This is an alternative to ee6459d6521cf6a4c2e08b6e13ce3c6ce5d55ed0.
That is, it fixes the issue that affects the very long type names
in https://docs.rs/async-stripe/0.31.0/stripe/index.html#structs.
This is, necessarily, a pile of nasty heuristics.
We need to balance a few issues:
- Sometimes, there's no real word break.
For example, `BTreeMap` should be `BTree<wbr>Map`,
not `B<wbr>Tree<wbr>Map`.
- Sometimes, there's a legit word break,
but the name is tiny and the HTML overhead isn't worth it.
For example, if we're typesetting `TyCtx`,
writing `Ty<wbr>Ctx` would have an HTML overhead of 50%.
Line breaking inside it makes no sense.
Update compiler_builtins to 0.1.114
The `weak-intrinsics` feature was removed from compiler_builtins in https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/598, so dropped the `compiler-builtins-weak-intrinsics` feature from alloc/std/sysroot.
In https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/593, some builtins for f16/f128 were added. These don't work for all compiler backends, so add a `compiler-builtins-no-f16-f128` feature and disable it for cranelift and gcc.
The `weak-intrinsics` feature was removed from compiler_builtins in
https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/598, so dropped the
`compiler-builtins-weak-intrinsics` feature from alloc/std/sysroot.
In https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/593, some
builtins for f16/f128 were added. These don't work for all compiler
backends, so add a `compiler-builtins-no-f16-f128` feature and disable
it for cranelift and gcc. Also disable it for LLVM targets that don't
support it.
deps: dedup object, wasmparser, wasm-encoder
* dedups one `object`, additional dupe will be removed, with next `thorin-dwp` update
* `wasmparser` pinned to minor versions, so full merge isn't possible
* same with `wasm-encoder`
Turned off some features for `wasmparser` (see features https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasm-tools/blob/v1.208.1/crates/wasmparser/Cargo.toml) in `run-make-support`, looks working?
Switch from `derivative` to `derive-where`
This is a part of the effort to get rid of `syn 1.*` in compiler's dependencies: #109302
Derivative has not been maintained in nearly 3 years[^1]. It also depends on `syn 1.*`.
This PR replaces `derivative` with `derive-where`[^2], a not dead alternative, which uses `syn 2.*`.
A couple of `Debug` formats have changed around the skipped fields[^3], but I doubt this is an issue.
[^1]: https://github.com/mcarton/rust-derivative/issues/117
[^2]: https://lib.rs/crates/derive-where
[^3]: See the changes in `tests/ui`
Add basic Serde serialization capabilities to Stable MIR
This PR adds basic Serde serialization capabilities to Stable MIR. It is intentionally minimal (just wrapping all stable MIR types with a Serde `derive`), so that any important design decisions can be discussed before going further. A simple test is included with this PR to validate that JSON can actually be emitted.
## Notes
When I wrapped the Stable MIR error types in `compiler/stable_mir/src/error.rs`, it caused test failures (though I'm not sure why) so I backed those out.
## Future Work
So, this PR will support serializing basic stable MIR, but it _does not_ support serializing interned values beneath `Ty`s and `AllocId`s, etc... My current thinking about how to handle this is as follows:
1. Add new `visited_X` fields to the `Tables` struct for each interned category of interest.
2. As serialization is occuring, serialize interned values as usual _and_ also record the interned value we referenced in `visited_X`.
(Possibly) In addition, if an interned value recursively references other interned values, record those interned values as well.
3. Teach the stable MIR `Context` how to access the `visited_X` values and expose them with wrappers in `stable_mir/src/lib.rs` to users (e.g. to serialize and/or further analyze them).
### Pros
This approach does not commit to any specific serialization format regarding interned values or other more complex cases, which avoids us locking into any behaviors that may not be desired long-term.
### Cons
The user will need to manually handle serializing interned values.
