14:17:59 +03:00
klensy
0b44330c38 bump sysinfo 2024-02-22 14:01:13 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
64dbc3f38f
Rollup merge of #121392 - bjorn3:unify_dylib_loading, r=petrochenkov
Unify dylib loading between proc macros and codegen backends

As bonus this makes the errors when failing to load a proc macro more informative to match the backend loading errors. In addition it makes it slightly easier to patch rustc to work on platforms that don't support dynamic linking like wasm.
2024-02-21 22:48:59 +01:00
bjorn3
f25c90a83f Unify dylib loading between proc macros and codegen backends
As bonus this makes the errors when failing to load a proc macro more
informative to match the backend loading errors. In addition it makes it
slightly easier to patch rustc to work on platforms that don't support
dynamic linking like wasm.
2024-02-21 11:17:07 +00:00
Alex Crichton
6181f3a566 wasm: Store rlib metadata in wasm object files
The goal of this commit is to remove warnings using LLVM tip-of-tree
`wasm-ld`. In llvm/llvm-project#78658 the `wasm-ld` LLD driver no longer
looks at archive indices and instead looks at all the objects in
archives. Previously `lib.rmeta` files were simply raw rustc metadata
bytes, not wasm objects, meaning that `wasm-ld` would emit a warning
indicating so.

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

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

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

The only caveat I know of with this is that if `wasm-ld` does indeed
look at the object file then the metadata will be included in the final
output. I believe the only thing that could cause that at this time is
`--whole-archive` which I don't think is passed for rlibs. I would
clarify that I'm not 100% certain about this, however.
2024-02-20 09:31:50 -08:00
bors
c9c83cca51 Auto merge of #121265 - klensy:bump-18-02-24, r=Mark-Simulacrum
bump some deps

First commit dedupes darling* crates and remove one more syn 1.* dep
Second one bumps windows crate to 0.52
2024-02-18 16:54:15 +00:00
klensy
35fe26757a windows bump to 0.52 2024-02-18 16:02:16 +03:00
klensy
5e2a7ac47a opt-dist: bump derive_builder to dedupe darling* and remove one more syn 1.* dep 2024-02-18 14:40:19 +03:00
bors
12b5498f3b Auto merge of #120023 - klensy:tidy-alloc, r=Mark-Simulacrum
tidy: reduce allocs

this reduces allocs in tidy from (dhat output)

```
==31349== Total:     1,365,199,543 bytes in 4,774,213 blocks
==31349== At t-gmax: 10,975,708 bytes in 66,093 blocks
==31349== At t-end:  2,880,947 bytes in 12,332 blocks
==31349== Reads:     5,210,008,956 bytes
==31349== Writes:    1,280,920,127 bytes
```
to
```
==66633== Total:     791,565,538 bytes in 3,503,144 blocks
==66633== At t-gmax: 10,914,511 bytes in 65,997 blocks
==66633== At t-end:  395,531 bytes in 941 blocks
==66633== Reads:     4,249,388,949 bytes
==66633== Writes:    814,119,580 bytes
```

<del>by wrapping regex and updating `ignore` (effect probably not only from `ignore`, didn't measured)</del>

also moves one more regex into `Lazy` to reduce regex rebuilds.
2024-02-17 16:22:44 +00:00
Urgau
6170394313 Implement RFC3373 non local definitions lint 2024-02-17 13:59:45 +01:00
Ralf Jung
fd5a84b529 update lockfile 2024-02-17 13:02:04 +01:00
klensy
12f9de7d0e tidy: wrap regexes with lazy_static
yes, once_cell better, but ...

this reduces from

==31349== Total:     1,365,199,543 bytes in 4,774,213 blocks
==31349== At t-gmax: 10,975,708 bytes in 66,093 blocks
==31349== At t-end:  2,880,947 bytes in 12,332 blocks
==31349== Reads:     5,210,008,956 bytes
==31349== Writes:    1,280,920,127 bytes

to

==47796== Total:     821,467,407 bytes in 3,955,595 blocks
==47796== At t-gmax: 10,976,209 bytes in 66,100 blocks
==47796== At t-end:  2,944,016 bytes in 12,490 blocks
==47796== Reads:     4,788,959,023 bytes
==47796== Writes:    975,493,639 bytes

miropt-test-tools: remove regex usage

this removes regex usage and slightly refactors ext stripping in one case
2024-02-17 12:29:05 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
71466ca804
Rollup merge of #120982 - momvart:smir-61-foreign_kind, r=oli-obk
Add APIs for fetching foreign items

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/project-stable-mir/issues/61
2024-02-15 09:20:18 +01:00
clubby789
9b73db3f1c cargo update 2024-02-13 21:24:16 +00:00
clubby789
ed8850010a Bump proc-macro2, syn and quote
This disables the `proc_macro_span` feature which unfortunately makes our
diagnostic derive macro diagnostics a little worse.
2024-02-13 21:03:34 +00:00
clubby789
6ac3b57fc8 Bump time and allow new dependencies 2024-02-13 21:03:34 +00:00
clubby789
4de3a3af4a Bump indexmap
`swap` has been deprecated in favour of `swap_remove` - the behaviour
is the same though.
2024-02-13 21:03:34 +00:00
Nikita Popov
edfbe6351d Update compiler-builtins
This is necessary to pull in a number of compiler-rt build fixes.
2024-02-13 10:33:40 +01:00
Mohammad Omidvar
213748749e Add APIs for fetching foreign items including foreign modules, their ABIs, and their items 2024-02-12 19:44:35 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
9bbd146e86
Rollup merge of #120729 - ehuss:update-mdbook, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update mdbook to 0.4.37

This updates mdbook to 0.4.37.
Changelog: https://github.com/rust-lang/mdBook/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md#mdbook-0437

The primary change is the update to pulldown-cmark which has a large number of markdown parsing changes. There shouldn't be any significant changes to the rendering of any of the books (I have posted some PRs to fix some minor issues to the ones that were affected).
2024-02-11 08:25:43 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
317c372284
Rollup merge of #120846 - petrochenkov:jobs, r=oli-obk
Update jobserver-rs to 0.1.28

Fixes the issues found in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120515 besides the diagnostic wording.
2024-02-10 00:58:38 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
5250abaeb8
Rollup merge of #120806 - flip1995:clippy-subtree-update, r=Manishearth
Clippy subtree update

r? `@Manishearth`
2024-02-09 19:21:17 +01:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
83f3bc4271 Update jobserver-rs to 0.1.28 2024-02-09 19:13:07 +03:00
Eric Huss
776590b14e Switch linkchecker to use html5ever for html parsing.
The existing regex-based HTML parsing was just too primitive to
correctly handle HTML content. Some books have legitimate `href="…"`
text which should not be validated because it is part of the text, not
actual HTML.
2024-02-08 14:23:40 -08:00
Philipp Krones
4ec9eec9e8
Update Cargo.lock 2024-02-08 20:25:09 +01:00
Oli Scherer
4389a1cc42 Stop using hir_ty_to_ty in rustc_privacy 2024-02-07 14:59:26 +00:00
Eric Huss
51f20b4f6b Update mdbook to 0.4.37 2024-02-06 20:22:13 -08:00
bors
ff95e52665 Auto merge of #120326 - tmandry:abort-in-tests, r=cuviper
Actually abort in -Zpanic-abort-tests

When a test fails in panic=abort, it can be useful to have a debugger or other tooling hook into the `abort()` call for debugging. Doing this some other way would require it to hard code details of Rust's panic machinery.

