Make `RustString` an extern type to avoid `improper_ctypes` warnings
Currently, any FFI function that uses `&RustString` needs to also add `#[ignore(improper_ctypes)]` to silence a warning.
The warning is not _completely_ bogus, because `RustString` contains `Vec<u8>` and therefore does not have a guaranteed layout. But we have no way of telling the lint that this doesn't matter, because the C++ code only uses that pointer opaquely and never relies on its underlying layout.
Ideally there would be some way to silence `improper_ctypes` at the type-definition site. But because there isn't, casting to and from a separate extern type is better than having to annotate every single use site.
remove support for rustc_safe_intrinsic attribute; use rustc_intrinsic functions instead
This brings us one step closer towards removing support for `extern "rust-intrinsic"` blocks, in favor of `#[rustc_intrinsic]` functions.
Also move `#[rustc_intrinsic]` under the `intrinsics` feature gate, to match the `extern "rust-intrinsic"` style.
Simplify FFI calls for `-Ztime-llvm-passes` and `-Zprint-codegen-stats`
The existing code for these unstable LLVM-infodump flags was jumping through hoops to pass an allocated C string across the FFI boundary, when it's much simpler to just write to a `&RustString` instead.
coverage: Extract safe FFI wrapper functions to `llvm_cov`
This PR takes all of the inline `unsafe` calls in coverage codegen, and all the safe wrapper functions in `coverageinfo/mod.rs`, and moves them to a new `llvm_cov` submodule that is dedicated to safe FFI wrapper functions. This reduces the mixing of abstraction levels in the rest of coverage codegen.
As a follow-up, this PR also tidies up the names and signatures of several of the coverage FFI functions.
coverage: Simplify parts of coverage graph creation
This is a combination of three semi-related simplifications to how coverage graphs are created, grouped into one PR to avoid conflicts.
There are no observable changes to the output of any of the coverage tests.
[StableMIR] API to retrieve definitions from crates
Add functions to retrieve function definitions and static items from all crates (local and external).
For external crates, we're still missing items from trait implementation and primitives.
r? ````@compiler-errors:```` Do you know what is the best way to retrieve the associated items for primitives and trait implementations for external crates? Thanks!
Set "symbol name" in raw-dylib import libraries to the decorated name
`windows-rs` received a bug report that mixing raw-dylib generated and the Windows SDK import libraries was causing linker failures: <https://github.com/microsoft/windows-rs/issues/3285>
The root cause turned out to be #124958, that is we are not including the decorated name in the import library and so the import name type is also not being correctly set.
This change modifies the generation of import libraries to set the "symbol name" to the fully decorated name and correctly marks the import as being data vs function.
Note that this also required some changes to how the symbol is named within Rust: for MSVC we now need to use the decorated name but for MinGW we still need to use partially decorated (or undecorated) name.
Fixes#124958
Passing i686 MSVC and MinGW build: <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/actions/runs/11000433888?pr=130586>
r? `@ChrisDenton`
Tweak detection of multiple crate versions to be more encompassing
Previously, we only emitted the additional context if the type was in the same crate as the trait that appeared multiple times in the dependency tree. Now, we look at all traits looking for two with the same name in different crates with the same crate number, and we are more flexible looking for the types involved. This will work even if the type that implements the wrong trait version is from a different crate entirely.
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `CustomErrorHandler: ErrorHandler` is not satisfied because the trait comes from a different crate version
--> src/main.rs:5:17
|
5 | cnb_runtime(CustomErrorHandler {});
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ the trait `ErrorHandler` is not implemented for `CustomErrorHandler`
|
note: there are multiple different versions of crate `c` in the dependency graph
--> /home/gh-estebank/testcase-rustc-crate-version-mismatch/c-v0.2/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub trait ErrorHandler {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this is the required trait
|
::: src/main.rs:1:5
|
1 | use b::CustomErrorHandler;
| - one version of crate `c` is used here, as a dependency of crate `b`
2 | use c::cnb_runtime;
| - one version of crate `c` is used here, as a direct dependency of the current crate
|
::: /home/gh-estebank/testcase-rustc-crate-version-mismatch/b/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub struct CustomErrorHandler {}
| ----------------------------- this type doesn't implement the required trait
|
::: /home/gh-estebank/testcase-rustc-crate-version-mismatch/c-v0.1/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub trait ErrorHandler {}
| ---------------------- this is the found trait
= note: two types coming from two different versions of the same crate are different types even if they look the same
= help: you can use `cargo tree` to explore your dependency tree
```
Fix#89143.