### Alternatives
1. We can directly provide access to the underlying `Tables` maps for interned values; the disadvantage of this approach is that it either requires extra processing for users to filter out to only use the values that they need _or_ users may serialize extra values that they don't need. The advantage is that the implementation is even simpler. The other pros/cons are similar to the above.
2. We can directly serialize interned values by expanding them in-place. The pro is that this may make some basic inputs easier to consume. However, the cons are that there will need to be special provisions for dealing with cyclical values on both the producer and consumer _and_ global values will possibly need to be de-duplicated on the consumer side.
Replace ASCII control chars with Unicode Control Pictures
Replace ASCII control chars like `CR` with Unicode Control Pictures like `␍`:
```
error: bare CR not allowed in doc-comment
--> $DIR/lex-bare-cr-string-literal-doc-comment.rs:3:32
|
LL | /// doc comment with bare CR: '␍'
| ^
```
Centralize the checking of unicode char width for the purposes of CLI display in one place. Account for the new replacements. Remove unneeded tracking of "zero-width" unicode chars, as we calculate these in the `SourceMap` as needed now.
No longer track "zero-width" chars in `SourceMap`, read directly from the line when calculating the `display_col` of a `BytePos`. Move `char_width` to `rustc_span` and use it from the emitter.
This change allows the following to properly align in terminals (depending on the font, the replaced control codepoints are rendered as 1 or 2 width, on my terminal they are rendered as 1, on VSCode text they are rendered as 2):
```
error: this file contains an unclosed delimiter
--> $DIR/issue-68629.rs:5:17
|
LL | ␜␟ts␀![{i
| -- unclosed delimiter
| |
| unclosed delimiter
LL | ␀␀ fn rݻoa>rݻm
| ^
```
Migrate `compiler-lookup-paths`, `dump-mono-stats` and `prune-link-args` `run-make` tests to `rmake` or `ui` format
Part of #121876 and the associated [Google Summer of Code project](https://blog.rust-lang.org/2024/05/01/gsoc-2024-selected-projects.html).
try-job: x86_64-msvc
try-job: aarch64-apple
try-job: dist-x86_64-linux
try-job: armhf-gnu
Promote the `wasm32-wasip2` target to Tier 2
This commit promotes the `wasm32-wasip2` Rust target to tier 2 as proposed in rust-lang/compiler-team#760. There are two major changes in this PR:
1. The `dist-various-2` container, which already produces the other WASI targets, now has an extra target added for `wasm32-wasip2`.
2. A new `wasm-component-ld` binary is added to all host toolchains when LLD is enabled. This is the linker used for the `wasm32-wasip2` target.
This new linker is added for all host toolchains to ensure that all host toolchains can produce the `wasm32-wasip2` target. This is similar to how `rust-lld` was originally included for all host toolchains to be able to produce WebAssembly output when the targets were first added. The new linker is developed [here][wasm-component-ld] and is pulled in via a crates.io-based dependency to the tree here.
[wasm-component-ld]: https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasm-component-ld
Sync ar_archive_writer to LLVM 18.1.3
From LLVM 15.0.0-rc3. This adds support for COFF archives containing Arm64EC object files and has various fixes for AIX big archive files.
This commit promotes the `wasm32-wasip2` Rust target to tier 2 as
proposed in rust-lang/compiler-team#760. There are two major changes in
this PR:
1. The `dist-various-2` container, which already produces the other WASI
targets, now has an extra target added for `wasm32-wasip2`.
2. A new `wasm-component-ld` binary is added to all host toolchains when
LLD is enabled. This is the linker used for the `wasm32-wasip2` target.
This new linker is added for all host toolchains to ensure that all host
toolchains can produce the `wasm32-wasip2` target. This is similar to
how `rust-lld` was originally included for all host toolchains to be
able to produce WebAssembly output when the targets were first added.
The new linker is developed [here][wasm-component-ld] and is pulled in
via a crates.io-based dependency to the tree here.