There's no reason we couldn't have done this in the first place; using a single exit code for "success" or "failed" was just simpler. Now we are aware of the special exit codes for posix and windows platforms, logging a special error if an unrecognized code is used on those platforms, and falling back to just "failure" on other platforms.

This continues to account for `#[should_panic]` inside the test process itself, so there's no risk of misinterpreting a random call to `abort()` as an expected panic. Any exit code besides `TR_OK` is logged as a test failure.

As an added benefit, this would allow us to support panic=immediate_abort (but not `#[should_panic]`), without noise about unexpected exit codes when a test fails.
2024-02-06 04:15:41 +00:00
bors
ea37e8091f Auto merge of #117372 - Amanieu:stdarch_update, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update stdarch submodule

Splits up #27731 into multiple tracking issues.

Closes #27731
2024-02-05 15:41:40 +00:00
Aphek
ee8703315e Update libc to 0.2.153 2024-02-01 23:58:42 -03:00
Tyler Mandry
f622e832d4 Actually abort in panic-abort-tests 2024-01-30 18:19:49 -08:00
Guillaume Gomez
f35504dbf2
Rollup merge of #120443 - GuillaumeGomez:footnote-def-improvement, r=fmease
Fixes footnote handling in rustdoc

Fixes #100638.

You can now declare footnotes like this:

```rust
//! Reference to footnotes A[^1], B[^2] and C[^3].
//!
//! [^1]: Footnote A.
//! [^2]: Footnote B.
//! [^3]: Footnote C.
```

r? `@notriddle`
2024-01-30 11:19:18 +01:00
Amanieu d'Antras
a00ec2d93b Update ahash dependency to 0.8.7 2024-01-30 03:34:28 +00:00
Michael Ciraci
ead0fc9529
Consolidating dependencies (#6034)
* Updating dependencies for rustfmt in an attempt to consolidate rustc dependencies
* Updating link for dirs 5.0.1
2024-01-29 08:44:11 -05:00
Guillaume Gomez
1bdeeef0d5 Update pulldown-cmark version to 0.9.5 2024-01-29 14:14:03 +01:00
Dylan DPC
5de94a3c80
Rollup merge of #120420 - lnicola:rm-pattern-analysis-derivative, r=Nilstrieb
Stop using derivative in rustc_pattern_analysis

CC #109302, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/16420#discussion_r1464357157

r? ````@Nadrieril````
2024-01-29 12:56:53 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
5d9dfbd08f Stop using String for error codes.
Error codes are integers, but `String` is used everywhere to represent
them. Gross!

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The commit also changes the structure of the error code definitions:
- `rustc_error_codes` now just defines a higher-order macro listing the
  used error codes and nothing else.
- Because that's now the only thing in the `rustc_error_codes` crate, I
  moved it into the `lib.rs` file and removed the `error_codes.rs` file.
- `rustc_errors` uses that macro to define everything, e.g. the error
  code constants and the `DIAGNOSTIC_TABLES`. This is in its new
  `codes.rs` file.
2024-01-29 07:41:41 +11:00
bors
6b4f1c5e78 Auto merge of #120201 - clubby789:dep-update, r=dtolnay
Bump some deps with syn 1.0 dependencies

cc #109302

`cargo update`ing `unic-langid` and `object` removes two dependencies on Syn 1.0.
2024-01-27 14:19:12 +00:00
Laurențiu Nicola
f5c78955c8 Stop using derivative in rustc_pattern_analysis 2024-01-27 14:21:01 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
37b9022cef
Rollup merge of #120345 - flip1995:clippy-subtree-update, r=Manishearth
Clippy subtree update

r? `@Manishearth`

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/12148
2024-01-26 14:43:32 +01:00
Philipp Krones
d7a0182157
Update Cargo.lock 2024-01-25 19:17:52 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
eeac90cbba
Rollup merge of #120288 - clubby789:bump-askama, r=GuillaumeGomez
Bump `askama` version

Ran into this while looking at #112865 and thought it would be useful to fix it now. Some more details in [Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/266220-t-rustdoc/topic/Askama.20parser.20changes)
2024-01-25 17:39:27 +01:00
Josh Stone
8f3af4c6e2 rustc_data_structures: use either instead of itertools 2024-01-24 15:36:57 -08:00
clubby789
da336190e3 Bump askama version 2024-01-24 01:04:34 +00:00
clubby789
c7517206ea Bump openssl version 2024-01-21 23:52:35 +00:00
clubby789
527f903a42 Bump ctrlc version 2024-01-21 23:51:33 +00:00
clubby789
b50b333a0f Bump uniq-langid version 2024-01-21 17:19:31 +00:00
clubby789
56bc5525b3 Bump object version 2024-01-21 17:19:29 +00:00
bors
159bdc1e93 Auto merge of #108359 - Zoxc:side-effects-tweak, r=cjgillot
Avoid code generation for ThinVec<Diagnostic>'s destructor in the query system

This avoids 2 instances of the destructor of `ThinVec<Diagnostic>` from being included in `execute_job`. It also outlines the cold branch in `store_side_effects` / `store_side_effects_for_anon_node`.
2024-01-20 15:20:15 +00:00
John Kåre Alsaker
862011e1ca Avoid code generation for ThinVec<Diagnostic>'s destructor in the query system 2024-01-20 13:43:05 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
ae09415fa4
Rollup merge of #119815 - nagisa:nagisa/polishes-libloading-use-somewhat, r=bjorn3
Format sources into the error message when loading codegen backends

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc_codegen_cranelift/issues/1447
cc `@bjorn3`
2024-01-19 19:27:00 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
3a3242a0f9
Rollup merge of #120039 - Nadrieril:remove-idx, r=compiler-errors
pat_analysis: Don't rely on contiguous `VariantId`s outside of rustc

Today's pattern_analysis uses `BitSet` and `IndexVec` on the provided enum variant ids, which only makes sense if these ids count the variants from 0. In rust-analyzer, the variant ids are global interning ids, which would make `BitSet` and `IndexVec` ridiculously wasteful. In this PR I add some shims to use `FxHashSet`/`FxHashMap` instead outside of rustc.

