Don't print opt fuel messages to stdout because it breaks Rustbuild
Rustbuild passes `--message-format json` to the compiler invocations
which causes JSON to be emitted on stdout. Printing optimization fuel
messages to stdout breaks the json and causes Rustbuild to fail.
Work around this by emitting optimization fuel related messages on
stderr instead.
Choose predicates without inference variables over those with them
Fixes#54705
When constructing synthetic auto trait impls, we may come across
multiple predicates involving the same type, trait, and substitutions.
Since we can only display one of these, we pick the one with the 'most
strict' lifetime paramters. This ensures that the impl we render the
user is actually valid (that is, a struct matching that impl will
actually implement the auto trait in question).
This commit exapnds the definition of 'more strict' to take into account
inference variables. We always choose a predicate without inference
variables over a predicate with inference variables.
[CI] Run a `thumbv7m-none-eabi` binary using `qemu-system-arm` [IRR-2018-embedded]
## What's included?
- Run a `thumbv7m-none-eabi` binary using `qemu-system-arm`
- We are using `cortex-m-rt = "=0.5.4"` which does not use `proc_macro`.
(reason: stage2 build of rustc does not work well with `proc_macro` in `run-make` phase.)
- We are using GNU LD for now.
## Blocker
All resolved.
- ~[Waiting] `#[panic_handler]` is not available in stable.~
- [Merged] https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/53619
- ~[Waiting] https://github.com/japaric/lm3s6965evb: does not compile on stable.~
- [OK] dependent crate ~`panic-abort`~ `panic-halt`: already moved to use `#[panic_handler]`.
## Update
`#[panic_handler]` will be stabilized in Rust 1.30.
CC @kennytm @jamesmunns @nerdyvaishali
NLL Diagnostic Review 3: Missing errors for borrows of union fields
Fixes#55675.
This PR modifies a test to make it more robust (it also fixes indentation on a doc comment, but that's not the point of the PR). See the linked issue for details.
r? @pnkfelix
Fix tracking issue numbers for some unstable features
And also remove deprecated unstable `#[panic_implementation]` attribute that was superseded by stable `#[panic_handler]` and doesn't have an open tracking issue.
std: Enable usage of `thread_local!` through imports
The `thread_local!` macro delegated to an internal macro but it didn't
do so in a macros-and-the-module-system compatible fashion, meaning if a
`#![no_std]` crate imported `std` and tried to use `thread_local!` it
would fail due to missing a lookup of an internal macro.
This commit switches the macro to instead use `$crate` to invoke other
macros, ensuring that it'll work when `thread_local!` is imported alone.
std: Improve codegen size of accessing TLS
Some code in the TLS implementation in libstd stores `Some(val)` into an
`&mut Option<T>` (effectively) and then pulls out `&T`, but it currently
uses `.unwrap()` which can codegen into a panic even though it can never
panic. With sufficient optimizations enabled (like LTO) the compiler can
see through this but this commit helps it along in normal mode
(`--release` with Cargo by default) to avoid codegen'ing the panic path.
This ends up improving the optimized codegen on wasm by ensuring that a
call to panic pulling in more file size doesn't stick around.
Use lld directly for Fuchsia target
Fuchsia already uses lld as the default linker, so there's no reason
to always invoke it through Clang, instead we can simply invoke lld
directly and pass the set of flags that matches Clang.
Fuchsia already uses lld as the default linker, so there's no reason
to always invoke it through Clang, instead we can simply invoke lld
directly and pass the set of flags that matches Clang.
NLL has increased precision in its analysis of drop order, and we want
the test annotations to deliberately reflect this by having fewer
ERROR annotations for NLL than for AST-borrowck. The best way to get
this effect is via `// revisions`.
As a drive-by, also added uses of all the borrows just to make it
clear that NLL isn't somehow sidestepping things by using shorter
borrows than you might have otherwise expected. (Of course, the added
uses do not make all that much difference since the relevant types all
declare `impl Drop` and thus those drops have implicit uses anyway.)
This is a variant of `ui/borrowck/borrowck-closures-mut-of-imm.rs`
that I used to help identify what changes I needed to make to the
latter file in order to recover its instances of E0524 under NLL.
(Basically this test includes the changes you'd need to make to
`ui/borrowck/borrowck-closures-mut-of-imm.rs` in order to get rid of
occurrences of E0596. And then I realized that one needs to add
invocations of the closures in order to properly extend the mutable
reborrows in a manner such that NLL will roughly match AST-borrowck.)
This is based on the feedback from estebank:
"""
I believe that test can be removed outright. It'd be impossible for a
new change to go through that breaks this kind of output without it
being picked up by multiple other `stderr` tests. This is an artifact
of the transition period to the "new" output style.
"""
see: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/52663#issuecomment-422155551
This is not strictly necessary to make this test "more robust with
respect to NLL"; its just an attempt to narrow the scope of the test
and focus on its core.
Most of the time we want to robustify tests, but in this case this
test is deliberately encoding artifacts of AST-borrowck. So instead
of adding artificial uses that would obscure the aspects of
AST-borrowck that are being tests, we instead use revisions and then
mark the cases that apply to NLL as well as AST-borrowck.
rustdoc: refactor: centralize all command-line argument parsing
This is something i've wanted to do for a while, since we keep having to add new arguments to places like `rust_input` or `core::run_core` whenever we add a new CLI flag or the like. Those functions have inflated up to 11-19, and in some cases hiding away the locations where some CLI flags were being parsed, obscuring their use. Now, we have a central place where all command-line configuration occurs, including argument validation.
One note about the design: i grouped together all the arguments that `html::render::run` needed, so that i could pass them on from compilation in one lump instead of trying to thread through individual items or clone the entire blob ahead of time.
One other thing this adds is that rustdoc also now recognizes all the `-Z` options that rustc does, since we were manually grabbing a few previously. Now we parse a full `DebuggingOptions` struct and hand it directly to rustc when scraping docs.