Move the cast_float_to_int fallback code to GCC
Now that we require at least LLVM 13, that codegen backend is always
using its intrinsic `fptosi.sat` and `fptoui.sat` conversions, so it
doesn't need the manual implementation. However, the GCC backend still
needs it, so we can move all of that code down there.
Simplify `get_trait_ref` fn used for `virtual_function_elimination`
1. The name `get_trait_ref` is misleading, so I renamed it to something more like `expect_...` because it ICEs if used incorrectly.
2. No need to manually go through the existential trait refs, we already have `.principal()` for that.
Replace `Body::basic_blocks()` with field access
Since the refactoring in #98930, it is possible to borrow the basic blocks
independently from other parts of MIR by accessing the `basic_blocks` field
directly.
Replace unnecessary `Body::basic_blocks()` method with a direct field access,
which has an additional benefit of borrowing the basic blocks only.
Move EH personality functions to std
These were previously in the panic_unwind crate with dummy stubs in the
panic_abort crate. However it turns out that this is insufficient: we
still need a proper personality function even with -C panic=abort to
handle the following cases:
1) `extern "C-unwind"` still needs to catch foreign exceptions with -C
panic=abort to turn them into aborts. This requires landing pads and a
personality function.
2) ARM EHABI uses the personality function when creating backtraces.
The dummy personality function in panic_abort was causing backtrace
generation to get stuck in a loop since the personality function is
responsible for advancing the unwind state to the next frame.
Fixes#41004
Because `PassMode::Cast` is by far the largest variant, but is
relatively rare.
This requires making `PassMode` not impl `Copy`, and `Clone` is no
longer necessary. This causes lots of sigil adjusting, but nothing very
notable.
triagebot: add translation-related mention groups
- Move some code around so that triagebot can ping relevant parties when translation logic is modified.
- Add mention groups to triagebot for translation-related files/folders.
- Auto-label pull requests with changes to translation-related files/folders with `A-translation`.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Now that we require at least LLVM 13, that codegen backend is always
using its intrinsic `fptosi.sat` and `fptoui.sat` conversions, so it
doesn't need the manual implementation. However, the GCC backend still
needs it, so we can move all of that code down there.
Support 1st group of RISC-V Bitmanip backend target features
These target features use the same names as LLVM and `is_riscv_feature_detected!`, they are:
- zba (address generation instructions)
- zbb (basic bit manipulation)
- zbc (carry-less multiplication)
- zbs (single-bit manipulation)
The extension is frozen and ratified, and I don't think we should expect LLVM to change those feature names in the future.
For reference, the specification for the B extension can be found here: https://github.com/riscv/riscv-bitmanip/releases/download/1.0.0/bitmanip-1.0.0-38-g865e7a7.pdf)
On my current project, I see a 7.6% reduction in binary size with these features on, so I have some incentive to try to silence the "unknown feature" warning from `-Ctarget-feature` =)
debuginfo: Generalize C++-like encoding for enums.
The updated encoding should be able to handle niche layouts where more than one variant has fields (as introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/94075).
The new encoding is more uniform as there is no structural difference between direct-tag, niche-tag, and no-tag layouts anymore. The only difference between those cases is that the "dataful" variant in a niche-tag enum will have a `(start, end)` pair denoting the tag range instead of a single value.
The new encoding now also supports 128-bit tags, which occur in at least some standard library types. These tags are represented as `u64` pairs so that debuggers (which don't always have support for 128-bit integers) can reliably deal with them. The downside is that this adds quite a bit of complexity to the encoding and especially to the corresponding NatVis.
The new encoding seems to increase the size of (x86_64-pc-windows-msvc) debuginfo by 10-15%. The size of binaries is not affected (release builds were built with `-Cdebuginfo=2`, numbers are in kilobytes):
EXE | before | after | relative
-- | -- | -- | --
cargo (debug) | 40453 | 40450 | +0%
ripgrep (debug) | 10275 | 10273 | +0%
cargo (release) | 16186 | 16185 | +0%
ripgrep (release) | 4727 | 4726 | +0%
PDB | before | after | relative
-- | -- | -- | --
cargo (debug) | 236524 | 261412 | +11%
ripgrep (debug) | 53140 | 59060 | +11%
cargo (release) | 148516 | 169620 | +14%
ripgrep (release) | 10676 | 11804 | +11%
Given that the new encoding is more general, this is to be expected. Only platforms using C++-like debuginfo are affected -- which currently is only `*-pc-windows-msvc`.