[wasm-component-ld]: https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasm-component-ld
Remove unused `rustc_trait_selection` dependencies
Found using `cargo-machete`. The `bitflags` and `derivative` crates were added for the new trait solver, but weren't removed when the next trait solver code was uplifted to a separate crate.
Implement `x perf` as a separate tool
Continues work from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/126318, adds a CLI for running `rustc-perf` profiling commands through a new `rustc-perf-wrapper` tool. The CLI is in a separate tool to enable experimentation outside of `bootstrap`.
This is probably most of what we can do so far, I'll add support for benchmarking once `rustc-perf` gets a terminal output for comparing benchmark results.
r? ``@onur-ozkan``
tidy: skip submodules if not present for non-CI environments
Right now tidy requires rustc-perf to be fetched as it checks its license, but this doesn't make sense for most contributors since rustc-perf is a dist-specific tool and its license will not change frequently, especially during compiler development. This PR makes tidy to skip rustc-perf if it's not fetched and if it's not running in CI.
Applies https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/126225#issuecomment-2158143674 and reverts #126225.
Stop sorting `Span`s' `SyntaxContext`, as that is incompatible with incremental
work towards https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90317
Luckily no one actually needed these to be sorted, so it didn't even affect diagnostics. I'm guessing they'd have been sorted by creation time anyway, so it wouldn't really have mattered.
r? `@cjgillot`
This removes the ICE codepaths for `f16` and `f128` in Clippy.
`rustc_apfloat` is used as a dependency for the parsing of these types,
since their `FromStr` implementation will not be available in the
standard library for a while.
Bump windows-bindgen to 0.57
This PR updates our generated Windows API bindings using the latest version of `windows-bindgen`.
The only change to the generated code is that `derive` is used for `Copy` and `Clone` instead of `impl`.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #123769 (Improve escaping of byte, byte str, and c str proc-macro literals)
- #126054 (`E0229`: Suggest Moving Type Constraints to Type Parameter Declaration)
- #126135 (add HermitOS support for vectored read/write operations)
- #126266 (Unify guarantees about the default allocator)
- #126285 (`UniqueRc`: support allocators and `T: ?Sized`.)
- #126399 (extend the check for LLVM build)
- #126426 (const validation: fix ICE on dangling ZST reference)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
add HermitOS support for vectored read/write operations
In general, the I/O interface of hermit-abi is revised and now a more POSIX-like interface. Consequently, platform abstraction layer for HermitOS has slightly adjusted and some inaccuracies remove.
Hermit is a tier 3 platform and this PR changes only files, wich are related to the tier 3 platform.
In general, the I/O interface of hermit-abi is more POSIX-like
interface. Consequently, platform abstraction layer for HermitOS
has slightly adjusted and some inaccuracies remove.
Support mdBook preprocessors for TRPL in rustbook
`rust-lang/book` recently added two mdBook preprocessors. Enable `rustbook` to use those preprocessors for books where they are requested by the `book.toml` by adding the preprocessors as path dependencies, and ignoring them where they are not requested, i.e. by all the books other than TRPL at present.
Addresses rust-lang/book#3927
`rust-lang/book` recently added two mdBook preprocessors. Enable
`rustbook` to use those preprocessors for books where they are requested
by the `book.toml` by adding the preprocessors as path dependencies, and
ignoring them where they are not requested, i.e. by all the books other
than TRPL at present.
This replaces the hardcoded rustc-perf commit and ad-hoc downloading and
unpacking of its zipped source with defaulting to use the new rustc-perf
submodule.
While it would be nice to make `opt-dist` able to initialize the
submodule automatically when pointing to a Rust checkout _other_ than
the one opt-dist was built in, that would require a bigger refactor that
moved `update_submodule`, from bootstrap, into build_helper.