Add functions to retrieve function definitions and static items from
all crates (local and external).
For external crates, add a query to retrieve the number of defs in a
foreign crate.
Basic inline assembly support for SPARC and SPARC64
This implements asm_experimental_arch (tracking issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93335) for SPARC and SPARC64.
This PR includes:
- General-purpose registers `r[0-31]` (`reg` register class, LLVM/GCC constraint `r`)
Supported types: i8, i16, i32, i64 (SPARC64-only)
Aliases: `g[0-7]` (`r[0-7]`), `o[0-7]` (`r[8-15]`), `l[0-7]` (`r[16-23]`), `i[0-7]` (`r[24-31]`)
- `y` register (clobber-only, needed for clobber_abi)
- preserves_flags: Integer condition codes (`icc`, `xcc`) and floating-point condition codes (`fcc*`)
The following are *not* included:
- 64-bit integer support on SPARC-V8+'s global or out registers (`g[0-7]`, `o[0-7]`): GCC's `h` constraint (it seems that there is no corresponding constraint in LLVM?)
- Floating-point registers (LLVM/GCC constraint `e`/`f`):
I initially tried to implement this, but postponed it for now because there seemed to be several parts in LLVM that behaved differently than in the LangRef's description.
- clobber_abi: Support for floating-point registers is needed.
Refs:
- LLVM
- Reserved registers https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-19.1.0/llvm/lib/Target/Sparc/SparcRegisterInfo.cpp#L52
- Register definitions https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-19.1.0/llvm/lib/Target/Sparc/SparcRegisterInfo.td
- Supported constraints https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#supported-constraint-code-list
- GCC
- Reserved registers 63b6967b06/gcc/config/sparc/sparc.h (L633-L658)
- Supported constraints https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Machine-Constraints.html
- SPARC ISA/ABI
- (64-bit ISA) The SPARC Architecture Manual, Version 9
(32-bit ISA) The SPARC Architecture Manual, Version 8
(64-bit ABI) System V Application Binary Interface SPARC Version 9 Processor Supplement, Rev 1.35
(32-bit ABI) System V Application Binary Interface SPARC Processor Supplement, Third Edition
The above docs can be downloaded from https://sparc.org/technical-documents
- (32-bit V8+ ABI) The V8+ Technical Specification
https://temlib.org/pub/SparcStation/Standards/V8plus.pdf
cc `@thejpster` (sparc-unknown-none-elf target maintainer)
(AFAIK, other sparc/sprac64 targets don't have target maintainers)
r? `@Amanieu`
`@rustbot` label +O-SPARC +A-inline-assembly
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `dep_2_reexport::Type: Trait` is not satisfied because the trait comes from a different crate version
--> multiple-dep-versions.rs:7:18
|
7 | do_something(Type);
| ^^^^ the trait `Trait` is not implemented for `dep_2_reexport::Type`
|
note: there are multiple different versions of crate `dependency` in the dependency graph
--> /home/gh-estebank/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/crate-loading/rmake_out/multiple-dep-versions-1.rs:4:1
|
3 | pub struct Type(pub i32);
| --------------- this type implements the required trait
4 | pub trait Trait {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this is the required trait
|
::: multiple-dep-versions.rs:1:1
|
1 | extern crate dep_2_reexport;
| ---------------------------- one version of crate `dependency` is used here, as a dependency of crate `foo`
2 | extern crate dependency;
| ------------------------ one version of crate `dependency` is used here, as a direct dependency of the current crate
|
::: /home/gh-estebank/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/crate-loading/rmake_out/multiple-dep-versions-2.rs:3:1
|
3 | pub struct Type;
| --------------- this type doesn't implement the required trait
4 | pub trait Trait {
| --------------- this is the found trait
= note: two types coming from two different versions of the same crate are different types even if they look the same
= help: you can use `cargo tree` to explore your dependency tree
```
The approach to accomplish this is a HACK, and we'd want a better way to do this. I believe that moving E0277 to be a structured diagnostic would help in that regard.