r? ```@compiler-errors```
2024-01-17 20:21:23 +01:00
bors
25b706cde3 Auto merge of #119111 - michaelwoerister:measureme-11, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update measureme crate to version 11

perf.rlo has been updated to use 11.0.0 already, so it should be able to handle the new file format.

r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/99282
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/119103
2024-01-17 09:32:03 +00:00
Nadrieril
19d6f068ee Don't rely on contiguous VariantIds outside of rustc 2024-01-17 03:09:06 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
b6f68a7fca
Rollup merge of #119971 - compiler-errors:zip-eq, r=nnethercote
Use `zip_eq` to enforce that things being zipped have equal sizes

Some `zip`s are best enforced to be equal, since size mismatches suggest deeper bugs in the compiler.
2024-01-15 08:44:49 +01:00
bors
9567c3ee73 Auto merge of #119581 - Nadrieril:detangle-arena, r=compiler-errors
Exhaustiveness: remove the need for arena-allocation within the algorithm

After https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119688, exhaustiveness checking doesn't need access to the arena anymore. This simplifies the lifetime story and makes it compile on stable without the extra dependency.

r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-01-15 00:04:09 +00:00
Michael Goulet
c811662fb0 Use zip_eq to enforce that things being zipped have equal sizes 2024-01-14 20:01:12 +00:00
bors
665d2c6f2c Auto merge of #119796 - androm3da:bcain/compiler_builtins_0_1_105, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update compiler_builtins to 0.1.105

This provides the builtins for the hexagon architecture.
2024-01-14 19:15:37 +00:00
Michael Woerister
ac58f9ae03 Update measureme crate to version 11 2024-01-13 16:32:03 +01:00
Nadrieril
db36304102 rustc_pattern_analysis no longer needs to be passed an arena 2024-01-12 18:55:27 +01:00
bors
2b1365b34f Auto merge of #119735 - lcnr:provisional-cache-readd, r=compiler-errors
next solver: provisional cache

this adds the cache removed in #115843. However, it should now correctly track whether a provisional result depends on an inductive or coinductive stack.

While working on this, I was using the following doc: https://hackmd.io/VsQPjW3wSTGUSlmgwrDKOA. I don't think it's too helpful to understanding this, but am somewhat hopeful that the inline comments are more useful.

There are quite a few future perf improvements here. Given that this is already very involved I don't believe it is worth it (for now). While working on this PR one of my few attempts to significantly improve perf ended up being unsound again because I was not careful enough 

r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-01-12 07:04:42 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
fe97e93166
Rollup merge of #119448 - klensy:annotate-snippets-0.10, r=davidtwco
annotate-snippets: update to 0.10

Ports `annotate-snippets` to 0.10, temporary dupes versions; other crates left that depends on 0.9 is `ui_test` and `rustfmt`.
2024-01-11 19:42:49 +01:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
fcaeb45421 deps: deduplicate the version of libloading used
The changelog can be found here:
https://docs.rs/libloading/latest/libloading/changelog/r0_8_0/index.html
2024-01-10 17:18:10 +02:00
Brian Cain
d5c39d0638 Update compiler_builtins to 0.1.105
This provides the builtins for the hexagon architecture.
2024-01-09 20:30:56 -08:00
Guillaume Gomez
3da96aed94
Rollup merge of #118680 - djkoloski:shell_argfiles, r=compiler-errors
Add support for shell argfiles

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/684
2024-01-09 17:52:21 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
87b0de6cb7
Rollup merge of #118645 - Patryk27:bump-compiler-builtins, r=Nilstrieb,dtolnay
chore: Bump compiler_builtins

Actually closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/118079.
2024-01-09 17:52:20 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
4a24b5bc05
Rollup merge of #117556 - obeis:static-mut-ref-lint, r=davidtwco
Disallow reference to `static mut` and adding `static_mut_ref` lint

Closes #114447

r? `@scottmcm`
2024-01-09 13:23:15 +01:00
lcnr
88271deac2 avoid always rerunning in case of a cycle 2024-01-09 11:19:34 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
91fcc17117
Rollup merge of #119734 - RalfJung:miri, r=RalfJung
Miri subtree update

r? ``@ghost``
2024-01-09 05:33:23 +01:00
David Koloski
684aa2c9d1 Add support for shell argfiles 2024-01-08 15:25:55 -05:00
Ralf Jung
0ddccf933a update lockfile 2024-01-08 11:21:50 +01:00
Mark Rousskov
be0293f468 Remove crossbeam-channel
The standard library's std::sync::mpsc basically is a crossbeam channel,
and for the use case here will definitely suffice. This drops this
dependency from librustc_driver.
2024-01-07 19:16:13 -05:00
klensy
5b153b52a2 annotate-snippets: update to 0.10 2024-01-07 16:53:32 +03:00
Obei Sideg
2c088f9520 Disallow reference to static mut for expressions
Add `E0796` error code.
Add `static_mut_ref` lint.

This is the idea for the 2024 edition.
2024-01-06 06:31:35 +03:00
bjorn3
6ed37bdc42 Avoid specialization for the Span Encodable and Decodable impls 2023-12-31 20:42:17 +00:00
Nilstrieb
ffafcd8819 Update to bitflags 2 in the compiler
This involves lots of breaking changes. There are two big changes that
force changes. The first is that the bitflag types now don't
automatically implement normal derive traits, so we need to derive them
manually.

Additionally, bitflags now have a hidden inner type by default, which
breaks our custom derives. The bitflags docs recommend using the impl
form in these cases, which I did.
2023-12-30 18:17:28 +01:00
Philipp Krones
0217ac9da6
Update Cargo.lock 2023-12-28 19:33:21 +01:00
bors
2df6406b88 Auto merge of #118431 - sjwang05:issue-44695, r=estebank
Emit better suggestions for `&T == T` and `T == &T`

Fixes #40660
Fixes #44695
2023-12-26 21:34:24 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
c2dcfc762d Update sysinfo sub-dependency version to 0.29.11 2023-12-25 22:45:38 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
51dff45aa3 Update sysinfo version to 0.30.1 2023-12-25 22:44:49 +01:00
Nadrieril
c6aa16c469 Use derivative for better derive bounds 2023-12-23 00:04:20 +01:00
bors
3a539c0889 Auto merge of #118842 - Nadrieril:librarify-further, r=compiler-errors
Make exhaustiveness usable outside of rustc

With this PR, `rustc_pattern_analysis` compiles on stable (with the `stable` feature)! `rust-analyzer` will be able to use it to provide match-related diagnostics and refactors.