Regardless, I imagine it must be quite rare to use `opt-dist` with a
checkout that is neither from a rust-src tarball (which will contain the
submodule), nor the checkout opt-dist itself was built (bootstrap will
update the submodule when opt-dist is built).
Unfortunately, we can't always offer a machine-applicable suggestion when there are subpatterns from macro expansion.
Co-Authored-By: Guillaume Boisseau <Nadrieril@users.noreply.github.com>
use key-value format in stage0 file
Currently, we are working on the python removal task on bootstrap. Which means we have to extract some data from the stage0 file using shell scripts. However, parsing values from the stage0.json file is painful because shell scripts don't have a built-in way to parse json files.
This change simplifies the stage0 file format to key-value pairs, which makes it easily readable from any environment.
See the zulip thread for more details: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/326414-t-infra.2Fbootstrap/topic/Using.20different.20format.20in.20the.20stage0.20file
Update ena to 0.14.3
Includes https://github.com/rust-lang/ena/pull/53, which removes a trivial `Self: Sized` bound that prevents `ena` from building on the new solver.
Avoid `alloca`s in codegen for simple `mir::Aggregate` statements
The core idea here is to remove the abstraction penalty of simple newtypes in codegen.
Even something simple like constructing a
```rust
#[repr(transparent)] struct Foo(u32);
```
forces an `alloca` to be generated in nightly right now.
Certainly LLVM can optimize that away, but it would be nice if it didn't have to.
Quick example:
```rust
#[repr(transparent)]
pub struct Transparent32(u32);
#[no_mangle]
pub fn make_transparent(x: u32) -> Transparent32 {
let a = Transparent32(x);
a
}
```
on nightly we produce <https://rust.godbolt.org/z/zcvoM79ae>
```llvm
define noundef i32 `@make_transparent(i32` noundef %x) unnamed_addr #0 {
%a = alloca i32, align 4
store i32 %x, ptr %a, align 4
%0 = load i32, ptr %a, align 4, !noundef !3
ret i32 %0
}
```
but after this PR we produce
```llvm
define noundef i32 `@make_transparent(i32` noundef %x) unnamed_addr #0 {
start:
ret i32 %x
}
```
(even before the optimizer runs).
There are some test cases involving `parse` and `tokenstream` and
`mut_visit` that are located in `rustc_expand`. Because it used to be
the case that constructing a `ParseSess` required the involvement of
`rustc_expand`. However, since #64197 merged (a long time ago)
`rust_expand` no longer needs to be involved.
This commit moves the tests into `rustc_parse`. This is the optimal
place for the `parse` tests. It's not ideal for the `tokenstream` and
`mut_visit` tests -- they would be better in `rustc_ast` -- but they
still rely on parsing, which is not available in `rustc_ast`. But
`rustc_parse` is lower down in the crate graph and closer to `rustc_ast`
than `rust_expand`, so it's still an improvement for them.
The exact renaming is as follows:
- rustc_expand/src/mut_visit/tests.rs -> rustc_parse/src/parser/mut_visit/tests.rs
- rustc_expand/src/tokenstream/tests.rs -> rustc_parse/src/parser/tokenstream/tests.rs
- rustc_expand/src/tests.rs + rustc_expand/src/parse/tests.rs ->
compiler/rustc_parse/src/parser/tests.rs
The latter two test files are combined because there's no need for them
to be separate, and having a `rustc_parse::parser::parse` module would
be weird. This also means some `pub(crate)`s can be removed.
This ensures the version of time used in rustc includes this change:
https://github.com/time-rs/time/pull/671.
This fix is a necessary prerequisite for #99969,
which adds FromIterator implementations for Box<str>.
Previously, time had an Into::into that resolved to the identity impl
followed by a collect::<Result<Box<_>, _>>().
With the new FromIterator implementations for Box<str>,
the Into::into resolution is ambiguous and time fails to compile.
The fix removes the identity Into::into conversion,
allowing time to compile with the new FromIterator implementations.
