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253 lines
9.6 KiB
Markdown
253 lines
9.6 KiB
Markdown
# Contribution Guide
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If you want to hack on Miri yourself, great! Here are some resources you might
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find useful.
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## Getting started
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Check out the issues on this GitHub repository for some ideas. In particular,
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look for the green `E-*` labels which mark issues that should be rather
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well-suited for onboarding. For more ideas or help with hacking on Miri, you can
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contact us (`oli-obk` and `RalfJ`) on the [Rust Zulip].
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[Rust Zulip]: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com
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## Preparing the build environment
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Miri heavily relies on internal and unstable rustc interfaces to execute MIR,
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which means it is important that you install a version of rustc that Miri
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actually works with.
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The `rust-version` file contains the commit hash of rustc that Miri is currently
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tested against. Other versions will likely not work. After installing
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[`rustup-toolchain-install-master`], you can run the following command to
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install that exact version of rustc as a toolchain:
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```
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./rustup-toolchain
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```
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This will set up a rustup toolchain called `miri` and set it as an override for
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the current directory.
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If you want to also have `clippy` installed, you need to run this:
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```
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./rustup-toolchain "" -c clippy
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```
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[`rustup-toolchain-install-master`]: https://github.com/kennytm/rustup-toolchain-install-master
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## Building and testing Miri
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Invoking Miri requires getting a bunch of flags right and setting up a custom
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sysroot with xargo. The `miri` script takes care of that for you. With the
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build environment prepared, compiling Miri is just one command away:
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```
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./miri build
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```
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Run `./miri` without arguments to see the other commands our build tool
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supports.
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### Testing the Miri driver
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The Miri driver compiled from `src/bin/miri.rs` is the "heart" of Miri: it is
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basically a version of `rustc` that, instead of compiling your code, runs it.
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It accepts all the same flags as `rustc` (though the ones only affecting code
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generation and linking obviously will have no effect) [and more][miri-flags].
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[miri-flags]: README.md#miri--z-flags-and-environment-variables
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For example, you can (cross-)run the driver on a particular file by doing
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```sh
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./miri run tests/pass/format.rs
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./miri run tests/pass/hello.rs --target i686-unknown-linux-gnu
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```
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and you can (cross-)run the entire test suite using:
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```
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./miri test
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MIRI_TEST_TARGET=i686-unknown-linux-gnu ./miri test
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```
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If your target doesn't support libstd, you can run miri with
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```
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MIRI_NO_STD=1 MIRI_TEST_TARGET=thumbv7em-none-eabihf ./miri test tests/fail/alloc/no_global_allocator.rs
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MIRI_NO_STD=1 ./miri run tests/pass/no_std.rs --target thumbv7em-none-eabihf
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```
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to avoid attempting (and failing) to build libstd. Note that almost no tests will pass
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this way, but you can run individual tests.
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`./miri test FILTER` only runs those tests that contain `FILTER` in their
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filename (including the base directory, e.g. `./miri test fail` will run all
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compile-fail tests).
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You can get a trace of which MIR statements are being executed by setting the
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`MIRI_LOG` environment variable. For example:
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```sh
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MIRI_LOG=info ./miri run tests/pass/vec.rs
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```
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Setting `MIRI_LOG` like this will configure logging for Miri itself as well as
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the `rustc_middle::mir::interpret` and `rustc_mir::interpret` modules in rustc. You
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can also do more targeted configuration, e.g. the following helps debug the
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stacked borrows implementation:
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```sh
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MIRI_LOG=rustc_mir::interpret=info,miri::stacked_borrows ./miri run tests/pass/vec.rs
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```
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In addition, you can set `MIRI_BACKTRACE=1` to get a backtrace of where an
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evaluation error was originally raised.
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#### UI testing
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We use ui-testing in Miri, meaning we generate `.stderr` and `.stdout` files for the output
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produced by Miri. You can use `./miri bless` to automatically (re)generate these files when
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you add new tests or change how Miri presents certain output.
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Note that when you also use `MIRIFLAGS` to change optimizations and similar, the ui output
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will change in unexpected ways. In order to still be able
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to run the other checks while ignoring the ui output, use `MIRI_SKIP_UI_CHECKS=1 ./miri test`.
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For more info on how to configure ui tests see [the documentation on the ui test crate][ui_test]
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[ui_test]: ui_test/README.md
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### Testing `cargo miri`
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Working with the driver directly gives you full control, but you also lose all
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the convenience provided by cargo. Once your test case depends on a crate, it
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is probably easier to test it with the cargo wrapper. You can install your
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development version of Miri using
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```
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./miri install
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```
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and then you can use it as if it was installed by `rustup`. Make sure you use
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the same toolchain when calling `cargo miri` that you used when installing Miri!