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `dep_2_reexport::Type: Trait` is not satisfied because the trait comes from a different crate version
--> multiple-dep-versions.rs:7:18
|
7 | do_something(Type);
| ^^^^ the trait `Trait` is not implemented for `dep_2_reexport::Type`
|
note: there are multiple different versions of crate `dependency` in the dependency graph
--> /home/gh-estebank/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/crate-loading/rmake_out/multiple-dep-versions-1.rs:4:1
|
3 | pub struct Type(pub i32);
| --------------- this type implements the required trait
4 | pub trait Trait {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this is the required trait
|
::: multiple-dep-versions.rs:1:1
|
1 | extern crate dep_2_reexport;
| ---------------------------- one version of crate `dependency` is used here, as a dependency of crate `foo`
2 | extern crate dependency;
| ------------------------ one version of crate `dependency` is used here, as a direct dependency of the current crate
|
::: /home/gh-estebank/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/crate-loading/rmake_out/multiple-dep-versions-2.rs:3:1
|
3 | pub struct Type;
| --------------- this type doesn't implement the required trait
4 | pub trait Trait {
| --------------- this is the found trait
= note: two types coming from two different versions of the same crate are different types even if they look the same
= help: you can use `cargo tree` to explore your dependency tree
note: required by a bound in `do_something`
--> /home/gh-estebank/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/crate-loading/rmake_out/multiple-dep-versions-1.rs:12:24
|
12 | pub fn do_something<X: Trait>(_: X) {}
| ^^^^^ required by this bound in `do_something`
```
Previously, we only emitted the additional context if the type was in the same crate as the trait that appeared multiple times in the dependency tree. Now, we look at all traits looking for two with the same name in different crates with the same crate number, and we are more flexible looking for the types involved. This will work even if the type that implements the wrong trait version is from a different crate entirely.
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `CustomErrorHandler: ErrorHandler` is not satisfied
--> src/main.rs:5:17
|
5 | cnb_runtime(CustomErrorHandler {});
| ----------- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ the trait `ErrorHandler` is not implemented for `CustomErrorHandler`
| |
| required by a bound introduced by this call
|
help: you have multiple different versions of crate `c` in your dependency graph
--> src/main.rs:1:5
|
1 | use b::CustomErrorHandler;
| ^ one version of crate `c` is used here, as a dependency of crate `b`
2 | use c::cnb_runtime;
| ^ one version of crate `c` is used here, as a direct dependency of the current crate
note: two types coming from two different versions of the same crate are different types even if they look the same
--> /home/gh-estebank/testcase-rustc-crate-version-mismatch/c-v0.2/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub trait ErrorHandler {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this is the required trait
|
::: /home/gh-estebank/testcase-rustc-crate-version-mismatch/b/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub struct CustomErrorHandler {}
| ----------------------------- this type doesn't implement the required trait
|
::: /home/gh-estebank/testcase-rustc-crate-version-mismatch/c-v0.1/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub trait ErrorHandler {}
| ---------------------- this is the found trait
= help: you can use `cargo tree` to explore your dependency tree
note: required by a bound in `cnb_runtime`
--> /home/gh-estebank/testcase-rustc-crate-version-mismatch/c-v0.2/src/lib.rs:3:41
|
3 | pub fn cnb_runtime(_error_handler: impl ErrorHandler) {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `cnb_runtime`
```
Fix#89143.
Make fn_abi_sanity_check a bit stricter
The Rust ABI must ignore all ZST arguments, all ignored arguments must be either ZST or uninhabited. And finally ScalarPair should never be passed as PassMode::Direct.
Remove unused intercrate dependencies
Checked by enabling `-Wunused-crate-dependencies`
`driver_impl` still depends on `index` to forward the `rustc_randomized_layouts` feature, and `rustc_main` depends on several unused crates for sysroot reasons
r? compiler
The Rust ABI must ignore all ZST arguments, all ignored arguments must
be either ZST or uninhabited. And finally ScalarPair should never be
passed as PassMode::Direct.
Only disable cache if predicate has opaques within it
This is an alternative to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/132075.
This refines the check implemented in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/126024 to only disable the global cache if the predicate being considered has opaques in it. This is still theoretically unsound, since goals can indirectly rely on opaques in the defining scope, but we're much less likely to hit it.