Two questions:
- Should I name the feature `nightly` instead of `rustc` for consistency with other crates? `rustc` makes more sense imo.
- `typed-arena` is an optional dependency but tidy made me add it to the allow-list anyway. Can I avoid that somehow?

r? `@compiler-errors`
2023-12-19 17:15:04 +00:00
sjwang05
2618e0f805
Provide better suggestions for T == &T and &T == T 2023-12-16 19:56:50 -08:00
Philipp Krones
b92ab506d3
Update Cargo.lock 2023-12-16 14:13:12 +01:00
Nadrieril
63c5b008e1 Make the crate compile on stable 2023-12-15 16:58:38 +01:00
Rémy Rakic
4cb2a281cb update measureme to 10.1.2 to deduplicate parking_lot 2023-12-14 15:40:50 +00:00
bors
1aa6aefdc9 Auto merge of #118566 - klensy:cstr-new, r=WaffleLapkin
use c literals in compiler and library

Relands refreshed https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111647
2023-12-14 11:14:03 +00:00
Yacin Tmimi
227e361187 Merge remote-tracking branch 'upstream/master' into subtree_push_2023_12_12 2023-12-12 11:45:27 -05:00
Nadrieril
281002d42c Extract exhaustiveness into its own crate 2023-12-11 11:20:55 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1889e5a00b
Rollup merge of #118694 - celinval:smir-alloc-methods, r=ouz-a
Add instance evaluation and methods to read an allocation in StableMIR

The instance evaluation is needed to handle intrinsics such as `type_id` and `type_name`.

Since we now use Allocation to represent all evaluated constants, provide a few methods to help process the data inside an allocation.

I've also started to add a structured way to get information about the compilation target machine. For now, I've only added information needed to process an allocation.

r? ``````@ouz-a``````
2023-12-08 23:15:12 +01:00
Michael Goulet
cb41509601 Uplift canonicalizer into new trait solver crate 2023-12-08 17:44:01 +00:00
Celina G. Val
4c9e842a09 Add instance evaluation and methods to read alloc
The instance evaluation is needed to handle intrinsics such as
`type_id` and `type_name`.

Since we now use Allocation to represent all evaluated constants,
provide a few methods to help process the data inside an allocation.
2023-12-07 17:01:29 -08:00
Zalathar
47e6e5ee67 coverage: Avoid unnecessary macros in unit tests
These macros don't provide enough value to justify their complexity, when they
can just as easily be functions instead.
2023-12-07 11:12:48 +11:00
bors
84a554cda9 Auto merge of #117072 - betrusted-io:unwinding-crate-support, r=cuviper
Use `unwinding` crate for unwinding on Xous platform

This patch adds support for using [unwinding](https://github.com/nbdd0121/unwinding) on platforms where libunwinding isn't viable. An example of such a platform is `riscv32imac-unknown-xous-elf`.

### Background

The Rust project maintains a fork of llvm at [llvm-project](https://github.com/rust-lang/llvm-project/) where it applies patches on top of the llvm project. This mostly seems to be to get unwinding support for the SGX project, and there may be other patches that I'm unaware of.

There is a lot of machinery in the build system to support compiling `libunwind` on other platforms, and I needed to add additional patches to llvm in order to add support for Xous.

Rather than continuing down this path, it seemed much easier to use a Rust-based library. The `unwinding` crate by `@nbdd0121` fits this description perfectly.

### Future work

This could potentially replace the custom patches for `libunwind` on other platforms such as SGX, and could enable unwinding support on many more exotic platforms.

### Anti-goals

This is not designed to replace `libunwind` on tier-one platforms or those where unwinding support already exists. There is already a well-established approach for unwinding there. Instead, this aims to enable unwinding on new platforms where C++ code may be difficult to compile.
2023-12-06 02:23:01 +00:00
Patryk Wychowaniec
a2b79cd92f
chore: Bump compiler_builtins
Actually closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/118079.
2023-12-05 15:58:07 +01:00
bors
db07cccb1e Auto merge of #113730 - belovdv:jobserver-init-check, r=petrochenkov
Report errors in jobserver inherited through environment variables

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

r? `@petrochenkov`
2023-12-03 16:28:22 +00:00
klensy
26e69a8816 compiler: replace cstr macro with c str literals in compiler and few other c str replacements 2023-12-03 14:54:09 +03:00
Ralf Jung
71c9ceb4da update hashbrown 2023-12-02 19:16:09 +01:00
Eric Huss
b07e3160a0 Update mdbook to 0.4.36 2023-11-29 15:52:16 -08:00
belovdv
45e6342346 jobserver: check file descriptors 2023-11-29 18:00:03 +03:00
bors
3dbb4da042 Auto merge of #117301 - saethlin:finish-rmeta-encoding, r=WaffleLapkin
Call FileEncoder::finish in rmeta encoding

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

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

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

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

r? `@WaffleLapkin`
2023-11-26 14:43:02 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
af3fbb3607 Remove unnecessary dependencies. 2023-11-26 08:38:42 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
df9f83987a Remove rustc_error_messages/messages.ftl.
It's empty, and it doesn't even make sense, because
`rustc_error_messages` is a lower-level crate than `rustc_errors`.
2023-11-26 08:37:27 +11:00
bors
0f696e555f Auto merge of #118229 - crlf0710:final_bump_unicode15, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bump `unicase` crate version.

This bumps `unicase` crate to align with Unicode 15.

Closes #101840.
2023-11-24 19:41:10 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
7e3ec1b0e2
Rollup merge of #117656 - ChrisDenton:invalid, r=thomcc
Update windows-bindgen and define `INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE` ourselves

We generate bindings to the Windows API via the `windows-bindgen` crate, which is ultimately what's also used to generate the `windows-sys` and `windows` crates. However, there currently is some custom sauce just for std which makes it a bit different from the vanilla bindings. I would love for us to reduce and eventually remove the differences entirely so that std is using the exact same bindings as everyone else. Maybe in the future we can even just have a normal dependency on `windows-sys`.

This PR removes one of those special things. Our definition of `INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE` relies on an experimental nightly feature for strict provenance, so lets bring that back in house. It also excludes it from the codegen step though that isn't strictly necessary as we override it in any case.

This PR also updates windows-bingen to 0.52.0.
2023-11-24 08:23:52 +01:00
Charles Lew
806b2b2553 Bump unicase crate version. 2023-11-23 18:55:36 +08:00
Ben Kimock
fbaa24ee35 Call FileEncoder::finish in rmeta encoding 2023-11-22 22:49:22 -05:00
Nicholas Nethercote
3ef9d4d0ed Replace custom_encodable with encodable.
By default, `newtype_index!` types get a default `Encodable`/`Decodable`
impl. You can opt out of this with `custom_encodable`. Opting out is the
opposite to how Rust normally works with autogenerated (derived) impls.