This version of time also matches what cargo recently switched to
in https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/13834.
Port repr128-dwarf run-make test to rmake
This PR ports the repr128-dwarf run-make test to rmake, using the `gimli` crate instead of the `llvm-dwarfdump` command.
Note that this PR changes `rmake.rs` files to be compiled with the 2021 edition (previously no edition was passed to `rustc`, meaning they were compiled with the 2015 edition). This means that `panic!("{variable}")` will now work as expected in `rmake.rs` files (there's already a usage in the [wasm-symbols-not-exported test](aca749eefc/tests/run-make/wasm-symbols-not-exported/rmake.rs (L34)) that this will fix).
Tracking issue: #121876
Implement `PROBLEMATIC_CONSTS` generalization
You forgot that `A≈4`, `B≈8`, and `E≈3` and some more constants.
The new `PROBLEMATIC_CONSTS` was generated using this code:
```py
from functools import reduce
def generate_problems(consts: list, letter_digit: dict):
for const in consts:
problem = reduce(lambda string, rep: string.replace(*reversed(rep)), ['%X' % const, *letter_digit.items()])
indexes = [index for index, c in enumerate(problem) if c in letter_digit.keys()]
for i in range(1 << len(indexes)):
yield int(''.join(letter_digit[c] if index in indexes and (i >> indexes.index(index)) & 1 else c for index, c in enumerate(problem)), 0x10)
problems = generate_problems(
[
# Old PROBLEMATIC_CONSTS:
184594741, 2880289470, 2881141438, 2965027518, 2976579765, 3203381950, 3405691582, 3405697037,
3735927486, 3735932941, 4027431614, 4276992702,
# More of my own:
195934910, 252707358, 762133, 179681982, 173390526
],
{
'A': '4',
'B': '8',
'E': '3',
}
)
# print(list(problems)) # won't use that to print formatted
from itertools import islice
while len(cur_problems := list(islice(problems, 8))):
print(' ', end='')
print(*cur_problems, sep=', ', end='')
print(',')
```
Add support for Arm64EC to the Standard Library
Adds the final pieces so that the standard library can be built for arm64ec-pc-windows-msvc (initially added in #119199)
* Bumps `windows-sys` to 0.56.0, which adds support for Arm64EC.
* Correctly set the `isEC` parameter for LLVM's `writeArchive` function.
* Add `#![feature(asm_experimental_arch)]` to library crates where Arm64EC inline assembly is used, as it is currently unstable.
Port the 2 `rust-lld` run-make tests to `rmake`
In preparation for finalizing most of the `rust-lld` work, this PR ports the following tests to `rmake`:
- `tests/run-make/rust-lld`
- `tests/run-make/rust-lld-custom-target`
As they use `$(CGREP) -e` I added `regex` as an exported dependency to the `run_make_support` library.
Unfortunately, the most recent versions depend on `memchr` 2.6.0 but it's currently pinned at 2.5.0 in the workspace, and therefore had to settle for the older `regex-1.8.0`.
r? `@jieyouxu`
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.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #123651 (Thread local updates for idiomatic examples)
- #123699 (run-make-support: tidy up support library)
- #123779 (OpenBSD fix long socket addresses)
- #123875 (Doc: replace x with y for hexa-decimal fmt)
- #123879 (Add missing `unsafe` to some internal `std` functions)
- #123889 (reduce tidy overheads in run-make checks)
- #123898 (Generic associated consts: Check regions earlier when comparing impl with trait item def)
- #123902 (compiletest: Update rustfix to 0.8.1)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
compiletest: Update rustfix to 0.8.1
This updates the version of rustfix used in compiletest to be closer to what cargo is using. This is to help ensure `cargo fix` and compiletest are aligned. There are some unpublished changes to `rustfix`, which will update in a future PR when those are published.
Will plan to update ui_test in the near future to avoid the duplicate.