It doesn't totally fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132064: for example, `lemmy` goes from 1:29 (on rust 1.81) to 9:53 (on nightly) to 4:07 (after this PR). But I think it's at least *more* sound than a total revert :/
r? lcnr
Remove the `wasm32-wasi` target from rustc
This commit is the final step in the journey of renaming the historical `wasm32-wasi` target in the Rust compiler to `wasm32-wasip1`. Various steps in this journey so far have been:
* 2023-04-03: rust-lang/compiler-team#607 - initial proposal for this rename
* 2024-11-27: rust-lang/compiler-team#695 - amended schedule/procedure for rename
* 2024-01-29: rust-lang/rust#120468 - initial introduction of `wasm32-wasip1`
* 2024-06-18: rust-lang/rust#126662 - warn on usage of `wasm32-wasi`
* 2024-11-08: this PR - remove the `wasm32-wasi` target
The full transition schedule is in [this comment][comment] and is summarized with:
* 2024-05-02: Rust 1.78 released with `wasm32-wasip1` target
* 2024-09-05: Rust 1.81 released warning on usage of `wasm32-wasi`
* 2025-01-09: Rust 1.84 to be released without the `wasm32-wasi` target
This means that support on stable for the replacement target of `wasm32-wasip1` has currently been available for 6 months. Users have already seen warnings on stable for 2 months about usage of `wasm32-wasi` and stable users have another 2 months of warnings before the target is removed from stable.
This commit is intended to be the final step in this transition so the source tree should no longer mention `wasm32-wasi` except in historical reference to the older name of the `wasm32-wasip1` target.
[comment]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120468#issuecomment-1977878747
Add a new `wide-arithmetic` feature for WebAssembly
This commit adds a new rustc target feature named `wide-arithmetic` for WebAssembly targets. This corresponds to the [wide-arithmetic] proposal for WebAssembly which adds new instructions catered towards accelerating integer arithmetic larger than 64-bits. This proposal to WebAssembly is not standard yet so this new feature is flagged as an unstable target feature. Additionally Rust's LLVM version doesn't support this new feature yet since support will first be added in LLVM 20, so the feature filtering logic for LLVM is updated to handle this.
I'll also note that I'm not currently planning to add wasm-specific intrinsics to `std::arch::wasm32` at this time. The currently proposed instructions are all accessible through `i128` or `u128`-based operations which Rust already supports, so intrinsic shouldn't be necessary to get access to these new instructions.
[wide-arithmetic]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/wide-arithmetic
bootstrap/codegen_ssa: ship llvm-strip and use it for -Cstrip
Fixes#131206.
- Includes `llvm-strip` (a symlink to `llvm-objcopy`) in the compiler dist artifact so that it can be used for `-Cstrip` instead of the system tooling.
- Uses `llvm-strip` instead of `/usr/bin/strip` for macOS. macOS needs a specific linker and the system one is preferred, hence #130781 but that doesn't work when cross-compiling, so use the `llvm-strip` utility instead.
cc #123151
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #132259 (rustc_codegen_llvm: Add a new 'pc' option to branch-protection)
- #132409 (CI: switch 7 linux jobs to free runners)
- #132498 (Suggest fixing typos and let bindings at the same time)
- #132524 (chore(style): sync submodule exclusion list between tidy and rustfmt)
- #132567 (Properly suggest `E::assoc` when we encounter `E::Variant::assoc`)
- #132571 (add const_eval_select macro to reduce redundancy)
- #132637 (Do not filter empty lint passes & re-do CTFE pass)
- #132642 (Add documentation on `ast::Attribute`)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Add documentation on `ast::Attribute`
I was working again with attributes in clippy recently and I often find myself in need to read the source code to ensure it's doing what I want.
Instead, a bit of documentation would allow me (and hopefully others) to skip this step.
Do not filter empty lint passes & re-do CTFE pass
Some structs implement `LintPass` without having a `Lint` associated with them #125116 broke that behaviour by filtering them out. This PR ensures that lintless passes are not filtered out.
Properly suggest `E::assoc` when we encounter `E::Variant::assoc`
Use the right span when encountering an enum variant followed by an associated item so we don't lose the associated item in the resulting code.
Do not suggest the thing twice, once as a removal of the associated item and a second time as a typo suggestion.