This commit inverts the behaviour, replacing `custom_encodable` with
`encodable` which opts into the default `Encodable`/`Decodable` impl.
Only 23 of the 59 `newtype_index!` occurrences need `encodable`.

Even better, there were eight crates with a dependency on
`rustc_serialize` just from unused default `Encodable`/`Decodable`
impls. This commit removes that dependency from those eight crates.
2023-11-22 18:37:14 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
ce363bb6e6 Remove IterDelimited.
itertools has `with_position` which does the same thing.
2023-11-22 08:13:21 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
3eadc6844b Update itertools to 0.11.
Because the API for `with_position` improved in 0.11 and I want to use
it.
2023-11-22 08:13:21 +11:00
bors
19079cf804 Auto merge of #115526 - arttet:master, r=jackh726
Add arm64e-apple-ios & arm64e-apple-darwin targets

This introduces

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

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

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

## Tier 3 Target Policy

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

I will be the target maintainer.

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

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

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

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

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

No dependencies were added to Rust.

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

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

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

Understood.
`std` is supported.

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

Building is described in the derived target doc.

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

Understood.

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

These targets are not fully ABI compatible with arm64e code.

#73628
2023-11-20 03:11:17 +00:00
bors
4f3da903a4 Auto merge of #116828 - compiler-errors:nightlyify-rustc_type_ir, r=jackh726
Begin to abstract `rustc_type_ir` for rust-analyzer

This adds the "nightly" feature which is used by the compiler, and falls back to more simple implementations when that is not active.

r? `@lcnr` or `@jackh726`
2023-11-19 22:55:15 +00:00
klensy
c653bb9a6b jsondocck: bump jsonpath to 0.3, dropping few dup dependencies
changes: https://github.com/freestrings/jsonpath/compare/v0.2.6...v0.3.0

self_cell: bump to 0.10.3 due to RUSTSEC-2023-0070

https://rustsec.org/advisories/RUSTSEC-2023-0070.html
https://github.com/Voultapher/self_cell/issues/49

bump h2 to 0.3.22, dropping few dup crate versions

https://github.com/hyperium/h2/blob/v0.3.22/CHANGELOG.md
2023-11-18 12:56:54 +03:00
Michael Goulet
4506681e2f Begin nightly-ifying rustc_type_ir 2023-11-18 00:20:00 +00:00
Chris Denton
00a12af3ca
Update windows-bindgen 2023-11-17 12:18:04 +00:00
Oğuz Ağcayazı
ebd9c145f6 better formatting for statements 2023-11-17 13:28:07 +03:00
Philipp Krones
2ac2b26aec
Update Cargo.lock 2023-11-16 19:20:09 +01:00
Sean Cross
2a533df5bd Cargo.lock: add unwinding to lock file
Add `unwinding` as a dependency. This is required on platforms where
unwinding isn't provided by llvm.

Signed-off-by: Sean Cross <sean@xobs.io>
2023-11-16 15:23:09 +08:00
Artyom Tetyukhin
f5e3492194
Add arm64e-apple-ios target 2023-11-15 14:55:18 +04:00
klensy
7142c8d83c bump few ICU4X leftover deps
implements https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117632#issuecomment-1795027801 suggestion
2023-11-09 14:53:21 +03:00
bors
287ae4db75 Auto merge of #117632 - Nilstrieb:icup, r=davidtwco
Update ICU4X

This updates all ICU4X crates and regenerates rustc_baked_icu_data.

Since the new unicode license under which they are licensed does not have an SPDX identifier yet, we define some exceptions. The license has to be reviewed to make sure it is still fine to use here, but I assume that is the case.

I also added an exception for rustc_icu_data to the unexplained ignore doctest tidy lint. This is a bit hacky but the whole style.rs in tidy is a mess so I didn't want to touch it more than this small hack.

part of #112865

r? `@davidtwco` `@wesleywiser` `@Manishearth`
2023-11-09 09:00:57 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
adf4981969
Rollup merge of #117663 - klensy:bump-deps, r=davidtwco
bump some deps

* drop `num_cpus` from rust-installer as not used
* update `rayon`, `rayon-core`, which drops it's deps on `num_cpus` and `crossbeam-channel` (for bootstrap too) (https://github.com/rayon-rs/rayon/blob/v1.8.0/RELEASES.md)
* update `errno`, which drops `errno-dragonfly` (5341791935/CHANGELOG.md)
2023-11-08 11:25:55 +01:00
bors
118a2deea5 Auto merge of #117617 - Urgau:bump-libc-0.2.150, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bump libc dependency

This bumps the `libc` crate to version 0.2.150 which includes https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/3410 which will help remove the old and deprecated check-cfg syntax.

Extracted from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117612
2023-11-07 17:18:36 +00:00
klensy
eed89185bb bump some deps
drop num_cpus from rust-installer as not used
update rayon, rayon-core, which drops it's deps on num_cpus and crossbeam-channel (for bootstrap too) (https://github.com/rayon-rs/rayon/blob/v1.8.0/RELEASES.md)
update erro, which drops errno-dragonfly (5341791935/CHANGELOG.md)
2023-11-07 15:33:59 +03:00
Nilstrieb
ffffc2038f Update ICU4X
This updates all ICU4X crates and regenerates rustc_baked_icu_data.

Since the new unicode license under which they are licensed does not
have an SPDX identifier yet, we define some exceptions. The license has
to be reviewed to make sure it is still fine to use here, but I assume
that is the case.

I also added an exception for rustc_icu_data to the unexplained ignore
doctest tidy lint. This is a bit hacky but the whole style.rs in tidy is
a mess so I didn't want to touch it more than this small hack.
2023-11-06 13:42:20 +00:00
bors
f9b644636f Auto merge of #117435 - SparrowLii:nightly_parallel, r=oli-obk,davidtwco
enable parallel rustc front end in nightly builds

Refers to the [MCP](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/681), this pr does:
1. Enable the parallel front end in nightly builds, and keep the default number of threads as 1. Then users can use the parallel rustc front end via -Z threads=n option.

2. Set it up to serial front end for beta/stable builds via bootstrap.

3. Switch over the alt builders from parallel rustc to serial, so we have artifacts without parallel to test against the artifacts with parallel.

r? `@oli-obk`

cc `@cjgillot` `@nnethercote` `@bjorn3` `@Kobzol`
2023-11-06 07:41:22 +00:00
SparrowLii
f2a40e99ff use portable AtomicU64 for powerPC and MIPS 2023-11-06 09:58:51 +08:00
Urgau
15719a8c1d libc: bump dependency to 0.2.150 2023-11-05 18:32:10 +01:00
bors
513a48517e Auto merge of #117504 - pcc:android-link-libunwind, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Remove obsolete support for linking unwinder on Android

Linking libgcc is no longer supported (see #103673), so remove the related link attributes and the check in unwind's build.rs. The check was the last remaining significant piece of logic in build.rs, so remove build.rs as well.
2023-11-05 09:50:21 +00:00
Nicholas Bishop
5d3535c616 Bump compiler_builtins to 0.1.103 2023-11-04 13:11:10 -04:00
Nicholas Nethercote
5c462a32bd Remove support for compiler plugins.
They've been deprecated for four years.