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There's a test for the cargo wrapper in the `test-cargo-miri` directory; run
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`./run-test.py` in there to execute it. Like `./miri test`, this respects the
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`MIRI_TEST_TARGET` environment variable to execute the test for another target.
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### Using a modified standard library
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Miri re-builds the standard library into a custom sysroot, so it is fairly easy
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to test Miri against a modified standard library -- you do not even have to
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build Miri yourself, the Miri shipped by `rustup` will work. All you have to do
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is set the `MIRI_LIB_SRC` environment variable to the `library` folder of a
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`rust-lang/rust` repository checkout. Note that changing files in that directory
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does not automatically trigger a re-build of the standard library; you have to
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clear the Miri build cache manually (on Linux, `rm -rf ~/.cache/miri`;
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and on Windows, `rmdir /S "%LOCALAPPDATA%\rust-lang\miri\cache"`).
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## Configuring `rust-analyzer`
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To configure `rust-analyzer` and VS Code for working on Miri, save the following
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to `.vscode/settings.json` in your local Miri clone:
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```json
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{
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"rust-analyzer.checkOnSave.overrideCommand": [
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"./miri",
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"check",
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"--message-format=json"
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],
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"rust-analyzer.rustfmt.extraArgs": [
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"+nightly"
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],
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"rust-analyzer.rustcSource": "discover",
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"rust-analyzer.linkedProjects": [
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"./Cargo.toml",
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"./cargo-miri/Cargo.toml"
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]
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}
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```
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> #### Note
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>
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> If you are [building Miri with a locally built rustc][], set
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> `rust-analyzer.rustcSource` to the relative path from your Miri clone to the
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> root `Cargo.toml` of the locally built rustc. For example, the path might look
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> like `../rust/Cargo.toml`.
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See the rustc-dev-guide's docs on ["Configuring `rust-analyzer` for `rustc`"][rdg-r-a]
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for more information about configuring VS Code and `rust-analyzer`.
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[rdg-r-a]: https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/building/suggested.html#configuring-rust-analyzer-for-rustc
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## Advanced topic: other build environments
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We described above the simplest way to get a working build environment for Miri,
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which is to use the version of rustc indicated by `rustc-version`. But
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sometimes, that is not enough.
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### Updating `rustc-version`
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The `rustc-version` file is regularly updated to keep Miri close to the latest
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version of rustc. Usually, new contributors do not have to worry about this. But
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sometimes a newer rustc is needed for a patch, and sometimes Miri needs fixing
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for changes in rustc. In both cases, `rustc-version` needs updating.
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To update the `rustc-version` file and install the latest rustc, you can run:
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```
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./rustup-toolchain HEAD
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```
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Now edit Miri until `./miri test` passes, and submit a PR. Generally, it is
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preferred to separate updating `rustc-version` and doing what it takes to get
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Miri working again, from implementing new features that rely on the updated
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rustc. This avoids blocking all Miri development on landing a big PR.
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### Building Miri with a locally built rustc
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[building Miri with a locally built rustc]: #building-miri-with-a-locally-built-rustc
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A big part of the Miri driver lives in rustc, so working on Miri will sometimes
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require using a locally built rustc. The bug you want to fix may actually be on
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the rustc side, or you just need to get more detailed trace of the execution
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than what is possible with release builds -- in both cases, you should develop
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Miri against a rustc you compiled yourself, with debug assertions (and hence
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tracing) enabled.
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The setup for a local rustc works as follows:
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```sh
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# Clone the rust-lang/rust repo.
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git clone https://github.com/rust-lang/rust rustc
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cd rustc
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# Create a config.toml with defaults for working on Miri.
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./x.py setup compiler
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# Now edit `config.toml` and under `[rust]` set `debug-assertions = true`.
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# Build a stage 2 rustc, and build the rustc libraries with that rustc.
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# This step can take 30 minutes or more.
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./x.py build --stage 2 compiler/rustc
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# If you change something, you can get a faster rebuild by doing
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./x.py build --keep-stage 0 --stage 2 compiler/rustc
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# You may have to change the architecture in the next command
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rustup toolchain link stage2 build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2
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# Now cd to your Miri directory, then configure rustup
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rustup override set stage2
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```
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Important: You need to delete the Miri cache when you change the stdlib; otherwise the
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old, chached version will be used. On Linux, the cache is located at `~/.cache/miri`,
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and on Windows, it is located at `%LOCALAPPDATA%\rust-lang\miri\cache`; the exact
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location is printed after the library build: "A libstd for Miri is now available in ...".
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Note: `./x.py --stage 2 compiler/rustc` currently errors with `thread 'main'
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panicked at 'fs::read(stamp) failed with No such file or directory (os error 2)`,
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you can simply ignore that error; Miri will build anyway.
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For more information about building and configuring a local compiler,
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see <https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/building/how-to-build-and-run.html>.
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With this, you should now have a working development setup! See
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[above](#building-and-testing-miri) for how to proceed working on Miri.
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