*TODO*
- [x] Properly update documentation
- [x] Add regression tests for new optimized enum layouts as introduced by #94075.
r? `@wesleywiser`
Just moving code around so that triagebot can ping relevant parties when
translation logic is modified.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
These use the same names as LLVM and is_riscv_feature_detected!:
- zba (address generation instructions)
- zbb (basic bit manipulation)
- zbc (carry-less multiplication)
- zbs (single-bit manipulation)
Fix flags when using clang as linker for Fuchsia
Don't add C runtime or set dynamic linker when linking with clang for
Fuchsia. Clang already does this for us.
Enable function merging when opt is for size
It is, of course, natural to want to merge aliasing functions when
optimizing for code size, since that can eliminate several bytes.
And an exhaustive match helps make the code less brittle.
Closes#98215.
It is, of course, natural to want to merge aliasing functions when
optimizing for code size, since that can eliminate several bytes.
And an exhaustive match helps make the code less brittle.
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #98771 (Add support for link-flavor rust-lld for iOS, tvOS and watchOS)
- #98835 (relate `closure_substs.parent_substs()` to parent fn in NLL)
- #99746 (Use `TraitEngine` in more places that don't specifically need `FulfillmentContext::new_in_snapshot`)
- #99786 (Recover from C++ style `enum struct`)
- #99795 (Delay a bug when failed to normalize trait ref during specialization)
- #100029 (Prevent ICE for `doc_alias` on match arm, statement, expression)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
This adds support for rust-lld for Apple *OS targets.
This was tested against targets "aarch64-apple-ios" and "aarch64-apple-ios-sim".
For targets "armv7-apple-ios" and "armv7s-apple-ios", it doesn't link because of
"symbols.o" not being generated with the correct CPU subtype (changes in
the "object" crate needs to be done to support it).
Limit symbols exported from proc macros
Only `__rustc_proc_macro_decls_*__` and `rust_metadata_*` need to be
exported for proc macros to work. All other symbols only increase binary
size and have the potential to conflict with symbols from the host
compiler.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/99909Fixes#59998
cc `@eddyb`
Introduce an ArchiveBuilderBuilder
This avoids monomorphizing all linker code for each codegen backend and will allow passing in extra information to the archive builder from the codegen backend. I'm going to use this in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97485 to allow passing in the right function to extract symbols from object files to a generic archive builder to be used by cg_llvm, cg_clif and cg_gcc.
Only __rustc_proc_macro_decls_*__ and rust_metadata_* need to be
exported for proc macros to work. All other symbols only increase binary
size and have the potential to conflict with symbols from the host
compiler.
LLVM 15 compatibility fixes
These are LLVM 15 compatibility fixes split out from #99464. There are three changes here:
* Emit elementtype attribtue for ldrex/strex intrinsics. This is requires as part of the opaque pointers migration.
* Make more tests compatible with opaque pointers. These are either new or aren't run on x86.
* Remove a test for `#[rustc_allocator]`. Since #99574 there are more requirement on the function signature. I dropped the test entirely, since we already test the effect of the attribute elsewhere.
* The main change: When a worker thread emits an error, wait for other threads to finish before unwinding the main thread and exiting. Otherwise workers may end up using globals for which destructors have already been run. This was probably never quite correct, but became an active problem with LLVM 15, because it started using global dtors in critical places, as part of ManagedStatic removal.
Fixes#99432 (and probably also #95679).
r? `@cuviper`
This avoids monomorphizing all linker code for each codegen backend and
will allow passing in extra information to the archive builder from the
codegen backend.
Replace the separate AbortCodegenOnDrop guard by integrating this
functionality into OngoingCodegen (or rather, the Coordinator part
of it). This ensures that we send a CodegenAborted message and
wait for workers to finish even if the panic occurs outside
codegen_crate() (e.g. inside join_codegen()).
This requires some minor changes to the handling of CodegenAborted,
as it can now occur when the main thread is LLVMing rather than
Codegenning.
Enable raw-dylib for bin crates
Fixes#93842
When `raw-dylib` is used in a `bin` crate, we need to collect all of the `raw-dylib` functions, generate the import library and add that to the linker command line.
I also changed the tests so that 1) the C++ dlls are created after the Rust dlls, thus there is no chance of accidentally using them in the Rust linking process and 2) disabled generating import libraries when building with MSVC.