This commit includes the following changes.
- It eliminates the `rustc_plugin_impl` crate.
- It changes the language used for lints in
  `compiler/rustc_driver_impl/src/lib.rs` and
  `compiler/rustc_lint/src/context.rs`. External lints are now called
  "loaded" lints, rather than "plugins" to avoid confusion with the old
  plugins. This only has a tiny effect on the output of `-W help`.
- E0457 and E0498 are no longer used.
- E0463 is narrowed, now only relating to unfound crates, not plugins.
- The `plugin` feature was moved from "active" to "removed".
- It removes the entire plugins chapter from the unstable book.
- It removes quite a few tests, mostly all of those in
  `tests/ui-fulldeps/plugin/`.

Closes #29597.
2023-11-04 08:50:46 +11:00
Peter Collingbourne
654288bbb7 Remove obsolete support for linking unwinder on Android
Linking libgcc is no longer supported (see #103673), so remove the
related link attributes and the check in unwind's build.rs. The check
was the last remaining significant piece of logic in build.rs, so
remove build.rs as well.
2023-11-02 18:06:35 -07:00
Philipp Krones
02562bfdf8
Update Cargo.lock 2023-11-02 17:50:52 +01:00
bors
62270fb4d6 Auto merge of #117204 - nnethercote:rustc_ast_passes, r=compiler-errors
Minor improvements to `rustc_ast_passes`

Some improvements I found while looking at this code.

r? `@compiler-errors`
2023-11-02 10:08:53 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
effc27dea4
Rollup merge of #117488 - GuillaumeGomez:update-minifier, r=notriddle
Update minifier-rs version to 0.3.0

It fixes https://github.com/GuillaumeGomez/minifier-rs/issues/105.

r? ```@notriddle```
2023-11-01 21:40:06 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
d6666e2ccc Update minifier-rs version to 0.3.0 2023-11-01 15:18:41 +01:00
Michael Goulet
de83057ac4 Use derivative for Clone 2023-10-31 13:16:37 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
bb3e09f144 Streamline gate_feature_* macros.
The debug probably isn't useful, and assigning all the `$foo`
metavariables to `foo` variables is verbose and weird. Also, `$x:expr`
usually doesn't have a space after the `:`.
2023-10-31 08:00:53 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
28e60de487 Remove memoffset dependency from rustc_query_impl.
The comment explains it's for `unstable_offset_of`, but `offset_of` is
now stable.
2023-10-30 08:25:51 +11:00
Jubilee
48a3865218
Rollup merge of #117268 - nnethercote:rustc_interface, r=oli-obk
`rustc_interface` cleanups

Particularly in and around `--cfg` and `--check-cfg` handling.

r? `@oli-obk`
2023-10-28 01:07:38 -07:00
bors
6f349cdbfa Auto merge of #116471 - notriddle:notriddle/js-trait-alias, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: use JS to inline target type impl docs into alias

Preview docs:

- https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/js-trait-alias/std/io/type.Result.html

- https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/js-trait-alias-compiler/rustc_middle/ty/type.PolyTraitRef.html

This pull request also includes a bug fix for trait alias inlining across crates. This means more documentation is generated, and is why ripgrep runs slower (it's a thin wrapper on top of the `grep` crate, so 5% of its docs are now the Result type).

- Before, built with rustdoc 1.75.0-nightly (aa1a71e9e 2023-10-26), Result type alias method docs are missing: http://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/ripgrep-js-nightly/rg/type.Result.html
- After, built with this branch, all the methods on Result are shown: http://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-5/ripgrep-js-trait-alias/rg/type.Result.html

*Review note: This is mostly just reverting https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115201. The last commit has the new work in it.*

Fixes #115718

This is an attempt to balance three problems, each of which would
be violated by a simpler implementation:

- A type alias should show all the `impl` blocks for the target
  type, and vice versa, if they're applicable. If nothing was
  done, and rustdoc continues to match them up in HIR, this
  would not work.

- Copying the target type's docs into its aliases' HTML pages
  directly causes far too much redundant HTML text to be generated
  when a crate has large numbers of methods and large numbers
  of type aliases.

- Using JavaScript exclusively for type alias impl docs would
  be a functional regression, and could make some docs very hard
  to find for non-JS readers.

- Making sure that only applicable docs are show in the
  resulting page requires a type checkers. Do not reimplement
  the type checker in JavaScript.

So, to make it work, rustdoc stashes these type-alias-inlined docs
in a JSONP "database-lite". The file is generated in `write_shared.rs`,
included in a `<script>` tag added in `print_item.rs`, and `main.js`
takes care of patching the additional docs into the DOM.

The format of `trait.impl` and `type.impl` JS files are superficially
similar. Each line, except the JSONP wrapper itself, belongs to a crate,
and they are otherwise separate (rustdoc should be idempotent). The
"meat" of the file is HTML strings, so the frontend code is very simple.
Links are relative to the doc root, though, so the frontend needs to fix
that up, and inlined docs can reuse these files.

However, there are a few differences, caused by the sophisticated
features that type aliases have. Consider this crate graph:

```text
 ---------------------------------
 | crate A: struct Foo<T>        |
 |          type Bar = Foo<i32>  |
 |          impl X for Foo<i8>   |
 |          impl Y for Foo<i32>  |
 ---------------------------------
     |
 ----------------------------------
 | crate B: type Baz = A::Foo<i8> |
 |          type Xyy = A::Foo<i8> |
 |          impl Z for Xyy        |
 ----------------------------------
```

The type.impl/A/struct.Foo.js JS file has a structure kinda like this:

```js
JSONP({
"A": [["impl Y for Foo<i32>", "Y", "A::Bar"]],
"B": [["impl X for Foo<i8>", "X", "B::Baz", "B::Xyy"], ["impl Z for Xyy", "Z", "B::Baz"]],
});
```

When the type.impl file is loaded, only the current crate's docs are
actually used. The main reason to bundle them together is that there's
enough duplication in them for DEFLATE to remove the redundancy.

The contents of a crate are a list of impl blocks, themselves
represented as lists. The first item in the sublist is the HTML block,
the second item is the name of the trait (which goes in the sidebar),
and all others are the names of type aliases that successfully match.

This way:

- There's no need to generate these files for types that have no aliases
  in the current crate. If a dependent crate makes a type alias, it'll
  take care of generating its own docs.
- There's no need to reimplement parts of the type checker in
  JavaScript. The Rust backend does the checking, and includes its
  results in the file.
- Docs defined directly on the type alias are dropped directly in the
  HTML by `render_assoc_items`, and are accessible without JavaScript.
  The JSONP file will not list impl items that are known to be part
  of the main HTML file already.

[JSONP]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JSONP
2023-10-27 23:08:24 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
98c469ce93 Remove an unneeded dependency. 2023-10-28 09:03:51 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
df8852a934
Rollup merge of #116834 - nnethercote:rustc_symbol_mangling, r=davidtwco
Remove `rustc_symbol_mangling/messages.ftl`.

It contains a single message that (a) doesn't contain any natural language, and (b) is only used in tests.

r? `@davidtwco`
2023-10-27 19:46:06 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
f131a0a771
Rollup merge of #117010 - celinval:smir-internal, r=oli-obk
Add method to convert internal to stable constructs

This is an alternative implementation to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116999. I believe we can still improve the logic a bit here, but I wanted to see which direction we should go first.

In this implementation, the API is simpler and we keep Tables somewhat private. The definition is still public though, since we have to expose the Stable trait. However, there's a cost of keeping another thread-local and using `Rc`, but I'm hoping it will be a small cost.

r? ``@oli-obk``
r? ``@spastorino``
2023-10-24 19:29:56 +02:00
Celina G. Val
66a554b045 Add method to convert internal to stable constructs 2023-10-23 12:01:39 -07:00
bors
1322f92634 Auto merge of #107009 - cjgillot:jump-threading, r=pnkfelix
Implement jump threading MIR opt

This pass is an attempt to generalize `ConstGoto` and `SeparateConstSwitch` passes into a more complete jump threading pass.

This pass is rather heavy, as it performs a truncated backwards DFS on MIR starting from each `SwitchInt` terminator. This backwards DFS remains very limited, as it only walks through `Goto` terminators.

It is build to support constants and discriminants, and a propagating through a very limited set of operations.

The pass successfully manages to disentangle the `Some(x?)` use case and the DFA use case. It still needs a few tests before being ready.
2023-10-23 18:05:44 +00:00
Oli Scherer
4a5fecb187 Avoid having rustc_smir depend on rustc_interface or rustc_driver 2023-10-23 09:48:15 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
dde77f7a33
Rollup merge of #117042 - Zalathar:file-table, r=cjgillot
coverage: Emit the filenames section before encoding per-function mappings

When embedding coverage information in LLVM IR (and ultimately in the resulting binary), there are two main things that each CGU needs to emit:

- A single `__llvm_covmap` record containing a coverage header, which mostly consists of a list of filenames used by the CGU's coverage mappings.
- Several `__llvm_covfun` records, one for each instrumented function, each of which contains the hash of the list of filenames in the header.

There is a kind of loose cyclic dependency between the two: we need the hash of the file table before we can emit the covfun records, but we need to traverse all of the instrumented functions in order to build the file table.

The existing code works by processing the individual functions first. It lazily adds filenames to the file table, and stores the mostly-complete function records in a temporary list. After this it hashes the file table, emits the header (containing the file table), and then uses the hash to emit all of the function records.

This PR reverses that order: first we traverse all of the functions (without trying to prepare their function records) to build a *complete* file table, and then emit it immediately. At this point we have the file table hash, so we can then proceed to build and emit all of the function records, without needing to store them in an intermediate list.

---

Along the way, this PR makes some necessary changes that are also worthwhile in their own right:
- We split `FunctionCoverage` into distinct collector/finished phases, which neatly avoids some borrow-checker hassles when extracting a function's final expression/mapping data.
- We avoid having to re-sort a function's mappings when preparing the list of filenames that it uses.
2023-10-23 08:12:39 +02:00
Caleb Cartwright
35400e8c16 bump rustfmt version 2023-10-22 20:34:12 -05:00
Caleb Cartwright
04bd7201a9 Merge commit '81fe905ca83cffe84322f27ca43950b617861ff7' into rustfmt-sync 2023-10-22 20:21:44 -05:00
Yacin Tmimi
81fe905ca8 chore: prep v1.7.0 release
bumping from v1.6.0 -> v1.7.0 since we added support for let-chains
2023-10-22 20:18:45 -05:00
Michael Howell
fa10e4d667 rustdoc: use JS to inline target type impl docs into alias
This is an attempt to balance three problems, each of which would
be violated by a simpler implementation:

- A type alias should show all the `impl` blocks for the target
  type, and vice versa, if they're applicable. If nothing was
  done, and rustdoc continues to match them up in HIR, this
  would not work.

- Copying the target type's docs into its aliases' HTML pages
  directly causes far too much redundant HTML text to be generated
  when a crate has large numbers of methods and large numbers
  of type aliases.

- Using JavaScript exclusively for type alias impl docs would
  be a functional regression, and could make some docs very hard
  to find for non-JS readers.

- Making sure that only applicable docs are show in the
  resulting page requires a type checkers. Do not reimplement
  the type checker in JavaScript.

So, to make it work, rustdoc stashes these type-alias-inlined docs
in a JSONP "database-lite". The file is generated in `write_shared.rs`,
included in a `<script>` tag added in `print_item.rs`, and `main.js`
takes care of patching the additional docs into the DOM.

The format of `trait.impl` and `type.impl` JS files are superficially
similar. Each line, except the JSONP wrapper itself, belongs to a crate,
and they are otherwise separate (rustdoc should be idempotent). The
"meat" of the file is HTML strings, so the frontend code is very simple.
Links are relative to the doc root, though, so the frontend needs to fix
that up, and inlined docs can reuse these files.

However, there are a few differences, caused by the sophisticated
features that type aliases have. Consider this crate graph:

```text
 ---------------------------------
 | crate A: struct Foo<T>        |
 |          type Bar = Foo<i32>  |
 |          impl X for Foo<i8>   |
 |          impl Y for Foo<i32>  |
 ---------------------------------
     |
 ----------------------------------
 | crate B: type Baz = A::Foo<i8> |
 |          type Xyy = A::Foo<i8> |
 |          impl Z for Xyy        |
 ----------------------------------
```

The type.impl/A/struct.Foo.js JS file has a structure kinda like this:

```js
JSONP({
"A": [["impl Y for Foo<i32>", "Y", "A::Bar"]],
"B": [["impl X for Foo<i8>", "X", "B::Baz", "B::Xyy"], ["impl Z for Xyy", "Z", "B::Baz"]],
});
```

When the type.impl file is loaded, only the current crate's docs are
actually used. The main reason to bundle them together is that there's
enough duplication in them for DEFLATE to remove the redundancy.

The contents of a crate are a list of impl blocks, themselves
represented as lists. The first item in the sublist is the HTML block,
the second item is the name of the trait (which goes in the sidebar),
and all others are the names of type aliases that successfully match.

This way:

- There's no need to generate these files for types that have no aliases
  in the current crate. If a dependent crate makes a type alias, it'll
  take care of generating its own docs.
- There's no need to reimplement parts of the type checker in
  JavaScript. The Rust backend does the checking, and includes its
  results in the file.
- Docs defined directly on the type alias are dropped directly in the
  HTML by `render_assoc_items`, and are accessible without JavaScript.
  The JSONP file will not list impl items that are known to be part
  of the main HTML file already.

[JSONP]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JSONP
2023-10-22 15:56:14 -07:00
Caleb Cartwright
75d84974f4 deps: bump bytecount version 2023-10-22 13:15:46 -05:00
Zalathar
e985ae5a45 coverage: Build the global file table ahead of time 2023-10-22 20:37:37 +11:00
bors
cc3dce5bd0 Auto merge of #116956 - Amanieu:hashbrown-0.14.2, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update hashbrown to 0.14.2

Fixes #116880
2023-10-22 03:55:24 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
d6ac149b4f
Rollup merge of #116312 - c410-f3r:try, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Initiate the inner usage of `cfg_match` (Compiler)

cc #115585

Dogfood to test the implementation and remove dependencies.
2023-10-21 21:22:59 +02:00
Philipp Krones
b8b55fe316
Update Cargo.lock (ui_test update) 2023-10-21 14:16:27 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
751a079413 Implement JumpThreading pass. 2023-10-21 06:58:38 +00:00
Ralf Jung
49e8acbfe9 update lockfile 2023-10-21 08:41:45 +02:00
bors
c7f3948028 Auto merge of #116946 - compiler-errors:movability-and-mutability, r=lcnr
Uplift movability and mutability, the simple way

Just make type_ir a dependency of ast. This can be relaxed later if we want to make the dependency less heavy. Part of rust-lang/types-team#124.

r? `@lcnr` or `@jackh726`
2023-10-20 08:19:54 +00:00
Ralf Jung
20fe485c57 Merge from rustc 2023-10-20 08:03:38 +02:00
bors
5cee4f305a Auto merge of #116875 - nnethercote:rustc_monomorphize, r=wesleywiser
`rustc_monomorphize` cleanups

Just some small improvements I found while looking over this code.

r? `@wesleywiser`
2023-10-20 00:03:47 +00:00
Caio
6379013876 Initiate the inner usage of cfg_match 2023-10-19 20:18:51 -03:00
Amanieu d'Antras
eeea74785d Update hashbrown to 0.14.2
Fixes #116880
2023-10-19 21:44:23 +01:00
bors
94c4e5c411 Auto merge of #115214 - Urgau:rfc-3127-trim-paths, r=compiler-errors
Implement rustc part of RFC 3127 trim-paths

This PR implements (or at least tries to) [RFC 3127 trim-paths](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/111540), the rustc part. That is `-Zremap-path-scope` with all of it's components/scopes.

`@rustbot` label: +F-trim-paths
2023-10-19 19:09:29 +00:00
Michael Goulet
e8e9f6a32a Uplift movability and mutability, the simple way 2023-10-19 16:42:58 +00:00
Ralf Jung
d5d8a515ce Merge from rustc 2023-10-19 17:57:38 +02:00
Michael Goulet
60c95448c3 Use v0.0.0 in compiler crates 2023-10-18 21:55:15 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
025eb20a86 Remove unneeded dependencies from rustc_monomorphize. 2023-10-18 14:23:51 +11:00
bors
09df6108c8 Auto merge of #116767 - cjgillot:alloc-normalize, r=oli-obk
Normalize alloc-id in tests.

AllocIds are globally numbered in a rustc invocation. This makes them very sensitive to changes unrelated to what is being tested. This commit normalizes them by renumbering, in order of appearance in the output.

The renumbering allows to keep the identity, that a simple `allocN` wouldn't. This is useful when we have memory dumps.

cc `@saethlin`
r? `@oli-obk`
2023-10-17 20:46:53 +00:00
Urgau
30f94717ca [RFC 3127 - Trim Paths]: Add unstable option and parsing 2023-10-17 10:11:30 +02:00
Nicholas Nethercote
f4a9d29c50 Remove rustc_symbol_mangling/messages.ftl.
It contains a single message that (a) doesn't contain any natural
language, and (b) is only used in tests.
2023-10-17 16:15:36 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
98ea131a6e
Rollup merge of #116790 - klensy:opt-dist-tabled-no-derive, r=Kobzol
opt-dist: disable unused features for tabled crate

Features looks unused, so left only used ones.

r? `@Kobzol`
2023-10-16 19:10:51 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
96be07e566
Rollup merge of #116709 - GuillaumeGomez:update-minifier, r=notriddle
Update minifier version to 0.2.3

Thanks for the fix `@notriddle` !

r? `@notriddle`
2023-10-16 19:10:50 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
02424e4bc5 Normalize alloc-id in tests. 2023-10-16 16:29:35 +00:00
klensy
83425967cb opt-dist: disable unused features for tabled crate 2023-10-16 12:59:15 +03:00
bors
d60d63fbf7 Auto merge of #116527 - sthibaul:libc, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bump libc dependency

To get GNU/Hurd support, so that CI of external repositories (e.g. getrandom) can build std.
2023-10-15 15:17:17 +00:00
bors
ab73de7d7f Auto merge of #116691 - chenx97:rustix-0.38.19, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update rustix to 0.38.19

addresses [rustix/#856](https://github.com/bytecodealliance/rustix/pull/856).

Commands that do the update:

`cargo +nightly update rustix`

r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
2023-10-15 09:36:49 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
87ae477af0 Update minifier version to 0.2.3 2023-10-14 00:17:27 +02:00
Peter Jaszkowiak
49aa5a23ca Revert "Invoke backtrace-rs buildscript in std buildscript"
This reverts commit 93677276bc
because it caused issues for projects building the standard
library with non-cargo build systems.
2023-10-13 13:43:00 -06:00
chenx97
b1d64c6c30 Update rustix to 0.38.19 2023-10-13 18:14:07 +08:00
bors
130ff8cb6c Auto merge of #115964 - bjorn3:cgu_reuse_tracker_global_state, r=cjgillot
Remove cgu_reuse_tracker from Session

This removes a bit of global mutable state.

It will now miss post-lto cgu reuse when ThinLTO determines that a cgu doesn't get changed, but there weren't any tests for this anyway and a test for it would be fragile to the exact implementation of ThinLTO in LLVM.
2023-10-13 00:09:30 +00:00